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- <text id=91TT0289>
- <title>
- Feb. 11, 1991: How Dailies Cover A TV War
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 11, 1991 Saddam's Weird War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 78
- How Dailies Cover a TV War
- </hdr><body>
- <p>After a slow start, newspapers play catch-up with fresh angles,
- skeptical analysis and a blizzard of lively graphics
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--Reported by William Dowell/Dhahran and
- Leslie Whitaker/New York, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Covering the gulf war is a tough assignment for any
- journalist, but consider the poor newspaper reporter. Hamstrung
- by pool restrictions in the field, overshadowed by glamorous
- TV correspondents, dependent for much of their information on
- CNN, daily scribes can be excused for feeling a bit
- underutilized. "A friend took a picture of me the other day
- taking notes in front of a television set," says Kim Murphy,
- who is reporting from Saudi Arabia for the Los Angeles Times.
- "That's what being a war correspondent has come to."
- </p>
- <p> Editors back home are grappling with the same kind of
- problem. In a story so thoroughly dominated by television, the
- daily press has been the forgotten news medium. Print
- journalists, of course, have long recognized that TV has
- changed the rules of their game. But the gulf war is raising
- anew tough questions about the newspaper's role in a world
- where television has become the instantaneous and nearly
- universal source of breaking news.
- </p>
- <p> Like the TV networks, newspapers jumped into the gulf story
- with all guns blazing: banner headlines, pages of coverage,
- reams of special features. And like the networks, they have
- attracted a bigger audience. The San Francisco Examiner, one
- of the nation's few remaining afternoon dailies, has seen its
- street sales increase 25% since the start of the war. Big-city
- dailies like the Washington Post (circ. 781,000) and the
- Philadelphia Inquirer (circ. 520,000) have sold 10,000 to
- 20,000 extra copies a day. "Obviously, our readers see things
- first and very dramatically on TV," says Post managing editor
- Leonard Downie. "But the information is fragmentary and
- sometimes contradictory. We think our readers have an appetite
- the next morning for having it sorted out."
- </p>
- <p> During the first few days of TV's saturation coverage,
- newspapers seemed to provide little more than a reiteration of
- stale news. But the print press has since been playing
- aggressive catch-up. Last week's most eye-catching scoop came
- from Bob Woodward, of Watergate fame, who reported in the
- Washington Post that despite the allied air successes,
- confidential Pentagon assessments revealed that "important
- parts of Saddam Hussein's war machine have not yet been
- significantly hurt."
- </p>
- <p> Newspapers with strong international coverage, like the New
- York Times and the Christian Science Monitor, have weighed in
- with stories from around the globe that TV has missed, like a
- report in the Monitor last week asserting that China had tried
- to circumvent the embargo against arms shipments to Iraq. Even
- papers that usually pay little attention to foreign coverage
- have sent reporters to the gulf region, and several have
- uncovered fresh news. The San Francisco Chronicle's Carl Nolte,
- for example, reported last week that some troops at the front
- are short of key pieces of equipment and basic items like soap.
- The Los Angeles Times, which has been offering the most
- extensive and informative daily coverage of the war, has
- published a steady stream of enterprising features on such
- topics as the history of Dhahran and the effort by military
- lawyers to make sure allied troops obey the rules of war.
- </p>
- <p> To attract an audience conditioned by TV, moreover,
- newspapers are spicing up their coverage with additional
- charts, maps, boxes and other visual devices. "This is an
- editor's story so far," says George Harmon, associate professor
- of journalism at Northwestern University. "Newspapers have to
- make sense out of a mountain of information. Packaging is
- important." The Los Angeles Times is running information boxes
- atop each page of its daily gulf coverage, containing everything
- from thumbnail sketches of U.S. battleships to marginalia like
- the origin of the term "mother of battles" (it comes from an
- Arabic phrase meaning ultimate battle). The Chicago Tribune ran
- a full-page, full-color "Young Reader's Guide to the Gulf War."
- Statistical roundups, "War at a Glance" boxes and Middle
- Eastern weather maps abound.
- </p>
- <p> The stress on visual packaging and short bursts of
- information marks another step along the TV-influenced trail
- blazed by USA Today. But newspapers have also offered
- thoughtful analysis of the war, often more skeptical than TV's.
- The New York Times put a notably downbeat spin on General
- Norman Schwarzkopf's upbeat briefing on the air campaign last
- Wednesday: "Although [Schwarzkopf] presented a picture of a
- devastatingly effective allied air war against Iraq," the
- front-page analysis began, "the kind of destruction he
- described is a slow process and the extent of its success in
- incapacitating Iraqi ground forces may not be known for weeks."
- The dailies have also paid more attention to the antiwar
- viewpoint than TV has, both in their news pages and in
- commentary by such dissenting columnists as Newsday's Jimmy
- Breslin.
- </p>
- <p> Media analysts doubt that the war-inspired boost in
- circulation will reverse the long-term slide in newspaper
- readership. But print journalists insist that the war is
- showing what dailies do best. Thomas Winship, former editor of
- the Boston Globe and now president of the Center for Foreign
- Journalists, contends, "The newspaper top-to-bottom wrap-up,
- which was the staple of World War II, has come back into its
- own. So much is incomplete on TV, newspapers are a godsend to
- the public." Whether the public fully agrees is far from
- certain, but despite TV's air superiority in the gulf,
- newspapers clearly are not ready to concede the field just yet.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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