Word: newspapermen
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...tell all, the Secretary of State called newspapermen for an unusual Sunday conference in an unusual place, his own office. Soberly, but radiating satisfaction, he read...
...more tough combat than any U.S. correspondents in World War II. Reporters on Bataan could recuperate in the rock caverns of Corregidor. On Guadalcanal, reporters' protection consisted solely of the fighting marines. Unlike many of their whip-corded, cane-carrying, limousine-borne forebears of World War I, Guadalcanal newspapermen literally become "fighting correspondents...
...product of his work and risks. (He probably provoked the veteran marine sergeant who said: "If I'm going to get it, I'm going to get it. But I'm not going to get bumped off on the top of a hill like those dumb newspapermen with their cameras...
Damon Runyon chipped in. So did newspapermen in Denver. Funds came from Author-Scenarist Gene Fowler, Col lier's Editor William Chenery, Colorado Governor Ralph L. Carr, New York Mirror Publisher Charles B. McCabe, Manhattan Drama Critic Burns Mantle, many another journalist and ex-journalist who had cut his teeth on Denver papers, in the good old days...
...progressed through the Baltimore Sun, the Philadelphia Bulletin and Ledger, and the New York Post, to city editor of the A.P.'s New York Bureau. He was already a corking good newspaperman when he went to work for the Times in 1934, the kind of newspaperman that other newspapermen are proud of. Many an Australian, British and U.S. reporter said so last week to the Times. So did General MacArthur, who wired: "He served with gallantry and devotion at the front and fulfilled the important duties of war correspondent with distinction to himself and the New York Times...