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5487 results
- , you know; there wasn't much around. We wound up, the two of us, on the back seat of this car on a beautiful Sunday morning seeing Fulton Market and all that part of New York. A couple of hours cost us the magnificent sum of $5.00. That was either
Oral history transcript, Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., interview 1 (I), 1/28/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . . . . It was my habit every morning to come into the Speaker's lobby some time between 8 :00 and 8 :30 to read the news papers . It was a habit of Sam Rayburn's single morning . he did it every Just the two of us would be in that lobby together, and through
- of archeologlcal treasures. He baa been have unem."thed Fresfdent of an organization that baa been doing tbls work. t•Hereis the way we are doing it. He la flying up from Mexico Wednesday.the 2nd and he ta going to spend'Wednesday here and he bas to be lD Dallas
- in that regard. Then he had the [Allan] Shivers conflict, which was very exciting for me to live through, because as a young woman, even though we had to go to the Capitol at times and run the robotype machines at three o'clock in the morning-(Interruption) Let's
- . • Seenie Dr1•• Au• 1.n. 'fe:xu Sunday 4 p.m., De pril 4, 1943 reat loTe: Saturlay morning I went by to ae• it ·••Johnson••• home yet but ahe wa•a'i. Then Saturiay night she e 11•4 ae ••haY1n1 Ju•1 r1Tet-to aay that there were a oupl ot
- on the payroll. G: Just brand new then. I see. What had his background been? What was his professional experience? T: Whose? G: Mr. Teague's. T: He flew for Herman Heap here. G: Herman Heap? I see. T: And Continental Gas Pipeline in Houston, quite
- (then) belonging to Emil Hartmann; the search for the plane; waiting for news of the wreck at the Teague home; events leading up to the plane's departure from Austin; Harold Teague's conversation with Homer Thornberry regarding the flight; the layout of the plane's
- and relaxation. ward Committee were weekend guests Th Award Committee, co-chaired by Dr. Wi!LiamJ. McGill and Mrs. Johnson, met on Saturday morning. The Foundation Board, chaired by Frank C. Erwin, Jr., met on the following unday morning Members of the LBJ
- been in other parts of Texas, for Mr. Johnson over Mr. Stevenson was the right-towork law. The right-to-work law had been proclaimed by The Dallas Morning News and was picked up and eventually was incorporated partially into the Taft-Hartley Act
- a prirlleg to be asked to write you about the Auat1n Dispe.toh and its progreu. Aa the Tenth 01.striet Congre11-.n, I am not able to be with you. h&nda•llOl'OH• tlie...table a1 you go into yo'ID" new quu•tere. :nake the Thie i■ a handahak• &nd
- went in the hospital? Was he at all senile? H: He never declined mentally. time he was lucid. elected to Congress. His mind was just as bright the last Two days before he died Henry Gonzalez was I got the Dallas News about six o'clock
- , 1987 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. O'Brien's office, New York City Tape 1 of 3, Side 1 O: The Oregon primary was hotly contested. [Eugene] McCarthy showed a better organization than he had shown
- Robert F. Kennedy (RFK) loss to Eugene McCarthy in the Oregon primary; support for RFK going into the New York primary; concerns going into the California primary and memories of 1960 California problems with Edmund "Pat" Brown; the RFK/McCarthy
Folder, "Whistle Stop [1 of 6]," Liz Carpenter Subject Files, White House Social Files, Box 11
(Item)
- party. -2- Charlotte, N.C. with following Airport news conference represented: Charlotte at Charlotte Observer, WSOCTV, WSOC- Mrs. Boggs and Mrs. Russell, com8ents on TV from W.H. coordinator, Morning fi'apers played night up fact him
- in the summertime for the Humble Oil Company in Baytown, Texas, in the research department . I dropped out of the University of Texas, where I had been going to school . I stayed at Baytown, and during the course of my employment there the New Deal came along
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 5 (V), 10/27/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , 1982 INTERVIEWEE: GEORGE E. REEDY INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Hyatt Regency Hotel, Dallas, Texas Tape 1 of 1 G: Let me start with a general question about 1953. Eisenhower Administration has come in. Of course, the I wanted
- in those days. G: You mentioned when we were talking this morning about Minnie Lee Pattillo [Taylor] campaigning, I suppose, for a county commissioner's position. L: Yes. And as it turned out, the candidate [she opposed] was a first cousin of my mother
- further about my status as the designee, or soon-to-be designated as the new military aide. Until one morning, one of the sergeants who worked on the White House logistics staff--mail handler and classified mail clerk, fellow named Duffy, fine man, just
- . ' NEW YORK. N. Y. DeOClllber Twenty-fourth 1965 .... Dear Bobs Ma7I first ' take this opportunity to express the unprecedented pleasure I have experienced 1n working w1th this •secret" task force. Having bad a mmber ot assignnents ot similar nature
- on a speech on this." During this early period, of course--this was toward the end of the first session of the Eighty-Ninth Congress--we had sometimes two and three bill signings a day. So we were up to four or five in the morning every night just turning
- Kintner replaced Valenti; expanded writing staff; Larry O’Brien; 90 to 100 items a day marked in Congressional Record for LBJ who read each morning; LBJ never forgot opposition, insults or slights; Stewart Udall called LBJ "a man of the land;" Hardesty
- shall ever have. A few things become quickly apparent. This is a whole new ball game. If I am to continue on the debate team, my outside activities will be largely confined to after-school practice and visits to the city library in the search of arcane
- in Dallas.
Folder, "Whistle Stop [3 of 6]," Liz Carpenter Subject Files, White House Social Files, Box 11
(Item)
- that always She tells bny who asked fC'lr her au~graph you write me a letter At the sight (If that held the crowd, shaking hands, smiling and chatting Senator Philip a crnwd early morning fnr a glimpse of the First who met her waited, length
Oral history transcript, William Robert Smith, interview 1 (I), 11/9/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- not too much attention to that election. lid read the paper every morning but I wasn't just carried away with all the news about it. I read the paper every morning now. live always read the paper every morning, just to see what's going on in the world
- beoe.use a mnjority of the delegates will be picked by Rayburn and Blaylock, it is most iw.portnnt that the epirit of the news going out of :Waoo to the country tell the actual tacts. Tm actual facts are that tha President of the United Sta.to~. looking
- to the same effect could be included in Section 3 either as a part of or as a new subsection following Sub~ection (d), with the succeeding Subsections to be renum• bered as required. In either event, Section 8(1) should be amended to insert the following
- . breakfast with him in the morning? have breakfast with you, 1 said, "Lyndon, and he I not only will but J'll arrange a luncheon for all the delegates in southwestern Pennsylvania. " M: This was prior to the convention in 1960? B: Prior
- practically wrote a layman's handbook. B: I did my best to, because I felt that was crucial. You had to keep them with you there. F: All right. Now then, the President was murdered down in Dallas and you have a new President. Did it ever occur to you
- growing years, and went to college at Wayne University in Detroit. Detroit is really--I still consider it home even though I came to Washington in World War II, 1942, and got a job as copy girl for the old Washington Daily News. I then went to UP
Folder, "Longoria, Felix [Newspaper Articles] [1 of 2]," Pre-Presidential Confidential Files, Box 3
(Item)
- -: Two__ Texans _ ,. . .. 1;,._ ~ ~....;.~..-._• • "J I LABOR is proud to honor two Texans, Lyndon B. Johnson-the new senator i from Texas-and .Felix Long~ia, . an American with ·Mexican ancestors. \ ·.Longoria died 11.ghting for his country
- , and Pat Coon and Ben Woodall, two lawyers who distinguished themselves later in a practice at Dallas. I watched that trial and I was so interested in it that I cut class and watched it to the end. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
- ,° In his r tirement LBJ had me to lunch on cla . The Dallas Morning New had published a story saying LBJ wanted to be chancellor f The niver:;ity of Texas. H glared at me and asked. '·Why in the hell would I want be the chancellor nf The University of Texas
- . About one o'clock in the morning I got a call from Coke Stevenson saying that they had lost something that I had done and they wanted to know if I'd come up and dictate it again. I said, yes, I would. My recollection is I had already undressed
Folder, "Demonstration – October 20-21, 1967 [1 of 2]," Aides Files of Mildred Stegall, Box 64C
(Item)
- at the Pentagon captioned demonstration. Edward Fields - Fields resides at Five Beacon Street, New York, New York. Fields in 1966 was a member of or attended meetings of the Students for a Democratic Society Chapter at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
- me to New York to work at the United Nations and all those kinds of things. But that is how I got to know John Connally, whom Senator Connally wanted to run his re-election campaign. John Connally refused him. There was really very little doubt
- . I.t you ob~eot, let me k.no • oth rwise I sh 11 write lilm. An1 old uncl 1 ed r orda of no u e to ue I sh ll give to Reed's b cau ., thy ar nice to us and thy need them for eor p, else the1 oan' t g t new record • Jam1e oalle. Scurry today. was told
- . DeMoss • Richard L. McGraw P1 1ard P. Bond Rob_ert H. Gow ·'• , ; :·•· · Tim Moffett , •• J. B: Thoma s, Jr. : : • Rkha.rd B. Dewey ·:., - J. Holland McGuirt (~ r, Boyle Don_Graubar_t . . Dallas H. Moore·-•:.:· .. ··.·:·:· D~vid R. Underw9()(1
- in the evening said to the Vice President, "What are you going to say tomorrow, Mr. Vice President?" And he said, "Well, whatever Joe has written for me," at which I kind of gleamed a little in a quiet way. The next morning then as the local major domo we had
- . G: What was LBJ's relationship with organized labor that you recall? W: Taft-Harley Bill entered into that somewhere or another. G: Yes. He voted for Taft-Harley. W: I believe that's right. G: The reason I ask is in June the Dallas Morning
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 27 (XXVII), 1/30/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . And then the year 1951 came in with a little gathering that became a part of a succession of years. We went to the Hornadays. He was a newspaperman, Walter and Ann Hornaday. [I] think he was head of the Dallas News Bureau [Hornaday was a writer for the Dallas
- ~ ne.u., Taaa has beccae na.,,.._.e:1..oue. On the Gu1t Cmus\ mill1ons an being spent. tor new hipprcla. a1r. At corpus Chr1sti 1 the In Dallas na'Rl reserna &N 1D t.he great.est na'l'&l. ~light tra1n1ng prograa 1a lvabez- Six Page Am.erioa 1e
- ORAL HISTO RY COLLECTI ON Narrator Gerald C. Mann · & Gerald C. Mann Jr~
- ?" This went on for some time, and they finally told me that they'd had my orders changed and rewritten and that I was going to be in charge of a training group on Martha's Vineyard. They were opening a new training school at Martha's Vineyard, and they were