Carolina Communicator - Summer 2009

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A publication of the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Summer 2009

Q&A with Hulu CEO Jason Kilar Comic strips, Southern stereotypes and Doug Marlette From the desk of Skipper Coffin: Journalism I lecture notes


We are celebrating 100 years of journalism and mass communication education at Carolina with special events and programs in 2009 for alumni, friends, students, parents, faculty and staff. In our centennial year, we are launching an ambitious new curriculum, forging new research partnerships and providing leadership and innovation in time of great change in the journalism and media industries.

Visit jomc.unc.edu, follow us on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook to be informed as we add to the lineup of centennial events that includes: Sept. 9 Centennial kick-off at Carroll Hall The first day of the first journalism class at Carolina was Sept. 9, 1909. N.C. Collection Gallery exhibit opens in Wilson Library “Consecrated to the Common Good: 100 Years of Journalism Education at UNC-Chapel Hill” Oct. 14 Roy H. Park Distinguished Lecture in Gerrard Hall Hulu CEO Jason Kilar ’93 5:30 p.m. Oct. 15 Coates University Lecture in Wilson Library Tom Bowers: “The Origins of Journalism Education at UNC-Chapel Hill” 5 p.m. Nov. 7 J-school Homecoming Open House at Carroll Hall Make plans to join the J-school community at Carroll Hall two hours prior to kickoff of the Carolina vs. Duke football game at Kenan Stadium.

“ Making News: One Hundred Years of Journalism & Mass Communication at Carolina” by Tom Bowers is available through UNC Press. Horace Carter, a 1943 graduate of the school and a Pulitzer Prize-winning editor, funded publication of the book.


CONTENTS

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12 3

Dean Jean Folkerts: Connecting

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37 th Frame

12 15 19

Cover photo from the school’s 37th Frame exhibition (see story on page 4). Kate Napier Two drivers sit on the roof of a car before the start of the first round in the semi-finals of the demolition derby at the N.C. State Fairgrounds in Raleigh on Oct. 25, 2008. The derby is a long-running tradition hosted over multiple days each year at the fair.

Q&A with Hulu CEO Jason Kilar

Comic strips, Southern stereotypes and Doug Marlette

Citizen Journalism: Grand vision, online reality

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Launching The Little Newspaper That Could

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Media and the Iraq War

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New Curriculum

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From the desk of Skipper Coffin: Journalism I lecture notes

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Catch-22: Business journalism and economic peril

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New media , new politics

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CONTENTS

School of Journalism and Mass Communication Jean Folkerts Dean 919.962.1204 jean_folkerts@unc.edu Dulcie Straughan Senior Associate Dean 919.962.9003 dulcie@email.unc.edu

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Anne Johnston Associate Dean for Graduate Studies 919.962.4286 amjohnst@email.unc.edu Joe Bob Hester Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies 919.843.8290 joe.bob.hester@unc.edu Speed Hallman Associate Dean for Development and Alumni Affairs 919.962.9467 speed_hallman@unc.edu

31 ‘Don’t worry about your DTH. It’s not going any where.’

32 Digital TV Transition’s Transition 33 Is the Time Right for a Federal Shield Law?

34 Agenda-setting to agendamelding 35 News Briefs 39 Donor list 41 Alumni support for student networking trips

42 Canady International Scholarship

Louise Spieler Associate Dean for Professional Education and Strategic Initiatives 919.843.8137 lspieler@unc.edu

Jay Eubank Director of Career Services and Special Programs 919.962.4518 jeubank@email.unc.edu Monica Hill Director, North Carolina Scholastic Media Association 919.962.4639 mihill@email.unc.edu Jennifer Gallina Director of Research Administration 919.843.8186 gallina@email.unc.edu Stephanie Willen Brown Park Library Director 919.843.8300 swbrown@unc.edu Fred Thomsen Director of Information Technology and Services 919.962.0281 thomsen@email.unc.edu Kyle York Assistant to the Dean for Communications 919.966.3323 kyle_york@unc.edu

Dottie Howell Assistant Dean for Business and Finance 919.843.8287 dottie_howell@unc.edu

Editors Morgan Ellis, Kyle York Designer Karen Hibbert, UNC Design Services Printer Harperprints, Henderson, NC Read the Carolina Communicator online at jomc.unc.edu/carolinacommunicator. Carolina Communicator is a publication of the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. © Copyright 2009, UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication. All rights reserved. Address corrections: Amy Bugno School of Journalism and Mass Communication Campus Box 3365 UNC-Chapel Hill, N.C. 27599-3365 amybugno@unc.edu 919.962.3037

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FROM THE DEAN

Dean Jean Folkerts: Connecting

Sept. 9, 2009 marks 100 years since Edward Kidder Graham taught the first journalism class at Carolina. Graham later became president of the University and is widely credited with instilling the public service ethic that has become a Carolina hallmark. It’s apt that a service-minded leader taught our first course. As journalism and mass communication education at Carolina grew and flourished over the past century, service has been at the center of the mission. And this may be true now more than ever – as journalism and the media industries confront major changes and considerable economic challenges. They need the school’s research, ideas and faculty experts. Most of all, they need our students. Our students will shape the future of media. In fact, they already are. Just take a look at “Powering a Nation” (poweringanation.org) to see what our students are doing for their part of the experimental News21 program of the Carnegie-Knight Initiative on the Future of Journalism. They are finding innovative ways to tell stories that need to be told. In this centennial year, we’re launching a new curriculum that takes into account the changes in the industry. (See pages 24 and 25.) We re-vamped the curriculum after I traveled extensively visiting with alumni and friends at newspapers, online news services, broadcast stations, and advertising and public relations agencies to hear what they need from our graduates. The school’s Board of Advisers weighed in, and we consulted the students themselves. The result is a curriculum the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications has called “converged and ambitious.” The school recently converted to high definition in the studio where we teach broadcasting students. Our students will be entering an HD industry, and we are committed to training them on the equipment and technology they’ll use when they start their careers. Twenty-one students traveled with faculty and professionals to the Galapagos Islands this summer to create a multimedia Web site documenting the effects of the rapidly growing human population on the islands. We believe it’s the first time anyone has approached the Galapagos from a multimedia standpoint. This is the kind of rich international experience we love to provide our students.

The school stays active in the community closer to home as well. Our Carolina Community Media Project has forged a first-ever partnership between UNC, N.C. Central University and the city of Durham to create a community newspaper in Northeast Central Durham – an area police call “the bull’s eye” because of its reputation for crime. (See story on page 20.) The project has drawn support from private funding, civic leaders, volunteers and other contributors. This work in Durham is a heartening example of how we can remain highly effective even in the midst of the state budget cuts. Our bottom line is to provide the very best in teaching, research and service. Budget cuts are never easy, but we will take on the challenge to be yet more innovative and creative in how we reach our bottom line. Gifts from alumni and friends make a huge impact. I hope you enjoy this edition of the Carolina Communicator, and I invite you to stay connected to the school, especially this year as we observe our centennial with special events and programs for alumni, friends, students, faculty and staff. We’re excited to welcome Hulu CEO, Jason Kilar, a 1993 graduate of our advertising program, back to Chapel Hill to give the school’s Roy H. Park Distinguished Lecture on Oct. 14. (See story on page 12.) Visit jomc.unc.edu; become a fan on Facebook; follow us on Twitter; join the J-link network; and come see us at Carroll Hall.

Dean Jean Folkerts

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37 th

Frame


PHOTOJOURNALISM

T

he 37th Frame, Carolina photojournalism’s annual student-run photo contest and exhibit, features the best student work from the past year.

This year’s exhibition featured 50 single images and five photo stories selected from more than 500 photos and more than 20 photo stories. The images were judged by a panel of professional journalists from The News & Observer and the Durham Herald-Sun. “ Our students produce compelling, real life photojournalism,” said associate professor Pat Davison. “Their work reflects humanity in a unique and intimate way.” The following images are just a few from the 37th Frame exhibition.

above: Abby Metty Muslim high school girls at Koh Yao Wittaya in southern Thailand say their afternoon prayers. At this rural high school, girls and boys say prayers separated by a curtain, with the boys by the window, facing toward Mecca, and the girls behind them, shrouded in robes in the sticky tropical heat. facing page: Eli Sinkus Tattoo artist Aaron Tingey feels strongly about equality. “I think that everyone’s opinion matters,” Tingey said. Tingey works at Glenn’s, a tattoo parlor in Carborro, N.C.

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right: Roxanne Turpen Snowglobes: Portrait of Jessica Anders below: Zach Hoffman Pelicans gather behind Tommy Leggett’s shrimp boat to dine on discarded fish trapped in shrimp nets. N.C. shrimpers are struggling to stay in business due to high fuel prices and the low cost of imported shrimp. Leggett and his brother, Robert, who set sail out of Shallotte, N.C., are determined to keep the industry alive. They were raised by shrimpers and are teaching their children the art of shrimping.

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PHOTOJOURNALISM

above, top: John W. Adkisson Deontae Paul, 10, right, draws on his arm while friends Tristin Ecker, 12, back left, and Ralph Ecker, 15, back right, replace the back tire on one of their bicycles on Leith Street in Flint, Mich. above, middle: Mary Catherine Penn Magdalena Grozsek, a Polish bossa nova singer, tries on a fur on her terrace in Paris, France. left: Tiffany Devereux Colin Lawrence works on a construction site on the island of St. Helena. He said the clutch of his car ripped open the top of his shoe when his foot slipped on the pedal. “The sole is still good, though,� he said.

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above: Danielle Verrilli Tory Daley and her mare, Sapphire, compete during Carriage Day at the 2008 N.C. State Fair Horse Show. left: John W. Adkisson A woman weeps after flagging down police officers in Durham, N.C. She reported that a thief had stolen money she intended to use to purchase crack cocaine. below: Courtney Potter 2008 Summer Olympics hopeful Erika Erndl, right, shares the pool with a children’s swim league for her early morning workout.

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PHOTOJOURNALISM

left: Brittany Peterson A couple dances the tango on a street corner in Montevideo, Uruguay. They were dancing to recruit people to dance at their studio. below: Elizabeth Ladzinski Julie Atlas Muz rehearses before the premiere of “Vivien and the Shadows,� a work commissioned by Carolina Performing Arts. The show was part of the Gender Project Series, which explored issues of gender and sexuality.

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above, top: Anthony Harris Caroline Mason and Beth Haley kiss in the Pit on the Carolina campus to protest street-preacher “Brother Micah’s” views on Christianity and morality. above, middle: Andrew Johnson Red Griffin reaches out to one of his 27 cows. Griffin, 99, has kept cows at his farm in southern Chatham County for most of his life. While the herd has dwindled, he still tends to them several days a week. left: Mary Catherine Penn Reflection of trees in a juice cup during an outdoor Hare Krishna dinner in Chapel Hill

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PHOTOJOURNALISM

above: Chris Carmichael Craig Carmichael enjoys a podcast during a family visit to Naples, Fla. Carmichael has battled the neuro-degenerative disorder Friedreich’s Ataxia from an early age. The disease has meant gradual loss of mobility, which has led him to channel his energy into writing. He has authored several books, including “See What I Can Do,” published by the comic book company Top Shelf. right: Jon Young Note to Self (Photo-Illustration)

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ALUMNI

with Hulu CEO Jason Kilar J

ASON KILAR, A 1993 ADVERTISING GRADUATE OF THE SCHOOL, IS CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF HULU, AN ONLINE VIDEO SERVICE THAT OFFERS TV SHOWS, MOVIES AND CLIPS AT HULU.COM FOR FREE. Kilar joined Hulu in July 2007 after more than a decade with Amazon. Hulu – which is co-owned by NBC Universal, News Corp. and Providence Equity Partners – is operated independently by a management team with offices in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago and Beijing. Its mission is “to help people find and enjoy the world’s premium video content when, where and how they want it.”

Jason Kilar will deliver the school’s Roy H. Park Distinguished Lecture on Oct. 14 in Gerrard Hall on the UNC campus.

Hulu has overtaken Yahoo as the third-most-watched Internet video destination – behind YouTube (and other Google sites) and MySpace. Hulu users find videos from more than 130 content providers, including FOX, NBC Universal, MGM, Sony Pictures Television, Warner Bros. and more. They can choose from more than 1,000 current TV hits such as The Simpsons, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and The Office the morning after they air. Popular older shows including Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The A Team and Married...with Children are available, along with hit movies like Men in Black, Ghostbusters and The Karate Kid. Hulu also carries clips from Saturday Night Live and Friends, among other shows and movies. Users can view the content at Hulu.com and on a growing network of personal blogs, fan sites and other Web sites that embed the Hulu video player.

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ALUMNI

Hulu is often noted as a unique venue for advertisers. What kind of research goes into ad development for Hulu? Hulu’s approach to advertising is the result of listening carefully to advertisers and users alike. We also marry that information with our own beliefs in what makes for an ideal advertising service. Our goal is to create a service to which we ourselves become addicted, both as users and as marketers.

Actor Alec Baldwin starred in Hulu’s February 2009 Super Bowl television ads.

Hulu allows users to choose the advertisements they see. How did that come about, and how does it work? Some of the most powerful innovations are the simplest ones. A number of us like regular soda in the office, whereas others like diet soda. As we were initially developing our ad formats, we felt that it would be better for both users and the Coca-Cola company if we let users choose whether they were presented with a Diet Coke ad or a Coke ad. Users and advertisers are much happier with the control and targeting, respectively.

What does Hulu offer advertisers that other sites do not? We enable high-fidelity conversations between brands and up to 30 million of their prospective customers. The recall rates of advertising and advertisers on Hulu are approximately two times what that same advertising and advertisers are getting in other mediums. In a world of clutter, we aspire to be a relatively simple, relevant and high-recall environment.

What type of audience does Hulu bring to advertisers? The bulk of our audience is 18-49 with an average income of $77,000.

What has been the response of advertisers to Hulu? It’s been humbling to see the response from the advertising community. We started with 10 charter advertisers, and that number grew to more than 175 in a year’s time. One of our goals is to invent the ideal advertising service, which we define as delivering relevant advertising to each individual user and to also deliver world-beating results to our advertising partners. ⊲

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ALUMNI

How do movie studios and TV networks view Hulu? Most movie studios and TV networks view Hulu as an increasingly relevant tool to help connect their great stories with the audience those stories deserve. They also view Hulu as an effective way to make a fair return on their investment in creating feature films and television shows.

Obviously NBC and FOX are on board. How can they offer their content for
free? In the U.S. alone, there is $67 billion spent on advertising that runs alongside premium content (like 30 Rock and Saturday Night Live). So it all depends on how you define the word “free.”

Are there plans to move beyond movies and TV shows? Our mission is to aggregate and offer the world’s premium content. Though we’ve made good progress this first year, we are very sober about the fact that we have a long way to go.

Hulu broadcasted
a live address from President Obama on Feb. 24. Does Hulu plan to expand into news-related programming like the Obama
address? People were receptive to the Obama address on Hulu, particularly given that it was a workday in the U.S. and most offices do not have television sets. The Obama inauguration was a record-setting day for us. Our long-term goal is to offer the world’s premium content to our users. We have not limited ourselves to entertainment television.

Where does the name Hulu come from? The name Hulu comes from a Chinese proverb, describing Hulu as “the holder of precious things.” The first five people who I asked to join me on this journey were in Beijing, so we though it appropriate on a number of levels to choose the name Hulu.

Does Hulu really soften the brain like a ripe banana? I’ll let Alec Baldwin answer that question.

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HEADER

By Tom Hanchett

O

ne of great pleasures of creating “Comic Stripped: A Revealing Look

at Southern Stereotypes in Cartoons”

Tom Hanchett is the staff historian for the

was entering the Southern-fried world of cartoonist Doug Marlette.

Levine Museum of the New South in Charlotte, where the “Comic Stripped” exhibit premiered. Hanchett, who earned his doctorate in history from UNC, gives audiences a glimpse into the making of the exhibit, which was displayed in the school’s Carroll Hall this spring.

We knew from the start that his Kudzu strip would be a big part of the project. But we hadn’t fully understood the extent to which the strip was about the South’s struggles with stereotype. And we didn’t expect that Marlette himself would take a personal interest in making the exhibit a success. Doug Marlette burst on the American scene in 1972 as the wonder-boy editorial cartoonist at The Charlotte Observer. Fresh out of Florida State University, he snagged a spot at one of the South’s most progressive newspapers and within months his hard-hitting panels on the Vietnam War, capital punishment, school integration and the like were being ⊲

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HEADER

picked up by the national press. Bitingly funny, he could plunge deep to the philosophical heart of a news issue, and he was able to do it again and again, day in and day out. That would be enough for most folks. But Doug Marlette possessed energy to burn, and in 1981 he channeled some of it into a new daily comic strip. Main character Kudzu DuBose was a young would-be writer longing for a way out of his stultifying hometown of Bypass, N.C. No coincidence that he looked a lot like Marlette. “Where I grew up artists were rarer than Jews or Catholics,” Doug later wrote. “My kinfolks were mill workers, cotton and tobacco farmers, auto mechanics and waitresses. Culture was something the veterinarian scraped off the cow’s tongue to check for hoof-and-mouth disease…. We moved around a lot, and some places were so backward even the Episcopalians handled snakes.”

“ Even as he rebelled against the South, Marlette loved it deeply.”

Marlette’s first Kudzu comic strip, June 15, 1981, showed Kudzu with his best friend Maurice.

But even as he rebelled against the South, Marlette loved it deeply. He did succeed in escaping, moving to New York’s Newsday soon after he won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning. But once he got that out of his system, he came back and bought a house in Hillsborough, N.C. When we phoned him there, asking permission to use his Kudzu images, he made only one request: “Just be sure to say I’m the first creator of a Southern strip to be actually born and raised in the South.” Indeed, Southern cartoons became a mainstay of American funny pages starting in the 1930s, and nary a one came from a Southerner’s pen. When Billy DeBeck introduced mountaineer Snuffy Smith in 1934, he sent his assistant out to Manhattan bookstores seeking studies of Southern speech and customs. Al Capp launched Li’l Abner the same year, a Connecticut native’s notion of an Ozark hillbilly. Walt Kelly’s Pogo, started 1948, starred talking animals in a lovingly portrayed Okefenokee Swamp, a real place in south Georgia, but won more attention for well-placed jabs at ultra-conservative Sen. Joe McCarthy.

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Marlette’s very first strip, on June 15, 1981, quietly announced a new era. Previous Southern strips had been almost lilywhite. By contrast, young Kudzu walked side-by-side with his African-American friend Maurice. Racial expectations became an overt theme as the strip evolved. When Maurice longed to get in touch with African-American roots music, he found himself “not black enough,” busted by the blues police for insufficient suffering. Kudzu’s nerdy white friend Nasal T. Lardbottom had the opposite problem. Nasal endlessly hungered to adopt black mannerisms as portrayed in the media, but remained “too white” to pull it off. In fact nearly all Kudzu characters at once embodied and rebelled against Southern stereotypes. Preacher Will B. Dunn was particularly outrageous. Marlette created him as a way to poke fun at Bible-Belt hypocrisy, rampant during the 1980s in the scandals of Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker’s Charlotte-based “Praise the Lord” televangelism empire. But Dunn also became a mouthpiece for Marlette’s own wry religious musings. Over time the preacher took center stage as the strip’s most active presence.


HEADER

Kudzu character Maurice gets busted by the blues police.

Nasal T. Lardbottom, from Doug Marlette’s book Even White Boys Get the Blues, 1992.

Preacher Will B. Dunn, Kudzu, Oct. 15, 2006.

The character of Uncle Dub, taciturn good ol’ boy, captured the conflicts inherent in being Southern. In one of the earliest Kudzu Sunday strips, he cheerfully fulfills the expectations of tourists seeking down-home Dixie — but beware anyone who fails to treat him with respect. Later, Marlette made a running gag of preservationists seeking to “save the good ol’ boys,” as cultural homogenization threatened to wipe out Southern distinctiveness.

No accident that Uncle Dub became the logo for the exhibit “Comic Stripped.” We initially wanted to use a clip from a famous 1940s-vintage strip, but ran into resistance from the syndicate that controlled it. We called Marlette, who delighted in poking his pen metaphorically in the syndicate’s face. He whipped up a special sketch of Uncle Dub —and to our surprise, drew him looking into a mirror. ⊲

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HEADER

Uncle Dub and the limits of Southern politeness, Kudzu, Aug. 9, 1981.

Is Southern distinctiveness on the verge of extinction? From Doug Marlette’s book Kudzu Chronicles: A Doublewide with a View, 1989.

Doug Marlette died suddenly after making that sketch. He was killed in a highway crash in Mississippi, where he went excitedly to see a high school drama troupe put on the Kudzu musical he co-wrote with Jack Herrick and Bland Simpson of the Red Clay Ramblers. Thankfully he’d deposited much of his archive of drawings with the Southern Historical Collection at Chapel Hill. We never got to thank him for adding the mirror. That’s the key to Doug Marlette’s work with Kudzu, we slowly realized. Kudzu is not just about the South or about stereotypes. It is about how all of us are wrestling with society’s expectations — and with our own images of ourselves. ♦

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RESEARCH

Citizen Journalism: Grand vision, online reality by Daniel Riffe

For the last two years I’ve worked on a project that surveyed the landscape of citizen journalism, trying to see how well the idealists’ vision reflects online reality. Funded by the Knight Foundation and the Pew Charitable Trusts, we looked at 145 citizen journalism news and blog sites in 46 randomly selected markets across the United States. To qualify, the sites had to have news and opinion focused on the local geographic area and have a significant portion of content provided by community members who were not professional journalists. What we’ve found is that the practice of citizen journalism, though alive and well in some places, may have fallen short of the democratization, vitality, participation and interactivity envisioned for it. Online citizen journalism has been widely heralded as a new type of community news coverage. Called participatory, hyperlocal and grassroots journalism, it involves non-professional citizen journalists at online news and blog sites reporting and offering opinions on local news and issues. Without easy-to-use Web site-building software and Internet access, this wouldn’t be possible – but that’s not the whole story. Changes in our communities and how we identify ourselves, as well as changes in journalism during the last 75 years, provide the backdrop. Townships and villages have blossomed into small cities or been absorbed as suburbs, central cities have declined and sometimes been revived, and tightly connected neighborhoods have emerged in many places. Big umbrella media may be too cumbersome and revenue-driven to cover the micro-communities that are increasingly meaningful to people. As a result, many people’s local public affairs and news and information needs are not being well-served. When enterprising people began to harness the Internet to create citizen journalism, supporters argued that their efforts could help create or re-establish communities.

Critics of big media add that citizen news and opinion is unfiltered by commercial media protecting owner and advertiser interests. The most idealistic champions of citizen journalism see it revitalizing the public sphere and providing an open arena for citizens’ voices and public debate. James Curran, Dan Riffe professor of communications at Goldsmiths University in London, described the public sphere as a place “where access to relevant information affecting the public good is widely available, where discussion is free of domination and where all those participating in public debate do so on an equal basis.” Dan Gillmor, in “We the Media: Grassroots Journalism by the People, for the People,” wrote: “The ability of anyone to make news will give new voice to people who’ve felt voiceless – and whose words we need to hear.” Another writer observed that blogging has “given millions of people the equivalent of a printing press on their desks.” Citizen journalism sites might best perform these democratizing roles when few formal rules or policies are in place and everyone’s voice can be heard – unedited, uncensored and unrestrained. Rather than the unfettered public sphere or marketplace, we found strong gatekeepers exerting tight control on what appears. Despite this, only half of the citizen news sites and a third of citizen blogs provided explicit restrictions and policies. Rather than active citizen creation and contribution of content, we found limited citizen participation and one-way communication, and very limited opportunity for participation, particularly on citizen blog sites. One in six blog sites allowed visitors to upload news and information or letters to the editor. The ability to upload audio, video or photographs was almost non-existent on the blog sites. Citizen news sites, however, were more likely to permit uploads of text (60-70 percent allowed news and features, and 40 percent allowed letters) and multimedia (audio, 28 percent; video, 34 percent; and photos, 45 percent). ⊲ continued on page 37 SUMMER 2009

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Launching The Little Newspaper That Could by Jock Lauterer

Remember that childhood rhyme — the one about the little locomotive engine that kept encouraging itself by repeating, “I think I can, I think I can,” as it labored up the mountain? As I spearhead the launch of an urban youth community newspaper and Web site for Durham, N.C., I’m beginning to appreciate how that little engine must have felt.

THE BACK STORY If I were asked to put down my credo on NPR’s program “This I Believe,” I’d say that teachers and journalists are here to “make life better,” in the words of Graham Spanier, president of Penn State University. I believe in the power of what the Buddhists call the “auspicious coincidence.” And I believe that the job of teachers – my job – is to put classroom theory into practice, and to help make lifechanging connections happen for my students. J-school faculty and students led 10 weeks of photojournalism workshops this summer for high school students in Northeast Central Durham.

A year ago, when UNC student body president Eve Carson was murdered and two young men from Durham were charged with the crime, I wondered – what could I and my students do? Then, through a series of auspicious coincidences, Carolina’s J-school and Department of City and Regional Planning made a connection. The Faculty Engaged Scholars Program of the Carolina Center for Public Service got me and seven other UNC faculty members together with Durham local government and law enforcement leaders to learn about a place called Northeast Central Durham (NECD), a 300-block neighborhood so troubled by crime that police call it “the bull’s eye.”

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Photo by Kafi Robinson

COMMUNITY JOURNALISM

Junior Carly Brantmeyer works with a student, Anthony Brandon, on using a digital camera.

At that meeting, I connected with city and regional planning assistant professor Mai Nguyen, who has studied NECD for several years. One of her graduate students, Hye-Sung Han, came up with the idea that a youth-staffed neighborhood newspaper and Web site could give kids a positive alternative to the pervasive street life in the area. I was hooked from the start. By providing this marginalized and at-risk area with a homegrown local newspaper and Web site, an NECD community newspaper would provide a single timely source of information unavailable anywhere else. Could it promote local pride, a sense of positive identity, and ultimately build community and civic engagement? Maybe, just maybe, this could start to erase those circles around the bull’s eye. The city of Durham hired Earl Phillips as its NECD executive director in community development. Earl, a revitalization guru, has energized the NECD community newspaper steering committee by opening the doors of city government and linking us with African-American and Latino civic and church leaders.

EAGLES AND TAR HEELS Critical to our start-up enterprise would be another unprecedented partnership – between the journalism programs at UNC and N.C. Central University, Durham’s historically black university just a stone’s throw from NECD. When I pitched the notion to NCCU associate professor Bruce dePyssler, he was quick to see the potential and accepted the challenge. dePyssler is the adviser to the school newspaper, the Campus Echo, and he volunteered the Echo’s newsroom as our temporary home. He and I agreed that our students needed to get to know each other. So we worked with other faculty to create an exchange between our programs. NCCU’s students came to several of my classes in Chapel Hill, and my students visited their campus in Durham. The exchange has been illuminating and constructive.

ONWARD AND UPWARD So how would this start-up work? We envision an urban youth community newspaper and Web site staffed primarily by local high schoolers, who will be ⊲

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mentored by journalism students from UNC and NCCU. By providing local teens and young people with college-aged mentors, the NECD community newspaper will serve as a living classroom, a positive and productive vehicle for personal change, a bridge to higher education and a real step toward career building. We hope to launch a lively, video-driven Web site to complement a 24-page tabloid monthly this fall. The free, all-local community paper will be distributed at schools, churches and gathering places. Our goal is to go bi-weekly by 2010. A $25,000 grant from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation has enabled us to buy laptops, video and still digital cameras for our youth reporters. The Daily Tar Heel has agreed to fund the printing of the paper for its first year.

that a strong local media presence can help connect young people with something in the community that relates to the larger world, shows them that one person can make a difference, and that as self-confidence and self-esteem grows, they can solve problems and make life better. We’ve got a lot of work ahead before we can claim any kind of success. I think I can, I think I can. ♦ Jock Lauterer is director of the Carolina Community Media Project at the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Contact Lauterer at 919.962.6421 or jock@email.unc.edu.

We are recruiting the youth with help from area church and school leaders, and we are searching for a secure place in the neighborhood to serve as a newsroom to which our reporters can walk. I’m betting that the city of Durham will make such a rent-free facility available. City leaders realize

Photos by Jock Lauterer

top: Levelle Muhammad, left, listens as UNC junior Taylor Meadows of Charlotte explains the workings of a digital camera. Meadows and other students are teaching basic photography to local teens at the Durham Salvation Army Boys and Girls Club. bottom: Christopher “Play” Martin, host of Durham-based Brand Newz, is among the many early collaborators on the NECD community newspaper project.

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INTERNATIONAL

Media and the Iraq War by Ahmed Fadaam

As an Iraqi journalist visiting the United States, many Americans I met had questions. They ask, “Is the surge working? What is the situation now in Baghdad? Do you see any sign of reconstruction? Is life getting better for Iraqis? How many hours of electricity do you get?” I think it is all really just one question. People want to know if the invasion has helped the Iraqis as they were told it would. They do know there is lots of violence in Iraq because they hear or read about it in the media, but they know little else. There are hundreds of journalists working in Iraq, doing their best to cover the full scope of life in the country. So, why aren’t people getting enough information to understand the whole picture? I try to explain what else is happening from my point of view. I worked as a journalist in Baghdad for several media organizations including American media. I saw the news coming in from our stringers all over the country, and I knew there was too much going on for all of it to get reported. But when I would read the next day’s editions, I could see what wasn’t used, and I would know what American readers were missing. The omissions were significant, and I wondered why gather up the news if it’s not given to people to read? The trouble is that the editors always choose the stories that have the most violence. The lasting impression is that everyone in Iraq is either fighting or getting killed in the crossfire. It is true that this is a part of life in Iraq, but it’s not all there is. It’s an important topic, but it’s not the only one. I ask students that I meet at UNC or Elon University about what Iraq means to them, and they all respond with the words like “violence,” “death” and “divided.” There are stories never heard just because they are not as exciting as an explosion that kills 100 people. There are stories that reflect the positive side of the Iraqi society, stories about Iraqis helping one another. I’m not talking about propaganda of American success. I mean stories about the decent things in Iraqi society that endure despite the upheaval.

Ahmed Fadaam – an Iraqi sculptor, photographer and reporter – was a visiting scholar at the school in 2008-09.

As an Iraqi who worked as journalist in the country for five years, I know well that the American people and the Iraqi people are both misinformed. Both populations suffer from a lack of complete information. Until the American invasion in 2003, everything in Iraq was controlled and centralized by the government of Saddam Hussein. His party controlled industry, agriculture, health care, education, services – and the media. The newspapers, TV and radio stations were all speaking the tongue of the government. The Internet was controlled and monitored by the government. Many Web sites were considered dangerous by censors, so articles criticizing Saddam’s policies and ideology were blocked. Any Iraqi who wanted an e-mail

“ People want to know if the invasion has helped the Iraqis as they were told it would.” account had to get permission from the government, and the government would decide on a username and password. Iraqis were led to see their leader as the media described him every day. Every front page of the four official newspapers was compelled to have an article about him every day. TV and radio would show him speaking, meeting with staff, ⊲ continued on page 38

SUMMER 2009

23


NEW CURRICULUM

Charting the new course T

he fall 2009 semester marks the beginning of significant changes to the school’s curriculum. The new curriculum takes into account significant changes in the industry, including the move toward increased use of a wider variety of channels to communicate to important publics and stakeholders.

G oals 1 To enable students to understand the roles of media in society and media’s social, economic and political impacts locally, nationally and globally. 2 To enable students to conceptualize and produce news and information.

Curriculum Core 141 Professional Problems and Ethics 153 News Writing 340 Introduction to Mass Communication Law

Journalism Curriculum Students learn to write, report, broadcast, photograph and present news and information. The public needs quality information from independent media now more than ever to better inform society and strengthen our democracy.

Advertising / Public Relations Curriculum

Quick View JOMC Core 10 credits News Writing (4); Ethics (3); Law (3) Journalism or Advertising/Public Relations Core 6 credits Specialization 12 credits Issues Immersion Modules 6 credits

34 credits total Students may take up to 40 credit hours. Students may choose to specialize further than is required by completing the requirements for a certificate in Sports Communication or Business Journalism or by taking additional electives in any specialization.

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CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR

Students learn to develop persuasive advertising messages or focus on strategic communication for an organization. Corporations, government agencies, nonprofits, advocacy groups, PR firms and ad agencies need a new breed of communicator who can use new media effectively within an ethical framework.


journalism Core (Prerequisites in parentheses) 221 Audio-Video Information Gathering (153) 253 Reporting (153) Students are encouraged to take 221 and 253 simultaneously. Editing and graphic design students may substitute 157 for 253.

immersions Conceptualizing the Audience

376 Sports Marketing and Advertising 445 Process and Effects of Mass Communication 475 Concepts of Marketing 490 Special Topics in Mass Communication (when appropriate) Mass Communication Theory

240 Current Issues in Mass Communication 445 Process and Effects of Mass Communication 490 Special Topics in Mass Communication (when appropriate) History, Law and Regulation

242 The Mass Media and United States History 342 The Black Press and United States History 424 Electronic Media Management and Policy 428 History of Broadcasting 450 Business and the Media 458 Southern Politics: Critical Thinking and Writing 490 Special Topics in Mass Communication (when appropriate) Communication Online

349 Introduction to Internet Issues and Concepts 449 Blogging, Smart Mobs and We the Media 490 Special Topics in Mass Communication (when appropriate)

Diversity

342 The Black Press and United States History 441 Diversity and Communication 442 Women and Mass Communication 443 Latino Media Studies 446 International Communication 490 Special Topics in Mass Communication (when appropriate) Political Communication

244 Talk Politics: An Introduction to Political Communication 446 International Communication and Comparative Journalism 447 International Media Studies 458 Southern Politics: Critical Thinking and Writing 475 Concepts of Marketing 490 Special Topics in Mass Communication (when appropriate) Communication, Business and Entrepreneurship

424 Electronic Media Management and Policy 450 Business and the Media 475 Concepts of Marketing 490 Special Topics in Mass Communication (when appropriate) Sports Communication

245 Sports and the Media 376 Sports Marketing and Advertising 377 Sports Communication 455 Sports Writing 476 Ethical Issues and Sports Communication 490 Special Topics in Mass Communication (when appropriate) Honors

691H Introductory Honors 692H Honors Essay

(Required courses in bold) Editing and Graphic Design (four-course minimum)

157 News Editing (153) 182 Introduction to Graphic Design (school permission) 457 Advanced Editing (157) or 484 Information Graphics (182) 482 Newspaper Design (182, 153 or concurrent 153 enrollment) 483 Magazine Design (482 or 153) 187 Introduction to Multimedia or 463 Newsdesk: Online News Production

NEW CURRICULUM

journalism SPECIALIZATIONS:

Electronic Communication (four-course minimum)

422 Producing Television News or 426 Producing Radio 121 Writing for the Electronic Media 421 Electronic Journalism (121, 221) 422 Producing Television News (421 & instructor permission) 423 Television News and Production Management (422 & instructor permission) 424 Electronic Media Management and Policy 425 Voice and Diction 426 Producing Radio (121) 427 Studio Production for Television News (221) 428 Broadcast History Multimedia (four-course minimum)

187 Introduction to Multimedia (school permission) 581 Multimedia Design (187 or instructor permission) 582 Interactive Multimedia Narratives (180 or 187, school permission) 583 Multimedia Programming and Production (187 & school permission) Photojournalism (four-course minimum)

180 Beginning Photojournalism (school permission) 480 Advanced Photojournalism (180 and 153 or concurrent 153 enrollment) 481 Documentary Photojournalism (480) 582 Interactive Multimedia Narratives (180 or 187) Reporting (four-course minimum)

157 News Editing (153) 121 Writing for the Electronic Media 256 Feature Writing (153) 258 Editorial Writing (153) 451 Economics Reporting (153) 452 Business Reporting (153) 453 Advanced Reporting (153, 253) 454 Advanced Feature Writing (153, 256) 456 Magazine Writing and Editing (153, 256) 459 Community Journalism (153) 463 Newsdesk: Online News Production (instructor permission) 491 Special Skills in Mass Communication (when appropriate)

ADVERTISING/PUBLIC RELATIONS SPECIALIZATIONS: (Required courses in bold) Advertising (four-course minimum)

271 Advertising Copy and Communication (137) 272 Advertising Media (137) 472 Art Direction in Advertising (137 & 271) 473 Advertising Campaigns (271 or 272) 670 Special Topics in Advertising Public Relations (four-course minimum)

137 Principles of Advertising and Public Relations

232 Public Relations Writing (137 & 153) 431 Case Studies in Public Relations (137) 434 Public Relations Campaigns (431 or 232) 182 Introduction to Graphic Design 187 Introduction to Multimedia 333 Video Communication for Public Relations and Advertising (137) 433 Crisis Communication (431, 137) 491 Special Skills in Mass Communication (when appropriate)

279 Advertising and Public Relations Research (137)

Strategic Communication (four-course minimum)

advertising / public relations Core (Prerequisites in parentheses)

232 Public Relations Writing (137 & 153) 271 Advertising Copy and Communication (137) 272 Advertising Media (137) 431 Case Studies in Public Relations (137) 490 Special Topics in Mass Communication (when appropriate)

SUMMER 2009

25


J-SCHOOL HISTORY

From the desk of

Skipper Coffin: Journalism I lecture notes

The school will commemorate 100 years of

By Tom Bowers

journalism education at Carolina with special events during 2009 and 2010. Tom Bowers, who retired from the school in 2006, has written a history of the school based on his scouring of the University’s archives and interviews with alumni, faculty and administrators. He uncovered the stories that trace Carolina journalism’s rise to prominence from a single course taught by Edward Kidder Graham in 1909 in the Department of English. Horace Carter, a 1943 graduate of the school and a Pulitzer Prize-winning editor, made a gift to the school enabling Bowers’ history to be published. The book, “Making News: One Hundred Years of Journalism and Mass Communication,” is available through UNC Press.

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CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR

hen I was looking through the archives and manuscript collections in Wilson Library while doing research for my history of the school, I discovered a set of lecture notes that the legendary O.J. “Skipper” Coffin prepared for the second lecture in his Journalism I course in September 1926 – his first semester in the Department of Journalism. It was the news writing course, and Skipper wanted to tell students something about the nature of newspaper work, their chosen profession. The wording and tone were typical for Coffin. He was an iconoclast who chose this quotation for the 1909 Yackety Yack to reflect his philosophy: “Here’s to those who love us well; all the rest can go to hell.”

“ Here’s to those who love us well; all the rest can go to hell.” We can imagine how Coffin looked and sounded as he delivered this lecture, thanks to the late professor Jim Shumaker’s account of the first time he saw Coffin: “I thought he was possessed. He was striding up and down in front of the desks, puffing furiously on a cigar, wheezing and snorting


J-SCHOOL HISTORY

Skipper Coffin’s Journalism I lecture notes.

asthmatically, pale blue eyes bulging, turning firm phrases and cackling at his own wit. It took only a while to realize that he wasn’t possessed, just nicely oiled.” Because he was preparing these notes for oral delivery, Coffin used incomplete sentences and misspelled words. I have presented the notes here as he wrote them. Coffin started by describing the proper attitude for a newspaperman: “Journalism is a job of work. Profession or trade. The tramp journalism is gone. The space writer who succeeds in selling has worked on the job until he has learned what is wanted and when to furnish it.” Most newspapermen had cleaned up their act, Coffin told the students. In his words, “Dandruff on the collar and liquor on the breath are no longer writers’ characteristics. Pretty

human bunch – above the average of intelligence, because they write for average people. There must be interest in run of the mine folks, but if one’s perception is no more acute, one’s senses no better trained, why should the average be interested. The run of the mine do not always think, they are generally without voice. To be a successful demagogue requires some ability in addition to gall; to be a leader demands no end of push.” [“Run of the mine” is an expression meaning “ordinary.”] In the next paragraph, Coffin explained why he had decided to become a college professor, but the identity of Kemp Hill is unknown. Coffin explained that he wanted to give students a look into their chosen work, and he used a horse-breaking analogy to describe the barriers he faced in teaching them. “Kemp Hill wanted to know what is the hell ⊲

SUMMER 2009

27


J-SCHOOL HISTORY

“ To be a successful demagogue requires some ability in addition to gall; to be a leader demands no end of push.”

[sic] a man with a neck as rought [sic] of his [Coffin?] was doing trying to become a college professor. ‘What are you going to try to do with them boys?’ he asked. [I?] Told [him?] that it was a matter largely of attitude, of trying to translate experience not into rules and regulations but road signs as it were – of trying to let students take a look ahead into the field which they were mindeed to enter, he said is was like his handling of a carload of Texas ponies. You’ll halter-break, and not expect them to work single or double, to pace, trot and singlefoot [sic].” Coffin ended the lecture by telling students about the kind of work they could expect: “You’ll write for magazines or newspapers. Newspapers set the pace for they have the biggest audiences; the one closest at hand and the most human and setting up the most intense and personal reactions. [sic]”

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CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR

Throughout his career, Coffin mocked the term “journalist” and preferred “newspaperman,” even though some of his students were women. The definition of a journalist in the next paragraph reflected Coffin’s own definition. It is notable that that was the only time he used the term in these notes. “Newspapers furnish the most of the magazine writers, and although the old-fashioned newspaperman defines a journalist as one who borrows money from the newspaperman often without any intention of paying it back, it is the newspaper experience which is the shortest cut to a place in the sun of writing for recreation or profit. That brings us up to what is news.” The discussion of the nature of news was apparently the subject of the next lecture. ♦


BUSINESS JOURNALISM

Catch-22: Business journalism and economic peril By Chris Roush

Oh, the irony of the situation. The current economic turmoil that has gripped the world has caused daily newspapers to cut back dramatically on the amount of space and interest that they’re devoting to business and economic news. Yet, that’s exactly the type of news and information that consumers most need today to help recover from lost jobs, frozen wages and a foundering housing market. In other words, the place where millions of U.S. residents go each day to be better informed about their surroundings is failing them. Here’s the data I’ve collected on the carnage: ■

At least 45 metro dailies in the United States have cut their standalone business section during the week and placed it in the back of another section. This includes the San Francisco Chronicle, Denver Post, Boston Globe and Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Another 18 metro dailies have cut their standalone Sunday or Monday business sections. In the case of some papers, like the San Antonio Express-News, both days were cut.

At least 10 metro dailies have cut their business staffs due to buyouts. And another 14 media outlets have had layoffs that have appreciably cut into their business news departments.

Finally, at least two weekly business news publications – the East Bay Business Journal in California and Financial Week in New York – have stopped publishing printed editions altogether.

Despite all of this, I find the future of business news to be brighter than most other segments of the journalism world. As daily newspapers are primarily cutting back on business reporting, other business news outlets are expanding, most notably The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires under ownership by News Corp. and its CEO, Rupert Murdoch. Despite cutbacks in its money-losing radio and television operations, Bloomberg News is also expanding its wire operations. Bloomberg had five interns from the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication during the summer of 2009, and it has hired nine former students of the school ⊲ continued on page 43

Carolina Business News Initiative director Chris Roush with students

SUMMER 2009

29


POLITICAL COMMUNICATION

New media, new politics political news. More young voters are turning toward the Internet as fewer are turning toward TV.

by Leroy Towns

If the trend continues, conventional political communication wisdom will be upended. And public relations professionals, advertisers and political communicators had better pay attention.

Leroy Towns

The 12th most visited news site in America did not exist two years ago. And it’s all about politics. Politico, a two-year-old news organization in Washington, D.C., is ranked 12th in Web site traffic among American newspapers by the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard University. In just two years, Politico replaced The Washington Post as the go-to source of political news in Washington. Politico – a hybrid of print, online, radio and television content – is but one symbol of how new media are changing the way political news is reported and consumed. By now, every American is familiar with blogs and their mix of news and political opinion that pervades the Internet. Less familiar, but growing rapidly in influence, are social news services like Twitter that can move a news item or political message to their audience (“followers”) instantly. Call it social news texting. And with it, the 24/7 news cycle can be sliced up into minutes. Call it 60/24/7. Good politics today must recognize the power of new media. As a candidate, Barack Obama mobilized millions of young voters through social sites like Facebook. The sites drove attendance at rallies, and more importantly, they were key to the most successful fundraising campaign in political history. There’s a caveat. To succeed politically in social media, you must first recruit legions of individuals who want to share your message. Republican candidate John McCain was on Facebook, but he attracted far fewer “fans” and “friends.” Obama won supporters with his message – and the campaign mobilized and expanded that support via social media. While television advertising continues to be the most effective way to reach voters in the short span of a campaign, that may be changing. A survey of 18-29 year olds says the Internet now equals television as their primary source of

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CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR

New media may diminish the power of political journalists. Back in the day, a politician wanting publicity was at the mercy of reporters. Today, politicians can take their messages around reporters and directly to voters. Got a message reporters won’t use? Get it on social media and the blogs in such a way that political reporters can’t ignore it. You cut out the journalist gatekeeper and tell your story your way. There are social, journalistic and political implications of this huge change in mass media. All of us involved with the journalism school at Carolina wrestle with these changes. Have blogs killed the pretext of objectivity in journalism? If politicians can go around the press, what does that say about journalism’s watchdog role? How will new media affect the need for informed citizens? I envy my students because their generation will define the new media born from today’s changes. They are optimistic, and their optimism is infectious. The school has made curriculum changes to meet the demand for new media skills. And we teach them how to think critically about new media.

“Good politics today must recognize the power of new media.” Next semester, my advanced reporting course is partnering with assistant professor Ryan Thornburg’s online reporting course in an electronic news lab. I want my print-oriented students to understand how to tell a political story with new media, and Ryan wants his online reporting students to understand how to dig out a political story using timehonored reporting techniques. So we teamed up. And when the students get their story, chances are good it will go out first as tweet from an iPhone. As they say on Twitter, you follow? ♦ Leroy Towns is a professor of the practice of journalism in the school and a research fellow with the UNC Program on Public Life. Towns was a political reporter for 12 years, and he directed eight successful U.S. House of Representatives campaigns and two U.S. Senate campaigns.


THE DAILY TAR HEEL

‘Don’t worry about your DTH. It’s not going anywhere.’ Q&A with Kevin Schwartz, General Manager, The Daily Tar Heel

The Daily Tar Heel, Carolina’s iconic student newspaper, is holding steady Serving the students and the University community since 1893

The Daily Tar Heel

as U.S. newspapers – including many college newspapers – struggle

VOlUMe 117, issUe 32

through a changing economic model for the news industry and a tough overall national economy.

sports | page 4 NOT THEIR NIGHT UNC lost another midweek game, this time an 11-9 loss to High Point University.

The DTH print edition circulation is 20,000, and DailyTarHeel.com draws

university | page 3 GRADE INFLATION A draft report saying that UNC has undergone significant grade inflation in the past decade is being presented to a group of faculty today.

more than 36,000 page views a day. Printed pages and publishing days aren’t being cut, and advertising sales are stable.

features | page 3 HEADING FOR IRAQ About 4,000 soldiers are preparing to deploy to Iraq, including UNC graduate student Emran Huda.

DTH general manager Kevin Schwartz talked to the Carolina Communicator about how the DTH is faring today and its prospects for the future.

university | page 7 GOALS FOR DIVERSITY The Minority Affairs and Diversity Outreach Committee and the Inter-Fraternity Council co-sponsored a forum on diversity at UNC.

city | page 5 CLEAN WATER Despite an expensive price tag, Chapel Hill will likely support a set of state rules that aims to clean up Jordan Lake.

university | page 3 A LOCAL AFFAIR Springfest, the annual music event that brought Boyz II Men last year, is scaling back with local musicians this year.

With the newspaper industry in crisis, how is The Daily Tar Heel doing financially, and what challenges are the paper facing?

this day in history APRIL 15, 1975… UNC-system President Bill Friday speaks before the Board of Governors, saying that potential cuts by the state legislature could harm UNC’s long-term success.

Today’s weather Showers H 68, L 54

Thursday’s weather Mostly sunny H 67, L 44

We’re doing fine. We’ve met our budget goals for the last year, and while there’s not huge growth in revenue, we have seen some growth even this year. College newspapers are a good deal for a marketer, and I don’t see that changing. We’re free, and we’ve always been free. As people get into the habit of not paying for news, that hurts paid circulation newspapers, but it doesn’t hurt us. We are focused on making the paper relevant to our core readership – undergraduate students and UNC employees. Both read at a 75 percent clip, so you’ve got 75 percent market penetration in two distinct, identifiable demographics. And for a marketer who wants to advertise, that’s golden. I think the fundamentals are in place for us to survive and thrive in this market. We do see a challenge in getting the next generation of students to pick up a paper every day. We put almost all of our marketing efforts into just that – to make it easier to pick up a paper. Our research that shows that people are perfectly willing to pick it up out of a rack every day, but that rack’s practically got to be in touching distance of their walk somewhere during the day.

wednesday, april 15, 2009

www.dailytarheel.com

prOTesTers sTOp speeCH

index police log ...................... 2 calendar ....................... 2 sports .......................... 4 nation/world .............. 5 crossword ................... 7 opinion ....................... 10

police use pepper spray, undirected Tasers at protest of Tancredo talk BY LAuRA HOxWORTH STAFF WrITEr

Police used pepper spray to disperse crowds of protestors in Bingham Hall on Tuesday outside the room where former congressman Tom Tancredo was scheduled to speak on immigration but was forced to leave. Campus police also discharged a Taser, sending sparks in an arc they said was meant to disperse the crowd, not to subdue an individual protestor. Tancredo, a former Republican U.S. Representative from Colorado, a former presidential candidate and an outspoken critic of immigration, was brought to UNC by the new student organization Youth for Western Civilization. About 150 people gathered in Bingham Hall auditorium, and many more protestors gathered in the hallway after police declared the room full and blocked the doorway. “I’m here because I represent UNC-Chapel Hill and I don’t support racism or fascism in the institution in which I am an educator,” graduate student Jason Bowers said. Riley Matheson, president of Youth for Western Civilization, introduced Tancredo amid hissing, booing and shouts of “racist” and “white supremacist.” “This is an organization that seeks to promote Western civilization,” Matheson said at the event. “We believe that our civilization is under attack from liberal forces.” Matheson said his organization supports people from every race participating in Western civilization, but that they must be properly assimilated to American culture first. “No matter how many times you chant racist, that doesn’t make it true,” he said to the crowd. After Tancredo entered the room, protesters kept him from speaking by shouting insults and holding a sign declaring “no dialogue with hate” in front of his face. Tancredo waited calmly while protestors held the sign and chanted. Two protestors holding the sign in front of Tancredo were escorted into the hallway by police, where the Taser and pepper spray were used. “The cops were trying to tell them to back up,” said first-year student Chris Sparks, who was in the hallway with the protestors. “It was a good 10 or 15 minutes that they would not back up. The cops did what they had to.”

DTH/ArIANA vAN DEN AkkEr

Student protestors enter Bingham Hall on Tuesday evening to protest an anti-immigration speech given by former U.S. rep. Tom Tancredo, who was brought to campus by Youth for Western Civilization. Protestors included members of Students for a Democratic Society and Feminist Students United.

SEE PROTEST, PAGE 6 DTH ONLINE: See a slideshow from the Bingham Hall protest, and read a story on the Dance Party for Diversity in the Pit.

DTH/ArIANA vAN DEN AkkEr

DTH/BEN PIErCE

Protestors were cleared from Bingham Hall when police used pepper spray and the threat of Tasers after students interrupted Tancredo’s lecture. Police, who followed the students along their protest march from the Pit, refused to allow more protestors to enter Bingham after the lecture hall was full.

no changes on road stretch UnC aims to fight

poaching of faculty

BY WILL HARRISON SENIOr WrITEr

The stretch of N.C. 54 where a woman was killed last year will not see major pedestrian safety upgrades because it fails to meet state criteria. Concern for pedestrian safety on the bypass culminated last December when Gloria Espinosa Balderas, a 43-year-old housekeeper, was killed while crossing near the Columbia Street bridge. The four-lane road is lined with bus stops and apartment complexes, but crosswalks are spaced nearly a mile apart. Five accidents on N.C. 54 involving pedestrians have been reported since 2006, according to Chapel Hill police records. Dawn McPherson, deputy division traffic engineer with the N.C. Department of Transportation, said placing additional crosswalks on N.C. 54 is unrealistic and possibly unsafe. The area does not meet the requirements for an additional traffic signal, she said. There is not enough vehicle traffic leaving the road’s apartment complexes, even at rush hour, to warrant a new signal. “We will never put a stoplight up because there are pedestrians,” she said. An investigation into Balderas’ death is nearly complete,

BY CAROLINE DYE STAFF WrITEr

DTH/JESSEY DEArING

The intersection at N.C. 54 near the South Columbia Street bridge has been particularly dangerous for pedestrians, with five accidents. McPherson said, but there were no complaints to the DOT or vehicle accidents in that location before the fatality. The four other pedestrian accidents on N.C. 54 all occurred before Balderas’ death. None were fatal. Hannah Choe, a UNC senior who lived at Chambers Ridge Apartments off N.C. 54, said many residents run across the highway, dodging streams of traffic, instead

of walking to designated crosswalks. “You have to cross two sides of the road to get to your apartment,” she said. “You’re basically jaywalking a highway.” Four areas of N.C. 54 were recognized in 2004 by the Highway Safety Research Center as having public safety issues. Libby Thomas, a research

SEE SAFETY, PAGE 6

As UNC faces possible budget cutbacks of 5 percent to 7 percent, it might be at an increased risk of losing faculty to rival universities now in stronger financial positions. In 2003, UNC faced similar state cuts and experienced serious faculty retention issues. The situation is different now, said Joe Templeton, chairman of the Faculty Council, because the economic grief is so widespread. But the possibility for faculty retention trouble remains a top concern for administrators who continue to push to maintain competitive faculty salaries even as cuts loom. “That’s always a possibility for a university with high-quality faculty,” said Executive Associate Provost Ronald Strauss. Templeton said fewer salary disparities exist between UNC and its peer institutions than in 2003, lowering the risk of faculty poaching. “We have made some strides in faculty compensation over the last couple of years,” he said. During the 2007-08 year, UNC retained 69 percent of its faculty, slightly down from a 72 percent high the year before. Faculty retention had been rising since the 2003-04

“(Poaching) is always a possibility for a university with high-quality faculty.” RONALD STRAuSS, ExECUTIvE ASSOCIATE PrOvOST

period when it was just 31 percent. A report by Provost Bernadette Gray-Little attributed the successful retention efforts to substantial salary increases but warned that lower increases might make UNC less competitive. For now, Chancellor Holden Thorp has said no tenured or tenure-track faculty will face any reduction in salary or benefits. Bruce Carney, interim dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, said he will maintain funds in his budget to counter offers from other universities to UNC faculty. “We need it, too. Last year we had 17 retention fights,” he said, referring to the University’s process of responding to other schools’ poach-

SEE RETENTION, PAGE 6

What sets the DTH apart from the newspaper industry at large? What makes college newspapers different, and what makes the DTH different from other college newspapers? We have no debt. Debt is really what’s crushing the newspaper industry right now. Advertising categories that have seen the biggest decline – real estate, automotive and classifieds – were never a huge part of what the DTH and other college newspapers have done. So when those categories took a nosedive, most college newspapers were pretty well insulated. What distinguishes The Daily Tar Heel from other college newspapers that are being trimmed is that the DTH is an independent, nonprofit corporation. The college papers that are getting cut are subject to some vice chancellor determining that the university can save money if the ⊲ continued on page 38 SUMMER 2009

31


DIGITAL TV

Digital TV Transition’s Transition $40. The government – when controlled by the Republicans – agreed to pay for those boxes with a coupon program.

by Jim Hefner

But the Republicans have no heart, remember. So, of course, they underfunded the program. No way would everyone who needed a coupon get one. That was well before Feb. 17. The GOP knew it but decided to do nothing. Besides, most people at the country club already had HD, and everybody had cable or satellite. Jim Hefner

Remember “Animal House?” It’s one of those guy movies – fraternity boys being fraternity boys. At any rate, in one scene a few of the boys are returning from a drunken road trip, driving a car owned by the older brother of one of the pledges. That 1962 Lincoln is now a wreck, literally. The pledge, nicknamed Flounder, is beside himself. “What am I going to do?” “You screwed up,” a brother replies. “You trusted us.” American television broadcasters could be told much the same. After all, they trusted the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) when it came to the digital television transition. For years the firm date for the transition from analog to digital was Feb. 17, 2009. Broadcasters had spent millions of dollars for new equipment to make the transition, and everything was in place. Broadcasters, after all, were looking forward to the new world of high definition television (HDTV) and the possibilities of multicasting. But a funny thing happened on the way to the switch over. The “hard” date moved to June 12. The change produced all kinds of headaches for broadcasters and the public. It didn’t have to happen. And the two political parties share much of the blame. When it comes to the digital television situation, I’ve come to believe Republicans don’t have a heart, and Democrats don’t have a brain. Most people get their television from cable or satellite, and they don’t have to do anything for the transition. The 10 to 15 percent of households that still receive analog television have to (a) get a digital or high-definition television set with the accompanying digital tuner and antenna, or (b) buy a converter box capable of changing a digital signal to analog, or (c) get cable or satellite. The boxes for conversion cost

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CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR

Come November of last year, the Democrats took the White House and held onto both houses of Congress. But remember, the Democrats don’t have a brain. They concluded most of these folks without a coupon were poor, minority, and most importantly, probably Democrats. The Democrats moved the date back and plowed a ton of money into the coupon program. Everything’s well that ends well, unless you’re a broadcaster. While in digital transition limbo, broadcasters continued to broadcast in analog and digital. The country is in a recession. Advertising revenue is in the tank. Television stations operate almost exclusively on advertising. TV station revenues are off as much as 50 percent and more in places. Having to operate two television stations at the same time is not exactly what the FEBRUARY stations needed. It costs many of these SUN MON TUE WED THU stations $20,000 a month or more for 1 4 2 5 3 electricity, just for analog. And all of this 8 9 10 11 12 happened while television broadcasters 15 16 17 18 19 were laying off workers. 22 23 24 25 26

FRI SAT 6

7

13

14

20

21

27

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Meanwhile, the federal government missed out on millions of dollars waiting for the analog spectrum to go over to its new owners. Much of this freed-up analog spectrum was promised to emergency workers for better communication in emergencies, but they had to wait out the transition, too. That’s just too bad.

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Like the pledge from “Animal House,” they – the emergency workers and the Americans the change might help – screwed up. They trusted the government. ♦ Jim Hefner joined the school’s faculty in July 2008 from Capitol Broadcasting Co., where he was vice president and general manager of WRAL-TV in Raleigh.


After considering hundreds of shield law bills since 1929, the 2007 U.S. Congress came the closest it ever had to adopting a law giving journalists a limited right to refuse to reveal confidential information in federal court. UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication professor and director of the UNC Center for Media Law and Policy Cathy Packer believes chances are good that the current Congress will take the next step and enact a shield law. Packer, who researched the recent shield law debate in Congress, looks at how law determines the way power is distributed. “The federal shield law debate was above all else a debate about the allocation of power between the Justice Department and media,” she said. “I think the law will pass with new people leading the Justice Department and a president that says he supports a shield law.”

MEDIA LAW

Is the Time Right for a Federal Shield Law? Packer’s research was published this spring in the Hastings Communications & Entertainment Law Journal. For 10 years she also has authored a textbook chapter about reporters’ confidential sources and information. Roy H. Park Ph.D. Fellow Dean Smith is one of several students in the school studying shield laws. Thirty-five states and the District of Columbia have shield laws, and Smith is combining historical and legal research to write a dissertation about the state shield laws that scholars believe can provide guidance to the U.S. Congress. Smith, who is Packer’s advisee, argues that the law regarding a First Amendment based testimonial privilege for reporters, which generally is considered an area of law separate from shield laws, often has influenced shield law deliberations. Smith said, “Most shield laws were adopted in response to cases in which courts declined to recognize a privilege based on the First Amendment. Statutes gave legislators a way to talk back to the courts, to say what freedom of the press meant to them.” ♦

Packer says the nation’s founders laid out plans to distribute power among different branches of the federal government in order to prevent a dangerous concentration of power in any one branch. “The Constitution also guarantees a powerful press to help citizens check the power of the federal government,” she said. In 2007, the House of Representatives passed shield law language in the Free Flow of Information Act by a vote of 398 to 21. Then the Senate allowed the bill to die without a vote. As Congress prepares to consider a federal shield law again this year, the media law program at Carolina is a significant voice in the national discussion about legal protection for reporters and their confidential sources and information. Faculty and students research, publish and debate extensively on the topic, and they hosted a visit last year from Toni Locy, a reporter who was threatened with jail time when she refused to reveal her confidential sources for stories about the 2001 anthrax attacks. “For the past couple of years, this has been a very exciting place in which to read, write and talk about a testimonial privilege for reporters,” Packer said. “The UNC Center for Media Law and Policy has increased interest in the topic, and we’ve done some important research in this area.”

The UNC Center for Media Law and Policy, a joint project of the School of Journalism and Mass Communication and the School of Law, hosted a lecture by former USA Today reporter Toni Locy, who was threatened with jail when she refused to reveal the identities of confidential sources she used for stories about the 2001 anthrax attacks. About 400 people heard Locy describe her legal battle and proclaim that she would go to jail before she would reveal her sources. The contempt order against her was thrown out after the case in which her testimony was sought was settled.

SUMMER 2009

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AGENDAMELDING

Agenda-setting to agendamelding by Meagan Racey

I

n 1968, Donald Shaw and Maxwell McCombs, then associate professors in the UNC School of

Journalism, became the first to test the agendasetting function of the media. Their groundbreaking research suggested that media set the agenda for political campaigns – telling voters what issues to think about, not what to think about the issues. Hundreds of agenda-setting studies have been published since. But what has changed in 40 years? Shaw, now Kenan Professor in the school, built a new study around the 2008 elections to find out. The study compares how voters older than 40 select and use media – and the ideas they form – with the choices and conclusions of voters under 40. Shaw wants to know how they pick and choose from all media and topics, and how they construct their picture of the world. “We’re seeing how voters blend their own experiences with information from friends and various media to craft a candidate’s image and single out important issues,” he said. “We’re interested in the audience’s role – not so much the media.” “We are seeing how people assemble different facts and opinions into a coherent single picture – and one quite different from previous elections,” he said. “That picture – of the election, the issues and the candidates – motivates voters to make choices.” Media innovations both complicate and expand the study of agenda-setting. Forty years ago, there were three major TV networks, radio and many fewer newspapers and magazines. Today’s research factors into the mix the proliferation of cable TV and the Internet – and the sea change those entail. “We have to do much more extensive content analysis to capture the media environment,” said David Weaver, and Indiana University professor who was the Roy H. Park visiting professor at Carolina in

Don Shaw, Max McCombs and David Weaver.

2008. “But these new developments, such as Web sites and blogs and entertainment programs, discuss mostly the same issues and topics as set by The New York Times, The Washington Post and wire services. A lot of these other new media talk about the details.” A concept Shaw calls “agendamelding” is emerging from the research. Agendamelding describes how people weave together the various messages they receive from a wide selection of media. “We’re all influenced by the main messages of media. The New York Times and Jon Stewart or a blog or my friend – we mix these details together to construct an image of the world.” Shaw is seeing evidence that today’s voters are blending media agendas to effectively reinforce their own positions and close out the points of view that disagree. “Traditional media may still set the broad agenda, but new media and partisan media cut out the pieces they want to cover,” he said. “The result is that the audiences self-select their own media mix of the traditional and the new – and they generally form into like-minded communities.” ♦ Meagan Racey is a senior from Pinehurst.

The first agenda-setting study

To test the agenda-setting function of the media, McCombs and Shaw interviewed 100 Chapel Hill voters in the 1968 presidential election. They sought out undecided voters, who would be more likely to use the media to make their decisions. Republican Richard Nixon, Democrat Hubert Humphrey and Independent George Wallace were running for president. Shaw and McCombs gathered what the voters considered to be key issues, which

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CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR

included the Vietnam War and civil rights, and matched the ranking of those issues with the mass media content. They found that what voters said was closely related to what the media said. They later found that the media usually set that agenda, instead of reflecting the people’s agenda. So the media tell their listeners, viewers and readers what topics are important. That can have consequences for all sorts of events, including political elections.


News Briefs School earns full re-accreditation

2009 Hall of Famers

The UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication received full accreditation from the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC) for the next six years.

The N.C. Halls of Fame, based in the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication, inducted two new members and presented the Next Generation Leadership Award on April 19 in a ceremony at the Carolina Inn in Chapel Hill.

A team of academics and professionals representing the accrediting council visited Carroll Hall Feb. 1-4 and said the school “has earned a reputation as one of the premier programs in journalism and mass communication.” The school has been accredited since 1958. The team praised the school for a tradition and culture of excellence that serves students, the news industry and journalism education; an outstanding, collegial faculty; strong ties to, and support from, media professionals in North Carolina and the nation; service to the state of North Carolina; enthusiastic, intelligent and accomplished students; state-of-theart resources; and marked improvements in various aspects of diversity. The team’s report said Jean Folkerts, the school’s dean, is “described by colleagues as a fast learner and a good listener, an administrator who invites and heeds faculty input and works to involve them in her key initiatives” and “has traveled tirelessly to get to know the media organizations in the school’s service area.” The new curriculum that will launch in fall 2009 was described as a “converged and ambitious undergraduate curriculum.” Team members commended the relationship between the school and N.C. media, saying, “one of the more remarkable legacies of the school is the extraordinary support it receives from the N.C. news and media industries.” ACEJMC is the national organization that evaluates journalism and mass communication programs. All accredited programs are reviewed every six years. ♦

William I. Morton, former chairman and CEO of Jack Morton Worldwide and a leader in experiential marketing, was inducted into the N.C. Advertising Hall of Fame. Josh McCall, his successor at the company, introduced Morton at the ceremony. Morton, a 1962 Carolina graduate, retired in 2003 after more than 25 years as chairman and CEO. He transformed what was primarily a meeting and events agency to a global experiential marketing agency with more than 600 employees in offices around the world. Among other major events, the agency produced the opening and closing ceremonies at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. Journalist, author and adventurer Robert Ruark was posthumously inducted into the N.C. Journalism Hall of Fame. Bland Simpson, Bowman and Gordon Gray Distinguished Professor of English and Creative Writing, spoke about Ruark, and Ruark’s great grandson, Nicholas Keller, accepted the award on behalf of the family.

Ruark, a 1935 Carolina graduate, began his career at the Hamlet News Messenger and the Sanford Herald and later wrote for The Washington Post, The Washington Star and the Washington Daily News. He wrote a regular column for Field and Stream magazine. He authored 13 novels and drew frequent comparisons to Ernest Hemingway for his love of big game hunting. Ruark died in 1965. Commercial illustrator Trip Park received the Next Generation Leadership Award. John Sweeney, distinguished professor in the school, introduced Park, who is a 1989 graduate and Sweeney ’s former student. Park’s illustrations are featured in children’s books including “Gopher Up Your Sleeve” by Tony Johnston; “Trout, Trout, Trout!” and “Ant, Ant, Ant!” by April Pulley Sayre; and the Rotten School series by R.L. Trip Park Stine. His editorial cartoons have appeared in the Greensboro News & Record, National Review and USA Today. The Robert Ruark Society also presented its annual Robert Ruark Award in Creative Non-Fiction to Laura DeMaria, a UNC English major. The N.C Halls of Fame honor individuals who have made outstanding, careerlong contributions to their fields. Honorees must be native North Carolinians, or must have made a significant contribution to the state. The Next Generation Leadership Award is given by the N.C. Halls of Fame to recognize individuals who represent the next generation of leadership in their fields. ♦ Dean Jean Folkerts and William Morton at the Halls of Fame induction ceremony.

SUMMER 2009

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NEWS BRIEFS

News21: U.S. demographics and energy use Ten Carolina journalism students are creating innovative multimedia reports this summer on demographic shifts in the United States and how energy use will be affected. The project – “Powering a Nation” – is part of the Carnegie-Knight Initiative on the Future of Journalism Education’s News21 program. One Harvard student and one Missouri student joined the UNC students on the project. News21 is short for News for the 21st Century: Incubators of New Ideas. It seeks to deepen the intellectual life at journalism schools and create a stronger voice for them in the news industry. A key element is to seed innovative reporting on issues in ways that attract new and younger audiences. “Powering a Nation” seeks to explain the current predicament related to U.S. energy and demographics; illustrate potential outcomes and solutions; investigate underreported issues; and educate viewers about how they can take action. It requires synthesizing complex issues; using compelling and innovative multimedia reporting; and developing a sustainable, replicable model for the journalism industry. Carolina’s J-school was selected to participate in the Carnegie-Knight Initiative in summer 2008. The other schools in the initiative include Arizona State, Columbia, Northwestern, Syracuse, UC-Berkeley, Maryland, Missouri, Nebraska, Southern California and Texas. The Joan Shorenstein Center for Press, Politics and Public Policy, a research center at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, also is supported by the initiative. ♦

UNC NextRay team places second in business plan competition

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The NextRay team: J-school student Allen Mask and UNC MBA students.

sity for its next-generation interactive payment cards that use programmable magnetic strips. NextRay provides medical imaging technology that produces more detailed images than current X-rays with less than 1 percent of the radiation dosage. UNC breast cancer researcher and vice dean of the UNC School of Medicine Etta Pisano developed the technology. In addition to the $15,000 second place overall prize, Mask and MBA students John Lerch, Justin Cross and Stephen Jarrett won the $100,000 Life Science Prize from Opportunity Houston and the Greater Houston Partnership Award. The team also took home the NASA Earth/Space Engineering Innovation Award for $20,000 and awards for the best business plan, best medical device and the best life science project. NextRay is a participant in the Student Teams Achieving Results (STAR) program at the business school. The STAR program sends teams of top MBA candidates and undergraduate students to corporations and not-for-profits to help them build effective business strategies. ♦

J-school junior Allen Mask and a team of UNC business school MBA students won second place and more than $142,000 in the 2009 Rice University Business Plan Competition for their medical device company, NextRay, that was spun off from UNC medical school research and technology.

Online master’s program

The competition is the largest graduate-level business plan competition in the world. The Rice grand prize went to Dynamics of Carnegie Mellon Univer-

The survey showed strong interest in the proposed degree by a broad range of working professionals.

CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR

Supported by a grant from the UNC General Administration, the school has conducted a yearlong review and market research to measure interest in an online master’s program in technology and communication.

Louise Spieler, the school’s associate dean for professional education and strategic initiatives is working with a faculty committee to develop the proposed program, tentatively called the Master of Arts in Technology and Communication. Jean Folkerts, dean of the school, said the online degree will not duplicate the school’s on-campus master’s program. “The idea is to create a niche program directed at working professionals, particularly our alumni, who cannot take advantage of an on-campus master’s program,” she said. “We envision the highest quality and rigorous requirements, including graduate-level media law and researchmethods courses.” Spieler said the program will focus on digital media and the ways journalists and other communication professionals can incorporate new technology. During the past year, Folkerts has visited with alumni and friends to get input for an online master’s program. “Many tell me they want to re-tool their skills to meet the demands of our changing industry,” she said. Technological changes are challenging many businesses and organizations. The online master’s will prepare journalists and communication professionals to be more competitive in the new media environment. It will also address the goals of UNC Tomorrow, a UNC system program to respond in a sustainable way to challenges facing North Carolinians. Spieler said online master’s students should be able to complete their degrees in about 2-3 years, but the number of credit hours


She said the earliest the program will begin is fall 2010. The new program will require approval by the school’s faculty, the UNC Graduate School, the Office of the Provost, UNC General Administration and the UNC Board of Governors. ♦

UWIRE 100 top collegiate journalists Two J-school students – Andrew Dunn and Monique Newton – and UNC firstyear student Jarrard Cole were named to the UWIRE 100, a list of the nation’s top collegiate journalists as selected by the UWIRE organization for college student media. Dunn, a junior from Apex double-majoring in journalism and Spanish, is the 20092010 editor of The Daily Tar Heel. Newton, a senior journalism and mass communication major from Kansas City, Mo., is president of the Carolina Association of Black Journalists. Cole, from Athens, Ga., is the 2009-2010 multimedia editor at The Daily Tar Heel. The students were selected from more than 825 nominations – representing students from more than 135 schools

citizen journalism continued from page 19 Only a fourth of citizen news sites and only one in 10 blog sites provided a contact telephone number. Rather than effective use of the contemporary capabilities of software and the Web in disseminating news, information and opinion, we found that many downloading features attractive to Web-savvy visitors were scarce. MP3/ iPod feeds were available on 5 percent of citizen blog sites and 15 percent of citizen news sites; delivery to cell phones was available on 6 percent of news sites and 2 percent of blog sites; and e-mail forwarding of items was possible with 30 percent of citizen news sites and a quarter of citizen blog sites.

nationwide – submitted by professionals, students and educators. A UWIRE panel evaluated each candidate based on demonstrated excellence in the field of collegiate journalism. ♦

J-school faculty book is summer reading choice The UNC Summer Reading Program chose “A Home on the Field” by assistant professor Paul Cuadros as its 2009 book selection. The University asks all first-year and incoming transfer Paul Cuadros students to read a book during the summer and participate in small group discussions led by faculty and staff once they arrive on campus. The voluntary non-credit assignment stimulates critical thinking outside the classroom environment and encourages new students to engage in the academic community. “A Home on the Field,” published in 2006, explores class and ethnic conflict through the story of a Latino high school soccer team in Siler City, N.C. Despite significant

RSS feeds, on the other hand, were offered by three-fourths of the citizen news sites and 89 percent of citizen blog sites. Just more than half (56 percent) the content on citizen news sites was news and 16 percent was opinion, while opinion content accounted for 47 percent of the material on citizen blog sites. Little of the news content on the blog sites, however, was original reporting. Many citizen journalism sites go long periods of time without updating the main stories. The scope of news content is narrower than one might find on online news sites maintained by traditional media in the same markets. None of these findings is meant to suggest that citizen journalism is a

social and immigration hurdles, the team climbed to a state championship under Cuadros’ coaching. The book offers insight into the complex issue of Latino immigrants coming to North Carolina to seek better lives and steady work but encountering significant resistance.

NEWS BRIEFS

for the degree is yet to be determined. The UNC Graduate School requires a minimum of 30 hours for a master’s degree.

A nine-member book selection committee of students, faculty and staff chose Cuadros’ book from four finalists, narrowed down from 239 recommendations. Committee chairman John McGowan, Ruel W. Tyson Jr. Distinguished Professor of Humanities and director of the Institute for the Arts and Humanities, said the book documents the evolving relationships between immigrants with long-time residents of Siler City – both black and white – as well as with those left behind in Mexico and Central America. “[Cuadros] raises tough questions about what services and opportunities the state of North Carolina should make available to these immigrants,” McGowan said. “We are also thrilled that our students will be reading a book written by a UNC faculty member and one that is about North Carolina today.” An award-winning investigative reporter specializing in issues of race and poverty, Cuadros joined the faculty in July 2007. ♦

failed experiment, is already a vanishing breed, or is in any way unworthy. Our study found many sites around the country that are performing a vital civic role; are engaging visitors to the sites in debates, polls and forums; are welcoming citizen input and uploads; and are offering content – both news and opinion – to the public through a wide range of downloading options. Still, the data show that for many sites, the goals of the site builders may be more modest, the capabilities more limited, and the necessary human and financial resources more daunting than envisioned. ♦ Dan Riffe is Richard Cole Eminent Professor in the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

SUMMER 2009

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DTH

DTH PHOTOS BY EMMA PATTI

continued from page 31

media and the iraq war

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continued from page 23

www.dailytarheel.com

DOMINATION

student newspaper isn’t printed. So, student newspapers are getting caught up in university budget cuts. Some cuts are in days or pages printed, and others are losing their print editions altogether. The DTH stands on its own, and that’s not happening to us. When papers cut days, they lose readers, and they lose marketers who won’t ever come back. We don’t want to be in that position at the DTH. We think a five-day-a-week printed newspaper for Carolina is right, and it’s going to be right for a long time.

With so much focus on online today, has the DTH newsroom shifted more to online? We created a new position recently for online managing editor, and we were recognized for online excellence by the N.C. Press Association, so we must be doing something right there. Our online audience comes primarily from outside our print distribution area. They come mainly for UNC basketball

A LEGACY

UNC won by at least 12 points each game this tournament

12

0+

TYLER GETS TITLE Wins NCAA title in last year as a Tar Heel

FULFILLED

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coverage, but I think they come back for the video, photo and multimedia features they find on the site. We’re not in a 24-hour news reporting cycle. Student schedules hold that back. But we do have the biggest newsroom in the Triangle. The News & Observer’s newsroom numbers are down, and they continue to cut. We’re at almost 300 people in the newsroom, so I think we’ve got more news gatherers than anyone in the Triangle.

TV channels and newspapers speak the tongue of the party that created it. This makes it hard for Iraqis to know whom to believe. Media that are prooccupation use words like “the friendly forces,� “terrorists� and “crimes against Iraq.� Some of them are paid by American forces to give favorable reports. Others who are against the occupation use words like “occupation forces,� “resistance� and “heroic operations against the invaders.� And each has to show its party’s leader every day. It’s the same as in the days of Saddam, but now Iraq has so many more leaders.

Students today know they have to be multi-talented. If you’re a designer, you better learn to copy edit. If you’re a copy editor, you better learn some concepts of design. They’ve gotten the message.

The Arab media isn’t so different than American media after all. A TV station or a newspaper is a business. They give different points of view, which can change according to management policy and efforts to increase popularity.

There are jobs at smaller community newspapers like the Washington Daily News, the Carteret News-Times and the Whiteville paper. You have to be willing to start your career in a smaller market, and you have to bring with you the ability to tell stories in a variety of ways. ♌

CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR

After the invasion, Iraq was stormed by sudden democracy and absolute freedom. Many Iraqis – and especially members of the political parties that came to Iraq after the invasion – started their own newspapers, Web sites, TV and radio stations. Instead of just one voice, now Iraq had a variety of thoughts and ideologies that did not agree with the other.

How are students working at the DTH adjusting to the demand in the job market for people who can do more than one thing – write, record audio, shoot video, take photographs and package it all for the Web?

Jobs are out there for qualified people. There are more than 11,000 newspapers in the United States. Only a small fraction of those are the big dailies that are doing so poorly.

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visiting places or doing any other of his daily activities. You could see that all of the stories were the same; it was all coming from one source.

So in the end, the lack of good information causes Americans and Iraqis to misunderstand each other. Many describe the other as terrorists or invaders. These over-simplistic titles can last, or they can end – and much of it is up to the media. ♌ Ahmed Fadaam was a visiting scholar at the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication and Elon University in 2008-09.


DONORS

Donors to the school july. 1, 2008 through april 30, 2009

The honor roll below recognizes contributors to the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication and the school’s foundation from July 1, 2008 through April 30, 2009. Bold type identifies Dean’s Circle donors – individuals who have contributed $1,000 or more and organizations that have contributed $5,000 or more this fiscal year. Alumni who graduated in the last 10 years qualify for Dean’s Circle membership at reduced levels. Donors give generously, empowering the school’s faculty and students to excel in their teaching, research and service missions.

Adams-Jacobson Endowment Charles Patrick Adams Jr. and Jamie Susan Jacobson Joel Gregory Curran Advertising Allen Marshall Bosworth IV C. Brandon Cooke Susan Fowler Credle Peter Broemmel Lee Pamela Denise Long Sarah Foscue Merrell Rachel Alexander Parks Patricia Lee Rosenbaum Floyd Alford Jr. Scholarship Julia W. Alford Peggy Allen Internship Danny Robert Lineberry and Sharon Ann Lineberry Philip Alston Scholarship Joel and Edith Bourne John Bittner Fund Denise Alexander Bittner Larry Dean Stone Jr. Margaret A . Blanchard Scholarship Fraser Berkley Hudson Nancy Cole Pawlow Tom Bowers Scholarship Fund Emily Mason Ballance Tom Bowers and Mary Ellen Bowers Jane Young Choi Owen Andrew Hassell Mark Christopher Holmes Frances Hudson Sharon H. Jones Gregory Mark Makris and Holly Hart Makris Nancy Pawlow Randy Rennolds Diane Harvey Bradley Scholarship David Bradley Suzanne M. Presto

Rick Brewer Scholarship J. Bryant Kirkland III Lenox Daniel Rawlings III Rebecca Branch Swift Julia Garner Wilson Peter Jude Zifchak Megan Eliza Collins Jane Brown Research Gift Fund Jane Delano Brown Canady International Scholarship Erika Williams Canady Cole C. Campbell Professional Development Fund Jane Elizabeth Albright Constance Campbell Brough Sharon D. Campbell Kathryn Louise Hopper John Albert Campbell III Scholarship Fund Elizabeth Gardner Braxton CHCPRMS Scholarship Fund Carolinas Healthcare Public Relations and Marketing Society Carroll Hall Renovation Fund Capitol Broadcasting Co. The Robin Clark Experience William Banks Bohannon Patrice Jane Dickey Ann Clark Howell and Glenn Richard Howell Margaret Olivia Kirk Marjo Edwina Rankin Susan Patricia Shackelford David Alan Zucchino O. J. Coffin Memorial Scholarship John Thomas Stephens Jr. Richard Cole Fund Bonnie Angelo John K. Bahr Jo Ellen Bass Joyce Lee Fitzpatrick

Troy Kenneth Hales Bryant Allen Haskins James Russell Hefner III Merrill Rose L. Joseph Sanders Fitzpatrick Communications Inc. James V. D’Aleo Award of Courage Karen D’Aleo and Robert I. D’Aleo Kathy Olson Andrea Diorio and Joseph Diorio Fall and Spring Break Networking Trips Joseph Nelson and Jean Nelson F. Weston Fenhagen Scholarship for International Students George M. Brady Jr. John Carlson and Caitlin Fenhagen Nancy P. Weston Mary K athryn Forbes Scholarship Charles and Katherine Forbes Stephen Gates Scholarship Fund Ronald R. Arnold James A. Auer Mark Alan Baratta Serene Anson Bartoletti William R. Bearding Matthew Wade Blanchard and Laura Thomas Blanchard Donald Arthur Boulton Carl E. Boyer James W. Brown Megan Eliza Collins Joan Conner Harvey Lindenthal Cosper Jr. and Kathryn Perrin Cosper Dale-Anna Carroll Cryan Walter K. Cupples Anthony F. Dardy Charles Ricketts Dike Shelia Duell George Anthony Gates III and Patricia Kennedy Gates

Charles E. Gates Godfrey Gayle Frank Boynton Heath Ken Hopper and Carol N. Hopper Fred L. Hsu L.G. Jeffcoat Raymond Lewis Jefferies Jr. Bridget B. Johnson Pamela A. Kennedy Carolyn C. Kingman Craig Thomas Kocher Sally S. Kocher Mitchell Lynn Kokai James J. Krasula Dennis Krause Joseph R. Locicero Lois R. Lunne Charles Mallue III Dennis Michael Manchester Dennis P. Mankin Ryan Michael McDonough Thomas Wayne McHugh Gates McKibbin Marilyn McPhillips Stuart Mease Beth Miller Vicki Harrison Murray Alan W. Neebe and Eloise C. Neebe Micki Ware Owens Elnora Piscopo S. Tinsley Preston Annette Fields Raines Sue Meador Rodier John Charles Rose Alton Glenn Ross and Francis Turner Ross Steven R. Sarcione Pamela S. Schneider Eric Shaun Schneider Sr. Josephine C. Sharpe David E. Slade Nancy Snee Gary Sobba Tom Trotta and Lorenda Tiscornia Susan Elizabeth Walsh Claire Stroup Walton Kandice Weglin Andrea Michelle Wessell Bill Harold Whitley Jr. Robert L. Wilson Miles H. Wolff Joshua Alden Wroniewicz ROI Technologies Inc. Lunne Marketing Group Inc.

Gift in Kind Charlie Tuggle CustomScoop KDPaine & Partners Canon USA Leaderboard Awards John L . Greene Fund John Lee Greene Jr. John Harden Scholarship Fund Mark Michael Harden The Charles Hauser Scholarship Fund Robert Donald Benson Jane Edwards Hauser William Storr Cormeny William Hearst Fund William Randolph Hearst Foundations The Hoffman Award Jeffrey R. Hoffman William & Barbara Hooker Library Trust Fund William H. & Barbara P. Hooker Trust Fund Paul Green Houston Scholarship Joan Pinkerton Filson Pete Ivey Scholarship Judson Davie DeRamus Jr. and Sarah Ivey DeRamus E. Eugene Jackson Scholarship Fund Estate of E. Eugene Jackson Journalism Special Fund Robert Brown and Laura Brown W. Horace Carter Kenneth Wayne Lowe William Irvin Morton Estate of Roland Giduz Capital Cities ABC IBM Corp. E.W. Scripps Company Keever Scholarship W. Glenn Keever and Nancy Caldwell Keever

SUMMER 2009

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DONORS

july. 1 , 2008 through april 30, 2009

Charles Kuralt Learning Center Thurman W. Worthington Jr. LPGA Scholarships Ladies Professional Golf Association Harvey F. Laffoon Scholarship Grace Laffoon Mackey-Byars Scholarship Fund Napoleon Byars and Queenie Mackey Byars Donna Whitaker Rogers Raleigh Mann Scholarship Fund Kendra Leigh Gemma Geoffrey Michael Graybeal Meggan Everidge Monroe Amy Marie Sharpe Maxwell Graduate Scholarship in Medical Journalism Kenneth Scruggs Maxwell and Tracey Maxwell Molly McK ay Scholarship Ashley Hartmann Mexico/Cuba Student Travel Fund Frederick Dana Hutchison Joseph Morrison Memorial Peter Seth Morrison Hugh Morton Distinguished Professorship in Journalism and Mass Communication William Grimes Cherry III Julia Taylor Morton Catherine Walker Morton Rolfe Neill John S. & James L. Knight Foundation N.C. Black Publishers’ Scholarship Charles Paul Ernest Harold Pitt Winston-Salem Chronicle Winston-Salem Foundation N.C. Community Media Project Rachel LaVerne Lillis Thomas W. Marshall N.C. Press Association/ N.C. Press Services Scholarship N.C. Press Association Nelson Benton Memorial Fund Landon R. Wyatt Jr. and Kathryn Benton Wyatt News-Editorial John Bayliff Frank Ron Paris Fund Robert Lamar Beall Jr. Joy Franklin Ashley B. Futrell Jr. State Port Pilot

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CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR

Roy H. Park Fellowship for Graduate Students Triad Foundation Pfizer Minority Medical Journalism Scholarship Pfizer Inc. Pruden Graduate Fellowship Estate of Peter Pruden Jr. Public Relations Anne Virginia Godwin Julie Anne Sass Carol Reuss Fund Carol Reuss Michael John Sauer Scholarship for Sports Communication Mary Jo Hester Cashion George-Ann M. Sauer Mary Ann Weitz Susan Weitz Scholarships Crystal Nicole Calloway Douglas Oliver Cumming Ann Murphy Freeman Ellen Marie Gilliam Sari Nicolle Harrar Stephanie Elizabeth Jordan Harriet Sue Sugar Julia Groves Walsh David Earl Wells North Carolina Psychoanalytic Foundation Arizona State University School of Journalism and Mass Communication International Fund Estate of Robert L. Stevenson School of Journalism and Mass Communication Foundation Corinne Anderson Adams Jerome Robertson Adams Thomas Joseph Ahern Jr. Patsy M. Albrecht Michael Miller Allen G. Craig Allen Jr. Ray Shores Alley Frank James Allston and Barbara Brown Allston Deborah Helms Alston O. Donald Ambrose and Patricia Watson Ambrose Sharon Hockman Ames Linda Frances Anderson Marjorie Jordan Andrea R. Frank Andrews IV Amy C. Andrews Jo Boney Andrews Nancy Appleby Ellen Hubbard Archibald Morgan David Arant Jr. Mary Hamilton Arcure William Griffin Arey Jr. Larry Rice Armstrong and Elizabeth Smith Armstrong Judith Carol Arnold Odette Embert Arnold Elisabeth Blake Arrington James Jordan Ashley III Tamara Overman Atkins Catherine Lynne Atchison Amanda Harding Atkinson Wendy Hunsucker Austin Erwin Theodore Avery Jr.

Benjamin Franklin Aycock V and Heidi Eli Aycock James Greer Babb Jr. and Mary Lou Babb MacKenzie Coleman Babb Robert Reece Bailey Crystal Baity Kaylee Ann Baker Susie Elizabeth Baker Emily Mason Ballance Garry Lee Ballance Thomas Angelo Ballus and Paige Fulbright Ballus Mark Alan Baratta Amy Elizabeth Barefoot Evelyn Faison Barge Suzy Maynard Barile Ellen Downs Barnes Virginia Breece Barnes Barbara Ann Barnett Pamela Hall Barnhardt Frances Keller Barr Frank C. Barrows and Mary Stewart Newsom Kenneth Houston Barton Jo Ellen Bass Leah Efird Bass Jason Bates E. Thomas Baysden Jr. and Cynthia Bullard Baysden Thomas Carlisle Beam Jr. Robert Locke Beatty Jennifer Knesel Beaudry Gail Place Beaver Andrew Ross Bechtel Elizabeth Richey Beck John Michael Beck and Jane Strader Beck Judd DuPont Beckwith William Lockett Beerman Jr. John Tjark Behm Jr. and Laura Elliott Behm Clara Bond Bell Meredith Boyer Bell George Elliott Benedict IV J. Goodwin Bennett Thomas Fleetwood Benning and Betsy Lark Burnett Benning Samuel Jay Bernstein and Nancy Badt Bernstein David Lee Berrier and Cammie M. Berrier John Monie Betts Jr. Camden Charles Betz and Sara Betz Adam Bianchi and CrystalFair Chalaron Melbourne Margaret Goldsborough Bigger Pamela Hildebran Bilger Kathy Pitman Birkhead Jesse Bissette and Jody Bissette Elizabeth Kathleen Black Norman Black Jr. and Beverly Lakeson Black Shannon Burroughs Blackley Lisa Dowis Blackmore Amy Cash Blalock Stanley Blum and June Blum Adam Michael Linker and Kristen Suzanne Bonatz Richard Dale Boner Jane L. Boone Norman David Borden Cynthia McCanse Borgmeyer Gwendolyn Michele Bounds Loretta Bowlby-Herbek Patricia Atkinson Bowers Tammy Marie Bowman Betty Holliday Bowman Jill Wienberry Boy Debra Harris Boyette Lois A. Boynton

Charles Delaine Bradsher Bethany Litton Bradsher W. Jeffery Brady Mr. Kenneth William Daniels and Angela Brady-Daniels Faye Riley Branca Michael Arthur Brannock Gregory Dean Braswell Linda Slawter Braswell Magda Ingrid Breuer E. Lawrence Brew Richard Franklin Brewer Larry Wayne Britt Rosemary Osborn Britt Charles Wilson Broadwell Nancy Weatherly Bromhal Sam Willis Brooks Jr. and Sandra Florence BrooksMathers Kelly Gangloff Brooks Sherri Berrier Brown Corey Lamar Brown Sumner Brown ToNola Doris Brown-Bland Paul Christopher Browne and Kimberly E. Sanders Christian Richard Bruning IV Joseph Alan Bryan Bob Bryant and Brandee Potts Bryant George Badger Bryant III Ralph Godfrey Buchan Jr. Anne A. Buchanan Pearle Long Buchanan Carl William Buchholz E. Harry Bunting Jr. and Elizabeth Cochrane Bunting Mary Gardner Burg Oscar Nesbitt Burgess Jr. Betsy Eugenia Burke A. Michael Burnett Sally Elizabeth Burrell Deborah Navey Burriss Robert Scidmore Bursch and Dolores da Parma Bursch Edward Winslow Butchart Beverly Gleason Byrnes Martha Till Cade J. Neal Cadieu Jr. Katharine Jones Calhoun Joan McLean Callaway Ann Stephenson Cameron Davis Lewis Camp Brenda Lee Campbell Erika Williams Canady Claudia C. Cannady F. Scott Canterberry Lee Hood Capps Dale Carlson John Chris Carmichael Carol Louise Carnevale Cheryl Beth Carpenter Carolyn Hof Carpenter Kent Hunter Carrington Lester Martin Carson Susan Keith-Lucas Carson Robert Lewis Carswell Eugene Venable Carver Carolina Wiggs Cate Joan Roberts Cates Susan Mauney Catron Dr. Martyn John Cavallo and Julie Austin Cavallo Joseph A. Cech III Tonya Widemon Cheek Mary Alys Voorhees Cherry Phillip Hoyt Childers and Kimberly Walsh-Childers Yun Hi Choi and Hwi-Man Chung Paula Grisette Christakos Margot F. Christensen George Worthington Civils Amy Armfield Clark Douglas George Clark

Ann Clarke Johanna Lynn Cleary Ann Sawyer Cleland Michael Clendenin and June Clendenin John Clifford Bill Cloud and Margaret Alford Cloud Richard Livingston Coble Jr. Henry Luther Coble Katherine Blixt Cody James W. Coghill Allan E. Cohen Gerry Farmer Cohen Kelly Furr Cohen Sara Frisch Coleman Lynn Wareh Coles Renee Rader Colle Kathryn Sue Collins Sheri Mingle Collins Stephanie Mingle Collins Tracy Pruit Collins Wendell Wood Collins Mary Clark Connell Courtney Sanders Connor Mark Edward Cook Karin Turner Cook Jane Cappio Cooke Linda Yvonne Cooper Susan Huges Cooper Dorothy Coplon Thomas John Corrigan Marry Riggle Cornatzer J. Leigh Cotter Sara Fitzhenry Coughlin Coline Smith Covington William Riddick Cowper III Richard Pearson Cowperthwait Helen Parks Cox Emily Smyth Cozart Michael Alan Cozza Kenneth Robert Craig Lois Ribelin Cranford Lisa Stewart Crater Mary Lou Craven Charles Gordon Crawley Elizabeth Anne Crumpler Jessica Blue Cunningham Philip R. Currie Kara Iverson Cvijanovich Kristin Biddulph Dabar Diana Lynn D’Abruzzo Cynthia Dalton and Tony Dalton Jayne Childs Daly Susana Lee Dancy Caroline Elizabeth Dangson Charles Rufus Daniel Jr. Barbara Parker Danley Barbara S. D’Anna Liane Crowe Davenport Maria Coakley David Shannon Marie David William Davie Paul Tripp Davies Lynn Davis Herbert Edward Davis Jr. James Allyn Davis Michael Aaron Davis Virginia Kate Davis Helen S. Davis Nancy Katherine Davis Noelle Marie Dean Kim Ruhl Dearth Wesley Lane Deaton Joseph Albert DeBlasio Derek Stevens DeBree Christopher Richard DeFranco Edward Harrison Denning and Shea Riggsbee Denning Rebecca Anne Denison William Austin Dennis


Derek Wayland Denton Stacey M. Derk Margaret Laurens deSaussure Bradley Lee Dezern Lella T. Dezern Blake Dicosola Laura Hammel Dicovitsky Christopher Joseph DiGiovanna and Jennifer Sucher DiGiovanna Emily Ogburn Doak Casey William Dobson and Sherry Elaine Miller Anne Marie Dodd Jean Huske Dodd Sherrie Marchant Donecker Claire Robbins Dorrier Linda Brown Douglas Dru Dowdy Patricia Rogers Dozier John Ernest Drescher Jr. Sandra Snyder Drew Derwin Lathan Dubose Sherrie Venable Duke Andrew Wayne Duncan and Alison Shepherd Duncan Kathleen Jane Dunlap Casey Brenelle Dunlevie June Dunn Thomas Edwin Dunn Elizabeth Gray Dunnagan Miriam Evans DuPuy Debra Kaniwec Durbin Jennifer Eileen Dure Carol Anne Bennett Durham W. Harry Durham

Diane Hanna Earl Jon David East Susan Johnson Ebbs Derek John Eberwein and Teresa Clark Eberwein Kristin Scheve Eckart Susan Datz Edelman Cobi Bree Edelson J. Gary Edge and Debra Rogers Edge Charles Guy Edmundson Gregory George Efthimiou Jamal Laurence El-Hindi George Maron El-Khouri Gregory Edwin Eller Samuel Michael Elliott and Ruth Reece Elliott Grace-Marie Blades Elliott Morgan Brantley Ellis Robert Anthony Ellison Charles Frederick Ellmaker David Charles Ennis Joy Cox Ennis Racheal Ennis John Walter C. Entwistle III and Marielle Stachura Entwistle Donna Maria Epps D. Brent Ericson and Sally Ellen Pearsall Florence McLeod Ervin Rhonda Francine ErvinParker David Wesley Etchison Russell Furbee Ethridge Kenneth LeRoy Eudy Jr. Johnna L. Everett

Harris Factor Phyllis Annette Fair Thomas Ellison Faison Henry Wayne Farber Kimberlie Jean Farlow G. Thomas Fawcett Jr. Robert Steven Feke Twyla Ann Fendler Randolph B. Fenninger Jr. Thomas Russell Ferguson Jr. Kristina L. Ferrari Cynthia Hutton Ferrell Christine Yates Ferrell Daniel Luther Fesperman Lori Morrison Fetner Mark Fey and Lisa Langley Fey William Henderson Fields Susan Oakley Fisher Luchina Lenay Fisher Elizabeth Anne Flagler Dolores L. Flamiano Michael Dickey Fleming and Virginia Martin Fleming Kristin Wood Flenniken Laura Nielsen Fogt Adrienne Layman Fontaine Danielle Bridgette Forword Katharine Moseley Foster Elissa Smith Fowler Rochelle B. Fowler Thomas Stockton Fox III and Mary Catherine Ray Fox Elizabeth Hartel Franklin Bill Freehling and Emily Battle Freehling Marie Thompson Freeze

Robert H. Friedman Christopher Martin Fuller Deborah Simpkins Fullerton Gary Douglas Gaddy and Sandra Herring Gaddy Carol Gallant Rebecca Smith Galli William Hunter Gammon and Jessica Gillespie Gammon Kara Elizabeth Gannon Eduardo Alberto Garcia and Enriqueta Garcia David Allen Garrison Jennifer Ann Dunlap Garver E. Clayton Gaskill Jr. Austin Gelder Adam J. Geller James Franklin Gentry Jr. Hunter Thompson George Jennifer Diane Gertner Shailendra Ghorpade Thomas Herrick Gianakos Dona Fagg Gibbs John R. Gibson Morton Joseph Glasser Charlie Upshaw Glazener and Patricia Moore Glazener Howard Gibson Godwin Jr. Colleen Crystal Natasha Goffe Scott David Gold Peggie Jean Goode James T. Gooding Jr. and Karen F. Gooding Charles Frank Gordon Jr. Blake Green

Roy McDowell Greene and Tracy Edwards Greene Sue A. Greer Scott Hamilton Greig Alissa Gail Grice William B. Grifenhagen Patricia Ellen Griffin Stephanie Lynn Gunter Rebecca Sirkin Gunter Phillip Warren Gurkin and Marie Karres Gurkin Debra Harper Gutenson David Warner Guth Leonard Julius Guyes John Brian Hackney L. Allen Hahn Elizabeth T. Haigler Parker Colleen A. Haikes Mary Cameron Haines David Robert Hair and Elizabeth Coley Hair Z. Bryan Haislip Deana Setzer Hale Troy Kenneth Hales Joan Charles Hall Stephen Neil Hall Dwight Craig Hall Calvin L. Hall Elizabeth Hughes Hall Speed Hallman and Susan Walters Hallman Charles Daryl Hamilton Sharon Kester Hamilton Cole Chapman Hammack Lawrence Townley Hammond Jr. and Alice Rowlette Hammond

DONORS

july. 1 , 2008 through april 30, 2009

Alumni support student networking trips School alumni Joe Nelson and Catherine Reuhl want to help students start careers in the media industry. They support networking trips each semester to a different city so students can gain insight into the job market. “The J-school is empowering students through these trips, giving them an opportunity to meet with professionals and further explore their areas of interest,” said Reuhl, a 2003 alumna and a communications specialist at the Harris Teeter headquarters in Matthews, N.C. Gifts from Nelson and Reuhl have helped the school take students to Atlanta, New York City and most recently, Washington, D.C. In Washington, students met with alumni at Arnold Worldwide, The Washington Post, ABC News, Voice of America, National Geographic, the White House, FleishmanHillard and the U.S. Senate Finance Committee, among others. The school hosted a reception at the Capitol Hill Visitor Center. Students who participate in the mentoring trips contribute to the cost of flights and lodging. Though many students get help paying for the trips from the Don and Barbara Curtis

Students and staff outside Union Station in Washington, D.C., in March 2009.

Excellence Fund for Extracurricular Student Activities, donors help remove financial obstacles for deserving students who could not afford to take advantage of these trips. “I just felt like I could do something to help students find meaningful employment,” said Nelson, who lives in Rocky Mount, N.C. Many students who go on these trips make contacts that lead to jobs.

SUMMER 2009

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DONORS

july. 1 , 2008 through april 30, 2009

Canady International Scholarship Erika Canady, a 1993 graduate of the school, and her husband, Randall, have given $50,000 to endow the Canady International Scholarship in the school. The annual scholarship will go to students who are engaged in international academic opportunities related to journalism and mass communication and who exhibit drive, initiative and curiosity about the world. The scholarship may be awarded to undergraduate or graduate students, with a preference for students who work. Erika Canady’s experiences on a class trip to Mexico and Cuba in the spring of 1992 led by Richard Cole, who was the dean of the school, inspired her to establish the $2,500 scholarship to enrich the lives of future students by supporting international travel.

Elizabeth Carroll Hamner William R. Handy and Barbara Handy Katherine Hart Hanes Roger Durant Hannah and Janell McCaskill Hannah Caroline Hanner Sarah Barbee Hanner Scott Allen Hanson Lynn Harand Margaret Taylor Harper Graham Dalton Harrelson Robert Chatham Harris Angela Dorman Harris John Lory Harris III and Catherine Randolph Harris Ashley Hartmann Bryant Allen Haskins Marshall William Hass Daniel Marshall Haygood J. Duncan Hays and Jayne Hamlet Hays Ruth Davis Heafner Louis Roy Heckler Kathryn Cooley Heiser Elaine Gaulden Helms Winifred Martin Helton J.D. and Cindi Henderson Bruce Finley Henderson and Lynn Garren Henderson James Donald Henderson Jr. and Cynthia Johnson Henderson Maurice H. Hendrick Virginia Susan Hendrix James Wright Henry Perry Cleveland Henson Jr. Charles Allan Herndon III James Charles High and Sarah McKenzie High Leslie Thompson High and Rebecca Nix High Susan Snyder Hight

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Joan Hennigar Hill John Charles Hinson Jr. and Linda Morse Hinson Grant McLeod Holland and Katherine Holland George Martin Holloway Christina Marie Mock Holmes W. Howard Holsenbeck Virginia Fridy Holt Frances Ledbetter Hook Matthew Edwin Hornaday and Catherine Davis Hornaday Nancy Carolyn Horner Susan Snipes Horvat Alison Page Howard Herbert Hoover Howard David Hamilton Smith Jr. and Tammy Lisa Howard Jane Howard Kate Tamba Howard James Fuller Howerton Pauline Ann Howes Edgar Allison Howie Julius Cicero Hubbard Jr. Steven Alfred Huettel Jeffrey Lawrence Huey Dane R. Huffman Sarah Jean Hughes James Brandt Hummel Scott Beale Hunter Nancy Rea Huntley Marian Louise Huttenstine Anne Hickman Imes Cynthia Walsh Ingram Stacey Kaplan Isaacs Sarah Christine Irvin Andrew James Ives Rick Jackson Barry Gilston Jacobs Shawn Rubach Jacobsen and Karen Wiggins Jacobsen Diane Gilbert Jacoby

William Brian Jaker Roy Frederick Reed and Dinita L. James Melissa Lentz James Lawrence Wooten Jarman Jr. Carol Spalding Jenkins John Russell Jenkins Jr. and Ann McMahon Jenkins Yongick Jeong Carole Ferguson Johnson Alfred Leonard Johnson Harmony Marie Johnson Cassandra Lyons Johnson Emily Hightower Johnston Anne Marie Johnston Thomas Kennerly Johnstone IV and Carrie Estes Johnstone Bruce Overstreet Jolly Jr. Emmy Campbell Jonassen Raymond Clifton Jones Robert Jones Joseph Christopher Jordan Telisha LeShawn Joyner Edward Grey Joyner Jr. Adam Charles Kandell Stephanie Alicia Kane Susie Cordon Karl Laura A. Katz Ashton N. Katzer Michael Ray Kaylor Gary Victor Kayye Michael David Kearney Ryan William Keefer Anne Raugh Keene William Lewis Keesler Patricia Patterson Kelly Elizabeth Anne Kennedy Janet Rose Kenney Urania Bakos Keretses Pamela Phillips Keull Charles Edwin Killian Julie Smith Kimbro

Anne Hanahan Ford Kimzey Keith King and Louise Spieler Wayne Edgar King Alison Michelle King Michelle Heeden King Robert Edward King David Burgess Kirk Janice Carol Kizziah Mark Corey Klapper Rochelle Helene Klaskin Kimberly Dawn Kleman Malia Stinson Kline Felisa Neuringer Klubes Karen Trogdon Kluever Susan Brubaker Knapp Richard K. Kneipper and Sherry Hayes Kneipper Robert Clifton Knowles Mitchell Lynn Kokai Michele Holland Kolakowski Rachael Landau Kornblum Stephen Kornegay Rhonda Whicker Kosusko Lisa Rowland Kozloff Gene William Krcelic John Dunham Kretschmer Anita Krichmar Paul Stuart Kronsburg Thomas Kublin Marsha Kurowski Paul Harvey Kutz Norma A. Kwee Angelique Cowan Kymmell Sarah Elizabeth Lamm Kara Michele Lashley Jarvis Harding Latham Sherry Johnson Lauber James Everett Laughrun Andrew Harmon Lavender Diane Marie Lavigne Virginia Temple Lawler Edward Franklin Lawrence and Emily Brewer Lawrence Sharon Elizabeth Lawrence Matthew Taylor Leach and Laura Byrd Leach Ann Paylor Leatherwood Daniel P. Lee Donna Claire Leinwand Frances Cauthen Lemcke Lucille Stanton Leon William Kent Leonhardt Charla Haber Lerman Margot Carmichael Lester Suzanne Nichols Levi Rebecca Lewis-Congdon Jeffrey Thomas Linder and Kathleen Keener Linder Richard Lindholm Eric Glenn Little David M. Lewis Slade Lewis Harry Walker Lloyd Alice Lockhart Jo Ann Gallo Loer Valerie Anne Lovko Suzanne Story Lowe Jeffrey Charles Lowrance and Janice Duffy Lowrance Diane Hadley Lucas Guy Stephen Lucas and Jane Meekins Lucas Fritz Bartley Luther Jamee Osborn Lynch Cy Kellie Lynn Ed Lyons Justin Neil Lyons Julie Anne Lytle Salem Elizabeth Macknee Jane Madden Joseph Edward Malloy and Cheryl Patton Malloy Marc Christopher L. Mankins Raleigh Colston Mann Angela Branoff Mansberger

Ronda Jae Manuel Karen Mary Markin Stacye M. Marrs Karen Trail Martin John Wright Martin III Keely Noffsinger Massie A. Michael Mathers Lydia Blanton Matthews Martha Nixon Matthews Mary Lineberger Matthews Ellen Wallace Matthews Etta Lee Matthews Thomas Blake Mattingly Elizabeth Houk Mauser Lisa Curtis May Claire Martin May Michael Wayne Mayo and Marcia S. Mayo Vernon Lee Mays Jr. M. Timothy McAdams and Katherine Carlton McAdams William Howard McAllister III Patricia Kingery McCarty Paul Gilbert McCauley Jr. Shaniqua L. McClendon David Walker McCullough Jr. Sheryl Windham McDonald Angus Morris McDonald III and Elizabeth Williams McDonald Michael Benjamin McFarland Kellee Schreiner McGahey Joseph Wilson McGee Margaret Padgette McGeorge Brittny Vernee McGraw Elizabeth Cotter McGroarty LaVerne McInnis Jr. Marilyn Spencer McKee Sam Stewart McKeel Margaret Ryan McKenzie J. Peter McKnight Teresa A. McLamb John Andrew McLeod and Erin Randall McLeod Heather Lynn McNatt Tracey W. McSwain Beth Erin Mechum Roger Preston Meekins Vito John Melfi Brittany Nicole Melvin Gregory Brian Mercer and Laura Anderson Mercer Margaret Myers Merrill Ellen Mesmer Abigail Natasha Metty Leonard Arthur Meyer Mary Thompson Midgett James Aubrey Midgett and Mary Thompson Midgett Draggan Paul Mihailovich Betty Jean Schoeppe Miller William Prather Miller and Stephanie Graham Miller Suzanne G. Millholland L. Barron Mills Jr. Donald Ray Millsaps Christopher Ryan Milner John Thomas Mims Jimmie Russell Mincey and Amy Gorman Mincey Kristen Yoohee Min Jimmie Russell Mincey Terry Mitchell and Karen C. Mitchell Philip James Mohr and Tracy Southern Mohr W. James Monroe Jr. Robert Carson Montgomery Amelia Nicole Moody Kathy Arrington Moody Gaye Gardner Moore Jeffery Frank Moore Patricia Miller Moore


Franklin Shaw Moore and Lisa Moore Curtiss Alexander Moore J. Jay Moore III John Ellison Moore III George W. Mordecai and Nancy Wood Mordecai Beverly Faye Morgan Danita Jan Morgan Lee Ann Morris R. Edward Morrissett Jr. Julie Moushon Kelly Reace Murphy James McKinney Moye III James Steven Muldrow Courtney Campbell Muller Stella Lassiter Murphy Ruth Henning Nagareda Stuart High Nance Brooke Archer Neal Deborah R. Neffa Tracy Lynn Newbold Laura E. Newman Cindy L. Newnam L. Dalton Nobles and Susan Quinn Nobles Gregory Walter Nye and Haddya Haddad Nye Joseph A. Norman Jr. and Kelly Elizabeth Peacock Jo Ellen Meekins Nowell Chantal Oberoi Dave A. Obringer and Lee Minzenmayer Obringer Barry Keith Odell Pekin Ogan and Christine Berlin Ogan Thad Brian Ogburn Ellen Wiener Oppenheim Stephanie Cunningham Ortiz Nicholas Joseph Ortolano III Jeffery Scott Orvin Aaron Matthew Overington Mollie Womble Owen

Heidi Elizabeth Owen Howard Wayne Owen and Karen Van Neste Owen S. Lee Pace Jean Reynolds Page Leslie Joe Page Jr. David Chandler Palmer Diana Williams Palmer Joan Deutsch Paradise Martha Whitney Parent Roy Hampton Park Jr. and Tetlow P. Park Vernon Caldwell Park Karen Lynn Parker Roy Parker Jr. and Marie Smithwick Parker James Howard Parker and Hallie McLean Parker Vernon Ray Parrish and Bonnie Sparks Parrish Nancy G. Pate Curtis Patton Jr. Gordon Reames Payne Ashley Everhart Pearson James Finley Perkins and Dolores Oteri Perkins David Tucker Perry and Karen McEntyre Perry Nikki Peters Marjorie Hunter Petersen J. Scott Peterson Gary Phaup and Nina Phaup Laura Lee Phelps Johnny Lee Phelps Kathleen Douglass Phillips Stewart Phinizy III Jennifer Darleen Pierce Bradford Hancock Piner and Donna Piner Joy Brown Pinson Michael John Pittman Robert Turner Pittman Ann Beaver Pokora Sharon Honey Polansky

business journalism continued from page 29 in the past three years as reporters or editors.

Elizabeth Koontz Ponstingel Jonathan Hume Pope Elizabeth Ida Portanova Deborah Ann Potter Marcia Moore Potter William Barry Potts Mark Steven Powell Marilyn Meeks Powell Angella Preston Ted Yates Prevatte Valeria DuSold Prevish Amy Edwards Price Scott Lawrence Price Steven New Price Amy Edwards Price Aimee Waters Pugsley Michael Edgar Pulitzer Jr. Alexis Jennifer Rabin Errol Mark Rainey Jr. and Linda Sherck Rainey Marjo Rankin M. Scott Rankin Melanie Morgan Raskin Marianna Miller Raugh Judith Thomas Ray Amy Mansky Regan Gennifer Johnson Renfrow Kevin John Reperowitz Barry John Reszel James Alexander Rhodes Ronald Albert Ricci Susan Dean Ricker Aimee Dhus Ridgway Dorothy Sattes Ridings Joshua Brent Rinehart Lauren Elaine Rippey Lewis Samuel Ripps H. Zane Robbins James Crawford Roberts Jr. William Claude Roberts Rosemary Roberts Teresa Bagwell Roberts W. Glenn Robertson Edwin Moring Robins

Rand Robins Jr. Kristin Houser Robinson Russell Austin Robinson and Barbara Helms Robinson Valerie Tunstall Robinson Betsi Simmons Robinson C. Bennett Robinson III and Michelle Donahue Robinson Cathy Steele Roche Suzette Roberts Rodriguez Austin Nichols Rogers Donna Rogers Jim R. Rogers Alanna Sigmon Rollins Charlotte Lyn Rollins Frederick Roselli III P. Paul Rothman Sara Lynn Roueche David Brian Layton Royle David Martin Rubin and Andrea S. Rubin Terry Alan Rudolph Paul Frederick Rule Raymond Earl Ruth Lou W. Rutigliano Evelyn Davida Sahr Lynn Timberlake Sakmann Elizabeth Stewart Salter Carly Doris Salvadore Joseph Dominick Sanchez Michael Patrick Sanders and Ginger Wright Sanders L. Joseph Sanders J. Kenneth Sanford Laura Seifert Santos Kenneth Sass and Lynn Sass Louis Leonidas Sasser III Larry Melvin Saunders Caroline Elizabeth Saunders Henry Lyttleton Savage Jr. and Helen Young Savage Thomas William Sawyer Lauren Yoder Sawyers

These are smart decisions by these media companies. Many business experts believe that the way to gain market share during a time of turmoil in an industry is to expand, not contract. Those that are building up their business news coverage during the current economic crisis will be the survivors in the long run.

They’re not alone. Charlotte-based American City Business Journals, which owns 40 weekly business newspapers across the country, seems to be faring better than its daily counterparts. I saw numbers from one of its executives near the end of 2008 that showed that its subscriptions were up for the year, and its advertising revenue was down just 2 percent at a time when the dailies were seeing double-digit declines.

What all of this means, I think, is that consumers will increasingly stop going to their daily newspapers – with some notable exceptions like The New York Times – for business news and start going to specialty Web sites and newspapers that focus solely on business and economics coverage.

And others are getting into the act. CBS, for example, announced that it’s starting a business and economic news site called Moneywatch. And the online magazine Slate launched The Big Money site last year.

That’s too bad. At some daily newspapers, there continues to be strong business news coverage. The Charlotte Observer recently won a Gerald Loeb Award, considered the Pulitzer Prize of business journalism, for its coverage

Ellen D. Scarborough Thomas Varnon Scarritt Frances Winborne Schaaf Justin Toby Scheef and Christine Teresa Scheef Edward Louis Schlesinger Sarah Brown Schmale David Bradley Schmidt and Sherri Murray Schmidt John Alexander Schmidt and Kathryn Seale Schmidt Thomas Edward Schnabel Emily Joanne Schnure Andrew James Schorr Walter Joseph Schruntek Henry G. Schuler Jr. and Wendy Becker Schuler Leslie Ann Scism Jack Lamar Scism John Cecil Scroggs Jr. and Judy Dunn Scroggs Caroline Britt Seals Donald Macdonald Seaver Nicole Bensch Seitz Jonathan Crocker Sekerak Barbara Potts Semonche Joey Senat Jr. Julian Dante Sereno David Everette Setzer Kathy Tilley Shaffer Claire Russell Shaffner Donald Lewis Shaw Anne Elizabeth Sherow Connie Leigh Sherrill Daniel Luther Sherrill and Mary Ellen Reece Sherrill Joseph Wayne Shugart James Alan Sigmon and Ellen Neerincx Sigmon George Herbert Simpson III Bruce Merle Simpson V. Michael Simpson Wendy Grady Simpson Marion DuBose Sims III

DONORS

july. 1 , 2008 through april 30, 2009

of the housing market. And the Wichita Eagle has actually added standalone business news sections during the week in the past year to accommodate its coverage. Yet for students interested in business journalism, the future remains bright. The school, for example, couldn’t accommodate all of the business news outlets that wanted interns from UNCChapel Hill for 2009. I take that as a sign that knowledge of how to write about business and the economy remains a valuable skill during these tough times, and will continue to place journalists with that talent in a coveted position as the industry undergoes dramatic change. Chris Roush is the Walter E. Hussman Sr. Distinguished Scholar in business journalism at UNC-Chapel Hill.

SUMMER 2008

43


DONORS

july. 1 , 2008 through april 30, 2009

Wilson Sims Brandon Joseph Sink and Kelley Cherry Sink Charles Andrew Sinnett Patricia Porubsky Sisson Ann Gretchen Sjoerdsma Stacy Scarazzo Skelly Frank Willard Slusser Jr. David William Small Katherine Ford Smart J. Walker Smith Jr. and Joy Duncan Smith Catherine Underwood Smith Katherine Phillips Smith Col. T. Harrison Smith Jr. and Elizabeth McMillan Smith Katherine Phillips Smith Loyd Baxter Smith Jr. and Robin Harry Smith Emily Toler Smith Katherine Snow Smith Robert Beasley Smith and Katherine Williams Smith Gayle Marie Smith-Neely William Davis Snider and Florence Lide Snider Andrea Sobbe Michelle Lowe Soler Dianne Baldwin Southern Robert W. Spearman and Patricia H. Spearman Diane Seniw Spina Nora El-Khouri Spencer David Roosevelt Squires Jacqueline Haithcock Stalnaker Suzanne Jacovec Standard Taylor Stanford Allen Dean Steele Adam Martin Steiner and Marieke Tax Steiner Mick S. Stewart Mark Stephen Stinneford and Karen Youngblood Stinneford Christopher Dustin Stoen and Amanda Baker Stoen John Stokes and Dianne Stokes Charles Hubert Stover Angela Maria Strader Christopher Straughan and Dulcie Murdock Straughan Nicholas Street and Angela Baxter Street Keven Strickland Madeline T. Struttmann William John Studenc Jr. Terri Potter Stull Brian Hamilton Styers Geoffrey Patrick Suddreth and Heather Lovelace Suddreth Kevin Michael Sullivan Leonard Holmes Sullivan Kevin Michael Sullivan Phyllis Galumbeck Sultan Brenda Jane Summers Lawrence Henry Sutker and Patricia Barr Sutker

D. Kent Sutton Gilmer Paiton Swaim Jr. Dee Swalley Zanna Worsham Swann Eric Gregory Swaringen Sandee Ann Swearingen John Matthew Sweeney and Elizabeth Paradise Sweeney Patrick Taintor John Idell Tallman Linda Love Talmadge Timothy Ohrom Tarkington Larry Wilson Tarleton Douglas James Tate David Edwin Taylor Barbara Ross Teichman Martha Pearsall Terry Cynthia Witthuhn Tew Albert Shaker Thomas Jr. Seth Alan Effron and Nancy Gertrude Thomas Patricia Thomas Larry Parks Thomas Lucy Grey Thompson John Eley Thompson Jr. and Candace Stephenson Thompson J. William Thompson Jr. and Kristen Brown Thompson Joy Anastasia Thompson Elizabeth Rogers Thompson Alfred Marshall Thomy James Swain Thore Jr. L. Steve Thornburg Larry E. Thornburg and Marjory Thornburg Lindsay Sloan Thorp Harry Vincent Tocce Jr. Dawn Michele Tomaszewski Donna Ellen Tompkins Sherry Landgren Tompkins Stella Anderson Trapp David Ferd Troisi Glenn Gibson Tucker and Nancy Prince Tucker J. Reed Tucker Antonio Aloysius Tucker II Michael Andrew Wargo and Jennifer Tumulty-Wargo Leigh Forbes Turner Gregory Christopher Turosak Patricia Ann Tutone Nichole Strom Tygart Jackie Tyson Garry King Umstead and Susan Morrison Umstead Robert McLean Upton Brandon N. Uttley Ann Berman Vaden M.S. Van Hecke and Faye Massengill Van Hecke Laura C. Van Sant Cory Adam VanBelois Catherine Cousins Veal David Alexander Venable Carl Vernon Venters Jr. Erin Michelle Vernon Matthew Allen Viser Karen Michelle Vogel

Jane Rouse Waddell Ryan Thomas Wade Kenneth Robert Walden and Laurie Baker Walden Alyson Lynn Walker Melissa Stofko Walker Kathryn Brubaker Wall Sandy Winfield Wall Jim Wallace Robert Allen Walton Steven Vance Walton and Victoria Chivers Walton J. Gary Ward Patrick Ward and Maria Ward James Edward Carlton Warren Jonathan Campbell Warren Marion Washington Bennett Wellons Waters W. Bennie Waters Jr. and Martha Harrison Waters Susan Cary Watkin Judith Rebecca Watkins Nadia Renee Watts Stanley Thomas Wearden Teri Weaver David H. Weaver Carver Camp Weaver John Wood Weaver Jeffrey Michael Weiner and Linda Howell Weiner M. Jerome Weiss David Felda Welch and Katherine Russell Welch Franklin Ennis Wells Jr. V. Stuart Wells Laura Baier Wente Meredith Ellen Werner Robert Mark West and Julia Milner West David Owen Westerhoff and Brooks Morgan Westerhoff Reniece Henry Westmoreland Melinda Sawyer Whitaker Ashlie Brook White Sara Rodgers White Clarence Earl Whitefield and Jane Pittard Whitefield Abney Harper Whitehead Phillip Wayne Whitesell and Sherri Sanders Whitesell James Jay Whitmeyer Erin Wall Whittle Sara Rodgers Whites Susan Rebecca White Julia Bullard Wilkie Leslie J. Wilkinson Suzanne Wood Wilkison Nicole Noel Willets David Arnold Williams Nicole McSwain Williams O. Lorraine Williams Judith Anne Willinger James Estes Willingham Sr. Dirk Edmund Wilmoth Richard Wright Wilson Robert Sessoms Wilson Gregory Michael Wilson Lyn Wilson Aimee Armande Wilson

Roy Reuben Wimmer Mark Wineka and Lindsay Wineka Anna Lee Winker Joe Wintrob and Janet Markstein Wintrob George Bryant Wirth and Barbara Morrison Wirth Callie Taintor Wiser Kevin Conrad Wolf and Susan Runser Wolf Merrill Wolf Andrea Lynn Wolfson James Horton Womack Chandler Woodall Raye Palmer Woodin III and Jane Minor Woodin W. Ruffin Woody Jr. Mary Ross Sherrin Woosley Sara E. Worrell-Berg Joni Buck Worthington Jennifer Dickens Wright Kim Mogul Wright Peter John Wylie Jr. Thomas Richard Yackley Jr. Laura Frances Yandell Ramon Lyon Yarborough and Virginia Lilly Yarborough Stephen Yarbrough Robin Rebecca Yontz Jack Gerard Yopp Jan Johnson Yopp Jennifer Heinzen York Kyle York Donna York-Gilbert Johanna Jane Yueh Anna Roselie Zarcone Charles W. Zimmerlein and Maria del Pilar Zimmerlein Ryan Catherine Zurawel Ronald Lee ZuWallack Beatrice Cobb Perpetual Charitable Trust Estate of Daniel Murphy Morton Family Foundation Landmark Foundation Greensboro News & Record The Cornelius J. Coakley Family Foundation Foundation for the Carolinas The Fayetteville Observer Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation Thompson Family Foundation Transylvania Times Crown Communications McLamb Communications Pace Enterprises Inc. A-1 Broadcast LLC Jewish Foundation of Greensboro Jameshenry1, LLC Schnabel Learning Center Southern Quarters Realty LLC Square One Marketing Inc. United Way of Delaware Crown Communications Triangle United Way EW Photography Edco

Bass, Berry & Simms North Carolina Association of Broadcasters Foundation Tracy Collins Design James H. Shumaker Term Professorship James George Wrinn Eleanor Lee Yates Walter Spearman Professorship Charles Gordon Crawley David Hart Rothman John H. Stembler Jr. Professorship Estate of John Hardwick Stembler Jr. Chuck Stone Citizen of the World Award David J. DeMaster Katharine R. Ford Lawrence David Turner John Sweeney Interview Fund Roy Hampton Park III and Laura Singer Park Tucker Family Endowed Scholarship Fund Bryan Hill Tucker and Rachael Tucker Van Hecke Award Michael S. Weinstein and Kathleen Mary Curry Visual Communication Edward Douglas Richardson Rebecca Ann Tench Ashley Lauren Zammitt Washington Summer Internship Program Melvin Sharoky Sharoky Family Foundation David Jordan Whichard II Scholarship Whichard Family Foundation David Julian Whichard Scholarship Fund D. Jordan Whichard III Whichard Family Foundation Earl W ynn Award Robert Palmer Brewer Jr. David Earl Hoxeng Charles Balchin Huntley Eleanor Barker Trommsdorff Journalism- Graduate Lucila Vargas

Please make a gift to the school using the enclosed envelope or make a gift online at jomc.unc.edu/gift.

Thank you!

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CAROLINA COMMUNICATOR


Jose Corbella Collecting alms early in the morning is part of every monk’s life in Thailand. Several miles are walked bare footed in order to visit every house in town in order to procure their fare. In exchange, they will offer blessings to the families.


Nonprofit Org US Postage PA I D Chapel Hill, NC Permit no. 177

Phil Daquila

Zach Hoffman

Abby Metty

Emma Patti

the university of north carolina at chapel hill campus box 3365, carroll hall chapel hill, nc 27599-3365

Ten Carolina J-school students worked with WashingtonPost.com to document the Presidential inauguration through a special multimedia package for Washington Post Newsweek Interactive called TimeSpace. See their work at specials.washingtonpost.com/timespace/inauguration.


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