Word: pattersons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Little Nells. Others take a more relaxed view. "The press has a fairly high betrayal threshold," says Eugene C. Patterson, editor and president of the St. Petersburg Times. "We're not a bunch of little Nells who were innocently seduced by the President. It's just the first time that Ford had a dustup with the press. There's bound to be more." Adds Emmet Dedmon, editorial director of the Field newspapers: "A honeymoon can last only until a President's first major decision...
This delightful "anything goes" informality can go too far. Annie Patterson, 59, makes vigorous use of Orange Cablevision to air her "inside" knowledge of a Kennedy assassination conspiracy. Since The Annie Patterson Show often displays "real bad form," Program Coordinator Debi Amos personally supervises the telecasting but says, "I can't stop her because I have no law or rules to stop her with." That dilemma is not unique. In Reading last year there were two programs by the Ku Klux Klan...
...Yale, then was a White House correspondent before becoming assistant city editor in 1964. Son of a wealthy New York City lawyer, he became editor in 1968, has brightened layouts, emphasized investigative reporting and broadened coverage of the underprivileged. A handsome bachelor-about-town since his divorce from Alice Patterson Albright, whose family of Medills and Pattersons made newspaper history with their Chicago Tribune, New York Daily News and the late Washington Times-Herald, the politically liberal Hoge has seen Sun-Timesmen collect four Pulitzer Prizes, while the paper's circulation rose by more than 40,000 under...
...Radcliffe squad dazed Brown in the first half, 8-0, with both Holly Loring and Ann Johnson racking up hat tricks. The second half was much the same story, with Loring notching another goal and Johnson picking up two more tallies. Karen Durbin, Kayle Patterson, Chloie Gavin and Carlene Rhodes also got into the scoring act, each pounding the nets with solo scores...
Then came Cusack, who missed beating the course record set by England's Ron Hill in 1970 of 2:10:30. Following Cusack came runner after runner, of all sizes and shapes, some grinning, others with faces contorted in pain. Tom Fleming, an American from William Patterson College in New Jersey was second, and then no one seemed to keep count...