LETTER FROM JAMES E. DONAHUE MANANGER/GOVERNMENT AFFAIRS
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP88-01315R000100250001-9
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
59
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 9, 2004
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
September 11, 1978
Content Type:
LETTER
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STAT
STAT
TO ADVANCE THE CAUSE OF A FREE PRESS
American Newspaper Publishers Association
The Newspaper Center, Box 17407, Dulles International Airport, Washington, D.C. 20041
Executive Offices: Reston, Virginia (703) 620-9500
Public Affairs Officer
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
Dear
Sept. 11, 1978
Thank you for the information you provided in your letter
of Aug. 31 including the agenda for the Sept. 20 ANPA Government
Affairs Committee's visit to CIA, the biographies of Director
Turner and others and the map.
Per your request, I am enclosing an alphabetized list of
attendees with full name, address, date and place of birth,
and I hereby confirm that all these persons are U.S. citizens.
None on this list is handicapped.
The list includes more than 40 persons, but, given the
meeting room accommodations which you outlined, we will limit
the actual contingent to 40 from the list. Some ANPA staff
members will have to be excluded.
The committee will be traveling by bus to the Langley
headquarters from downtown Washington. The bus company is the
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority/Metrobus. The
only other vehicle will be the ANPA van which will accompany
the bus. This is a 1977 Dodge van with Virginia license plate
No. 405-154. The van driver will be Mr. Kelly Watkins. We
understand that the bus and van will pull up to the main entrance
of the CIA where you will meet us and direct the vehicles to
the proper parking place. Also, we understand that arrangements
will be made for Mr. Watkins and the bus driver to eat lunch
in one of the CIA cafeterias upon a showing of their driver's
licenses.
We also understand that arrangements can be made for taxi
service for any publishers who have to leave before the conclusion
of the briefing and luncheon.
I think the above information covers all the bases. If you
have any questions or if there are any other details which remain
to be worked out, please contact me. Otherwise, I want you to
know that ANPA very much appreciates all the assistance you have
given us in arranging this function. I look forward to seeing you
on the 20th.
cerely4
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61st
e_s_xE. Donahue
iii4Wd0WORMINVAMOlb
TAT
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THE EVENING NEWS ASSOCIATION
BIB LAFAYETTE BOULEVARD
DETROIT, MIckuctAx 48231
September 21, 1978
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D. C. 20505
Dear Admiral Turner:
PETER B . CLARK
PR IES IOCHT
Thank you for your hospitality yesterday, and for the
good briefing you and your staff provided.
?I greatly enjoyed the remarks of Dr. Bowie, Mr. Heymann,
1 and Mr. Lilly. I particularly enjoyed the
opportunity to chat with you at lunch, and the question
and answer exchange.
This kind of dialogue is extremely useful to the press and,
therefore, in the long run, to the CIA and the public.
My contImuing best wishes.
Sincerely yours,
1/14-7
Peter B. Clark
PBC/m
NEWSPAPER DIVISION Michigan THE DETROIT NEWS
California THE DESERT SUN Palm Springs
New Jersey TIMES GRAPHICS, INC Vine/and
BROADCAST DIVISION Michigan WWJ - TV ? WWJ -AM ? WWJ- FM Detroit
Oklahoma KTVY Oklahoma City
Arizona K OLD-TV Tucson
Alabama We LA -TV Mobile
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PUBLIC AFFAIRS
Phone: (703) 351-7676
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
WASHINGTON, D. C. 20505
Mr. James E. Donahue
Manager, Government Affairs Department
American Newspaper Publishers Association
Box 17407
Dulles International Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041
Dear Mr. Donahue,
3 1 AUG 1978
Enclosed is the agenda for the visit of the Government Affairs
Committee of the American Newspaper Publishers Association at the
Central Intelligence Agency on Wednesday, 20 September. Also enclosed
are biographic sketches of Admiral Turner, Mr. Carlucci and Dr. Bowie
for your information and use.
As we discussed, ten days in advance of your session I will need
an alphabetized list of attendees with full name, address, date and
place of birth and confirmation of U.S. citizenship (this is merely
a statement from you that the attendees are indeed U.S. citizens.)
If any foreign nationals plan to attend, I need the same information
plus their current U.S. address, address of any foreign residences
still maintained, and current citizenship. Children under 16 are not
allowed to attend these sessions. If any handicapped people plan to
attend, I would appreciate your letting me know so that I can make
special arrangements to assist them as necessary.
The Agency does not allow hazardous equipment?such as weapons
or explosives--or cameras, recording devices or radio transmitters to
be brought into the building.
The meeting room will only accommodate 40 guests, so I must ask
you to limit attendees to this number.
It would assist us if you would please let us know the transportation
arrangements, i.e., the name of the bus company and makes and tag
numbers of any private vehicles. Our parking facilities are extremely
limited; we urge you to use bus transportation if possible.
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I hope the enclosed map will be helpful. We are looking forward
to your visit.
Sincerely,
Public Attairs Officer
Enclosure
fc/typed: 31 Aug 78
Enclosure sent:
Agenda
Bio-Turner
-Carlucci
-Bowie
Map
Distribution: Orig addressee w/atts
1-P&PB Chrono wo/atts,
1-ANPA file wo/atts be,
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STAT
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3 1 AUG 197B
MEMORANDUM FOR: Deputy Director of Central Intelligence
FROM:
Deputy Director, Public Affairs
SUBJECT: American Newspaper Publishers Association,
Wednesday, 20 September 1978
1. Action Requested: That you agree to act as back-up luncheon
host and speaker for the DCI in the event he is unable to meet with
approximately 40 members of the Government Affairs Committee of the
American Newspaper Publishers Association (ANPA) on Wednesday,
20 September, in the Executive Dining Room, 1230 to 1400 hours.
2. Background: The Government Affairs Committee of the ANPA is
holding a two-day meeting in Washington--19 and 20 September. ANPA is
a trade association whose more than 1290 member newspapers represent
more than 91% of the daily newspaper circulation in the United States
and more than 85% of Canadian daily newspaper circulation. Several
non-dailies also are members.
Dr. Bowie will emcee a session from 1000 to 1230 hours in the DCI
Conference Room prior to the luncheon. The luncheon will be in the
Executive Dining Room from 1230 to 1400 hours. The DCI is scheduled
to speak for approximately 20 minutes and to respond to questions for
another 20 minutes. The subject of the DCI's remarks will be the role
of the intelligence in a free society, the need for secrecy legislation,
and the Agency's public policy, with specific reference to relationships
with the press.
The DCI has blocked the time on his calendar to address this
influential group.
3. Recommendation: That you agree to back-up the DCI for this
event.
APPROVED:
DISAPPROVED:
Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Date
Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Date
SThTpur 131 Aug 78 7; I
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1-ANPA file
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TO ADVANCE THE CAUSE OF A FREE PRESS
Officers
Chairman and President
Allen H. Neuharth
Gannett Co. Inc., Rochester, N.Y.
Vice Chairman
Len H. Small
Kankakee (III.) Daily Journal
Secretary
Dolph C. Simons Jr.
Lawrence (Kan.) Daily Journal-World
Treasurer
Katharine Graham
The Washington Post
Chairman of the Executive Committee
Joe D. Smith Jr.
Alexandria (La.) Daily Town Talk
Directors
Alvah H. Chapman Jr.
Knight-Ridder Newspapers, Inc.
Miami, Fla.
Lyell B. Clay
Charleston (W.Va.) Daily Mail
Stanton R. Cook
Chicago Tribune
Helen K. Copley
The Copley Press, Inc.
La Jolla, Calif.
Frank A. Daniels Jr.
Raleigh (N.C.) News & Observer
and Times
Beland H. Honderich
Toronto Star
Richard J. V. Johnson
Houston Chronicle
John M. Jones
Greeneville (Tenn.) Sun
K. Prescott Low
The Patriot Ledger, Quincy, Mass.
Robert G. Marbut
Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc.
San Antonio, Tex.
William C. Marcil
The Forum, Fargo, N.D.
Ashton Phelps
New Orleans Times-Picayune
and States-Item
Warren H. Phillips
Dow Jones & Co. Inc.
New York, N.Y.
Donald N. Soldwedel
Yuma (Ariz.) Daily Sun
Richard C. Steele
Worcester (Mass.) Telegram
and Gazette
Jerry W. Fricdheim
Executive Vice President
and General Manager
American Newspaper Publishers Association
The News...paper Center, Box 17407, Dillies International Airport, Washington D C 20041
Executive Offices Reston, Virginia (703) 620-9500
July 19, 1978
Admiral Stansfield Turner, U.S.N.
Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
Dear Stan:
The Government Affairs Committee of the American
Newspaper Publishers Association, which meets in
Washington September 19-20, would very much appreciate
the opportunity to tour your headquarters at Langley
fand to discuss with you those intelligence operations,
policies and practices which you are free to address.
Consequently, I have been asked by the committee
to propose such a tour on Wednesday morning, September 20
and to invite you to join our group as its guest speaker
at lunch at the headquarters -- at our expense, of course.
As you may know, ANPA is a trade association whose
more than 1290 member newspapers represent more than
91% of the daily newspaper circulation in the United
States and more than 85% of Canadian daily newspaper
circulation. Several non-dailies also are members.
The Government Affairs Committee, headed by
Chairman John M. Jones of Greeneville, Tenn., gener-
ally is the most active of ANPA committees, and the
weight of its contribution to the newspaper business
is illustrated by the fact that the elected officers
of ANPA always attend this committee's meetings. In
addition, many of the 36 committee members also are
ANPA Directors.
The committee meets twice a year in Washington
to study and make 4-ecommendations for action on govern-
ment matters affectillg_ReNapaaers ana-EU-an-aas these
'issues with top fgaeral officials.
In addition to those issues which could be cate-
gorized as "press" or "newspaper" issues, our committee
members are vitally interested in all intelligence
and national security matters and would welcome the
opportunity to have your views and to discuss these
matters with you.
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The format the committee usually follows is for the guest
to deliver remarks for perhaps 10-15 minutes, leaving the bulk
of time for informal discussion with the committee. This can
be off-the-record to any extent you desire. We do not make
public announcements of these sessions which are entirely for the
background information of the publishers.
If this tour and luncheonmeeting can be arranged, the ANPA
officers, Government Affairs Committee members and some senior
staff -- a group of approximately 40 -- could arrive at the
CIA by bus from Washington at approximately 10 a.m. September 20,
tour the headquarters and finish with a noon luncheon with you.
Last year this group made a similar visit to the National
Military Command Center with CJCS Gen. George Brown; it was
enthusiastically received by the committee, a reflection of
the interests of these newspaper executives.
For your information, I am enclosing a roster of the Govern-
ment Affairs Committee, the list of guests who have met with the
committee in recent years, and a booklet describing ANPA.
I sincerely hope that arrangements can be made for this tour
of the headquarters and that your schedule will permit you to
meet with us September 20.
We, of course, will provide any additional information you
or your staff might require.
Enclosures
25X1 cc- John M. Jones
Best personal regards,
Herbert E. Hetu
.1"
W. Friedheim
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Harold W. Andersen
President
Omaha World-Herald
14th and Dodge Streets
Omaha, Nebraska 68102
Richard F. Barry
President
Landmark Communications,
Norfolk, Virginia 23501
Richard H. Blacklidge
Publisher
Kokomo Tribune
300 N. Union Street
Kokomo, Indiana 46901
,Alvah H. Chapman Jr.
President
Knight-Ridder Newspapers
One Herald Plaza
Miami, Florida 33101
Peter B. Clark
Publisher
Detroit News
615 Lafayette Blvd.
Detroit, Michigan 48231
John M. Jones, Chairman
Publisher
Greeneville Sun
200 S. Main Street
Greeneville, Tennessee 33743
K. Prescott Low, Vice Chairman
Publisher
The Patriot Ledger
13 Quincy Street
Quincy, Massachusetts 02169
Inc.
Inc.
J. Hart Clinton
Publisher
The Times & News-Leader
1080 S. Amphlett Blvd.
San Mateo, California 94402
John Cowles Jr.
Chairman of the Board
The Star & Tribune
427 Portland Avenue
Minneapolis, Minnesota
55488
J.J. Daniels
Publisher
Florida Times Union
Box 1949
Jacksonville, Florida 32201
Richard E. Diamond
Associate Publisher
Staten Island Advance
950 Fingerboard Road
Staten Island, New York 10305
John F. Dille, Jr.
President and Editor
The Elkhart Truth
421 S. 2nd Street
Elkhart, Indiana 46514
Theodore D. Griley
V.P. and Chairman of the Board
Spenley Newspapers Inc.
39 South Fourth Street
Newark, Ohio 43055
Howard H. Hays Jr.
Co-Publisher
Riverside Enterprise & Press
14th and Orange Grove
Riverside, California 92502
Edwin L. Heminger
Publisher
Courier
701 W. Sandusky
Findlay, Ohio 45840
William J. Keating
President and Editor
Cincinnati Enquirer
617 Vine Street
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
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Raymond C. Kennedy
Publisher
Hudson Register-Star
366 Warren Street
Hudson, New York 12534
Clayton Kirkpatrick
Vice President and Editor
Chicago Tribune
435 N. Michigan Avenue
Chicago, Illinois 60611
Edward Lehman
Publisher
The Times-Call
P.O. Box 299
Longmont, Colorado 80501
Harold E. Martin
Publisher and Editor
Montgomery Advertiser
200 Washington Avenue
Montgomery, Alabama 36104
Douglas H. McCorkindale
Sr. Vice President, Finance and Law
Gannett Company Inc.
Lincoln Tower
Rochester, New York 14604
Donald C. Meyer
125 Algonquin Trail
Pines Lake
Wayne, New Jersey 07470
Ralph L. Millett Jr.
Editor
Knoxville News-Sentinel
204 W. Church Avenue
Knoxville, Tennessee 37901
Ashton Phelps
Publisher
The Times-Picayune and States-Item
3800 Howard Avenue
New Orleans, Louisiana 70140
Charles S. Rowe
Editor and Co-Publisher
Free Lance-Star
P.O. Box 617
Fredericksburg, Virginia 22401
Stephen W. Ryder
Publisher
Ottaway Newspapers Inc.
P.O. Box 1108
Medford, Oregon 97501
Joe R. Seacrest
Chairman of the Board
Journal-Star Printing Co.
P.O. Box 81609
Lincoln, Nebraska 68501
John H. Sengstacke
Publisher
Chicago Defender
2400 S. Michigan Avenue
Chicago, Illinois 60616
Otto A. Silha
President
The Star & Tribune
427 Portland Avenue
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55488
Len H. Small
Publisher
The Daily Journal
8 Dearborn Square
Kankakee, Illinois 60901
Fred W. Smith
Executive Vice President
Las Vegas Review-Journal
Box 70
Las Vegas, Nevada 89101
Stanley H. Stauffer
President
Stauffer Communications Inc.
6th and Jefferson Streets
Topeka, Kansas 66607
Davis Taylor
Publisher
Boston Globe
135 Morrissey Blvd.
Boston, Massachusetts 02107
Robert M. White II
President, Publisher, Secretary
Editor
Mexico Ledger-
300 N. Washington Street
Mexico, Missouri 65265
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John B. Winsor
Chairman of the Board
Canton Daily Ledger
53 W. Elm Street
Canton, Illinois 61520
Charles H. Withers
Publisher
Rochester Post-Bulletin
18 First Avenue, S.E.
Rochester, Minnesota 55901
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I? AJ
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TO ADVANCE THE CAUSE OF A FREE PRESS
OFFICERS
Chairman and President
Allen H. Neuharth
Gannett Co. Inc., Rochester, N.Y.
Vice Chairman
Len H. Small
Kankakee (Ill.) Daily Journal
Secretary
William C. Marcil
The Forum, Fargo, N.D.
Treasurer
Katharine Graham
The Washington Post Co.
Chairman of the Executive Committee
Joe D. Smith Jr.
Alexandria (La.) Daily Town Talk
DIRECTORS
Alvah H. Chapman Jr.
Knight-Ridder Newspapers Inc.
Miami, Fla.
Lyell B. Clay
Charleston (W.Va.) Daily Mail
Stanton R. Cook
Chicago Tribune
Helen K. Copley
The Copley Press Inc.
La Jolla, Calif.
Frank Daniels Jr.
Raleigh (N.C.) News & Observer
and Times
Beland H. Honderich
Toronto Star
Richard J. V. Johnson
Houston Chronicle
John M. Jones
Greeneville (Tenn.) Sun
K. Prescott Low
The Patriot Ledger, Quincy, Mass.
Robert G. Marbut
Harte-Hanks Communications Inc.
San Antonio, Texas
Charles M. Meredith III
The Free Press, Quakertown, Pa.
Ashton Phelps
New Orleans Times-Picayune
and States-Item
Warren H. Phillips
Dow Jones & Co. Inc.
New York, N.Y.
Lloyd G. Schermer
Lee Enterprises Inc.
Davenport, Iowa
Dolph C. Simons Jr.
Lawrence (Kan.) Journal-World
Donald N. Soldwedel
Yuma (Ariz.) Daily Sun
Jerry W. Friedheim
Executive Vice President
and General Manager
American Newspaper Publishers Association
The Newspaper Center, Box 17407, Dulles International Airport, Washington, D.C. 20041
Executive Offices: Reston, Virginia (703) 620-9500
September 25, 1979
Mr. Herb Hetu
Director/Public Affairs
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
Dear Herb:
You'll recall that you contacted me several
months ago about whether we could provide you with
reproductions of the First Amendment artwork which
was displayed at the ANPA Convention in New York
City last April.
Sorry this has taken so long -- but we have
now received word that Peters Griffin Woodward
Inc., the firm which controls the copyright, will
not grant us permission to reproduce the artwork
in poster form for distribution to our member
newspapers and to others requesting it.
We regret that we are not able to give you
a more favorable response.
All the best.
WS/lsb
Cordi
Wil jam habacker
Ma g /Public Affairs
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THE WASHINGTON POST
26 April 1979
Article appeared
on page A-20
_
* 9
o ernize
ategze Forces' 1
,
5.,`1 LT-
eLL) s
)
Pollo-wing are excerpts from Pres
dent Carter's address yesterday to th
A7r-arican Newspaper Publish.ers Associ
I want, first of all, to commend and
endorse the theme of this convention:
the defense of the First Amendment
P.nd the freedom of the press..
Liberty of expression Is our 'most
Important civil right, and the freedom
of the press is its most important bul-
wark. We can never afford to grow
complacent about the First Amend-
ment On the contrary; we must ac-
tively protect 4 always. e.
The American press has - grown
enormously since our nation's early
days?oot onlY _in-- size and breadth,
hut in its conception. of its own duties
and responsibilities...:The -highest oss
those duties iseeteinform the public on'
the important Issues of the day. And
no issue is more :important than the.
one I want to -discuss with your-today
?the control of nuclear arms.
Each generation of Americans faces-
a choice that defines its character--a-
choice that is also-important for what
it says about our nation's outlook on
the world.- - sse - ? -
In the coming months, we will al-
most certainly be faced with Such a
choice: whether to accept 'or to reject
a new strategic arms limitation treaty
[SALT]. The decision we make will
profotmdly- affect_ our lives---and the
lives of people allSover the world'-e-for.
years tre come. ?see
We face'thias'eshoice Iikm-SC`poSitioa
of strength-a- the strongest- nation
on earth=eicaiticallYe economically
and rniliteribee We have-a-capacity
for leadership. in the world that sur-
passes that 'of any other
That leadership leadership imposes many;re-
sponsibilities upon us, burour noblest
duty is to use- Our strength' to serve
our highest interest: the building of e,
secure, stable and peaceful world.
In our relations with the Soyiet Un-
ion, the possibility of Mutual-annihila-
tion makes a-strategy of peace:the
only rational choice for both sidese, .
As the Congress and the American
people _consider-- the SALT?treat
which is now nearly corn-pietas' tie d
bate will , center 'arciund four ;basic
questions fra7/444. 7:;114._
First, why, dn_.we .need ,aS,stretegiC
-11rMs limitation tieaty?,;
We need it beeause it will ''Cion"trite
lite to-w more-peaceful-world?and to
our oWn..iiatioital iecUSIDIKONatte
Today, we and the Soviet Unio
with sharply different world outlook
and interests, both have the ominou
destructive power literally to destro
each other as a functioning society,
killing, tens of millions- of people in
the process, And common sense tells
us?as it tells the Soviet Union?that
we must work tb.,filike our competi-
tion less dangerous, less burdensome,
and less likely to bring the ultimate
horror of nuclear war. - .
Indeed, the entire world has a vital
interest in controlling 4e? strategic
armsrace
see ? ? .-: ?
We have consulted closely with our
allies, who: count on us - not only to
maintain strong military forces toff-
set Soviet military power, but also to
manage successfully a stable. Last-
West. relationship.. -SALT is -"at .the
heart of both these crucial efforts,
,That is why the leaders of France,
'Great Britain. the Federal Republic of
Germany, Canada and other nations
have -voiced their support for the
:emerging Treaty. 1 -
, Some- nations which have so far
held back from building nuclear weap-
ons will be strongly influenced by
whether the two nuclear superpowers
will restrain our own weapons. Rejec-
tion-of the new strategic arms treaty
would seriously undermine the effort
to control proliferation of , these
deadree' weapons. And nothing weuld
..moresurely damage our-other-critical
effortefin" arms control .-seSee-seses,
`Arsoverwhelming majority-of the
- American people ;recognize the need
for SALT IL Our people want- and-ex-
pect continued; step-by-step progress
toward bringing nuclear weapons un-
der 'control. Americane-will-support a
reas6ned increase our defense ef-
,fort,. but we do not want- a wholly un-
necessary return to the Cold War and
an- all-out, arms race, :with' -vastly'
greater- -.risks e and scciat Through
istrength, we want world peace. ,
Let me. turn to the second question,
.---hovr SALT IL is related to our over-.
all defense strategy.eiese eese
?
The strategic forces of the United
_ - , .
?States and. the Soviet Union -today?are
essentially -equivalent. , 'They have,.
larger and more numerous land-based
.missiles. .We have a larger-number of ,
warheads,, and significant technoIogle?
,cal and geographical advantages' i"
Each aidet has the will and the'
to--ore ethal. -0
R40019.941a6Y,
in a":"Position to exploit its nuclear
weapons for political purposes, nor to
use strategic weapons without facing
almost certain suicide. .
What causes us concern is not the
current balance but the momentum of
the Soviet strategic buildup. Over the
past decade, the Soviets have steadily-I
increased their real defense spending,
while ours -has had a net decrease. In
'areas not limited by SALT I, they
have launched ambitious programs to
strengthen their strategic forces. At
some future point, they could achieve
a strategic advantage--unlese we alter
these trends. ' - . -
That is exactly what I intend to do
--with the support of the American
people and the bipartisan support elf
-Congress. ' , : es-
- We must move on two fronts- at the.
same time:
First, within mutually accepted lim-
its. we must modernize our own stra-
tegic forces. Alone with the strength-
ening of NATO, that Is a eentral,
purpose of the Increased defense
budget I have submitted to the
Congress. . . . z - .7.
Second, we must place more strin-
gent limits on the arms race than are
presently imposed by SALT I. That
is the purpose of the SALT II treaty-
The defense budget I have submit!
ted will ensure that our nuclear force
continues to be essentially equivalent
,to that of the Soviet Union.:. se- es!
The SALT LI agreement lwlll- slow
the growth of Soviet arms- and.liinit
'the strategic competition, and. by help-
ing to define future threats we might
face, SALT I1. will make our-defense
planning more effective. net _S.. 2
'Alder the agreement, the two- sides
will.be limited to equal numbers of
? strategic launchers for the first time,
ending the Soviet nuroericai advan-
,tage permitted in SALT I. . .
SALT II will also impose, the test
:limited but Important restraints on
:the race-to build. new systems and im-
prove 'existing -'ones?the so-called
-"qualitative' arms race. . .
Let me turn now to the third of the
four questions . How can we know
whether the Soviets are living up to-'
their obligations ,under this SALT-
agreement'Sene-We are confident that
no' significant violation of the treaty
could take-place- without the United
States detecting it. - '
15RogegoVititt
essAn eheeverifiability
it derives _from the
_
...s SOUR4
..,KO Senor.. To Journalism
1943, 1967
Lo.,.vERSiTY OF MINNESOTA
Service To Journalism
1361
NAnDNAL NEWSPAPER
ASSOCIATION AWARD
Of Ment, 1967
MISSOURI PRESS ASSN
GENERAL EXCELLENCE
First Plata, 1963, 1458, 1953
1950
Second Place. 1974, 1971, 1961
55,53 Placa, 1973, 1970, 1957,
1952 1951
Honorable Mention, 1972, 1968,
1965, 1459, 1967. 1956, 1949
BEST EDITORIALS
FirSt Place, 1963
Second Place, 1974, 1973, 1968, NM,
1457, 1958, 1954
Third Place, 1968, 1965
Honorable Mention, 1975, 1967.1959
BEST ADVERTISING IDEA
Second Piece. 1972
BEST FRONT PAGE
First Place, 1952
Third Place, 1970, 1969
BEST FARM COVERAGE
First Pled). 1958
Second Plate. 1975, 1967
Third Placa, 1974, 1968
Honorable Mention, 1971, 1969,
1466, 1963,1957. 1934
BEST SPORTS PAGE
Second Place, 1968
Honorable Mention, 1972, 1987
BEST NEWS STORY
First Place. 1967, 1965, 1981
Second Rao% 1963
BEST NEWS PICTURE
Third Place, 1971
BEST FEATURE PICTURE
Third Place, 1978, 1970
BEST FEATURE STORY
First Place, 1967, 1962
Second Place. 1969, 1968
Honorabie Mention, 1973
SPORTS PICTURE
Second Place, 1969, 1965, 1951
Third Place, 1953
BEST USE OF PICTURES
Third Place, 19E4
Honorable Mention, 1972, 1971
BEST COLUMN
Honorable Mention, 1965, 1983
BEST YOUNG PEOPLES PAGE
Second Place, 1974
Third Placa, 1976, 1905
TYPOGRAPHICAL EXCELLENCE
Second Place, 1972
Honorable Mention, 1971
NATIONAL BETTER
NEWSPAPER CONTEST (WHA)
COMMUNITY SERVICE
First Place, 1949
BEST EDITORIAL
Second Place, 1949, 1049
Third Recs., 1959, 1957
Honorable Mention, 1963
HERRICK EDITORIAL AWARD
Honorable MentiOn, 1958
Third Place, 1971, 1949
GENERAL EXCELLENCE
Honorable alerillOn, 1934, 1944
TYPOGRAPHICAL EXCELLENCE
Honorable Mention, 1965, 1958
sese, 1964, 19493
BEST NEWS PICTURE
'Third Place. 1969
N. W. AVER & SON
TYPOGRAPHICAL EXCELLENCE
Finalist. 1960
FREEDOMS FOUNDATION
EDITORIAL DIVISION
Award. 1949
NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL
Public inweet Aweni, 1949
INLAND DAILY PRESS ASS'N
WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE AWARD
PUBLIC RELATIONS
First Place, 1963, 1262, 1953
TYPOGRAPHICAL EXCELLENCE
Third Place, 1965
Nonryabie Mention, 1049 -
Second Place. iso
STAT
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ROBERT M. WHITE II
Editor and PubIisher
LEDGER NEWSPAPERS INC.
PHONE (314)5.81.1111
Oct. 16, 1978
MAX THOMSON, Managing Editor
GRETTA MAI, Advertising Director
VERNON DUFFY, Circulation Manager
LARRY JERICHOW, Production Manager
Ledger Plaza
Mexico, Missouri 65265
Mr. James Lilley
National Intelligence Officer for China
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D. C. 20505
Dear Jim:
Again, you did a marvelous job with your China briefing
for the ANPA group. Thank you so much.
I think I told you I was scheduled to go to the Soviet
Union to a seminar at Moscow. The seminar was
called off by the Soviets, the invitation being
withdrawn.
Out of the blue I've received the attached letter and
? story attributed to Novosti. It's the first time
I ever had any contact of this kind from the Soviets.
That point was of interest to me; however, I was equally
interested in what I suppose is their new thrust:
."...the growing rivalry between itself (Peking)
and Washington in Southeast Asia".
While all of this might be an old story to you, I thought
I would send it along just on the chance it might
be of some interest.
Again, my deepest appreciation for the briefing and the
pleasure it was to have lunch with you.
Sincere,
Ms I P.101.442 CX11.1001Anl;
B.Mrolidhs
Encl.
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fl Igil AMERICAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION
. Headquarters: 11600 Sunrise Valley Drive ? Reston, Va. 22070 ? (703)620-9500
April 15, 1977
Mr. Herbert E. Hetu
Assistant for Public Affairs
to the Director of Central Intelligence
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
Dear Mr. Hetu:
MAIL ADDRESS:
P.O. Box 17407
Dulles International Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041
Jerry Friedheim has asked me to give you some information
concerning the ANPA Government Affairs Committee following his
communications with you about the possibility of CIA Director
Turner addressing the committee.
As you know, ANPA is the trade association for newspapers
whose more than 1225 member newspapers represent more than 90
percent of the daily newspaper circulation in the U.S. In
addition, several nondaily newspapers also are members.
The Gvern
Dmnt,4ffairs Committee, headed by Chairman Len
H. Small of Kankakee, Ill., generally is the most active of ANPA
committees, and the weight of its contribution to the newspaper
business is illustrated by the fact that the elected officers of
ANPA always attend this committee's meetings. In addition, many
of the 36 committee members also are ANPA Directors.
The committee meets twice a year in Washington to study and
make recommendations for action on government matters affecting
newspapers and to discuss these issues with top federal officials.
The meetings with guests from the government are in
conjunction with meal functions -- two luncheons, one dinner and
one breakfast session at every two-day meeting of the committee.
Generally these affairs are informal ones at which the guest
delivers remarks for about 10-15 minutes, leaving the bulk of
time for informal discussion with the committee. This can be
off-the-record to any extent the guest desires. We do not make
public announcements of these sessions which are entirely for the
background information of the publishers.
For your information, I am enclosing a roster of the
Government Affairs Committee, a list of guests who have met with
the committee in recent years, and a brochure which describes in
more detail the activities of ANPA.
As Jerry mentioned, the next committee meeting is
September 13-14 at the Capital Hilton Hotel in Washington, D.C.
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We expect attendance will be approximately 45, comprised of
nearly all of the committee, the elected ANPA officers, some
guest publishers and some ANPA staff and counsel.
If you have any further questions about the committee
or its activities, please contact me.
Sincrerely1
01.44Let't
Jas E. Donahue
Ma ager/Government Affairs
JED/biw
Enclosures
cc: Len H. Small
John M. Jones
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GUEST SPEAKERS
Ap p rove dfue Iftleaut2(kOffaat3s gediaallkid4 3/11t4ROR14%250001-9
_October 1971 Thru March 1977
October 18-19, 1971
William D. Ruckelshaus, Director, Environmental
Protection Agency
Miles W. Kirkpatrick, Chairman, Federal Trade
Commission
Senator Warren G. Magnuson (Washington)
March 7-8, 1972
Miles W. Kirkpatrick, Chairman, Federal Trade
Commission
Donald Rumsfeld, Director, Cost of Living Council
Herbert G. Klein, Director of Communications,
White House
Maj. General Winant Sidle, Chief of Information,
Department of Army
Lawrence F. O'Brien, Chairman, Democratic National
Committee
September 12-13, 1972
Rep. Gerald R. Ford (Mich.)
Senator Sam J. Ervin, Jr. (N.C.)
L. Patrick Gray, III, Acting Director, Federal
Bureau of Investigation
March 28-29, 1973
George Bush,Chairman, Republican National Committee
Don I. Wortman, Assistant Director, Office of Price
Administration
Senator Alan Cranston (California)
John Ehrlichman, Assistant to the President
Luther Holcomb, Vice Chairman, Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission
Senator Edward M. Kennedy (Mass.)
September 11-12, 1973
Senator Charles H. Percy (Ill.)
John Love, Director, Office of Energy Policy
Senator Thomas Eagleton (Missouri)
Dr. John Dunlop, Director, Cost of Living Council
Lewis Engman, Chairman, Federal Trade Commission
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Clarence M. Kelley, Director, Federal Bureau of
Investigation
William E. Simon, Administrator, Federal Energy
Office
Rep. Robert W. Kastenmeier (Wisc.)
Rep. John J. Rhodes (Ariz.), House Republican
Leader
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (Ark.)
October 8-9, 1974
Dr. Albert Rees, Director, Council on Wage and
Price Stability
Sen. Robert P. Griffin (Mich.)
Rep. Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. (Mass.)
Attorney General William B. Saxbe
March 11-12, 1975
Senator Robert C. Byrd (W.Va.)
L. William Seidman, Asst. to the President for
Economic Affairs
Donald Rumsfeld, Assistant to the President
Rep. Phillip Burton (Calif.)
Horace R. Kornegay, President and Executive
Director, The Tobacco Institute, Inc.
H. Thomas Austern, Law Firm of Covington and Burling
Rep. Al Ullman (Ore.)
September 16-17, 1975
Senator L. Hruska (Neb.)
Senator Frank Church (Idaho)
Senator Hubert H. Humphrey (Minn.)
Melvin R. Laird, Executive, Reader's Digest, Inc.;
Former Secretary of Defense
March 16-17, 1976
James R. Schlesinger, Former Secretary of
Defense
George F. Will, Syndicated Columnist
Elliot L. Richardson, Secretary of Commerce
Robert S. Ingersoll, Deputy Secretary of State
Thomas J. Madden, Asst. Admin./Gen. Counsel, LEAA
Senator John Tower (Texas)
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S.
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Senator Russell B. Long (La.)
Leonard H. Marks, Former Director of the U.S.
Information Agency
Patrick H. Caddell, Pollster for The Jimmy
Carter Presidential Campaign
Representative Barbara Jordan (Tex.)
Rogers C. B. Morton, Chairman of the President Ford
Campaign Steering Committee
March 15-16 1977
Jack Germond (The Washington Star) and Jules-
Witcover -- syndicated political columnists
W. Michael Blumenthal, Secretary of the Treasury
Senator Howard H. Baker. Jr. (Tenn.), Senate Minority
Leader
Paul F. Gavaghan, Vice President/Research and Public
Information, Distilled Spirits Council of the
U.S. Inc.
Senator Adlai E. Stevenson III (Ill.)
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13 April 1977
Mr. Jerry W. Friedheim
American Newspaper Publishers Association
P. 0. Box 17407
Dulles International Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041
Dear Jerry,
Things have finally settled down somewhat as has Admiral Turner's
schedule. He would very much like to meet with ANPA's government
affairs committee but unfortunately he will be out of the country on
September 13-14.
However, I would like to offer some alternatives. We might either
send a senior representative (one of our principal deputies) or if
your group could spare the time we could invite them here to the
Agency for a briefing and tour. There still seems to be a certain
mystique about what goes on in this place and such a tour might be an
interesting break in the schedule.
If either of these alternatives sound good, please let me know.
In the meantime Stan sends his best and asks for a raincheck.
Sincerely,
Herbert E. Hetu
Assistant for Public Affairs
to the Director of Central Intelligence
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4 April 1977
Mr. Jerry W. Friedheim
American Newspaper Publishers Association
P. 0. Box 17407
Dulles International Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041
Dear Jerry,
Many thanks for your letter of March 28 and for your
kind remarks. It promises to be a busy and exciting job.
As you can imagine the Admiral's public speaking
schedule is still somewhat uncertain but I know he would
very much like to meet with your government affairs committee
in September if at all possible. I'll let you know just as
soon as T can. In the meantime if someone in your office
could send a few more details on the meeting, who will
probably attend, etc., it would be helpful.
Thanks again for your thoughtful letter and very
warmest wishes.
Sincerely,
Herbert E. Hetu
Assistant for Public Affairs
to the Director of Central Intelligence
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1
i
AMERICAN
NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
".... to
advance the
cause of a
free press."
*Research
*Training
*Government Relations
*Labor Relations
*Professional Meetings
'In-plant Consultation
*Inquiry Service
*Credit Data
*Newsprint and Traffic Information
*Timely Information Bulletins
*Special Studies
*Educational Programs
*Libel Insurance
*Strike Insurance
*Management Tips and Tools
Reston, Virginia
Easton, Pennsylvania
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How do you put into a booklet a meaningful definition of
the many ways in which ANPA serves the cause of a free
press? Certainly a mere listing of publications and activities
hardly does justice to the program.
It is difficult to describe briefly ANPA's continuous work
with congressional committees and federal agencies?the
White House, the U.S. Postal Service, the Federal Com-
munications Commission, the Federal Trade Commission,
the Department of Labor?and with non-governmental and
international organizations in support and defense of our
newspaper publishing business.
Or the research effort involved in bringing together the
various elements of private industry to provide solutions to
the modern production and communication challenges of
the North American press.
Or the time spent in developing better working relation-
ships between management and the international and local
unions represented in daily newspapers.
Or the work of the Newsprint/Traffic Department during
the newsprint shortage in rounding up supplies for dailies
and weeklies throughout the country so they could maintain
publication.
Or the work of our attorneys in many court cases where
the right of the people to a free press is being tested.
Or the individual staff efforts spent consulting with mem-
bers or researching a reply to a specific inquiry to help in the
solution of some member's publishing problem.
We hope this booklet will provide an understanding of
what ANPA seeks to do for its membership, for the
newspaper business in general and for professional jour-
nalists everywhere. We welcome the many requests we
receive for assistance and try to respond promptly to them.
Members have commented that if there were no ANPA,
they would have to invent one to help keep them abreast of
the complicated business of publishing a responsible, finan-
cially-sound newspaper in a free society. We intend to con-
tinue to fulfill this responsibility to the press and the public.
Sincerely,
Reston, Virginia
August, 1976
Jerry W. Friedheim
General Manager
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ANPA: ITS PROGRAM AND ACTIVITIES
Founding
Representatives of 95 daily newspapers formed the
American Newspaper Publishers Association in 1887.
Present membership is more than 1170
newspapers, located principally in the United States,
Canada, and the offshore islands (Bahamas, Bermuda,
Guam, Virgin Islands and West Indies) and constitutes
more than 90% of U.S. daily circulation. Member
newspapers represent circulation sizes from two
thousand to two million. While most members are
daily newspapers, membership also includes some
non-dailies.
Purpose
Formed initially to monitor business interests of the
daily press, the purposes of the Association have ex-
panded greatly and now include advancing the cause
of a free press by encouraging the advancement of the
newspaper publishing business in all of its branches
and departments, protecting the rights of the people to
a free press and promoting the highest standards of
journalism.
Leadership
The Association is directed by a 20-member Board
of Directors elected by the membership to represent
newspapers of all circulation sizes. ANPA also has a
permanent professional staff headed by an Executive
Vice President who serves as General Manager.
Assisting the General Manager are a Senior Vice
President, a Vice President/Technical, a Vice
President/Labor and Personnel Relations and a Vice
President/Comptroller. The senior staff includes the
managers and directors of the various departments of
ANPA proper, the ANPA Foundation and the ANPA
Credit Bureau. ANPA's offices include headquarters
and Labor and Personnel Relations Office in Reston,
Virginia, and the Research Center at Easton, Penn-
sylvania.
2
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Committees
At the heart of the continuing ANPA program are
various committees representing the interests of and
the myriad tasks involved with newspaper publishing.
The titles of most of these committees are descriptive
of their functions. They include: Membership, Labor
and Personnel Relations, Government Affairs,
Professional Relations, Newsprint, Traffic, Postal, Cir-
culation, Press Communications, Technical Coor-
dinating, Production Management, Laboratory, For-
mat and Printing Materials Standards, Press-Bar
Relations, News Research, ANPA-AEJ Journalism
Education, and Convention Arrangements. Special
task forces and committees are formed as required to
deal with special problems. An example is the ANPA
Task Force on Broadcast and CATV Ownership.
Printed committee reports are distributed as part of the
annual convention report. Representation on these
committees comes from throughout ANPA mem-
bership, comprising all circulation groups and
geographic areas. This enables the committees to be
true spokesmen and expert witnesses for the
newspaper publishing business in their dealings with
governmental and non-governmental organizations.
Meetings
The ANPA Annual Convention for members is held
in April or May. There is no registration fee. The con-
vention schedule follows: San Francisco in 1977, Mon-
treal in 1978, New York City in 1979 and Honolulu in
1980.
A Production Management Conference is held each
June in different cities?New Orleans, Houston, Las
Vegas, Atlantic City, Anaheim, for example. This
meeting features the nation's largest exhibit of
newspaper production equipment and technical
discussions of current production techniques.
Organization
At Reston headquarters are the offices of the
General Manager and staff departments representing
the Comptroller's Office, Membership Services,
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Newsprint/Traffic, Public Affairs, Government Affairs,
Labor and Personnel Relations, the ANPA Foundation
and the ANPA Credit Bureau. Other organizations
with offices at ANPA include: International Circulation
Managers Association (ICMA), International
Newspaper Promotion Association (INPA) and
Newspaper Personnel Relations Association (NPRA).
Functions performed at the ANPA headquarters en-
compass the principal administrative, service, publica-
tions, labor and personnel relations, legislative and
legal functions of the Association. The activities in-
clude:
? The ANPA Labor and Personnel Relations
Office, formerly in Chicago but recently consolidated
with the Reston headquarters, is the responsibility of
the Vice President/Labor and Personnel Relations.
Operations include:
1. A file of thousands of newspaper labor contracts
and a staff of trained personnel who advise member
publishers on matters pertaining to contract
negotiations, personnel relations, arbitration, union
organizational attempts, and wage & hour matters.
2. Publication of information which is described in
the section of this booklet on bulletins.
3. Operation of training programs throughout the
year that include contract negotiations, seminars and
managerial skills workshops for supervisors (both
production and administrative).
? The Newsprint/Traffic Department assists
newspapers with the transportation details of any ship-
ment including the auditing of freight bills. It can advise
on all aspects of newsprint on-track unloading and off-
track delivery arrangements, clarify carriers' tariff rules
and regulations and provide general tariff information.
This department publishes monthly newsprint con-
sumption and supply information and other important
newsprint and transportation matters. It also advises
and represents members on postal rules, regulations
and rates and coordinates the ANPA/ICMA Safe
Driving Campaign.
? The Public Affairs Department publishes the
ANPA General Bulletins and special publications; con-
ducts policy review; edits the publications of other staff
departments; supervises press activities for the
Association; provides staff representation for the corn-
4
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mittees on Professional Relations and News Research,
and handles public inquiries.
? The Government Affairs Department
monitors and reports on issues affecting the
newspaper business in the legislative, executive and
judicial branches of government. The department
coordinates activities in this area, maintains close
liaison with the office of the ANPA General Counsel,
provides staff support for the Government Affairs
Committee and handles inquiries on governmental
matters.
? The ANPA Library represents a major resource
of books and periodicals available for general use. This
facility, along with extensive record files covering
nearly every aspect of newspaper publication, enables
ANPA personnel to promptly answer numerous mem-
bership inquiries.
? The ANPA Credit Bureau, Inc. (CBI)?in-
corporated separately?provides many services at a
modest monthly fee (ranging from $4.17 to $84.00)
based upon the size of the newspaper subscriber.
These services include:
(a) Periodic Credit Bulletins containing confidential
data about advertising agencies, national advertisers
and retail advertisers placing business in newspapers;
(b) Credit Index, which is a looseleaf service con-
tinuously kept up-to-date with information on ad-
vertising agencies and mass marketing retailers doing
business with newspapers;
(c) Debt Recovery and Reports (over the years, the
Credit Bureau has helped ANPA members recover
millions of dollars in past due accounts);
(d) Collections on a contingent fee of 5%, exclusive
of attorney charges and legal cost;
(e) Identification of ownership of retail establish-
ments which have merged or been sold (especially
useful in bankruptcies). CBI has access to data on
more than 200,000 retail companies throughout the
country, including 1400 mass marketers, providing
subscribers with immediate access to information on
retailers as well as advertising agencies.
? The ANPA Foundation is a non-profit organiza-
tion chartered in 1963 "to encourage in the broadest
and most liberal manner the advancement of freedom
of speech and of the press; and to foster such study
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and research by others." ANPA Foundation is a public
foundation, funded through an endowment.
Newspapers, newspaper groups, newspaper organiza-
tions and individuals have contributed more than $5.5
million to the Foundation's Endowment Fund.
The Foundation has three major program goals:
(a) To develop informed and intelligent newspaper
readers
(b) To develop and strengthen the public un-
derstanding of a free press
(c) To advance the professionalism of the press.
The ANPA Foundation undertakes projects to sup-
port these goals through conferences, seminars,
publications, research studies and consulting services.
Included in this effort is assistance to newspapers and
school systems in starting and improving Newspaper
in Education programs.
? The ANPA Research Institute in Easton, Pa.,
is supervised by the Vice President/Technical. Prin-
cipal department heads include the Director, Produc-
tion Department and the Director, Research Center.
The American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE)
has its office at this location.
The Research Center is a major activity for
newspaper research, development, testing and
training. ANPA invests more than $1 million of its $3
million-plus annual budget in this facility and its related
functions. Services from Easton include:
1. Basic Research and development on newspaper
production problems including mail-room equipment,
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
related problems, computer programming, newsprint
and ink testing service, standardization of color inks,
shallow-relief plate development, etc. This Research
Center works with many manufacturers to stimulate
development of new equipment needed by
newspapers.
2. Liaison for advanced research with the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology on advanced
computer program technology, and with other re-
search organizations and equipment suppliers in the
development of pagination devices, advanced com-
munications systems, lasers and plateless printing.
3. A variety of technical training seminars held
throughout the year on a less-than-cost basis. Most are
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"hands-on" working sessions emphasizing practical ap-
plication. These include Basic Offset Press and Plate;
Camera Techniques; Direct Plate Quality Control; Elec-
tronic Editing for the Newsroom; Photocomposition an
Paste-Up; Management Orientation to New
Technology; and Environmental Control.
4. Objective and professional in-plant technical ad-
visory services (TAS) which are available to member
newspapers on request. ANPA production engineers
spend whatever time is needed (usually two days) at
nominal charge at a newspaper plant as consultants
on specific production problems.
5. Research bulletins and the annual Production
Management Conference, which are described else-
where in this booklet.
Training Programs
In addition to the various technical seminars and
workshops offered by the Research Center and the
Labor and Personnel Relations Office, ANPA sponsors
other types of newspaper personnel training. This in-
cludes seminars for young newspaper people; credit
administration; electronics in the newsroom; CATV;
those sponsored by the ANPA Foundation for repor-
ters and editorial staff and Newspaper-in-the-
Classroom personnel; and those sponsored jointly
with other organizations, such as the ANPA-INPA
Newspaper Executives Marketing Seminar and the
ANPA-INPA-ASNE Newspaper Research Workshop.
Regular Bulletin Mailings
1. The weekly ANPA General Bulletin covers
general management, laws, circulation and advertising.
Its handy size and format facilitate both reading and
filing. Bound, indexed copies are available on request
at the end of the year for more permanent reference
purposes.
2. The periodic ANPA News Research
Bulletin summarizes timely information about sur-
veys of editorial content, format, reader preferences
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and other projects conducted under the auspices of
ANPA News Research Center, or by others.
3. The ANPA Report (Blue Ribbon Letter) con-
tains brief comments and analyses by the General
Manager on the most important business, government
and management items and expectations of the
month. It is circulated to top executives of member
newspapers.
4. The monthly Public Affairs Newsletter
provides general interest information about
newspapers and the newspaper business. It is designed
to assist publishers, editors, journalism educators,
businessmen, and the community at large in gaining
public understanding of the role of newspapers.
5. The Newsprint & Traffic Bulletin reports
monthly statistics on newsprint consumption, produc-
tion shipments and publisher stocks as well as other
newsprint and traffic matters.
6. The Equipment Exchange Bulletin affords
a way of locating or offering newspaper equipment for
sale.
7. The Library Memorandum concerns
newspaper library operations.
8. The Labor & Personnel Relations Bulletin,
issued weekly by the ANPA Labor and Personnel
Relations Office reports on developments in labor mat-
ters, arbitration awards, NLRB and court decisions,
wage trends showing contract settlements, and in-
cludes semi-annual scale summaries which provide in-
formation on contract settlements for each newspaper
and each union.
9. A weekly Labor Letter and Top City Scale
Report are provided publishers who wish to monitor
current contract-negotiation developments in the
nation's largest cities.
10. The ANPA RI. (Research) Bulletins
(recognized by their yellow color) are issued as
developments in the technical field warrant (every
week or two) with detailed information on new equip-
ment, new production techniques, safety, physical
plants and other results of research conducted at the
ANPA Research Center or elsewhere.
11. The Environmental Control Memoranda
deal with various matters affecting personnel, materials
equipment and management.
8
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12. Special Reports are issued as necessary on
subjects of interest.
Special Publications
1. Facts About Newspapers provides an an-
nual general summary of the basic economic facts of
the newspaper business.
2. Newspapers and the Courts summarizes
court cases affecting newspapers. One set of this
document is provided each ANPA member in a hard
cover looseleaf binder at no charge. Supplements are
issued periodically.
3. The ANPA Most Valuable Staffer Award
brochure describes a minimum-cost program by which
newspapers may recognize and honor students
working on high school newspapers.
4. The Annual ANPA/ICMA Safe Driving
Campaign affords a program encouraging safe
operation of newspaper delivery vehicles, thus
promoting favorable insurance ratings.
5. A Report on Pre-Printed Ad Supplements
concerns second-class mailing requirements.
6. Political Advertising in Newspapers is a
digest of federal and state laws pertaining to political
ads.
7. How to Conduct A Readership Survey of
Features is a do-it-yourself manual for editors.
8. Newsprint Conservation Methods offers
ideas for saving newsprint as compiled from a survey
of ANPA members.
9. AdProTm ROP Newspaper Color Ink Book
Vol. V, for use with letterpress ($20).
10. Preparation of ROP Color Advertising for
Newspaper Reproduction is a booklet on art work,
engraving, stereotyping, inks and offset ROP color.
11. The Environmental Primer for News-
papers is an ANPA Research Institute bulletin on
safety and health regulations.
12. Specification Data is a comprehensive
ANPA Research Institute compilation issued annually
listing newspaper production equipment in use by
each member newspaper.
9
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13. The Letterpress Presses Manual is a
detailed instruction manual on operation of various
type letterpresses ($18.50).
14. Handbook for Maintaining the In-
dependent Contractor Status of Newspaper
Carriers is a special report providing detailed guid-
ance on this subject.
15. Free Press and Fair Trial, a 1966 report of a
special ANPA committee.
16. Taxes Affecting Newspapers, a summary of
state sales, use, gross receipts and business license
taxes affecting newspapers.
ANPA Foundation publications are available to
all at minimal cost. They include:
1. Speaking of a Free Press?famous quota-
tions on the importance of press freedom ($40 per
100 copies; single copy free).
2. Newspaper in Education instructional material,
including:
(a) Newspaper in the Classroom Manual for
Newspapers, a looseleaf publication ($10).
(b) The Kit of Teaching Materials, a collection
papers written by teachers, describing the use of
newspapers at various grade levels ($1.50).
(c) The Anatomy of a Newspaper, a student
guide to the daily newspaper ($2.00 each for 1-5
copies, less for quantity orders).
(d) The Newspaper in the American History
Classroom, a teachers guide for using the newspaper
in the secondary social studies classroom ($2.00).
(e) Update NIE, a quarterly review of new and
important uses of the newspaper in education ($2.50
per 25 copies, single copy free).
(f) The Newspaper as an Effective Teaching
Tool introduces the classroom teacher to the
Newspaper in Education concept ($1.00).
(g) Using Newspapers to Teach Reading
Skills relates comprehension, vocabulary develop-
ment, reading rate and word attack skills to the use of
the newspaper at primary, intermediate and secondary
school levels ($1.00).
3. Learning in the Newsroom: A Manual for
Supervisors is a looseleaf guide to help editors orient
and train new newsroom employees ($20).
10
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4. News Research for Better Newspapers is a
series of seven volumes compiling News Research
Bulletins issued by the ANPA News Research Center
($15, includes index).
5. Your Future in Daily Newspapers provides
facts about a career in the daily newspaper business
($40 per 100 copies; single copy free).
6. Education for Newspaper Journalists in
the Seventies and Beyond is a set of authoritative
papers on future directions for newspaper journalism
and newspaper journalism education ($8).
7. Free Press and Fair Trial: Some Dimen-
sions of the Problem provides studies on pre-trial
news and its effect on juries ($3.75).
8. Guidelines for Newspaper Libraries is a
126-page looseleaf manual on proven methods of
gathering information and systematic procedures for
storing data and making it quickly available ($15).
9. Hanson on Libel; a definitive legal reference
work in two volumes ($48 per set). Supplements up-
date the work periodically ($10).
10. Films About Newspapers?a brief listing of
films, film strips and slide presentations about the
newspaper business ($25 per 100 copies, single copy
free).
11. ANPA Foundation Newsletter?a periodic
report on the activities of ANPA Foundation.
Insurance Program
ANPA members are eligible to participate in a strike
insurance program underwritten by the Mutual In-
surance Company Limited of Hamilton, Bermuda,
which will insure any member of the ANPA for losses
caused by a strike. The program, in one form or
another, has been in effect for 38 years. This same
company has underwritten libel insurance for ANPA
members for the past 13 years. MIC also offers libel
coverage to TV, radio and CATV stations owned or
controlled by ANPA members. Information con-
cerning these insurance programs may be obtained by
writing directly to Mutual Insurance Company Limited,
Reid House, P.O. Box 1179, Hamilton, Bermuda.
11
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ANPA
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Executive Committee
Chairman of the Board Joe D. Smith Jr., Alexandria (La.)
and President of ANPA Daily Town Talk
Vice-Chairman Allen H. Neuharth, Gannett Co. Inc.,
Rochester, N.Y.
Secretary. . . Dolph C. Simons Jr., Lawrence (Kans.) Journal-World
Treasurer Len H. Small, Kankakee (Ill.) Daily Journal
Directors
Harold W. Andersen Omaha (Neb.) World-Herald
Otis Chandler Los Angeles (Calif.) Times
Lyell B. Clay Charleston (W.Va.) Mail
Stanton R. Cook Chicago (III.) Tribune
John Cowles Jr. Minneapolis (Minn.) Star and Tribune
Frank A Daniels Jr.. . Raleigh (N.C.) News & Observer and Times
Joe M. Dealey Dallas (Tex.) Morning News
Katharine Graham Washington (D.C.) Post
John M. Jones Greeneville (Tenn.) Sun
Edward Lehman Longmont (Colo.) Times-Call
Robert G. Marbut . Harte-Hanks Newspapers, San Antonio, Tex.
Rollan D. Melton Speidel Newspapers Inc., Reno, Nev.
Ashton Phelps . New Orleans (La.) Times-Picayune and States-Item
Warren H. Phillips Dow Jones and Co., Inc., New York, N.Y.
Robert W. Southam Ottawa (Ont., Canada) Citizen
Richard C. Steele Worchester (Mass.) Telegram and Gazette
ANPA FOUNDATION
TRUSTEES
Chairman Joe M. Dealey, Dallas (Tex.) Morning News
Vice-Chairman Frank A. Daniels Jr., Raleigh (N.C.) News
& Observer and Times
Executive Vice-President Jerry W. Friedheim
Treasurer Thomas C. Fichter
Secretary Stephen E. Palmedo
Trustees of the ANPA Foundation include members of the ANPA
Board of Directors, plus the following:
Donald B. Abed Milwaukee (Wis.) Journal and Sentinel
Alvah H. Chapman Jr. Knight-Ridder Newspapers, Miami, Fla.
William H. Cowles III Spokane (Wash.) Spokesman Review
& Chronicle
Marshall Field Chicago (Ill.) Sun-Times and News
Helene R. Foellinger Fort Wayne (Ind.) News-Sentinel
Walter Friedenberg Cincinnati (Ohio) Post
'4064MMB. Lake St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times and Independent
Lloyd G. Schermer Lee Enterprises, Davenport, Iowa
Franklin D. Schurz Jr South Bend (Ind.) Tribune
12
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STAFF
Headquarters: Reston, Va.
P.O. Box 17407, Dulles International Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041
Street Address: 11600 Sunrise Valley Drive
Reston, Va. 22091 Phone (703) 620-9500
Jerry W. Friedheim General Manager
Donald R. McVay Senior Vice President
Thomas C. Fichter Vice President/Comptroller
Miles P. Patrone. . . Vice President/Labor and Personnel Relations
Harry W. Edwards Manager/Membership Services
Joseph F. Prendergast Jr Manager/Newsprint & Traffic
William Schabacker Manager/Public Affairs
James E. Donahue Manager/Government Affairs
Michael J. Genick Vice President ANPA/Credit Bureau Inc.
ANPA Research Institute
P.O. Box 598
Easton, Penn. 18042
Street Address: 1350 Sullivan Trail
Easton, Pa. 18042 Phone (215) 253-6155
William D. Rinehart Vice President/Technical
Peter P. Romano Director, Production Dept.
Erwin Jaffe Director, Research Center
13
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American Newspaper Publishers Association
TO ADVANCE THE CAUSE OF A FREE PRESS
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EXECUTIVE OFFICES
Reston, Va.
(703) 620-9500
Jerry W. Friedheim
Executive Vice President
and General Manager
American Newspaper Publishers Association
P.O. Box 17407, Dulles International Airport, Washington, D.C. 20041
Mr. Herbert E. Hetu
Assistant to the Director
for Press Relations
CIA
Washington, D.C. 20505
Dear Herb,
March 28, 1977
Glad to read that you will be helping Stan in his new DC! hat. It
is an important task for the admiral and for the country, and I'm pleased
you were available and willing to undertake it.
I talked last month with Stan about the possibility of him meeting
sometime with ANPA's government affairs committee. The group will gather
here September 13-14, and I hope you and I might be able to work out
something then. In the meantime, you are invited to beautiful, downtown
Reston for lunch at your convenience.
Sincerely,
W. Friedheim
. . . to advance the cause of a free press.
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COMMANDER IN CHIEF
ALLIED FORCES SOUTHERN EUROPE
r
Dear Jerry,
Many thanks for your words of congratulations on
my nomination. I am really grateful for the honor,
humble at the immensity of the task and appreciative
of your good wishes.
I'll certainly keep your offer of assistance from
ANPA in mind and will be interested when things slow
down a bit to get together and chat about what you are
doing there.
In the meantime, again thanks.
STANSFIELD TURNER
Admiral, U.S. Navy .
Mr. Jerry W. Friedheim
American Newspaper Publishers Association
Post Office Box 17407
Dulles International Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041
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NEW:SUEZ
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8 AVAY 1972
THE MEDIA
Gloria Steinein
Ernest Dunbar
I. F. Stone
Photos by Robert H. McElroy?Newsweek
Counter-convention panel: The audience criticized the critics, too
The Enemy Within
"The. American Newspaper Publishers
Association convention reaches here at
the same season as the Ringling Brothers
and Barnum and Bailey Circus," A.J.
Liebling once wrote in The New Yorker.
"Like the Big Show, the convention al-
ways bears a certain resemblance to its
predecessors."
Liebling, the most respected critic and
chronicler of the press that the U.S. has
yet produced, died eight years ago, but
his wry analogy still holds. Both the
Ringling Brothers' circus and the ANPA
convention were holding, forth in. New
York City last week with what looked
very much like the same old acts. Meet-
ing at the Waldorf-Astoria, with the U.S.
Marine Band providing the flourishes,
the nation's newspaper publishers held
their usual sessions about the usual sub-
jects?advertising, circulation, labor rela-
tions?and then adjourned to the usual
cocktail parties to munch on tidbits of in-
dustry gossip. Five blocks across town,
however, an entirely original journalistic
event was taking place?the first A.J. Lie-
bling Counter-Convention. Sponsored by
MORE, a year-old, New York-based
journalism review, the counter-conven-
tion attracted more than 1,500 of the pro-
fession's stars and students?along with a
vociferous number of Consciousness III
propagandists and ? publicity parasites.
Yet while the. two-day counter-conven-
tion had quite as many circusy overtones
as the ANPA convention, it at least
served to demonstrate that Vice Presi-
dent Agnew and his supporters were
anything but alone in their unhappiness
with the nation's media.
The rationale for organizing an alter-
native to the ANPA conclave was
summed up by MORE editor Richard
sands of men and women capable of giv-
ing their communities the kind of en-
lightened, tough-minded reporting they
deserve are daily demeaned by the feck-
less institutions for which they work. And
thousands more leave or refuse to enter
the profession every year because of a
system that still rewards stenography and
discourages enterprise. This lament is
hardly new. What is new, however, is
that working journalists are beginning to
sense they might be able to do something
about it.
Pies: Whether the bulk of the U.S.
press does indeed share Pollak's disaffec-
tion with the traditional modes is inde-
terminable, but DO one who observed the
ferment at last week's Liebling counter-
convention could help but conclude that
the sheer number of angry young news-
men and women constitutes a significant
phenomenon. The only trouble was that
too many seemed intent on grinding their
own special axes. No sooner had the
meeting been launched with a discussion
of the "New Journalism" than representa-
tives from the "underground" press be-
gan circulating leaflets denouncing the
affair itself as "a back-patting sock hop."
Some of the protesters threatened to
throw pies at the panelists unless they
were allowed to share the spotlight;
others began organizing a sort -of coun-
ter-counter-convention to explore what
they termed "the real issues of American
journalism."
While the convention's organizers
sought to assuage the underground, a
bearded member of the Vietnam Vet-
erans Against the War grabbed the mi-
crophone to demand that the agenda
include the media's coverage of the war.
He was followed by a representative of
the Gay Activist Alliance, who duly
voiced his outrage over the press's treat-
Torn Wicker
cause. In fact, the feminist was at that
moment having her troubles with a young
m
male chauvinist from educational televi-
sion. "I See that this panel has three
women on it," he sneered. "Well as far
as I'm concerned, that's three too many."
As the audience heaved with outrage, a
reporter for The St. Louis Post-Dispatch
began groping toward the bar. "My
God," he exclaimed. "This is turning into
another Altamont."
The panelists themselves?perhaps the
most glittering array of journalistic su-
perstars ever to put their egos on the
line voluntarily?also seemed to have dif-
ficulty in reaching beyond their own per-
sonal piques. Women's lib activist Gloria
Steinem wanted to know why the press
was not investigating "how male machis-
mo makes us stay in Vietnam." Ernest
Dunbar, author of "The Black Experi-
ence," objected to the criticism some had
voiced over NBC's decision to hire a non-
journalist, former Cleveland Mayor Carl
Stokes, as co-anchorman on its New York
evening news show. And J. Anthony Lu-
kas, who won a Pulitzer Prize while a
reporter for The New York Times, at-
tacked editors in general and the TimesIs
managing editor A.M. (Abe) Rosenthal
in particular. "When he was first made an
editor," said Lukas of Rosenthal, "we all
celebrated. But a disaster. I think
it's because egotistical, brilliant, hard-
driving reporters just make lousy editors.
Editors need to put aside their egos and
let the writer just write."
Boredom: While all this titillated some
of the rank and file, it seemed highly
disappointing to those journalistic rebels
concerned with decision-making power
?and specifically with how to wrest more
of it away from their editors, publish-
ers and station managers. Yet the panels
that offered practical information along
Pollak. "In city rooms and television merit of homosexuals. "You think you've those lines, such as an expert discussion
newsrooms around tiAppropicr ForRelisgateo2660110/43VCIALREYP881041115ROd0101125blibig9 a TV license, drew
Pollak in MORE's current issue, "thou- elist who was championing the feminist the smallest audiences of the conven-
boat intied
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tion. On the other han , an over ow pu lc an private power. n o o el, an long-haired youths.
crowd attended a celebrity-studded pan-
el, "How They Cover MC," What came
-out of that one were such momentous
revelations as director Otto Vreminger's
dislike for movie reviewers, actor Tony
Randall's dependence on press agents
and author Gore Vidal's boredom with
just about everything.
Perhaps the most revealing indication
of the counter-convention's mood came
when a middle-aged journalism professor
from the University of Iowa hesitantly
stepped up to the mike, to extend an in-
vitation. "I've just come from another
part of the forest," he said. "I've been
attending the ANPA convention across
town. Now why don't some of you go
over there and make your voices heard
have any ready-made answers, warned
Stone with a rueful smile. "The fun of
beinget reporter is to recognize how little
we know. So listen to a lot of different
voices." ?
By that token, both Izzy Stone?and
the late A.J. Liebling?would have been
heartened by the diverse reviews that
the counter-convention received from
those who were there. "The fact that we
all finally came together," enthused a
Chicago reporter, "is probably the most
significant happening in modern journal-
ism." But an older New York reporter
came away dispirited. "The only time
doubt the value of 'a free press," he mut-
tered, "iS when I find myself in a large
group of journalists." More succinctly, a
t?.1ir
Itobcrt It. 100,1roy?Nc,sweek
U.S. Marine Band serenading the publishers: 'Weirdos need not apply
where they'll do the most good?" There
was a momentary ? silence, and then a
youthful panelist shouted "Up your ---!"
As it happened, the publishing chieftains
in that other part of the forest were con-
cerned enough about the New Journal-
ism to hold a seminar on "democracy" in
the newsroom. But here, too, a communi-
cations gap yawned. "It's the most nitwit
idea I've ever heard of in my life,"
snapped the publisher of The Hunting-
ton (Ind.) Herald, "I'm responsible for
what's in my paper and I'm not going to
delegate it to a democracy. We get off
the track when we bring in all these
freaks and weirdos."
Power: Meanwhile, New York Times
columnist Tom Wicker was offering some
cautionary advice in a luncheon talk at
the counter-convention. "I'm opposed to
advocacy journalism," declared Wicker.
"Beware of new orthodoxies to replace
the old ones. We need a journalism that
will let a hundred flowers bloom." The
same note was sounded by Washington
muckraker I.F, Stone, who received the
first annual A.J. Liebling award for his
unrelenting investigation" of abuses of
newswoman who had covered both the
MORE and ANPA affairs resorted to a
paraphrase of cartoonist Walt Kelly's im-
mortal line. "I have met the enemy," she
sighed, "and it seems to be us."
Noise in Boise
Nestled safely in their mountain-
ringed desert, the 80,000 citizens of
Boise, Idaho, come close to fulfilling Spiro
A.gnew's vision of Middle America. For
the most part, their polities run what
might be called half a gamut?from mid-
dle of the road to extreme right. And
their leading newspaper, The Boise
Statesman, espouses a brand of conser-
vatism that would warm the cockles of
the Vice President's heart.
Curiously, however, the most talked-
about publication in Boise these days is
not the Statesman but an upstart weekly
called The Intermountain Observer,
which champions such causes as imme-
diate U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam, the
right of servicemen at local military bases
to oppose the war and the extension of
full membership in the human race to
Despite such heretical stands, the Observ-
er has won influence out of all proportion
to its small size (twelve pages) and pal-
try circulation (about 3,000). Among its
regular readers are Gov. Cecil Andrus,
more than half the members of the state
legislature, the Idaho Congressional dele-
gation and almost everyone .else who
wields any power in the state. "We
can't afford not to read the Observer,"
says John Hough, the governor's press
secretary.
The man who has given the Observer
its remarkable political clout is its editor,
45-year-old Samuel II. Day Jr., a kind of
radical William Allen White who con-
ceals a will of granite beneath the friend-
ly demeanor of a basset. The son of a
career Foreign Service officer, the peren-
nially rumpled Day has run the Observer
Since 1964 when it had only 450 readers.
But until last week the paper was owned
by station KBOI-TV, whose boss, H. Wes-
terman Whillock, originally saw it as a
counterweight to the strident conserva-
tism of the Statesman.
'Phony Concept': Whil.lock became
disenchanted with Day's stewardship
last year when the feisty editor took
up the cudgels for a Gi antiwar group
at nearby Mountain home Air Force
Base and inserted its pacifist newspaper
in the Observer. At that, Whillock sus-
Pended Day, charging that he had total-
ly lost "Ins objectivity." Day freely con-
cedes the accuracy of that charge.
"There's no such thing._ as objectivity,"
he told NEWSWEEK'S Gerald Lubenow
last week. "It's a phony concept. We
try to bridge gaps and be fair on all
sides but we openly align ourselves
with causes."
, Rather than. accept Whillock's crack-
down quietly, however, Day and his
circulation director, a strapping Metho-
dist minister named Milt Jordan, came
up with a scheme to convert the Ob-
server into a reader-owned paper. Work-
ing with a volunteer board of directors
that included a Boise-Cascade .executive,.
a professor of accounting at Boise State
College, an auto salesman and a reclama-
tion engineer, Day and Jordan sold
$27,550 worth of stock to more than 200
Observer readers. With $10,000 of the
money they bought the paper from
KBOI; -with the rest they plan to build
circulation and advertising.
Last week, Day and his three-member
staff triumphantly moved into new offices
above a Chinese restaurant in down-
town Boise. And despite his narrow
brush with professional oblivion, Day has
vowed to continue making waves in the
Idaho desert. To his detractors, Days
polemical approach has made him some-
thing of a humorless ideologue obsessed
with the faults of society and unmindful
of its successes, But even his journalistic
rivals admit that he is a sage political
analyst and a hard-digging reporter.
"Sam Day is A brilliant guy," says one
Boise Statesman editor. "And we respect
the Observer very much,"
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t7 Y610iiIES
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hBLISHER GROUPKraftco Plans to MoveT
The Kraftco .Corporation,
TO EAVE PIE CITY 260 Madison Avenue, also an-
' L
? .
,Rent Rises Prompt Planned
. Move to Reston, Va.
By LINDA CHARLTON
1/7 The American Newspaper Pub-
lishers Association, which was
founded in New York City 84
years ago .and has been here
ever since, announced plans
yesterday to move its head-
quarters to Reston, Va., prim-
arily becuse of "unacceptable"
rent increases.
The association's decision to
move, according to its bulletin,
was approved by the board of
directors after 'an extensive
series of reports" from a spe-
ial subcommittee that investi-
gated the future needs and like-
ly operating costs of the group
after its present lease expires
In May, 1973.
-? A study of the possiblity of.
renewing the lease and of other
.possible locations in Manhattan
!aclearly showed cost increases
,which A.N.P.A. deemed unac-
ceptable," the bulletin aid. The
group now occupies the 17th
floor of 750 Third Ave, at 46th
Street. Its Research Institute
occupies part of the 19th floor
of the building as'well as a site
in Easton, Pa.
Dulles Airport Nearby
Another factor influencing
the board's decision was the
proximity' of Reston, a new,
"planned town" in northern
Virginia, to Dulles Internation-
al Airport. The airport, the bul-
letin said, will make for "ease
of membership contact" with
the headquarters ? "easier in
many respects than reaching
midtown Manhattan."
Proximity to Federal Gov-
ernment agencies and depart-
ments was still another consid-
eration.
A spokesman for the group
said that "in the long run" it
would be less expensive for the
A.N.P.A. to buy 10 acres of land
in Reston and build a 30,000-
squre-foot building than to re-
main in New York. The move
Is planned for the summer of
.1972. About 50 people work in
the headquarters.
???? The announcement came less
than a week after one of the
'major corporate tenants in the
city, the General Telephone ?
andElectronics Corporation, an-
nounced it would move its ex-
ecutive offices to Connecticut
Ir early 1973.
nounced relocation plans yes-
terday, but a spokesman said
that the decision to move the
corporate headquarters to Glen-
view, Ill., a suburb of Chicago,
was a reflection solely of the
corporation's structure: "We've
been very happy in New York,"
he said.
Kraft Foods, the largest divi-
sion of the corporation, 'is
situated in Chicago, and the
corporation's research and
development division is already
in Glenview.
The two Kraftco divisions
now in New York?Sealtest
Foods and Breakstone Sugar
Creek?will remain here, the
spokesman said.
Another New York boncern,
the Richardson-Merrell Corpora-
tion, outlined on Monday nis-;;At
a proposal for moving its 'cor-
porate headquarters from 122
East 42d Street to Wilton,
Conn. The pharmaceutical con-
cern is seeking a zoning ad-
justment in Wilton that will en-
able it to move to a 54-acre Site
by 1974. ? ??
- STA-
0100250001-9
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S
By WILLIAM FULTON I hie, and unless we continue a
Approved For Release 20011610: Wittitt#88-01315R00
24 APR 1970
S./ Technolog
'Chime Tribune Press Smote)
New York, April 23?Dr. John
S. Foster .Jr., director of the
!government's defense research
and engineering, warned today
I that "the Soviet Union is about
I to seize world technological
leadership from the Unite d-
/States." He addressed the
American Newspaper Publish-
ers association.
The scientist, whose respon-
sibility was described as gener-
ating defense weaponry to
protect the nation in the "That counter in the past has
next decade, said that during been a vigorous research and
the last 15 years the Russians development program, which
had almost quadrupled their provided American technologi-
training of engineers. He oh- cal leadership. We can lose our
served they were "turning technological lead?or, we can
them out at a rate of six times turn the trend around. We can
ours." fulfill the opportunity for new
Foster revealed for the first American leadership thru sci-
time the United States had ence and technology."
been gathering intelligence Dr: Werner von Br au n,
since the late 1950s of a deputy associate administrator
' 0towering soviet radar complex, for planning, National Aeronau-
. known in code as "Hen House." tips and Space Administration,'
urged continued space explora-
tion despite the near disaster of
Apollo 13.
Tour of Outer Planets
Von Braun told plans for a
tour of the outer planets,
orbiting and landing unmanned
reporting vehicles on Mars, the
first orbital space station called
Skylab, shuttle craft for crews
and equipment, and earth re-
porting satellites. .
Clayton Kirkpatrick, vice
president and editor of THE
CHICAGO TRIBUNE, said the in-
filtration of a reporter's views
into a newS account could be
"dangerous if carried to an
extreme."
"Opinions of reporters and
writers have to be labeled and r
balanced as part of an editor's
job," he said. .?
Kirkpatrick ' said ; ha ? , was
, g
vigorous program providing
research and development
hedges, our reaction time could
be dangerously 1 o n g ," he
warned.
"We cannot penetrate all of
soviet or communist Chinese
secrecy. Those are closed soci-
eties, successfully closed. We
must have another way to
guard against dangerous sup
prise.
A Vigorous Program'
Size of Radar Complex
"Imagine, if you can, three
football fields lined up end to
end and standing on their
sides," he said. "That is the
size of the Hen House radar."
Additional Hen Houses have
been deployed. down Hum the
years, he disclosed.
"We know now that the giant
Hen House radars serve an
important early warning and
tracking function in the soviet.
ABM weapons system," be
said. "They can in the near
term provide the same radar
coverage which we will have
some eight years from now if
all the Safeguard program is
completed." ?
Measures Aie Taken
Research and development
have taken, measures to counter
. the Hen House, hster said.
"Unless we have a thoro impressed that,: altho young
understanding of what is possi- 'reporters on Tug Tampa stai
had
Lags,
? STAt
0100250001-9
_,.ublishers
4 e
their own Ideas :and .; I
commitments, they respected ,
the highest standard of ethics ,
and were "honest journalists." '
More than 1,500 newspaper
executives froin the United
States and Canada wound up
their 84th annual convention
with the election of Richard H.
Blacklidge, publisher of the
Kokomo (Ind.) Tribune, as
president. He succeeded Wil-
liam F. Schmick Jr.; publisher
of the Baltimore Sun.
?
?
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1C"
frfriumvirate of Scientists Aids Newspapeis
DETROIT
The U.S. newspaper industry
has a continuing rapport with
scientists who are shaping the
future of communications.
Otto A. Silha, general man-
ager of the Minneapolis Star
Jand Tribune, reminded the
members of the Association of
Newspaper Classified Adver-
tising Managers here this week
that the Scientific Advisory
Committee of the American
Newspaper Publishers Associa-
tion is entering its fifth year of
counselling to the industry.
The "unusual triumvirate of
scientists" was named in 1962,
Saha said, and it was a a-
matic step for the newspaper
industry in keeping up-to-date
on developments in the commu-
nications field.
Two of the original members
of the committee are still serv-
ing. They are the chairman, Dr.
Athelstan Spilhaus, dean of the '
Institute of Technology at the
University of Minnesota, and
Dr. John F. Pierce, executive
director of communications re-
search, Bell Telephone Labora-
tories.
They have been joined, since
the death of Trevor Gardner in
1963, by Dr. Carl F. J. Overhage
who is in charge of the INTREX
program at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. This
project?Information Transfer
Experiments?seeks to deter-
mine the best methods of making
available information located in
the libraries to MIT staff mem-
bers who require it in their
research and training work.
"Our scientists," Silha said,
"firmly believe that all of us are
in the information transfer busi-
ness, not just the newspaper
business. They caution us not to
make the mistake which rail-
roads made earlier in this cen-
tury and not just the railroad
business. So keep in mind that
our 'three wise men' constantly
urge us to take the broad view."
Dr. Overhage and MIT expect
to produce a new breed of scien-
tists?information transfer en-
gineers, Silha noted.
The newspaper industry, he
said, is interested in the MAC
project at MIT?Multiple Ac-
cess Computer. This involves
more than 100 teletypewriter
terminals at various points all
connected to a central computer.
One of the major recommen-
dations of the Scientific Ad-
visory Committee is that the
ANPA Research Institute enter
into a formal relationship with
a major university to give better
access to high-level scientific
information which might be use-
ful to newspapers.
In the near future, Silha said,
the consummation of an agree- ,
ment with MIT will be an-
nounced. This will give the news-
papers a stake in "the wonderful
world of computer information."
EDITOR AND HIS PLAQUE?FrA,gls, R. Ahlgren4, editor of the
Memphis Commercial Appeal, ro'ol( a1t'"pleas4d-as he holds the
President's Plaque of the Tennessee Press Association citing him
for his service in the development of journalism education. His wife
and their three sons, who are all pursuing careers in journalism,
attended the presentation ceremonies. Ahlgren is serving a fourth
term as President of _.1.he America.n_ Couacil_fof
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rai-e2
V.
c)-Pf4,,c4d,615 /42,4
DAL! IL LURE SUN
JUN 2 1966
Publishers Pick
'Bulletin' Owner
New York, June 1 Url---Bobert
L. Taylor, president and pub-
!
usher of the Philadelphia Bulletin,
was elected president today of the
American Newspaper Publishers
ASsociation Foundation, Ile sue-
. ceeds David Lindsay, Jr., presi-
dent and publisher of the Sara.
sola .(Fla.) Herald-Tribune and
Journal.
Eugene S. Pulliam,' assistant
,publisher of the Indianapolis Star
and' News, was elected vice presi-
dent.
: Barnard L. Colby, publisher of
the New London (Conn.)? Day,
was reelected secretary, and En-
:gene S. Bishop, president of Penin.
'sula Newspapers, Palo Alto, Cal.,
was elected treasurer.
The ANPA Foundation admin-
Islas the newspapers in the class-
:room program of workshops , for.
:teachers, sponsors the annual
'World press achievement award
' and. publishers a variety of ma-
Aerials to aid teachers and news-
Aiers educational_ activitieL
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EDITOR & PUBLISHER
Approved For Release 2004/16P4 MAIKII?P88-01315R0001
Every Saturday Since 1884
April 30, 1966
ANPA Elects J. H. Wood
Of Chicago As President
Union Chief Tells Publishers
To Stand Firm on Contracts
J. Howard Wood, president of
The Tribune Company and pub-
lisher of the Chicago Tribune,
was elected president of the
American Newspaper Publish-
ers Association on the final day
of this week's convention.
William F. Schmick Jr.,
president of A: S. Abell Com-
pany, publisher of the Balti-
more (Md.) Sun, was elected
vicepresident; Ri chard H.
? Blacklidge, Kakomo (Ind.)
Tribune, was named treasurer
and St. Clair Balfour, Southam
Press Lt., Toronto, was re-
elected secretary.
Gene Robb, Albany (N. Y.)
Times-Union and Knickerbock-
er News, retiring president,
was elected a director for a
two-year term. Other new di-
rectors for two-year terms are
William David Taylor, Boston
(Mass.) Globe, and Walter W.
White, Lincoln (Neb.) Star.
New directors for a one-year
term are M. W. Armistead, III,
Roanoke (Va.) Times and
World-News; Peter B. Clark,
Detroit (Mich.) News, and John
H. Colburn, Wichita (Kans.)
Eagle and Beacon.
Joyce A. Swan, Minneapolis
(Minn.) Star and Tribune, re-
tiring treasurer, reported a
surplus of $7,411.18. Revenue
in 1965 exceeded that of 1964 by
$63,596.68. Expenses for 1965
in contributions to
ANPA Research Institute Inc.,
exceeded 1964 expenses by
$74,610. Contributions to the
Research Institute in 1965 were
$458,730.
Contributions to the ANPA
Foundation for last year were
$57,000, including $10,000 to the
Newspaper in the Classroom
Program Fund.
Mr. Swan said the excess
revenue was made possible
without recourse to the general
10 percent increase in member-
ship dues which had been au-
thorized as of July 1, 1964.
During a panel discussion
greeted a comment directed at
Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller
that New York State's unem-
rployment pay policy subsidizes
strikes against newspapers and
gives the unions a balance of
power in negotiations. (See
story on page 13.)
Labor Relations
Capitulation by publishers in
the New York City and Boston
strikes may be a very serious
factor to contend with in the
future, in the opinion of
Anthony DeAndrade, president
of the International Printing
Pressmen and Assistants' Union,
who addressed the ANPA during
its labor relations session Mon-
day.
"Now ? notwithstanding the
past achievements of arbitration
?and there have been many?
there have been unfortunate in-
stances in recent months wherein
negotiations have completely
broken down," DeAndrade said.
"This has resulted in inter-
rupted publication of some news-
papers, the temporary unemploy-
ment of thousands of people,
inestimable inconvenience to the
general public and the loss of
millions of dollars in business
revenue, salaries and wages. I
have had many years of first-
hand experience in contractual
negotiations on which to base an
opinion relative to collective
bargaining. In my opinion we?
the newspaper publishers of this
country and the labor unions
involved?must strive to deter-
mine and establish some system
whereby agreement can be
reached without warfare.
"The two most recent of these
have been in New York City and
PRESIDENT?J. Howard Wood, president of The Tribune Company,
Chicago, is pictured just before his elecigoisea "This," he declared, "could be
(A)-0-0--0(
) --/IAA4V2.4fAk
?1194,1-4,G.14-.
Boston. in case, the pub-
lishers and .,nost of the unions'
involved had agreed upon a
package deal which had been
hammered out in contract nego-
tiations. As a matter of fact,
most of the unions signed these
collective bargaining contracts
in good faith, believing they had
accepted the final offer of the
publishers. Then they found
themselves out of work and in
the embarrassing position of.
being the innocent victims of a
strike by another union which
decided to employ industrial
warfare rather than accept what
the publishers said was their.
final offer.
"This capitulation on the part
of the publishers may be a very,
serious factor to contend with in.
the future. If we cannot bring
about a policy whereby unions
in multiple bargaining will ac-1,
cept negotiated benefits agree-
able to the majority, or the em-
ployers will not 'stand fast'
after signing contracts with the
majority of the unions, then we
must search for a better system
of negotiated contracts or the
crafts may bind themselves to-
gether into one all-powerful
unit."
DeAndrade said that as an
alternative "we may see con-
tractual negotiations seriously
hampered by the refusal of any
of the unions to sign a contract
until all of the unions have
agreed on terms. Each of you
can visualize the chaos that
would result from this."
Suggests New System
The pressmen's leader said he
would prefer that "we immedi-
ately address ourselves to im-
proving our system in order that
we may avoid the repetition of
the New York and Boston
massacres."
He added there are enough
brains, experience and ability on
both sides of the bargaining
table to create some system
whereby newspapers can con-
tinue to publish and the em-
ployes can continue to draw their
wages during the period when
contractual differences exist. He
observed that "perhaps we both
have been a little negligent in
the search for the common meet-
ing ground."
He again made the suggestion
that one labor union embracing
the various crafts in the printing
industry be created.
*ursday, general AMilleiiied For Releas600/60/1ilflOneCtiblRii) biithribotto9250001-9
NEW YORK TIMES
-? Li /
. i-971itApproved For Release 2004/10/13 ARAfFligge01315
? c...,, __
'
;
Chicagoan ? Heads Publishers Group
1 h,.
tf
J. Howard Wood, publisher of
iThe Chicago Tribune, was
'elected yeSterday as president
o
:Publishers Association as it
C
,at the Waidorf-Astoria Hotel.
? 4
,J
' where his father edited The
Daily Register and later The
^ Daily Ledger. worked in a
01 circulation mail rcrom before be-
coming a cub reporter in Canton
? at 16, and started as a police
'reporter for The Chicago Trib-
; ne in 1925.
s- William F. Schmick Jr., of
!
Ar,!The Baltimore Sun, was elected
r' ;vice president. St. Clair Balfcrur,
? Southern Press Ltd., Toronto,
!Ont. was .re-elected secretary.
^ ,
In IL Blacklidge, Kokomo
%,(Ind.) Tribttne, moved-up from
'di
Robb, of The Albany Times-
Union and Knickerbocker News,
was elected a director of the
A.N.P.A., along with William
Davis Taylor, of The Boston
Globe for two-year terms.
Peyton Anderson, Macon (Ga.)
Telegraph and News; Eugene C.
Bishop, Palo Alto (Calif.) Pen-
insula Newspapers; Barnard L.
Colby, New London (Conn.)
Day; Jack R. Howard, Scripps-
Howard Newspapers, New
York, and Walter W. White,
Lincoln (Neb.) Star, were re-
elected also for two-year terms.
For one-year terms as direc-
tors the association elected M.
W. Armistead 3d, Roanoke
(Va.) Times and 'World News;
Peter B. Clark, Detroit News, a
John H. Colburn, Wichita
(Kan.) Eagle and Beacon.
Directors continuing Until
1987 include Crosby PC Boyd,
Washington. Star; M. 3: Prey,
Pulliam, Indianapolis Star and
News, and Robert L. Taylor,
Philadelphia Bulletin.
Mr. Wood took over leader-
f the American Newspaper
ship of an organization with a
record membership of 978 news-
nded its 80th annual meeting
papers in the United States and
Canada. Joyce A. Swan, of The
Mr. Wood, 63 years old last
Minneapolis Star and Tribune,
an. 2, was a newspaper carrier
outgoing treasurer, reported
boy at the age of 11 in Canton,
that 1965 revenues of $1,645,-
549.93 exceeded expenses, in-
He cluding a $40,000 allocation to
reserves, by $7,411.18. The con-
vention registered 1,425 dele-
gates.
Mr. Wood has ,been president
since July, 1960, of the Tribune
Company, which owns The Chi-
cago Tribune, New York News,
Chicago's American, Fort Lau-
derdale (Fla.) News and Or-
lando (815..) Sentinel & Star, as
well as WON ? Continental
Broadcasting Company, Ontario
Paper Company, Quebec North
rector to treasurer.
Shor* Paper Computy 'and other
ITha outgoftigepeilltietit aettf Port1nd OregOniang,sEugeni 8. Inter.estai i4) ? .1.A-
. 11( ?,;;;;,; ,
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1..
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EDITOR & PUBLISHER 5nt i? ?
Approved For Release 200/M13 5q9rselDP88-01315R00 001 1
CIRtULATION
No Girl Carriers'
Is A Moral Matter
taniorci general man-
a er o e meilc,an,N.ewspp_.per_
Publishers --rssociatiop hart
, ,
found--it-ritreatify to itraighten
out the thinking of the Equal
I Employment Oppprtunity Com-
mission on the subject of news-
paper carriers?boys and, if any,
girls.
In a bulletin containing legal
opinions for the Commission, Mr.
Smith spotted the following:
"Denial of employment to 14-
year-old girl as newspaper car-
rier because of her sex violates
,- Sec. 703 (a) unless the law of
the state or municipality pro-
hibits it."
The reason that newspapers
generally do not employ girls
to service routes, Mr. Smith
pointed out in a letter to EEOC
General Counsel Charles T.
Duncan, is grounded in an old
self-regulation procedure worked
out with the U.S. Children's
Bureau. Standards pertain to
minimum wages, permissible
hours, summer and winter, and
include the following specific
?.
statement: "Girl Carriers: No
female minors to be permittedi
o sell or distribute newspapers."
Mr. Smith's letter to the gen-
eral counsel went on to explain:
"The recommendation against
girl carriers was adopted and?
has continued through the years,
not as a physical matter in- '
volving the weight of the news-
papers but rather as a moral
matter to avoid subjecting teen-
age girls to any risk of approach:
by unsavory characters who
might observe their regular pas- '
sage of the same places at the
same time each day.
"These standards agreed to
many years ago by newspapers
and the Federal Government
have worked well. They have
been disseminated to newspapers
from time to time through chan-
nels of the American Newspaper
Publishers Association and the
International Circulation Man-
agers Association.
"One further important point.
Use of the word 'employment'
implies that newspaper carriers
are employees. Generally speak-
ing they are not employees but
are independent contractors,
buying newspapers at wholesale
and selling them to their own
customers at retail."
* * *
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NEW YORK TIMES
2-.
Approved For Release 2AP4110031(965P-RDP88-01315R00 1002090-1.6.0 : (11/:
P,.,?,,? )4.e.eitti ei,r4c a)
i . David J. f-Tayhow, assistant!hieles. in the Safe Driving .,
1 Hp IQllppQ : plivn ,dtoalrthempicuhbl)ishDeariloyf
Newes,
HsTisr-licAal\npra, ism and stEeonIsnotreerd
International Cq-A-
111.011PIW FIND to
on Vietnam was divided,Circulation Managers Associa-
q,
l. SUPPORT ON ASIA ma"Personally, I'm more favor- 'Albany Times-Union and
L.'-
in his section, with policy a jzion.
matter of debate. ? Gene Roblisher of The
able toward a hard policy than;Xnickerbocker NeWs and presi-
' a soft one but I'm a little bit dent of the publishers associa-
frightened about the outcome," Lion, will deliver the annual.
agreement that our Governmentl cession on labor relations.'
Most People Back Johnsorrhe said. "But there's generaladdress this morning prior to a
:on Vietnam, They Report? has done what it had to do Elmer Brown, president of
so far." the International Typographical
. Convention Opens Today Philip D. Adler of The Daven- Union. will speak at the session..
. port (Ia.) Times Democrat U ' Thant, United Nations.
said people there were very Secretary General, will speiilt
much concerned because re- at a general membership
By WILL LISSNER turning veterans had toId.them luncheon Wednesday. At the
? Newspaper publishers yester- how long the war was going luncheon, Cetin Rcmzi Yuregir,
day reported widespread st.,1P- to last. a 27-year-old publisher :of Ad-
port around the country for ? "Sort of like fighting the ana, Turkey, will receive a gold
President Johnson's Vietnam Indians," he said. "But almost medallion. His paper, The Yeni
policy. unanimously people are whole_ Adana, a six-page daily with
They made their findings
heartedly behind the President. 2,500 circulation, won the first What we .shrink from is the World Press Achievement
known in interviews at the utter hopelessness ?of winning Award of the : A.N.P.A. Foun-
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, ' where: or losing.- dation.
the 79th annual convention of. George W. Healy Jr., execu- Stanford Smith. general man-
the American Newspaper Pub- tive editor of The Times- ager of the association, reported
ushers Association opens this Picayune & States-Item of New that, all important industry
morning. The convention, which Orleans, said people were find- barometers showed substantial
will end Thursday, is expected ing the war very confusing. growth in 1061.
"Parents who have lost S. son "United States daily news-
to draw 1,200 newspaper execu- are finding it difficult to under- paper circulation has passed 60
lives ? a record ? from the stand how their son can homillion," he said. "Newspaper
United States and Canada. killed and we not be at war,"1, advertising volume has passed
!
Many who arrived early were he said. $4 billion. Newsprint eonsump-
among 3,000 persons invited to People are naturally con- 'tion in 1964 exceeded 8 million
the New York World's Fair for cerned "over the continuinglons." ' ._ i.
possibility of escalation of the,
a preview Easter Sunday prom- war," said Hugh B. Patterson'
enad,e. Jr. of The Arkansas Gazette of i 121-4 .fiOtb-A P v1,7
The problem of Communist +Little Rock. "But my feeling,'' i
activity in South Vietnam and he added. "Is that people gen-! p Luc...0 f< joidi the possibility possibility of further Inter- erallY are in sympathy with the
-vention by the Soviet and Chi- course the Administration isl
?
nese Communist camps is cast- pursuing.
William J. A Rohn of The ? 1,L.,4 Sei..4,zettyrizdk
mg a shadow over the country Reading (Pa.) Eagle-Times said,
ditions are good and getting of criticism but there was seri-,
at, a time .when ;business . con- he had heard no great amount
better and when there are few ous Concern about greater in-' r.
,
i. i Paul A. Schrader of The;
"Most people wonder
? pL,t,c, 09 etftze--) 4
clouds on the economic horizon, volvement.
the visitors said.
Wily Toledo Blade said there was a.
we're in Vietnam in the first "calm concern."
-place," said J. M. Blalock, board. People "don't quite under- f,.t(.. Ceti/led:14? 7
chairman of The State and. The stand what's - going on and
S. C. "Most people would be A report to the convention ' fr1? 1"4-4(Al i j'?id
Columbia Record of Columbia, where we're going." he added.
l-
S
glad to see us get out if we said that for the third sue-
could do it without losing face. cessive year the accident rate
But they back the President." ?, had declined ror newspaper ve-
Ralph W. Callahan, executive,
vice president of The Star of,
Anniston, Ala., said people were
troubled by an inability to
assess theSeriousness of Soviet.
intentions in Vietnam.
, "I'm not an admirer of (the:
ilate John Foster] Dulles's;
brinkmanship, but I don't seei
how we can retreat," he said. ,
, James D. Harding of The Mo-
desto (Calif.) Bee said that.
some persons in his area-were
'concerned about Vietnam ancil
others were not. But he said he'
-believed that the people gen
:erally'supported President John-
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EDITOR 8-z PUBLISHER .41?,,--15?,/??fr,, olivt luA43e4rA,t, 04,t,)
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S g71- / NSP1j"'t'
/` C/64-6.71`
editorial
Covering Red China
THE CHANGE in attitude of the U.S. Department of state toward the
freedom of reporters to go to Red .China is welwne news. For
15 years U.S. correspondents have been_pawns.,in a 4Virontatic chess
game and the American public has been the*fo'ser. Now our evernment
agrees that it sho-uld not 'prevent the tra'velorrona'r=e-ws reporters
into any country of the world with Will?weAre not at war. This is
the position which the American Newspap-r Publishers Association
ir a r
has adhered to for a decade and a half acvhich it has successfully
convinced the State Department is correct?
We suspect that quite a few newsmen wIl 1w the recommenda-
tion of ANPA and apply to the ChinVe 9,..gunthps_t government
through its diplomatic representatives o-Verseai'for permission to visit
that country. The U.S.. government has let it be known that it has "in
effect pre-validated 'the passports" of 45 bona fide correspondents if
the Red Chinese grant a visa. (The quoted words are those of ANPA.)
We don't know whether the Chinese will give such permission to
any U.S. newsman. It seems doubtful in the light of past experience.
But at least we now know that the real barrier to admission of Amer-
ican reporters to the mainland of China is the Communist Chinese
government and not our own government.
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EDITOR -8i PUTiLTSFIER ,4-4? / /
FEB 2 3 1965
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDITK.,131500.01/0,025001,z9e.yx /14-6
Red China
News Visa
Bids Urged
ow' (44/")rr1,7 ktds)
,s1-licteL
U. S. news media seeking to mission of reporters with the
send reporters to Red China Peking representatives at War-
should make direct contact with saw on several occasions ? al-
Peking. ways without success. He notes:
This is the advice contained "ANPA is now convinced that
in a message to American News- the real barrier to admission
paper Publishers Association of American reporters is the
members from general manager government of Red China and
Stanford Smith. that only continuous efforts by
The latest pronouncement on U. S. newspapers will have any
this delicate subject follows a chance of achieving the goal of
meeting in Washington of actual entry of several report-
ANPA officers and Secretary of ers."
State Dean Rusk. Representing Mr. Smith noted that for
the ANPA were its president, some time the State Depart-
Gene Robb; its immediate past ment has maintained a list of
president, Irwin Maier, and Mr. correspondents designated by
Smith. ?their news media as prepared
In a letter to ANPA mem- to go to China, adding: "By this
bers, Mr. Smith states: "We 'method the State Department
are now confident that any bona has in effect pre-validated the,
' fide news reporter who can get passports of correspondents on '
permission of the Chinese com- the list (who now number 45)
munists to enter Red China will for travel to mainland China
?be given immediate passport ap- any time they can obtain per-
proval by the U. S. State De- mission. Up to the present no
partment. U. S. correspondent whose name
Apply Now was on the list has obtained per-
mission, though many have tried.
"We recommend that any Even when reporters of other
ANPA member who wishes to nationalities have received visas
send a reporter or editor to Red U. S. reporters have been turned
' China or any publisher who down by the Communist authori-
himself wishes to go should :ties."
? make immediate application to Mr. Smith said the ANPA is
the CHINESE COMMUNIST interested in achieving the goal
GOVERNMENT through its of reporter-entry "for the bene-
? diplomatic representatives in fit of the American people."
any country which recognizes it.
Applications might well be made AP and UPI to Act
through Hong Kong, Paris, Ge- The letter broke the silence'
neva, London, Rome or any other which the State Department had
city where Red China maintains imposed on the recent talks.
an embassy or legation. These Now that "the wraps were off,"
might be made by regular re- executives of both AP and UPI
porters now stationed in such said they would renew their bids
cities or by newspaper editors to get reporters into Red China
or publishers visiting in such on a permanent basis.
cities. Applications also can be Still undetermined was
mailed. whether Peking would still in-
"If the Chinese grant a visa sist on a quid pro quo ? an ex-
or indicate that they will do so, change of newsmen ? and
application should be made at whether the U. S. officially would
once to the U. S. State Depart- accept the "journalists" China
ment, James L. Greenfield, as- sends here.
sistant secretary of State for Several years ago Peking ad-
Public Affairs, to whom details ' mitted a few U. S. newsmen for
should be given. This can be limited coverage, then slammed
done by cable if urgent." the doors again. Meanwhile,
Mr. Smith points out that Canadian and French news
U. S. diplomats for several years agencies have been allowed to
haAepir3argde the (c)1111?eatleadi007,;130;81113b:uiCa-slge
8.8-01315R000100250001-9
NEW XORK Thw
FEB 4 1965
Approved For Release 2004/10/13-RD088-8131514000100250001-9
PUBLISHERS PLAN
FAIR-TRIAL STUDY
Will Explore Relationship
of Press and Courts
The Amerioan Newspaper
Publishers Association has de-
cided to make an extensive
study . of the relationship be-
tween a free press and fair
trials.
At a meeting yesterday, the:
board of , directors of 1.*.-.e daily*
newspaper trade association ap-
proved a, proposal that it make
such a study. Afterward the
president of the association,
Gene Robb, publisher of The
Albany (N'.Y.) Times-Union
and Knickerbocker News, an-
nounced the appointment of a
12-man committee of national-
ly newspaper exec-'
utives to make the study.
Mr. Robb said the committee
would be ? known as the
A.N.P.A. Committee on Free
Press and Fair Trial.
"The public interest is para-
mount in any consideration of
these two constitutional guar-
anttees ? a free ,press under
the Plitt Amendment and a.
fair trial under the Sixth
Amendment," Mr. Robb said.
He went on:
"Those few instances where
they appear to be in conflict
should be resolved without any
loss of our liberties.
"Indeed, the studies now em-
barked upon concerning the re-
lationships of a fair trial and.
a free press in the administra-?
tion of justice ought to help,
preserve and strengthen both.
That is our purpose."
Will Talk With Bar
, The A.N.P.A. committee is
arranging to discuss fair trial,
and free press problems with
the American Bar Association,
and its Advisory Committee on
Fair Trial and Free Press, re-
cently appointed by Lewis F.,
Powell Jr., A.B.A. president.;
Judge Paul C. Reardon of the;
Supreme Judicial Court of Mas-
sachusetts is chairman of the:
'ABA. committee.
The A.N.P.A committee will
cooperate with the Judicial
Conference.- of the 'United States,
which is also studying the sub-
ject.
D. Ter1112.11 t Bryan, president
and publisher of The Rich-
mond -(Va.; Times-Dispatch.
and News Leader, a past presi-
dent of the association, is
chairman of the A.N.P.A. com-
mittee, Other members are:
Otis Chandler, publisher, The
Los Angeles Times; Jack R.
Howard, president, Scripps-
Howard Newspapers, New York;
City; W. D. Maxwell, first'
vice president and editor, The.
Chicago Tribune; Paul Miller,,
president, Gannett Newspapers,_
Rochester; Behjamin M. IVIcKel-e
way, vice pres'dent and editori-
al chairman, The Washington
Evening Star. ?
Also, Sam A. Ragan, execu-i
tive news editor, The Raleigh'
(N.C. News & Observer and
Raleigh Times; Vermont C.
Royster, editor;' The Wall Street
Journal; Arthur ()its Sulzberg-
er, president and publisher, The
New York Times; Robert, L.
Taylor, president. and, publish-
er, The Philadelphia Bulletin;
Louis A. Well jr., publisher and
editor, The. Lansing (Mich.)
State Journal, and Robert M.
White 2d, president and editor,
The Mexico (Mo.) Ledger.
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MIAMt HERALD
Approved For Release goety wIts5CIA-RDP88-013
Elected by Publishers
J. L. I-Cnig t Beads
Is ch In,stiitute
James 'L. Knight, president of.
The Miami Herald, was elected
president of the American
Newspaper Publishers Associa-
tion. Research .Institute Inc.
Friday at Ocean Reef Club in
North Key Largo. ;
At a meeting of the board of
directors, Knight was chosen to
head the research arm of ANPA
which -operates mechanical re-
search programs for the daily
newspaper business and serves
ANPA members in the field of.
production management..
? Knight succeeds Harold F.
Grumhaus, vice president and
general manager of Tha Chi-
' cage Tribune. He will take
bffic,e April 22 at the annual
meeting of .the ANPA in NW
? York.
Succeeding him in the post of
vice. president, in which capac-
ity. Knight has served the Re-
search Institute for two years,.
is Otto A. Silha, vice preSident
and business manager of The
Minneapolis Star and Tribune..
Silha is the former ANPARI-
treasurer.
?
?? Richard H. Blacklidge, pub-
lisher of The Kokomo, Ind.,
Tribune is the new treasurer.
'Bernard L. Colby, publish-or
of 'the New London, Conn.,
Day, was reelected secretary.
ANPA President Gene Robb,:
publisher of The Albany Times.;
Union and Kickerbocker News,;
was reelected chairman of the,
board of the 'ANPA Research,
Institute.
Stanford Smith continues. to!
serve, as general manager of;
both ANPA and ' its . research'
organization... , ,
. .
?
James lei
' '
'? ;? Herald presideit
L.
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*0 t".........+.......????.?,?????????
LAM./ A J. N.J111. VC J. VI/LA.0A
? JAN 16 1965
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STAT
10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000100250001-9
Q>011-1-
Flory Begins
Assignment
With OEP
/
WASHINGTON
Harry Flory, former general
manager of communications for
United Press International, has
been appointed to serve as a
consultant on emergency infor-
mation to the Office of Emer-
gency Planning.
Mr. Flory will represent the
American Newspaper Publishers
Association, the Associated
Press and United Press Inter-
national at OEP meetings. This
is the executive agency which
co-ordinates national non-mili-
tary planning in the case of
Pnemy attack or natural dis-
aster.
The retired UPI executive
will advise OEP staffers in the
planning for the functions of
the press in situations of nation-
al emergency. The details of
such plans are classified infor-
mation, but an OEP spokesman
describes Mr. Flory as a "bridge
between the industry and OEP."
He says, "Every time we need
competent guidance we have a
seasoned representative who
knows the problems of the indus-
try." He is paid by ANPA.
A security clearance was ob-
tained for Mr. Flory in Decem-
ber to give him access to "sen-
sitive" information. An OEP
spokesman said that Mr. Flory
has been in Washington two or
three time's in connection with
his new post.
Mr. Flory will serve on a part-
time basis, unlike the represen-
tative of the broadcasting indus-
try, who works full-time for
OEP. A spokesman said that
this is because more extensive
planning is required for the
functioning of the network of
broadcast stations throughout
the country which would be im-
mediately involved in any
national emergency.
, Mr. Flory served as general
manager of communications
with UPI from 1952 until his
' retirement in 1963. He is a for-
mer European news manager
for UPI and was a staff corre-
spondent and bureau manager
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NEW YORK
DAILY NrWS
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : ClieoRE
OCT 7964
STAT
44/
t Publisher's' Aid
Takes New Post
Donald R. McVay, executive
secretary of the Publishers Asso-
ciation of New York City, yes-
terday was named assistant
general manager of the Ameri-
can Newspaper Publishers Asso-
ciation.. He will take over the
newn,i.Ob .on completion of current
'assignments for the New York
? assockation, said Stanford Smith,
- ?
P88-01315R000100250001-9
rut,1-Cm4.o`
ANPA general manager. McVay,
50, was general manager of the?
Toronto Council of Printing In-
dustries before taking the. New;
York position in _41958.
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Approved For ReleaatiegaiMUDI\Pk5fRi?
NEWS
SEP 2 9 1964
So-cd/y- o s ?
_
'SERIOUS CONSEDERATION1 FOR WARRO4 PRUPOSAL
8-01315R000100250001-9
News Media Weigh Ethics Code
NEW YORK, Sept. 29 (1.11)1)?
,Miles H. Wolff, President of the
'American Society of Newspaper
Editors, said yesterday the
narren Commission's sugges-
'
1/4tion of a code of professional
onduct for all news media de-
fserves. "serous consideration."
41 The Commission criticized
1.
..neWs media for "general disor-
der" and lack of "self-disci-
pline" in covering the assassin-
ation of President Kennedy and
.1stabsequent events. ?
REPORT DUE
Mr. Wolfe, executive editor of
the Greensboro, N. C., News,
said an ASNE committee head-
--ed by Alfred Friendly, Manag-
ing Editor of the Washington
;Post, would make a preliminary
report Thursday on a study -be-
:gun last April on a proposed
icode of ethics.
"Notwithstanding this, I am
- ?
asking Mr. Friendly to meet
with representatives of other
media at the earliest possible
time to consider the Warren
Report recommendation," Mr.
'Wolff said.
"I have suggested that the
group include representatives of
Sigma Delta Chi journalistic
fraternity, the Radi-Television
News Directors Association, and
the National Association ' of
Broadcasters, together with any
press groups that would want to
join in the deliberations."
POOLING PROPOSED
Mr. Friendly said the Warren
Commission's remarks about
press conduct and responsibility
in Dallas "must, obviously, be
weighed thoughtfully by every-
one concerned with the func-
tion of news presentation in a
Democratic society."
He noted his committee has
proposed poling ' newsmen
certain circumstances "whereI
hers of reporters and photog-
raphers could ,be disturbing,"
if other news media generally ,
agree.
Gene Robb, President of the
American Newspaper Publish-
ers Association, commenting on
the Warren Commission sug-
gestion, said:
"Newspapers and their organ-
izations already are discussing
improved criminal case proce-
dures with bar and law enforce-,
ment groups.
ANPA will participate furth-
er in these undertakings. The
paramount public interest that
newspapers always must serve
is to get and print the news, ex-
actly what they did in the Os-
wald case.
"I am glad to find nothing in
the Warren report criticizing
them for this." .
_
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WEW YORK TIMES
Approved For Relea03411064 : CIA-RD
STAT.
P88-01315R000100250001-9
Press Award Aide Named
Sam A. Ragan, president of
the Associated Press Managing
Editors Association, has been.
appointed to an award advisory
board of the American News-
paper Publishers Association
Foundation. Mr. Ragan, execu-
tive news editor of The Raleigh
(N. C.) News & Observer and
Ttmes, will represent the Asso-
ciation on the board that will
select the winner of the founda-
tion's World Press Achievement
Award. The award is to en-
courage the growth of a free
press in the developing nations
of the world,
- ,
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NEW YORK TIMES
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lease 2004/10/13: CIA-R0P88-01315R000100250001-9
STA1
ST
1
Again sone mutual misunder-
?
PUBLISHERS' clliE4-
J.,1,. standings were corrected,
' he said. Also, "we have agreed
to explore the field of techno-
HOPEFUL ON LABOR newspaperb (sn?lts In k pthe
sibility of ? developing better
methods for collective bargain-
ing." he reported.
Mr. Maier said he was also
optimistic about the future of
daily newspapers in their com-
petition with other media of
mass communication.
"The newspaper, by reason of
Its frequency of appearance and
Its literary rather than audio--
visual character, is naturally
suited to perform an indispen- Brazil" because "of the coura-
sable task in our society?to geous fight" it conducted.
inform and at the same time "As hemisphere problems be-
to enlighten its readers," he come . more acute," Mr.
went on Dubois said, "we have two al-
: .
Asks "Meaningful Writing" lernatiVes: we can 'hope and
"The rhythm of newspaper pray' that our two continents
publication corresponds to the will be immune to the entice-
rhythmmts of the world's most
of the daily life of the ,
reader.. This enables the re- devastating force, or we can go
porter to engage the attention all-out in militant counter-di-
of the reader more swiftly and plomacy and friendliness and
more surely than might other- demonstrate a direct personal
interest.
?"And ? unpopular though
this may be -- we Must step
forward at certain psychological
momerits with financial assist-
ance, irrespective of what one
may think of foreign aid as an
abstract principle,"
K. M. Whitworth, president
of the Newspaper Society of
Great Britain, told of efforts
in his country to improve the
training of newspaper writers
and editors. Britain still is a
long way from getting a chair
of journalism at any university,
.he said.
.? Richard H. Blacklidge, pub-
?lisher of The Kokomo (Ind.)
!Tribune and chairman of the
A.N.P.A. newspaper in the
classroom committee, said there
iwould be five workshops for
I teachers this year on the use of
['the newspaper as a teaching
aid. In addition individual news-
;papers. will organize a number
of ? local and regional, seminars
LtCp,techers,hesald
Meier Reports to A.N. P.A. on
Discussions With Unions
By WILLIAM LISSNER
The retiring president of the
;American Newspaper Publish-
ers Association voiced "hope"
and "cautious optimism" yester-
day that the industry had seen
the last of the long, costly
strikes that have plagued it in
recent years. ?
Irwin Maier, who is com-
pleting a two-year term as
presklentq reported to the as-
sociation's annual meeting at
the Waldon-Astoria Hotel on
efforts to settle management-
labor disputes.
Emphasizing that any state;
merit had to be tentative,, Mr.
Governor -Lacerda Said there
had been an alliance in his
country between Communism
and corruption, which waged a?
subversive war upon the coun-
try through an attack by a
fifth' column organized within
it. This, he said, "is what we
had to fight."
Mr. Dubois, chairman of the
Committee on Freedom of the
Press of the Inter- American
Press Association, said he had
moved before the association's
executive committee to award
the Hero of the Freedom of the
Press Medal for 1964 to the
"free and independent press of
Maier declared: wise occur. Then, of course, it is
"We may be on the threshold the reporter's task to reward
that-attention with knowledg-
of a new era of labor-manage- able and fneaningful writing."
ment relations that will be. The newspaper cannot be con-
marked more by enlightenment tent with dispensing data,. it
than by passions, by under-
tarst distill wisdom, Mr. Maier,
and by a mutual search for
standing rather than emotion:: the
president and , publisher of
common ground rather than a The Milwaukee Journal and The
Milwaukee Sentinel, asserted.
"The newspaper must com-
municate meaning," he de-
clared. "And meaning cannot be
communicated through radio
headline, or bulletin journalism,
or through an occasional audio-
visual documentary.
. "Full meaning can be com-
municated only through the
printed word, through thoughts
and insights, which, because
they are printed, can be read
and studied,' re-read and re-
studied and finally filed for
future reference by those whose
frantic scramble for strategic
ground." ?
He said that while no One
could predict he future, recent
developments ? supported his
hope.
The A.N.P.A.'s former stand-
ing Committee has been re-
named the labor-relations corn,
mittee and has been strength-
ened with additional members
and supporting staff, he said.
Joint Meetings Described
A number of presidents of
newspaper unions met with a
group of publishers, including business it is to write and teach
hiinself, and several labor-rela- and lecture and, indeed, to
tions experts last September govern.
under the auspices of the Con= Brazilian Sends Message ,
ter for the Study of Democratic Gov. Carlos Lacerda of
Institutions at Santa Barbara, Guanabara state, a Brazilian
Calif? A number of misconcep- newspaper editor and publisher
tions were corrected and a fur-
. who was a leader in the politi-
ther meeting called for, he said. cal campaign that resulted in
The second meeting was held the deposition of President
Tampa, Fla., , in January
under the auspices of the
American ,Arbitration A.ssotia-,
?
Jo10 Goulart, sent a nibssage
to the convention "through
Dubois, Latin America corres-
pondent of The Chicago: Trib-
une
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4.-110
1