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  • to go to Baylor University. I graduated in 1937 with a Bachelor of Arts and a major in journalism and came up the street and went to work June 11, 1937, for the Waco News Tribune as a copy editor, and I have been with the paper ever since. M: You
  • mate! M: You made this before? Z: Before the convention. Yes, sir. Even some of my friends--editors of the Milwaukee Journal--said I must have been smoking some kind of prohibitive drug--stating it was an unimaginable ticket. But I said
  • of "This is not the kind of journalism that we want." I was amazed at the willingness of the guys to say, "Well, we're going to be fair; we will run it as it is. We'll be objective." So this was the sort of an off-the-record commitment that I got from the keys to the Negro
  • to Schell about this? R: No. G: Do you have any idea what his purpose was, other than journalism? R: I can't imagine. Well, I can imagine. I don't know. G: Speaking of Ben Suc, what happened to those people? Were you able to follow up on what
  • office, and Harold was with me, and Novy was quite interested, to a degree. And then I told him about newspaper and journalism and photography, which I was pretty good at. Novy just took the phone, called the editor of the Tribune, competing
  • and with a friendship that he extended to.them. Well, when it didn't work, from time to tim&- it didn't you know--this, again, you just can't gene.ralize, but I know that he felt .. like a Caesar .· . be~rayed when one of the journal~sts who he thought
  • stated that in the future when the Muslims are ready, it will be every man's duty to be worth ten men. It was LIGHTNER's intention to provide the instruction to enable each man present to be able to ffght and to beat ten men. 7 CONFIDBfflAL --w CE
  • done, expressed found gratitude for ··tne aid being provided by the United States, He asked that this be conveyed to President Johnson as soon as possible pending his formal reply to the latter's letter. 2. 0£ Costa Rica was President Trejos said 1hat
  • , "Yes, I do." The President said, "Well, I knew that you'd be able to provide the package. You just saved me some money." We got out of the helicopter and A.W. was there to meet us in his car. We drove around looking for deer, and I think stopped
  • : Geylin. G-E-Y-L-I-N. M: I thought he was with the Wall Street Journal. Was he with the Post? l: Well, he may have been, but he's been at the Post as head of the editorial page several years. He had complained to me about the time the President went
  • . the Senior Civil Service (as recommended in the Report on Personnel and Civil Service) is urgently required in Research and Development to provide competent administration. Research and Development is a highly technical field, requiring special­ ized
  • blue-chip Executives Club: "If this been serious security lapses. Before his break the story-provided it wasn't in type of man had information vital •to first arrest in 1959, Jenkins had at least two security checks. In 1956 the Air print elsewhere
  • blue-chip Executives Club: "If this been serious security lapses. Before his break the story-provided it wasn't in type of man had information vital •to first arrest in 1959, Jenkins had at least two security checks. In 1956 the Air print elsewhere
  • of such findings to the advancement of human welfare. Eventually it is planned to establish Memorial headquarters in Honolulu which will provide laboratory and other facilities for evaluating and distributing the results of the work done at the Field Stations
  • archival staff from oral history transcripts and other sources as a service to our researchers. Not intended to be complete or definitive. lbjlibrary.org 1/26 discoverlbj.org JFK introduces a bill to provide medical care for the aged under the social
  • . HOWEVER, INFORMATION WHICH MARK fAs(ER AND .:.,-­ PROVIDENCE GUIDE YOU IN YOUR LONELY DECISIONS. 0 0 PURSUANT TO CONVERSATIONS WITH MR. JACK VALENTI AND MR. 0 oour-t_ASS CATER AT THE WHITE HOUSE ON DECEMBER 21, 1965, I AM 0 SENDING THEM
  • thing that we did was to provide that members' retirement, except for the formula of 2 1/2 per cent for each year of service, would include all of the general benefits that are a part of the retirement system for all federal employees . We came
  • important today than in the 1950s. However, as we grope toward new regional arrangement• in the Middle Eaat, we are in no hurry to abandon an organization which baa provided a pattern of realonal cooperation that is now beginning to pay off in non-military
  • to keep peace within these United States by militant action in overhauling the basic business of government. That is, by oorreoting the real abuses of both capital and labor minorities and by providing a better scheme for living for the codm.on man
  • "Donovan, LA Times Robert Keith Fuller, Asst Gen Mgr AP i n NYC Wes Gallagher, Gen mgr AP Henry Gemmill, Bureau Chief, Journal Hon. So l Linowitz, Amb t o OAS William S. Kerby, Pres. U . S. Journal REMARKS, impromptu, by the President about the Vietnam war
  • the States weren't moving. It was killed by the Meat Institute and by the State Commissioners of Agriculture so this year we put in a mild one , providing for matching funds from the Federal -to the State if they would move into the field of meat inspection
  • Intelligence Task Force to manage this crisis. It was able to formalize the continuous liaison within CIA and outside the Agency. It provided a mechanism to keep me informed of the activities and plans of the Agency, to keep me abreast of the current
  • as promptly as possible and Humphrey and I were both concerned that we hadn't gotten the regional meetings going as of the fifteenth. Joe Napolitan reported on radio spots, five to fifteen minutes in length, ready to go out to local areas. We provide the spots
  • that this could become a matter of public discussion and it could be reported in such a way that it would look devious. We had that occur. As I recall, it might have been the Wall Street Journal that made an effort to dig into these procedures and failed
  • was not popular; O'Brien's and JFK's relationships with Bryce Harlow and Dwight Eisenhower; congressmen using the navy or air force for travel and Sam Rayburn's opposition to these junkets; providing transportation to bring members of Congress back to Washington D
  • . JESSE GRAYlett the area at 6:00 pm.. The above demonstration NYT-2 on Pebruary 14, 1966. was also reported by An article in the "Journal .American" dated February lS, 1966, on page three, narrated that tour associates - 16 - • 1 f ' NY 100
  • Sigma Phi, which is an honor journalism sorority to which I had belonged in the University of Texas. This was a question-and-answer; the victim--the speaker--was asked questions by all the members of the sorority. This was in Fort Worth. I found
  • of Science degree at Columbia. What was that in? M: Journalism. G: In 1955 you received a law degree at the University of California in Berkeley. From 1948 to 1952 you engaged in journalistic practice in Washington, D. C. and Los Angeles, is that right
  • me see. That would be his He'd already got himself set up It's just characteristic of Lyndon, I remember his providing me with offers of assistance, about keeping your fences up back home, doing this and doing that on various legislation. B: What
  • the results, but, anyway, that was part of it. Another experiment we had in that period we never used before was the extensive use of radio. Coming out of journalism, the newspaper business, my interest basically was in print. But Howard Woods of St. Louis
  • saw my name in there--he was there for INS or Hearst--and he said, "Gee, if Beech is going to go, I got to go, too, or else I'll get a rocket from the New York Journal American "--or at least that's what I think he was thinking--and Jim Lucas . So
  • you to Mr. Johnson when he was majority leader? N: I became the Senate correspondent for the Wall Street Journal in September of 1958. Previous to that, I had been with the Associated Press, and I had not been close to Johnson at all with the AP
  • , in the School of Journalism. They took pride in her after he was elected. She was one of their girls who had made good by marrying this young congressman. So I'd hear her name around. She was more than an ordinary 14 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • provide for assured continuity that would have the appropriate people administer as they should, because they'd feel that you wouldn't be around and they'd still be there. And that affected you constantly, to the point where you turn your back on the whole
  • ; The Wayward Bus, 1947; Russian Journal, 1948; East of Eden, 1952; The Winter of our Dis­ content., 1961; and Travels 11ith Charlie, 1962. Mr. Steinbeck was a-.,1arded a Pulitzer Prize in letters for The Grapes of Wrath in 19lto., and a Nobel Prize
  • of the Corporation's transac• We operate, among other things, two companies active right here in Metropolitan New York. One is the Westchester Street Transportation Com­ pany, providing bus service in Westchester County: the other is V.1.P.Metered Transporta­ tion Co