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...Secret Service and the U.S. Attorney's Office decided that the columnist. Dominic F. Manno, "is not dangerous at this time." Kevin M Tucker, the special agent in charge of the investigation, said yesterday...

Author: By Charles D. Bloche, | Title: Secret Service Grills Penn Columnist; Feared His Column Threatened Reagan | 4/11/1981 | See Source »

...Manno's column appeared on April 1. two days after John W. Hinckley allegedly attempted to assassinate Reagan. "Too bad he missed. That's the result of sending an amateur to do a professional job. I hope he dies," Manno wrote...

Author: By Charles D. Bloche, | Title: Secret Service Grills Penn Columnist; Feared His Column Threatened Reagan | 4/11/1981 | See Source »

Hinckley "just seems to be someone who could get upset and angry enough about the political system to use a bullet to cancel out the ballot. A lot of people feel that way about the system. Including me," Manno wrote...

Author: By Charles D. Bloche, | Title: Secret Service Grills Penn Columnist; Feared His Column Threatened Reagan | 4/11/1981 | See Source »

...Vincent J. Manno of Manno & Romano, the newspaper brokerage firm that brought the two publishers together, the transaction represented a "new horizon for the newspaper field." In the joint announcement made by the two companies, Newark News President Edward Scudder said that "although the News has never occupied a stronger position in its field than it does today, I am convinced that the vast resources and prestige of Time Inc. will contribute tremendously to its growth and service to its readers." Time Inc.'s plans for the News will be made public when the transaction is concluded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Time Inc.'s First Daily | 2/23/1968 | See Source »

Jumping the Traffic. No matter how high the quality of the editorial product, costs must be kept down, the work force reduced, union restrictions eliminated, production fully automated. "One thing you've got to have is a modern plant," says Vincent Manno, the New York newspaper broker who brought Hearst, Howard and Whitney together for the ill-fated W.J.T. merger. "You can't spend less than $25 million and have the kind of plant necessary to put out a paper in the city of New York. A fully automated plant contemplates that the unions would permit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: How to Survive in the Afternoon | 5/26/1967 | See Source »

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