This is what SPJ stands for.
This is where you would find the breaking news and biggest news headlines of the day.
What is the front page?
This involved saying something aloud publicly that is untrue and damages a person's reputation, hurts their ability to make money and provide for themselves and/or their family, and/or endangers their safety.
What is slander?
Two pages of a yearbook that are side by side are called this.
What is a spread?
This is the pretty much the only kind of photo editing that is allowed in journalism in which unimportant parts of a photo are cut out of the frame.
What is photo cropping?
This Code of Ethics has to do with not giving up in search of the true story and reporting it when you find it.
This is where you would find a game brief or a player profile.
What is the Sports section?
This involved writing something publicly that is untrue and damages a person's reputation, hurts their ability to make money and provide for themselves and/or their family, and/or endangers their safety.
What is libel?
In a yearbook, content is organized into ______ on spreads.
True or false: It is always unethical in journalism to 'photoshop' someone or something into or out of a photo.
True
This Code of Ethics has to do with protecting sensitive groups' information and privacy, respecting others, and not making things worse than they already are.
What is Minimize Harm?
This is where you would find an album review or a editorial.
What is the Opinion section?
This law protects intellectual property, like a music video, from being published in the news in its entirety. Parts can be published for review or news purposes, but not the entire thing.
What is copyright law?
In a yearbook, the biggest module on the spread is called the _______.
What is the dominant module?
What is a retraction?
What is Act Independently?
This section of the newspaper includes articles on major events happening in the world. It is typically the biggest section of the newspaper.
What is the News section?
This is the exception to copyright law -- it includes allowing copyrighted material to be used for educational or journalistic purposes.
What is fair use?
This includes timelines, Q&As, maps, charts, graphs, surveys and polls, and more.
What is alternative coverage?
What is lead room?
What is Be Accountable and Transparent?
This is the only section of the newspaper where content can be paid for to be published.
What is the Ads section?
This law differs from state to state and has the ability to legally protect journalists for keeping your sources private and anonymous.
What are shield laws?
This is the design principle wherein the meaning of the words in the design match the way the design looks. (Example -- the word 'contrast' written in black and white to highlight the contrast)
What is visual-verbal unity?
"I don't know how to swim," Ms. Thornton said.