The Internet has quickly become the journalist's best friend.
Category: Uncategorized
Complaint dismissed against Schroeder
The state Superintendent of Public Instruction has ended the investigation into Val Schroeder of Stanwood High School.
Court of Appeals to rehear arguments over the right to refuse advertisements
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has agreed to rehear arguments in the case of Yeo v. Lexington and threw out its earlier decision.
Professors take Virginia Internet law to court
Six Virginia university professors have joined the American Civil Liberties Union to fight a new law that bans state employees from accessing sexually explicit material on the state-owned Internet providers.
Prior review keeps up Snohomish snow job
Student editors at Snohomish High School have found that dealing with the school board is like dealing with a brick wall: neither listens.
Alcohol-related ads banned
A law nobody seems to know much about is causing confusion among student journalists.
Iowa governor vetoes student Internet access bill
Pressure from students and faculty at the University of Iowa has finally helped halt a state bill that would have forced students and faculty living off-campus to pay the equivalent of a commercial rate for Internet use.
Principal tries to censor prom coverage
A controversy over the prom led Principal Jimmy Jones of Lamar High School to butt heads with editors of the student newspaper, The Viking Scroll.
The other side of the schoolhouse gate
Parents say harassment over Web site led to son's suicide
Gabriel Kelley was only 17 when he was found dead after hanging himself near the dormitories of his high school, the Texas Academy for Leadership in the Humanities in Beaumont on April 29.