Columbia Journalism Review/Volume 2

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
3876143Columbia Journalism Review — Volume 21963

COLUMBIA JOURNALISM summer 1963 REVIEW


Columbia Journalism Review is published quarterly under auspices of

ARTICLES


the faculty, alumni, and friends of 6 S : : ss : ? ? Smoking and news: coverage of a decade of controvers

the Graduate School of Journalism, ga 8 f y

Columbia University. 24 Sunday magazines: end of an era. William A. Hachten

Dean and editorial chairman: Ed- 39 Procrustes’ bed. Dallas S. Townsend, Jr. ward W. Barrett. Managing editor:

James Boylan.

Chairman, publishing committee:

Louis G. Cowan. Business manager: §TAREF REPORT

Robert O. Shipman. Production supervisor: Monroe Lesser. 13 Suburb and city: competitors for the metropolitan reader

Advisory editors: Richard T. Baker, John Foster, Jr., John Hohenberg, Penn T. Kimball, J. Ben Lieberman, Samuel Lubell, John Luter, Melvin Mencher, Lawrence D. Pinkham, Louis M. Starr, William A. Wood, Frederick T. C. Yu.

Art assistant: Burton Wenk. Production assistant: Lois Ireland. Typography by Weltz Ad Service.


AROUND THE MAP

29 Birmingham: newspapers in a crisis 33 Kansas City: the fetish of non-partisanism 34 Detroit: on the job market

DEPARTMENTS

Volume II, Number 2, Summer, 1963. Published four times a year by the Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. Editorial and business offices: 504 Journalism Building, Columbia University, New York 27, N.Y. ©

36 Washington letter: diggers and toilers. Ben H. Bagdikian 1963 Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University.

41 Second reading: How far have we come? A view from 1911

Passing comment: views of the editors

Subscription rates: $6.00 a year. 46 Editorial notebook Single copy: $1.75. Add 50¢ a year = 47 ~~ Books, Edited by Louis M. Starr for subscriptions going outside the

United States and United States 51

Topics in journalism

possessions.

52 Unfinished business: letters and comment Second-class postage paid at New York, N.Y. oF the lower case