The New Orleans Press-Radio War and Huey P. Long, 1922-1936
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Broadcasting Iijun
Special report on BPA: Focus on promotion in St. Paul BroadcastingThe sweekly of broadcasting and allied arts iiJunOur 47th Year 1978 POI pipit I rve COLLEGE PITTSBURGH, LIBRARY PA 15222 Bring back "Hogan s Heroes" to your market and claim a large captive audience of young adults in fringe time. "Hogan's Heroes"l,lÀ Visit us at the BPA, Radisson St. Paul Hotel, Suite 1601. People turn us on! All the people of Gaylord radio and television stations share one common philosophy: To be uncommonly responsive to the people of the individual markets we serve. We stay tuned in to their information and entertainment preferences. That's why Gaylord Broadcasting continues to grow in the ability to offer you a receptive audience. And that's why advertisers, too, turn us on! GEGAYLORD Broadcasting Company One of America's largest privately owned group of radio and television stations. KTVT WTVT KIHTV KSTW -TV WUAB -TV Dallas /Fort Worth Tampa /St. Petersburg Houston Seattle /Tacoma Cleveland /Lorain WVUE -TV WVTV WKY KYTE -AM /FM KRKE -AM /FM New Orleans Milwaukee Oklahoma City Portland Albuquerque To get turned on inTampa /St.Petersburg, get on the Gaylord station Channel 13 WTVT delivers the largest share of audience of any lion tourists annually who depend on TV for television station in the top 30 markets' weather reports and news of home. WTVT dominates the nation's 17th television WTVT is the must -buy station because WTVT, one market, and that dominance is complete in every of the nation's leading CBS affiliates, delivers the demographic category for women and men? WTVT's biggest share in the top 30 markets. -
Huey Long Published Materials
HUEY P. LONG PUBLISHED MATERIALS (Mss. 2363) Inventory Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections Special Collections, Hill Memorial Library Louisiana State University Libraries Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Reformatted 2003 Revised 2011 HUEY P. LONG PUBLISHED MATERIALS Mss. 2363 1932-1936 LSU Libraries Special Collections CONTENTS OF INVENTORY SUMMARY .................................................................................................................................... 3 BIOGRAPHICAL/HISTORICAL NOTE ...................................................................................... 4 SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE ................................................................................................... 4 INDEX TERMS .............................................................................................................................. 5 CONTAINER LIST ........................................................................................................................ 6 Use of manuscript materials. If you wish to examine items in the manuscript group, please fill out a call slip specifying the materials you wish to see. Consult the Container List for location information needed on the call slip. Photocopying. Should you wish to request photocopies, please consult a staff member. The existing order and arrangement of unbound materials must be maintained. Publication. Readers assume full responsibility for compliance with laws regarding copyright, literary property rights, and libel. Permission -
Huey P. Long, Louisiana Governor and United States Senator Research Subject Guide Louisiana State Archives
Huey P. Long, Louisiana Governor and United States Senator Research Subject Guide Louisiana State Archives Introduction: This guide was made by archival staff at the Louisiana State Archives as an introduction to some of the materials we have on the Louisiana Governor (1928- 1932) and United States Senator (1932-1935), Huey Pierce Long. The listings are arranged according to the Table of Contents listed below and then alphabetically within each section. For further information on this topic, or to view our collections, please visit the Louisiana State Archives Research Library or contact the Research Library staff at 225.922.1207 or via email at [email protected]. Table of Contents: Manuscripts Newspapers, Journals, and Magazines Photographs Posters Government Records Microfilm Manuscripts Carolyn R. Chaney Collection, 1935, Collection contains one copy of the funeral oration that was delivered over the grave of Huey P. Long, included in the Louisiana Conservation Review, dated September 1935. The collection also contains one copy of the Louisiana Review Memorial Number for Huey P. Long dated October 1935. Collection No. N2018-021 Martha Metrailes Collection, 1935, Collection contains speeches given by Senator Huey P. Long, titled “Our Growing Calamity” and is dated 1935. Items collected by Martha Metrailes. Collection No. N1991-033 Historic New Orleans Collection Cecil Morgan Interview, 1981, Paperback book copyrighted 1985 that contains Betty Werlein Carter's interview with Louisiana legislator, Cecil Morgan. The book focuses on the Huey P. Long era and includes a typed interview transcript (119 pages), vignettes on topics ranging from Chief Justice John B. Fournet to marriage (53 pages), an appendix of articles and speeches (79 pages), and a curriculum vitae of Morgan (3 pages). -
Barthé, Darryl G. Jr.Pdf
A University of Sussex PhD thesis Available online via Sussex Research Online: http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/ This thesis is protected by copyright which belongs to the author. This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the Author The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the Author When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given Please visit Sussex Research Online for more information and further details Becoming American in Creole New Orleans: Family, Community, Labor and Schooling, 1896-1949 Darryl G. Barthé, Jr. Doctorate of Philosophy in History University of Sussex Submitted May 2015 University of Sussex Darryl G. Barthé, Jr. (Doctorate of Philosophy in History) Becoming American in Creole New Orleans: Family, Community, Labor and Schooling, 1896-1949 Summary: The Louisiana Creole community in New Orleans went through profound changes in the first half of the 20th-century. This work examines Creole ethnic identity, focusing particularly on the transition from Creole to American. In "becoming American," Creoles adapted to a binary, racialized caste system prevalent in the Jim Crow American South (and transformed from a primarily Francophone/Creolophone community (where a tripartite although permissive caste system long existed) to a primarily Anglophone community (marked by stricter black-white binaries). These adaptations and transformations were facilitated through Creole participation in fraternal societies, the organized labor movement and public and parochial schools that provided English-only instruction. -
City of New Orleans
New Orleans Community Health Improvement Plan Second Revision November 2016 Second Revision, August 2016 1300 Perdido St., Suite 8E18 I New Orleans, LA, 70112 I www.nola.gov/health Front Cover Photo Credit: P1& P2: Whitney Mitchell, Fit NOLA Partnership P3: Greater New Orleans Breastfeeding Awareness Coalition P4: The GIFT Program, Louisiana Department of Health, Bureau of Family Health P5 & P6: NOLA For Life, City of New Orleans New Orleans Community Health Improvement Plan Second Revision November 2016 Acknowledgements This document would not be possible without the contributions and support of the Community Health Improvement Steering Committee, Core Advisory Team, NOHD Administration, NOHD Program Managers, previous CHIP authors Yvette Wing and Liz Burpee, and the countless community partners who dedicate their work to improving the health of New Orleans . The Health Department thanks you for your commitment to our shared vision. COMMUNITY HEALTH IMPROVEMENT STEERING COMMITTEE Adrian Todd Director, Office of Children Youth and Families, Total Community Action Avis Gray Regional Administrator, Bureau of Family Health, Louisiana Department of Health Ben Johnson President and CEO, New Orleans Chamber of Commerce Christy Ross VP Health Grants, Baptist Community Ministries Daesy Behrhorst Co-Chair, Louisiana Language Access Coalition Denese Shervington President and CEO, Institute of Women and Ethnic Studies Dr. Flint Mitchell Program Officer, Greater New Orleans Foundation Dr. Kathryn Parker Executive Director, Market Umbrella Jim Kelly -
An Abbreviated Article, Part 1
An Abbreviated Article The title of this article might indicate to the reader that this may be a shortened offering from yours truly, but instead it is on the topic of abbreviations commonly used in the Crescent City, or as some might say: NOLA. Abbreviations are shortened forms of words or longer phrases found in almost every field or discipline of our daily lives, from commonly used abbreviations in names or titles, such as Mr., as in Mr. Bingle, or Dr., as in Dr. John., to quite commonly used local abbreviations, such as MB for Maison Blanche, and KB or K&B for Katz and Besthoff. They are commonplace in the use of weights and measures, distances, medicine, cooking and baking. And if you need directions, it’s best you know location abbreviations such as Blvd. and Ave. That’s where New Orleans’ neutral grounds are usually located. These ads ran side by side in the New Orleans Item, September 21, 1938. On the same page was an ad for the L & L Shop at 622 Canal. Many abbreviations have been used for so many years in New Orleans that we have forgotten what the original letters stood for. For example, there’s P&J’s Oysters, key supplier of oysters to restaurants locally as well as nationally. John Popich was the “P” and Joe Jurisich was the “J”, but Alfred Sunseri, a cousin of Joe Jurisich, was the driving force, and all these many years later, P&J’s is still run by the Sunseri family. And the A&G Cafeterias, just like K&B and MB, “ain’t dere no more”. -
TAPE #003 Page 1 of 10 F;1; ! G
') 1""~" TAPE #003 Page 1 of 10 f;1; _ ! G. DUPRE LITTON Tape 1 Mr. Litton graduated from the LSU Law School in 1942, having been president of Phi Delta phi Legal Fraternity, associate editor of Law Review, and the first LSU student named to the Order of the Coif. During a period of thirty-four years, Mr. Litton served in numerous important governmental capacities, including executive counsel to the governor, chairman of the ~ state board of tax appeals, first assistant attorney general, and legal advisor to the legislature. Q. Mr. Litton, your career in state government has closely involved you with the administrations of this state through several governors, dating back to the time of Huey Long. Would youqive us your recollections of the high points in these administrations? A. Thank you, Mrs. Pierce. My recollection of the governors of Louisiana dates back even prior to 1930, which was some 50 years ago. However, in 1930, I entered LSU, and at that time, Huey P. Long was governor. He had been elected in 1928. I recall that on a number of occasions, I played golf at the Westdale Country Club, which is now called Webb Memorial Country Club, I believe, and I saw Huey Long playing golf, accompanied, generally by some twelve to fifteen bodyguards who were on both sides of him, as he putted or drove. Enough has been written about Huey Long that it would probably be superfluous for us here at this time to go into any details concerning him. However, history will undoubtedly recall that Huey Long was one of the most powerful and one of the most brilliant governors in Louisiana history. -
Stavola's Assault Case Dismissed
Death Penalty Sought in Russo Murder SEE STORY BELOW Sunny, Milder Sunny and milder today. Cloudy and mild tonight Sun* FINAL 1 tnild tomorrow and } Red Bank, Freehold f I Long Branch / EDITION Monmouth County's Home Newspaper for 02 Years VOL 93 NO. 198 RED BANK, N.J., FRIDAY, APRIL 9,1971 TEN CENTS Stavola's Assault Casattorney sincee bis arres t andDismisse"I challenge the state to dictment, Judge Conklidn By WILLIAM J.ZAORSKI Grand Jury Aug. 18. rights as guaranteed by the vised that he had a right to Whue the county indictment fifth, sixth and fourteenth consult with his attorney any had been warned of his rights show where the prosecutor noted that Mr. Stavola bad FREEHOLD - Superior is dismissed, Mr. Stavola still amendments of the U.S. Con- time during the questioning, prior to hi? appearance before warned Mr: Stavola that any- not signed a waiver of immu- Court Judge Walter H. Con- faces an indictment by the stitution and by the N. J. Con- he said. the grand jury. thing he said would be used nity and was not warned of klin yesterday dismissed an state Grand Jury which stitution. "This was not done," main- The assistant prosecutor against him," said Mr. Wal- his rights by the prosecutor. indictment against Michael J. charges him and another man The attorney said that tained the attorney, adding said Mr. Stavola volunteered der. He should have been read- Stavola of Middletown which with trying to influence a while Mr. Stavola voluntarily that Mr. Stavola was not giv- to give his side of the story Mr. -
The Historic New Orleans Collection Quarterly to the Myth That These Books Were Explicit
VOLUME XXXIV The Historic New Orleans NUMBER 1 Collection Quarterly WINTER 2017 Shop online at www.hnoc.org/shop BLUE NOTES: The World of Storyville EVENT CALENDAR EXHIBITIONS & TOURS CREOLE CHRISTMAS HOUSE TOURS All exhibitions are free unless noted otherwise. Tour The Collection’s Williams Residence as part of the Friends of the Cabildo’s annual holiday home tour. CURRENT Tuesday–Thursday, December 27–29, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; last tour begins at 3 p.m. Holiday Home and Courtyard Tour Tours depart from 523 St. Ann Street Through December 30; closed December 24–25 $25; tickets available through Friends of the Cabildo, (504) 523- 3939 Tuesday–Saturday, 10 and 11 a.m., 2 and 3 p.m. Sunday, 11 a.m., 2 and 3 p.m. “FROM THE QUEEN CITY TO THE CRESCENT CITY: CINCINNATI 533 Royal Street DECORATIVE ARTS IN NEW ORLEANS, 1825–1900” $5 admission; free for THNOC members Join us for a lecture with decorative arts historian Andrew Richmond and learn about the furniture, glass, and other goods that traveled down the Mississippi River to be sold in Clarence John Laughlin and His Contemporaries: A Picture and a New Orleans. Thousand Words Wednesday, February 1, 6–7:30 p.m. Through March 25, 2017 533 Royal Street Williams Research Center, 410 Chartres Street Free; reservations encouraged. Please visit www.hnoc.org or call (504) 523- 4662 for more information. Goods of Every Description: Shopping in New Orleans, 1825–1925 GUIDEBOOKS TO SIN LAUNCH PARTY Through April 9, 2017 Author Pamela D. Arceneaux will present a lecture and sign books as we launch THNOC's Williams Gallery, 533 Royal Street newest title, Guidebooks to Sin: The Blue Books of Storyville, New Orleans. -
Huey Long Accomplishments Dr
Senator/Governor Huey Long Accomplishments Dr. Frank J. Collazo January 3, 2013 Introduction Huey Pierce Long was born in Winfield, La. in 1893 to a middle class family. He liked to tell people he was from a poor background. This helped him relate to the poor people of Louisiana. He was expelled from high school for criticizing the faculty. Huey Long was a very intelligent man. He was able to pass the bar exam after only one year at Tulane Law School. Huey preferred to do battle with the powerful, large corporations and Standard Oil Company was his favorite target. Huey championed himself as a lawyer for the poor man and this strategy would benefit him politically. He had a definite plan for his rise to political power and was well on his way to becoming president before he was shot down in the new Louisiana State Capitol building that he had built by a young doctor named Carl Weis. Long took the nickname "The Kingfish," from the radio show Amos and Andy. He was a Democrat and noted for his radical populist policies. He served as Governor of Louisiana from 1928 to 1932 and as a U.S. senator from 1932 to 1935. Though a backer of Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1932 presidential election, Long split with Roosevelt in June 1933 and allegedly planned to mount his own presidential bid. The Kingfish got much of his power in Louisiana by destroying his adversaries and rewarding his cronies. He also did much good for Louisiana by building roads and bridges and improving education. -
The Celebration Bicentennial Louisiana Supreme Court
The Celebration of the Bicentennial of the Louisiana Supreme Court Ceremonies The Louisiana Supreme Court celebrated its 200th anniversary on March 1, 2013. As a special session of court, the Louisiana Supreme Court justices presided over the Bicentennial ceremony, which commemorated the Court’s two centuries of legal heritage. The ceremony took place at the Louisiana Supreme Court’s courtroom at 400 Royal Street in New Orleans. The event was free and open to the public, with the option of one hour of CLE accreditation for Louisiana attorneys. Justice Greg G. Guidry chaired the Court’s Bicentennial Committee, which was in charge of planning the ceremony. Louisiana Lieutenant Governor Jay Dardenne was the master of ceremonies. After Lieutenant Governor Dardenne’s opening address, the Washington Artillery presented the colors, which was followed by the Pledge of Allegiance, led by Donna D. Fraiche, President of the Supreme Court of Louisiana Historical Society. Bishop Shelton J. Fabre gave the invocation, and Chief Justice Bernette J. Johnson delivered welcoming remarks to the attendees. Four speakers discussed various aspects of the Court’s history, including A Walk Through the Streets of New Orleans at the Time of the Court’s Foundation, by Tulane Professor Richard Campanella; The Civilian Aspects of Louisiana Law, by LSU Law Professor John Randall Trahan; The Role of the Louisiana Supreme Court in the Early Civil Rights Movement, by UNO Emeritus Professor Raphael Cassimere, Jr.; and The History of the Louisiana Supreme Court, by UNO Emeritus Distinguished Professor of History and Bicentennial Court Historian Warren M. Billings. Students from the International High School of New Orleans took the stage following the speakers to present a short, trilingual play entitled An Uncommon Birth: Shaping Louisiana’s Legal Tradition for Statehood. -
Huey Long, Father Coughlin, and Anti-Intellectualism in the Public Sphere Ragan Updegaff Trinity University
Trinity University Digital Commons @ Trinity Speech & Drama Honors Theses Speech and Drama Department 9-16-2005 Freedom in Dialogue : Huey Long, Father Coughlin, and Anti-Intellectualism in the Public Sphere Ragan Updegaff Trinity University Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.trinity.edu/speechdrama_honors Part of the Speech and Rhetorical Studies Commons Recommended Citation Updegaff, Ragan, "Freedom in Dialogue : Huey Long, Father Coughlin, and Anti-Intellectualism in the Public Sphere" (2005). Speech & Drama Honors Theses. 1. http://digitalcommons.trinity.edu/speechdrama_honors/1 This Thesis open access is brought to you for free and open access by the Speech and Drama Department at Digital Commons @ Trinity. It has been accepted for inclusion in Speech & Drama Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Trinity. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FREEDOM IN DIALOGUE Huey Long, Father Coughlin, and Anti-Intellectualism in the Public Sphere __________________________________ ______________________________ Ragan Updegraff APPROVED: ______________________________ Dr. Andrew C. Hansen, Advisor ______________________________ Dr. L. Brooks Hill ______________________________ Dr. L. Tucker Gibson ______________________________ Dr. Sheryl Tynes Associate Vice President of Academic Affairs FREEDOM IN DIALOGUE Huey Long, Father Coughlin, and Anti-Intellectualism in the Public Sphere __________________________________ A SENIOR THESIS Presented to the Department of Speech and