Word: newsdom
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...fell to spare, moose-tall (6 ft. 5½ in.) Major Daniel Imboden, onetime San Luis Obispo (Calif.) newsman, who lectures Japanese editors and reporters three times weekly on how to run an honest newspaper. Last week Imboden put the finger on a long-cherished anachronism of Japanese newsdom: the all-powerful reporters' clubs. He told them to reform or break...
...trade journal of British newsdom, World's Press News, looked into the matter, concluded that Churchill had every technical right to release the speeches. That seemed to solve the legalities of it, but did little to lessen the indignation of Britons over the moral decision Winston Churchill made...
...Newsdom, a Depression-born trade journal, asked a picked group of the nation's newsmen for a personal ''Yes'' or ''No'' on the New Deal. By last week it had received and tabulated replies from editors and publishers of about 35% of the U. S. daily press. The New Deal was running ahead in the nation, 5½-to-4½. But it was behind in every New England state except Maine, in the industrial East (except New Jersey) and in most of the Midwest-Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota...
...Mirror is carefully considered lest it give Winchell the supreme satisfaction of breaking his contract. The instant that should occur Winchell would skip three blocks downtown to Joseph Medill Patterson's big little Daily News (completing his ascension of the scale of Manhattan tabloids). According to Newsdom, weekly of unemployed newspapermen, the News offered Winchell $1,000 a week for a Sunday colyum alone...
Outstanding features of Newsdom are articles and drawings contributed without pay by famed (working) newsmen and artists. "Guest artist" of the first issue is Winsor McCay. "Guest colyumist" is Hearst's Idwal Jones. "Guest story-teller'' is Martin Green, long of the World...