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Fred Goss remembers Al Warren.


Al Warren spent 60 years in the newsletter business. After World War II, Al came to Washington looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 a newspaper job. Because he had enlisted early, he had enough "points" to be one of the first discharged. No one would hire him, however, because they were "keeping jobs open" for their own employees who soon would be returning.

One nice guy who turned him down at the Evening Star did tell Al that he knew a guy who was planning to launch a weekly newsletter aimed at the new television industry and might be hiring. Al got that job at Television Digest and the rest is history. In the early '60s he was able to buy the company. Two of his sons, Paul and Dan, now own and run Warren Communications News, 60 years old and publishing about a dozen newsletters for the communications industry communications industry, broadly defined, the business of conveying information. Although communication by means of symbols and gestures dates to the beginning of human history, the term generally refers to mass communications. . Until he was well into his '80s, Paul says his dad was in the office every day in his '80s, reading copy.

Al Warren was one of the founders of the Washington Independent Newsletter Association, in 1962. A predecessor of the newsletter association, the group sought to gain independent newsletter journalists press credentials CREDENTIALS, international law. The instruments which authorize and establish a public minister in his character with the state or prince to whom they are addressed. If the state or prince receive the minister, he can be received only in the quality attributed to him in his credentials.  on Capitol Hill (which were previously classified with corporate and association house organs house organ
n.
A periodical published by a business organization for its employees or clients.

Noun 1. house organ - a periodical published by a business firm for its employees and customers
).

In 1985, Al was the fourth person to be inducted into the newsletter association's Hall of Fame.

My favorite My Favorite is an independent synthpop band from Long Island, New York. They released two CDs: Love at Absolute Zero and Happiest Days of Our Lives. My Favorite broke up on September 14, 2005, when singer Andrea Vaughn left the band.  Al Warren story came when he told me of his career triumph. As editor of The Ohio State University Ohio State University, main campus at Columbus; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1870, opened 1873 as Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, renamed 1878. There are also campuses at Lima, Mansfield, Marion, and Newark.  student newspaper, he got an exclusive interview with its famous grad James Thurber--back in Columbus to receive an award.
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Publication:The Newsletter on Newsletters
Date:Nov 30, 2006
Words:269
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