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...very much present in both sides of the correspondence. And there is the matter of aging. In this respect, the later letters offer a warmer, more gentle, and sometimes whimsical picture of the aging giant and his aging devotee, extending their sympathies from each other's sick beds by courier post. By this time, moreover, Salome is slightly more hesitant in offering her intellectual opinions, or at least more apologetic about what she repeatedly calls her "babbling." And the more eagerly she plays a flattering fifth fiddle, the more Freud seems able to afford an occasional word of advice, encouragement...

Author: By Alice VAN Buren, | Title: Sigmund Freud's First Lady | 4/28/1973 | See Source »

...members: Co-Chairmen Lucy Wilson Benson, president, League of Women Voters, and C. Donald Peterson, associate justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court; Barry Bingham Sr., chairman, the Louisville Courier Journal; Stimson Bullitt, president, King Broadcasting Company (Seattle); Hodding Carter III, editor, the Delta Democrat Times (Greenville, Miss.); Robert Chandler, editor, the Bulletin (Bend, Ore.); Ithiel de Sola Pool, professor of political science, M.I.T.; Hartford N. Gunn Jr., president, Public Broadcasting System; Richard Harwood, assistant managing editor, the Washington Post; Louis Martin, editor, the Chicago Defender; John B. Oakes, editorial page editor, the New York Times; Paul Reardon, associate justice, Massachusetts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Judges for Journalism | 12/11/1972 | See Source »

...particularly bad beating. Even the Abilene (Texas) Reporter News has endorsed Nixon, the first time it has gone for a Republican in 91 years. The only Southern papers of any size to opt for McGovern so far are Little Rock's Arkansas Gazette and Louisville's Courier-Journal. Elsewhere, Nixon enjoys a solid majority of editorial votes in the Midwest and a virtual stranglehold on the West Coast. In New England, the sole prominent daily to declare for McGovern to date is the Pittsfield (Mass.) Berkshire Eagle (circ...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Who's for Whom | 10/30/1972 | See Source »

...Compania de Azufre Veracruz, S.A. This firm, in turn, gave it to one of Allen's attorneys, Manuel Ogarrio Daguerre, of Mexico City. Ogarrio converted the $100,000 check into $11,000 in cash and four bank drafts, apparently related to the size of the original gifts. An unidentified courier carried the money back to Houston. There it was placed in a suitcase along with $600,000 more collected by Allen in Texas, and flown in a private aircraft to Washington by Pennzoil Executive Roy Winchester...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICS: The Disgrace of Campaign Financing | 10/23/1972 | See Source »

...Supreme Court ruling involved three reporters who refused to answer grand jury questions. Caldwell and Paul Pappas of WTEV in New Bedford, Mass., were summoned for questioning about what they had learned in their coverage of Black Panther activities. Paul Branzburg, then of the Louisville Courier-Journal, was interrogated about his sources for stories on local drug traffic. Despite the June ruling, no effort has yet been made to recall either Caldwell or Pappas for questioning. The reason, Caldwell speculates, is loss of official interest in the Panthers and a wish to avoid controversy with the press in an election...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Threatened Reporters | 10/16/1972 | See Source »

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