This week, December 7th marks the 75th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. MTSU Professor of Journalism Dr. Larry Burris comments...
Many people recall hearing James Daley make the news announcement about the attack, and today that tape is standard fare in history and broadcasting classes.
But what is also interesting is the effect the attack had on American media.
Another side-effect was the creation of the Office of Censorship, under the direction of Byron Price of the Associated Press. The office was established a few days after the attack, and a month later issued guidelines for voluntary censorship.
Price and his staff drew up a short list of guidelines, which included such suggestions as coastal radio not giving completely accurate weather forecasts so as to not help the enemy plan an attack.
The office worked directly with newspaper and radio reporters, and there were few conflicts between freedom of the press and the need to keep military secrets away from the enemy.
It is estimated there were about 84,000 military personnel on Oahu on December 7th. Today there are only about 2,000 Pearl Harbor veteran survivors, which means more effort must be made to keep the memory alive. That's because the attack on Pearl Harbor did more than simply get us into the war. It brought the specter of war home to a complacent and self-satisfied America, and forever changed the relations between the media and the government, changes that would last all the way into this century.
I'm Larry Burriss.