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