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Amoret Man Dies in Bates County Crash

Amoret Man Dies in Bates County Crash An Amoret man was killed in a single-vehicle crash that occurred Sunday morning in Bates County. The Missouri State Highway Patrol reports that an eastbound Ford Explorer, driven by 63-year-old David W. Dunlap of Amoret, Mo., was on Missouri 52, west of Route J (just east of 1101 Road) at 7:10 a.m., when the vehicle traveled off the roadway & returned, and the driver overcorrected. The vehicle then overturned, struck an embankment and the driver was ejected. Dunlap was not wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash, according to the report. Dunlap was pronounced dead at 8:34 a.m. by Dr. Anthony Decker at Bates County Memorial Hospital.

For Times Journalists, the Page One Press Plate Is Precious Metal

Precious Metal for Times Journalists: The Page One Plate Carrying out this four-decade tradition at The Times has become more complicated because of the coronavirus pandemic. But it’s no less special. Getting a commemorative Page One press plate is hard work. So is delivering it.Credit.Flora Lee Peir/The New York Times By Flora Lee Peir Jan. 17, 2021 The requests trickle in every two or three weeks: A reporter or photographer has made the front page of The New York Times for the first time. Could we honor them with a press plate of that day’s Page One?

I figured I d give it a year : Arthur Sulzberger Jr on how the New York Times turned around

For a hundred years, for better or worse, no institution has played a larger role in American culture and politics. And no corporation with comparable clout has been continuously controlled by a single family since 1896. This month, at 69, Arthur Sulzberger Jr will retire as company chairman, after decades of speculation that he would be the last Sulzberger to run the business. In 2005, a vicious profile in the New Yorker asked: “Can Arthur Sulzberger Jr save the Times – and himself?” A couple of years later, Vanity Fair declared that he had “steered his inheritance into a ditch”. As the New Yorker editor, David Remnick, put it to the Guardian this week: “As recently as five years ago, the biggest question was: “Is [Mike] Bloomberg going to own the Times or [Mexican billionaire] Carlos Slim?”

Betsy Wade changed journalism for women, at the Times and beyond

Betsy Wade changed my life. If you’re a woman or a journalist or both, she changed yours, too.  Because of Betsy, who died earlier this month at ninety-one, women, including me, were hired, and advanced, at the New York Times, at wages equivalent to those paid to our male colleagues. Other newspapers around the country did likewise. Because of Betsy, the Times acknowledged “Ms.” as an honorific, or “courtesy title,” as the stylebook refers to the letters preceding a last name on second and subsequent references. It took until 1986, but finally the keepers of Times style deemed that marital status indicated by “Miss” or “Mrs.” no longer need be telegraphed in reference to a woman. 

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