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  • LBJ and the Vietnam War; Lady Bird's interview with a magazine; Lady Bird reads about Beautification; Lady Bird has lunch meeting with Bess Abell about mail; Lady Bird meets with Stewart Udall about Beautification; Lady Bird swims and has
  • about my vice. I call it a vice because it wastes time and accomplishes nothing. But I dont go to movies and I never never listen to the radio and I very rarely read women's magazines--so I guess it's alright to deliberately waste a little timel It's
  • advertising manager of Life Magazine who is here with OWI on leave. He told me he thought we should have a new national representative, suggesting Free & Peters, and stating he and Mr. Peters were personal friends and he would put in a plug for us in order
  • members; Life magazine photo session for LBJ, Lynda and Luci Johnson; meeting with Angier Biddle Duke about Lady Bird's trip to Greece; Cyprus and civil rights issues
  • and Ornamental Iron Workers. Recommended by George Meany. Thomas 1) ..__, Vandergriff, Mayor of Arlington, Texas. Richard W. O'Neill, Editor, House and Home Magazine. Recommended by Lloyd Hand. 2 5 '/ , '+ Anthony Research Downs, Treasurer, Real
  • ( elae ) Magazine cover by ( ( , 0 . ) N..,.paper Picture Further descr!pt:lcn U necusary: o~ photograph .. ( ) Other L ,J~ * Inscriptimu "For Dorothy and ~rry For part:, Territo with warm regarda, Lyndon B. Johnson" other than one
  • magazine there was a big picture of Senator Humphrey holding the V-for-victory sign with Larry O'Brien, delighted with the passage of the bill in the Senate after the very vigorous opposition we offered. So I guess we didn't have quite the sympathetic ear
  • in Texas incidentally--in 1956 I was editor of two trade magazines in Stanford, Connecticut dealing with the inland commercial marine industry--tugboats, barges. Then in 1959 or '60, I guess, I started with a friend of mine a national magazine called
  • publicity like the Kennedys were getting. "Every week they're on the cover of this magazine or that magazine. I can't even get an item in 'Periscope.'" (Laughter) G: This was his Senate staff, is that right? M: No, his vice presidential staff. Reedy, Liz
  • : Occasionally he would ask a question about a magazine. or he would come in and he would say there was a certain item in some magazine LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
  • out in TIME magazine and had been on the air last night was helpful. On the other hand, he was extremely careful to say that he did not know all the considerations bearing on a statement by President Johnson; he would not advise him; but he merely
  • : ) ) ) ) ) White House Card Autograph Album Book First Day Cover Souvenir Program Photograph of the President, furnished by office Photograph of the President, furnished by party being autographed for Photographs>f President with someone else Magazine Cover
  • oul of 60. A magazine editor goe back to New York and calls a meeting of all women's magazine editor· to DO OME THING about he Equal Rights Amendment this year. The voi1•esof the sp akers linger in our thoughts. Rallying voices like Anne Armstrong, "Go
  • , featuring works by talented junior and senior high school students in the Central and North-Central region of Texas, was part of the national Scholastic Art Awards program which has been sponsored for more than a half century by Scholastic Magazin . 9
  • between wire services, magazines, newspapers, television, and foreign press--foreign press being put on for the very simple reason that when there are foreign royal weddings we want American reporters to have the right to be there. F: Do you arbitrarily
  • , that is directly. I started working for Time magazine in Paris in 1950 and at that time the French war in Indochina was going on. So I had a good deal to do from the Paris end of covering the story, that is, from the French end of the story. And [I] became
  • do good and you'll certainly get more than thirty-five bucks." I don't know what they paid me in the beginning but about forty-five. "At least you can move up and you can do what I'm doing." This is John Radosta, R-A-D-O-S-T-A. He said, "I do magazine
  • to newspapers, magazines and other publications, Williams was allocated $200 a month. The items were to be obtained by someone at UN and delivered through the diplomatic pouch. Williams complained that he never received the publications or the money. tions He
  • . . I had seen the picture "The Day The Earth Stood Still", and enjoyed it. It was well done, and your own well done role added greatly to it's realism. 11 Loo~1 Magazine, as you know, has recent­ ly done an article on "eaucers"which I think is the beet
  • the Vietnam war, the most important of info - (tel- a book on UFO's to be pu~lished very much interested Klass to U Thant, aviation interested he is writing bit Week magazine magazine. - he handles house..Jnext in this in their magazine
  • that Coretta King, widow of Martin Luther King, Jr., had advised Stanley Levison that she objected to a story in "Jet" magazine which indicated that she is supporting Senator Eugene McCarthy in the presidential race. Levison indicated that someone other than
  • ~ ·wno_~~avels regularly as an extension of the eyes and ears of the President. "In a sense, we now have a working executive type, at that. 11 ~nne Morrow Lindbergh woman in the White House and an Look Magazine 11 Mrs. Johnson is very much
  • ,Edward c., Bur. of Outdoor Recreation BERRY,E.Y., Congress BIBLE, Alan, Senate CRAMER,William c., Congress BLACK, David S., Interior DAVIS, Joseph H., Citizens Adv. Coom BLAKE, Peter J., Archi tectu.ral Forum DIAMOND,Henry, NYC Magazine DOUGLAS,Paul H
  • have that background. B: I was working at McCall's magazine with Lynda Bird. She and I became good friends, and I came to Washington several times. I was in her wedding, and I got to know the family pretty well. One day her father called me
  • of Harpers Magazine and will be eoming in to help with tbe· fa•ton show oa Wedaeeday. (Mr.e. White hae been cleared ab·•ady) China Machado 141 M aGiaoa AY•nue New York, New Yol'k Eve Orton 140 East. S6th llreet New York (born ia Vienna 1917) Natalie
  • Magazine asked why Ho Chi Minh would not come to the conference table. The President said that Ho has looked upon South Vietnam for years as something he wants to rule. The President felt that each day Ho Chi Minh has a little more doubt that he will ever
  • to their membership. And the project helped develop a new kind of interest in household employment. It spread awareness of the problem. Three or four Magazine writers took it up. of the leading, very large circulation magazines ran feature articles LBJ
  • --and we won the Academy Award in 1967. We published a weekly news summary; we published a monthly magazine on the war on poverty, which is disseminated very widely throughout the country; and in addition put out brochures and booklets and fact materials
  • Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Wildenthal -- I -- 23 Johnson. He had in tow a Look magazine correspondent, I believe, who was doing an article on him. He asked me
  • was the managing editor of Harper's magazine. Lapham proceeded to testify that he could account for Drosnin's presence with Hoffman when the deal was made as an effort by Drosnin to pursue an article he was writing supposedly under Lapham's direction on drugs
  • -eight depressed counties that comprise Appalachian Ohio. national newspaper and magazine publicity. As a result, we received -Time magazine ran a LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson -- III -- 5 Lyndon let them go for the speeches at the Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner. The next day Knowland brought up one of the most controver- sial bills. You'll have to check Time magazine
  • . One of the most devastating articles about Johnson in this era was written in Harper's magazine by Larry King. Larry and I got to be friends during this period, and some of what Larry says is entirely too bitter and too biting, but a lot
  • Lady Bird goes to hair salon and then meets Lynda Johnson at Boyhood Home; tree planting ceremony at Johnson City; Lady Bird mentions where Rebekah Baines and Sam Johnson met; Lynda Johnson's magazine article on "See America;" park is donated
  • helped Governor Connally when he prepared his story which ran in Life magazine. As you look over on that wall, you'll see the picture and the inscription there. It's a picture from Life magazine. M: Right. That's the one of John Connally standing
  • reading a popular magazine or anything like that at all . He was a great newspaper reader . He bought every issue of the paper and of course at that time there were quite a few dailies in Washington and he would buy each latest edition and he read them
  • of popular magazines; LBJ a voracious reader of newspapers; LBJ-FDR agreement on policy; Rayburn-LBJ relationship; LBJ and the Texas delegation; LBJ gets NYA job; roadside parks; the "Little Congress;" LBJ drafts patronage agreement for Texas delegation.
  • that information. But shortly after that the fellow who was acting primarily as our chief information officer allowed a Time magazine photographer to come into our office and take pictures. imagine. That upset me no end, as you might He tried to say, "The guy
  • White House correspondents, wrote about the administration Then know, and wrote a column on the presidency . I got started on Tet! , the book . in a strange way . I had been writing and free-lancing And it started, a magazine writer, done before
  • dealt with it. There was an article--I think it was in McCall's magazine, one of the women's magazines--which by happenstance my wife happened to have. And that told of the difficulties--how clinical laboratories were giving phony responses, what