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NOMOCHOMO ago

@vindicator @think- @carmencita @shewhomustbeobeyed @asolo @argosciv

....LAYBOURNE's are DEEPSTATE CIA & Unitarian Universalists...check out the genealogy

Kit Laybourne's real name is Lawrence C.N. Laybourne

https://www.mylife.com/lawrence-laybourne/e468210226020

Miss Geraldine Ann Bond and Lawrence C. N. Laybourne were married June 28 at the First Unitarian Church, Plainfield, N. Y. The cere-, mony was performed by the Rev. Frank Cayce of Louisville, KY, assisted by the Rev. Raymond Baughan. minister of the Plainfield NY church.

A reception was held following the service at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paterson Bond, in Martinsville N. J., The bride, who was graduated from Vassar College last year, is the granddaughter of Charles G. Bond, chairman of the New York City Alcoholic Beverage Control Board and a former United States Representative from Brooklyn. Her father is manager of the Plainfield brokerage office of Halle & Stieglitz. Mr. Laybourne is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Laybourne of Bronxville. His father is international editor of Time-Life Books in New York.

https://news.hrvh.org/veridian/cgi-bin/senylrc?a=d&d=bronxvillereviewpressreporterBRONXVILLE19700709.1.2

Kit's son's name is also Lawrence, even though he goes by "Sam". He was married by Geraldine Laybourne's sister (Unitarian-Universalist) Deborah Bond-Upson

https://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/07/fashion/weddings/07beke.html

Check out Lawrence E. Laybourne's Declassified shilling for the CIA in the 1940's as Editor of Time-Life

https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP80R01731R001300130048-6.pdf

Lawrence E Laybourne's Obit:

https://www.nytimes.com/1976/02/13/archives/le-laybourne-62-time-magazine-aide.html

Lawrence E. Laybourne, who retired last year as Time magazine's director of corporate affairs in Washington, died of cancer yesterday at his home there. He was 62 years old.

Mr. Laybourne started his journalistic career in 1934 as a reporter on The St. Louis PostDispatch. Ten years later, he joined Time as its first staff correspondent in Canada, with headquarters at Ottawa. In 1946, he was Washington news editor. He transferred here in 1949 to head Time's domestic news service.

In 1957, he went back to Canada to become managing director of Time International of Canada Ltd. He was appointed assistant publisher in 1962 and, five years later, went to Tokyo as managing director of TimeLife International in Asia.

Two years later, he was appointed international editor of Time‐Life Books, then assumed his last post in 1970.

P.S.

I can't say if this is a valid connection, but Lawrence E. Laybourne is cited regarding the 1950's NY adoption scheme (i've previously written about it being a CIA operation involving AHEPA)

https://books.google.com/books?id=lVmeDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA252&lpg=PA252&dq=%22lawrence+e.+laybourne%22&source=bl&ots=urvLM5ivux&sig=ACfU3U2IiNNWGwwE6txa_xtQqzaYv1MDcg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjinuuDvuzgAhUIsJ4KHV-oAZsQ6AEwBnoECAgQAQ#v=onepage&q=%22lawrence%20e.%20laybourne%22&f=false

Vindicator ago

Well I'll be damned. They reeked of Deep State before this, but this pretty much wraps it up and puts a bow on it.

NOMOCHOMO ago

@argosciv @shewhomustbeobeyed @carmencita @newfornow @asolo

Literal descendants of the original CIA-Corporate propaganda machine. Check out Geraldine Bond's (Laybourne's) mom:

http://www.gazette.net/gazette_archive/2001/200116/montgomerycty/obituaries/51240-1.html

Gwendolyn Stenehjem Bond

Gwendolyn Stenehjem Bond, 84, of Somerset died at home March 31 of complications following a stroke.

Born on a farm in North Dakota, Mrs. Bond graduated from North Dakota State University and became a drama teacher for the University of Wisconsin. She drove throughout the Midwest, and started local theater groups in farm communities. [community organizer]

She came to Washington, D.C. during World War II, and met and married Paterson Bond, a Navy officer making the North Atlantic run between the United States and England. They married in 1945 in the chapel at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

She worked in Washington, D.C. at WTOP during the war, writing, producing and broadcasting the CBS Radio program "Country Journal."

After the war, they moved to New Jersey, where she raised their four children and served as chairman of the Board of Vocational Education for Somerset County and, later, with the Middlesex County College's Division of Community Services.

After her husband died in 1990, Mrs. Bond moved to Somerset where she lived until her death. She was a resident of Somerset and was active in the political campaigns of candidates for the Somerset Town Council. She was also an avid supporter of the drama program at Somerset Elementary School.

She is survived by her four children, Ellnor Martin of Chevy Chase, Geraldine Laybourne of New York City, Deborah Bond-Upson of Kentfield, Calif., and Charles Bond of Larkspur, Calif.; 12 grandchildren and one great-grandson.

A memorial service will be held Saturday, April 21, at 5 p.m. at All Souls Unitarian Church in Washington, D.C.

NOMOCHOMO ago

@argosciv @shewhomustbeobeyed @carmencita @newfornow @asolo

Better Obituary for Geraldine Laybourne's Mom. PROPOGANDIST & CHILD WELFARE WORKER

https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/washingtonpost/obituary.aspx?n=dorothy-louise-nesbit-brickhouse&pid=3502989

DOROTHY LOUISE NESBIT LAYBOURNE (Brickhouse)

Former social worker, died on April 18, 2005 at age 92 after a stroke at her home at Collington, in Mitchellville, MD. Mrs. Brickhouse was born on April 17, 1913 in Martin's Ferry, OH and grew up in Springfield, OH and St. Louis, MO, where her father was a Presbyterian minister. She graduated from The John Burroughs School in St. Louis in 1930, attended Western College for Women in Oxford, OH, for two years and then attended Washington University in St. Louis, graduating from the George Warren Brown School of Social Work in 1934.

She worked as a social worker in St. Louis for two years and then married Lawrence E. Laybourne on May 30, 1937. She lived with her husband in St. Louis for eight years, while he worked as a reporter for the St. Louis Dispatch. In 1943, he went to work for Time, Inc. and the couple moved to Ottawa, where he opened the first Canadian office for Time. They lived in a number of places around the world after that, on various assignments for the magazine, including Washington, D.C., Scarsdale, NY, Toronto, Canada, Pound Ridge, NY, Tokyo, Japan, Bronxville, NY, and Washington, D.C. for a second time in 1970.

Mrs. Laybourne did a great deal of volunteer work for a variety of social welfare agencies in the various places she lived, including work for the American Red Cross, the International Student House in Washing ton, D.C., the Ontario Welfare Counsel, a school for autistic children in Toronto, a leprosarium in Tokyo, Recordings for the Blind and the Volunteer Clearing House.

Mr. Laybourne died on February 12, 1976. The couple had three children, Cindy (1938), Kit (1943) and Anne (1946).

Mrs Laybourne met Gregory Brickhouse, a widower, on a trip to Antartica in January, 1981 and the couple married on May 15, 1982. He died on July 7, 1988.

She is survived by her three children, Cindy Ryley of Ottowa Canada, Kit Laybourne of New York City and Dr. Anne Kendall of Washington, D.C.; seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild. A private memorial service was held on April 22, 2005. Donations in Mrs. Brickhouse's memory may be made to The American Red Cross, In Memory of Dorothy Brickhouse, 8550 Arlington Boulevard, Fairfax, VA 22031.

Published in The Washington Post on May 5, 2005

NOMOCHOMO ago

Kit Laybourne's sister Dr. Anne Kendal is a child psychotherapist

http://www.wakekendall.com/staff-biographies/

Dr. Anne Kendall received her B.A. from Sarah Lawrence College and then earned a Master of Arts in Teaching from Wesleyan University. After teaching history in high school and middle school for 7 years, she realized she was more interested in how students learn than what they learn. She received a Ph.D. in School Psychology from the University of Maryland. Dr. Kendall worked at The Kingsbury Center before starting this practice in 1990 with Dr. Wake. Since then she has focused on treatment of children, adolescents and adults. Her approach to therapy follows a cognitive and behavioral therapy orientation. Often family work is a part of her intervention. She is very interested in learning issues as well as emotional concerns, and works closely with schools to help children and adolescents. She has consulted with many area schools and presented training workshops on a variety of subjects: how to deal with children with anxiety and depression; how findings from neuropsychology give guidance into what teaching strategies work best; understanding learning differences and exploring what strategies can help. In addition to individual therapy, Dr. Kendall enjoys working with couples where she follows an Emotion Focused Therapy (EFT) approach. She has also taught child development and abnormal behavior at American University, The Washington School of Psychiatry and the Jewish Social Services Association. Currently Dr. Kendall is a member of the Dialectical Behavior Therapy team at Wake Kendall and has presented the DBT program in many settings. She is the coauthor with Georgia DeGangi of Effective Parenting for the Hard-to-Manage Child, which was published by Routledge Press in 2008. She frequently works with parents on managing difficult children and has lectured on parenting techniques.