Word: printed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Juxtapositions II: Paint And Print Expressions--by ten women artists from the Boston area. Through Feb. 28. Schlesinger Library...
...past two weeks, print and broadcast news editors who normally scorn supermarket tabloids have struggled over how to cover a story engineered by one, concerning a top-priority subject: presidential politics. When the Star, its cover splashed with scarlet, citron and purple, asserted that Gennifer Flowers enjoyed a 12-year affair with Democratic candidate Bill Clinton -- in an issue that also retailed movie star Harrison Ford's "brush with death" (resulting in four stitches) and a household "ghostbusting" by rocker Joseph McIntyre of New Kids on the Block -- "real" journalists scoffed. The interview with Flowers was tainted, they said...
...When actor Warren Beatty addressed the American Society of Newspaper Editors in 1983, he asked the assembled power elite of print whether they thought their publications shared the same standards and values as the sensational tabloids sold in supermarkets. After the editors got over their astonishment that anyone would pose such a question, they responded with overwhelming denial. No rational adult, their reasoning went, would take such twaddle seriously as a source of news. Beatty responded that the chasm between serious reportage and junk journalism, so vast in the editors' minds, was far narrower in the minds of consumers...
...Washington Post determinedly underplayed the story on inside pages at first, it profiled Clinton on Page One on the day he and his wife Hillary were to appear on 60 Minutes. The following day, when Flowers held her press conference, a Post staff member was among the 300 print and electronic reporters crowded in -- a pack comparable to the entire national press corps covering New Hampshire's primary...
...Print ads for a Chrysler-Plymouth dealer in Anchorage feature photographs from America's battle against Japan in World War II. The message is clear: the Japan that Americans fought against in World War II is still the enemy. In retaliation for their military defeat, Japan is waging economic warfare against the United States...