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Death of Carrick Lewis

Carrick Lewis who has died after a long illness was a determined and contributing member of the National Press Club.
He was one of a number of high-level public sector administrators who joined the club via the University Club and then the Civil Service Club as these clubs reluctantly closed their doors for the last time.Carrick Lewis

Of measured and considerate manner he was a studious listener who enjoyed being drawn into discussions, be they practical, abstract, or doctrinal. He attended all annual general meetings of the National Press Club, and took the proceedings with notable seriousness and attention to detail.

He was for many years involved with the United Nations Association being national president in the early 1990s. He was a former president of the National Library Society, and was prominent mover behind Grey Power.  He was much to the fore in cultivating closer relations between the USSR- Russia and New Zealand, and at a time when there was much hostility toward the Soviets.

His mild and accommodating manner disguised though his fierce determination to promote the interests of what he saw as underdogs. This also extended to individuals and entities of money and power if he believed that they were being treated as underdogs.

He was born in 1937. He is survived by his wife Norina.

An Interview with National Press Club President Peter Isaac

Dame Thea Muldoon Personified an Era. 
She Gave Shortest New Zealand Speech Ever

The 20th annual gathering of Central Districts/ Wellington region journalists this year also served as a milestone for perpetual host New Zealand Farmer editor Jon Morgan's own half century in harness.

He signed on under the old cadet apprenticeship scheme in his teens and soon began specialising in rural and agribusiness reporting which has remained his focus ever since. In recent years he has found himself shifting from the press bench to the judges rostrum, adjudicating on exhibits at agricultural shows and field days.

The event also gives his guest-colleagues an insight into their hosts' own pastoral and horticutural skills because the venue is the Morgan's own property in the Horowhenua - Kapiti district.

      Post prandial. Evening Post's Penny Harding Gary Connor

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Russia will adhere to its traditions regardless of what the West wants it do, thinks it should do, or believes it should do cautioned Major General Peter Williams talking to the National Press Club at the Associated Audio Bose auditorium.

The Russian mind-set and thus approach rests on fear of iinternal fragmentation which in turn pivots on the threat of external intervention, especially full scale invasion. Such fears were justified noted General Williams recalling the British interventionism after World War 1. This was followed by the determination after World War 2 of the West to disrupt the USSR via the Cold War.

This type of damaging intervention continues to this day, he observed, and is characterised for example by the United Kingdom taking in from Russia hundreds of billions of US dollars equivalent which amounted to “dirty money,” declared General Williams.
General Williams himself was a Cold War warrior having served with BRIXMIS, the British cross-mission into Soviet held East Germany.

After the collapse of the USSR he went on to lead the NATO Mission to the new Russian Federation.

The Coldstream Guards officer identified the failure of the West to understand the Russia concept of power as central to what he described as the syndrome in which there was the belief that “because they look like us – they must also think like us.”

In the event Russians were most at home with their tradition of centralised monolithic power just because experience had taught them that such unbridled power was the best way to deal with these constant threats of invasion, foreign interventionism, internal fragmentation, and economic collapse.

There was no such thing in the Russian makeup as the notion of the steel fist in the velvet glove. There was no such concept as the Western one about the “abuse of power”.

“In Russia, if you have power. Then you must use it. If you do not use it, then the power that you possess will simply be taken away from you.”

Because of this, Russia was determined to bring back into Mother Russia, what it knew as its “near abroad,” the newly created republics.

In pursuit of this national objective Russia, under its leader Vladimir Putin, would continue to exhibit singularity of purpose by, for example, “reaching out to kill its enemies, regardless of where they are.”

Russia, emphasised General Williams, was not going to change its ways on the whims of the West. Its overarching objective remains to restore its Tsarist “former glories.”

An aspect of Russian life today that constantly bamboozled Western journalists and other observers and analysts declared General Williams was that surrounding the lifestyle of Vladimir Putin himself.

His association with gymnasts and other such contemporary figures in the sports sphere was interpreted in the West as an indication of modernism.

In the event and within Russia such behaviour was regarded as a tough-guy lifestyle, and thus to be respected – and feared.

Committee member Digby Paape with Major General Peter Williams at the National Press Club meeting at the Associated Audio Bose Auditorium in Wellington

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National Press
Club Stalwart
Addresses Poland
Parliament


Krystina Tomaszyk (pictured) has addressed the Polish Parliament on the topic of the post World War 2 diaspora of the nation’s peoples. She addressed the Senate, the Upper House, on the divergence of Polish peoples in different parts ofthe world. Krystina Tomaschyk Mrs Tomaszyk spoke of the variables affecting the groups in terms of geographical location and the differing attitudes of the communities in which they now found themselves.

During World War 2 she was among those forcibly deported from Poland by the Soviets to Siberia. Then via Isfahan, and through the influence of the Polish legation in Wellington, eventually arriving in New Zealand.

These experiences and what followed are related in Mrs Tomaszyk’s autobiography, Essence. In her adult career in New Zealand Mrs Tomaszyk continued to cross boundaries becoming a pioneer marriage guidance counsellor and in other areas of community health. Along the way she became a publisher, and it was in this capacity that she joined the National Press Club.

In her address to Poland’s legislature she warned that neither Poland itself nor its dispersed peoples could be complacent about their future. Past threats could recur she warned, and become present dangers.

She has been prominent in a number of internationalist associations, notably that of United Nations. She married in 1952 the late Czeslaw Tomaszyk a hero of the Polish resistance movement.

Max Farndale publisher of MSC Newswire.Washington-based news agency EIN Presswire has embarked upon a joint venture with the National Press Club. The venture sends news about the New Zealand productive sector to North America and the rest of the world. The arrangement was put together by Max Farndale (pictured at side) publisher of MSC Newswire. It is the affiliate of the Washington news company.

The proprietor of EIN Presswire David Rothstein (pictured underneath) declared that the joint venture was part of his organisation’s world-wide emphasis on the productive sector and especially in manufacturing.

"New Zealand has this reputation in North America and Europe for honesty of purpose blended with an inventive sense of industry. There is now this opportunity of presenting the products of this to the world at large."

 

The Washington news agency turned to MSC Newswire to develop the channel for New Zealand manufacturer news into the North American market. It was then that Mr Farndale talked to the National Press Club to assist in the venture.

MSC Newswire is the only such organisation in Australasia dealing exclusively in productive sector news. All the other agencies focus on the financial news and politics spectrum.

Mr Farndale observed that New Zealand’s economy rests on its ability to produce products that people need and which are three dimensional..

Since the 1987 crash in which New Zealand lost all its banks and insurance companies along with 150 years worth of accumulated capital, it had ceased to be regarded globally as a repository of financial expertise, an impression confirmed since 2007 when almost all its finance companies had gone to the wall.

“So our focus is on manufacturing, production engineering, and processing, spheres in which New Zealand enjoys a high and sustained reputation.”

The joint venture organised by MSC Newswire has run since the start of the last quarter of 2014. According to Mr Farndale data reveals that over half the audience for the New Zealand productive sector stories is now within North America.

“It is one of those examples of an outsider, in this case Washington’s EIN Presswire, seeing an opportunity that was hiding in plain sight of the locals,” commented Mr Farndale.

MSC Newswire is based in Hawkes Bay which Mr Farndale considers one of the hearts of the productive sector. The company was formed two years ago.

The National Press Club’s role is to use its members own resources to identify products and companies of interest. The club’s newsmaker category includes industrialists, technicians, and administrators in the productive sector.

The procedure is for the New Zealand productive sector stories to enter the project via MSC Newswire and for these stories then to be vectored onto EIN Presswire’s global network.

“It is an example of the kind of leverage that can be obtained through this joint approach. In this case it means that New Zealand’s productive sector news is seen by an audience hundreds of times greater than if the same stories had been restricted to just local consumption,” added Max Farndale

“It overcomes the problem of New Zealand producers marketing back to themselves and to the people who already know all about them, and what they are doing. It has opened up an entirely new world for the productive sector here.”

The proprietor of EIN Presswire David Rothstein (pictured underneath) declared that the joint venture was part of his organisation’s world-wide emphasis on the productive sector and especially in manufacturing.

 


 

 

Minister of Education Hon, Steve Maharey and Connie with the club’s silverware and plaque

Connie with NZ Book Council ceo Lincoln Gould and Fairfax political columnist Vernon Small

Connie with husband Dr Charles Sneiderman and Radio New Zealand chairman Richard Griffin

Connie with Fairfax columnist and Radio Live host Sean Plunke

Connie with Hon Steve Maharey, Carrick Lewis, and Norrie Lewis

For a generation from Washington Connie Lawn every week day morning brought to the radio listeners of the world’s remotest English-speaking nation news from the White House.
 

New Zealanders time zones ahead usually heard the breaks before their counterparts in the United States. Connie Lawn was as much a part of the New Zealand way of life as their rugby version of football or a sheep shearing gang.
 

Then she was gone, and with her the intimate first-person portrayals of the decisions and the decision makers at the fulcrum of the Western World. Connie Lawn had been scythed aside in one of the ritual restructurings that are part of mainstream broadcasting everywhere. In this particular rite of passage she was replaced by local content, mostly in the form of contrived news notably sport.
 

If Radio New Zealand was finished with her, Connie Lawn was not finished with New Zealand. For the best part of the intervening generation her voice in the southern latitudes was rarely stilled.
 

Being heard, for example, in regular bulletins on Radio Live.  Since the advent of the internet she is a regular contributor to Scoop, the nation’s version of the Huffington Post.
 

She has been unofficial ambassador for New Zealand pointing in the right direction through the Washington maze fellow journalists, listeners, business people, diplomats, in fact, anyone at all who asks for help.
 

In 2006 she was presented in Parliament with the National Press Club’s Lifetime Achievement Award. You may not always agree with what Miss Lawn says. But you are never left in any doubt about what she is saying. Outlining in her acceptance speech her own journalistic career in Washington which started in 1968, and which subsequently encompassed marriage and motherhood she dwelled on the trade’s willingness in that era to give opportunity to women.
 

Now, in contrast, she noted, there were so many other and different career opportunities available for young females.
 

“Women can have better things to do,” she told her audience in the Parliamentary auditorium. “There are now so many careers for women outside journalism,” she insisted to her listeners many of whom had anticipated a feminist anti discriminatory appeal.
 

A few years later she was presented by Ambassador Mike Moore at the New Zealand embassy in Washington with the Honorary Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to New Zealand-U.S. Relations.
 

Now though the woman who always chose to compete on equal terms with everyone finds herself battling an enemy who she knows is each day getting the upper hand.
 

For the past years, since she was 65, she has been afflicted by Parkinson’s Disease which most cruelly of all has robbed her of her voice. Though not of her ability to type her regular insightful bulletins to The Huffington Post, and Scoop, among others.
 

She applies full disclosure to her affliction. Not for sympathy. But because “it makes me stagger and I do not want people to think that I am drunk.”
 

For Connie Lawn, honours tend to arrive unsought. She is now the Dean of the White House Press Corps, following the death of Helen Lawrence. She has rubbed shoulders with every president from Lyndon Johnson onward, has interviewed more international icons living and dead than practically anyone else on earth. Has skied most of the world’s signature ski slopes and in New Zealand had a race horse named after her.
 

Connie Lawn’s career proves that any obstacle is just an opportunity in disguise and should be treated as such.

 

You May not always agree with what Miss Lawn says…….
But you are never left in any doubt what she is saying.



Previous page: Dean of the White House Press Corps Connie Lawn and husband Dr Charles Sneiderman in the White House with President Obama and Mrs Obama.


At the reception at Parliament on the occasion of the presentation to Connie Lawn in 2006 of the National Press Club’s Lifetime Achievement Award.
 



At left from the top. Minister of Education Hon, Steve Maharey and Connie with the club’s silverware and plaque;
Connie with NZ Book Council ceo Lincoln Gould and Fairfax political columnist Vernon Small;
Connie with husband Dr Charles Sneiderman and Radio New Zealand chairman Richard Griffin;
Connie with Fairfax columnist and Radio Live host Sean Plunket;
Connie with Hon Steve Maharey, Carrick Lewis, and Norrie Lewis.

 



Below: In 2012 Connie was presented with the New Zealand order of Merit by ambassador Mike Moore at the New Zealand Embassy, Washington. Ambassador Moore is a former prime minister of New Zealand and a former head of the World Trade Organisation. He is a regular speaker at the National Press Club in Wellington.. 

In 2012 Connie was presented with the New Zealand order of Merit by ambassador Mike Moore at the New Zealand Embassy, Washington.

 

 

Centre of Influence   The National Press Club founded in 1974  is open to anyone of learning and curiosity who is interested in free speech and in the events around them. The club is well financed and from its inception the total joining fee remains $35. It is an annual subscription designed to assist those from all walks of life to participate in the club's role as the capital's independent centre of influence. Those interested in joining should email president This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..  

"The National Press Club has the value of being inclusive." Life Member Rt Hon. Jonathan Hunt ONZ

Among those who have spoken to the National Press Club in recent years have been:

HE Syed Ibne Abbas
Richard V Allen
HE Robert Alston
Guillermo Altares
Hon Jim Anderton, MP
Lord Archer
Ed Asner
Rowan Atkinson
Tim Barnett, MP
Kim Beazley
Sir James Belich
Michael Bentine
Sir Paul Beresford
Georgina Beyer MP
HE Saaed Bhatti
Acker Bilk
Sir Gordon Bisson
Michael Bloomberg
Sir Chay Blythe
Michelle Boag
Rt Hon Jim Bolger
Tom Bradley
Don Brash
Ambassador Carol Moseley Braun
Simon Brickles
Baroness Brigstock
Geraldine Brooks
Gerry Brownlee MP
Tom Burns
Elizabeth Calder
Alastair Cooke
Sir Roger Cork
Pam Corkery
HE Robert Cotton
Baroness Caroline Cox
Ian Cross
Hon Dr. Michael Cullen, MP
David Cunliffe MP
Dr. Theodore Dalrymple
Trevor de Cleene, MP
Bernard Diedrich
HE Gary Domingo
John Douglas
Karl du Fresne
Hon. Peter Dunne, MP
Dick Emery
Hon. Bill English, MP
Patrick Ensor
James Fallows
HE Richard Fell
Ian Fletcher
Frederick Forsyth

  Dr Liam Fox
Ian Fraser
Victoria Gaither
Nicholas Garland
Sir Douglas Graham
Nicky Hager
Christopher Harder
Cynthia Heimel
Paul Henry
Gerald Hensley
Chaim Herzog
Charlton Heston
Claire Hollingworth
Marc Holtzman
Michael Horton
Barry Humphries
Rt Hon Jonathan Hunt
Glenda Jackson
Paul Johnson
Sue Kedgley
Thomas Keneally
John Key MP
Peter Kittakachorn
Air Vice Marshall Robin Klitscher
Philip Knightley
Winnie Laban MP
Rt Hon Lee Kuan Yew
HH The Dalai Lama
Rt Hon David Lange
Connie Lawn
Judy Lessing
Lord Levene
Bernard Levin
Andrew Little MP
Gerald Long
Dr Sharon Lord
Carolyn Machado
Peter Mahon
Ron Mark MP
HE Otto Mattei
Dame Judith Mayhew
Murry McCully MP
Gerald McGhie
Patrick McGovern
Hon Don McKinnon
Tony Molloy QC
Sir Nick Montagu
Tony Molloy QC
Mike Moore, MP
Trevor Morley
Malcolm Muggeridge
Viscount Monckton
 

Dame Thea Muldoon
Hon Robert Muldoon
Steve Norris
Barrie Osborne
Terence O'Brien
Hon Winston Peters
Sir William Pickering
Daniel Pipes
Jean Plantureux (Plantu)
John Platts Mills QC
Kawana Pohe
Hon Richard Prebble
Gordon Ramsay
George Reedy
Hon Robert Reich
James Reston
Elliot Richardson
Commissioner Robbie Robinson
John Ralston Saul
Rt Hon Jenny Shipley, MP
Peter Shirtcliffe
Prince Norodom Sihanouk
Dr Patrick Sookhdeo
Sir Dryden Spring
Ambassador Charles Swindells
Peter Switzer
Hon. John Tamihere, MP
Oliver Tambo
Nandor Tanczos, MP
Lord Tebbit
Mark Tier
Lester Thurow
Peter Troughton
Hon Taria Turia MP
Simon Upton
Sir Peter Ustinov
Count Otto Von Lambsdorff
Terry Waite
Kurt Waldheim
Asher Wallfish
Peter Walters
John Wareham
Auberon Waugh
Terence White
HE Martin Williams
Maj. Gen Peter Williams
Ian Wishart
Martin Wolf
Richard Woods
David Yallop


Hon solicitor: Jack Hodder LLM

Lifetime Achievement Award Holders
Peter Arnett, Sir Geoffrey Cox, Pat Booth, Frank Haden, Connie Lawn, Sir Terry McLean, Graham Stewart MNZM

Life Members
Denis Adam, Tim Birch, Paul Cavanagh, Catherine de la Roche, Gavin Ellis, Rt Hon. Jonathan Hunt ONZ,
Jack Kelleher, Ralph Lenton, Warren Page, Pat Plunket, Paul Prince, Derek Round MNZM, Graham Stewart, Sir Christopher Harris

Executive Committee and Member Information

The National Press Club Inc President Peter Isaac - Journalist

Secretary/Treasurer Bryan Weyburne - Retired businessman

Lifetime Achievement Award Holders
Peter Arnett, Sir Geoffrey Cox, Pat Booth, Frank Haden, Connie Lawn, Sir Terry McLean, Graham Stewart MNZM

Life Members
Denis Adam, Tim Birch, Paul Cavanagh, Catherine de la Roche, Gavin Ellis ONZM, Rt Hon. Jonathan Hunt ONZ, Jack Kelleher, Ralph Lenton, Warren Page, Pat Plunket, Paul Prince, Derek Round MNZM, Sir Christopher Harris

 

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