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m Discard the old gossip from 2004 and place a news item about Daad Mohammed Murad Abdul Rahman from 2007 in the article
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==Other reporting==
==Other reporting==


On August 21, 2007, in its Datelines feature, the Tribune-Review printed the news story of Daad Mohammed Murad Abdul Rahman, a sixty-years old one-legged man who is the father of 78 in the [[United Arab Emirates]], who hopes to father his 100th child by [[2015]]. He has had 15 brides.
One ''Tribune-Review'' flap went national when [[Colin McNickle]], editor of the newspaper's editorial page, attended a [[July 26]], [[2004]] speech at the [[Massachusetts|Massachusetts State House]] given by [[Teresa Heinz Kerry]], who had been the subject of two negative articles in the ''Tribune-Reviews's'' opinion pages. After the speech, there was a dispute between McNickle and Heinz Kerry over her use of the term "un-American activity."


==Competition==
==Competition==

Revision as of 16:20, 10 October 2007

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
File:Pittsburgh Tribune-Review front page.jpg
The July 27, 2005 front page of the
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)Tribune-Review Publishing Company
PublisherRichard Mellon Scaife
Founded1992
Headquarters503 Martindale St.
3rd Floor
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15212 United States
Circulation150,253 Daily
185,331 Sunday[1]
Website[1]

The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review is a newspaper in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. It was founded in 1992 as an offshoot of the Greensburg Tribune-Review after a press strike at the two previously dominant Pittsburgh dailies.

The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Greensburg Tribune-Review and affiliated dailies are published by the Tribune Review Publishing Company, which was purchased by Richard Mellon Scaife in 1970. The newspaper is generally considered to have a conservative and libertarian opinion page.[citation needed]

Investigative reporting

The newspaper is known for its lengthy investigations [2] into allegations of corruption, [3] [4] allegations of government malfeasance, [5] social injustice, [6] [7] and complex sports issues. [8] [9]

Carl Prine, an investigative reporter for the newspaper, conducted a probe with the CBS news magazine 60 Minutes that highlighted the lack of security at the nation's most dangerous chemical plants following the September 11, 2001 attacks. [10] The reporters were charged with trespassing at one plant during their investigation, [11] but were acquitted when the judge accepted that the story had been in the public interest. [12]

Other reporting

On August 21, 2007, in its Datelines feature, the Tribune-Review printed the news story of Daad Mohammed Murad Abdul Rahman, a sixty-years old one-legged man who is the father of 78 in the United Arab Emirates, who hopes to father his 100th child by 2015. He has had 15 brides.

Competition

The chain of Scaife newspapers competes against the larger Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. In 2005, a report by the Audit Bureau of Circulations determined that the Post-Gazette had lost 5,000 subscribers on its Monday-to-Friday deliveries, [13] while the Greensburg Tribune-Review and Pittsburgh Tribune-Review lost 8,000 subscribers Monday to Friday, with deeper losses on Sundays. [14]

Although the circulation slumps are part of a nationwide trend in the U.S., both the Tribune-Review and Post-Gazette lost readers at a greater rate than the national average of 1.6 percent for dailies with more than 100,000 subscribers. [15]

In 2003, the Tribune-Review launched an afternoon tabloid, Trib PM. [16].

Merger

Edward H. Harrell, the president of the Tribune Review Publishing Company, announced in January 2005 that most of the regional editions of the paper would have their newsroom, management and circulation departments merged and staff reductions would follow. The merged papers include the Tribune-Review of Greensburg, the Valley News Dispatch of Tarentum, The Leader-Times of Kittanning, The Daily Courier of Connellsville and the Blairsville Dispatch. The Valley Independent, the only paper with a unionized newsroom and contract, will not be affected. [17] The company incorporated as Trib Total Media in the summer of 2005, and purchased Gateway Newspapers, a community publication group servicing approximately 22 communities in and around Pittsburgh's Allegheny County.

Two managers were immediately laid off; the exact number of proposed redundancies was not announced. [18] In September 2005 Harrell announced his retirement as president of Tribune-Review Publishing Company, effective December 31, 2005. He had served as president since 1989.[19] Several staff writers were laid off in December, 2005, as two of Gateway's newspapers were discontinued.

See also

Arkansas Project

References

  1. ^ "2007 Top 100 Daily Newspapers in the U.S. by Circulation" (PDF). BurrellesLuce. 2007-03-31. Retrieved 2007-05-31. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)