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  • /show/loh/oh 9 office at Newsweek in New York, and Mrs. Johnson called up and suggested that I come and have a cozy evening, more or less alone, with them. F: This was while they were still living in the house? G: [It was] before they moved
  • helped Governor Connally when he prepared his story which ran in Life magazine. As you look over on that wall, you'll see the picture and the inscription there. It's a picture from Life magazine. M: Right. That's the one of John Connally standing
  • millions of dollars to the Post Office Department for the below cost operations. It includes your villages, it includes your rural routes, and it includes delivery of your publications. They're subsidized, you see. These big magazines that yell
  • : All right, I'll take that. You said it. When Johnson became President, where were you-- at the time of the assassination? M: In Puerto Rico. F: How did you happen to hear about it? M: That was a very peculiar thing. McCall's magazine. I
  • in the newspaper business, magazine business, World War II service in the Air Corps, and, after the war, your own public relations firm. When in this process did you first meet Mr. Johnson? M: I saw him when he was running for the Senate in 1948. I did
  • speculation--these things were written up in the papers and magazines--. The third speculation was in connection with when he made the appointment of Fortas and of Thornberry as the Associate Justice of the Supreme Court; there was speculation that I would
  • with some of the broadcasters--not all of them by any means. The great majority of broadcasters supported me very well, but it did get to be a rather agonizing experience when Broadcasting Magazine every week was trying·to tear up what we were trying to do