


So the Chicago Tribune’s Michael Tackett blogs today:
Just yesterday, according to the most reliable records on the subject, the death toll for U.S. forces in Iraq hit 4,000. The number was known quickly, the name of the fallen was not.In very few places was the number even front page news in a war now five years old.
Among those “very few places” with a mention of the Iraq death toll on the front page: USA Today, The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, New York Daily News, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Houston Chronicle, Dallas Morning News, Newsday, San Francisco Chronicle, Newark Star-Ledger, Minneapolis Star Tribune, Philadelphia Inquirer, Detroit Free Press, Cleveland Plain Dealer, The Oregonian, San Diego Union-Tribune, St. Petersburg Times, Miami Herald, Sacramento Bee, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Denver Post, Rocky Mountain News, Kansas City Star, Indianapolis Star, San Jose Mercury News, Baltimore Sun, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, Columbus Dispatch, South Florida Sun-Sentinel, San Antonio Express-News, Ft. Worth Star-Telegram, Charlotte Observer, Seattle Times, Tampa Tribune, Louisville Courier-Journal, New Orleans Times-Picayune, Cincinnati Enquirer and the Hartford Courant. As well as dozens of smaller papers.
Research! It’s what’s for dinner.
Michael Bazeley, who worked at the San Jose Mercury News for 11 years, writes (prematurely, it is hoped) the paper’s obituary.
Managers from parent company Media News will continue to downsize the editorial staff until it’s down to several dozen people. (It’s at about 200 FTEs now, and will be 170 after Friday. New publisher Mac Tully has told the staff that downsizing could continue for the next 18-24 months.) They’ll consolidate the copy and design desks with their other Bay Area papers. They’ll work aggressively to get rid of union representation so they can bring salaries and benefits down to the substandard wages they are paying at their non-union papers. That will drive away whatever senior reporters are left, except those who are close to retirement (most of them are gone already) or who cannot find work elsewhere. And it will turn the paper into a waystation for young reporters looking to hone their skills and pad their resumes until something better comes along (being a mid-tier paper, that was already the case to some degree). The quality of the product will suffer.
Also, Ryan Sholin's advice: "So change. Or die."
Incidentally, the Merc reported today that enough employees took buyouts to avert layoffs.
Update: As Ashley points out, that story, though posted on the Merc's site, was from the Contra Costa Times and actually referred to other Bay Area publications owned by Media News Group. The Merc today laid off 15 in the newsroom and 19 from other departments.
» RIP Mercury News [Media Grunt: Michael Bazeley]
If Saul Bass did the Star Wars titles:
(via Calacanis)
Wow. Matt Mansfield, deputy managing editor and business development director at the San Jose Mercury News, is leaving the paper.
It’s also one of the hardest decisions I have ever made. Without question, I love the Merc: the work, the people, the place.Leaving here will be a heartbreaking end to an amazing ride and, yet, the time feels right to exit. The buyout seemed an appropriate moment to hit the reset button.
I must admit to being more than a little sad right now, but I think that’s just because I’m nostalgic for a time that was, ultimately, unsustainable. That’s the difficult truth for many of us in newspapers right now.
What amazes me, looking back on it, is how much of myself has become tied up in my Merc personality. I’m humbled by the work we have been able to do here. And I’m genuinely indebted to my colleagues — present and past — who have worked tirelessly to make the Merc smart, successful and daring. They made me look good every day.
At our best, I hope we were able to set a pretty high benchmark.
He says he's not quite sure what's next yet, other than finishing up some redesign work for the Merc and doing some consulting and traveling.
Matt's been a good friend of this blog over the years. Good luck, Matt! Looking forward to seeing what you come up with!
» He’s leaving the Merc: Matt Mansfield to exit [SND Update]

Saturday was the Albuquerque Tribune’s last day. E.W. Scripps Co. determined the market could no longer support an afternoon paper and couldn’t find a buyer. The paper’s circulation in January had dwindled to 9,600 from 42,000 in the late ’80s.
The Trib long had a fine reputation as a visual paper. Here’s a slideshow with photos and words from Tribune photographers and editors. Go poke around the Trib’s site and read the remembrances, some of which I’ve linked below.
Incidentally, the guy at right in the 1994 page above is Tribune Managing Editor Neal Pattison, now executive editor at The Herald in Everett, Wash., and a former president of the Society for News Design. (And, full disclosure, the guy on the left is Tribune City Editor Michael Arrieta-Walden, who is now my boss.)
» Mike Davis: We set out to challenge readers and ourselves with the best pictures possible [Albuquerque Tribune]
» Mark Holm: Our photos hold up a mirror to the world and share the responsibility of reporting the news [Albuquerque Tribune]
» Eileen Welsome, Albuquerque Tribune made history with ‘The Plutonium Experiment’ [Albuquerque Tribune]
» Neal Pattison: Take a piece of my heart [Everett Herald]
The Society for News Design has announced the “World’s Best-Designed Newspapers.” They are:
More details, videos, etc., here.
Also, the full database of all SND winners is now online. Update: Well, I guess it's not anymore. Tomorrow, they say. Update2: It's up now!
I'm surfacing from my Benadryl fog long enough to note that the judging of SND's Best of Newspaper Design competition began today in Syracuse. There's a lot of blogging and Flickring and videomaking going on. And absolutely no drinking, I'm sure.

Here's a collection of Super Tuesday fronts. Lotsa big mugshots abound, as you might expect. The Times-Picayune, however, knows where its beads belong.
