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Page "Cotton Mather" ¶ 26
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editorial and stance
" It takes an editorial stance which is supportive of free trade, globalisation, free immigration and some socially liberal causes.
Articles often take a definite editorial stance and almost never carry a byline.
From then on, Pravda essentially followed Lenin's editorial stance.
The paper took an editorial stance against political parties like the National Front.
" Yet the paper began to demonstrate a more independent editorial stance, criticising the authorities ' handling of the events surrounding the Peterloo Massacre and defying an 1820 court order against publishing details of the trial of the Cato Street Conspirators, who were alleged to have plotted to murder members of the Cabinet.
The paper maintains a left of center editorial stance.
The merger of the Liberal Globe and the Tory Mail and Empire prefigured the paper's characteristically Red Tory editorial stance, as its support alternated between the two established national parties.
When the Post launched, its editorial stance was conservative.
Its front pages tended more to the sensational, apart from concluding the newspaper's editorial shift to a pro-Republican tendency, which started with the Sun-Times endorsement of Richard Nixon in the 1968 elections, meanwhile the Trib since the mid-1970's geared towards a moderate stance swinging between liberalism and its more classic conservatism, ending the city's clear division between the two newspapers ' politics.
Britain's Road to Socialism, the programme of the Communist Party of Britain ( which split from the CPGB in 1988 ), underlies the paper's editorial stance.
He always insisted on total editorial independence, regardless of whether or not his cartoons agreed with the Post's stance on political issues.
When the Hartford Times ceased publication in 1976, The Courant's editorial page took an independent stance.
The Gazette took a strong editorial stance against Governor Orval Faubus when he tried to prevent the Little Rock Nine from integrating Little Rock Central High School in 1957.
Its editorial stance is currently of centre left.
" In the early 1980s it began to take advertisements and allowed external bodies to have a stake in its financing, which it had completely refused before, but continued to maintain a left-of-centre editorial stance.
While the United Daily News is regarded as taking an editorial line that supports unification, the Liberty Times is thought to take a Pan Green pro-independence political stance.
Life had taken an editorial stance against the Labour government.
The editorial board of The New York Times said Giuliani's stance " promises to begin a new Ice Age in New York's cultural affairs.
It is known for its daily Sunshine Girl feature and for what it sees as a populist conservative editorial stance.
The DTI report said: " We do not expect the transfer adversely to affect the current editorial freedom, the current editorial stance, content or quality of the SMG titles, accurate presentation of news or freedom of expression.
A watershed came in 1968, when The Tablet took an editorial stance at odds with Pope Paul VI's encyclical Humanae Vitae, which restated the traditional teaching against artificial contraception.
Harding later switched support ( and his newspaper's editorial stance ) to the anti-Jackson faction within the Democratic-Republican Party and in 1836 supported the Whig candidate William Henry Harrison for president.
The magazine takes a " liberal " editorial stance.

editorial and was
The double editorial on Two Aspects Of `` The U.S. Spirit '' was subtly calculated to suggest a moral sanction for gambles great as well as small, reflecting popular approval of this questionable attitude toward the highest office in the land.
While I was sitting at one of the rewrite telephones with my derby and my great beard, Arthur Brisbane whizzed in with some editorial copy in his hand.
Although because of the important achievements of nineteenth century scholars in the field of textual criticism the advance is not so striking as it was in the case of archaeology and place-names, the editorial principles laid down by Stevenson in his great edition of Asser and in his Crawford Charters were a distinct improvement upon those of his predecessors and remain unimproved upon today.
Yet during the years when I was on the staff of The Nation, I tried to the limit the patience of the editors on almost every occasion when I was permitted to write an editorial having a bearing on a political or social question.
A recent editorial discussing a labor-management agreement reached between the Southern Pacific Co. and the Order of Railroad Telegraphers has been criticized on the grounds that it was not based on complete information.
The editorial was based on a news association dispatch which said that the telegraphers had secured an agreement whereby they were guaranteed 40 hours' pay per week whether they worked or not and that a reduction in their number was limited to 2 per cent per year.
The editorial `` Confrontation '' was certainly direct in its appeal to those of us living here in America.
This illusion was described in a far-sighted editorial in The New York Herald Tribune, on March 5, 1947, in connection with the submission of the satellite peace treaties to the Senate.
Failing to heed the lesson so clearly contained in the satellite treaties, President Truman re-declared the Cold War on March 12, 1947, in the Truman Doctrine, exactly one week after the Herald Tribune editorial was written, and a year after the Cold War had been announced by Churchill at Fulton, Missouri, in Truman's presence.
Mary J. Packard, states a Messenger editorial, was `` efficient, pains-taking, self-effacing, loving, radiating the spirit of her Master.
The wave of arson in the South Bronx in the 1960s and 1970s inspired the observation that " The Bronx is burning ": in 1974 it was the title of both a New York Times editorial and a BBC documentary film.
In a July 2, 2011 editorial the New York Times opined, " The Defense of Marriage Act was enacted in 1996 as an election-year wedge issue, signed by President Bill Clinton in one of his worst policy moments.
It was also reprinted by Marvel UK, which created new editorial material.
It has been awarded eight Pulitzer Prizes in its history, including four for editorial writing and three for photography before it was converted to tabloid format in 1981.
Kamenev, Trotsky's brother-in-law, was added to the editorial board from the Bolsheviks, but the unification attempts failed in August 1910 when Kamenev resigned from the board amid mutual recriminations.
The 1549 book was soon succeeded by a more reformed revision in 1552 under the same editorial hand, that of Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury.
Alongside his industry in collecting and collating manuscripts, Tischendorf pursued a constant course of editorial labours, mainly on the New Testament, until he was broken down by overwork in 1873.
Canadian newspapers also received much of their international content from American press agencies, therefore it was much easier for editorial staff to leave the spellings from the wire services as provided.
Moreover, during the mid-1970s the magazine was run by a Maoist editorial collective.
" In true editorial fashion, he was honest about the quality of his own writing ," says his daughter Betsy.
The initial 15th edition ( 1974 – 1985 ) was faulted for having reduced or eliminated coverage of children's literature, military decorations, and the French poet Joachim du Bellay ; editorial mistakes were also alleged, such as inconsistent sorting of Japanese biographies.

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