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328 results
Oral history transcript, Nadine Brammer Eckhardt, interview 1 (I), 2/22/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , you know, "Fine. I'd like to have you work on the staff." I had been working for Charlie Green, who was the editor of the [Austin] American Statesman, and before that I had been working in journalism and for the journalism director at North Texas
Oral history transcript, Robert E. Waldron, interview 1 (I), 1/28/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- [Homer] Thornberry, then Congressman Thornberry from Austin, asked me to come to Washington as his administrative assistant in June of 1955. of 1955 as his aide. Fortunately, I accepted the offer and came in June And then, like so many Texans, I am still
- imitators an.d American imitators went different routes. The United States was an expanding market of its own with .a country btgger than western Europe to grow in. Germany fooght. for raw ma tar - ials and trade outlets in among her neighbors~ resulting
- Austin (Tex.)
- Valley Round Rock Spicewood Sprinkle Webberville Amarillo Times (Potter) Austin American (Travis) Austin American II (Travis) Austin Statesman (Travis) Series Political Correspondence Political Correspondence Political Correspondence Political
- INN, ALBEN W. BARKLEY, KY , WARREN R , AUSTIN , VT, JOSEPH F . Ci,UFFEY , PA . STYLES BRIDGES . N , H . CARTER GLASS, VA. ALEXAND ER WI L EY , WI S. JAMES M . T UNNELL, DEL. CARL A, HATCH, N , MEX. L IS T ER H ILL , ALA. aeon w. LUCAS , IL.L
- nationalities and set ting up a schedule under which we can all live; but we are in it and must go through to the end and we Americans are so sure we are in the right that we can not see anything but victory for the Allies. Tpere is not a lot going on in Austin
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 21, February 12- 28, 1967 [1 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 13
(Item)
- . :. ! • 2. ..~ State and Defense to prepare position on Latin American arms in Senate in response to Mansfield. ·. ....,.. ~~ ~. (" 9. Sec. Rusk to respond immediately to Mansfield's suggestion about - . Ambassadorial appointment (Sec. Rusk has
- and market changes. All of these sharply affect the American farmer and the related Agri-business sector of our n£.tion. Obviously, it is impossible to forecast or control these f orces. To protect the farmer, the Congress developed farm programs -w:·. th
Oral history transcript, Harry C. McPherson, interview 6 (VI), 5/16/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- a southern manifesto I would think would be very similar to how he would feel about a northern manifesto, one that said we must, at whatever cost to a civic or political peace that is bought on the backs of disenfranchised black Americans, we must move
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 7 (VII), 8/26/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- -(Interruption) We landed in Fredericksburg--my sister Josefa was there and her husband and little Rodney--and went there. That was the twenty-fifth. Then I came on in to Austin. Yes, August 25. All right, August 26, 1955, I went down to the American
- - Is it time for Labor peace and Labor racketeers? factory racketeers and fifth colunmists? If there are to be Are we to put an election eye on Labor? · It is alright f or a candidate , but not for a statesman who is going into the winter seeing
- • • ,.r,• "' • ... I t fl I • J • "" .. ..- ., - .. ..... l. ..... 'I: I !II,~ ,,t •• I ■ - ~ > .-< ..•••.,....,, .. '" ,._.,, "1 • Ir' .. ~ I' 33 --UNITED STATES INFORMATION AMERICAN SERVICE. EMBASSY TELEPHONE 56
Oral history transcript, John Ben Shepperd, interview 1 (I), 12/30/1968, by Elizabeth Kaderli
(Item)
- with the commission or the State Parks and Wildlife Department, or that had any matters pending before that agency. And I think only two papers have ever published--the San Angelo Standard Times and the Austin Statesman are the only ones that ever published the fact
Folder, "Greece - Papandreau Visit - 6/23-24/64 [1 of 2]," Country Files, NSF, Box 127 [2 of 2]
(Item)
- of Foreign Affairs, the concern of the American Government in view of informa.tion about an imminent Turkish landing in Cyprus. He also informed Mr. Costopoulos of the action taken by the American Govern ment with the Government of Turkey, in order to avert
- a conservative. And I think his Great Society program was a one-way road to dissolution of the American way of life. I think his poverty program is going to haunt us for years to come. Those of us who supported him for president, and I'm one of them, when
- Biographical information; 13 years in DC; disillusioned with LBJ after he became President; Great Society Program to haunt us for years: it awarded indolence; LBJ a politician, not a statesman
- INTERVIEWEE: CALLAN GRAHAM INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: LBJ Library, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 2 G: Mr. Graham, very briefly sketch where you came from and how you ended up working with Coke Stevenson. CG: I have lived in Junction, Texas
- back as director of the National Youth Administration. I suspect it was not long after he came back because Austin was a small town in those days and those in the political world all knew each other pretty well. I know that I did not know him
- , either one, have made any ser ioua erro•s ot commission. Your errors have been of omission. One year aco on February first, you were a &reat shining li&ht be fore the .American people. Today I hear neither your name or Wal lace's one-tenth as much as I
- THE DENVER POST September 28, 1965 .\ .' . American ' political motivations, ·. India had no alternative but to WASHINGTON-The United accept the offer, for without the · States has offered India 500,000 additional shipments it would tons
- 29, 1986 INTERVIEWEE: WILLARD DEASON INTERVIEWER: Walter Richter PLACE: LBJ Library, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 R: What we're doing here today--this is April 29, 1986, and Bill Deason and I, Walter Richter, have decided that it would
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 3 (III), 6/9/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- INTERVIEWEE: SAM HOUSTON JOHNSON INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: The Alamo Hotel, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 2 J: "Years later, when I was on Johnson's staff, Sam Houston felt only irritation when the Majority Leader was hailed in newspapers
- . sto·ry partly ofi, and appealed to him not to sp~ead it. a.rrison said he 1ad story fr·o:m ' 1a loyal American pretty high . •. ' 1 e doubt he got it from his br·ather in lhi ( "..'•owles. isn't that dumb). April 15, 1965/5:30 pm AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI
Oral history transcript, Richard Morehead, interview 2 (II), 7/2/1987, by Christie L. Bourgeois
(Item)
- INTERVIEWEE: RICHARD MOREHEAD INTERVIEWER: Christie L. Bourgeois PLACE: Mr. Morehead's office, Barker Texas History Center, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 M: When we were talking before, we were talking about some things I'd like to add a little
- and the 1947 Texas right-to-work law; organizing urban African Americans in the 1930s under Franklin Delano Roosevelt; Price Daniel's 1952 U.S. Senate campaign based on tidelands issues; the Heman Sweatt lawsuit against the University of Texas Law School
- Washington, D. c. Mr. Vice President, Please consider this note as an endorsement of the Adminis tration's stand on the Berlin issue. I am proud that you have been one of the firmist leaders on this problem. Right. now we need every true statesman to stand
- the force (with conventional capability for use or threat in Asia). · 5. A British c 'o ntribution of three or four POLARIS submarines to be matched by an equal number of American POLARIS subs (or, as second best, by an equivalent American contdbution
- Maybor n (Templ e Dail y Telegram ) Charlie Gree n (Austi n America n Statesman) . Lunch - Sta g - Se e gues t lis t Newspaper guest s leav e Nap Driving t o Scharnhors t - Mrs . J . , Mr . & : Mrs. Ton y Taylor , Dr . Lamb , MF , Mr . & Mrs. Kellam , Li
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 12 (XII), 12/21/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- know how to read the figures at that time. We weren't aware of the fact--you know, most Americans have the concept that figures don't lie. Well, of course they don't, but people looking at the figures can lie to themselves if they don't understand
- Leinsdorf--tor Da.11as Gordon Fulcher-tir4s at discount when reach Austin 2-8156 or 8-6881 Roy Miller (Bishop and Corpus) McNeils Only oil and gasoline broker of size in Houston. He is a good man and perfectly reliable. Frost does not Janow him. He · sold
- that he issued at the inauguration of Cooperative Month--which has been October for many years, so proclaimed by the governors of most states; this is when he was president--on the place of cooperatives in American life and their value as a means
- a communist. The business side of our life was pretty much left up to me in those days. We were about to move out of our apartment in Austin, and I was trying to get it either rented if I could, or the furniture put in storage. It's interesting to read back
- "Decca" Mitford Romilly; settling Lady Bird Johnson's Uncle Claud Pattillo's estate; Lady Bird Johnson attending business school; plans for a military installation in Austin, which later became Bergstrom Field, and competition over which city would get
- troops is another. There was another reason, to be very honest about it. I'm a first generation American. My father came from Russia. Although he was an educated man, as an immigrant he made his living, since he didn't know the language, driving a blind
- --it's an old trite saying that you hear very often now--that was where the action was in politics. So I began to work for Leslie Carpenter, who still is a correspondent in Washington for several newspapers. F: Including the Austin American-Statesman. S
- and Russians have become so efficient at fishing off our three-mile coastline that they've sort of made lobsters, which are a great American delicacy, almost extinct. If they continue to fish the way they've been doing for the past ten years for the next ten
- a certain phrase or something. Between the three of us we put this thing together. He called the managing editor of the Austin American-Statesman and said, "If we air-mail this down or wire it down--I forget which, we may have even telegraphed it--will you
- , but was on a bipartisan basis. I know that on various occasions I would propose resolutions of support for his policies, because I believed in them. I thought he was a great statesman and a great American patriot. F: You had something that Lyndon Johnson had
- touches us more profoundly, nothing is more freighted with meaning for our own destiny, than the revo lution of the Negro American. In far too many ways American Negroes have been an other nation: deprived of freedom, crippled by hatred, the doors
- INTERVIEWEE: GEORGE SANDLIN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Sandlin's office, Austin, Texas Tape 1of1, Side 1 G: --by sketching briefly your background, Mr. Sandlin, and explain how you became associated with Governor Allan Shivers. S
- \Val" ! I am not saying that my young country school teacher understood the scope and depth of the disaster American farm- LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
- in the Washington Star or the Washington Post or the New York Times, or in those days the New York Herald Tribune, the story hadn't been published with LBJ. I should add one other paper, the Austin-Statesman, or, you know, the Dallas News or the Dallas Times-Herald
- Friday _ iaavax:J i~:ln~, 1967 Mr. P1tesid,e nt: Before proceeding further in our planning !01· your South American tour. I would like to r...a.ve your reaction to the itinerary described in the n1ap and schedule at '"l'ab A. The 13-day trip