rules of the road. and we clearly don t have those yet in artificial intelligence. the problem is very few know intelligence. the problem is very few know much about it and even fewer few know much about it and even fewer know where it might lead us. so, fewer know where it might lead us. so. i fewer know where it might lead us. so. i think fewer know where it might lead us. so, i think we have to have a very open so, i think we have to have a very open debate, a lot of transparent reporting open debate, a lot of transparent reporting. but the problem is, if history reporting. but the problem is, if history is reporting. but the problem is, if history is a reporting. but the problem is, if history is a guide, we are not going to see history is a guide, we are not going to see that history is a guide, we are not going to see that coming from the government, the us government. the euro ean government, the us government. tie: european union has government, the us governme
The New England Newspaper & Press Association has given nine journalism awards to Worcester Business Journal at part of the 2021 Better Newspaper Competition, honoring stories on the legacy of slavery in Central Massachusetts, housing discrimination in Worcester, and attempts to narrow racial and gender pay gaps.
Vermont Business Magazine Vermont Independent Media has announced that its community newspaper,
The Commons, won 10 prizes in the New England Newspaper & Press Association’s 2021 Better Newspaper Competition, in divisions for weekly newspapers with circulation greater than 6,000.
The Commons is based in Brattleboro.
The awards for the newspaper, which covers Brattleboro and the surrounding towns and villages in Windham County, Vermont, included one first prize for Spot News Story for Randolph T. Holhut and Olga Peters, “Cash-strapped Retreat pursues shutdown after rebuke by state agency.”
The category awards exceptional work on stories that are unplanned, like this report, where Holhut and Peters broke down a temporary but public and escalating conflict between the Vermont Department of Public Health and the Brattleboro Retreat, a psychiatric hospital providing essential services to the state of Vermont.
Gazette wins three top awards at annual competition
This photo from July 2020, taken by Carol Lollis, Gazette photo editor, won a first-place award in the Feature Photo category of the New England Newspaper & Press Association’s annual Better Newspaper Contest. In this photo, Beatriz Rivera swims with her son, Nathaniel Gomez, at the Leeds dam. Rivera explained that Nathaniel is autistic and that she has two other children, ages 2 and 4, whose day care had recently reopened. “I was so happy,” she said. “that I could bring Nathaniel here and have some mommy time.” STAFF FILE PHOTO/CAROL LOLLIS
Published: 4/9/2021 4:55:57 PM