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  • in journals . B: At that time, I was considered one of the candidates . I went back to New York--oh I think in November of 1959,--and did a very poor job . meeting in New York, they had all of the candidates . At that It was the meeting of the National
  • Row at the White House An Evening with Veteran Reporter Helen Thomas She came to Washington in 1942 the ·ame year that Liz Carpenter arrived. One of nine chil­ dren in a family of Lebanese immi­ grants. Helen Thomas began her career in journalism
  • in the Wall Street Journal that in the aluminum industry there were hints of antitrust action, review of rates charged for federally produced electricity, IRS [Internal Revenue Service] audits of tax returns and studies to substitute other materials
  • equivalent of an English knight), became a book author almost by accident. Thirty-five years in the making, Hanny says the book began as a journal he kept each night after work at the White House. Years later, when Hanny was going through his divorce
  • equivalent of an English knight), became a book author almost by accident. Thirty-five years in the making, Hanny says the book began as a journal he kept each night after work at the White House. Years later, when Hanny was going through his divorce
  • story. I went to Chicago when I was eighteen years old because my father wouldn't let me go to the School of Journalism at Columbia. In those days they had an undergraduate School of Journalism, and I had--why, I have no idea because I didn't know
  • Pfister with industrial leaders of Wisc. Quick address to Wisconsin Comm. on U.N. at Univ. Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Visits Milwaukee Journal for meeting with Editorial Board. Drops by reception for Wisc. Democratic Women; arrives at suite at 5:45 p.m. Dinner
  • a lot of money. So we had a number of meetings on them. But this could not be kept quiet. I have no idea who talked, but I'm sure that a lot of people said small things, and so a very careful reporter for the Wall Street Journal was able to put together
  • courtship via the U.S. mails. Lady Bird was a journalism major while at the University of Texas and he dedicated to these daily letters the same meticulous detail he gave to every to-drawer project. He would frequently read a sentence and ask me whether
  • that this was so. So we zeroed in-- two or three of us at least, Dick Fryklund, who was with the Washington Evening Star, and Dan Henkin, who ,vas editor of the Army-Navy-Air Force Journal, and myself--zeroed in on Cy as someone who knew very well what was going
  • campaign when I was working for the United Mine Workers, I helped by writing speeches. Journal. I worked on the United Mine Workers I did the women's page, and I was the editor's secretary, and I helped write the speeches. We were also what would now
  • 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
  • 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
  • meeting at FRANKHOUSER I s home that date. At this meeting, FRAlOOIOUSER said there would be Klan rallies in · Macyland on July 29-30, 1966, and in Delaware on August 5-6, _:1956_._ · ._, ~e 11 La11caster Intelligencer-Journal.," Lancaster., Pa • ., daily
  • resignation as State NYA Director. A telegram was sent to Washington. My resignation was also submitted, not only to NYA, but also to the University of Texas where parttime I was teaching a first-year journalism course. My NYA resignation was accepted
  • , it really gets scrutinized and gone over and torn to pieces by his colleagues and it's published in journals where LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More
  • by way of any private decision of what he would do in the future . M: And you need to deal with what I think one of the better accounts of the whole affair, the one by Philip Geyelin of the Wall Street Journal /Lyndon B . Johnson and the World , 1966
  • of my law clerks spend a lot of time going back over the old journals of the Supreme Court to see what civil rights cases the Court had not taken where it should have. And we just found that in those days--particularly after the civil rights cases were
  • stories appeared 3/2 in the Washington Daily News and 3/3 in the N.Y. :Jorld Journal Tribune, citing Edelson's article mn this subject. On 3/5, James Egan and Charles Adler, -N.Y. lawyer~, undertook to have GONGORA released from the hospital. A habeas
  • , directed by Gloria Quinlan. Photos by Charles Bogel. 8 An Evening With Gregory Curtis and the Venus de Milo [n 2000 the Columbia Journalism Review selected Gregory Curtis as one of the ten best magazine editors in the country. Curtis recently retired
  • to write a letter apologizing for the pejorative nature of the term, which was published in the American Metals Industry Journal in the course of time. But we were worried about having a copper price in which there were formal sales at thirty-six cents
  • could and when you had time? C: Oh, I re a d the available papers that were time l y. Of course, that was just the Washington p apers and the New York Time s an d the Sun and th e Wall Street Journal. Th ey we re the only one s that you coul d real
  • : This is November 22, 1968; we are talking with Gordon Fulcher, the publisher of an East Texas newspaper at Atlanta. Tell us about what newspaper it is that you publish now, Gordon. GF: I publish the Atlanta Citizens Journal, a weekly newspaper, in Atlanta, Cass
  • saying it was because of the association with Westinghouse and commercial people weren't welcome in the news department. Then they also said I had no background in journalism which was very true. They failed to point out to me that I was woman, which