120 résultats
1939880505.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
5X-XUW0-55Z1Hardcover. Very Good. Hardcover YearBook 1957 Hardcover. Name on end page Otherwise Clean! Tight Binding some cover rub. Quick Daily Shipping! W-10F hardcover
NC-ZR77-K0QXHardcover. Very Good. 1958 University of Colorado Yearbook 1958 Hardcover Clean &Tight copy. Name inside Cover FAST Daily Shipping! W-10F hardcover
14216<p>Nashville: Abingdon Press 1959 1st ed. SIGNED on half-title p. by author under "Best wishes." 92pp. salmon cloth sm 8vo: near Fine in a Good dj in Brodart poly cover ink name on pastedown; hint of age browning to edges; else nrF; dj = torn @ spine head & top corners; else G A collection of newspaper columns by the progressive editor of the Atlanta Constitution Ralph Emerson McGill 1898-1969. The first title column about the Jewish Temple bombing in Atlanta won the author a Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing.</p> Nashville: Abingdon Press hardcover
1359719091.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1171472331.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1164534165.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1436735270.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
ria9780748617692_inpHardback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; This book explores how the Internet presents radical ways of organising and producing media that offer political and cultural alternatives to ways of doing business and to how we understand the world and our place in it. hardcover
2010DADAX1164053981Kessinger Publishing 2010-09-10. paperback. New. 6.00x1.39x9.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Kessinger Publishing paperback
0548712379.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1164053981.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2007DADAX0548712379Kessinger Publishing 2007-11-03. paperback. New. 6.00x1.53x9.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Kessinger Publishing paperback
19272332New York: Sun Printing and Publishing Association 1927. <br /><br /> Octavo 8 1/2 x 5 1/2 inches; 215 x 140 mm 11 1 pages in stapled wrappers. <br /><br />A short history of The Sun founded in New York by Benjamin H. Day in 1833. The Sun was a trendsetter in American journalism according to the media historian Edwin Emery. "Journalism began a new epoch on September 3 1833 with the appearance of a strange little newspaper The New York Sun It Shines for ALL" he writes in The Press and America: An Interpretive History of the Mass Media. "Most of the material was trivial flippant -- but highly readable. Most important it was cheap. Within six months the Sun had a circulation of around 8000 which was nearly twice that of its nearest rival." <br /><br />The Sun was sold in the street for only a penny and appealed especially to working-class readers with its mix of human-interest stories and emphasis on clear lively sometimes exaggerated storytelling. It was also notable for relying largely on advertising rather than subscriptions for its revenue. <br /><br />"An Outline of The Sun" features numerous photographs of key people at The Sun through the years including the great editor Charles A. Dana who led the paper and was its owner for 20 years. Its editorial cartoonist Rube Goldberg won the Pulitzer Prize in 1948. But perhaps its most famous moment came in 1897 with the publication of a letter from a young girl wanting to know if there is a Santa Claus. That led to one of the most renowned newspaper editorials ever commonly known as "Yes Virginia there is a Santa Claus." Oddly though the pamphlet doesn't mention it. <br /><br />The Sun continued to publish until 1950 when it was folded into the New York World-Telegram. <br /><br />OCLC shows only 2 institutional holdings at Columbia and the New York Historical Society. None in commerce. RARE. <br /><br />A short but interesting look at a famous American newspaper known for its emphasis on human-interest storytelling. <br /><br />CONDITION: Some soiling to the wrappers upper corners bumped upper part of wrappers pulled away from staple small split at bottom of spine. Clean bright and unmarked on the inside pages. About Very Good. Sun Printing and Publishing Association paperback
196014043Oklahoma City OK: American Association of University Women. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1960. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. tall 8vo 9" - 10" tall; 60 pages; Minor rubbing and wear to the decorated covers with a previous owner's name inked to the inside front cover. Illustrated with photographs throughout. . American Association of University Women hardcover
187045149London: s.i. 1870. Very Good. London: s.i. ca. 1870s. Small broadside flyer 20x13.5cm printed on laid paper. A few small closed tears at previous folds light soil and spotting else Very Good.<br /> <br /> Unrecorded broadside poking fun at the press and an England awash in the different newspapers that mushroomed throughout the middle of the 19th century--national local daily women's art science sports religious--and all providing wildly different takes on the same story. The handbill lists the opinions of twenty-two newspapers "upon the subject of the text which tells you that Jacob kissed Rachel and lifted up his voice and wept." The Daily Telegraph states "If Rachel was a pretty girl and kept her face clean we can't see what Jacob had to cry about" while the Jewish Chronicle surmises that "He wept for joy because it tasted so good" in direct contradiction with the British Standard which reports that "We reckon Jacob cried because Rachel had been eating onions." <br /> <br /> Not separately catalogued in OCLC or Library Hub as of August 2025. s.i. unknown
5913A9 Class. PBO Decorated Wraps with few minor chips Cvr & small ink mrk former owner nameVG AS-IS SOFTCOVER. Soft Cover. A9 Class paperback
19821197<p><b>Apóstrofes: Revista de la Escuela de Periodismo Universidad Católica. Año I No. 1 May 1982–No. 3 Sept.-Oct. 1982 all published</b>. Santiago Chile: 1982. 8vo three issues: 23 pp. 25 pp. 21 pp.; side-stapled mimeograph with illus. wrappers b/w reproductions of orig. graphics including cartoons collage and photography light edge-wear and toning at extremities No. 2 toned front wrap with small crease.</p><p>When the left-wing Popular Unity party led by Salvador Allende came to power in 1970 they reached an agreement to undo previous limits on the freedom of the press in Chile. This brief period of pluralism was silenced by the Pinochet coup in 1973 which ushered in not only an era of censorship persecution and state-sponsored journalism but also a period in which opposition journalists were imprisoned tortured and "disappeared."</p><p>It is within this context that students at the Journalism School at Santiago's Catholic University began publishing this short-lived serial questioning the role and relevance of the professional journalist in Chile. Beginning as a general inquiry into the conditions of journalism and teaching the tone shifts rejecting university and national hierarchies and censorship. No. 3's headline "Renacer del Movimiento Estudiantil" declares the rebirth of the student movement following the arrest and torture of Marcela Palma secretary general of El Centro de Estudiantes de la Universidad Católica and sister of the leftist paramilitary Ricardo Palma. Articles report on colleagues in exile and the duty of the journalist to justice and critical thinking.</p><p>No copies found in OCLC or direct searches of Chilean national online catalogues.</p>
1498560342.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1938674<p>Philadelphia: Macrae-Smith-Company 1938. First Edition. <br /><br />Octavo 8 1/4 x 5 3/4 inches; 210 x 145 mm 268 pages in yellow cloth with a pictorial dust jacket. <br /><br />An unusual book aimed at guys who want to go from copy boy to ace reporter. Unusual in the sense that it combines both fiction and nonfiction. We follow Jerry a likable copy boy on a New Jersey daily who puts up with coarse and frankly awful editors and pressmen but then gets his big chance to be a reporter. <br /><br />Journalists will enjoy the depiction of Matt Hale the city editor who communicates primarily through growling screaming and banging his fist on his desk. Very entertaining; most journalists have known editors like Matt Hale. Illustrated with real newsroom and technical photographs of the day. SCARCE especially in dust jacket. <br /><br />CONDITION: Light toning to page edges heavier toning to paste downs but clean and unmarked. The pictorial dust jacket has several shallow chips and tears including a 1 1/2" tear with creasing to top edge of front panel affecting "O" in "COPY." Overall a Very Good copy.</p> Macrae-Smith-Company hardcover
ria9781399533805_inpHardback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; Investigates how political reporting can more effectively counter misinformation in order to enhance the public legitimacy of journalism. hardcover
15729'Transcript of speech delivered by Mr Cushrow Irani at the FIEJ Congress in Tokyo - 16th May 1985.'. 9pp. folio. With compliments slip 'With Compliments from C. R. Irani'. No other copy traced either on COPAC or OCLC WorldCat. 'Transcript of speech delivered by Mr Cushrow Irani at the FIEJ Congress in Tokyo - 16th May 1985.' unknown
69-1967Berkeley: Graduate School of Journalism University of California Berkeley 1993. 8vo. circa 50 pp. Soft Cover Very Good. B&W Plates. Berkeley: Graduate School of Journalism, University of California, Berkeley, 1993. paperback
19882090502113716343Not Available 1988. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
197111113Richmond California: Freedom News Inc 1971. First Edition. Tabloid newspaper. Very Good-. Folio. Pp. 28 32 40 40. Illustrated with b&w photo reproductions drawings and display advertising. Tabloid newsprint. Variable age toning and light stains edges rubbed. Vol. IV No. 8 rubber stamped cover and part of the back cover torn away Vol. V both issues with mimeographed mailing address to covers. Four issues of the Richmond - Bay Area alternative underground community paper.<p>Preserved in a clear archival pouch with acid free backing. Freedom News, Inc unknown