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Front Page vs. Home Page
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Dear Katharine,
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I don't know anything about your reading habits, but these days a lot of my
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newspaper consumption is online. There are a number of reasons for this: a
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nomadic office life over the last year, which left me without a reliable
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physical address; contributing to "Media Grok," an e-mail newsletter that
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thrives on Web links; and the sheer amount of time I spend staring at my laptop
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screen. Although I find the convenience of online newspapers compelling, I'm
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also first to acknowledge that there are things you miss when not touching the
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actual pulp.
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Take today's New York Times . Like most political mammals, I am drawn
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to Adam Clymer's front-page story on the 25th anniversary of Nixon's
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resignation. The piece itself is tame and perfunctory, but when you open the
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paper to Page A12 where it continues, your eye travels immediately to the
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continuation of another front-page story headlined "G.O.P. Asking Top Donors To
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Contribute $1 Million." Forgive me, but if you've listened to those famous
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Watergate tapes, you can't help but hear Nixon's voice echoing on how to get a
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million dollars of hush money to the plumbers: "We could get that." I love that
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both stories end up, as it were, on the same page.
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One could slyly infer from the A12 juxtaposition that with the GOP seeking
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all top donors to give $1 million apiece, Watergate-style abuses will
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inevitably reoccur. A facile assumption of the left? Sure. But at least that
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would counter the right's facile assumption that Nixon's crimes were not
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substantially different from those of his predecessors, the tack taken by David
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Frum in a National Public Radio commentary this morning.
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My fascination here is not that one must take any particular meaning from
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the play of the two stories, but that, as with a work of art, one can. The
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"jump" of front-page news stories is a necessity borne of spatial limitation,
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which the Web theoretically does not have. But working around those
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limitations--and indeed manipulating them for narrative advantage--is one of
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the great moments of the newspaper craft. (Headline writing in a narrow space
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is another.)
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On the other hand, the Washington Post --which I'm reading today
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online--displays one of the Web's great counterstrengths. You can click on
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today's front page and get a reproduction of the Post's front-page
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coverage from August 9, 1974: the Web as microfiche. The Post spoils the
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effect somewhat: by calling its project immodestly "The Washington Post
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Century," and running only excerpts of the original front-page stories. Still,
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the historian in me applauds the widespread availability of primary documents,
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and the media critic in me notes that the New York Times has no interest
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in calling attention to the way that it covered (or rather didn't cover) the
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Watergate saga.
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Sorry for the East Coast obsessions,
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Jim
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