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Another resolution introduced by Rep. W.J. Bryan Dorn (D-S.C.) would create a committee to investigate discontent with national foreign policy in Vietnam...

Author: By Nancy H. Davis, | Title: Resolution Would Authorize HUAC To Study SDS | 2/15/1966 | See Source »

Peter Weil as Sorin, and John Ross as Dorn created distinct characters; Johanna Madden, as Masha, created a superb one. All three maintained the tone and pace of the production perfectly, in their individual scenes...

Author: By Harrison Young, | Title: The Seagull | 11/19/1964 | See Source »

...General MacArthur was grieved because, in 1952, President-Elect Eisenhower refused to accept a MacArthur plan to end the entire cold war. Precisely what the plan was, MacArthur did not disclose to Considine. One version of the plan came from South Carolina's Democratic Congressman William Jennings Bryan Dorn, who said last week that he heard it ex plained by MacArthur in 1956. Mac-Arthur, said Dorn, urged Eisenhower and John Foster Dulles to threaten Rus sia with complete rearmament of Germany and Japan, "possibly including nuclear power," unless Russia agreed to live up to its Yalta and Potsdam...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Heroes: Threnody & Thunder | 4/17/1964 | See Source »

Tony was charged with extorting $17,100 between 1952 and 1959 from Walter A. Dorn, president of Dorn Transportation Co., in Rensselaer, N.Y. At the trial, Dorn testified to the payments. Most of them were made, he said, to Michael G. Communale, a dismissed Hudson County assistant prosecutor who was placed on the Dorn payroll at Provenzano's insistence. Communale testified that he received the money, even though he performed no legal services for Dorn. Tony, outwardly confident of acquittal, acted bored during most of the testimony, coddled his chin with a well-manicured hand, his little finger aglitter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Labor: Tony Pro Takes a Tumble | 6/21/1963 | See Source »

Carefully kept from the locked-up jury was an even more unsavory aspect of life-and death-in Tony's union. During the trial, Walter Glockner, 27, a Dorn driver, Teamster steward, and a Pro foe, got into an argument with one of Tony's relatives at a union meeting, knocked him to the floor. Next morning Glockner was shot to death as he left his Hoboken home for work. He died just a week before he was to have kept an appointment with Justice Department officials to tell what he knew about the local...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Labor: Tony Pro Takes a Tumble | 6/21/1963 | See Source »

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