Word: newsroom
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...powerful World (morning and evening circ. 500,000). The fight drained his funds at the rate of $100,000 a month. The Journal picked up strength from circulation promotions and from some of the best talent in the business-much of it lured from the World's newsroom-but Hearst had larger excitement in mind. Eying the Spanish colony of Cuba, where revolt had been smoldering for years, Hearst decided to stir...
During his competition post that he finally won, night editors said of him: not have a weak story on Most Important of all, he top of his paper all evening was no wild running newsroom last night, no ..Another DLH memorial For anyone who has even acquaintance with 14 this is quite an achievements...
...CRIMSON competitions are rather like Mad Hatter tea parties, except, of course, that yards and yards of AP ticker substitute for tea and goodies. Actually, that's a bad metaphor, because it doesn't really describe the comforting and comfortable kind of beery chaos which reigns in the newsroom...
...everyone liked the Tribune's assistant publisher. There was a forbidding coldness to him; even today he rarely visits the newsroom. Intolerant of deadwood. Knowland started chopping at it; since 1958 he has fired ten editorial hands, and seven more have quit in anger. Knowland declared war on overtime, trimmed the Trib's virtually unlimited sick leave. He promoted his son Joe, 30, to overseer at large, and Joe antagonized much of the staff. The American Newspaper Guild, which had long failed to organize the Tribune, succeeded last year. To the guild's surprise. Bill Knowland...
...freshmen, sophomores, and juniors are invited to the CRIMSON building, 14 Plympton St., at 7:30 p.m., to talk with the editors, inspect the newsroom and printing facilities, and discuss the details of the eight-week competition. Beer will be served...