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Indiana University School of Journalism

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Scholastic Journalism Resources: Books&Movies

The Adman in the Parlor: Magazines and the Gendering of Consumer Culture, 1880s to 1910s – Ellen Gruber Garvey
How did advertising come to seem natural and ordinary to magazine readers by the end of the nineteenth century? This book explores readers' interactions with advertising during a period when not only consumption but advertising itself became established as a pleasure. Garvey argues that readers' participation in advertising, rather than top-down dictation by advertisers, has made advertising such a central part of American culture. Her analyses interweaves such diverse texts and artifacts as scrapbooks, medical articles, paper dolls, chromolithographed trade cards, advertising trade journals, and even contest rules as she tracks new forms of fictional realism that contained brand name references, courtship stories, and other fictional forms. Accessibly written and illustrated with forty-four fascinating images of the period, The Adman in the Parlor unearths the lively conversations among writers and advertisers about the new prevalence of advertising for mass-produced, nationally distributed products.

All Over but the Shoutin – Rick Bragg
This memoir tells of growing up dirt poor with an alcoholic father and strong-willed mother and about moving on but never really letting go. A sample of extraordinary storytelling.

Alvin Fernald, TV Anchorman - Clifford B. Hicks

Back in the Saddle (Pine Hollow #12)
– Bonnie Bryant
Stevie Lake, ace reporter! She's joined the Fenton Hall school paper and she's ready to go undercover and break big stories, but her editor has other ideas. Stevie's first assignment is to cover the junior class on marriage. It's not her idea of a hard-hitting investigative piece--especially since her own "marriage" is headed for divorce court faster than you can say "cavalletti." However, Callie Forester and her "husband" are having a blast planning for the future. In fact, as far as someone is concerned, they're having too much fun.
Meanwhile, Carole Hanson is still trying to figure out what the future holds for her and Ben, while Lisa Atwood just wonders whether she and Alex have a future.

Bait for a Burglar - Joan Lowery Nixon
With homeowners on vacation, burglars are going into homes and stealing their possessions, so Brian, a teen reporter for a local news station, begins to believe that an insider might be responsible and sets out to solve the mystery and bring the criminals to justice

Baldwin From Another Planet (Clueless) – H.B. Gilmor
Cher has her own cable show. Her first guest--a new four-star hottie with a totally troubled soul and righteous Italian accent. What is his problem? Cher's on a mission to find out, so stay tuned!

Be Sweet: A Conditional Love Story – Ray Blount Jr.
Blount journeys into the past and his psyche in search of the answers to three riddles that have haunter him: "the family curse," what drives him (or anyone) to be funny, and what so cruelly tangled his unseverable bond with an orphan girl who become the impossible mother who raised him to Be Sweet.

Behind the Phantom’s Mask: A Serial – Roger Ebert
Following the formula of Victorian novelist Wilkie Collins, Ebert penned a newspaper serial that was enjoyed by readers of newspapers all over the world. Now he has revised his outrageous weekly cliffhanger into a funny, free-wheeling thriller that reflects the dizzying imagination of the Pulitzer Prize-winning movie critic.

The Best Bet Gazette - Linda Gonosch
Set in Cleveland in 1954, this basically humorous story about two sixth-graders learning how to put together a newspaper is darkened when polio strikes a younger child for whom they babysit. A fast-moving, readable story, with messages about friendship and truth in journalism delivered with a light touch.

The Book of Questions – Gregory Stock
This book of 200 questions helps more advances students develop interview questions and story ideas. The subjects of the questions range from ordinary to the bizarre and serve as thought stimuli.

A Bookful of Bob Getz - Bob Getz

Bright Days, Stupid Nights - Norma F. Mazer
Two prolific, reliable YA authors set a knotty contemporary issue--privacy vs. the right to know--in an accessible story about four teens, summer interns on a small-town paper. Vicki, who has lied about her age to win one of the coveted spots, is 14; Faith is a high-school graduate, while Elizabeth and Chris, who defied his dad to come, will be seniors. The four establish a workable camaraderie despite their diversity--and the triangle resulting from Vicki's crush on Chris and Chris's on Elizabeth; the plot centers on Vicki's discovery that Faith comes from a well-known, and notorious, family (show business, public office, addiction, and acrimonious divorce). Claiming good intentions, Vicki writes an article about Faith that the others implore her not to show to their editor. Their fury at her intransigence leads to a blowup that almost destroys their summer; but when everyone--even Vicki--realizes they've gone too far, they manage to patch things up and remain friends. The characters here are so schematic that their struggle lacks depth; Vicki, in particular, is simply immature, which doesn't allow much chance to explore the moral issues. There are few convincing clues to the vaunted talent of the young people, and Faith's family (minor star, past lieutenant governor) doesn't seem important enough to cause the furor that it does. Still, though a disappointment coming from these fine authors, the details of working in journalism are interesting. Better-than- average light fare.

Buffalo Brenda - Jill Pinkwater
Determined to make their mark on their high school, ninth graders India Ink and her zany best friend Brenda Tuna organize an underground newspaper and then provide a live buffalo as a mascot for the football team.

Darnell Rock Reporting - Walter Dean Myers
Gr. 4-6. Thirteen-year-old Darnell Rock reluctantly joins the school newspaper and is surprised to find himself actually interested. His interest leads him to interview Sweeby, a homeless Vietnam veteran. The local paper picks up the story, and Darnell becomes a minor celebrity, causing a change in how he is perceived by others as well as a change in how he perceives himself. Myers includes a lot of issues here--the homeless, Vietnam, educating the "problem" child--but his story is not issue driven. It is the development of Darnell's character that moves things forward: we watch as Darnell takes his first tentative steps toward thinking and acting on his own. The dialogue is funny and down to earth, and none of the characters is a flat-out caricature. The barber-shop scene in which Darnell interviews Sweeby (and by default, everyone else in the shop) is a masterpiece of understatement

The Day They Came to Arrest the Book --- Net Hentoff
Who would have believed that The Adventure of Huckleberry Finn could cause the worst crisis in the history of George Mason High School? Certainly not Barney Roth, editor of the school paper. But when a small but vocal group of students and parents decide that the book is racist, sexist, and immoral--and should be removed from reading lists and the school library--Barney takes matters into his own hands.
When the Huck Finn issue comes up for a hearing, Barney decides to print his story about previous censorship efforts at school. He's sure that investigative reporting and publicity can help the cause. But is he too late to turn the tide of censorship?

Dear Dr. Heartbreak (Keepsake #34) - Janice Harrell

A Dictionary of American Idioms (3rd edition) – Adam Makkai
Defines more than 8,000 idiomatic words and phrases. Each entry has a grammatical explanation and an example sentence. Here is an ideal tool to help writers and yearbook staffers who need theme ideas.

Elizabeth Solves it All (Sweet Valley Twins, #103)
- Jamie Suzanne, Francine Pascal
No one can be right all the time. . .
Elizabeth Wakefield's new advice column is the rage at Sweet Valley Middle School. Not only is "Dear Elizabeth" the most popular column in Sixershistory, letters are pouring in by the hundreds!
At first, Elizabeth is thrilled by her success. But then she starts to worry. Her friends expect miracle cures for every problem . . . and she's running out of answersSoon her advice is causing problems instead of solving them! Now Elizabeth's the one who needs help. How can she get out of this mess?

Extraordinary Women Journalists (Extraordinary People)
– Claire Price-Groff

First the Good News - Julie Angell

A Fly Named Alfred - Don Trembath
Harper Winslow, a writer for his high school newspaper, gets more than he bargains for when he begins writing scathing articles under the pseudonym "Alfred." When one of his columns goes too far and makes fun of a tough student named Bruce, Bruce sends the school bully, Tommy, to force Harper to expose Alfred. How can Harper convince Bruce and Tommy that he's searching for Alfred without revealing his true identity?

Friends Talking in the Night: Sixty Years of Writing for the New Yorker – Philip Hamburger
From a writer of astonishing versatility comes a wonderfully rich collection of pieces--in a book that is both a memoir of one man's writing life and a vivid and various record of the world in which he has lived.

Games Trainers Play – John W. Newstrom, Edward E. Scannell
This book is packed with 100 different games and activities, including those to develop leadership ability and build self-confidence; enhance problem-solving skills; and boost creativity. All can be administered in 30 minutes or less.

Good News / Bad News – Fragasso Philip M

Ham Reporter - Robert J. Randisi

Have You Heard About Elizabeth (Sweet Valley University, #36) - Francine Pascal
It's all there in black and white...
Elizabeth Wakefield and Scott Sinclair have made it into a major national news magazine! Will Scott's hints of a personal relationship with Elizabeth make her turn red with embarrassment...or anger?
Tom Watts is disgusted by the magazine article, and by the suggestive things Scott says about Elizabeth. Can Tom win her back by broadcasting his feelings on WSVU?
Jessica Wakefield can't believe that Nick Fox wants to give up his exciting career as an undercover cop in order to save their love. But will Jessica still feel the same way about Nick if he's not wearing a badge?

The Henderson Equation - Warren Adler

Here Comes the Brand New Me (Full House Stephanie) - Jacqueline Carrol, Carol Ellis
It's a new school year, and time for a really big change-- "a whole new Stephanie". This year Stephanie plans to be perfect in every way! She's going to wear very, very cool clothes every single day. She'll write only serious things for the school newspaper, and there will definitely be no giggling around boys.
Easy, right? Wrong! Before Stephanie realizes what's happening, she's moved out of her house-- and is caught breaking into the school cafeteria! How did she ever get into this mess?.

How to Enter and Win Non-Fiction Journalism Contests
- Alan Gadney

Idea Catcher: An Inspiring Journal for Writers – Editors of Story Press
This spirited journal helps writers open their eyes to the creative possibilities in their everyday world – with clever writing prompts, insightful quotes from will-known writers and short anecdotes about how authors "caught" the idea.

It’s News to Me – Barbara S. Goldman
Students will love playing this board game that uses the newspaper for learning and entertainment. The game shows electronically oriented students what the medium has to offer. Along the way players must turn to business pages, classified ads, sports section, front page and advertisements to complete assignments. The first player to reach the editor’s office with completed assignments wins.

Lake News - Barbara Delinsky
Both Lily Blake and John Kipling grew up in Lake Henry, New Hampshire, and both left after high school to pursue their dreams--singing for Lily and writing for John. Now the two have returned separately to seek shelter in the small lakeside town due to the disastrous results of paparazzi fever--Lily as a victim, John as a member of the press responsible for a tragedy.
Falsely accused and hounded by the press, her privacy violated and destroyed, Lily finds refuge in a cottage on the lake, while her sister and the other residents of Lake Henry close ranks, refusing to discuss her with the media hordes that soon come knocking. But Lily can't avoid John, who also lives on the lake and at first sees Lily's story as prime fodder for the novel that can break him into publishing. But soon the vulnerable, besieged woman elicits far different emotions from him, and John becomes fiercely committed to helping Lily find justice.
Layered with complicated family relationships and richly textured with the sights, sounds, and colorful characters of a small town, Barbara Delinsky's Lake News will satisfy longtime fans as well as those anxious to read a timely and thought-provoking tale from one of the genre's top authors.

The Life's Work of a Minor Poet
- Edmund McGranahhan

The MayDay Rampage: A Novel - Clayton Bess
This book was published in 1993 and concerns a sequence of events in a California high school in 1988. What can a book published in 1993 about 1988 tell us in the new millennium about a disease like AIDS? Lots. This very entertaining book, written completely in rivetting dialogue as a transcript of a tape recording between a high school boy and a high school girl, is full of so much. It has these two kids pitted against their school and their community in a struggle to find a voice of their own through their school newspaper. It gives a streetwise talk about AIDS, how young people contact the disease, the history of treatment for the disease and a projection for the future course of the disease. It presents the frank truth about a government and society who stuck their heads in the sand while the disease blossomed and rampaged through our community. These kids are real. They talk like real kids, not like mouthpieces. They fall in love and (gasp) have sex. They're lovable and funny, and their story is gripping from beginning to end. Don't be fooled by the publication date of this novel. It is right up to date with many issues that involve young people today. Looking for a way to talk to kids about sex, so that they can be educated about both the dangers and the joys which lie ahead of them in the new millennium? Give them THE MAYDAY RAMPAGE and watch them enjoy and learn.

Muckraker: Based on a True Story
- Bill Callahan
When a kid from a neighboring town is stabbed in a downtown park, 16-year-old Ashley Munroe stumbles upon a drug ring in his quiet suburban town. The decision to reveal his findings in the high school newspaper is made more complex by the presence of his brother at the park gatherings.
Once the article appears, his trouble really starts. Vandalism to his home, a bomb threat at the school, and telephoned death threats make Ashley and his family wonder if he made the proper decision. A climactic Halloween night brings it all to a stunning resolution.
Based on a true story, we see how one teenager, by following his conscience, can truly make an impact on society.

Ninth Issue – Dallin Malmgren

Online! A Reference Guide to Using Internet Sources – Andrew Harmack
A pocket reference guide to using Internet sources, the first book to provide guidelines on choosing evaluation, citing and documenting Internet sources using all four styles: MLA, APA, CBE and Chicago. Tips of netiquette, writing and publishing on the Internet and Web, as well as guidelines for designing a home page are covered.

Preparing for a Career in Journalism (What Can I Do Now) – Ferguson Staff

Price of Silence (Live From Brentwood High No. 2) – Judy Baer
This second book in the series tells of Molly who wants to be a model, but struggles to make ends meet as a waitress in a greasy restaurant (with an even slimier manager). When her teammates from the media program go undercover to expose her boss, Molly and her friends realize how difficult it is to go against the flow--but find keeping silent is definitely not the answer.

Project Scoop - William D. Hayes

The News They Didn't Use - Stephen Measday

Nothing but the Truth - Avi
Ninth-grader Philip has never been in trouble, but he's upset because his English grade is keeping him off the track team. Meanwhile, though the rule is ``respectful, silent attention,'' he hums along with the daily playing of the national anthem--a habit ignored by his jocular homeroom teacher. Then he's moved to the homeroom of Miss Narwin, his English teacher- -well-liked because she's fair but rigid, humorless, and out of touch with modern kids. When she tries to enforce the silence rule, Philip responds with offhand rudeness borne of his distress about track plus his chronic tongue-tied style; the ensuing confrontation escalates into a two-day suspension followed by national media attention based on the erroneous belief that Philip has been denied the right to express his patriotism. Skillfully composing his story from school memos, news clips, dialogues, and Philip's diary, Avi shows how well-meaning people can generate misinformation through a combination of interrupting or simply not listening, shaping facts to suit their own goals, letting preconceptions muddy thought, or just lacking the will and the skill to get things straight. The garbled conversations here are all too believable; only one reporter makes an intelligent effort to find out what really happened, and his story is never printed. Nobody wins: Philip transfers to a school that doesn't have track, and Miss Narwin is forced to take leave. Wryly satirical: nothing but the deplorable truth about our increasingly inarticulate, media-driven society.
Swallowing Stones - Joyce McDonald
The best day of Michael Mackenzie's life becomes the worst when the bullet he exuberantly fires into the air during his 17th birthday party comes down a mile away and kills a man. When he hears the story on the radio, the news hits him like a lightning bolt. Numbly following the advice of his best friend, Joe, he buries the rifle and tries, without much success, to get on with life. So does the victim's 15-year-old daughter, Jenna, who had been present when the bullet struck. Switching between Michael's point-of-view and Jenna's, McDonald (Comfort Creek, 1996) sends the two teenagers dancing slowly toward each other, using mutual acquaintances, chance meetings at parties and the community pool, and glimpses at a distance. Both go through parallel phases of denial, both are tortured by remorse, exhibit behavior changes, and experience strange dreams; both eventually find ways to ease their grief and guilt. When the police close in, Joe takes the blame, giving Michael the nerve to confess. In the final chapter, McDonald shifts to present tense and brings Michael and Jenna to a cathartic meeting under a huge sycamore said in local Lenape legend to be a place of healing--an elaborate and, considering the suburban setting and familiar contemporary characters, awkward graft in this deliberately paced but deeply felt drama.

Sydney, Invincible - Colby Rodowsky
Middle graders and junior-high readers will love looking ahead to high school as they read about Sydney Downie's junior year at Hawthorne Hills, a private girls' school. The year brings significant changes to Sydney's life. Her mother and Sam, Sydney's former creative-writing teacher, are married and expecting a baby. Her boyfriend, Wally, is frustrated with the constant battling of his parents. And Sydney is named school newspaper editor, even though she would prefer to do the "Dear-Abby-type" column. A fast-paced plot, believable dialogue, and likable characters will keep readers entertained. This novel stands on its own, but adolescents who have read Sydney, Herself will find familiar characters and places

Taking Charge (Generation Girl 10)
– Melanie Stewart
Chelsie has barely had a minute to herself since sheÍs become the assistant managing editor of International HighÍs school newspaper, Generation Beat. She takes a lot of pride in her work, and everybody knows sheÍs great at her job. But when a co-worker steals her article, should she fight back?

That's What Friends Are For: A novel - Joni Hilton

The True Story of the Three Little Pigs

Used creatively in the journalism classroom, this new version of the classic tale can show students the importance of balanced news coverage. You’ve always heard the pigs’ view now listen to the wolf’s side.

War Between the Twins - Francine Pascal
Jessica Wakefield has written an aritcle about the Unicorn Club for the class newspaper, The Sweet Valley Sixers. As its editor, her twin sister, Elizabeth, has promised to run the article in the very next issue. But when Elizabeth has to take Jessica's article out at the last minute, Jessica is furious!
Jessica and her fellow Unicorns decide to teach Elizabeth a lesson by starting their own paper, The Unicorn News. Before long, it's clear that Sweet Valley Middle School isn't big enough for two newspapers, and Jessica's begins to take the lead. Will Elizabeth's beloved Sixers be able to hold its own against the sensational news that the Unicorns print?

We Interrupt This Semester for an Important Bulletin - Ellen Conford
I enjoyed this book because it is very realistic. Girls do this kind of thing every day. Carrie realizes that Prudie is trying to take her man she trys to find the best information for the school newspaper ,that her boyfriend is editor of. She wants him to realize that she is good. She digs up some good evidence or at least she thought it was good. She risks getting into trouble to make her boyfriend realize that she is better than Prudie.
Will the Real Ms. X Please Report to the Principal – Sheila Black
After proving that a boy can land the job of advice columnist Ms. X, Sam wonders how he'll get out of it before the entire school discovers Ms. X's true identity. A humorous story about a sticky situation--just what preteens are looking for.

Writing Down the Days: 365 Creative Journaling Ideas for Young People – Lorraine M. Dahlstrom
This book offers a year of journaling ideas – some serous, some silly – all tied to the calendar year. Each day there is a creative journal-writing assignment based on something interesting that happened in the past.

The Year They Burned the Books - Nancy Garden
High school condom distribution and a hotly contested sex education curriculum set a small New England town's blood boiling and books burning in The Year They Burned the Books, an issue-driven novel by Nancy Garden. Jamie Crawford is the senior editor of the "Telegraph," her high school's newspaper, but the publication of her editorial in favor of the school's new policy to distribute condoms happens to coincide with the election of a new, highly conservative school board member. As a result, Jamie suddenly finds her editorial voice gagged. Soon the school's health books have been removed from the classrooms for "review," a conservative parents' group stages a library book burning, and Jamie's beloved teacher is forced to resign as the newspaper's faculty advisor. Jamie's personal life also becomes more complicated as she tries to deal with her physical attraction to Tessa, a new girl at school. Then, on top of it all, Jamie and her best friend Terry (who is openly gay) are the victims of an attack by a group of conservative students and Jamie has to decide if she can handle the consequences of coming out.
Teens love controversies, especially those involving young people, and there is scarcely a hot topic here that Garden doesn't touch. Yet in spite of the scene-stealing issues, Garden's timeless message that hardship shapes character is illustrated well in Jamie's transition from a "maybe," (as in "maybe gay, maybe straight")to a "probably" by novel's end. An excellent choice for use in high school discussions about censorship and free speech.

Videos

The China Syndrome (1979)
– Columbia Tri Star Home

In this socially-conscious thriller an ambitious female newscaster and her cameraman, an ex-60s radical with a penchant for conspiracy theories, witness and capture on film a potentially disastrous nuclear accident. Joining forces with a concerned engineer at the plant where the near-meltdown occurred, the reporter and cameraman attempt to expose the subsequent cover-up. Film was produced just before the March 1979 accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania in a bizarre bit of synchronicity.

Cover-Up in Oklahoma (Plus Testimonial of Murrah Bombing Survivor) -Jane Graham
Cover-Up In Oklahoma uses eyewitness accounts, expert testimony and extensive 'live' local newscast footage to prove the 'truck bomb' scenario promoted by the government and the mainstream media does not fit the facts. The video shows:
* The damage sustained by the Murrah Federal building could not have been produced by a bomb on the street without additional charges placed on or near internal structural columns.
* The initial news coverage, supported by statements from state, federal and local government officials, described the removal of multiple unexploded bombs from inside in the Murrah Federal building.
* Blast debris was blown out and away from the Murrah Federal building not into it, as would occur with a truck bomb on the street.
* The truck-bomb 'crater', described in the national media, appears to have been an outright hoax.
* Murrah bombing survivors experienced multiple blasts and describe events consistent with the placement of explosives both on the street and inside the Murrah Federal Building.
The presence of bombs within the Murrah Federal building raises disturbing questions about who might have had the access needed to place bombs inside a protected Federal building. In Testimonial of Murrah Bombing Survivor: Jane Graham a federal government employee and the head of her local union describes unfamiliar workmen inside the building, days before the blast. These workmen had architectural plans, wiring and other materials, that fit the description of explosives. Some of these unfamiliar workmen were in GSA attire. Ms. Graham has been unable to get the government to either identify these workmen or to act upon her testimony, which undercuts the government's 'truck bomb' story.
Jerry Longspaugh, the producer of this video, notes, "Cover-Up In Oklahoma is significantly comprised of broadcast video footage that was recorded in the homes of citizens all across the country...due to the origin of the video footage within Cover-Up In Oklahoma, some of it is of marginal technical quality...viewers are urged to concentrate on extracting the abounding content of suppressed information rather than to be sidetracked by any shortcomings of superficial technical quality."
Viewers who do look beyond the technical problems will find a documentary that will force you to confront the probability that elements within our government and within the media are prepared to sacrifice both the truth and the lives of children to achieve their social and political objectives.

Hometown Story (1951) – Madacy Entertainment Group
After losing an election a man uses his position as a newspaper editor to attack big business and the man who defeated him. Then he learns that big business isn't so bad.

The Insider (1999) – Buena Vista Home Entertainment
THE INSIDER is a gripping motion picture about big business corruption, featuring a stunning lead performance by Russell Crowe. Scientist Jeffrey Wigand (Crowe) takes on the tobacco industry by breaking his confidentiality agreement with his employer Brown & Williamson. By granting 60 MINUTES a revealing interview, Wigand's life spirals out of control. He seeks help in Lowell Bergman (Pacino), the producer who has given his word that he will air the interview in its entirety. Big Tobacco, however, does everything in their power to shut Wigand up, including persuading CBS to shelve the interview he has sacrificed everything to give

The Man Inside (1990)
– New Line Home Video
Based on the true story of German journalist, Gunter wallraff, who, using a false identity, infiltrated the most powerful newspaper in western Europe and exposed it as a ruthless propaganda machine.

Medicine River (1994) – United American Video Corp.
When a Native American photojournalist returns to his reservation for his mother's funeral he discovers the strength of his background.

The Nightmare Years (1989) – Turner Home Entertainment
The incredible, true story of William l. Shirer, an American journalist in Nazi Berlin. The man who went after Hitler with the one weapon that could stop him - the truth. Risking his life in a cloak-and-dagger world of intrigue and terror, he tried to warn the world.

Salvador (1985) – MGM Home Entertainment
A harrowing account of the experiences of American combat photojournalist Richard Boyle during the bloody El Salvador civil war of the early '80s, SALVADOR marked Oliver Stone's emergence as a director with a passion for social and political issues. James Woods stars as the reckless Boyle, who takes off for Central America with his friend Dr. Rock (Jim Belushi) as the war heats up, fully equipped wth pharmaceutical enhancements. As the range and magnitude of the carnage become increasingly apparent and the extent of the Reagan administration's involvement revealed, Boyle begins to sober up both literally and physically.
Writing for Publication – Director: Steve Randel
Join an executive as he watches Workshop Video Host Erik Bean appear inside his Netscape browser! Then view a workshop as it was taped live from Ann Arbor, Michigan as Erik along with Car and Driver Editor-in-Chief Csaba Csere, Pulitzer Prize Nominated Environmental Writer and Michigan State University Professor Jim Detjen, and Publisher, Novelist and Freelancer Len Fulton, as they debunk the myths of how people do and don't get their work published. Each 1 hour and 55 minute video cassette includes a Website password to the "Participant Lounge." at www.freelanceworkshop.com
Title:"South of Heaven"
Author: Tom French

Title:"Adventure in Writing"
Author: Bill Medcalf

Title:"Adventures in Medialand"
Author:Jeff Cohen

Title:"Assignment Homicide: Behind the Headlines"
Author:Jeanne Tearney

Title:"High School Journalism" (with workbook)
Author: Homer L. Hall

Title:"Mass Media and the School Newspaper"
Author:Dewitt Reddick

Title:"Press Law and Press Freedoms for High School Publications"
Author:Louis E. Ingelheart

Title:"Freedom of the High School Press"
Author: Nicholas D. Kristof

Title:"Kill the Story"
Author: Johanna Malcolm

Title:"Create Your Own Class Newspaper: A complete guide for planning, writing and publishing a newspaper"
Author: Diane Crosby

Title:"A Fly Named Alfred"
Author: Don Tembath

Title:"Get Real" (a series about an ace female school reporter)
Author: Linda Ellerbee

Title:"My First Year as a Journalist: Real-World stories from America's
Newspaper and Magazine Journalists"

Author: Dianne Seldich

Title:"Price of Silence (LIVE! From Bentwood High)"
Author: Judy Baer

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Indiana University

Indiana University School of Journalism

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