Word: schoenbrun
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Vietnam: How Did We Get In? How Can We Get Out?, a film by David Schoenbrun, is the feature of a fund-raising party sponsored by the Massachusetts McCarthy for President Committee, beginning at 8 p.m. tonight at 12 Arrow Street. The film will be shown five times, and seminars will explore the reasons behind Senator McCarthy's candidacy...
...provide perspective, which in this case was superfluous, NET staged a 60-minute debate between two differing Asia hands from academe. The discussion was urbane and informed but not particularly illuminating. Former CBS Correspondent David Schoenbrun, now a professor of Vietnamese history at Columbia University, conceded that Greene's "emphasis on civilian targets gave a false impression," but called the film "a useful counterpoint to our own propaganda." Robert Scalapino, who teaches political science at Berkeley, observed that the documentary "did not mention the word 'Communism' once," and summed up that it "presented North Viet...
N.E.T. JOURNAL (shown on Mondays). "France Is Dead: Long Live France!" Since the end of World War II France has become a land of the very old and the very young-today one-third of all Frenchmen are under 20. Reporter David Schoenbrun talks to the French about the New France, their goals, De Gaulle and the war in Viet...
Could it be that Charles de Gaulle had ever been young? At a Books and Authors luncheon in Manhattan, former CBS Paris Correspondent David Schoenbrun was talking about his new biography, The Three Lives of Charles de Gaulle, and told one anecdote that didn't get into the book. The general, said he, had a reputation as a ladies' man once, even used to pursue the same demoiselles as his former comrade-in-arms Marshal Henri Pétain. Well, a friend asked the general in later years if the story was true. "Ah, oui," De Gaulle answered...
...Administration's foreign policy moves, and his public support of the Dominican Republic and Viet Nam policies pained many of his liberal followers. This caused a good deal of chatter among journalists, including some talk immediately after his death that raised questions of journalistic ethics. Radio Reporter David Schoenbrun claimed that Stevenson, in a personal conversation the week before, had called President Johnson's intervention in the Dominican Republic a "massive blunder...