Word: post-dispatch
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...orchestration of the latest delivery was highly sophisticated. The Pentagon papers first appeared in the Times and the Washington Post, the two newspapers most regularly read in the capital. They emerged in the Boston Globe in the heart of the Cambridge intellectual community. Also favored were the Los Angeles Times, which is powerful in the West and runs a news service with more than 200 U.S. newspaper clients, and the eleven-newspaper Knight chain. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch and Chicago Sun-Times also met the same obvious criteria: a strong antiwar editorial record...
While court action temporarily prevented the Times from publishing more of the Pentagon papers, its rivals were playing catchup. The Washington Post and Boston Globe front-paged other parts of the study. They too were stopped by the courts. "I would have felt left out," said Globe Editor Thomas Winship, "if the Government hadn't moved against us." Later, the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Sun-Times, St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the eleven-paper Knight chain turned up still more details. So many papers were printing Pentagon pieces that Editor Kenneth MacDonald of the Des Moines Register lamented...
...correspondents know their way around as well as Richard Beebe Dudman. Resourceful without being reckless, in 20 years on the St. Louis Post-Dispatch he has learned to operate with equal ease in Cuba or Washington, the Middle East or London, Viet Nam or Paris. But no newsman can be at ease on assignment in Cambodia...
...syndicated columnist. There are no black managing editors on white publications. Many newspapers, particularly in the South, employ no blacks at all, except as clerks or janitors. The Washington Post, with 19 blacks out of an editorial staff of 222, is the most "integrated" large daily newspaper. The New York Times (13 blacks out of 374 editorial employees), the San Francisco Chronicle (four out of 196), the St. Louis Post-Dispatch (six out of 150) and the Detroit News (five out of 300) have more typical percentages...
...story I think you'll be interested in." Most of the editors responded with remarks like "What's that agency again?" Obst persisted, asking $100 if the story ran. Some 35 newspapers (including the Chicago Sun-Times, the Milwaukee Journal and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch) printed...