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  • to the junta's heart so it would not look as if he came down here on a purely social fling. State would do this with the weekly news magazines if at all. But since the King's main talks were with you, State wouldn't think o£ backgrounding this way without your
  • on that considerably even after he became defense secretary, but yet you would hear or read these things in the national magazines and the New York Times, how "Clark Clifford is trying to lead a dovish position, a change in policy on the war." The public print just
  • proponents of the Wilderness Act, and also all the conservation hierarchy in the city. When I wasn't working in the office, I was spending my spare hours writing articles for the various conservation magazines. Little did I know that these would bring me
  • , one of the two leading weekly magazines in Egypt, which features a picture of the President and Anwar Sadat on his recent visit to the United States. I thought you might like to call this to the President's attention and inform him that the article
  • was in the Embassy in Cambodia as the attache, and his name was Peach, and Kraft had written this article in Time magazine. And I had not seen the arti- cle. He had interviewed Peach in It was really a devastating article. Cambodia, and Peach, who, by the way
  • , and I did pull together all the figures for the section on credit in the South. I think I had a draft of it, and it was rewritten by Jack Fischer, who was later editor of HarE~~~ magazine. He did a good He was in the government at the time. LBJ
  • of the piece. And so the senator gleefully picked this up and said, "I have the review of your book written in this Communist magazine. Jim Crow? 'I Do you know LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • produced here in Washington. Have you published any poetry? M: No, none except in the captive literary magazine of which I was an editor at Sewanee, I never published any. B: Then in 1956, I assume shortly after you got your law degree, you joined
  • isn't anything happening, and put you totally on the defensive. There was that general attitude and it wasn't the case. Neil McNeil up on the congressional side saw that a lot of things were happening, and he was dutifully reporting it to his magazine
  • WERE GIVING HL"1 PLASMA. WE WERE TREATING THE OTHER l 1EN THAT WER~ SE.1\IOUSLY WOUNDED, WITH OTHER INDIVIDUAL LED THIS OFr'ICER TiffiOUGH THE SHIP. TO KNOWW:-IBRETHE SHIP'S CRE'.-1MEMBERS. HE HAD VERY FEW COMMENTS. HE WANTED MAGAZINE
  • loyal program of 7ranklin Roosevelt in job ot trying to posts. Big lim began to being able to say yes tor a it in the American Magazine tor August, "I think'11t He takes no part to his He even wrote out a cod4 of patronage qualified
  • foreign aid program, that fact was clearly confirmed. I found there validation of an analysis of foreign aid made some six years ago in the quarterly magazine "Foreign Affairs" by ··John Kenneth Galbraith. Galbraith, as is well lmown
  • well.paid post last week, that of a senior editor on Time magazine. Unofficial reports were that his salary was around S30,000 a year. Hiss offered his resi,nation to the trustees as the New York federal 1rand jury began its second week of inquiry
  • :_:, ME..· S0 f1ETHING OF HIS RECENT ·TRIP TO V-IET ' NAM, WHICli . WILL FORM TH~ BASIS FOR AN ARTICL~ APPEARING IN LOOK MAGAZINE IN NOVEMBER~ I. ' n~-G!NERAL, HE E.MERGED ~ITH A · SENSE -OF~-GREAT. OPTIMISi'f,- fJJ HICH ~Ill -BE REFLECTED