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  • 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
  • thought newspaper work was pretty soft compared to getting up at 1:30 every morning to milk, so I went from there. I came to The University of Texas, went to journalism school, and went to the University of Missouri briefly and ran out of money. Then we--I
  • lived at that time. A bit of history, immaterial possibly. I'm a product of Austin public schools, the University [of Texas] class of 1934. I studied journalism and also government, minor on municipal government. In the middle of the Depression I
  • are notoriously slow in the way they pick up-M: So are historical journals, you're not alone. R: So are historical journals, that's right. But I would think that this piece has the detail that I don't have in my head. at the Congressional Record. But all
  • into the life of Lyndon Johnson and national politics? S: Well, it's a long story, Dr. Frantz, but I'll try to make it as short as possible. Ny primary interest in college was in journalism. F: Where was this? S: Hardin-Simmons University. And I
  • , was a member of the House Committee on Naval Affairs, \'Jhich Nr. Vinson was chairman of then. I went to a small military prep school and junior college in Milledgeville and graduated from the University of Georgia in 1959 with a degree in journalism. From
  • be a matter of concern to the profession of journalism, the institution of journalism, in this country, is the pressures existing within the paper to make the front page, on the tendency, because of the importance of making the front page, to write a story
  • 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
  • , this was not any secret. There was no problem for them to determine a relationship had existed. Publications had printed the fact that I had opened an office in New York. In fact, I had run an ad in the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times announcing
  • TORY COLLECTION L~D O . Eugene Patterson And ress 2855 Normandy Dr., N. W. Atlanta, Georgia Biographical information : Newspaper editor b. Valdosta, Ga., Oct. 15, 1923; student N. Ga. Coll., Dahlonega, 1940-42; A.B. in Journalism, U. Ga., 1943
  • they were both in the Department of Journalism, and they graduated together--but she had done her first two years at TCU, and then she transferred to the university, and I went to work. I got a job, and first off, I worked for--in the legislature when
  • himself never tried to move things one way or another? H: No, never. Bob's too good a newsman to do that--has too much regard I think for journalism. F: Now, how does NBC establish its policy? H: You know the Federal Communications Commission keeps
  • been a fifth one there. But I remember four of us got together and we were going to cut him up. One of the guys at the television station in Albuquerque, [one from] the Albuquerque Tribune, [one from] the Albuquerque Journal, and myself, I know we'd
  • remember Tobacco Road and how we laughed and pointed out each of the characters in our own little locality. (Laughter) G: She studied journalism at the university? P: She got her degree, a BA degree, and then she stayed a year longer and picked up
  • in 1946, I went to work as a reporter for the Ohio State Journal , which was at that time a locally- � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ
  • here. C: Well, I was born in Oklahoma and was educated at the Unitersity of Tulsa. I received first a degree there in economics and later another degree in journalism, both of these being bachelor of arts degrees. Then I worked for newspapers
  • industry around. Oh no, this isn't unique to journalism. But I've seen it in two or three cases. In fact, we had the rule at CBS News that if anyone was having anything to do with somebody in government that they had to get off the air; they could
  • to be torn out of the headlines of the times: "The press seems to have developed an unhealthy new arrogance with Watergate," she said. "The press enjoyed the letting of blood and now too often seems to think that good journalism knows no secrets, respects
  • 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
  • Post Bill Eaton, Chicago Daily News Jim Millstone. St. Louis Post Dispatch Ted Sell. Los Angeles Times John Pierson, Wall Street Journal Karen Klinefelter, Dallas News Saville Davis, Christian Science Monitor Day 1, 1968 Date Apri • Da the Whit e
  • of Harriman and Vance in Paris; peace talk progress - pl (b. 2) - Labor Department matters, mtg w/ Secy Wirtz yesterday, Wall Street Journal Article and Joe's plans after Jan 20. Edwin Weisl Sr - NYC •' VH.TE HOUSE Date DENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON Oct 1 or t
  • a degree in journalism, though, . .from the University of Texas . She's a good writer, and she's just a smart person . I'm an old German .candle maker. G: Z: Well, this is a letter thanking you for a German candle . Yes, and for twenty years, see . We
  • ; LBJ & Lynda plan birthday party for Lady Bird; Lady Bird mentions the guests; Lady Bird receives $1000 for the School of Journalism at the University of Texas as birthday gift; LBJ, Lynda and Luci give toasts at the party
  • on Secretary Rusk to review the discussions at the United Nations. Secretary Rusk: While at the United Nations I had sessions with the editorial boards of Newsweek, McGraw-Hill, and the Wall Street Journal. Those meetings were most profitable. On the Middle
  • York Bureau Chief Bill Moyers ^y Amb. Bruce recommended the President see King -- Bruce says he "is the most powerful journalism figure in Britain--and for that matter, in Europe." BM memo re this m MW to dt John Steinbeck OFF RECORD. --Mr. Steinbeck
  • . Therefore, I shifted to the Joint Atomic Energy Committee, where by law they have to give that informati'on. But the Joint Atomic Energy Committee had turned into a tightly held club. Today I was just looking through the Wall Street Journal: much
  • 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
  • supportive of him actively? Z: Yes,. all the way through. Yes. G: Did she prove to be an asset, and if so, how? Z: Yes, very much of an asset. She could talk for him. You see, she has a degree in journalism,. though, from the University of Texas
  • 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
  • . 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
  • , Bachelor of Journalism. She was a journalist, too. She was always interested in politics a little bit. G: Yes. Was she active at all in student politics there? T: No. I don't think so. She was more interested in state politics. [Voice in background
  • 21, 1968 Mr. Joseph A. Calif's.no, Jr., Special Assistant to the President, The White House, WASHINGTON,D.C • Dear .Mr. Calif's.no, It occurs to me that twenty-five years ago I wrote up in SURVEY GRAPHIC,the leading socio-economic journal of' its
  • • HOME JOURNAL, 1 yr., $3. All prices u. s. only. No chars• for wire. Pay Western Union clerk for subscription or when billed by publisher. !'Jc,•, name anJ adJra, (For reference) Publlehwwlll,oneubtcriber's requeat, refund full amount paid for copies
  • a new series in the Library, to be called ''An Evening With .. ;' Future such evenings were planned for George Reedy (March 7). longtime aide to LBJ, author of several books and now Professor of Journalism at Marquette University, and for former
  • be coming from the Secre­ tary of State or the Secretary of Defense or any one of the other Cabinet officials that help run the government. So: one of my pieces of advice to those who really want to improve the quality of White House journalism ,is: Back off
  • manuscripts, diaries, and artifacts lent by individuals and institutions around the world. A cartoon of LBJ as gunslinger, by Jack Jurden of the Wilmington News Journal, adorns a banner hanging in front of the National Archives build­ ing in Washington
  • -.: ,i1u:11i1mi. rs ~riou. C cry nt:\ !,IOJ)', n~ I •hllf ' !, :II 0 Lhcend m wh re. Thc"c o •:1n11.a11011"ah.: n I journal- h1i all,- f8 ni7alim1,. f uny1ltin~ likl.'. joum;1lb1i cthi .. i clrn1·1 1hi11kth, I they cith ·r .1ppn:ci1.11cd1hcm or \ ould
  • /UD; Chair, Presidential Task Force 011 Model Cities From the Journal of Urhan HisfOry, November 1998. You know, th is whole Great Society period represents an aspect of the human spirit that I think remark­ able. As I look back on it, I'm struck