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Live From ... The Philadelphia Bulletin Reunion

Where: Franklin Inn Club, Camac Street, Center City. When: 12:30-3:20 p.m., Jan. 29.

"There are so many newspaper people here, I think we could start our own newspaper! Give me rewrite!" shouts Peter Binzen, thrusting a fist in the air.

And so the reunion of former staffers of the Philadelphia Bulletin gets off an enthusiastic start, following the opening toast by Don Harrison, in which he proclaimed this event wasn't a sad occasion, but a happy one to celebrate a once-glorious newspaper.

Harrison, who held a variety of editing jobs at the Bulletin, was especially happy with the turnout -- about 40 talkative souls, many graying -- because Binzen had begun setting up the event only a couple of weeks before.

The Bulletin folded 25 years ago today, a victim of the Inquirer's glory days, some would say, though others will rightly point out that afternoon papers, good and bad, were falling by the wayside then.

I remember the Bulletin as a family-friendly newspaper, with its Daily Chuckle and comics on the very back page. As a Bulletin paper boy, I even earned a couple of trips by adding new homeowners to my Cherry Hill route.

Ron Goldwyn, who landed at the Daily News after the Bulletin's demise, says he still has an honor box on his front porch with the paper's final edition.

The idea for the reunion grew out of a regular Monday luncheon meeting of the quarterback club of the "quirky" Franklin Inn Club, Binzen said. Harrison was coming to talk, and the idea arose of staging an impromptu reunion. People like Inquirer editor Dotty Brown and Harrison made some calls, and the event came together. "It amazes me," Binzen said. "It's just an indication of the loyalty people felt for the Bulletin."

And for the old journalism. "The Bulletin covered every grass fire," Binzen says. "Lot of great reporters who went onto the Inquirer. A lot of them retired." Old journalism? The days of typewriters (these machines with keyboards that actually slapped marks on sheets on paper) and copy boys and chaos in the newsroom with a lot of yelling, "Copy!" as those typed sheets were hustled off to be turned into print.

The Bulletin had seven editions, he says. The last one was 5 o'clock in the afternoon. So people were working around the clock. At its height, the Bulletin had the biggest daily circulation in the North America, over 700,000.

What went awry? "The Inquirer got a whole lot better. ... As long as we were competing against Walter Annenberg's Inquirer we were in pretty good shape." Annenberg was a great philanthropist, but a lousy publisher, Binzen said.

David O'Reilly, now the Inquirer's religion editor, clinks a glass and has a story to tell about the top editor's secretary. As soon as she saw this new hire in a gray flannel suit, she said to herself he'd be her future husband. Sure enough, the day the paper folded, he asked her out, and a couple of years later O'Reilly and the secretary were wed. One particular date, he remembers, he felt this magical connection, and took her arm to walk arm in arm. "We were emotionally married that day," he said.

Marci Shatzman followed up by relating her tale about an "erotic dream" about a fellow Bulletinite she'd long known but didn't really like. She later talked about it with Daily News bud Jill Porter (to Binzen's overhearing shock), who set the two divorcees up. Today, Brian Feldman's sitting across from her, her husband of 26 years.

Carroll "Buck" Shelton, in a later conversation, said he was hired at the Bulletin before anyone else in the room, as a copy boy in 1945. His mother worked in the dress pattern department. In those days, he explained, the paper printed a dress pattern every day, and women came to the Bulletin Building (a great place to watch the Mummers Parade, he added) to buy copies of previously printed patterns. He left three months before the paper went under to become editor of the Norristown Times Herald.

Dick Langman said the memory that stands out most for him was when he was working on the "telegraph desk," a holdover term for the area where teletype machines printed out news from national and international wire services. It was November 1963, and when the machine made five pings, he knew the story had to be a "real big one." That's how he learned of the Kennedy assassination. He also recalled laying out the paper at 7 a.m. to get in all the final results of one of Ronald Reagan's elections.

So many memories in this room. Too little time to meet the rest of the crowd, which has been filing out. Attendees included John Farmer, still a political writer for the Newark Star-Ledger; George Packard, once the Bulletin's executive editor; Rem Reider, editor of the American Journalism Review; Nessa Foreman, an art critic now with WHYY, as well as a contingent of current and former Inquirer writers and editors. Stu Ditzen, Denise Cowie, Liz Williams and Tom Gibbons departed in recent years. Walter Naedele, Joe Slobodzian, David Taylor and Tom Infield are still at the Inky.

Those interested in learning more can check out Nearly Everybody Reads It, a collection of recollections edited by Binzen and published by Camino Books.

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Comments (5)

Lois Brooks:

What date did the Bulletin have the largest circulation in North America? Must have been back in the 19th century (oe early 20th C.)before the New York Daily News and the other NYC morning papers.

Wendy Contos:

Dang. I missed another Bulletin reunion? Rats.

Joe Shea:

For me the Bulletin was always the paper to read and I still miss it.
I find it reprehensible that an article on the Inquirer web site would state that it was because of the Inquirer that the Buletin no longer exists.
The Inquirer is all that is left and it is not much.
I have always believed that the Bulletin was the better of the two, in fact I think the Inquirer dosen't even make a good fish wrapper.

Christopher Meehan:

My father worked at the Bulletin for 20yrs. His name was Lawrence Meehan and he was a Pressman. He lost everything when the company closed and even tried to kill himself. There are no good memories the way the place closed, he lost everything. Eventually he lost his life from cancer and some of it was blamed on the lead and ink he worked with. I am happy for those who made it through the storm and moved on. I guess it wasn't all smiles for everyone

Elizabeth Taylor has been around since I was a child, we all grew up with her. She had divorces, failed marriages, bad health starting from her fall when she was 12 in National Velvet, and broke her back 5 times. She suffered from scoliosis , in later years (wheelchair), and was in constant neckpain. Through it all she was a great mother, humanitarian, and was able to laugh at herself. She was also one of the most beautiful woman ever (violet eyes & double row of eyelashes).

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Authors

Expect various Inquirer writers to start to show their faces -- or at least their words -- on this blog.

Mike Jensen Inquirer reporter Mike Jensen is the college basketball columnist for the Inquirer. Each year, he gives a special insight into the tournament.


Jeff McLane Inquirer reporter Jeff McLane is the beat writer for Temple. He will pick the tournament.


Tom Fitzgerald Inquirer reporter Tom Fitzgerald will blog about Hillary Clinton's Pa. visits March 10 &11.


Larry Eichel Inquirer reporter Larry Eichel will post updates on Bill Clinton's March 7 visit to Media.


Tim Panaccio Inquirer reporter Tim Panaccio will write about National Hockey League trade talk.


David Aldridge Inquirer reporter David Aldridge will live-blog the week before the NBA's trade deadline.


Peter Mucha Peter Mucha began this blog, before moving on to other writing duties.


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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on January 29, 2007 12:56 PM.

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