Hearst's International News Service last week lured away from the Associated Press one of the best U.S. foreign correspondents: good-looking, hard-working Clark Lee, who has traveled 40,000 miles over land & sea in the last ten months for A.P. The switch earned Lee a handsome contract—one of the best a war correspondent ever got—and the rare prerogatives of a roving correspondent.
Lee, 36, had been with A.P. since 1929. He was born to newspapering: his father was a founder and first president of the United Press, his mother wrote for newspapers. When Lee...
To continue reading:
or
Log-In