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...purchase does serve to highlight a growing fear among journalists and others that high quality, objective news sources will slowly vanish, in this age of new media, for lack of demand. The rise of blogs and news sources tailored to niche audiences, along with the decline of newspapers?? advertising-based business model and a burgeoning school of thought that dismisses even the possibility of objective journalism, have conspired to erode the bottom line at many newspapers and left many journalists waiting for a pink slip. Gloom and doom about the future of journalism has become the norm...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Don’t Believe the Hype | 9/11/2007 | See Source »

...Although the Daily Trojan is not totally fiscally independent, its daily production has historically been student-run. Regardless of the formal level of independence of the paper, a meddling administration undermines the educational value of student journalism. Interventions like this assault the core values of student newspapers??objectivity and comprehensive coverage. They compromise journalistic integrity and tarnish the development of the next generation of journalists...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Defending the Collegiate Press | 12/5/2006 | See Source »

...wine increases life expectancy: study,” said Canada’s National Post yesterday, while the Times of London told its readers, “A drop of wine can prolong an active life.” Sinclair did not identify any particular newspapers?? coverage as inaccurate. He added that a person would have to drink over 100 glasses of red wine per day to take in the same amount of resveratrol as the mice. However, according to the Nature paper, the doses of resveratrol used on the mice are “feasible daily doses?...

Author: By Nadav Greenberg, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: It's Wine, Not Cheese, That Leads Media Into This Moustrap | 11/3/2006 | See Source »

...waves across the country. Harvard is not just an elite university; it has a special place in American culture because of its history, its influential professors, and undoubtedly its marketing of the Harvard brand. So the fact that Summers’ ouster became fodder for talk radio and national newspapers?? editorial pages is not surprising. Yet as an undergraduate at this fine university (and perhaps an aspiring journalist), it was disappointing to see the current fracas oversimplified and grossly misconstrued. Too often, newspapers and pundits have stated that Summers’ downfall was due to an extreme faculty...

Author: By Andrew B. English | Title: A Saga Misconstrued by the Media | 2/28/2006 | See Source »

...choose its own editorial content. In the case of the Salient in particular, we must examine the Danish cartoons in the context in which the Salient displayed them. They were accompanied by editorial text and placed alongside other anti-Semitic cartoons that have already been published by Arab-language newspapers??and this juxtaposition was specifically intended to foster dialogue about religious censorship rather than blatantly offend readers. This also begs the question of why offensive Muslim images have caused such furor, both among some readers on campus and abroad, when similarly offensive anti-Semitic cartoons have provoked little...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, CONTRIBUTING WRITERS | Title: An Informed Furor | 2/21/2006 | See Source »

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