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June 3 presentation to focus on innovative teaching methods in 'teaching for tolerance' | |||
Nielsen has article published on mass communication scholarship | |||
Three ²ÝÁñÉçÇø faculty members to be part of Innovative Teaching Showcase | |||
Judge blocks third attempt to subpoena reporter's notes | A federal judge in Seattle Friday quashed the third subpoena served on a reporter by lawyers representing the Chicago Police Department in a civil rights lawsuit, highlighting in her ruling the importance of protecting the First Amendment-based reporter’s privilege not to testify about sources… |
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Carolyn Nielsen presents manuscript at Texas conference | |||
²ÝÁñÉçÇø journalism instructor gets court victory, heralds win for reporters | A Western Washington University journalism assistant professor just got some major protection from a federal judge, and she's calling it a win for all reporters. Carolyn Nielsen will not have to turn over information about her reporting on a story about a 13-year-old boy convicted of murder… |
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Judge quashes subpoena for journalism professor's notes | Judge Marsha Pechman of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington ruled in favor of Carolyn Nielsen, who wrote articles about a now-exonerated teenage murder defendant during graduate school. Pechman also awarded Nielsen a protective order against future deposition and her… |
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Carolyn Nielsen presents papers at Denver conference | |||
When does diversity equal bias rather than benefit? | Soon after television stations aired a videotape of Shirley Sherrod talking about whether she could overcome her own racial bias to help a white farmer save his farm, further reporting showed the tape had been edited to take her words out of context. The full tape revealed that Sherrod, who is… |
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²ÝÁñÉçÇø professor pulled back into '94 murder trial | "In 1994, Carolyn Nielsen was a graduate student at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism when she wrote stories that questioned the trial and subsequent murder conviction of a 14-year-old Chicago boy. |