PrepTest C, Section 3, Question 20
Sarah: Reporters, by allotting time to some events rather than others, are exercising their judgment as to what is newsworthy and what is not. In other words, they always interpret the news.
Sarah: Reporters, by allotting time to some events rather than others, are exercising their judgment as to what is newsworthy and what is not. In other words, they always interpret the news.
Ramon: Reporters should never interpret the news. Once they deem a story to be newsworthy, they are obliged to relay the facts to me untainted.
Sarah: Reporters, by allotting time to some events rather than others, are exercising their judgment as to what is newsworthy and what is not. In other words, they always interpret the news.
Ramon: Reporters should never interpret the news. Once they deem a story to be newsworthy, they are obliged to relay the facts to me untainted.
Sarah: Reporters, by allotting time to some events rather than others, are exercising their judgment as to what is newsworthy and what is not. In other words, they always interpret the news.
Sarah and Ramon's remarks provide the most support for holding that they disagree about the truth of which one of the following statements?
Reporters actually do interpret the news every time they report it.
Reporters should exercise their own judgment as to which events are newsworthy.
Reporters' primary responsibility is to see that people are kept informed of the facts.
Reporters should not allot time to reporting some events rather than others.
Reporting on certain events rather than others qualifies as interpreting the news.
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