Village Voice - Donald And Me
In 1978, when thenVillage Voice reporter Wayne Barrett requested several thousand pages of records from the State Urban Development Corporation, the staff there set him up in a conference room so he could review them on site. He sat down alone, at a long table with stacks of papers, and began plowing through them.
Barrett was only 33 years old at the time. Hed been on staff at the Voice for less than a year, but the story he was chasing, about a series of multimillion-dollar real estate transactions, was a big one. Some of the citys most prominent power brokers were involved including former New York mayor Abe Beame and at the center was a brash young developer named Donald Trump.
As Barrett was sitting alone at the table doing his research, he was surprised when a nearby phone began to ring.
I didnt know whether to pick it up or not, Barrett says today. He couldnt imagine who might be on the other end; no one but a few government employees could have possibly known he was even in that office. But after a few rings he lifted the receiver and heard an unfamiliar voice.
Wayne! Barrett says, his voice booming, taking on Trumps now unmistakable accent. Its Donald! I hear youre doing a story on me! Id never talked to the guy in my life.
Though he'd been working on the story for several months, he hadn't yet approached Trump. He was circling, as he puts it today, determined to have his ducks in a row by the time he sat down with his subject.
It was Trumps way of letting him know he was keeping an eye on him, Barrett says. After all, the story he was working on, which would land Trump on our cover in January of 1979, wearing a sneer and a mop of brown hair, was the first detailed examination of Trumps business practices to appear in the press. And the results werent pretty.
cont'd
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/how-a-young-donald-trump-forced-his-way-from-avenue-z-to-manhattan-7380462