Word: pollsters
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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CROSS SECTION, Kan., Nov. 24--Gonfalon B. Mud, the CRIMSON's newly-hired football prognosticator, could nowhere be located here yesterday for his Yale game prediction. According to townsfolk, the Kansau pollster embarked on a week-long drinking bingo immediately following last week's successful prediction of a Harvard victory over Brown...
...CRIMSON, following the example set by a neighboring boys' school, yesterday tore up the one-week trial contract of its new football prognosticator Gonfalon B. Mud and decided to grant the Kansas pollster an unprecedent's 10-year contract...
...Princeton, NJ., Pollster George Gallup figured that more than six out of every ten U.S. adults (or nearly 60 million people) have now seen a TV show...
...Pollster George Gallup asked voters of both parties whom they would pick for President if the race should be between Eisenhower and Truman. The results, announced this week: 60% for Eisenhower; 31% for Truman; 9% don't know...
...Pollster Claude Ernest Hooper threw a new scare into radio broadcasters. In Manhattan at the start of 1949, he reported last week, radio had some 81% of the nighttime broadcast audience, television only 19%. But by year's end radio's share of the nighttime audience was down to 59%, TV's up to 41%. The Hooperating was just what TV hucksters had been waiting to hear. Their flat prediction: TV's current U.S. audience of 12 million persons will be trebled...