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Readers were understandably surprised since the Trib customarily brooks no "internationalist," "pro-Eisenhower" or "leftwing" nonsense in its pages. For 30 years, the paper has faithfully expressed the views of its eccentric publisher, Colonel Robert R. McCormick. It still runs no syndicated political columnists because there are none whose views would fit day to day with the views of the colonel. But last week, to prove that it meant what it said, the Trib ran a series of editorials from such sources as the Fair Dealing New York Post and Nashville Tennessean and even Britain's Manchester Guardian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Trib in Transition | 7/26/1954 | See Source »

...chief trouble--the Committee claimed in its staff report last week--is that education has become centralized, and has lost the "natural safeguards" inherent in local control. Central planners, by donating large grants to universities in foreign countries, have given education an "internationalist viewpoint" supposed to be dangerous...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Solid Foundations | 5/21/1954 | See Source »

...Republicans to lead them into a reconciliation with the rest of the party. He knew the East--he had graduated from Harvard Law, served on the Yale Corporation, and was respected in Eastern financial circles. As "the only mind in the conservative ranks," he knew the facts of the internationalist position. But he could never rise above the short-run interests of his own section. Never, that is, until the first months of the Eisenhower Administration when, acting as Eisenhower's "Prime Minster," he whipped Eastern and Midwestern Republicans into the same line. But death cut short Taft's brief...

Author: By Milton S. Gwirtzman, | Title: Mr. Republican | 5/18/1954 | See Source »

Paul Douglas, onetime professor at the University of Chicago, is a tousled scholar, a philosophizer, an internationalist, a supporter of the New and Fair Deals. He thinks much of the Eisenhower Administration's foreign policy is basically sound, but has serious doubts about its domestic policies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Mr. Retail v. the Professor | 4/26/1954 | See Source »

...Washington Post (circ. 201,645) and Washington Times-Herald (253,532) were about as unlike as two metropolitan dailies could be: the Post is internationalist and often New Dealish, although it backed Eisenhower; the Times-Herald was isolationist and archconservative, bore unhappily with Ike. But last week the two papers came to complete agreement on one of the biggest newspaper deals in U.S. history. For $8,500,000 the Post's Board Chairman Eugene Meyer, 78, bought the ailing (estimated $500,000 loss last year) Times-Herald from its ailing publisher, Colonel Robert R. (Chicago Tribune) McCormick...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Sale of the Times-Herald | 3/29/1954 | See Source »

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