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  • went back to college to get an extra degree. It was in writing, you know. like newspaper writing. I have forgotten the name of it. MR. CATER: Journalism ? MRS. COOPER: Journalism . She took journalism . That is the only thing I know of. She also
  • advised that ALLEN also advised her that he was a "Bircher" up to last year. FORSnR furnished the following newspaper clipping which is a letter to the editor of •,ene State Journal'' 1 a Lansing, Michigan daily newspaper
  • March 16, 1967 /.Mr. Vernon Mitchell Columbus News 9 500% 9th St. Jamaica, Columbus, Ga . Mr. Frank Mitchell The St. Louis Argus Jamaica, '- 4595 Easton Avenue ^ St. Louis, Missouri Mr. T. C. Jervay Jamaica, Wilmington Journal ^ 412 South 7th St. Howard
  • ., Assoc of Natl Advertisers, Inc Moyers Allan S. , Austin, Chairman, the Austin Co. Secy Connor ID John B. Babcock, President, American Business Press Babcock, Richard J. , President, Farm Journal, Inc for Pix Bache, Harold L. , Chairman, Bache & Co. , Inc
  • was to travel all over the world. I thought perhaps--she could just write the most beautiful themes and beautiful stories. I had thought at one time perhaps she'd choose journalism as her major but I don't know what her major really was dcwn in Austin, whether
  • of Arts and Bachelor of Journalism. Some 25 years later than on platforms. the First Lady is still more at ease with people Greeting more than 2,000 womenwho jammed a reception lowing her speech to the home economists in Detroit, a PUest who admired
  • a distinguished array of experts from the lields f political science, his ory and journalism. Among the po itical scientists w re Joseph Cooper, Rice niversity; oger Davidson. Library of C ngress; Richard Fenn , niversity of Rochester· Sam Kernell. Brookings
  • 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
  • . at the Austin Club, a beautiful place, in Austin on Eighth \~olilans and San Antonio, the lovely house that's still there. I was living But Bird often visited me. Then when she got her first degree, her B.A. in journalism in 1933, that's when we went out
  • as a combination sports editor and general assign- ments reporter and shortly thereafter had a letter from Paul Thompson at U .T . [University of Texas] journalism school asking me if I'd be interested in a fellowship . Took the fellowship in journalism
  • 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
  • a nationwide boycott of products manufactured in Mississippi. I do not know the full extent of this plan, but I do know that it is already having a very adverse effect. On February 2, 1965, the Wall Street Journal carried a news story, copy of which is attached
  • and then I'd go home and start over. I did that for twenty-one months and saved up a wee bit of money and went back to Chapel Hill and got a degree in journalism, A. B. in journalism. Journalism was handy because all they--they had more electives than any other
  • Political Science Association. M: And you've published numerous articles in that journal, as I recall. R: I've published some in that journal and other journals. M: Now, to ask you a large question. There has been some talk that Lyndon Johnson's
  • 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
  • WashingtonPost Robert Youn g Chicag o Tribun e James Deaki n St . Loui s Past Dispatc Shelley Scates Heart Erwin Knoll NewhouseNewsService Ted Sell Los Angles Times John Pierson Wall Street Journal Robert Fullerton USIA Dick Saltonstal l TimeMagazine h b 27
  • l i s Associat e Edito r o f th e Wal l Stree t Journal , an d wants t o discuss w/ th e Presiden t "the general financia l pictur e an d Vietnam an d other curren t news issue s suc h a s th e campaign . " 2:06p T e e l o colonnad e fo r pictur
  • s Guy , El PasoTexas - -^ Lubbock Avalanche - Journal" re closing of Briggs AFB also talked to Dan and Roderick El Paso Departed house i n gol f car t w / Mr . Kellam , --Mrs. Johnso n .(i n he r robe), , MF, V M to runwav. Th e President, MF, V
  • this has already been published in technical journals. The President asked about the Kiesinger material. Rusk replied "it smells like negative." The President agreed and said ''yes, why are you waiting." McNamara said at some point it would be well
  • Pensacola Mr. Bill Powell County Commissione r 616 Palm Court Pensacola Ed McCullough City Councilma n 1027 LaRue PENSACOLA W. J. Kelson Room 21 0 Pensacola Taris Savel l WCOA Pensacola Harry Hughley Pensacola Miss Pat Lloyd News Journal Pensacola Charles
  • . Vandiverr / /o n Vie tnam
  • . Robert Mr. John A. Frasca - Pulitzer prize winner - journalism Frentz, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S Frentz, Mr. Stuart Joseph - P. S. Friefeld, Miss Wendy Karen - P. S. Fuhrman,x&&?sx Miss Sheila Ann - P. S. Dr. and Mrs. Buckminster Fuller Galeota, Mrs. William
  • to a tend the Mr. Bill Bray, Executive Secretary Official Manual 100th Anniversary of the Mo. Mr. James Kirkpatrick, Secretary of State of Missouri (also a newspaper publisher) Press Association and the 100th Anniversary of the School of Journalism
  • and Roxboro Rd. Jr. High School Band Motorcade departed airport w/ Cong. James Hanley Hon. John Mulroy , Onondaga County Executive Mayor Wm F Walsh of Syracuse Cong. Samuel Stratton Stephen SHHE* Rogers , ^HHH§ Publisher, Syracuse Herald Journal The President
  • , Polish Army War Veterans - NYC Rev. Cornelius Dende - Buffalo, NY Mr. Henr y J. Dende - Publisher and Editor. - Polish American Journal . Scranton. Pa. Mr. Anthony Dopieralo - NYC Mr. Tad Drweski - Washington, D. C. Mr. W. L. Dworakowski - Censor, Polish
  • 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
  • or--I'd throw the Wall Street Journal into that, too--that is just hasn't appeared anywhere. I think that is quite true, and it's unfortunate. If a reporter, a columnist, did not have an outlet in any of those papers, he just didn't exist. G: Yes. 16
  • on a few Eastern newspapers vs. the rest of the country; anti-LBJ sentiment in the Wall Street Journal; Jack Anderson; LBJ leaking information to the press; Bob Kintner; attempting to organize a group of young people to support LBJ; Edward Hamilton; how
  • . 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
  • 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
  • . 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
  • -in and universities, of a national journalism and in industry and in government-­ photographic archive, a record of our time for use by future generations. Their most eloquent exponent was California the great member of the FSA group whose pictures landmark
  • 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
  • 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
  • in advertising, radio, television, journalism, and so on, but a professional PR kind of an operation was something else. And when you get into the tax collection business, our Economists and School of Business people didn't seem to have a lot of enthusiasm
  • 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
  • ~ conference 700 outstanding would 1,e e;ues ts associates, consultants would be guests invitation& woµl~ be by invitation or the journalism, and heaqs of diplomatic of the relig:.on, and other misr ions 1 to leaders education, and foreigners
  • , Patricia Lindh, Assistant o Presidenl Ford. Summarizer: Lenore Hershey, editor-in-chief, Ladies Home Journal. Tuesday, l'fol•ember I 1 Testimony of Texas Women efore the United States Committee on Women in Power-Hanna ray, Provosl, \:ale Umversity
  • Hamilton, who reported on her research in the current is.sue of "Dio;covery," a University of Texas journal. Following are excerpts from Dr. Hamilton's article: My research analysis concerns President Johnson's cabinet appointments, how he made them, why
  • century man. He hated the tekph n . among other things, ~o thank goodn ss he wrote letters to his mother, to his sister, to his wife. to his daughter. to friends. And he wrote private memo­ randa to himself and he kept a diary. a journal. Harry Truman