Михальцов - The Guardian.pptx
- Количество слайдов: 9
*The Guardian
* The Guardian, known until 1959 as The Manchester Guardian (founded 1821), is a British national daily newspaper. Currently edited by Alan Rusbridger, it has grown from a 19 th-century local paper to a national paper associated with a complex organisational structure and international multimedia and web presence. Its sister papers include The Observer (British Sunday paper) and The Guardian Weekly.
*The Guardian in paper form had a certified average daily circulation of 209, 354, behind The Daily Telegraph and The Times. The newspaper's online offering is the second most popular British newspaper website, behind the Daily Mail's Mail Online.
*The Guardian has changed format and design over the years, moving from broadsheet to Berliner. It has become an international media organisation with affiliations to other national papers with similar aims. The Guardian Weekly, which circulates worldwide, contains articles from The Guardian and its sister Sunday paper The Observer, as well as reports, features and book reviews from The Washington Post and articles translated from Le Monde. Other projects include Guardian. Film, the current editorial director of which is Maggie O'Kane.
*The Guardian Type-daily newspaper Format-berliner Vladelets Guardian Media Group Editor Alan Rasbridzher It is based-1821 year, The Observer - 1791 Political accessory - (left) liberal The price - £ 0. 80 (Monday — Friday) - £ 1. 50 (Saturday) - £ 1. 90 (Sunday, The Observer) Main office London Circulation-355. 750
*The Guardian: In Great Britain the largest strike of teachers today begins Teachers more than 8 thousand schools in Great Britain will participate today in a national strike, is directed on salary increase. As the The Guardian newspaper writes, directors of schools and probationers should take a place of striking teachers. As the newspaper managed to count, every sixth school in the country will be closed, a third of schools simply won't accept pupils. Besides, more than 100 thousand civil servants who are engaged in monitoring of schools will participate in a strike or about 30 thousand university lecturers are occupied in carrying out school examinations, and also.
* Seumus Milne's op-ed blames Israel and apologizes for Hamas. Honest. Reporting has previously debunked the misleading charge that Gaza is 'under siege'. Yet, The Guardian's Seumus Milne headlines his op-ed "The siege of Gaza is going to lead to a violent escalation". Milne does not take long to reveal where his sympathies lie, referring to "rockets fired by Palestinian resistance groups". Since when is the firing of Qassams from Gaza schoolyards (see video here) against civilian targets in Sderot and the surrounding region an act of resistance and not terrorism? The piece continues in the same vein, littered with bias. Here are some examples:
*The Guardian's Disappointing Response The Guardian digs itself a deeper hole over promoting a Hamas terror site. Honest. Reporting alerted you to the inclusion of the "Hamas military wing" on a list of "Useful links" at The Guardian's online "Israel and the Palestinians" section. We asked how could The Guardian justify linking to a proscribed terror group and many of you wrote to the readers' editor requesting the removal of the link.
The Guardian in pictures