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When the Dallas Morning News teamed up with Freedom Forum consultants to plan a new religion section, the process involved leaders of all faith groups in the city. The six-page section debuted in December 1994 and was an immediate success, winning numerous awards and drawing accolades from journalism organizations because it was a commitment by a major news organization to produce good religion coverage and help legitimize religion as an important news beat. The section encouraged other newspapers to either begin or to expand their religion sections. But in January 2007, the section was cut and allocated to several pages in the metro section, a victim of financial pressures affecting newspapers. This article tracks the planning and development of the section and how it fit the culture o...
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Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas
Before REYNALDO G. GARZA, HIGGINBOTHAM, and BENAVIDES, Circuit Judges...
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SECRETARY RICE IS INTERVIEWED BY THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS EDITORIAL BOARD, AS RELEASED BY THE STATE DEPARTMENT
NOVEMBER 9, 2007
SPEAKER: S...
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McAfee's Own Employees Vote Their Office to be Recognized as One of the Best Work Environments in the City
DALLAS -- The Dallas Morning News has nam...
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The Dallas Morning News
DALLAS - Blockbuster and Netflix Inc.
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Donald A. Robinson, Steven L. Lapidus (argued), Keith J. Miller, Robinson, Lapidus & Livelli, Newark, NJ, for Appellants Newark Morning Ledger Co., Pu...
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To: LEGAL AFFAIRS EDITORS
Contact: Jasmine Bouyer, +1-214-891-5817, or jasmine_bouyer@richards.com, for The Dallas Morning News
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UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 00-10117 Summary Calendar HATTIE WAYNE, Plaintiff-Appellant, vs. DALLAS MORNING NEWS; AH BE...
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Associated Press
DALLAS - Media owner Belo Corp. said Wednesday that it would cut 250 jobs, more than half of them at its flagship newspaper, The Dallas Morning News, and that an internal investigation into circulation overstatements showed the projected circulation decline at the newspaper would be slightly steeper than forecast last month.
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NEW YORK - The Los Angeles Times captured five Pulitzer Prizes on Monday for coverage ranging from devastating wildfires in its backyard to a civil war on the other side of the globe - the second- most awards ever won by a newspaper.
Coverage of the war in Iraq led to two prizes: Anthony Shadid of The Washington Post for international reporting, and David Leeson and Cheryl Diaz Meyer of The Dallas Morning News for breaking news photography.