The Kingdom and the Power (40 page)

BOOK: The Kingdom and the Power
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Dear Syd:

This is a letter of non-congratulation. The Pulitzer Prizes were announced today. You should have had one. I’m sorry you didn’t get it.

Sincerely,
ECD       

Sydney Gruson folded this note and tucked it into his wallet, and he carried it with him for the next nine years.

A year after his trip to Mexico, Catledge visited London and was told by the London bureau chief, Drew Middleton, about a bright young man named Sander Vanocur that Middleton wanted to hire for his bureau. Vanocur was then working for the
Manchester Guardian
, and, though still in his mid-twenties, he had already demonstrated talent not only as a reporter but also as a gracious and likable individual who moved easily through the British social and diplomatic scene, and Middleton was convinced that Vanocur would be an asset to
The Times
in London. Catledge, who was now insisting that all hiring be done in New York, said that he would be happy to consider Vanocur’s application when the young man was next in the United States. A few months later, during the winter of 1955, Sander Vanocur appeared in Catledge’s office.

He was tall, husky, dark-haired, and rather handsome, and he wore a finely tailored suit and brown suede British shoes. Catledge was impressed. Vanocur had, on his own initiative, already gone to Washington to see Reston, having had the appointment arranged by Eric Sevareid, who had known Vanocur when the latter was a stringer for CBS. Reston had liked Vanocur, and so did Catledge; and so did Catledge’s special assistant on personnel selection, a former news editor named Richard D. Burritt—who was regarded by irreverent staff members as the office psychiatrist.

Richard Burritt was not really a psychiatrist—this position being held by a licensed practitioner who spent one day a week in the
Times’
Medical department on the thirteenth floor—but Burritt’s technique while interviewing an applicant, his tendency to ask personal questions and then to lean back and quietly listen, observing reactions, nodding, analyzing tendencies, nodding, noting the way in which the applicant had knotted his necktie, the width of his lapels-all this, and more, had earned for Richard D. Burritt the title of
Times
“shrink,” which he carried with an aura of either notoriety or esteem, depending largely on who was describing him. If Burritt was being described by an individual who had failed Burritt’s imaginary psycho-trial, who had been turned away for not being “
Times
material,” or who had been hired by Burritt as
a copyboy but had never been promoted beyond that, then Richard D. Burritt was seen as a crazed contemptible corporate clod. But if described by an individual whom Burritt had favored and who had subsequently risen from copyboy to clerk, from clerk to reporter, then Burritt was characterized as a sensitive sage, a perceptive appraiser of men, an executive of rare flexibility. Burritt
was
more flexible than his critics would ever concede, a fact that was demonstrated when Burritt—who preferred hiring as copyboys tweedy graduates of Ivy League colleges who swore by
The Times
, who would eagerly accept employment in the
Times
building even as window washers—was approached one day by a skinny, six-foot five-inch pimply young army sergeant in uniform. Yet there was something about the applicant that intrigued Burritt, and, together with another
Times
personnel expert, Burritt proceeded to interrogate him. Everything was fine until Burritt asked the applicant to name the college from which he had graduated.

“I did not attend college, sir,” he said.

Burritt shook his head sadly, explaining that all copyboys on
The Times
had to be college graduates, adding that there were copyboys employed at that very moment who had Master’s degrees and Ph.D.’s.

Suddenly and dramatically, the tall sergeant rose to his feet and announced, “Gentlemen, I regard the essence of education to be the enlightenment of the mind by the introduction of ideas!” As the two
Times
personnel experts looked at him in startled silence, he continued, “It is true that I am not a college graduate, but I am literate and articulate and I
dwell
in the realm of ideas.”

“Yes,” Burritt interrupted, “we can see that you do, but you could not live in New York on a copyboy’s salary of $27 a week.”

“Leave that to me,” he said, and he displayed such self-assurance that Burritt decided to hire him. Within a few years he had risen from copyboy to clerk, then to reporter, and soon he was one of the best reporters on the paper—McCandlish Phillips.

In the case of Sander Vanocur, the situation was different. He was hired not as a copyboy but as a reporter, which in many ways was a great advantage over the way that McCandlish Phillips began on
The Times
. The copyboy’s life consisted of filling paste pots, fetching galley proofs, walking across the street to obtain coffee for the
copyreaders and rewrite men, and also a quart of ale for the superintendent of copyboys, a white-haired stout ruddy man named Steve Moran, whose nightly consumption of ale is one of the unheralded legends of
The New York Times
. After Steve Moran had gone off duty, the copyboys came under the supervision of a tiny tyrannical man named Sam Solovitz who, at four feet eleven inches, resembled an aging jockey, which is what he claimed to be to any woman he met in a Times Square bar. Working under Steve Moran during the late afternoons, or under Sam Solovitz during the evenings, was no bargain in either case, and as a result many copyboys became so obsessed with a determination to escape their plight that they
wrote
; they wrote more than Proust; they stayed all night in the newsroom and borrowed a reporter’s typewriter and wrote a “Topics of The Times,” or a piece for
The Times
’ travel section, or an article for the Sunday
Magazine
, or
anything
that they could get into print and send to Richard Burritt as an example of the “initiative” that he always said was the hallmark of great
Times
reporters. And this is how dozens of copyboys got onto the reportorial staff.

But for a young reporter already on the staff, like Sander Vanocur, the display of “initiative” could be a handicap. Or at least it was during the Nineteen-fifties when the city editor and his subordinate editors, traditionalists all, often misinterpreted initiative in young men as a sign of insubordination or gall or a desire to take stories away from older, more deserving
Times
reporters—particularly on those many days when there were not enough stories to go around. The young reporter was supposed to sit at his desk near the back of the newsroom and await his turn. Sometimes an assistant city editor would wander back and ask him to rewrite a three-paragraph publicity release, or sometimes the reporter would hear his name bellowed over the newsroom microphone, meaning that he was either to report to the city desk for some minor assignment outside the office (“Mr. Vanocur—city desk, please”), or that he should remain at his desk to answer an in-coming call from a funeral home (“Mr. Vanocur—obit, please”). Unlike the copyboys, who at least were kept busy during their working hours, the young reporters would sit and wait.

Occasionally, they would be assigned to substitute for, or to work under, a veteran district reporter in the “East Side shack” or the “West Side shack”—which were two apartments within two buildings near the two major police precincts in mid-Manhattan, the
first on East Fifty-first Street, the other on West Fifty-fourth Street; or they might be assigned to the shack in Brooklyn or the one in downtown Manhattan across the street from the headquarters of the New York City Police Department. This assignment consisted mainly of looking out the window at the police precinct to see if there was any “activity,” or listening to the Fire Department’s bell-code apparatus that was installed within the reporter’s shack and periodically clanged out bongs in a special rhythm and frequency that revealed the precise location of the fire that had just been reported somewhere in New York City. All veteran district reporters knew the firemen’s bell-code by heart, and they could tell within a second of hearing the bongs how large the fire was, where the fire was located, and whether or not it was worth covering—a decision that was influenced both by the size of the fire and by the progress of the card game that was going on among the reporters from all the newspapers that assigned men full time to shack duty. The shacks were actually like men’s clubs, and the reporters who were full-time district men (i.e., reporters who spent their entire working day in a particular shack until a four-alarm fire, or a gangland killing, or a riot demanded that they temporarily leave it and gather the necessary information and
telephone
it into a rewrite man in the newsroom before returning to the shack and the card game: the district men themselves did not write stories)—these reporters liked the life in the shack: it was like a cozy retreat from the wife and the city editor; it was an ideal spot for an older newspaperman who liked to play cards and did not mind the incessant bonging of bells.

But for a younger reporter, life in a shack could be sheer misery. He could neither sleep nor read novels nor concentrate on his own free-lance writing because of the bells. And it was also very boring to spend hours looking out the window watching the front door of the police precinct—
The Times
did not publish that much crime news anyway. And so the young reporter soon joined the older men from the
Journal-American
, or the
World-Telegram
or the
Herald Tribune
, in a card game, leaving most of the work to be done by the tabloid men from the
Daily News
and the
Mirror
, which featured crime and which usually had reporters who had relatives either on the police force or in the Mafia. Vanocur had neither.

Following his tour of the shacks and after a session as a
Times
correspondent in Queens, Sander Vanocur returned to the news-room
and took his turn on night rewrite. The rewrite bank was a rather caste-conscious place at
The Times
during the Nineteen-fifties. The city editor, Frank S. Adams, who had been a first-rate rewrite man himself during his earlier reporting days, took great interest in the nocturnal performance of the rewrite bank, which consisted of about seven men clustered within three tight rows of desks near the front of the newsroom facing the city editor’s desk. The very best late-breaking stories went to the man who sat in the first row on the aisle—he was known as the “dean” of rewrite, and he was unquestionably the most trustworthy and imperturbable under deadline pressure. His name was George Barrett. The other rewrite men in the front row got good stories
if
they occurred when Mr. Barrett was out to dinner, which he had each night at nine o’clock after two J&B’s-with-water in Gough’s Chop House across the street from the
Times
building, or at Downey’s on Eighth Avenue—where he could always be reached should something
really
big occur.

The reporters in the second row were a mixture of old reliables, men who were capable of writing but tired of running, and a few maturing reporters in their final polishing stage prior to becoming foreign correspondents. In the Fifties, this latter group included Tad Szulc, Bernard Kalb, and Wayne Phillips (no relation to McCandlish Phillips)—and these three were very fast and lively and they reflected the spirit that the city editor wanted to see on his rewrite bank, and he did not complain when they hung a sign on one of the pillars overlooking their desks that read: “Greatest Bank in the World—Human Interest Compounded Nightly.” These three men also played jokes regularly on the copyboys, and sometimes—using one of the telephones in the back of the newsroom—they would phone in a fake story to one of the older unsuspecting rewrite men, imitating the voice of one of the district reporters from the shacks, or perhaps the breathless correspondent that
The Times
had in Riverhead, Long Island—J. Harry Brown. J. Harry Brown had a very distinctive telephone style—rapid-fire, repeating every phrase: “Hello, Hello. This is J. Harry Brown, J. Harry Brown, in Riverhead, Riverhead, Long Island.

Early one morning in Damascus, Syria, where Wayne Phillips was then assigned following his triumphant tour on rewrite, he was suddenly startled from his slumber by a telephone call in his hotel room that began:
“Hello. Hello. This is J. Harry Brown, J. Harry
Brown, in Riverhead, Riverhead, Long Island.”
Wayne Phillips had been drinking arrack in an Oriental cabaret until dawn, and the familiar staccato of J. Harry Brown brought him bolt upright in bed—until the caller finally identified himself as Bernard Kalb, Phillips’ former colleague on rewrite, who was being dispatched by
The Times
to Djakarta, and whose plane had briefly stopped at the Damascus airport. Phillips, overjoyed to hear Kalb, quickly dressed, rushed down through the hotel lobby, jumped into a taxicab, and roared off to the airport, where he found Kalb in the terminal. They had coffee and reminisced until Kalb’s plane was ready for takeoff. On Phillips’ way back to the hotel he encountered along the road a convoy of troops in trucks and tanks, security guards, road checks, dust, and confusion. “What’s going on,” Phillips yelled to his driver, “an invasion?” The driver stopped to inquire, and then he said to Phillips, “That’s what
they
want to know. From the way you took off for the airport they thought an attack had started.”

Sander Vanocur worked on rewrite, but a great story never occurred while Mr. Barrett was out to dinner, or while most of the other rewrite men were busy or away from their desks or gone for the night—which had been Wayne Phillips’ good fortune while on rewrite a year before when the poet Maxwell Bodenheim was discovered murdered in a dingy furnished room on the fringes of the Bowery; and which had happened to another young rewrite man, Max Frankel, a year later, in 1956, when after midnight there was the radio flash on the
Andrea Doria-Stockholm
collision at sea. Frankel, who was twenty-six, did a superb job of organizing the facts and writing the story clearly and swiftly, and at 2:34 a.m. the press machines began to roll with Frankel’s front-page story and by-line under an across-the-page headline: “
Andrea Doria
and
Stockholm
Collide; 1,134 Passengers Abandon Italian Ship in Fog at Sea.” The next day,
The Times
’ top reporters, Meyer Berger, Milton Bracker, Peter Kihss, and others took over the story—but Frankel had been the newsroom hero of the night, and later that year, shortly after the outbreak of the Hungarian revolution, he was sent to Vienna to help in
The Times
’ coverage of the revolution and the refugees streaming out of the country. Frankel’s foreign assignment was listed as “temporary,” but he never returned to the New
York newsroom. After Vienna he served as a vacation replacement in Belgrade for one month, and then he was assigned to
The Times
’ Moscow bureau, where his major assignments included Khrushchev’s rise, Zhukov’s fall, and the discovery of a young American pianist—Van Cliburn.

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