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- Edward R. Murrow
-
-
- (December 15, 1941)
-
- Edward R. Murrow is a dark, lanky man with a luminous grin and
- a scholar's careful head. Thinking about Europe and thinking on
- his feet were two specialties with him before he became chief
- of CBS's news staff abroad in 1937.
-
- Other newsmen did their jobs under similar conditions;
- Murrow's distinction was that he did more than his job. Twice
- every 24 hours, on the appointed second, almost never fluffing
- a word, in a voice that meant what it said,he not only reported
- the news but conveyed an actuality. U.S. listeners actually
- heard the people going by the church of St.
- Martin's-in-the-Fields on their way to shelters before a raid
- because Murrow laid his mike down on the sidewalk to pick up
- their unhurried footsteps. U.S. listeners sensed the strange
- silence between two raids on moonlit London because Murrow told
- them how loudly the liquid from two pierced cans of peaches
- dripped inside a smashed shop.
-
- No bunk, no journalese, no sentimentality. Of the embattled
- English he remarked, "Often they are insular, but their
- determination must be recorded."
-
- At a time when the official British were still egg-walking on
- the subject of the U.S.,he reported the truth in plain words:
- "They want us in this war."
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-