Word: newsprint
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Crimson editors over the decades have made some memorable attempts to capture exam period in newsprint. The op-ed “Beating the System” won the Dana Reed Prize for undergraduate writing in 1951. The Crimson proudly ran it every reading period until 1962, when it irked one maligned and anonymous grader enough to reply with the following...
Crimson editors over the decades have made some memorable attempts to capture exam period in newsprint. The following op-ed, “Beating the System,” won the Dana Reed Prize for undergraduate writing in 1951. The Crimson proudly ran it every reading period until 1962, when it irked one maligned and anonymous grader enough to reply...
...nature of religion in every case. After all, a large percentage of religious Americans are not pro-life, do not oppose same-sex marriage, and do not believe that the messiah will only come when the children of Israel inhabit their whole homeland. Despite their near-constant presence in newsprint and political media, evangelical Christians constitute only 26.3 percent of religious adults in America. Yet, if Bill Maher’s recent film “Religulous” and a wave of secularist polemics are any indication, extreme religious views are being used to justify the wholesale abandonment...
...from magazines, but their search capacity is so extraordinary that you can just find things so easily.”In an age when physical newspapers are getting too costly and nearly any story is available at the click of a mouse, it seems that the era of smudgy newsprint might be coming dangerously close to extinction. Allon has his own optimistic suggestion for those suffering from the changes in the market. “People who have been involved with print models will have to come up with other creative multimedia ways to expand businesses...
...newspaper industry is in a bad spot. Actually, run a correction on that statement - newspapers are in a "time to panic" spot. The business model is collapsing, ad dollars are disappearing, newsprint prices are at a 12-year high and the Internet is just giving news away for free. On July 2, the Los Angeles Times announced it was cutting more than one-sixth of its newsroom staff; the Tampa Tribune said it would...