DATELINE JOURNALISM IN THE UNITED STATES THE FIRST 200 YEARS

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CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7
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RIFPUB
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K
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76
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 27, 2004
Sequence Number: 
17
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Publication Date: 
January 1, 1976
Content Type: 
MAGAZINE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7.pdf15.75 MB
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N - - , Approved For Release 2005/01/12 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7 Give Ken a call. Ken Peterson is ready to talk about Mobil and the oil business worldwide. He's our press relations supervisor. And he can fill you in on the energy news. Give you complete background information. Set up interviews with the experts you want. And supply sharp photos for those crisp pieces you write. To get the energy story right, fast and complete, come to the source. Call Ken: (212) 883-3232. Approved For Release 2005/MQDP88-01315R000400150017-7 Approved ale 2005/01/*: CI DP88-01315R000400150017-7 IS1Q liiea; get launched in Parade On January 9,1966, PARADE had a far-out idea. In an Open Letter to President Johnson, Editor Jess Gorkin proposed that "a Russian cosmonaut ... join an American astronaut for a ride in space:" On July 18, 1975, the American Press told the rest of the story - it happened! PARADE believed in 1966, as it does now, that peace in outer space can lead to peace on earth. That wasn't the first time PARADE took a giant step for peace. In 1960, we proposed a "hot line" between Washington and Moscow. President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev approved the idea; President Johnson implemented it. Not all of our ideas are this big...but we keep trying. It wouldn't beAWA ~ I'o s~e"2U Ai/12 Cia= 8' 315000 015001 American homes Approved For ReleasIMQfl5 df1 ih $s 01315R000400150017-7 Lord Acton, a historian who never wrote a book of history, authored, in a letter, a phrase that is much with us these days: "Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely." Lord Macauley, who wrote many history books, was equally concerned with excesses of power. In another enduring phrase he placed his hopes not in the three formal estates of govern- ment, but elsewhere: "The gallery in which the reporters sit has become a fourth estate of the realm." His faith has never been better vindicated than in the past few years in America. Outrageous abuses of power have been uncovered in which all the formal instruments of government have ordered the abuses. Congress's oversight bodies have winked at them. The Courts have rarely dealt with them. It has been the Fourth Estate, prying, insisting, harrying, that has kept them in the searing light of public attention which, in the end, may stop them. The price of thus becoming conspicuous has been a host of plans to affect media freedom, by restriction as in Senate Bill S-1, or by defending it with statutory "shield laws." Both, I think, are wrong. They would complicate the simple clarity of our guarantee of freedom, the First Amendment's plain statement that "Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press." If we are wise we shall shun all statutory refinements. Like General Grant, who vowed "to fight it out on this line if it takes all summer," we should fight it out on this unadorned, perfectly clear line, forever. -Howard K. Smith aac NEWS Approved Fear Release 2005/01!12 CIA-RDP88=01.315R0004000017 7 Appr6ved?For Re lease2'005/01/12 . CIA=RDP88-0i 315R0004001500'f7.7 Approved For Release 2005/01/12 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7 ^ Dateline is always a joy to read, espe- cially the honors for journalistic excel- lence. I have said often and don't mind repeating that the OPC awards, next to the Pulitzer awards, are the most pres- tigious in journalism. The Club has a right to be proud of its role in main- taining them; it is a professional trust. This year we have a new title-the Bob Considine Memorial Award. Bob, one of the great men of journalism and a former OPC president, died last Sept. 25, 1975. Only a week earlier he had been honored at an OPC Old Timers' Night and delivered a very sentimental talk, in which he expressed his love for his profession and predicted he would "croak in the newspaper business." The text of that talk became his last column. We are grateful to King Fea- tures for making the award possible. Incidentally, the Bob Considine Schol- arship Award is now in existence. Each year a full annual scholarship will be awarded at Ohio University to a stu- dent completing his junior year in journalism. If there are sufficient funds the second scholarship will provide for a Bob Considine Internship in Ohio University's unique foreign correspon- dence program. This special field of journalism identifies closely with Bob's own career in an area where he re- corded major achievements. Through 37 years Another source of pride to the Club over the years-we now mark our 37th anniversary-is Dateline. Leading maga- zines assume editorial responsibility for putting out our annual magazine, and this time we have PARADE to thank. We appreciate especially the Bicenten- nial theme. Now, let me report the Club had a good year. The annual awards dinner, the headliner luncheons, shop talks, book nights, overseas jazz nights, re- gional dinners and "Old Pro" nights were well attended. One of the shop talks deserves special mention, the one that was held at a special luncheon for Sydney Schanberg of The New York Times, who, covering the last days of 6 the war in Cambodia, stayed behind to PRESIDENT'S LETTER be captured-then released-by the in- surgents. The third OPC World News Roundup, after two years of being co- sponsored by NBC, was put on this time by CBS, with Walter Cronkite as anchorman. One of the Club's most important events was "Jimmy's Night," honoring Club manager Jim Menditto on his 20th anniversary with the OPC. The Overseas Press Club Foundation has taken on new life and strength. The OPC Bulletin is getting better all the time. We have enjoyed good rela- tions with other clubs, particularly the Deadline Club (Sigma Delta Chi), the City Club, which holds its regular newsmaking meetings in our quarters, and the Foreign Press Association, with which we co-sponsored a luncheon. Financially, the Club operated in the black for the third year, but it still is burdened by grave debts from earlier years. The Club quarters at the Hotel Biltmore are quite attractive. The mem- bership rolls are slowly increasing, but we need many more members. Many persons believe the name of the Club ought to be changed, in view of the fact that overseas professional experi- ence no longer is a requirement for active membership. Now, about the Bicentennial theme in Dateline. What better theme could there be for journalists than one based on the founding of the United States of America and the freedoms for which it stands? Especially since one of its fundamental freedoms is that anchored in the First Amendment of the Con- stitution? I do not know what other contribu- tors are writing in this issue, but as for me: If it is true, as many assert, that there is a pendulum effect in the na- tion's philosophic attitude, that people sometimes accept more strictures on their freedoms, sometimes less, I fear we may be witnessing a swing toward the more. Too much freedom? Despite our pride in our institutions and despite the readiness of some of our leading commentators in print and on the air to uphold the banners of journalistic freedom and despite those all-too-few publishers and radio-TV executives who back them, too many people are revealing their discomfort with our country's practice of a free press. What is more, there are newsmen among them. Embarrassedly they apol- ogize for those who "go too far," who "don't care about security." I submit that there has been very little breach of security in most of the exposes of recent years. What we've seen are in- creasingly desperate and even clumsy efforts on the part of newsmen to cope with increasingly powerful and equally clumsy efforts to hide nefarious deeds. I think it's about time that we stop equating the inadequacies of disparate elements of journalism with the abuses by institutional authority. On that note, so long everybody. This concludes my four years as president of the Overseas Press Club. It was an honor. -Jack Raymond Approved For Release 2005/01/12 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7 Ap pved-.pr Release 2005 2: CIA-RDP88-0131 iar o w INew L Entry PacksTaste Of ~irettes 60% MoreTar. Enriched Flavor' idea succeeds-increases taste of new 9 mg. tar MERIT without the usual increase in tar. You can write today for a study conducted by the American Institute of Consumer Opinion for Philip Morris showing new MERIT delivers as much - or more -flavor than five current leading low tar cigarettes. Brands having up to 60% more tar than MERIT! 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You've been smoking "low tar, good taste" claims long enough. Now smoke the cigarette. MERIT Unprecedented flavor at 9 mg. tar. From Philip Morris. *American Institute of Consumer Opinion. Study available free on request. Philip Morris Inc., Richmond, Va. 23261. 9 mg'tar,' 0.7 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method. Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous toYour Health. Approved For Release 2005/01/12 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7 DATELINE JOURNALISM IN THE UNITED STATES- THE FIRST 200 YEARS Two centuries ago, when the United States of America was becoming a nation, Thomas Jefferson wrote: "Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate for a moment to prefer the latter." Ever since, this country has managed to have both, each working with the avowed aim of furthering the interests and answering the needs of a democratic society. At various epochs in our history it may have been arguable which was doing the better job. But certainly today, journalism-now an inclusive term that embraces electronic media as well as the printed word-has never played a more potent or influential role in the national life. In Vietnam, as never before, journalism has brought home the reality and meaning of war. In Watergate, as never before, it has investigated and uncovered malfeasance in the highest places in the land. Journalism has touched and changed all our lives. Yet to a considerable extent this is what it has been doing in America ever since the days of John Peter Zenger and Ben Franklin. In this Bicentennial year it is the purpose of DATELINE to glance back over American journalism during the last 200 years, to recount some of the ways in which it has met its challenges, to salute some of the men and women who have provided its leadership and worked in its ranks. In fulfilling its task of chronicling the achievements of others, journalism too often overlooks its own. Yet surely the nation's reporters, correspondents, photographers and editors have compiled a record in which they can take pride as they begin their third century of serving the people. Approved For Release 2005/01/12 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7 Approved For Release 2005/01/12 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7 THE FIRST 200 YEARS- REFLECTIONS OF A VETERAN EDITOR by I. Russell Wiggins page 10 kq BROADCASTING THE YOUNG GIANT by Elmer W. Lower page 1s ONE CHANGE AFTER ANOTHER MAGAZINES COVER: 1) Benjamin Franklin 2) Thomas Paine 3) Margaret Bourke- by John Tebbe/ / White 4) Adolph S. Ochs 5) Ma- page25 thew Brady 6) Horace Greeley 7) Carl Bernstein 8) Bob Woodward EVOLUTION OF THE NEWS SERVICES 9) Lowell Thomas 10) William Ran- dolph Hearst 11) Walter Lippmann by Samuel G. Blackman 12) Herb Block 13) Cissy Patterson page 30 14) Henry Luce-15) Edward R. Mur- row 16) DeWitt Wallace 17) Ernie REBELS WITH A CAUSE - MUCKRAKING Pyle 18) Walter Cronkite. John by Jack Anderson Peter Zenger was not forgotten, but hi t it il bl a 34 s por ra was not ava a e. p ge WOMEN IN JOURNALISM EDITOR by Georgie Anne Geyer Jess Corkin page40 MANAGING EDITOR James D. Head THE CAMERA WAS THERE ART DIRECTOR Anthony La Rotonda page 46 ASSOCIATE EDITORS Jonathan Braun THE TRENCHCOAT BRIGADE Noel Humphreys by Walter Logan Herbert Kupferberg David Paley page 52 Pam Proctor Martin Timins DRAWING THE LINE L. H. Whittemore THE EDITORIAL CARTOONIST PICTURE EDITOR Arthur-Rothstein by Thomas A. Engelhardt ASSISTANT ART DIRECTOR page 60 Al Troiani ART ASSOCIATES THE OVERSEAS PRESS CLUB AWARDS Candice Culbert page 66 Robert Peterson PUBLISHER PRESIDENT Jack Raymond Arthur G. Milton Long Island Press VICE PRESIDENTS Anita Diamant Berke, Matthew A. R. Bassity, Arthur G. Milton SECRETARY Helen Alpert TREASURER Louis J. Calderoni CIRCULATION DIRECTOR Will Yolen AWARDS COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN Robin Moore Hill & Knowlton BOARD OF GOVERNORS-ACTIVE: Jean Baer, Ruth C. Biemiller, Marguerite Cartwright, Ralph Leviton, Meyer Laurie, Rosalind Massow, Robin Moore, Grace Naismith, Joseph C. ASSOCIATE CIRCULATION DIRECTOR Peters, Ralph Salazar, Ralph R. Schulz, John L. Scott, Larry Stessin. ACTIVE ALTERNATES: Patricia A. Milton Robert Moskin, Donald Shannon, Jean P. Shepherd. ASSOCIATE: David Anderson, Jay Associated Press Brennan, George Burns. ASSOCIATE ALTERNATES: Jack Galub, Harry Rand. ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Len Silverman Overseas Press Club of America, Inc. Pennyfeather Press Hotel Biltmore, 55 East 43rd Street, New York, N.Y. 10017 (212) 687-2340; Cable: OVERPRESS CONTENTS Approved For Release 2 P88-01315R000400150017-7 Approved For Release 2005/01/12 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7 The First 200 Years- Reflections of a Veteran Editor by JAMES RUSSELL WIGGINS This is our 200th anniversary year; but in strict accuracy, the Declaration of Indepen- dence adopted on July 4, 1776, did not begin the Amer- ican Revolution. John Adams pointed out that the "Revolution" was some- thing that took place long before Lex- ington and Concord-something that took place in the minds of the people. The American press had much to do with that, probably more than any other element in Colonial society. On the surface, the early newspapers did not seem very formidable opponents of British rule in North America. They were modest publications. And there were few of them. The first American newspaper, The Boston News Letter, had been started in 1704. There were only 12 weekly newspapers by 1750. There were 23 weekly papers in the Colonies when the Sugar Act was passed in 1764, and 37 by the time of the Stamp Act in 1775. These news- papers had few subscribers. In 1765, The New York Journal had 1500; The Boston Chronicle 1500; The Pennsyl- vania Chronicle 2500; The Massachu- setts Spy 500; The Boston Gazette 1500. During the next 10 years their circulation rose somewhat, but on the eve of Independence, The Spy had only 3500, The Boston Gazette 2000. Mighty mite Even less impressive than their size and circulation was the equipment on which they were printed-the com- mon press. This puny hand press with two printers was capable of printing some 200 sheets an hour on one side. But, to British authority in America, it proved a more formidable weapon than the cannon that Henry Knox dragged by sledge from Ticonderoga and Crown Point for the siege of 10 Boston. The "common" printing press of The Massachusetts Spy: Newspapers helped bring American Colonists from mild dissent to open rebellion in the decade before 1776. Approved For Release 2005/01/12 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7 Approved For Release 2005/01/12 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000400150017-7 It is something of a miracle that so weak a press could have transformed the relations of the Colonies to the Mother Country. In 1764, before the Sugar Act, the American Colonials were prosperous, loyal to the King, devoted to the Mother Country, and proud of their British connection. Within a decade, they were brought from mild dissent to a state of rebel- lion. It was, of course, partly due to the misguided governmental policies of England, and partly due to the sud- den maturity of a hitherto dependent people. John Holt, publisher of The New York Journal, made no idle boast when he told Sam Adams that the press had "kindled a spirit" sufficient to repel the tyrannical designs of Great Britain. From the moment the Stamp Act was passed, the patriot newspapers kept up a drumfire of attack and ac- cusation, playing upon the fears and anxieties of a people who viewed with increasing mistrust the designs of the British government. The Declaration of independence proved that a vigorous and patriotic press could make a revolution; but if the Revolution that commenced in 1775 had proceeded from military victory to counter-revolution and pol- itical disintegration in the footsteps of so many violent revolutions, there Printer John Peter Zenger (dock, left) represented by Andrew Hamilton (center) beat libel action in this historic case with truth accepted as defense against Crown. would have been little to celebrate in 1976. What made the struggle of the Co- lonial printers and the other Colonial patriots memorable was not just Lex- ington, Concord, the Siege of Boston, and the Revolutionary War, but the principles that governed them, the zeal that animated them, the funda- mental tenets that lent vitality to the Revolution and permanence to the in- stitutions that were founded upon its victories. The Declaration of Independence proved that a vigorous press could make a revo- lution, and the first account of that document was in The Pennsylvania Evening Post. i dl ?F 1 200510,1Ji2.; CI -RD 6a I, N =p of of