填空题
News can be something the authorities want you to know, or something they would rather keep secret: an announcement of a
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, denial of a failure, or a secret scandal that nobody really wants you to
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. If the authorities want to tell the world some good news, they issue statements, communiques, and call
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. Or politicians make speeches. Local newspapers, radio and television help to
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to what is going on. And by making contacts with
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, journalists can ask for more information or explanations to help them
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.
Unless the correspondent is an
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, it is rare to trust any single source. Officials have a policy to defend, and
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want to attack it. Rumor and gossip can also confuse the situation. So, you have to
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as much as possible, using common sense and experience as final checks to help establish just what"s likely to be the truth, or
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.
Just getting the news is only half the job. A correspondent may be well-informed, but his job is to
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, the public. So, once the information is available it has to be written
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which is also easily understood. Particularly for radio, since, while a newspaper reader can turn back and reread a sentence or two, the radio listener has
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. This also means that only a limited number of facts can be contained in a sentence and that there should be an
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. And vital information necessary to understand the latest development should be presented
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in ease the producer of a news program decides to
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an item, by cutting for example the last sentence or two.
Finally, the style of presentation must
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. A cheerful voice might be perfect for a
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. But it would be sadly out of place for a report of a
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. And this would also confuse and distract the listener, probably
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just what had happened and to whom.