Document 6442802
Transcription
Document 6442802
Volume 27, No. 2 March 2002 IN THIS ISSUE Get Your Kicks In Joplin June 26-30 ........................................................Page 1, Page 3-4 President’s Report.............................................................................................Page 2 -3 ISWNEWS ..........................................................................................................Page 5-6 ISWNE new member ..............................................................................................Page 7 Golden Quill entries up slightly this year .................................................................Page 8 Learning to speak ‘corporate’.................................................................................Page 9 ‘Thank you, Mr. President...’.................................................................................Page 10 2002 — a vintage year to visit the UK.....................................................................Page 11 And the bad new is...well read .............................................................................Page 12 Reaction of marketplace is punishment enough ....................................................Page 13 Five hot-type weeklies remaining ........................................................................Page 13 Brake finally having fun with his upstart paper........................................Page 15, Page 20 Joplin Conference Registration.............................................................................Page 16 Joplin Conference Schedule ...........................................................................Page 17-18 Visit the ISWNE’s Web site: www.iswne.org International Society Weekly Newspaper Editors The of Published by the Institute of International Studies, Missouri Southern State College, Joplin, MO Get your kicks in Joplin June 26-30 Get your kicks on Route 66 and Jop-lin Miss-ouree, as the old Bobby Troop song goes. Joplin, Mo., right in the middle of “The Mother Road” and “America’s Main Street,” will be the scene of the 2002 ISWNE conference, June 26-30. Conference fees, which include all lodging, meals, and entertainment, are $395 for adults and $195 for children if paid by May 15. Delegates will stay in suite-style housing at Missouri Southern State College. Each suite-style apartment can accommodate four or five delegates. Each apartment consists of two bedrooms, self-contained bath, and living room with kitchenette alcove, microwave, and refrigerator. Each bedroom is furnished with twin extra-long beds, stationary wardrobes, chest of drawers and desks. The living room area is furnished with two chairs, one sofa, two end tables, coffee table, and lamps. After registration and check-in from 8 a.m. to noon Wednesday, June 26 and lunch in the Student Life Center, the conference officially opens at 1 p.m. with a program by Brad Belk, director of the Joplin Museum Complex, on Joplin’s colorful history and scientific wonders. Joplin, founded in 1873 as a lead and zinc-mining community, gained notoriety for the nightlife of its saloons, the most famous of which was the House of Lords. In 1933, Bonnie and Clyde killed two law enforcement officers in a shootout that brought Joplin national publicity. Famous Joplinites include Langston Hughes, John Beal, Bob Cummings, Gabby Street, Percy “On Moonlight Bay” Wenrich, and Dennis Weaver. Mickey Mantle, who grew up in nearby Commerce, Okla., got his start with the Joplin Miners baseball team in 1949. Joplin’s scientific wonders include Grand Falls, the only continuously running waterfalls in the state of Missouri; Crystal Cave, a giant calcite-lined cavity discovered in 1894; and the Spooklight, a nocturnal light with a 100-year history that glows along the Missouri-Oklahoma border. ISWNE member Kim McCully, editor of the Aurora (Mo.) Advertiser, will present a program at 2:30 p.m. on “Ozarks Culture & Folklore.” McCully, who recently completed her master’s degree in education at Drury University in Springfield, Mo., focused her research on storytelling, folklore, outlaws, literature, ballads, and preserving the language and customs of the Ozarks. She credits her passion for Ozarks culture and folklore to those childhood summer months spent traipsing around with her grandparents in northwest Arkansas. At 4 p.m., conference attendees will board a bus headed for Galena, Mo, and an Ozarks hootenanny. The backdrop will be a cabin owned by Dr. John Moore, president of Drury University, on continued on page 3 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors President’s Report By Bill Haupt Lodi Enterprise, Lodi, Wis. We’re always looking to share the ISWNE gospel. In that spirit, I met on March 1 with Phil Haslanger, the managing editor of The Capital Times in nearby Madison, Wis. In addition to Phil’s duties at the feisty daily, he also toils as the president of the National Conference of Editorial Writers (NCEW). So we connected to do a presidential thing: pose for pictures, confer with aides, dine at sumptuous banquets and smile while we wait for translations. Does this surprise you? Truthfully, the presidential entourage included just Phil and me. The setting was the cafeteria below the Cap Times editorial offices, and the menu consisted of coffee. Phil paid. One friendly colleague from the neighboring Wisconsin State Journal briefly intervened to impugn my character. We both spoke English. Bottom line: we’ve got a lot in common. NCEW members hail from primarily daily newspapers and also broadcasting outlets that offer editorial comments. Phil said they have about 600 domestic and international members and an annual budget of about $150,000. They hold an annual conference featuring six-hour editorial critique ses- 2 sions. They publish The Masthead, a quarterly journal about editorial stuff. They organize trips abroad. Sound familiar? NCEW is obviously a bigger group than ISWNE. But just as obviously, we share the same mission of encouraging strong editorial voices and press freedom. We sense that by working together, we may create some exciting synergy and support. At a minimum, we want to spark some dialogue. Phil is trying to find room in a busy summer calendar to join us in Joplin and combine a side trip to Kansas to visit his daughter. He also invited me to appear as a guest at the NCEW conference next September in Nashville. Additionally, we will approach the Wisconsin Newspaper Association about jointly conducting an editorial critique session at their convention next January. That’s a good start. As most of you have learned, you can’t have too many friends in this business. * * * * * Congrats to our former ISWNE Executive Secretary Dick Lee, who was named 2002 Freedom Forum Journalism Administrator of the Year. Dick’s recognition and his acceptance speech were well chronicled in the January/February newsletter. I think anyone who knows Dick felt a special sense of pride that one of our ISWNE folks earned this honor. Good for you, Richard. And keep up the great work on your journalism diversity efforts at South Dakota State. * * * * * Final arrangements are pending, but it appears that our editorial critiques road show will stop in Louisville, Kentucky in April. Past President Tim Waltner (Freeman Courier, Freeman, S.D.) and I will be leading the sessions at Landmark Community Newspapers, and ISWNE Secretary/Treasurer Chad Stebbins will join us. We’ll keep you posted. * * * * * It’s almost time to get into that “serious planning” mode for the Joplin conference from June 26-30. Chad has shared the tentative agenda and it looks like a real winner. Hope to see you there. March 2002 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Get your kicks in Joplin the banks of the historic James River. The cabin is on a Century Tree farm owned and operated by John and Connie Johnson of Galena. The Johnsons have a colorful background and a unique insight to the hills and hollers of the Ozarks. Authentic bluegrass music and folk tunes will fill the air, as a variety of entertainers will be on hand to perform. Attendees will be able to visit informally with storytellers and entertainers throughout dinner, which will consist of a fish fry, hamburgers, hot dogs, cole slaw, hushpuppies, and watermelon. At approximately 7 p.m., the Mountain Maid will take the spotlight. Tracie Snodgrass (the Mountain Maid) makes her home in the woods of Barry County, Mo., not far from where the famous Ozarkian clairvoyant Jeanne Wallace, the original Mountain Maid, lived in the early 1900s. Typically, Wallace helped folks find lost livestock or helped steer them through difficult times with her “sixth sense.” Snodgrass literally takes on the form of the elderly woman in dress, actions, and language as part of her performance. Children (and interested spouses) will have a special activity on Thursday, June 27. They’ll depart at 9 a.m. for Roaring River State Park, nestled in the midst of Mark Twain National Forest, just south of Cassville, Mo. The 3,000plus acres of mountain-like hills and canyoned valleys cut by the White River are covered with vegetation. The numerous varieties of oak, hickory, and pine trees are home to a bounty of little critters including raccoons, ground hogs, muskrats, squirrels, chipmunks, possums, armadillo, as well as the white-tailed deer and American eagles. As part of its development in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corps, the park manages its own hatchery and stocks the spring-fed river daily with trout ready for the catching. A hatchery tour will be a part of the visit, as well as a presentation and activity provided for the children by one of the park’s many naturalists. A sack lunch will be provided midday. Other activities include swimming in the river, several walking and hiking trails, play- March 2002 from page 1 grounds, and of course, fishing. If at all possible, ISWNE participants are asked to bring their own poles. Randy Hopkins, president of the Joplin FlyFishing Club, has volunteered to join us in helping our young anglers with baiting, casting, and proper techniques for reeling in the big one. Meanwhile, back at the Joplin conference, attendees will hear Michael Wallis, author of Route 66: The Mother Road, speak on “Romancing the Mother Road” at 9:30 a.m. Wallis, nominated three times for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, is a former newspaper reporter and magazine writer and special correspondent for Time, Inc. At 11 a.m., three Missouri weekly news- www.missouri66.org paper editors and David Burke of the Tuam (Ireland) Herald will pontificate on “When the big one lands on your doorstep,” interesting and unusual stories they have had to cover. One of the conference highlights is a panel discussion of “Trends in Community Journalism” at 1:30 p.m. Thursday featuring four noted scholars in the field: Jock Lauterer, director of the Carolina Community Media project at the University of North Carolina; Gloria Freeland, director of the Huck Boyd National Center for Community Media at Kansas State University; Harry Hix, the Engleman/Livermore professor of Community Journalism at the University of Oklahoma; and Jim Sterling, Missouri Community Newspaper Management Chair at the University of Missouri. The Greenslade Bursary recipient (an Irish editor to be named) and Brian Burmester, editor and publisher of Local News New Zealand, each will have about 45 minutes to make presentations following the panel discussion. Attendees will enjoy a program and catered brisket dinner at George Washington Carver National Monument, a few miles southeast of Joplin, in the evening. The park consists of 210 acres of the original 240-acre Moses Carver homestead. The visitor center includes a museum with exhibits that trace George W. Carver’s life from his birth through his youth at the Carver farm, to his role as an artist, educator and humanitarian, as well as his world-renowned work as a scientist. The three-fourths-mile walking trail winds its way through the woodland and tall grass prairie. Included at the monument are the Carver bust, birthplace site, boyhood statue, William’s Pond, 1881 Moses Carver dwelling, and Carver family cemetery. ISWNE members Gary and Helen Sosniecki, of Lebanon, Mo., have arranged for several members of the Missouri Ozarks Press Association to participate in Thursday’s conference activities at a special one-day rate. In addition, the Missouri Press Association is sponsoring the dinner at the George Washington Carver National Monument and a few MPA board members are expected to attend. The editorial critiques session, a mainstay of every ISWNE conference, opens Friday’s program. At 11 a.m., Tony Stephenson, a retired educator/administrator from Republic, Mo., will give an account of the 1932 Young Brothers Massacre, which resulted in the deaths of six police officers. The children will have another separate activity at 1:30 p.m., an excursion to The Swimmin’ 3 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Hole Water Park in Joplin. Following a 45-minute monologue on “The Human Truman,” by Niel Johnson, a retired archivist and oral historian from the Truman Library in Independence, Mo., attendees will chose either a visit to Contract Freighters, Inc. or King Press. CFI has evolved into North America’s premier truckload carrier with an international fleet of more than 2,000 tractors and 6,000 trailers. King Press, headquartered in Joplin, is one of the principal manufacturers of web offset presses for newspapers. The Golden Quill and Eugene Cervi awards banquet will be held Friday evening at Missouri Southern. The children will have a separate pizza party in the college’s Student Life Center. On Saturday, delegates will board buses for Branson, Mo., “The Live Music Show Capital of the World.” Branson has become the No. 1 tour bus destination in the United States and is only a day’s drive from well over half of the nation’s population. From the rustic Ozark craft shops and spectacular outlet shopping malls, to the world-class music/entertainment shows and theme/amusement parks, Branson has something for everyone. There are more theater seats in Branson than there are in New York City. Silver Dollar City is a reconstructed turn-of-the-century village featuring Ozarks Mountain craft shops with daily demonstrations by authentic craftsmen (i.e. candle making, glass blowing, taffy pulling, woodworking, blacksmithing, leather crafting, weaving, painting, etc.). Silver Dollar City presents music and entertainment on 12 stages, a demonstrating craft colony 100-strong, dozens of rides, and the world-class National Kids’ Fest (SDC partners with some of the top names in children’s entertainment to present kid-acclaimed performances such as Veggie Tales and Flintstones). The amusement park includes log plunges, flooded mines, train trips, and tree houses. Food stands throughout the park feature unique mountain food such as pork rinds, funnel cakes, baked potatoes, roasting ears in the shuck, hot dogs, hamburgers, polish sausages, and ice cream. There are also full-service restaurants. 4 ventriloquist Todd Oliver, Broadway There is plenty to keep you hopping, or singer/performer Gregg Busch, the talmany opportunities to sit under the ented “Steppin’ Out” quartet of shade and listen to live entertainment singers/dancers, and the Russian adagio and folklore. dancers Elena and Vadim Serykh. Those who do not wish to spend the Plan on a very late night; those going entire day at Silver Dollar City can opt will arrive back in Joplin between 12:30 to attend the “Lost in the Fifties” music and 1 a.m. Breakfast will be served show at 2 p.m. in downtown Branson. between 8 and 9 the next morning Here you will experience the happy, (Sunday), if you’re able to get up that feel-good music of the 1950s. You will early after all the excitement of the see poodle shirts, scarves, bowling four-day conference. After saying goodshirts, and letter jackets. You will hear byes, ISWNE members will look forward the familiar sounds of rock-n-roll, dooto the 2003 conference in Galway, wop, and blues. The theatre alone is worth a visit with its 11,000-square-foot Ireland. atrium lobby and 19,560 square feet of glass. You can enjoy refreshment from the authentic 1950s soda fountain. Following the show, a Joplin Convention and Visitors Bureau short trip will be made www.joplincvb.com/ to the Factory Joplin Area Chamber of Commerce Merchants Outlet Mall, the largest outlet center www.joplincc.com in Branson with 90 Missouri Southern State College stores. You can stroll www.mssc.edu from store to store under canopied walkways or Missouri Southern State College housing through courtyards http://www.mssc.edu/slc/html/suite_style_housfilled with trees and seaing.html sonal flower displays. The Spooklight At 7 p.m. the ISWNE www.qsl.net/w5www/spooklight.html Silver Dollar City and music show/shopping www.twilitedrivein.freeservers.com/tristatespookgroups will meet at the light.htm White River Landing for Roaring River State Park an evening cruise on http://www.mostateparks.com/roaringriver.htm Table Rock Lake aboard George Washington Carver National Monument the Showboat Branson Belle. The dinner menu www.coax.net/people/lwf/carver.htm features beef tenderloin, Young Brothers Massacre Atlantic salmon with http://www.republic.k12.mo.us/highschool/teachbéarnaise sauce, garlic ers/tstephen/youngs.htm potatoes and steamed Contract Freighters, Inc. vegetables, with a grand finale of flaming baked http://www.cfi-us.com/ Alaska. King Press Corporation The spectacular awardhttp://www.kingpress.com/ winning “Steppin’ Out” Branson, Mo. stage show will also be held in the 700-seat dinwww.branson.com ing theater. Named Silver Dollar City Branson’s Best Dinner www.silverdollarcity.com Show for three straight Showboat Branson Belle years, the “Steppin’ Out” show features http://showboat.silverdollarcity.com/ nationally acclaimed Some helpful web sites: March 2002 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors NEWS ISWNEWS Longford Leader changes hands Beasley’s encyclopedia receives honor Eugene McGee, the managing editor of The Longford Leader in Ireland, announced on Feb. 11 that he had sold the newspaper to Scottish Radio Holdings (SRH) for £5.6 million sterling ($7.9 million). The Longford Leader was founded in 1897 and has a paid-for circulation in the Irish midlands of around 11,000. McGee and all 20 staff will be staying on in their positions. Indeed he stated that this was the main reason why he opted for SRH from several would-be purchasers. “SRH has bought four other local papers in Ireland in the past few years and they have a policy of leaving things exactly as they are,” McGee said. “So there will be no change to the format, style or editorial attitude of The Longford Leader after this sale. This was very important to me, as like all local newspapers The Leader is a vital part of the local community in County Longford and I would not want anything to interfere with that.” SRH owns about a dozen local newspapers in Scotland and the same number in Northern Ireland. McGee was the Greenslade Bursary editor at the ISWNE conference in Erie, Pa., in 1998 and also attended the Nova Scotia conference in 1999. Waltners purchase neighboring weekly On April 1, after 102 years in the Headley family, ownership of the Hutchinson Herald, the weekly paper serving the small rural South Dakota community of Menno, will be transferred to Mary and Tim L. Waltner of Freeman. The Waltners have owned and published the Freeman (S.D.) Courier since 1984. Bill Headley, the third generation of the Headley family, and the Waltners reached agreement in late February for the transfer of ownership of the Herald, which has been published for 120 years. Menno is located 16 miles southwest of Freeman. Erik Kaufman, a Freeman native who has been part of the Courier staff since September 2000, will serve as news editor of the Herald. Other members of the present Courier staff will also be part of the production team for both weeklies. “We will continue to publish the Herald as an independent weekly newspaper,” Waltner said. And, he added, “although we may be purchasing the Herald, we believe a community newspaper really belongs to the people of the community it serves.” March 2002 The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia, co-edited by ISWNE member Maurine Beasley, has received an “Editor’s Choice Award for 2001” from Booklist, the journal of the American Library Association. The encyclopedia brings together basic information illuminating Roosevelt’s complex career and makes the interaction between her private and public lives assessable to scholars, students, and the general public. The 200-plus entries provide easy access to material showing how Roosevelt changed the first lady’s role in politics, widened opportunities for women, became a liberal leader during the Cold War era, and served as a guiding spirit at the United Nations. The 656-page book sells for $65 through the Greenwood Publishing Group, www.greenwood.com. Beasley is a professor of journalism of the University of Maryland, where she specializes in women and media. She has published seven books, including Eleanor Roosevelt and the Media: A Public Quest for Self-Fulfillment (1987) and The White House Conferences of Eleanor Roosevelt (1983). Pearl Serbus reviews John Whalen’s book ISWNE member Pearl Serbus, who lives in Buffalo Grove, Ill., but is a member of the Arkansas affiliate of the National Federation of Press Women, reviewed John Whalen’s Maverick Among the Magnolias in the NFPW January/February newsletter. Serbus learned of the book from the August ISWNE newsletter. “In her retirement, Pearl delights in baking cookies for friends and acquaintances and they are delicious, to which I can attest, having been the recipient of two batches in recent months,” Whalen writes. “The cookies, Pearl says, ‘are just a token of my appreciation for all your efforts in Hazel’s [Brannon Smith] behalf.’” Serbus is presenting an autographed copy of Maverick to the NFPW library in memory of Brannon Smith. The book can be ordered online through the publisher, Xlibris.com, or from BarnesandNoble.com, Amazon.com, or Borders.com. The Wisconsin Regional Writer, the newsletter of the Wisconsin Regional Writers’ Association, reviewed Maverick in its Winter issue. 5 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Mihalek’s paper fares well in Ohio contest Phyllis Karolevitz beats breast cancer The Yellow Springs News won five awards at the 2002 Osman C. Hooper Newspaper Show, the premier contest for Ohio weekly newspapers. The awards were announced Feb. 14 in Columbus, Ohio, at the annual convention of the Ohio Newspaper Association, which along with its Weekly Newspaper Committee, sponsored the contest. Forty-two papers participated in the contest, which included newspapers published between Aug. 1, 2000, and July 31, 2001. Competing against 13 other papers in the division for the state’s smallest weeklies (papers with a circulation less than 2,240), the News placed first in three categories: Advertising, Local Features and Special Editions, for the 2000-2001 “Guide to Yellow Springs.” Robert Mihalek, the paper’s editor and an ISWNE member, won third place in the Editorials category for editorials he submitted commenting on low-voter turnout during a recent recall election, a controversial affordable housing project, and an effort to build a commerce park in Yellow Springs. Contributor Jimmy Chesire, one of the organizers of the local youth tee-ball program, received an honorable mention prize in the Original Columns category for his seasonal column on tee-ball. Phyllis Karolevitz, who was diagnosed with breast cancer nearly a year ago, reports that her last checkup was great and that she is suffering no ill effects. “I’m very positive about it and don’t even think about it that much,” she says. Phyllis completed 32 radiation treatments last summer. She and Bob are planning to attend the ISWNE conference in Joplin, their first one since Nova Scotia in 1999. Tuam Herald stacks up the awards It’s been a good awards season for The Tuam Herald, with two writing awards so far for senior reporter Tony Galvin, who is now news editor. This time it’s the turn of staff photographer Ray Ryan, who has had four pictures selected for Ireland’s annual 100 Best Press Photographs exhibition. This is open to all press photographers, and there were more than 1,200 entries. Drew Cochrane has brush with Kuwaiti military One of ISWNE’s newest members, Drew Cochrane, almost ended up with a criminal conviction in the hotspot of the Middle East. He was invited to Kuwait by the Caledonian Society to speak and perform the works of great Scottish poet Robert Burns, whose memory is marked every year on his birthdate, Jan. 25. Only hours before Cochrane was to appear at the dinner, he was taken to the “tanks graveyard” near the Kuwaiti-Iraqi border. This is where the burned out and redundant Iraqi tanks were dumped after being blasted by the U.S. during the Gulf War. While taking pictures at the desert location — and trying to keep a pack of wild dogs at bay — the Kuwait military arrived. “It was like a scene from a movie as they tore the film from my camera and marched us back to the checkpoint for interrogation,” Cochrane said. The Scottish editor was released in time to speak at the Burns Supper and had a story to write for his Largs & Millport News. As Burns wrote, “The best laid schemes of mice and men gang aft agley.” 6 Norio Tamura keeping busy in Japan Norio Tamura is a professor of community journalism studies and dean of the Graduate School of Communication Studies at Tokyo Keizai University. He reports that he has many students, including six doctoral students and seven master’s students. They are studying the Japanese community media, including local weekly newspapers, cable television systems, city magazine companies, and many other subjects. Tamura and his wife, Ayako, are planning to attend the ISWNE conference in Joplin. It will be their first conference since 1999 in Nova Scotia. Jeremy Waltner to play ‘Jigger’ in musical The new year has gotten off to a blistering start for Jeremy Waltner in Freeman, S.D. “A variety of activities — work, hanging with friends, girls (we’ll say nothing more of that) — has kept me both busy and contented as 2002 clips along,” Jeremy writes. “But the biggest deal in my life right now is my role in this year’s Schmeckfest musical production of Carousel.” For those who don’t know, Schmeckfest is an annual community celebration commemorating the German heritage of which Freeman was founded upon 123 years ago. The threeday festival — which began in 1959 — draws thousands and features ethnic art, crafts and food, including a full-blown German meal that 1,000 enjoy every night of Schmeckfest. There’s also the full-scale musical production. This year’s musical is Carousel, and Jeremy plays Jigger, the bad influence. “We’ve been rehearsing three nights a week for about a month,” he says. “As March rolls on, the schedule will only intensify. Performances are April 4, 5, 6 and 7. If you’ve got nothing to do during that time, come to Freeman. I guarantee you won’t be disappointed.” Alex Haupt advances to state wrestling meet Alex Haupt advanced to individual state wrestling tournament competition in February. A junior at Lodi (Wis.) High School wrestling at 125 pounds, Alex won his first match but lost to the eventual champion 3-0 in a quarterfinal contest. Alex has attended the last six consecutive ISWNE conferences with his family. March 2002 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors ISWNE new members ISWNE has 7 new members, including three from Australia Chris Johnson is the editor of Western Australia’s The Geraldton Guardian — published three times a week. Geraldton is a large regional centre located 400 kilometres north of Western Australia’s capital city, Perth. He is a Walkley Award recipient. The Walkley Awards for Excellence in Journalism are compared in Australia to the Pulitzer Prizes and regarded as the country’s highest accolades in journalism. Johnson has accumulated multiple awards for journalism throughout his career and is dedicated to excellence in reporting. In addition to writing editorials for each issue of his newspaper, he still enjoys reporting on some of the major issues of the region himself. He is the immediate past president of the Rural Media Association of Western Australia and a fierce advocate for the rights of communities outside of the major capital cities. Johnson is the author of the book Shares Affair: Geraldton’s Impact on the 2001 Race for Government. It retells the political scandal he revealed during Western Australia’s last general election. The scandal involved a Geraldton-based politician who was also, incidentally, a shareholder of the newspaper Johnson edits. His hard-hitting reports and editorials during the election won him his Walkley Award. He has been the editor of two weekly newspapers prior to his current position. Johnson is married with two children and has a Bachelor of Arts degree from Edith Cowan University. Dean Gould is the editor-in-chief of The Northern Star, an APN Newspapers regional newspaper in the state of New South Wales, Australia. APN Newspapers is Australia’s largest publisher of regional newspapers, producing 14 daily and more than 50 non-daily publications. Gould has twice won the Pacific Area Newspaper Publishers Association (PANPA) Newspaper of the Year Award. He is a member of the PANPA Editorial Advisory Panel and the Southern Cross University Industry Advisory Panel to its journalism school. Gould headed up APN Newspapers’ team covering the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games. He has won awards for his investigative reporting, news design and editorial writing. He has worked on regional papers in Australia and a metro afternoon daily in the Republic of Ireland as chief sub-editor. In 1992 he was selected for a Rotary Group Study Exchange to the United Kingdom visiting newspapers there and has visited newspaper organizations in Europe, Africa and India. March 2002 Don Campbell is editor and publisher of the Port Stephens Examiner in Raymond Terrace, New South Wales, Australia. David Green is editor and publisher of the Morenci Observer in Morenci, Mich., “where time is killed humanely.” Green’s paper, with a circulation of 2,389 subscribers, has a reputation for earning top awards from the Michigan Press Association for editorial writing and design. For the year 2001, his paper was named Newspaper of the Year by the MPA. Ron Shamma is publisher of the Clarkston Eccentric in Clarkston, Mich., with a circulation of about 9,000 on Sunday and Wednesday. The Clarkston Eccentric is part of the Observer and Eccentric group owned by HomeTown Communications. His editorial pages took first place in the Michigan Press Association awards for 2001; the judges liked the way he uses photos instead of cartoons on the editorial page and praised the Eccentric’s editorial on “Hiding Government in e-mail.” His web site can be found at www.observerandeccentric.com Karl Kling is editor of the Milford (Mich.) Times, circulation 5,500. The Times is also part of HomeTown Communications. Karl took second in the Michigan Press Association competition for editorial writing. Judges said: “This writer tells the facts in a great descriptive manner; a reader can’t help but finish it without stopping.” Dr. Robert H. Linnell, from White River Junction, Vermont, has been writing a new oped every week and publishing it at www.my-oped.com. “We have had an enthusiastic response,” Linnell says. “All the opeds are based on my extensive and diverse background in the Middle East, in government and in academia. I am now professor emeritus, University of Southern California. We have no ads and accept no funds from any commercial sources.” Linnell offers his opeds at no cost to newspapers. They are 500 to 900 words on timely topics that are of importance to the United States and the world. “Weekly papers seem to be those that use our opeds the most,” he says. “Every oped is carefully researched and we try to present a broader picture than the typical opeds in the daily press which, all too often, provide only a narrow perspective. If there is some way I could let your members know of these quality opeds which are available to them at no cost, I would like to do so.” Linnell has taught in the Middle East (at the American University of Beirut) and at the University of New Hampshire, the University of Vermont, and the University of Southern California. He has several patents and publications in science and education. 7 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Golden Quill entries up slightly this year 113 Golden Quill entries were received from 61 people this year, up from 108 entries and 58 people in 2001. Rick Barrs New Times Los Angeles Los Angeles, Calif. Ann Marie Gonsalves The Valley Voice Hellertown, Pa. Christine Lupella Pine River Journal Pine River, Minn. Jon A. Brake Manhattan Free Press Manhattan, Kan Lisa Gray Houston Press Houston, Texas Paul MacNeill The Eastern Graphic Montague, PEI, Canada Mike Buffington The Jackson Herald Jefferson, Ga. Melissa Hale-Spencer The Altamont Enterprise Altamont, N.Y. Bradley A. Martin Hickman County Times Centerville, Tenn. Bryce Butler The Altamont Enterprise Altamont, N.Y. Ray Hartmann Riverfront Times St. Louis, Mo. Kim McCully The Aurora Advertiser Aurora, Mo. Patricia Calhoun Westword Denver, Colo. Bill Haupt The Lodi Enterprise Lodi, Wis. John Mecklin SF Weekly San Francisco, Calif. Eric Celeste Dallas Observer Dallas, Texas Margaret Hennigar The Bulletin Bridgewater, Nova Scotia, Canada Michele Merens CNI Newspapers, Inc New Berlin, Wis. Rachel Clarke The Representative Leduc, Alberta, Canada Roger Holmes The Wainwright Star Chronicle Wainwright, Alberta, Canada Robert Mihalek Yellow Springs News Yellow Springs, Ohio David Cox Villager Journal Cherokee Village, Ark. Jack Howser Edwards County Times Advocate Albion, Ill. Jim Mullin Miami New Times Miami, Fla. Jim DeFede Miami New Times Miami, Fla. Angela Howser Edwards County Times Advocate Albion, Ill. Mitchell Naylor The Oakdale Leader Oakdale, Calif. Margaret Downing Houston Press Houston, Texas Judy Johnson The Times of Acadiana Lafayette, La. Leslie O’Donnell News-Times Newport, Ore. Robert H. Estabrook The Lakeville Journal Lakeville, Conn. John William Johnson The New Eagle Hawley, Pa. Mary Owen The Stayton Mail Stayton, Ore. Harrison Fletcher Westword Denver, Colo. Pete Kotz Cleveland Scene Cleveland, Ohio Jim Painter West Valley View Litchfield Park, Ariz. Elliott Freireich West Valley View Litchfield Park, Ariz. Peter Lesniak Yukon News Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada Martha Perkins Haliburton County Echo Haliburton, Ont., Canada Angela Gary The Banks County News Homer, Ga. Bill Lueders Isthmus Madison, Wis. Joan Plaxton The Valleyview Valley Views Valleyview, Alberta, Canada Charles Gay Shelton-Mason County Journal Shelton, Wash. Susan Lundy Gulf Islands Driftwood Salt Spring Island, B.C., Canada Laura Putre Cleveland Scene Cleveland, Ohio Tim Redmond San Francisco Guardian San Francisco, Calif. 8 Donna Remer The Armada Times The Voice Armada, Mich. Tony Richards Gulf Islands Driftwood Salt Spring Island, B.C., Canada Bill Schanen Ozaukee Press Port Washington, Wis. Jim Schutze Dallas Observer Dallas, Texas James V. Smith Shelby Promoter Shelby, Mont. Matt Smith SF Weekly San Francisco, Calif. Brett Sokol Miami New Times Miami, Fla. Fred Steiner The Bluffton News Bluffton, Ohio Jill Stewart New Times Los Angeles Los Angeles, Calif. Chuck Strouse News Times Broward/Palm Beach Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Karen Cord Taylor The Beacon Hill Times Boston, Mass. Jack Ventimiglia Liberty Sun News Liberty, Mo. Jeremy Waltner Freeman Courier Freeman, S.D. Tim L. Waltner Freeman Courier Freeman, S.D. Dan Wehmer Webster County Citizen Seymour, Mo. March 2002 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Learning to speak ‘corporate’ By Clyde Wills ISWNE board member Editor & Publisher, Metropolis Planet Metropolis, Ill. After spending most of my life in family-owned newspapers, I now find myself a corporate employee. I grew up in what was truly a family operation. My father was ownereditor-publisher of a small weekly in western Kentucky. My mother served as proofreader and the six of us boys worked up from janitors to typesetters, photographers and pressmen. After college, and a few years of the insurance business, I jumped back into the newspaper business. For the first few years my direction came from the paper’s owner, who was the publisher of a nearby daily. Following his death, his family moved from the area and turned over the operation of The Metropolis Planet to me. So for 20 years I was almost completely on my own. The owner family received monthly reports and stopped by every year or two to make certain the real estate was still there. Other than deciding to build a new building, start a total market coverage publication, and similar decisions, I was on my own. It was very close to an ideal situation. There were some small drawbacks — the pay was not great, and the opportunity never developed to buy an interest in the paper. The big problem was — it could end someday. That day finally came. The family owners decided it was time to sell. My wife and I thought seriously about buying the paper, but when March 2002 the bidding went past our limit, we dropped out. At 55, we did not want to be in debt for another 15 or 20 years. Not buying the paper left me in the situation of trying to find a newspaper job in another area, trying something completely different, or working for the new owners. I chose what I thought was going to be the same position under new ownership. That meant a year of learning to operate in an environment where the company includes 60 newspapers. The middle of the first month I got an e-mail saying, “We forgot to tell you, we flash on the 15th.” Feeling that daily staff members probably did not throw open their raincoats to celebrate mid-month, I wondered, “What the hell is a flash?” I learned it is a projection of that month’s income and expenses. Thus began a year of learning, changing and stress that took its toll on the Planet staff, and on me. Among the changes that year were our software for bookkeeping, circulation, classified and pagination. We now use the systems selected by the nearby daily, which may be best for them, but cause some problems for a weekly. Another surprise was being told that the next week our pages would have to be completed at 11 a.m. instead of 5 p.m. Now, all employees work on Monday nights, instead of just two or three of us. One of the biggest headaches has been changing some delivery of our total market coverage product from third class mail to carriers. Following two months of mass confusion at both the daily and the Planet, the daily carriers were still not getting the job done. So, the decision was made that the Planet would hire and supervise its own carriers. By changing to carriers, money is being saved, but we have spent countless hours lis- Clyde Wills tening to complaints, including having the city aldermen accuse us of littering. A year and a half after the sale, most of the changes have been completed without major problems. We can now paginate and electronically send the pages to the daily in a way that actually works better than our old paste-up system. When our computers break down, we have someone to call on for help. So there are some advantages to being part of a corporation. And most importantly, the corporation has not made any attempts to dictate editorial policy. Perhaps the most difficult changes have been for me personally. I’ve learned, and am continuing to learn, corporate methods. I’m learning to reduce my community involvement in order to accommodate new priorities. I’ve adjusted to new schedules. The list goes on and, in general, I’ve been pleased that I am flexible enough to adjust to the changes. The really difficult adjustment has been remembering that I am responsible to others, not on an annual but on a daily basis. Old dogs learn some new tricks more slowly than others. 9 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors ‘Thank you, Mr. President ...’ By Donna Remer ISWNE board member Editor, Voice Newspapers New Baltimore, Mich. For 57 years, Helen Thomas worked for UPI covering eight presidents. She almost always asked the first question at a press conference and she was the one who closed the session with the firm pronouncement: “Thank you Mr. President.” More than one president, dangling on a difficult line of questioning, probably wished she had spoken up sooner. Now, she is a syndicated columnist for Hearst newspapers and she admits, with a pleased smile, that she is “... the last of the Mohicans, a liberal columnist.” Her two favorite presidents are JFK, because he put a man on the moon and gave the American people an ideal to work toward, and LBJ because of his work on the domestic front with Medicare and the Civil Rights and Voting Rights acts. “He provided a foundation so people in this country do not starve or lack for education,” she said of Johnson. 10 She likens Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to Gen. George Patton as he moves forward, relentlessly pounding the White House Press Corps and obscuring information we need to get a clear picture of where our country is headed. “Information is the essence of democracy,” she told a group of young journalists at Wayne State University in Detroit in January. “We have to stand up for democracy, especially in our new, jingoistic, patriotic society.” Thomas is a graduate of Wayne, as I am. The daughter of Lebanese immigrants, she grew up in the Detroit area. Now, she returns at least once a year to share her insight and to present the “Helen Thomas Spirit of Diversity” award and scholarships to aspiring journalists, encouraging new voices to follow her example and speak up. This year, I had the pleasure of meeting her and listening as she answered questions from students. Thomas, 81, takes a very human approach to current affairs, an approach based on a lifetime of experience. She thinks we should show mercy to John Walker, for example. “He was just 16 when he became involved,” she said. “I don’t think he knew what he was doing.” Should cameras be in the courtroom when, or if, he comes to trial for treason? An unqualified, “yes.” What has the Bush administration done with Dick Cheney? He might be out of sight, but she says, “he’s still very much a player. Some thought he was getting too big for his britches.” Is the media today less substantive than when she first went to the White House? Television: yes. Newspapers: no. But there have been changes in newspapers, too. “We have become a nation of one-newspaper towns,” she said. “There is less respect for great journalism.” She points to coverage of the Enron scandal as one of the high points in current journalism at a time when “Disney-land is running Donna Remer ABC.” Her advice to young people in general: “Find a job that makes you want to get up in the morning and go to work with great enthusiasm.” Helen Thomas was the first woman ever to be named chief of the White House bureau, an honor she earned in 1974. She has covered more presidents than any other human being, from Eisenhower to our current President Bush. Through it, she says, she almost always enjoyed her job. “The great joy of journalism is that it is an education every day,” she said in an interview for Hour Detroit recently. “You have to keep learning and you can never let up.” When she stepped into her post with UPI in the early’60s, journalists were at the fore of dramatic change in this country. About that time, journalism educator Malcolm MacLean of the Iowa Journalism School wrote: “I see an implied demand that our communicators need to know deeply, empathetically, and at the same time be able to analyze objectively and communicate what it means to be poor among the rich, to be hungry among the well-fed, to be black among the white, to be degraded among the smug, to be sick among the healthy ... to be unheard, unheard, unheard — in a society noisy with messages.” The din of messages has only escalated since then. And many voices are still unheard. Helen Thomas’ voice stands out. March 2002 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors 2002 - a vintage year to visit the UK By Bob Satchwell, executive director of the Society of Editors in the UK and a member of ISWNE If we believe the things we are told by the British media — and I always try to set an example — there was an upside to the tragedy of 11 September 2001 in New York. It bound our two nations together and, we are told, the government, the media, and the people of the USA were particularly grateful that Britain stood shoulder to shoulder in the aftermath. We are well into another year now. It is time to look forward and perhaps to start enjoying yourselves again. This year is special for us in the UK. It offers a chance to cement those historic ties between two great nations. As so often is the case, the big event for Britain in 2002 has been expected, it has been planned for in immense detail and, above all, it is about history. Queen Elizabeth II ascended the throne 50 years ago this month (February) on the death of her father George VI. Golden Jubilees are rare — the last one was for Queen Victoria, more than a century ago. What better an excuse for a party? And you are all invited. We get an extra holiday in June. A weekend of pageantry and fun is planned for London. Parties are expected to break out in streets and in parks all over Britain — in places where many of you may have roots — as Her Majesty embarks on a royal progress across the realm. It is the kind of thing that Britain does so well. I guess no one does it better. Then I suppose we have had a long time to learn. Our quaint old system involving an hereditary head of state has it detractors but it seems to work. Its timeless certainty gives us the opportunity to prepare for great events and provides a special reason — indeed a duty — to mark and celebrate them. March 2002 It was another King George, from whom our present Queen has direct descent, who was foolish enough to lose his wife — and the colonies. As a famous film recorded, with indecent carelessness, he also lost his mind! That is why, to our mutual benefit, the United States was founded. That was of huge good fortune. Britain has enjoyed economic and cultural advantages, importing so much that is great and wondrous from across the Atlantic. It is that shared cultural heritage which has become a two way traffic, and a shared language — or at least a few common phrases — that makes our two countries inseparable, especially at times of crisis. Sadly, we have not been spared the difficulties of the post 9/11 economic downturn and your understandable concern about flying, or even to leave home. Not everyone has appreciated Britain’s powerful alliance and unstinting friendship with America at a time when it was most needed. As a result, in 2001 Britain was severely damaged by your reluctance to visit, first because of the foot and mouth crisis that shattered our farming industry and rural communities, and then by the terrorism that undermined your national spirit as much as it devastated a great city. Some of our tourist areas have lost 80 per cent of their business Now we hope you will start thinking again about the history, culture, royalty and pageantry that have attracted so many Americans to our shores in the past. 2002 will be one of the best years for the US traveller to witness and enjoy these unique qualities at first hand. Part of the celebrations will naturally involve a look back at the huge changes we have experienced over the last 50 years of the new Elizabethan age. Many have been imported from America. No one can argue that the British have not become expert down the centuries in how to learn from other peoples and to adapt their best ideas. It is an ideal time to see how we have learned from you. It is also a time to show off the changes and achievements that make Britain Bob Satchwell modern and vibrant. But most of all, I suspect there are other factors that attract visitors to our tiny but culturally diverse islands. A long history provides maturity and a neighbourliness that is as comforting as a pair of old shoes. Years of experience have also created levels of security that are understated yet second to none. In short, Britain shared the terrible events of last September and the economic aftermath. We hope that in 2002 you will remember the ties that bind our two nations. A visit this year will be especially valuable and appreciated. Don’t be party poopers — come and help us celebrate. You can get more information about travelling to, and in, Britain from Paul Duboudin Manager Public Relations USA British Tourist Authority 551 Fifth Ave, Suite 701 New York NY 10176-0799 Ph (212) 850 0311 Fx (212) 986 1188 For media information on Britain visit www.travelbritain.org/mediaroom and for information about the Queen’s Jubilee including a searchable geographic database take a look at www.goldenjubilee.gov.uk. 11 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors And the bad news is...well read By Dave Berry Publisher Bolivar (Mo.) Herald-Free Press The Internet is far from replacing the printed page as a medium for news, but it does offer certain advantages for readers on occasion, and it is an interesting tool for those of us who disperse the news. When we publish a printed version of the Herald-Free Press (which I believe will continue to happen long after I’m no longer alive, regardless of how long I live), we are left to depend on what we hear from people as to what they read. And more often than not, when people tell us something, they tell us they like to read the “good” news. I could afford to retire tomorrow if I had a dollar for every time in my life I’ve heard someone say they don’t like newspapers because all they ever print is the bad news. Same for TV and radio. When a person hears that often enough, he comes to believe it and even agree with it. Contrary to what we are sometimes accused of doing at this newspaper, more often than not we’ve caught ourselves over the years trying to protect the community from bad news. We don’t leave it out, but we have sometimes gone the extra mile to display the positive news ahead of the bad news, unless the bad is just so overwhelming that it can’t be downplayed. That’s not the way it’s supposed to be done. The biggest news is supposed to have the biggest play, whether it be bad news or good news. 12 One thing we can do with our Web version of the newspaper (www.bolivarmonews.com) that we can’t with our printed version is find out exactly what people are clicking on. We don’t know who clicks on what, but we can count the clicks. And I’m here to tell you we can all go to our graves saying we like the “good” news, but the click reports I’m seeing tell me that it’s the “bad” news we are reading, even if we have to navigate around the positive news to find it. This would be a good time, though, to remind myself and readers of what I’ve often told students when I’ve talked at schools. Sometimes the difference between “good” news and “bad” news is all in the eyes of the beholder. A person convicted for driving while intoxicated, along with his grandmother, will think that to be bad news when it shows up in the newspaper, but I’ve always chosen to view that as a form of good news. It may not be good that he was doing what he was doing, but it’s good he was caught and convicted. That can’t be said about all of the “bad” news, though. Sometimes, it’s bad no matter how one looks at it. One “electronic” version of the newspaper produced this result over a six-day period: • 250 clicks on “Bolivar woman charged with plotting to murder husband.” • 134 clicks on “Pleasant Hope man killed in Friday wreck on slick roads.” • 126 clicks on “Presley will stand trial for murder.” • 78 clicks on Dorothy Marie Jump’s death notice. • 74 clicks on Russell Van Johnson’s death notice. • 65 clicks on business of the year news about Polk County Bank Dave Berry and HutchesonCoker Real Estate. You get the drift. And that is the case week after week. The click reports seem to tell us that if we are without crime and punishment, we would serve readers best by running the death notices on the front page. They are always popular on the Web site, but we also know they draw great interest in the printed version. We are not about to stop publishing positive news. Nor are we going to rush to any premature conclusions about the makeup of our Web readership vs. readership of the printed product. We’re still going to print all the news that’s fit to print and all that will fit. We’re still going to be a cheerleader for the community while at the same time not pretending our community blemishes don’t exist. And we are going to be cognizant of the fact that our printed version has far, far greater readership than the Web site. March 2002 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Reaction of marketplace is punishment enough By Dale Blegen Editor & Publisher The De Smet News De Smet, South Dakota Newspapers, especially the Argus Leader, are being roughed up by the Legislature this year over charges for obituaries. Sioux Falls Rep. Hal Wick introduced a bill that would have taken a newspaper’s status as a legal paper away (one eligible to publish paid notices from various units of government) if it charges for obituaries. The bill died Tuesday in committee. But not without more than a half-hour of debate. The Argus raised the ire of many throughout the state when it began charging for obituaries last year. I’m sure they got a truckload of letters and calls on the subject. And I’m betting not many favored the charge. They backed off from their original policy to charge for every word and now offer the first three inches of an obituary for free. They charge $35 a column inch for every inch thereafter. Maybe it’s this amount that angered people. But managers there know what it costs to run their newspaper, and news isn’t “free.” Gathering, processing and presenting it isn’t even cheap. And your subscription dollars cover only a small portion of total costs. Paid advertising is what really carries the day. I don’t agree with their decision to charge for obituaries. But it is their decision to make and they and every other paper in South Dakota should have that same right. And, we should note, they are not the only newspaper to charge for obituaries. Several other dailies charge. And some weeklies charge for extraordinary coverage such as inclusion of a poem. Obituaries are well-read and are highly regarded by readers. If anything is considered “news” in a newspaper, obituaries fit the bill. And South Dakotans are used to getting such news items in their hometown paper without charge. This is tough to change. But understand this — newspapering is a business. It must turn a profit to provide coverage within its market. Advertising revenues nationwide are down. The economy is slumping. Newsprint and other costs are rising and newspapers are looking at every possible way of maintaining or increasing revenues. And charging for what has historically been free is an attempt to remain economically viable in a tight market. In South Dakota, at least, charging for obituaries was an unforDale Blegen tunate choice. Lots of people got angry. And politicians, like Wick, saw an opportunity to strike back at an aggressive paper that may not always have kind things to report or kind things to say editorially. That’s petty. The Argus boldly made its business decision. Readers reacted. The newspaper altered its policy. I think it has suffered as a result of its choices. Legislative restrictions are unnecessary. The reaction of the marketplace should be punishment enough. Five hot-type weeklies remaining Jerry Lee Morton, author of The Sound of Words (see November ISWNE newsletter), reports that only five hot-type weeklies remain in the United States. “Since I published the book last year, the Sherburne (N.Y.) News has gone ‘cold type’ and is still going strong,” Morton says. “And the hot-type Boswell (Ind.) Enterprise will shut down following publication of its April 24 edition. Boswell is near the Illinois line, about 25 miles from Lafayette, Ind. Publisher Jerry Lee Morton Cecil Krebs says he will continue to do job printing by computer.” The five hot-type weeklies that will remain: The Montpelier (Ind.) Herald, The Edinburg (Ill.) Herald-Star, The Saguache (Colo.) Crescent, The Westminster (Calif.) Herald and The Montebello (Calif.) Messenger. The Sound of Words, which tells the story of the demise of The Freeport (Mich.) News in 1999, sells for $19.95. Please contact Jerry Lee Morton at 6120 Gossard, East Lansing, MI 48823 or at 517-3366832. His email address is [email protected]. March 2002 Engaged Roy Miller Cornett, Jr., and AnnaMarie Walter Roy Miller Cornett, Jr., and AnnaMarie Waltner of Georgetown, Ky., are pleased to announce their engagement. The future groom is a 1996 graduate of Scott County High School. The bride-to-be is a 1997 graduate of Freeman Academy. The couple met while attending Bethel College in N. Newton, Kan. Cornett is the son of Thelma Cornett and Roy Cornett Sr. of Georgetown, Ky. Waltner is the daughter of Tim and Mary Waltner of Freeman, S.D. An Aug. 10 wedding is planned in Freeman. 13 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Use of e-mail frees up the language, but often short on common courtesies By Jim Sawyer A few years ago, I was the typical oldtimer holding out from the high-tech age. I had all kinds of rationalizations about why I didn’t need computers. But nowadays, thanks to advancements in user-friendliness, even fossils like me can figure them out. It’s far easier than interpreting the directions on a box of laundry detergent. I’m very concerned, however, about what I see happening to common courtesies because of e-mail. The lightningspeed expediency is having a negative effect in terms of the well-crafted attention to etiquette that in the past was used to make our language convey a certain amount of class. Sure, when it comes to the mechanical end of semantics, there’s that gizmo we use with computers to check proper spellings. One to check grammar, too. But lots of folks don’t bother with them because they’re in such a hurry. Besides, the recommendations of grammar-check can cause nervousness and confusion to the point that one begins to bite other people’s fingernails. But the spell-check functions of computers can reveal big mistakes. For example, my Missouri newspapering friend and fellow ISWNE member Gary “Soz” Sosniecki has been spelling his name wrong. Soz should be spelling it “Gary æSo’ Cessnook,” according to my computer. Same thing with Goodloe Sutton, another ISWNE friend from Alabama whose name is supposed to be “Godly” Sutton. After all, he did get a crooked sheriff put in the pen. And my computer also lets me know that it’s OK nowadays to use various spellings of same-sounding words, no matter how I use them or where they’re 14 located in the context. Take the spelling of the word “to.” I’d been having too watch that all my life, and you probably have, two. That’s the good side of how computers help us with our language. But the biggest problem is the pollution of the common-courtesy thing when we write to each other using e-mail. What ever happened to greetings and salutations in letters — the “Dear Fred” and “Sincerely yours” stuff? I once sent an e-mail message to someone I don’t know but who had some information I needed relating to a national organization we’re both members of. “Dear Liz,” I started the message. “Like you, I’m a member of blah, blah, blah. I’m in need of blah, blah, blah. Do you have this? Thank you in advance for your reply.” And I signed it “Regards, Jim Sawyer.” Lots of people don’t even bother to sign their e-mails. About two minutes later, Liz sent me a rather lengthy letter. Here’s what it said: “No.” Now stuff like that’s a shocker to oldtimers like me, computer age or not. Sure, the message told me Liz had sent it, listed her e-mail address again in case I might forget it, and even the date, hour and minute it had been sent. But something was missing that I would have appreciated from Liz. Warmth, not just a blunt “No.” And something was present that hit me like a rock. Aloofness and coldness in face of the possibility that Liz may very well be a warm and loving person. But whether she is or not, with treatment like that I really don’t give a rip. I know that the “Dear So and So” and “Sincerely yours” stuff can be looked upon as redundant. But let’s face it. Why should it be more redundant with computers, of all things, than with handwritten or typed messages? In fact, the speed of e-mail Jim Sawyer should free more time for those little niceties. Another thing, speaking of handwritten messages, is that people who heavily rely on computers actually forget how to write anything by hand. What used to be penmanship with at least a hint of legibility is fastly starting to look like graffiti from another language expressed on a piece of paper instead of a brick wall. But that’s another subject. I guess this whole thing amounts to just a few examples of some of the more personal and warmer expressions of humanity going down the drain as we become a busier and more faceless society. I’d like to point out to any critics that I used spell-check on this piece, and it passed in flying colors. So that proves that not only can some of us old-timers spell, but we can get the hang of new-fangled computer inventions to check it out. But grammar-check locked me up. ISWNE member Jim Sawyer writes a widely carried column for weeklies. It’s issued by e-mail. For details, contact him at [email protected] or (417) 7425211. Or write him at 711 South Main Street, Willard, MO 65781, USA. March 2002 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Brake finally having fun with his upstart paper By Allison Rosewicz Junior Communications Major Missouri Southern State College Running a newspaper alone seems next to impossible, but Jon Brake, editor and publisher of the Manhattan, Kan., Free Press, makes it happen. “I sell the ads, write the news, attend the meetings, take the photos, lay out the paper, take it to the press, deliver to the stores and do the billing,” he said. Unfortunately, that is not all the work being the sole staff member entails. “I also clean the bathroom on Saturday,” Brake said. The Manhattan Free Press is published on Thursdays, so Wednesdays can be hectic. Brake’s wife, Linda, owns Roche’s Family Hair Care in Manhattan, but she occasionally helps out with the paper. “She will come in on Wednesday if I am running late,” Brake said. Although he loves what he does now, Brake has not always been involved with journalism. He attended Kansas March 2002 State University in Manhattan for two and a half years as a history major before being called for active duty in Berlin, Germany, in 1961. At age 22 Brake began selling advertising for a twice-weekly newspaper in Marysville, Kan. After seven years in that job, he switched careers and became a real estate broker. Ten years later, in 1980, Brake returned to journalism. He may have come back to the field, but Brake felt a bit jaded by the business. “I was tired of being fired by others,” he said. After more than 20 years of working in journalism, Brake started his own paper, the Manhattan Free Press, in 1991. The paper was started with only $487. The first office on Poyntz Avenue cost $300 a month, but the office owner offered Brake a special of six months free rent. Brake also convinced a computer store to sell him a used Mac in exchange for free advertising. Following that exchange, however, advertising went downhill. “The first issue was one week late because I could not sell the ads,” Brake said. “I had the news ready to go, but every time I talked to an advertiser, they thought it was a good idea, but they wanted to see the first issue. Which comes first, the newspaper or advertising?” The second week Brake came up with a different strategy. He offered a doubletruck ad to a fur- niture store and a full-page ad to a car dealer at half price if they paid in advance. “That did the trick,” he said. “That first Thursday morning was special.” Brake had 2,000 newspapers in bundles of 100. He planned on rolling the news- Jon Brake papers, loading them into his car and throwing them up and down the streets of Manhattan. “After about 15 minutes, I could see that this was going to be a much larger job than I had planned,” Brake said. “About that time I heard people coming down the hall.” His brother, Clark, and his 78-year-old mother had driven 45 miles to help, and they continued to do so each week. “For the next two years, the three of us looked like the Beverly Hillbillies,” Brake said. “Our mother would be in the back seat rolling papers, and Clark and I would roll and throw the papers. ‘A good time was had by all.’” Today the Free Press is distributed in 15 locations within Manhattan. And advertising definitely picked up after that first disheartening week. “For the first two years, I had advertisers that paid every week,” Brake said. “I still have advertisers that reach for their checkbooks when they see me coming.” The current circulation of the Free Press is 2,000. It is a free distribution paper, but 200 people subscribe for $25.38 a year. “Most subscribed because the Free Press would be gone before they could pick one up,” Brake said. The Free Press currently runs 20 to 24 continued on page 20 15 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Joplin Conference Registration To register, please complete this form and send it with your check in U.S. funds to: Registration Fees By May 15 Adults $395 Children (ages 6-17) $195 2 Adults & 1 Child $900 2 Adults & 2 Children $1,000 2 Adults & 3 Children $1,200 2 Adults & 4+ Children $1,400 After May 15 $450 $250 $1,150 $1,400 $1,650 $1,900 ISWNE 2002 Chad Stebbins Missouri Southern St. College 3950 E. Newman Rd. Joplin, MO 64801-1595 (417) 625-9736 All Prices in U.S. funds, payable to ISWNE 2002 Name Address $ Phone Number E-mail U.S. Newspaper Affiliation Others in my party (please include names & ages of children) TOTAL If single, would like to share a two-bedroom apartment with: Any special dietary needs or other considerations: $ $ $ $ $ U.S. U.S. U.S. U.S. U.S. Names of children for June 27 Roaring River trip: Check tour you prefer for afternoon of June 28: Trucking industry Check activity you prefer for June 29: Silver Dollar City (all day) 16 King Press Music Show March 2002 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors International Society Weekly Newspaper Editors The of 2002 ISWNE Conference - Joplin, MO (USA) Wednesday, June 26 8 a.m. - noon 9 a.m. Noon 1 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Registration ISWNE board meeting Lunch “Joplin’s colorful history and scientific wonders” — Brad Belk, director of the Joplin Museum Complex “Ozarks Culture & Folklore” — Kim McCully, editor of The Aurora Advertiser Depart from Student Life Center for John Morre cabin on James River, near Galena, Mo. Dinner — A fish fry, hamburgers, hot dogs, cole slaw, hushpuppies, and watermelon An Ozark Hootenanny — Bluegrass music, storytellers, and the Mountain Maid Expected return to campus — Hospitality suite open until midnight Student Life Center Webster Hall 357 Student Life Center Webster Hall Auditorium Webster Hall Galena, MO Galena, MO Galena, MO College Skyline Center Thursday, June 27 7-8 a.m. 7-9 a.m. 8-9:30 a.m. 9 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 11 a.m. 12:15 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 3 p.m. 5 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m. March 2002 Breakfast Student Life Center Swimming — Available in the Missouri Southern indoor pool Gymnasium ISWNE business meeting Webster Hall Auditorium Children depart for Roaring River State Park Cassville, MO “Romancing the Mother Road” — Michael Wallis, author of Route 66: The Mother Road Webster Hall Auditorium “When the big one lands on your doorstep” — David Burke, Tuam (Ireland) Herald; Webster Hall Betty Stanley, Ozark County Times; Don Ginnings, Hermitage Index; Auditorium Gerald Elkins, McDonald County Press Inc. Lunch Student Life Center “Trends in Community Journalism” — Jock Lauterer, director of the Carolina Community Media project at the University of North Carolina; Gloria Freeland, Webster Hall director of the Huck Boyd National Center for Community Media at Kansas State Auditorium University; Harry Hix, the Engleman/Livermore professor of Community Journalism at the University of Oklahoma; and Jim Sterling, Missouri Community Newspaper Management Chair at the University of Missouri Presentations — Greenslade Bursary Editor and Brian Burmester, editor and publisher Webster Hall of Local News New Zealand Auditorium Depart for George Washington Carver National Monument Diamond, MO Brisket dinner — Sponsored by the Missouri Press Association, with program to follow Diamond, MO Expected return to campus — Hospitality suite open until midnight College Skyline Center 17 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Friday, June 28 7-8 a.m. 8-10:45 a.m. 11 a.m. 12:15 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 2:45 p.m. 2:45 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 9 p.m. Breakfast Editorial critiques “The Young Brothers Massacre” — Holds the record for the most law enforcement officers killed in a single incident, Tony Stephenson Lunch — Youth team-building rope exercises with Susie Cook, from Branson Children depart for the Joplin Water Park “The Human Truman” — A 45-minute monologue by Niel Johnson, a retired archivist and oral historian from the Truman Library Depart from Webster Auditorium for the “war room” at Contract Freighters, Inc., an international truckload carrier based in Joplin, and a program on the Joplin trucking industry OR Depart for a tour of King Press, one of the principal manufacturers of web offset presses for newspapers Children return from Joplin Water Park Dinner and Banquet in the Connor Ballroom Pizza party for the children Hospitality Suite — open until midnight Student Life Center Webster Hall Auditorium Webster Hall Auditorium Student Life Center Water Park Webster Hall Auditorium Contract Freighters King Press Billingsly Student Center Student Life Center College Skyline Center Saturday, June 29 8-9 a.m. 9 a.m. 11 a.m. 11 a.m. 12:15 p.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Breakfast Depart for Branson, MO Arrival at Silver Dollar City Lunch at the Hard Luck Diner for the music show group Shopping at The Grand Village for music group — 26 unique shops Music show group departs for “Lost in the Fifties” “Lost in the Fifties” music show begins Music show group departs for Factory Merchants Outlet Mall — 90 shops Silver Dollar City & music/shopping groups both depart Arrival of both groups at Showboat Branson Belle Dinner cruise Depart for Joplin Student Life Center Student Life Center Branson, MO Branson, MO Branson, MO Branson, MO Branson, MO Branson, MO Branson, MO Branson, MO Branson, MO Branson, MO Sunday, June 30 8-9 a.m. Breakfast and goodbye(s) Student Life Center don’t miss the fun... 18 March 2002 The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Statement : International Society Weekly Newspaper Editors The of Due by January 31, 2002 2002 ISWNE Dues ......................................................................$50 All Membership Dues Must be Paid in U.S. Funds For Our Records You may wish to do one of the following: • Be a Sustaining Member at $100 $ • Make your editor-friends members of ISWNE at a special price of $20 per year. If you do, please list their addresses below in space provided. $ Name: Title: Organization: Address: Phone Number: Fax Number: E-mail Address: Total Enclosed: $ Web Site: Please make checks payable to ISWNE If You Are A New Member : Please attach a brief description of yourself for the ISWNE Newsletter if you are a new member. A mug shot would be appreciated. Mail To: Questions: March 2002 Dr. Chad Stebbins, Missouri Southern State College, 3950 East Newman Road, Joplin, MO 64801-1595 Phone: (417) 625-9736 Fax: (417) 659-4445 E-mail: [email protected] 19 Brake finally having fun with upstart paper from page 15 tab pages. Brake would like to get up to 32 pages by the end of the year. He would also like to see a slight increase in the size of his staff. “Four employees would be nice,” he said. “If and when Linda retires, I hope she will work full-time here. She knows everyone and has a good, real interest in the news of Manhattan.” Brake and his wife stay very busy, so it is hard to find time for the rest of their family. Brake has two sons with one grandson and one granddaughter, and Linda has two sons with four grandsons. But Brake said no matter what, he and Linda make time to be with them. On top of the stress of a small staff and finding time for family, Brake has to worry about competition with two of the best newspapers in Kansas. The Manhattan Mercury is a 10,000circulation daily, and the Kansas State University paper, the Kansas State Collegian, has a pressrun of 12,000 each weekday of the college’s fall and spring semesters. But Brake does not allow the competition to intimidate him. In fact, he said having the KSU paper near helps him. He uses the university’s news service items, and if its paper has a good story, Brake uses it and gives KSU credit. He also takes photos at all the Wildcat football games. Brake said the Free Press has its own place between the Mercury and the Collegian because his paper deals solely with community issues rather than national and college news. “I think a newspaper should report on everything the city, county and school district is doing,” he said. “We run a lot of ABOUT THE memos, minutes, and charts. I have never seen any budget that I did not want to run.” Although Brake loves running a community paper, he said it does come with its disadvantages. He said government employees are often difficult to deal with because they do not want to open public records. “In most cases it is because their office has done something they do not want the public to know about,” he said. “Several years ago a county clerk would make me wait three days each week to get the approved minutes of the County Commission. Today all of my requests for open records must go through the city manager’s office. It is next to impossible to get the county attorney or attorney general to look into open meeting or open records violations.” Despite these difficulties, Brake continues to believe that working for a large newspaper pales in comparison to practicing community journalism. “When invited to speak to journalism classes, I tell them that they cannot work for other people and do what I do,” he said. “We cover city, county and the school district in a way that a large newspaper cannot.” So although Brake has not always been interested in journalism, and even though he left the field for a decade, he eventually could not resist the draw of running a community newspaper. “It is more fun today, more fun than anything I have ever done,” he said. ISWNE The International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors (ISWNE) was founded in 1954 at Southern Illinois University (SIU) by Howard R. Long, then chair of SIU’s Department of Journalism at Carbondale, and Houstoun Waring, then editor of the Littleton (Colo.) Independent. ISWNE headquarters were at Northern Illinois University at Dekalb from 1976 to 1992, at South Dakota State University in Brookings from 1992 to 1999. Missouri Southern State College in Joplin became the headquarters in 1999. ISWNE’s purpose is to help those involved in the weekly press to improve standards of editorial writing and news reporting and to encourage strong, independent editorial voices. The society seeks to fulfill its purpose by holding annual conferences, presenting awards, issuing publications, and encouraging international exchanges. There are ISWNE members in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Japan, and India. There are subscribers to Grassroots Editor, the society’s quarterly journal, in still more countries. International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Institute of International Studies Missouri Southern State College Joplin, MO 64801-1595 Dr. Chad Stebbins Editor & ISWNE Secretary/Treasurer Director, Institute of International Studies Produced by the Institute of International Studies Missouri Southern State College 3950 E. Newman Road Joplin, MO 64801-1595 (417) 625-9736 (417) 659-4445 FAX FIRST CLASS