Page:The Newspaper and the Historian.djvu/28

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xviii
CONTENTS
PAGE
Circumventing Parliament 162
Dr. Johnson as reporter 163
His debates 164
Their limitations for the historian 164
John Wilkes and parliamentary reporting 166
Present theory of parliamentary reporting 167
Difficulties of reporting 167
Position of provincial reporters 167
Development of organization of reporting 168
Social status of reporters 169
General limitations of reporting 170
Difficulties with speakers 170
Variations between Hansard and collected speeches 170
"Reporting speeches which never were made" 171
Verbatim reports 172
Comparative merits of different forms of reports 172
Decline of interest in verbatim reports 173
Explanation of opposition of Parliament to reporters 174
Parliament accepts reporters 174
Reporters in Congress 174
Right of the public to know the business of the public 174
Three general systems of reporting 175
Reporting in the hands of the press 175
Official reporting 175
Contract system 175
Parliamentary reports on reporting 175
Press reports and parliamentary records 176
Comparative advantages 176
"Man always to be blest" 176
Objections to reporting at first general 177
Kossuth and reporting 177
Reporters and court trials 178
J. G. Bennett and court reporting 178
Reporters not alone responsible for unreliable reports 179
Real service may be rendered justice by reporters 179
Chapter VIII
The Special Correspondent
Many forms of special correspondence 180
The Letters of Junius 180
Cramped opportunities of early papers 180
Material often contributed by prominent men 181
Development of reporter into special correspondent 181