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  • Cleaning at the old Sam Johnson house and storage at the hangar; Lady Bird looks through her courtship letters from LBJ and photographs of Lady Bird as a teenager; Vietnamese visitors to the LBJ Ranch; Life magazine gift of park in Johnson City
  • worked on for almost six or eight months leading up to the announcement and then later there was a magazine article on it in the New York Times and then later in my book, To Be Equal, which went into it more in detail. Mr. Johnson is mentioned in the book
  • millions of dollars to the Post Office Department for the below cost operations. It includes your villages, it includes your rural routes, and it includes delivery of your publications. They're subsidized, you see. These big magazines that yell
  • LBJ talks about Vietnam; Lady Bird devotes day to Beautification with meeting in the morning; story published in Life magazine; Lady Bird lunches with niece, Diana, and discusses Girls Scouts; Lady Bird, Mary Lasker and Walter Washington tour
  • , which unhappily is not an uncommon thing in the history of Vietnam but to us in America it looked like a horrible thing. I can still remember the picture of the burning bonze on the front page of one of our weekly magazines. It shocked our entire
  • the standpoint of export trade and from a standpoint of reducing defense costs. F: You always saw it more of an investment than you did in any sort of an aid sense, didn't you? H: I made a statement at one time, which appeared on a front cover of TIME Magazine
  • to their congressmen and senators, to other people of influence; they published pamphlets, magazines, and books, urging statehood. And toward the end of the fifties statehood was a going concern as far as interest was concerned. It was in the newspapers all the time
  • . And I'll tell you, Jane Fonda did such a great disservice to our country we'll never be able to forgive her. I have heard her depicted-- I have read in a national magazine that she is a communist. know that before then. I didn't But I listened to her
  • brokers, the intermediaries, at a time when mass media politics, particularly in California, were coming on strong. Kennedy had been using public relations, p6pular magazines, glamour and so forth like that, and Johnson was still thinking that there were
  • this hindsight that people try to put into history these days to prove that they were right. I was fascinated to read last night an article in Encounter magazine written by a man named Robert Elegant-G: He's a British journalist, I believe. H: --in which he
  • the table and hope that it goes by. at the time. I was inclined to speak out myself. I thought it was wrong The whole thing, you know, was developed by these two fellows that ran this Rampart Magazine up here who were inclined to produce the sensational
  • was picked up by Senator Douglas and others out of a magazine article. Of course, Paul Douglas at that time was working very hard for elimination of the depletion allowance. G: To him it seemed a profile in courage to turn it down. Reportedly Senator
  • TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 2 the FAA magazine and the ICC publications, the Coast Guard Monthly Newsletter and so forth . And we had
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh CHURCH -- I -- 13 in his praise of me. He spoke to newspapermen, people who were doing special magazine articles, talked about the great future of this young
  • to start myself out in college at Occidental. I should first start with the summerbefore I went to Occidental when I worked selling magazine subscriptions down in San Diego. I will now turn the tape over. house to house rN~ • U. ALEXISJOHNSON Tape
  • a little bit, Hugh Sidey of Time magazine, and before long, he encountered the priest coming out who had delivered the last rites. So, by the time I got to the press room, and he got to the press room with our reports, everybody pretty well believed
  • was with. And he said he was with Playboy magazine, and I said, "Well, David, there's absolutely no point in us talking at all. So we'll have a cup of coffee and then I'll bid you goodbye, because no matter what you wrote, if it wasn't absolutely opposed
  • Library and Museum] Type of Material: Magazine Author(s): Title of Publication or Description: The Washingtonian Publisher: Washington Magazine, Inc. Title of Series/Chapter/Article: Edition: Volume Number: 4 Issue Number: 12 Date of Publication
  • Photos for "Look" magazine; meeting about Christmas, parties & gifts; luncheon with Jane Engelhard, et al, about raising funds for education; LBJ with newspapermen; renovations made in the White House; tour of White House; LBJ has press conference
  • of this. And in giving you my impression, I am literally talking from my personal point of view, and I'm not being influenced by what I've read in various documents or magazine stories or books and elsewhere. I'm simply talking about what I observed and what I drew
  • in Life Magazine, and that included Sarge It also included Gerry Ford, the minority leader; it included Peter Dominick, who is a Senator; it included Justice Potter Stewart and Justice Whizzer [Byron] White. It included the present Secretary of the Army
  • to Metcalf, and he told them he wouldn't even consider. M: GM: But that is the beginning of the McCarthy effort? Yeah. I can tell you that that article in Harper's Magazine about Lowenstein here about two or three months ago called "The Man who Dumped
  • a--Wayne Kelley is a guy who is now with the Congressional Quarterly here, but at the time was at the Atlanta Journal, and this is something that might be worthwhile for your archives if they're not already there--magazine piece on the relationship between
  • Kong, the more mature, older, some of the World War II and Korean [War] vintage correspondents out of Hong Kong, Tokyo, Bangkok, points east and west who would come in periodically to cover. Even Time magazine's bureau chief at that time, a fellow
  • to back up and do. Some of them hqye come up partly as the result of the article just coming out in Look Magazine which you've probably had a chance to know about by Norman Cousins ["How the U.S. Spurned Three Chances for Peace in Vietnam," July 29, 1969
  • . Airmen - Governor Harriman's staff has been in touch today with David Dellinger, the editor of the magazine "Liberation", to find out his plans in connection with the North Vietnamese invitation to him reported in the press to send a representative
  • to the way the c~:)Untry got ,to see Johnson, that is, the magazine articles and the rest of them. 'As I say, it was wholly opportunistic in the classic sense of the word, because Bob Kennedy made me look like a pacifist on the subject of Vietnam
  • AND EUROPE WITH NGO DINH- DIEM ANDrlENT TO VIETNAM IN NINETEEN FIFTYFIVE WHERE HE REMAINED UNT NINETEEN SIXT YFOUR PUBLISHING PAPERS AND MAGAZINES. G'P-1 . END AND ACK ,8/WH PLS ACK Of.QAWllllU .,.orhorin N'L! oQ - l..'!>I Rl_t:.Jf~ "ARA Tmel..~:!~O TH E
  • it's the sole effect, I don't think writing in newspapers or magazines--or any kind of written word--really hits people as much as television does now. M: Of course, if the physicians themselves give it out, they communicate this to their patients. S