Holiday Datelines From Decembers Past
Briefly

"For decades, the Christmas Day edition of The Times often featured an article from Bethlehem, in the West Bank, with New Testament allusions aplenty. Most detailed the annual pilgrimage of the faithful to the biblical site amid the historical forces of partition and Israeli occupation. Year after year, the dispatches reflect the evolution of the conflict and its reverberations in the city."
"Datelines, particularly before the era of cellphones and social media, were traditionally a gesture of gravitas, meant to signal to a reader that Times journalists were on the ground, physically reporting from a location outside the newsroom."
"The Times introduced more conversational, plain-spoken datelines on online articles. Some holiday-season datelines are holy sites of worship. Others are quirky-sounding spots. And some are unabashedly on the nose."
"An article by Gene Currivan published on Dec. 23, 1945, used these opening lines: 'Tonight, like that night almost 2,000 years ago, there still is no room at the inn.'"
Read at www.nytimes.com
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