Word: mcllwaine
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...Republican Governor Nelson Rockefeller, a possible opponent of President Johnson next year. But Newsday's owner, Captain Harry F. Guggenheim, is a staunch Republican. And more disclosures are still to come. "I think we've got enough stuff to keep us going through 1968," says Editor Bill Mcllwain. "There's some awfully fertile ground out there...
...Newsday is published just outside New York City, it has hired few experienced reporters from New York publications. "We get our best people from middle-sized papers in middle-sized towns," says Hathway. "Towns like Charlotte, N.C., or Columbus, Ohio, have given us better reporters," adds Managing Editor Bill Mcllwain. "They're a little bit hungrier, and they don't come on like a bunch of old China hands doing you a favor...
...Chauncey St. apartment. When she lectures she seems to tell her historical story as much for herself as for her intent listeners. Seldom dramatic or humorous, her own quiet enthusiasm carries her talk and one admiring student pronounced what has been a lasting epithet: "Aha," he said, "A female Mcllwain...
...James P. Baxter, III '14 for "Scientists Against Time," 1942; Paul H. Buck for "The Road to Reunion," in 1938; Frederick J. Turner for "The Significance of Sections in American History," 1933; Edward Channing for volume six of "The History of the United States," 1926; and Charles H. Mcllwain, professor emeritus, for "The American Revolution...
Three emeriti professors in the University, Sidney B. Fay '96, Charles S. Mcllwain, and Arthur S. Pease '02, are among the instructors. Mrs. Richard Borden directs the program...