Obituaries
Fresh out of college, Mr. Bailey became a reporter at The Tribune in 1950. He was a Washington correspondent for the paper, Look magazine and The Des Moines Register beginning in 1954.
Jack Hardin covered the 1970 Marshall University plane crash and was a consultant for the movie "We Are Marshall."
William H. Schroeder and his father, Marshall R. Schroeder, founded Lakeland Publishers in July 1956.
Tom Wicker covered Congress and the Kennedy White House, the 1960 political campaigns and presidential trips abroad. Wicker was named chief of the Washington bureau in 1964.
Louis Silverstein helped modernize the Times and was credited with influencing newspaper design nationwide.
Ed Heminger was publisher of The Courier in Findlay, Ohio, from 1965 to 2000 and editor from 1977 to 1989. He also was elected president of the Findlay Publishing Co. in 1983 and chairman of the board in 1989.
Robert Estabrook retired from The Post in 1971, a year after buying a weekly newspaper in northwestern Connecticut, the Lakeville Journal.
Bil Keane started drawing the one-panel cartoon featuring Billy, Jeffy, Dolly, P.J. and their parents in February 1960.
Andy Rooney, best known for his “60 Minutes” segments on CBS Sunday nights, also brought his wry observations on everyday life to his weekly column.
Covering hockey, USFL football and Big 5 basketball, among many other sports in his 33 years at The Inquirer, Chuck Newman was as likely to provoke the teams and people he covered as praise them.
Larry Allison began as a reporter at the Independent, Press-Telegram in 1957 and worked in virtually every department in the paper through editor. He served until his final days as editorial page editor.
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