Word: newsprints
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...through the years, those with the most impact on news have usually been the world's - and America's - political leaders. Franklin Roosevelt was selected three times; Presidents Truman, Eisenhower and Johnson twice. During the past twelve months, few people have so dominated the air waves and newsprint as have Richard Nixon, last year's choice, and Presidential Adviser Henry Kissinger...
...newspaper? The Minneapolis Star is running full-page house ads declaring that "the Star will work on your yard." Lay the paper flat and anchor it, the ad advises, for erosion control. Or use it as a compost-pit liner: "It is good to have woody material like newsprint decomposing in your soil." Moreover, says the Star, "newsprint ink is like dessert. The ink contains valuable trace minerals in the seaweed-derived binder...
...injurious impact on Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's re-election bid next month. President Harold Ballard of the Toronto Maple Leafs termed it "a national disaster." Dick Beddoes of the Toronto Globe and Mail, who had boastfully predicted a clean Canadian sweep, ate his column-after coating the newsprint with a thick layer of borsch...
...Secret Doubts. As leaks continued, TIME polled two dozen editors across the U.S., asking how they would have played the story had they, and not the Times, received the Pentagon papers first. Although most newspapers do not command as much newsprint space as the Times, the great majority of editors, in the words of Denver Post Executive Editor William Hornby, "would have done just what the Times did." The little (circ. 13,500) Daily News in Anchorage, Alaska, has a tiny news-hole, and seldom exceeds 16 pages a day; yet it ran the entire Times package, word for word...
...backs of endless flocks of sheep. Today it rests more comfortably on the gigantic power shovels of the new mines. The economy boasts a steady if unspectacular annual growth rate of 3%, and the country has had virtually full employment for 25 years. "Positions Vacant" columns fill acres of newsprint every day, but Australians note that unemployment is on the rise-from .96% to 1.2% in the past year. Such a rate would go almost unnoticed in the U.S. or Western Europe...