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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- Admit it. No matter how interested you are in serious news,
- every so often you glance at a gossip column, scanning its
- staccato list of items and bold-faced names to see if there is
- anything of interest . . . Yet, is American society becoming
- too obsessed with gossip, too absorbed with the private lives
- of public people? . . . For Naushad Mehta, interviewing
- columnist Liz Smith and her brethren for this week's cover
- stories was an amusing change of pace . . . Though Mehta kept
- asking about the troublesome issues raised by our national
- infatuation with the trivial, her subjects kept changing the
- topic to . . . you guessed it. Says Mehta: "They usually
- prefaced their gossip with the words `Don't quote me on this,
- but . . .'"
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- Mary Cronin probed the public relations trade . . . "Flacks
- guiding clients up the social ladder," she says, "protect them
- as if they were atomic secrets" . . . In Washington, Michael
- Riley rang up Diana McLellan, the doyen of D.C. gossips . . .
- "She breathlessly picked up the receiver and talked without
- stopping. And she was doing her nails, causing her to lose her
- train of thought several times" . . . In Los Angeles, Jeanne
- McDowell concluded that gossip levels there approach the toxic
- because so many people have car phones . . . Stuck in traffic?
- Call a friend and talk about Cher.
-
- As the motto embroidered on a pillow in Alice Roosevelt
- Longworth's sitting room said, "If you can't say anything good
- about someone, sit right here by me" . . . That's certainly not
- the credo of William A. Henry III, who wrote the main story.
- But the Pulitzer-prizewinning Henry understands the appeal of
- a juicy tale . . . "Whenever friends get together in a room,"
- he observes, "the conversation may start out with East Germany
- or nuclear energy, but it gets around to people's divorces
- pretty quickly."
-
- And what gossip travels faster than gossip about
- newsmagazine stories about gossip? . . . Last Tuesday senior
- editor Claudia Wallis brought up the idea for this week's cover
- with managing editor Henry Muller and executive editor Edward
- Jamieson . . . Less than two hours after the cover was
- scheduled, a New York Post reporter called to ask if it was
- true that TIME was working on a cover story about gossip . . .
- Like peanut butter and Cheez Whiz, gossip sure has a way of
- spreading.
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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