Pieter12
Member
This - plus the fact that if the photo ended up being printed on newsprint using a high volume and fast press, a photo that offered soft contrast and subtle tone transitions tended to lose detail and just lie whimpering on the page, while a contrasty and very graphically strong photo - which also lost some detail - otherwise tended to jump out and grab the customer/reader's attention.
Obviously it will depend on the press and the quality of the newsprint. But a contrasty print will only get more so when printed. A 65 line screen halftone or velox printed high-speed on less than prime newsprint generally suffers.