Article Title,Year,Volume,Issue,Page Range,Author Youth and race on local TV news,1998,52,4,43-44,Woodruff Inside the juvenile justice system: Lifting the veil of secrecy,1998,52,4,25-27,Wolfson Parents' warning: Remember the children,1998,52,4,50,Wade Voicing the community's horror worked well in Jonesboro Arkansas,1998,52,4,11-12,Troutt Integrating the public health perspective into reporting on violence,1998,52,4,38-40,Stevens Restraint and empathy defined reporting in Pearl Mississippi,1998,52,4,7-8,Skipper Making sense out of a tragedy: Don't report what you don't know,1998,52,4,5-6,Schwartz Giving readers ways to heal and to help in Springfield Oregon,1998,52,4,15-16,Schwartz Context contacts and accuracy were key in Paducah Kentucky,1998,52,4,9-10,Paxton Children's exposure to violence: A critical lens for reporting on violence,1998,52,4,22-24,Osofsky The courts and the media: improving the dialogue,1998,52,4,27-29,O'Neil Interview with photographer Donna Ferrato,1998,52,4,19-21, Riding the crime wave: Why words we use matter so much,1998,52,4,47-49,Miller Girls and juvenile violence: Stories rarely told,1998,52,4,33-34,Mehren Sensitive early reporting opened up good leads in edinboro pennsylvania,1998,52,4,13-14,Lloyd When juveniles are locked up: A reporter uncovers abuse in a system few people know exists,1998,52,4,30-32,Hargrove The superpredator script,1998,52,4,45-46,Gilliam Mapping children's roadway to violence: The early years,1998,52,4,17-18,Dowling Measuring the effects of changing the way violence is reported,1998,52,4,42-43,Thorson Media and juvenile violence: The connecting threads,1998,52,4,35-36,Doi Editors' question: Do we fail our children?,1998,52,4,51,Blau