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...Puppies around. When I graduated, I followed up a job I started with Phillips Brooks House while I was an undergraduate, working at a community newspaper in East Boston. After a brief stint as a community organizer in Fall River I came back to East Boston to edit the paper, and finally left the paper to pursue freelance writing. It has become clear over the years I've spent with the paper that fewer and fewer students at Harvard of any other college in the city are willing to volunteer for a community newspaper of other community organizations that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Puppies in the Age of Reagan | 1/14/1985 | See Source »

...entirely to a news organization. Detroit's automakers, for example, have a selective boycott of television. Since 1980 General Motors executives have refused to grant interviews to reporters from CBS's 60 Minutes or ABC's 20/20 because the networks will not allow the company to edit the videotapes. Ford generally limits interviews with television reporters to brief exchanges. A Ford spokesman claims that when the networks edit a longer interview, "questions and answers can be taken out of context...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Closing Doors | 12/17/1984 | See Source »

...that things were going to change," says Roger Rogalin, editor in chief of D.C. Heath & Co. Yet the formulas remain in place. "It's a catch-22 situation," sums up Bernstein. "Until the states stop requiring readability formulas, publishers won't stop using them to write and edit texts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: A Debate over Dumbing Down | 12/3/1984 | See Source »

...write, edit and check the 19 election stories in Nation, TIME augmented the regular staff of that department with editors, writers, reporter-researchers, artists, copyreaders and other specialists from all sections of the magazine. The picture department assigned 15 photographers from coast to coast, with the latest election-night photographs from the West Coast being beamed by satellite to New York City for editing and transmission to printing plants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Nov. 19, 1984 | 11/19/1984 | See Source »

These stories can then called up by editors, who edit them on the screen and then, with the flick of a key, send them over cable to a machine that typesets the articles...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: VDTs, Computers Revolutionize Crimson Newsroom | 8/10/1984 | See Source »

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