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...Teddy Kennedy were there. Dave Powers, White House jester during the Kennedy years, served as master of ceremonies. Benjamin Smith, who was J.F.K.'s Harvard roommate and later warmed the U.S. Senate seat to which Teddy Kennedy was elected, was on display. Others on the dais included Andy Hatcher, a former White House press aide, and Dick Goodwin, a Kennedy speechwriter who was drafted by Lyndon Johnson to help with this month's State of the Union address. Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield gave the principal speech...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Massachusetts: Kenny Comes Home | 1/28/1966 | See Source »

Other Administration dropouts have found room at the top without writing a line about the Cuban crisis or J.F.K.'s opinion of Dean Rusk. Andrew Hatcher, a Negro who earned $18,000 as assistant White House press secretary, is now market-promotions manager for the Ballantine beer outfit. Another former press aide, Malcolm Kilduff, whose chief claim to fame is that he announced Kennedy's death to the press in Dallas, is in the $50,000-a-year bracket as a partner in a Washington public relations firm...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Most Happy Dropouts | 9/24/1965 | See Source »

...spent his entire 21-year academic career at Michigan, rising from graduate teaching assistant to psychology professor to head of its College of Literature, Science and the Arts. At 40, he was the youngest man to hold the post. Ann Arbor considered him the logical successor to President Harlan Hatcher, who will retire in 1967; to keep him on campus, some faculty members suggested that Heyns be given a special executive position ranking above the university's six other vice presidents. "I am no disciplinarian," Heyns says, but he once squelched disorderly students, protesting the campus presence of former...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Universities: The Man for Tomorrow | 8/6/1965 | See Source »

Jouncing along the dusty, crushed-rock ribbon of road behind the wheel of a green Ford pickup truck, Hatcher M. James Jr., 41, an American AID officer in Dinh Tuong province, surveyed with satisfaction the peasants on either side peacefully tilling fields of green beans, tomatoes, melons. He waved at Vietnamese small fry, moonfaced boys and graceful schoolgirls in black sateen pants, who broke into excited smiles as the truck sped by and called out in English "hello hello" and "okay okay...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Viet Nam: To Clear & to Hold | 3/27/1964 | See Source »

...clapboard and stone L.B.J. ranch house in Johnson City, Texas. The President mustered more than a score of Baineses, Johnsons and other friends and kinfolk, lined them up and got them to look real pretty for the cameramen. He introduced a few: 'This is Aunt Jessie, Mrs. Jessie Hatcher, who did all my cooking, washing and sewing for me when I was in school in Houston. And I was in her dining room when I announced I was going to run for Congress in 1937." And "this is Uncle Huffman Baines. Uncle Huffman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Presidency: Whatever You Say, Honey | 1/3/1964 | See Source »

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