From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of notable reporters who worked for
United Press International during their careers:
Carl W. Ackerman , 1913-1914 Albany, NY and Washington, D.C. bureau reporter, 1915-1917 Berlin Correspondent
[1]
Howard Arenstein , 1978 Jerusalem bureau chief 1981 editor on UPI's foreign desk in New York and Washington.
[2]
James Baar , editor in the UPI Washington Bureau
Arnaud de Borchgrave , 1947 -1951 Brussels bureau chief, 1998 president of UPI, 2001 editor-at-large of UPI based in Washington DC
[3]
Joe Bob Briggs
David Brinkley
[4]
Don Canaan UPI Ohio 1996-1999
Lucien Carr
Pye Chamberlayne
[5]
John Chambers, son of
Whittaker Chambers
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
[12]
[13] (UPI Radio, 1960s)
[14]
[15]
[16]
Marquis Childs
Charles Collingwood
[4]
Walter Cronkite , 1939-1950, covered World War II for UP.
[4]
[25]
William Boyd Dickinson
Bill Downs
[26]
Marc S. Ellenbogen
James M. Flinchum
Sylvana Foa
Oscar Fraley
Thomas Friedman
Joseph L. Galloway
Carmen Gentile
Seymour Hersh
John Hoerr
Richard C. Hottelet
[27]
Stewart Kellerman
Michael Keon , covered the Chinese Civil War in the late 1940s
David Kirby
Paul Ladewski
Eli Lake
Larry LeSueur
[28]
Eric Lyman
Eugene Lyons
Carlos Mendo
Webb Miller
[5]
Randy Minkoff
Joe W. Morgan, editor who covered the
Alger Hiss trial,
Joseph Stalin death,
Sputnik launch,
Yuri Gagarin spaceflight,
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. assassination
[29]
M. R. Akhtar Mukul
Ron Nessen
Richard S. Newcombe
Dan Olmsted
Bill Rosinski
Milton Richman
Eric Sevareid
[4]
Steve Sailer
Harrison Salisbury
[4]
Mac Sebree
Neil Sheehan
William Shirer
[4]
Howard K. Smith
[4]
Merriman Smith
[5]
Jeff Stein
Barry Sussman
Roger Tatarian
Helen Thomas
[4]
Morris DeHaven Tracy
Martin Walker
Kate Webb
[5]
Steve Wilstein
Lester Ziffren
[5]
References
^
"Carl Ackerman Dies At 80; Was Journalism School Dean" . Columbia Daily Spectator . 13 October 1970. Retrieved 13 September 2016 .
^
"Howard Arenstein" . CBS News . 13 October 2009.
^
"Book Arnaud de Borchgrave | Speakers Bureau | Booking Agent Info" .
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h Liebenson, Donald (4 May 2003).
"UPI R.I.P. - As a new book by two veterans of United Press International shows, the world lost more than a scrappy wire service when UPI died. It lost a vital witness to history" .
Chicago Tribune . Retrieved 13 September 2016 .
^
a
b
c
d
e
"Unipressers & UPI Staff" . Retrieved 17 March 2011 .
^
Chambers, David (18 October 2012).
"Salon.com debate on Whittaker Chambers Farm" . WhittakerChambers.org. Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
"Whittaker Chambers relative: Farm need not be open to public" . Salon . 18 October 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
Murphy, John (13 December 1998).
"Whittaker Chambers' Son Returns To Roots On Farm" . Baltimore Sun (via Seattle Times). Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
Fitzgibbon, William (12 July 1961).
"Chambers Is Dead; Hiss Case Witness" . New York Times . Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
Frantzich, Stephen E. (2008).
Founding Father: How C-SPAN's Brian Lamb Changed Politics in America . p. 43.
ISBN
9780742558502 . Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
"Widow of Whittaker Chambers Dies" . Associated Press . 19 August 1986. Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
Allen, Jane E. (17 April 1988).
"Site of 'Pumpkin Papers' Spy Case Cache: Chambers' Farm Proposed as Landmark" . Los Angeles Times . Associated Press. Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
Buckley Jr., William F. (6 August 2001).
"Witness and Friends: Remembering Whittaker Chambers on the Centennial of His Birth" . National Review. Archived from
the original on 17 October 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
"July 1968 UPI Directory (Domestic)" . Downhold Digest. 1968. Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
Mudd, Roger (2008).
The Place to Be: Washington, CBS, and the Glory Days of Television News . Public Affairs. p.
215 . Retrieved 4 August 2013 . chambers.
^
Franklin, Mary Beth (27 December 1984).
"Inaugural committees consider military flyover" . United Press International . Retrieved 14 March 2017 .
^
Chambers, John (1962).
"Events of 1962: 87th Congress" . United Press International . Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
Chambers, John (1964).
"Events of 1964: 1964 Presidential Election" . United Press International . Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
"Funeral Services for Adlai Stevenson" . WNYC. 16 July 1965. Retrieved 14 March 2017 .
^
"Civil Rights Movement in 1965" . United Press International . 1965. Retrieved 14 March 2017 .
^
"Preview 1966" . Washington. 1966. 03'25" - minutes in. United Press International. Retrieved 16 September 2014 .
^
"From the People" (PDF) . Minnesota History Society. February 1968. Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
"MLK: The Assassination Tapes (Full Episode) (at 40'50")" . Smithsonian Channel. 11 April 1986. Retrieved 3 March 2018 .
^
"RFK Near Death" (PDF) . Oakland Tribune (Hood College). 5 June 1968. Retrieved 4 August 2013 .
^
"Walter Cronkite Dies" . CBS News . 17 July 2009.
^ Gay, Timothy M (2013). Assignment to Hell: The War Against Nazi Germany with Correspondents Walter Cronkite, Andy Rooney, A.J. Liebling, Homer Bigart, and Hal Boyle . NAL Caliber Trade. p. 528.
ISBN
978-0451417152 .
^ Goldstein, Richard (17 December 2014).
"Richard C. Hottelet, CBS Newsman and Last of 'Murrow Boys,' Dies at 97" . The New York Times . Retrieved 13 September 2016 .
^ Goldstein, Richard (7 February 2003).
"Larry LeSueur, Pioneering War Correspondent, Dies at 93" . The New York Times . Retrieved 13 September 2016 .
^
"Author to speak about Trump/Russia book" . Galesburg Register-Mail. 3 May 2019. Retrieved 4 May 2019 .