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...were Rogers' Herald Trib bosses pleased with his performance. He had not been sent to the Roundtable to peddle ads; his ideas, the Trib hastened to add, were strictly his own. The Trib was particularly annoyed at being pictured as the Poor Little Match Girl of New York journalism by its own financial editor: "Last month was our biggest June yet," said Editor John Denson. In an editorial page box which complained that the Times had struck a low blow merely by printing most of Rogers' now on-the-record speech, the Trib was moved to brief apology...

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

...least saw a human hand come out once in a while. But you don't even see a human hand any more. And I'm more interested in things like that than in politics.'' Buchwald's replacement in Europe will be Trib Columnist John Crosby, 50, who switched in 1960 to writing about cosmic affairs after 14 years of criticizing radio and TV. but has lately begun to feel rather uncomfortable on cloud nine. Said the Trib's new Paris-based columnist: "I've lived in New York for 25 years. It doesn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: For Art's Sake | 6/22/1962 | See Source »

...Trib let Kennedy have it on a variety of other scores. After Salinger's return from a tour of Russia, the paper front-paged a caustic cartoon that showed the secretary reporting to his boss: "Mr. Khrushchev said he liked your style in the steel crisis" (see cut). The Trib also carried a Page One editorial arraigning the President as the cause of the market decline. Back in the business section, Financial Editor Donald Rogers not only blamed the slump on Kennedy, but called him an "antibusiness" schemer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Paper Everyone's Talking About | 6/8/1962 | See Source »

...news. "We would hope that the President has not canceled because of hard reporting by our greatly respected staff or because of the critical nature of our editorial page . . . We hope the President will instruct his assistants to renew the White House subscriptions. And soon." If not, added the Trib later, it would limp along with its other Washington subscribers-notably the U.S. Information Agency (94 copies), the State Department (20), Secretary of State Rusk and the Attorney General (one each...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Paper Everyone's Talking About | 6/8/1962 | See Source »

...vastly improved under his aegis. "To ascribe as a reason [for the cancellation] that the President has time to read just so many newspapers," said Whitney, "just doesn't jibe with the fact that on the Eastern seaboard the Tribune is the paper everyone is talking about." The Trib's Paris columnist, Art Buchwald, took it nicely from there. Reporting that he had a letter from a little girl in Washington whose three-year-old friend Caroline told her there was no New York Herald Tribune, Buchwald wrote a jolly "Yes, Virginia" reply sprinkled with needles: "Not believe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Paper Everyone's Talking About | 6/8/1962 | See Source »

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