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  • Christian Church 2. 12:20 Returned to White House with Dr. and Mrs. Davis and Judge and Mrs. Ferguson 12:45 Jean Louis 1:10 Lunch with President, the Davises, the Fergusons, Luci and Pat 1:40 Leave by chopper for New York with Davises, Mansfields, Fergusons
  • . Valenti calle d (ID ) l Room c i \ 1:50 Dic 2:15 Senato . called (fro m car ) "Local) l Haddad(Heral d Tribune ) Ova l Room New T OF DISCUSSION IF INDICATED. „\ r \ v -L.B.J. the Liberal President Liberalism York = e Lunc . called (ID ) Wis
  • STATES:MIGHT BE MADE'. •-:°'.'-'. .. , .... ' ,,r 1 1I~' • •· . IT WAS LEVISON'S SUGGESTION THAT.':.PEOPLE LIKE-:JQHN KENNETH GALBRAITH,,' . ,_..:;·;-· :: ' KING, JAMES WECHSLER, ·THE EDITOR ·or THE' "NEW ·YORK POST~, DR.,'.JOHN .. BENNETT, PRESI DENT OF UNION
  • , 35, brilliant, articulate economist -- his boaa ia Que Wortham page 4 - li•t for Nov. 17 ~ Mr._ Oian Carlo Menotti - Caprico1'n, Mt. Ki1co, New York - composer, v won Pulitzer prize•, in 1950 and 1955 - '--Mr. and Mre" Cower Champion - very
  • Broadcaating Company We1tern Union CBS-frV UPI Newafilm Chicago Tribune New York Herald Tribune Time United Pre1 • International USIA U.S. New a & World Report ABC News New York Daily News NBC TV Wa•hington Star Wa1hington Poat St. Louia Poat Diapatch National
  • Post, Denver, Colorado Jack S. Knight, Miami Herald, Detroit Free Press, and Akron, Beacon Journal John Cowles, Jr. , Minneapolis Star and Tribune, Minneapolis, Minn W. H. James, Exec VP of New York News, NYC Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, NY Times Richard
  • are going to organize in the newspaper. we will tell you where we will be, how we will be, and what methods we are going to use to stop these cops. That should be our slogan - - "•stop the Cops'"· The."Herald Tribune", a New York daily news­ p~per, Late City
  • . Dorchester, Massachusetts Mr. and Mrs. Walter Millis Mrs-Eugenia Sheppard, N. Y. Herald Tribune Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Negley San Antonio, Texas Mr. Patrick Nugent Waukegan, Illinois Miss Mollie Parnis New York, New York Miss Sharon Percy Chicago, Illinois Mr
  • heritage. The only son o£ Whitelaw Reid, the journalist-diplomat who took over Horace· Greeley's New York Tribune, Reid was born in New .;: York 64 years ago, studied at Bono Uni­ Burgeoning Chains versity in Germany, took his law degree In the wake
  • newspape r tabl e each da y b y his desk : Delete: ' N Y Herald Tribune , Chicag o Tribune , Wal l Street Journa l an d N Y Daily New s Add: Th e Denver Post , Louisvill e Courie r Journal , St . Loui s Pos t Dispatc h to Museu m o f Natura l Histor y w
  • , Minneapolis Tribune Mr. Peter Barnett, Australian Broadcasting Commission Mr. Charles ^^Bartlett, Columnist, Chicago Sun-Times Mr. Karl Bauman, Associated Press Alfred M Bell, Washington, D.C. William M Blair, New York Times Hon. Waggoner Carr, Attorney
  • . Appleton, Wisc. Post-Crescent G. Wausau, Wisc. Record-Herald H. Lacrosse, Wisc. Tribune I. Washington, D.C. Post-Times-Herald K. Washington, D.C. Star L. Washington, D.C. News M. New York Times N. Long Island City, Ne~ York Star Journal O. Jamaica, New York
  • Jack Valenti George Reedy Chairman Gardner Speaker John Jim Watson Ackley McCormack of NYC former call to mjdr Pres Senator of New York talked on it Douglas Riker New York Herald Tribune Charles Mohr New York Times OFF RECORD Kenneth
  • Boulevard, L012g Ialand Cit7, !few. York. Be OD $500.00 bail. Thia waa taken to Night Court and released intar.m.ation waa obtained tr
  • calls February 17, 1965 carded The White House Wednesday Awake, breakfas t in bed w/Mrs. Johnson Mayor Robert Wagner, New York (returning his call of yesterday) Bill Moyers, Marvin Watson, JV Governor John Connally, Austin, Texas (returning his
  • newspapers. So He got the Tulsa Tribune to pay the same amount the Arkansas Gazette did. Then Liz, in the meantime, had started a little news bureau of her own, and she represented the Beaumont Journal. We later were to represent the Enterprise as well
  • newspapers, had their best on the beat: Murrey Marder, Chal [Chalmers] Roberts of the Washington Post; Ned [E. W.] Kenworthy, Bill Jorden, Max Frankel of the New York Times; Pete Lisagor of the Chicago Daily News; John Cauley of the Kansas City Star; Paul
  • choice and phrasing; the new mission for the marines in 1965; government's right to withhold information; the press' ability to get the information it seeks; how McCloskey obtained information; McCloskey's "thought, word and deed" message on 1967 war
  • newspapers, had their best on the beat: Murrey Marder, Chal [Chalmers] Roberts of the Washington Post; Ned [E. W.] Kenworthy, Bill Jorden, Max Frankel of the New York Times; Pete Lisagor of the Chicago Daily News; John Cauley of the Kansas City Star; Paul
  • McCloskey’s work in foreign service and as State Department spokesman; reporters; Vietnam; credibility gap; coordinating briefings with the White House and the Pentagon; new mission of the marines in 1965; withholding information from the press
  • New York Daily News Baltimore Sun New York Herald Tribune Washington Post USIA ~••rleaa 81 swieasH•s &smpant American Br~adcasting Company Westinghouse Broadcasting Company Mutual Broadcasting System National Broactaating Company National Broadcasting
  • Sout h Grounds Merriman Smith , UP I Frank Cormier , A P John Chancellor , NB C Nan Robertson, N Y Time s Charles Baile y. Minneapoli s Tribun e Douglas Kiker , N Y Herald Tribun e • Garnet t "Jack " Horner . Washingto n Evenin g Star George George Reed
  • e At th e poo l Newspaper part y - gues t lis t t o b e attached : Housto n Hart e an d E d Hart e (Sa n Angelo Standard-Times) ; Alber t Jackso n (Dalla s Time s Herald) ; Harr y Provenc e (Waco New s Tribune) ; Georg e Brown ; Amo n Carter , Jr
  • . This article, entitled "Negroes Are Not Moving Too Fast" appeared.in the November 7, 1964, issue of the '"Post." In November, 1964, Wachtel wrote an article for King entitled "Looking Ahead" which was to be turned over to the "New York Herald Tribune
  • Miss Mollie Parnis Parnis-Livingston, Inc.,, NYC Mrs. Charles S. Robb Arlington, Virginia Mr. Sarmi Sarmi, Inc.,, NYC Miss Patricia Sheldon Christian Science Monitor Miss Eugenia Sheppard New York Herald Tribune Mrs. Robert Short Wife of the Natl. Chmn
  • recall it, a week or ten days, LBJ found out that Kilduff was going up to New York for the weekend, I think it was. This is typical LBJ. He told Reedy he wanted him to take the weekend off, he was tired and needed a rest. He knew that that was going
  • , Sen Everett McKinley Dirksen Ambassador a t Large Mr. Rdscoe Drummond, New York Herald Tribune Mr. Mel Elfin. Newsweek Mr. David Watt, London Financial Times Mr. Peregrin e Worsthorne, London^_ The Secy of the Treasury, Henry Fowler Senator J. W
  • ." · "Be prompt when you are wrong to back straight out," urged the New York Tribune, demanding the recall of all our troops from Mexico. Senator Corwin of Ohio said that if he were a Mexican, he would welcome the Americans to a bloody grave. Con­ gressman
  • . SpeQ!al to The New York Tl01es . . . .. WASHINGTON,.May !2 - In for small businesses much of· ·America, there are ers. pockets of poverty in the midst The . Appalachia and farm­ program, of · plepty. ,~ Jiut in Appalachia, strictly ·a regional one
  • , Tau. daily ..-pe lundaJ. N.w Year't. rourtb o1 111b', Labor D17, Thanastvinl and · Clu1ltlnaa Day. Sunday and holiday llaun Th• Waco Tribune-Herald. En• tend u NCOnd-clau matter at the Waco Poat Offlc• under the Act of ConlNIII March 3. ll'lt
  • . BARRETT,Ashton c., Federal Maritime Conmission. BARTO~, Frank., Law Southern Railway System, Wash. 3 D.C. BEA.RD,Charles H• ., Union Carbide Corp. New York City BEATTIE, Donald, Railway Labor Executives Assn., Wash., D .c. BERGER,David, Phila., D .C
  • was very light. Attached are articles appearing April 19 in the Daily Telegraph and The Guardian, and also the Paris edition of the Herald Tribune. 7 The Guardian carried a press wire service dispatch :f'romParis stating that the French confirmed
  • W Westinghouse Broadcasting Co.), Douglas Kiker (New York Herald Tribune), Francis Lewine (As­ sociated Press), John Chancellor (NBC), Marianne Means (Hearst Newspapers; Look Magazine), Bob Thompson (Los Angeles Times, Hearst), Helen Thomas (United
  • Herald Tribune Mri Henry A Dudley, Washington, DC Mr. John C Duncan. NYC Mr. Richard Eder, NY Times Dr. Alvin C. Eurich, Pres. , Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies, Aspen Dr. Edwin B Firmage, Washington, Dc Mr. Bernard M. Gwertzman, Washington Evening
  • March 11, 1965 Thursday White House Breakfast w/ Mrs J Jack Valenti Marvin Watson McGeorge Bundy Robert Anderson, in Ne w York City re Donald Cook George Reed y Bill Moyers AG Katzenbach re civil rights problems George Reedv Rufus
  • was then with the New York Herald Tribune. Since then they've both become commentators on NBC. Kiker was always the nemesis of the President. It was my feeling that if LBJ had run for re-election that eventually Doug Kiker would become his press secretary
  • and President Kennedy; Presidential scholar ceremony invitee list; Laitin losing his code name; LBJ not wanting people to know who he was taking to Camp David; how the press manipulate the people who release the news; LBJ’s relationship with the press; the focus
  • for Christian Science Monitor 1924-53; Chief of New York Herald Tribune's Washington bureau 1953-55; syndicated columnist 1955 to date\ An Eisenhower Re­ publican. Described as "mild, harmless" by press people~ Sam Yette,--A general assignment reporter
  • , an attorney for the National Associa.tion for the Advancement of Colored People in New York City. According to Wachtel, Greenberg had been contacted by Acting Attorney General Nicholas deB. Katzenba.ch concerning the "clearing" of an individual for a United
  • . · c.E.u. PRESERVATION COPY I l:- U . 1, ·' GENERAL NEWSPAPERS, lNc. ROOM 842 GRAYBAR BUILDING 420 LEXINGTON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY 'l'dtphone MOHAWK 4 ~ 5524 Llttle~l•l .Bul~J AuaUa, exa.1 J-• "· 19Z2 ·• -•n• o. 111 G••••l WW1papel"a• Le ln4
  • , Hilitary Aide to The Vice President Mr. Baskin, Dallas U ews Mr. Bell, AP Mr. Scali, ABC Miss Hi ggins, New York Herald Tribune Mr . Miller, Time Mr. Greene, New York Daily News j\'h". Alexander, McNaughton Press Mr. Spivak, UPI Mr. Freedman, Manchester
  • Stassen. 1/9 Truman delivers the State of the Union Message. [?] is appointed to the committee to escort Truman to the chamber. 1/11-1/12 LBJ, Estes Kefauver, Lester Hunt and John Stennis conducted hearings in New York City, checking on the cost