Newspapers
in sentence
499 examples of Newspapers in a sentence
His prime ministerial new year's address – "Russia at the Turn of the Millennium" -- was posted on a Russian Government website for all the world to see before being published in Russian
newspapers.
But most farmers had no access to radio, television, or daily
newspapers.
The Arabs and the Democratic ChoiceNEW DELHI – Egypt’s fate has had the world riveted in recent days to
newspapers
and televisions, as the unfolding consequences of Tunisia’s “Jasmine Revolution” seem to portend a wave like the liberal revolutions of 1848 for the Arab world.
If you go back to the leading European and American
newspapers
on the year January 1, 1900 they were filled with optimism.
Some
newspapers
have stoked the country’s ethnic and regional animosities, and can be wildly inaccurate in their reporting.
Beijing Versus the BillionaireBANGKOK – China’s government and Hong Kong’s wealthiest man, the much-admired Li Ka-shing, have been waging an acidic spat – one that increasingly looks like a bitter divorce being played out in tabloid
newspapers.
In 1990,
newspapers
across the country employed nearly 458,000 people; by March 2016, that number was less than 200,000.
And the national non-profit organization Report for America now trains and subsidizes young journalists working for local
newspapers
around the country.
So I appeal to all of you working for newspapers, radio, and television stations outside the United States: it is to you that we – including those of us in America – must look to discover what our own government is doing.
Whether on state television or in government-controlled
newspapers
– at the time, there was no free press, Internet, or cable news – citizens were reassured that Egypt had regained control of its destiny.
In Dickens’ England, the judiciary was not independent, and
newspapers
were subject to state censorship.
In fact, few media tycoons – Berlusconi owns Italy’s main commercial television channels and several daily
newspapers
(either directly or through his family) – have ever been as freewheeling in their use of libel litigation to silence journalists and other critics.
When the alternatives are few and provide only low returns, the equity market looks more attractive, especially if – as was the case – the country’s major
newspapers
are running bullish editorials about stock prices.
Newspapers, by contrast, are not monopolists.
Eight companies own Britain’s 12 national newspapers, and four proprietors account for more than 80% of all copies sold.
The other reason is more sinister:
newspapers
have “dirt” on politicians, which they are willing to use to protect their interests.
The same year, following criminal prosecutions for telephone hacking which led to the closure of Murdoch’s News of the World, then-Prime Minister David Cameron appointed Lord Justice Brian Leveson to head an inquiry into “the culture, practices and ethics of the press; their relationship with the police; the failure of the current system of regulation; the contacts made, and discussions had, between national
newspapers
and politicians; why previous warnings about press misconduct were not heeded; and the issue of cross-media ownership.”
The first part of the Leveson Report, published in 2012, recommended an industry regulator whose independence from the
newspapers
and government alike was to be assured by a Press Recognition Panel, set up under a Royal Charter.
True to previous form, the government then gave up, overruling the opinion of Leveson himself that further inquiry was needed to establish the “extent of unlawful or improper conduct by newspapers, including corrupt payments to the police.”
One television channel after another was taken over by the state under various pretexts, as were major
newspapers.
Meanwhile, Russian oligarchs have been purchasing European newspapers, including The Independent, The Evening Standard, and France-Soir.
Strikes were called,
newspapers
halted publication, and fears of widespread insurrection remain high.
The latest fad is for officials to sue
newspapers
for libel, demanding over $1 million.
Brazil is not the kind of country where a president can manipulate the constitution or close
newspapers
at will.
The Other Financial CrisisNEWPORT BEACH – Two variants of financial crisis continue to wreak havoc on Western economies, fueling joblessness and poverty: the one that we read about regularly in newspapers, involving governments around the world; and a less visible one at the level of small and medium-size businesses and households.
After an attempted coup in 1982, many smaller
newspapers
were shut down by the state, and between 1988 and 1990, at least 20
newspapers
were forced to cease publication permanently.
Since the outbreak of the financial crisis in 2007, the word’s usage in major
newspapers
such as the New York Times and the Financial Times has fallen still further.
Institutions like schools, universities, newspapers, and political parties have been our traditional structuring devices.
In recent years, Big Tech companies have been subjected to scrutiny for perfecting a dark art pioneered by commercial newspapers, radio, and television: attracting and holding our attention, in order to sell access to our senses to paying advertisers.
When mainstream politicians, newspapers, and churches rail against Israel, many Swedish Muslims inevitably see this is a green light for them to unleash their own hostility toward ordinary Jews.
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