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  • of Perestroika. Christian stressed that since Watergate, the presid nt's r la­ tionship with the press has become much more adversarial. Lee Cullum is a Dallas Morning News correspondent and regular commentator on the "NewsHour with Jim Lehrer" on PBS. She
  • ~.) . safd · ·he arranged for the . 1·e-burial aJter- he was advh1ed by · DALLAS the American GI forum in Corpus .P hristi. Tex.. that a Three Rivers funeral• home: bad • refused to · handle the soldier's remain!'! "sole-·. Longview . (Tex.) News ,. J;Y
  • , 1969 INTERVIEWEE: IRVING GOLDBERG INTERVIEWER: Joe B. Frantz PLACE: Judge Goldberg's office in Dallas, Texas Tape 1 of 1 F: Judge, tell us something about your background. Where you are from, and how you got to this point of being a circuit
  • ; 1956 and 1960 Democratic Conventions; Walter Jenkins; Goldberg suggesting that LBJ take the oath of office in Dallas from Judge Sarah Hughes after the JFK assassination; appointment to Court of Appeals; Court of Appeals procedures from 1966-1969
  • this morning in his press conference 1:33p The 1:34p t White February 1968 Johnson -pl . Tom J in and out with pages of the press conference Johnson -pl (Actually Tom J calling Loyd Hackler) Cabinet Room greet members of the National Committee on United
  • Decides on Cotton Allotment Transfers The New Mexico Case The Williams Inquiry The Bridgforth Memorandum Correspondence with Congressman Mahon The Manwaring Memorandum The Regulations are Amended The Estes Scheme The Texas Meetings The Fort Stockton
  • (DL T-3, 11/13/67) 'lbe·Dallas Morning News, a dailJ newspaper published at Dallas, Texas, in the October 10, 1967, issue, published IIARIONERNESTMCMILLAN,II an article on page 12 describing as a Field Secretary for SNCC. According to the article
  • Texas, in Belton, and lived there a good portion of my early life. I graduated from high school in the Depression years, when it was practically impossible to get any \vork. In 1933 I was offered a job as an employment service manager for a new U. S
  • . But we were looking for signs of hostility Of course, there was the Dallas Morning News of that morning, with a very unfriendly ad. IIYankee. Go Home" and so forth. mostly friendly. We saw signs like, But the crowd at the airport was Kennedy
  • Interview -- 6 The significant thing of the 1941 campaign, which I think everyone needs to understand, is that Johnson, in my judgment, won that race. We were convinced of it. The Dallas Morning News, ran the Texas Election Bureau, which was an unofficial
  • there was nothing there for me to do. The boss said, "I can send you to Panama, and you can catch up with them or better still, why don't you stay here and start a nucleus of a new outfit which we hope to have here, because we have this big lab." to stay. So I
  • , a quivering young reporter from Galveston who most recently was given an administrativeeditorial position on the Houston Post after many years as their Capitol correspondent; Wick Fowler, who was later a war correspondent for the Dallas News; the brilliant
  • Texas press in 1930s; State Observer; first contact with LBJ; Alvin Wirtz; war years; KTBC radio station; 1944 Democratic state convention; 1944 and 1946 congressional campaigns; speech writing; KTBC and aggressive new policy; UN conference; San
  • , and Governor Connally did, and plenty of mayors did. The mayor of Oakland, California, the mayor of Newark, New Jersey, the mayor of Syracuse--it wasn't political, you understand. They reacted--and not all of them reacted that way. And I want to give you one
  • Jim Lincoln Kri m - New York City Jones - pl Sitting Room portrait sitting - for portrait to be done by Madame Elizabeth Shoumatoff Oval Office w/ Joe Califano YVH.TE HOUSE Date June 7, 1968 DENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON DIARY . , the President began his
  • Lawrence, Dallas, Tex Mr. and Mrs. Ignacio E. Lozano, Jr. , Publisher, LaOpinion Mr. and Mrs. Anthony M. Macleod, Pres., Philippine-American Chamber of Commerce Hon and Mrs. Theodore R. McKeldin, Mayor of Baltimore Mr. and Mrs. John Morning, NYC Mr. and Mrs
  • Glanton Des Moines, Iowa Mr. AtMrs. Irving Goldberg Dallas, Texas Hon. At Mrs. John J. Grogan Mayor of Hoboken, N. J.; Pres., Industrial Union of Marine & Shipbuilding Workers of America Mr. & Mrs. Harry B. Henshel New York, New York Mr. & Mrs. William P
  • in the morning, the majority leader and the minority leader always are at their desks. and the press comes in, and they hold a very brief news conference. So you could see him every day without fa i1 that way. F: Did Johnson show that procl ivity for getting
  • Biographical information; 1960 “rump session;” Henry Cabot Lodge; campaign trips; Democratic ticket; Catholic issue; McCarthy censure; Watkins Committee; Vice Presidency; assassination; Connally-Yarborough feud; Dallas; funeral; Vietnam; press
  • INTERVIEWEE: ROBERT BASKIN INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Mr. Baskin's office at the Dallas News, Dallas, Texas Tape 1 of 1 F: Bob, we've known each other too long to be formal, so we might as well go on there. Lyndon Johnson? B: Briefly, when
  • for 66 "demonstration cities," it Address: David Mathews, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare was extended to 150 with no increase in funds; (2) other 18 Toward New Human Rights: Thursday Morning Session the right to equal educational
  • to show up and [inaudible] what this fine man was saying. B: Really, you, as a reporter and especially from a conservative paper like the Dallas Morning News, would actually feel threatened at times? M: Yes. A reporter is not supposed to be part
  • ; higher education for African Americans; Morehead's work for Southern Education Reporting Service and Southern School News; negative press coverage of the South; school integration and racial violence in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957; the legal
  • know. The other man you mentioned, Harry Benge Crozier, was a corre­ spondent for the Dallas Morning News ; then became executive secretary of the American Petroleum Institute where he served many years . I don't know when or why he returned to Texas
  • DISCOUNT. HIM. IF YOU NEED ADVICE OR HELP CHECK PLATO. GOD HELP . YOU ALL P'~S. THERE IS NOTHING· NEW UNDER SUN. JOHN KENNEDY .CERTAINLY . . ASKED FOR THIS ONE. HE HAS MY PRAYERS. DO vou· FINE GENTLEMAN KNOW HOW FAR OUT IN LEFT FIELD YOU ALL ARE I JOHN F
  • : Frank Wolfe, Paul Chevalier Staff Assistance: Yolanda Boozer, Lou Anne Missildine 9 The winter of LBJ By Warren Woodward The following is excerpted from an article which appeared in the Dallas Morning News, January 21, 1979, marking the sixth
  • couldn't do that in Chicago. I was going to help him on that when we got back to New York the next morning. Then when I got up the next morning, Sam Rayburn had already had his talk with Lyndon and it was set the other way, and that was that. So, yes
  • The House Ag. Committee then was chaired by Congressman Bob Poage of Waco. I retired last year. G: What year did you come to Washington? E: Reported to work for Associated Press on Monday morning, March 15, 1937. G: Okay. Did you know Lyndon Johnson
  • greatest work with the Dallas She makes Braille drums and running finds Church, I feel of all citizens family and Women's Clubs. because 11 and includes Lea, 11; Martha Kay, 10; and Mary Frances, 8. it is one in three news reease
  • of--was it the Dallas News? G: Well, or the Times Herald. B: Times Herald, yes, Times Herald. G: Tom Clark was there, too, I think. 8 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • forget you start off with twenty-two votes from the ex­ Confederate states. Then you add to that Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Nevada, New Mexico, that's another eight [ten] votes, that gets you up to thirty [-two]. Then you pick up a few oddballs here
  • and its results; contrasting of Dallas and Houston.
  • , in Waco, up in his suite. He had some of the regulars, some of the top state political reporters in his suite, talking to them, stroking them. Felix McKnight was there, from the Dallas News. I'm not sure that Allen [Duckworth] wasn't there, too, but I
  • , telling political stories. So then the next morning--we were assigned different bedrooms or cabins--after breakfast he said, "Well, let's all go in the new office." It wasn't completed then; it was just being built. So we sat on the saw-horses and piles
  • nomination; Lady Bird Johnson being spat on at the Adolphus Hotel in Dallas; the 1952 presidential campaign; LBJ's career in the 1950s; Allan Shivers and his relationship with Rayburn; Rayburn turning down the vice presidential nomination in 1944 and how
  • , I was the advance man in Rome when LBJ, on that round-theworld trip, went to the funeral, as I recall it, in Australia of the prime minister who was drowned, and decided to come by Rome. Then, preceding that, when the Pope came to New York, I did
  • leadership breakfast. During morning he meets with Morris Jaffee, Mayor Gaines of San Antonio, and Cliff Carter; Stanley Marcus, Dale Miller, and John Stemmons to present picture of LBJ Freeway proposed to be built in Dallas; Oscar Chapman; Commissioner
  • going to be in the book--it could well be called the annual--of the House. They'll have a picture of each committee. G: I suppose that will be your last committee picture, won't it? P: That may be so. G: I remember the morning I saw you last time
  • any time to ask questions. So Walter Hornaday of the Dallas [Morning] News, who is now dead, wanted to ask him some questions, and of course Walter would try to interject a word, interrupt and get in. Lyndon would say, "Now be quiet. minute
  • of [them] are not very interesting, but the Iwriter] almost always is .. Every human being has a story to tell. .." On C-Span 's news program­ ming: "I get up at four o'clock in the morning to get to the office at five ... I tear into the newspapers for two
  • of 1942, the Johnsons have bought 4921 Thirtieth Place. Atmosphere in Washington in 1943: rubber and fuel oil shortages, gasoline rationing. Early in 1943 LBJ (Lyndon Johnson) moves his office from 1320 New House Office Building to 504 Old House Office
  • an interview with him. R: You've interviewed him. G: Yes. [Interruption] G: You were saying when Henry Wallace and New Deal agriculture people started the committee-- 6 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • of 3] THE: WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON August 26, 1961 For: Vice President Lyndon Johnson From: Miss Norma C. Zandrino West Wing My fiance 1, Reverend Richard L. Irvin, Daingerfield, Texas thought you should have this article from The Dallas Morning News
  • on a non-commercial basis. There were a substantial number of those already in existence, but they lacked substantial funds; could not enter into the FM spectrum, which was a new field that had just opened; they had poor equipment, and they certainly did
  • Biographical information; public educational broadcasting legislation; 1960 campaign; liaison with Eastern states; vice presidential nomination; media campaign; LBJ and JFK in New York; LBJ and television; Cuban Missile Crisis; USIA; Vietnam
  • problem also was a problem of newspapers, too, because they couldn't get all the newsprint paper that they wanted, among them the Dallas [Morning] News, who is someone else that always fought Mr. Johnson. But he saved the day for them as far as their paper
  • than anticipated. G: What about Dallas? Did you 'ever think of duplicating the program in Dallas to reach that audience? D: I didn't do it in Dallas. The bill was $57,000. I raised [a] consid- erable amount of money, and I went up through East