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  • Bio: (1912-1984) Journalist; Midwest Bureau Chief, Newsweek Magazine, 1953-1957; Correspondent, 1957-1961, Chief, Washington Bureau, ABC News, 1961-1965; Deputy Press Secretary for LBJ, 1966-1968; Assistant Director, U.S. Intelligence Agency, 1968
  • LBJ Connection: Journalist; White House correspondent for Time magazine
  • LBJ Connection: Journalist; Washington bureau chief for Hearst and editor for Look magazine
  • for the Philadelphia Record. Miller then served in the U.S. Army Air Corps as an editor of Yank magazine, from 1941 to 1945. After the war, he also served as contributing editor at Time magazine, 1945, and editor at Harpers magazine from 1947 to 1949. Miller's books
  • LBJ Connection: Donor of 179 bound volumes of Life magazine
  • Bio: Helen Fuller was an author, columnist, and editor for the New Republic magazine
  • Bio: Silas Douglass Cater (1923-1995) was a Washington editor for Reporter magazine from 1950 to 1963, and national affairs editor from 1963 to 1964. He was Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Army in 1951, and Special Assistant to President
  • LBJ Connection: Donor of LBJ-related newspaper and magazine articles
  • LBJ Connection: Donor of LBJ-related newspaper and magazine articles
  • Bio: Cecilia Dempster Bellinger, also known as Ceil (b. Cecilia Isobel Dempster, January 5, 1927, Dumfries, Scotland-d. November 15, 2009, Fairfield, California), was a researcher for Time magazine, and a research assistant and speechwriter
  • Bio: Stanley Karnow (b. 1925) was the Paris Correspondent for Time magazine from 1950 to 1957, North African Bureau Chief from 1958 to 1959, Hong Kong Bureau Chief from 1959 to 1962, and the Special Correspondent from 1962 to 1963. He was a Far East
  • . Eisenhower's 1952 presidential campaign. In 1953 he began work for Time-Life News Service. From 1955 to 1958 Steele was a White House reporter for Time magazine. From 1958 to 1969 he served as chief of the Washington Bureau of Time-Life News Service.
  • and more than thirty other books. He contributed to hundreds of publications and held many jobs with magazines, newspapers and federal agencies. He wrote books about the Peace Corps, the steel industry, politics, sports and Hollywood.
  • that included the Louisville Courier-Journal and the New York Post and for national magazines that included the Saturday Evening Post, McCall's, Ladies Home Journal and the Economist.
  • and wrote extensively for magazines, including Life, Look, The Saturday Evening Post and The Atlantic Monthly.
  • wrote for the Harvard Crimson newspaper. After college he began working as a reporter for the Minneapolis Tribune. In 1954 he became a Washington correspondent for the paper, as well as for Look magazine and other Cowles Media Company publications
  • , 1967. They had three children: Lucinda Desha (b. 1968), Catherine Lewis (b. 1970), and Jennifer Wickliffe (b. 1978). She is a writer and served as writer for McCall's Magazine from 1966 to 1968, contributing editor to Ladies Home Journal from 1968
  • and Washington correspondent (1925) for the Raleigh News and Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina. He authored his first novel, Clash of Angels, in 1930. He was a Guggenheim Fellow from 1930 to 1931, and served on the editorial staff of Fortune magazine in New