May/June 2004
Table of Contents
Cover Story: Across the Great Divide
- Faith
A Tenuous Bridge to Believers. By Gal Beckerman - Class
- How Far to the Other America? By Brent Cunningham
- Martha Guilty? Surely You Jest. By Elizabeth Koch
Articles
- On the Job
- Red Dawn in Dallas
A publisher who sees profits in hard-hitting journalism calls for a newsroom "revolution." By Craig Flournoy - Can the AP Go Global
The wire extends its reach. By Judith Matloff
- Red Dawn in Dallas
- Bush and the Texas Press
Is the honeymoon over? By Robert Bryce - Ties that Bind
Adrian Nicole LeBlanc's eleven years with a Bronx Family. By Laurie Kelliher - Brits vs. Yanks
Who does journalism right? A debate between Leonard Doyle, The Independent's foreign editor, and Michael Getler, The Washington Post's ombudsman. - Lists
Pulitzer Prizes, DuPont Awards, National Magazine Award Finalists
Voices
- Ben Casselman
How young reporters learn to skim - Douglas McCollam
Goosing circulation numbers - Andrew Lawler
Dark side of the moon - Bill Wilt
Free the White House press corps - Christopher Lesser
Scene: The power of a press
Reviews
- Books: No Debate
by George Farah. Reviewed by Anthony Marro - Theater: Embedded
Written and directed by Tim Robbins, produced by the Actors' Gang. Reviewed by Gloria Cooper - Documentary: The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
Filmed and directed by Kim Bartley and Donnacha O'Briain. Reviewed by Phil Gunson
Directors' Rebuttal By Kim Bartley and Donnacha O'Briain - Books Reports
by James Boylan
Departments
- Opening Shot
- Comment
- Darts & Laurels
- Language Corner: One Was, Two Were
- Spotlight
- Letters
- American Newsroom: Mother Jones
- The Lower Case



