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  • as of March 1963), Mainichi (3.8 million), and Yomiuri (3 million). These three major newspaper companies and several smaller ones publish weekly magazines and have interests in commercial radio and television. There . are many other national and pref ectural
  • iiI I BH 105-560 On July 8, 1961 9 BH T-22 adv,ised that the "Fiery Cross" being printe d by ROBERT SHE LTOU is being redesigned, and it is now goi ng to be pu blis hed as a magazine. The cove~ for the magazi ne is be ing printed in Florida, atid
  • AND EUROPE WITH NGO DINH- DIEM ANDrlENT TO VIETNAM IN NINETEEN FIFTYFIVE WHERE HE REMAINED UNT NINETEEN SIXT YFOUR PUBLISHING PAPERS AND MAGAZINES. G'P-1 . END AND ACK ,8/WH PLS ACK Of.QAWllllU .,.orhorin N'L! oQ - l..'!>I Rl_t:.Jf~ "ARA Tmel..~:!~O TH E
  • . As a matter of fact, a recent magazine which was analyzing my conduct during the years had the heading, "Salami Slicer." It said that Secretary Cohen believed in the principle of salami slicing, which is to take a piece of salami and slice it very thin
  • : Yes. He came down I think with his mind fairly well made up, and I was amused by a quote that I've seen in Look magazine out of Sam Houston Johnson's book. I haven't read it all yet, but-- F: I don't intend to. 17 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • distribution. There were some other events that I recall, not in necessarily exact chronological order. There was a very important magazine article in the New Yorker--I'm blanking on the name. Do you know the piece I mean, that. G: Yes. Let's see, who wrote
  • to discuss probable einployment in the drilling program. I have a. drilling magazine before me which says, among other tlilngs, that the AE C test holes appco.r to be just the beginning of a:big ?rogram, which will be a very large process. It may
  • for a "full dress 11 presentation on what to you and me are obvious fundamentals. I I therefore have written a magazine article which am told might interest Foreign Affairs·. I understand . further that Foreign Affairs is widely commented on by colurnnists
  • of the President's pro . a~ by writing letters to tho editors of local nowspapors d to the leading news magazines. One's sphere of influenc spree. s as far aa the written and spo~·en word, and I belie o that his ia one or the ~ ost effective ways a citi&on can co
  • as the movie sex symbol. You could hardly pick up a magazine or a newspaper without seeing some exotic picture of her or sensational story about her. One day a bunch of us were together and somebody, Jake Pickle, I believe, asked somebody else, "Have you
  • it's the sole effect, I don't think writing in newspapers or magazines--or any kind of written word--really hits people as much as television does now. M: Of course, if the physicians themselves give it out, they communicate this to their patients. S
  • worth saving, because if they had any gumption they'd get up and leave. Our culture is thoroughly urban centered. Our newspapers, our magazines are published, and our radio and television programs originate in urban centers. If there is any attention
  • you to watch and I If there's something that you can help on, Marvin will tell you, or I'll tell you, but I probably won't have much communication with you. don't want you just to be in the bed all the time reading I ne'Hspapers and magazines
  • Vice President Johnson was interest- ed in making the whole trip a success. He called me about four days before they were due to come down and wanted me to put together a magazine-program for the Austin dinner. It seems like something had happened
  • attributes-- R: That's right, she does. At the time I went to London after the first year, at the end of 1964 I went to London and was our bureau chief there and later went to Asia before coming back, there was a story in Time magazine,which
  • called her from Nuevo Laredo or Laredo, Texas, one or the other. So far as I remember now, he was the only one that had skipped out and gone to Laredo or anywhere else. There was some magazine article I read later that said all the witnesses, most
  • thing we did-­ you might try to find this in Shriver 's fil.es--we got up a list that .f irst · night of books and magazines and ali kinds of things that we suggested Shriver start reading immediately. on tha~ list, not just Oh, there might have been
  • , that He got special treatment all the time. British magazine was always about as objective as you could find. I didn't have the problems that General Westmoreland faced, or Abe. But I do recall when I was in II Field Force, we did have a real bad