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OCR Page 1 of 62NOVEMBER 22, 1971 THE PRESIDENT HAS SEEN
Not a major news day this morning, or so it appears. The
SVN drive into Cambodia is the top foreign policy story, sharing
top billing with Sadat's statements about cutting off contact
with the United States peace efforts and preparing for war.
The CSM has a front-pagre ranalysis of RN's recent use of
the in-office press conference and his seeming abandonment of
the televised format. The CSM writer says that the Washington
press corp prefers RN's inwovation; feeling is that more news
is garnered in the less formal arrangement.
Otto Kerner has reportedly been named in an indictment handed
down by a grand jury which the Justice Department is currently
looking over. Involved scandal during the Judge's years as
Governor of the State of Illinois.
In the Baltimore Sun, we read that labor in Miami is accus-
ing the White House of "trumping up" charges that the President
was treated insultingly in Miami the other day at the AFL-CIO
convention.
In New York the big story seems to be the walkout of the lay
teachers at the Catholic parochial schools, which the Archdoiocese
has XXXXXXX vowed to keep open.
As for the weekend clearly a major story is the post-mortems
of the President's visit to Miami, and review of allegations that
the President was treated insultingly by the union chieftains.
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