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  • Parten. · I have asked Ellen Downs (Secretary Ickes) to have lunch with Bird , Nellie . and me next Friday, and the giris in Bards' office at the Navy have aske d me to have lunoy: with them on Thursday. ,Nellie found the Merry Go Round in the Tribune so
  • Silver Star
  • themselves the Black Stars. I'm 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/exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson
  • on "The Women's Movement Through the Eyes of the Media." Panelists will include Sey Chassler, Editor of Redhook Magazine; Peggy Simpson, President of the Washington Press Club; and Isabelle Shelton with the Washington Star. Tuesday will be devoted to state
  • an associate editor of the college newspaper, but I liked to write and that sort of thing. And then there was an opening at the New York Herald Tribune. A colleague of mine had gotten on the New York Herald Tribune and said, "Well, you can come on here, and we
  • rked by an exile group determined to overthrow 1 coastal sugar mill. Other reports tell of the Scalr nf .\ / ilr.• 100 ~ (t) 196'l by The Chlcaro Tribune. destruction of hundreds of acres of sugar cane in Camaguey province. Cuban artillery men
  • All 1·otn.te equnlly, but March .. Stan Stearns April ... lt1·c:mk Cancclla1·e Post .:.Wally McNnmee Chai-les
  • MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHIICGTON /) j/ I I MEz.m.ANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT From Bob Fleming Following are notes on your discussions at 6s25 p.m. Sept. 5 with the followings: Eric Sevareid CBS John Cauley, !ansas City Star Duff Thomas, UPI
  • every day in private business by people who do not have pre­ cedents when they want things done. he Orlando Star 'has a car of paper purcha•ed from a pa.per company and the T Tribune is out of paper, the paper manufacturer merely phones llartin Ande en
  • of' emigration, Star at Liverpool. He founded a publishing helped to organize the utah Central Railroad; Union Pacific; a vacancy in In J.B6ohe was sent to England for four years over the European mission, to edit the Millennial (M. F. and acted
  • in Republican terms. But the Republican Party in the state was controlled by Colonel [Robert R.] McCormick of the Chicago Tribune. By God, you weren't going to get the statewide Republican nomination unless you were kosher with Colonel McCormick, and Dirksen
  • that no reporter, when I got down here, really qualified, with very few exceptions--such as Marshall Peck of the Herald-Tribune in New York City, Paul Weeks in Los Angeles--both of whom by the way later joined the War on Poverty--there were no qualified poverty
  • in Austin, the Austin Tribune. He built the Tribune Tower. Then he also had a radio station there. The paper owned KNOW, or Marsh did. I've forgotten the precise date, but the Johnsons, with this money that Mrs. Johnson had inherited from one of her bachelor
  • a job on a newspaper. So I went to I lived in Chicago for quite a number of years. F: Which paper? E: Chicago Tribune, believe it or not. F: I was going to say--that was good training for a career Democratic girl. E: And that's the only paper I
  • .... ·- . - --- . ----------------l~--------'----l_.o:;..;.._;;_ L----E_V_ANS_~,.__R_o_w_l_a_nd__.,__,._Jr~.;_.,...-----~;l~· ----'----------~-i.......:----.-":iil'IMI . ----~~~_ro_rk Herald Tribune Office in Residence Res: 3125 . 0 Street, N. W. ~ .. . .-~-":_.:__N_A_8_-_0_290
  • that he was looking puzzled that anyone would want to see a parade. The meeting is held the following morning. Reporter magazine publishes an article by Douglass Cater on LBJ: “Lyndon Johnson, Rising Democratic Star.” 1/23 CTJ hosts a luncheon for Mrs
  • in the Masons. The Jews don't know what is going on. They have the Star of David which is six pointed. All Muslims are aware that there are only five points on a star. El Jebel has no Negroes because El Jebel means something. The De Molay people are workers
  • are lll&RJ, &n4 much la to 'be learned from the .tu4,. ot th• naUvu of the Pactftc; TRIBUNE 31, 1948 A Memorial Which '\Viii Serve ~ - On Thursday of this week three years will have passed since Sept. 2, 1945, became that V-J Day which, ln
  • of the Association of Georgia Klans (AGK) formed an organization on July 7, 1953, known as AFKKK. The "Morning Tribune", Tampa, Florida, newspaper, in its August 11, 1955,· issue revealed AFKKK disbanded on that date. · A fourth source advised on October 25, 1956
  • onl.7 and Juat aa soon as wo rld p ople• star\ doi.Q& a little pu hi.og aroun4 th elves- -puahia& their leaders into aane and sensible peao• pro• greas. How muob time he.Ye we got? Not muoh . We shall go through ihia tall ' s campaign atresa
  • ,) Legislative Programs (1965 - 1968) Lippmann, Walter (Column Herald-Tribune/N. Y.) Medicare Mental Retardation ... (j ' c~ ' .. JL I I ro~-_:/J I 'o ~ T DE~IFIED E.O. 12356, Sec. 3.4 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT . SUBJECT: NLJ By~ - - , N
  • it? C: It's referenced in here someplace. I know perfectly well; I'm just terrible on names. Well, then there was Homer Bigart [who] did a series in the [New York] Herald Tribune on poverty in Appalachia, particularly in eastern Kentucky and West
  • . Frifield's ma­ 'erial was accepted by the New ~l'k Herald Tribune News See LOBBY, A!l, Col. 1 I [1 of 3] -rttv~ s •) fl 'f ,:µ;~'1 l9~ 3 ~~ News1ne11's Junliets Pro]Jeil l\"tL J,OURY-t'ram ,."!W Al By Foreig11 Relatio11s G1·ou11 nnd the North J
  • , daily, monthly, and forever. Slowly, painfully, the human race has been struggling toward unity and peace. From the feeble work of Andrew Carnegie and the Hague Peace Tribunal--the peaoe hope of my father and of your fathers-­ we have been olimbing
  • of effort, out of which some specific pictures emerge. There was one time that Lyndon got a movie star-G: Gene Autry. J: Gene Autry, whom somehow in the course of our--I guess it was in our work on radio we had come to know him. They liked each other
  • of things in his office in one sense, and yet in another sense he delegated. He began to delegate more and more authority. F: Did you have a feeling that early that you had a star on the rise? C: Yes, I think beyond question. F: You were working like
  • Tribune who said that Johnson saw him after that speech--when he got the voting rights legislation--and said that they had just lost the South for the Democrats for the next twenty-five years, or words to that effect. G: The South? D: I'm sorry; yes he
  • . himself well. Yes, Paul Harkins was one of General Patton's star He knew his way around and handled players. G: Did you know he was the technical adviser for the movie Patton? L: Well, so was I. G: Oh, really? L: Well, General [Omar] Bradley
  • , and he called me down to lunch at what was then the old Powhatan, later the Raleigh and now gone. I remember his tales of his experiences out there and their giving him the Silver Star. didn't deserve it. I don't think he did, either. flight
  • : --young veterans in uniform, with enough battle stars to reach from hell to breakfast. When the opposition saw that, they just folded. My recollection is that KVET got their construction permit without· a hearing, and KTBC then had good, tough
  • they had ever flown the Cypriot flag. An interesting sidelight, by the way, is that the Cypriots didn't have a national anthem. And so you get into this customary thing, the exchanges of national anthems. They had a band there that could play "The Star
  • in the constant finite line. One saw once a barefoot brother scrubbing the floor of the man of science --a Jesuit seeking God through the stars. brother of the scrllb br11sh. One thought to speak with the Worn and aging hands told their story. The mind