Word: bulletining
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...exultant outbursts of several players at once jumping on top of each other, kissing and embracing is really excessive and inappropriate and should be banned from the football pitch," the federation said in its September bulletin. The IFF also said that jubilation for a goal should be limited to congratulation by the team captain, and all players should be "reminded" to behave like adults...
...love the craft of newspapering like the personal loss so many travelers felt when the great transatlantic liners disappeared. Those big liners had their distinct personalities-the French liners with their exuberant meals, the reliable and stately Queens. Newspapers had decided characteristics too, in the days when the Philadelphia Bulletin jauntily advertised that in Philadelphia NEARLY EVERYBODY READS THE BULLETIN, when the Washington Star faithfully reflected the "cliff-dwellers" in the nation's capital. Later, attempting to change with the times, but perhaps too late in doing so, proud papers like these became more like the QE2 with...
Advertisers, not readers, have placed this unhealthy emphasis on dominance. Morton is convinced that the Washington Star and the Chicago Daily News need not have folded, and the Philadelphia Bulletin and Cleveland Press would not be in such difficulty if their share of the city's advertising was as large as their share of the city's circulation...
Salvucci's union suffered the heaviest job losses and was the last to sign the agreement. Its members were persuaded in part by the magnanimous example of Shop Steward Jim Healy, 30, a Bulletin pressman for 13 years. In a brief, impassioned plea, Healy urged the membership to ratify the agreement, though it meant his own dismissal. The pressmen had been especially reluctant to sign because their contract, unlike those of the other unions, contains a "uniformity clause" that could allow concessions granted to the Bulletin to be extended to Philadelphia's Inquirer and Daily News...
...Star and the Tonight edition of New York's Daily News, predicts that his paper will turn a profit by 1984. "Philadelphia is big enough and vibrant enough to support two viable metropolitan newspapers," he says. The Charter Co., the oil, insurance and publishing conglomerate that owns the Bulletin, plans to pump in up to $30 million over the next four years. Meanwhile, Philadelphia Phillies Batting Star Pete Rose is doing some pitching for the Bulletin in radio spots. "I don't care whether you are a newspaper or a ballplayer," says Rose, "if you give...