Word: columnists
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...combined paper quickly signed up the Sun's Drama Columnist Ward Morehouse, Sport Columnist Grantland Rice, Paragraphs H. I. ("Hi") Phillips. Columnist George Sokolsky* switched his column to Hearst's Journal-American; Pulitzer Prizewinning Cartoonist Rube Goldberg also jumped to the JA. Such by liners as Reporter Mike Johnson, 82-year-old Henry McBride, dean of U.S. art critics, and Washington Correspondent Phelps Adams would have little trouble landing jobs. But heartbroken Executive Editor Speed was "looking for a hobby," and most of the Sun's staff of 1,200 editorial, business and mechanical employees were looking...
...slim, greying Producer George Crothers: "The bestseller lists are crowded with books like Peace of Mind and Peace of Soul. If people are searching for a faith, we'll help them." On the first program, Provost Mason Gross of Rutgers, Syracuse University's T. V. Smith and Columnist Max Lerner discussed The Guide for the Perplexed, a closely reasoned attempt by the 12th Century Jewish intellectual Maimonides to reconcile Rabbinic teaching with Aristotelian philosophy...
...Manhattan's Communist Daily Worker, sportwriters are expected to toe the party line as carefully as reporters and editorial writers. Last spring, Sport Columnist Lester Rodney publicly apologized for a misstep: he had been guilty of subtle "white chauvinism" in failing to condemn New York Giants Manager Leo Durocher for his Polo Grounds row with a Puerto Rican fan (TIME...
...Columnist Rodney was obviously in need of a brush-up course in subtle chauvinism. Last week he apologized again, this time for quoting San Francisco University Basketball Coach Pete Newell's description of Substitute Willie Wong as "exceptionally fast, intelligent and a good shot." Lamented Rodney: "The inclusion of 'intelligent' was a subtle form of chauvinism ... I had thought of it as part of the reason why a player of only 5-4 could make a college team . . . Looking back . . . it is clear enough that the SF mentor was expressing ... so called white superiority over those with...
...pearls in Evie's column as important as the pearl onions in their Gib sons, promptly swallowed the news. After all, hadn't Evie scooped even Bootsie with the news that William III was on the way? Last week, after brooding darkly about the whole thing, Columnist Hearst scratched back at Columnist March: "Friends will be pleased and amazed to learn that Newsgal Evelyn Peyton Gordon at long last is expecting." No one was more amazed than fortyish, married and childless Evie; she was too mad even to scratch back. The sound of strife on Washington...