“In London, Moscow, Paris and Rome, war-slimmed papers devoted columns to Mr. Roosevelt:”

“‘It’s impossible to to believe that Mr. Churchill could have got a bigger play ,’ cabled ‘Newsweek’s’ correspondent, Mary Palmer, from London… Of the Paris press, only the communist ‘L’Humanité’ did not lead with the President’s death Friday morning. The ‘Tribune’ jumped from two to four pages without permission; the next day the government doubled the paper allotment for everybody.”

“In Moscow, Mr. Roosevelt’s death shattered the newspaper tradition that all foreign news of whatever nature goes on the back pages. The story was played on front pages, together with a black-bordered picture of the President. In death, as in life, Mr. Roosevelt still was setting precedents.”


– from Amazon: Drunk Before Noon: The Behind-The-Scenes Story of the Washington Press Corps

Read The World Press and the Death of FDR<br>(Newsweek Magazine, 1945) for Free

international news service 1945associated press 1945united press 1945Douglas cornell associated press corespondentmerriman smith united press corespondentrobert nixon international news service corespondentmary palmer newsweek reporter1945 world telegram executive editor lee woodjournalist lee fitzgerald 1945 death of FDR
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