New York City woke up one day this week, looked on its doorstep, and found no newspaper. The New York Newspaper & Mail Deliverers Union had gone on strike.
The Brooklyn Eagle and the tabloid PM (published in Brooklyn) were unaffected. New York’s four morning papers (Times, Herald Tribune, News and Mirror) and four evening papers (World-Telegram, Post, Sun and Journal-American) continued to go through the motions of publishing to be ready for the strike’s end, but only a handful of their papers reached the streets. The Times ran off about 35,000 for mail subscribers (the copies to be mailed when the strike ends) and another 7,000 which were sold fast at the Times building.
A subscriber called the Herald Tribune to complain. Told about the strike, he asked to have the comic strip Mr. & Mrs, read to him over the phone. A Tribune man obliged.
More Must-Reads from TIME
- L.A. Fires Show Reality of 1.5°C of Warming
- How Canada Fell Out of Love With Trudeau
- Trump Is Treating the Globe Like a Monopoly Board
- Bad Bunny On Heartbreak and New Album
- 10 Boundaries Therapists Want You to Set in the New Year
- The Motivational Trick That Makes You Exercise Harder
- Nicole Kidman Is a Pure Pleasure to Watch in Babygirl
- Column: Jimmy Carter’s Global Legacy Was Moral Clarity
Contact us at letters@time.com