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- significance. Too rapid population growth seriously hampers efforts to raise living standards, to further education, to improve health and sanitation, to provide better ~ousing ar;d transportation, to forward cultural and recreational opportunities-and even
- the University of Texas in journalism. WPA offered me a job of handling public relations for the state of Texas for the agency at a salary of about double what my newspaper salary was. So I went, with some trepidation that I was leaving direct newspapering
- : Not really. I can see her kind of and remember her being there in the home and I met her, but I don't recall her. G: There's an indication that LBJ favored the establishment of a school of journalism there at Southwest Texas. Did he ever talk about
- : The Honorable John 8. Connally Address: Jody Powell, Former Press Secretary to President Carter Moduators; PanelL~ts: Arthur L. Ginsburg, Visiting Professor of Journalism, The University of Tual> 111Auslin Dwight L. Tttler, Jr., Chairman, Department
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh June 18, 1969 B: This is the interview with David E. Lilienthal. Sir, to begin at the beginning, do you recall when you first met Mr. Johnson? You mention in your journals meeting him at the time he was assigned
- Administrative A ssistant to Senator Clifford P. Case of New Je rsey, a post he has hel d for the past ten years . From 1946 to 1955 Mr . Z a goria was a reporter for the Washing ton P ost. While employed at the Post, he also taught journalism par t- time
- with a degree in journalism from Louisiana State University. In 1986, LSU's Manship School of Mass Communication inducted Mr. Middleton into the Manship School Hall of Fame for distinguished alumni. The August 2000 edition of Texas Monthly magazine described
- . Additional Plebiscite Inducements. I. Government at the District level. J. Government at the Municipal level. Appendix A - Draft of proposed 1964 Secretarial Order providing for Trust Territory legislature. Appendix B - Draft of proposed 1968 Presidential
- Moyers MW (pl) Walt Rostow and Kei Wakaizumi Mr. Rostow suggested the President see "this first class young Japanese about to g into politics. He has taught at their War College; just interviewed Secy McNamar for one of their biggest journals; played
- memory. • The "general rule" in journalism "is that you shouldn't report the private life of someone when it affects their job ... But it's a diffi cult line to draw." 2 at the Library Charles Guggenheim, who produced the Library's orien tation film
Oral history transcript, Eugene H. Guthrie, interview 2 (II), 5/16/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- taught to be ashamed of. So many of the retarded were closeted within homes and families and no one knew about them. There was an attempt to provide public education and information to enlighten people that to be retarded was not a shameful affair
- Government which are now carrie
Oral history transcript, Dr. Ralph K. Huitt, interview 3 (III), 11/29/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- in his office with Mr. Paul Ringler, the principal editorial writer of The Milwaukee Journal. In this interview some of his habits certainly were evident. One thing was that he intended to convince Mr. Ringler absolutely and completely. It's very
- LBJ's 1958 interview with Paul Ringler of the Milwaukee Journal; LBJ's practice of making telephone calls while people were in his office; Senator LBJ's ability to get information from people on the telephone; LBJ's tactics to gain Senate passage
- to be intuitive judgment. He didn't seem to arrive at his conclusions from data garnered from recent issues of the Wall Street Journal or the New York Times. But somehow he knew; he seemed to have read widely and picked up much by ear. And it was often fun being
- ) by making possible sophisticated weapons of mass destruction which have the potential for destroying ^ m o d e m civilization arid which, therefore, are high priority and urgent subjects for arms control, arid (2) by providing techniques which can
- and Challenge" by U. Alexis Johnson (from the Foreign Service Journal, April, 1966) _ _ ____ _ _ ___ ___ _ _ _ ___ _ _ __ _ _ ___ _ ____ ___ _ _ 15 "New System for Coping With Our Overseas Problems," Speech by General Maxwell D. Taylor to the American
- . Then I went on to the University of Texas, and this is kind of an interesting story because in a way, that's how I ultimately got to work for Mrs. Johnson. I chose Texas in part because they had a good journalism school. But ultimately, I wanted to go
- and the apostles rather than James J. Strang and Sidney Rigdon [qq.v.], chief contenders for Snd.th1s prophetic Illinois was imperative, to strengthen journal he traveled r8le. So, too, when the exodus from throughout the Atlantic the r-bnnon nd.ssionary
Folder, "Task Force on Pollution Abatement [1 of 2]," Office Files of Joseph A. Califano, Box 32
(Item)
- to the proposal fran Karl Bendetsen on which we provided caments the other day. Effluent fees are, of course, one way to induce industry to hook up to treatrcent plants, but they are not the cnly way. 3. Construction aid for solid waste disposal facilities
- national 2 life, the Congress finds tho.t establishment of o.n executive 3 department is desirable to achieve the best administration of 4 the principal programs of the Federal Government which .p provide assistance for housing o.nd
- involve the President. We believe we have absolute security on this file within Justice, provided no copies are made within Justice and provided there are no leaks. We have no idea of the distribution that took place within Justice." That Colson memo
- and Harold Geneen of ITT, and other memos that would be harmful if leaked; Mitchell's and Kleindienst's denials of knowledge or involvement in ITT; Terry Lenzner's and Sam Dash's demand that Robert Maheu's replacement, Chester Davis, provide them
- House press st.cretary Bill Moyers rnmmcnled in a 1966 interview, the SC was a "misc lluncous Jody of mu1 designated by stal ute" and was simply' n t relevant to each issue." Needing "greater flexibility" than lhal provided y a "fixed body;' Johnson
- , the Library has operated beyond the bo1J-ndariesof its responsibilities as an archives {1,nd museum. In addition to preserving and providing access to the papers and materials under its control,, the Library has undertaken a series of programs that spotlight
- through determined. The building and grounds for the Johnson Library, the first to be located on ::i university campus, were donated by the Uni- Thi, publication provides a brief history of Daines Johmon c1nd the progratns the recent expansion
Folder, "Report to Task Force on Pollution Abatement," Office Files of Joseph A. Califano, Box 31
(Item)
- recommends a substantial stepping-up of Federal &,:ant programs to assist .State and local governments to provide ade quate sewage treatrnent facilities. These prograrns need to be adrnin istered in ways which induce or require the adequate vided
- . World Crise Provide Conference Backdrop Planning began in January 1979 for "The International ChaUenge of the 80's: Where Do We Go From Here?" At that time, the symposium planning committee, composed of members of the Univer~it) of Texa~ faculty
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 3 (III), 8/14/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , but once that bridge was crossed there's no need in going back over it. G: You were active in the honorary journalism fraternity, Delta Sigma Phi. You were secretary of that, I guess. J: Probably. It was a matter of no importance. But I did decide
- to and be interpreted in such a way as to provide the needed flexibility freedom of action. Under this interpretation we would not, for example, be called upon for such a strong burden of proof as has been required in the past that the needed assistance
- -IL Routes 1-IL s 1 Annually 1-IL Routes 1-IL Foreign Service Journal u l 1-t>nthl.y Intelligence s 5 1-t>nthl.y 4-M/R Routes 1-IL Studies Completed on Foreign Areas Analyst ~ntelligence /Intelligence IL Information Briefs Per
- and was on the agenda beginning in the early sixties as something that would be adopted but that's the nature of the way I became involved. G: In the sort of aid, help, information that you were providing, was it largely a question of how to fund
- in order to permit the Department of Housing o.nd Urban Development to start operations. A. The Act creating APPLICABLELEGALPrlOVISIQ!,S the Department provides as follows: l. 'Ille Act "shall 2. The Act 'fDD.Y take effect "on such earlier date
- became the number-one reporter and everybody else kind of looked around for their own stories. It was not an organized process. Time magazine works it a little [differently], because it's group journalism. [At] Time magazine, the bureau chief is assigning
- . Lowell Limpus, as a military historian, took the laws of Clausewitz and applied them to journalism, plain military tactics and politics also. vast change. At that time the news media was undergoing a very Captain [Robert] Patterson had started the News
- no· ~~bt that such discussion, under private auspices, of the· problems of peace will provide a. major contribution to the greatest single problem of our time. The symposium ·ip.a.t the ~enter proposes can, I think, an important ovont in tho International
- 1°SUENUMBERXXXIXrEBRUARY15, l 'U\7 ongFri SPEAKERS ENLIVEN AUTUMN AT THE LIBRARY A distinguish d array of speakers from the worlds of poli tic cducation and history provided a lively serie!>of evenings at the Library during the final quarter
- majored in journalism and became sports editor of the student newspaper. the Daily Texan. After a stint as capitol corre spondent for International News Service, he became press secretary to Texas Governors Price Daniel and John Connally. ln 1966 he
- and nieces. My father and my uncle and I felt for a long time, primarily through my own wish, that I [should] go into journalism. I had taken quite a few journalism courses while I was at the University of Texas. tion. My majors there were journalism
- and nieces. My father and my uncle and I felt for a long time, primarily through my own wish, that I [should] go into journalism. I had taken quite a few journalism courses while I was at the University of Texas. tion. My majors there were journalism
- and tell them, IIAll rightll--and he did do James Henry on the TV station the same way-"if you run one ad with him, you'll never run another ad in the Longview News and Journal." unpopular. Just such stuff as that. He was very In fact, I was trying
- ., these major holdings : The Macon (Ca.) ./ sional elections. In December he entered Victor F., and Joseph E.- whose holdings Telegraph anq News, The Gadsden spread from The Journal of Commerce (Ala.) Times, The Cleveland (Tenn.) the Columbia-Presbyterian