pro, as britain the pledges to send battle tax ah, on carriage austin. this is out to sara whitlock from deb. also coming up. i demonstrated to near the amount 12 years since the arab spring uprisings are repeating calls the president to step down protests in israel against the new governments. proposed judicial reforms. opponents worried we can, the legal system and more classified material is found that u. s. president jo biden s home as he faces criticism for not being transparent. we begin in ukraine where russian forces have unleashed a major miss al strikes targeting multiple cities for the 1st time in 2 weeks. authorities in the central city of denise pro, say, rock, it strikes, hit 2 residential buildings, killing 12 people, least 60 were reported injured. one of the buildings was reduced to rubble. rescue workers are searching for survivors. we saw strikes were also reported in chief and the western city of the viv, one rocket left a huge crater in the village, close
26 May 2021
by: Lauren Boyer
The SciLine team takes an ice cream break after running a 3-day boot camp for reporters. Photo courtesy of the SciLine family.
Reporters and scientists have a lot in common, including their relentless commitment to uncovering facts through methodical observation and questioning. At the same time, the two groups can sometimes find themselves with different priorities and perspectives.
Journalists often work on same-day deadlines writing stories intended for broad audiences. When they reach out to interview a scientist, however, they may find that their anticipated source is hesitant to speak, sometimes out of fear of being misquoted, or might offer a response too jargon-laced to use – if they’re even available on such short notice.