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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
  • 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
  • /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
  • to represent other employers, that was perfectly all right provided it did not conflict with my activities for Dallas and that I had the time to undertake them. F: So both of you have been somewhat mixed up in Washington life from Frankl in Roosevelt down
  • doing that manual typing myself . But in '41, you see, I was in journalism school, just scratching my way through college . It was a very interesting tour . F: Trying to pick up an extra,fifty cents here and there . B: But 1948 is when I really
  • - third of November, I was on a television program with Martin Agronsky, Elie Abel, who is now head of Columbia School of Journalism, and Sander Vanocur, who has left NBC and is with Public Broadcasting. And they were talking about what kind of a president
  • Journal tearing down their five-tower line, and I thought maybe I was heading for disaster and I was worried and spending my time up there rather than in Texas. I wasn't around here, except I was reading and I was familiar with what was going
  • on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Rather -- I -- 5 in Texas journalism [helped]. Mind you, Stuart didn't know me from toad hop; he had just sort of taken me into tow. F: He had heard of Houston. (Laughter) R
  • 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
  • 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