Make It Deadpan, Make It Factual

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Before the furor over Frank Morrissey's nomination for a federal judgeship died down last week (see THE NATION), it had ricocheted through headlines and editorials across the country. Yet relatively few people realized that the major factor in bringing the Morrissey case to a head was one newspaper's display of the kind of dogged, investigative journalism that is rare these days in the U.S. press. The paper is the Boston Globe, which zealously carried on a crusade to discover everything possible about the man it thought unfit for high judicial office.

Until recently, such a display has also been rare at the Globe, which languished for years under the flabby aim to be a paper "that would enter the homes as a kindly, helpful friend of the family." Under the prod of its new editor, Tom Winship, 45, the Globe has begun to shuck that please-'em-all philosophy. Ads have been dropped from the front page, almost every big syndicated columnist except Walter Lippmann has been signed on, and the new drama and music critics are both caustic and first-class. News stories have become sharper.

Such changes have moved the rejuvenated paper out of a dead heat with the rival Herald-Traveler only two years ago into a widening 58,000 circulation lead (374,000 v. 316,000). Says Winship: "I'm trying to make the paper damn courageous and really not afraid of sacred cows."

No Personal Attack. With that credo, the Globe set vigorously to work when it learned of President Kennedy's intention to nominate Morrissey, his father's longtime friend, to the federal bench. After the Globe's Washington bureau dug up the details on Morrissey's three applications to the Massachusetts Bar, other papers were quick to pick up the story. Soon after that, Jack Kennedy quietly dropped the whole idea, and the story died for two years.

Then, last year, the rumor surfaced again: this time it was President Johnson who was planning to nominate Morrissey. The Globe carefully tracked the hearsay, finally confirmed it in March through a tip from inside Teddy Kennedy's office. Swinging back to its crusade, the Globe was first to announce that Morrissey was being pushed by Teddy, first to announce that the FBI was running a check on him. Editor Winship ordered a concerted effort to uncover every pertinent piece of information available on Morrissey. "This is not a personal vendetta," he explained. "We just think Morrissey is a very mediocre mind and not up to the job." He wanted no flamboyant personal attacks, he said, just "deadpan, factual stories."

No Question. The best of the Globe staff started to dig. The paper's two Washington men began to test Capitol Hill willingness to resist the nomination. The Atlanta Journal was asked and agreed to track down details at the Georgia end of the trail. All the while, the Globe scrupulously printed every bit of pro-Morrissey news—but there was no question what the paper really wanted.

QUOTES OF THE DAY

Open quoteThe war we are fighting is our war. This battle is for Pakistan's soul.Close quote

  • ASIF ALI ZARDARI,
  • co-chairman of the Pakistan People's Party and a leading candidate in Saturday's presidential vote, stating that global terror is the country's priority