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  • that would help Lyndon, even though he be a Republican in the McNaught Syndicate, it was Holmes, because I would feed him stuff. My opinion was give it to a reporter that you could depend on, [even] if he was a Republican, and it would be more valuable than
  • . Then by happenstance in the trade the syndicates formed, that is, these writers who demonstrated they could sell papers in New York and perhaps Washington were syndicated throughout the country. And being a by-product, they were offered 50 per cent of the take
  • , 1971 INTERVIEWEE: ROBERT NOVAK INTERVIEWER: Paige Mulhollan PLACE: Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 M: I've already identified you on the tape, but just to get the credentials on here as well, you are Robert Novak and you are a syndicated columnist
  • reporter many years ago. When I was in Swathmore, Pennsylvania, I worked for the Philadelphia papers part time, but I drifted into political reporting when I was here in Washington. F: By the time the New Deal came on, you were established as a syndicated
  • Marianne Means and her coverage of the White House. I'm wondering if he made any effort to get her syndicated? L: He may have. He used to try to do that with people he liked. He tried to give the career of Max Freedman, the Manchester Guardian
  • , and you were a longtime syndicated columnist with your brother Joseph, whom I also interviewed, incidentally, and later with the Saturday Evening Post, and now with Newsweek regularly. A: That's right M: And the author of The Center, which appeared
  • in the real estate business, managing apartment houses in syndication in New York City. I had gotten into interpreting quite accidentally, at first for the Carnegie Foundation; subsequently the Young Women's Christian Association, the national board
  • to my news bureau, I write a syndicated column which is syndicated nationally by Publishers Hall Syndicate, and that's owned by Marshall Field who owns the Chicago Sun-Times and the Chicago Daily News. F: So that you have a national audience? C: Yes
  • ://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh syndicate, the mob--that apparatus-B: May I ask here--is "Mafia" a proper term
  • to the wedding? M: I don't think so. F: Business remained more or less normal. M: I can't trace any advantages that we got from doing the wedding at all. F: Some of your syndicated women's wear columnists and, of course, your Women's Wear Daily, etc. took
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh May 28, 1969 M: Let's begin by just identifying you, sir. You're Joseph Alsop, a syndicated columnist at the present time and author of numerous books, and you've been doing this same type work for long enough to watch
  • feel that I'm over-sourced." It got to the point where he reluctantly would accept an invitation to go into the Oval Room. Now this happened with Jim Marlow of the AP, [who] wrote a syndicated column. I was responsible for that, in that one night Marlow
  • clap." I said, "I never heard of that. I never thought it possible for an animal to have gonorrhea." "Kazee says in six months he thinks that he can cure him. the dice." Senator Kerr bought that bull. syndicate a [bull]. He said, I'm rolling He's
  • S u n - T i m e s , and also became nationally syndicated--I believe you were that before. Also you have received a Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 1 9 5 5 , and in 1967 you co-authored a book Facing the Brink with Mr. Edward Weintal. Do
  • of damage. L: Yes. Well, maybe we could turn now to another topic I had, the administration and what has been called the health syndicate, the noble conspiracy, the benevolent plotters, at the center of which was Mary Lasker. I noticed that among the first
  • beginning. Then later Bill White was of course with the New York Times many years, and then a syndicated columnist. As Lyndon and his aspirations grew beyond being a senator to being a LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • one day with this idea on "Dr. I.Q." and I was the only one that thought it would work at the station. So I volunteered to help him and then to syndi- cate it, because I had "VOx POp'S" questions syndicated. He said, "Well, I don't know whether I
  • a syndicate to print this ad? Here it is. Now, I'll show you the pull from that first paper. I'll give you the mat free. Now here. Will you put up the money for this and will you put it in all the newspapers?" And, boy, that way for Roosevelt and for Johnson I
  • of the "Daily Washington Merry-Go-Round, 'I a syndicated column, 1932 to '42, when you were called to active duty. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More
  • to Washington from your home state in Texas, and you worked with them until 1945. From 1945 to 1958 you were with the New York Times and rose to the position of chief congressional correspondent. In 1958 you left to become nationally syndicated. Your column
  • always had a kind of a feeling there was something phony about it, particularly under television. M: Mr. White, has the more or less continued defense and support of Mr. Johnson lost you any columns in your syndication? W: It undoubtedly has. I don't
  • , there was no syndicated wire service for women. She said, "I want hard copy women's stuff, hard copy." She really got all started and they were doing awfully well for a couple of years, and financially, too, until the AP decided that that's what 17 LBJ Presidential
  • a syndicated colwmi.st. r thought I would just .begin by introducing you and then at the end of that, you can add whatever you'd like to it. You were born in 1924 in New York City. In 1947 you received a B.A. I from U.C.L.A. and in 1948 received a Master
  • . [The reference is to James Mathis, then of the Advance--Newhouse--Syndicate.] He got up and went to the front of the bus, and he looked out the window. IISomething's happened. His family He said, The President's car just sped away, just gunned away
  • by this, as were many of us on the staff. So the President had the thought that the American public, as it were, might also be interested. The letter was then released, and I believe two or three columnists, some of them syndicated around the country, picked