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...talkative Rogers, who by then was surely wondering whether he was still working. "Who the hell am I?" he protested. "Just a voter and not even a registered one. What do I know about it? Perhaps I didn't explain myself well. I even like Collingwood. I've dropped him some fan mail...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Who the Hell Am I? | 7/20/1962 | See Source »

...major culprits: the Washington Post, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, TIME and Newsweek. On television, Rogers named NBC's Huntley and Brinkley, CBS's Charles Collingwood, ABC Commentator Howard K. Smith and even silenced Jack Paar as antagonists of free enterprise. Advertising dollars spent on such people and publications, he warned, do more harm than if business simply "paid all these millions of dollars right into the Communist Party...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Who the Hell Am I? | 7/20/1962 | See Source »

...Tour. Back in Washington next afternoon. Jackie Kennedy, along with some 45 million other Americans, settled down to watch herself in action as guide to CBS's Charles Collingwood on an hour-long White House tour that had been taped a month before. She had refused the services of a CBS makeup artist, wore a wireless microphone around her neck with the pack and battery concealed in the small of her back. Pamela Turnure, her press secretary, had been instructed how to adjust the mike if anything went wrong. Explained Collingwood later: "We couldn't have a technician...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Presidency: Simply Everywhere | 2/23/1962 | See Source »

...impetus for questions in Congress and the source of many subsequent accounts by reporters and newscasters (who last week reported the capture by Castro's forces of General Manuel Artime, the controversial young exile whom TIME introduced as the active leader of the invasion). CBS Correspondent Charles Collingwood, on his viewing the press TV show, last week said "TIME Magazine was the first of really national circulation" to report the story of the so-called secret invasion bases run by the CIA in Guatemala. The story of the invasion that went wrong, and why it did, was no pretty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: may 12, 1961 | 5/12/1961 | See Source »

...blood had been instilled in CBS news during the war by Edward R. Murrow, some of whose proteges imitated his sepulchral tones and adopted his left-of-center emotions; the so-called "Murrow Boys" included Eric Sevareid, Charles Collingwood and Larry Le Sueur. The Murrow style has long since come to seem stale, and the proof lies in the widespread acceptance of the far more informal Huntley-Brinkley format. But CBS's problems go even farther back. When Sig Mickelson joined CBS in 1949, he began trying to build his own news organization, and a Murrow-Mickelson rift developed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Convulsions at CBS | 2/10/1961 | See Source »

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