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  • bit about how you came to be what you are in life. W: Well, I was lucky enough to get a scholarship at the University of Chicago. F: I've taught there. W: And by working my way through there, I was able to get a degree in law and practice law. F
  • in Philadelphia. That had been something I had been wanting to do since I was an eight-year-old in 1932 and listened to the convention in Chicago. Paul Bolton had also given me assurance that if Johnson didn't run, if he went out of Congress at the end of the year
  • !'notiona miloting -with the Prollidont. t\10 nooks ngo by Toma Dot10orate lly ooncem is that Europe h&ar through America that this country is behind the Preoident to the sneximum. Thnt Jll8e.ns1 l. Chicago ehould be une.nimouu with _no other name
  • stood in all of those doors that read Look Magazine and New York Herald Tribune and a lot of publications that I was too intimidated to even go in. bureau for twenty-six dailies in Michigan. She had a news For twenty-five dollars a week I could
  • that no reporter, when I got down here, really qualified, with very few exceptions--such as Marshall Peck of the Herald-Tribune in New York City, Paul Weeks in Los Angeles--both of whom by the way later joined the War on Poverty--there were no qualified poverty
  • INTERVIE~~EE : HARRY PROVENCE INTERVIEWER: DAVID PLACE: His office at the Waco Tribune Herald r4ccor~B Tape 1 of 1 M: First of all, we'll get some background information. I'd like to know where you were born and when and where you got your
  • was then with the New York Herald Tribune. Since then they've both become commentators on NBC. Kiker was always the nemesis of the President. It was my feeling that if LBJ had run for re-election that eventually Doug Kiker would become his press secretary
  • Farley, Federal Fall Guy. By John Boettiger. Chicago SUnday Tribune J-ane 10, 1934. Washington, D.C.A new temple in the forum ot the New Deal rises Pennsylvania quarters Avenue, and within its which set.to Washington's expensively stone
  • their 1952 convention-convened in the same vast, air-conditioned Chicago audi­ torium where the Republicans nominated Dwight D. Eisenhower for the presidency 10 d4ys earlier. They said sessions would start on time, speeches would be brief. Everybody
  • criticized the practices in the Senate. L: I don't remember that, but I do remember that very soon after the election in 1958, he gave an interview to the Chicago Tribune in which he took a relatively conservative position on everything. And we had a kind
  • are going to organize in the newspaper. we will tell you where we will be, how we will be, and what methods we are going to use to stop these cops. That should be our slogan - - "•stop the Cops'"· The."Herald Tribune", a New York daily news­ p~per, Late City
  • York; Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio; Long Island; Chicago; Indiana University; Pittsburgh; Wilmington, Ohio. D·CLAS 11-lf:.D 11526.. . 3.5 E NU__:filA-l,._'-l~-1'.4,\ NARA. t J·3f5·'.dt:Ql) Marvin ~-14 lo (~-2-65) o·r'FICE OF TH& DIRECTOR ITED
  • and some of these other leaders in Florida. So when they put the Kennedy campaign together they really centered it into this element of leadership, and they alienated the Tampa Tribune, the Miami papers--not the Orlando paper, because "Lyndon LBJ
  • to Kansas City, Mo. to attend 78th birthday luncheon party for Truman. Later flies to Chicago to attend fundraising dinner. 5/9 Flies from Chicago to Walla Walla, Washington for ceremonies at Walla Walla and Pasco re: Ice Harbor Dam. Spends night
  • . It was the kind of proposal that sat very well with the Washington Post but not very well with the Chicago Tribune. It was just sort of talked about. I realized at the time that while it was probably a rather good idea, that there was simply no prospect
  • . Appleton, Wisc. Post-Crescent G. Wausau, Wisc. Record-Herald H. Lacrosse, Wisc. Tribune I. Washington, D.C. Post-Times-Herald K. Washington, D.C. Star L. Washington, D.C. News M. New York Times N. Long Island City, Ne~ York Star Journal O. Jamaica, New York
  • every day in private business by people who do not have pre­ cedents when they want things done. he Orlando Star 'has a car of paper purcha•ed from a pa.per company and the T Tribune is out of paper, the paper manufacturer merely phones llartin Ande en
  • Miss Mollie Parnis Parnis-Livingston, Inc.,, NYC Mrs. Charles S. Robb Arlington, Virginia Mr. Sarmi Sarmi, Inc.,, NYC Miss Patricia Sheldon Christian Science Monitor Miss Eugenia Sheppard New York Herald Tribune Mrs. Robert Short Wife of the Natl. Chmn
  • blunder on our part. We thought--Shriver thought that he had Mayor Daley's concurrence in putting the project on. There had been much discussion prior to its funding about its being operated by the Chicago Community Action organization, CCUO
  • looked exactly like a Chicago Tribune caricature of a cookie-pushing, waist-coated diplomat. Talked something like it, too--spoke beautiful Italian. So Outerbridge went with him to a gallery; he was going to buy some paintings. And he came across a real
  • in establishment of the force of unity would be the very denial of a supreme placement. I do not believe we need a Tribunal of The Hague, or the fixation at Geneva of a world business, or at Washington, any more than I am sure we need a fixed Pope at Rome, backed
  • .... ·- . - --- . ----------------l~--------'----l_.o:;..;.._;;_ L----E_V_ANS_~,.__R_o_w_l_a_nd__.,__,._Jr~.;_.,...-----~;l~· ----'----------~-i.......:----.-":iil'IMI . ----~~~_ro_rk Herald Tribune Office in Residence Res: 3125 . 0 Street, N. W. ~ .. . .-~-":_.:__N_A_8_-_0_290
  • . yours, sent photo­ at my THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON July 31, TO: GEORGE FROM: OKAMOTO Do you think Attachment we should 1968 CHRISTIAN do this? --- ®tica.90Onbune THI: woaLD'I OR:SAT&ST NIWIPAPIR 30, 1968 Juq TRIBUNE TOWER
  • . I hr, Dy Gl,Jo:NX I•"OWl,ER Ing code re~dy to propose l•! giants that erect several Ulou20,60. '10/ 111tt••• 10n1 N•• vor• ,,_ locAl author1tes tn every par\ sand houses a_year. St., IN l~ CHICAGO Dec 6 _ There of Ulc country," he SAld. , Mr
  • investigation is to provide an independent tribunal which, unrestricted by depart­ mental or other loyalty or partiality, can examine the extent to which accident investigations fairly state the circumstances of an accident. In other words, the Board, with its
  • for adherence to the Chicago Convention and urging East European countries to apply the ICAO standards. 5. Facilitation of Travel We should encourage the flow of tourist travel both ways by civil aviation links, by establishment of tourist offices where appro­
  • activities with that of Mr. Johnson and the events that occurred during his time. You began your news career with the Chicago Sun Times in 1948 and moved into broadcasting in 1950. You went with Station WNBQ, the NBC station in Chicago. From 1950 to 1965 you
  • it in the Herald Tribune, but I didn't associate it with me. I mean, I never have sought any kind of office, any kind of political thing--any! show how he dealt. But I tell this to Now to prove it to you, when I went to see him and I told him, "Mr. President
  • they've been doing with white and black in this country for the longest damned time. Now there are several white reporters on the Times or the Post or the Chicago Tribune or any of these papers who have a competency and have exhimted it, to go and see
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Baker -- III -- 10 and the Chicago Tribune learned about it. So they got hold of Senator Bridges, Senator [Herman] Welker, and Senator [William] Jenner, and said, "Now, we've got this story. Why don't you
  • Katzenbach as attorney general; presidents’ interaction with the State Department; May 1966 trip to Chicago; LBJ’s opinions of the U.S. role in Vietnam; LBJ’s assessment of his own staff; Tonkin Gulf resolution; Lindley Rule and press access to LBJ
  • was living in Japan, Dien and I began to hear and read about this place called and so I went down there for the Chicago Daily News what turned out to be the end of to the Viet Minh Dien Bien Phu fell Accords . it . and at the time of the Geneva
  • , former defense secretary who left the government on 10/8, but said this decision might be “reconsidered” in view of Wilson’s statements to a New York Herald Tribune reporter on 12/30 disclaiming responsibility for holding down military spending. Wilson
  • , but primarily because of his association with a very controversial labor case. The Chicago Tribune was very adamant against his appointment, and had used all the influence possible--sent investigators in and everything else to Wisconsin. And this was affecting