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  • was the statehouse. And since the age of media-handouts--press releases--had not yet reached the Capitol, reporting the statehouse was a full time job. As a foot- note to journalism, Kennedy and myself possibly speeded along the age of handouts at the Capitol
  • . But it was the beginning of the period of advocacy journalism and, you know, you took them as they came. G: Who were some of the good reporters from that period? M: Oh, the best are really no longer there. John Hightower was the senior Associated Press correspondent
  • and Challenge" by U. Alexis Johnson (from the Foreign Service Journal, April, 1966) _ _ ____ _ _ ___ ___ _ _ _ ___ _ _ __ _ _ ___ _ ____ ___ _ _ 15 "New System for Coping With Our Overseas Problems," Speech by General Maxwell D. Taylor to the American
  • , Carlisle, Pennsylvania. May 23, 1967 - G.M. Loeb Awards for Distinguished Business and Financial Journalism, New York City. Folder 1 1962 - 1968 1962 - 1968 Series II - Speeches and Presentations Series II - Speeches and Presentations 9 May 23, 1967
  • ], League for Industrial Democracy [letter ’42 ’46 ‘48], Legal Groups [clippings, notes], Labor Groups[clippings, notes] Jewish Groups (and Zionist) [clippings, notes], Journalism [clippings, notes], K. Miscellaneous [clippings, letter ’44], Law Groups
  • to be intuitive judgment. He didn't seem to arrive at his conclusions from data garnered from recent issues of the Wall Street Journal or the New York Times. But somehow he knew; he seemed to have read widely and picked up much by ear. And it was often fun being
  • 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
  • it was like, how often it met, what it did, what the purpose of it was? W: That Press Club at San Marcos? G: Yes. Was it made up of people that wanted to go into journalism, do you think? W: Probably. Because Lyndon persuaded Doc [Tom] Nichols to teach
  • -- III -- 14 know; I'll just have to kind of guess and put two and two together. She was a graduate in journalism at the University of Texas. Newspaper work and radio work are a little bit similar. He often said, in fact he would say it nearly every two
  • ~ conference 700 outstanding would 1,e e;ues ts associates, consultants would be guests invitation& woµl~ be by invitation or the journalism, and heaqs of diplomatic of the relig:.on, and other misr ions 1 to leaders education, and foreigners
  • , Patricia Lindh, Assistant o Presidenl Ford. Summarizer: Lenore Hershey, editor-in-chief, Ladies Home Journal. Tuesday, l'fol•ember I 1 Testimony of Texas Women efore the United States Committee on Women in Power-Hanna ray, Provosl, \:ale Umversity
  • Hamilton, who reported on her research in the current is.sue of "Dio;covery," a University of Texas journal. Following are excerpts from Dr. Hamilton's article: My research analysis concerns President Johnson's cabinet appointments, how he made them, why
  • century man. He hated the tekph n . among other things, ~o thank goodn ss he wrote letters to his mother, to his sister, to his wife. to his daughter. to friends. And he wrote private memo­ randa to himself and he kept a diary. a journal. Harry Truman
  • sure Mr. Johnson has become a more patient man possibly than he ever would have otherwise. F: During the period of the heart attack, did Mrs. Johnson--was she active in the office, or was she mainly just courier duty? P: At first, she
  • the wholehearted 11 support of all informed citizens. I s letter I am sending Rockefeller and statement along on the courier plane. Meanwhile, Califano, McPherson Rqstow, Moyers, and I will confer on the matter. I have also sent a copy to Secretary Rusk for his
  • , 1964 BY COURIER SERVICE Honorable Lee c. White Associate Counsel to the President The White House Washington , D. c. Dear Mr. lVhite : Reference is made to my previous communications which furnished information concerning Mr. Walter lilson Jenkins
  • then on, it was a lot Then after the speech, we had a long lunch break and I had time to call Washington and get them to send me another camera. They sent it to London and I picked,it up there. that happened, too. But these are things We had daily couriers and all
  • of which was the Winston-Salem Journal. I first went there in 1951, and the executive editor of the Winston-Salem Journal at that time was Wallace Carroll. He left and went to Washington as the assistant chief of the Washington Bureau of the New York
  • thought newspaper work was pretty soft compared to getting up at 1:30 every morning to milk, so I went from there. I came to The University of Texas, went to journalism school, and went to the University of Missouri briefly and ran out of money. Then we--I
  • lived at that time. A bit of history, immaterial possibly. I'm a product of Austin public schools, the University [of Texas] class of 1934. I studied journalism and also government, minor on municipal government. In the middle of the Depression I
  • into the life of Lyndon Johnson and national politics? S: Well, it's a long story, Dr. Frantz, but I'll try to make it as short as possible. Ny primary interest in college was in journalism. F: Where was this? S: Hardin-Simmons University. And I
  • , was a member of the House Committee on Naval Affairs, \'Jhich Nr. Vinson was chairman of then. I went to a small military prep school and junior college in Milledgeville and graduated from the University of Georgia in 1959 with a degree in journalism. From
  • be a matter of concern to the profession of journalism, the institution of journalism, in this country, is the pressures existing within the paper to make the front page, on the tendency, because of the importance of making the front page, to write a story
  • think I should draw a distinction there, that while an awful lot of journalists I think were emotionally involved, I think a bare minimum of them, and I wouldn't know how to express it, let that intrude on their practice of journalism. I don't think
  • , this was not any secret. There was no problem for them to determine a relationship had existed. Publications had printed the fact that I had opened an office in New York. In fact, I had run an ad in the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times announcing
  • Center Citicorp Savings George J. Clark, Executive Vice President Columbia University – Business School Columbia University, Graduate School of Journalism Committee for Economic Development Communications Communications Committee Communications
  • -Trust Cases" open Contains lists of individual and corporate defendants in pending anti-trust cases before the Department of Justice, 1965-1967, and material on the merger of the New York Herald Tribune, New York Journal American and New York World
  • TORY COLLECTION L~D O . Eugene Patterson And ress 2855 Normandy Dr., N. W. Atlanta, Georgia Biographical information : Newspaper editor b. Valdosta, Ga., Oct. 15, 1923; student N. Ga. Coll., Dahlonega, 1940-42; A.B. in Journalism, U. Ga., 1943
  • they were both in the Department of Journalism, and they graduated together--but she had done her first two years at TCU, and then she transferred to the university, and I went to work. I got a job, and first off, I worked for--in the legislature when
  • himself never tried to move things one way or another? H: No, never. Bob's too good a newsman to do that--has too much regard I think for journalism. F: Now, how does NBC establish its policy? H: You know the Federal Communications Commission keeps
  • been a fifth one there. But I remember four of us got together and we were going to cut him up. One of the guys at the television station in Albuquerque, [one from] the Albuquerque Tribune, [one from] the Albuquerque Journal, and myself, I know we'd
  • remember Tobacco Road and how we laughed and pointed out each of the characters in our own little locality. (Laughter) G: She studied journalism at the university? P: She got her degree, a BA degree, and then she stayed a year longer and picked up
  • in 1946, I went to work as a reporter for the Ohio State Journal , which was at that time a locally- � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ
  • here. C: Well, I was born in Oklahoma and was educated at the Unitersity of Tulsa. I received first a degree there in economics and later another degree in journalism, both of these being bachelor of arts degrees. Then I worked for newspapers
  • industry around. Oh no, this isn't unique to journalism. But I've seen it in two or three cases. In fact, we had the rule at CBS News that if anyone was having anything to do with somebody in government that they had to get off the air; they could
  • to be torn out of the headlines of the times: "The press seems to have developed an unhealthy new arrogance with Watergate," she said. "The press enjoyed the letting of blood and now too often seems to think that good journalism knows no secrets, respects
  • majored in journalism and became sports editor of the student newspaper. the Daily Texan. After a stint as capitol corre­ spondent for International News Service, he became press secretary to Texas Governors Price Daniel and John Connally. ln 1966 he