Archive for April 6th, 2008

Twisters: V’Burg misses Saturday

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Friday’s twisters wreaked havoc with the traditional print cycle at the Vicksburg Post, which missed publication for Saturday. PDFs of the Saturday pages were made available online and the actual printed copies surfaced the next day, stuffed inside the Sunday edition.

The Clarion-Ledger got quotes from the requisite rubberneckers and eyewitnesses, but this time committed their observations to video, not just print.

Surprise: Mississippi ranks last

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

In what hardly could be considered newsworthy, Congressional Quarterly has declared Mississippi least livable among states — again. And somehow life goes on.

Rounding out the bottom of the barrel are the usual suspects: Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas and South Carolina. Georgia, Alabama and Louisiana are not asking for a recount.

Racks disappearing in Meridian

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Single-copy sales of The Meridian Star have been unusually profitable recently — profitable, that is, for the thieves who are stealing the 15,000-circulation daily’s newsracks.

In the past three weeks, someone or some gang has stolen 11 Meridian Star racks, as well as a number of USA Today honor boxes. Most of the newsracks have been recovered, with their change boxes missing, the Star reported Friday in an article by staff writer Brian Livingston.

Passages

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Charles G. Smith, who may have been best known for his stints as an editor at The Clarion-Ledger and The Clinton News, died Wednesday at the G.V. “Sonny” Montgomery Veterans Affairs Medical Center from complications associated with Alzheimer’s disease. He was 83.

From the Quill

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Lloyd Gray, editor of the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal in Tupelo puts Greg Davis’ win over Glenn McCullough in the Republican run-off for the First Congressional District into perspective: “If the district had been 22 counties instead of 23, McCullough would have won in a blowout. He got 62.7 percent of the vote outside of DeSoto County. Problem was, the DeSoto vote was almost one-third of the total districtwide, and Davis held a 6,334-vote margin in his home county.”

More on Monroe County merger

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

From Editor and Publisher: The first issue of the new Monroe County Journal will hit newsstands April 9, according to officials with Journal Publishing Company.

During the past month, interim general manager Charlie Langford and the staff in the Amory and Aberdeen offices have been working to bring together the merged product, Tupelo-based Journal Publishing CEO Billy Crews said.