Search:
E & P
Web
America's Oldest Journal Covering the Newspaper Industry
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Site Index
Home
Top Stories
NewsPeople
News Links
Obituaries
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Departments
- Business
- Ad/Circ
- Newsroom
- Technology
- Online
- Syndicates
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Columns
- Americas Extra
- Ethics Corner
- Five Questions
- ForestWeb's Newsprint
- Get Me Rewrite
- Newspaper 2.0
- Newspaper Beat
- Operations
- Pressing Issues
- Shoptalk
- Stop the Presses
- Syndicate World
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Resources
- Podcasts
- Webcasts
- Newspaper Directory
- E&P Publications
- Newsletters
- Industry Calendar
- E&P Conference
- EPpy Awards
- E&P Photo Contest
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Magazine
- E&P in Print
- Subscribe
- Archive Search
- FAQ
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
About Us
- Advertising Opportunities
- About Us
- Contact Us
- Media Kit
- Editorial Calendar
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Classifieds
1999 - August 21 - Published Date
from Editor & Publisher, Aug. 13, 1949
AP names first Internet reporter
Keeping a sharp focus
Snapping up info at NPPA workshops
Putting together the pictorial puzzle
From Page One
Cox invests in tix
Contempt case won't die
Daily Deal goes print, shuns broadcast
Anita Tobias Pulitzers prize diverse writers
D.J. expects charge, layoffs
Spineless tabloids
The Missouri School of Journalism announced the winners of the 1999 Missouri Lifestyle Journalism Awards. The Missouri Lifestyle Journalism Program (formerly known as Penney-Missouri) honors newspapers, editors, and writers nationwide for outstanding lifestyle journalism. Winners were chosen from among nearly 1600 entries in 15 categories. Honorees in the reporting category include Laura Saari, of The Orange County (Calif.) Register, who received the Paul L. Myhre Single Story award for her story, "Motel Children," and John Dougherty and David Holthouse, of the New Times in Phoenix, who received the Paul L. Myhre Series/Special Section award for their investigative work, "Bordering on Exploitation."
Goss' money matters
J-school grads enter a raging bull
Legal newspaper
News-rack laws gain steam
Y2K's the problem;
Loyce Joe Allen, 73, former advertising director for the Dallas Times Herald, died Aug. 1 of cancer. Allen was graduated from Southern Methodist University in 1950, and joined the Times Herald that same year. He spent over four decades in the ad department of the Times Herald, leaving only when the paper was bought and folded by The Dallas Morning News in 1991. Allen subsequently joined People Newspapers, where he served as an ad consultant until his retirement in 1996.
Building a paper,
It's not easy being green
Community papers plan format change
Audit vs. survey:
Boy in the bubble
California
Campaigns approach; journalists shift
"Said a newspaper baron named Black,
Read his lips:'Circulation'
Many subscribe to these scribes
Hillary's visit to upstate N.Y.
New E&P stock table
Lost publisher mourned
To tell or not to tell
Terror threats bared
O, Conrad! Black
Thomson divisions name sales V.P.
New Times: Old
Black Voice sounds off
Publishers back Bronx recycled newsprint
J-school grads enter a raging bull market
22-27 Visual Edge, National Press Photographers Association, Bay Front Hilton, St. Petersburg, Fla.
DIGITAL CAMERAS:
Adweek
|
Brandweek
|
Mediaweek
|
American Artist
|
PDN
|
Photoserve
|
IPN
|
Clio Awards
SUBSCRIBE
|
FAQ
|
ADVERTISING OPPORTUNITIES
|
ABOUT US
|
CONTACT US
|
ARCHIVES
|
SITE MAP
|
SUBSCRIBER FAQs
|
RSS
© 2010
Nielsen Business Media, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Terms of Use
|
Privacy Policy