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Lance is not likely to be queuing at Safire's window any time soon. Despite his fondness for the now defrocked Budget Director, Safire was one of Lance's most relentless journalistic tormentors. The columnist began writing about Lance's alleged financial improprieties in July, and a week before Lance bowed out Safire even conjured up an eloquent, 946-word television address in which the President announced that Bert and LaBelle were going home. Carter used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Punder on The Right | 10/3/1977 | See Source »

Lancegate, as Safire has christened the controversy, does not mark the first time he has been out front of most of the Washington press corps. In four years as a New York Times columnist he has helped keep journalistic attention on such languishing scandals as Korean influence buying and John Kennedy's liaison with Judith Campbell Exner. In the Lance affair, Safire for a time had so many fresh allegations that Times editors in New York asked Washington staffers what he knows that they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Punder on The Right | 10/3/1977 | See Source »

Satire's casual contrariness has won him some reluctant admirers. "The most influential columnist in the country," says Esquire National Editor Richard Reeves. "I'm not enamored of his political viewpoint, which is sometimes to the right of Genghis Khan. But, hell, I read him because I have to. He's not predictable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Punder on The Right | 10/3/1977 | See Source »

...native New Yorker, Safire dropped out of Syracuse University to become a researcher for Columnist Tex McCrary, joined McCrary's public relations firm, and later struck out on his own. As press agent for a "typical American house" at a Moscow exhibition in 1959, he lured Richard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev into their now famous "kitchen debate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Punder on The Right | 10/3/1977 | See Source »

Safire joined the 1968 Nixon presidential campaign as a speechwriter, a job he retained when Nixon won. Nine months after the Watergate breakin, Safire left the White House and took a columnist's job at the New York Times. He had a previous offer from the Washington Post Co., but Publisher Arthur Sulzberger met him at a dinner in New York and made a higher bid-reportedly $50,000. That sizable salary, and his early columns defending Nixon against Watergate charges, did not endear Safire to many Times colleagues. But readers found him a lively contrast to the paper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Punder on The Right | 10/3/1977 | See Source »

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