Read the passage: I was in full-on panic mode. Here I was on my first day as an inexperienced reporter
 having to cover an important story with little guidance. I was starting to regret my
 decision to take the job. What was I doing here? I wasn't a journalism major. I didn't
 have a "beat." I didn't even know all the rules about dealing with sources and off-the-
 record information
 The previous spring. I'd taken up my boss on his offer and stayed at my part-time job
 through the summer after college. He gave me more hours, so I was making more
 money, but I didn't yet have the responsibility of a "real job. I'd been an English
 major and wanted to be a writer, though I had no idea what kind of writer. I'd taken
 the summer to think about things and prepare for a tall job search.
 By the time I began the search for my first full time job. the job market was in bad
 shape. During my first few months looking for a job. I sent out countless resumes
 and only had one interview. Unfortunately. I was very unqualified for the job at the
 time. Then a woman I worked with at my part time job told me about a reporter
 position opening up at the newspaper chain where her daughter worked. Though id
 never thought about being a reporter. I figured it couldn't hurt to go on the
 interview. In addition to interview experience, the opportunity meant I was officially
 networking. All the job search materials I'd read stressed the importance of
 networking in finding a job.
 A few days later. I was sitting down with John, one of the executive editors of the
 newspaper chain, hearing all the daunting details of being a cub reporter: Although
 it sounded intimidating, it was also exciting, and John didn't seem deterred by the
 fact that I had no solid experience. He was happy with the few writing samples id
 brought to the interview and offered me the job on the spot thought about the
 opportunity over the weekend and on Monday I let John know I would take the job.
 There would be a learning curve, but I would also get to write every single day.
 Two weeks later, when I arrived for my first day on the job, discovered that my
 editor had been called away for a family emergency also learned that the state
 education department had announced that aid typically allocated to school districts
 in the area would not come through that year. This would be a blow to schools that
 had relied on tunding to keep art, music and sports programs running,
 Since Monday was press day needed to do all my reporting and have the story
 written by the end of the day. John told me that the fastest way to get reactions and
 comments from everyone involved was to go to the schools and talk directly to the
 principals teachers and parents. No one would be in their offices today lotted
 down the list of people that should speak to and set out to cover my first story on