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  • Wednesday March 2 , 196 0 P-38 Date Activity (includ e visited by) * LD Expenditure Code Sen Russell , Gerry , Bobb y Walter, Woody , Mr . Kella m Texas Delegatio n (closed ) Mrs. Margare t Parto n (Ladie s Hom e Journal ) fo r intervie w Claude McCa n
  • , or radio folks or "ikewise, they .risk their inevitable, The Fifth ,kolsky. quotas from to Nationalist China by the Russians._ phical error, a sen­ lay'a Journal-Ameri­ meaning. It read :_ most militant and • The aeni-.,!nce, as •ea~ does represent
  • 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
  • Walter Ridder, Ridder Newspapers James Cary, Copley Newspapers Bernard Gwertzman, Washington star Richard stoiUey, I!fe Wayne Kelly, Atlanta Journal Cauley asked the President to discuss his philosophical approach to his office at this time in his service
  • facilities, needs redefinition; (3) the limited level of military supplies we might be willing to offer is unlikely to provide any significant leverage; and (4) in the absence of an understanding on arms limitation, any US military assistance could prove
  • not uncommonly taken a number of years to complete.) under I fact, In addition, ian conditions targets its present for plant who can provide of plants construction financial must of construction Thus, if India production goals, during years. need
  • .' She would nap until the company started up again, taking her food with her and eating on horseback. Her young son rode with her. She said in her journal: 'Sometimes I found my­ self fast asleep on my horse, and only 14 when I was nearly over
  • 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
  • to modify Rule 22 to permit two-thirds of all senators present and voting to shut off debate on any question, including a motion to consider a rules change. Their proposal also provides that Senate rules shall continue from one session of Congress
  • reduction until we see a definite turn upward. In the meantime, I am also stimulating in­ creased selling effort . _ Conway is evidently back a t his desk and writes me tha t he is agreed to our new plan of buying and payi ng for newsprint providing Mr
  • the following :p ropos ition: That they be provided the in.! ormat·l on whlc::b. wou.ld ~ permlt them to do a seriee ot articles explaining p:reetaely, on the 'basit of tacts, why the Ac:lmlnletration believeo bomblng nortb ot the ZOth p~rallel ls important
  • in existence. It has value - as does a car, a train, a ship - only in the service it provides. Which brings us to the question of the customer .. In the U.S., we have trouble predicting how many there will be. Over the .last decade we have continually
  • a political stability there. The issue as regards the supplemental is not nearly so much one of providing funds for needed projects as one of shoring up the government party in this critical election year -- thereby ensuring, in our self interest
  • DCT and of the Part is the Development the of New Conununi ties Federal response Act· of 1968. New Cornmuni ties provides for developers a revolving fund Act necessitates the cooperation ments, the Department 18,· 1968
  • Arlington librarian. P• 1866~ Library Journal, 5/15/62, Kenton Kilmer Government and General Research Di~ision December 8. 1965 Union Calendar No. 884 89th Congress, 2d Session House Report No. 1928 1 /~ I\ 1( - i ✓ -✓-. COMMITTEE ON UN-AMERICAN
  • the first combat troops to Vietnam, the marines, doing this and the instructions and he was explaining it, why he was that he had given these marines and so on . Well, it was very clear to me at the point that I was going back to daily journalism
  • problem. And a decision [was reached] in 1964 that there was an urban crisis; but [there was] an inability to focus on a great, bold, new, dramatic program to respond to it. The 1964 Task Force provided a highly sophisticated analysis of the main
  • '.!;.;:(£} Pal-~ MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE Fe;:/ /)..a./J' WAIHIKOTOII i October 3, 1967 •T.uesday, 10:45 a. m. MEMO FOR: Marvin FROM Barefoot Watson Sanders~\~ .... .....-_,. ~ As I mentioned to you the Wall Street Journal is asking questions
  • . Watson's comment? Washington Post Baltimor·e Sun N. Y. Times Wall Street Journal Washington Evening Star Washington Daily News !_ ✓ Disapproved ------- Approved / {:!) MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON v{ I t·-- June 18, 1966 12: 15 p. m
  • to languish in the Agriculture Committees of both bodieo. Every year Farm Magazines, Trade Journals and the NAC News inform us of the ever-increasing amounts of economic poisons used in agriculture in this Country. The Apr:iJ. 1968 issue of NAC News states
  • , but the main thing is what about all this stuff in the paper," because there had been a lot of sort of yellow journalism going in there. He said, '~ell, without commenting on any of its truth or falsehood, the fact is that this is Boing to make his
  • , the dean of the School of Social Work--now there's a dean that was not excluded, perhaps because Social Work was less, you know, a smaller school and was not so demanding. I don't know. It included Dewitt Reddick in journalism. It included Don Goodall, who
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh 6 I wandered all the way through the morgue at the Milwaukee Journal in Milwaukee ; the Madison Capital Times in Madison . I interviewed fifty - seventy-five people in the State of Wisconsin who theoretically had knowledge about
  • ." From the Mailbox Dear Museum Curator, Thank you for continuing to open the LBJ Museum to the public for free. I work for a charity helping underprivileged children in Ft. Worth. We provide a hand up in life, not just a hand out. We took 7 children, ages
  • with Green after the hearings about an editorial in the Providence Journal saying Green should relinquish the chairmanship of the Foreign Relations Committee. LBJ meets with Green that afternoon and the next day Green resigns the chairmanship because
  • of leglslatlon provldlng for apPropriate pwdshments fo,: using public office for private gain. (1) "Iffipact11 proposal. The new President will establish,. in conjunction with the Assembly, the Inspectorate provided for in the Constltu.tion and will appoint
  • instance where they paid a GI to be filmed cutting the ears off of a dead VC. This sort of journalism wasn't something that anybody can be proud of. But all in all, I'd say that the press called the shots as their publishers saw them, and some were very
  • . It had to stop, and I didn't know how to stop it. But that stopped it. B: Well, as a matter of fact, I'm sure you've seen an article that's been published in the Journal of Church and State that comes out of Baylor, it's an article on you in which
  • in his mind too, because Bill certainly demonstrated conclusively that you can be an extremely successful press secretary without ever having had any experience in journalism at all. I mean, my feeling is that Bill Moyers was the best presidential press
  • Johnson City. That Lady Bird, with her journalism degree, could buy the newspaper and she could run the newspaper, and he would like to have an insurance company. And he said that lots of times to me. 11 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • Carolina, because he had been a liberal light in the South, and he was considered the most progressive of the southern governors. I also chose several people to receive our customary awards, either for achievement in journalism or achievement in the civil
  • ? I'm thinking about the fact that in general I do not believe that the TET offensive and its stalling has ever been portrayed as a failure. T: It hasn't been adequately so. A few papers editorialized on it, I think, like the Wall Street Journal
  • billboard company in East Texas, and I tried my best to stay out of it. I was sure that any day that apostle of the new journalism, Drew Pearson, would write that Lyndon Johnson had on his staff a fellow who's connected with the billboard interests. So I
  • eligible again for new procurement of IDB's borrowers, but would also be provided with a possibility of showing its interest in participating in the development effort of Latin America. 4.- It is believed that an appropriate arrangement would be one
  • . These statement• 1 think provide a good aum.m&l'J" ,oJ our ·t alka, but l want to. aseure you pet.,onaU,y that we discus••• f•anldy th~ eubjecta which conce:rt1 you .m oat. l stressed to MJ:s. Oandhi the bnpon.noe we attach to the t:eato1-ation of peace on th