Advanced Newsgathering

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Bloomsbury Academic, Mar 6, 1991 - Business & Economics - 280 pages

Written primarily as a text for the serious student of journalism, the professional journalist will profit as well from this invaluable back-to-basics, nuts-and-bolts approach to news collection and reporting. Bryce T. McIntyre uses his extensive experience as both a professor of journalism and a working journalist for newspapers around the country to present practical information on gathering and writing the news. Advanced Newsgathering challenges the journalism student with solid, fundamental newswriting techniques and crucial information about the world outside that student's immediate environment; the various structures of governmental agencies, ethical questions, and journalism and the law.

The book begins by introducing the novitiate to the world of the journalist and establishing a background for understanding advanced reporting. McIntyre follows this with a concise but comprehensive treatment of newswriting, including at least one appropriate story structure for every occasion. Following chapters deal with state and local governments as well as political, legal, business, science, and health writing. The book finishes with a valuable chapter on the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act and how to obtain information under it.

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Contents

Introduction
1
Newswriting
13
3
20
Copyright

14 other sections not shown

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About the author (1991)

Bryce T. McIntyre taught journalism at California State University, Northridge, Stanford University, and the University of Wisconsin. He worked at many newspapers around the country, including the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Francisco Examiner, and The Arizona Republic. He received his PhD from Stanford, and co-authored Writing Opinion: Editorials.

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