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  • ~ o. 12356, Sec. 3. CQNFIDEN-'IlAL.. Tuesday, September 12, 1967 -- MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJEcr: PL 480 Package I -- Four agreements totaling $35 million in commodities Herewith, as promised, is the first package of new PL 480
  • ' the ,lffflii ~&t'y"•scouting vessel and An official announcement said tvi.ZZ oe~ 'ti.Md a file ' ,.,..,,. · · · t!v(!l-·1 plane 'the United States ·' · · , pm;sessetl, 'and 'if !he;· commandera that up :to .J..ast;",,,".i.v.ay 86 Japanese ••• New -civi service
  • INTERVI EWEE: THOMAS G. HICKER INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Mr. Wickerls office, Washington Bureau, New York Times Tape 1 of 1 F: First of all, I know you came out of Hamlet, North Carolina, which I think is a very happy place to have been born
  • an associate editor of the college newspaper, but I liked to write and that sort of thing. And then there was an opening at the New York Herald Tribune. A colleague of mine had gotten on the New York Herald Tribune and said, "Well, you can come on here, and we
  • foreign policy his party will agree to must be their policy. I quote from his address, as reported in the New York Herald Tribune of Sunday, January 26, 1947: A Democratic President and his Secretary of State can propose, but a Republican Con­ gress can
  • -of-I Panel & Legislation) Conflict of Interest (The Assn. of the Bar of the City of New York), 1958-62 Sept. 1, 1938 – August 1, 1940 [correspondence] CAH Personal Correspondence - 1949 Sept. 1, 1936 – August 31, 1938 [correspondence] July 15, 1935
  • to the, 'Indian Government to finance local cosls o[ development pro-' grams. But dollar repayment for ·11 ilc
  • , former defense secretary who left the government on 10/8, but said this decision might be “reconsidered” in view of Wilson’s statements to a New York Herald Tribune reporter on 12/30 disclaiming responsibility for holding down military spending. Wilson
  • ~: As the Congress had not acted, "there is no war, according to the sense of our constitution". It was, he opined gloomily, entirely uncertain whether our army could reach -Mexico City or secure a peace. The press held similar views: -- The New York Tribune urged
  • ALMOST INAUDIBLE CONVERSATION ABOUT USDA PRESS LEAK TO CHARLES BAILEY OF MINNEAPOLIS TRIBUNE ABOUT RECENT ACQUISITION OF ADDITIONAL LAND AT LBJ RANCH; LBJ DISCUSSES LAND LEASES AT RANCH, COMPLAINS ABOUT LEAK, READS FROM NEWS STORY
  • -Trust Cases" open Contains lists of individual and corporate defendants in pending anti-trust cases before the Department of Justice, 1965-1967, and material on the merger of the New York Herald Tribune, New York Journal American and New York World
  • ) Bill Mo yers (PlO Mrs. Johnson Califano (pl) Bob Kintner ^——-^—— — Ambassador Goldberg in New York ( b 3) ___ Senator Frank Church (In New York in Amb. Goldberg's suite) (b4) (Courtenay Valenti called. Pres said he'd have to call her back, he had
  • Truman Democrat and I am an Orval Faubus Democrat." F: And never the twain shall meet! H: That experience~ of course, is beside the point, except that it brings us together in this matter of geography. F: I think New York City is beginning to get
  • "'... the Times and ~ X.~ Herald Tribune, x: -. ;:.t"'f4vely for Septer,, and September 30, 1963. •••; I ,! 'These reports comprise an in rvi'ew· witfi.Mr. _ i~ ~i.:>mc. a powerf'ul figure in Nicaragua. and refer to a joint. '.J.,1.-Nic.a.ra~;-..1ar: plan
  • in the 1964 Campaign. Republican charges and smears Communism in the U.S. - General Congress, 89th, 1st Session. Conflict of interest series in New York Herald Tribune Congress, 88th, 2nd Session. Record of Congress, 1964. Editorial Criticism and Public Polls
  • . R. ) John T . O'Rourk e - Washingto n Daily , News David Wis e - Ne w York Heral d Tribun e Ben Bradle e - Newswee k John Steel e - Tim e Albert Clar k - U . S. New s an d Worl d Repor t William Stringe r - Christia n Scienc e Monito r Warren Rogers
  • Francisco Chroricl e Don Shoemaker, Editor , Miam i Heral d Templeto Tom Easton, Editor , Sa n Francisco Call-Bulleti n Martin Ochs , Editor , Chattanoog a Times E . L . Holland , Editor , Birmingha m New s Max Lerner, Columnist , Ne w York Pos t To m
  • --- .:- - - -___.; ~ - - - -· - · ·-·- -.-~ _ ···----i-------1 - ENGELHARD, . Charles Cragwood, Far Hills, N. ]. BE 8-0073 · Private ------. . ...residence . --- - -- . ·-------- . Newark Office · - ·----- -- -- - -- . .· Waldorf, New York ·· .. .. CODI: "'"·"'· x 4521 LI 6..:5379 Res: 434
  • it. F: Didn't have anything to move with. H: Didn't have anything to move with. Purely on a political side I think that the majority of people supported him in my own state. F: New York? H: We were concerned politically. We had every indication
  • campaigning in the early primaries against Kennedy. And so I pretty much stayed out of that one. I went to the convention as a correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune and did some writing. I did have the distinction of being the first reporter to carry
  • of urbanization that (Nov. 6, 1965 is accurately of the areas leaves are Tribune to reflect the urbanizing problems problems, appointing Cabinet fail and unfortunately, and city is and Urban as the New York Herald inaccurately does
  • me price information about the GRI Directory and Directory Service. Name _____________________ _ Organization ___________________ Address ___________________ _ _ Mail with check or money order to Group Research Inc., 1404 New York Avenue, N.W
  • -- 23 for Hiroshima. Mike Cowles understood that. In fact, I did one thing which for a long time preyed on my mind; I was actually filled with guilt although I had been right to do it. Helen Reid, owner of the New York Herald Tribune, once presided over
  • , New York Herald Tribune-- (Interruption) G: Where are we? M: On the book-- G: Well, at any rate-- M: This was cancelled then? G: At any rate I heard that the thing was going to be cancelled, got notice that it was going
  • ..:fterno o , to : is Minet a Stockel 1075 Fir st Avenue New York, In the e ent you th snme offe r i · ~ York ecide on vanitie , b gs , or go o iElthing else, In addition Mr. rsh' s Del e te to ing nnio ns. Deleg t.e ,s to thie inf'orn tion of mine
  • today and the year 2000, more than 80 percent of our pop­ ulation increase will occur in urban areas. During the next fifteen year ■ , thirty million p~ople will be added to our cities -- equivalent to the combined population of New York, Chicago, Loa
  • . 3/19/2009 ---- Initials - THE NEW YORK TIMES, 'Pf[URSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1968 China', Late,t At~m.. Teat I• -Believed a Failure . ~ IIY JORNW. FINNEY -.i .. '1'1111..., Tenll'lmle WASRINGTON,Jan. :f-Pre- '· ,. UJ. lfetn • Ducr,,-c1 off
  • , to cover the legislature and continued on covering the Governor's Office. My bureau chief, who was Bill Carter--he was from New York--did not know much about Texas politics. He had been sent down to take over and spruce up the bureau and so he let me write
  • American Oil Co Harold Bateson, Greenwich, L. I. William L. Beale, Jr., Assoc Press Stephen D Bechtel, Jr., San Francisco, Calif Louis Beck. New York. NY Charles E. Blake, Hearne, Texas Windsor P. Booth. Chief, Natl Geographic Society News Service Myron G
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 5 August 1969 F: This is an interview with Mr. Laurance Rockefeller and Mr. Henry Diamond in Mr. Rockefeller's office in New York on August 5, 1969; the interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. Mr. Rockefeller, very briefly tell us how
  • . George McCollough 330 Bast !26th Street New Y( rk 35, New York LBJ:WDT [1 of 2] ./ [2 of 2 front] [2 of 2 back] PUBLIC ACTIVITIES ~c~~
  • .. sponsored school f.n Greece, has designated the Academic Year 1964-65 as its 60th Anniversary Year, to be inaugurated by a banquet to be held in New York on December 29, 1~64. Mr. Alexander W. Allport, Vice President of the school, bQs t•equested
  • like that? LBJ Put that on interview and played it to the New York Times, the Herald Tribune, Chicago Tribune, had 27 damn lie charges . Now, that's the type of stuff they resort to. It's the lowest down thing you have and that ' s what you got
  • daily? N: Not daily, 0:: Cape Cod at the time of the second primary? but I telephoned. I bought the New York Times. Boston pa?ers didn't report anything. The The New York Times would have very confusing information, and I remember I called
  • that no reporter, when I got down here, really qualified, with very few exceptions--such as Marshall Peck of the Herald-Tribune in New York City, Paul Weeks in Los Angeles--both of whom by the way later joined the War on Poverty--there were no qualified poverty
  • colum­ nist for the Dallas Times Herald, who in the course of her award­ winning career has worked for the Minneapolis Tribune, the Texas Observor and the New York Times, covered the recent revelation of pay­ ments to football players at SMU that became
  • of delegates to the Blanco County convention on Tuesday. 5/6 In conversations with Earl Mazo of the New York Herald Tribune, LBJ discloses that he was threatened with death or maiming by an anonymous telephone caller after his speech Thursday night
  • INTERVIE~~EE : HARRY PROVENCE INTERVIEWER: DAVID PLACE: His office at the Waco Tribune Herald r4ccor~B Tape 1 of 1 M: First of all, we'll get some background information. I'd like to know where you were born and when and where you got your
  • departed for New York to attend the opening of the UN General Assembly. Bolivia Fighting in the mining area broke out last Saturday evening when miners attacl
  • of the service and started as a news correspondent here at the National Press Building. That was June 12, 1944. F: That was right at D-Day in Normandy, wasn't it? M: That's right, that's right. She was nine days old when I started working here in the Press