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  2. wp.lps.org › 12 › Spring-Breakdown-Stephen-GlassSPRING BREAKDOWN - LPS

    MARCH 31, 1997. SPRING BREAKDOWN. BYLINE: Stephen Glass. SECTION: Pg. 18. LENGTH: 2208 words. HIGHLIGHT: Conservative youths despair, drink, debauch. On the fourth floor of Washington's Omni Shoreham Hotel, eight young men sit facing each other on the edge of a pair of beds. They are all 20 or 21 and are enrolled in Midwestern colleges.

  3. In May 1997, Joe Galli of the College Republican National Committee accused Glass of fabrications in "Spring Breakdown", his lurid tale of drinking and debauchery at the 1997 Conservative Political Action Conference.

  4. Spring Breakdown, published in March 1997, was another example of Glass s fabrications. The theme of the article was that young, conservative Republicans had given up on electoral politics and had turned to drugs and sex.

  5. Finally, in ‘Spring Breakdown,’ Glass’s portrayal of a 1997 conservative political conference in a Washington hotel, Glass made up the article’s accounts of drug use, drinking, and sexual harassment by young conference attendees.

  6. In early 1997, he wrote hostile articles like ‘Don't You D.A.R.E.’, ‘Spring Breakdown’, ‘Peddling Poppy’, where he was accused of fabricating information. But the magazine continued to vehemently defend him.

  7. Sep 8, 2018 · A quick social media harvest on Twitter would reveal that the Stephen Glass story is still to this day a staple subject matter in press ethics classes all across the globe.

  8. Spring-Breakdown-Stephen-Glass - Free download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read online for free.

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