The Aug. 1, 1979, story announcing the printing press for the Lewiston Daily Sun. Sun Journal file photo

It was the summer of 1979 and there was lots to be discussed. 

In politics, Sen. Ted Kennedy had announced that he would challenge President Jimmy Carter for the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination. 

Michael Jackson had just released a new album called “Off the Wall,” while a jaunty pop song called “My Sharona” was tearing up the charts. 

CBS had just debuted a sitcom called “The Dukes of Hazzard” while in theaters, the war film “Apocalypse Now” was raking it in at the box office. 

Locally, residents of the Lewiston-Auburn area were starting to get excited about the new shopping mall being built in Auburn. 

Among the advertisements running in the Lewiston Daily Sun, which cost 15 cents, was an ad for Marco’s Restaurant, where two stuffed or boiled lobsters could be had for $7.95. 

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The Barefoot Trader on Lisbon Street was advertising Wrangler Jeans for $7.99 while at Food Town, a pound of beef would set you back $1.58. 

On the first of August that year, tucked in around stories of local car wrecks and national gas rationing, the Daily Sun  also ran a story announcing big changes at the newspaper. 

“Starting today,” began the front page story, “the look of the Lewiston Sun will be different, clearer, brighter and easier to read. 

“With today’s editions,” the news story continued, “the Central Maine and northern New Hampshire newspaper will be printed on a brand now $1 million Goss Urbanite offset press — a gleaming, 70-foot long machine that employs the latest technology to print a crisper, dramatically cleaner newspaper.” 

If reporter Steve MacIntyre seemed to be gushing about the new press, you could hardly blame him. For a newspaper man, the Goss was hot stuff. The Sun Journal had been printing papers in Lewiston since the late 1800s, but the Goss was something new: a marvel of technology. 

The introduction of the machine was considered a giant leap forward; one that would not only enhance the look of the paper, but which would increase the speed at which it could be printed. 

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James R. Costello, vice president and general manager of the paper at the time, likewise raved about the capabilities of the Goss, which would enable editors and ad creators to bulk up the size of each edition. 

“It will provide an additional 16-page print out,” Costello told one of his reporters, “from 48 to 64 pages.” 

At full tilt, the new Goss could crank out 52,000 copies of The Sun per hour where the previous press could only manage 40,000 in that span. 

It got better — the Goss would make it much easier for printers to add color to the pages and it would capture much greater detail in photographs — super sharp, color photographs on the pages of a newspaper that had been universally black and white for decades.

The improvement, Costello explained, was made possible by the technology of offset printing, in which print is applied to a “blanket,” a rolling rubber drum, which in turn would transfer images onto the pages. 

By October 1983, The Lewiston Daily Sun, Inc,. produced its first edition of Sunday, the first paper in the state to break the mold of the traditional black-and-white news pages with its extensive use of full color photography. The daily papers would follow. 

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The change was good for the press crew, as well. The new machine, described as “a silent giant,” was said to be virtually vibration free. 

“Some old hands may miss the thunder and clatter of the old behemoth,” MacIntyre wrote. “But a lot more will appreciate the quiet of the new.” 

As changes went, this was a big one.

More of the Lewiston Daily Sun story about the Goss Urbanite offset press and its predecessors.

The new Goss had predecessors from 1898 to 1904, from 1904 to 1918, from 1918 to 1926 and from 1926 to 1962. As excited as they were about their new machine, nobody at The Daily Sun could say for sure how long the Goss would serve the needs of the paper. It was an era known as the electric age in newspaper printing, after all, and new technologies were coming along fast. 

The publishers took a chance that the Goss, 13-feet high and consisting of eight units, would carry them into the future. 

The very installation of the new press, during which the concrete floor had to be dug up and reinforced, proved weirdly auspicious. 

“I remember that we struck oil when they dug to reinforce the floor,” recalls Bill McCarthy, who was with the paper more than 50 years. “We found that the service station behind the DeWitt Hotel buried the waste oil tank instead of removing it.” 

The Goss would serve the newspaper and the people who read it for a long time — longer, in fact, than most had predicted. It first first began chugging out local news in the summer of 1979 and didn’t stop until May of this year. And it was a business decision, not any mechanical failure, that retired the Goss on Park Street in Lewiston. 

The Goss Urbanite printed its last pages in the early morning of June 1 after the Sun Media Group, which now operates the Sun Journal, decided to consolidated its print and distribution work to a facility in South Portland. 

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