Word: newspaperman
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Union Leader has refused to run advertisements for the biography. It is no secret around New Hampshire that Cash once had a drinking problem and was dismissed by the Union Leader in 1959. "Nobody ever drank more than Kevin-he was a real newspaperman," says Jimmy Breslin, an old colleague from Cash's Herald Tribune days, who encouraged him in the project. Cash readily admits that he was fired-for showing up drunk to cover a golf match -but swears he has not had a drink in two years. Says he: "I gave up everything for this. I thought...
...course, Lazarus, 61, the son of Fred Lazarus Jr., who helped found Federated 46 years ago, and Federated's President Harold Krensky, a former newspaperman, exercise far more authority than the chart shows. Still, Federated has kept its headquarters staff to 450?out of a corporate total of about 80,000 employees...
...Franklyn ("Lyn") Nofziger, 51, a pudgy ex-newspaperman who was press secretary during Reagan's first campaign and his first two years as Governor. After leaving the staff in 1968, he worked successively in public relations, as a White House aide and deputy chairman of the Republican National Committee. He rejoined Reagan last summer as a deputy to Sears, and directs the campaign's West Coast operations from Los Angeles...
...Katharina Blum, at the beginning of these five days, slept with a man who was wanted for murder. Duly it is stated, too, that under police interrogation, Katherina shows herself to have been ignorant of her lover's legal status. But from then until Katherina's murder of the newspaperman who has hounded her since the beginning of the case, the web of facts breaks apart in a cascade of "allegedly"s. The ambiguities pile up quickly: The reporter even records a full page of argument between a cook and a secretary about whether their employer will have crepes with...
Inside Access. Beecher is no stranger to scoops. A lifelong newspaperman except for his stint at the Pentagon-which he left with a Distinguished Service Medal to return to journalism-he was once a defense specialist for the New York Times, where he scored major beats on the secret U.S. bombing of Cambodia in 1969 and the SALT talks in 1971. But some Government officials have strong suspicions about this latest coup. Beecher, they suspect, may have been using material he recollected from his Government days to write the article. Beecher flatly denies the insinuation. "My story," he insists...