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  • large, beautiful trees. its Wilson is presently lmown as the City of New tluildings slogan - WIDEAWAKE wnsw. With Toisnot Depot was the forerunner of what is now the City of Wilson and was served by the Wilmington-Weldon Railroad. The City of Wilson
  • to achieve new employment opportunities for minorities. SAVANNAH, GA. - After some difficulty last year, this city has achieved a very successful adjustment to desegregation in public accommodations and Mayor Malcolm McClain and religious leaders deserve
  • Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Cronin -- VI -- 2 counsel and other people come down to Birmingham and we met in the Tutwiler Hotel, which is no longer there. That's
  • to the University of New Mexico for KNME-TV; $90, 660 grant to the Community Television, Inc. , of Jacksonville, Fla.-, to WJCT-TV; $388, 541 grant to Greater Washington Educational Television Ass., Inc., to WETA-TV; $187, 881 grant to the School District No. 1
  • Ce111etery, LBJ Runch. Judith and I were deeply honored to be asked by Lady Bird to be here today. lo take part in and preside over these ac­ tivities. I wrote this in an essay Lhat appeared in the New York Times on the day after President Johnson was buried
  • ; served some in New Orleans; I served Some in the Atlantic and some in the Pacific. My last tour of duty was at Kwajalain in the Pacific; I was there when the Japanese surrender took place. And as quick as I could get passage, I carne back to America
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh November 8, 1968, in his part-time home in New Orleans, Louisiana B: I have the machine on now, so if we can go ahead and start. I'd think a logical starting place, sir, would be with when you first met Mr. Johnson. C
  • , aole , a.nd r•liaole coll~e. You . be, and som~ of the new ones 1 do not know who have sh&ke4 fruan's political articulations are the hope o.f lllOre than 120 million people who■ 1ou nationally repre~ent . The thing is biger than Party lines . Xou.r
  • , House of Representatives, Advocating Saving the American Railroad from Financial Disaster and Destruction Prepared Remarks for the Congressional Record (Not Used) News Release Concerning REA Draft Statement of Lyndon Johnson Pertaining to Usefulness
  • : Tuesday ·Taft speaks at Birmingham, thence to Biloxi, Miss.~ and from there to New Orl~. These states have never.gone Republi• can and probably won't. in '62. ;But, and here's the big . but, if Truman ·runs, they have a good chance ·of electing a pledge_d
  • one, was quite conservative. paper~ I Jim Free of Birmingham, I think, as southerners go, is quite liberal; certainly more so than the . Birmingham paper. I was. Bruce Jolly, of the Greensboro Daily News, at that time, was I thought more liberal
  • and American induetry, and its ■ uccee ■ ful eUort ■ ■hould be communicated to every American. '
  • No. Folder Title 11 09/14/17 Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Massachusetts Maryland Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Campaign Material - 1964
  • : It came about because the former un-dersecretary was named by Presiqent Johnson to be ambassador to New Zealand. F: That was who? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
  • the new LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Pollak -- I -- 2 Solicitor
  • February 26, 1964 \ >(' Mrs. Fred McCaffrey NCCJ - an uet ~~,., Cole Hotel .Albuquerque, , ~l)a.,.._a!'-~ ...-0 (j,,i~/ '-,,_,ve.,,,LJ ,I__c.-l.,,11.. J v q_,1.,'r-;; •, New Mexico .. . ·,·::,\'.,,,.,',: oti~·~t X Brooks Hays, has
  • Club Speech – Dallas, TX 7/6/67 Texas State Bar Convention Speech – Washington, D. C. 10/25/67 FHWA’s National Defense Exec. Reserve Speech – Chicago 10/26/67 Illinois Chamber of Commerce Speech – New York 10/25/67 Eastern Industrial League Speech
  • , is also in charge of the Temple Luncheonette on South McDowell Street (new address Belmont and Davidson Streets, supra), Charlotte, which is owned by the mosque. In addition to this cafe, the mosque rents farm land near Mint Hill, North Carolina
  • . And now very soon we will have the fourth-a new law guaranteeing every Amer­ ican the right to vote. This is the next and more profound stage of the ha ttle for civil rights. We seek not just freedom but opportunity-not just legal equity but human ability
  • for August 6 and 7, 1966, in :New York City, Birmingham and Phoenix., Several state conventions are reportedly scheduled for September 10 and 11, 1956. Everet·t; Moore, acting chairman of the Patriotic Party in Arizona, said after the conven-t;ion that 1,000
  • and the invitation to speak at Birmingham's National Veterans Day ohservance November iZtb. I couldn't make it last year, as you know, and I won't be able to make it this year. I am sorry but the pressures of a very full, a very heavy schedule prevent my adding
  • Rayburn. B: You and he in those days shared interest--the New Deal in general-- H: That's right. B: Franklin Roosevelt's policies, the TVA. Did you ever get together on bills or legislation? H: The truth is by the time he got to the House, we had
  • . lBE¥lIIAb •• I POOR PEOPLE'S CAMPAIGN THE NORTHEASTERfl CARAVfl.M OF THE POOR PEOPLE0 S C{~MPtiICtJ LEFT NEWYORKCITY ADOUTNOONTODAYWITH ABOUTFOURHUNDRED PEOPLEENROUTE TO I-JE~·!ARX$NEW .JERSEY t,JHERE THEY PLAN TO SPErm THE t.JIGHT~ "F'HEC:DOt;I
  • - District Director, BRxKdRkClevd McLeod, Harold M - District Director, Columbia Uretz , Lester - Deputy Chief Counsel Meek, Everett L - Service Ce^iterlirector, Covington Usry , Chester A - District Director, New Orlean s Moss, Harold L. Director, Foreign
  • Decides on Cotton Allotment Transfers The New Mexico Case The Williams Inquiry The Bridgforth Memorandum Correspondence with Congressman Mahon The Manwaring Memorandum The Regulations are Amended The Estes Scheme The Texas Meetings The Fort Stockton
  • . As to Tweed and Segal, they have worked extremely hard without compensation to make this Committee successful. This letter would constitute the only recognition of their efforts. The letter to Seymour and Marshall is important as it might give a new direction
  • eport that another bomb had been found in a Birmingham school. A demolition team was sent to take care of it. There is no further information on this at pr esent . [8 of 8] ­ . 3/22/65 FOR THE RECORD : The attached press release constitutes the only
  • of S. 3010 as amended, is to centr~lize in one new Cabinet-level department the responsibility for leadership in the development, direction, and coordination of the principal transporta­ tion policies, functionsJ .and operations of the Federal
  • , 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
  • FAUVER ASKS SIGNAL CORPS OPERATOR FOR PHONE NUMBER OF KTBC NEWS, THEN PLACES CALL; WHEN CALL IS CONNECTED, FAUVER ASKS FOR PAUL BOLTON, THEN TELLS KTBC NEWS DESK ABOUT HELICOPTER BRINGING NEWS FILM TO AUSTIN, CONFIRMS LANDING SITE FOR HELICOPTER
  • Telephone conversation # 721, sound recording, EDWIN "JIGGS" FAUVER and KTBC NEWS DESK, 12/25/1963, time unknown
  • KTBC NEWS DESK
  • Bio: Frederick O'Reilly Hayes, also known as Frederick O'R. Hayes (b. October 4, 1923, Utica, New York-d. June 30, 2002, Utica, New York), economist. Hayes graduated from Hamilton College in Clinton, New York and earned two advanced degrees from
  • started in the Johnson Administration, and you had agreed to remain as an assistant special counsel :for the new president. We've talked about the problems of getting a Kennedy staff reoriented into a Johnson staff and meshed with 2. Johnson staff
  • for 'her blx'thday. All good.wt&hes to you for a happy HnHday Lyndon B. Jol'tnson Mtsa :Mary B. ~ 405 Bast 63rd Street New York 21, N. Y. LBJ:V\TDT December 8, 1961 Dear Mr. Hughey: • I am sorry that Ambassador Zortn left the ·meeting ln New York
  • anticipation of Negro violenc e l ed to heavy- handed uses of official for ce that provoked violence which might not have othe~wi~e occurred , The news media , for their part , sometimes shared in c r e atine a c limate in which viol ence could be expected
  • Bio: Chester ("Chet") Robert Huntley was a broadcast journalist best known for his work on NBC's top-rated news show, the "Huntley/Brinkley Report." Born December 10, 1911, in Caldwell, Montana, he began his career in radio, eventually serving three
  • LBJ Connection: NBC news commentator, 1955-1970
  • Bates] Taylor. T: My father was five years older than Lady Bird’s father. They were both born in Alabama. G: Yes. Which one came first? T: T. J. came [inaudible] first though. My father owned a [inaudible] gin in Birmingham, Alabama. He sold
  • ) Agriculture, Department of [Divider] Department of Agriculture Commodity Credit Corporation Commerce (Divider) Commerce, Department of (Bureau of Census) Department of Commerce: Business News Report Business Statistics (Dept. of Commerce) Monthly Report
Bolton, Dolly (Item)
  • LBJ Connection: Journalist; Long-time employee of KTBC news and personal friend of the Johnsons
  • LBJ Connection: Journalist; Long-time employee of KTBC news and personal friend of the Johnsons
  • LBJ Connection: Journalist, New York Times, 1960-1968; Saigon Bureau Chief, The Washington Post, 1968-1973