Word: printings
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...sources. At present, the country has a highly independent public broadcasting network spanning radio, television, and now the internet. This exists together with licensing controls on private media that ensure proprietors must be either, “queens of the screen” or “princes of print,” but not both in any one market—the cross-media laws. Foreign ownership was even more tightly controlled...
...issue in the spring of 2005, and according to H Bomb’s former business manager, Vladimir P. Djuric ’06, the magazine was scheduled to publish a third issue last spring but simply did not have the financial resources to put the issue into print...
...issue was put together last year, but it was never printed,” Djuric, a former Crimson executive editor, said. “We didn’t have enough money at the end of last year to print another issue...
According to Djuric, an issue costs between $9,000 and $12,000 to print, and H Bomb currently has “not that much” money. Djuric said the first issue was printed using a $2,000 grant from the Undergraduate Council—an unusually large grant for a student group—and other donations. Djuric added that the first issue generated enough advertising revenue to print the second one, but that the magazine did not sell as many ads for the second issue...
...heart Thomas L. Friedman. I mean, the guy’s completely full of crap 87% of the time, but his writing style has basically changed my life. Dave Eggers can go suck a dong—Tommy Friedman has the most interesting narrative voice in print today. You know why? Because, like all good fairy-tale children’s-book writers, he understands the power of repetition. So, without further ado, here are my top 5 favorite Thomas L. Friedman tropes of 2006. 5. Exclamation Points! Tommy travels a lot. He talks to “entrepreneurs?...