But no. On July 4, 2004, the Lexington
Herald-Leader apologized for, uh, not covering the civil rights movement back in the day.
From the July 5, 2004 Washington Post:
The Lexington Herald-Leader featured a prominent clarification on its front page
yesterday, apologizing for the newspaper's failures in covering the 1960s civil
rights movement.
The notice accompanied a series of stories titled "Front-page news, back-page
coverage" and decades-old black-and-white pictures taken by an independent
photographer.
"It has come to the editor's attention that the Herald-Leader neglected
to cover the civil rights movement," the clarification read. "We regret the
omission."
The report comes as the nation observes the 40th anniversary of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964. Beneath the clarification were photographs of a Main
Street march and a lunch counter sit-in taken by Calvert McCann, now 62.
Many of his pictures were undeveloped until last year, when University
of Kentucky historian Gerald L. Smith was researching a book.
"If it had not been for Calvert, we wouldn't have a visual record of
this moment in Lexington's history," Smith told the newspaper.
Lexington's newspapers at the time, the Herald and the Leader,
occasionally published short stories about the local civil rights movement;
photographs rarely appeared.
The papers merged in 1983 and the Herald-Leader is now owned by Knight
Ridder.
"The people in charge of recording the 'first rough draft of history,'
as journalism is sometimes called, ignored sit-ins and marches, or relegated
them to small notices in the back pages," Herald-Leader reporters Linda B.
Blackford and Linda Minch wrote.
McCann, who is black, became interested in the civil rights movement
while working at Michael's Photography store, where he was a janitor and film
processor.
"I just wanted to document it and tell the story for me and my
friends," McCann told the newspaper.
So who covered the issue?
The Louisville Defender, a black newspaper, and the Courier-Journal of
Louisville covered the civil rights movement in the state. The Herald and the
Leader shelved most news about blacks in a column called "Colored Notes."
It was compiled by the newsroom's only black employee, Gertrude
Morbley, until 1969.