Tag Archives: Walter Cronkite

Library of Congress races to preserve TV history

By hnn

(CBS News) CULPEPER, Va. — There are moments that define America, and the record of many of them are stored in a vault in Culpeper, Va.

But these videotapes, some 50 years old, are deteriorating, and there is a race to preserve the history they contain.

“I think an important thing is to capture people’s memories, to take people back to the day when they first saw Carol Burnett tug on her ear, or the day when Walter Cronkite couldn’t hardly finish his sentence in November 1963, when Kennedy was shot,” says Rob Stone, the Moving Image Curator of the Library of Congress….

Source:
CBS News

Source URL:
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18563_162-57596237/library-of-congress-races-to-preserve-tv-history/

Date:
7-30-13

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

The Media: From Horace Greeley to Helen Thomas

By Nathan Raab, Contributor

Last weekend, journalist Helen Thomas passed away, ending a remarkably long and historic career in journalism.   When she began working at United Press International (UPI), Edward R. Murrow was reporting for CBS, Walter Cronkite had yet to start his career at the same network, and William Randolph Hearst, founder of the great newspaper empire where Mrs. Thomas would eventually work, was still alive.  When Hearst was born, in 1863, Horace Greeley of the New York Tribune ruled the world of newspapers from New York.  He battled it out for readership and influence with James Gordon Bennett of the Herald, among others.  William Lloyd Garrison was still writing The Liberator, an anti-slavery publication he founded in the 1830s.  Frederick Douglass had ceased publishing his paper, The North Star, only a decade earlier. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Bullies In The Newsroom

By Bradlee Dean

“Democracy becomes a government of bullies tempered by editors.”– Ralph Waldo Emerson

Today’s state-run media gives us knowledge of what is going on in America and around the world… or does it?

Although the media has a damaging 21 percent approval rating according to a recent Gallup poll (I am surprised it is that high), it still seems as though the locomotive of socialism runs full steam ahead because, for the most part, the American people do not know we are a Constitutional Republic, not a democracy. America is ruled by Law, not by opinion or the media’s false polling.

With their socialist-communist agenda behind their reports, they are attempting to bully anyone who stands against their propaganda into submission.

Let’s pull the curtain back on the media so you can see who is doing the reporting.

In 1917, Congressman Oscar Callaway entered a disturbing statement into the congressional record:

 J.P. Morgan, a banker and a steel tycoon, hired 12 high-ranking news managers and editors, and asked them to determine the most influential newspapers in America. He wanted to control the policy of the daily press of the United States (that policy being whatever they wanted it to be).  The twelve found that it was only necessary to purchase 25 of the greatest newspapers.  An agreement was reached, the policy of the papers was bought, and an editor of their choice was placed at each paper to ensure that all published information was in keeping of the new policy. (Again, keep in mind it was their policy.)

Now you know why ABC, CBS, MSNBC, CNN, FOX, etc. are reporting the same content. It is all derived from the same source.

In a nutshell, those who are attempting to rearrange reality to become the reality they want you to believe in control the news media.

Mark Twain rightly stated, “If you don’t read the newspaper, you’re uninformed. If you read the newspaper, you’re misinformed.”

Let me explain…

Richard Salant, former president of CBS news, said: “Our job is to give people not what they want, but what we decide they ought to have.”  That’s pretty arrogant, isn’t it?

Walter Cronkite, former CBS news anchor said, “News reporters are certainly liberal and left of center.”

Herman Dismore, foreign editor of the New York Times, said, “The New York Times is deliberately pitched to the liberal point of view.”

Richard Cohen, senior producer for CBS, said,  “We are going to impose our agenda on the coverage by dealing with issues and subjects that we choose to deal with.”

America, it is time to turn the television off (Psalm 101:3; 2 Corinthians 6:17). You have two options: stand for truth and demand justice, or become the victims of your own undoing and be trodden under the foot of media oppression.

Let’s take the next step and show you the twisted ideology of those who report the news:

Exposing the Media:

The Modern Day Psalm 23:

Who is Bradlee Dean?

Eugene Patterson, voice on civil rights, dies at 89

Eugene Patterson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning editor and columnist whose impassioned words helped draw national attention to the civil rights movement as it unfolded across the South, has died at 89.

Patterson, who helped fellow whites to understand the problems of racial discrimination, died Saturday evening in Florida after complications from prostate cancer, according to B.J. Phillips, a family spokeswoman.

Patterson was editor of the Atlanta Constitution from 1960 to 1968, winning a Pulitzer Prize in 1967 for editorial writing. His famous column of Sept, 16, 1963, about the Birmingham, Ala., church bombing that killed four girls — “A Flower for the Graves” — was considered so moving that he was asked by Walter Cronkite to read it nationally on the “CBS Evening News.”

“A Negro mother wept in the street Sunday morning in front of a Baptist Church in Birmingham,” Patterson began his column. “In her hand she held a shoe, one shoe, from the foot of her dead child. We hold that shoe with her.

“Every one of us in the white South holds that small shoe in his hand. … We who go on electing politicians who heat the kettles of hate. … (The bomber) feels right now that he has been a hero. He is only guilty of murder. He thinks he has pleased us. We of the white South who know better are the ones who must take a harsher judgment.”

“It was the high point of my life,” Patterson later said in a June 2006 interview from his home in St. Petersburg. “It was the only time I was absolutely sure I was right. They were not telling the truth to people and we tried to change that.”

Patterson also spoke of what he called his good fortune to work for the Atlanta newspaper and an “enlightened” leadership that encouraged his work.

“We were rather rare editors in the South at that time,” Patterson said of himself and Constitution Publisher Ralph McGill. Patterson worked under McGill, himself a Pulitzer winner in 1959, and then succeeded him at the helm of the Constitution four years later.

Editor Kevin G. Riley at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution called Patterson’s contributions to the newspaper, Atlanta and the field of journalism “enormous.”

“We benefit still from his work and legacy,” Riley told The Associated Press via email.

In 1968, Patterson joined The Washington Post and served for three years as its managing editor, playing a central role in the publication of the Pentagon Papers. After leaving the Post he spent a year teaching at Duke University.

He became editor of The St. Petersburg Times and its Washington publication, Congressional Quarterly, in 1972 and was later chief executive officer of The St. Petersburg Times Co. Under Patterson’s leadership, the Times won two Pulitzer Prizes and became known as one of the top newspapers in the country.

Times owner Nelson Poynter, who died in 1978, chose Patterson to ensure his controlling stock in the newspaper company was used to fund a school for journalists then called the Modern Media Insititute. It is now known as the Poynter Institute, which owns the Tampa Bay Times (formerly The St. Petersburg Times).

“A person — one person — had to be entrusted with fulfilling what Mr. Poynter intended,” said Roy Peter Clark, the school’s first faculty member. ” … He had to be totally trustworthy, so Mr. Poynter chose Mr. Patterson.”

Patterson retired from the Times and Poynter in 1988.

A collection of Patterson’s Atlanta Constitution columns was published in book form in 2002 as “The Changing South of Gene Patterson: Journalism and Civil Rights, 1960-1968.”

Hank Klibanoff, director of the journalism program at Emory University and co-author of a Pulitzer Prize-winning book on press coverage of the civil rights movement, said Patterson wrote with deep-seated conviction about the troubled era.

Klibanoff said that when black churches were burned in southwestern Georgia in 1962, Patterson was “deeply disturbed” and wrote a column tweaking white people who claim to be religious but support segregation. He called on whites to raise money to rebuild the churches, sparking an effort that raised $10,000.

“When he sat down to write, that conviction came out. And it came out in just a very, very powerfully written way,” Klibanoff said of Patterson.

Patterson was born in 1923 in Georgia and grew up on a small farm. School, fishing and literature were his only means of escape.

He graduated from the University of Georgia in 1943 and served in the Army in Europe during World War II. His first reporting job was at the Temple (Texas) Daily Telegram. He also had stints for United Press in Atlanta, New York and London during his journalism career.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News