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  • , Sen Everett McKinley Dirksen Ambassador a t Large Mr. Rdscoe Drummond, New York Herald Tribune Mr. Mel Elfin. Newsweek Mr. David Watt, London Financial Times Mr. Peregrin e Worsthorne, London^_ The Secy of the Treasury, Henry Fowler Senator J. W
  • Comm Mr. and Mrs . Max Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Eddi e Ada usForest Hills, NY Pres & Gen Chmn, UJA, Hon. and Mrs. Robert H. Fleming Mr. and Mrs. Martin Agronsky NBC Hon. and Mrs. Justice Abe Fortas Col. ahd Mrs. Jacob M. Arvey Chicago, Ill. Secy and Mrs
  • ground floor (se e pag e "7" ^ National Newspaper Publishers Associations CIVIL RIGHTS John Bogle Joh n Sengstacke Asst Pub Philadelphia Tribune Publisher Chicago Defender Mildred Brown Whittier Sengstacke • Publisher Omaha Star Gen Mgr Tri State
  • newspapers, had their best on the beat: Murrey Marder, Chal [Chalmers] Roberts of the Washington Post; Ned [E. W.] Kenworthy, Bill Jorden, Max Frankel of the New York Times; Pete Lisagor of the Chicago Daily News; John Cauley of the Kansas City Star; Paul
  • newspapers, had their best on the beat: Murrey Marder, Chal [Chalmers] Roberts of the Washington Post; Ned [E. W.] Kenworthy, Bill Jorden, Max Frankel of the New York Times; Pete Lisagor of the Chicago Daily News; John Cauley of the Kansas City Star; Paul
  • Bock, who was-G: How do you spell that last name? D: B-O-C-K. He was a leader of the Veterans for Peace in Chicago, and he was a member of the national executive committee, representing them, of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War
  • stations allocated to it. The three networks got stations and--no, the three networks didn't, but there were three allocated to what later became network stations, and the other one went to the Tribune. Now, there were a lot of people in Chicago
  • -relations end of the New York Herald Tribune in those days, and the New York Times, Newsweek, and other magazines and newspapers. 2 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
  • The origin of Shriver’s interest in poverty-related issues; Shriver’s involvement with trade unionism, the St. Vincent de Paul Society and the board of education in Chicago; Shriver’s work in the 1940s with Eunice Kennedy on the Continuing Committee
  • , 1974 INTERVIEWEE: RALPH G. NEWMAN INTERVIEWER: Joe B. Frantz Place: Reception Room, Abraham Lincoln Book Shop, Chicago, Illinois Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 F: How did you ever get in contact with the Johnsons in the first place? N: My first word
  • a job on a newspaper. So I went to I lived in Chicago for quite a number of years. F: Which paper? E: Chicago Tribune, believe it or not. F: I was going to say--that was good training for a career Democratic girl. E: And that's the only paper I
  • . And then-G: I assume you were asleep; this was-- S: When he called? G: Yes. S: Oh, sure. He pulled me right out of sleep. And he said, "I want you to meet me at seventhirty in the morning at Andrews [Air Force Base] and go to Chicago with me, because
  • Paley; Stanton’s role as LBJ’s tie to the television industry; the 3/31/68 speech; leaving Washington DC with LBJ the morning of 4/1/68 to go to Chicago; the decision to keep the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago and not move it to Miami; press
  • of the North and East and to some extent the West. And this is increasingly true of the South with the development of the two-party system. take the Chicago delegation. But you Now the Chicago delegation would seldom coalesce or have a meeting ground
  • OF !HE FIFTH RUSSELL TRIBU~AL INVESTIGATION TEAM iERE TAKEN ON GUIDED TOURS OF BbMBED CIT!ES I~ THE HANOI VICINITY. WHE~-- THE THE FIRST TRIP TOOK PLACE ON 3 AUGUST TRIBUNAL MEMBERS WERE DRIVEN FROM HA'"'rnr TO 'rHE TOWN OF SON TAY ~OHTH ~EST
  • -taking session with Alain Poher, President of the European Parliament {biographic sketch at Tab A), and 12 of his colleagues {list ·a t Tab B). The delegation just visited Chicago, and will go on to Cape Kennedy on the 15th. {The European Parliament
  • know who the woman is now who is vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee. But she [Edwards] was well known by everybody; she was a power. She'd come out of the Chicago Tribune. She'd been a woman's editor, came to Washington, got interested
  • the Republican Party of Senator Taft. They have the Republican Party of Senator Morse. And somewhere--way out behind the Chicago Tribune Tower--is the Republican Party of Senator McCarthy with one foot heavy in Greece and the other foot in 1953 Chronology ● p. 9
  • , N Y Times Helen Thoma s - UP I ; Bob Young - Chicago Tribune Forrest Boyd . Mutua l News ___ Hugh Sidey , Tim e an d Lif e Jim Jone s Tom Johnso n _ Mary Rathe r pob Talked abou t hi s visi t with Gen, Eisenhowe r an d how well he looked . Als o
  • Lady Bird has a cold; Lady Bird spends day in bed autographing Christmas presents; lunch in bed; Robert McNamara is resigning as Secretary of Defense to take job with World Bank; Lady Bird is interviewed by Louise Hutchinson of Chicago Tribune; Lady
  • , Tau. daily ..-pe lundaJ. N.w Year't. rourtb o1 111b', Labor D17, Thanastvinl and · Clu1ltlnaa Day. Sunday and holiday llaun Th• Waco Tribune-Herald. En• tend u NCOnd-clau matter at the Waco Poat Offlc• under the Act of ConlNIII March 3. ll'lt
  • -Fulbright natural gas bill through the Senate immediately, but he is going to encounter opposition from Senator Paul Douglas of Chicago. Chicago’s Negro population “has been seething” since the recent murder of Emmett Till, from Chicago, in Mississippi
  • of urbanization that (Nov. 6, 1965 is accurately of the areas leaves are Tribune to reflect the urbanizing problems problems, appointing Cabinet fail and unfortunately, and city is and Urban as the New York Herald inaccurately does
  • ;uat 30., 1966. At tb1s time he was fin.ed t ,b e. amount of . · !;~J .00 for holding a public rally at Marquette Park, Chicago, Ul1.n~1s on August 21, 1966, without obtaining a permit. Colonel FRANK BATTAGLIA, Chie,f of Patrol, Baltimore., :·~-. r
  • that on November 26, 1967, a meeting of the Chicago Branch of the NSRP was held at 2237 North Wes t e rn Avenue i n Chicago which \J;as a tt~L.tl 6:..°l L i approximately 50 indiv.iduals. SV T-2 po.inted out that JESSE STONER was introduced by RAY SOWA after which
  • • teen per cent. These people are bou&ht and sold on special pri­ vile&e trade-outs. This means that you do a Job on .Arnall of Georgia and Hill ot Alabama and Mayor Kelly of Chicago. and the bum Hague. But tbe .tact is that you are enterin&..the .vale ot
  • Boulevard, L012g Ialand Cit7, !few. York. Be OD $500.00 bail. Thia waa taken to Night Court and released intar.m.ation waa obtained tr
  • met with--the correspondents were very angry and we met with Bill--what's his name? He is over in Beirut now, head of the Tribune bureau over there, Chicago Tribune. M: Could you tell me what you found about Vietnam then? H: Well, you know, people
  • , president and editor, Min­ neapolis Star and Tribune. Arthur H. Dean, Sull1van & Cromwell. Dr. Elmer Ellis, president, University o! Missouri. John Fischer, editor, Harper & Row. Marion B. Folsom, Eastman Kodak Co. James M. Gavin, U.S. Army, retired
  • in the Chi­ cago Committee of the Northern Friends of the South, which assembled in Chicago under Joe McWilliams in August, and in a National States Rights Conference in 1956. (Facts, Sept. 1956) The Memphis in Sept., Iowa America -Constitutional Party polled
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh congressman from the El Paso district; probably Frank Ikard and Homer Thornberry; John Holton was there, I think--I'm sure he was there; Nick Kotz of the Des Moines Register Tribune was there; probably others--I just paid
  • WITHALLOTHERPEACE-LOVING PEOPLEAND COUNTRIES OP' TKE WORLD,FOR THE NOBLEAIMOF COMPLETELY PROHIBITING DESTROYING NUCLEAR WEAPONS. ANDTHOROUGHLY 28 OEC l830Z CF/CP 90, ATOI SMASHER VASHINGTON AP>•MATOR RICHARD J. DALEY PLEDGED CHICAGO•s COOPERATIONWITH ATOMIC
  • , and Chicago and Detroit. He is a publishers• representative who meets the sellers of advertising ror large corporations and the operating executives or the same. He is an Irish Catholic, has not become anti-Catholic, but has been broadened b.r !our years
  • and I got together late (!_o ;i. 7 p Friday night which was sent you by Mr. Macy, there were listed (!.o 3 g the Executive Editor of the Chicago Daily News (Lawrence S. (!_ o // ~arming); a foreign correspondent, now city editor of the '. N ew e_oo1.oO
  • : The New York Daily News, the New York Tribune, the New York Evening Post, the Chicago Times, the Detroit Free Press, the Cincinnati Inquirer, the Cin­ cinnati Gazette, the Columbus Crisis, and the Indianapolis Sentinel. On August 23, 1864, Lincoln recorded
  • inspiration for that letter. worth checking out. I'm not sure of that, but it's If you find the letter, I think the letter first appeared in the New York Herald Tribune. G: Was Johnson upset about the leak of it? R: Not really. He said that he
  • . G: Let's see. I think that there's a Chicago Tribune article on August 10. O: Oh, it's that early. G: Then the Washington Post September 2 has a piece saying that O'Brien had hinted two days ago that he might quit unless the campaign direction
  • , actress; Billy Taylor, musician, composer; and Thomas Willis, Music Critic, Chicago Tribune. Summarizer: Peter Garvie, Dean, College of Fine Arts, University of Texas at Austin 5 Afternoon Panel Focuses On "Art And The Participant" "What is it like
  • , in the fall before the convention, and moved up to Chicago. Then we got tangled up in the long primary fight with Estes Kefauver, which we tried to avoid and couldn't. That meant an endless campaign, beginning in Minnesota and running all the way through
  • the Big Ten and the University of Chicago, who go into these kinds of things collectively. My basic scheme was to have this consortium of universities and in effect a consortium of Polish universities under the Ministry of Education jointly administer