Ira Berkow had received a master's degree from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern when he was hired in 1965 to fill an opening in the Minneapolis Morning Tribune sports department.
Wally Allen was a force in the newsroom at the time and was said to have pushed strongly for the hiring of a young wordsmith such as Berkow.
Sid Hartman was the sports editor and also a news-breaking columnist in a section that had minimal "space'' for excess articles, other than on Sundays.
Sid wasn't much for wordsmiths, as proven in his earlier battles with Vikings reporter Jim Klobuchar, who by 1967 was starring along with Barbara Flanagan as columnists at the afternoon Minneapolis Star.
"I had written for papers while in college at Miami in Ohio, and wrote some pieces while at Northwestern,'' Berkow said this week. "I came to the Tribune and Sid put me on the copy desk. I had never done that. I made a lot of mistakes.''
Ira was only a few weeks into his time in Minneapolis when Sid called him into an office and said: "You're a bright young man, but I think you have picked the wrong profession.''
Finally, Berkow was given some writing assignments. I was a copy boy at the Tribune that summer and there were some chuckles at Sid's reaction to Ira's literate writing.
I wasn't working on this night, so only heard about this one: