Australia relies on 70,000 volunteer firefighters to battle bushfire infernos. As fire seasons get longer and more intense, would the country be better off paying for professionals?
Today鈥檚 stories explore the strains on Australia鈥檚 century-old volunteer bushfire fighting force, the question of whether a community can have too much diversity, the struggles of Mexico鈥檚 president to tamp down national violence, whether au pairs aren鈥檛 compensated enough, and why artists are often targets of authoritarian regimes. But first, a moment to remember a lion of journalism.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not magic, and it鈥檚 not saintly.鈥
That鈥檚 what Jim Lehrer said about his approach to covering the news. For almost 40 years Mr. Lehrer, who passed away Thursday, was a beacon of integrity in journalism, first as co-anchor, and then anchor, of the PBS nightly news broadcast.
He was born in Wichita, Kansas. After a stint in the Marines he worked for newspapers in Dallas. President John Kennedy鈥檚 assassination taught him that anything can happen at any moment. As a city editor, he ruled that every phone that rang in the newsroom got answered, because you never knew what was on the other end of the line.
He developed other tenets over a lifetime. In his honor PBS of nine 鈥淟ehrer鈥檚 Rules鈥 this week. No. 1: 鈥淒o nothing I cannot defend.鈥 No. 2: 鈥淐over, write and present every story with the care I would want if the story were about me.鈥
He cared a lot about balance. 鈥淎ssume there is at least one other side or version to every story鈥 was rule No. 3.
Lehrer knew he was fortunate to work for PBS. He wasn鈥檛 in the entertainment business, he said. He only had to get up every day, decide what the news was, and how to report it. His NewsHour never had to figure out what it was or why it was there.
At the Monitor we try to live up to similar values. It鈥檚 hard work and we don鈥檛 always get there. But as Jim Lehrer says, it鈥檚 not magic. It鈥檚 not saintly, either.