Saul Halpert Papers,
1960-2000
Processed by August Maymudes
Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research
6120 South Vermont Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90044
Phone: (323) 759-6063
Fax: (323) 759-2252
Email: archives@socallib.org
URL: http://www.socallib.org/
© 2001
Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research. All rights reserved.
Register of the Saul Halpert Papers,
1960-2000
Collection number: MSS 032
Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research
Los Angeles, California
Contact Information:
- Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research
- 6120 South Vermont Avenue
- Los Angeles, CA, 90044
- Phone: (323) 759-6063
- Fax: (323) 759-2252
- Email: archives@socallib.org
- URL: http://www.socallib.org/
- Processed by:
- August Maymudes
- Date Completed:
-
July 2001
- Encoded by:
- Julia Bazar and Teri Robertson
© 2001 Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research. All rights reserved.
Descriptive Summary
Title: Saul Halpert Papers,
Date (inclusive): 1960-2000
Collection number: MSS 032
Creator:
Halpert, Saul
Extent:
3 legal boxes, 1 half-legal box, 3 letter boxes, and 3 film canisters
3+ linear feet
Repository:
Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research
Abstract: Collection consists of the files, papers, and kinescopes of Saul Halpert, working journalist in the Los Angeles area from
1946 to 1999. Topics covered range from local to international politics, with a significant project on Los Angeles school
integration.
Language:
English.
Administrative Information
Provenance
Donated to the Library by Saul Halpert upon his retirement as a journalist in 1999.
Access
The collection is available for research only at the Library's facility in Los Angeles. The Library is open from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. Researchers are encouraged to call or email the Library indicating the nature of their research
query prior to making a visit.
Publication Rights
Copyright has not been assigned to the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research. Researchers may make single
copies of any portion of the collection, but publication from the collection will be allowed only with the express written
permission of the Library's director. It is not necessary to obtain written permission to quote from a collection. When the
Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research gives permission for publication, it is as the owner of the physical
items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by the reader.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Saul Halpert Papers, Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research, Los Angeles, California.
Biography
Saul Halpert was born in Albany New York on September 22, 1922. He attended the local school until 1938. After his mother's
death he came with his father to Los Angeles, and the family settled in the Temple Street district, which at that time was
a largely Jewish neighborhood. Halpert attended Belmont High School and graduated in 1940. He then enrolled in Los Angeles
City College on Vermont Avenue for two years and earned an AA degree in 1942.
Entering the Army in 1942 for 3 ½ years, he qualified for and was assigned to the army's engineering school, Army Specialist
Training Project (ASTP). He was also accepted into the Officer Candidate School (OCS) and served as a 2nd Lieutenant. While
in the army he and Ruth Levin were married in 1943. They had met and become friends in high school five years previously.
Upon leaving the service, he decided that he preferred journalism to engineering. Job hunting for the first time, he became
a cub reporter with the City News Service in downtown Los Angeles for a year, and for another year, at the Huntington Park
Signal. He then moved toward broadcast journalism.
In 1948 he got a job with radio station KECA, which later became KABC, and which was owned by the American Broadcasting Company
(ABC). After two years in radio, he transferred to television and helped found the News Department at Channel 7, ABC TV. He
remained there for sixteen years, until 1966. While working he earned a B.A. in Social Studies at USC. In 1960 Halpert was
the first broadcast journalist to receive a one year graduate fellowship from the Haynes Foundation, prior winners had all
been print journalists. He did his fellowship in Mass Media at UCLA where he earned a masters degree in Journalism. In 1978
he was the only television reporter, among twenty journalists, selected from throughout the country to attend the prestigious
Harvard seminar on "Trends in American Education through the 1980s", given by the Education Writers Association. In the course
of four decades in the Los Angeles market, Halpert was a writer, reporter and broadcaster of news and documentary programs
for all three network TV stations - channels 2, 4, and 7. He received the prestigious designation of Journalist of the Year
awarded by the Society of Professional Journalists and has also won awards from the Radio and TV News Association, the American
Political Science Association, and the California Teachers Association.
Throughout his more than 40 years with the broadcasting networks, Saul Halpert was an active Union member, serving at various
times as shop steward for the unions representing newsroom workers: the Writers Guild of America, the National Association
of Broadcast Employees and Technicians (NABET) and the American Federation of TV and Radio Artists (AFTRA).
In 1965 Halpert was a member of the Strike Committee that organized the first nationwide AFTRA strike by TV reporters working
at all three networks. While not entirely successful, this historic walkout did establish some basic precedents for writing
wages and working conditions into union contracts. In the late 1960s he was one of the founders of a news staffers caucus
in the Los Angeles local of AFTRA. That local won national support for the first AFTRA master contract with the networks,
establishing the principle of job security. In all the years until then, AFTRA members working in the network newsrooms were
at the mercy of management, subject to firing without cause at the end of any 13-week work cycle.
Appointed political editor at KNBC TV channel 4 in 1979, Halpert conducted a weekly public affairs interview program featuring
a broad range of issues from race relations in Los Angeles to national issues and international affairs. Political assignments
included coverage of both Democratic and Republican national conventions, presidential election campaigns and the Los Angeles
school desegregation controversy. In 1982 he was moderator of the station's Emmy award winning interview program
Channel 4 News Conference, which was also awarded a Golden Mike from the Television News Association of Southern California.
After leaving his last corporate job in 1989, Halpert lectured, served as a panelist on programs dealing with the role of
mass media in the political process, and worked as a freelance writer, media consultant, and instructor in broadcast journalism
at both USC and UCLA. Halpert's articles on media/political issues were published in
Quill, the magazine of the Society of Professional Journalists;
Emmy, the official journal of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, the
Los Angeles Times, and others.
Scope and Content
The files consist of a large number of newspaper and magazine clippings, personal notes, drafts and final scripts for the
"on air" presentation of the material. Of particular note is the group of files devoted to the "School Integration Project
of 1976", including final scripts for the broadcast. These cover the "Gitelson" decision (the rejection by Judge Alfred Gitelson
of the Los Angeles School District's original desegregation plan), appeal of the decision, as well as a 1979 update on the
issue.
The majority of the scripts or transcripts in the collection come from regular daily or weekly reports and are loosely organized
by date aired. However, scripts of several special reports on Police-Press Relations, Commuter Transportation, Sickle Cell
Anemia, and Freedom of the Press, were separated out by Halpert, and have been made into their own series.
There are five reels of kinescopes, movie film copies of television news programs, mostly focused on the Integration Project.
The Los Angeles school desegregation controversy was a regular lead story on the TV news in the mid-1970s, and an issue in
which Halpert took an active interest.
This collection consists of the files of a working journalist and includes materials on stories and issues that he felt would
be of particular interest to the researchers at the SCL. Other files remain in the workplaces and are the property of the
respective news organizations.
Arrangement
The collection is divided into 6 series:
1. HALPERT BIOGRAPHIES,
2. SUBJECT FILES,
3. SCHOOL INTEGRATION PROJECT,
4. SCRIPTS BY SUBJECT,
5. MISCELLANEOUS SCRIPTS, and
6. KINESCOPES.
Related Material at the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research
Title: Integration Project: The Dorothy Doyle Collection,
Date: c. 1967-1978
Physical Description:
7 linear feet
Title: Integration Project: The Jackie Goldberg and Sharon Stricker Collection,
Date: c. 1980-1985
Physical Description:
2 2/3 linear feet
A copy of the collection register is kept in the first box of the collection (1/0).
Series 1.
HALPERT BIOGRAPHIES,
1960-2000
Physical Description:
1 folder
Scope and Content Note
This folder contains biographical material on Saul Halpert.
Box-folder 1/1
Biographies of Saul Halpert,
1960-2000
Series 2.
SUBJECT FILES,
1965-1978
Physical Description:
48 folders
Scope and Content Note
This series includes clippings, notes, and drafts according to subject. Of special interest are materials on the Black Panthers
and the struggles in Watts, which Halpert volunteered to cover to the relief of some of his colleagues who were afraid to
go into the black ghetto.
Box-folder 1/5
Capital Punishment,
1967-1972
Box-folder 2/3-2/6
Earthquake [4 folders],
1971
Box-folder 2/8
Viet Nam Peace March,
June 23rd, 1967
Box-folder 2/9
McGovern Presidential Campaign,
1971-1972
Box-folder 2/10
Miller, Lucille - Murder Trial,
1965
Box-folder 2/11
Peace Movement,
1969-1978
Box-folder 3/3-3/6
Student Reading Tests [4 folders],
1970
Box-folder 3/7-3/11
Universities of California
Box-folder 4/10
Watts Hospital,
1968-1972
Box-folder 4/11
Watts Kids Camp Out,
1967
Series 3.
SCHOOL INTEGRATION PROJECT,
1970-1979
Physical Description:
10 folders
Scope and Content Note
This series includes scripts and other papers concerning a 1970 project on integration in the Berkeley (California) schools,
a 1976-1977 multi-part series on integration and a 1978-1979 update. Also included in this series is information on the 1970
Gitelson Decision in which Judge Alfred Gitelson rejected the Los Angeles School Board's original integration plan, which
was based solely on voluntary busing as "designed to show extremely high cost, create disruption, and was designed to fail
- not a plan at all," as well as the 1975 Appeal.
Box-folder 5/1
Berkeley School Integration - APSA Award,
1970
Box-folder 5/2-5/8
Integration, Los Angeles schools
Box-folder 5/3
Part 2-5 - Status, Denver, Effects, and Schools Management,
1976
Box-folder 5/4
Part 5 - Management,
1976
Box-folder 5/5
Community Involvement,
1976-1977
Box-folder 5/6
Court Pairing, Magnet Schools,
1977
Box-folder 5/8
School Board, Bussing,
1976
Series 4.
SCRIPTS BY SUBJECT,
1966-1971
Physical Description:
5 folders
Scope and Content Note
This series contains scripts from several special reports done by Halpert. They are arranged by subject.
Box-folder 6/1
Police-Press Relations,
1966-1969
Box-folder 6/2
"End of the Line" - Commuter Transportation,
1966
Box-folder 6/3-6/4
Sickle Cell Anemia Disease
Box-folder 6/5
Freedon of the Press,
1969-1970
Series 5.
MISCELLANEOUS SCRIPTS BY DATE,
1962-1988
Physical Description:
32 folders
Scope and Content Note
This series includes over 2000 pages of on-air scripts and transcriptions that have been arranged by date presented "on air."
They consist primarily of short reports as part of larger newscasts. Subjects include both news and features with a focus
on local (city council), national (electoral, Bork nomination), and international (South Africa, Argentina) politics, police
and prison reform, schools, transportation, and local industry issues.
Box-folder 6/6
Miscellaneous Ideas,
1968-1972
Series 6.
KINESCOPES,
1976, n.d.
Physical Description:
1 folder, 5 reels
Scope and Content Note
This folder contains reels of 16 mm movie film-kinescopes of TV broadcasts.
Box-folder 8/15
Paperwork with Reel #1 - Voluntary Bussing,
n.d.
Film Storage 2-3
Integration (2 small reels),
1976
Film Storage 4-5
Integration - Property of ABC (2 small reels),
n.d.