Word: newspapermen
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...must have a very exciting life, you meet so many interesting people," is a comment to which few newspapermen ever reply, but last week one did. Though the New York Times calls him a "staff writer," Samuel Johnson Woolf is the only journalist of his kind. An ex-portrait painter, for the last 14 years he has chased after famed men, sketching them with amiable shrewdness, interviewing them as he sketched. Now 61 and lively as ever, Artist-Interviewer Woolf last week published his pleasant memoirs...
Most U. S. newspapermen have stopped asking each other: Will there or will there not be a press censorship? Instead they ask: What kind of censorship will there be? To this question the main corollaries are still well on the side of confusion, exasperation and no little uneasiness (TIME, Feb. 17). Last week the censorship problem took a new dramatic turn...
Applications for Nieman Fellowships for 1941-42 are due May 1, the Nieman Foundation announced Saturday. These Fellowships will again give approximately 12 newspapermen an opportunity to spend a year here studying whatever interests them most, and to receive stipends equal to their present salaries while they are working...
Oftenest reputed to be in line for World War II's George Creel, if one is ever appointed, is a soft-spoken ex-newspaperman named Lowell Mellett, elder brother of Don Mellett, "the newspapermen's martyr," who was killed in 1926 by gangsters on whom he waged war as editor of the Canton (Ohio) News. Top-flight Scripps-Howard editor and executive for 16 years, Mellett parted company with Roy Howard in 1937 over editorial policy in the Supreme Court fight. Called by President Roosevelt to head the National Emergency Council, super-press bureau of the New Deal...
...North Carolina. Their trip was arranged by the Institute of International Education and Grace Line (which cut rates in half) and was aided by the U. S. State Department and South American governments (which paid some of the students' expenses). The students-undergraduates, teachers, doctors, lawyers, social workers, newspapermen, an army officer-had come to study chiefly the English language and the U. S. way of life...