Word: printed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Journal publishes four regional editions in nine printing plants across the U.S., runs a mammoth and complicated delivery system to ensure same-day service to most subscribers. The paper still sticks to line drawings in preference to photographs-a tradition that happens to be thrifty and that bypasses pressure to print glossies of executives. In 1972 Managing Editor Frederick Taylor outlawed the word "reform" on the conservative principle that not all change is for the better. The Journal has enormous impact on its main beat. On the day it ran a grim front-page report listing the expected impact...
...game is to make optimistic statements of near-normalcy in the White House and the nation, to print and broadcast them out of a sense of journalistic fairness, and then for some people, out of political loyalty and the fervent hope that believing will be father to fact, to act as if they believe them...
This prudence may come from his back ground in print journalism, as publisher of the Long Island newspaper Newsday (1967-70) and author of the 1971 book Listening to America. The most engaging and refreshing thing about him is that, at 39, he regards himself as he does the nation - as open and unfinished - and is not yet ready to wrap himself in the cellophane of self-esteem and present himself as a finished media product...
...showed that they still had not the slightest notion of what 1,000,000 of anything means. The collection, however, was lumbering on-a paradigm of futility. Not a major story, to be sure, but given the Osgood treatment, a model of its kind that is scarce in both print and electronic journalism...
...acknowledgment of TV's limitation in clarifying so complex and voluminous a pile of data was accurate enough. But the advice that Americans turn to print for more lucid, complete reportage was only partly satisfactory