It was with great interest that I viewed Murder at Harvard on PBS, and I enjoyed the short -- but insightful -- review of the program by Louis P. Masur (“History or Fiction?,” The Review, July 11). ..
There are many possible reasons for the public’s declining trust in journalism — it’s falling for pretty much everyone — but it’s plausible that one of them is the difference in that way journalists ...
Part of Greenwood District in Tulsa, Okla., burned during the 1921 Tulsa race massacre. (GHI / Universal History Archive via Getty Images) Sometimes, after educating teachers about the Tulsa race ...
Sign up for the daily CJR newsletter. Objectivity hasn’t always been a cornerstone of journalism. American publishers first turned to objectivity in the early ...
In his April 28 op-ed “Journalists, what side of history are you on?”, Gabe Hawkins wrote that journalistic objectivity was “drilled into” his skull during his first year at Medill. I’m glad to hear ...
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