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  • that abound. A front page story in the Wall Street Journal reports that amenity of towns is a crucial factor in deciding where factories locate. The magazines you pick are apt to have an ad showing a trout r i sing from crystal clear waters, with the caption
  • was in college, I was a journalism major. I was going to be where the exciting things were happening with the people who were making them happen. Well, along came a young man named Lyndon and here I am -­ furnishing copy instead of competing with you for stories
  • on and took another Degree -- a Bachel or of Journalism. I don't think I need to tell you the many ways I have found that useful i n the ye~ r s since, although I find myself on the .other end of th e p e ncil from the r ep orter. Why am I being personal
  • for America's favorite magazines-HOLIDAY 1 yr•• $5 • the request,, Publlsherwlll,onsubserlber'a . ' refund full amount Post, 1 yr.,'$6 • LADIES' HOME JOURNAL, 1 yr., $3. All prices U.S. only. No charce paldforcoplesnotpre:vlously n W • • • · malled. Prices
  • The White House Thursday Dav 1 Expendi- Activhy (snc!ude visited by) ture Code ./ To office w/ Mrs. Simon McHugh The President said for Mary S and mjdr to remind him that any courier coming down after the 21st he wanted Vicky to come down on so she
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh June 18, 1969 B: This is the interview with David E. Lilienthal. Sir, to begin at the beginning, do you recall when you first met Mr. Johnson? You mention in your journals meeting him at the time he was assigned
  • was ready to boost them up for it. So he gave a nice lot of publicity to Mr. Johnson in our Elgin Courier, which is an old, old paper. I'm sure that's one reason we got as much publicity in Elgin as we did. Mr. Buchanan had died on February 25
  • ....•. .: : ~. attach a master copy of the Jl•po'r t to the Pt;'eaident ol the United States · and the Prime Minister of Canada, prepared by Am~aeador Merchant and Ambaaaador Hee'ney. 'Zone hundred additional cople• will come down i to .J. ". _ you by courier Sunday
  • Paris. this coming week via the week-end courier who .appeared to operate Hanoi, Prague, Paris. But we shall see • .W.W .R. ·i. . \ . SECRET PAGE 01 8 ~- ·AC fl ON -~S ·70 INFO /070 W . •· · .. R 1318152 OCT 67 .· . . -~~ .. •.. j ..• (· i
  • Guy, Lubbock --Sigma Delta Chi, Professional Journalism Society is honoring Mr. Guy on the 40th anniversay of his daily column, "The Plainsman" in the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. The President called and followed talking points prepared for him
  • and the domestic economy. ATTENDANCE: Els worth L. Abbott, the Signalman's Journal Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen, C Mr. Edward C. Adams, Intl Fire Fighter, Intl Assoc of Fire (xidxx Fighters, Washing Mr. Simon Alpert, UAW Ammunition, Intl Union, United Auto
  • as Special Asst to the White House staff ' i ^_ X *Bureau Chief attendance: | Joh n Cauley - Kansas City Star and Times i Richard Stolle - LIFE j Eric Sevareid - CBS Wayne Kelly - Atlanta Journal Walter Ridder - Ridder Publications | Duff Thomas - UPI Audio
  • White House Dav FRIDAY Activity (inciude visited bv) ture Expen Cod^ OFF RECORD: Picture with Hilding Peterson of the Wooster, Mass. Telegram and Gazette James Darke, Providence, R. I.,Journal-Bulletin (Circulation Director) Robert M. Beauregard
  • Jack Valenti asked that the President see Frank Coniff. Mr. Coniff will be the editor of the afternoon JOURNAL AMERICAN, NyC} OFFRECORD: Marianne Means, Bob Considine and Frank Coniff —; Mrs. Emmet Riordan press release During this meeting
  • , a journalism major -- and made a tape recording that she conducted. The President went to Lueders Hall -- where the made the aforementioned tap e -- thi s was th e Hall in which the President worked on the school newspaper while he was a student. Departed
  • Secy Fowler JV (pl) Jan 13, 1966 White House Thursday M. Watson (pl) to JV's ofc Back to Oval Rm --reading ticker machines To MJDR's Ofc - reading newspapers JV - re article in NY Journal American by Warren Rogers " It is the abstract
  • : Not really. I can see her kind of and remember her being there in the home and I met her, but I don't recall her. G: There's an indication that LBJ favored the establishment of a school of journalism there at Southwest Texas. Did he ever talk about
  • evening I have enjoyed, especially the company of friends frorn past and present. Dr. Reddick who gu.i ded me in journalism school to those two ‫ ס‬r three stories in the Daily Tex.an with the by-line -- "By Claudia Taylor. 11 Does one ever read any story
  • of teaching in what seemed to me a far-off, exotic place like Alaska or Hawaii. And I was a journalism major, with vague hopes of finding a place in those alluring news rooms where the clatter of events constantly breaks over typewriters. But whatever I
  • . Then I went on to the University of Texas, and this is kind of an interesting story because in a way, that's how I ultimately got to work for Mrs. Johnson. I chose Texas in part because they had a good journalism school. But ultimately, I wanted to go
  • : The Honorable John 8. Connally Address: Jody Powell, Former Press Secretary to President Carter Moduators; PanelL~ts: Arthur L. Ginsburg, Visiting Professor of Journalism, The University of Tual> 111Auslin Dwight L. Tttler, Jr., Chairman, Department
  • in his office with Mr. Paul Ringler, the principal editorial writer of The Milwaukee Journal. In this interview some of his habits certainly were evident. One thing was that he intended to convince Mr. Ringler absolutely and completely. It's very
  • LBJ's 1958 interview with Paul Ringler of the Milwaukee Journal; LBJ's practice of making telephone calls while people were in his office; Senator LBJ's ability to get information from people on the telephone; LBJ's tactics to gain Senate passage
  • , but once that bridge was crossed there's no need in going back over it. G: You were active in the honorary journalism fraternity, Delta Sigma Phi. You were secretary of that, I guess. J: Probably. It was a matter of no importance. But I did decide
  • became the number-one reporter and everybody else kind of looked around for their own stories. It was not an organized process. Time magazine works it a little [differently], because it's group journalism. [At] Time magazine, the bureau chief is assigning
  • : ---------------- 5·'41 - - !i-2-J51 OPFJCE OF TB& DJB.ECTOll UNITED STATES DEPARTME FEDERAL BUREAU T OF JUSTICE OF 1 VESTIGATION December 4, 1967 BY COURIER SERVICE Mr. Milan Miskovsky Director of Investigations National Advisory Commission on Civil Room
  • , but some difficulty in getting a hold of those papers; they had gone down to Texas. But they were sent up at our request by courier, and I think \lJe have the \lJhole record. t1: These were Presidential papers, or agency--? S: Well . . . M: There's
  • Bird was taking journalism, she could be, you know, like what's her name with the Washington Post. And in that way Aunt Effie certainly was ahead of her time, I think. Her dream was not of Bird marrying and having a family. Bird to have a real career
  • , his English was bilingual, very colloquial, and I did not have to tell him very much. fellow named Dinh Trinh Chinh was minister for a while. Another He had been educated at the University of Missouri journalism school, so he knew some. But most
  • and nieces. My father and my uncle and I felt for a long time, primarily through my own wish, that I [should] go into journalism. I had taken quite a few journalism courses while I was at the University of Texas. tion. My majors there were journalism
  • and nieces. My father and my uncle and I felt for a long time, primarily through my own wish, that I [should] go into journalism. I had taken quite a few journalism courses while I was at the University of Texas. tion. My majors there were journalism
  • and tell them, IIAll rightll--and he did do James Henry on the TV station the same way-"if you run one ad with him, you'll never run another ad in the Longview News and Journal." unpopular. Just such stuff as that. He was very In fact, I was trying
  • the University of Texas in journalism. WPA offered me a job of handling public relations for the state of Texas for the agency at a salary of about double what my newspaper salary was. So I went, with some trepidation that I was leaving direct newspapering
  • ., these major holdings : The Macon (Ca.) ./ sional elections. In December he entered Victor F., and Joseph E.- whose holdings Telegraph anq News, The Gadsden spread from The Journal of Commerce (Ala.) Times, The Cleveland (Tenn.) the Columbia-Presbyterian