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Phyllis Battelle

American journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Phyllis Marie Battelle Van Horn (January 4, 1922 – February 25, 2005) was an American journalist, a columnist for the International News Service (and later United Press International). In 1957 she was described as "one of the most widely read columnists in America."[1]

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Early life and education

Battelle was born in Dayton, Ohio, the daughter of Gordon Sellers Battelle and Ina Marie Sides Battelle.[2] She graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University in 1944.[1] She was a member of Delta Gamma sorority.[3]

Career

Battelle first worked in newspapers at the Dayton Journal-Herald; one of her colleagues there was Erma Bombeck, who was also just starting her career.[4][5] Battelle moved to New York City after college, and was a fashion writer at Women's Wear Daily.[1] She became women's editor for the International News Service,[6] and wrote the service's "Assignment: America" column and from 1955 into the late 1980s. In 1951, Battelle won the Newswomen's Club of New York's award for distinguished writing.[7] She was known for her celebrity interviews,[8][9] and fashion reports,[10] but she also covered diplomacy,[11][12] the arts,[6] and cultural controversies,[13] including the Karen Ann Quinlan case.[14]

Battelle also wrote a theatrical sketch, Hobby Op'ry, which was produced in Dayton in 1947.[15] In 1974, she was named to the Order of the Delta Gamma Rose.[16]

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Publications

In addition to her Assignment: America columns, which were widely syndicated, Battelle wrote for magazines including Good Housekeeping[17][18] and The Ladies' Home Journal.[19][20] She also worked with the Quinlan family on a book about Karen Ann Quinlan.[21]

  • "Two Phyllis Battelles Meet in San Francisco" (1956; one of her Assignment: America columns)[22]
  • "Americans Live by the Numbers" (1963; one of her Assignment: America columns)[23]
  • "Theatre for the Deaf" (1967)[24]
  • "'Let me sleep': the story of Karen Ann Quinlan" (1976)[19]
  • Karen Ann: The Quinlans Tell Their Story (1977)[21]
  • "Help Find Etan Patz" (1980)[17]
  • "The Triplets Who Found Each Other" (1981, about the brothers featured in the 2018 documentary Three Identical Strangers)[18]
  • "Down on the Farm with Sissy Spacek" (1985)[20]
  • "Pierce Brosnan: Please Don't Call Me a Sex Symbol!" (1985)[25]
  • "Raquel: Celebrating the Body Beautiful" (1985)[26]
  • "Karen Ann Quinlan: Ten Years Later" (1985)[27]

Personal life

Battelle married fellow journalist Arthur Honnold Van Horn in 1957.[2] They lived in Pound Ridge, New York, and had a son, Jonathan.[16] She died in 2005, at the age of 83.

References

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