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Official Publication of the Arizona Newspapers Association for distribution to all employees of ANA-member newspapers

A N Ag r a m s

A community newspaper for community newspaper people. October 2007

Briefs

Stardust Foundation partners with Cronkite School to create high school newsrooms The Stardust Foundation is making a $510,000 grant to the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University to fund a groundbreaking outreach initiative to create high school journalism programs in underserved communities in Arizona. Ten Arizona high schools will be selected to participate in the program. The Stardust program will create multimedia newsrooms in each school and help teach journalism skills and values to students and advisors. Schools interested in participating in the Stardust program should contact Anita Luera at 480.965.5477. UA publication is finalist for award Border Beat, an online publication produced by students in the University of Arizona’s Department of Journalism, has been named a finalist for the 2007 Online Journalism Awards presented by the Online News Association and the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Southern California. The online journalism awards will be presented in Toronto, Oct. 18-19. WSJ to launch new magazine T h e Wa l l S t r e e t J o u r n a l announced Monday that it will launch a glossy monthly magazine next year that it will distribute with the Saturday edition of the newspaper. The magazine, to be called “Pursuits,” marks the latest expansion of the Journal’s efforts to attract consumer advertising with coverage of leisure activities and lifestyle topics, following the launch of a Saturday edition of the paper two years ago. Stonybrook University to start center for news literacy New York’s Stony Brook University journalism school has announced plans to establish a Center for News Literacy, designed to educate news consumers on how to judge the reliability of news. The center will differ from media centers at other universities because its sole focus will be judging the credibility of news, as opposed to an exploration of broader media-related issues, university officials said. Teaching journalists to fight The Iraqi Journalists Union has announced that it is planning to offer martial arts and survival courses to help its members cope with the risks of life in the war-torn country. Reporters, photographers and television crews will also be taught how to lower their profile and conceal their equipment when they are traveling. Reporters Without Borders, a Paris-based organization for the protection of journalists, says a total of 200 journalists have been killed in Iraq since 2003.

Find the complete list of BNC winners Page 4

www.ananews.com

You should check out ANA’s new members-only Web site

Gus Olavarria, graphic artist for The Sun (Yuma).

The Arizona Newspapers Association is proud to announce that we have officially gone live with the new “members only” part of our Web site at http://members.ananews.com. Through this Web site, our membership will be able to communicate and share with each other 365 days a year. Our new site has: Forums and listservs for communicating and sharing ideas; File libraries for posting information, questions, letters and more; Keep track of special seminars and events with Event Calendars, participate in polls and surveys and

stay up-to-date on Arizona newspaper news! We are excited about this new tool and look forward to it being another method of communication with our members. Instructions on how to log in are posted on our Web site and we’d like to encourage all newspaper staff members to check it out. We think that you will find our new site and tools valuable to your membership. If you have any questions about the new members-only site, contact us at our support address: web@ananews.com.

Better Newspapers Contest winners get happy The East Valley Tribune and Payson Roundup once again took the coveted award for Arizona Newspaper of the Year during the Arizona Newspapers Association’s 2007 Better Newspapers Contest. “They’ve won a few years in a row now, but the results have never been closer,” said ANA Interim Executive Director Paula Casey. Newspaper of the Year awards are calculated from honors won in the Excellence in Advertising Contest added together with winning entries from the Better Newspapers Contest. New this year are the “Photographer of the Year” and “Journalist of the Year” awards. Greg Bryan, Arizona Daily Star (daily newspaper division)and Mario Aguilar, Green Valley News and Sun (non-daily newspaper division) were named the ANA 2007 Photographer of the Year. Brady McCombs, Arizona Daily Star (daily) and John Dickerson, Scottsdale Times (non-daily) were named the ANA 2007 Journalist of the Year. This year, 66 Newspapers and 14 high schools entered in the Better Newspapers Contest for a total of 1,844 entries. The Better Newspapers Contest consists of nine categories that measure the overall quality of the newspapers and 13 categories that honor the individuals who contribute to journalism excellence. A special thanks to the Nevada Press Association, who graciously judged the entries in July.

You can find a complete list of winners, beginning on page six of this issue of ANAgrams. The awards were presented by Deputy Executive Director John

F. Fearing on Sept. 22, 2007 in Scottsdale, Ariz. The event concluded the ANA 2007 Fall Convention. We were pleased to see so many happy winners. Congratulations!

White Mountain Independent photographer Alec Pearce grins while holding up his first place award for Best Feature Photo Layout.

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