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Michael Stern (journalist)

Michael Stern
Born (1910-08-03)August 3, 1910
Brooklyn (borough of New York City), New York, U.S.
Died April 7, 2009(2009-04-07) (aged 98)
Lake Worth, Florida, Florida, U.S.
Occupation reporter, author, philanthropist
Nationality American
Spouse Estelle (née Goldstein) Stern (1934–1995 (her death))

Michael Stern (August 3, 1910 – April 7, 2009) was an American reporter, author and philanthropist. As a reporter during World War II he issued some of the first accounts from a liberated Rome, Italy in June 1944. He later worked in concert with Zachary Fisher to create the Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum in New York City, New York, United States.

Stern was born on August 3, 1910, at a farm in the Brooklyn borough of New York City and attended Alexander Hamilton High School (It is now called Paul Robeson High School.) there. He majored in journalism at Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, leaving school just before his graduation.

After leaving college, he took a job at The New York Journal in New York City but left for a better position at the Middletown Times-Herald (now the Times Herald-Record), Middletown, New York. During the early 1930s, Stern worked on a part-time basis in the office of the Kings County, New York, District Attorney where his investigation led to the conviction of those behind a prostitution ring; it became the basis for his 1936 book, The White Ticket: Commercialized Vice in the Machine Age.

He was hired by Bernarr Macfadden in 1933 at the rate of 3.5 cents per word as an investigative reporter for Macfadden's pulp magazines, such as True Detective Mysteries. Stern wrote under pseudonyms for other similar publications, earning at times half of Macfadden's rate per word.


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