The world's journalism . =S?i=S£^S=SS DRESDNER ANZEIGEE—TYPICAi GERMAN MAKE-UP the Hannoverscher Courier, strong representative of the Liberalparty; in Dresden, the Dresdner Zeitung, a fine example of theexcellent possibilities of a municipally owned but not municipallydirected newspaper. These and other newspapers outside Berlinhave more influence and higher rank than the newspapers of thecapital city. The newspapers of other European countries are modeledto a considerable degree upon the French or German type orcombinations of these types. In Italy, Belgium,Spain and Portugal, the French typ


The world's journalism . =S?i=S£^S=SS DRESDNER ANZEIGEE—TYPICAi GERMAN MAKE-UP the Hannoverscher Courier, strong representative of the Liberalparty; in Dresden, the Dresdner Zeitung, a fine example of theexcellent possibilities of a municipally owned but not municipallydirected newspaper. These and other newspapers outside Berlinhave more influence and higher rank than the newspapers of thecapital city. The newspapers of other European countries are modeledto a considerable degree upon the French or German type orcombinations of these types. In Italy, Belgium,Spain and Portugal, the French type predominates;in Holland, Switzerland and Austria-Hungary, theGerman. The Russian newspapers resemble theFrench in many ways, but in this great empire the vast andsparsely settled territories to be covered and the close govern-mental supervision have caused considerable departure from the EussianJournalism T>HE WORLD^S JOURNALISM 1^ (Sl&t japjlffi ^%mmtU. THE DAILY CHBONICLE, LONDON FIBST AND EDITORIAL PAGES 16 UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI BULLETIN freedom of discussion and the comprehensiveness of news servicecharacteristic of the journals of Paris. In most of these countries the governments, through legisla-tion, official editors or the actions of agents, so largely restrictor limit the expression of opinion and the publication of newsthat a genuinely free press is well-nigh impossible. A few of theliberal newspapers, such as the Russiche Slovsky at Moscow, theCorriere della Sera at Milan, the Neue Freie Presse, Tageblatt andArbeiter Zeitung at Vienna; the Pester Lloyd, Pesti Hirlap andthe Est at Budapest, have grown strong enough to make govern-ment interference practically impossible. Even these newspapers,however, must be careful and restrained in political comment andnews-statement or run the risk of the imprisonment of theresponsible editor, suppression of the journal and confiscation ofthe property. The secret or revolutionary press


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectjournal, bookyear1915