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Arthur Krock Papers, 1909-1974 (bulk 1930-1974): Inventory

MC079

Portrait of Arthur Krock

Portrait of Arthur Krock

Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library
65 Olden Street
Princeton, New Jersey 08540 USA
Phone: 609-258-6345
Fax: 609-258-3385
mudd@princeton.edu
http://www.princeton.edu/~mudd

Published in 1998

Summary Information

Creator:
Krock, Arthur, 1886-1974.
Title and dates:
Arthur Krock Papers, 1909-1974 (bulk 1930-1974).
Abstract:
Arthur Krock (1886-1974) had a long and distinguished career as a journalist, working for much of his career as Washington correspondent and columnist for The New York Times. His column "In the Nation" was noted for its depth of information and analysis, especially on American politics. The Krock papers document his journalism career, especially with The New York Times, and include his correspondence, his writings, and biographical materials.
Size:
39.5 linear feet (98 boxes)
Call number:
MC079
Location:
Princeton University Library. Department of Rare Books and Special Collections.
Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library.
Public Policy Papers.
Princeton, New Jersey 08540 USA
Language(s) of material:
English.
Storage note:
This collection is stored onsite at the Mudd Manuscript Library.

Biography of Arthur Krock

Arthur Krock (1886-1974) had a long and distinguished career as a journalist, working for much of his career as Washington correspondent and columnist for The New York Times. His column "In the Nation" was noted for its depth of information and analysis, especially on American politics. Krock also worked as a reporter and editor at several Louisville newspapers and the New York World.

Arthur Krock was born on November 16, 1886 in Glasgow, Kentucky to Joseph and Caroline (Morris) Krock. He began study at Princeton University in 1904, but was forced to leave after his first semester due to the financial difficulties of his family. He then attended college at the Lewis Institute in Chicago for two years, earning an Associate in Arts degree in 1906, and returned to Louisville with the intention of securing a newspaper job. He was hired as a reporter at the Louisville Herald, where he covered the national political conventions at Chicago and Denver, his first experience reporting on national politics, after which he was assigned to cover Kentucky politics. Krock had to leave the Herald in 1908 when the newspaper reorganized and worked briefly as a deputy sheriff in Jefferson Country, Kentucky before becoming night editor for the Associated Press in Louisville.

In 1910, Krock went to Washington, D.C. for the first time as Washington correspondent for the Louisville Times. In 1911, he became Washington correspondent for the Louisville Courier-Journal as well, both papers being edited and partly owned by the same man. In 1915, Krock returned to Louisville to serve as editorial manager on both papers, working for Colonel Henry Watterson. Krock traveled to France for the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, where he wrote syndicated articles for several newspapers and was one of the journalists who convinced the Peace Conference to open its sessions to the public. Krock was made an officer in the French Legion of Honor for his coverage of the conference.

Krock became editor in chief of the Louisville Times in 1919, which was purchased by Judge Robert W. Bingham. He took time off to assist the chairman of the Democratic National Committee of New York in 1920, the only time in his career that he participated directly in politics. Krock remained at the Louisville Times until the fall of 1923, when he left for New York after differing with Bingham over editorial policy. He first took a job outside of journalism, working in public relations as assistant for Will H. Hays, head of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America. While in this position, he was asked to write a few editorials by Frank I. Cobb, editor of the New York World, which lead to his appointment in 1923 as assistant to Ralph Pulitzer, president of the World. Krock remained there until 1927, when he left to join the editorial staff of The New York Times.

In 1932, Krock became the Times' Washington correspondent and head of the Washington bureau. Much of his subsequent writing was for his column "In the Nation," which is published on the Times' editorial page from 1933 until he retired in 1966, as well as writing on important events for the Times. His views on political, social, and economic issues were generally conservative, and "In the Nation" became widely regarded as a major voice of conservative America, while still maintaining independence from any political agenda. The column provided detailed information on current issues, along with critical analysis. In his writings, Krock supported the State Department's international policies, but beginning in 1936 became a critic of and authority on the economic policies of the Roosevelt Administration, the New Deal. Krock covered many fields, including foreign policy, but predominantly wrote about American politics. He wrote the "lead" story for the Times for every biennial election from 1932 to 1952. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1935 for his excellence as Washington correspondent for his coverage of the beginning of the New Deal, and won again in 1938 for his exclusive interview with President Roosevelt. He also received a special commendation from the Pulitzer awards board for his interview of President Harry S. Truman in 1950 and a special citation in 1955 for distinguished correspondence from Washington. Krock retired from The New York Times in 1966, but continued to go to his office at the bureau, working on several books. In 1968, he published Memoirs: 60 Years on the Firing Line. He also wrote The Consent of the Governed and Other Deceits (1971) and Myself When Young: Growing Up in the 1890s (1974).

Arthur Krock married Marguerite Polleys on April 22, 1911 and they had one son, Thomas Polleys Krock. Marguerite Krock died in 1938. Krock married Martha Granger Blair on June 14, 1939. She had two sons, William Granger Blair and Robert H. Blair, from a previous marriage. Krock died on April 12, 1974 at the age of 87.

Description

The Krock papers document his journalism career, especially with The New York Times, and include his correspondence, his writings, and biographical materials. Krock's correspondence is with political figures, businessmen, academics, and his readers about American politics and government, journalism, and Krock's career. The papers also include memoranda by Krock recording his interactions with public figures as Washington correspondent for The New York Times. Other papers include photographs, biographical material, and memorabilia related to awards and other recognition Krock received for his journalism.

Please see the series descriptions in the contents list for additional information about individual series.

Arrangement

Organized into the following series:

Access and Use

Access

Collection is open for research use.

Restrictions on Use and Copyright Information

Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. Permission to publish materials from the collection must be requested from the Curator of the Public Policy Papers. Any copyright vested in Arthur Krock has passed to Princeton University; researchers are responsible for determining any other copyright questions.

Acquisition and Appraisal

Provenance and Acquisition

This collection was donated by Arthur Krock in December 1968 and October 1969, with an addition from Lucian Pera in June 1982.

Related Materials

Related Archival Material

Collections at the Mudd Manuscript Library of particular relevance to the Arthur Krock Papers include the papers of several individuals who corresponded with Krock, including John Foster Dulles, Ferdinand Eberstadt, and James V. Forrestal, and the papers of several journalists, including David Lawrence, Joseph Howard, and Charles W. Thompson.

Processing and Other Information

Works Cited

The following sources were consulted during the preparation of the biographical note:
Belair, Felix, Jr. "60 Years a Journalist." The New York Times, April 13, 1974.
"Krock, Arthur" from Current Biography. New York: H. W. Wilson Company, 1943.

Descriptive Rules Used

Finding aid content adheres to that prescribed by Describing Archives: A Content Standard.

Encoding

Machine-readable finding aid encoded in EAD 2002 by Techbooks and Cristela García-Spitz on January 29, 2007.

Finding aid written in English.

Preferred Citation

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Arthur Krock Papers, Box and Folder Number; Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library.

Subject Headings

These materials have been indexed in the Princeton University Library online catalog using the following terms. Those seeking related materials should search under these terms.

Browse other finding aids related to the following terms:

Contents List

  1. Series 1: Works, 1909-1973

    (6.1 linear feet in 15 boxes)

    Series Description

    The Works series includes published copies of Krock's writings, as well as drafts and notes. Please see the subseries descriptions in the contents list for additional information about individual subseries.

    Arrangement

    Divided into three subseries: Memoranda, Publications, and Speeches.

  2. Subseries 1A: Memoranda, 1928-1968

    (0.4 linear feet in 1 box)

    Subseries Description

    The Memoranda subseries is composed of notes written by Krock about conferences, conversations, and interviews he conducted while at The New York Times with presidents and presidential candidates, legislators, and other public officials. The memoranda describe political events in Washington, D.C. while he headed the Times Washington Bureau and wrote his column "In the Nation" for that newspaper. Subjects include the United States economy and monetary policies, presidential candidates, national security, foreign affairs, including relations with Japan and the Soviet Union, World War II, the Vietnam War, the Supreme Court, racial discrimination in the United States, the decisions and resignations of political figures, and the influence of Krock and other journalists upon politics. Also included are letters and memoranda sent to Krock on these topics. Krock referred to these as "the Black Books" because they are kept in black notebooks. Please note: this box contains photocopies of the original memoranda made for research use. The originals are located in Boxes 94-96.

    Arrangement

    Arranged chronologically.

  3. Book I, September 18, 1928 - September 11, 1948

  4. Glass, Carter - Letter to Arthur Krock, 7/18/28

    Re Prohibition plank in the Democratic platform

    Box 1, Page 2-3
  5. Howe, Louis - Interview: Memo from Arthur Krock to Arthur Hays Sulzberger, 11/25/31

    Re Candidacy of Franklin D. Roosevelt for President

    Box 1, Page 4-5
  6. Cox, James M. - Telephone Call: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/15/32

    Re Franklin D. Roosevelt and Alfred E. Smith as candidates for President

    Box 1, Page 6-7
  7. Traylor, Melvin A. - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 2/5/32

    Re National economic conditions

    Box 1, Page 8-9
  8. Stimson, Henry L. - Conference: Memo by Arthur Krock, 2/16/32

    Re China; Japan; Reporters and the press, etc.

    Box 1, Page 10-11
  9. Hoover, Herbert - Comments: Memo by Arthur Krock, 3/1/32

    Re Warren Road Construction Bill

    Box 1, Page 12
  10. Stimson, Henry L. - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock., No date

    Re Disarmament; China; Japan

    Box 1, Page 13-14
  11. Borah, William Edgar - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 4/15/32

    Re Philippine independence; War debts; World Court; Qualifications of Herbert Hoover and Franklin D. Roosevelt for the Presidency

    Box 1, Page 15-16
  12. Hoover, Herbert - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 4/20/32

    Re Prohibition; Philippine independence; National economy

    Box 1, Page 18-22
  13. Hoover Herbert - Interviews: Memos by Arthur Krock, 12/11/32 and 1/12/33

    Re War debts; Philippine Bill; President-elect Roosevelt at the White House Conference; Republican Party; President Hoover's refusal to cooperate with Pierre Laval in his efforts to obtain consent from the United States to a security pact for France, etc.

    Box 1, Page 23-25
  14. Hoover, Herbert - Interview: Memo by George Benson, 1/11/33

    Re War debts

    Box 1, Page 26-30
  15. Hoover, Herbert - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/12/33

    [same as page 251, Re President Hoover's refusal to cooperate with Pierre Laval in his efforts to obtain consent from the United States to a security pact for France

    Box 1, Page 31
  16. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Conference: Memo by Turner Catledge, 3/8/33

    Re Emergency powers; Gold Standard; Bank deposits; Currency, etc.

    Box 1, Page 32-35
  17. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Conference: Insert to the previous memo [on pages 32-35] by Turner Catledge, 3/8/33

    Re Monetary crisis as a subject of the coming World Economic Conference

    Box 1, Page 36
  18. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Conference: Memo not signed [a second account of the conference of 3/8/33, previously referred to on pages 32-35]

    Re Emergency powers; Bank deposits; Currency, etc.

    Box 1, Page 37-38
  19. Reynolds, Jackson E. - Speech before the American Bankers Association: Galley proof, 10/24/33, and note by Arthur Krock

    Re Changes made after President Roosevelt objected to parts of Mr. Reynolds' speech

    Box 1, Page 38
  20. Le Hand, M.A. - Letter to Arthur Krock, 5/3/33

    Re Request for an interview with President Roosevelt which was declined because of a busy schedule

    Box 1, Page 39
  21. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Letter from Arthur Krock, 5/31/33

    Re Request for an interview and for guidance about dispatches concerning foreign policy

    Box 1, Page 40
  22. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Letter from Arthur Krock, 8/11/33

    Re Dispatches in The New York Times concerning war debts

    Box 1, Page 41
  23. Cox, James B. - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 8/8/33

    Re “Inner history” of the American delegation to the World Economic Conference

    Box 1, Page 42-46
  24. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 8/15/33

    Re Dispatches in The New York Times concerning bonds, war debts, Pennsylvania coal situation, etc.

    Box 1, Page 47-49
  25. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/14/33

    Re Newspaper influence on the confidence of readers in government monetary policy; Review of economic measures

    Box 1, Page 50-54
  26. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Interview at Hyde Park: Memo by Clarence K. Streit, 9/13/34

    Re France; Japan; United States in the I.L.O.3 Trade; Adolf Hitler and the threat of war

    Box 1, Page 55-56
  27. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Press Conference: Memo from Charles Hurd to Arthur Krock, 11/9/34

    Re President Roosevelt's comments on interpretive news reporting

    Box 1, Page 57
  28. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Letter from Adolph S. Ochs, 11/30/34

    Re Defense of an article by Arthur Krock about Sir John Simon in response to a letter of protest by President Roosevelt stating that Mr. Krock's publication had been a hindrance to friendly negotiations with the British

    Box 1, Page 58-59
  29. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Interview: Memo by Arthur Hays Sulzberger, 12/8/34

    Future prosperity in the United States; Preparations for war in Europe; United States relations with Japan; Relief program, etc.

    Box 1, Page 60-62
  30. Lamont, Thomas W. - Comments: Memo from Arthur Krock to Arthur Hays Sulzberger, 1/22/35

    Re Words of praise by Mr. Lamont for the article by Arthur Krock about Sir John Simon

    Box 1, Page 63
  31. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Visit to Joseph P. Kennedy's Estate at Marwood: Memo by Arthur Krock, 7/1/35

    Re President Roosevelt during an evening of relaxation

    Box 1, Page 64-66
  32. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Conversation: Memo by Turner Catledge, 11/14/35

    Re Inaccuracies in an article on the budget by Mr. Catledge; President Roosevelt's personal relations with Arthur Krock; Canadian trade treaty; British fear of war, etc.

    Box 1, Page 67-73
  33. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Visit at Hyde Park: Memo by Arthur Krock, 8/20/36

    Re Re-election of the President; Governor Lehman and the influence of anti-Semitism in the New York gubernatorial campaign; David E. Lilienthal and the TVA; London Economic Conference of 1933, etc.

    Box 1, Page 74-77
  34. Catledge, Turner - Job Reclassification: Staff Notice from Arthur Krock, 9/30/35

    In which Turner Catledge is designated as Chief News Correspondent of the Washington Bureau, Delbert Clark is classified as Manager of the Washington Bureau, and Arthur Krock's title is given as Washington Correspondent of The New York Times

    Box 1, Page 78
  35. Morgenthau, Henry, Jr. - Conversation: Memo by Turner Catledge, circa November 1937

    Re An article by Mr. Catledge concerning a cut in the 1937 budget

    Box 1, Page 79-82
  36. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 2/13/37

    Re Program to change the personnel of the Supreme Court; also a letter from Stephen Early, 2/24/37, Re Suggestions for changes in Arthur Krock's article on the Supreme Court

    Box 1, Page 82A
  37. Hoover, Herbert - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/28/37

    Re Republican Party; New Deal; President Roosevelt and “dictator talk,” etc.

    Box 1, Page 83-84
  38. Bingham, Robert A. - Resignation as Ambassador: Memo by Arthur Krock, 12/23/37

    Re Mr. Krock's account of the resignation of Ambassador Bingham, the appointment of Joseph P. Kennedy as Ambassador to Great Britain, and President Roosevelt's charge that “the premature publication may have hastened Bingham's death.”

    Box 1, Page 85-87
  39. Ludwig, Emil - Biography of Franklin D. Roosevelt: Article and memo by Arthur Krock, 1/6/38

    Re Inaccuracies in Mr. Ludwigts description of the events leading to the nomination of Mr. Roosevelt for Vice President in 1920; Confirmation of Mr. Krock's account provided by James A. Farley who also contributed information concerning Mr. Roosevelt in the 1932 Convention

    Box 1, Page 88
  40. Kennedy, Joseph P. and Thomas W. Lamont - Conference: Memos by Arthur Krock, 6/27-28/38

    Re A discussion of proposals, which were later dropped, to prevent or delay wage cuts by United States Steel Corporation

    Box 1, Page 89-91
  41. Douglas, William O. - Telegram and memo by Arthur Krock, 3/20/39

    Re Mr. Krock's role in securing the nomination to the Supreme Court for William O. Douglas with the aid of Frank Murphy

    Box 1, Page 92-94
  42. Farley, James A. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 7/25/39

    Re A discussion between President Roosevelt and Mr. Farley concerning a third term

    Box 1, Page 95
  43. Farley James A. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 3/7/40

    Re Mr. Farley's candidacy for President, his relations with President Roosevelt, and the “Catholic issue”; John Nance Garner's candidacy for President and his opposition to President Roosevelt's third term

    Box 1, Page 96-97
  44. Willkie Wendell - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 6/23/40

    Re Lack of organization in Mr. Willkie's bid for the Republican Presidential nomination

    Box 1, Page 98-100
  45. Willkie, Wendell - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, l0/16/68, and letters to and from Archibald MacLeish and Arthur Krock, l0/16-30/68

    Re An incident in August 1940, after Wendell Willkie had been approached by Archibald MacLeish, during which Arthur Krock advised Mr. Willkie as to what his response should be concerning the transfer by President Roosevelt of forty destroyers to the British Navy

    Box 1, Page 100A
  46. Kennedy Joseph P. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 12/1/40

    Re Resignation as Ambassador to Great Britain

    Box 1, Page 101-103
  47. Hull, Cordell - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 12/11/41

    Re Japanese negotiations and the role of Secretary Hull in trying to gain time for the United States but “never as an appeaser of Japan”; His warning of a sudden Japanese assault which was useful in the Philippines and the Canal Zone but “Why it was not at Pearl Harbor Mr. Hull said he has no idea.”

    Box 1, Page 104-106
  48. Hull, Cordell - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 12/29/41

    Re Pre-war policy of the United States toward Japan and Secretary Hull's warning to the “War Council” of an imminent Japanese attack

    Box 1, Page 107-109
  49. Beaverbrook, Lord - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/3/52

    Re North Atlantic sea battle; Threat of a German invasion of Britain; Appraisal of Joseph Stalin; Fighting in Libya; War supplies for Turkey, etc.

    Box 1, Page 110-113
  50. King, Admiral Ernest J. - Conversation: Memo by Turner Catledge, 6/6/43

    Re “Blueprint for War” drawn up at a meeting between President Roosevelt and Winston Churchill in the United States in May 1943

    Box 1, Page 114-115
  51. Marshall, George - Conference: Memo by Turner Catledge, 6/9/43

    Re Russia; North Africa; Bombing of Germany, etc.

    Box 1, Page 116-122
  52. Marshall, George - Conversation: Memo by Turner Catledge, 8/25/43

    Re War in Burma; Chiang Kai-shek and China; Sicily; Alaska; Russia; Race problems in the United States Army, etc.

    Box 1, Page 123-130
  53. King, Admiral Ernest J. - Conversation: Memo by Turner Catledge, 9/13/43

    Re “Bottleneck to the Western France invasion strategy” which is attributed to (1) insufficient supplies and (2) “Dunkirk psychosis on the part of the British”; Lack of cooperation by the RAF; Italian armistice, etc.

    Box 1, Page 131-135
  54. Roosevelt, Franklin D. - Observations by Arthur Krock: Memo by Arthur Krock, 10/27/43

    Re A report of an indirect attempt by President Roosevelt to block Arthur Krock's news sources based in part upon information supplied by Edward R. Stettinius, Jr.

    Box 1, Page 136
  55. Hull, Cordell - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/30/43

    Re Moscow negotiations

    Box 1, Page 137-139
  56. Halifax, Lord - Conversation: Memo from Charles Hurd to Arthur Krock, 12/21/43

    Re Rumor of a “rift between Churchill and Stalin growing out of the Teheran conference”

    Box 1, Page 140-141
  57. Hull, Cordell - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 12/21/43

    Re Attempts by Sumner Welles, Henry Wallace, and Milo Perkins to undermine the foreign policy of Cordell Hull; Teheran Conference and British responses to Joseph Stalin's demand for a second front

    Box 1, Page 142-144
  58. Hull, Cordell - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/29/44

    Re Argentine policy; Morgenthau Plan, etc.

    Box 1, Page 145
  59. Marshall, George and Ernest J. King - Conversations: Memo by Arthur Krock, 10/16/44

    Re Allied armies in Europe and Allied fleets in the Pacific; Chiang Kai-shek and China; Japan; Russia; Effect of manpower shortages in the United States on the Navy program of “assault shipping”

    Box 1, Page 146-149
  60. Hull, Mrs. Cordell - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 10/21/44

    Re Secretary Hull's illness; Morgenthau Plan

    Box 1, Page 150
  61. Kennedy, Joseph P. - Meeting with President Roosevelt: Memo by Arthur Krock, 10/26/44

    Re Post-war economy; 1944 election; Morgenthau Plan; President Roosevelt's health

    Box 1, Page 151-152
  62. Byrnes, James F. - Conversation: Memo by Turner Catledge, 2/26/45

    Re Yalta Conference; Russia and Japan; Polish borders; Partition of Germany; Joseph Stalin's insistence that only the “Big Three” make decisions on ending the war; An understanding that the concern of the San Francisco Conference would be not to end the war but to prevent future wars

    Box 1, Page 153-157
  63. Hull, Cordell - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 5/26/45

    Re Secretary Hull's health and his resignation; San Francisco Conference and Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., Argentina; James F. Byrnes, etc.

    Box 1, Page 158-159
  64. San Francisco Conference - Observations: Memos by James B. Reston and Arthur Krock, 6/14-19/45

    Re Roles of Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., Harold Stassen, John Foster Dulles, Arthur H. Vandenberg, etc.

    Box 1, Page 160-166
  65. Jackson, Robert H. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/8/47

    Re Portal-to-portal cases in the Supreme Court; Personal relations of various Supreme Court Justices

    Box 1, Page 167-168
  66. Gerhart, Eugene C. - Letter to Arthur Krock, 5/11/49

    Re An account of the “Black-Jackson controversy” which appears in a biography of Robert H. Jackson by Mr. Gerhart

    Box 1, Page 169
  67. Byrnes, James F. and George C. Marshall - Resignation and Appointment: Memos by Arthur Krock, 1/8, 16/47

    Re Circumstances leading to the resignation of James F. Byrnes and the appointment of George C. Marshall as Secretary of State. Note: Pages 171-172 are the same as those originally assigned the numbers 173-174.

    Box 1, Page 170-174
  68. Baruch, Bernard M. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 3/25/47

    Re British financial policy; Comments on the views of Dean Acheson, George C. Marshall, James F. Byrnes, and William D. Leahy

    Box 1, Page 175
  69. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Conversation during a dinner at the 1925 F Street Club: Memo and letter by Arthur Krock, 12/6/47, and also a letter from General Eisenhower, 12/10/47, a memo from Frank Kent, 12/11/47, and a letter from Lewis L. Strauss, 2/1/61

    Re General Eisenhower's views on inflation. [Please see also pages 289-294.]

    Box 1, Page 176-180
  70. Baruch, Bernard M. - Meeting with President Truman: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/26/48

    Re Taxes; Financing the European Recovery Program; British policy in Greece, Turkey, and Palestine

    Box 1, Page 181
  71. Lovett, Robert A. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock., 1/29/48

    Re European Recovery Program

    Box 1, Page 182
  72. Hull, Cordell - Excerpts from The Memoirs of Cordell Hull: Published in The New York Times, 2/3/48

    Re Differences among the United States, Britain, and France in the first years of the Roosevelt Administration; Role of Sir John Simon in United States relations with Britain

    Box 1, Page 183
  73. Lovett, Robert A. - Press Conference: Memo by F. Belair, Jr., 10/25/48

    Re Cost and administration of the Marshall Plan

    Box 1, Page 184-191
  74. Marshall, George C. - Interview: Memo by James B. Reston, March 1947

    Re Joseph Stalin's health; France; England; Views of John Foster Dulles concerning Germany, etc.

    Box 1, Page 192-194
  75. Truman Harry S. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 4/8/48

    Re Thanks for various articles by Arthur Krock; Rearmament; Joseph Stalin; Republican campaign; President Truman's method of making decisions; Central Intelligence Agency; Demobilization, etc.

    Box 1, Page 195-198
  76. Truman, Harry S. and James V. Forrestal - Interviews: Memo by Arthur Hays Sulzberger, 5/8/48

    Re Palestine, Zionist activities and anti-Semitism; Indoctrination School in the Armed Forces, etc.

    Box 1, Page 199-201
  77. Vandenberg, Arthur H. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock with an addendum by James B. Reston, 6/16/48

    Re Prospects of a draft of Senator Vandenberg for President and the nomination of Thomas E. Dewey for Vice President

    Box 1, Page 202-203
  78. Stassen Harold E. - Message: Memo by Arthur Krock, 6/28/48

    Re Nomination of Thomas E. Dewey for President

    Box 1, Page 204
  79. Stassen, Harold E. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 7/2/48

    Re Republican Convention and background information about Arthur H. Vandenberg, Robert A. Taft, Thomas E. Dewey, etc.

    Box 1, Page 205
  80. Forrestal, James V. - Letter from Arthur Krock, 9/14/48

    Re Failure to guard security in the press and in government in an article, ‘If War Comes,’ by Joseph and Stewart Alsop, Saturday Evening Post, September 11, 1948. [Please see also pages 207A-211. ]

    Box 1, Page 206-207
  81. Book II, September 14, 1948 - April 7, 1960

  82. Symington, Stuart - Telephone Call: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/14/48

    Re Secretary Symington's use of the word “constructive” to describe Arthur Krock's letter to James V. Forrestal about guarding national security in the press. [Please see also pages 206 -211.]

    Box 1, Page 207A
  83. Lovett, Robert A. - Telephone Call: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/15/48

    Re Approval of Arthur Krock's letter to James V. Forrestal about guarding national security in the press. [Please see also pages 206-211.]

    Box 1, Page 207B
  84. Forrestal, James V. - Letter to Arthur Krock, 9/14/48

    Re Reply to Arthur Krock's letter about guarding national security in the press [on pages 206-207] and Secretary Forrestal's decision to take it up with the Chiefs of the Services. [Please see also pages 207A-211.]

    Box 1, Page 208
  85. Baldwin, Hanson - Views of the Article, “If War Comes,” by Joseph and Stewart Alsop, Saturday Evening Post, September 11, 1948: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/20/48

    Re Risk to national security by those who released the plan, those who published it, and particularly by General Carl Spaatz whose remarks about how we will fight a war with Russia were repeated in the article. [Please see also pages 206-211.]

    Box 1, Page 209
  86. Forrestal, James V. - Meeting with Generals Bradley, Eisenhower, Cates, Denfield Vandenberg, and Arthur Krock: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/20/48

    Re Article, “If War Comes,” by Joseph and Stewart Alsop, Saturday Evening Post, September 11, 1948, in which information that threatened security, initially questioned by Arthur Krock, was said to be chiefly the fault of the magazine which never cleared it with the Pentagon, etc. [Please see also pages 206-209.]

    Box 1, Page 210-211
  87. Berlin Blockade - Observations: Memo by James B. Reston, 9/28/48

    Re Airlift and future measures favored by Messrs. Bevin, Clay, Dulles, Finletter, LeMay, Marshall, McNeil, Murphy, etc.

    Box 1, Page 212-216
  88. Eberstadt, Ferdinand - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 5/6/49

    Re A meeting with James V. Forrestal on March 29, 1949, and a report on Secretary Forrestal's illness

    Box 1, Page 217-219
  89. Forrestal, James V. - Illness: Memo by Arthur Krock, 5/30/49

    Re Secretary Forrestal's last weeks in the hospital before his suicide

    Box 1, Page 220-221
  90. NSRB - Meeting: Memo not signed, July 1950

    Re Korea; Russia, Generals Bradley and MacArthur; Messrs. Harriman, Symington, Truman, etc.

    Box 1, Page 222-228
  91. Johnson, Louis A. and James Bruce - Meetings with President Truman: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/27/50

    Re Information held in confidence by Arthur Krock but printed elsewhere

    Box 1, Page 229
  92. Stassen, Harold E. - Telephone Call from Tokyo to Arthur Krock and James B. Reston: Phone conversation transcribed, 12/5/50

    Re Discussion of a procedure for reporting on the military situation

    Box 1, Page 230
  93. Acheson, Dean - Conversation: Report [Incomplete] by James B. Reston, 12/11/50

    Re Proposal for peace by the Chinese Communists; United States policy in the Far East and in Germany, etc Note: Page 232 is missing.

    Box 1, Page 231-233
  94. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/5/51

    Feasibility of Western Europe Land Defense Force; United States policy in Germany, China, and Korea, etc.

    Box 1, Page 234-235
  95. Truman, Harry S. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 5/25/51

    Re President Truman's view that Russia will not start a war primarily because of an inadequate industrial machine and a shortage of oil; NATO; Point Four; Korea; etc.

    Box 1, Page 236-238
  96. Churchill, Winston - Visit in England: Report by Julius Ochs Adler, 4/29/51

    Re General MacArthur; Russia; United Nations; NATO, etc.

    Box 1, Page 239-247
  97. MacArthur, Douglas - Conversation: Report by Julius Ochs Adler, 5/23/51

    Re Universal Military Training; President Truman; Generals Bradley and Eisenhower; Korean War; Russia; Winston Churchill, etc.

    Box 1, Page 248-254
  98. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Conversation with Christian Herter in Paris: Memo by James B. Reston, 7/12/51

    Re General Eisenhower's agreement to accept the Republican nomination for President

    Box 1, Page 255-256
  99. Wallace, Henry A. - Atomic Weapon Policy Toward Russia: Memo by Arthur Krock, 10/9/51

    Re Henry Wallace's accusation that the editorial note in The Forrestal Diaries [Edited by Walter Millis, New York, Viking Press, 1951] about his approval of sharing atomic secrets with Russia was a “lie”; Recollections by Robert P. Patterson and John Snyder about the Cabinet meeting of September 21, 1945, at which atomic weapon policy was discussed

    Box 1, Page 257-259
  100. Douglas William O. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/8/51

    Re Justice Douglas' permission to publish, if his own name were not revealed, an account of a conversation between President Truman and General Eisenhower; Also Arthur Krock's effort to check the story with Joseph Short, President Truman's Press Secretary, who, after publication, stated, “It is not true.” [Please see also pages 262, 262A-H, 270-273, and 295.]

    Box 1, Page 260-261
  101. Douglas, William O. - Permission given to Arthur Krock to enter the facts of a story in a private file: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/12/51

    Re President Truman's comments to Justice Douglas about his remarks on November 5, 1951, to General Eisenhower that “his offer of 1948 held good for 1952” to which General Eisenhower responded that he had real differences with the Democratic Party particularly over labor policy. [Please see also pages 262B-H. 270-273, and 295.]

    Box 1, Page 262
  102. Douglas, William O. - Envelope: Addressed to Arthur Krock, handwritten by Justice Douglas, 12/2/51

    Box 1, Page 262A
  103. Douglas, William O. - Confirmation of Arthur Krock's account of the conversation about President Truman and General Eisenhower: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/8/51

    [pages 260-261], corrected and initialed by Justice Douglas

    Box 1, Page 262B-C
  104. Hagerty, James C. - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/26/56

    Re Mr. Hagerty's confirmation of Arthur Krock's account of President Truman's efforts to bring General Eisenhower into Democratic politics. [Please see also pages 262, 262B-C,E-H. 270-273, a nd 295.]

    Box 1, Page 262D
  105. Royall, Kenneth C. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/25/55

    Re Mr. Royall's account of President Truman's efforts to make General Eisenhower President on the Democratic ticket. [Please see also page 262G.]

    Box 1, Page 262E-F
  106. Rovall, Kenneth C. - Letter to Arthur Krock, 11/29/55

    Re Mr. Royall's request that his conversation with Arthur Krock [pages 262E-F] concerning President Truman and General Eisenhower not to be the subject of a newspaper article

    Box 1, Page 262G
  107. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Remarks at a 1955 Gridiron Club Dinner: Memo by Edward T. Folliard, Gridiron Club President for 1955, 12/19/57

    Re Remarks by President Eisenhower that former President Truman “invited me to run for President twice and for Vice President once, and yet he accused me (in 1952) of trying to misrepresent things.” etc. [Please see also page 295.]

    Box 1, Page 262H
  108. McGrath, J. Howard - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 2/26/52

    Re President Truman and the Department of Justice “after revelations of corruption in the government”

    Box 1, Page 263-265
  109. Perlman, Philip B. and H. Graham Morison - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 7/l/52

    Re Details of changes and estimates of morale in the Department of Justice

    Box 1, Page 266-267
  110. Perlman, Philip B. - Letter to President Truman, 7/l/52

    Re Resignation of Philip B. Perlman as Solicitor General on August 15, 1952

    Box 1, Page 268-269
  111. Davies, Joseph E. - Conversation: Letter from Arthur Krock to Arthur Hays Sulzberger, 12/17/52

    Re Ambassador Davies' knowledge of President Truman's efforts to make General Eisenhower the Democratic nominee for President in 1948 and 1952, which confirmed a story published by Arthur Krock on November 8, 1951, but later denied by the Truman Administration. [Please see also pages 262, 262B-H, 273, and 295.]

    Box 1, Page 270-272
  112. Dewey, Thomas E. - Letters to and from Arthur Krock, 12/17, 19/52

    Enclosure of Arthur Krock's letter to Arthur Hays Sulzberger, 12/17/52 [pages 270-272], including Joseph E. Davies' account of President Truman's efforts to make General Eisenhower the Democratic nominee for President

    Box 1, Page 273
  113. Dulles, John Foster - Press Conference: Memo by James B. Reston, 6/5/53

    Re Egypt, including British preparations for war; Korea, outlook for a truce, and negotiations of the Korean situation with Jawaharlal Nehru, etc.

    Box 1, Page 274-276
  114. Nixon, Richard M. - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 2/26/54

    Re Joseph R. McCarthy, Roy Cohn, and the division of opinion in the Administration “on how the President should deal with McCarthy”

    Box 1, Page 277-279
  115. Hoover, Herbert and Harry S. Truman - A Projected Meeting: Memo by Arthur Krock, 5/11/54

    Re Arthur Krock's efforts to have an informal discussion with the two former Presidents on “The Lessons of The Presidency”

    Box 1, Page 280
  116. George, Walter - Letter to Arthur Krock, 1/6/55

    Re Bricker Amendment

    Box 1, Page 281
  117. Frankfurter, Felix - Note to Justice Stanley F. Reed, later sent to Arthur Krock: Memo by Arthur Krock, 3/11/55

    Re Personal hostility between Felix Frankfurter and Arthur Krock; Also a letter from Mrs. Stanley F. Reed transmitting the note by Justice Frankfurter

    Box 1, Page 282-284
  118. Stassen, Harold E. - Letter and memo from Arthur Krock, 4/12/55

    Re Suggestions from Arthur Krock for eliciting widest public interest in Mr. Stassen's assignment by the President of “ways to a durable peace”

    Box 1, Page 285-288
  119. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Dinner at the White House: Memo by Arthur Krock, 5/17/55

    Re Formosa, Chiang Kai-shek, Quemoy and Matsu; Outlook for a Summit Meeting; Opposition to the Bricker Amendment; Foreign aid; “Leaks” and Arthur Krock's account of the 1947 dinner at the F Street Club [previously mentioned on pages 176-180] after which there was a “leak” of a distorted version of General Eisenhower's views on inflation, denied at the time by Arthur Krock

    Box 1, Page 289-294
  120. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Remarks at a 1955 Gridiron Club Dinner: Memo by Arthur Krock of Edward T. Folliard's account of the dinner, 7/12/55 [a second account of the Gridiron Club Dinner, previously referred to on page 262H]

    Re Remarks by President Eisenhower that former President Truman had invited him to run for President and yet accused him of “misrepresenting things”; Also a note by Arthur Krock that this is a confirmation of “my Truman-Eisenhower story of November, 1951”

    Box 1, Page 295
  121. Nixon Richard M. - Telephone Call: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/21/55

    Re President Eisenhower's illness and Vice President Nixon's intention to “minimize whatever my role is to be during the President's inactivity”

    Box 1, Page 296
  122. Royall Kenneth C. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/21/55 [excerpts from a previous memo on pages 262E-F]

    Re Mr. Royall's account of President Truman's efforts to make General Eisenhower President on the Democratic ticket

    Box 1, Page 297-298
  123. Meany, George - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/5/56

    Re Violence during strikes; Newspaper shutdowns; Right to strike of civil employees, etc.

    Box 1, Page 299-300
  124. Stevenson, Adlai E. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/21/56

    Re Presidential campaign strategy; Hydrogen bomb tests; Suez, etc.

    Box 1, Page 301-304
  125. Truman, Harry S. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 10/20/56

    Re Adlai E. Stevenson's campaign for President and former President Truman's opinion that Governor Stevenson's statements on the hydrogen bomb and the draft were “mistakes” about which he was not consulted; Comments about Estes Kefauver and Richard M. Nixon, etc.

    Box 1, Page 305
  126. Eisenhower, Dwight D. and John Foster Dulles - Conversations: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/15/56

    Re Suggestions from President Eisenhower and Secretary Dulles for a lecture on NATO to be given by Arthur Krock, including observations concerning the “unreasonable expectations of what the United States should provide” and the effect on NATO of the British-French-Israeli attack on Egypt; Also additional comments by President Eisenhower regarding Gamal Abdel Nasser

    Box 1, Page 306
  127. Nixon, Richard M. - Interview: Memo by Arthur Krock, 12/11/56

    Re Vice President Nixon's speech on foreign policy in the Middle East; Christian Herter's appointment as Under Secretary of State; Operations Coordinating Board, etc.

    Box 1, Page 307
  128. Reed, Stanley F. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/28/57

    Re Justice Reed's resignation from the Supreme Court, including his statement that he had supported President Roosevelt's plan to enlarge (“pack”) the Supreme Court “by retirement of its members who had reached the age of 70 or, if they did not retire, of adding a new Justice”

    Box 1, Page 307A
  129. Adams, Sherman - Conversation: Memo by James B. Reston

    Re 5/23-24/57, President Eisenhower's illness and its effect during the past year on the conduct of the executive branch of the government; President Eisenhower's role in the selection of a Republican candidate for President in 1960; Mr. Adams' recommendations for a change in the organization of the White House staff, etc.

    Box 1, Page 308
  130. Nixon, Richard M. - Comments: Memo by Wallace Carroll, 10/22/57

    Re An analysis of the reasons for a loss in public support of the Administration since the 1956 election because of the budget, farm policy, modern Republicanism, etc.; Little Rock disturbances and the effect on the Republican Party; Sputnik; Middle East; Mutual aid; Indonesia; Also comments by Mr. Carroll about a “new Nixon”

    Box 1, Page 308A
  131. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Impressions by a Cabinet Member, not named: Memo by Arthur Krock, 12/3/57

    Re The President's health after his latest illness

    Box 1, Page 309
  132. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Comments by William Pierce Rogers, Attorney General: Memo by Arthur Krock's, 2/18/58

    Re Provision for the Vice President to take over the “duties and powers” but not the “office” of the President if or when the President is in a state of inability

    Box 1, Page 310
  133. Adams, Sherman - Meeting with Christian Herter and Eric Johnston: Memo by Arthur Krock, 6/20/58

    Re An incident revealing Sherman Adams' practice of making enemies

    Box 1, Page 311
  134. Rogers, William Pierce - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 1/20/59

    Re Integration in Virginia

    Box 1, Page 312
  135. McElroy, Neil - Conversation: Memo by Wallace Carroll, 1/28/59

    Re Missiles including some comments about the capabilities of the United States and the Soviet Union

    Box 1, Page 313-318
  136. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Conversation: Memo not signed, 7/27/59

    Re President Eisenhower's plans for 1961; “Why He Ran”; His most cherished objective; Nikita Khrushchev; Proposed Geneva Conference; Christian Herter; Charles de Gaulle; Captive Nations Resolution; 1960 Presidential election; Attitude on the Presidency; Inflation and interest rates; Work habits and health; Labor, etc.

    Box 1, Page 318A
  137. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Conversation at the White House: Memo by Arthur Krock, 7/28/59, [a second account of the conversation recorded on page 318A]

    Re President Eisenhower's comments concerning the Presidency, Fiscal affairs, Nikita Khrushchev; Charles de Gaulle, Christian Herter; Also “ground rules” for reporting the occasion; President Eisenhower's political philosophy; Qualities for public service; Cuba, etc.

    Box 1, Page 319-330
  138. Khrushchev, Nikita - Visit to the United States: Memo by Arthur Krock, 10/7/59

    Re Nikita Khrushchev's comment about the availability of telephones in Russia which is cited by Arthur Krock as an example of his “sensitiveness” to any suggestion of Soviet inferiority; Speculation about the reasons for the postponement of the announcement on Berlin until after Nikita Khrushchev returned to Moscow; Remarks by President Eisenhower and Nikita Khrushchev about obtaining courteous treatment of foreign visitors, etc.

    Box 1, Page 331
  139. Eisenhower Dwight D. - Conversation: Memo not signed or dated.

    "Plans for the coming visit of Nikita Khrushchev including security provisions; Possible Summit Meeting; Russia's fear of a united Germany; President Eisenhower's view that war is not imminent; Prospective Presidential nominees; National goals; Comments about Charles Bohlen, Lewis Strauss, etc.

    Box 1, Page 331A
  140. Gray, Gordon - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 12/7/59

    Re Possible proposals by President Eisenhower for changes in the organization of the Executive Branch including a “First Secretary of the Executive Department” to be placed over the Cabinet and the Secretary of State; Comments about Thomas S. Gates, Neil McElroy, and President Eisenhower's unfulfilled wish to appoint Gordon Gray as Secretary of Defense

    Box 1, Page 332
  141. Vagnozzi, Archbishop Egidio - Conversation: Memo from Paul Hofmann, 3/9/60

    Re Presidential candidates John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon and the attitude in the Vatican that a Roman Catholic in the White House might do more harm than good to the Church; Future diplomatic relations between the United States and the Vatican; John Foster Dulles; Nikita Khrushchev, etc.

    Box 1, Page 333
  142. Nuclear Weapons Testing - Meetings prior to the conference between President Eisenhower and Harold Macmillan at Camp David: Memo by Arthur Krock, 4/4/60

    Re Preparations for an Anglo-American response to a Soviet proposal to terminate tests; Report of a dispute between the President and the State Department on one side against the Atomic Energy Commission and the Pentagon on the other side over the system of inspection and other matters

    Box 1, Page 334
  143. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 4/7/60

    Re Richard M. Nixon; Nelson Rockefeller; Henry Cabot Lodge; Thomas E. Dewey; John F. Kennedy; Lyndon B. Johnson; Adlai E. Stevenson; Nuclear weapons testing and the Camp David communique with Harold Macmillan; Summit conference and Berlin; Supreme Court decision on racial desegregation and Justices Black, Brennan, Frankfurter, Harlan, Stewart, Warren, and Whittaker; Political philosophy; James B. Reston; Senators Bush, Byrd, Holland and Stennis, etc.

    Box 1, Page 335
  144. Book III, May 3, 1960 - July 8, 1965

  145. Nixon, Richard M. and Lyndon B. Johnson - Conversations: Memo by Arthur Krock, 5/3/60

    Re Richard M. Nixon's campaign positions that he stated would not be popular with “influential groups” concerning civil rights, federal spending, minimum wage, etc., his comments on the postponement of an endorsement by Nelson Rockefeller, his denial that his internationalism is new or political, a campaign stand, in disagreement with President Eisenhower, that “the President alone can exercise … moral leadership against racial discrimination, and should do so”; Lyndon B. Johnson's comments about J.W. Fulbright, Hubert H. Humphrey, John F. Kennedy, and Stuart Symington.

    Box 1, Page 336
  146. Kennedy, John F. and Lyndon B. Johnson - Conversations: Memo by Arthur Krock, 5/26/60

    Re Senator Kennedy's comments concerning the Summit conference and about Adlai E. Stevenson; Lyndon B. Johnson's remarks about sniping directed at him in the “Kennedy camp,” etc.

    Box 1, Page 337
  147. Eisenhower, Dwight D. and the U-2 Incident - Questions for the Study of the U-2 Episode by the Committee on Foreign Relations, 5/26/60

    e.g. What were the “special reasons” for extending the flights after they were marked for suspension about May 30; Did none of the experts in the State Department and the CIA advise the executive high command to wait and see what more Premier Khrushchev knew about the U-2 flight before the “untruthful NASA and Herter statements?” etc.

    Box 1, Page 338
  148. Eisenhower Dwight D. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 7/7/60

    Re Cuba, Japan, and foreign affairs in general; Veto of the federal pay increase bill; Comments about Lyndon B. Johnson, John F. Kennedy, Richard M. Nixon, Nelson Rockefeller, etc.

    Box 1, Page 339
  149. Johnson, Lyndon B. and his nomination as Vice President -Report: Memo by Arthur Krock, 9/22/60

    Re Stuart Symington as first choice for Vice President; A later decision by Thomas U. Corcoran and Edward H. Foley that John F. Kennedy would be defeated unless Lyndon B. Johnson was his running mate; Several attempts by Hale Boggs, Thomas G. Corcoran, and Edward H. Foley to obtain Sam Rayburn's approval of the nomination of Lyndon B. Johnson as Vice President; Senator Johnson's final eagerness to accept the nomination. [Please see also pages 346A, 347, and 347B.]

    Box 1, Page 340
  150. Kennedy, John F. - Death: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/22/63

    Missing

    Box 1, Page 340A
  151. McNamara, Robert C. - Conference: Memo by Jack Raymond, 2/6/61

    Re Military strategy reappraisal; A predicted missile gap which has not materialized, etc.

    Box 1, Page 341
  152. Kennedy, John F. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 5/5/61

    Re Nuclear Testing Treaty; Nikita Khrushchev; Military aid for Vietnam “in all forms considered necessary by us, in consultation with the South Vietnamese Government”; Cuba and President Kennedy's lack of confidence in the Joint Chiefs of Staff; James R. Killian and the CIA Advisory Committee, etc.

    Box 1, Page 342
  153. Kennedy, John F. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 10/11/61

    Re Possible compromise on Berlin and regret that David Bruce was not the West German ambassador; A statement by Arthur Krock that he witnessed the writing of Profiles in Courage by John F. Kennedy at Palm Beach to counter the charge of ghost-writing; President Kennedy's role in the recent Rules Committee fight and his relations with Congress; Comments on Representatives Albert, Boggs, McCormack, and Raines; Eugene Black, Douglas Dillon, and John A. McCone; Vietnam and (1) President Kennedy's view “that United States troops should not be involved on the Asian mainland” or in civil disturbances created by guerrillas and (2) his doubts that the “falling domino” theory had much point because the “Chinese Communists are bound to get nuclear weapons in time and from that moment on they will dominate South East Asia.”

    Box 1, Page 343
  154. Kennedy, John F. - Telephone Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/8/61

    Re President Kennedy's talks with Prime Minister Nehru and Indira Gandhi concerning Krishna Menon; President Kennedy's concern over whether “India can be kept non-Communist”; Comments on Henry Cabot Lodge and Adlai E. Stevenson

    Box 1, Page 344
  155. Cuban Blockade - Chronology: Memo by Arthur Krock, 11/30/62

    Re Intra-Administration meetings and discussions beginning August 10, with a memo by John A. McCone expressing the “belief that installations of offensive M.R.B.M. weapons, at least, were designed for Cuba by the U.S.S.R.” and ending October 14-19, with a report of pictures taken by low-flying pilots over Cuba, confirming John A. McCone's “warnings.”

    Box 1, Page 345
  156. Kennedy, John F. - Observations about Richard M. Nixon: Memo by Arthur Krock, 12/31/62

    Re President Kennedy's views that Richard M. Nixon should not have run for Governor of California, did so because he saw Nelson Rockefeller as a candidate in 1964, and would have been “up in front” if he had not run, just as Adlai E. Stevenson would have been nominated in 1956 if he had not run in the primaries.

    Box 1, Page 345A
  157. McCone, John A. and Robert Kennedy - Comments on November 22, 1963: Memo, 12/18/63

    Missing

    Box 1, Page 346
  158. Foley, Edward H. - Letter from Arthur Krock, 12/10/63

    Re Arthur Krock's decision “in view of the installment in the Post of President Johnson's biography by Booth Mooney,” that “any publication at this time of the Foley-Boggs mission to Speaker Rayburn is outmoded and would be misunderstood”; Arthur Krock's expression of confidence that Edward H. Foley and Hale Boggs helped to persuade Sam Rayburn to give his consent to the nomination of Senator Johnson as Vice President. [Please see also pages 34, 347, and 347B.]

    Box 1, Page 346A
  159. Johnson, Lyndon B. - Nomination Is Vice President: Memo by Arthur Krock, 2/4/64

    Re A statement by Arthur Krock that he had interviewed the principals in the negotiations for the nomination, including Lyndon B. Johnson, his immediate convention staff, Hale Boggs, Thomas W. Corcoran, Edward H. Foley., D.B. Hardeman, and John McCormack. [Please see also pages 340, 346A. and 347B.]

    Box 1, Page 347
  160. Krock Arthur - Article in The New York Times entitled “Rayburn's Fear of Nixon Victory Influenced Johnson to Run in '60.”, 8/30/65

    Re Arthur Krock's 1964 account of the details of the meetings to gain the approval of Speaker Rayburn for the nomination of Senator Johnson, involving Hale Boggs, Thomas W. Corcoran, and Edward H. Foley, previously held in confidence, now released “in consideration of President Johnson's open discussion of the matter”; Also Hale Boggs' recollection of an incident during the 1956 Democratic Convention in which he had been authorized by Lyndon B. Johnson and Sam Rayburn to inform Adlai E. Stevenson that either of them were available for the Vice Presidential nomination. Note: Page 347A was omitted in the original memoranda and 347B followed 347. [Please see also pages 340, 346A. and 347.]

    Box 1, Page 347B
  161. Eisenhower, Dwight D. - Telephone Conversation concerning Governor William Scranton: Memo, 6/16/55

    Missing

    Box 1, Page 348
  162. Johnson, Lyndon B. - Conversation: Memo by Turner Catledge, 12/15/64

    Re Vietnam and President Johnson's statement that we have no intention at this time of withdrawing and that we want other countries to participate openly, especially West Germany and India; Multilateral Force in NATO viewed by President Johnson as a measure to deter West Germany from seeking nuclear weapons; A possible visit to see Charles de Gaulle; Closing of domestic military bases; Legislative program to be centered on health, education, and poverty relief; Future Cabinet changes; Comments about Douglas Dillon, Nicholas Katzenbach, Robert C. McNamara, Dean Rusk, Edward Weisel, etc.

    Box 1, Page 349
  163. Fulbright, J.W. - Conversation: Memo by Arthur Krock, 2/11/65

    Re Southeast Asia and a possible confrontation with Communist China; A reassembled Geneva Conference; President Johnson's habit of reaching executive decisions without listening “much” to Congressional leaders; Senator Fulbright's intention to speak out if Vietnam is to become “another Korea” and his view that the military increase in Vietnam by President Kennedy was a “regrettable decision”; Report of an incident in which President Johnson commented, “In a choice between Humphrey and General Taylor as our major strategist [in Vietnam] I am disposed toward Taylor in the matter”; Denial of a “rift” with President Johnson over the Foreign Aid Bill.

    Box 1, Page 349A
  164. Johnson, Lyndon B. - Conversations: Memos by Charles Mohr, 4/29/65 and 5/5/65

    Re An assertion by President Johnson that the move to land troops in the Dominican Republic was a decision to save American lives but not to put down a Communist threat; Juan Bosch and the military situation in Santo Domingo; President Johnson's intention to send more troops to Vietnam in order to free Vietnamese troops for combat and his recurrent optimism on the Vietnam war; Mrs. Johnson's calming influence on the President and his attitude on being compared to John F. Kennedy in style; President Johnson's praise for Dwight D. Eisenhower as “one of the sharpest men in any conference”; His adverse criticism of the “Kennedy staff”; Comments on J.W. Fulbright; Joseph P. Kennedy, Mike Mansfield, etc.

    Box 1, Page 350
  165. Moyers, Bill - “Backgrounder Luncheon”: Memo not signed, 5/l0/65

    Re Civil rights, including possible Klan legislation, a plan for a “sub rosa freedom march to serve as an energy outlet” in Washington, D.C., and the Equal Employment Commission; President Johnson's management of the economy, including the budget, labor legislation, and excise taxes; Dominican crisis, including comments on President Johnson's decision to send troops, his statement about the “communist danger,” the role of Ambassador John Bartlow Martin, etc.

    Box 1, Page 351
  166. McNamara, Robert C. - Background Session: Memo not signed, 4/22/65

    Re Vietnam war: Viet Cong is armed by outside assistance in an increasing degree; Next steps are to increase the American commitment; We are not following a strategy that recognizes any sanctuary or any weapons restriction … But we would use nuclear weapons only after fully “applying non-nuclear arsenal”; Alternative to war is a “Red Asia”; Withdrawal would damage the domestic economy in the United States and result in a “disastrous political fight”; A victory would open the way to combine “birth control” with “economic expansion techniques in a gigantic arc … to Iran and the Middle East”; In a settlement, the United States must “insist on a Non-Communist … SVN … and international guarantees,” etc.

    Box 1, Page 352
  167. Humphrey, Hubert H. - “Impressions from trip with Humphrey”: Memo by Tom Wicker, 6/9-l0/65

    Re Vice President Humphrey's speeches on Vietnam policy that “out-Johnsoned Johnson” but do not reflect his own belief that “matters are not so simple”; Difficulties, shared by J.W. Fulbright, in getting his views on Vietnam across to the President; Vice President Humphrey's general relations with the President, his confidence in Bill Moyers, and his reservations about Robert C. McNamara and McGeorge Bundy as not being temperamentally equipped to handle the problems of Vietnam, etc.

    Box 1, Page 353
  168. Rusk, Dean - Conference: Memo by Charles Mohr, 6/10/65

    Re Denial that “certain officials in the Pentagon wanted to provoke China into a war so that it would be possible to knock out the nuclear capability of the Chinese regime”; Assertions that it was “naive” to doubt that American troops would not go into combat action in Vietnam, that the principal change in American strategy was the decision to bomb the North, that there was little political pressure to get out of Vietnam or “turn this into a big war,” that “the Russians had no influence with Hanoi or Peking to cool down the situation,” etc.

    Box 1, Page 354
  169. Johnson, Lyndon B. - Conversation: Memo by John Pomfret, 6/24/65

    Re Domestic program for higher education centers and high speed transport; President Johnson's determination not to pull out of Vietnam as well as his awareness of the danger of getting into a war with China; Lack of support for his Vietnam policy by The New York Times; His assertion that he is a “consulting president”; His praise for George E. Reedy; Also John Pomfret's overall impression of “a man deeply worried about Vietnam” who “sees no way out,” etc.

    Box 1, Page 355
  170. Moynihan, Patrick J. - Conversation: Memo by Max Frankel, 6/26/65

    Re His chances of receiving support to run for Mayor of New York

    Box 1, Page 356
  171. Bundy, McGeorge - Conversation: Memo by Tom Wicker, 5/28/65

    Re Dominican Republic: Denial of a “Szulc story, source Jaime Benitez,” that the “U.S. government was divided” and “could not reach agreement on Dominican government”; A mission to the islands in which McGeorge Bundy participated and observed the difficulties in attaining agreement among the “Guzman-Bosch-Caamano” and “Imbert forces,” etc.

    Box 1, Page 357
  172. Johnson, Lyndon B. - Conversation: Memo by Max Frankel, 7/8/65

    Re Dean Rusk: his devotion, kindness, lack of aggressiveness, ability to weigh all sides, attention to details, and his relations with Robert F. Kennedy, Robert C. McNamara, and the entire Johnson family; Also President Johnson's comments about Dean Acheson, Hugo Black, Arthur Dean, Walter F. George, Robert A. Lovett, Bill Moyers, George E. Reedy, Theodore Sorensen, Jack Valenti, Marvin Watson, etc.

    Box 1, Page 358
  173. Subseries 1B: Publications, 1909-1973

    (4.2 linear feet in 10 boxes)

    Subseries Description

    The Publications subseries includes articles and books written by Krock. The articles are predominantly for The New York Times and The New York Times Magazine and cover a wide range of political topics, including presidential policies, the economy, court systems, political conventions, the New Deal programs, and World War II. The books include drafts and typescripts of Consent of the Governed (1971), In the Nation: 1932-1966 (1966), Memoirs (1968), and Myself When Young Growing Up in the 1890s (1973). Also included are Krock's notes and four reel to reel tapes of interviews he compiled for use in writings his memoirs.

    Arrangement

    Divided into two sections: Articles and Books.

  174. Articles

  175. 1909-1949

    Box 2
  176. 1950-1963

    Box 3
  177. 1964-1973

    Box 4
  178. Books

  179. The Consent of the Governed. Little, Brown, and Company, 1971

    A corrected typescript

    Box 5
  180. In the Nation: 1932-1966. McGraw-Hill, 1966

    A draft

    Box 5
  181. Memoirs. Funk and Wagnalls, 1968

    Box 5
  182. Background material and notes

    Box 6
  183. A draft

    Box 7
  184. A corrected typescript, Part 1

    Box 8
  185. A corrected typescript, Part 2

    Box 9
  186. A corrected typescript, Part 3

    Box 10
  187. A galley proof

    Box 10
  188. Myself When Young Growing Up in the 1890s. Little, Brown, and Company, 1973

    A corrected typescript

    Box 11
  189. Foreign editions of various books

    Box 11
  190. Duplicates of various publications

    Box 11
  191. Subseries 1C: Speeches, 1922-1973

    (1.5 linear feet in 4 boxes)

    Subseries Description

    The Speeches subseries contains published or typed copies of texts for speeches Krock delivered at universities and university clubs, as radio or television broadcasts, and at political and business organizations. The subject of his speeches included journalism, free speech, his career, and his political opinions.

    Arrangement

    Arranged chronologically.

  192. 1922-1947

    Box 12
  193. 1948-1956

    Box 13
  194. 1957-1964

    Box 14
  195. 1965-1973

    Box 15
  196. Series 2: Correspondence, 1916-1974

    (29.2 linear feet in 70 boxes)

    Series Description

    The Correspondence series is composed of letters between Krock and legislators, government officials, lawyers and businessmen, academics, journalists, and readers of his articles. Please see the subseries descriptions in the contents list for additional information about individual subseries.

    Arrangement

    Divided into two subseries: Selected and General.

  197. Subseries 2A: Selected, 1916-1974

    (19.2 linear feet in 46 boxes)

    Subseries Description

    The Selected series contains correspondence between Krock and government officials, legislators, businessmen, journalists, readers of his work, and friends and acquaintances. Subjects of the letters include ideas for articles Krock could write and discussions of politics, as well as seeking advice on writing or publishing, discussing the state of the journalism profession, responses from individuals he had written about, invitations for Krock to attend events or accept positions, and arranging meetings. Other correspondence is related to Krock's publications and his membership on the Pulitzer Prize Advisory Board.

    Arrangement

    Arranged alphabetically by correspondent or subject.

  198. Abel, Elie, 1951-1959

    Box 16
  199. Acheson, Dean, 1935-1950

    Box 16
  200. Acheson, Mrs. Dean, 1950, 1971

    Box 16
  201. Ackerman, Carl W., 1941-1953

    Box 16
  202. Adams, Sherman, 1957, 1967

    Box 16
  203. Ade, George, 1917

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 16
  204. Adler, Julius Ochs, 1935-1955

    Box 16
  205. Adler, Julius Ochs, Jr., 1964-1965

    Box 16
  206. Adler, Ruth, 1949-1967

    Box 16
  207. Albert, Carl, 1962

    Box 16
  208. Aldrich, Winthrop W., 1968

    Box 16
  209. Alexander, Archibald S., 1964-1971

    Box 16
  210. Algase, Gertrude, 1939-1948

    Box 16
  211. Alger, Mrs. Frederick M., 1957-1963

    Box 16
  212. Allen, George V., 1959, 1961

    Box 16
  213. Allison, Young E., 1919, 1923

    Box 16
  214. Alsop, Joseph, 1941-1967

    Box 16
  215. Alsop, Stewart, 1948-1970

    Box 16
  216. American Civil Liberties Union, 1957-1962

    Box 16
  217. American Political Science Association, 1958-1962

    Box 16
  218. American Society of Newspaper Editors, 1928-1929, 1945-1973

    Box 16
  219. Americans for Democratic Action, 1957, 1959

    Box 16
  220. Anda, Van, 1944

    Box 16
  221. Anderson, Maxwell, 1950

    Box 16
  222. Anderson, Robert B., 1958-1965

    Box 16
  223. Anderson, W.S., 1950-1956

    Box 16
  224. Andree, Herbert, 1957-1963

    Box 16
  225. Re Angola, 1961

    Box 16
  226. Annals, The, 1941

    Box 16
  227. Re Anti-Trust Laws, 1949

    Box 16
  228. Armour, Norman, 1954, 1959

    Box 16
  229. Armstrong, Hamilton Fish, 1957

    Box 16
  230. Ashby, Flora, 1942-1948

    Box 16
  231. Atkinson, Brooks, 1956-1964

    Box 16
  232. Auchincloss, Hugh D., 1949, 1963

    Box 16
  233. Austin, Warren R., 1941-1946

    Box 16
  234. Australian Embassy, 1955-1963

    Box 16
  235. Re Awards, 1969-1971

    Box 16
  236. Bacon, E.A., 1942-1968

    Box 17
  237. Bailey, Josiah W., 1938, 1943

    Box 17
  238. Baker, Newton D., 1917-1931

    Box 17
  239. Baker, Ray Stannard, 1927

    Box 17
  240. Baker, Russell, 1970

    Box 17
  241. Baldridge, H.M., 1952-1963

    Box 17
  242. Baldwin, Hanson W., 1948-1973

    Box 17
  243. Ball, George W., 1960-1962

    Box 17
  244. Ball, W.W., 1951-1952

    Box 17
  245. Barkley, Alben W., 1928-1929, 1944-1950

    Box 17
  246. Barrett, Edward W., 1950-1968

    Box 17
  247. Bartlett, Charles L., 1950-1970

    Box 17
  248. Barton, Bruce, 1936

    Box 17
  249. Baruch, Bernard M., 1920-1965

    Box 17
  250. Bayh, Birch, 1965

    Box 18
  251. Bayley, Malcolm, 1944-1974

    Box 18
  252. Beaverbrook, Lord, 1942

    Box 18
  253. Belain, Felix J., 1945-1956

    Box 18
  254. Belgian Embassy, 1958-1966

    Box 18
  255. Benson, Ezra T., 1953

    Box 18
  256. Bentley, Wilmer Douglas, 1966-1974

    Box 18
  257. Benton, William, 1949-1970

    Box 18
  258. Berger, Elmer, 1953-1961

    Box 18
  259. Berle, A.A., 1953

    Box 18
  260. Bernstein, Theodore M., 1956-1967

    Box 18
  261. Berry, Lady Pamela, 1956-1964

    Box 18
  262. Biddle, Anthony J. Drexel, 1943-1961

    Box 18
  263. Biddle, Francis, 1966

    Box 18
  264. Bingha, Barry, 1958-1966

    Box 18
  265. Bingham, Robert W., 1918-1933

    Box 18
  266. Birchall, F.T., 1928-1931

    Box 18
  267. Bishop, Jim, 1973

    Box 18
  268. Re Black, Hugo, 1947

    Box 18
  269. Blair, William McCormick, Jr., 1956, 1959

    Box 18
  270. Blair, William Mitchell, 1949-1953

    Box 18
  271. Blythe, Samuel G., 1927

    Box 18
  272. Re Bolitho, Camilla, 1940

    Box 18
  273. Bolitho, William, 1931

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 18
  274. Bonsal, Stephen, 1943-1963

    Box 18
  275. Boorstin, Daniel J., 1953

    Box 18
  276. Borah, William E., 1932

    Box 18
  277. Bouvier, Jacqueline, 1952

    Please see also Kennedy, Mrs. John F., 1960, 1965

    Box 18
  278. Bowen, William G., 1973

    Box 18
  279. Bowers, Claude G., 1928-1958

    Box 18
  280. Bowes-Lyon, D., 1942

    Box 18
  281. Bowles, Chester, 1954-1962

    Box 18
  282. Boy Scouts of America, 1941

    Box 18
  283. Boyd, Julian, 1953, 1959

    Box 18
  284. Boyden, Preston, 1949

    Box 18
  285. Boyer, Philip, 1949-1952

    Box 18
  286. Bracken, Brenden, 1943-1958

    Box 18
  287. Bradford, Amory H., 1949-1963

    Box 18
  288. Brandeis, Louis D., 1924, 1953

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 18
  289. Breckinridge, Desha, 1923-1931

    Box 18
  290. Brennan, William J., Jr., 1966

    Box 18
  291. Bricker, John W., 1955-1964

    Box 18
  292. Bridges, Styles, 1959

    Box 18
  293. Brinkley, David, 1954-1965

    Box 18
  294. British Embassy, 1950-1956

    Box 18
  295. Broadman, Joseph, 1948, 1964

    Box 19
  296. Bromfield, Louis, 1954

    Box 19
  297. Brookings Institution, 1955-1956

    Box 19
  298. Brown, Francis, 1951-1967

    Box 19
  299. Brown, Jack E., 1956

    Box 19
  300. Brown, John Mason, 1952-1962

    Box 19
  301. Brown, J. Douglas, 1960-1961

    Box 19
  302. Brownell, Herbert, 1953-1960, 1970

    Box 19
  303. Brownell, Mrs. Herbert, 1954-1959, 1971

    Box 19
  304. Bruce, David, 1949-1966

    Box 19
  305. Bruce, James, 1949-1964

    Box 19
  306. Re Brussels Fair, 1958

    Box 19
  307. Bryan, Joseph III, 1952-1968

    Box 19
  308. Buchwald, Art, 1957-1966

    Box 19
  309. Buckingham, Roy Boy (Syndicate), 1962-1966

    Box 19
  310. Buckley, William F., 1956-1974

    Box 19
  311. Bullitt, A. Scott, 1926-1932

    Box 19
  312. Bundy, McGeorge, 1961-1965

    Box 19
  313. Bunker, Ellsworth, 1957-1959

    Box 19
  314. Burden, William A.M., 1950-1969

    Box 19
  315. Burden, W. Douglas, 1964-1973

    Box 19
  316. Burger, Warren E., 1955, 1968

    Box 19
  317. Burgess, W. Randolph, 1966

    Box 19
  318. Burke, Arleigh, 1966, 1968

    Box 19
  319. Burke's Peerage, 1953

    Box 19
  320. Burns, Arthur F., 1969

    Box 19
  321. Burritt, Richard D., 1951-1959

    Box 19
  322. Bush, Prescott, 1950-1972

    Box 19
  323. Bush, Vannevar, 1941-1952

    Box 19
  324. Butler, Edward Gay, 1947

    Box 19
  325. Butler, Lee D., 1951-1954

    Box 19
  326. Butler, Paul M., 1959

    Box 19
  327. Byrd, Harry F. Sr., 1940-1966

    Box 19
  328. Byrd, Harry F., Jr., 1955-1972

    Box 19
  329. Byrd, Richard E., 1953-1954

    Box 19
  330. Byrd, Richard E., Jr., 1960-1971

    Box 19
  331. Byrd, Robert C., 1955, 1960

    Box 19
  332. Byrnes, James F., 1943-1963

    Box 19
  333. Re Cabinet Meeting, September 21, 1945, 1945, 1951

    Box 20
  334. Cain, James M., 1947-1972

    Box 20
  335. Cairns, Huntington, 1952-1962, 1973

    Box 20
  336. Caldwell, Taylor, 1961

    Box 20
  337. Campbell, Tom, 1963-1965

    Box 20
  338. Canfield, Cass, 1955-1970

    Box 20
  339. Canfield, Cass, Jr., 1957-1961

    Box 20
  340. Cantrill, J.C., 1916-1922

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 20
  341. Carpenter, Liz, 1968

    Box 20
  342. Castleman, John B., 1916-1918

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 20
  343. Cathles, Henry M., 1962-1966

    Box 20
  344. Catholic Historical Association, American, 1958

    Box 20
  345. Re Catholic Vote, 1956

    Box 20
  346. Catledge, Turner, 1931, 1943-1973

    Box 20
  347. Celler, Emanuel, 1957

    Box 20
  348. Re Censorship, 1941-1942

    Box 20
  349. Center for Strategic Studies, 1966-1972

    Box 20
  350. Centre College, Danville, Kentucky, 1955-1959

    Box 20
  351. Chadbourne, William M., 1929, 1941-1955

    Box 21
  352. Chamberlain, John, 1943-1964

    Box 21
  353. Re Chambers, Whittaker, 1948

    Box 21
  354. Chancellor, John, 1973

    Box 21
  355. Chandler, Albert B., 1959

    Box 21
  356. Chase, Stuart, 1960

    Box 21
  357. Childs, Marquis W., 1954-1969

    Box 21
  358. Re China - Senate Hearings, 1951

    Box 21
  359. Choate, Robert B., 1951-1962

    Box 21
  360. Chodes, Ralph, 1962

    Box 21
  361. Church, Frank, 1963, 1965

    Box 21
  362. Churchill, Randolph S., 1963-1970

    Box 21
  363. Re Churchill, Winston, 1941-1943, 1951

    Box 21
  364. Cincinnati, University of, 1951

    Box 21
  365. Clark, Charles Upson, 1951-1960

    Box 21
  366. Clark, Joseph S., 1957-1966

    Box 21
  367. Clark, Ramsey, 1968

    Box 21
  368. Clark, Tom, 1945-1958

    Box 21
  369. Clark, William, 1951-1957

    Box 21
  370. Clay, Lucius, 1966

    Box 21
  371. Clayton, Will L., 1944-1967

    Box 21
  372. Cleveland, Harlan, 1962-1969

    Box 21
  373. Clifford, Clark, 1948-1973

    Box 21
  374. Clifton, C.A., 1961

    Box 21
  375. Cloke, H. Walton, 1950-1964

    Box 21
  376. Clothier, Robert C., 1956-1968

    Box 21
  377. Clynes, Edmund, 1956-1962

    Box 21
  378. Cobb, Frank I., 1922, 1927

    Box 21
  379. Cockrell, Ewing, 1955-1961

    Box 21
  380. Coghlan, Ralph, 1938, 1949-1966

    Box 21
  381. Cole, Leon, 1961-1962

    Box 21
  382. Collins, J. Lawton, 1948-1957

    Box 21
  383. Colombian Embassy, 1961

    Box 21
  384. Columbia University - Miscellaneous, 1931, 1933, 1952-1968

    Box 21
  385. Columbia University - Oral History, 1950-1967

    Box 21
  386. Columbia University - School of Journalism, Advisory Board, 1942-1951

    Box 21
  387. Re Congo, 1961-1965

    Box 22
  388. Re Congressional Investigations, 1951

    Box 22
  389. Connally, John, 1972

    Box 22
  390. Connally, Thomas, 1943-1944

    Box 22
  391. Connelly, Marc, 1930

    Box 22
  392. Re Conventions, National, 1932-1964

    Box 22
  393. Coolidge, Calvin, 1923

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 22
  394. Coolidge, Mrs. Harold, 1962

    Box 22
  395. Coolidge, T. Jefferson, 1948-1960

    Box 22
  396. Cooper, John Sherman, 1951-1973

    Box 22
  397. Re Corcoran, Thomas G., 1960

    Box 22
  398. Corneille, Mrs. Walter S., 1954-1967

    Box 22
  399. Cornstarch (Publication), 1939-1944

    Box 22
  400. Corwin, Edward S., 1948-1957

    Box 22
  401. Coudert, Frederic R., 1929, 1949-1956

    Box 22
  402. Cousins, Norman, 1951, 1957

    Box 22
  403. Cowdin, J. Cheever, 1924-1932

    Box 22
  404. Cowdin, Mrs. Katherine, 1950-1958

    Box 22
  405. Cowles, Gardner, 1950-1960

    Box 22
  406. Cowles, John, 1950-1971

    Box 22
  407. Cox, James M., 1920-1932, 1942-1956

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 23
  408. Cox, Oscar, 1944-1963

    Box 23
  409. Craig, May, 1962-1963

    Box 23
  410. Creel, George, 1922, 1926

    Box 23
  411. Crider, John, 1940-1965

    Box 23
  412. Cronkite, Walter, 1961-1969

    Box 23
  413. Crowe, Philip Kingsland, 1958-1970

    Box 23
  414. Re Cuba, 1960-1962

    Box 23
  415. Re Cumberland Falls Dam, Kentucky, 1928

    Box 23
  416. Cunningham, John R., 1951-1965

    Box 23
  417. Currie, Francis, 1948-1966

    Box 23
  418. Curtis, Laurence, 1959-1966

    Box 23
  419. Dabney, Virginius, 1956-1969

    Box 23
  420. Dana, Anderson, 1944, 1957-1960

    Box 23
  421. Daniel, Clifton, 1956-1973

    Box 23
  422. Daniels, Harold K., 1956-1962

    Box 23
  423. Daniels, Jonathan, 1949-1955, 1966-1968

    Box 23
  424. Daugherty, Harry M., 1923-1924

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 23
  425. Davies, Joseph E., 1942-1958

    Box 23
  426. Davis, Elmer, 1929, 1941-1955

    Box 23
  427. Davis, John W., 1926-1952

    Box 23
  428. Davis, Shelby Cullom, 1971

    Box 23
  429. Dean, Arthur H., 1951-1966

    Box 24
  430. Re Democratic National Committee Convention Manual, 1931

    Box 24
  431. Derby, Lord, 1929-1930

    Box 24
  432. Desmond, John, 1956-1966

    Box 24
  433. Dewey, Charles, 1946-1970

    Box 24
  434. Dewey, Thomas E., 1947-1952

    Box 24
  435. Dick, Edison, 1960

    Box 24
  436. Dickinson, Frank G., 1959-1964

    Box 24
  437. Dillon, Clarence, 1972

    Box 24
  438. Dillon, Douglas, 1959, 1965

    Box 24
  439. Dirksen, Everett M., 1961

    Box 24
  440. Dock, George, Jr., 1957-1965

    Box 24
  441. Dodd, Thomas J., 1959-1962

    Box 24
  442. Dodds, Harold W., 1937-1938, 1948-1973

    Box 24
  443. Re Dominican Republic, 1965

    Box 24
  444. Donovan, William J., 1931, 1942, 1945

    Box 24
  445. Doran, George H., 1918-1928

    Box 24
  446. Douglas, Lewis W., 1932-1974

    Box 24
  447. Douglas, Paul H., 1956, 1958

    Box 24
  448. Douglas, William 0., 1938, 1951-1968

    Box 24
  449. Dressler, C.W., 1956-1964

    Box 24
  450. Driscoll, Alfred E., 1952

    Box 24
  451. Drury, Allen, 1959-1971

    Box 24
  452. Dryfoos, Orvil E., 1942-1963

    Box 24
  453. Duke, Angier Biddle, 1961, 1969

    Box 24
  454. Dulles, Allen W., 1948-1967

    Box 24
  455. Dulles, Eleanor Lansing, 1963

    Box 24
  456. Dulles, John Foster, 1943-1959

    Box 24
  457. Re Dulles, John Foster - Oral History Project, 1964-1965

    Box 24
  458. Dulles, Mrs. John Foster, 1959-1963

    Box 24
  459. Dundon, Robert E., 1926, 1929

    Box 24
  460. Dure, Leon, 1950-1964

    Box 24
  461. Eagleton, Thomas F., 1972

    Box 25
  462. Early, Stephen T., 1934-1952

    Box 25
  463. Eaton, Cyrus S., 1958

    Box 25
  464. Eberhardt, Sarah and Pope, 1949-1952

    Box 25
  465. Eberstadt, Ferdinand, 1948-1958

    Box 25
  466. Eccles, Marriner S., 1945

    Box 25
  467. Eden, Anthony, 1938, 1943, 1957-1966

    Box 25
  468. Einstein, Albert, 1947

    Box 25
  469. Eisenhower, Dwight D., 1946-1971

    Box 25
  470. Eisenhower, John S.D., 1973

    Box 25
  471. Eisenhower, Milton, 1963

    Box 25
  472. Re Election Summary, 1943

    Box 25
  473. Ervin, Sam J., Jr., 1965-1966

    Box 25
  474. Essary, J. Fred, 1917-1931

    Box 25
  475. Ethridge, Mark, 1942, 1945, 1960

    Box 25
  476. Fairbanks, Douglas, Jr., 1951, 1961

    Box 25
  477. Fall, Albert B., 1926-1931

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 25
  478. Farley, James A., 1935-1972

    Box 25
  479. Re Fight for Freedom, 1941

    Box 25
  480. Finkelstein, Louis, 1957

    Box 25
  481. Finletter, Thomas K., 1942-1971

    Box 25
  482. Finley, David E., 1950, 1973

    Box 25
  483. Finley, John H., 1928, 1938

    Box 25
  484. Fish, Hamilton, Jr., 1947

    Box 25
  485. Fleeson, Doris, 1961

    Box 25
  486. Fleischmann, Raoul H., 1950-1962

    Box 25
  487. Fleming, Ian, 1961

    Box 25
  488. Fleming, Robert V., 1950-1961

    Box 25
  489. Flemming, Arthur S., 1972

    Box 25
  490. Fletcher, Henry Prather, 1948, 1955

    Box 25
  491. Flynn, Edward J., 1946-1947

    Box 25
  492. Foley, Edward H., 1948-1969

    Box 26
  493. Ford, Gerald R., Jr., 1961, 1967

    Box 26
  494. Ford, Wendell H., 1973

    Box 26
  495. Forgan, J. Russell, 1949-1967

    Box 26
  496. Forrestal, James V., et al, 1926-1972

    Box 26
  497. Forrestal, James V. - Research Center, 1951-1964

    Box 26
  498. Fortas, Abe, 1959

    Box 26
  499. Fortas, Carolyn Agger, 1969

    Box 26
  500. Fosdick, Raymond B., 1923

    Box 26
  501. Foster, Robert J., 1949-1950

    Box 26
  502. Foster, William C., 1958-1964

    Box 26
  503. Fowleri, Henry H., 1968

    Box 26
  504. Frank, Jerome N., 1938-1949

    Box 26
  505. Frankel, Max, 1969

    Box 26
  506. Re Frankfurter, Felix, 1955

    Box 26
  507. Franz, Edward, 1944-1945

    Box 26
  508. Fraser, Hugh Russell, 1945

    Box 26
  509. French Embassy, 1930-1931, 1961-1970

    Box 26
  510. Freund, Paul A., 1953

    Box 26
  511. Friendly, Fred W., 1964

    Box 26
  512. Fritchey, Clayton, 1964, 1966

    Box 26
  513. Fulbright, J. William, 1954-1969

    Box 26
  514. Fuller, Mrs. S.M., 1947

    Box 26
  515. Funk & Wagnalls, 1946, 1961-1973

    Box 26
  516. Funke, Lewis, 1963

    Box 26
  517. Gaevernitz, Gero V., 1964

    Box 27
  518. Gannett, Lewis, 1952

    Box 27
  519. Gardner, Arthur, 1947-1967

    Box 27
  520. Garner, John Nance, 1932-1940

    Box 27
  521. Garnett, George Tinsley, 1948-1961

    Box 27
  522. Garrett, George and Ethel, 1947-1974

    Box 27
  523. Garrison, Lloyd K., 1957, 1962

    Box 27
  524. Garst, Robert, 1948-1965

    Box 27
  525. Gates, Thomas S., 1955-1965

    Box 27
  526. Gauss, Christian, 1930, 1932, 1951

    Box 27
  527. Re Genocide Treaty, 1928, 1940-1950

    Box 27
  528. George, Walter F., 1955

    Box 27
  529. Gerhart, Eugene C., 1949

    Box 27
  530. German Embassy, 1961

    Box 27
  531. Gest, Morris, 1919-1923

    Box 27
  532. Gibson, Hugh, 1943

    Box 27
  533. Glass, Carter, 1928-1936

    Box 27
  534. Glenn, C. Leslie, 1956-1968

    Box 27
  535. Re Gobbledygook, 1951

    Box 27
  536. Goheen, Robert F., 1957-1970

    Box 27
  537. Goldberg, William, 1960-1973

    Box 27
  538. Goldman, Eric F., 1969

    Box 27
  539. Goldstein, Nathan W., 1956-1968

    Box 27
  540. Goldwater, Barry, 1959-1974

    Box 27
  541. Gordon, Max, 1949-1973

    Box 27
  542. Gould, Jack, 1964-1965

    Box 27
  543. Government Affairs Institute, 1956-1959

    Box 27
  544. Graham, Frank P., 1933

    Box 27
  545. Graham, Katherine, 1967

    Box 27
  546. Graham, Philip L., 1952-1960

    Box 27
  547. Granger, A.H., 1939-1941

    Box 27
  548. Graves, Mrs. E.D., 1950-1963

    Box 27
  549. Gray, Gordon, 1950-1970

    Box 27
  550. Grayson, Cary T., 1931

    Box 27
  551. Green, Joseph C., 1951-1974

    Box 27
  552. Green, Theodore F., 1957

    Box 27
  553. Greenhalgh, William W., 1950-1955

    Box 27
  554. Grew, Joseph C., 1941-1955

    Box 27
  555. Gridiron Club, 1948, 1968-190

    Box 28
  556. Griffin, Donald W., 1955-1969

    Box 28
  557. Griffith, David Wark, 1930

    Box 28
  558. Gross, Mrs. John, 1950-1959

    Box 28
  559. Groves, Leslie R., 1957, 1962

    Box 28
  560. Gruening, Ernest, 1960, 1966

    Box 28
  561. Gruenther, Alfred M., 1957-1973

    Box 28
  562. Guffey, Joseph F., 1923-1931

    Box 28
  563. Gunther, John, 1957, 1964

    Box 28
  564. Haartz, Karl, 1957-1966, 1971

    Box 28
  565. Hagerty, James A., 1931-1932, 1952-1961

    Box 28
  566. Hagerty, James C., 1953-1960

    Box 28
  567. Hague, Frank, 1927, 1932

    Box 28
  568. Hailey, Foster, 1954, 1957

    Box 28
  569. Halberstam, David, 1962-1966

    Box 28
  570. Haldeman, W.B., 1915-1923

    Box 28
  571. Halifax, Lord, 1942-1951

    Box 28
  572. Halley, Samuel H., 1922

    Box 28
  573. Hamilton, Thomas J., 1945-1946, 1960-1962

    Box 28
  574. Hammond, Percy, 1922

    Box 28
  575. Hand, Learned, 1950

    Box 28
  576. Hanes, John W., 1942-1956

    Box 28
  577. Hanes, John W., Jr., 1958-1972

    Box 28
  578. Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., 1956-1963

    Box 28
  579. Hard, William, 1957-1961

    Box 28
  580. Hardin, B. Lauriston, 1948-1963

    Box 28
  581. Harlan, John M., 1962-1963

    Box 28
  582. Harned, Frank W., 1949-1955

    Box 28
  583. Harper & Brothers, Harper & Row, 1957-1969

    Box 28
  584. Harriman, W. Averell, 1928, 1959-1966

    Box 28
  585. Harris, Joel Chandler, 1948

    Box 28
  586. Harris, Julian, 1933-1961

    Box 28
  587. Harris, Overton, 1921-1973

    Box 28
  588. Harrison, Pat, 1920-1924

    Box 28
  589. Harrison, William B., 1928

    Box 28
  590. Harsch, Joseph C., 1957-1958, 1971, 1974

    Box 28
  591. Hart, Philip A., 1959-1960

    Box 28
  592. Harte, Edward H., 1958-1973

    Box 28
  593. Hartke, Vance, 1964

    Box 28
  594. Harvard Club, 1953

    Box 28
  595. Harvard Crimson, 1953

    Box 28
  596. Harvard University - Nieman and Littauer Fellows, 1941

    Box 28
  597. Harvard University - Professors' Advertisement Concerning Cuba, 1961

    Box 28
  598. Harvier, Ernest, 1925

    Box 28
  599. Hatfield, Mark O., 1959, 1966

    Box 28
  600. Hauge, Gabriel, 1950-1960

    Box 28
  601. Haugh, John H., 1968-1974

    Box 28
  602. Hayes, Ralph, 1928-1931

    Box 28
  603. Hays, Will H., 1923-1948, 1969

    Box 28
  604. Hearst, William Randolph, Jr., 1941-1956, 1969-1970

    Box 29
  605. Henderson, Leon, 1960

    Box 29
  606. Hennings, Thomas C., 1956-1959

    Box 29
  607. Hensel, H. Struve, 1951-1969

    Box 29
  608. Hershey, Lewis B., 1961-1962

    Box 29
  609. Herter, Christian, 1962

    Box 29
  610. Hicks, C.D., 1951-1952

    Box 29
  611. Hill, Gladwin, 1949-1964

    Box 29
  612. Re Hillman, Sidney, 1944

    Box 29
  613. Hinton, Harold, 1937-1958

    Box 29
  614. Hiss, Alger, 1946, 1949

    Box 29
  615. Hitchcock, Thomas, 1968

    Box 29
  616. Hodges, Luther H., 1965

    Box 29
  617. Hoffman, Paul G., 1948-1962

    Box 29
  618. Hohenberg, John, 1957-1973

    Box 29
  619. Homestead, Hot Springs, Virginia, 1958-1959

    Box 29
  620. Hook, Sidney, 1956-1957, 1972

    Box 29
  621. Hoover, Herbert, 1931-1967

    Box 29
  622. Re Hoover, Herbert - Commission, 1949

    Box 29
  623. Hoover, Herbert - Oral History Program, 1966-1972

    Box 29
  624. Hopkins, Harry, 1938-1958

    Box 29
  625. Hopper, Bruce E., 1956-1965

    Box 29
  626. Hornbeck, Stanley, 1956-1962

    Box 29
  627. Houghteling, James L., 1939-1940, 1958

    Box 29
  628. Hoyt, Alfred O., 1946-1969

    Box 29
  629. Hughes, Charles Evans, 1928, 1943, 1948

    Box 29
  630. Hughes, Emmet John, 1961

    Box 29
  631. Hughes, Tom, 1968

    Box 29
  632. Hull, Cordell, 1921-1955

    Box 29
  633. Humphrey, George M., 1953-1957

    Box 29
  634. Humphrey, Hubert H., 1960-1971

    Box 29
  635. Huntley, Chet, 1960, 1962

    Box 29
  636. Hurd, Charles, 1932, 1943-1966

    Box 29
  637. Huston, Luther, 1943, 1957-1968

    Box 29
  638. Huxley, Julian, 1961

    Box 29
  639. Ickes, Harold L., 1938-1943

    Box 30
  640. Re India, 1961

    Box 30
  641. Indian Embassy, 1958-1961

    Box 30
  642. Inter-American Bank, 1940

    Box 30
  643. International Press Institute, 1957-1958

    Box 30
  644. Iranian Embassy, 1949

    Box 30
  645. Irish Embassy, 1961-1963

    Box 30
  646. Isham, Ralph H., 1931

    Box 30
  647. Israeli Embassy, 1958-1962

    Box 30
  648. Italian Embassy, 1954-1964

    Box 30
  649. Jackson, Henry M., 1955-1967

    Box 30
  650. Jackson, Robert H., 1945-1947, 1957-1968

    Box 30
  651. Jackson, Samuel D., 1944, 1948

    Box 30
  652. Jackson, William H., 1951-1971

    Box 30
  653. James, Edwin L., 1932-1951

    Box 30
  654. James, Ollie M., 1915-1917

    Box 30
  655. Re Japan, 1941, 1960

    Box 30
  656. Japanese Embassy, 1964, 1966

    Box 30
  657. Javits, Benjamin A., 1949, 1960

    Box 30
  658. Javits, Jacob K., 1949-1969

    Box 30
  659. Re Jefferson Fund, 1924

    Box 30
  660. Jenkins, W.S., 1956-1963

    Box 30
  661. Johnson, Gerald W., 1960

    Box 30
  662. Johnson, Hugh S., 1930-1938

    Box 30
  663. Johnson, Louis A., 1949-1964

    Box 30
  664. Johnson, Lyndon B., 1949-1968

    Box 30
  665. Re Johnson, Lyndon B. - Oral History Program, 1968

    Box 30
  666. Johnson, Mrs. Lyndon B., 1969

    Box 30
  667. Johnson, Tom L., 1948-1950

    Box 30
  668. Johnson, Walter, 1949, 1960, 1968

    Box 30
  669. Johnston, Eric, 1957-1963

    Box 30
  670. Jones, Jesse H., 1934-1957

    Box 30
  671. Joseph, D.H., 1941, 1951-1952

    Box 30
  672. Kahn, Otto H., et al, 1921, 1958

    Box 31
  673. Keating, Kenneth B., 1957-1962

    Box 31
  674. Kefauver, Estes, 1948-1962

    Box 31
  675. Kennan, George, 1948-1958, 1972-1973

    Box 31
  676. Kennedy, Edward M., 1962-1974

    Box 31
  677. Kennedy, John D., 1942-1968

    Box 31
  678. Kennedy, John F., et al, 1940-1973

    Box 31
  679. Re Kennedy, John F. - Administration, Oral History, 1964-1965

    Box 31
  680. Kennedy, Mrs. John F., 1960, 1965

    Box 31
  681. Kennedy, John P., 1928-1930

    Box 31
  682. Kennedy, Joseph P., 1934-1965

    Box 31
  683. Kennedy, Mrs. Joseph P., 1969

    Box 31
  684. Kennedy, Robert F., 1948-1966

    Box 31
  685. Kent, Frank R., et al, 1931, 1947-1965

    Box 31
  686. Kent, Rockwell and Frances, 1930

    Box 31
  687. Kentucky - Advisory Commission on Public Documents, 1969-1972

    Box 31
  688. Kentucky, University of, 1955-1961

    Box 31
  689. Kenworthy, E.W., 1962

    Box 31
  690. Keyserling, Leon H., 1950, 1952, 1972

    Box 31
  691. Re Khrushchev, Nikita, 1959-1961

    Box 31
  692. King, Ernest Joseph, 1943-1944

    Box 31
  693. Kinney, Harrison, 1950

    Box 31
  694. Kintner, Robert E., 1962-1968

    Box 31
  695. Kirkland, James Hampton, 1956

    Box 31
  696. Kissinger, Henry A., 1957-1954, 1969

    Box 31
  697. Kleffens, Eelco van, 1948, 1954

    Box 31
  698. Klein, Herbert G., 1960-1972

    Box 31
  699. Kleindienst, Richard G., 1973

    Box 31
  700. Kluckhohn, Frank L., 1944-1967

    Box 31
  701. Knebel, Fletcher, 1956-1965

    Box 31
  702. Knight, John S., 1956-1971

    Box 31
  703. Knopf, Alfred A., 1930, 1957-1966

    Box 31
  704. Knowland, William F., 1957

    Box 31
  705. Konefsky, Samuel J., 1954

    Box 31
  706. Konta, Alexander, 1925-1926

    Box 31
  707. Korean Embassy, 1965

    Box 31
  708. Koretz, Sidney, 1957-1963

    Box 31
  709. Kriendler, Robert, 1950-1967

    Box 31
  710. Krock, Arthur

  711. Re Awards, 1935-1967

    Box 32
  712. Re Clubs, 1922-1968

    Box 33
  713. Re Finances and Property, 1920-1952

    Box 34
  714. Miscellaneous, 1915-1974

    Box 35
  715. Re Retirement, 1966

    Box 36
  716. Re Vacations, 1923-1974

    Box 37
  717. Krock, Thomas and Mary, 1969-1974

    Box 37
  718. Krug, Cap, 1940-1947

    Box 37
  719. Lacy, William Sterling Byrd, 1957-1963

    Box 38
  720. La Guardia, Fiorello H., 1943

    Box 38
  721. Laird, Melvin R., 1966-1967

    Box 38
  722. Lambert, Gerard B., 1956-1958

    Box 38
  723. Lamont, Thomas S., 1931-1960

    Box 38
  724. Land, Emory S., 1956-1965

    Box 38
  725. Landon, Alf M., 1937-1949, 1959-1970

    Box 38
  726. Lane, Arthur Bliss, 1956, 1958

    Box 38
  727. Lasky, Victor, 1957-1965

    Box 38
  728. Laurence, William L., 1956-1963

    Box 38
  729. Lawrence, David, 1928, 1951-1973

    Box 38
  730. Lawrence, William H., 1956-1972

    Box 38
  731. Leach, W. Barton, 1961-1964

    Box 38
  732. Le Hand, M.A., 1933

    Box 38
  733. Lemus, Rienzi B., 1956-1966

    Box 38
  734. Levi, Emanuel, 1923

    Box 38
  735. Leviero, Anthony, 1950

    Box 38
  736. Lewis, Anthony, 1956-1974

    Box 38
  737. Lewis, John L., 1950

    Box 38
  738. Re Lilienthal, David E., 1936

    Box 38
  739. Re Lincoln, Abraham, 1948, 1955

    Box 38
  740. Lindsay, John V., 1961-1973

    Box 38
  741. Linsay, Ronald C., 1933

    Box 38
  742. Lippmann, Walter, 1928-1967

    Box 38
  743. Little, Brown and Company, 1971-1973

    Box 38
  744. Re Little Rock, Arkansas, 1957

    Box 38
  745. Lodge, George C., 1958-1963

    Box 39
  746. Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., 1932-1965

    Box 39
  747. Loeb, Louis, 1950, 1956

    Box 39
  748. Loening, Grover, 1943-1968

    Box 39
  749. Long, Breckinridge, 1913, 1955

    Box 39
  750. Re Longworth, Alice Roosevelt, 1970

    Box 39
  751. Look, 1943-1948, 1961

    Box 39
  752. Louisville Courier-Journal, 1958-1959

    Box 39
  753. Louisville Times, 1959

    Box 39
  754. Lovett, Robert A., 1948-1973

    Box 39
  755. Lubell, Samuel, 1957

    Box 39
  756. Luce, Clare Boothe, 1940, 1953-1972

    Box 39
  757. Luce, Henry R., 1942-1963

    Box 39
  758. Ludwig, Emile, 1937-1938

    Box 39
  759. Lund, Svend Aage, 1949-1964

    Box 39
  760. Lynd, Robert S., 1960

    Box 39
  761. MacLeish, Archibald, 1968

    Box 39
  762. MacLeod, Norman, 1957

    Box 39
  763. MacNeil, Neil, 1945-1959

    Box 39
  764. Magnuson, Warren G., 1957-1965

    Box 39
  765. Mallon, Paul, 1940, 1944

    Box 39
  766. Malone, John A., 1958-1961

    Box 39
  767. Manchester Guardian, 1926-1927, 1943

    Box 39
  768. Mann, Joseph F., 1947-1951

    Box 39
  769. Mansfield, Mike, 1957-1965

    Box 39
  770. Marcosson, Isaac F., 1923, 1945-1957

    Box 39
  771. Markel, Lester, 1931, 1943-1972

    Box 39
  772. Marshall, George Catlett, 1943-1957

    Box 39
  773. Marshall, John, 1954-1964

    Box 39
  774. Marshall, Thomas R., 1920

    Box 39
  775. Marshall, Thurgood, 1948

    Box 39
  776. Martin, John Bartlow, 1966

    Box 39
  777. Marvel, Josiah, 1946-1969

    Box 39
  778. Mathews, W.R., 1951-1968

    Box 39
  779. Mathey, Dean, 1947-1949, 1966

    Box 39
  780. Matthews, Ruth S., 1957-1963

    Box 39
  781. Re McAdoo, William, 1930

    Box 40
  782. Re McCarthy, Joseph, 1953-1954

    Box 40
  783. McCloy, John J., 1942-1968

    Box 40
  784. McCone, John Alex, 1950-1973

    Box 40
  785. McCormack, John W., 1956

    Box 40
  786. McCormick, Anne O'Hare, 1942-1959

    Box 40
  787. McCormick, Robert R., 1950

    Box 40
  788. McDonald, James B., 1939-1961

    Box 40
  789. McElroy, Neil, 1959, 1961

    Box 40
  790. McGhee, George, 1951-1965

    Box 40
  791. McGill, Ralph, 1942, 1966

    Box 40
  792. McGrath, J. Howard, 1952

    Box 40
  793. McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1965-1968

    Box 40
  794. McIlvaine, Jane and Robinson, 1942-1961

    Box 40
  795. McInerny, T.A., 1949-1966

    Box 40
  796. McKelway, B.M., 1943-1971

    Box 40
  797. McLaughlin, Kathleen, 1945, 1947

    Box 40
  798. McNamara, Robert S., 1961-1965

    Box 40
  799. Re Meany, George, 1956

    Box 40
  800. Mencken, Henry L., et al, 1925-1930, 1946, 1963

    Box 40
  801. Merchant, Livingston T., 1963-1968

    Box 40
  802. Merz, Charles, 1951-1968

    Box 40
  803. Meyer, Eugene, 1944-1958

    Box 40
  804. Meyner, Robert B., 1959

    Box 40
  805. Middleton, Drew, 1949-1966

    Box 41
  806. Re Mikoyan, Anastas I., 1958-1959

    Box 41
  807. Miller, Edward Terhune, 1956-1970

    Box 41
  808. Milloy, James S., 1947-1968

    Box 41
  809. Mills, Ogden L., 1934

    Box 41
  810. Mills, Wilbur D., 1964-1969

    Box 41
  811. Re Minnesota Press Censorship Law, 1929

    Box 41
  812. Re Mississippi University Case, 1962

    Box 41
  813. Mitchell, James P., 1956

    Box 41
  814. Mitchell, Margaret, 1937

    Box 41
  815. Mitchell, Stephen A., 1946-1965

    Box 41
  816. Moley, Raymond, 1933-1949, 1961-1966

    Box 41
  817. Mollenhoff, Clark R., 1956-1970

    Box 41
  818. Monroney, A.S. Mike, 1960-1966

    Box 41
  819. Moore, Edmund A., 1956

    Box 41
  820. Moore, George, 1930

    Includes a note by Arthur Krock, 1966.

    Box 41
  821. Morgenthau, Henry, Jr., et al, 1934, 1941, 1963

    Box 41
  822. Morris, Anne Redding, 1945-1956

    Box 41
  823. Morris, Charles W., 1930, 1932, 1950-1961

    Box 41
  824. Morris, Emanuel, 1943

    Box 41
  825. Morris, L.E., 1928, 1937

    Box 41
  826. Morse, Wayne, 1952

    Box 41
  827. Morton, Thruston B., 1956, 1968

    Box 41
  828. Moscow, Warren, 1952

    Box 41
  829. Moseley, J.H., 1957-1966

    Box 41
  830. Moyers, Bill, 1965-1973

    Box 41
  831. Mundt, Karl E., 1954, 1964-1965

    Box 41
  832. Munson, Curtis, 1948-1966

    Box 41
  833. Murphy, Charles J.V., 1959-1973

    Box 41
  834. Re Murphy, Frank, 1939

    Box 41
  835. Murrow, Edward R., 1961

    Box 41
  836. National Advisory Council on Radio in Education, 1932

    Box 42
  837. National Broadcasting Company, 1954-1967

    Box 42
  838. National Confederation of American Ethnic Groups, 1962

    Box 42
  839. National Educational Television, 1964, 1967

    Box 42
  840. National Labor Relations Board, 1934, 1936

    Box 42
  841. National Review, 1956-1967

    Box 42
  842. National Trust for Historic Preservation, 1967-1969

    Box 42
  843. Re Navy Super Carrier, 1949

    Box 42
  844. Netherlands Embassy, 1949, 1962-1966

    Box 42
  845. Neuberger, Richard L., 1957, 1959

    Box 42
  846. Re Neutrality, 1939

    Box 42
  847. Nevins, Allan, 1966-1971

    Box 42
  848. Re New York Times - Miscellaneous, 1932-1948, 1961

    Box 42
  849. Re New York Times - Oral History Program, 1972

    Box 42
  850. New Zealand Embassy, 1955

    Box 42
  851. Nitze, Paul H., 1956

    Box 42
  852. Nixon, Richard M., 1949-1972

    Box 42
  853. Norstad, Lauris and Isabelle, 1956-1973

    Box 42
  854. North Carolina, University of, 1957

    Box 42
  855. Norton, Garrison, 1949-1962

    Box 42
  856. Nourse, Edwin G., 1958-1966

    Box 42
  857. Oakes, John B., 1947-1965

    Box 43
  858. O'Briam, John Lord, 1944-1973

    Box 43
  859. O'Brien, Lawrence, 1962-1971

    Box 43
  860. O'Brien, Robert Lincoln, 1943-1964

    Box 43
  861. Ochs, Adolph S., 1927-1935

    Box 43
  862. O'Connor, Roderic L., 1956-1959

    Box 43
  863. Odmark, Marion, 1960-1965

    Box 43
  864. Re Offers, 1935-1937, 1953-1966

    Box 43
  865. O'Hara, John, 1959

    Box 43
  866. Re Oil, 1951

    Box 43
  867. O'Laughlin, John Callan, 1923-1928

    Box 43
  868. O'Neal, J.T., 1927

    Box 43
  869. O'Rear, Edward C., 1956

    Box 43
  870. Osborne, John, 1963

    Box 43
  871. Oulahan, Richard V., et al, 1928-1932, 1968

    Box 43
  872. Outerbridge, Kenneth, 1957-1968

    Box 43
  873. Pakistan Embassy, 1957-1964

    Box 43
  874. Palmer, A. Mitchell, 1932-1933

    Box 43
  875. Patterson, Robert P., 1943-1967

    Box 43
  876. Pearson, Drew, 1942-1958

    Box 43
  877. Pegler, Westbrook, 1942-1958

    Box 43
  878. Pell, Claiborne, 1956-1974

    Box 43
  879. Perkins, Frances, 1934-1935

    Box 43
  880. Perlmaw, Philip B., 1948-1959

    Box 43
  881. Perrotta, Rosemarie, 1965-1968

    Box 43
  882. Peruvian Embassy, 1957-1963

    Box 43
  883. Philippine Embassy, 1950-1962

    Box 43
  884. Phleger, Herman, 1956-1972

    Box 43
  885. Pierson, Louise Randall, 1940-1968

    Box 43
  886. Pinci, A.R., 1958-1962

    Box 43
  887. Polleys, Louisa A., 1939-1941

    Box 44
  888. Poore, Charles, 1950-1966

    Box 44
  889. Portuguese Embassy, 1961-1967

    Box 44
  890. Re Presidential Inability, 1956-1965

    Box 44
  891. Re Presidential Prospects, 1924

    Box 44
  892. Princeton University, 1927-1973

    Box 44
  893. Princeton University - Alumni Committee on Princeton Objectives, 1956

    Box 44
  894. Princeton University - Annual Giving, 1950-1967

    Box 44
  895. Princeton University - Class 1908 Reunions, 1938, 1948-1958

    Box 44
  896. Princeton University - Personal Papers and Other Gifts to the Library, 1930, 1954, 1964-1974

    Box 44
  897. Princeton University - Third Century Fund, 1947

    Box 44
  898. Princetonian, The Daily, l966-1967

    Box 44
  899. Proxmire, William, 1958-1972

    Box 44
  900. Re Publications: Comments in letters about various articles and other published works by Arthur Krock, 1925-1938

    Box 44
  901. Re Publications, 1940-1966

    Box 45
  902. Pulitzer, Joseph, 1927-1930, 1942-1955

    Box 46
  903. Pulitzer Prizes, Advisory Board, 1935-1948

    Box 46
  904. Pulitzer Prizes, Advisory Board, 1949-1951

    Box 47
  905. Pulitzer Prizes, Advisory Board, 1951-1953

    Box 48
  906. Pulitzer Prizes, Advisory Board, 1953-1954

    Box 49
  907. Pulitzer Prizes, Advisory Board, 1955, 1957, 1971

    Box 50
  908. Pulitzer, Ralph, et al, 1911-1912, 1923-1932, 1968

    Box 51
  909. Pulitzer, Mrs. Ralph, 1960-1966

    Box 51
  910. Radford, Arthur W., 1956, 1972

    Box 51
  911. Rae, Bruce, 1919, 1960-1962

    Box 51
  912. Ragland, James, 1956-1968

    Box 51
  913. Ramsey, Carl, 1940-1941

    Box 51
  914. Raskin, A.H., 1951

    Box 51
  915. Raskob, John J., 1931

    Box 51
  916. Rauch, Joseph, 1955

    Box 51
  917. Re Rayburn, Sam, 1960

    Box 51
  918. Reader's Digest, 1941-1944

    Box 51
  919. Re Red Cross Bill, 1944

    Box 51
  920. Reed, Stanley, 1937, 1947-1973

    Box 51
  921. Re Relief and Public Assistance Programs, 1936

    Box 51
  922. Reston, James B., 1941-1974

    Box 51
  923. Ribicoff, Abe, 1963

    Box 52
  924. Richardson, Seth, 1943-1953

    Box 52
  925. Rickard, G.L., 1927

    Box 52
  926. Rickover, H.G., 1960-1970

    Box 52
  927. Riquier, C.H. de Saint, 1942-1953

    Box 52
  928. Ritchie, Albert C., 1926-1930

    Box 52
  929. Roberts, Roy A., 1944-1966

    Box 52
  930. Robertson, Walter S., 1956-1962

    Box 52
  931. Robinson, Joe T., 1928

    Box 52
  932. Rockefeller, Nelson, 1960-1963

    Box 52
  933. Rodlers, Richard, 1944

    Box 52
  934. Rogers, William P., 1956-1973

    Box 52
  935. Romney, George, 1966, 1972

    Box 52
  936. Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1933

    Box 52
  937. Roosevelt, Franklin D., et al, 1923-1961

    Box 52
  938. Roosevelt, Nicholas, 1923, 1932, 1942-1970

    Box 52
  939. Roper, Elmo, 1957-1959

    Box 52
  940. Rosenthal, A.M., 1956-1972

    Box 52
  941. Ross, Charles G., 1941-1950

    Box 52
  942. Ross, Harold, 1920

    Box 52
  943. Rostow, Eugene V., 1957-1963

    Box 52
  944. Rowe, James M., 1959-1974

    Box 52
  945. Royall, Kenneth C., 1955

    Box 52
  946. Royster, Vermont, 1962-1967

    Box 52
  947. Rusk, Dean, 1962-1968

    Box 52
  948. Russell, Richard B., 1970

    Box 52
  949. Ryan, Allen A., 1920-1922

    Box 52
  950. Sackett, F.M., 1929-1932

    Box 53
  951. St. John's Parish - Men's Club, 1956

    Box 53
  952. Salisbury, Harrison, 1958-1973

    Box 53
  953. Saltonstall, Leverett, 1944-1974

    Box 53
  954. Sampson, Flem D. and Susan, 1931

    Box 53
  955. Saturday Evening Post, 1944

    Box 53
  956. Sayler, James, 1968-1973

    Box 53
  957. Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr., 1959, 1967

    Box 53
  958. Schlobohm, Harriet, 1943-1952

    Box 53
  959. Schoenbrun, David, 1962

    Box 53
  960. Schwartz, A. Charles, 1925, 1967

    Box 53
  961. Schwartz, Bernard, 1957-1964

    Box 53
  962. Scott, Hugh, 1972

    Box 53
  963. Sedgwick, Ellery, 1932, 1957, 1959

    Box 53
  964. Re Segregation, States Rights, and Related Issues, 1931-1962

    Box 53
  965. Re Senate Closure, 1946

    Box 53
  966. Shanley, Bernard M., 1957-1966

    Box 53
  967. Sheean, Vincent, 1950, 1963, 1969

    Box 53
  968. Shenker, Israel, 1971

    Box 53
  969. Shepard, C.D., 1951-1968

    Box 53
  970. Sherley, Swagar, 1917-1922

    Box 53
  971. Sherwood, Robert, 1948-1950

    Box 53
  972. Shouse, Jouett, 1928-1931, 1958-1961

    Box 53
  973. Sieverman, Frank A., 1956-1965

    Box 53
  974. Sigma Delta Chi, 1940

    Box 53
  975. Simon and Schuster, Inc., 1932

    Box 53
  976. Slater, H. Nelson, 1961-1962

    Box 53
  977. Slessor, John, 1941-1944, 1961

    Box 53
  978. Smalley, Walter B., 1959-1964

    Box 53
  979. Smathers, George A., 1957, 1960

    Box 53
  980. Smith, Alfred E., 1924-1936

    Box 53
  981. Smith, H. Alexander, 1949-1964

    Box 53
  982. Smith, Gerard C., 1959-1972

    Box 53
  983. Smith, Mrs. Gerard C., 1959, 1961

    Box 53
  984. Smith, Walter Bedell, 1958-1961

    Box 53
  985. Smith, William P., 1957-1966

    Box 53
  986. Re Snyder, Howard M., 1972

    Box 53
  987. Snyder, John, 1945, 1951

    Box 53
  988. South African Embassy, 1958-1965

    Box 53
  989. Soviet Embassy, 1953, 1958

    Box 53
  990. Spanish Embassy, 1963-1964

    Box 54
  991. Sparkman, John, 1959

    Box 54
  992. Speeches, 1931-1967

    Box 54
  993. Speiden, J.G.F., 1956-1968

    Box 55
  994. Spellman, Francis Cardinal, 1946-1966

    Box 55
  995. Spivak, Lawrence E., 1962

    Box 55
  996. Re Stalin, Joseph, 1943, 1948

    Box 55
  997. Stallings, Laurence, 1930-1931, 1962-1964

    Box 55
  998. Stassen, Harold E., 1947-1963

    Box 55
  999. State, Department of, 1961-1963

    Box 55
  1000. Re Steel Strike Controversy, 1952

    Box 55
  1001. Stettinius, Edward R., Jr., 1942-1949

    Box 55
  1002. Stevens, Austin, 1956-1963

    Box 55
  1003. Stevenson, Adlai E., 1948-1966

    Box 55
  1004. Stevenson, Ellen B., 1967-1968

    Box 55
  1005. Stewart, Potter, 1965

    Box 55
  1006. Re Stimson, Henry L., 1932, 1945, 1951

    Box 55
  1007. Stokes, Harold Phelps, 1948-1958

    Box 55
  1008. Stone, Harlan Fiske, 1937-1947

    Box 55
  1009. Stone, James C., 1929

    Box 55
  1010. Stone Mountain Confederate Memorial, 1924-1927

    Box 55
  1011. Re Stout, Rex, 1941

    Box 55
  1012. Strauss, Lewis L., 1949-1973

    Box 55
  1013. Streit, Clarence K., 1956-1966

    Box 55
  1014. Sullivan, Mark, 1922

    Box 55
  1015. Sulzberger, Arthur Hays, 1935-1968

    Box 56
  1016. Sulzberger, Mrs. Arthur Hays, 1943-1973

    Box 57
  1017. Sulzberger, Arthur Ochs, 1951-1973

    Box 57
  1018. Sulzberger, Cyrus L., 1947-1973

    Box 57
  1019. Re Supreme Court, 1935-1959, 1971

    Box 57
  1020. Swedish Embassy, 1958

    Box 57
  1021. Swing, Raymond G., 1946

    Box 57
  1022. Swiss Embassy, 1958

    Box 57
  1023. Swope, Herbert Bayard, 1919-1967

    Box 57
  1024. Symington, Stuart, 1946-1971

    Box 57
  1025. Syndicate Information, 1924-1929

    Box 57
  1026. Szulc, Tad, 1959

    Box 57
  1027. Taft, Robert A., 1942-1952

    Box 58
  1028. Taft, William Howard, 1923, 1929

    Box 58
  1029. Talbott, Harold E., 1957-1958

    Box 58
  1030. Tarkington, Booth, 1917

    Box 58
  1031. Taylor, George W., 1952

    Box 58
  1032. Taylor, Henry J., 1943, 1956-1966

    Box 58
  1033. Temple University, 1938, 1955

    Box 58
  1034. Re Tennessee Valley Authority, 1938

    Box 58
  1035. Thomas, Norman, 1950

    Box 58
  1036. Thompson, Charles Willis, 1935

    Box 58
  1037. Thompson, Llewellyn, 1968

    Box 58
  1038. Thomson, James M., 1956-1963

    Box 58
  1039. Time Inc., 1921, 1952-1968

    Box 58
  1040. Tobriner, Walter, 1961

    Box 58
  1041. Re Tompkins, Harry J. vs. Erie Railroad, 1938

    Box 58
  1042. Tomlinson, Mrs. John D., 1956-1967

    Box 58
  1043. Trohan, Walter, 1957-1967

    Box 58
  1044. Truman, Harry S., 1942-1968

    Box 58
  1045. Tumulty, Joseph P., 1917-1929

    Box 58
  1046. Tunney, Gene, 1927, 1931

    Box 58
  1047. Underwood, Oscar Wilder, 1919-1927

    Box 59
  1048. Re Union Shops, 1952

    Box 59
  1049. Valentino, Rudolph, 1923

    Box 59
  1050. Van Benschoten, Mrs. Walter, 1956-1973

    Box 59
  1051. Re Vandenberg, Arthur, 1948

    Box 59
  1052. Van Paassen, Pierre, 1926-1927

    Box 59
  1053. Van Winkle, Julian P., 1951-1964

    Box 59
  1054. Veit, Ivan, 1956-1968

    Box 59
  1055. Re Vietnam, 1961-1968

    Box 59
  1056. Villard, Oswald Garrison, 1923, 1925

    Box 59
  1057. Vinson, Fred M., 1945-1953

    Box 59
  1058. Virginia, University of - Doherty Lecture, 1964

    Box 59
  1059. Von Dreyhausen, Hans, 1940

    Box 59
  1060. Wadsworth, James J., 1961-1964

    Box 60
  1061. Wadsworth, James W., 1950

    Box 60
  1062. Waggoner, Walter H., 1944-1909

    Box 60
  1063. Wagner, Robert F., Sr., 1929, 1932

    Box 60
  1064. Wait, Franklin A., 1956, 1959

    Box 60
  1065. Waldrop, Frank, 1953-1966

    Box 60
  1066. Walker, James J., 1928, 1931

    Box 60
  1067. Wall, Joseph Frazier, 1956

    Box 60
  1068. Wallace, David, 1947-1965

    Box 60
  1069. Wallace, Henry A., 1942-1952

    Box 60
  1070. Wallace, Tom, 1927-1956

    Box 60
  1071. Walz, Jay, 1950-1974

    Box 60
  1072. Ward, Baldwin H., 1940, 1950

    Box 60
  1073. Waring, J. Waties, 1948, 1952

    Box 60
  1074. Waring, T.R., 1944-1963

    Box 60
  1075. Warren, Charles, 1941-1949

    Box 60
  1076. Warren, Earl, 1956

    Box 60
  1077. Warren, Lansing, 1955-1968

    Box 60
  1078. Wasson, R. Gordon, 1943

    Box 60
  1079. Watterson, Henry, et al, 1913-1965

    Box 60
  1080. Wehle, Louis B., 1927, 1946-1959

    Box 60
  1081. Welles, Sumner, 1940-1943

    Box 60
  1082. Wendling, George, 1925

    Box 60
  1083. Whalen, Grover A., 1929

    Box 60
  1084. White, Walter, 1953

    Box 60
  1085. White, William Allen, 1928-1929, 1942-1951

    Box 60
  1086. Whitehouse, C.E., 1956-1958

    Box 60
  1087. Whitney, C.V., 1930, 1944-1951

    Box 60
  1088. Whitney, Mrs. C.V., 1948-1954

    Box 60
  1089. Whittlesey, W.L., 1945-1958

    Box 60
  1090. Wicker, Thomas G., 1964-1973

    Box 60
  1091. Widener, George D., 1960-1967

    Box 60
  1092. Wiener, Ernest H., 1959-1960

    Box 60
  1093. Wiggins, J. Russell, 1958-1963, 1973

    Box 60
  1094. Wigglesworth, Richard, 1957-1960

    Box 60
  1095. Wiley, John C., 1956-1965

    Box 61
  1096. Wiley, Louis, 1928-1933

    Box 61
  1097. Wilkins, Roy, 1952

    Box 61
  1098. Williams, Edward Bennet, 1956-1959

    Box 61
  1099. Williams, E.D., 1943-1944, 1961

    Box 61
  1100. Williams, Edmund Randolph, 1950

    Box 61
  1101. Williams, Eustace L., 1957-1966

    Box 61
  1102. Williams, Harrison A., Jr., 1959-1962

    Box 61
  1103. Williamson, Marjorie, 1956-1963

    Box 61
  1104. Willson, James C., 1925-1929

    Box 61
  1105. Wilson, Charles Edward (President, General Electric Company), 1948

    Box 61
  1106. Wilson, Charles Erwin (President, General Motors Corporation), 1942

    Box 61
  1107. Wilson, Lyle C., 1956-1967

    Box 61
  1108. Wilson, Woodrow, et al, 1897-1927, 1956-1967

    Box 61
  1109. Winchester, John G., 1960-1967

    Box 61
  1110. Windsor, The Duke of, 1937, 1951

    Box 61
  1111. Wisner, Frank G., 1956-1965

    Box 61
  1112. Wolfram, A.L., 1956-1961

    Box 61
  1113. Wood, Lewis, 1951, 1953

    Box 61
  1114. Woodson, Urey, 1936

    Box 61
  1115. Woolcott, Alexander, 1937

    Box 61
  1116. Re World Brotherhood, 1958

    Box 61
  1117. World Publishing Company, 1968-1970

    Box 61
  1118. Wright, Jerauld, 1956-1972

    Box 61
  1119. Wyzanski, Charles E., Jr., 1956

    Box 61
  1120. Yale University, 1942, 1956

    Box 61
  1121. Re Yalta Conference, 1945

    Box 61
  1122. Subseries 2B: General, 1917-1974

    (10.0 linear feet in 24 boxes)

    Subseries Description

    The General subseries contains brief correspondence between Krock and readers of his writings, including businessmen, professors, and government officials. The majority are from the United States, but also include some international correspondents. In their letters, the readers praise Krock's work and discuss issues raised in his writings, as well as sending him holiday greetings and good health wishes, inviting him to visit, and thanking him for meeting with them.

    Arrangement

    Arranged alphabetically by correspondent. Letters are not in order within the folders.

  1123. A

    Box 62
  1124. Ba - Bo

    Box 63
  1125. Br - Bz

    Box 64
  1126. Ca - Cl

    Box 65
  1127. Co - Cz

    Box 66
  1128. D

    Box 67
  1129. E

    Box 68
  1130. F

    Box 69
  1131. G

    Box 70
  1132. Ha - Hem

    Box 71
  1133. Hen - Hz

    Box 72
  1134. I - J

    Box 73
  1135. K

    Box 74
  1136. L

    Box 75
  1137. Ma - Mc

    Box 76
  1138. Me - Mz

    Box 77
  1139. N - O

    Box 78
  1140. P - Q

    Box 79
  1141. R

    Box 80
  1142. Sa - Sh

    Box 81
  1143. Si - Sz

    Box 82
  1144. T - V

    Box 83
  1145. Wa - Wh

    Box 84
  1146. Wi - Z

    Box 85
  1147. Series 3: Records By Others About or Relating to Arthur Krock, 1916-1973

    (1.9 linear feet in 5 boxes)

    Series Description

    The Records By Others About or Relating to Arthur Krock series includes biographical materials and tributes, reference materials, reviews of his writings, verses of poetry on current events and culture, and meeting minutes of the council of the New York World. The biographical materials include articles and editorials from newspapers and magazines about Krock's career and opinions expressed in his writings, as well as photocopies of materials about Krock from other research institutions. Reference materials includes articles about topics of interest to Krock, including politics, foreign aid, the International Monetary Fund, and New Deal organizations.

    Arrangement

    Arranged alphabetically by document type.

  1148. Articles and Tributes, 1916-1973

    Box 86
  1149. Biographical Materials, 1927-1973

    Box 86
  1150. Photocopied Materials from Other Research Collections, 1917-1972

    (Donated by Lucian Pera in 1982.)

    Box 86a
  1151. Reference Materials, 1831-1961

    Box 87
  1152. Reviews, 1969-1973

    Box 87
  1153. Verses By Others, 1928-1964

    Box 87
  1154. World Council Meetings, 1920-1923

    Box 88
  1155. World Council Meetings, 1924-1926

    Box 89
  1156. Series 4: Memorabilia and Photographs, 1917-1974

    (2.3 linear feet in 8 boxes)

    Series Description

    The Memorabilia and Photographs series is composed of materials related to recognition Krock received as a journalist, as well as to his career in general. The series included his passports, documents related to the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, plaques and awards certificates honoring his excellence in journalism, including the President's Medal of Freedom (1970), diplomas for honorary degrees, and photographs. The majority of the photographs are portraits of Krock, and also include photographs of Krock with government officials, politicians, and journalists, a few portraits of officials and journalists signed to Krock, and the artwork for a political cartoon. Also included are the original memoranda from Krock's "Black Books."

    Arrangement

    Arranged according to document type.

  1157. Documents, 1917-1966

    Box 89a
  1158. Memorabilia, 1931-1974

    Box 90
  1159. Degrees, 1937-1967

    Box 91
  1160. Medals, Plaques, Awards, Etc., 1967-1973

    Box 92
  1161. Photographs, circa 1930-1966

    Box 93
  1162. Black Books, Originals

    Photocopies of these materials are located in Box 1. Please use the photocopies for research.

  1163. Volume I, September 18, 1928 - September 11, 1948

    Box 94
  1164. Volume II, September 14, 1948 - April 7, 1960

    Box 95
  1165. Volume III, May 3, 1960 - July 8, 1965

    Box 96

Permanent URL: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/7p88cg543

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