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  • · Hon. Charles Schultze Harry McPherson YOUNG, Mrs. Whitney 29 Mohegan Place New Rochelle, New York First Floor by the President 17 L.1 on MAY 8, 1967 5: 57p-6:40p - Mansion Mrs. Johnson's RECEPTION in the Conference of Women Poverty REMARKS
  • (particularly Cong. Gonzales of Texas), etc. B. Misc. Publications - "Underground News Bulletins", anti-semetism, "Network Bulletins" (training pamphlets, reaction to gun control, letters from members, etc.), "What Chance for the Minutemen?", training program
  • that morning. way behind schedule. So he was late coming down and we were We started down the road to Dallas, and he looked at his watch and we were going to be late. He just fussed and exploded, and he said, "I loathe being late, and I loathe peo!Jle who
  • :"30a • The President read the morning papers and generally just talked about his day. He said that he wanted to take a ride very soon and see "the deer jump and play, " and then come back for an early lunch, take a nap and then go to Austin
  • was there and he was sitting with Allen Duckworth, back in the crowd. You know about Duckworth. G: Political writer for the [Dallas] Morning News. B: Yes. Big, big influence for a period in Texas. It partly was just Duckworth's presence. He walked into a room
  • : No. G: We've looked for a maker and can't find it. P: I don't. Let me give you the history of this organ. It was owned by Walter Hornaday, who was the political correspondent for the Dallas Morning News during the thirties, forties and fifties
  • Underwriters Corp. *Businessmen Mr. Alphonse De Rosso, Standard Oil Co. , New Jersey . W. R. Grace s card Pres. Grace Steamship Lines /f i I Amb. Sol Linowitz , US Rep to OAS-Anthon y Solom on dLabor Leaders T " Robert Sayre , Deputy Asst Secy of State, Bureau
  • Monday morning and went into New Orleans and spent the second night in Atlanta and were having breakfast somewhere in Atlanta Wednesday morning when we heard the ra9io had been counted out. was wonderful about it. F: ~eport that he So it was a sad
  • the material, whereabout• before 6:30 p. m. on November 22, 1963. One exception relates to a etatement made by attorney G. Wray Gill, who aaid that he remembered the morning of November 22, 1963, because that morning a jury in New Orleans returned a verdict
  • , you know, just by happenchance. I think I was with Dad and Tony Buford from St. Louis and Mr. Johnson the night after Lynda Bird was born. B: What was Mr. Johnson like as a brand new father? C: Well, you know, that's a long time ago. My
  • of the motorcade. C: Smitty was one of the four pool reporters, and I was serving as-the wire services have what they call a backup man. I was overnight editor for UP, and then I went out that morning to backup (I was in Dallas, I was stationed in Dallas
  • proving that it would require more steel to reinforce a concrete pipeline than it would take to build an all steel pipeline. We had a very good MIT engineer, out of the organization of Standard Oil of New Jersey, who very effectively made that point
  • willing to assign that man. R: Well, yes, certainly, because there's a rapport there, and when a new man comes in it's an advantage because there's an understanding there and and it makes it much easier for us to present our problems to the extent
  • Review of career; dealing with various Presidents; assignment of agents; the Johnson family; effect of JFK assassination on duties; the Texas operation; Presidents traveling abroad; demonstrations; the Dallas tragedy; the Warren Commission's
  • to come up for re- election, say in 1940 I suppose was the year, because it wasn't that first election, of course, and we were invited to come to Fort Worth-no. We got the news of that sometime in the morning in Marlin, and LBJ Presidential Library
  • , of course. A: Liz was during the campaign but, you see, Liz was going back to work with Les in the Carpenter News Bureau. She went back there before she joined the Vice President's staff the second time around. So really it was just me. Before that Grace
  • the document. (Cl Closed In accordance with ntstrtctiona contained in the donor'• dead of gift. 11/1/2007 --UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION In &ply, PleaaeReferSO FU.No. Newark, New Jersey August 31, 1967 NATIOrTAL
  • answer this? Should we ignore it?" He would check on there what [he wanted] or he would say something. After he'd looked at all the mail and watched all the news in the morning--and he watched all three stations while he was talking to you, reading
  • ). This will cover the ··new Texas" of the modern period, including the development of the major metropolitan areas of Houston. Dallas, and Austin; The University or Texas. the growth of stale govern­ ment and the evolution of selected industries, such as the oil
  • coming in, and news wires and all like that. So I really don't know how much of the time we were at Dillman and how much at some hotel. But Sunday morning the Dallas Morning News said, "The Senate race looks like a photo finish, with Stevenson holding
  • was always as a tax adviser or attorney to the Johnsons. M: Then when President Kennedy was killed here in Dallas, apparently the new President, Lyndon Johnson, contacted you immediately. Is that correct? B: He endeavored to. I was in Shreveport
  • 1945 12/26/45 LBJ (Lyndon Johnson) goes to Austin intending to spend only ten days, part of which he spends in Dallas with Speaker Rayburn. January 1/8 Stag party honoring Sam Rayburn is scheduled at summer cabin on the shores of Lake Texoma. LBJ
  • atman. I am I Mr. B. G. Davia Auauat 11, 1948 Page 2 P.S. Juat before the new COJ13reaa opens, I will aend you new to the ·House and Senate in blank, which you can uae to accommodate your friend ■ when they come to Waahtnston,. similar to the ones
  • of January of the year after one's election. I was a candidate in 1934 in the new district, the Nineteenth District, that cut Marvin Jones' district about half in two. I ran along with--there were nine of us--no incumbent [who] ran for the position and I
  • How he met LBJ in 1935; LBJ’s ambitions and absorption with politics; LBJ as a new Congressman and loss of the Appropriations Committee appointment to Albert Thomas; Sam Rayburn and the Board of Education; rural electrification; Civil Rights Act
  • meTelephon f In Ou e Whit e Hous e ____ e or t Expendi . Activit oL D Cod tL _ Day_Thur sday y (includ e visite d by ) tur e (Mr. Wal t Rosto w brie f th e Press thi s morning an d said essentiall y that: the meetin g o f the President , Prim e
  • him with his grandparents at the White House and take a short vacation. We sent our dogs along, too-as a bonua. Greatest politician The first morning, when arrived in New York · City, the newspa~r., gave u s a hint of how things were d eveloping
  • him with his grandparents at the White House and take a short vacation. We sent our dogs along, too-as a bonua. Greatest politician The first morning, when arrived in New York · City, the newspa~r., gave u s a hint of how things were d eveloping
  • McPherson (pl) ! i 10:10a j i t George Today issued proclamation for observing Feb. 1967 as American History Month ~~~~ ; | 10:09a | t Moyers (pl) ' —— 1 . I 10:07a t Mike Mansfield Bill ~"\ "' i Sunny this morning, increasing cloudiness
  • at the Lyndon Eames Johnson Library m Austin. -The Dallas Morning News November 5, 1978 World War I veteran salutes a11 members of service organizationr;i lay memorial wreathR C remon,>hegin~ at 2 The opening was a community affair. The Austin-Travis County V
  • of the Texas Association for the tudy of Afromerican Life and History, Inc.; mem rs of the ibrary's oral history staff; and Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Craig Flournoy, whose report of the event for the Dallas Morning New contained the following excerpts
  • the editors of the conservative publications that were not sympathetic to Johnson anyway were not present at this thing--the Dallas [Morning] News was not there; maybe one editor was, but not the top people. They were dissatisfied by and large. They did
  • and press assistant to then-Representative Jacob K. Javits from what was then the Twenty-first Congressional District of New York, which is the upper west side of Manhattan ranging at that time from West 114th Street north to the end of the island
  • was “Setting a new and dangerous policy by not informing his colleagues in advance of the night session. Governor Shivers is in Washington to protest with the Veterans Administration against a proposed transfer of the Dallas district VA office to Denver. LBJ
  • Post Bill Eaton, Chicago Daily News Jim Millstone. St. Louis Post Dispatch Ted Sell. Los Angeles Times John Pierson, Wall Street Journal Karen Klinefelter, Dallas News Saville Davis, Christian Science Monitor Day 1, 1968 Date Apri • Da the Whit e
  • Force One in Dallas on that day in November of 1963. Many times in his political career President Johnson was referred to by the news media as a political animal. Yes, President Johnson had been a LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
  • was asking Maury who he should hire to handle his stuff in NYA. And he recom- mended Herbert Henderson, you know. G: Oh, really? J: Yes, we were having breakfast that morning. Lyndon had Bill White. Bill had forgotten this until I reminded him
  • to Congress on April 10, 1937, through the elimination of ten opponents . His campaign was based on strong support for President Roosevelt's New Deal program . iii : Did you work i n that campaign? B: Yes,sir, in a general way . the Of course he
  • and Regional Directors of HEW to meet \\ith him and the Regional Directors of HEW for coffee for CONGRESSIONAL r) this morning, and it occu -red to Senator MauReen Neuberger Congresswoman Leonard K. Sullivan him tha t the President might like Senator John
  • INTERVIEWEE: EDIE ADAMS INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: The Fairmont Hotel in Dallas, Texas Tape 1 of 1 F: Miss Adams, first of all, how did you get mixed up in politics? A: Well, it was the 1964 campaign. Before that I really felt that anyone
  • Hickerson with Associated Press called from Dallas and insisted on an inter­ view with Senator Johnson. We got the lights on, and I and Woody at different times tried to tell him we'd talk to him in the morning, but Clayton was feeling 11 no pain" about
  • we call Long News Service which is an independent Capitol News Service. We correspond for eighteen daily newspapers in Texas. Among them the San Antonio Light, Corpus Christi Caller-Times, Beaumont Enterprise, EI Paso Herald-Post, Texarkana