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  • . Robert Anderson. DLC-RA, Anderson 1 ·, ifc, Aug. 6, 1861. Senate and House committees notify President of _ !;o\ rnmcnt unless he has further communications. Senate Journal, 198; ! :i
  • story. I went to Chicago when I was eighteen years old because my father wouldn't let me go to the School of Journalism at Columbia. In those days they had an undergraduate School of Journalism, and I had--why, I have no idea because I didn't know
  • of that I went out to California and was a free-lance writer for the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's, various other newspapers, St. Louis Post-Dispatch and so forth. Then I gradually got into electronic journalism and did a lot of radio work. 1 LBJ
  • alter Lt. Brown's body was re­ covered from the wreckage of the B-25 near Kelso, Washing­ ton. From the Louisville Courier-Journal July 29 and August 6, 1880, between 6 and 7 o'clock in the evening an ob­ ject like a man was seen in the sky with some
  • of journalism degree in February I worked on the Austin American-Statescan, a full-time job while I was in the University. I was in Austin fifteen years old when the President won his first race, when President Johnson won his first race. ever knew him until
  • Journal, Finance and other budgeting State •pecialized Previously to the United commission on a Sage Foundation; graduate school. He has written and a wide range of topics for Government, Public Haaagement,Municipal journals. at Wheaton
  • ," supra, has a photograph showing "H. RAP BROWN, National Director of SNCC" emerging from 00 the Black Arts Studio at 726 East McMillan Street, to ask police to leave his press conference. They did." The June 16 9 1967, 0'Journal Herald," daily newspaper
  • disarmament, many papers in the area said. Canrnunist China's A-bombblast "will set of.fa chain reaction" of nuclear bomb develop­ ment that may "shove all this disannament talk down the drain," said the Tehran Journal. Influential Hindu of i-iadras likewise
  • , Readers' Digest, Ladies' Home Journal, Rotarian ... in books ... and Congressional Record. He has appeared as major-speaker on programs with such prominent personalities as Presidents Eisen­ hower, Truman ... Secretaries of State Acheson, Dulles, Rusk
  • a lot of money. So we had a number of meetings on them. But this could not be kept quiet. I have no idea who talked, but I'm sure that a lot of people said small things, and so a very careful reporter for the Wall Street Journal was able to put together
  • than three towns, and we'd stop at five to eight of them a day, that I didn't run into somebody working on a local paper, usually a weekly, that I'd been in journalism school with. I got from seeing those people whom I had known at university and seeing
  • . " .· ,, of poverty "but by training . ics . and . operatrnn alpha~et,_ the untrained, by giving skills, a project to aitack the problem C.-J. Editorial Attacked By- SJiyder • , Co11"rier-Journal,&. Times Bureau / · ' . Washl'ngton - The editorial writers
  • a Texan? H: I was born in San Antonio, and I grew up here in Austin. lJhen my family moved here, I was just a little fellow, about seven or eight years old. F: When did you join the Dallas News? H: 1916, on the old Dallas Journal, which
  • : No. (Laughter) (Interruption) G: Did LBJ ever express an interest in setting up a school of journalism there at San Marcos? J: Not that I know of. G: Tell me about his work for President Evans. What did he do, in essence? J. Whatever President Evans
  • How Jorden got into foreign policy government service from journalism; going to Vietnam to assess the situation in 1961 and the resulting white paper; Jorden’s Berlin Viability Plan and trip to Germany; Averell Harriman; working group
  • courtship via the U.S. mails. Lady Bird was a journalism major while at the University of Texas and he dedicated to these daily letters the same meticulous detail he gave to every to-drawer project. He would frequently read a sentence and ask me whether
  • the engineers in the nation. I have as a part of another story that I frequently tell--I for many years carried in my wallet a clipping out of the Wall Street Journal which reminisced, I will say, about the difficulty of decision of people entering
  • hoc things which I don't remember now: wrote an article for the ABA Journal, gave a speech to this group or that group. thing. There was a lot of that kind of In terms of projects, I remember one of them was to go through all of the government
  • that this was so. So we zeroed in-- two or three of us at least, Dick Fryklund, who was with the Washington Evening Star, and Dan Henkin, who ,vas editor of the Army-Navy-Air Force Journal, and myself--zeroed in on Cy as someone who knew very well what was going
  • . I worked under Cecil Horne, who was head of the journalism department; that's what I studied in Tech. I enjoyed being at Texas Tech. I had been to four other schools before I got there, because during the Depression you would go to school until
  • campaign when I was working for the United Mine Workers, I helped by writing speeches. Journal. I worked on the United Mine Workers I did the women's page, and I was the editor's secretary, and I helped write the speeches. We were also what would now
  • . Are you talking about Harris-Blair? G: Yes. S: Well, I'll hunt for the other one, then. ES: Do you have any record of where Lyndon was made a member of Pi Gamma l~u? G: Yes. Now, that was a journalism [club], is that right? ES: That was history
  • went back to the newspapering business, and I think it's probably the finest thing that ever happened to me. I've certainly enjoyed my fifty-plus years in journalism, and Mr. Johnson obviously enjoyed his many years that led eventually
  • in that particular course, Journalism 312 or whatever. It got to the point where certain factions of the college, of the student group, didn't feel that the students were getting enough recognition or enough acknowledgement, and so there was a little turmoil
  • Enquirer called CHINFO [Chief of Information], and they said, "Hey, the whole story is out there. What you got was released and there it is. There ain't no more." They advised me that if I got any inquiries from any of those journals to refer it to CHINFO's
  • he could ever do if he'd take this subcommittee. So I told him a story about how I'd been with Governor Cox in Atlanta after he'd had a readership test on the Atlanta Journal. He kept telling me it cost twenty five thousand dollars to have
  • was telling him--I've forgotten how it came up--about some of my problems with the Southwest newspapers particularly, the Shreveport Journal, and President Johnson remarked, "You know that is an area which has the most right-wing isolationist people
  • thought it would be very nice to live in a small town--he didn't necessarily say live in Austin; I remember he said a smaller town one time--and own the newspaper, buy the newspaper. With Lady Bird's degree in journalism that would be right up her alley
  • to do with the food program. But I cannot be sure, because, hell, this has been twenty-five years ago and I didn't know there was going to be a bright, young Texan here talking about it twenty-five years later. I didn't keep a journal about it. I
  • . either, five or ten dollars a week . We didn't pay very much Homer Olsen would work for us . We published a daily oil journal up there, a mimeographed oil company report that we had to have extra help for, for the mechanical work of getting it out
  • knowledge and Stevenson's knowledge and you sort of bred them together, if maybe those two great minds might get us out of this abyss that we're in now. Because I recently read in the Wall Street Journal where that if you continue to spend--I'm talking
  • . President. What is the problem.?" The problem was that he planned to announce the next day that Fowler would succeed Dillon and was worried about the editorial reactions in the Times, the Post, the Wall Street Journal, and Business Week, as well he should
  • , 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
  • City, and BILL EPTONwas present at the meeting. '!be group held a discussion on China. NYT-1 March 11, 1964 - 9 - • .. I . } NY100-138651 on July 24, 1964, OOMFRASCA,Night City Editor or the "Journal American", a NewYork City daily n6wspaper
  • , has come home to Texas. She was recently named Govern­ ment and Public Affairs Woman of the Year by Ladies Home Journal and is a mem­ ber of the President's Com­ m 1ss1on on International Women's Year. Among her varied activities, Mrs. Car­ penter
  • the Goliad massacre. While a student at the University of Texas in the mid-1930s, Hardeman worked as sports ditor of the Daily Texan, and after several hard-fought campaigns he was elected editor. His dual interests in journalism and politics continued