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  • , Fortune Magazine Not since Teddy RooscYelt's time has there been so strong a current of concern among the people to preserve the lyricism of the continent and its seas This current has be n submerged in recent years. It does need a cataly~t. a political
  • an extremely transitory majorily. The presidential election was also the subject of a presentation by Life magazine editor Todd Brew­ ster and Life reporter Peter Meyer, who recounted the high­ lights of the campaign as they had covered it. They spoke
  • winner David Shribman is Washington bureau chief of The Boston Globe. He writes a column that appears in more than fifty newspapers, and another for Fortune magazine. He appears frequent! y on television's "Face the Nation" and ·•Washington Week in Review
  • is currently Styles Pro­ fessor Emerita in American Stud­ ies and Professor of Government. Professor Parker teaches at the Harvard Kennedy School of Gov­ ernment, and is the co-founder of the magazine Mother Jones, which has described itself as "your home
  • the Watergate scandal, and the Per ian Gulf War. His hallmark has been quiet and effective diplomacy; hi mantra was always " ever l t the other fellow set the agenda." Time magazine once called him "the Velvet Hammer." In his first statevvide campaign
  • ? l've had enough problems." He paused. "But if I want­ ed to b"' the chancellor of The niversity of~ xas I would be the b st one they ever had." Hugh Sidney (Time magazine Washington hureau chief): This coun­ try never produced a man who under, toocl
  • about the Watts riots. We were talking to the fellow from Time magazine and what have you. I mean it's so amazing. I notice the obvious following-up on all this other stuff. I mean Will Sparks comes by to see me on Thursday the nineteenth at 5:45
  • and loyalty and the press seducing you. It was just incredible. I don't know if you have that or not. Do you have the magazines for that period of time? G: Was he consistent about that, not wanting his aides to get publicity? C: Yes, he was consistent
  • ~ Mr. Alrnena Lornax Editor-Publisher Tribune 4100 \,fest dams Los ;. ngeles, California JC:plr 90008 lo 1 Magazine of Report, Opinion and Interpretation ➔~t.mHB'f.V~f 1~.100W. Adams Alrnena Lomax Los Angele~~, Califor:iia Edi.tor-Publisher
  • it on the cover of Time Magazine, I believe [Time Magazine, August 17, 1970, page 12.] B: Well, recently there was an account of it but the rumors were spreading around even during those years. H: If so, you know, with it being people who were highly involved
  • ] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Jenkins -- I -- 8 held a very high staff position on a national magazine which is now defunct. It wasn't the Literary Digest--Today was the name of it, Today magazine
  • -- 21 B: But you did sneak some in anyway? A: Yes, we snuck some in anyway. We also got questions planted in that thing in the Parade magazine, which was also my idea. B: That "People" feature that's in the first part of Parade? A: Right. B
  • Braestrup’s work as a journalist in Southeast Asia for the New York Times; New York Times coverage of Vietnam compared to Time magazine; how journalists covered Vietnam and the danger involved; how Braestrup became Washington Post Bureau Chief; Joe
  • Life magazine. So many things that happened here; you know, that is Life magazine is quoting, you know, what Haley said about him--that's not the Haley that you're familiar with. This is a 18 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • are copies with the Embassy in Tokyo. '~ ' -, 'I lJ Suggested Draft of a1tw Year's Statement from Mrs. o nson to Japanese Women's Mag ine "Josei Jishin" • r- In response Poulain there is Year's statement Women's Magazine t" ·...~ statement L
  • there that was published in Collier's magazine. That picture in the bedroom there is the picture of the cover of the Collier's magazine. And it said, "Can Lyndon do what Truman did?" Because he'd just been named head of the [Armed Services] Preparedness [Investigating
  • magazine and television coverage of it. Between the election of '60 and the time this commission was formed, both CBS and NBC did documentaries of Appalachia. You may remember "Christmas in Appalachia" the one that NBC did in December of '62
  • led me unexpectedly to North Texas, to Denison and Sherman, where we established a fishing and travel magazine. I had a public relations and advertising agency for roughly ten years. legislature for two terms from North Texas. And I went
  • in the newspaper business, magazine business, World War II service in the Air Corps, and, after the war, your own public relations firm. When in this process did you first meet Mr. Johnson? M: I saw him when he was running for the Senate in 1948. I did
  • 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
  • remembered LBJ reading this story by Pincus, who at that time I think was editor of the Potomac magazine on the Post. He made some very unpleasant, unflattering comments about Walter Pincus and his ancestors. He said, "That hypocritical son of a bitch
  • of directors. Another company, Riker-Maxman, an electronics firm, was an initial client. This client list was included in the announcement of the organization of O'Brien Associates. The announcement appeared in several newspapers and I believeNewsweek magazine
  • to work for Lyndon Johnson he wrote an article for Collier's magazine. If I recall correctly, the title was "The Frantic Gentleman from Texas. 11 And one of the things that puz­ zled me was Johnson's worrying over the word frantic, looking it up
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Scott -- I -- 10 B: What did you do? S: Well, I edited a little magazine called Movieland, that we gave away at the old Mayo Theatre, which was the largest one. We just put it out at the beginning of the week when
  • . On domestic trade publications--5 per cent . We have in addition to the outlook seven recurring publications or magazines, recurring reports or magazines ; two monthly, The Construction Review and Marketing Information Guide . P: This would be part of your
  • worked as a wire editor, copy editor, and foreign news writer for United Press International before joining Equitable Life Assurance in 19,0 as a sales representative. He sened as assistant editor, then editor of Equitable Life"s bi­ weekly magazine
  • appearing in ~merican Legion Magazine - June 1967 (a 1967 NSC meeting) ··/:~~~ I~ • ,, ~f D J"-0 3 p~ f~~'- J , ef .,/- o}J 0 Juna 6, 1967 I Dear Mr. Mayor: I I J The P1·esident le very apprecL • " your kindness in inviting hlm to address
  • . who is also a correspondent that the correspondent I point for various out that of the New York Times the correspondent newspapers and magazines, of NBCRadio, has been expelled from the country. This is the latest It is the latest mala
  • as recently as July, 1963. On September 6, 1965, King conferred with Levison regarding an article which is scheduled to appear in "The New York Times Magazine" sometime in the future. The article which will be attributed to King will deal with the civil rights