Word: printed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Hard times are forcing some people to turn their back on the American Dream. In El Monte, Calif., Julio Toruno, the son of a Nicaraguan immigrant who prospered in Southern California after World War II, watched the revenues from his print shop nose-dive 20% last year. "I don't have the opportunities my father had," he says. Strapped by high housing costs, steep taxes and a declining income, Toruno and his wife recently bought land in Nicaragua and plan to move there in the spring...
Free press means that no government censor blacks out what the papers print or the networks broadcast. It does not mean that journalists have carte blanche to impose themselves and their equipment wherever they choose. No one has the right to install a camera in your bathroom for example...
...Nobody can print it the way I do," Weston explained. "It wouldn't be my work...
There are only two convincing arguments for actually going through with the controversy. First, it stokes the inflamed egos of campus bigwigs who like seeing their names in the paper. There's nothing really wrong with that; as compensation, have The Crimson print all their names in a corner of the paper near "Doonesbury" for a week or so. It's either that or have the paper run another front-page story about a first-year student getting hit on the head by a falling ceiling tile while he was on the john. Complete with a picture...
...years, avid readers of the New York Times took part of their favorite paper with them wherever they went -- whether they wanted to or not. The ink that went into "All the News That's Fit to Print" was notorious for its tendency to rub off onto the hands and subsequently the face, the clothes, the furniture and the walls of whoever touched it. Enterprising merchants peddled special gloves readers could wear while working their way through the paper...