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  • stint as a correspondent in Washington, working out of Bascom Timmons· bureau there; this lasted for several months. Then later I worked as a display advertising salesman and later in the business office. In fact, [I worked in] every part
  • stint as a correspondent in Washington, working out of Bascom Timmons· bureau there; this lasted for several months. Then later I worked as a display advertising salesman and later in the business office. In fact, [I worked in] every part
  • himself an escape hatch. K: I have no idea where Life got their material. F: You had those charges that in a sense you had bludgeoned certain people into taking advertising. Was there any substance to that? K: That's an insult to the individual
  • you cannot advertise with companies owned by congressmen. meaning their wives indirectly, HEB, Jack's Sawmill, owned by Ed Clark." I'm quoting Dan Moody. Lyndon and I have. you might call it, a hate-love relationship. buried the hatchet with Lyndon
  • , "Well, I'm going out here to the Guadalupe Catholic Church in East Austin. They're having a bazaar and I'm supposed to help the Father out there." They had a microphone and advertised the different booths they have at the bazaar, and people would
  • and calling my friends and giving money to help to pay for advertising. M: Well, I believe that's all the questions I have. very much for the interview. G: Oh, fine. I hope it has been helpful. M: I think it will be. A~d I wish to thank you LBJ
  • more interested in trying to bring activity down by the department stores that advertised so heavily than in the merits of the case. F: I remember somewhere in there Robert Kennedy was rumored as having some reservations on this Potomac River site. S
  • vocal--I think Mr. Avery. I'd better not say which one--but one of them in his campaign had that as his public advertising, that he was opposed to that, that FDR would stack the Supreme Court. So there was vocal opposition to Roosevelt because
  • of the time I was in the Un i ve rs ity, I was on the YMCA cabinet. Fo r two yea rs, I was state president of the Baptist Student Union. I was advertising manager of the Texas Ranger for several years. forensic activities. And I went in I was captain
  • in advertising, radio, television, journalism, and so on, but a professional PR kind of an operation was something else. And when you get into the tax collection business, our Economists and School of Business people didn't seem to have a lot of enthusiasm
  • Zandt County that joins you, y'all haven't done doodley." When Johnson got his helicopter, I had to pay all the bills up there and get it advertised and get cards sent out to everybody. And they'd hit people up in Tyler and nobody'd helped them. When
  • . Of course. they all branched off. business, as you probably know. John went into the advertising You may not have followed John Connally too much. G: Oh, yes. Jake Pickle went intoadvertising,calso. M: Yes, Jake was another one I had forgotten. John
  • somewhere and we pointed it out. G: You said that at first you thought that things didn't look too good but after they began making mistakes, things started looking better. What were the mistakes? W: They started attacking him, which was good advertising
  • advertisers. Do you remember anything about that? M: Oh, I remember Robert Kerr, Johnson's great friend, working assiduously for the billboard interests. I had a kind of a--I had a definite conflict of interest. My father was the president of a little
  • :300 newspapers in the United States. young Reid and by 1922, two years be­ In another 'postwar period of record fore the $5,000,000 merger of The Trib­ circulations and advertising, the news­ une and Herald, be had turned .the com­ mercial departments
  • advertising 2315 18th PLACE,N. E. WASHINGTON, D. C. 20018 r Democratic C•-ittee Mra. Beas Abel 1600 Peua. AYenue, N. ~ Washin1toa, D. c~· w. PLEASEDETACHANO RETURNWilli YOUR REMITTANCE $----··············-··· DATE 10/y REFERENCE NUMBER BALANCE
  • , they should take paid issue advertising by those with a point of view." Newspapers are vulnerable, loo, Hodding Carter charged. "All the resources are there," he maintained, for both press and televi- 10 Jim Lehrer We've got to stop defending
  • for how you titled stuff or sell stuff on the Hill-- G: Truth in advertising. C: --we never would have sold anything. But Ramsey, so he'd make that thing an issue. He was very sticky on everything. Johnson made a terrible mistake with Ramsey at one
  • revised and he loved it. G: She was from a PR firm, an advertising firm? C: She was from a PR firm, and he [was] enamored of her writing. It was a brief--I don't know how long she was around, but she wrote very zippy, inflammatory stuff, and he loved
  • lawn, Johnson City. LBJ writes Ed Standifer of the Bastrop Advertiser: “I am still working on Camp Swift and although we may not get any decision for the next few weeks, I am still very hopeful.” 1946 Chronology ● p. 10 of 17 07/2024 10
  • ready to agree that maybe Foster and Kleiser and the Outdoor Advertising Association didn't have to stay out on their high horse and oppose the bill. After all, from our point of view of beautification, it's terribly weak right now. They're getting
  • it was issued and was accepted by the NSRP officials without comment. On August 8, 1966, SV T-10 advised that HENRY G. WHITE of Dalton, Georgia, had passed out leaflets advertising a rally sponsored by the Dalton, Georgia, Chapter of the NSRP, -5
  • calamities, in that, and it's natural enough, if you ask a man who is, say, a journalist or an advertising person to do a speech with no knowledge of the President's style or demands, it isn't going to work our particularly well . John Steinbeck has done some
  • who was-- J: Yes, I remember that name. G: --the outdoor advertisers' lobbyist. J: Yes. Yes. G: He really felt that he had been betrayed by the White House on that. Do you recall? J: No. I don't know who he dealt with in the White House. I
  • ; criticism that LBJ was impulsive in dealing with the Dominican Republic; Jacobsen's involvement in beautification legislation; the outdoor advertisers' lobby; Jacobsen's relationship with Henry Gonzalez; Larry O'Brien's work; misconceptions about trading
  • no threat to violence. It merely serves peacefully to advertise their protest against dis­ crimination. But the massing of men with sticks and clubs, shouting insults, is hysteria of a far more dangerous kind. This could lead to another r ound of turmoil
  • don't think any real understanding of American politics. I' 11 never forget that preconvention advertising campaign he wanted to launch; it was absolutely ridiculous. puerile in its concepts. had a meeting. Absolutely ridiculous! It was childish
  • Morley says: "A factually-informed citizenry . .. free of political-expediency ed-propaganda ... is America's greatest-security." "Even in the midst of the worst crisis I cover, hope often exceeds hopelessness ... hopelessness is better advertised
  • $600,000 which he . described as a "drop in the bucket" compared to what is needed. Levison noted that Harry Wachtel has $30,000 from an advertisement for the King Memorial Foundation. Levison was critical of Andrew Young, Executive Vice President
  • publications analyst ANNE FITTON advertising & circulation administrator VENUS RODRIGUEZ vxrOakc.org 212-696-8260 advertising representatives J.L. FARMAKIS, INC. 48 Topfield Road WIiton, CT 06897 203-834-8832 billOjllarmakls.com 4 Your Family Dog 24 At Your
  • publications analyst ANNE FITTON advertising & circulation administrator VENUS RODRIGUEZ vxrOakc.org 212-696-8260 advertising representatives J.L. FARMAKIS, INC. 48 Topfield Road WIiton, CT 06897 203-834-8832 billOjllarmakls.com 4 Your Family Dog 24 At Your
  • fields. And sound trucks with advertising of Lyndon Johnson all over them were sort of the trademark of the campaign. The scene was very likely to be the courthouse square. That's the way it was in the thirties, forties and up until television took over
  • , and sometimes it was a pretty good distance. But Sam, he mentioned one time that his cut was going to be commissions on all the advertising that was sold at those two radio stations, so this was what he was working for. I don't know how all that stuff came out
  • had no ring. Then he remembered stores were closed This produced another call to Lady Bird and a swing by their home to borrow the much advertised dimes tore ring Dan Quill had LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • of 156, Johnson was nominated--I suppose that was just a sort of advertising-- S: Yes, yes. F: No one had any serious ideas. S: No, no, not then. F: Right. By 160 though he was really contending. Johnson surprised everyone in that vice