Word: drummonds
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...circ. 7,971,000) and its weekly rivals are filled with lurid accounts of court reports of crimes, engulfing such thoughtful, first-rate weekly newspapers as the Sunday Times or Observer, which together have a circulation of only slightly over a million. Observed New York Herald Tribune Columnist Roscoe Drummond, visiting in London last week: "We Americans often think the British press neglects America . . . Most British mass circulation newspapers neglect what is important about Britain [in] a sensational, restless hodgepodge of trash and trivia...
...York Herald Tribune's COLUMNIST ROSCOE DRUMMOND...
...York Herald Tribune Columnist Roscoe Drummond, pondering what the Republicans might do if Dwight Eisenhower were to say no, wrote: "Now, I am not starting a presidential boom for anybody nor assuming that I could, but obviously it is no good to say there are plenty of Americans who can meet [the necessary] specifications unless you can name at least one. I can name at least one. He began his public life as a Foreign Service officer in Edinburgh, Scotland. He came to Washington at the behest of a Republican Secretary of Agriculture . . . He held top posts in the Department...
...York Herald Tribune's COLUMNIST ROSCOE DRUMMOND: DEAR Mr. President: Don't give us what we want-if you have the merest, lingering, flickering doubt that the Soviets are offering more the shadow than the substance of a safer world...
...Avery policy of secrecy with the press. To replenish Ward's ravaged top executive echelon, down to one vice president, he began setting up a new management team. In one day he named three new veeps from the ranks: Ward's Treasurer Howard Kambestad, 45, Personnel Manager Drummond C. Ball, 39, Soft Goods Merchandiser George...