Murrow, who was inventing broadcast journalism during the second World War by breaking many of the traditional rules, had CBS rule-maker WilliamS. Paley as his partner.
Murrow and Walter Cronkite helped CBS get there even when there was little question that what WilliamS. Paley wanted was what the Man Men were selling.
"Boy Leading a Horse" went to MoMA after the death of WilliamS. Paley in 1990, and the Fifth Avenue apartment is now the Manhattan home of French financier Michel David-Weill.