Newspapers
in sentence
499 examples of Newspapers in a sentence
What is stopping the great
newspapers
from flushing out from the dark web the Mossack Fonsecas of global jihad and its criminal offshore companies?
This can and must change, but it requires a grassroots movement that uses blogs, online magazines and newspapers, book clubs and meet-up clubs, and anything else that might work to promote educational opportunities to develop critical-thinking skills.
Newspapers
around the world dutifully wrote feel-good stories about how engaged environmentalists celebrated as the lights went out around the world.
Danish
newspapers
– coincidentally in the native country of the story of the Emperor’s New Clothes – happily quoted the WWF regarding the event’s overwhelming success.
He and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu signed a joint declaration ending the dispute between their countries; and the Polish government purchased full-page ads in major
newspapers
around the world – including the three largest Israeli dailies – to promote the text of the statement.
Yet many media organizations, including two leading newspapers, Asahi and Mainichi, continued to report on the supposed scandal – leaving out the testimony of Hatta and Kato, while providing an extensive account of Maekawa’s accusations.
In the United States,
newspapers
and magazines are trumpeting reports in the last few months that the decade-long boom in home prices may be at an end, and that the bubble may be bursting.
A search of old
newspapers
finds surprisingly few articles about the outlook for home prices.
Renewing the NewsNEW YORK – Last week, rumors from the world of print media were rife: a hundred reporters from The New York Times news desk to be bought out – or to lose their jobs if they refuse; steep cutbacks at British newspapers; staffs slashed at Condé Nast – eight respected editors axed at Glamour magazine.
There is no way to disguise the reality: newspaper readers, in the West at least, are getting older; younger readers prefer to get their information online, where readers spend far less time actually reading news than print readers do; and, most agonizingly of all for the industry, people who were willing to pay for
newspapers
are unwilling to pay for the same content on a screen.
At that time,
newspapers
held the public’s focus and could be a powerful gadfly.
But this means that newspapers, in order to survive, will have to abandon their top-down tone, their “we decide what's important” sense of hierarchy, and create more collaborative kinds of documentation and feedback with citizens.
As more citizens become documentarians, online
newspapers
will have to curate their work to reflect reality on a level of visual urgency that new readers take for granted.
To be sure, I have been exposed to flimsy sources, and
newspapers
of the future should help readers learn what a good source is, and what good citizen journalism requires.
But I do know that that goal is far more likely to be achieved if
newspapers
take their readers seriously and train them as documentarians of their own communities and of their own moments.
Kim Jong Il's actions also projected a new image of himself as a serious and reasonable leader, not the sinister recluse frequently depicted in
newspapers.
Today's Kremlin, however, is full of clever ideas about how to control and intimidate newspapers, radio, and television.
In the era of the Founding Fathers,
newspapers
were extremely partisan, and George Washington was dismayed by the harshness of political language.
Perhaps the least bad solution would be to proceed by default: gradually allow the drug war to vanish from television screens and newspapers, and have its place taken by other wars: on poverty, on petty crime, and for economic growth.
Berlusconi’s used his TV stations and
newspapers
so liberally to smear his opponents that the writer Roberto Saviano called them his macchina del fango or “mud machine.”
Why We Need “Game of Thrones”PARIS – Today’s popular television programs have become the equivalent of the feuilletons that began appearing in
newspapers
in the nineteenth century.
Beyond the need to alleviate the human misery that fills television screens and front pages of
newspapers
lies the imperative not to miss the significant medium-term opportunities that migration provides.
The paper that reported the story is owned by the government and sells more copies than all other
newspapers
combined.
In the opinion pages of some German newspapers, anti-capitalism is returning in a new form, which entails nothing less than a renunciation of Europe and even of the West.
But Jordan’s media environment is dominated by state-owned
newspapers
and national radio and television stations that act as government mouthpieces.
While a few private
newspapers
exist, their owners largely cooperate – if not collude – with the government.
And while the pictures and the story of Abu Ghraib ran on front pages in Europe and elsewhere, it was at first buried in many American newspapers, including leaders like The New York Times .
In the aftermath of September 11th, even French
newspapers
carried headlines reading "We are all Americans."
Newspapers
depicted her against the background of the Argentinean flag, with her head bathed in a halo of sunshine.
A Movable Financial FeastLONDON – There was a time when league tables were to be found only on the sports pages of
newspapers.
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