Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

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

1536 results

  • Luther. foreman of the Amarillo expressway maintenance section; and Glenwood Vierus, roadway maintenance supervisor for Washington County. A special citation was given to Troy King of Pecos County for roadside planting, and employees of the Amarillo
  • , as I called him. G: What did they talk about when they were together? N: State of the nation. State of the economy. Ed Weisl always used to be like a--well, we called him Eddie the Wise because he was like a patriarch adviser to the kings
  • H eflin Heid eke Holstein Holt Horany Hughes Hull Isaacks Ivey .Jackson James Ja.meson Jobe Johnson Jones Kazen Kilgore King Kirkpatrick Latimer Lee Lehma.n Lewis Lindsey Loving Luedemann ;\IcCann ll1cCorkle Mc· Daniel Mc·Donald McGregor Steward
  • . G: Were you involved in any of the activities in the wake of Martin Luther King's assassination? O: No. G: Where were you at the time you learned the news? O: I had to be in Washington. That was April 4. That was prior to my resignation
  • Schnittker -- II -- 6 This issue coincided with the Martin Luther King assassination, the Poor People's March, and the civil rights acceleration of 1967 and 1968. Much of the Poor People's March, a very large part of its agenda, was "more food for more people
  • in the spring and summer of 1967 and 1968, particularly the one here following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King? Did you have any relationship with the White House on this? K: No, not really. F: Let's shift to foreign affairs. You made a trip
  • 29, 1963 Bernard Safran 8 MARTIN LUTHER KING February 18, 1957 Boris Chaliapin BOB HOPE December 22, 1967 Marisol LADY BIRD JOHNSON August 28, 1964 Boris Artzybasheff BOBBY KENNEDY May 24, 1968 Roy Lichtenstein BARRY COLDWATER June 12, 1964
  • created by the subjects of the portraits. The bronze pieces, representing Berks' output over a long career, included leaders in the worlds of politics (Presidents John­ son, Kennedy and Truman); religion (Pope Paul VI, Martin Luther King, Jr.); industry
  • possibly introduced him. G: Yes. P: He was working for Congressman--King Ranch, South Texas. G: Yes. P: K1eberg. G: Well, did you have much contact with Johnson before you worked in that Richard K1eberg. That's right. campaign, the 1934 campaign
  • Department for some years, primarily because of what I regard as its obvious and inexcusable failure to investigate effectively the shootings of President John F. Kennedy, Reverend Martin Luther King, Senator Robert Kennedy and, more recently, Governor George
  • ago, July 2, 1964: LBJ signs the Civil Rights Act in the East Room of the White House. Just behind the President are Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Whitney Young (accepting a pen from LBJ). 10 the corridor to create the appearance of a cul cle sac
  • :]:t}fl~--f---A-- -2(,f ....,...-... 2-1,1p_ 0/e.rt [Duplicate of #lOa, NSF, CF, Norway, "King Olav V Visit"] #39-memo,1---U-Astew-to-Pr-esident, -c ~F#LT 4:35----p;m: f7-ZJ,1 I-IS-ff 1p FILE LOCATION NSF, Memos to the President, Walt Rostow
  • /loh/oh Alexander -- III -- 7 F: I remember the Nat King Cole fiasco. A: I don't think his show lasted six months--again, with someone as prominent as he was. F: One of the cliches is that entertainment and sports are a road to o p p o r t u n
  • ) !• I. iii.via, Ida J ebnstenian-Sun, Pub. P. I. M~ (1ft. lad. -.) (1S,766)✓fe,w--, • · Bprne 1 Id. JJ.,cq Meuat,~b. Ce., 148 Heward St. - fele~ru ✓Vil■• - Tia ■ lira. • ~~ ~ ~ o. P. Bex 9325 (6,030) 518 I. Martin st. Id. & Publisher, (Neva
  • , and Martin Luther King hold a conference of key Negro leaders in Washington to plan a Prayer Pilgrimage to Washington to draw attention to civil rights issues. May 17th, the third anniversary of the Supreme Court school desegregation issue, is chosen
  • . . . /. , . •. ,. ' '. . .. ------------~-----------------------------------------... SIMONE t-- BARBARA ..,... BUFORD ELLINGTON ...., JOHN BEN ~ MARTHA HODGES ,....,, LUTHER HODGES "11HtRGQ. u- ~ SCOOTER TOMMY -•(Jones) BETTY - • (Martin) BARBARA • (Howar) LIBBY ( Cate~ , ta ; l - ·- J. • .. .• ti V • \ I
  • like to talk about a couple of national matters which were occurring at about this time. Some time, I believe in April, I received a phone call from Martin Litton, the travel editor of Sunset magazine, and himself an extremely ardent conservationist
  • - - - EMANUEL CELLER (D.-N. Y.) FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1966 THIS IS NO TIME FOR PANIC Nobel Prize winner, Dr. Martin Luther King, able civil rights leader, asks President Johnson to abandon the military junta now ruling South Vietnam
  • , particularly Louis Martin, people like that, which is a general feel-out, as they do in these situations. B: There has been some talk that perhaps Mrs. Johnson was your strongest recommender. W: I would say this, that I got to know Mrs. Johnson better than
  • with the Pres ident . He claimed that ~RTIN LUTHER KING, a Negro leader, attende d a communist trai ning -school at Folk Highlander. He also a ttacked the National Council of Churches. An associate of SHELTON9 MELWEN SEX'l~ON, was selling Klan paraphernalia
  • for them because the man who owned and ran that one was a very close friend of hi.s from 01 d Texas days, Martin Anderson. So that was an exception. can at the present time. It's very much Republi- Anderson has sold it. T counseled with them about
  • Secretary McGif fert 32,33,37 March on the Pentagon 33-36 Analysis of the M-16 rifle 38,39 Controling police type organizations during civil disturbances. 41,42 April disorders after Martin Luther King's death Tape 112: 1-5 April riots after Martin
  • munism in Asia. lt was no le wrong, LBJ thought, to leave the brown- and ellow-skinned peoples of the world to ommu­ ni m, than it was to leav south- rn blacks to th tender mercies of white segregationists. But by 1967 Martin Luther King had be­ come
  • table: Her Majesty, the Queen of Nepal; Cong. Cecil King, Miss Marian Anderson, Mr. Robert McKinney, Mrs. Tony Martin, Mr. Frank Pace. Jr. . Cong. Leonor Sullivan, Hon. Lucius D. Battle, and Mrs. Kirti Nidhi Bista (wife of the Deputy PM) Coffee
  • , I can't imagine that the President would have stuck with that decision. And when it can happen on a little thing like Martin Luther King, flag-lowering, in comparison to these other things, I think you can see how important it is that people working
  • an executive order versus legislation; fair housing; Wozencraft's opinion of reviewing and redrafting executive orders; OLC's work clearing proclamations for White House release; the proclamation of a period of mourning following Martin Luther King's
  • degrees; rain is expected most of the day. Most of the marchers have light plastic raincoats. Since Martin Luther King had to go to Cleveland to give a speech, Mr . Young is in charge until his return. Mr . Lewis of the SNCC is second in command. The group
  • File unit description: Documents center on the demonstrations and the controversy over the voting rights of Negroes in Selma, Alabama; the march led by Martin Luther King, Jr.; Gov. George Wallace's meeting with President Johnson; and the decision
  • )] Conner and (Martin Luther] King [Jr.], it had the country much more in a turmoil than Oxford. You didn't know what you were trying to do. I mean, that was one of the problems--that there were no clear objectives anywhere and you didn't know what they were
  • ~mt air e Rev. Martin Luther King, '"anotfher Gandhi," said Slidney Poitier, who represents "the digniity of the Negro." Uninformed Pupils Mrs. Brnwn is currently vis­ iting school systems in an ef­ fort to interest eduoalto:l'ls in :the textbook
  • LBJ’s decision not to run for re-election in 1968; Martin Luther King’s death and LBJ’s view of King; LBJ on civil rights; open housing bill; trip to Chicago 4/1/68; the idea of moving the Democratic National Convention from Chicago; Chicago’s Mayor
  • Lady Bird flies back to D.C. & she is driven to the USS Sequoia; LBJ & Lady Bird read newspapers & have breakfast; Johnsons watch Clark Clifford & Maxwell Taylor on tv; Johnsons watch Martin Luther King on tv; lunch; Luci Nugent meets boat
  • was forced to work abroad," informs Eichler. In addition. he reveals that one of our well-known "extreme rightist" actors is on record in the dossier as criticizing Eartha for marching with Martin Luther King Jr. during the Selma, Ala., civil rights
  • : None whatsoever. In fact, I picketed only after I could not get any response from a series of wires to the President asking for an audience with him. He had been giving audiences to Martin Luther King and other groups, other individuals, and I had
  • look back at the day I was appointed with the Viet Cong inside the Embassy garden there in the TET offensive, and the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy, the urban riots and convention battles, and all of the things that happened
  • ming, Politics and the PubhL Interest: An Adrninistrntivc Biograph) of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting' • Julie L. Pycior, 'Lyndon Johnson and M xican-Amcril-ans in the Great Depression"· Jame; Ralph. "Northern Protest· Martin Luther King, Jr
  • August 6, 1999. AMONG FRIE February 1 Henr Kissinger; Fifth Harry Middleton Lecturer February 17 William Barrows Gives One-Man Show on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. February 19 African-American Art Exhibit Opens February 29 n Evening with Lawrence