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  • this agreement. I was put under some suspicion because I had the appearance, the public appearance, of being Troutman's buddy-buddy. I mean, I was going everywhere with Troutman, I was visiting him in his home, I was going to his riding club down there in Atlanta
  • ro u g h the th in d a y s . T h e y liv e in T e m p le an d th e y a r e m e m b e r s o f the T e x a s A d v e n t u r e r s Club - - the f i r s t thin g I 'l l jo in w hen I 'm o u t of th is jo b . N ex t the Audubon S o ciety . N ex t s o
  • on ,July 4., 1967, in connection· w:lth a 1"a.ffle or an automobile and the confiscation of. this au.t~omobil,2; by the PD. 'l1he subject -gave security guards clubs and tol~i them if tl:H;y came i.n con--. tact with police off icers to UfJe them. - A group
  • persons were present as LYNCH denounced the Negroes. He referred to the FBI Agents as "Nigger babysitters, feebleminded hypocrites, gestapo for the Jews and Federal Bureau of Integration." Women's Century Club Hall, Yakima, Washington LYNCH spoke before
  • largely made possible the work of Head Start. Here is another example of just one group here in the city of Washington, a Women's Club with some fifteen hundred women. years it had two meetings a week to listen to speakers. For many With the advent
  • -- 25 G: One of the stories live heard about his experiences in San Bernardino is that he went to a Wilson Democratic Club meeting. Do you recall that? K: I have a sort of faint recollection that he did, but I don't remember any of the details
  • up at the Fort '''orth Club one day and designed this emblen--the LBJ with the Texas hat emblem on it. M: Eventually very well known. K: That's right. M: Then did you go to Los Angeles? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • his He's a powerful, forceful man, as everybody knows, and so of course he made an impression. I didn't see him much after that until one night maybe a year later I was on the board of the Women's Press Club. was sea,ted at the head table. di nner
  • institutions in the city or town to work along with them, even in a homespun way: getting the Kiwanis Club to donate a bus to bring the children to an after hours tutorial session which is being sponsored by the local school setup which was convinced to do so
  • trips that somewhere--it might have been in the west lobby or in the Black Steer or in the National Press Club--somebody said, "Ye Gods, there's a credibility gap in the White House," and thus was born that phrase. And then it grew. Then everything
  • had gone to a dinner, I think at the Metropolitan Club, that a group of newspaper people had had for him--off-the-record background dinner. I was there, and in the course of this dinner, McNamara was asked whether it made any sense to use nuclear
  • . I was once chairman of a committee of the Kiwanis Club to build a monument at his birthplace and we invited leading Kiwanians from Texas to corne up and we had a big celebration. M: Lyndon Johnson was a fan of Sam Houston's as I recall. He
  • at a party that was given him at the F Street Club by a group of his friends after the election in which he was elected vice president .. M: He didn't call in editors like he called in newsmen and conducted long conversations or monologues? W: No, I
  • , perfectly legitimate. G: Some of the points that you raised in that speech to the Press Club when you came back were--you mentioned that the government did respond to press criticisms. Z: Yes, it did. G: Can you recall how? Z: Oh, on issues like use
  • of their hooches and go to the club, where they would have the support of the other guys. So he started a rumor there in the compound that solitary drinking is a form of latent homosexuality and these guys couldn't stand up under that stigma. So he flushed them all
  • , with John Kennedy. K: Before John Kennedy announced. I am sure that I was at that point influenced by that comment of Nixon's and I accepted it at face value; I'm sure I did. A group of us had dinner in the National Press Club, one of the rooms
  • to the Stork Club or various places like that. A lot of those trips had no purpose to them at all although he would sometimes come up with one. If there had been anything significant, I would have remembered it, but to me, there were so many New York trips
  • went through the receiving line, and then came into the state dining room and sort of singled me out, came over to where I was and gave me this remembrance and chatted with me. And the last time I saw him was at the Woman's National Democratic Club
  • 10, 1972 INTERVIEWEE : MAURICE M . BERNBAUM INTERVIEWER : JOE B . FRANTZ PLACE : Room C, Cosmos Club, Washington, D .C . Tape 1 of 1 F: Mr . Ambassador, you came into the Foreign Service from outside, as my notes tell me . B: Oh, yes, I did
  • mean this was occurring in my state and in a town that I'd lived in as a kid and I felt ashamed . I took--Tony Lewis was covering for the New York Times and I've forgotten who else--but I took them to dinner that night at the Key Club
  • was a Senate man and he was in the club and Senator Kennedy wasn't. So it always seemed to me that Senator Kennedy was respectful of him, but there also seemed to be a warmth. But as I say in my office we didn't see a great deal of Senator Kennedy, he wasn't
  • Indian clubs," I think he said, "and she'd put a quilt on the floor and she'd have me doing exercises." Isn't that something? G: They must have had good rapport. Could you confide in him pretty well? J: Not very much. I wasn't the sort who could have
  • was one of those wonderful volunteers that sometimes politicians of those years would be so lucky to have. I mean, from dawn till dark she would give her work and her voice and they were--she was a member of lots of clubs. She was a staunch believer
  • NIGHT CLUBS: Mme. Rumor, the p retty tr ick, is spread ­ int talk about a flock of new n ight spots due to op en t h i3 fo!L . , , B ut it' su~ U, at one r,ew p lacF: w ith , . _n ,.;a _.,. _ .,.\... ,.. •• • ,n n .~i ,... -;-,-. n~ r:.Tr 2 HJ step
  • destroy his nightmare as he looks unseeing into the dark by knowing that he had but to await the light with courage. ***** Back to the picture of this today. The cave, the club, the daily battle for life itself when on in countless conflicts unorganized
  • , will not do any better job of controlling violence 11 police brutality'' than the conventional or reducing- resentment against billy club and pistol. I think we saw this happen during the civil rights demonstra~ions in the South, when the police used tear gas
  • WASHINGTON January MEMORANDUM FROM: Peter Benchley Attached delegation Guided FOR CHARLES MAGUIRE points the National by secret 1968 ~ are the talking from 30, for the President's Association messages passed of Attorneys Club
  • 1961, and had collected food, money, medicine and clothing for the organization. He denied ever purchasing any weapons or ammunitions for the group, however, and said that this material was purchased by him in 1959 for a New Orleans cadet rifle club
  • of respect for her we did not use·that particular one. Instead, we chose the one that was used for the Women's National Press Club Award, when they gave Mrs. Johnson the Eleanor Roosevelt Golden Candlestick Awardcitation. It says 1 "She aroused
  • at Wake Forest College , is President of the Federation of College Young Demo­ crats Clubs of N. C. His address is Box 60?4 , Rey­ nalda Station , Winston - Salem , N. C. - telephone #7259711, ext~nsion #216 . We spoke with him yesterday and he will take
  • _Hubert do> you se.e. ' And Kennedy never recognized .that Lyndoa as ­ Vice Prc~si~ent didn't have this clout that ·he had as Majority Leader. M: You'va got to ·be a member of the club, you can 1 t be an ex-mernbe ,- . D: That's right. ·. .There's