Police incident involved N&O staff
Submitted by tleonard on 11/22/2011 - 10:21Best Coverage Money Can Buy?
Submitted by josephneff on 05/11/2011 - 09:16This is a big no-no for reporters - Get Paid By the People You Cover!
A pharmaceutical company offered a free-lance reporter $250 just to show up to a press conference/presentation on Botox and two other drugs.
The ethics policy at The N&O says this: "Staffers may not accept gifts or favors from their sources, the people regularly relied on for tips and information. It's clear we cannot be in the debt of anyone we depend on for news. This means not taking gifts of any kind and not accepting favors, such as an offer by a municipal official to void a ticket."
A Grammar Guide quiz: Word choice in Sunday's paper
Submitted by Pam_Nelson on 08/22/2010 - 10:45If you are a close and thorough reader of The N&O, you might have an advantage on the new Grammar Guide quiz. I based the quiz on Sunday's newspaper. I found five sentences that included words or terms that are sometimes confused in writing. To the credit of writers and editors, all but one of the five sentences were correct in the paper.
Words you see only in headlines
Submitted by Pam_Nelson on 04/17/2010 - 07:04I am a copy editor, and as part of that job, I write headlines. Last week, I wrote this headline, using a word that we rarely see except in headlines
Every time a cliche rings, a copy editor gets her wings
Submitted by Pam_Nelson on 12/14/2009 - 09:46The holiday season brings out the familiar and the banal.
At Arizona: stolen newspapers and an editor's challenge
Submitted by eferreri on 11/10/2009 - 09:54A bizarre story out at the University of Arizona, where 10,000 copies of a recent edition of the Daily Wildcat school newspaper went missing.
Hmm. The newspaper's editors think members of Phi Kappa Psi, a fraternity stole the papers because of a police item involving a couple of frat brothers.
Here's where the fun starts: The papers were reportedly recovered in a heap out on the outskirts of town...along with some homework bearing the names of two fraternity brothers.
Whoops.
Now, the student paper is challenging the fraternity to a duel. Okay, maybe not a duel, exactly, but in this column, the paper's managing editor is clearing throwing down a challenge.
Arizona's president, by the way, is Robert Shelton, the former UNC Chapel Hill provost. Shelton condemned the theft of the papers, telling the student newspaper that it is "completely counter to the principles of freedom of expression that we embrace at the UA."
Requiem for the printed word
Submitted by dmenconi on 06/03/2009 - 07:30
Yes, consensus is that the printed word is deader than dead. But before we get to the funeral and turn this whole mess over to the blogosphere, dig this sharp list of 10 songs about print journalism -- compiled by Charlotte writer Mark Kemp.
ADDENDUM (7/28/09): Three reasons music mags are dying.
We're in the book
Submitted by linny on 01/07/2009 - 13:24

A handsome coffee table book arrived in the mail today. It is the Poynter Institute's collection of the best front pages of newspapers published on November 5, 2008. That, of course, was the day after America's historic election of its first African-American president.
The News & Observer's page is one of 100 from around the world selected by Poynter, a St. Petersburg, Fla. nonprofit devoted to journalism education, for this book. Our sister publication, The Charlotte Observer, is also included. A team of journalists contributed to this page, but we are especially proud of news designer Jennifer Bowles, a graduate of the University of Missouri-Columbia School of Journalism, has designed many News & Observer fronts and special projects.
The print newspaper has sometimes been undervalued in the age of the Internet. "Election Day, November 4, 2008, was different," cartoonist Garry Trudeau, writes in his introduction to the book. He describes an election evening of boistrous celebrations around the globe. "And then the next day, after the street parties were over, people went out and did something many of them hadn't done in years. They bought newspapers. Yes, newspapers. By the trainload, actually."
The printed paper was not for the purpose of information, Trudeau notes, rather to the people who stood in long lines, it was a tangible keepsake "that can forever evoke and refresh a deeply consequential memory."
Prior to election, we mostly saw this reaction with sports championships.
Here's to the ink-stained, bird cage fillers, fish wraps that we love.
The Poynter book is available here.
Linda Williams
Word watch: doorstep as a verb
Submitted by Pam_Nelson on 11/22/2008 - 10:44I ran across the word "doorstepped" in a story about a British
journalist today. I didn't understand what it meant even in context. So I looked it up.
Found treasure
Submitted by Pam_Nelson on 09/22/2008 - 03:00
I happened across a copy of John B. Bremner's "Words on Words" on a bookshelf in The N&O's computer training center last week. It had been left behind in an editor's office. I was excited to find this copy in good shape. My own copy at home is a bit worn, and the book is out of print. Now I have an extra copy to keep on my desk at work and to share with my fellow copy editors. Subtitled "A Dictionary for Writers and Others Who Care about Words," the book was published in 1980, but it still serves us well when we need a solid reference on usage.If you ever have a chance to get a copy, you should.
Bremner was a teacher at the University of Kansas. He is a legend in copy editing circles for his teaching and his book. The William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications at KU has a section on its Web site devoted to Bremner. Try his editing test here. You can read Bremner's obituary in the New York Times here.



