Word: pearson
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John Kennedy has often fussed about an inequity in international journalism. Nikita Khrushchev, through private interviews with such traveling U.S. pundits as Walter Lippmann, Drew Pearson and the New York Times's Cyrus L. Sulzberger, has communicated his views to the U.S. newspaper public; Kennedy himself has had no such access to the Russian people. But last week the President finally got a chance, and a good one. In the first presidential interview ever granted a Russian newsman, he talked for two hours with Aleksei Adzhubei, who is both editor of Izvestia and Khrushchev...
Fortnight ago, a Gallup Poll of Canada reported the Tories at their lowest ebb since their '58 sweep, and Nobel Peace Prizewinner Lester ("Mike") Pearson's resurgent Liberals sprinting ahead. The standings on Gallup's fever chart: Liberals, 43%; Tories, 37%. Way down on the chart with 12%, but making headway: ex-Saskatchewan Premier T. C. Douglas' New Democratic Party. It was formed last summer, on the rough model of Britain's Labor Party, by a marriage between the old socialist CCF Party and the 1,150,000-member Canadian Labor Congress...
...labor force). But on the debit side, Diefenbaker has failed to show how his government intends to meet the new challenge of world trade-particularly that posed by Britain's expected entry into the European Common Market. The Tories stubbornly oppose Britain's entry; Liberal Pearson wants Canada to join in a counterbalancing Atlantic alliance trading area with the U.S. and Europe...
Born. To Manda Jane Pearson, 37, harried housewife, and Marion Pearson, 43, itinerant TV repairman: a reported U.S. record-setting seventh consecutive set of twins, their 17th and 18th children (of whom 13 survive); in Jacksonville, Fla.'s Duval Medical Center...
...Central American students have numbered about 225 of the total of 14,000), the university had been in the awkward position of refusing admission only to American Negroes. "This just makes legal what we've been doing all along," said one dean. But Miami President Jay F. W. Pearson made clear that the move was deliberate and far-reaching. Said he: "We all recognized that sooner or later we would integrate. Some said it ought to begin at the graduate level, but some of us said, 'Why do it in steps? If you believe it's right...