Sentence examples for whose newsroom from inspiring English sources

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Woe to the editor whose newsroom becomes the news.

Internally, Ms. Antunes and Mr. Chandler have made a series of changes reassigning executives whose newsroom profiles were once higher than hers.

The Los Angeles Times, whose newsroom staged a revolution last year against the newspaper's leadership, will be turned over to new leadership soon after the merger of its parent company, Times Mirror, with the Tribune Company.

Correction: June 19 , 2002 Wednesday Because of an editing error, an article in Business Day yesterday about a segment of the Wall Street Journal staff that opposes a return to the paper's office near ground zero omitted the name of the union whose newsroom director commented on the findings of a survey.

Full disclosure: "Times 365:24:7" drew from interviews company members had with journalists, including David Giambusso, a staff reporter for The Star-Ledger in New Jersey and a freelancer for The New York Times, whose newsroom is one of the settings.

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Anchoring one of the tables was Jeff Daniels, the star of HBO's "The Newsroom," whose Emmy for best actor in a drama was one of the night's biggest surprises.

Engaging with readers is now a mantra at the F.T. Earlier this year, the paper even created an audience-engagement team in its newsroom, whose members spend a lot of time creating and distributing content on social media.

Kaiser Health News, a nonprofit health newsroom whose stories appear in news outlets nationwide, is an editorially independent part of the Kaiser Family Foundation.

But Blair, who also wrote a book about it (the ridiculously titled "Burning Down My Master's House"), can only be regarded as permanently untrustworthy, even in his claims to want to better understand himself, and even Raines, a new broom in the newsroom whose demands for More, Faster some blamed for the conditions that made Blair possible, has come to defend himself.

Showcasing a strapping, mustachioed John Viscardi, the show, whose title is the newsroom term for a front-page tabloid headline, has the spirit of a certain kind of column: sentimental, agenda driven, leading with the heart.

The August article presented a summary paragraph — the "nut graf," in newsroom parlance — whose final sentence amounted to The Times's certifying the district attorney's case as worthy of a trial.

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