Separation of press and paper taking place in downtown Salt Lake City

MediaOne's symbols of the 'old days' are going to scrap heap

Published: Saturday, Aug. 11, 2007 12:12 a.m. MDT
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Once upon a time — and not all that long ago — newspaper reporters could feel the ground beneath them shaking every day when the presses began printing the paper. Today, thanks to technology, the newsroom and the printing press might as well be worlds apart.

That functional separation is officially becoming physical this week, as crews on Thursday began pulling the old presses — all 1.3 million pounds of them — from the old Newspaper Agency Corp. (now MediaOne of Utah) building on Regent Street. They will be sold as scrap metal.

In many ways, the old-school newsrooms of movies — the foul-mouthed editors, hard-drinking reporters and shouts of "Stop the presses!" — disappeared long ago. In recent years, those abstract changes have been followed by more concrete ones as the physical places where news is put to paper have reflected the new technological realities.

NAC began printing the Deseret Morning News and Salt Lake Tribune miles away from the newsrooms in March 2006, when a new press facility opened in West Valley City. And the Tribune moved away from the presses before that, relocating to The Gateway in May 2005.

The three presses — two Goss Headliner Offsets that arrived at NAC in 1991 and a Goss Metro from 1979 — stand three stories tall and printed an average 200,000 papers daily over the past few decades, MediaOne daytime press foreman Dave Valdez, who has worked for the company for 26 years, estimated. Roughly figuring, since the Metro started operation, the three presses have likely printed more than 2.5 billion newspapers in total.

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Since the new press building opened, the old presses — where countless Salt Lake schoolchildren on field trips had their first look at how newspapers work, where thick ink coated the walls, smells of chemical solvent filled the air and a familiar rumbling let you know the newspaper was being printed — have sat unused as symbolic reminders of days when editors and pressmen worked closely together.

Once the presses are gone, those days will become an even more distant memory — and not an entirely pleasant memory.

"It was a scary place," Morning News features writer Carma Wadley said of the press room. "It was dark, and it was dirty, and there were big, scary men."

Wadley, who started work at the News in 1971, has seen a lot of changes in the way newspapers are put together over the decades. She remembers when news pages were typeset with letters made of hot lead, and editing the final product often meant reading upside down and backwards.

Morning News television editor Scott Pierce and visual arts editor Dave Gagon, both with the paper since 1986, and theater editor Ivan Lincoln, with the paper since 1968, also remember when the process of sending news stories from a writer's brain to the printed page was a much more tactile experience.

Recent comments

So did the reporter actually go to the pressroom, and saw the name...

Daryl Gibson | Aug. 13, 2007 at 12:26 p.m.

About time. Now they can tear it down and make it a parking lot.

Jim Schues | Aug. 11, 2007 at 8:52 p.m.

Travis Jones, top, and JJ Murphy, center, disassemble MediaOne presses in Salt Lake City in August. (Tom Smart, Deseret Morning News)
Tom Smart, Deseret Morning News
Travis Jones, top, and JJ Murphy, center, disassemble MediaOne presses in Salt Lake City in August.