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Freeman Fulbright : ウィキペディア英語版 | Freeman Fulbright
Freeman Fulbright (1925-1978) was a reporter and public relations executive, notable for his coverage of Adlai Stevenson's 1952 presidential campaign for the International News Service. He was editor of ''Newsweek'' in the 1950s, executive editor of the ''New York Herald Tribune'' (1961-1964), and an executive vice president of Hill and Knowlton, the largest public relations firm in the world at the time. ==Early life==
Fulbright was born on April 26, 1925 in Atlanta, Georgia, to Ernest Alexander Fulbright and Lessie Freeman Fulbright, both of North Carolina. The family moved back to North Carolina soon after their son’s birth, settling in Durham. Fulbright’s father was originally a traveling salesman, but with the onset of the Depression lost work and subsequently left the family, ultimately joined the US Merchant Marine service in 1937, and died of a ruptured appendix in a hospital in Calcutta on April 10, 1943 after sailing in a convoy from the US East Coast. Fulbright was thereafter raised by his mother and maternal grandmother, Minerva “Minnie” Freeman. Fulbright graduated from Durham High School, where he received high marks and was editor of the school newspaper. He was accepted to Duke University, but was unable to attend due to financial constraints.〔Who’s Who in America, 1977-78, page 1088〕
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