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374 results
- convention in Chicago. I was not a delegate to the convention, but I went. He took me, and this was my first national convention. In those days it was much, much easier to get credentials. I had some kind of assistant secretary's badge or something and got
Oral history transcript, Elizabeth (Liz) Carpenter, interview 5 (V), 2/2/1971, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- pets always, particularly when Luci was in the White House, from mice to--well, everything, it seemed to me. And we tried to answer them, because there is a curiosity about them, and it's one way to get in the Chicago Tribune favorably, almost
- ee H ills of the ■‘K night N e w s p a p e rs ’*V L o u is e H u tc h in so n of th e ■'^Chicago Tribune"^. ^ And tw o of m y f a v o r ite c o m p a n io n s , N an R o b e r ts o n o f the *N ew Y o rk T im e s* ^ a n d B onnie A n g elo . A m ong
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 7 (VII), 8/26/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- is a former newspaper reporter for the Dallas News, Chicago Tribune, but at that time he was working for the United States Information Agency. He said, "That's all right." Of course, that Saturday, July 2, he called me about at noon, about one o'clock
- in and opened up a paper in opposition. They opened up the Tribune and built a building where the Railroad Commission is on 10th Street. the editor. William Travis, I believe, was Lyndon formed a friendship with Silver Dollar West and the other West a t
- twenty miles off Tokyo at the end of the war. I then quite quickly turned around and went over to the Nuremberg Trials at the request of Francis Biddle, in which I was called technical advisor to the Nuremberg Tribunal. But what I was many years later
- , perhaps my dearest friend, has lately written a book called, Political Animals. name is Walter Trohan. His He was the chief correspondent here for the Chicago Tribune for a great many years, and there's some damned interesting stuff about Lyndon
Oral history transcript, Thomas H. (Admiral) Moorer, interview 2 (II), 9/16/1981, by Ted Gittinger
(Item)
- everybody about it, and the Chicago Tribune did, and they damn near got their ass in jail. And they should've. But all the questions from the Congress, all the questions from the media, the answers sometimes are well known, but they are given
- , yes. Yes, there was Alex Hurd~ acts~ and this-- the chancellor of Vanderbilt, [he] was the chairman; Walter Thayer, then president of the New York Herald Tribune, one of the stalwarts of the Republican hierarchy on the Eastern Seaboard
Oral history transcript, Merrell F. "Pop" Small, interview 1 (I), 8/20/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- family in Oakland, his father had been congressman way back in about 1910, and they had this very fine newspaper, the Tribune, which has gone downhill afterwards. Warren got out of the army in 1919, and he had sixty bucks in his pocket, which
- . by return wire. Sherwin J. Markman, Assistant to the President. BLOUGH,Roger, U.S. Steel Corp COWLF.s,John, Minneapolis Star & Tribune • GRUENTHER, Alfred M., Wash., D.C. KISTIAK
- VON UNRUH CHICAGO COURTENAY MRS. ROBERT J. J. ZMRHAL BARBER, BIGGERT JR. LOS ANGELES F. E. BROOKMAN MAJ. JULIUS HOCHFE:LDER lnclosed you will find reprints ot a nullber ot new iteJIS coo oemi11g the war in Ye•n, which invol.T&s both Saudi
- BANISTER, \'l . Guy Banister was a fonner FBI agent (at one time, Special Agent in Chicago), who retired December 31, 1954. He went to New Orleans, where he established a private investigating agency, and apparently had very close ties with the anti
- from the Hearst Press. The interview was reque sted after I'd made the suggestion of a token "joint session" of Gollgress :in Berlin in the Washing· ton Post of August 5, and in the N. Y. Herald Tribune of August 10. It has n0w been suggested tha
- stopwas:Ahoskie. a townoflort)t,,fl..,.~d. Thesheriff estimated.howewr, Chatten tt-ousand peopieiIU'nO(I OIA.ti() see tt'l8first lady. "lNs is lt'lesecond biggest ero'Mlwe'w Md since BuffaloSil broughthis Wild Weat ahoYtheN!I in 1916."a resideri fOldthe Chicago
- stopwas:Ahoskie. a townoflort)t,,fl..,.~d. Thesheriff estimated.howewr, Chatten tt-ousand peopieiIU'nO(I OIA.ti() see tt'l8first lady. "lNs is lt'lesecond biggest ero'Mlwe'w Md since BuffaloSil broughthis Wild Weat ahoYtheN!I in 1916."a resideri fOldthe Chicago
- velopment. Pessimistic on question whether Mexico can maintain economic momentum.) Whetten, Nathan L., Rural Mexico, Chicago, Uni versity of Chicago, 1948. (Prodigious in factual content, it is essentially a sociological study of the Mexican Revolution
- · point.ea. · out · .not "all .lies under oath c0ns.t itute · · wh~the:t he~· : -' lied ·, under:.·present·. la~s, ... perju:rr o• . :. "Perjury involves·.;_ lying :about a ·s:Peei:t:ic ma.t~erial matter.··under· investigation by a tribunal
- Tribune. From 1935 until 1939 you From 1941 until 1947, and then again from 1949 to 1951, you were an administrative analyst with the Bureau of the Budget. Between those two terms, from 1947 to 1949, you were the director of management control
- the utterances is of traitors to me. fc GEORGE HANNER. of is Greensboro. ~,e. Jtew-t/ !>7ep Itt7 4 VII • NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE WEEKLY BOOK REVIEW, AUGUST 8, 1947 Freedom: The Right and Duty A Philosopher Tries to Analyze the Moral Principles of the Press
- . Frifield's ma 'erial was accepted by the New ~l'k Herald Tribune News See LOBBY, A!l, Col. 1 I [1 of 3] -rttv~ s •) fl 'f ,:µ;~'1 l9~ 3 ~~ News1ne11's Junliets Pro]Jeil l\"tL J,OURY-t'ram ,."!W Al By Foreig11 Relatio11s G1·ou11 nnd the North J
Folder, "Longoria, Felix [Correspondence] [2 of 2]," Pre-Presidential Confidential Files, Box 3
(Item)
- No. 1017 808 w. Beoeevelt Rd. CJdc&10 8, Jllinoia .............. !} I / ' : I I I I fl, ; I \I ( [1 of 4] ..A-merican ef!egion mAnUEL PEREZ Posr NO. 1017 SOS W. Roosevelt Rd. CHICAGO 8, ILLINOI S JANUARY EIGHTEENTH 1 9 4 9 Senator
- published today by the Herald Tribune. We all wish you a lot of luck in solving get but harder to keep ... Jose ~nchimol the_ present ~ crisis. Goodwill is hard to , G!al3iiam S.A.C.I.F. DIVISION SISTEMAS DYMO VIAMONTE 1336, PISO 4", OFICINAS 22 y
- interested in your personal reaction to Mr. Alexander'• comments. Beat re1arda. Sincerely, Booth Mooney Executive Aaaiatant to Lyndon B. Johnson Mr. Frederick L Maaaeqlll, Terrell Tribune Terrell, Texaa I Jr. ./ ,,,,~ , / .J , ,. f !' j' ,I
- DECI.ASSIPIE0 E.O. I 2958, Sec.3 6 NJ 0\-rl-.35 NARA,Datel:2.i.O) By~ -- 8B€ftfi Honorable William D. Moyers Los Angeles, California; Chicago, Illinois; Michigan; Baltimore, Maryland; and return officials This information is also being in the Department
- equipment to East European countries and within security limitations encouraging such sales. d. Supporting applications from individual East European countries for adherence to the Chicago Convention and urging East European countries to apply the ICAO
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 50, November 8-15, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 25
(Item)
- -- S.SCE:ET -- written assurances from the mercena~ies themselves and their parent countries that theyt 11 never ent~:r the Congo again . ~ - - an ad hoc OAU tribunal to screen and question the m.ercenaries before they leave Rwanda, trying to findJ..ouf who
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 50, November 8-15, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 25
(Item)
- -- S.SCE:ET -- written assurances from the mercena~ies themselves and their parent countries that theyt 11 never ent~:r the Congo again . ~ - - an ad hoc OAU tribunal to screen and question the m.ercenaries before they leave Rwanda, trying to findJ..ouf who
Folder, "Garrison Investigation, New Orleans, 1967-1968," Papers of John B. Connally, Box 324
(Item)
- .tyou for I thought Like this And I of the country,, we jur3t talked is thought it might in -?;his righto. ANGELES'• WASHINGTON, D. C, • SAN FRANCISCO• NEW ENGLAND° CHICAGO -2GARRISON: questions It• s fine. you• d also ask me any
Folder, "C.F. - FG 170 DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (1967)" WHCF Confidential Files,
(Item)
- ;::,.• .,_· .::";:.,-·: \'" in Chicago have now given firm commitment unemployed in the target cities: ' •·.>;/:1:::::::·;::::::;:·.·.:~·./ • ) 53 jobs . . ' •. ',.,: ',~ • ;.~•, .•: •.. ·•. ',.· •. :· •.',· .' ·-- ·Lockheed ··> ··:_:• ~.'..\Y ..;i.',_;~_i
- to the, 'Indian Government to finance local cosls o[ development pro-' grams. But dollar repayment for ·11 ilc
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 19 (XIX), 2/6-7/1981, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- it on your tape about the man who bought the paper every day, bought the Chicago Tribune every day and paid his nickel, stood at the newsstand, read the headlines, put the paper 16 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT