Sender: |
|
Subject: |
|
From: |
|
Date: |
Tue, 15 Feb 1994 08:43:02 +0100 |
Reply-To: |
|
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
>> Second off, I think it's pretty lame. A newspaper is in the business of
>> REPORTING news. This is an example of them making news. [snip] They can
>> criticize it in their editorials, if they wish. They can urge such
>> schools to change their names. But they have an obligation to report
>> the facts, in their news stories. To do otherwise is journalistically
>> dubious.
>
>Well, I have a # of problems with this myself.
>
>1. Newspapers are (or, in many cases, *should be*) doing more than just
>reporting the news.
Could you give us an example? Or are you from the school of thought that
says journalists should change the world (which they most decidedly should
not)?
>2. I don't see how failing to use a school's nickname is in any way
>failing to fulfill a paper's obligation to report the news. The *news*
>is the score, what happened during the game. Not School A, whose
>nickname is XYZ, beat School B, whose nickame is 123.
They are not failing their obligation to report the news. They are,
however, failing their obligation to stay impartial- to stay out of the
news. Many noted journalists (including, I believe, Walter Cronkite) have
gone on record as saying that journalists should take great pains not to
become part of a story,
*---------------------------------------------------------*
|Jeff Billman |Signature Under Construction |
[log in to unmask] |/////////////////////////////|
|Bowling Green State Univ. | CAUTION: WORK AREA |
|Bowling Green, OH |\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\|
|Other info by request. | This Is A Hard Hat Area |
*---------------------------------------------------------*
|
|
|