Library of Congress

Authorities & Vocabularies

The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service > LC Name Authority File

From Library of Congress Name Authority File


us: Hadley, Arthur T., 1924-



  • URI(s)

  • Instance Of

  • Scheme Membership(s)

  • Collection Membership(s)

  • Variants

    • us: Hadley, Arthur Twining, 1924-
  • Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

  • Earlier Established Forms

    • Hadley, Arthur Twining, 1924-
  • Sources

    • found: Do I make myself clear? 1956: title page (Arthur T. Hadley)
    • found: The empty polling booth, c1978: title page (Arthur T. Hadley)
    • found: The straw giant, c1986: title page (Arthur T. Hadley) CIP (Hadley, Arthur Twining, 1924-)
    • found: Glitterati Incorporated, via WWW, November 12, 2012 (Arthur T. Hadley; writer and journalist; he received his BA from Yale in 1949, graduating in three years as Scholar of the House, Magna cum Laude; he enlisted in the Army out of high school, retiring as a major and a highly decorated tank officer; he covered the Korean War and the Truman and Eisenhower White Houses for Newsweek, and was an Assistant Executive Editor of the New York Herald Tribune; he won several prizes for his magazine reporting from Vietnam in 1969, and later became Washington Bureau Chief of the New Times Magazine; he is the author of numerous magazine articles, two plays, and ten books, including The Straw Giant, published in 1986 by Random House Publishers; he has been Press Secretary to three Democratic presidential candidates during their primary campaigns, and is a founding member of the International Institute of Strategic Studies in London)
    • found: Contemporary Authors, via WWW, November 12, 2012 (Arthur T. Hadley, 1924-; also known as: Arthur T. Hadley, Arthur Twining Hadley, Arthur Hadley; born June 24, 1924 in New York, NY; son of Morris Hadley and Katherine Blodgett; Yale University, B.A. (with honors), 1949; U.S. Army, 1942-1946, became major; received Purple Heart and Silver Star; Free-lance writer; Newsweek, New York City, Department of Defense correspondent, 1949-1953, White House correspondent, 1953-1955, "Periscope" editor, 1955-1956; New York Herald Tribune, New York City, assistant executive editor, 1957-1960; New Times, New York City, Washington correspondent, 1974-1978. Consultant on arms control to Stanford Research Institute, 1961-1965, and on army training to Arthur D. Little, Inc., 1971-; Member-secretary of the U.S. Army Psychological Warfare Advisory Board, 1949-1952)
  • LC Classification

    • PS3558.A316
  • Change Notes

    • 1980-05-01: new
    • 2012-12-19: revised
  • Alternate Formats