Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

901 results

  • not look as if he came down here on a purely social fling. State would do this with the weekly news magazines if at alL But since the King 1 s main talks were with you, State wouldn't think of backgrounding this way without your permission. Is this much OK
  • speculation--these things were written up in the papers and magazines--. The third speculation was in connection with when he made the appointment of Fortas and of Thornberry as the Associate Justice of the Supreme Court; there was speculation that I would
  • . D; Yes, very happily, they did. I remember the next week Life magazine had a centerfold and they had pictures of everybody laughing. They had all the senators, Humphrey, Kennedy, Johnson, Symington, all of them---l sti 11 have that copy of Li
  • there, because this candidate was in town. And the major news outlets, newspapers, magazines and TV have their own reporters there. So it's not a matter that you have to do anything. When an incident like this happens, of course it goes nationwide very quickly
  • 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
  • ? S: None at all. F: What about the revelations on Bobby Baker? Did you get to see the Vice President's reaction to those? S: I think his reaction was one of disappointment. He, as everyone knows and as the newspaper and magazine articles very
  • by the newspaper story I saw, and also a story that appeared in Time magazine naming the four judges who had been agreed upon by the Vice President and Senator Yarborough. So, as I say, I went to Florida and then came back here, and when I got back to San Antonio
  • 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
  • cartridge shells in the magazine of the gun that night. The next day they all went off hunting and the Judge come in a little early, red-faced and red-eared, about held seen this big buck and he tried to throw a shell in his gun. couldn't get the shell
  • ; GREEN BOOK; LOOK magazine feature; Temporary Commission on Pennsylvania Avenue; John Saylor; Lady Bird’s Committee for the Beautification of Washington; THE AMERICAN AESTHETIC; reflecting pool at the Capitol; Pennsylvania Avenue and the Mall or national
  • awfully minor things, you know--how many magazine subscriptions ought to be passed around and all of that-but I don't know. It would be a very hard job to ride herd on that bunch of prima donnas running around the White House, you know, playing God
  • this was able to say, "Unfortunately Dr. Prindle is not here because . . . . " And this just seemed to highlight the whole thing. Therewas tremendous interest both here and overseas, and ~ magazine pi cked up thi s dramati c trip, and so forth. [as di d
  • it, but of course it didn't do me any good. Time magazine ran it and I called them up and said, "Look, when you have two immediate sources, best of sources, and one says one thing and one says another, at least you run what each of them say. don't just run
  • 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
  • as owners of the television and radio station in Texas employers of any of your union members? B: Yes . They are employers . an opportunity to correct . There was one story out that this gives me It was published widely in a magazine
  • wrote, as I recall, a profile of Califano for the New York Times Magazine which we believed would be of great benefit to the President because it would show the way in which the President decided his options in 7 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • originally a weekly. I got involved in that, so I had an interest in Chicago and Detroit. Then I started a little magazine in New York, and had a little interest out over there. So I was kind of spread around. Well, in 1959 I was asked by a group in London
  • [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Reedy -- XXI -- 5 and he started bawling him--Loye Miller from Time magazine--he started bawling him out, saying he knew all about those briefings that were
  • magazines a month in addition to the three newspapers a day. M: Do you pick up names that are prominent in a field? C: I pick up names, people who are doing new things and all this business. And you say, "All right, I'm going to use him sometime so I'll
  • magazine that wrote something about the same time that was also quite influential. G: Did Harrington's book have an impact on you personally in your work on poverty? C: Yes, it did, it did. It was a Gestalt kind of thing in the sense that suddenly
  • Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh COOK -- I -- 31 an uncommon experience to have a certain mental image of an individual based on newspaper articles, magazine articles, radio and television broadcasts; and then to later
  • 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
  • it was Time Magazine and saw a little squib about what the people in Congress were doing toward getting a travel act established . � � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories
  • some prices at a different time than we raised other prices ; and one of the reasons was to avoid, let's say, the magazine and the newspaper world almost forcing the Administration into taking some kind of action about steel prices . A great deal
  • : Well, read that little story there. G: You're referring to the story here that's in the Texas Highway Department magazine. W: I met him right there; that's the first day I met him. If you read that story, you'd kind of find out what it was all about
  • it? G: Well, she's asking if LBJ will autograph an official portrait from Look magazine-- W: For her? G: For you, and send it to you. W: Well, maybe so, I don't know. (Laughter) G: You don't remember that? W: I don't remember it. She
  • --named Frankie Randolph who financed a magazine--gee, I never thought I'd forget the name of it but I have--devoted to liberal causes in Texas and-M: Wasn't the Texas Observer? J: Yes, that was it. And Lyndon was their target and they often took out