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Romenesko

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Jim Romenesko
Your daily fix of media industry news, commentary, and memos.
True/Slant
woodward
NPR's Scott Simon gets an A from Lewis Grossberger for his "straightforward" presentation that's "full of Journalism 101 verities." Bob Woodward gets a failing grade for being "the epitome of the tired, droning, narcolepsy-inducing academic who inspired so many of us to cut our 8 and 9 o’clocks in college." PLUS: More teacher evaluations.
Posted at 3:06 PM on Jul. 3, 2009
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Updated at
3:06 p.m.

Listen to DHD's Finke
And Gawker's Snyder.
(Cyber Frequencies)

Mary Lou Forbes dies at 83
Longtime WT Commentary editor.
(Washington Times)

Farewell, CompuServe Classic
Plug pulled after 30 years.
(The Paper PC)

Orlando's Newseum
Run by a Sentinel veteran.
(Urban Sketchers)

POSTED FRIDAY
City/regional magazine contest
Winners named.
(Romenesko Misc.)

Journalists vs. bloggers
From Scott Rosenberg's book.
(SayEverything.com)

LEFT RAIL ARCHIVE

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Send letters, memos,
and feedback.






POPULAR TOPICS


"One-woman media machine" snags A-listers for podcasts
San Jose Mercury News
Alison van Diggelen may be an unknown, but her interview subjects aren't. The citizen journalist has convinced Martin Sheen, Charlie Rose, Jack Welch and others to chat for her podcasts. Maureen Dowd, who agreed to an interview, says: "I thought it would be rude to say no. She was persistent, charming and enthusiastic, which is kind of an unbeatable combination."
Posted at 11:06 AM on Jul. 3, 2009
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Wasser named executive editor of Maine newspapers
Kennebec Journal
Scott Wasser will help MaineToday Media CEO Richard Connor run the editorial departments of the Portland Press Herald, Kennebec Journal, Morning Sentinel, Coastal Journal and their related websites that MaineToday Media recently acquired from Seattle Times Co. Wasser keeps his title of vice president/news at Connor's Wilkes-Barre Times Leader.
Posted at 10:41 AM on Jul. 3, 2009
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Rocky Mountain Independent officially launches Monday
Associated Press
A dozen equity owners, about a dozen freelancers and partner blogs are providing content for the Rocky Mountain Independent, led by former Rocky Mountain News journalists.
Posted at 10:01 AM on Jul. 3, 2009
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McClatchy operations veep loses job in restructuring
Modesto Bee
Lynn Dickerson's duties will be divided between McClatchy's two other operational vice presidents. "We continue to restructure and transition to a new business model, one that requires us to be smaller and more efficient in every area of the organization," says CEO Gary Pruitt. "This includes our senior management and corporate offices."
Posted at 9:03 AM on Jul. 3, 2009
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Federal News Service sues Poynter's Congressional Quarterly
Reuters
Congressional Quarterly says the accusations of corporate espionage and theft of information are baseless. Federal News also accuses CQ, which Poynter is selling, of trying to buy the transcript provider to eliminate a competitor.
Posted at 8:33 AM on Jul. 3, 2009
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Ex-editor: I'm surprised WP's salons plan got this far
Washington Post | Slate
washingtonpost
Former Miami Herald editor Tom Fiedler says news organizations should be a neutral broker among differing interests and that "what the Post was looking to do was to make a profit on the role of the convener. ...The idea of crossing a boundary line that seems to me painted so brightly white, I'm astonished that it got this far." || Jack Shafer: What really stinks is that Katharine Weymouth appears to have considered selling something that wasn't hers to sell -- WP's credibility.
> News of WP's planned salons inspired wisecracks in DC
> WPers, who can't even accept a coffee mug, were "furious"
> Temple on lessons learned from the Post's salons fiasco
Posted at 8:23 AM on Jul. 3, 2009
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Two suitors for Globe join forces for potential bid
Boston Globe
Former advertising executive Jack Connors and private equity investor Stephen Pagliuca got the okay this week from the New York Times Co. to team up for a potential Globe bid. Meanwhile, the Times has moved to make a sale more palatable by asking would-be buyers to assume only a portion of the Globe's pension liability, report Robert Weisman and Beth Healy. Overall liability from pension plans at the Globe exceeds $200 million.
Posted at 6:55 AM on Jul. 3, 2009
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Arthur out as Los Angeles Times executive editor
LAObserved.com | LATimes.com
John Arthur was the #2 editor. "John and I did not agree on the need for the just-announced masthead changes, and we differ on the best approach to reaching our goals," says Times editor Russ Stanton. Sports editor Randy Harvey becomes associate editor and obituaries editor Jon Thurber is promoted to managing editor, print.
> Arthur was a leftover from the O'Shea era, an editor ago
Posted at 6:44 AM on Jul. 3, 2009
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Jul. 2, 2009

"The most powerful woman in Boston" leaves the Globe
Boston Globe
Loth
Globe editorial page editor Renee Loth, who has been with the paper for 24 years, says "I was once described in a magazine profile as 'the most powerful woman in Boston.' This was cause for much hilarity among my family and friends. But of course it's not the power of any one individual, but only this institution, the Boston Globe, that gives the editorial page its influence."
> John Kelly: "People are on the move here at the Post"
Posted at 3:48 PM on Jul. 2, 2009
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The good news is they're paying more than HuffPost
ChicagoReader.com
The Chicago Tribune is paying its Chicago Now bloggers $5 per 1,000 hits. Michael Miner is told that the operation has 65 bloggers and last month recorded 700,000 pageviews. That works out to $3,500 split 65 ways, or about $54 a blogger for the month.
Posted at 3:18 PM on Jul. 2, 2009
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Wow Now that's a micropayment. More.
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WP ombud: "This comes pretty close to a PR disaster"
WP Ombudsman's Blog
Post ombudsman Andrew Alexander says reaction to the story about the Post's off-the-record salons "was immediate and ranged from anger to disappointment to disbelief." The promotional flier came out of the office of Charles Pelton, who recently joined the paper to find ways to generate business through conferences and events. Pelton says newsroom leaders had been involved in discussions about the salons. "This was well developed with the newsroom. What was not developed was the marketing message to potential sponsors."
> WH spokesman Gibbs discusses the controversy
Posted at 3:09 PM on Jul. 2, 2009
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Flier link Thanks for that link, Walter. More.
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"Kurtz knows the minefield upon which he ventures" with First Lady/reporters story
True/Slant
It's fair for a media writer like Howard Kurtz to point out the sudden presence of female faces of color among the press in the White House, says Lisa Takeuchi Cullen, but "what I don’t think is fair is the implication, careful and nuanced as it is, that their work ought to be specially inspected for bias. ...Don't tarnish their professionalism by prematurely alleging bias." || Related from TheRoot.com.
Posted at 12:18 PM on Jul. 2, 2009
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cheerleaders these are not Black reporters. They are not reporters. they... More.
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Colbert, Stewart praised for "impressive" foreign coverage
GlobalPost.com
"The Daily Show" and "The Colbert Report" had plenty of laughs in their reports from Iran and Iraq, says Thomas Mucha, "but they also produced some insightful -- and certainly entertaining -- coverage of these two complex and important global stories. If Wolf Blitzer isn't quaking in his beard, he should be."
Posted at 11:36 AM on Jul. 2, 2009
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WP: Newsroom didn't know about fliers promoting salons for lobbyists
Politico.com | WP | Hillman Foundation
Brauchli
A Washington Post spokeswoman says a flier promoting $25,000 to $250,000 WP-sponsored sessions with "those powerful few" went out before it was properly vetted, "and this draft does not represent what the company's vision for these dinners are." || Executive editor Marcus Brauchli (left): "We will not participate in events where promises are made that in exchange for money The Post will offer access to newsroom personnel or will refrain from confrontational questioning." || More from Howard Kurtz. || Comment from Charles Kaiser.
> Kane: Reaction in WP newsroom was astonishment
> Kafka: Why not have editorial staffers participate?
Posted at 11:25 AM on Jul. 2, 2009
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Washington Post's shame Like hell Brauchli got blindsided by this! He got caught.... More.
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When Boston magazine gets thin, the owner "figures the editor is an idiot"
Boston Globe
A dozen "idiot" editors came and went between 1975 and 2000. Owner Herb Lipson -- he's the guy who fired several Boston mag staffers, then enjoyed a steak -- once boasted during the good times that he was "backstroking in green." Lipson, says a former editor, "is to the right of Attila the Hun" and wants his magazines -- he owns Philadelphia, too -- "going after poor people, Democrats, the handicapped, minorities."
Posted at 10:19 AM on Jul. 2, 2009
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Ex-LATer Frantz now writes "for an audience of one"
NPR.org
Former LAT and NYT investigative journalist Doug Frantz now works for Sen. John Kerry on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and his first report -- on Iran's nuclear program -- "is surprisingly readable for a finding by a Senate committee," says David Folkenflik. Frantz tells him: "My first and highest responsibility there was to produce something that would inform Sen. John Kerry, my boss. In a sense, everything I do and write is for an audience of one."
Posted at 9:46 AM on Jul. 2, 2009
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This is new? Yes, the economy is terrible. But a newsperson going to... More.
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WP offers lobbyists access to "those powerful few" -- for $25,000 and up
Politico.com
dollarbills
Mike Allen reports the Washington Post is offering lobbyists and association executives off the record, non-confrontational access to "those powerful few" -- WH officials, members of Congress, and Post reporters and editors -- for $25,000 to $250,000. The offer, writes Allen, "is a new sign of the lengths to which news organizations will go to find revenue at a time when most newspapers are struggling for survival."
Posted at 9:05 AM on Jul. 2, 2009
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Gotta be a hoax And Politico fell for it. The only sources are a... More.
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"No one noted all the white chicks covering Laura Bush"
Washington Post
That's what the Post's Robin Givhan tells Howard Kurtz, who points out that five reporters who cover Michelle Obama are African American women. "Whether racial and gender identification produces a gauzier, more favorable portrayal of Obama is perhaps too early to judge," he writes. "After all, no one raises questions when an Irish American male reporter covers a pol named Murphy."
Posted at 8:32 AM on Jul. 2, 2009
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Murdoch denies that he's plotting to acquire NYT
TheStreet.com
murdoch
Rupert Murdoch says Michael Wolff's claim that he's planned out a Times deal in detail is "nonsense." "I don't think it's for sale anyway. I haven't even thought about it. But I would imagine that it would be legally and politically almost impossible, so I'm not thinking about it." How's advertising at WSJ? he's asked by Dan Freed. "Marginally better than at other newspapers, but not great. Certainly we have reduced our costs at The Journal I think fully as much as we've declined in national advertising."
Posted at 7:36 AM on Jul. 2, 2009
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"I don't mind getting in fights," says Wolff
Women's Wear Daily
"Do I like it? Well, sometimes I like it. You get in fights because there's something to fight about," Michael Wolff tells Irin Carmon. Lately, Wolff has been fighting with Times media writer David Carr, who says Wolff "has credibility. I just don't think he's spending it very well."
Posted at 7:25 AM on Jul. 2, 2009
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Rohde: "I cemented my position as the worst newly wed husband ever"
NYTimes.com
David Rohde is low-key by nature, and he was in character as he spoke briefly in the Times newsroom on Wednesday, reports Clyde Haberman. He didn't discuss details of his abduction or of his escape, but he said that his escort and interpreter, Tahir Ludin, had told the hostage takers that if they wanted to chop off Rohde’s head, they would have to chop off his own first.
Posted at 7:21 AM on Jul. 2, 2009
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Jul. 1, 2009

MediaNews: No bankruptcy, no management change
Romenesko Misc.
MediaNews says a Debtwire story on the chain "is inaccurate is almost all respects" and that "proposals to the company's lenders do not include a change in control of the company, nor do they include proposals for any bankruptcy filings, as the rumors suggest."

Read the Entire Post
Posted at 5:20 PM on Jul. 1, 2009
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I hate this comment system My first comment was: <sarcasm>Right</sarcasm> But, the dumbass comment system... More.
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Gannett to cut 1,400 jobs, or 3% of its work force
Associated Press
Gannett
Newspaper division chief Bob Dickey informed Gannett staffers of the layoffs in a letter Wednesday. He says "there have been some promising signs of a recovery, but the reality is the improvements are not broad-based and the economy continues to be fragile." Most layoffs will come by July 9.
Posted at 4:45 PM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Group launches nonprofit Investigative News Network
WatchdogsatPocantico.com | Content Bridges
The Investigative News Network's mission is very simple, says the group's declaration: it's "to aid and abet, in every conceivable way, individually and collectively, the work and public reach of its member news organizations, including, to the fullest extent possible, their administrative, editorial and financial wellbeing. And, more broadly, to foster the highest quality investigative journalism, and to hold those in power accountable, at the local, national and international levels." Twenty-seven nonprofit news publishers were at Pocantico to discuss the venture.
Posted at 4:07 PM on Jul. 1, 2009
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ABC News boss: "What can we provide that others can't?"
Politico.com
David Westin says TV news shops have had a strategy of covering the same news that everyone else does but trying to do it better. "That strategy is no longer a successful one," he tells an Aspen Institute audience. Another panelist, Time's Josh Tyrangiel, rejects claims that his magazine and Newsweek are essentially carbon copies of each other. "Time and Newsweek have probably never been less alike than right now."
Posted at 3:45 PM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Politico's a credible version of what the world will be
Vanity Fair
politico
How Michael Wolff sees it: "Obsessives everywhere in their particular narrow-focused areas of interest, flashing ever more information, ever quicker, in ever shorter bites --the shorter you can make it, the more information there can be -- to all the ships at sea." He adds that "at Politico's level of specificity there may be no room for a general-interest reader. The conversation arguably becomes limited to professionals and compulsives."
Posted at 2:34 PM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Pew: 64% say Jackson's death got too much coverage
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press
Pew found that about two-thirds of the public believe news outlets gave too much attention to Michael Jackson's death, while 29% say the coverage was the right amount. Only 3% say there had been too little coverage.
> Lowry: LAT seems determined to "own" MJ story
> MW's Friedman: "Jackson coverage was disappointing"
Posted at 2:15 PM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Story on today's MediaNews lender call uses the b-word
Westword | MinnPost.com
A Debtwire piece reports: "MediaNews has scheduled a July 1 lender call to provide an update on the progress of the negotiations. ...The company is expected to implement its restructuring through a pre-arranged or pre-packaged bankruptcy filing, said the first source, a lender and a sellside analyst." Michael Roberts points out: "This move doesn't mean MediaNews is definitely filing for bankruptcy -- far from it." || Related from David Brauer.
> McClatchy's fate looks increasingly out of its hands
Posted at 1:51 PM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Ingram: It was wrong for NYT to conceal Rohde's kidnapping
Nieman Journalism Lab
Did staying quiet about David Rohde's kidnapping save his life, as many people have suggested? "There's no evidence whatsoever to support that, other than the emotional response felt by many of his fellow journalists, and in fact there is some evidence to suggest that all the kidnappers wanted was money," writes Mathew Ingram.
Posted at 12:55 PM on Jul. 1, 2009
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I think it was Eliot Cohen, in an Oxford University Press book on philosophy and journalism, who said that walking into a journalism debate... More.
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Judge tells Philly papers' creditors to share info about secret recording
Philadelphia Daily News
A judge ordered lawyers to give up their July 4 weekend, if necessary, to share notes, documents and any other information related to an incident last year in which Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News publisher Brian Tierney was recorded by one of the newspaper's lenders without consent.
Posted at 12:34 PM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Curley: "I feel like I've died and gone to journalism heaven"
Mediabistro.com
curley
Fast Company
"I love it here. I love our newspaper," says Rob Curley, who heads the Las Vegas Sun's new-media division. "Maybe this is the Kansan in me, but I can't get enough hooker knife-fight stories. Plus you have all these stars who come to Vegas and just behave badly. ...This is one of the coolest places in the country you could want to do something like this because you totally get to embrace schizophrenia." || Poynter Online: Curley discusses 702.tv with Will Sullivan.
Posted at 11:51 AM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Indy Star guild rejects contract that calls for a 12% pay cut
Indianapolis Star
The vote was 97-9. The Indianapolis Newspaper Guild says on its website: "Because this was not a last, final offer the union bargaining team looks forward to resuming negotiations with representatives of Gannett and reaching a deal that is acceptable to both the company" and employees.
Posted at 11:13 AM on Jul. 1, 2009
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"Vibe was to hip-hop journalism what 'The Arsenio Hall Show' was to late-night TV"
The Root
vibe
"When Arsenio was on the air, many people hated on the show, but when it was no longer available, people came to realize that something was indeed missing," writes Todd Boyd. "Vibe leaves a large footprint. Hip-hop culture is everywhere now, from the most commercial to the deepest underground."
Posted at 10:25 AM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Deggans: Is there anything left to cut at Gannett?
TampaBay.com | NYTimes.com
Eric Deggans points out that the company laid off 2,000 people last fall. "This will make for an excruciating week for Gannett employees and media watchers, as we wait for the drip, drip of news revealing where the job reductions are, how many people have lost jobs and how many have come from the newsrooms." || Earlier: Another big round of layoffs at Gannett.
Posted at 9:16 AM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Froomkin: Editors should let journalists call the truth as they see it
New York Observer | CJR
"Not offending people is not a business model," says fired Washington Post blogger Dan Froomkin. "You've got to have something to say." Regarding his dismissal: "There was of course the money issue. I was an easy line item to scratch out." || More from Megan Garber.
Posted at 8:49 AM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Shales: TV critics are needed now more than ever
Washington Post
Shales:
The TV critic job "has simply and callously been abolished" at many newspapers, notes Tom Shales. "The irony is (and there has to be an irony), a critic's informed guidance is arguably needed now more than ever -- what with the 500-channel ('and nothin' on') universe having taken over, and considering the fact that Old Man Webber -- you know, the Internut -- has exponentially multiplied viewing choices for global villagers. What's a viewer to do? Consult a critic, for one thing."
Posted at 7:42 AM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Not every junior blogger is going to become an ace reporter, but...
Slate
"Journalism has generally benefited by increases in the number of competitors, the entry of new and once-marginalized players, and the creation of new approaches to cracking stories," writes Jack Shafer. "Just because the journalism business is going to hell and it may no longer make economic sense to maintain mega-news bureaus at the center of war zones doesn't mean that journalism isn't thriving." || East Bay Express: Lowell Bergman sees a "brighter future" for journalism, thanks to technology.
Posted at 7:28 AM on Jul. 1, 2009
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Tuesday, June 30, 2009 Headlines
Gannett confirms layoffs coming, but says rumored 4,500 figure too high
Dalglish: It's popular to bash mainstream media, but...
NYT reader: Doesn't MJ's death belong on page 2?
"Another misdirected attempt to right the newspaper ship"
Additional items for June 30, 2009
Chittum scolds LAT for going easy on Wired editor
Freedom implements 5% across-the-board pay cut
NYT Co. retirement plan hit by $154M loss in 2008
Principal confiscates student magazine over "gang-looking" tattoo, other content
San Diego U-T staffer to launch nonprofit investigative journalism venture
Waco paper cuts 43 jobs by moving printing operation to Austin
MacDonald leaves Creative Loafing, rejoins Denver Newspaper Agency
Jarvis: "It's the newspapers that are free-riding, getting the benefit of free links"
2009 Gerald Loeb Award winners announced
Monday, June 29, 2009 Headlines
Las Vegas Sun's Heikes named LA Weekly editor
Fired Tampa Tribune reporter ended up on the streets
Garfield, Shepard debate NPR's "torture" policy
Claim: Blethen Maine Newspapers sold for $30M-$40M
Editor "does a Letterman" for his farewell column
LAT's Lopez: We need columnists who do real reporting
National Edward R. Murrow Award winners named
Too much Jackson coverage from "serious" news outlets?
Posner: One way to save newspapers is to outlaw linking
More than 250 biz journalists lost their jobs in 2009
Vail editor apologizes for "Jewish descent" description
Milbank, Pitney spar over "orchestrated" question
Wikipedia posts on Rohde's kidnapping were deleted
Sulzbergers' control of NYT probably safe until 2015
Philly papers say they've been frozen out of secret recording probe
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