Word: columnists
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When Hearst Columnist Walter Winchell had a relapse last month, after doctors had ordered "a complete rest" (TIME, Feb. 4), his column dropped out of some 600 papers, and he discontinued his Sunday night broadcast. Last week Winchell's $500,000-a-year radio contract with Warner-Hudnut, Inc. was canceled...
...that he would never have anything to do with them during working hours. The one time he broke this vow was on a day that shells were whistling over his head while his landing boat was pulling into the Inchon beachhead, and a sudden swerve sent a pretty young columnist flying into his lap. The somewhat embarrassed Davies recovered his equilibrium, however, and went on to become one of the top war correspondents, covering the Pacific campaign for the Newark Evening News...
...Columnist Selby, who specializes in digging up stories that others pass by (TIME, July 3, 1950), was far from convinced. The broken pane had a smear of paint on one side and heavy putty on the other, and police assumed the thick putty was on the outside. Selby checked the lobby windows, discovered each had the telltale paint smear on the outside and heavy putty on the inside. Last week he wrote that the bullet might have come from outside the hotel. After new tests Dilworth announced meekly: the tests "appear to absolve" Virginia Carroll. Said Bulletin Managing Editor Walter...
Doctor's Dilemma. In New York City, the Daily News medical columnist, Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen, was asked whether men over 50 should wear suspenders or a belt, solemnly replied: "Whatever holds up the trousers...
Bill Cunningham, Boston sports columnist and radio commentator, will head the list of speakers for the banquet. Associate Dean Watson, Conductor Malcolm H. Holmes '28, and Eric Cutler '40, president of the Varsity Club, will also speak...