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  • . Are you talking about Harris-Blair? G: Yes. S: Well, I'll hunt for the other one, then. ES: Do you have any record of where Lyndon was made a member of Pi Gamma l~u? G: Yes. Now, that was a journalism [club], is that right? ES: That was history
  • went back to the newspapering business, and I think it's probably the finest thing that ever happened to me. I've certainly enjoyed my fifty-plus years in journalism, and Mr. Johnson obviously enjoyed his many years that led eventually
  • in that particular course, Journalism 312 or whatever. It got to the point where certain factions of the college, of the student group, didn't feel that the students were getting enough recognition or enough acknowledgement, and so there was a little turmoil
  • Enquirer called CHINFO [Chief of Information], and they said, "Hey, the whole story is out there. What you got was released and there it is. There ain't no more." They advised me that if I got any inquiries from any of those journals to refer it to CHINFO's
  • he could ever do if he'd take this subcommittee. So I told him a story about how I'd been with Governor Cox in Atlanta after he'd had a readership test on the Atlanta Journal. He kept telling me it cost twenty five thousand dollars to have
  • was telling him--I've forgotten how it came up--about some of my problems with the Southwest newspapers particularly, the Shreveport Journal, and President Johnson remarked, "You know that is an area which has the most right-wing isolationist people
  • thought it would be very nice to live in a small town--he didn't necessarily say live in Austin; I remember he said a smaller town one time--and own the newspaper, buy the newspaper. With Lady Bird's degree in journalism that would be right up her alley
  • to do with the food program. But I cannot be sure, because, hell, this has been twenty-five years ago and I didn't know there was going to be a bright, young Texan here talking about it twenty-five years later. I didn't keep a journal about it. I
  • . either, five or ten dollars a week . We didn't pay very much Homer Olsen would work for us . We published a daily oil journal up there, a mimeographed oil company report that we had to have extra help for, for the mechanical work of getting it out
  • knowledge and Stevenson's knowledge and you sort of bred them together, if maybe those two great minds might get us out of this abyss that we're in now. Because I recently read in the Wall Street Journal where that if you continue to spend--I'm talking
  • . President. What is the problem.?" The problem was that he planned to announce the next day that Fowler would succeed Dillon and was worried about the editorial reactions in the Times, the Post, the Wall Street Journal, and Business Week, as well he should
  • , or radio folks or "ikewise, they .risk their inevitable, The Fifth ,kolsky. quotas from to Nationalist China by the Russians._ phical error, a sen­ lay'a Journal-Ameri­ meaning. It read :_ most militant and • The aeni-.,!nce, as •ea~ does represent
  • City, and BILL EPTONwas present at the meeting. '!be group held a discussion on China. NYT-1 March 11, 1964 - 9 - • .. I . } NY100-138651 on July 24, 1964, OOMFRASCA,Night City Editor or the "Journal American", a NewYork City daily n6wspaper
  • , has come home to Texas. She was recently named Govern­ ment and Public Affairs Woman of the Year by Ladies Home Journal and is a mem­ ber of the President's Com­ m 1ss1on on International Women's Year. Among her varied activities, Mrs. Car­ penter
  • the Goliad massacre. While a student at the University of Texas in the mid-1930s, Hardeman worked as sports ditor of the Daily Texan, and after several hard-fought campaigns he was elected editor. His dual interests in journalism and politics continued
  • journalism and speech communica­ tions. He is president of Martine "I am here," said Vernon Sykes, ''to tell you about a little colored boy born in the Mississippi delta in Forrest City, Arkansas ... in a wood shack that stood on concrete blocks
  • Bird Johnson in the White House (The following is adapted rrom an article written by Senior An:hivist Clau
  • conversations. Since the Library opened 111 1971. researchers orking in the archives have produc d 786 books, 204 dis ertations, 93 theses, and nearly 900 journal articles and confcren e p·tpers. Photo by Charles Bogel 9 The "Mayor of the Reading Room
  • rocket· had a habit of blowing up on the pad. One headline story in a British journal stated: "Cape Canaveral: A jealous husband shot and killed his waitress wife last night. It was the only successful shot here in weeks." The space program was about more
  • Intelligencer drew the morai: "We presume that our President and his Cabinet are by this time convinced that they have forfeited the public confidence ••• " 1/ "The War with Mexico, ti Justin H. Smith 5 Whig journals now assured Mexico that "her cause
  • in all papers except the Atlanta Constitution and the Journal, my hometown papers. So it appeared in the front page of my hometown newspapers in relatively large print, "Rear Admiral So-and-so has said" the following things and so forth. So he taught me
  • questions on, I'll bring them out as we go along or I'll bring them up at the end. Would you like to continue from the point where we were? F: Yes. Now, I'm following through the journal notes that I kept intermittently at the time I was at the White
  • the Wall Street Journal called and said, "What do you think of the merger?" And I said, "What merger?" He said, "The merger of the Departments of Commerce and Labor that the President is about to announce." And I said, "You're out of your cotton-picking
  • the heart attack, and then I thought for a while, perhaps, that he would be permanently sensitive to this, but it was interesting to me that despite the little clues that I found in this journal that I kept, he got over his concern. I remember certain
  • to Richard Nixon. Df·i: That is true. F: When did you first get to know Johnson? OM: I actually met Mrs. Johnson a considerable time before I did the President. He were schoolmates at the University of Texas together and in the journalism school
  • instance where they paid a GI to be filmed cutting the ears off of a dead VC. This sort of journalism wasn't something that anybody can be proud of. But all in all, I'd say that the press called the shots as their publishers saw them, and some were very
  • doing that manual typing myself . But in '41, you see, I was in journalism school, just scratching my way through college . It was a very interesting tour . F: Trying to pick up an extra,fifty cents here and there . B: But 1948 is when I really
  • in the liberal journals of opinion. So I discovered the Nation and the New Republic in college and began to be interested in seeing the country come out of the Depression, so that the opportunities of many people were enlarged. (Interruption) M: Now, you were
  • , I was really out of touch with the mainstream of academic economics. I wasn't reading the journals, LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ
  • Journal cited radio station. TOW. Carlos Alvarado above on December 11, 1953, eulogized Jerez, ls a Communist. the Guatemalan Communist dally news­ Second. The Chief o! the Press Sec­ paper Tribune. Popular. tion of President Arbenz' publlclty office
  • .' She would nap until the company started up again, taking her food with her and eating on horseback. Her young son rode with her. She said in her journal: 'Sometimes I found my­ self fast asleep on my horse, and only 14 when I was nearly over
  • Monroney, when Secretary Anderson had been waiting for half an hour to give testimony to the Senate Banking subcommittee. 3/19 The Wall Street Journal reports that recession is sparking interest in a capital bank proposal that would provide longer term
  • ". The National Intelligencer presumed "that our President and his Cabinet are by this time convinced that they -have forfeited the public confidence ..• " Other Whig journals assured Mexico that "her cause was just, that a majority of Americans detested the war