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  • was a Texas newspaperman and we were jabbing him about Texas newspapers, what crummy newspapers they were. We started with the Dallas Morning News and went all the way down the damn list to the Houston Chronicle. Having newspapered in Oklahoma, I had gone down
  • and asked that I do so . When I called the Governor and explained the situation to him, he assured re that he would take action at once . Judging from the a tta.ched clipping from the Houston Chronicle of Thursday, 20 January 191.B he apparenl.l y did so
  • believe it was. Connally, who was then governor, was doing his damnedest to get out of Byers--I'm not certain it was Byers but I think I'm right. The Houston Post? F: I think Byers was with the Chronicle then. I'm not sure. W: Anyway, it was one
  • Consolidated Gas, and the Budd Company. Pl111s have been developed for similar projects to be held in the following cities begiMing in June: Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Hartford, Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, San Francisco
  • the 5th Congressional District. District. I handled the 6th Congressional There was a Judge Chandler from Jacksonville who handled the 7th Congressional District. Houston had Sam D. W. Lovell; John Singleton who is now a federal judge in Houston
  • seand San Francisco Chronicle, over CIA crets is not yet over. sleuthing, use of covers and channeling I Nor has Ramparts any intention of of funds .through secret "conduits," but slowing down. Though $1.2 million in · an appraisal of . the record
  • was delivering newspapers in Bishop and I read in the Houston Chronicle that the NYA had been set up, and that he was going to be the administrator of it ; that you could get $15 .50 a month and go to the University by working two hours a day or some such thing
  • (OCDM ) Bobby Senator Dirkse n Senator Richar d Russel l - P-3 8 Presided a t convenin g o f Senat e Cong Thomas , Dr . Hug h Dryden, Pau l Demling , Bil l Lloy d - P-3 8 Vernon Louviere (Ja 7-6013 ) John Jone s (Housto n Chronicle ) Fred Hartma n (Ba y
  • Norman Isaacs , Executiv e Editor , Louisvill e Courie r Journa l Bill Steven , Editor , housto n Chronicl e Eugene Patterson , Editor , Atlant a Constitution Ralph McGill , Publisher Publisher ,, Atlant Atlant aa Constitutio Constitutio n Mr Arnold Mr
  • /37 "Federal Reserve Banks" 4/26/37 "Reorganization of the Federal Judiciary" 4/26/37 "Reorganization of the Federal Judiciary" at Houston, TX 5/12/37 Federal Reserve System 5/15/39 Congress Should Pay 1935-36 Cotton Certificates 8/2/39 Alcatraz
  • ce,re f or Sinclair .Le'Wi& because he worked too hard on the Great American Average. My same obj,ction applies to Mepken. But t his Americ an come s out of a 3.50 per copy in a chronicle ao naive that it should be put in every township 1chpolhouae
  • / Georg e Christia n a t 5:00 p today) 3:38p t 3:58p t 4:00p t 4:00p Rep 4:01p t 4:06p T Marvi Georg Jo Marvi n Watso n -p l e Christia n -p l e Califan o -p . Wrigh t Patma n and Lucille Utterlinde , Housto n Chronicl e n Watso n -p o the Mansio n
  • , Wm. Houston Martin, Murphy Chronicle ABC Wendall Mays stations , Znd CJ 4t, ,,,.. ..&.::1::1:>&, -P..A..::t:G-J!IU" :I: P. 0. Box 8272, S. W. Station, Washington 2 , D. C. Phone - NA 8-5715 November Mrs. Bess The White Washington
  • Oi~R LE S R 01'2H T S J 0.-1 :-l SUI Hi~ LA ND GirlC:RS : ct R u 1,..; rz di NR Y CATtJCC I CH I CAGO IR ! BUN£ CH I CAGO DA IL '( N£wS ST . LOU I S POST - DI SPATCH L OS ANGELE S T fri£S t ,;~ • .. ,. HOUSTON CHRONICL£ UN I TED STATES I NF
  • to Lawrence Houston, General Counsel, Central Intelligence Agency, with a request for his commentso At the conference, Messrs. Dymond and Wegmann expressed their belief that if Clay L. Shaw is convicted of conspiring to assassinate President Kennedy, not only
  • -chairmanevery year since, ADAcalls iblelf the "noncommunistleft," but is not activelyopposingcommunism.Sen. John F. Kennedy said of ADA: "I'm not comfortable with those people." Sen. Lyndon Johnsonstated in Houston in 1960: "I would expect them (ADA
  • £Singer. The number two man in the organization was Ed Kelly, who was believed an ANP sympathizer. Attached are items clipped from the Michigan Chronicle, Detroit, Michigan, December 2, 1967, relating to the picketing in Detroit by 200 white people, led
  • Griffi n , Housto n Chronicl e John Pierson , Wall Stree t Journa l | | John Wallac h , " " " Robert Fullerton Haaker Ringda Charles Robert s (Chuck) Newsweek Richard Saltonstal l . Time-Lif e Ton y Sargent, CBS - News , l VHITE HOUSE date 3-18-68
  • , AFL-CIO, Washington, D. C. Kenneth Fiester, Labor Press Assoc, AFL-CIO, Washington Robert H. Fox, The Chronicle. Cincinnati AFL-CIO Labor Council, Cincinnati John Garrett, Boilerworkers-Blacksmiths Record; Boilermakers, Iron Shipbuilders, Blacksmiths
  • Porter Clifford Alexander ixBcegsxHzx Longworth Longworth Quinn Quinn .,.*,.,—*$ Louis Martin General Mgr Michigan Chronicle calls ushers ofc checked At on e tim e durin g the afternoo n tw o o f the demonstrator s lef t becaus e the y had gi s t o g o
  • Francisco Examiner & Chronicle; International Circulation Distributors; Seaboard Airline-Atlantic Coast Line; Norfolk & Western Nickel Plat-Wabash; North Pacific-Great Northern-Burlington; PA-NY Central; Union-Rock Island; list of anti-trust actions against
  • of California and Nevada, Underhill,” U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1941] [Journal: “The OAS Chronicle,” Volume I, Number 1, August 1965, Pan American Union, Washington, D.C.] [Report: “RUPI: a Program for Urban Reform
  • which , will ,vork if America cuts off her: foo,1 ~hipments tomorrow . . "That means I am spending most of my time these days on m· naging scarcitY-;-?:.cl:w~n,g 1:1~; me! HOUSTON CHR ONICLE Decemb er 2, 1965 ,r •• He will discuss the issue
  • Butler began sketching at the age of seven with an insightful look at the Spanish-American War in 1898. While at a boarding school he chronicled the rough-and-tumble world of high school football. During his years at Yak his work often appeared
  • for the Chicago Defender. I stayed here a few months and then in June of the same year, 1936, I went to Detroit to help establish and edit and publish the new newspaper called the Michigan Chronicle, which I still retain some proprietary interest in. From
  • Relativism in the nee-Madison Avenue Approach to the Listener in Albuquerque." (The Murray Hill Chronicle, March, 1938.) "A Conceptual Analysis of the Contribution of Procter &Gamble to the Cultural Lore of the U. S." (The Old Advertiser's Almanac, . January
  • f appt requeste d by Mr. A l Neuharth , Exe c V P Miller askin g t o bring Jame s Head , Edito r o f TODA Y in thes e peopl e an d Clif f Carpenter , Rocheste r Democrat-Chronicl e "expose the m t o the Stuar t Dunham , Edito r o f Hartfor d (Conn
  • chronicled the 1920s. Friends of the LBJ Library had a special loo at the exhibit at a reception on ovember 2. Flapper costumes, like those worn by the guests shown here with Mrs. Johnson, a jazz band and the Charleston helped re-create the mood
  • the museum was renovated two years ago, is "A Family Album," a photographic chronicle of the Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson family through the years. The final panel, showing the Johnson grandchildren to the present time, has to be brought up to date every year
  • chronicles events both momentous and quiet cheerful and tragic. as seen through the eyes of the First Lady. The :-.elections in the exhibition arc dramatically illustrated with photographs. paintings. drawings. sculpture. plus a variety of historically