Talk:Linda Greenhouse

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Revision as of 06:28, 1 November 2008 by imported>Sandy Harris (→‎Multiple problems.)
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 Definition A Pullitzer Prize winning legal journalist who began covering the Supreme Court of the United States in 1972. [d] [e]
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 Workgroup categories Law, Journalism and Topic Informant [Editors asked to check categories]
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Multiple problems.

Again, there is no obvious reason that there is more than a paragraph or two that belongs in an integrated article about media coverage about Bush 43 administration policy coverage.

Note that 350px is an inappropriate size for an image not truly needing fine detail.

The lengthy quotes in footnotes are inappropriate. If the quote is appropriate, or preferably a paraphrase of it, it belongs in the main article, rather than forcing the reader to have to click every citation to see if it does, or does not, add more than bibliographic data.

Yes. Put quotes in the text. I'd often prefer an actual quote to a paraphrase, less chance of unannounced writer bias slipping in. However, CZ:Article_Mechanics#Quotations says "Quotations should not be used to “make an argument”; an argument is made by logic and reason, not by authority, and if a quote is used to support an argument by showing that important people agree with the point, then this is a misuse." Some of the quotes here look dubious to me by that citerion. Sandy Harris 08:35, 1 November 2008 (UTC)

There were few links to the article, so it would be unlikely to be found by a reader.

Recommend merging substance into general coverage and deleting this article. Howard C. Berkowitz 16:26, 31 October 2008 (UTC) Military Workgroup Editor.

Most of my wiki experience is on the travel guide site Wikitravel. Policy there is to have articles only for destinations ("can you sleep there") not attractions (museums, etc.) or facilities (hotels, etc.). However, any name a user is likely to search for is created as a redirect. For example, a "Taj Mahal" article exists but it is a link to "Agra", the city where the Taj is located. This both makes it easier for users to find things within the wiki and makes our pages more likely to be found by search engines.
I would say deleting this article should be considered out of the question. There should absolutely be a Greenhouse article since people may well search on her name. The only question is whether that article has text or is a redirect into some broader article. I don't know the area well enough to have an opinion on that. Sandy Harris 03:38, 1 November 2008 (UTC)
Would you accept a friendly amendment that agreeing that a topic -- with appropriate editing -- should not be deleted -- but how it is stored and retrieved in terms of articles is open to guidance? Sandy, I especially want your perspectives here, because you have made me think a great deal about accomodating top-down and bottom-up styles in a set of articles. It may be that you and George have more writing style in common, of building up from seemingly separate pieces, than I do so -- although, while this isn't the time for detail, I actually do use some bottom-up methods for organizing my own thoughts, but, by the time I actually begin to post articles, those sandbox/offline methods let me get to more of a top-down approach. I'm delighted to share them, and was just now thinking of somewhere to post them to avoid the forum access problem -- you aren't the only one with it, and we have the added problem that if there is a good search mechanism for the forums, I haven't found it.
I mention the forums because there are several active discussions that directly bear on ways to make groups of articles easier to navigate, extend, and edit. Without rehashing the details, let it simply be said that there may be some problems with the specific #REDIRECT construct that may eventually be better solved with some other techniques where the people working on the problem are beginning to be able to categorize the problems, although not necessarily the shape of the final or even a well-improvised interim solution.
Just as one conceptual point, I think there's a certain consensus among people working on the CZ — not sure what to call it -- schema? metastructure? Something more general that what we now call metadata — that we have a goal in which search engines can have a role, but the main navigation technique, we hope, will be somewhat more empowering by making the process less random.
Without trying to get into the merits of this specific article, I don't disagreee that that there should be coverage of Linda Greenhouse, Eugene Fidell, and other people; coverage that absolutely would be found by a search engine. There are other questions, which to some extent get into the internal conceptual and technical organization of CZ, which is not always the same as WP, may have nothing at all to do with the merits of a specific topic. There is an unnamed function -- not exactly Editor, not exactly Developer, but sharing both -- that strongly believe their are some usability issues here. In this case, there are separate issue of emphasis, style and notability.
I really want to get this discussion into an article page where it is not tied to specific mainspace articles, but probably something like CZ: space; that will get around your Forums access problem and some of the inherent problems of the Forum software (i.e., no good search capability). Earlier this morning, I was considering a VERY TEMPORARY userspace page to concentrate on the meta-issues including, for example, a consensus on when it is best to have separate, merged, or at least explicitly linked articles. There really is a lot of active thought being given to this problem, and no ideal solution has yet emerged; there are bound to be prototypes. Driving this is a desire, in large part, to make CZ more navigable and more verifiable, without going too far in the "expert-controlled" rather than "expert-guided" direction. Howard C. Berkowitz 11:33, 1 November 2008 (UTC)
Is CZ_Talk:Article_Mechanics the right place? Or where?
I was objecting to your "Recommend merging ... and deleting this article." She looks like an appropriate topic for an encyclopedia, and I want people who search on her name (either with a search engine or on the wiki) to find that topic. The methods I know are writing lots of little articles to cover all reasonable topics, writing overviews to tie it all together, wikilinking a lot, and adding redirects so searching on "Pekin" gets you "Beijing" et cetera. I'm certainly not wedded to those methods; anything else that works (including the CZ "related articles" stuff) is of interest.
I tend to the view that more-or-less all indexing methods have their place. A book needs table of contents, index and cross-references. If you can make the text searchable too, or provide a one-page index of only the key points, or colour-code the chapters, or come up with something else, so much the better. Users and their goals are all different; give them all the choices you can.
I've even written code to generate a permuted index from HTML headers [1]. Definitely not an ideal index, but some users loved it. I wonder if something similar might work here, based either on HTML headers or on definition lines.? Sandy Harris 12:28, 1 November 2008 (UTC)

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(CC) Photo: Chris Haynes
Add image caption here.

Linda Greenhouse is a Pullitzer Prize winning legal journalist. Greenhouse who wrote for the New York Times from 1968 to early 2008.[1] Greenhouse began covering the United States Supreme Court in 1972.[2] Greenhouse has appeared as a legal expert on various televsion news shows.

Covering the Supreme Court's rulings on Guantanamo captives

Greenhouse's husband, Eugene R. Fidell, is also a lawyer -- a specialist in military law. He has been a critic of the Bush Presidency's policy on captives taken in the "war on terror".[3][4]

On January 20, 2008 Clark Hoyt, of the New York Times described Fidell holding back in participating in preparing a brief submitted to the Supreme Court on behalf of National Institute of Military Justice and the Bar Association of the District of Columbia because of the concern it would be considered a conflict of interest, due to his wife covering the case.[5]

On January 22, 2008 Slate magazine, published an article written by Emily Bazelon and Dahlia Lithwick, criticizing the New York Times for failing to show more support for their employee.[6]

According to Bazelon and Lithwick the main critic of Greenhouse covering stories where her husband Fidell has a role is M. Edward Whelan III of the National Review. They wrote:

Unable to point to any actual bias, Whelan resorts to the petulant claim that the effect of Fidell's involvement in the detainee cases "would be impossible to separate … from the broader political bias that pervades so much of Greenhouse's reporting."

Resignation

Greenhouse and the New York Times negotiated a buyout and voluntary resignation in late February 2008.[1] The New York Times had announced a plan to trim 100 staff members, and had asked staff to consider volunteering for a buyout.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 John Koblin. Supreme-Court-Whisperer Linda Greenhouse Takes $300K Times Buyout, New York Observer, February 28, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-04-28.
  2. Linda Greenhouse: Supreme Court Correspondent, The New York Times, PBS. Retrieved on 2008-04-28.
  3. Eugene R. Fidell, Dwight H. Sullivan, Detlev F. Vagts. Military Commission Law, The Army Lawyer, December 2005. Retrieved on 2007-11-10.
  4. Carol D. Leonnig. Panel Ignored Evidence on Detainee, Washington Post, March 27 2005, p. A01. Retrieved on 2008-01-20. “"It suggests the procedure is a sham, If a case like that can get through, what it means is that the merest scintilla of evidence against someone would carry the day for the government, even if there's a mountain of evidence on the other side."”
  5. Clark Hoyt. Public and Private Lives, Intersecting, New York Times, January 20, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-01-18.
  6. Emily Bazelon, Dahlia Lithwick. Lay Off Linda: Why doesn't the New York Times stand up for Linda Greenhouse?, Slate magazine, Tuesday, January 22, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-01-25. “Whelan didn't point to any concrete problem with Greenhouse's handling of these cases. That should be easier to do than with almost any other reporter, given that Greenhouse relies primarily on court filings and oral arguments that are publicly available in their entirety, as Yale law professor Judith Resnik points out to us. Unable to point to any actual bias, Whelan resorts to the petulant claim that the effect of Fidell's involvement in the detainee cases 'would be impossible to separate … from the broader political bias that pervades so much of Greenhouse's reporting.'”