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Cablecast and web streaming of program in series

"Conversations with Harold Hudson Channer"

Upcoming Cable Television/Web Show:

For details of airing see bottom of page

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TUESDAY AUGUST 23, 2011 

                                                GUESTS:

                                     (Originally aired 01-14-87)

                                                 WILLIAM ATTWOOD

                                                         (1919- 1989 R.I.P)

                                                         (First 40 Minutes)

                                     

      American Journalist, Author, Editor and Diplomat.

                                               Author:

                                   (Among Many Works)

                    

                                      HarperCollins, 1987        

                 "The Twilight Struggle: Tales of the Cold War"

                                                       &

                                        JOHN McARTHUR

        

                   

                                       

                     President and Publisher of Harper's Magazine

                                                    (Final 18 Minutes)

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The program can be viewed in its entirety by clicking the you tube link below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LzWpRjf72BU - WILLIAM HOLLINGSWORTH ATTWOOD & JOHN McARTHUR

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More about: WILLIAM HOLLINGWORTH ATTWOOD & JOHN McARTHUR

 

William Hollingsworth Attwood (July 14, 1919 – April 15, 1989) was an American journalist, author, editor and diplomat.

Born in Paris, France, he received his education at Choate Rosemary Hall and Princeton University, editing The Daily Princetonian and later serving as a Princeton trustee. Later he served as a paratrooper in World War II.

After the war, Attwood wrote for the New York Herald Tribune and soon was transferred to the Paris bureau of the international edition. His first book, The Man Who Could Grow Hair, or Inside Andorra was a memoir-based series of tales of his adventures in post-war Europe.

Attwood married Simone Cadgene in Paris in 1950 and the couple eventually had three children, Peter, Janet, and Susan. He published a memoir of their impressions of the changes in America upon returning, titled Still the Most Exciting Country.

Adlai Stevenson enlisted Attwood to serve as a speechwriter and advisor in both of his presidential campaigns, in 1952 and 1956, and to write other speeches in 1960.[1] When John F. Kennedy became the 1960 Democratic nominee, Attwood joined the Kennedy campaign. Stevenson and Attwood were close friends and collaborators for years. Attwood accompanied Stevenson on a trip around the world sponsored by Look magazine, writing the regular articles about Stevenson's travels that appeared in that magazine.

Early in his presidency, President Kennedy appointed Attwood to serve as Ambassador to the West African country of Guinea. He was forced to return to the States after a near fatal case of polio (which gave him a permanent limp), but recovered and returned to Guinea for a time.

In 1963, the Kennedy administration desired to negotiate détente with Fidel Castro and to negotiate the beginning of normalized relations after the 1964 campaign. Attwood claimed he served as a secret liaison and was due to report to the president when Kennedy returned from the trip to Dallas during which he was assassinated; and that the Johnson administration discontinued this effort.[2][3]

Attwood served a second appointment as ambassador during the Johnson administration, to Kenya. He published a book about the relationship of Kenyan politics and communism, The Reds and the Blacks.

Attwood had long worked with Cowles Communications, mostly in various editorial roles at Look. In 1970, he became editor of Newsday, the Long Island daily newspaper. He started Newsday's New York edition.

Upon retirement in 1979, Attwood focused on writing, and serving the Town Council in his hometown of New Canaan, Connecticut. After covering the Geneva Summit between Reagan and Gorbachev in 1987, Attwood published his final book, The Twilight Struggle: Tales of the Cold War, which chronicled his unique view of the Cold War from its beginning to its presumable end.

Attwood died from congestive heart failure in New Canaan on April 15, 1989.

The Public Library in Attwood's hometown of New Canaan annually hosts the Attwood Memorial Lecture, which features speakers who reflect his own passions for the intersection of journalism and politics. Speakers have included Art Buchwald, Doris Kearns Goodwin, and Jonathan Alter.

Attwood's papers are held by the State Historical Society of Wisconsin.[4]

[edit] Books by Attwood

  • The Man Who Could Grow Hair Alfred A. Knopf, 1949.
  • Still the Most Exciting Country Alfred A Knopf, 1955.
  • The Decline of the American Male (contributor to essay collection with other Look editors) Random House, 1958.
  • The Reds and the Blacks Harper & Row, 1967.
  • The Fairly Scary Adventure Book (children's book) HarperCollins, 1969.
  • Making It Through Middle Age Atheneum Books, 1982.
  • The Twilight Struggle: Tales of the Cold War HarperCollins, 1987.

[edit] Sources

[edit] References

  1. ^ Time, Be Prepared.
  2. ^ William H. Attwood, recorded statement, November 8, 1965, John F. Kennedy Library Oral History Program.
  3. ^ Spartacus Educational, William Attwood.
  4. ^ Plummer, Brenda Gayle. Rising Wind: Black Americans and U.S. Foreign Affairs, 1935-1960, p. 390

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MacArthur, John R.

John R. (Rick) MacArthur is president and publisher of Harper's Magazine, the oldest continuously published monthly magazine in America. He has served in this role since 1983. Mr. MacArthur is also an award-winning journalist and author. In 2008, he published his third book entitled, You Can’t Be President: The Outrageous Barriers to Democracy in America. Mr. MacArthur writes a monthly column for the Providence Journal and, in French, for Le Devoir (Montreal) on a wide range of topics from politics to culture.

Mr. MacArthur's first book, Second Front: Censorship and Propaganda in the Gulf War, was a finalist for the 1993 Mencken Award for books and won the Illinois ACLU's 1992 Harry Kalven Freedom of Expression award. His critically acclaimed follow-up, The Selling of “Free Trade”: NAFTA, Washington, and the Subversion of American Democracy, was published in the spring of 2000.

Mr. MacArthur initiated the foundation-sponsored rescue of Harper's Magazine in 1980. Under his stewardship the magazine has received numerous awards and the support of advertisers and readers alike. Since 1994 the magazine has received 18 National Magazine Awards, the industry's highest recognition.

Before joining Harper's Magazine, Mr. MacArthur was an assistant foreign editor at United Press International (1982) and a reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times (1979-1982), Bergen Record (1978-1979), Washington Star (1978), and the Wall Street Journal (1977). In 1993 he received the Mencken Award for best editorial/op-ed column for his New York Times investigation of Nayrah Al-Sabah, the Kuwaiti ambassador's daughter who helped fake the Iraqi baby-incubator atrocity.

A tireless advocate for international human rights, Mr. MacArthur founded and serves on the board of directors of the Death Penalty Information Center and the Roderick MacArthur Justice Center. Along with members of his family he founded Article 19, the International Center on Censorship, based in London, and in 1989 he initiated and helped organize the PEN/Article 19/Author's Guild rally for Salman Rushdie. He is also on the board of directors of the Author's Guild, and he is a fellow at the New York Institute for the Humanities.

Born on June 4, 1956, in New York City, Mr. MacArthur grew up in Winnetka, Illinois, and graduated in 1978 from Columbia College with a B.A. in history. He lives with his wife and two daughters in New York City.

WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
They say America is the land of the second chance -- the chance to make good on a promise, a project or a virtuous deed that might lead to redemption. But in the case of Henry Kissinger, the chances never seem to run out, no matter how much harm he d . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
A few days after I voted in the first round of the French presidential election, I dropped by the French Cultural Center on Fifth Avenue to attend a reception in honor of the American novelist Paul Auster—and to gather some political intelligence. . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
Given my dissident politics, I should be up in arms about the Israel lobby. Not only have I supported the civil rights of the Palestinians over the years, but two of my principal intellectual mentors were George W. Ball and Edward Said, both severe c . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
With talk at last turning seriously to a possible pull-out of American troops from Iraq, my thoughts run immediately to the fall of Saigon in 1975. That was the last time the United States had to face on a large scale a grave moral question: Whom amo . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
I know I was supposed to love it, but when I was a kid I was scared of the circus. . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
Whenever liberals moan about the sorry state of American print journalism, I'm reminded of A.J. Liebling, the great New Yorker press critic of the 1950s and '60s, who remarked that “freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one.” . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
Sometimes it's great to be wrong. When the Democrats took the House and the Senate—contrary to my published expectations—I breathed a sigh of relief. So what if James Webb is a pulp-fiction-writing former Reaganite. The senator-elect from Virginia an . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
WATERBURY, Conn. It might seem unfair to the citizens of this worn-out jewel of New England's industrial past, but come Nov. 7, Waterbury voters could well determine the future conduct, not only of the Democratic Party, but of the war in Iraq. . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
Ever since George Bush's take-it-easy response to Hurricane Katrina, the chattering classes have been trumpeting Republican “vulnerability” and the likelihood of the Democrats' retaking one, if not both, houses of Congress. . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
I'm what you might call a train buff—not the obsessive camera-toting variety who hangs around stations and crossings snapping “action” shots, but nonetheless a passionate devotee of railroad travel. . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
If you're having trouble understanding why America has been sitting on its hands while Israel devastates Lebanon and Hezbollah fires missiles at Haifa, I refer you to the fall of 1990, when American diplomacy attained a new level of cynicism in its d . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
Last month, when the White House attacked The New York Times for revealing a secret Treasury Department surveillance program, it was tempting to conclude that the thieves were falling out among themselves. The Times, according to Bush and his congres . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
I don't consider myself naive about war, but then I've never been in the military and certain childish notions die harder than others. So when I read more confirmations of the apparent U.S. Marines' massacre of 24 civilians in Iraq, I felt as though . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
If you want to know why the Democrats are unlikely to retake the majority in either house of Congress this November, you need look no further than the boilerplate party platform, just published, entitled America Back on Track and allegedly written by . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
Usually I give The New York Times's right-wing columnist John Tierney a pass in the morning. I like my ideologues witty—or at least outrageous—and Tierney, like his stablemate David Brooks, almost never delivers on either count (except, perhaps, in h . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
It's hard not to chuckle at the Democratic Party cash-in on “Portgate,” the proposed sale of big East Coast port operations to Dubai Ports World. (The company is owned by the United Arab Emirates, of which Dubai is a part.) The other day a Washington . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
Every time I take my kids to the Tecumseh Playground, at 77th Street and Amsterdam Avenue, in Manhattan, I'm troubled by a political paradox. . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
The last time I saw Eugene McCarthy was in July, and we didn't have much of a conversation. Parkinson's disease and old age had dimmed the witty and philosophical voice that always left me feeling ahead of where we'd started out. . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
Football aphorisms and analogies usually leave me cold—such “life lesson” clichés seem designed to pacify an already somnolent population of television-addicted zombies. . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
New York — It's been dreadful, these past three years putting up with George Bush's fraudulent rationales for invading Iraq. And there's no respite in sight — the phony justifications keep coming, no matter how many corpses pile up, no matter how bad . . . MORE . . .
WEB ONLY
By John R. MacArthur
A commencement address delivered to the graduating class of Eastern Connecticut State University on May 23, 2004. . . . MORE . . .

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TUESDAY AUGUST 23, 2011

11:00 - 11:58 AM  / (NYC Time)

Channel 34 of the Time/Warner & Channel 83 of the RCN 
  Cable Television Systems in Manhattan, New York.

The Program can now be viewed on the internet at time of cable casting at: WWW.MNN.ORG

  
NOTE: You must adjust viewing to reflect NYC time & click on "WATCH MNN 1" at site

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                                    241 West 36th StreetNew York,N.Y. 10018 Phone: 212-695-6351 E-Mail: HHC@NYC.RR.COM

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