1. Observe everything on the endless sea, examine the unexpected storms and dangerous reefs on the sea, and issue timely warnings. (Pulitzer’s famous saying has never been an empty talk for the Pulitzer Prize for Journalism, and it also explains why investigative reporting has repeatedly shined.)
2. If a country is sailing on the sea If there is a ship, then the news reporter is the lookout standing on the bow. He wants to observe everything on the endless sea, examine the unexpected storms, shoals and reefs on the sea, and issue warnings in time. (This famous saying by Pulitzer has become the "Hippocratic Oath" for almost all journalism students.)
3. Journalists are the watchmen on the big ship of society. They must see the future. Good or bad information must be conveyed to the captain and passengers to allow them to sail safely.
4. (I hope "Le Monde") can be both a daily classroom and a daily forum; it not only educates the public, but also provides a platform for public discussion.
5. If you can spare two or three hours a day to teach the revision staff how to streamline and condense, how to avoid piecing together, and how to squeeze out water, waste, and dregs, then you will have completed something. The most important job.
Extended information:
In 1901, Pulitzer was tired of competition and canceled the most attacked yellow part of Le Monde, and the trend of yellow journalism gradually declined. He is recognized as the founder of the "new journalism" in the 1870s and 1880s.
After his death in 1911, his will stipulated that Le Monde must never be sold. In accordance with his will, descendants donated US$2.5 million to Columbia University in 1912 to create the second journalism school in the United States. Since 1917, he has established the Pulitzer Prize, which is awarded annually to American journalism and literature. People who have made outstanding contributions in novels, poetry, biography, history, drama, music, news interviews and reporting.