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5487 results
- two or three ladies sitting there; I didn't know what their role was. So what? A: This is in New York? R: Yes. One piped up--what was it? Well, "Mr. Rosenthal, you will see me on Monday morning at 10:30 at my office on Times Square." "Yes ma'am
- family home in Cologne, Germany; photography methods and a photograph of LBJ in Austin with the Jewish Brotherhood; the work of the Joint Distribution Committee and Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS) in New York and Amsterdam; LBJ's involvement
Oral history transcript, George G. (Admiral) Burkley, interview 1 (I), 12/3/1968, by T.H. Baker
(Item)
- , I had no call to be of any personal assistance to President Eisenhower . THB : Then, sir, after the election of John F . Kennedy as President, what was your status? B: The election of John F . Kennedy was general news and information to all of us
- Medical training; first association with White House; President Eisenhower; General Snyder; Dr. Tkach; Kenneth O'Donnell; Dr. Janet Travell; Dr. Eugene Cohen; Dr. Pep Wade; Dr. Hans Kraus; events in Dallas; campaign travel with LBJ; Dr. Cain; Dr
- then. B: But your papers did have a record of supporting the Democratic nominee. H: yes! B: Mr. Harte, we've sort of skipped around, but generally that brings us I remember in 194-- I think the Dallas News even supported Roosevelt then. w
Oral history transcript, Bess Whitehead Scott, interview 1 (I), 3/31/1987, by Christie L. Bourgeois
(Item)
- " but I said, "I want to write news stories and features," and at first he wasn't going to consider it at all. I said, "I'd like to work through the summer for nothing if you'll just let me work here and learn it. I know this is what I want to do!" 5
- TUESDAY, June 29, 1954 JUNE 29, 1954 PEOPLE SENATOR JClINSOU TAI.ICED TO ON THE TELEPHCllE: Thomas Corcoran Congress:n:nn Martin Dies 1o :o-oa . ] - c.~~ Michael Mum Joe Sheehy in Tyler Anna Rosenberg, New York Bob Clark in Dallas /O
- /Marvi n Watso n -- walke d int o Mrs . Roberts ' offic e j sayin g "wel l there' s Mis s Yoland a kar d a t wor k s o earl y i n the morning . " n gav e Mrs . Robert s instruction s o n engraving t o b e pu t o n accutron watc h the Presiden t gav e Sec
Oral history transcript, Donald S. Thomas, interview 4 (IV), 3/23/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- not have co-channels within, I believe it was, 220 miles. So if you had a Channel 7 in Austin and you wanted to put a Channel 7 in Dallas, Austin being nearer than 220 miles, then the Dallas signal and the Austin signal would just go head on. Presumably
- came back to the office and answered some phone calls and went to lunch. While sitting at lunch in the White House Mess the telephone rang with the news from Dallas. Of course we did not know at that moment that the wounds necessarily were fatal
- / RECORD: Robert Baskin of the Dallas Morning News (Bob) Johns on \; jflHH^ Appointment 2 . -i requested by Mr. Baskin--interested in doing birthday story VHITE House Date August DENT LYNDON B . JOHNSON MARY President began his day at(Place) Time
- the morning press which (I hoped) would also be positive. Much more important, my idea was that I felt certain I could get my old Treasury boss, Bob Anderson Dillon's predecessor, who was held in high esteem abroad to come down from New York City
- INTERVIHJEES: GOVERNOR AND NRS. RICHARD HUGHES (Betty Hughes) INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: The Hughes' home in Princeton, New Jersey Tape 1 of 2 F: First of all, Governor Hughes, tell us briefly where you came from, how you gradually moved up
- Meeting LBJ in 1959; Governor of New Jersey, 1961; LBJ and Kosygin held a meeting at Glassboro State College; Kosygin’s daughter, Dr. Gvishiana, joined Lady Bird, Lynda and Mrs. Hughes for lunch at Island Beach; Ramsey Clark; candidates, 1966-1968
- Truman Democrat and I am an Orval Faubus Democrat." F: And never the twain shall meet! H: That experience~ of course, is beside the point, except that it brings us together in this matter of geography. F: I think New York City is beginning to get
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 17 (XVII), 6/11/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . But at the beginning Johnson thought that he would take as many newspapermen with him as he possibly could, and actually it turned out that there were not very many that could go along. As I recall, Allen Duckworth from the Dallas News [and] Maggie [Margaret] Mayer, I
- Wolters stalked up to my table and saluted and said, "Lieutenant, what are you doing here?" When I told him I was on my way to Mexico, he blandly said, "Well, all of us are away from our jobs, and you'll report to Camp Hutchins tomorrow morning
- you pack a bag and come with me, fly in my plane to Fort Worth and we can go on to Dallas the next day and then be with me in Austin for the dinner," and then I could fly back to Houston on Saturday morning when they went back to Washington. My
Oral history transcript, Margaret Mayer Ward, interview 2 (II), 4/22/1981, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- : In 1954? W: Yes. G: Really? W: Absolutely. The same people. G: Well, let's talk about the first convention. W: Was it in Dallas? G: One was in Dallas, the other one was in Fort Worth. I guess the first one was Dallas. W: The first one
Oral history transcript, Donald S. Thomas, interview 3 (III), 3/21/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , hardly--and it was the leading station here for most of those years. KVET came along probably in about 1947 or 1948 and it always commanded a good audience. At one time it had a news broadcast, Stuart Long, at ten o'clock at night that LBJ
- •• We muat seek new way• to better serve the public . ...._ 1 am gratlfled that you continue to communicate wltb and encoura1e other org-anlzatlon• of Federal flold offlc:tal8. The concept of cootdlnated Fede1ral action on national goals at the local
- , Hilitary Aide to The Vice President Mr. Baskin, Dallas U ews Mr. Bell, AP Mr. Scali, ABC Miss Hi ggins, New York Herald Tribune Mr . Miller, Time Mr. Greene, New York Daily News j\'h". Alexander, McNaughton Press Mr. Spivak, UPI Mr. Freedman, Manchester
- weeklies except the Austin paper. And Camp Swift is still there in some capacity. G: Can you recall any other times when you gave him important news like that? R: I don't know. That was just one of the very first times when I had started working for him
- in a Dallas hotel [the Adolphus Hotel in November 1960?]; the Taft-Hartley amendment; George Parr; LBJ's strategy in the two 1948 primaries; African American support for LBJ in Texas; the death of Rather's father.
- interviewsII_this was before TV--"on Sundays and make news stories out of them for Monday morning's paper, so why don't you start you a Sunday broadcast and get it wherever you can get it. Furnish a copy or a news story based on it to the wire services and see how
- Folk Art in l'iew York City, the Dallas Museum of Fine Art, the Witte Museum in San An tonio, and Laguna Gloria Art Museum in Austin. She is currently represented bl Webb and Parsons (,al lery in Bedford Village. New York. 3 WOMEN: NEW VOICES
- margin, though, wasn't it? CH: Very, very narrow margin. As a matter of fact, as I remember, the election was on a Saturday, and the Sunday Dallas News came out with big headlines that Lyndon Johnson had been elected to the Senate. That was before
- • to the Urban Development Committee, which waa Jointly obaJnd by Mr. WNver and Dalla ■ J)ffelo,er laymond Na■h•• The IC'l group bellwea th11 would be a parUoularly appropdata Um• to make thia atata1ent, 1n view of lntare ■ t 1n the new De,-nment and the 1•1111
- "new era" programs, I went on to a strong pitch on bargaining power. All of this ' extemporaneous, with bright lights on me and late at night, so I really don't know if it was really worth doing, but apparently it was. Up again early in the morning
- , 1965 Mr . Bill D. Moyers Assistant to the President The ·white House Washington, D. C. Dear Mr . Moyers : I was greatly distressed at the report of my Sunday sermon in the WASHINGTON POST this morning. The notice was brief, but was plainly and simply
Oral history transcript, Helen Gahagan Douglas, interview 1 (I), 11/10/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh (Tape #1) NOVEMBER 10, 1969 F: This is an interview with Helen Gahagan Douglas in her apartment in New York on November 10, 1969. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. Mrs. Douglas, briefly run over your career, at least get
Folder, [Correspondence and clippings from James and Peter Mangan], Papers of James W. Mangan, Box 1
(Item)
- by the co1 mitt~. Usually, there's only a few vpt difference from the unofficial electi, night figures; this time there was tremendous change." DuBosedispatch, the new figw:es to the Election Bureau Dallas. Salas said that in a book he is writiJ about
- in Dallas, the old firm my father had 'way back in 1881. So I would go to Austin sometimes when the legislature was meeting, quite often, other times not so often. I met Mr. Johnson there as Youth Administrator, and I think I knew him slightly when he
Oral history transcript, William Hunter McLean, interview 1 (I), 5/11/1971, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- is May 11, 1971. I'm in l~orth, Texas. It is about 9:30 in the morning, and my name is David McComb. First of all, to get some background on you, Mr. McLean: Where were you born and when, and where did you get your education? HM: I have to first
- . A month later, some of them joined members of the Friends of the LBJ Library for a celebration that saw I ,600 people dining on the Library's plaza (see cover photo). At both the Washington and Austin events, a new film titled "LBJ: A Remembrance
Oral history transcript, Albert W. Brisbin, interview 1 (I), 2/6/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- in Dallas and Houston, Austin and San Antonio . I'm sure you're aware that the NYA was really a supplemental program to WPA . We were really to try to provide useful employment and training to secondary breadwinners in the family . The breadwinner
- by ) The Presiden t remaine d i n his bedroo m muc h o f the morning , makin g telephone call s an d talking to various staf f members . 8:20a t Dal 9:02a f r e Meek s - Ft . Worth , Texa s . Marvi n Watso n - Washingto n 9:06 a t Dal e Maleche k - LB J Ranc
- on the vaudeville circuit, and it was not until the next morning when I went to the Capitol to be put on the payroll and was met by these battalions of people wearing green that I came to appreciate that the Irish were one of the great sub-forces in American
- that I met John Connally. I remember that he introduced me to Senator Johnson just after he was elected, I think by just a few votes. B: That's correct. G: It was at a dinner either in Dallas or Fort Worth. Senator Johnson said that he had heard
- , New York ot my (€1Jrouitle Dtmocmf ... MORNING AND SUNDAY ROCHESTER NEW YORK 4, November 9, 1955 Dear Mr. Pearson: In answer to my query regarding where I could lay my hands on some real, undoctored lowdown on Herbert Clark Hoover's mysterious
- JACK FROST TOWER PETROLEUM BUILDING DALLAS 1 , TEXAS July 22, 1960 Mr. Charles E. Marsh Washington, Virginia Dear Charles: I recently got your address from Mr. Cox of the bank in Austin. I did have a New York address but lost it. At the present
- majored in journalism and became sports editor of the student newspaper. the Daily Texan. After a stint as capitol corre spondent for International News Service, he became press secretary to Texas Governors Price Daniel and John Connally. ln 1966 he
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 1 (I), 4/13/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- I However, way back there several months ago, I wrote a memorandum recommending that he not run and I got no reaction from him at that time." So anyhow I left and I went into Lyndon's bedroom the morning of April 1, and he was playing
- for a news bureau which represented newspapers in Houston, San Antonio, Dallas, Ft. Worth, Wichita Falls, and Amarillo. So I started covering Lyndon Johnson then, and Liz--I think you've already interviewed her, Joe--wrote a column called "Southern Accents