Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

374 results

  • , ' ·•' . • . I j t ; ·.,•, •. • . . . .. :.. ·.. I ' ' ii I • I - :._,., !..,:\/, . TEA : i :''?;{l~Yi r:·~ :: •:-Copyric;3ht1982. The kroge . co. we reserve the ric;3htt, . llmlt Quantities. None-sol< .to dealers, Prices effectlv1 ·:sun.. Aug. 22
  • , ' ·•' . • . I j t ; ·.,•, •. • . . . .. :.. ·.. I ' ' ii I • I - :._,., !..,:\/, . TEA : i :''?;{l~Yi r:·~ :: •:-Copyric;3ht1982. The kroge . co. we reserve the ric;3htt, . llmlt Quantities. None-sol< .to dealers, Prices effectlv1 ·:sun.. Aug. 22
  • , as a wheeler-dealer. This is where the real charge came. Was he a wheeler-dealer in the sort of flamboyant sense, or was it just the fact he was a man who stayed after things? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org R: ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • , early in President Johnson's Administration I had discussed the possibility of sending a small delegation to the Soviet to clear up some areas of concern that I had, which arose from the fact that Vie were being told by the two big grain dealer
  • to rest in the Library or not. G: I think you'll find copies. J: I hope so. Yes, there is a copy of his stationery, which had the familiar red fish at the top, "T. J. Taylor, Dealer in Everything." It used to say, "Dealer in General Merchandise." Later
  • confident of victory, because he had a statewide image. Johnson had a district-wide image, although Johnson had made one statewide race in 1941 against O'Daniel. Stevenson was conservative and Johnson was a New Dealer, and so Stevenson had not the slightest
  • : Late February. T: Any rate, we decided to transfer the airplane and there was a company in San Antonio that serviced airplanes. Zachry. It was owned by Mr. [H. B. "Pat"] I don't remember the name of the company. craft dealer over
  • exclusively members of Congress. G: Johnson was regarded, I think, pretty much as a young turk, a liberal in those days, a New Dealer. R: I suppose you also knew Maury Maverick. Oh, indeed I knew Maury Maverick, but if I start talking about him we'll
  • decloive person. he didialt al6vayl- Like it. During this period wovild you call I.-Am an all-out New Dealer or an onthasla ic 'New De er or zoine such adjective aa that" I would say that he waa -in all-out ~Te-w Dealer . Admiration for the President
  • of delegates on the ballot in each southern state who would be pledged to vote against Truman or any Fair Dealer who e-spoused a Truman platforiµ. Tl).is seems to be the plan of the important -southerners. None has come out specifically
  • Dealer. In the real sense of the Roosevelt tradition--Social Security, yes, minimum wage, yes, the kind of economic legislation for depressed areas, yes, education, yes--he was a Rooseveltian Democrat, and the Social Security issue was hotly debated
  • New Dealer in those days. He really took off his coat. G: Lots of gestures? K: Lots of gestures and he haggled with the hecklers in the audience. G: Did he take on the hecklers? K: He would take them on. He always held his own, you know
  • of Price Administration, in October of '41 and stayed with them through October of '45. At that time I reSigned from government service and went to Corpus Christi and went in business for myself as a dealer for Friedrich Commercial Refrigeration and Air
  • ? M: Quickly, yes, sir, with the utmost dispatch. Mc: For the sake of the typist, I need to know how to spell these names. You mentioned someone by the name of Rowsey. M: Rowsey. R-O-W-S-E-Y. Mc: And the Chevrolet dealer? M: McConchie. M-C-C
  • was a general merchandise store? T: Yes. G: Let me ask you to describe it. T: It was just a big, big stone building, two-story. It had a sign on it, "Dealer in Everything," and he tried to live up to that. He wasn't afraid to tackle anything. G: Did he
  • Welfare Administration at that university, is often called the "Father of Social Security,'' because he helped draft the original legislation as a young ew Dealer in the 1930s. In his presentation, Cohen disputed the contention that the social security
  • the longtime activist for civil rights and ot er causes recount some of the experiences in her eventful and colorful life. Now 80 Mrs. Durr was a transplanted Alabamian in Washington dur·ng the 1930's. She and her late husband, Clifford, were ardent New Dealers
  • was the last of the original New Dealers to occupy the White House and like FDR despite his cautious tendencies-and like FDR he was cautious-he was will­ ing to experiment. Ht: thought there would be time to find out what worked and what didn't. Helping once
  • , there was the unconditional love of her Grandpa Patton. a junk dealer and ex-convict. He told her she was spe­ cial and worthy of God's love. Then there was the Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church with its emphasis on respectability, educa­ tion, and responsibility
  • •••• The ~ Aubrey Williams, Maury Mavericks, Mrs. John Corson, Alt"' meyers, a Mrs. Ellen Woodw~rd of Mississippi--quite a sle of ardent New Dealers, that now nearly extinct breed. Mr. Corson has been drafted by Altmeyer into holding three · jobs, one of which, re
  • ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Jackson -- I -- 2 the fact that he came from Texas and was in the thirties, as I understand it, a New Dealer. And that liberal image in the eyes of Mr. Roosevelt gave
  • Jimmie Allred writes LBJ letter of thanks for treatment LBJ gave him in Washington when he was there and for “wonderful gathering out at your home.” 2/16 Banquet of New Dealers in Austin, attended by Texas federal, state and county officials
  • . H: That's right. But Johnson never was a captive of the southern bloc. He was trying to be a captain of them, rather than a captive. You see, being a Roosevelt New Dealer and being a protege of Sam Rayburn, he obviously couldn't be a real
  • be no better anti­ coagulant bait. LURAT bait is safest to use. The LURAY self-feeder carton is the most effecient, economical, and effective way to feed anti-coagulant bait. The cost is insignificant compared to the loss that rats and mice inflict. DEALER
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh FISHER -- I -- 14 F: I think so. Me: He had a reputation, or gained a reputation, during his majority leadership days, as a wheeler-dealer. Do you recall any events or examples of legislation that really required his very
  • Biographical information; meeting LBJ in 1943; casual relationship with LBJ in House for six years; controversial 1948 election of LBJ over Coke Stevenson; LBJ’s reputation as a wheeler-dealer; insecure politically in Texas; dedication of Medical
  • he started out. R: Oh no, no, nobody had ever heard of him. No. Here's a man whose county had only been attached to the district for two years. He was a New Dealer in the time when that wasn't necessarily popular. I don't know whether you have
  • 24617781] G: I know that FDR did that. R: I don't either. G: Was FDR criticized for that move? R: A little bit by the New Dealers. More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh I'm not sure it was tied to-- No, I
  • , and naturally he and Johnson had sort of a political affinity . to Roosevelt . He was a New Dealer . Johnson was close Jimmie Allred was a New Dealer . Johnson supported Jimmie Allred very strongly when he ran for the Senate, and Jimmie Allred supported
  • of Congressman Kleberg. Now those were the days--we were contempo- raries of a sort--where the young New Dealers around Washington congregated at all hours of the day and night, particularly at night. I came to Washington in 1933. F: You P
  • . That's the kind of operation now. You know he had a reputation of being a wheeler-dealer, and I wouldn't say it came from intimate experience that would cause me to say that. I was pretty young and a freshman in '58 and new in the Congress, you know
  • matter to the dealer, if he got the stamps, and he didn't follow strictly the rules . It could go for purposes for which it wasn't intended, and it was generally regarded as a difficult thing to handle . I think this was the main reason . And in fact
  • couldn't get together; they were divided by too many issues. The ultraliberals, for instance, for whom Kennedy wasn't liberal enough; the old New Dealers who kind of looked upon Kennedy as the son of the man who had given Roosevelt a lot of trouble
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Small -- I -- 4 postmaster general? [Arthur Summerfield]. He was a Chevrolet dealer from Detroit. He called a meeting with the Republican senators and announced that he was going to get rid of every
  • think he was ever par­ ticularly effective in understanding the House business . I don't think he was a very great wheeler and dealer in the House after the honeymoon was over . I personally believe that what we got out of the Goldwater Congress
  • -- 11 and [he thought they] would consider him an obnoxious young New Dealer. Brown says he was convinced that Johnson could sell himself--there's that Treatment A again--if he had the opportunity, and he arranged the opportunity, a meeting in a Houston
  • and the smoke-filled room type of operation. B: He was generally viewed as just a southern politician, a wheeler-dealer type? C: Well, I think he was looked upon as a wheeler-dealer type. I think even in Wisconsin there's still some recognition