Channel 4 wins this round
The lead story on the noon news in St. Louis on May 31 on both Channels 4 and 5 was the same…but……
Founded as St. Louis Journalism Review in 1970
The lead story on the noon news in St. Louis on May 31 on both Channels 4 and 5 was the same…but……
After decades of controversy about the dangers of the West Lake and Bridgeton Landfill and nearby Coldwater Creek, the Post-Dispatch……
St. Louis Public Radio has won two national awards for its 2015 coverage of the events that followed the shooting……
By MITCH EDEN / Talk is cheap. Free speech isn’t. And that is what Missouri lawmakers must decide as they contemplate the Cronkite New Voices Act currently making its way through the state government. If passed, the bill, sponsored by Elijah Haahr, R-Springfield, would protect student journalists and advisers from censorship unless content is libelous, illegal or an invasion of privacy. The act would override a decision in 1988 by the U.S. Supreme Court in Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier, which ruled that St. Louis high school students’ freedom of speech rights were not violated when the school’s principal prevented articles about teenage pregnancy and parental divorce from being published in the school newspaper.
By MITCH EDEN / We learned Monday the New Voices Cronkite Act (HB2058) is not being put up for vote by Sen. David Pearce. If this bill is not heard by Friday, it will die.