20th Annual Associated Collegiate Press
Best of the Midwest
College Newspaper Convention
February 11-13, 2011 Marriott City Center Minneapolis
Welcome It may be cold outside this time of year in Minneapolis, but inside the walls of the Marriott City Center, you’ll be up close with the hottest topics in journalism courtesy of your friends at the Associated Collegiate Press. We are offering you a couple dozen sessions and three keynote presentations to provide you an abundance of opportunities for learning, problemsolving and inspiring conversations. Beginning Friday, we have two options for interactive workshops: newsroom management or ethics. We’ll kick off the convention with a veteran of two types of rough-and-tumble coverage: sports and politics. Jay Weiner will share what he has learned from both beats as well as writing in print and online. Saturday is packed with training. Check out sessions about basics like how to cover specialized beats and media law. It’s a solid lineup from start to finish. Our Saturday keynote, Joe Grimm, will lead two career-oriented breakout sessions, and his keynote will help you think about what’s ahead after graduation. His experience as a newsroom recruiter and career specialist is unmatched.
Schedule at a Glance Friday, Feb. 11 Early registration for “Futurizing the News” with Tim Harrower 8:30 a.m. Registration/Best of Show Newsroom Management
12-5 p.m. 12:45-4:30 p.m.
Exchange Area
3-6 p.m.
Special Ethics Session
3-4:30 p.m.
Welcome/Keynote
4:45 p.m.
Convention Reception
5:45 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 12 Registration 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Best of Show
8:30-10 a.m.
Networking/Exchange Lounge Breakout Sessions
2-5 p.m. 9-11:20 a.m.
Keynote
11:30 a.m.
Editor & Adviser Luncheon
12:15 p.m.
Breakout Sessions
1:15-3:30 p.m.
Critiques — by appointment
Sunday, Feb. 13
Between sessions, take a break in the Atrium to network and exchange ideas. It’s a chance to see what your peers are doing, grab a cup of coffee and get to know someone from another college or state. Learn even more by participating in the critiques for newspapers. The smart, experienced professionals and educators leading the weekend’s sessions won’t let you down. Continue your convention experience in the Great Room, where you can use the Internet and grab a drink. Don’t be afraid to venture outside the hotel. Minneapolis is an energetic city, and you’re at the epicenter of its bustling nightlife. Don’t want to brave the chill? Take the Skyway! We continue teaching and learning all the way to Sunday morning with sessions designed to give you knowledge and skills you can put to work immediately. We’ll close with some thoughts from Gail Rosenblum on how regardless of the medium, storytelling is the heart of what you do. Finally, turn in those Best of Show and individual contest entries. The Best of the Midwest contests recognize outstanding work in collegiate newspaper journalism. We’ve tried to pack as much learning as possible close to home. We think what we have to offer really does represent the Best of the Midwest. At the end of the weekend, we hope you do, too.
Networking/Exchange Lounge 8:30 a.m.-noon Breakout Sessions Keynote/Awards
9:15-10:20 a.m. 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Logan Aimone ACP Executive Director
Best of the Midwest Schedule of Sessions Friday, Feb. 11 Special session: “Futurize the News” with Tim Harrower 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Gain insights on how to improve your storytelling and design in print and online from one of the industry’s best-known gurus. Preregistration required. Convention Registration, Best of Show and Critique Sign-ups 12-5 p.m.
Sign up for a critique! One of the most valued aspects of the convention is a face-to-face critique of the newspaper during the convention. That’s why we’ve arranged for more veteran professionals and advisers to look over your edition and give feedback and suggestions that can be put to work starting Monday. All of the 25-minute critique sessions are by appointment only, and there is no additional fee. The appointment list is available at the registration desk and first-come, first-served. Just pick a time, drop off one or two papers and
then meet at the appropriate place and time. Saturday morning critiques will be in the Lake Calhoun Room. Saturday afternoon critiques will be in the Crystal Lake Room. If your critique time is during a scheduled breakout session, just quietly excuse yourself when it’s time for the critique.
We’ll do our best to accommodate every paper represented at the convention, but scheduling may not allow all requests.
Special Session • 12:45-4:30 p.m. Newsroom Management for College Editors • Deer Lake Management is one of the least-taught and yet hardest-to-learn skills, especially when it comes to newsrooms, where reporters often don’t follow a herd mentality. Attendees will learn the psychology of management and how to apply it. Learn the three key psychological needs that a good manager needs to create a positive working environment and increase motivation at your collegiate news organization. Preregistration and additional fee required. Check at registration to see if space is available. Vincent Filak, University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh
Special Session • 3-4:30 p.m. Journalism the Right Way: Creating an ethical culture in the newsroom • Elk Lake How do you decide what stories to publish, what makes them fair, and how far reporters should go to get them? Journalists must wrestle with difficult ethical questions every day. Making the right decisions requires a solid, ethical foundation. In this session, we’ll discuss, together, a number of real-life cases and begin building that foundation together. Chris Ison, University of Minnesota
Welcome Sessions • 4:45-6:45 p.m.
Keynote Address: Why journalism is still important • Ballroom 1 4:45-5:30 p.m. You can teach “old dogs” new tricks. You can also teach younger journalists — the “new dogs” — some old tricks of this trade. A veteran journalist will share what he’s learned while reporting on beats from sports to politics, and while telling stories in newspapers and online, and the lessons he learned from making the switches. Jay Weiner, MinnPost.com
Reception • Atrium 5:45-6:45 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 12 Convention Registration: 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Best of Show and Best of the Midwest Entries: 8:30-10 a.m. Breakout Sessions • 9-10:05 a.m. Newswriting Basics & Beyond • Ballroom 1 Whether you are a new reporter or experienced writers beyond the five Ws and the inverted pyramid, you will learn how to make your writing sparkle by using feature leads for news and online stories and by incorporating fiction techniques in your non-fiction writing. You’ll also learn the basics of investigative reporting, something that usually adds credibility to your student publication.
Victoria Goff, University of Wisconsin – Green Bay
The Resume Doctor • Deer Lake The Resume Doctor breaks down the application process for you and tells you how the different parts work together. Joe Grimm, Michigan State University
“Go cover soccer.” • Elk Lake In a heated moment, a high profile coach sought to ban coverage from the school newspaper of his football team because of a critical column. The idea that soccer is a lesser sport raises the issue of covering sports not so much in the limelight but giving notice to what some see as secondary sports or issues. Sam Martino, University of Wisconsin – Whitewater
Beyond the Beat: Finding Stories in Unexpected Places • Gray’s/Wayzata Bay Anybody can cover a city hall meeting or a plane crash, but how do you find stories that no one else will have? We’ll talk about how to use public records and crowdsourcing to deliver investigative stories. Lora Pabst, Star Tribune
Advisers Roundtable • Lake Calhoun Join a veteran adviser for a facilitated discussion about challenges of the role. Got something on your mind? You set the agenda this hour. Mark Plenke, Normandale Community College
Breakout Sessions • 10:15-11:20 a.m.
WordPress: A Power Publishing Platform • Ballroom 1 WordPress is an incredibly powerful and flexible publishing platform, suitable for news operations of all sizes. In this session, we’ll show you how to get the most out of WordPress. Jason Wallestad and Tom Hutchinson, School Newspapers Online
Entertainment Reporting: The Good, the Bad and the Weird • Deer Lake This session will focus on the art of arts journalism, from interviewing celebrities to covering the club scene to writing reviews. Tom Horgen, Star Tribune
The Live Job Interview • Elk Lake A newsroom recruiter will demonstrate an actual interview. Joe Grimm, Michigan State University
PANEL: Managing a College Newsroom • Crystal Lake
Erik Burgess, Hamline University Ryan Van Handel, University of Wisconsin – Green Bay Devin Henry, University of Minnesota
I Don’t Know What I’m Doing! • Gray’s/Wayzata Bay Is this how you got into a managerial role? Someone said, “Hey you’re a great (writer/reporter/photographer/ designer)! You should move up and be an editor!” OK, so now what? Usually fear, anxiety and despair. Or arrogance, anger and control freakishness. The purpose of this session is to start talking about what editors need to be able to do in order to survive. We will likely find out that a) we know more than we think we do and b) we’re all afraid of something, but that’s OK. Vince Filak, University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh
Keynote • 11:30 a.m.-12:15 p.m. Your Big, Fat Journalism Career • Ballroom 1 11:30 a.m.-12:15 p.m. Historic disruptions of traditional media are opening doors for today’s students — but only for those who are ready to try new things. Hear about seven trends that will mean jobs for those who prepare to take advantage of them.
• St. Croix 2 (Sixth Floor) Preregistration required. Check at ACP registration desk for availability. 12:15-1:10 p.m. Breakout Sessions • 1:15-2:20 p.m. Thinking through Page Design • Ballroom 1 What design considerations make or break the look of your paper? The Luther College CHIPS reconfigured its sections last semester to allow better coordination of facing pages. Editors and production staff will share successes and failures in this, as well as use of type, white space, photography, color and graphics. They will also look at how these elements figure into the design of prize-winning newspapers. Natalie Baudler, Libby Dahms, Sam Depagter, Emily Kittleson and Liz Smith, Luther College
Are You Flummoxed by FERPA? • Deer Lake University secrecy, student privacy, and developments in student media law — join a discussion of changes in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. Patrick File, University of Minnesota
What Would You Do? Six Case Studies in Journalistic Ethics in 60 Minutes • Elk Lake Would you… Consider giving your notes or photos to the police? Print news that could change the course of an election? Tweet unconfirmed rumors? Journalists are often faced with these decisions that do not have concrete answers. Test your instincts in this interactive session.
James McCommons, Northern Michigan University
A “Marketplace” or a “Cesspool”? • Deer Lake Legal and ethical issues related to online comment forums — a discussion about rights and responsibilities related to campus news websites and reader comments. Patrick File, University of Minnesota
Covering LGBT issues in the Media: The Controversy, The Spin, The Story • Elk Lake Whether it’s DADT, same-sex marriage or bullying, issues affecting LGBT people often dominate much of the news coverage in the U.S. and the World today. How do you cover LGBT issues? What terminology is correct? Who do you interview? We will discuss some of the must haves for your journalistic toolbox. Patty Mattern, NLGJA
Clean up Your Copy • Gray’s/Wayzata Bay You need more than a dictionary to edit copy for student media. Get tips on using the Associated Press Stylebook, establishing a local style, fact checking, and avoiding libel and clichés. Maintain consistency and build credibility with these proven copyediting techniques. Lori Keekley, St. Louis Park High School
Sarah Bauer, Minnesota Newspaper Association
Getting the Most out of the Interview • Gray’s/Wayzata Bay From background research and preparation to writing and asking the questions, the interview is the bread and butter of reporting. A former investigative reporter will share what worked for him and how you can conduct a successful interview. Chris Ison, University of Minnesota
Joe Grimm, Michigan State University
Adviser and Editor Luncheon
Writing the How-to Article • Ballroom 1 “How to buy textbooks online.” “Where to get help when you’re feeling blue.” Service journalism provides readers with news they can use. Craft compelling leads, find experts, break out sidebars and write actionable tips.
Breakout Sessions • 2:30-3:35 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 22
Breakout Sessions • 9:15-10:20 a.m. Busts, Break-ins and Beyond: The basics of police, fire and courts reporting • Deer Lake Police coverage can range from the daily and mundane to the exciting, dangerous and even humorous. Understanding what to ask and how to ask for it is just part of this session. We will talk about safety, compassion and legal issues. While crime doesn’t hit everyone every day, people do like to read about it. Learn how to make it worth their time. Vincent Filak, University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh
From College Paper to Daily Metro: Managing the transition
into your first jobs • Elk Lake So you landed your first job. Now what? Here’s how you can develop a beat, network and not just survive the challenging transition, but thrive.
have a place in journalism.
Closing Sessions • 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Logan Aimone and Kathy Huting, Associated Collegiate Press
Kelly Smith, Star Tribune
Closing Keynote Address: The World Will Always Need Storytellers — Only the Form Will Change • Ballroom 1 10:30-11:15 a.m. Despite the changes taking place in journalism in both business and platform, the heart of journalism will always be the story. A metro columnist for a large daily newspaper, Gail Rosenblum will share her experiences and lessons on why good storytellers will always
Gail Rosenblum, Star Tribune
Awards Ceremony: Best of Show and Best of the Midwest • Ballroom 1 11:15-11:30 a.m.
Convention ends • 11:30 a.m.
Best of the Midwest Keynote Speakers Jay Weiner is a journalist whose work straddles two worlds: sports and politics. He writes regularly for MinnPost.com, the nationally recognized notfor-profit news website in Minneapolis-St. Paul. His book about the 2008 U.S. Senate recount — “This Is Not Florida: How Al Franken Won the Minnesota Senate Recount” — was published last fall by the University of Minnesota Press. Politico wrote: “[Weiner] has written a vivid tale of legal wrangling, political maneuvering, and chutzpah told with a sportswriter’s flair.” Weiner spent 27 years as a sports writer for the Minneapolis Star Tribune, specializing in sports business issues and the Olympics. He has covered every Winter and Summer Olympics since 1984. In 2010, he was a research supervisor for NBC at the Vancouver Winter Olympics. In 2009, he helped author “College Sports 101,” a primer about big-time intercollegiate athletics finances, for the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics. In 2008-09, he covered the Al Franken-Norm Coleman U.S. Senate recount for MinnPost. For his reporting, he was awarded the Frank Premack Public Affairs Journalism Award, Minnesota’s most prestigious journalism honor. His book, “Stadium Games: Fifty Years of Big League Greed and Bush League Boondoggles,” (University of Minnesota Press, 2000) is a history of stadium politics in Minnesota.
Joe Grimm teaches and works with student groups as a visiting journalist at Michigan State University’s School of Journalism. He was newsroom recruiter and staff development editor at the Detroit Free Press from 1990 until 2008. During those years, he also worked with corporate recruiting teams at Gannett and Knight Ridder. He has interviewed hundreds of people, reviewed thousands of job candidates on paper and recruited at hundreds of job fairs and college campus career days. In 1993, he established an annual jobs fair in Detroit.
Gail Rosenblum is a Metro Columnist for the Minneapolis Star Tribune, writing two to three columns a week on people, issues and trends.
In 1997, he launched the JobsPage, a journalism career site, at www.jobspage.com. He spun off a journalism careers blog, “Ask the Recruiter” in 2003. It became part of Poynter Online’s Career Center in 2006. He has been a regular contributor to Editor & Publisher magazine, the Newspaper Association of America’s Fusion magazine, UNITY: Journalists of Color and a technology website.
She has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of New Mexico and a master’s degree in journalism, with a concentration in public health, from the University of Minnesota.
Grimm published two books in 2007. “Breaking In” is a guide to landing and acing newspaper internships; “Bringing the News” is a collection of 100-year-old postcard images of newspaper hawkers.
Her first book of collected essays on motherhood, marriage and mortality, titled “A Hundred Lives Since Then,” will be published this spring by Nodin Press. Gail has three children, ages 21, 19 and 12.
Grimm created “100 Questions and Answers About Arab Americans” in 2000. He posted that guide the day after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks and it became a timely and heavily trafficked publication.
Gail joined the Star Tribune in 2000 as Variety Team Leader, and returned to full-time writing in 2005, covering the unique “relationships” beat. She was named a columnist in 2009. Before coming to the Star Tribune, Gail worked for nearly 20 years as a reporter, editor and essayist for many newspapers and national magazines, focusing on family issues and women’s health.
Her writing has garnered awards from the Associated Press, American Association of Sunday and Features Editors, and the Society of Professional Journalists in Minnesota and Texas.
Best of the Midwest Breakout Session Speakers Sarah Bauer is the Program Director for the Minnesota Newspaper Association, the trade association for newspapers in the state. Bauer plans all educational and outreach programs for the Association, including hands-on training for journalists, public forums on media issues, and its annual convention. Bauer is the former executive director of the Minnesota News Council and is current president of the Minnesota Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. Vincent Filak is an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. He currently serves as a board member of the Daily Cardinal, UW-Madison’s premier student newspaper and as the vice president of College Media Advisers. Prior to his arrival at UWO, he served as the faculty adviser to The Ball State Daily News, the university’s award-winning newspaper. He has taught news writing and reporting at the University of Wisconsin and the University of Missouri. He also worked as a night-side city desk reporter at the Wisconsin State Journal. He earned his Ph.D. in journalism at the University of Missouri and his M.A. and B.A., both in journalism, from the University of Wisconsin. Patrick File is a Ph.D. student at the University of Minnesota School of Journalism and Mass Communication whose work focuses on media law and policy. He teaches Mass Communication Law. He was formerly a fellow with the SJMC’s Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and Law. He interned with the Student Press Law Center in Washington, D.C., and was an awardwinning reporter and editor-in-chief for the Simpsonian of Simpson College in Iowa. Victoria Goff, a former newspaper and magazine journalist, is a journalism professor at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay and the editor of the Voyageur magazine, an award-winning history magazine. She has been a newspaper adviser for 22 years and is finishing a textbook on feature writing. Chris Ison is an associate professor at the University of Minnesota School of Journalism and Mass Communication. He was a reporter and investigative editor at the Star Tribune in Minneapolis
from 1986-2003, and a reporter at the Duluth News-Tribune from 1983-86. He won a Pultizer Prize for Investigative Reporting in 1990. Ison is a graduate of the University of Minnesota. He is also on the board of directors for the Associated Collegiate Press. Tom Horgen has been an Arts & Entertainment reporter at the Star Tribune since 2005, where his scribblings span the outer reaches of nightlife, movies, music and comic books. His nightlife column runs every Friday in the Variety section. He also produces (i.e. makes a fool of himself) in frequent entertainment videos, which document the best of eating and drinking in the Twin Cities. Tom Hutchinson is an Internet veteran, having worked in the industry for over 10 years as a trainer, project manager, and product manager. He is currently responsible for project management and product development at Big Timber Media in Burnsville, Minn. Lori Keekley teaches at Minnesota’s Saint Louis Park High School, where she advises the Pacemaker-winning Echo newspaper. She also taught in Indiana and while a student at Indiana University was the editor of the Arbutus yearbook and copy chief for the Indiana Daily Student, both Pacemaker winners. She is the former national director of contests and critiques for NSPA/ACP. Sam Martino is on the journalism faculty at the University of Wisconsin–Whitewater, where he advises The Royal Purple newspaper. His reporting experience includes bureau assignments for both AP and UPI. He began teaching in 2000 after a 28-year career at the Milwaukee Journal and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, where he won numerous awards, including a Pulitzer nomination. He also worked for the Minneapolis Tribune in the 1960s and early 1970s covering government and politics. Patty Mattern is a board member of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association and Associate Director of the University of Minnesota News Service. Mattern joined the News Service after 10 years as an award-winning reporter at the St. Cloud Times. She covered nearly every beat from cops and courts and features to K-12 and higher education. Prior to her work at
the St. Cloud Times, Mattern served as a copy editor and reporter for the Aberdeen American News, a Knight-Ridder newspaper in Aberdeen, S.D. James McCommons teaches journalism and nature writing at Northern Michigan University. He is a veteran journalist, specializing in ecology, environmental and travel topics. He has written hundreds of general interest magazine articles. He serves as faculty adviser to The North Wind, the student newspaper. Lora Pabst is an investigative reporter assigned to the Whistleblower team. She looks for tips from readers about problems or struggles they are facing. She has covered crime, breaking news and cities and community issues in the north metro. She graduated from the University of Minnesota and was an intern at the Star Tribune for two summers. Mark Plenke teaches journalism and advises the award-winning student newspaper at Normandale Community College in Bloomington, Minn. He worked more than 15 years as an editor and reporter at daily newspapers in South Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota and as the managing editor of KMSP-TV news in the Twin Cities. Kelly Smith covers education for the Star Tribune in Minneapolis. She graduated in 2008 from the College of St. Benedict/St. John’s University, where she was an editor at The Record newspaper and intern at Sun Newspapers, the St. Cloud Times and The Forum in Fargo, N.D. After graduation, she worked for two years at The Forum. Jason Wallestad has been a high school teacher for over 15 years in Minnesota and South Dakota. He has taught in urban and rural schools, both public and private. He is currently an English teacher at Benilde-St. Margaret’s School in St. Louis Park, Minn. He advises the Knight Errant newspaper and website, which earned the Online Pacemaker in 2009 and 2010.
ASSOCiATED COllEGiATE PRESS National Summer Journalism Workshops July 21-24, 2011 University of Minnesota Minneapolis Thursday starts with a half-day short course, a special keynote session and a chance to network with college journalists from around the nation. Beginning Friday morning and continuing to Sunday morning, pack your day with keynote sessions and two-hour seminars on management, design, law, multimedia, publishing software, and the current issues in collegiate journalism taught by top professionals and advisers. Registration includes Friday evening welcome and networking dinner.
WorkShopS*
Spend a weekend with us this summer, and you’ll be ready to start the year! During this weekend of intense learning from the nation’s top college media advisers and talented media pros in the Twin Cities, you will have a hands-on opportunity to improve your skills for any newsroom position. Join us in Minneapolis this summer for an intense journalism training experience in a relaxed environment. LOW FRILLS & HIGH TECH Whether you need the basic skills or have been around a while, our talented instructors — accomplished, high-energy veterans from around the country — will help you get better. Experience hands-on learning in state-of-the-art computer labs available throughout the day and evening. Take advantage of the campus wireless Internet. JOIN US FOR THE BEST TRAINING SOURCE
Newsroom Management for Editors Radio Station Management Print Newspaper Design Newspaper Ad Sales Advanced Reporting Website Management Photojournalism: Beyond Basics *Planned
Sign up by July 1 for special reduced rates. Critiques and Best of Show contest available. Registration form available later this spring.
We’ve assembled a lineup of some of the Twin Cities’ top names in media to offer their knowledge during general and breakout sessions. Gather your fellow staffers for a thorough and personal on-site critique. Get the most from the workshop by bringing the whole crew — we have discounts for groups of four or more. SO MUCH MORE THAN 10,000 LAKES Minneapolis is a progressive city with a dynamic vibe and a whirlwind of creative energy. With its amazing theater, worldclass museums, sports galore, picturesque strolls in a green, urban environment, the variety of what Minneapolis has to offer is sure to delight. Getting here is easy by airplane, train or car. Spend some time along the river, at a local hangout, experiencing nightlife or shopping at the Mall of America.
Don’t just take our word for it. Here’s what attendees said about last year’s workshop: “Those leading the sessions were spectacular especially for incoming managing and editors in chief. All showed they knew about leadership and in general the conference had a laid-back feel. Nothing was forced upon us and everyone was very open and welcoming to our questions.” “It is cost-effective, held at a great location, fires my students up for the year, allows them to get hands-on training and the opportunity to learn from extremely qualified professionals who all seem to be great teachers.” “My students and I loved Minneapolis. And they were brimming with fresh ideas about reporting, management, technology and multimedia. To me, that was the biggest benefit — our coverage this year should reflect what they learned. It was clear that the ACP staff worked extremely hard to create a smooth-running, lively, informative workshop. Everyone was helpful and friendly, from the front desk at Murphy Hall to the staff at Centennial Hall. If only the Twins had been in town.”
Check out our Web site for more details and updates: ACP.STUDENTPRESS.ORG
Marriott City Center Meeting Rooms 4th floor Registration
Deer Elk Lake Lake
1
2
3
4
Exchange Lounge
Silver Crystal Lake Lake
8th floor Gray’s Bay Wayzata Bay
Lake Calhoun
March 3-6, 2011 Renaissance Hollywood Los Angeles
ACP National College Journalism Workshop “Low frills. High tech.” July 21-24, 2011 University of Minnesota Minneapolis
ACP/CMA National College Media Convention Oct. 26-30, 2011 Renaissance Sea World Orlando, Fla.
Also… 1st floor: Street 2nd floor: Skyway 5th floor: Great Room, Lobby 6th floor: Luncheon Contact Us
Upcoming Events ACP National College Journalism Convention Media+
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ACP Best of the Midwest College Newspaper Convention Feb. 10-12, 2012 Marriott City Center Minneapolis
ACP National College Journalism Convention Media+ March 1-4, 2012 Renaissance Seattle
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