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Herb Brin (February 17, 1915 – February 6, 2003) was an editor and journalist for largely Jewish publications in Chicago and California.
As a reporter-essayist, Herb Brin covered some of the crucial stories of our day, from the Eichmann trial to the 1960 Summit Conference in Paris. He ran exposes that helped track down and try Klaus Barbie and was the first journalist to break the emerging story about the oppression of Soviet Jewry.
11 de feb. de 2003 · Herb Brin, one of the most colorful writers and editors in the annals of Los Angeles Jewish journalism, died Feb. 6 of congestive heart failure. His death at an old-age home in...
13 de feb. de 2003 · Herb Brin, poet, crusader and newsman who owned and operated the now-defunct Los Angeles Jewish newspaper Heritage from 1954 until he closed it in 2001, has died. He was 87.
Herb Brin's poems resonate with a deep sense of history, from the battlegrounds of the second World War to the era of Kennedy, from reflections on the horrors of the Holocaust to the miracles of faith, tinged with hope for a better world.
6 de feb. de 2013 · In the years before America’s entry in World War II, Herb infiltrated the German-American Bund for the Anti-Defamation League, then became a gangland reporter for the legendary City News Bureau in Chicago. He quickly gained a reputation for tough and fearless reporting, but with a unique tone of heart and compassion.
Herb Brin, Investigative Reporter, World-Recognized Poet, and Pioneering Jewish Journalist.