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  • ) to date should enyt l i nc hn ve happened s ince yours of , rch 17th. Sincerel y, PRESERVATION COPY . . - ·- :..----:" . DR . CLIFFORD ,, J . BARBORKA 700 NORTH MICHIGAN AVENUE CHICAGO April 14, 1933 Mr . Charles E. Marsh Austin , Texas My
  • heritage. The only son o£ Whitelaw Reid, the journalist-diplomat who took over Horace· Greeley's New York Tribune, Reid was born in New .;: York 64 years ago, studied at Bono Uni­ Burgeoning Chains versity in Germany, took his law degree In the wake
  • • teen per cent. These people are bou&ht and sold on special pri­ vile&e trade-outs. This means that you do a Job on .Arnall of Georgia and Hill ot Alabama and Mayor Kelly of Chicago. and the bum Hague. But tbe .tact is that you are enterin&..the .vale ot
  • , and Chicago and Detroit. He is a publishers• representative who meets the sellers of advertising ror large corporations and the operating executives or the same. He is an Irish Catholic, has not become anti-Catholic, but has been broadened b.r !our years
  • !'notiona miloting -with the Prollidont. t\10 nooks ngo by Toma Dot10orate lly ooncem is that Europe h&ar through America that this country is behind the Preoident to the sneximum. Thnt Jll8e.ns1 l. Chicago ehould be une.nimouu with _no other name
  • their 1952 convention-convened in the same vast, air-conditioned Chicago audi­ torium where the Republicans nominated Dwight D. Eisenhower for the presidency 10 d4ys earlier. They said sessions would start on time, speeches would be brief. Everybody
  • every day in private business by people who do not have pre­ cedents when they want things done. he Orlando Star 'has a car of paper purcha•ed from a pa.per company and the T Tribune is out of paper, the paper manufacturer merely phones llartin Ande en
  • in establishment of the force of unity would be the very denial of a supreme placement. I do not believe we need a Tribunal of The Hague, or the fixation at Geneva of a world business, or at Washington, any more than I am sure we need a fixed Pope at Rome, backed
  • the utterances is of traitors to me. fc GEORGE HANNER. of is Greensboro. ~,e. Jtew-t/ !>7ep Itt7 4 VII • NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE WEEKLY BOOK REVIEW, AUGUST 8, 1947 Freedom: The Right and Duty A Philosopher Tries to Analyze the Moral Principles of the Press
  • to your Commander-in-Chief Roosevelt, last year fou ght t he battle of Chicago f or Roosevelt. And I saw him at 1a shington fight a lmost alone t he battl e f or a democartio majority without which the voice of Rayburn would not be t he voice from t he
  • an Austin newspapel"-other than The . . r you are interested in giving us -l :15i Novelty Note: Tribune-an acc.ount of what had gone on On the American side of the a chance to show what we really 4:Jo, SIGN Oli'I' show, considerable teamwork is know
  • npreaenta1.1Tea ot a worl4'• peopl.o in unity, a.ad 't.bo abeeDGe of a or fixed plaee in e1tabl1ehment or -the fQroe or \lU1 '\J' woul.d ba the TerJ denial a apreme pla01t11Snt. I do ao't bel1ew w Geneva or DIH4 a Tribunal of filo Bacw, , or the fixation
  • of in- ' The De Luxe Dole sition of headlines in t_he Sµnd ay fluence." The process ·of so di­ Herald Tribune. Rigqf across the viding it threatens freed.o m and · , I WISH i t were possible to hold page at the top was the banner: a -s uper-colossal investigation
  • foreign policy his party will agree to must be their policy. I quote from his address, as reported in the New York Herald Tribune of Sunday, January 26, 1947: A Democratic President and his Secretary of State can propose, but a Republican Con­ gress can
  • , daily, monthly, and forever. Slowly, painfully, the human race has been struggling toward unity and peace. From the feeble work of Andrew Carnegie and the Hague Peace Tribunal--the peaoe hope of my father and of your fathers-­ we have been olimbing