Printed during the closing days of the newspaper’s existence (the paper would be resurrected some twenty years later for Germany’s second brawl); the reporting journalist could not emphasize enough how lousy the paper was with enlisted men serving in many of the most trusted positions. The reader will come away with an understanding as to how the newspaper’s crew addressed their daily responsibilities and made it to the presses on time.

The high number of experienced newspapermen who wrote for the paper is astounding; writers such as Franklin P. Adams and Alexander Woolcott of The New York Tribune, Charles Phelps Cushing of The Kansas City Star, and Wilson Rogers of The Baltimore Sun.


More articles from The Stars & Stripes can be read here.


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Franklin P Adams New York TribuneFranklin P Adams WW1 The Stars and Stripes newspapercaptain guy viskinskki stars and stripes officer-supervisorCharles Phelps Cushing WW1 The Stars and Stripes newspaperCharles Phelps Cushing Kansas City StarHudson Hawley Hartford WW1 The Stars and Stripes newspaperHudson Hawley Hartford Times Yale RecordWilson Rogers WW1 The Stars and Stripes newspaperWilson Rogers Baltimore SunAlexander Woolcott WW1 The Stars and Stripes newspaperAlexander Woolcott New York Times Drama Critic during ww1Harold Ross WW1 The Stars and Stripes newspaperCartoonist Albian A Wallgren Stars and StripesWW1 Army Journalism 1918Illustrator C LeRoy Baldridge Stars and Stripes
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