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Cherry, max

This article explores significant instances of plagiarism within literature and journalism, highlighting the unethical practices of several well-known figures. Janet Dailey's extensive copying of Nora Roberts' work led to settlements and the withdrawal of her novels. Timothy S. Goeglein and Stephen Glass faced severe repercussions for fabricating and plagiarizing stories in major publications like The New Republic and The New York Times. These scandals reflect the ongoing issue of integrity in writing and the consequences of plagiarism across different mediums.

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Cherry, max

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  1. Plagiarism Cherry, max NOVELISTS

  2. Borrowed plot points and passages from Nora's Robert's Novels. (Novels were pulled from print and paid a settlements to Nora Roberts) Janet Dailey

  3. 20 out of 38 stories he wrote for "News-Sentinel", copied text without citing. (Resigned from white-house and the News-Sentinel says that will not publish his articles anymore) Timothy S. Goeglein

  4. 27 out of 41 stories wrote for the new-republic contain fabricate information, some stories were completely made up. (Force to resign from the new republic) Stephen Glass

  5. 36 out of 73 national news stories written for the new york times includes plagiarized and some were made-up. (Forced to resign from new york times, executive and managing editor also resigned) Jayson blair

  6. http://libraries.ucsd.edu/locations/sshl/guides/preventing-plagiarism/real-world-examples.htmlhttp://www.likesbooks.com/daileyupdate.htmlhttp://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/05/07/60minutes/main552819.shtml http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4457860/ns/dateline_nbc/t/question-trust/ http://watchingthewatchers.org/news/1368/white-house-official-caught-plagiarism Bibliography

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