Word: readerships
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...people involved in the utility rates issue. Some people involved probably are interested in taking over the utilities; but Burlingham implies none are because that's his bias; he doesn't want to say that anybody has an ideology that might offend the liberal consciences of the Mother Jones readership...
...obvious to us that The Crimson is not content to simply bring the news of each day to its readership. Rather, the Crimson apparently continues to check the facts of each story which appears and is not ashamed to bring new-found knowledge, once it has sincerely and innocently defamed the character of the subjects of their stories. The sheer size of the corrections column corroborates this fact. And the consistency of this column points to the fact that each day's paper is not allowed to "rest in peace," rather, it is searched with a fine-toothed comb...
...become repetitive. There is no overall conception, no theme, no characterization, so that the reader is deprived of the interest which comes when a book is creatively unified. Writing in The New Yorker pampers the trite, and even a writer as versatile as Updike often caters to a readership which can interest itself in such a well-written frivolity as "Coffee-Table Books for High Coffee-Tables." Picked-Up Pieces is good bedside reading, and if it can make you laugh, it can also have the very practical effect of putting you asleep...
...everything which appears in it--news, editorials or advertisements. To set off advertising as a separate entity not subject to moral evaluation would be an abdication of a newspaper's trust and responsibility. The Crimson's advertising columns will remain open to those wishing to communicate with the Crimson readership. But The Crimson reserves the right of judgement with respect to the nature of that communication; racism, explicit or implicit, should not appear in any form in The Crimson...
...magazine with a readership that is hip, presumably liberal and young (average age: 29), New Times can be remarkably undogmatic about politics. Marshall Frady's examination of Democratic candidates in the current New Times comes down hard on several of them. Says Editor Jonathan Z. (for Zerbe) Larsen: "We want to avoid being trapped in a radical, youthquake rut. We're not conservative by any means, but we can be brutal on liberalism...