TIME MEDIA OUT OF THE CLOISTER

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01314R000100270024-0
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 15, 2004
Sequence Number: 
24
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 23, 1971
Content Type: 
MAGAZINE
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01314R000100270024-0.pdf99.93 KB
Body: 
,, z~~~xi'slI~r~a>;gqx77 Approved For Release 20047'1~/~8'~'~TA1RDP88-01314 000100270024-0 J ~~a'~ ~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~al~ The C;hrfstian Science hTonitor has vvrn1 three Pulitzer Prizes in the ~ past four years arul Inorc than 100 different jour- nalism awards over the past decade. hor a loaf; iirne, in fact, the Monitor has been the kind of newsp..rper that both laymen anti professionals respect--hut much less often read. Over the years since it was laullchccl in 1`)08, the church-o\anecl pa- per clevelopecl a reputation for Ilarrow- inindedness and fusty conscr?vatism, and with it a virtually static readership whose average age vvas nearly as old as the nc~i'spapcr itself. Now,'as cclclies of social consciousness blow around the ulhamod- -ern bnilcling complex the i\?lother Church is erecting in Boston, au esb-a gust has reached the 1\lonitor and \vhisl:ed iu a new editor-~Velslr-born, i~nglish-cchrcat- ed John Iiughes. A. dynamic Pulitzer .Prize-\vinuing veteran. of the pape]'s overseas staff, the 4:7.-year-old Iiughes was granted a blanket mandate by church elders to uncloister its editorial goals and to reach out, as he describes it, "to the poor, fire blacks alyd~ all the others who were not included before.". Quick to accept the challenge, Hughes's frsl step last fall vvas to initiate a near-total reconstruction of iIIC news staff. "The paper vvas suffering from hardening of the arteries," IIughes in- sists, "and looked prissily ?at the world through rose-colored glasses." 1Ie dis- missed anumber of old-timers, aplx>intcd three new senior editors, called in some tough old pros such as ABC's Joseph G. Iiv~scll to bring new force#uhless to the editorial page and hil?ed a crew of ag- g]'(',SS1Ve yOllIlg TCp01'te]?S \L'holll he n11- mediately assi.gnecl to explore such youth?~orienicd topics as communes and hitchhiking. (Among those untouched by the Iiughes scalpel \vas venerable politi- cal analyst 1'~ichard Strout--;7'he 1`sTcw Re- public's `"1'.R.B."--for 50 years a corner-~ stone of the Monitor's op-ed page.) "I've brought in people \vith a great sense of outreach," savs IIughes, adding th.ai: he is not yet finisllccL Deem: The major change -that $1e genial, handsome editor has instilled iS1 fire Aonitor's nc\vsroom is a new sense of ~inlnlediacy. Because 90 per cent of its readers receive their topics by mail, the paper's staff hacl long been accus- tonled to polishing stories with little rc- garcl to cleacllines; as a result, InosC. of the news coverage hn?lled ou.t to be pondel?- OL1S background pieces, little more than lac};luster supplements to the timely re- porting of other dailies. All that has changed in the last eleven months. Says IIughes-appointed nationa]. news editor David Ii.. Willis, 32: "Our correspondents services do anti then go into it much deeper-all. in the same story. 1n some I;cspects, tang-standing policy at the newspaper remains untouched: smoking is still barred in t11e newsroolrr anal the paper runs no obituary columns. Nl;veriheless, one of the most riolablr, realities about t11e "ncnv" A4ouitor is the progressive disappearance of many mtii- quatcd strictures that dale to the clays when the paper was a proselytizing in- struul.ent of il.le church. Like other first- ranl: newspapers, the i~Zonitor defied the goverrullcnt and printed excerpts froru the Pentagon papers before the Supreme Court approved. their publication. ]~;ven more stunning to olcl-line readers, the JIughes team ran blockbuster stories on the Manson inu.rder trial and the Ali- hrazier fight, then followed vvidl an ag- gressivcr editorial on the chief of the h'BI, entitled "Ilaovel? itlust Go." Sutns up Iiughes, himself a In?actieing Christian Sciealtist (a tacit requisite of all 14oniior .