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  • tment t o a n art icle in t he New York Tines o f Febru.ary l5 in which Janes Rest on ncr;1ed s everal USG offi ci c..ls who are former NS..ll... of :::'i c e rs a nd i ndicated that t hey had · b een p ri . .;y to t he ?1T3A-CLA · financ i a l
  • 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
  • of the AFL-CIO, and Philip J. Santora, New York DAILY NEWS re­ porter, all have in common? What is their real occupation? What sensational secret is hidden behind their "cove'!"" ? The answer is given by Dr. Julius Mader, 40-year-old East German writer
  • to Washington from your home state in Texas, and you worked with them until 1945. From 1945 to 1958 you were with the New York Times and rose to the position of chief congressional correspondent. In 1958 you left to become nationally syndicated. Your column
  • •u pleaaN with your lett.er~ Should you t • l the nee4 ot •• :,ou mQ' 111a \o lfflw tb41. I _,, be reached by' letter o/o ~ 1 6 11st 92nd St..-et, New York 2l,t N.Yo or- a\ iaab1ng1-. Virginia, 0/0 UiN Ruby Jenldne. ~..s,:rne. I shall
  • the decision was made. This research will also serve as the basis for my doctoral dissertation in political science at New York University. I am currently discussing with of Prentice-Hall, Little-Brown, and M.I.T. Press the publication the book. I understand
  • SAUCER. Kenneth Arnold was told about these photographs by Frank M. Brown while in Tacoma, Washington, August 1, 1947. Frank M. Brown, who was a counter espionage agent from Mitchell Field, New York, and operating with Army Air Force Intelligence out
  • of American for­ ces to Vietnam. President Lyndon Johnson maneuvered the measure through the House and Senate with astonishing speed. The vote in Con­ gress, with only Senators Morse and Gruenjng dissenting, was to mark the beginning of a new phase
  • ' bellow would roar out suddenly, "And what about eggs!" and then he'd tell his story. A grand newsman in those days, long dead and forgotten, was Lemuel Spears, a New York Times correspondent. men Mr. Ochs himself hired. was concerned. Lem Spears was one
  • . Lawrence B. Levinaon warr•n L. 111\ith w. Barr , _,,.."JTIVI' ~:?/7 ~/70~ September Wednesday, 4, 1968 10:00 a. m. FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM Joe Califano and Larry Levin•on It is important to name the new FNMA Board so that the trander of FNMA
  • reporter many years ago. When I was in Swathmore, Pennsylvania, I worked for the Philadelphia papers part time, but I drifted into political reporting when I was here in Washington. F: By the time the New Deal came on, you were established as a syndicated
  • news; suppression of news; RFK never broke with McCarthy; characterization of McCarthy; LBJ as VP; LBJ’s effectiveness as an ambassador; JFK assassination; dinner with the Johnsons; press disenchantment with LBJ; press secretaries; RFK; oil interests
  • in New York. They are an interesting group, but they are seldom able to agree, and the Parliamentary group is probably not the most hopeful one for NATO at present. So I would suggest a messa g e to Hays along the following lines: "I send you best wishes
  • Sunfiower Dr., L. Rock, Ark., 7/24/64. SEIBS, F. L., 1015 So. Van Buren St., Little Rock, Ark., 7/21/64. MCNEIL,S. E., 1208 West 48th, No. L. Rock, Ark., 7/24/64. BlmNimB, Bill,RT 1, Box 3, Demming, New Mexico, 7/24/64. PCWELL,J. E., 3209 Whitfield, Little
  • --- .:- - - -___.; ~ - - - -· - · ·-·- -.-~ _ ···----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
  • Jackson , Jr . follo w and proceed t o th e Mansion . Called b y Barbara Gamarekia n i n mjdr' s ofr , - askin g di d he hav e somethin g fo r Charli e Bartlett: , (syndicated columnist ) als o brought int o mjdr's ofce . Pres . return s thr u mjdr' s ofc
  • Star Telegram, 6/12/60-7/16/60" "Xerox Copies of Selected Articles from The New York Times" 4 5 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 8 8 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 16 "Summary of 1960 by Dee J. Kelly" "Xerox Copies of Selected
  • it straight. I remember that Kennedy was very bitter at reporters like David Halberstam with the New York Ti mes, who \'lere tell i ng another versi on of what was goi ng on in Saigon. And I think that this is where this credibility gap gained momentum
  • business-economic news column for his paper which is syndicated throughout the country. (The President discussed with Livingston some of Livingston's ideas and views on the economy and then read to him the draft of the speech the President is planning
  • ~RACHI 4 3 RUFHDN/AMEMBASSY LONDON· 378 RUEHOT/ USUN NEW YORK 05 • STATE GRNC I ' .I • I I ' '/' • I' \ 'i' BT S E C R r--' T NOVEMBER 1 I //LIM Di I SIi , ATMOSPHERICS AND DETAILS EMERGING FROM DCM CONVERSAT✓ ION WITH L. K•··· JHA OCTOBER
  • was elected speaker [of the Little Congress], I ran and was defeated. It goes on and says what I wanted to do was to be in charge of entertainment to New York. Here's what happened. for speaker. In 1937 my name was put in the pot to run Lyndon Johnson
  • never really told him what I thought about it, which is very simple. The trouble with Johnson and Viet Nam was that he was too clever by half. He had 150,000 troops on the ground before the New York Times admitted we were in a major war, literally
  • ~~~~~~-:---• --►~"·'"~-=--~~ -~~--·-------~-·~, ~~ ..,~:-....;ro.r ...-:---"' . ·-.. ..--.,. ··.,. . -,.~--~-- ~- ·· ----~ While the Washington Post gave best United States coverage to the ceremonies themselves, many important newspapers -- including the New York Times, the Baltimore Sun, tl·,..e Washington Star
  • THEECONOMY: As The Cartoonist Saw It Then Inflatiun and rrcession command a stronghold on today·.- nl'WS spotlight. A. they struggle with the eronomy. President ford and the new Con­ gress are faking more an a few ja s rom e powerful pens of editorial
  • . and Mrs. Dre w Pearson, columnist, Bell syndicate Dr. and Mrs. James A. Perkins, President, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY Mr. and Mrs. M. Robert Rogers, Mgr., Natl Symphony Orchestra Mr. Daniel Schorr, CBS News Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Simon, Jr., Pres
  • on this before the President made the statement." fine. Let him be heard. to New York." Sam. Where is he?" I said, "Well, that's "He inmediately took a train "Cecil, had he planned that before?" "I don't know, I did hear him call Marvin and say that he
  • to whether all things po•aible were being don·~ in South Vietnam. McNamara anawered affirmatively and then advocated the Propoaed North Vietnam Operations which are to be reviewed oa Tu9Clay. McCone raiaed the que8tion of omiaalon ol any reference to New
  • that an issue of this seriousness has arisen and particu­ larly that we are obliged tQ deal with it so soon after the constitu­ tion of new governments in both of our countries. In our hand­ ling of the matter in New York, we are seeking a solution which would
  • a syndicated colwmi.st. r thought I would just .begin by introducing you and then at the end of that, you can add whatever you'd like to it. You were born in 1924 in New York City. In 1947 you received a B.A. I from U.C.L.A. and in 1948 received a Master
  • there was a meeting in New York about a month ago and that involved. In Bush's opinion, they are the scene. a meeting of The Boggs had to publicize GOAL2 s real of socialists the Boggs were the powers behind A -416. The Inter-City Voice, published by James
  • for constitutional leadership; Huong widely respected. -- Overall trend unfavorable to enemy; Hanoi1s hopes for GVN collapse or Paris breakthrough dimmed by SVN response to Tet and by American firmness. -- Thieu and Ky predict massive new enemy attacks; Bunker cites
  • : -- hla illteatlon to ren1ove the two weak Corp• Coaamaader ■ (ll aad IV Corpah • - hi• effort• to pu1 the varloaa political 1ro.p• and the natioa to,etur • lac:1\ICll.aa ••pport for the new "People•• C-r••• to Save the Nadoa u; -· and hi• plalla for hl
  • Stevenson's nomination that very night. ActUally it was not that easy. Front-running F.&tes Kefauver still had 31-0 votes. But Kefauver lwl alienated the South QY vot­ ing with the Young Turks. On the third ballot New York, which had given Averell Harriman 83
  • , to give the South a chance to live with the new decision of the Supreme Court, I think Senator Russell would have been drafted for the presidency and would have been president. But I think that was the biggest political blunder in my lifetime, because
  • , he would wait until the last moment before he would personally authorize the wheat shipments . As a result, the Indians found it very hard to maintain a rationing estimate, because they couldn't know what to count on . The American Embassy in New
  • statement. Themes: - NlJ ldfy§2 , NARA, Date- z::: 7-9 ~ . The challenges confronting the hemisphere in the next decade and the importance of continued inter-American cooperation. Unique opportunity of Summit meeting to give AFP new di­ rections
  • it arose myself through the New York Times and specifically through Mr. James Reston. I recall this instant quite well. It was early in the President's Administration. He was preparing to go before the United Nations, and Mr. Reston apparently in getting
  • that impassio ned deprecations in New York streets got the upper hand over responsible debate in the Cap itol, that the American people had lost their will to resist aggression and that any further war es calation by Hanoi and the National Liberation Front would
  • of India very sincerely new hope and a new dimension countries. ot' You are a great and your friendship but will in India.· which I am morning, will not only be also give new faith, of friendsh~p and sincere is a source and hel.p between our
  • wriioh our 51' management sho l d stand up as an o perating fee. up his Ce ntral News p pers , f'ormerly w Ill (I fi n d t ' a.t Pulliam !ns kept s b s idia ry of GNI , and is using Central olly to own t he Sub s id.iary s tookn of his radio and e.ll