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Ann Arbor Newsboy Grins with Paper, October 1953

Ann Arbor Newsboy Grins with Paper, October 1953 image
Year:
1953
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, October 6, 1953
Caption:
Six days a week, a rain or shine, your newspaper is delivered to your home. The newspaper boy who places it there has to come to symbolize one of our nation's great institutions. The biographies of many of our leading citizens contain a passage such as this: "He had a paper route while in high school." In the course of conducting his business, the newsboy acquires valuable training for his future career. He learns to meet people on a friendly basis; he learns to buy and sell; to handle money. And above everything else, he learns a sense of responsibility that moves him to carry a given task to its completion. (Fifth of a series)

Desk Workers Proofread in Newsroom Office, October 1953

Desk Workers Proofread in Newsroom Office, October 1953 image
Year:
1953
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, October 3, 1953
Caption:
Desk men--and women--in the newspaper office edit the work of reporters and the seemingly endless stream of copy from news wire services. They write the headlines and check for accuracy. They are expected to be versed in grammar and spelling and to have a functional knowledge of current literature and world affairs. They must be accurate, fair, understanding, curious, skeptical. Stingy with precious space, their motto is: "There's nothing so good it can't be cut." (Third of a series)

Wire Editor Reads Latest News Feed, October 1953

Wire Editor Reads Latest News Feed, October 1953 image
Year:
1953
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, October 2, 1953
Caption:
While the reporters and photographers are the ears and eyes of your newspaper, the world-wide press services are its circulatory and nervous system. By means of telephone, telegraph, beamcast, radio and cable, word of today's happenings is channeled to central offices where the wire editors keep their fingers on the pulse of world events. The news is then retransmitted over coast-to-coast networks, and rolls in never-ending streams from machines in your own newspaper's office. Your paper is a mirror which reflects today's world, today--thanks to modern channels of communication.

Newspaper Duo Catch the Latest News, October 1953

Newspaper Duo Catch the Latest News, October 1953 image
Year:
1953
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, October 1, 1953
Caption:
Many of your newspaper reporters are as well known to you as members of your own family. In reality, they are your extra set of eyes and ears, as they look and listen for the news that you would not have time to seek out for yourself. Because they live in a democracy, they are free to write fearlessly, dispassionately, and without prejudice. They sift the important from the unimportant in the hope that they can impart to you, the reader, a true picture of what goes on in this complex world. Their job is to make you the best-informed reader on earth. (First of a series)

Derby Judges Named

Derby Judges Named image
Parent Issue
Day
11
Month
July
Year
1963
Copyright
Copyright Protected