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  • : How does it differ working for a wire service and working for a daily like the L.A. Times? M: Well, I've now worked for a wire service, and a daily, and a weekly magazine. And the deadlines can actually get rougher, in a certain way, because so long
  • , and the rest of them follows him. It was in Time magazine I think. G: Why did he walk out? R: I guess it was because Pauley certified the other group of delegates also. And when you 15 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • to me in the lobby, "Now, I see this fellow on the front of Time magazine here; it says 'from Texas.' Have you ever heard of that man?" And I said, "Well, I'm sure that you won't believe me, but I was sitting in that man's living room talking to Mrs
  • coverage, how much time can you spend! you say over and over again exactly the same thing! How many times can With your magazines and your newspapers, there's just a limit to how much you can--and with the financial end of it, how much it costs. Ba: It's
  • to their congressmen and senators, to other people of influence; they published pamphlets, magazines, and books, urging statehood. And toward the end of the fifties statehood was a going concern as far as interest was concerned. It was in the newspapers all the time
  • Item Autographed: u, 1964 ( ( ( ( ( ) ) ) ) ) ( Photograph ot the President, furnished by office Photograph ot the President, furnished by party being autographed'tor Photograph ot President with someone else ) Magazine Cover ) Newspaper Picture
  • . l,t,Hon. William H. Hastie 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Phila., Pa. Mr. Ralph L. Helstein Pres., United Packing House, Food & Allied Workers,. Chicago, Ill. George P. Hunt Editor, Life Magazine, NYC Dr. J. Willis Hurst Emory Univ.,. Atlanta, Ga
  • ) Magazine Cover ) Newspaper Picture Further description of photograph if necessary: 8 x 10 glossy prints ... 5 in color, 3 black and white 0 4 autos. Other Inscription: For party other than one to whom addressed or delivered: ... with all good wishes 8
  • set fire to ti large fr«tion of tl,e continent." Air Force-Sp«e Digest magazine, the highly informed voice of the Air Force, rammed home the same point: "It is possible to place very large-yield devices in orbit, which have virtually instantaneous
  • little format called the magazine in which in five minutes or less, they will sum up a subject of great controversy and deliver a very pronounced decision." This, he said, "is not the kind of systematic informing of public opinion that is up to the kind
  • . And the end ol the Reagan era came on Di::cenibcr-+.I 986. on the o -ed pag • of the Nl'w York T111u·.1. ~hen a rc,pccted eJnor of a foreign policy magazine declared. "It is high time tor America to dcmon.,tratc awarcne ., of its ~trength in the world today
  • magazine, introduced LBJ biographer Robert Caro to a crowd in the LBJ Library Auditorium as "a man of tremendous had thought the book would take nine months to do. It wound up taking seven years-because, as he told his wife Ina (who is his entire research
  • . The President also mentioned two people to me. One was a fellow named Charles Lipsett, who published newspapers in the magazine field. The other was a guy named Joe LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • Committee of U.S. and Canada; Talk with Luci and Lynda Johnson; Time magazine article on John Connally; Dinner with Congressman and Mrs. Jack Brooks; LBJ's sleeping habits
  • is yes. But I must admit that a 10,000 mile trip in the other direction to see peace would be a heck of a lot more worthwhile," Kennedy wrote home. Another poignant handwritten note contains details by Kennedy later used in a magazine article describing
  • is yes. But I must admit that a 10,000 mile trip in the other direction to see peace would be a heck of a lot more worthwhile," Kennedy wrote home. Another poignant handwritten note contains details by Kennedy later used in a magazine article describing
  • ?" "This is The President "When are you going to start talking about these He thought I was creating a credibility gap. recall, Time Magazine did see a rattlesnake. off the runway in order to land. But as you We did have to scare antelope We saw hundreds of canyon
  • attentio n pages 3 23, 324 and 325 , all excerpts from the 1949 speech on FEPC, etc. fl-c.,t AGENCY /.I ~ 1_/;::::-6 .z-96 .z- ·~ u 4/2/65 r ') The United States Informa tion Agency is preparing a magazine- type pamphlet on President Johns
  • and voluminous documentary evidence was gathered in the form of Minutemen brochures, membership applications, magazines, bulletins, newsletters, manuals, handbooks and correspondence. The Documentary E.v idence ''On Target", a magazine published monthly
  • . And I'll tell you, Jane Fonda did such a great disservice to our country we'll never be able to forgive her. I have heard her depicted-- I have read in a national magazine that she is a communist. know that before then. I didn't But I listened to her
  • be "first name" on this, I've known you so long. Tell us a little bit about how you came out of Texas and wound up in Washington. m.1: After I got out of the Uni versi ty of Texas I spent several years in Dallas as an editor of an editorial magazine
  • of the investigators tremendous publicity. of the Preparedness Subcommittee. M: Mr. Johnson was chairman? K: Mr. Johnson was chairman of it. Magazine and almost the waste of military this. really story expenditure happened here~ because in fact
  • was written by me in Collier's Magazine, and it appeared in February of--what year was he elected whi,p of the Senate--February of 1951, because I remember they had to stop print!ng the magazine to put in his election as whip. elected whi,p in January
  • ., on different phases ot the E.uropeliUl scene as it affeete the United Statee in ,Politienl 1 eioution.al; medifle.1 1 aeour!ty, nOlllie raat tfJr&, des1:g.ned primarily for newspaper ust. and $CO• I sh.a.ii be pre.p ared to al so, produe,e magazine art
  • magazine in the local language; --to assist East European countries to improve the teaching of English in their schools and universities and where possible to establish chairs of American studies (Country Programs). c. We have concluded a Fulbright
  • - Disapprove -· -· Monday, July 24, 1967 -- 10:40 _a . m. {)p;Y Mr. President: Herewith last week's press contacts. Stuart Lancaster, PACE magazine. An interview recommended by Geol"ge Christian on the contemporary meaning of freed.o.m . l will edit
  • was airmailed to 31 posts for immediate local distribution. - - The bi-monthly Latin American film news magazine, Horizons, covered the new President's White House meeting with representatives of the Alliance for Progress countries. -- For African countries
  • Raisers Association 5. Statement - Texas Sheep & Goat Raisers Association 6. Editorial - Texas Sheep & Goat Raisers Magazine 7. Letter - Arkansas Cattlemen's Association 8. Letter - Louisiana Cattlemen Association 9. Statement - C . G . Scruggs 10
  • being autographed for Photograph of President with someone else Magazine Cover Newspaper Picture Further description of photograph if necessary: Other - Plain pictllre ot tba Prea14ent and Nr. Willd.u with tacaillila cud attached - With beat viahu
  • Number& (Title realatered u. S. Patent. omce1 NEWS MAGAZINE Published Every Other Weekfrom the Nation's Capital APRIL 21, 1948 / Pacific Memorial The U.S. troops who "island-hopped" to Tokyo in 1941-45 did more than de­ ~troy an empire. They also
  • in He didn't trust MacArthur. this regard and what he did conclude when he reported back? J: Well, I can't elaborate on it, except I can quote from Time magazine on it and so forth. Anybody that intimately knew or served under MacArthur knew he
  • General of the UPS (February 1959 - July 1960). The Ambassador has published novels, poems and short stories, usually under the pen name ousmane Soce. He once edited the UPS newspaper, Regroupment, and in 1961 edited BingO', an African photo magazine. He
  • abreast developments by following the local newspapers Time magazine, the New York newspapers and U.S. regularly. King Constantine is dignified, and expects the proper respect. He is sensitive to the moods of the people. While he believes deeply
  • missions, US cultural centers and reading rooms; --to distribute cultural and scientific bulletins as well as an America magazine in the local language; --to assist East European countries to improve the teaching of English in their schools and universities
  • to let you return to any kind of normal-- H: No, I had a great many people interview me for newspapers and magazines, and it seemed to me as if I would never finish talking to them about-- F: Was your court in session at the time? H: Yes. F: So