Complete the paragraph with the correct form of the words in the box. accurate chase exaggerate expense fraud inform minor occasion principle The New York Times The New York Times has the reputation of being one of the world's best papers. Where other papers may (1)_________the facts, The New York Times has always sought to (2)_________readers through objective, (3)_________reporting. But even The New York Times can make mistakes sometimes, as it did with one of its journalists, Jayson Blair. To use the words of The New York Times, over a period of several years Blair committed numerous "acts of journalistic (4)_________". Instead of (5)_________the news in the traditional way, he preferred to write his stories from his home in New York, using his computer to get up-to-date news and pictures from different sources. He copied the stories he found there, adding some more details at the (6)_________of the truth. On one (7)_________, however, he went too far, describing a landscape which didn't exist. His editor began to suspect something was wrong, and set up a seven-person team whose job was to find information that showed Blair had invented his material. They examined everything Blair had written over four years, and found dozens of invented details, some quite (8)_________but others much more serious. Blair lost his job, of course; The New York Times, true to its (9)_________, put the story of the cheating journalist on its front page.