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Warren G. Harding & the Marion Daily Star: How Newspapering Shaped a President
Sheryl Smart Hall and Edward Looman

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Warren G. Harding & the Marion Daily Star: How Newspapering Shaped a President

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Tags: Biography, Lang:en

Summary

President Warren G. Harding's thirty-nine-year career as a newspaperman is often treated as a footnote. This book offers a unique approach to the Harding story, presenting him as he saw himself: as a newspaperman. His political successes were based on the thinking of a newspaper editor--balancing all of the facets of an issue, examining the facts and weighing the effect on the constituents. Even his approach to balancing the federal budget was built on early experience at his small, struggling newspaper, where his motto was: "All paid in, all paid out, books even." The only member of the Fourth Estate to enter the White House, Harding found his voice through the pages of the "Marion Daily Star." Author Sheryl Smart Hall offers an intimate view of the man, often as seen through the eyes of those who knew him best--his co-workers at the "Star."

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About the Author

Sheryl (Sherry) Smart Hall was city hall and police reporter, as well as the Sunday edition editor at the Marion Star and a copyeditor and bureau chief at the Canton (Ohio) Repository before accepting her current position at the Harding Home Presidential Site in Marion. She served as the site's education coordinator for nine years and then assumed the job of site manager in 2009. A native of Marion, she graduated from Heidelberg University with majors in English and American studies.