Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

594 results

  • think I should draw a distinction there, that while an awful lot of journalists I think were emotionally involved, I think a bare minimum of them, and I wouldn't know how to express it, let that intrude on their practice of journalism. I don't think
  • in Austin and I went to colleg~ in Montgomery and we corresponded regularly. r.Je· wrote about: everything--ati.l our dreams and ambitions--life--love--politics--prohibition--and the like. She was taking Journalism. and wrote most interesting
  • hero. Her detailed accounts and journals led to a revolution in the practices of nurs­ ing and sanitation. The University of Texas at Austin's School of Nursing follows Florence Nightingale's model of out­ reach in nur ing. he School partici­ pates
  • . But it was the beginning of the period of advocacy journalism and, you know, you took them as they came. G: Who were some of the good reporters from that period? M: Oh, the best are really no longer there. John Hightower was the senior Associated Press correspondent
  • . But it was the beginning of the period of advocacy journalism and, you know, you took them as they came. G: Who were some of the good reporters from that period? M: Oh, the best are really no longer there. John Hightower was the senior Associated Press correspondent
  • -- the Montgomery bus case and the nationwide boycotts aga~inst certain chain stores to get them to serve Negroes at Southern lunch counters are examples. Such cases can provide a focus for informal government mediation. This does not appear to be the case
  • on the yacht that used to be provided for the Secretary of Defense on the Potomac, and there was only a handful, including Mr. and Mrs. Johnson. was the first time I had been close to them. There were very pleasant conversations, and this led to many more
  • it was like, how often it met, what it did, what the purpose of it was? W: That Press Club at San Marcos? G: Yes. Was it made up of people that wanted to go into journalism, do you think? W: Probably. Because Lyndon persuaded Doc [Tom] Nichols to teach
  • -- III -- 14 know; I'll just have to kind of guess and put two and two together. She was a graduate in journalism at the University of Texas. Newspaper work and radio work are a little bit similar. He often said, in fact he would say it nearly every two
  • matter. But I don't remember Bird's ever cutting a class. G: Anything else on her favorite courses there? S: Well, I know journalism and history. ite. English history was her favor- I wish I could remember her professor's name, he was very well
  • , has come home to Texas. She was recently named Govern­ ment and Public Affairs Woman of the Year by Ladies Home Journal and is a mem­ ber of the President's Com­ m 1ss1on on International Women's Year. Among her varied activities, Mrs. Car­ penter
  • the "awe­ some record" of the Great Society­ some ''400 pieces of landmark legislation," including: • Protection of the consumer in the marketplace; programs to provide safer cars, tires and highways; a Truth-in-Packaging law; a Child Safety Act to protect
  • of Columbia, transmitting a draft of proposed ness. and other Members in order of seniority. legislation entitle d "A bill to provid e for the May they be men of vision and of valor, Following the Presidential oath of of- mandatory reporting by physicians
  • pictures on OEO programs for telecast over Canadian broadcasting. The last one produced by a Canadian crew was, for example, made by Romeo LeBlanc who is now Press Secretary to Prime Minister Trudeau. Also we have provided Canadian outlets with our films
  • ments have in no small measure b~en ma.de possible by the shield of security provided to the region by the determination of the gallant people of Viet Nam and those assisting them to repel Communist aggression. The President and the Prime Minister noted
  • , and that would by and large be negative. Based on that specific, often negative [incident, the press] would draw conclusions that ended up being quite at variance with what the official channel of communication provided the Washington policy makers. You know
  • are provid:1.ng in-formation and Mrs• Donald Russell, .. conversa.tio11 ;,rith a North-6tld. .South. Cs.rol.i.M., .. Georgia.~ FJ..nrida., Alabama, Raleigh, Although President to for all. 51 women. and Louisiana.. Ta:_labassee, contribution Mrs
  • , there was no policy in the State Department, there was no policy in AID to provide direct assistance. ~ere was a policy which was articulated at the U.N. in 1962, December, by Mr. Richard Gardner, a lawyer who has gone back to Columbia--he was Deputy Assistant
  • ". The National Intelligencer presumed "that our President and his Cabinet are by this time convinced that they -have forfeited the public confidence ..• " Other Whig journals assured Mexico that "her cause was just, that a majority of Americans detested the war
  • opportunities for the "hard core" unemployed, by encouraging and assisting Federal managers as employers to provide jobs for the disadvantaged, and by working with local representatives of the National Alliance of Business­ men in their efforts to make the JOBS
  • Ml!M>RANilJM FOR MR. CALIFANO Subject: Creation of a private FNMA The Housing and Urban Development conference bill provides for converting ffiMAto a private corporation, essentially as proposed by the President. If we can accomplish
  • , to provide various types of assistance in a major disa.s ter declared by the President. Under sub· section (d) of Section 3, Federal agencies provide assistance by ttmaking emergency repairs to and temporary replacem~nt.s oi public facilities of local
  • . "The Committee has provided the kind of lead­ ership that has stimulated all areas of American life to greater effort to make sure that each man is given the opportunity to develop his capacities and to find employment that will fit' them. "In this effort we have
  • . That was not unique to journalism. I think that the entire U.S. command structure had exactly the same problems. You would discover, for instance, that young agency [CIA] or State Department or military people at the district level or lower had a pretty shrewd
  • Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 2. feature article, The Wall Street Journal had a long side column, and Life magazine devoted about twenty pages to a young president
  • senior meeting each week, between 1400 and 1530 hours, on the following Tuesdays: 25 April, 2 May, and 9 May. A final critique will be held between 1400 and 1530 hours on Tuesday, 16 May. In addition to your own participation, I hope you will provide one
  • of the rationale underlying the transfef of the mass traosit program to DOTis that mass transit is part of a ~ingle urban transportation system, and that the mass transit·program should therefore b~ brought into the Department.that provides Federal aid fortthe
  • " (- ., .:··.:>:· :··/_. ":~~ • AVCO in Boston. The Company will lease a plant in. :>~· ..;.;',:,-'. ,' .:·.•>·; ;'.':: .. ·-.·~·._-:.Roxbury which will provide 12 jobs within the next 2 ·, •• • ' ·.•·· :',,. • •· weeks and 55 jobs within a month. AVCO will.also .. ,, spent $1 million
  • codes .•. and development total welfare and aided finds that standards can be encouraged housing and_ building to provide there State standards, in order to determine bui_lding costs, to serve ~s iarge a part as (it) including
  • to provide an evaluation of ROLLING THUNDER Operations. Future reports will be submitted on a monthly basis in order to provic,le a continuing e·valuation of CINCPAC's objectives, accomplishments and future intentions concerning ROLLING THUNDER Operations
  • was the statehouse. And since the age of media-handouts--press releases--had not yet reached the Capitol, reporting the statehouse was a full time job. As a foot- note to journalism, Kennedy and myself possibly speeded along the age of handouts at the Capitol
  • during the time he was at Sam Houston, the group that included: Edna Dato, Jake Kamin, Myrtle Lee Robbins, Ellie Jones, Gene Latimer. Through particularly Edna Dato, who later was the one to get me into journalism, I got to know Lyndon Johnson
  • of which was the Winston-Salem Journal. I first went there in 1951, and the executive editor of the Winston-Salem Journal at that time was Wallace Carroll. He left and went to Washington as the assistant chief of the Washington Bureau of the New York
  • : And that sort of cemented your relationship with him? G: Yes. K: Did it antagonize Wayne Morse at all? G: Oh, yes. K: When Kennedy came into office as president, he had, I guess because of his Catholicism, become very hemmed in on the issue of providing
  • for Jordan's poor defensive response to the Israeli raid. t. . In an effort shl>ft responsiblity ·to the United Arab Comma~(UAC), Jordan's Prime Minister Tal claims the UAC should have provided air cover. But C a iro says air cover was the respon sii blity
  • IS IRRESPOliSIBL£ AGCE?TANCEOF. HEAVY RUSSIAN CAPITAL. PftOJECTS. WHILE US AND GERt•AUY HAVE MADE EVERY EFFORT TO PROVIDE MAXIMU'I LOCAL CUiiRENCY SUPPOHT,·THERE NO EVIDENCE THAT SOVIETS • • HAVE BEEN SJMILARLYEXERCISED. AVAILABLE FUNDS NOWSO L~ S'i'JGRi'.L
  • bank reserve requirements The IMF is happy enough with this progress that they will provide a $13 million standby. Some New York banks will come in with an addi­ tional $11 million to help meet Ecuador's foreign exchange needs. AID wants authority
  • Monroney, when Secretary Anderson had been waiting for half an hour to give testimony to the Senate Banking subcommittee. 3/19 The Wall Street Journal reports that recession is sparking interest in a capital bank proposal that would provide longer term