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374 results
- , it's going to be one-holer because if it was a two-haler, before that Governor could make up his mind, it would be too late!" Well, Dan Moody proved this again in this case. Moody had been a New Dealer up to this time and later became violently
Oral history transcript, Charles L. Schultze, interview 2 (II), 4/10/1969, by David G. McComb
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Oral history transcript, Richard Morehead, interview 1 (I), 6/26/1987, by Christie L. Bourgeois
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- assistants and his advisers--they called themselves the New Dealers--and John Garner said, "They weren't Democrats. They were just New Dealers or socialists, whatever you wanted to call them." So the vice president and the president didn't see eye-to-eye
- TO: BRUCE THOMAS FROM: OKAMOTO My wife baa a good friend, Mr. Michael Arpad, the antique dealer in Georaetown, who i• a rabid Lyndon B. Johnson fan. Would it be poaaible to get a regular signed portrait to Michael A rpad? Many thank•. September
Folder, "[Visitors - Foreign] Adenauer, Konrad [April 1961] 1 of 2," LBJA, Subject Files, Box 90
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Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 101: Oct. 23‑28, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 41
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Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 38 (XXXVIII), 8/1994, by Harry Middleton
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- /loh/oh Johnson -- XXXVIII -- 9 of you." And she said, "Oh, have you got room to put it in the trunk of the car?" The antique dealer said, "Well, if you'll let me prop the trunk up and rope it tight we can get it in there." So he did. And dadgummit, we
- . And all this razzle-dazzle over the budget; Bobby Baker--all this had a cumulative effect and people began to think of LBJ as the wheeler-dealer. And his critics certainly helped to make sure that image was emblazoned wherever they could, and he had
Reference File Folder List
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- -Statesman Articles 5/96, "LBJ - A Hill Country Heritage" Autograph Dealers Autograph (LBJ) Autograph (LBJ) - Value Automobiles (incl. Model T) see also Amphibious Car, Limousines Autopen see also Pens Autopsy (LBJ's) Awards for Civilians see also Medal
- from the White House during the election, because he ran as a New Dealer, a New Deal candidate. nut the President was fishing in the Gulf, and after this fishing trip he landed at Galveston. Marvin McIntyre, who was his secretary at the time, had all
Oral history transcript, L.T. (Tex) Easley, interview 1 (I), 5/4/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
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Oral history transcript, George L.P. Weaver, interview 1 (I), 1/6/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- of implementing legislation, in terms of setting the moral tone in our country. Here is a man who was looked upon as a wheeler-dealer, but this has been a very clean administration. 'I'le haven't had any scandals. We haven't had a serious scandal in the five
- you come to Roosevelt being popular, he always got the votes. But I think Mr. Johnson thought that that would be favorable to him. He was labeled as a New Dealer, and I cannot understand, have never been able to understand, during the more recent
Oral history transcript, Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., interview 1 (I), 7/30/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- contest of his primary election in Texas? R: No. Actually, like most of the other young New Dealers around town, I met then-Congressman Lyndon Johnson in the early '40's, but it's not a clear recollection for me. I guess I remember him mostly as sort
- on creating legislation. He was a great manipulator -- to use that word in its best sense. F: He has been accused of being an arm twister and wheeler-dealer and so forth. S: Would you care to comment on that? Whether you saw any evidence of it? Well, I
- suspected the wheeler-dealer image, and both of these certainly 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
- ? Was one more of a New Dealer and the other one more of a traditional Democrat? 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
Oral history transcript, John E. Lyle, Jr., interview 1 (I), 4/13/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
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- , and LBJ and some of the New Dealers were supporting Roosevelt. forces? Do you recall that issue, the stop-Roosevelt LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org L: ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781
- Eisenhower. Mc As you know, Mr. Johnson had the reputation of a political wheeler-dealer during his Majority Leadership. In 1955 he managed to get through"-or you, I think, managed to get through a very sizeable increase in public housing. Didn't you work
- in the race. 80th of them I should characterize as quite conservative -- cert,ainly not "New Dealers" by anybody I s computations; and ti~e he was Editor of the Austi.n FAl'L 80lTOK: selected him as his fact-" ] ee -- I believe at that :~ay ~werican
- . Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Murphey -- I -~ 13 that he thought Lyndon was an opportunist, that Lyndon was a New Dealer, whom Mr. Stevenson utterly
Oral history transcript, Joseph J. O'Connell, Jr., interview 1 (I), 10/23/1968, by David G. McComb
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- in administration circles up to that point ; Isador Lubin who was the Director of Labor Statistics in the Labor Department . All of them I would call New Dealers . Jerry Frank, a whole coterie of people--some of them dead--most of them moved to other walks of life
- business of applying to Black as a Justice, I had kept Black as a Roosevelt New Dealer aware about what was going on in the Texas election. Black has always been one of my best friends. He did me a last great favor about two years ago--he appointed my
- . And then these same people had a· high regard for him and I can remember-F: Vlho were they, may I ask? K: It was Cl ifford Durr, D-U-R-R, who ~"as Communications Comrnission, and his ~"ife. New Dealers. Mrs. Durr was the a member of the Federal They were
- he should have had one. He has got that tremendous reputation as a wheeler-dealer, and yet I'm sure that his opposition then and his successors since have looked deeply to find something, for there seems to be a certain amount of, "Well, we're
- of his skills and all of his talents to produce legislative results designed to accomplish this, that he picked up instead the image of a kind of a Texas wheeler-dealer. And since IilOSt people who are unthinking, and either not terribly educated
- -- III -- 17 who has a big furniture store now, who was later president of the Texas Furniture Dealers Association . I think he lived at Killeen, somewhere in that neighborhood . There was one other big project and that was the Inks Dam Project
Oral history transcript, Charles K. Boatner, interview 3 (III), 6/1/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- --that little town, poor boy beginning . He had become, in my mind, what I'd always thought of as a wheeler-dealer in Texas, whereas Johnson never did show that . Now their speed of mind, of both of them, is astounding . Even before the question had formed
- , something like that? G: Yes. W: He wanted everybody to have something. At the same time, he didn't want them to throw it away, or something--I don't know. G: Was he a New Dealer, do you think? Was that his chief political heritage? 29 LBJ
- value and proceed from that basis because he almost always turned out to be right. Well, he had that kind of a gut reaction about Bobby Baker, as I recall. G: What was that reaction? P: That here was a fast operator, a wheeler-dealer, and someone