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  • party not attr:nding President A3ub' s dinner on M~ 20 at his residence, 3 Golf Club Road. Members oi the press, and other members of the official party who will be st~ing at the Hotel Metropole, should be.s.r in mind that meals a.re charged
  • activities in New York, I debated at the various reform Democratic clubs for Kennedy against both [Adlai] Stevenson and Johnson and [Hubert] Humphrey and [Stuart] Symington, who was also a candidate at that time. You've got to remember now, there were about
  • highly of by the other members, and I feel that it's a closed corporation, so to speak. It's the greatest country club in the world, and if you belong to it, others will help you. G: Of course, he also had allies on the commission. H: Yes, right. Well
  • with a chamber of commerce group or a service club, a breakfast meeting, a lunch meeting, a lot of stops in between. The state is a big place. It was not nearly as simple as it had been in running in the Tenth District. You couldn't just stop like in Taylor
  • , Selma--Jim Clark was sheriff at the time and they got some bad pictures of him clubbing people and so on and so forth. There were a lot, myself included, who felt that the situation was inflamed enough at that time that you didn't need a march and if you
  • LBJ, Lady Bird & Dr. Cain swim; Lady Bird to hair salon; talk of strike; Johnsons to Wirtz wedding; reception at Army-Navy Club; lunch; Lady Bird and guests to Camp David; Lady Bird describes scenery; bowling; LBJ and others arrive; call from Mrs
  • — ; . r e c t a n g u l a r b lo ck , of c l e a r p la s tic in w h ich w a s im b e d d e d a c t u a l le a d type w ith fc e jm " T o M r s . L y n d o n B . J o h n s o n - B .A . , B . J . - Y o u 'r e Our T y p e " , p lu s t t ^ the Club name
  • C : WASHINOTON Sunday, N o v e m b e r 12, 1967 Page 5 B a c k a t B a s s e t t H o u se L yndon ch a n g ed in to le i s u r e c lo th e s an d took C huck and Jake and w e n t out to p l a ^ g o lf a t the G old en H o r s e sh o e G o lf Club
  • Lady Bird has nightmares; Lady Bird makes telephone calls; Lady Bird goes to the first meeting of the Johnson City Garden Club; lunch; drive to Danz and Sweeney houses to view renovations; Lady Bird drives to Luci & Pat Nugent's home in Austin; Lady
  • aussig, w h ose r e s e a r c h m ean t so m uch fo r the blue baby operation; and Connie C a sey , who had a ll the la te s t new s from the W om ens N ational D em o cra tic Club, so it w as liv e ly co n v e r sa tio n . B e s id e s the sty le show
  • & Lady Bird go to Lynda Johnson's graduation at the University of Texas; Lady Bird describes ceremony; party for Lynda at the 40 Acres Club
  • . May 4 May 6 .&:'j-- ro1-x-j_jit,4~ Refere:1.ces to the 11i,eat A:pril 23-l-:S.y 22 , I q ~ 4 Re: . society" made by the P-1."esiden-!; . 23 Speech e.t Fm1.d raising Dinner, I'emocra:~ic Club of Coo~ County (p.530 Public Papers) Pi tts"ou.rgh
  • that wonderfu l generous spiri t o f inquiry and hospitality an d pu t them a t eas e immediately. Sh e talked a grea t dea l abou t thei r tri p i n which they visite d man y areas o f American life--from nigh t club s to SAC bases. Sh e discovered tha t bot h
  • . clubs don't make up·. .., ; enough money, ,· which -• l'm aure they will,'.' he · said: · . "" · · ~ Ramsey W
  • such fun. We went to this one particular night club, the name of which I forget. T: It was out on the lake. I took LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781
  • Press Club here. And the person making [the presentation?], just casually, just like you were lifting something from a biographical sketch, mentioned that I was to be serving as chairman of the Texas Advisory Committee on Civil Rights, and a member
  • President Johnson through President Miguel Mexico and through his friend Miguel Guajardo. Ale~an of Miguel Guajardo'as a young boy worked with his fathGr in the hotel in Acapulco by the name of the Club de Pesca, and having been to school in the United
  • of Houston and I had offices on the fourth floor of the old building just as far from anywhere as you could get, way back toward the Republican Club of today. Lacey Sharp, who later was my secretary for eighteen years or more and then for my Agriculture
  • to return. The two of us appeared on a television show, "Meet the Press." I also talked to the National Press Club here in Washington. Mrs. Johnson at the White House. that trip. I again was guest of the President and Mrs. Westmoreland accompanied me
  • reaction to you for your failure to join the club on the way they had made their mind up by 1967? B: I think it was ambivalent . On the one hand, I think a good section or the majority section of the intellectual community disagreed with and resented
  • his supporting anyone in particular? S: No, not at this point. G: Would you have characterized him as a liberal or conservative? S: I wouldn't say on the liberal side. G: Now, you were a member of one political fraternity or club, the Black
  • at the country club and said-- F: Is this Wichita Falls? T: Yes, Wichita Falls. Said, "John, I hate to tell you this, but you ain't got a cut dog's chance." But we recovered by '66. F: What do you do, just quietly go back to work on something like this? T
  • : Not that I heard him say; he could have, but I never heard him mention anything about it. I really think that he just thought it wasn't happening to him and he was going to just go away. G: Do you ever go to the Gay Nineties Club in Fredericksburg with him
  • served you so well in your life. You've had such good health and such a great physique." And he smiled and said, "It wasn't always like this." Said, "When your mother first got married, she bought me a set of dumbbells and Indian clubs," are the words he
  • and in fact was at the time meeting wi presentatives of our Community Re .. lations Service. Foster t Doar that two restaurants in Tuskegee, which had turned them& v. s into sham private clubs in order to avoid Title II of the Civil Rig Act of 1964, aggravated
  • ■ . of a multlmllllonalre hotel Cohn, now 33 yean old, Ill owner and unpaid con■ultant a counsel for National Alr­ to the committee. On a whirl• llnea, the Stork Club and other wind fact-finding tour of enterprllll!I. His Income baa Europe, the brash pair met a bee11put
  • and Presidenl, Washington Press Club: Isabelle Shelton, W· shington tar columnist; Molly Ivins. co-ed1tor, The Texas Ob­ server; Susan Caudill, KERA TV, Dallas; Scott Tagliarino, editor, The Daily Texan_ Re.~ponder.~:Judith Moye s, 'O-moderator. Jill Ruckel­
  • -not the historical Crockett, but the Di ney television version of him, played by UT alumnus Fess Parker. who in 1958 thundered onto the American cultural seen like an avalanche. The TV imag of Cro kett ', last stand, swinging his empty rifle like a club
  • benefits for you." Conrad Cooper, who was the main negotiator for the steel industry, was a tough guy, very hard-nosed negotiator who was of the old school of business, old hard-line Duquesne Club steel industry, and he was determined to teach Abel a lesson
  • C ountryM a r y Lynn D r o s s e a u p r e s e n t e d m e with som e h a n d cra fte d g ifts, a n e c k la c e fo r me and so m e L B J cuff links fo r Lyndon. The Young D e m o c r a t i c s Club, r e p r e s e n t e d by Je ff C r o s slyn, gave
  • /4-' t·._. r(P/ • /='~. ~~~/4c..,. October 26, 1967 MEMORANI>UM TO BAREFOOT SANDERS • Geor1e Chrlatian FROM: X I.attended a chili aupper last night at the National Pr••• Club, and had contact with Congreaamen Jake Pickle, J\0lin Teague and Bob
  • . GREE'T MEMBERS OF COMMITTEE: Express regret over death of a member--Mrs. Coiner, President of the National Capital Oarden Club League--was instrumental in · generating much enthusiasm for the beautification program. Announce the gift of 500
  • -six. F: In your senatorial career then, after being named to the Appropriations Committee, did you have much of a relationship with Mr. Johnson or were you--? M: Not intimate, that is, I wasn't on the inner club. I was not one of his confidants
  • me questions about my life while he was urinating. G: Had you seen him before, while he was in the Senate? L: No. If I had seen him I did not recall him. The first time I ever heard of him was when George Reedy, at the Press Club Bar, told me he
  • , and when it was a junior college, and the scholarship from there to Baylor University. I finished in Baylor University in 1912. The other day, Monday of last week, I went up to Baylor. They have a Heritage Club, and the members are those who have graduated
  • . She was attending the joint convention of the National Council of State Garden Clubs in the American Forestry Association. This was one of the first trips, one of the first follow-throughs, after the White House Conference on Natural Beauty_ TOg
  • -- 27 which is now the Austin Woman's Club. It was then, I think, the property of the Austin Woman's Club, but they took in business and professional women and gave them a room there. I don't think they boarded, but they had rooms there. She had
  • . He is a 1955 graduate of the National War College. He is a member of the Georgia Bar Associati~n, Phi Beta Kappa ar.d Phil Delta Phi, as well as other professional and social clubs and associations. Ambassador Bennett delivered the 1966 Comrr.e