Student journalists at Mounds View High School want to stop publishing their school newspaper rather than allow school administrators to review stories before they go to print.
"I would like to keep our newspaper a real newspaper, not a newsletter for the district," said Christina Xia, 18, editor-in-chief of the school's student newspaper, the Viewer.
}}} full story {{{
.
A look at the downward spiral of the newspaper industry in the 21st century.
Because no news is bad news
Monday, March 1, 2010
It's not first time Gannett gave up fight
For some, the impending sale of The Honolulu Advertiser to the owner of its smaller, money-losing rival, The Honolulu Star-Bulletin, has striking similarities to a deal that involved The Advertiser's owner nearly 20 years ago in Little Rock, Ark.
}}} full story {{{
}}} full story {{{
Palo Alto’s trio of newspapers staying alive in hard times
The online news boom and the busted U.S. economy have combined to make community newspapers an endangered species. So how does Palo Alto manage to support three newspapers–The Palo Alto Weekly, The Daily Post and The Daily News?
}}} full story {{{
.
}}} full story {{{
.
Labels:
newspaper war
| Reactions: |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)