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There are exceptions. Political Writer Richard Reeves earns more than $100,000 a year, Diplomatic Expert Tad Szulc makes about $80,000, and Sportswriter Bil Gilbert grosses more than $40,000. But the big moneymakers almost always have some kind of cushion. Reeves has, among other odd jobs, a regular Esquire column that guarantees him $50,000 a year; Szulc does books (twelve to date) as well as magazine work; Gilbert has a contract with SPORTS ILLUSTRATED that places a solid floor under his yearly income. Such props are essential. Says Literary Agent Scott Meredith: "There are no writers left...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Grub Street Revisited | 4/10/1978 | See Source »

Pincus says he has not read The New Republic since he was fired. Like Karnow, he levels charges of non professionalism at Peretz and says that Peretz's ideology sometimes influences the presentation of his facts. Pincus cites an article by Tad Szulc that appeared in The New Republic in June claiming Soviet violations of the SALT agreements. The piece made it seem as though the USSR was the only violator, Pincus says; it was ironically pro-U.S. military. He attributes the bias to Zionist criticism of the Soviet Union. "You can let the ideology come out in your...

Author: By Clark Mason, | Title: What Peretz Has Done to The New Republic | 12/10/1975 | See Source »

Firing Line. Buckley, former N.Y. Timesman Tad Szulc and Jorge Mas discuss resumption of diplomatic relations with Cuba. Ch. 44, 8 p.m. 1 hour...

Author: By F. Briney, | Title: TELEVISION | 10/24/1974 | See Source »

...Suit. In any event, Szulc bounced back with a disclosure that the U.S. was still sending arms to Pakistan despite a State Department ban. That story did appear, and it prompted the Administration to tap the phones of a number of Government employees and journalists. Szulc is now suing the FBI and the "plumbers" for allegedly tapping his phone and breaking into his Washington, D.C., home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Global Gumshoe | 10/21/1974 | See Source »

...Szulc, who describes himself as a "Kennedy liberal," was one of the first important journalists to knock Kissinger, and in recent months he has scorched the Secretary's negotiating tactics in Foreign Policy, deplored his obfuscation of aspects of the SALT talks in the Columbia Journalism Review, and accused him of everything from sabotaging democracy in Chile to possessing "a thirst for applause and adulation that can brook no questioning or criticism" in New York magazine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Global Gumshoe | 10/21/1974 | See Source »

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