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  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh February 14, 1972 F: Let's talk, George, about the President and what you know about the Richard Russell situation. R: I don't know too much of it directly, Joe. I do know that a number of months after I left
  • , and docU?nents pertaining to the transportation of a r11inoceros. 5-3/4" (12 ltems ·restricted) r CIVIL DEFENSE This subject contains reco~ds Telated to the Proclamation and Executive Order (11179) concerning the "National Defense Executive Reserve
  • , the Committee took a bus tour through the city. The highlight of the tour was at a tr~ngle between Maryland and Independence Avenues and 3rd Street, S. W. , where Mrs. Johnson planted the first azalea of the beautification program. The buses also stopped
  • Kennedy and Robert Kennedy right after President Eisenhower's State of the Union address in January. Do you recall any of the significance to that meeting? R: No. I don't remember it at all, and I doubt if there was any unusual significance
  • that because it prevented whatever chances the Democrats had to carry the election. And they nominated John W. Davis for President and Charles Bryan, governor of Nebraska who was a brother of William Jennings Bryan, who had run for the presidency a number
  • THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Mrs. Johnson began her day at (Place). San Simeon, Hearst Castle Entry No. Time MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON, Daily Diary Date Thursday, September 22, 1966 Activity not dictated Breakfast in room 7:00 Toured castle
  • 06255 '+68 1807372 03 10,AID 10,GPM 0'+•H 02,SY' .!i : DODE 00, JUS· 02, TRSY· Pl8, RSR 0 03,MC 01,INR i, 01, RSC /054· 07,C1AE 00,NSA 02, W R 180712Z JUN 68 FM AMEMBASSY CANBERRA TO SECSTATE WASHDC 2530 UNCLAS REF~ CANBERRA STATE
  • was periodically covering the White House for the [New York] Times--obviously we gave him a backgrounder story the next day, saying that we were going to make a major push in this area. G: Had the [William Randolph] Hearst [Jr.] series already come out? C: Well
  • on the Peace Corps operation in Tunisia. 15 15 1345 16 Information Kit -- College of Virgin Islands St. Thomas November Vote in Texas Counties - w/ Harte-Hanks Newspaper Circulation 1960 presidential election returns broken down by counties in which
  • . of the Air Force Spec. Order TA-328 authorizing staff members to use military air transportation Corres. with Cecil Greer re ALICIA bermuda grass dated 10/8/70 William Randoph Hearst, Jr. article re: LBJ in San Antonio Light (3 copies) 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
  • Criterion Advertising Cube Card Corp. Diane's Creations Dial - a - Buy C&W Manufacturing REJ DNC Papers, Series 2 15 National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov http
  • , and it was essentially a picture newspaper. Hearst's Mirror. It was challenged by There was a war of tabloids which drew in all of the newspapers of New York. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
  • , origin of major componentq _________________ U.S.Cout Guard Icebreaker W cstwind -----------------------------------Amphibious helicopter landing on U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Vigilant ________ ActiYity in an FAA control tower
  • - Howard Newspaper Editors Statement of Senator Johnson Statement of Senator Johnson Speech to Texans by Senator Johnson Senator Johnson's Speech at Luncheon for Hon. Joe W. Sheehy in Tyler, Texas Remarks by Senator Johnson at Austin's Welcome to the 27th
  • , Mayor Coyle accompanied. 4:00 Left Nat Owings residence via motorcade. Entry No. 6. Activity 5:38 Arrived Hearst Castle, San Simeon, California. 7:00 Stayed in Cottage A at castle. Reception, water ballet, entertainment (see sheet) Staying
  • know why 1 thought it would stay there, but 1 had it on this car where 1 thought it would ride, in between the bumper and the engine. And Johnson asked me if I minded moving from that car over to another car so he could ride back with A. W. Moursund
  • particularly? M: I don't know. What was his name? A: James W. Pate, P-A-T-E, Jimmy Pate. At that time, of course, radio was kind of in its infancy; it was new and it had a lot of appeal. A radio announcer in those days was really a celebrity. I had
  • saw my name in there--he was there for INS or Hearst--and he said, "Gee, if Beech is going to go, I got to go, too, or else I'll get a rocket from the New York Journal American "--or at least that's what I think he was thinking--and Jim Lucas . So
  • about that time, the Ladies for Lyndon movement. Predictably, Marietta Brooks was a big factor in it, and a lady named Mrs. W. A. Griffis, from, I believe, San Angelo. Later on they wore darling little red, white, and blue costumes, girlish straw hats
  • incident. Did I ever tell you the story about Cassie Mackin, who since has become quite well known as an NBC news commentator, very prominent in covering the conventions. She replaced Marianne Means on the Hearst headline service. Marianne Means had sort
  • INTERVIEWEE: DAN RATHER INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: CBS Offices, Washington, D. C. Tape 1 of 1 F: I suppose we ought to go back and place you at that point in November, 1963, at which you get involved in things. R: That's as good a place as any
  • , but the JCS said 40 of these we re insignificant. He said the buffer zone targets we re under consideration, that he'd felt that there were risks in hitting China, but General Wheeler had said planes could go parallel to the horde r and thus cut that risk
  • 43 43 43 43 43 43 43 43 43 43 43 44 44 44 44 44 44 Poverty War - Operating Programs: VISTA. Volunteers in Service to America. (see also Peace Corps, Domestic) Poverty - The Organization Under R. Sargent Shriver Poverty War - 1964. City Programs - New
  • was president of the Hearst Corporatinn, which owned the INS, the organization for which I worked. It was Lyndon's way of letting me know that he was on the inside track. Of course he had by that time attracted a great deal of attention outside
  • before that. race for the senate. I ye~r he was elected? don't know that I knew Wirtz in his first I know I knew him well by the time he ran for his second term, which must have been about 1928 or something like that. Because I ran for the senate
  • the vice president was. That was so typical, that he would have, as always, a clipping in his pocket. H: It was some survey. paper, I F: It wasn't a Gallup survey. It was a Hearst rememb~r. I sometimes thought it would have been better if he
  • TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Connally -- I -- 4 headquarters. That was the year of the [W. Lee "Pappy"] O'Daniel blitz. O'Daniel had won
  • and Saturday. We have an appoint~nt to eat dinner with Eddie Weisl and Dick Berlin (Berlin is with INS - Hearst papers). 'l'omorrow I hope to see Paley of the Columbia Broadcasting Company and also the SeSac people. I will write you upon my return and tell you
  • Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Califano -- LIV -- 4 (Long pause) Then we have all this bureaucratic stuff about how they're going to organize. William Randolph Hearst [Jr
  • ] William W. Broom - Ridder Publications 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 05/23/19 open open missin g missin g missin g missin g missin g missin g missin g open open A Survey of Public Opinion in Alabama - Poll Book Arno Nowotny - University of Texas
  • Busby, Horace W.
  • was to get upon a chair and say in a loud tone of voice, "Arizona casts four votes for William Randolph Hearst." LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More
  • him that I had seen a bunch of VC bodies and [had] burst into tears. And there was some stuff in the Hearst papers that I was trying to uncover an Asian Fidel Castro. It was really nasty. And meanwhile you're going out and getting your ass shot
  • [Cather- ine] Mackin, who was a very, very good friend of mine, who was the Hearst reporter at the White House, was down doing what we usually did on Sunday morning with the press: standing outside the church. This was the church in Johnson City
  • , and Johnson had a close relationship with William Hearst. And Johnson told Hearst that "I don't think you're my friend if you're carrying Evans and Novak on the right-hand corner of your edit page," which kind of shook up Hearst. M: Yes. N: So they didn't
  • through Dick--well, the president of Hearst, such a good friend, I'll think of it in a minute--but he was the one I think that originally introduced Lyndon to Weisl [Dick Berlin] . He saved Hearst ; Hearst was about to go bankrupt . G: During