Browse Business, Law, and Journalism Stories
business
- Your Sweetheart Job. (fall 2008)
- Normal: The enemy of great. (winter 2008)
- Back from the Stone Age: After the tsunami. (fall 2007)
- The Passion behind the Business: Launching ventures with a conscience. (fall 2006)
- Music in a World Gone Wired: Can the music business survive the internet? (winter 2004)
- Vita: The Money Guy: He’s one of the world’s top financial forecasters, but even he couldn’t predict his own future. (winter 1999)
law
- Loyalty in Question: A wartime witch hunt. (fall 2007)
- Democracy and Dissent: The Supreme Court Rules. (spring 2007)
- Free to Die for Their Country: For Japanese Americans interned behind barbed wire, the draft was the final straw. Could they count on the courts? (winter 2002)
- For the Good: A team of law students learn early that working pro bono is just good practice. (spring 1999)
- Objection!: Why lawyers behave as they do. (fall 1998)
journalism
- Life by the Andaman Sea: Carolina J-schoolers document fighters, farmers, and mahouts in Thailand. (spring 2009)
- Meet the Bucket Brigade: The J-school rescues a paper in peril. (winter 2008)
- Fixing the News: Philip Meyer wrote the book on reporting by the numbers. (fall 2007)
- Battlefront to Bridal Suite: Why British war brides got a bad rap. (spring 2007)
- Bombs over Beirut: Stephanie Preston was asleep in her bed when the first bombs hit at 3:45 a.m. (winter 2007)
- Dear Newspapers... A letter to the editor. (spring 2005)
- Where’s the Sweat Equity? Female athletes aren’t getting their fair share of the spotlight. (fall 2004)
- Tough Questions, Real Faces: Journalism students report on two potentially fatal diseases. (spring 1999)
- Dialogue: Should news media select the building blocks of debate? (fall 1997)
- Dialogue: John Bittner and Mary Ruth Coleman comment on the Communications Decency Act. (fall 1996)
- TV Violence: Which is winning—anti-violence public service announcements or programming that may glamorize violence? (fall 1996)
- Chuck Stone: The Journalist as Ombudsman. (spring 1996)
