CESURALAB

SUMMER 2010
SPRING 2010
WINTER 2009
AUTUMN 2009
SUMMER 2009
SPRING 2009
WINTER 2008
AUTUMN 2008
SUMMER 2008
SPRING 2008
Fanzine #2
LUZPHOTO
PORTFOLIO'S SUBMISSIONS
WORKSHOP POSTPONED
ATRI FESTIVAL
MASTERCLASS WITH ALEX MAJOLI
GOMORRAH GIRLS EXHIBITION
PHOTOLUCIDA
PHOTOGRAPHERS' ROOM
PROJECTION
CESURALAB EXHIBITION
DIMENSIONE MASSIMA 10X12 CM
THE FAMILIES ALBUM EXHIBITION
WINE PHOTO AWARD
WORLD PRESS PHOTO AWARD
CESURALAB & YOOX
ANDY ON 7.7 MAGAZINE
NEW MEMBER
Canon award 2009
Riccardo Pezza Award
PDN'S 30 2010
OLAF / RECENT WORKS
WAR IS OVER!
ASSIGNMENT ESPRESSO
GOOSSENS
CESURALAB IN ARLES
END OF PAPER?
OPENING IN MILAN
ALEC SOTH
LABELS
ACCESS TO LIFE
PIXEL LIKE CUPCAKES
MOCA, LOS ANGELES
THAI PROTESTERS
HERESIES
MASTERCLASS
SCHMUTZER 1894/1928
THE PARK
LOAN NGUYEN

END OF PAPER?


END OF PAPER? Christian Science Paper to End Daily Print Edition

by STEPHANIE CLIFFORD

After a century of continuous publication, The Christian Science Monitor will abandon its weekday print edition and appear online only, its publisher announced Tuesday. The cost-cutting measure makes The Monitor the first national newspaper to largely give up on print.The paper is currently published Monday through Friday, and will move to online only in April, although it will also introduce a weekend magazine. John Yemma, The Monitor’s editor, said that moving to

a Web focus will mean it can keep its eight foreign bureaus open.

“We have the luxury — the opportunity — of making a leap that most newspapers will have to make in the next five years,” Mr. Yemma said.

The Monitor is an anomaly in journalism, a nonprofit financed by a church and delivered through the mail. But with seven Pulitzer Prizes and a reputation for thoughtful writing and strong international coverage, it long maintained an outsize influence in the publishing world, which declined as its circulation has slipped to 52,000, from a high of more than 220,000 in 1970.

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