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  • W Westinghouse Broadcasting Co.), Douglas Kiker (New York Herald Tribune), Francis Lewine (As­ sociated Press), John Chancellor (NBC), Marianne Means (Hearst Newspapers; Look Magazine), Bob Thompson (Los Angeles Times, Hearst), Helen Thomas (United
  • in the coffee shop of the hotel in Fort Worth. F: Texas. W: The Texas Hotel in Fort Worth. What is it, the . . . ? I remember sitting there with John Connally and somebody from his staff, and Doug Kiker, who was then at the Herald Tribune, and Bo Byers, I
  • mixed up on dates at this point, but-­ G: The letter was 1957. R: It was 1957? The letter itself was actually written by Jim Rowe, but the concepts were Johnson's. I think that the letter leaked out to the [New York] Herald Tribune somehow. We
  • --although they fought like dogs most of the time--he got that same feeling toward Margaret Mayer of the Dallas Times Herald. Now, I know he has called Margaret Mayer a number of times, when he would be displeased over something. She is chief of bureau
  • Merriam of the Dallas Times Herald, as well as with Stewart Alsop. The Harold Stuarts host a mint julep party in honor of the Bentsens. 6/5 LBJ greets students from Gladewater, Texas at the Capitol Rotunda. 6/7 Maury Maverick dies in his sleep at Nix
  • , New York Herald Tribune-- (Interruption) G: Where are we? M: On the book-- G: Well, at any rate-- M: This was cancelled then? G: At any rate I heard that the thing was going to be cancelled, got notice that it was going
  • . We had a cocktail party for them. Spring was the traveling time for constituents, heralded by the Cherry Blossom Festival, and main groups were the DAR [Daughters of the American Revolution], who always came in April and it was impossible to get
  • --no, no, no, no, eight times. They came in in 1945, didn't they? In April of 1945. So, there'd been, possibly, close to eight. Other visitors were our old contingent from the Dallas Times Herald, good friends through the years, Albert Jackson--growing more hunched over
  • with Amon Carter, with Sid Richardson, back in 1940 and even before, and with Tom Gooch of the Dallas Times Herald. We knew the Hearst people quite well, Dick Berlin who was then a relatively young man but high up in the councils of the Hearst corporation
  • -- 23 for Hiroshima. Mike Cowles understood that. In fact, I did one thing which for a long time preyed on my mind; I was actually filled with guilt although I had been right to do it. Helen Reid, owner of the New York Herald Tribune, once presided over
  • , the "We shall overcome" speech? D: I remember the words, "I now have the power to do something about it. I aim to use it." I remember that line and I remember the closing line, "We shall overcome." I think it was Douglas Kiker of the New York Herald
  • is a grave and ter­ rible warning tbat Soviet methods of waging the cold war are coming very close to hot-war methods. Coonlcht. 1962. New Yorll Herald Tribune.. Inc. .f 4:05 Sat. Afternoon M-. Rusk. 2 U-2 aborted, Low flight - McNamara subsequently said
  • fiscal policy. He named some of the crises he has faced in the last few months. He introduced the Members of the Cabinet and then called for questions from the audience. Jim Chambers of the Dallas Times Herald asked what the consensus of the Vietnam
  • that no reporter, when I got down here, really qualified, with very few exceptions--such as Marshall Peck of the Herald-Tribune in New York City, Paul Weeks in Los Angeles--both of whom by the way later joined the War on Poverty--there were no qualified poverty
  • to the newspapers that he was there during this incident, Margaret Mayer ofthe Dallas Times Herald, the reporter, not only saw him there but she had asked her photographer that was with her to take a picture of him standing on the curb in front of the Adolphus Hotel
  • they talk to in confidence who leaks it out. I talked to the press on arrival. So Naturally the trips were heralded to some extent and the press and television and radio were always present on arrival and on departure. were also on television. I answered
  • Parks work, that you take a city born, city raised, city oriented person and put him just in a passive park, he doesn't know what to do. R: That is so right. But more and more--I just went up to this old Herald Tribune Fresh Air Camp. They're taking
  • , yes. Yes, there was Alex Hurd~ acts~ and this-- the chancellor of Vanderbilt, [he] was the chairman; Walter Thayer, then president of the New York Herald Tribune, one of the stalwarts of the Republican hierarchy on the Eastern Seaboard
  • INTERVIE~~EE : HARRY PROVENCE INTERVIEWER: DAVID PLACE: His office at the Waco Tribune Herald r4ccor~B Tape 1 of 1 M: First of all, we'll get some background information. I'd like to know where you were born and when and where you got your
  • others and I think everyone of us was from [the South]. I was from Alabama, Tom Wicker was from North Carolina, The New York Times, Doug Kiker from the Herald Tribune was a Georgian, and there were several others. have made this charge? So how could he
  • Communism in government. that there w a s The story that I believe to be true was a luncheon held across from the Mayflower Hotel at which there was a Catholic priest, a fired correspondent from the old Times Herald in Washington, and somebody else
  • of the airport and would not disclose this information even if she did as it would be a breach of security. Mrs. Stein then said that Larry Stern (phonetic), a member of the staff of "The Washington Post and Times Herald," will know the airport prior
  • business is crazy. 11 Sydney, .t\ustralia, Sun-Herald, November 26, 1967. 11 • • • There would be no sense in our checking into routine reports. 11 Rocky Mountain News, October 8, 1966. "It is highly irnprobab~e that they . I I -2(UFOs) exist." Denver
  • of in- ' The De Luxe Dole sition of headlines in t_he Sµnd ay fluence." The process ·of so di­ Herald Tribune. Rigqf across the viding it threatens freed.o m and · , I WISH i t were possible to hold page at the top was the banner: a -s uper-colossal investigation
  • is called to EDI10RIALS clipped from the Dallas Times Herald dated October 10, 1961. Many other editorials, articles and in the Herald, the Saturday Evening periodicals seem to indicate we are and weaker from week to week on our other comments Post
  • "Miami Herald" of about a month ago. Due to tha big strike on tha coast of Honduras our mail has been nry slow in reaching us- henoe tha dalq. The last four paragraphs of this article han thoroughly aroused me. I li'Nd and worked in El Salvador tor
  • of delegates to the Blanco County convention on Tuesday. 5/6 In conversations with Earl Mazo of the New York Herald Tribune, LBJ discloses that he was threatened with death or maiming by an anonymous telephone caller after his speech Thursday night