• food journalism,  Jeanne Voltz,  journalism history

    AJHA presentation

    Tomorrow, Lance and I are leaving for the American Journalism Historians Association convention in Tucson. I am presenting a paper about women’s page journalist and food editor Jeanne Voltz and her coverage in the L.A. Times in the 1960s and early 1970s: “Food Journalism and Culinary Anthropology: Jeanne Voltz and the Food Section in the Los Angeles Times.” Here is the abstract: As society was changing in the 1960s, food editor Jeanne Voltz guided one of the most significant food sections in the country – at the Los Angeles Times. An analysis of her work at the Times, during the heyday of the sections, show she was laying the foundation…

  • journalism history,  Val Imm,  Vivian Castleberry

    Women’s Page coverage of child abuse

    In the 1960s, the women’s pages were the first places where the coverage of child abuse could be found. The above story was one of several written by Val Imm that appeared in the the Dallas Times Herald. The series was initiated by editor Vivian Castleberry would was tipped off by a woman at a Dallas medical center who saw injured children coming in. This coverage led to a community-wide discussion of the issue, centers for abuse and later legislation that truly make this a crime.

  • Vivian Castleberry

    Curtis meets Curtis

    The best part of our trip to Dallas was our baby Curtis meeting his namesake, Curtis Castleberry – the husband of women’s page editor Vivian Castleberry. My book about Vivian will include a chapter on the Castleberry marriage and children.

  • Uncategorized

    Dedication of the Vivian Castleberry Peace Institute

    We just returned from our trip to Dallas. We were able to watch the dedication of the Vivian Castleberry Peace Institute at the University of North Texas. (Vivian was the longtime women’s page editor of the Dallas Times Herald.) Here is an article about it. It was a great ceremony. On one wall were murals that elementary students created of Vivian.

  • journalism history,  Vivian Castleberry

    Off to Dallas

    Tomorrow we leave for Dallas so I can speak about Dallas Times Herald women’s page editor Vivian Castleberry. We are also going to be at the University of North Texas for the opening of the Vivian Castleberry Peace Institute. Here is how Vivian is described for the documentary Trailblazing Texas Women: “An extremely bright, articulate woman, her close-cropped gray hair, pearls and suit reminiscent of the Kennedy era, Vivian Castleberry sips her cup of tea and tells her stories with a sardonic sense of humor and the same dry wit she deployed in print to blast those that treated her as “the little woman” journalist. Vivian knew from day one…

  • journalism history,  Vivian Castleberry

    Vivian Castleberry and Marina Oswald

    Dallas broadcast journalist Eddie Barker was one of the first to announce the death of the president. He also later got an exclusive interview with Marina Oswald, the widow of Lee Harvey Oswald. In his 2006 book, Barker described the woman as “a cold, calculating woman, even at the tender age of twenty-two.” This insight was despite the fact that as a Russian citizen, she spoke little English. Dallas Times Herald women’s page editor Vivian Castleberry also interviewed the widow who was the mother of two young children. They spoke while both folding diapers. The result became her only front page story. Vivian found Marina Oswald to be “warm, loving…

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