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The Columbia Record : ウィキペディア英語版
Columbia Record

The ''Columbia Record'' was an afternoon daily newspaper published in Columbia, South Carolina. It was established in 1897. International Paper & Power Co. purchased ''The Record'' in 1929 form R. Charlton Wright, who had been principal owner since 1918. The State had declined a chance to buy the paper in 1928 and subsequently faced stiff competition from its local rival. In 1945 ''The State'' finally purchased ''The Record'' from International Paper Co. ''The State'' for $550,000, to form the State-Record Company. The company was purchased by Knight-Ridder in 1986 and publication of the ''Columbia Record'' ceased on April 1, 1988. One of the quirks of the paper was that it printed the weekly entertainment section on green newsprint.
The decision to close ''The Record'' was the natural outgrowth of the decline of afternoon papers nationally. By 1987, the paper's circulation was only 27,000 of which only 15,000 were exclusive ''Record'' subscribers. The rest also subscribed to ''The State''. The decision to close the paper was announced by publisher Ben Morris on Jan. 20, 1988. All 50 ''Record'' employees were transferred to ''The State''.〔Palmettos and Oaks, A Centennial History of The State by Robert A. Pierce〕
Among the reporters to work at ''The Record'' was Marilyn Walser Thompson, who was on staff from 1974 to 1982. She gained national recognition for reporting on South Carolina’s nuclear industry. She later worked for ''The Washington Post'', the ''Los Angeles Times'', ''The New York Times'' and Reuters, as Washington bureau chief. At ''The Post'', she helped manage investigative teams that won Pulitzer Prizes in 1999 and 2000. She also broke the story of Strom Thurmond’s biracial child.〔The State, July 31, 2013.〕
Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/2013/07/31/2892987/4-journalists-to-be-inducted-intothe.html#storylink=cpy
==References==

''Palmettos and Oaks: A Centennial History of The State, Robert A. Pierce, 2011, The State-Record Co., Columbia, S.C. ''
The State, July 31, 2013


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