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  • , Calif. A film story of how project headstart changed hi m from a child who seemed to be retarded to an alert normal youngster. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Mansera, parents I also present. Also, Mr. James Vestal, San Luis Obispo Tribune photographer ____ who
  • — - —-^ ^ ^ ^ , Carnegie Endowment Building - /"^^-^ there by Secretary Dean Rusk, Ambassador Arthur Goldberg, a group from the fXULX NCEW ^xtax^^n^^www^idxw^iKdntwxicxi National Conventi Editorial Writers: d^xR) James F. Clendinen, President, NCEW - Editor, TAMPA TRIBUNE
  • to his suite on the 11th floor and held an OFF THE RECORD meeting with editorial staff of the Des Moines Register and Tribune: Drake Mabry Frank Eyerly Cliff Miller Kenneth MacDonald Herbert Kelly Lauren Soth , , (L_,8:19p ! Departed Hotel Savery via
  • Jack Valenti George Reedy Chairman Gardner Speaker John Jim Watson Ackley McCormack of NYC former call to mjdr Pres Senator of New York talked on it Douglas Riker New York Herald Tribune Charles Mohr New York Times OFF RECORD Kenneth
  • of an impartial tribunal. The President: Shouldn't we answer all these questions about our being spread too thin? George Ball: I think Admiral McDonald can cb this. Cyrus Vance: You cannot submit this matter to a tribunal until you see what happens at the meeting
  • ^ste d N Y Daily News £ Aldo Argentieri NB C Radio . Bill Richards NB C T V May Frankp l N Y Tim es C Bob Young Chicag o Tribun e Joh Don Baco n Newhouse David Bowe s St . Louis Pos t Dispatch John Pierso n Wall St . Journa l ' John Averil l L
  • WashingtonPost Robert Youn g Chicag o Tribun e James Deaki n St . Loui s Past Dispatc Shelley Scates Heart Erwin Knoll NewhouseNewsService Ted Sell Los Angles Times John Pierson Wall Street Journal Robert Fullerton USIA Dick Saltonstal l TimeMagazine h b 27
  • ) Dudman , St . 4 ^ Louis Post-Dispatc George Weeks , UP I Harry Kelly , A F Sam Donaldson. AB C . Henry Hubbard , Newswee k . Joh n Pierson , Wal l Street Journa l Barbara Furlow , U . S. New s an d Worl d Repor t Robert (Bob ) Young, Chicag o Tribun e
  • , Evenin g Sta r Carroll Kilpatrick , Washingto n Pos t Carlton Kent . Chicag o Su n Times William (Bill) McGaff in , Chicag o Daily News Philip Phili p Warden , Chicag o Tribune Press Servic e William (Bill ) Wyant , St . Loui s Pos t Dispatc h Oscar
  • Minister visite d w/ Senato r Mansfield . An d they placed a telephone cal l to a friend of Senator Mansfiel d — the President talked on the call also. ^ Alex Warden in Great Falls Great Falls Tribune Wednesday White House P. 3 September 16 1964
  • Herald Tribune Mri Henry A Dudley, Washington, DC Mr. John C Duncan. NYC Mr. Richard Eder, NY Times Dr. Alvin C. Eurich, Pres. , Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies, Aspen Dr. Edwin B Firmage, Washington, Dc Mr. Bernard M. Gwertzman, Washington Evening
  • -May. H: Yes. F: The war crimes trial had ended just before you got there, right? H: The Russell Tribunal--the so-called Russell Tribunal. F: Right. Did that leave some kind of a situation for you to walk into? How did, for instance, Prime
  • Building of LBJ Library; Heath named Swedish Ambassador in March, confirmed April 1967; Russell Tribunal; three groups in Sweden: hard-core ant-Americans, Communists, pro-Americans; race and Vietnam both issues in Sweden; experiences of Tanzanian
  • f the day t h e rankling unpleasantness of Time, N ewsweek, the H era ld Tribune, and others discussing Lyndon’ s fast d rivin g at the ranch weekend. o v e r the E a ster "T h e P re s id e n t charged on, his paper cup of Pe a r l b e e r within
  • was another. M: Did any of them ever do it? N: No. The only successful effort came in connection with our Johnson book. It was rather widely syndicated in newspapers in installments. The [New York] World Journal Tribune, short-lived, was started in 1966
  • was very light. Attached are articles appearing April 19 in the Daily Telegraph and The Guardian, and also the Paris edition of the Herald Tribune. 7 The Guardian carried a press wire service dispatch :f'romParis stating that the French confirmed
  • Military Tribunal. House passes extension of Selective Service Act to 2/15/47. Draft was due to expire 5/15/46. 1946 Chronology ● p. 4 of 17 07/2024 4 lbjlibrary.org REFERENCE: LBJ CHRONOLOGY Drafted by LBJ Library archival staff from oral history
  • 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
  • , Hilitary Aide to The Vice President Mr. Baskin, Dallas U ews Mr. Bell, AP Mr. Scali, ABC Miss Hi ggins, New York Herald Tribune Mr . Miller, Time Mr. Greene, New York Daily News j\'h". Alexander, McNaughton Press Mr. Spivak, UPI Mr. Freedman, Manchester
  • . was vigorously opposed to jus cogens, the Article 50 that I have just described to you, and to anything that had not involved the international court of justice as a settlement tribunal or adjudicating tribunal in the case that nothing could be settled. France
  • to go to Mexico and use my Spanish; [I've] forgotten it now. But we'd work in the journalism school together, B Hall, and I worked for the Austin American and also for the [Waco] News-Tribune later. I wrote a weekly column for the--"University Life
  • certainly did." of session at National Press Club The panelists and the organizations they represented in ,the 1960s:Bonnie Angelo (Newhouse National News Service), Chuck Bailey (Minneapo­ lis Tribune), Frank Cormier (Asso­ ciated Press), Sid Davis (Group
  • Dick McGowa n - N Y Daily News John Pier s on - S&aJagJBd^AaKyiawVhg^iri r Wal l St . Journa l George Packar d Philadelphi a Bulleti n Phil Potte r - Baltimor e Su n Carroll Kilpatric k - Washingto n Pos t Bob Youn g - Chicag o Tribune James Deaki n
  • for Christian Science Monitor 1924-53; Chief of New York Herald Tribune's Washington bureau 1953-55; syndicated columnist 1955 to date\ An Eisenhower Re­ publican. Described as "mild, harmless" by press people~ Sam Yette,--A general assignment reporter
  • , and no press ever really much likes the president. Even Jack Kennedy wasn't an entire exception. You remember the phrase "managed news" arose under the Kennedy Administration. And you remember it was Jack Kennedy who cancelled the New York Herald Tribune
  • that psychological turn-around reached if we remained firm. Thanat said he had only one worry. Referring to 15 Feb issue of Paris edition of NY HERALD TRIBUNE and NY TIMES, carrying spate of stories on 'negotiations', he said he was certain Secretary understood now
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh SAZ MANERO -- I -- 16 news from all the passengers in the trip from Rome to Paris. That evening I was looking for the Herald-Tribune in Paris as soon as it came out~ sometime around ten-thirty or eleven. I bought
  • , 'Burke is a wise man, but he is wise too soon.' The average man will not bear this. Politicians, as has been said, live in the repute of the commonality. They may appeal to posterity, but of what use is posterity? Years before that tribunal comes
  • , tell these people we are newspaper reporters and we are making a survey of the house." We walked into a house which wreaked with urine. I told them I was with the Philadelphia newspaper the Philadelphia Tribune, which is a black paper, and they said
  • ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Abram -- Interview II -- 13 which the North Vietnamese would have swallowed the South Vietnamese, held no elections. As far as UN tribunals to which people could petition
  • ; Mrs. Johnson returns to White House; Lynda Johnson home for Luci Johnson's baptism; article in Herald Tribune;
  • been a fifth one there. But I remember four of us got together and we were going to cut him up. One of the guys at the television station in Albuquerque, [one from] the Albuquerque Tribune, [one from] the Albuquerque Journal, and myself, I know we'd
  • important person, so he got an immense amount of attention in Utah. Television wasn't quite as big then as it's become later, but I well remember that after his Saturday speech, the first page of the Salt Lake Tribune, which is the large newspaper
  • Tribune, and it looked to us- -we were on a freighter- -it looked to all of us on the freighter as if Mr. Johnson was the only person in the United States who did understand how far behind we were, how hard it was for us to catch up. He was the leader
  • . This article, entitled "Negroes Are Not Moving Too Fast" appeared.in the November 7, 1964, issue of the '"Post." In November, 1964, Wachtel wrote an article for King entitled "Looking Ahead" which was to be turned over to the "New York Herald Tribune
  • colum­ nist for the Dallas Times Herald, who in the course of her award­ winning career has worked for the Minneapolis Tribune, the Texas Observor and the New York Times, covered the recent revelation of pay­ ments to football players at SMU that became