Topic: Bill Buckley
To be honest, I haven't read much by William F. Buckley, Jr., nor did I watch Firing Line all that often. I first heard of William F. Buckley when my mom bought me a copy of his book, Up from Liberalism ...
PK) Q1 2010 Earnings Call Transcript May 10, 2010 10:00 am ET. In the first quarter, revenue reached $225 million, this was 27% below the prior year, and reflects lower pipeline project activity. I will now ask Gary Love, our CFO ...
How to maintain quality control in the movement pipeline.Coming Up Conservative How to maintain quality control in the movement pipeline. I served briefly as a senior editor at the CN-funded Cornell Review, a newspaper that prides itself on having been a ...
GstaadThis place made its reputation during the Fifties. We had Bill Buckley, Ken Galbraith, David Niven, Sir Roger Moore, Lord Menuhin, Nathan Milstein, Balthus, even Vladimir Nabokov at times. Last week Paris Hilton hit town, and I can't think of a ...
New York There was a disclaimer of sorts in the programme for William Buckley's 80th birthday party and National Review's 50th: 'WFB guarantees never again to figure in any celebration in which he has a leading role.' It is the ...
The first time I ever saw Bill Buckley was July 16, 1969, at Cape Canaveral, the morning they sent Apollo 11 to the moon. I was in the press bleachers with the rest of the press crowd, Norman Mailer, Oriana Fallaci, Allen ...
If you're like me, you'll absolutely want to read Ross Douthat's exceedingly well written account of the weekend he and another NR intern went sailing with WFB. Then there's David Brooks's column this morning, and Patrick Deneen ...
Firing Line" television program, made Wednesday "a very sad day for a lot of people" who remembered the 82-year-old author and commentator as "the father of the modern conservative movement. In 1955, Buckley founded National Review, which rose in circulation from 16 ...
"He might have been working on a column," Mr. Buckley said. On the occasions I had dinner with National Review editors at the Buckleys' townhouse in Manhattan, there would always be an Ur-liberal present. It was fascinating to watch Bill -- and he ...