REUTERS AND AP TO END

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP74-00115R000300040011-7
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 30, 2013
Sequence Number: 
11
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
July 19, 1967
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP74-00115R000300040011-7.pdf234.48 KB
Body: 
STAT. - ?-? , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved forr l'ele-ase-@ 50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300040011-7 , ? .? ? , ? AND liMES TTFR PI P .,?: ? ? ? It a ? Reuters jointly announced to- day the termination of a long- standing agreement on the ex- ;change of news. JUL 19 iss7 Reuters and AP to End News Exchange Accord NEW YORK, July 18 (AP)? The Associated Press and ? The agreement, dating from I: 'World War I, provided that 'Reuters would supply news ;from the British Isles in re- turn for the Associated Press supplying news from the United States. Each agency was free to distribute the other's news in countries other than that In which it was gathered. The arrangement will be terminated as of Sept. 7, after which each organization will Make its own ' arrangements for ,gathering news in Britain acd the, Upited States, ream? ? , ? ?;1 ? ? : Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300040011-7 4 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300040011-7 STAT 1.! 1:1! AP, Reuters News Link Ends Sept. 7 A long-standing news ex- change agreement between the Associated Press and Reuters will end on September 7. A brief announcement dis- tributed by both news agencies on Tuesday (July 18) said that from the cut off date each "organization will make its own arrangements for gathering news in England and the United States respectively." The agreement, dating from World War I, provided that Reuters-. would supply news from the British Isles in return for the AP supplying news from the United States. Each agency was free to distribute the other's news in countries other than that in which it was gathered. Cost of Coverage AP's general manager, Wes Gallagher, told E&P: "Over the years the value of news from the United States has increased. Also, it's costing more cash to cover the U.S. Last year we spent ? $51-million on a world wide basis on news gathering. Reuters spent approximately $12-million . . . we asked the Reuters management to pay a differential. They decided not to do so, preferring instead to increase- their own staff cover- age from the U.S." Gallagher said AP had re- ceived the Press Association coverage from Britain through Reuters. Now, the AP will be dealing directly with Press As- sociation in London. "We have a large bureau in London which, together with the PA report, will provide us with exactly the same news file as before." A spokesman at Reuters' New York bureau commented: "All I can tell you is that termi- nation of the agreement was decided by management . . . London executiyes will he draw- ing up a plan for expanded coverage in the U.S. by our own correspondents replacing the service we had from AP." Under the agreement, Reuters took the AP's 'A' wire, rewriting leads and changing copy styles for its British audi- ence. Reuters maintains its own bureau in Washington which provides independent coverage from the U.S. capital. Simi- larly, Reuters has staff corre- spondents manning a bureau at the United Nations. When the agreement with AP 10 I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release terminates, it seems likely that Reuters will establish bureaus in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and, possibly in a Texas city. The agency ' as stringers in other major U.S. cities. Stormy Years The relationship between AP and Reuters has been one of mutual cooperation, particularly in recent years, following a period of stormy policy and competitive disagreements. It was a relationship that began in 1893 allowing the newly formed Associated Press to win a decisive victory over the old United Press. Preferring to deal directly with a national association of newspapers, the Reuter agency offered the exclu- sive cartel contract to the AP. It was accepted and from that moment the new agency went forward to success, but AP at the same time became a fettered member of the European cartel. The latter situation took yeais to overcome. The earlier relationship be- tween AP and Reuter was well summed up in comments made in 1951 at a Centenary dinner for the British news agency by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Dr. Geoffrey Fisher, noted amid laughter, "I confess that I find myself surprised and even taken aback tonight because here everything is billing and cooing between Reuters and the AP of the United States. As I read the book "Reuters Century" they were bitter enemies, and Mr. Kent Cooper (AP general manager) led the fight from the other side. Well, I am very glad to find that in one sphere of human endeavor peace has supervened. . ." In recent history Reuters be- came a cooperative like the AP, its ownership resting with pub- lishers of the national and provincial newspapers in Eng- land and several in Australia and New Zealand. Two AANR Chapters Elect New Officers Two chapters of the Ameri- can Association of Newspaper Representatives have announced new officers for the coming year, through June 30, 1968: Kansas City?Cranston M. Lintecum (Allen-Klapp) presi- dent; Robert Linton (South- west Dailies) vicepresident; and William Bonham (Branham) secretary-treasurer. Philadelphia?Dana Carroll (Cresmer, Woodward, O'Mara & Ormsbee) president; Russell E. Franz (Julius Mathews) vicepresident; and Robert Kramer (Katz) seer. eta r y- treasurer. 1. lviviv-mn"m ? RP-ntrbrfAr'a 130., UTICTPapers UTICA, N. Y. Striking pressmen continued to block publication this week of the Utica Observer- Dispatch and Utica Daily Press, Gannett Group newspapers. Negotia- tions with the pressmen's union collapsed July 17. Picket lines were set up out- side the plant which produces the morning Press and the eve- ning-Sunday Observer-Dispatch. The pressmen walked out when they failed to reach agreement with management over manning of new presses expected to come into operation at the plant next spring. Herman E. Moecker, pub- lisher, told E&P: "We bought 10 Scott press units from the Dallas Times Herald, the pur- chase being made in 1965. We expect to have them in opera- tion next year, therefore we started discussing new manning schedules. The union has been asking for two additional men on each machine over our pres- ent manning?an approximate manning increase of between 30-35 percent." Moecker, who sent a letter to 330 fulltime " employes of the newspaper asking them to re- turn to work, reported that by mid-week he had full employ- ment in advertising and circula- tion departments, "plus a third of the regular editorial team reporting for work." Unions observing picket lines set up by the 14 striking mem- bers of Local 58 of the printing and pressmen's union, were printers, stereotypers and en- gravers. According to Moecker, some guild members were cross- ing the line. The contract with the press- men expired Feb. 1. In addition to the manning issue, the press- men are seeking wage increases and other benefits. Contract issues with other unions, re- portedly, remain to be settled. ? Irving L. Martin Dies STOCKTON, Calif. Irving L. Martin, 48, pub- lisher of the Stockton Record and third generation member of the newspaper's founding fam- ily, died in his sleep July 19. After military service he be- came co-publisher with Ross Williams in 1952, when his grandfather died. He advanced to publisher and president when Williams died last year. Chicago's American and the AFL-CIO Chicago Editorial As- sociation have agreed to wage scales that will bring reporter: an increase of $30 a week or June 10, 1968, and rewritemer and copy readers $25 more r week on the same date. Rewrite and copy desk mer who are receiving $190 a wee] got $205 effective June 12. The: go to $210 Dec. 11 then to $21. next year. Reporters, now a. $175 go to $205 in steps of $191 and $200. A feature of the new agree ment, according to Don Husch union president and an Ameni can copy reader, is that over scale editorial personnel re ceived the same raises, rathe? than the difference betweei present salary and the ner scale. Sub-editors received a $: weekly increase and now an $20 over scale, or $235 by Jun, 10, 1968. The agreement provides threi weeks extra vacation for base ball writers and paid holiday. during the sports seasons; in creased gasoline and meal al lowances; prorated vacatioi time for retirees; and a mop liberal nightside differentia policy. ? Dean Kenneth Olson Of Medill School Dies EVANSTON, Ill Kenneth E. Olson, 71, deal emeritus of Northwestern Uni versity's Medill School of Joui nalism, died July 13 of a hear attack. He was Medill den from 1937 to 1957, retiring hi cause of ill health. At Medill he introduced th first five-year training prograr for journalists and the maste of science degree in journalisrr He continued to teach until 196 as dean emeritus and also di; research for his book, "The His tory Makers," published 1966. He had worked for news papers in Minnesota and Wis consin, later was managing edi tor of the Madison (Wis. Capital Times. ? Financial Editor CHICAC Louis Saxon has been a]; pointed financial editor of Chi cago's American, succeed in; Thomas G. Michelmore, retire(' William Gruber succeeds Saxo, as assistant financial editoi Saxon has been with the Amen: can since 1928. EDITOR & PUBLISHER for July 22, 196! @ 50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300040011-7