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Metro Seven: What the Media Were Saying

The Metro Seven's 40th anniversary reunion, with other Washington Post alumni, April 2012.
The Metro Seven’s 40th anniversary reunion, with other Washington Post alumni, April 2012.  Ivan C Brandon, Hollie West, Sandy Davis, Angie Brown Terrell, Craig Herndon, Alice Bonner, Mike Hodge, Bobbi Bowman, Courtland Milloy Jr, Leon Dash and Ron Taylor at Home of Ivan Brandon, Rockville, Md.

Also see:

Media coverage of the 1972 complaint filed by young black reporters against the Washington Post before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Metro Seven letters2

 

first column: whites too) and started his own newspaper.

No matter how much is done or not done . . .

second column: columns are another matter, of course. Too many younger journalists get so involved with their own in- . . .

third column: These blacks complain of “The lack of black participation in shaping of the news reported by one of America’s most prestigious newspapers, is to us an insult to the black community of this city and an insult to black Americans around the country.” I have always thought that it was a newspaper’s duty to report the facts, not to shape the news. There is too much shaping now. What would the blacks do? Have no adverse black news and all hate-whitey propaganda?

OTIS McCORMICK.

Metro Seven-NYT
Metro Seven-Star
Metro Seven-WashDaily News
Metro Seven-Wash Post story
Metro Seven-Judy Luce Mann

Washington Star, March 26, 1972
Washington Star, March 26, 1972

NIck Von Hoffman-Fair Share

MetroSeven-VonHoffman2

last paragraph: To achieve full employment or abolish the need for it takes more fundamental measures than the equitable distribution of a.sufficient number of jobs.  But consideration of that comes later. Now we have to fear that workers will cut each other up and short-sighted managements will egg them on to do it.Metro Seven-Richard Wilson

Metro Seven-Guild Reporter
Metro Seven-Guild Reporter-2Metro Seven-Guild Reporter-3

Metro Seven-VonHoffman

Metro Seven - Tom DowlingMetro Seven-Raspberry
second column: so many black newsmen are feeling. We’ve known that . . . Metro Seven-MORE cover

Metro Seven-MORE-1

Metro Seven-MORE-end
Metro Seven-MORE-better end

Metro Seven-More-3
>

Metro Seven MORE-finale
Metro Seven-Colonial Times
Metro Seven-Colonial-2
Metro Seven-Colonial-end

interrupted paragraph: I’m not sure of all the reasons why I was fired because I never got very straight answers to my questions, but I’m reasonably sure that my being black had little to do with it, but that my being openly radical in my politics had a good deal to do with it.

There is the possibility that I was not as good a journalist as I thought, but . . .

Paul W. Valentine, Washington Post: “Post Bias In Hiring Charged” (Nov. 7, 1972) (PDF)

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Stephen Green, Washington Post: “Post Rebuts Charge of Racial Bias” (Nov. 28, 1972) (PDF)

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1 comment

Greggory Walter Morris October 16, 2018 at 2:53 pm

This invaluable effort needs to be memorialized: MOVIE!. MOVIE!. MOVIE!. MOVIE!. MOVIE!. MOVIE!. MOVIE!. MOVIE!. MOVIE!.

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