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- LBJ to New York for Mrs. Robert Wagner's funeral; Lady Bird meets with Jim Webb about trip to space installations; lunch meeting with Mr. Ketchum; Look magazine photo session for Lynda and Luci; fifth congressional reception; Johnson family vacation
- are also guests. The current issue of Time magazine has an article on LBJ, calling him the “Texas Watch Dog.” U.S. troops in Korea successfully complete an amphibious assault on Inchon and retake Seoul. 9/17-9/23 Maury Maverick is visiting in Washington
- of interest. The areas she chose were: conservation and beautification, Head Start, and working on the Johnson Library. Her interest in conservation and beautification stemmed from her childhood. In an interview for the New York Times Magazine of September 10
- reason, it didn't happen. Lyndon was hoping to come back on Christmas Eve with good news, some sign that the Pope would intercede in the war with Ho Chi Minh. Some days later Hugh Sidey wrote a piece for Life magazine and he called it, "Around the World
- with which he hoped to come back and run Washington, and I came down as a political writer for the Reporter magazine to ask him if that story was true. It led to a story that he liked, interpreting Johnson and his attitude toward national politics. But I
- of a deposition , to one Sydney Baron , whom she believes to be connected with the Democratic Party . She took such action at the request of her superior , Mr . oodrow Wir sig , Editor , "Printers' Ink , " a magazine for advertising and marketing men , published
- , I would think. other words, you probably did so~e In work in between, with your ideas, but you had not actually, as yet, had him sit for you. H: I'd done a portrait for Time magazine of selected as Man of the Year. ~lr. Johnson when he
Oral history transcript, L.T. (Tex) Easley, interview 1 (I), 5/4/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . You now have galleries for periodicals and magazines. So to answer your question, Lyndon was smart in his press and public relations from the very beginning. He would call me and the other Texas reporters, but particularly me at that point because
- a magazine cover picture of TIME Magazine, and he was very happy with it. I hope maybe some day it'll hang at the Lyndon B. Johnson Library at the University. It was a great gift, and he liked it. M: Well, you met him there? L: I met him there and had
- 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
- " effect that they could do no wrong. And even Jackie's recent marriage, these rationalizations that have been appearing in magazines. are the darndest things I've ever read, some of them. They I hope history will recognize Mrs. Johnson for all of her
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 14 (XIV), 9/11/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of a year or less. There had been some contacts made with me; I don't even remember details of them. It was to be a matter of making a selection among two or three possibilities; also, I had on-going a book agreement. A contract was signed with Look magazine
- on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 4 and did a radio broadcast once a week on Sunday night. pieces and lectures and one thing and another. I also did magazine I now look back in awe and unbelief on the amount
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 5 (V), 4/1/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- cousin Elaine looked at it and said, "Oh, he's a regular Fisher Boy" or something like that. I forget the name she used. But there was an artist at that time who drew pictures of handsome young men, and they appeared in all the magazine illustrations
- react badly to some bit you have written, it's a hard but invaluable lesson: "I'm never going to do that again!" Mamet's next career stop was a stint at Playboy magazine. He met all sorts of people there, did some editing, and by his account, wrote most
- with him, mainly as an errand boy, and oftenti·mes he could 5e delightful. My wife ts favorite story about it is that he was_gofog in one day to the East Room. to present an award to someone as Teacher of the Year. it. He was_goi_ng Some magazine
- Sevareid, and Ed Johnson had made a statement, which we proved had been in newspapers and magazines and was really public knowledge. And, as I recall that, the reason that Eric Sevareid took off after Ed Johnson was that he was the first one
- on CNN said this was the first of the paparazzi pictures, and he said, "Did you do it or did Ted [?] do it?" And I said, "Well, I did it." We found him. Don Erbach [?], who was then a Life magazine photographer--we went to the lake and rented a boat, got
- article that I reported on. I don't know wheth.e r they printed them or not, but I have put in many hours talking to these magazine guys and 'newspaper people. B: Back in those early days when you all were boys together, did Lyndon ever express any
- 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
- posed for a nude layout to be seen in an upcoming issue of Playboy. (She wears boots, a lot of hair and great eyeliner.) When Nancy announced to her father that she was considering an offer from the famous men's magazine, Frank Sinatra did not explode
- Club and the mailing label from your Rifleman magazine. b1 sending $1.00 Yours for God and Country, R.P. Varani, Conmander "The object and practice of LIBERTY Iies in the limitation of governmental power... · Mussolini's Italy, in Hitler's Germany
- to Governors last night for lunch next week. his telephone call -w/ Joe Califano, the President remained in his bedroom alone, sitting at his desk, reading a New York Times Magazine story on Jack Valenti. 12:14 The President came out of his bedroom and walked
- for some three or four years, the first permit for that channel was granted years and years before the station was ever built. F: Life magazine came out during the campaign of 1964 showing President Johnson's holdings and putting valuations on them. Did
- that was our confrontation. But following that, when he was a senator and his picture was on the Time magazine and said, "The second most powel~fl!l man in the United States," I said to my friends, "You know who the most powerful man is? It's me! I
- . He'd been in Vietnam for Time magazine, and his point of view would certainly be interesting to you if you haven't already interviewed him. G: Oh, he's on my hit list. K: Right. You might ask him when you see him, ask him about his conversation
Oral history transcript, Maxwell D. Taylor, interview 1a (I), 1/9/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- , 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
- school. But I did manage to get both an A.B. and a LL. B. degree from the University. M: What kinds of jobs did you hold? G: Well, I worked in stores. I waited on tables. I sold magazines in LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
- 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
- was an advertising executive--was for his entire career until he retired in 1951. He was associated primarily with Field and Stream magazine, so I have something of an outdoorsman background via the advertising route. had been a school teacher. My mother [I
- : All right, I'll take that. You said it. When Johnson became President, where were you-- at the time of the assassination? M: In Puerto Rico. F: How did you happen to hear about it? M: That was a very peculiar thing. McCall's magazine. I
- : There was no problem. No. I just went right through, with no questions being raised, really. I think the only comment, the only anecdote I can throw in here is Science magazine sent a young lady out to interview me--this is the American Association for the Advancement
- : How does it differ working for a wire service and working for a daily like the L.A. Times? M: Well, I've now worked for a wire service, and a daily, and a weekly magazine. And the deadlines can actually get rougher, in a certain way, because so long
- , and the rest of them follows him. It was in Time magazine I think. G: Why did he walk out? R: I guess it was because Pauley certified the other group of delegates also. And when you 15 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
- to me in the lobby, "Now, I see this fellow on the front of Time magazine here; it says 'from Texas.' Have you ever heard of that man?" And I said, "Well, I'm sure that you won't believe me, but I was sitting in that man's living room talking to Mrs