Being Part of the News
While in journalism school at San Francisco State University, I was stringer for United Press International. UPI was the second largest wire service in the U.S. during the 1970s. It was a tradition that one of the college newspaper editors would be a UPI stringer and so I was. A former SFSU graduate worked as a reporter at UPI and he would often call and ask for a bit of “string” for national stories. String was just another way of saying comments from around the country that could be woven into a large round-up story.
One such story that not only did I provide string but provide a quote that was in the story involved the firing of Lt. Gen. Lewis B Hershey in 1969. Hershey was the head of the selective service system, the draft, and a hated official during the Vietnam war.
Here’s my quote:
“It’s great that Hershey as a personality is finally getting out,” said Howard Finberg, 20, a student at San Francisco State College. “But the system is still wrong, and that’s what needs to be corrected.”
The image is the wire service teletype copy that was set to newspapers and other subscribers of the UPI national wire.
This was an interesting period to be a journalist and cover the Vietnam war era turmoil on your own campus.