In a striking showcase of the immediacy of electronic journalism, the paper used the Web to quickly correct a story the site carried, acknowledging that " the source . . . a longtime Washington lawyer familiar with the case, later said the information provided for that report was inaccurate.
42.
When you think Ahmad Rashad has endured a full day of grueling electronic journalism by tagging behind Michael Jordan or eavesdropping on the Bulls'bench, think of the job done by ABC's Jack Arute, Gary Gerould and Jerry Punch, the jump-suited reporters who worked the pits Sunday at the Indianapolis 500.
43.
The different treatment underscores the different demands of the two kinds of media, and what could happen to a newspaper's information when it is conveyed in the real-time world of electronic journalism, especially in the environment of business news, where minutes count and the need to highlight breaking reports is critical.
44.
Simpson was also motivated by a 1967 book in which former president of CBS News Fred Friendly was quoted as having said, for the most part we were . . . just a bunch of old radio hands learning the hard way that cameras need something more than emulsion and light valves to create electronic journalism.
45.
The flagship magazine of a journalism school that also administers the Pulitzer Prizes and the National Magazine Awards, the review, widely known as CJR, focuses primarily on the practice of print and electronic journalism rather than on the business side of news, the area more often dealt with by its principal rival, the University of Maryland's American Journalism Review.
46.
The editor of Slate ( http : / / www . slate . com ), who has been subjected to a great deal of scrutiny himself due to his leap from print to the untilled fields of electronic journalism, titled his first Slate column " Introduction and Apologia " _ and then proceeded to explain that recent media attention, while appreciated, " also makes us nervous ."