Jenny's Journal

Thu
18
May
News Staff's picture

Jenny's Journal

A few weeks ago, I left on a scheduled two week vacation to Europe, leaving the Tribune in the trusted hands of my co-workers. This is nothing new – we have a small staff, and so everyone is cross-trained to do various jobs, covering for those who take time off.What wasn’t expected, though,was what happened shortly after my departure. The facility where we print the Tribune suffered a fire in the press room, damaging the presses and rendering them unusable. We needed to find a new printer, who can handle newspapers, in a matter of literally one day – we received the news about the fire on Monday, and we print on Wednesday morning, in order to get the papers in the mail to subscribers on Thursday.The Tribune staff did an absolutely amazing job of figuring out how to get the paper printed. Advertising representative Garry DeYoung has 40 years of experience in the newspaper industry, and many, many contacts. He reached out to a half dozen print facilities, and was able to secure us a press run time with the Star-Ledger, a huge relief to me as I was freaking out, more than 4,000 miles away.We haven’t missed publishing even one issue of the Tribune in 94 years, and, as editor Michael Izzo stated, “We weren’t going to miss one on my watch!”By the time I returned to the office on May 8, the first two issues at the new facility had been published. This part of the story may be a bit confusing, as it deals with the nuts and bolts of newspaper layout, but bear with me...The April 27 issue, the first printed at the Star-Ledger’s facility, was created with our normal six-column (13” wide) layout, the way we always put the paper together. However, unbeknownst to us until we saw the printed product on Thursday morning, it was drastically reduced to fit on the much narrower web width that the Star-Ledger uses. We were quite disappointed with the tiny print and squashed look of the paper, and it led to a scramble to completely change our layout for the following week.The printed area of the Tribune is usually about 13” wide, however, we needed to get the width down to 10.75” to fit on the Star-Ledger’s narrower newsprint and avoid the drastic shrinking of the page that occurred on April 27. So, our production department created ...

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