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  • newspapers of significance and four English-language dailies. The Japanese publishing industry brings out more new titles each year than its American counterpart. There is a tre~endous variety of magazines, appealing to all tastes, many of which have very
  • . RWK cc: Cooper Thomson January ZS, 1966 Chris Herter, Jr. called today to say that h:i,s company (Standard of New Jersey) has been approached by sources he preferred not to name to supply quite a lot of crude on a five year con. tract from the West
  • ) The,; ri¼s exchanged by President Johnson and Prime Minister Ikeda make clear the importance of thfs'/o~'c1i ion. This new trans -Pacific t elephone cable is but the latest of many tangible and intangible bonds that link the US and Japan more closely
  • by this spring at the latest. by the ~its new schedule the ROKGexpects to reach agreement in the negotiations 8 end of March with parliamentary ratification following shortly. Ambassador Kirn ~ -commented that al though there were still some in the Government who
  • DEPARTMENT 0F STATE ASSISTANT SECRETARY January 11, 1965 Note to Mr. McGeorge Bundy: The attached Sato interview in U. S. News and World Report might be as good as all our position papers in giving the President the feel of Sato' s thinking
  • Games. QUOTE Dear Mr. Prime Minister: Now that Japan has added a bright Olympiad chronicle new page to the world I wish to extend to you and the Japanese nation on behalf of the .American people our congratulationa admiration and for your splendid
  • modernized, new elements, primarily industrialized labor and the urban white collar worker, uproot _ed from the traditional matrix, emerged into self-consciousness. These elements found themselves exploited economically and inadequately represented
  • open for suggested revision. Moderate JSP leaders, including many in SOHYO, are opposed to· Sasaki's parliamentary obstructionism and, particularly, his new emphasis on a united front with the Communists. The moderates, J1owever, are in political
  • and that the Japanese Gove rn­ ment doesn 1 t seem to want that either. He said that things to be decided were: (1) what we need prim.a rily for our defense purposes, and (2) the timing and stages of new movement toward rever­ sion. He thought that action
  • ) 4pp. St(t1c j_h, ?- 7- 7 S Draft 11:9tel [1538] Undated State ~ (Gp 3) 2pp. ':.J+o.te.. d-r ?-'7-'75 Draft Deptel [1537] 12/19/63 State U 2pp. Ernbtel 1835 (Tokyo); 3c 3d 3e proposed presidential New Year's 5 12/26/63 State~ (Gp 3) 4pp. S~a.tt