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- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh HUGHES -- I -- 18 BH: Island Beach State Park, oh, possibly fifteen minutes as the crow flies north of Atlantic City. You would place it from there. There is a state house there provided for the governor as kind
- , and the President took a whole armload of records, which were the records that had been turned over to Judge Ireland Graves. It must have been a stack a foot high of books, ledgers, accounts, journals, income tax returns and everything else, and he carried them out
Oral history transcript, John Chancellor, interview 1 (I), 4/25/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- at what I like to call the intersection of two disciplines. One of those disciplines is diplomacy and the other is journalism. Where these disciplines intersect there are going to be sparks, and there's going to be conflict. Every once in awhile it gets
- Ljndon Johnson's friends also. For example, Charlie Guy, the editor of the newspaper, the Avalanche Journal in Lubbock, became a very dear friend of mine. While he and I were not always of the same philosophy, especially regarding labor, we did enjoy
Oral history transcript, Michael A. Geissinger, interview 1 (I), 12/16/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
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- , that was the personnel setup. here to the Library. Frank, of course, came down I have since had two jobs, one at Virginia Poly- technic Institute as head of their PR photo operation, and right now I'm teaching photo journalism at Rochester Institute of Technology. MG
- participated in writing it. M: It's always a group project. Was there any person in particular who gave you trouble on the Hill, or did it depedd on the issue? S: It depends on the issue. Since I was really providing technical information wherever I went
Oral history transcript, James C. Thomson, Jr., interview 1 (I), 7/22/1971, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- and its fellow travelers in journalism, and everyone got edgier and more tense. If you sat down to dinner and someone made some stupid comment about the press, there was likely to be a very quick rejoinder. I think it is true that by the end of my tour I
- on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Rather -- I -- 5 in Texas journalism [helped]. Mind you, Stuart didn't know me from toad hop; he had just sort of taken me into tow. F: He had heard of Houston. (Laughter) R
- , of the Wall Street Journal, who later became under Nixon or Ford assistant secretary of defense on public relations or deputy assistant on public information, wrote a story called liThe Guided leak." The policy was quite clear to do this sort of thing
- Stanton, who was a dear friend of Senator Johnson's, and Mr. Bill Paley had been awarded a scroll at the University o f Arizona from the Walter Cronkite School of Radio and TV Journalism. were the first recipients. So they I guess somebody gave a lot
- more of that with him, but I'm not certain in my own mind that everyone isn't pretty much the same way that way. They all feel that way, and I'm sure that Senator [Daniel] Inouye today feels that print journalism and television has done him
Oral history transcript, Thomas Francis "Mike" Gorman, interview 1 (I), 6/5/1985, by Clarence Lasby
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- Biographical information; how Gorman got into journalism; how Gorman got involved in writing about conditions in mental hospitals; the Oklahoma State Mental Hospital; Gorman's work at the Daily Oklahoman; newspaper publisher, E.K. Gaylord's
- , IIPlease explain who all these people are taking notes. They think they're news reporters or something here, journal ists. Tell them that they're your staff and they just want to record every breath taken here. II Which he didn't do. So I told them who
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 9 (IX), 8/16/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
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Oral history transcript, William S. Livingston, interview 2 (II), 7/19/1971, by David G. McComb
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- to a conversation that I had had with him in which he was telling me that the Regents were going to consider it at that meeting. So I was providing a kind of aide-mémoire to Harry about 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
- to talk to Bill Jorden tomorrow morning. R: Immediately he came over. I wanted to give him a chance to function in Far Eastern policy in general. He's come out of the journalism, but he was a very good Far Eastern man. The government had kept him since
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 8 (VIII), 8/17/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
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Oral history transcript, Clifton C. Carter, interview 1 (I), 10/1/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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Oral history transcript, Kenneth P. O'Donnell, interview 1 (I), 7/23/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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Oral history transcript, Robert D. S. Novak, interview 1 (I), 11/15/1971, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- you to Mr. Johnson when he was majority leader? N: I became the Senate correspondent for the Wall Street Journal in September of 1958. Previous to that, I had been with the Associated Press, and I had not been close to Johnson at all with the AP
- went back to college to get an extra degree. It was in writing, you know. like newspaper writing. I have forgotten the name of it. MR. CATER: Journalism ? MRS. COOPER: Journalism . She took journalism . That is the only thing I know of. She also
- TORY COLLECTION L~D O . Eugene Patterson And ress 2855 Normandy Dr., N. W. Atlanta, Georgia Biographical information : Newspaper editor b. Valdosta, Ga., Oct. 15, 1923; student N. Ga. Coll., Dahlonega, 1940-42; A.B. in Journalism, U. Ga., 1943
- himself never tried to move things one way or another? H: No, never. Bob's too good a newsman to do that--has too much regard I think for journalism. F: Now, how does NBC establish its policy? H: You know the Federal Communications Commission keeps
- here. C: Well, I was born in Oklahoma and was educated at the Unitersity of Tulsa. I received first a degree there in economics and later another degree in journalism, both of these being bachelor of arts degrees. Then I worked for newspapers
- supportive of him actively? Z: Yes,. all the way through. Yes. G: Did she prove to be an asset, and if so, how? Z: Yes, very much of an asset. She could talk for him. You see, she has a degree in journalism,. though, from the University of Texas
- believe you also did some work for President Truman before that. Was it your bona fides as a journalist that got you started in the government? C: No, it was in pre-journalism days, having had nothing to do with journalism but with what I value above
- ., publisher of the Floresville Chronicle Journal and the Robstown Record, who is now deceased--and got acquainted with him. Introduced himself, and spent the night there. think they'd ever met before that, had they, Marion? Mrs. Keach, also in the ~oom) I
- consent, unanimous consent. Because at any step of the way, in the old way of doing things, somebody could stop the operation. stop it then. They could But the Senate rules were so encumbered by all the things you had to do, like reading the journal
- -two years of it. C: Bill, I guess you know he's publisher of the Floresville Journal. F: And next morning he had breakfast with us. C: What year was that? F: I can't give you the exact year of that -- around 1930 somewhere -- 1931
Oral history transcript, Edmund Gerald (Pat) Brown, interview 1 (I), 2/20/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
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- in journals . B: At that time, I was considered one of the candidates . I went back to New York--oh I think in November of 1959,--and did a very poor job . meeting in New York, they had all of the candidates . At that It was the meeting of the National
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 13 (XIII), 11/17/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
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- in the Wall Street Journal that in the aluminum industry there were hints of antitrust action, review of rates charged for federally produced electricity, IRS [Internal Revenue Service] audits of tax returns and studies to substitute other materials
- story. I went to Chicago when I was eighteen years old because my father wouldn't let me go to the School of Journalism at Columbia. In those days they had an undergraduate School of Journalism, and I had--why, I have no idea because I didn't know
- a lot of money. So we had a number of meetings on them. But this could not be kept quiet. I have no idea who talked, but I'm sure that a lot of people said small things, and so a very careful reporter for the Wall Street Journal was able to put together