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  • , but once that bridge was crossed there's no need in going back over it. G: You were active in the honorary journalism fraternity, Delta Sigma Phi. You were secretary of that, I guess. J: Probably. It was a matter of no importance. But I did decide
  • to and be interpreted in such a way as to provide the needed flexibility freedom of action. Under this interpretation we would not, for example, be called upon for such a strong burden of proof as has been required in the past that the needed assistance
  • -IL Routes 1-IL s 1 Annually 1-IL Routes 1-IL Foreign Service Journal u l 1-t>nthl.y Intelligence s 5 1-t>nthl.y 4-M/R Routes 1-IL Studies Completed on Foreign Areas Analyst ~ntelligence /Intelligence IL Information Briefs Per
  • and was on the agenda beginning in the early sixties as something that would be adopted but that's the nature of the way I became involved. G: In the sort of aid, help, information that you were providing, was it largely a question of how to fund
  • in order to permit the Department of Housing o.nd Urban Development to start operations. A. The Act creating APPLICABLELEGALPrlOVISIQ!,S the Department provides as follows: l. 'Ille Act "shall 2. The Act 'fDD.Y take effect "on such earlier date
  • became the number-one reporter and everybody else kind of looked around for their own stories. It was not an organized process. Time magazine works it a little [differently], because it's group journalism. [At] Time magazine, the bureau chief is assigning
  • . Lowell Limpus, as a military historian, took the laws of Clausewitz and applied them to journalism, plain military tactics and politics also. vast change. At that time the news media was undergoing a very Captain [Robert] Patterson had started the News
  • no· ~~bt that such discussion, under private auspices, of the· problems of peace will provide a. major contribution to the greatest single problem of our time. The symposium ·ip.a.t the ~enter proposes can, I think, an important ovont in tho International
  • 1°SUENUMBERXXXIXrEBRUARY15, l 'U\7 ongFri SPEAKERS ENLIVEN AUTUMN AT THE LIBRARY A distinguish d array of speakers from the worlds of poli­ tic cducation and history provided a lively serie!>of evenings at the Library during the final quarter
  • majored in journalism and became sports editor of the student newspaper. the Daily Texan. After a stint as capitol corre­ spondent for International News Service, he became press secretary to Texas Governors Price Daniel and John Connally. ln 1966 he
  • and nieces. My father and my uncle and I felt for a long time, primarily through my own wish, that I [should] go into journalism. I had taken quite a few journalism courses while I was at the University of Texas. tion. My majors there were journalism
  • and nieces. My father and my uncle and I felt for a long time, primarily through my own wish, that I [should] go into journalism. I had taken quite a few journalism courses while I was at the University of Texas. tion. My majors there were journalism
  • and tell them, IIAll rightll--and he did do James Henry on the TV station the same way-"if you run one ad with him, you'll never run another ad in the Longview News and Journal." unpopular. Just such stuff as that. He was very In fact, I was trying
  • ., these major holdings : The Macon (Ca.) ./ sional elections. In December he entered Victor F., and Joseph E.- whose holdings Telegraph anq News, The Gadsden spread from The Journal of Commerce (Ala.) Times, The Cleveland (Tenn.) the Columbia-Presbyterian
  • to provide all the details for the President's economy program in government to cut back expenses, I knew the stuff she was looking for, and I gave her the old statistics straight from the book. But there was one thing that I gave her which she always
  • on a few Eastern newspapers vs. the rest of the country; anti-LBJ sentiment in the Wall Street Journal; Jack Anderson; LBJ leaking information to the press; Bob Kintner; attempting to organize a group of young people to support LBJ; Edward Hamilton; how
  • --I just don't remember. Edgar Cahn I may I would have thought of him because he and his wife had written that long piece in the Yale Law Journal that was one of the basic documents. G: Was it assumed during this period that Sargent Shriver would
  • , Readers' Digest, Ladies' Home Journal, Rotarian ... in books ... and Congressional Record. He has appeared as major-speaker on programs with such prominent personalities as Presidents Eisen­ hower, Truman ... Secretaries of State Acheson, Dulles, Rusk
  • , Connecticut, the University Business of be on the staff Alan S. Dean. leadership of as Chief at Portsmouth, Hyslop will for Administration for providing A native in the new Department Hyslop has been serving wide basis. attended Policy Coast
  • ., Assoc of Natl Advertisers, Inc Moyers Allan S. , Austin, Chairman, the Austin Co. Secy Connor ID John B. Babcock, President, American Business Press Babcock, Richard J. , President, Farm Journal, Inc for Pix Bache, Harold L. , Chairman, Bache & Co. , Inc
  • was to travel all over the world. I thought perhaps--she could just write the most beautiful themes and beautiful stories. I had thought at one time perhaps she'd choose journalism as her major but I don't know what her major really was dcwn in Austin, whether
  • of Arts and Bachelor of Journalism. Some 25 years later than on platforms. the First Lady is still more at ease with people Greeting more than 2,000 womenwho jammed a reception lowing her speech to the home economists in Detroit, a PUest who admired
  • for .humanitarian assistance in East Europe. Present authority to provide food assistance for needy persons through voluntary agencies is adequate. However, we have only limited authority to meet disaster si uations in East Europe. We should also be able to cover
  • of the library prior to reviewmg the bulk of the documents, the processing of requests to declassify items, I he need to provide information Lo governmental agencies, the time required to gel ready for symposia, and the Lask of simply having lo answer innumerable
  • lhr1t ro1ilcl mrr1n a sho'rtj age of from r1 .m:o.ooo lo . 14.0r'fO,. ooo tons in cereal grains, about' 1oouhle the amounl of whe
  • , Texas p^ June 7,1966 TUESDAY 4:30p --Jl'
  • - - for awhile - - but I would love to have a half-dozen of these (14 October, 3305-37) if that is workable. (I would like to give one to my father for Christmas.) ·1 Many thanks; I am most grateful. This sort of thing provides compensation for too much work
  • , you know, "Fine. I'd like to have you work on the staff." I had been working for Charlie Green, who was the editor of the [Austin] American Statesman, and before that I had been working in journalism and for the journalism director at North Texas
  • father's knee when his daddy was talking to some important person. But his knowledge of government and politics was way ahead of most of us. G: Did he ever try to ·promote the creation of a journalism school there at San Marcos? W: Yes, according
  • was an enthusiastic In fact, that book there says that Lyndon asked Tom about starting a course in journalism so we'd learn how to write, we need to. Of course that was right down Tom's alley. He said, "Well, get some of your old friends that'll take the course
  • . At the time that I was his clerk, I was his only law clerk. B: That was in 1949 and 1950? W: That was in the 1949 term, right. I had been editor-in-chief of the Yale Law Journal and had come down along with other candidates from all over to be interviewed
  • manuscripts, diaries, and artifacts lent by individuals and institutions around the world. A cartoon of LBJ as gunslinger, by Jack Jurden of the Wilmington News Journal, adorns a banner hanging in front of the National Archives build­ ing in Washington
  • as sacred. It provides a good bench mark against which to squeeze every last bit of waste out of the bureaucracy - - and you are constantly conscious of waste. But you listen to your advisers and your economic experts. You are committed to maintaining
  • get away with providing little more than additional quantitative import commitments ~o the other CP 1 s as a group. On the other hand, if a complete set of new rules should be added to the GATT to provide special standards for Communist countries
  • Bird was taking journalism, she could be, you know, like what's her name with the Washington Post. And in that way Aunt Effie certainly was ahead of her time, I think. Her dream was not of Bird marrying and having a family. Bird to have a real career
  • and then I'd go home and start over. I did that for twenty-one months and saved up a wee bit of money and went back to Chapel Hill and got a degree in journalism, A. B. in journalism. Journalism was handy because all they--they had more electives than any other
  • Political Science Association. M: And you've published numerous articles in that journal, as I recall. R: I've published some in that journal and other journals. M: Now, to ask you a large question. There has been some talk that Lyndon Johnson's
  • . He made . He said that the prohibition of jus~ice, meeting out h_,rsh no . mention of shooting by WASHINGTON,April 17 - against "deadly force" except penalt~es to Neg~oes·and minor policemen. . . At_torneyGeneral Ramsay Clark to provide self-defense
  • be operated more economically in the future, but, at the present time it must be adequately financed as it provides many other benefits. The present program affords greater protection to the northern and southeastern portions of the United States which
  • , from BillXWalton. of June 1, In view of Bill's remark that we understated the case and, particularly, since my June 1 letter provides all of the pertinent data, I can only con­ clude that he wrote his memorandum to you before he saw our supple­ sure
  • taxes. It provides employment for more than 9 million workers . And it is the only major transportation system in the world operated by private entrepreneurs rather than under government ownership. Highly developed and diversified, it has served