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To make people think
To influence policy makers, to sway a pending decision by government agency.
To localize issues for readers, to bring it home for them and give it relevance.
Daily Routine of News Editor
His working day begins early. Once he gets to his office there is so much to be one that he has little time to examine thoroughly his own paper and those of rival managements.
Therefore, he must begin his reading with his early morning cup of tea and continue it on the way so that when he gets to his desk he has a fair idea of the contents of the morning papers. His assistant will have arrived earlier and will have prepared a list of his papers, exclusive news items and a more depressing list, that of the stories which the paper has missed.
He will probably regard the 'scoops' as in the natural order of things, but he will certainly want to hold an inquest on the news which has been missed, primarily to satisfy himself that there is not a fault in the paper's methods of news gathering which needs to be
eradicated.
Having dealt with the past he must immediately concern himself with the future and launch his plan of campaign for the next issue. Probably his first task will be to decide whether there is anything in any of the papers which needs to be followed up.
Next he must mark the diary and assign the reporters to attend meetings which ought to be specially covered and not left to the news agencies.
He must also allot men to the news stories which have cropped up and to enquiries which may not produce immediate results but which may be the preliminary step towards a first- class article a few days later. But he must watch his man-power closely. He must not fritter it away and he must not be left in the position that if later in the morning big news comes in, the reporters' room is empty.
It is certainly not false economy to have one or two reporters sitting idle; if they are wise they will spend their free time in reading newspapers, books, or periodicals which can always be borrowed from the office library.
It is the great thrill of the News Editor's life that he can never guess when the big news
will break. One News Editor certainly will never forget the moment when a pale-faced messenger tore an item off the tape machine and put on his desk the first news of the death of Lal Bahadur Shastri. Or another moment when, as he sat quietly in his armchair, the telephone rang in the late evening and he was informed that his paper's Patna correspondent had been kidnapped.