To see a big picture please click the image of the house of the newspaper. The copyright of the image of © Front Page belongs to each newspaper displayed.
New Hampshire · Communiqué on April 21 was also the most important in history, as it was the only American newspaper printed at the time. I will use the actual title instead of regular date line or tribute as the first report of Lexington and Concord. . Early newspapers seldom used headlines, so the central headline of New Hampshire · Communiqué - "bloody news" certainly pulled attention of settlers. A unique title reminding New Englanders of the start of the American Revolutionary War deserves the top ranking in the history of the most important newspaper headlines. The article continued that local parliamentary chairman James Hudson sent an urgent report to the Portsmouth Committee (Portsmouth Committee). According to news historian Frank Luthermott:
In the history of the New York Times, only four newspapers used 96 point font size as the title of the homepage. This is the largest font size that has been used so far in the New York Times heading. Two of the titles are political and two are events. Name the four events. How about Pearl Harbor? One may be JFK assassination. Some say that the big headline comes from a negative event rather than a positive event. Then another person may try to analyze what the negative event is; is the satellite a negative event? Do not forget the actual function of the printing machine. The 96 point font is very big. When Charles · Lindbergh flew across the Atlantic, are they still in a good condition?
The headline for this event was sensational. "Panic radio viewers, watching the drama of war as a fact" is the news on the front page of the "New York Times". "Chicago Herald" and "Examiner" said that "radio fakes scare the country." The San Francisco Chronicle said, "America's terrorist Radman is from Mars." Boston Daily News and Detroit News also have front page coverage. Within a month, it has been repeatedly said that the world has released 12,500 articles on panic at the foreign community. But in a comprehensive analysis of the same period within the book entitled "Wronged", American college professor W Joseph Campbell discovered almost all newspapers gave up the story soon. He wrote: "Broadcast coverage quickly disappeared from the front page, and in most cases it only took a day or two."