Word: printed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Pressing its case, the N.U.J. has ordered typesetters and printers to "black," or refuse to print, stories by non-N.U.J. journalists. As a result, blank spaces have whitened the pages of the provincials, and publishers have been quick to retaliate. The Kentish Times summarily sacked 60 employees for "blacking" its non-N.U.J. local correspondents...
...highly respected Guardian, contend that what is at stake is freedom of the press. They claim that hi the past, labor pressure has forced the removal of articles critical of unions. Now, editors fear, in a closed-shop situation their jobs would depend on what they say in print. Said the London Times: "If the editor can be required to be a member of a trade union against his will, his independence is thereafter circumscribed by union rulings...
...emperor." At one stop, Reeves contends, Ford apparently equated the legitimacy of Jordan with that of the Palestine Liberation Organization, but no journalist squawked. Along the campaign trail, says Reeves, many journalists referred to Ford in private as "dummy" or "Bozo," but treated him with due deference in print...
...transition from free speech to enforced silence is no doubt painful. What torment it is for a living society, used to thinking, to lose, as from some day determined by decree, the right to express itself in print and in public, year in and year out to bite back its words in friendly conversation and even under the family roof...
...advertiser, the company complained. In an effort to avoid direct identification of the advertisement that appears today, a representative offered a compromise line: "If you wish a poster-size reprint of this ad, please write to the E. & J. Gallo Winery..." The Crimson refused the compromise, but offered to print it along with more direct identification...