Word: transcripts
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...Late General MacArthur, Warts and All," "Bobby Baker Has It Made," "Two Cheers for the National Geographic," "In Defense of Cassius Clay," "The Life and Suspiciously Hard Times of Anthony Quinn," and "The American Newspaper Is Neither Record, Mirror, Journal, Ledger, Bulletin, Telegram, Examiner, Register, Chronicle, Gazette, Observer, Monitor, Transcript, nor Herald of the Day's Events...
...BostonTranscript, voice of the Beacon Hill Brahmins, was badly hurt in the depression, yet its publisher dragged on until 1941. Finally, but only after months of pathetic appeals for financial aid (some of which actually appeared in the Transcript), the paper went under. In 1956, the Boston post, the strident and powerful voice of the Democratic Party in Massachusetts and once the nation's third largest paper, died. ThePost's publisher, John Fox, so firmly believed in the Post's importance as the Democratic standard bearer that he twice managed to revive the paper, in one case after it hadn...
...offensive, adolescent, sex variety." The woman who claimed to have been called never appeared at any hearing. Neither Gerald nor his parents were advised of any right to counsel or of his right to keep silent. They had little or no advance notice of the charges against him. No transcript was kept of the proceedings, and no appeal was possible. It took a writ of habeas corpus to get any sort of review. The offense was punishable by a maximum of two months and $50 if Gerald had been an adult. Since he was only 15, however, he could...
Precisely what was said will probably remain in dispute, unless, as New York Daily News Columnist Ted Lewis suggests, a transcript is eventually published. Both Johnson and Kennedy are known for using strong language in private, not forgetting vulgarisms; Kennedy, once part of the White House power center, is less awed in presidential surroundings than most...
...Contradicting the Boss. Secretary McNamara has never called for an end to the bombings. What prompted the talk of his differences with Rusk was his patent ambivalence about the value of the raids during closed hearings of the Senate Armed Services and Appropriations Committees in January. A heavily censored transcript of his testimony released last week indicated that McNamara did indeed have reservations. "Undoubtedly, the bombings do limit the capability of the North Vietnamese to infiltrate men and equipment into the South," he said at one stage. "But it is not clear that the limit that results is below...