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  • , Tau. daily ..-pe lundaJ. N.w Year't. rourtb o1 111b', Labor D17, Thanastvinl and · Clu1ltlnaa Day. Sunday and holiday llaun Th• Waco Tribune-Herald. En• tend u NCOnd-clau matter at the Waco Poat Offlc• under the Act of ConlNIII March 3. ll'lt
  • for Christian Science Monitor 1924-53; Chief of New York Herald Tribune's Washington bureau 1953-55; syndicated columnist 1955 to date\ An Eisenhower Re­ publican. Described as "mild, harmless" by press people~ Sam Yette,--A general assignment reporter
  • , North Carolina Comments I Criticized those present for failure to create interest in the NSRPo S·TATarENtS BY CONNIE LYNCH ",\ugusta Chronicle-Herald : Augusta, Georgia, issue of J-uly 31, 1966 . This article stated that LYNCH, who was a speaker
  • , Hilitary Aide to The Vice President Mr. Baskin, Dallas U ews Mr. Bell, AP Mr. Scali, ABC Miss Hi ggins, New York Herald Tribune Mr . Miller, Time Mr. Greene, New York Daily News j\'h". Alexander, McNaughton Press Mr. Spivak, UPI Mr. Freedman, Manchester
  • at all before you came to Washington? E: I did not. Of course, I knew who Lyndon was. I had been working on the Dallas Times Herald when this vacancy occurred with the death of Congressman [James] Buchanan in Austin. I knew about Lyndon Johnson's
  • we call Long News Service which is an independent Capitol News Service. We correspond for eighteen daily newspapers in Texas. Among them the San Antonio Light, Corpus Christi Caller-Times, Beaumont Enterprise, EI Paso Herald-Post, Texarkana
  • as a correspondent in January of 1930 and was a correspondent for our three Texas papers-lIm sorry to say we only have one now--a paper in homa~ and two in Tennessee. G: The three Texas papers were? M: We had the Houston Herald-Post. Press~ Alabama
  • , and no press ever really much likes the president. Even Jack Kennedy wasn't an entire exception. You remember the phrase "managed news" arose under the Kennedy Administration. And you remember it was Jack Kennedy who cancelled the New York Herald Tribune
  • that psychological turn-around reached if we remained firm. Thanat said he had only one worry. Referring to 15 Feb issue of Paris edition of NY HERALD TRIBUNE and NY TIMES, carrying spate of stories on 'negotiations', he said he was certain Secretary understood now
  • no doubt that the country as a whole reacted as we did. Cordially yours, Mrs . Johnson The White House Washington CO YLBJL PRESS CUPPING RlJRF.AtJ DALI.AS f.rtahl1 .1 hrd 1910 Palestine, TX Herald-Press (Cir. D. 11,463) '; (;·r 1 1 'MA~ Eartha Kitt
  • might say that Felix McKnight switched over from the Dallas Morning News to the Dallas Times Herald later on, because the man at the Dallas Times Herald, who was named [Tom] Gooch, I believe it was, hired him then. I don't know what Felix is doing now
  • rather than supporting me. But we went ahead and made our report anyway, and I got a unanimous vote from the committee, which included a strong Republican in favor of it. It's been heralded by others as the best report on urban housing and rural housing
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh SAZ MANERO -- I -- 16 news from all the passengers in the trip from Rome to Paris. That evening I was looking for the Herald-Tribune in Paris as soon as it came out~ sometime around ten-thirty or eleven. I bought
  • : "He is the goddam lose-iest boy I ever say!" And another incident in Dallas County, a companion of mine and a newspaper man, a man from the Dallas Times-Herald, and I met Mr. Johnson. Mrs. Johnson with us, too. We had We met him at a small air
  • of bamboo and papier mache, form animals of all shapes and siz . in this xhibit. • idnight, Dec. 2 . La Alisa de· allu (the mass of the cock) heralds th birth of Jesus. Christma Day is illus­ trated by Mexkan nativity scenes. Each region has its own
  • for the Dallas Times Herald. Cyndi Krier. Texas state senator from Bexar County. Earl Lewis, department chairman and professor at Trinity University. Larry McMurtry. novelist. Dave McNeely, political editor of the Austin American-Statesman. Bill Messer. Texas
  • . His name was Herald R. Clark, and he was dean of the College of Business. The first name is like the herald of the morn, and I think this is appropriate also, because he was that type of an influence in my life. Herald R. Clark was a very interesting
  • way and down the fire stairs in order to avoid the press, not to have them know that there was any kind of dickering going on, and walking into Jim's room and finding Earl Mazo of the Herald Tribune sitting there. He was the first one I ran into. He
  • .... ·- . - --- . ----------------l~--------'----l_.o:;..;.._;;_ L----E_V_ANS_~,.__R_o_w_l_a_nd__.,__,._Jr~.;_.,...-----~;l~· ----'----------~-i.......:----.-":iil'IMI . ----~~~_ro_rk Herald Tribune Office in Residence Res: 3125 . 0 Street, N. W. ~ .. . .-~-":_.:__N_A_8_-_0_290
  • , they were never on the same wavelength. Not hostile, but just distant, I mean Mitchell and Lyndon. Our old friend, Albert Jackson, of the Dallas Times Herald came up and we went 13 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • of the Stevenson gaffes? B: No. Now we didn't have any of the--we had the Dallas Times Herald, which was an old deal. We had the support of the Houston Post. G: Were the writers themselves more likely to be supportive than the publishers and editors? B
  • ; Mrs. Johnson returns to White House; Lynda Johnson home for Luci Johnson's baptism; article in Herald Tribune;
  • HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Of course, a lot of things have happened since then. More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh But at the time that was certainly heralded
  • with at that Convention. I made many friends over the country, and I have been pleased with what happened there at that convention. F: Let's talk about your own career for a moment. In 1963, you were heralded by the newspapers and by general sentiment as the person
  • myself. I did check I wrote a letter I remember it was at a time when Peter Marshall was quite a popular and widely heralded minister. He would have been in that period somewhat like Billy Graham today. And Mrs. Peter Marshall had come to Dallas
  • and walked down to Lyndon's place and when I got there Felix McKnight of the Dallas Times Herald. stepped out, said, "How do you do?" And I shook hands with him and I said, "What are you people doing down here?" He said, "Jack Kennedy's in there. We're
  • , and some of them [proclaiming], "Lady Bird's a blackbird!" and so forth. And when we went through Charleston, the blinds were pulled down, and it was certainly not the heralding of America's First Lady. I think that there were moments that were very trying
  • York. Lyndon usually attended both things, quite often with Johnny Runyon and the Dallas Times Herald people. The American Legion had a big dinner. G: Did you go to that event in New York with him, the newspaper--? J: I often did, and I think
  • with the Speaker's birthday, Sam Rayburn's, which was, I think, the sixth of January and always heralded by a big party, most often given--well, there were many parties for the Speaker celebrating his birthday, but always a very important one given by Dale
  • are going to organize in the newspaper. we will tell you where we will be, how we will be, and what methods we are going to use to stop these cops. That should be our slogan - - "•stop the Cops'"· The."Herald Tribune", a New York daily news­ p~per, Late City
  • . This article, entitled "Negroes Are Not Moving Too Fast" appeared.in the November 7, 1964, issue of the '"Post." In November, 1964, Wachtel wrote an article for King entitled "Looking Ahead" which was to be turned over to the "New York Herald Tribune
  • colum­ nist for the Dallas Times Herald, who in the course of her award­ winning career has worked for the Minneapolis Tribune, the Texas Observor and the New York Times, covered the recent revelation of pay­ ments to football players at SMU that became