Clayton Willis Talk Show- WPBR 1340 AM

 

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 Presidential Adviser, veteran White House Correspondent,
Art Critic and Art Collector. Clayton Willis has had meetings
with Presidents Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Johnson, Ford,
Bush'41, Bush'43, Nixon, Clinton, Khrushchev,
Prime Minister Nehru of India, President
"Popa Doc" Duvalier, Sean Connery, Jackie Robinson,
Joe Louis, Whitney Young, John Steinbeck, Salvador Dali,
Leonard Bernstein and many others.

In 2004 he covered the departure of former President Aristide from Haiti,
a country he  often traveled for 50 years.

Mr. Willis has traveled to 150 countries.

Clayton Willis attended the University of Oslo,
the University of Paris and graduated from
The George Washington University.

He is a member of Palm Beach Pundits.

The commentator is a serious art collector.
(He has major collections of Argentine, Haitian
art and American historic treasures).

Clayton Willis has covered the world and the local
scene from the Middle East, Rhodesian and Vietnam Wars
to the 2000 Election Recount in Florida.

Clayton is also Manager and White House Correspondent
of The Evening News Broadcasting Co.,
( documentaries, news, photo-journalism),
formed in 1970.

He has always been involved in international,
national affairs and public service,
doing the TV, Radio, newspaper and magazine reports,
editing, anchoring TV programs; many of them aired
on PBS TV stations.

Mr. Willis appears as a guest on talk shows.

He started to build his knowledge of oil and gas and
mining at home because his family members were pioneers
in both in the 1850's (mining) and in the 1860's (oil).

The broadcaster had a pioneer involvement in one of
the great mining discoveries of our time:

Diamond Field Resources' nickel, copper, & cobalt
find in Labrador, Canada. Willis' inquiring mind and drive
has taken him to the front lines such as the Rhodesian War,
and to other historic events.

He witnessed the independence of Malaya in 1957
and Kenya in 1963.

He has done work in Chinese television
and Saudi Arabian TV.

Commitment to making the world a better place
took the commentator to work in Harlem
during the heyday of the riots at the nation's
largest Black newspaper.

Willis was the only White staff correspondent
and critic on The New York Amsterdam News.

He went on to The Ford Foundation
and to the White House.
 


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