He was editor of Consolidated Book Publishers during his in Chicago years and a research director of radio broadcasts for the Chicago Sun.
Beginning as a copyboy at the Chicago Daily News in 1943, Holtzman wrote for the paper through its merger with the Chicago Sun.
In the winter of 1941, he left the New York Times to become chief correspondent and later Editor-in-Chief of the Chicago Sun.
While pursuing freelance work, Fischetti began his career as an editorial cartoonist at the Chicago Sun in 1941.
The Chicago Sun reported that Thompson fainted at the base of the scaffold, forcing Hash to perform the task.
Lidman contributed philatelic articles to the Chicago Sun and the New York Times.
Even after his departure his testimony remained controversial, and the Chicago Sun criticized his trip, which it estimated to have cost $1,820.
He went to Europe during World War II as a correspondent and artist for The Chicago Sun.
He learned the newspaper trade as a reporter for the Chicago Sun, owned by his father, from 1946 to 1948.
Akers joined the Chicago Sun, later the Chicago Sun-Times, shortly after its founding in 1941.