TIDBITS AND OUTRAGES
Tidbits and Outrages Air Force Talent Hunt Civil service columnists—one of the journalistic species peculiar to life in Washington—occasionally publicize jobs in the federal government that...
...Lawford has a new home on Sutton Place...
...and had written off the case as solved...
...Pierre S. duPont IV (R-Del...
...Small Businessmen Those who have been doubtful about the sincerity of the Republican commitment to vigorous enforcement of the anti-trust laws can take comfort from this announcement in the Republican Congressional Committee Newsletter: “A Republican task force to look into anticompetitive practices and mono polistic concentrations of power will be chaired by Rep...
...H. John Heinz I1 of Pennsylvania...
...The Beverly Hills Police Department had pinned the burglary of Ellsberg’s psychiatrist on “a small-time, secondstory man and pursesnatcher named Elmer Davis...
...In the course of another investigation ,” Schrag writes, “the police had succeeded in getting Davis to ‘confess...
...said she had gone to her sister Pat Lawford’s costume housewarming party dressed as the first woman president...
...Case Closed For people who think the Supreme Court Miranda decision was softheaded, there is edification in Peter Schrag’s new book on the Ellsberg trial, Test of Lojdty...
...It’s one thing to mistakenly recognize a modus operandi, but in this case the local police went a big step further...
...True Believers Take Their Lumps For all the troops who loyally go forth to battle mistyeyed with devotion to their leader, there can only be further inspiration from these items from the news: Herbert Porter, who will be remembered for telling the Senate Select Committee how he had worked for Nixon from the time he was a boy right up through his perjury to the Grand Jury, will be touched to learn that John Dean’s mention of his name to the President drew this response: “Who is Porter (unintelligible...
...Tidbits and Outrages Air Force Talent Hunt Civil service columnists—one of the journalistic species peculiar to life in Washington—occasionally publicize jobs in the federal government that are going begging for want of qualified applicants, Mike Causey, who writes "The Federal Diary" column in The Washington Post passed this memo on to us: A Keen Judge of Character If you wonder what kind of personnel a President Ford would bring into the government, a new biography called Jerry Ford, Up Close, due for publication this month reveals that he was the one who recommended G. Gordon Liddy for employment by the Nixon Administration...
...Shriver sported a top hat and cutaway over her evening dress and carried a cassette that played “Hail to the Chief...
...In their search for a vice chairman, we hope they won’t overlook Rep...
...Equally touching, for those Kennedy loyalists who still find the music associated with the late President’s f~ineral unbearably evocative, will be this report from Betty Beale of The Washington Star-News: Eunice Shriver...
Vol. 6 • June 1974 • No. 4