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Can You Get My Name in the Papers? |
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CRIME REPORTER I came out of the army in February 1948. I had turned
21 only a couple of months earlier. The picture of my mother and Sheila
waiting on the platform as I came off the train at Glasgow's
Central railway station is still
vivid in my mind. Sheila hadn't seen me for more than a year and shyly
hid behind my mother. We all hugged and kissed and went home to Gorbals.
I also vividly recall the claustrophic feeling that engulfed me when
I went up the dingy close to our first-floor flat with its odd bits
of furniture still in the bath. I had spent
three years in wide open spaces, seen Notre Dame Cathedral overlooking
the Seine and the Great Sphinx and the Pyramids and Cairo and although I was glad to see my family I was also overcome
with gloom at the thought of living
in a place like Gorbals. I suppose like many other men I could have
left home again to seek my fame and fortune elsewhere but I wanted to
be with my family after such a long time away from them. I also missed
the cameraderie of the barrack room and the tent.
A week
or so after my return I went back to my old job as a junior reporter
on the Glasgow Herald. Not long afterwards a banker was found dead early
one morning in the garden of his elegant home in Bearsden, a posh suburb
of the city. Every paper in the country had the story except mine. Our
crime reporter had fallen down on the job, an unforgiveable crime even
on the unsensational Herald. Tom Chalmers,
the news editor, called me to his room, a tiny space with a roll-top
desk at the end of a large, gloomy room which reporters shuffled in
and out of at all hours of the day and night. Chalmers was something
akin to the Almighty in the Outram group. That's the way he looked to
me anyway from my vantage point as a lowly junior reporter. Many stories
circulated about how he had lost an eye but I never met anyone who could
tell me exactly how it had happened. He wore a black patch like a pirate
because, it was said, his glass eye exploded one day and nearly blinded
someone he was talking to. Chalmers was the kind of man about whom stories
like that were told. "How
would you like to be crime reporter?," he said. The job
required me to write three versions of every story, one for the Herald,
another in a less formal way for our sister morning paper The Bulletin,
and the third in a 'punchy' style for the group's evening paper the
Evening Times. I was young and keen and touchingly grateful for the
chance to show what I could do. It was also very good training. I can
still write in a variety of styles, sometimes unintentionally, as you
will possibly gather if you read the rest of this book. Jimmy Paton,
chief reporter of the Bulletin, vetted my stories before they went to
the chief sub-editors of the two morning papers. It was Jimmy Paton,
a good-humoured, fresh-faced man who came to Glasgow from Dundee in
1926, the year I was born, who taught me how to write a news story;
that it should start in such a way that the reader will want to read
on, and that it shouldn't ramble and be cluttered with unnecessary verbiage. The title
crime reporter was a bit grand for what I had to do. My job was to go
round all the main police, fire
and ambulance stations and hospitals in the city to try to pick up any
kind of stories that were going. The hospital casualty departments were
real war zones, especially the Victoria Infirmary, which was nearest
to the notorious Gorbals. On Friday nights the infirmary was packed
with the victims of drunken battles. There were men and women waiting
patiently on benches with broken legs, arms, jaws, and strips of pillowslips,
curtains, and shirts stemming the blood from head wounds. All the
other newspapers in the city also had reporters doing the same nightly
rounds as myself and the competition between us was fierce. I soon learned
not to ask a question I had heard in many Hollywood films, "Any
statement for the press?" The answer one was most likely to get
in the environment I worked was, "F... the press."
One had to be direct in one's questions; and they had to be formed
in a way that brought out the answer one wanted. One night
I went to see a robbery victim, a woman who operated an unlicensed money-lending
business from her tenement home in the Bridgeton area of the city and
who had been robbed earlier in the day. I knew she wasn't likely to
be very forthcoming about how much the robbers had taken as she didn't
want anyone but her clients to know about her business. The door
opened about two inches and
one eye peeped suspiciously out. The conversation went like this. "I'm
a reporter missus. I hear you were robbed of a thousand pounds today." "It
wiz £75." "It
was three thugs, is that right?" "It
wiz only wan." "A
wee fellow." He wiz
a big fella." I hear
he punched you in the face." "Naw,
he jist pushed me into the hoose and demanded money." "That
was the fourth time you've been robbed in a couple of months." "It
wiz the second this year." The woman
then slammed the door with the words, "Ah'm telling you reporters
nothin!" My nightly
ritual started with a phone call round the potential news sources when
I came on duty at 7.30 p.m. There were two telephone boxes each about
the size of a broom cupboard built into a wall of the reporters' room.
Each cupboard had a shelf on which rested a 'candlestick' telephone
with a tubular-shaped earpiece that clipped onto the side of a column
with a mouthpiece at the top. Not the kind of thing you would talk to
an astronaut with. The air, if that's the right word, was heavy with
stale cigarettes and perspiration. Immediately
after the calls, which took up to an hour and yielded almost nothing,
I did the rounds by car, came back for a meal if the volume of work
allowed, rushed out again to do another round,
and so on until about 2 a.m., which was the deadline for the
morning papers unless something really big broke. Many nights
I was so strung up with excitement and the desire not to miss anything
that I raced up to the office canteen, bolted down a pie and greasy
chips, rushed out again and brought it all up on the pavement. Because
of my frequent nocturnal visits to police stations I became friendly
with many police officers, but
I also became known to many ladies of the night
who had been hauled in for 'hawking their mutton,' as it was
inelegantly described by the hardened coppers. This had
unfortunate consequences sometimes. One evening after leaving the Empire
Theatre I was walking down a busy Renfield Street with a well brought
up young Jewish girl of whom I was very fond when we passed one of the
ladies at the St Vincent Street coffee stall which served as a kind
of headquarters for prostitutes. She had a cleavage like an elephant's
arse and a complexion to match. "Helloooo
rerr, Harry," she drawled drunkenly.
"Friend
of yours?" said my well brought up young Jewish girl, ice dripping on the pavement. " "You
meet all kinds in my job," I said nonchalantly. "Huh,
huh," without much conviction. A couple
of weeks later we were walking down the same busy street when a police
car, siren tearing the evening air apart, screeched to halt beside us
and two policeman leapt out.
"That's him. Get him." Each
of them grabbed an arm and bundled me into their car, which raced off
leaving a bewildered young lady on the pavement, The car
sped round a corner, stopped, and soon the young lady arrived at the
corner drowning in tears. One of the coppers said, "Talk your way
out of that one, son!" They watched
my fruitless efforts for a couple of minutes and then had to intervene
to tell the girl it was just a joke by a couple of friends. Joke or
no joke it was too much for the girl's mother who forbade her from going
out with me again. It was bad enough being hailed by prostitutes but
being grabbed by policemen in front of everyone in the street was just
too much. Besides, how could she boast to her bridge friends that her
daughter was going with a junior reporter, not a lawyer or a doctor
or an accountant. The girl's
mother wouldn't have been terribly impressed with another encounter
I had. About 2 a.m., on a very dark, wet morning I was driving to police
headquarters in Turnbull Street when I saw a tall, slim, well-dressed
young woman with a hand to her head swaying at the edge of the pavement.
The world's dumbest reporter immediately thought, "My goodness,
a lady in distress. I must try to help her." I drew
up beside her but before I could get out to enquire what was the matter
the young woman was in the passenger seat. "Take me up to St Vincent
Street," she drawled drunkenly. Jeez, what have I done, I thought.
Where the hell did my brains go? "Look,
I'm a reporter and I'm going to police headquarters. You'd better get
out." "Take
me up to St Vincent Street," she drawled again. "I'll make
it worth your while." A hand shot down to the front of my trousers.
I pulled the hand away and told her again to get out but she wouldn't
go so I started the car and raced for the police office. The hand came
back and wriggled past the buttons. Trousers didn't have zips in those
days. For several hundred yards I tried to steer the car through
the darkness and fight her off while she juggled with my crown jewels.
I couldn't
be too tough with her as she would undoubtedly have created a helluva
row in the street and I could have been arrested, even if I did have
friends in the police. That would have been just great, the Glasgow
Herald's crime reporter in the pokey for fighting with a prostitute
in the street in the middle of the night! I raced
into the police forecourt, jumped out of the car, almost leaving some
of my vital organs behind, and ran into the office. Gasping for breath
I told the lads what had happened and appealed for help. "You
must be joking," said the desk sergeant. "You have a good
time and then want us to get rid of your lady friend. That'll be right." After a bit more pleading however a constable
came out, dragged the woman out of the car, and told her to beat it
before he locked her up. Even the world's dumbest reporter learned a
valuable lesson that night. Another
night I was sitting in a deep armchair interviewing a very attractive
young woman in a dressing gown about a stairway collapse when she came
over and sat on the arm of my chair as I scribbled away in my wee notebook.
At one point I turned to ask her something. The dressing gown had opened
wide and my nose collided with her left breast. I jumped up as if I
had been attacked by a scorpion and fled. When I told my colleagues
about the incident their comments were pretty ribald. You could say
they unanimously agreed that Mr Balfour had been right. I just didn't
have the qualities of a real journalist. For two
years I raced round the city every night covering murders, accidents
of every kind, fires, floods, gassings, bank robberies and jewel thefts.
There was laughter, excitement, drama, and tragedy. Once I walked down
a tenement stairway with tears running down my face. I had just talked
to a couple whose daughter had been burned to death earlier that day,
her fifth birthday, when her birthday dress had caught fire from an
electric bar heater. It was bad enough having to interview the parents
but I also had to ask them for a picture of their daughter. Understandably
they refused, but as I was walking downstairs the mother came after
me and handed me a beautiful picture of the girl with the words, "You're
only doing your job, son." I can still see in my mind the child's
picture on the front page of The
Bulletin. That was the stuff of which human interest stories were made,
and still are I suppose. If anyone in that family is still alive I hope
they forgive me for my intrusion in their grief. On another
occasion I interviewed a woman whose young son was drowned in the Forth
and Clyde Canal. When I muttered a few words of condolence she said,
"There's plenty more where he came from." I didn't write that comment into my story. I quickly
learned to take a professional view of what I was doing, which meant
distancing myself from other people's tragedies like a doctor or an
ambulance man or a lawyer. I
could still feel sorry for them but not to the extent that I worried
about their problems. I had to develop a protective barrier. One night
I went to see a member of the famous Bluebell troupe of dancers whose
trousseau had been stolen from her car. When I announced my identity
at her front door she said, "I'm sorry, I've sold my story to the
Daily Express." I talked my way into the house anyway and found
sitting in the lounge the Express reporter to whom she had sold her
story, for five shillings, a young man named Magnus Magnusson. The three
of us sat and talked and eventually
I got my story, for nothing. Good thing, too. If I had tried to outbid
Magnus I would have had to go to the international court at The Hague
to get my money back from Tom Chalmers. A fire
in which 13 girls died stays in my memory for a number of reasons. Solomon
Winetrobe, a 29-year-old ex-paratrooper, was manager of the stock records
department of Grafton's fashion warehouse
in Glasgow's busy Argyle Street when fire broke out one afternoon
in the Spring of 1949. The flames quickly spread through the building.
Winetrobe was on the fourth storey along with some girl workers. Their
route downstairs was cut off by the flames. Winetrobe
climbed out of a window on to a narrow ledge, grasped a rain pipe with
one hand and with the other helped
four girls out to the ledge and on to the roof of an adjoining
cinema where his assistant, George Platt, grabbed at the girls
and pulled them to safety. All of them then went down a fire
brigade ladder. That night
when myself and other reporters were fitting the many aspects of the
story together I discovered that although we had received an account
of Winetrobe's bravery from the Press Association, a news agency, we
didn't have an interview with Winetrobe or Platt. This is
where I had the kind of break that comes to a reporter only very rarely.
The moment I heard Winetrobe's name I knew where to find him because
his younger brother Raymond had been in my class in primary school and
was my closest friend. I went
to their tenement flat in Gorbals, not far from my own tenement home,
and the boys' aunt opened the door. "Aunty Sophie, I have to speak
to Solly," I pleaded. "I have to get an interview with him
for my paper." Aunty Sophie
was unimpressed. "You can't. He's sleeping." "Aunty
Sophie, I can't go back without seeing Solly. My editor will throw me
out. I might even be fired." Aunty Sophie
was still unimpressed. "He has been through a terrible ordeal.
The doctor has given him some sedatives. I can't wake him up." At that
point Raymond, who had been out with me on assignments from time to
time, came to my rescue and persuaded his aunt to let me in. It took
us some time to wake Solly out of his heavily-sedated sleep but eventually
he came to just enough to tell me in a whisper about his eventful day.
My story of the fire and Solly's heroism took up the whole front page
and most of page three. Later that
year Winetrobe and Platt were awarded the George Medal, the highest civilian bravery award. In February
1994 I went to Solomon Winetrobe's funeral. Much of the material for
the obituaries which appeared in The Herald and other newspapers were
taken from my story of 45 years earlier. Another
fire in November 1968, long after I had left the sound and fury of daily
newspaper production, had a profound effect on my father. Among the
people killed in an upholstery warehouse in James Watt Street was Harry
Ure, one of my father's closest friends who had come to Britain as a
refugee about the same time as he. Twentytwo people died that night
in the worst fire disaster in Glasgow since the second world war. As night
and crime reporter I very often had
to phone my stories from dark telephone boxes because there wasn't time
to go back to the office to write them. My fingers were often burned
by matches as I wrestled with the telephone and my notebook. Most of
my travels about the city were done in the office car but once when
it was not available I became the only reporter of a major newspaper
group to be sent to a murder scene on a tramcar. The Herald group believed
in carefully husbanding its financial resources.
Friendly
policemen phoned me at home when I was off duty to tip me off about
a good story. One Sunday morning
I received a cryptic message to go to a bank in Bridge Street. During
the night some bandits went into an office above the bank, drilled a
hole in the floor, put an umbrella through the hole and used it to catch
debris as they widened the hole enough to wriggle through. Years later
a very successful film about a bank raid was made. The
method was exactly as I described it in my story.
The night
job I had been doing was regarded as an apprenticeship and eventually,
after I had served my time so to speak, I was transferred to the staff
of The Bulletin. My job doing the rounds at night went to a clerk from a city centre unemployment office who quickly
became popular with the city's police and banditry because they knew
he could be relied on rarely to reveal what either of them were doing.
One afternoon
when I reported for duty Tom Chalmers handed me a brief teleprinter
message from the Press Association. It said "Attorney General announced
in House or Commons no criminal proceedings against people who took
Stone of Destiny from Westminster Abbey."
It was
the signal for every major every newspaper in the land to publish the
stories they had been compiling for just such a day. "See if you can find these people and
get their stories," said
Chalmers. "O.K.,
where are they?" "You're
the reporter, you find them." It had
taken months for an army of police on both sides of the border,
and an even bigger army of reporters, to find the four students who
created a sensation on Chistmas 1950 by taking the Stone of Destiny,
on which the ancient kinds of Scotland were crowned, from Westminster Abbey. By the
time the Attorney General, Sir Hartley Shawcross, made his statement in the Commons on April 1, 1951 the Scottish-based
newspapers, and most of the London-based nationals, already had the
students' story. But not the Glasgow Herald. The Herald didn't believe
in devoting large resources to any story,
let alone one which was tainted with Scottish nationalism, which
the Herald hierarchy considered to be the province of the crank and
the politically insignificant. Sir Hartley's
reason for taking no action against the students was that he did not
think it was in the public interest that he should direct criminal proceedings
to be taken....."I have no desire to provide these individuals
with the opportunity either of being regarded by their followers as
martyrs if convicted or as heroes if they are not convicted." It has
to be said that quite to tell Special Branch who was at the meetings
and what they said. Sir Victor
Warren, Tory Lord Provost of Glasgow (they were called Progressives
in those days) and an implacable foe of the Scottish Nationalists, had
the front of his house daubed with the words, in very large letters,
LONDON'S OFFICE BOY, SCOTLAND'S QUISLING, and in even larger letters
underneath the word TRAITOR. A picture of this piece of vandalism appeared
in the paper with a sinister-looking figure in a dark hat, long coat
and gloves peering at it closely - Harry Diamond. Warren
had been elected Lord Provost on May 6, 1949 by one vote. Although Labour
had a majority of members in the council they took the huff at an opposition
member being elected Lord Provost and gave up control of the city after
a rule of 15 years. In the
middle of all this I remember two stories I had to write one day to
the amusement of my colleagues. One was about a live monkey and a book-keeping
machine which were among items handed in to Glasgow Police lost propery
department and the other was about a man who was taken to hospital with
a fractured skull after a cistern fell on his head when he pulled the
lavatory chain. This was not the kind of thing that brought down governments
or got presidents impeached but it was fun.
Apropos nothing, the entire day's radio programmes occupied four
single column inches in those days. Television was yet to come. In the
years that followed I covered disasters on land, sea and air, and wrote
about royalty, prime ministers, princes of industry and rogues, some
of whom were indistinguishable from one another.
I interviewed film and
stage stars like Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, Abbott and Costello, Danny
Kaye, Johnny Ray, Guy Mitchell, playboys, playgirls, sportsmen, millionaires,
paupers, crooks, cranks with talking dogs, and people who claimed to
be the reincarnation of everyone from Henry the Eighth to Count Dracula.
Reporting
a royal visit I wrote that the Queen wore a hat and coat and when I
couldn't explain them in detail our women's editor exclaimed contemptuously, "You stupid boy." Years later when
I was chief sub-editor I had to tell her to change a horse-riding story
which started, "Miss Charlotte Drink-Waters was mounted last night
by Colonel Featherstonehaugh-McGinty...."
The names have been changed to protect the guilty. I had a helluva
job trying to tell her why she should change the introduction but I
didn't tell her she was a stupid woman. She was just pure minded, a
characteristic not common in newspapers. At a wedding
reception once with my mother a friend of hers looked me up and down
with a critical eye and asked "Voddus he do?" "He's
a reporter," said my mother. "A
porter?" said her uncomprehending friend. "Vot kind of job
is dat for a Jewish boy?" In the
early 1950s I met my first hard-boiled American colleagues when a wee
man the newspapers described as an "odd job man" from Maryland
woke up one morning to discover he had become Sir Adrian Ivor Dunbar
when a distant relative died in Wigtownshire. Sir Adrian hurried to
Scotland to claim his baronetcy followed by a posse of journalists.
My news editor sent me there, too, to chronicle Sir Adrian's adventures.
Among the
Americans was Bob Musel of the Asssociated Press of America, a short,
burly man inseparable from his black, wide-brimmed hat and black raincoat.
Bob could have stepped straight out of a Hollywood gangster film. Despite
his sinister appearance he was a talented, good-humoured man and his
daily despatches on the comings and goings of Sir Adrian testified to
his gifted imagination. I learned a lot from him! Bob was also a song-writer.
One of them was Pappa Piccolino, which had quite a lot of success on
both sides of the Atlantic. I have
met many American journalists since then and have even been interviewed
by a few of them, and almost without exception they have been men and
woman of exceptional ability and great fun to work with. Some of them
have become personal friends like R. W. (Johnny) Apple of the New York
Times, Stanley Meisler of the Los Angeles Times, Bob Erburu, chairman
and chief executive of the Times Mirror group, and Israel Shenker, author
and former European correspondent of Time magazine who now lives in
Scotland. In 1985
Johnny Apple wrote to tell me he had been appointed chief correspondent
in Washington of the New York Times and added, "Wherever again
will I be associated with a success story like Glasgow and the Burrell?" In 1988
I met an American couple Harvey and Myrna Frommer, a husband and wife
writing team, who came to Glasgow
to write about the Jewish community of Scotland. I was with them only
a few hours showing them something of the city but we formed an enduring
friendship. In August 1995 I went to New York at their invitation and
stayed with them in their home on Long Island for a couple of weeks.
They were generous with their time and lavish with their hospitality
and I spent one of the best holidays of my life with them. None of
the stories I covered as a reporter reshaped the world in any way but
I enjoyed it all, especially when I saw my name on a story. That made
me a celebrity in the particular level of society in which I lived and
moved. For a few
months my name and a caricature of me appeared every day as the paper's
gossip columnist. Diamond's Diary my page was called. The cartoon was
drawn by a very clever cartoonist named John Jensen and showed me with
a rather prominent nose. The caricature also appeared on posters outside
newsagents' shops throughout the country.
One day my mother came back from her daily errands furious with
indignation because, she said, I was plastered all over the country
looking like a big-nosed, chinless idiot. She wanted
me to sue the paper for defamation of character! I told her, "Don't
you mean definition of character, mum?"
but this went over her head. I tried to explain that the paper
was making her son famous but she was unimpressed. I wasn't
a great success as a gossip columnist as I was no William Hickey and
had no desire to spend my nights in restaurants, receptions and night
clubs and looking through keyholes.
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