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Poynter Institute
The Poynter Institute is a school for journalists, future journalists, and teachers of journalists. You can reach us by phone at 727.821.9494.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Contact us to learn about Poynter programs...

Karen Brown Dunlap, Pres.
Roy Peter Clark, Vice Pres.
Keith Woods, Dean

Howard Finberg, NewsU
Bill Mitchell, Online
Paul Pohlman, International
Jessica Sandler, Marketing

Broadcast/Online:
Al Tompkins

Ethics:
Kelly McBride

Diversity:
Kenny Irby

High School Journalism:

Wendy Wallace 

Leadership:
Jill Geisler
 

Publications:
Julie Moos

Visual Journalism:
Kenny Irby
 
National Writers Workshops:
Chip Scanlan

Main Poynter Phone:
727.821.9494
The Poynter Institute is a school for journalists, future journalists, and teachers of journalists. No matter what their job title may be, journalists come to Poynter in a search for excellence. Our faculty provide concentrated instruction and personal support in that quest.

We tailor our programs to serve specific audiences, but all share the same approach. Poynter prides itself on a style of teaching and learning that helps shape every seminar, every conference, every course, into a "Poynter Experience."

We keep seminars small, which means you get lots of individual attention. We emphasize a hands-on approach, so you may participate in brainstorming sessions, case studies, discussions, role-playing, and other exercises to get you involved in your own learning.

Our resident faculty includes scholars, distinguished professionals, and master teachers who bring special expertise to every session. Each seminar includes visiting faculty, accomplished professionals who leave their jobs to teach, and who spend time with you inside and outside the classroom.

We want our students to leave Poynter better prepared to produce quality journalism, so that readers, viewers, and listeners can make better-informed decisions. We want you to be equipped with new tools to handle the challenges of producing authoritative, responsible, and creative news reports, programs, and publications, and with new ways of thinking about the work you do. Here's what we hope you might gain from your time at Poynter:

  • The courage to take risks and do your best.
  • A higher sense of self-esteem, new confidence in your craft, and a workbench full of new tools and ideas.
  • A recognition of the value of diversity in the newsroom and in life.
  • The vocabulary to describe what you do and why, and what you stand for.
  • A new network of people who support you in your work.
  • A clear picture of the special role of journalism in a democracy.
  • An understanding that your life's work is valuable and that you can make a difference.

MISSION STATEMENT
The Poynter Institute is a school dedicated to teaching and inspiring journalists and media leaders. It promotes excellence and integrity in the practice of craft and in the practical leadership of successful businesses. It stands for a journalism that informs citizens and enlightens public discourse. It carries forward Nelson Poynter's belief in the value of independent journalism in the public interest.

Founded in 1975 by Nelson Poynter, chairman of the St. Petersburg Times and its Washington affiliate, Congressional Quarterly, the Institute was bequeathed his controlling stock in the Times Publishing Co. in 1978. As a financially independent, nonprofit organization, The Poynter Institute is beholden to no interest except its own mission: to help journalists seek and achieve excellence.

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Jun. 5, 2008

Advertising on Poynter Online
Advertising appears in the following areas of Poynter Online: as banner ads atop selected pages of the site, on e-mail newsletters and on the Poynter Career Center site. The Career Center includes help-wanted advertising and special "Featured Employer" ads.

You'll find details about the Career Center here.

Here are a few questions and answers about other forms of advertising on Poynter Online:

What are your standards for ads posted on Poynter Online?
  1. Poynter Online reserves the right to reject any advertising. Some considerations that may prompt us to reject an ad include:
  2. Offensive:  Content must not be patently offensive and cannot contain attacks of personal nature.  They must not be libelous, threatening, harassing or overly competitive or refer abusively to the goods and services of others.
  3. Misleading:  Content must be accurate and in no way fraudulent, deceptive or misleading.  Ads that describe a book or product as “best seller” must contain a citation to the relevant best seller list.  
  4. Illegal: The Content cannot violate civil, municipal, provincial/state or federal laws. 
  5. Conflict with Poynter Values:  The content cannot conflict with the values the Poynter Institute upholds.  (See our mission and standards guiding publishing.) www.poynter.org/ethicsguidelines.
Why have you added advertising to Poynter Online?
In order to enhance the services that Poynter provides to the journalism community -- better training, a new site design (coming soon), additional scholarships -- we're going to need additional revenue. And just like the news organizations we serve, we need to develop new ways to generate that income. The help-wanted advertising included in the new Poynter Career Center is designed to serve media companies as well as individuals. We're working hard to make sure that this and other forms of advertising on Poynter Online measure up to Poynter's standards of integrity and transparency at the same time they help us finance the work of the Institute.

What organizations do you expect will purchase ads on Poynter Online?

We believe the most likely buyers will be media companies, news organizations and journalism schools -- all groups that are interested in reaching the site's targeted audience of journalists around the world. But we also accept advertising from non journalism vendors and retailers who want to reach our audience. Poynter reserves the right to reject any ad.

What do you know about the audience?
According to the Urchin software provided by Google Analytics, about 300,000 unique visitors come to Poynter Online each month and view about 2 million pages. More than 62,000 users have registered for the site, and about 52,000 of them receive e-mail newsletters that Poynter sends to their inboxes each week. The newsletters include such columns as Romenesko, Al's Morning Meeting and E-Media Tidbits as well as centerpieces and other articles.

How much do the ads cost?
You'll find rates for Career Center ads in the FAQ linked above. For prices of banner ads on the site and in e-mail newsletters, please contact Poynter's Colleen Eddy at (727) 553-4711 or ceddy@poynter.org.

How can I purchase an ad?
Please contact Poynter's Colleen Eddy at (727) 55304711 or ceddy@poynter.org. For more information about Poynter Career Center ads, click here for an FAQ.

What will you do with the money generated by advertising on Poynter Online?
We'll use it to support Poynter training, publications (print as well as online) and other projects. Poynter is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that is exempt from taxes, but we will pay taxes on whatever portions of Career Center revenue are considered taxable for organizations such as ours. You can learn about Poynter finances here.

How do you handle privacy issues?
You'll find our privacy policy here. We do not make information about individual users available to advertisers or other third parties.

What if I have a question, concern or suggestion about advertising on Poynter Online?
Colleen Eddy is director of the Career Center. Bill Mitchell is director of Poynter Online, which includes the Career Center. Karen Brown Dunlap is Poynter's president and managing director. You can reach any of them via the e-mail addresses listed on their personal pages (linked from their names above) or by calling Poynter toll-free at (888) 769-6837.
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May. 13, 2008

Poynter Online Outage
For about four hours Monday morning, Poynter Online was offline. The problem recurred Tuesday morning, limiting availability of parts of the site for a few hours. We believe we have isolated the problem and are working to prevent a recurrence. We are sorry for any inconvenience these outages may have caused.
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Apr. 18, 2008

Charlotte Sun Sports Writer Wins McKenzie Cup
Dugan Arnett, a graduate of the University of Missouri’s journalism school, summer program for college students at The Poynter Institute and a sports writer at the Charlotte Sun, is the winner of the second McKenzie Cup.

Arnett was presented with the award Thursday at Poynter by first-year winner Jemele Hill of ESPN during Sports Journalism Summit III. His work at the Sun has been recognized by awards he has won in state competition during his 18-month stint at the paper.

"Dugan Arnett has been like a breath of fresh air to our newspaper and our community," said Sun Editor Chris Porter. "His stories on the subculture of sports -- from skeet shooters to horseshoe pitchers -- have delighted our readers. And his solid coverage of high schools in the area has also been a main staple of our sports pages."

Dugan Arnett and Jemele Hill
Dugan Arnett is presented the McKenzie Cup by the 2007 winner, Jemele Hill of ESPN. The McKenzie Cup is given in tribute of the late Van McKenzie, the innovative sports editor, and recognizes talented, young sports writers.

The McKenzie Cup is given in tribute of the late Van McKenzie, the innovative sports editor whose passion for sports journalism won him hundreds of awards and the admiration of his colleagues. He served as sports editor of four Florida newspapers, as well as the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and was deputy sports editor of the New York Daily News and managing editor of the National Sports Daily.

"Van's enthusiasm for sports journalism and willingness to mentor young people set him apart in his profession," said Roy Peter Clark, Senior Scholar at Poynter.

Like so many young adults who have attended college, McKenzie found himself in need of cash as an 18-year-old junior college student in Ocala during 1964.

Having an interest in sports, he answered an ad placed in the Ocala Star-Banner looking for sports writers to cover Friday night football games.

Little did McKenzie know when he took that job where the sports journalism world take him -- to the top of his profession as one of the most respected, admired and honored editors in sports journalism before his life ended in early 2007 at age of 61.

McKenzie, who was hired by then Star-Banner (and now Charlotte Sun associate editor) Buddy Martin, never forgot the struggles of young journalists making it in the newspaper world, and he became a champion of the young, talented and enthusiast writers, editors, designers and photographers as he moved from newspaper to newspaper until his final stop at the Orlando Sentinel, where he was the associate managing editor of sports.

"Van had multiple talents," said Martin, "but his biggest asset was his heart. His inclusiveness as a manager opened doors for journalists of every kind, even back in the day when few opportunities existed for young people, women and minorities. He was totally blind to color, gender or age."

The McKenzie Cup is awarded to one of the most outstanding young journalists at the Poynter Sports Journalism Summit who has demonstrated a passion for sports journalism and excellence in his or her work.

Hill, now a commentator, show co-host and columnist for ESPN, was a former columnist at the Orlando Sentinel, where she was hired by McKenzie.

By John Fineran, Charlotte Sun-Herald
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Jan. 4, 2008

Poynter On The Road
Experienced journalists and dedicated teachers, Poynter faculty offer expertise in the areas of leadership and management, online and multimedia, and core journalism values and skills. Depending on your needs, we’ll work to match you with the faculty member who can best meet your schedule and desire for learning.

For more information about costs or to inquire about inviting a Poynter faculty member to your location, please send an e-mail to Paul Pohlman, ppohlman@poynter.org, with suggested dates and subject area.
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Dec. 1, 2007

The Eugene Patterson Library

The Eugene Patterson Library supports Poynter's teaching and research through its traditional and specialized journalism collections and its contributions to Poynter Online. The library is named in honor of Eugene Patterson, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, former managing editor of The Washington Post, editor of the Atlanta Constitution and St. Petersburg Times,and chairman of the Poynter Institute Board of Trustees.

Library














Founded in 1985, this journalism library contains more than 11,000 books, videos, journals, reports, magazines, and newspapers. Special collections include the Eugene Patterson and Don Murray collections as well as the Newsleaders videotape oral history collection. Historical information about the Institute is preserved in the library's archives.

Since 1995, the library has contributed to Poynter Online's resource center. Currently, the resource center includes specialized bibliographies, the Links to the News and Page One Today columns, tips sheets, and journalism links.  

Library Books













The Eugene Patterson Library staff maintains an informal and relaxed atmosphere that encourages casual browsing and reading while supporting professional and scholarly research.

Please contact Library director David Shedden if you have any questions about the Poynter Institute's library.

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Nov. 20, 2007

A New Poynter Online in the Works

Dear Colleagues:

These are busy, interesting times at Poynter. We're building a new version of Poynter Online, and we've realigned the staff to help us do a better job delivering what you need.

Poynter Online faces an intriguing challenge -- just like the Institute it represents and the news organizations it serves: How do we change to reflect the rapidly shifting demands of our audiences without compromising our commitment to the enduring needs of the journalism community?

With a lot of help from you, we're about to find out.

By mid-December, we expect to have the beginnings of a new site available for review. Based partly on your feedback, we'll unveil a Beta in the First Quarter of 2008 and launch the new site as soon as we're satisfied it delivers what you need.

This past summer, more than 2,000 of you responded to our invitation to let us know what you like (and like less) about the site. About 700 of you volunteered to help, and we'll be following up with you soon.

Among our biggest surprises was how much you like the site as it is. It was a great reminder worthy of posting on the walls of Web teams everywhere: Be careful what you change. This is not an argument against innovation, just a reminder that most every change carries a cost as well as a benefit.

You also pointed out something we already knew about the site: It's cluttered.

Some other highlights from our research and subsequent usability testing included:

  • You're ready for some serious professional networking.
  • You're hungry for news about news, and you're looking for examples of best practices in a number of areas.
  • No consensus has emerged about horizontal vs. left-rail navigation, but you do have strong ideas about the look and feel of the site.

We have plans in the works in each of these areas. 

Finally, we promise not to pester you with too many e-mails about the redesign. We'll be blogging the redesign on a page that you'll be able to subscribe to as an e-mail newsletter or an RSS feed. Our redesign blog will start in December. We realize every news organization we serve is either in the midst of a redesign, coming out of one or viewing one on the horizon. We hope to go to school on your experience -- and invite you to do likewise.

We look forward to working with you along the way.

Best regards,


Bill Mitchell
Director, Poynter Online

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Nov. 12, 2007

Ethics On-Call
c
  • Facing a tough ethical call on deadline?
  • Wrestling with a thorny news judgment about privacy, sources, or fairness?
  • Grappling with how to handle a graphic photo or video?
  • Heading into an ethics minefield on an investigative story?
  • Dealing with a conflict of interest dilemma?
  • Deciding how far to go in interviewing or naming juveniles?
  • Struggling with the complexity and contention of covering race relations and other diversity issues?
  • Wondering about how to approach rape and sexual abuse coverage?
If you are a professional journalist and think Poynter can help, give us a call on our special toll-free number: 877-639-7817. The best time to reach us is between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. East Coast time. We don't pretend to offer simple answers. We will help you make good decisions. We encourage journalism students to e-mail your questions after reviewing what we've written on our website (See our Ethics section, Talk About Ethics, the Poynter Ethics Journal, and Journalism with a Difference, as well as the below).

    Online Resources

    Guiding Principles for the Journalist
    Bob Steele, December 1994.
    http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=36&aid=4349

    Ask These 10 Questions to Make Good Ethical Decisions
    Bob Steele, June 1999.
    http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=36&aid=4346

    "Who Said That?" Guidelines for Evaluating Sources http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=4634

    Guidelines for Interviewing Confidential Sources
    Bob Steele and Al Tompkins, May 1999.
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=4361

    Respecting Privacy Guidelines
    Bob Steele, May 1999.
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=4643

    Guidelines for Interviewing Juveniles
    Al Tompkins, May 17, 1999.
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=4571

    Identifying Juveniles
    Al Tompkins
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=5555

    Deception/Hidden Cameras Checklist
    Bob Steele, February 1995.
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=866

    Guidelines for Covering Hostage-taking Crises, Prison Uprisings,Terrorist Actions
    Bob Steele, July 1999.
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=4640

    Reporting on Race Relations, Guidelines & Tips
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=4448

    Racial Identification Guidelines
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=4343

    The 5 W's of Journalism from a Diverse Perspective
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=4604

    Get Online and Get Information Fast
    http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=4436

    Posted by Aly Colón 3:04 PM
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    Sep. 21, 2007

    Harnisch Family Foundation Helps Poynter Help Journalists

    No girls allowed.  The Buffalo (N.Y.) Courier-Express wouldn't let her deliver the newspaper, so instead she became the youngest girl in the newspaper office, sending bills to the carriers instead of becoming one.

    When her shift at the newspaper ended, 15-year-old Ruth Ann Geisdorfer often hopped on a city bus and emerged a few blocks later as Teen DJ Karin Kelly, spinning records and doing her first call-in talk shows on Buffalo's WYSL-FM.

    And so a multimedia career unfolded. As Ruth Ann Leach, she became one of Nashville television's first female news anchors, hosted talk radio on the legendary clear-channel WLAC-AM and wrote columns for the Nashville Banner.

    Harnisch Logo
    When she married money manager William F. Harnisch, Ruth Ann traded in daily deadlines for a career in philanthropy, but she didn't forget what it was like to be a financially struggling reporter.

    The Harnisch Family Foundation recently gave Poynter $50,000 to serve journalists who want to learn and don't have the resources to attend professional development programs. The gift funds technology for "Studio H," a means for live audio and visual connections between Poynter faculty and newsrooms. It also expands Poynter Webinars from audio with on-screen images to include real-time viewing of presenters and video material.

    "Journalism is still a field ripe for the individual careerist, even in these times of great upheaval in the media business. Anyone with talent, skill and moxie can still create a career, and the new media opportunities of today create unimagined possibilities for the person with drive and desire," Harnisch said. "Nelson Poynter's vision of investing philanthropic dollars in high-quality training for journalists is one I'm honored to support. Poynter offers opportunities for any journalist to get top career-building information at a very reasonable price."

    The Harnisch Family philanthropies support journalistic initiatives through grants to the Society of Professional Journalists, Investigative Reporters and Editors, the Committee to Protect Journalists, and others.

    However, Harnisch’s main philanthropic focus is encouraging the giving spirit in others. Other projects of The Harnisch Family Foundation include Thrill!onaires.org, The Dignitarian Dialogues and The Foundation of Coaching.  The Foundation has given several hundred grants since its inception in 1998.

    Ruth Ann's philanthropy is informed by the memory of the first career advice she ever got in media: "Keep your suitcase packed."  In other words, be prepared, period.

    Harnisch recalls that she got most of her journalistic education directly from mentors, including Chris Clark, recently retired after 41 years on the air at Nashville’s WTVF-TV, and from Jack Gunter, a photographer who became vice president at the now-defunct Nashville Banner.

    "In my first TV job, I made so little I qualified for food stamps," Harnisch says. "I couldn't have afforded to pay for a class no matter how cheap it might have been. That's why I'm interested in helping people in that situation today." In 2006, she donated scholarships to Poynter television courses led by Al Tompkins. This time she's contributing in the belief that technology offers new educational opportunities.

    Harnisch gives without specific expectations of those who benefit. "My only hope is that they become so successful and grateful that they, too, will be generous with their resources."

    The little girl who wasn't allowed to deliver the newspaper has found a way to deliver to the news people -– through Poynter.


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    Jul. 25, 2007

    The Poynter Alumni Connection
    By La'Shawn Ware
    Online Alumni Connection

    La'Shawn Ware
    We don't forget about you after you leave Poynter. The Poynter spirit lives on in your newsroom work, as you use the many skills you learned here. To help us strengthen our bond with you, I've taken on the role as Poynter's alumni connection.

    I want to help Poynter's alumni stay in touch with us and with each other. Did you receive an honor, award, fellowship? Are you on the move? Send me a note with your name, the details (including the name of the job/place you're leaving and the job/place you're headed next if that's the news), and the year(s) you participated in a Poynter seminar. We'll publish the information in our "Alumni in the News" section. If you set up a personal page and include a mug shot, we may even feature you on the homepage.


    UPDATES 

    July 16, 2007:

    Elizabeth Zavala,
    formerly of The Dallas Morning News, has been named deputy city editor at the Forth Worth Star-Telegram. The place where she spent 10 years of her professional career before going to The News seven years ago. Elizabeth is excited about her new challenge, she says, "In a sense, it's like I'm going home."

    June 21, 2007:
     
    Ronnie Bradford has a change of work address update:
     
    KNX 1070 Newsradio
    5670 Wilshire Blvd; Suite 200
    Los Angeles, CA  90036-5679
    Phone:  323.964.8340
     
    They are no longer on Sunset Blvd.  Please make changes accordingly.
     
    April 9, 2007:
     
    Erica Lee Nelson, from the 2003 College Reporting Fellowship, is now an associate editor at Inside US Trade in Washington D.C., covering international trade policy. Erica recently came back to the states after living in India for three years, where she worked for Businessworld magazine and freelanced for US and Indian publications like The Washington Times and India Today.

    August 18, 2005:

    Heidi Bell Gease was covering Indian affairs for the Rapid City Journal when she came to Poynter in 2001 for a seminar on covering race. In 2003, she moved over to the cops and court beat, then went part-time when her son arrived. She and her husband now have two kids (Tate, who will be 2 in September, and Tia, who will be 1 in November), and she is working part-time, covering federal court and general assignment stories.

    May 19, 2005:

    Rafael Olmeda -- general assignment reporter at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and a graduate of Reporting on Race Relations 2003 -- was elected vice president/print of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists last summer (2004). Olmeda is now an adjunct professor teaching Writing Strategies for Reaching a Mass Audience at Florida International University.

    Oct. 28, 2004:

    Kelly Brewing from Reporting on Race Relations in 2002, is now at the Baltimore Sun covering demographics. She had been at the Orlando Sentinel.

    Tom Brislin writes from Hawaii that he has a new role and title. He's now Professor and Associate Chair at the Academy for Creative Media. Tom has attended several seminars at Poynter, especially in Ethics.

    Joyce Dehli, 2002 Ethics Fellow, was named editorial training manager for Lee Enterprises. Joyce was managing editor of the Wisconsin State Journal.

    Demetria Kalodimos is an Ethics grad and visiting faculty member from Power Reporting and Anchors as Newsroom Leaders. She is writing, reporting, shooting, and editing documentaries for her own genuine human productions. The latest, Pre-Madonna, sold out the Nashville Film Festival twice and was awarded for excellence by the Berkeley Film and Video Festival.

    Corinne Milligan from Producing Newscasts in '99, accepted a job as a morning show EP at WVEC-TV, the ABC station in Norfolk, Virginia. She's very excited about this opportunity.

    Sept. 22, 2004:

    Ross Becker attended our 1989 Power Reporting Seminar. His passion for broadcast continues with his new position of anchor/managing editor for a staff of young people in Las Vegas at KTNV-TV.

    Ron Coddington, senior designer at USAToday.com and visiting faculty for Information Graphics 2004 published his first book, "Faces of the Civil War: An Album of Union Soldiers and Their Stories." It was released by Johns Hopkins University Press.

    John Cutter has moved from his position as editor of the Lake County section of the Orlando Sentinel to working as an assistant city editor in the main newsroom. He's supervising the "criminal justice" team, which is cops and courts to the rest of the world. John graduated from Poynter's Leadership Skill Building Seminar in 2004.

    Leslie Fulbright (Untold Stories 2003) is moving a bit south, from the Seattle Times to a new position at the San Francisco Chronicle.

    Dean Gould writes from Australia that he's happy in his new job. He's Associate Editor of the Editorial Department at Gold Coast Publications Pty Ltd. Dean came to us for the Leadership Academy Seminar.

    Roland Martin, Poynter alum from the College Editors Leadership & Ethics Program in the early '90s is now executive editor of the Chicago Defender.

    Meg Murphy is now a visiting lecturer for one year at Mount Holyoke College in western Mass. She'll be teaching one course in journalism and freelancing. Meg was part of the 2003 Poynter Winning Writing seminar and left her job at the Eagle-Tribune in Lawrence, Mass.

    Melissa Preas, a '99 Newsroom Management participant, is happy in her new position at News Director at WNCT-TV in Greenville, N.C.

    Virgil Tipton continues to keep in touch with Poynter since leaving the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. He's currently with NewsEngin Inc. Virgil fondly remembers his experience as a participant in the Leadership Development Program for News Executives in 1999.

    Bonnie (Harris) Tormey was a graduate of our elementary and high school programs and just became the state editor of The Des Moines Register.

    Angela Townsend, a member of the Government Beat 2004 seminar, made the switch from city hall to rejoining the education team at The Plain Dealer in Cleveland.

    July 12, 2004:

    Ann-Marie Adams, formerly of the Hartford Courant, is the 2004 Independent Press Association George Washington Williams Reporter. She's currently writing a book on school desegregation. Anne-Marie attended both the 2001 "Reporting & Writing the Untold Stories" seminar and the 2002 "Newspaper Reporting, Writing & Editing" seminar.

    Vin Alabiso is retiring from AP. In his current role as vice president and director of global business development/photos, Vin has forged significant new partnerships with photo agencies around the world and has set the stage for AP's growth in the global marketing and sales of photos. Thanks for your many contributions!

    Roberta Baskin, a true Poynter friend, has been selected to be a duPont juror for the next three years! She says that it's the next best thing to winning awards!

    Eric Deggans has big news! After seven years as TV/media critic at the St. Petersburg Times, he'll be moving onto a news responsibility – joining the editorial board of the St. Petersburg Times. He'll be helping write the unsigned editorials on the paper's op-ed page. He's also jockeying for a weekly column in the Sunday Perspective Op-Ed section. Eric has attended several seminars, including "Ethics Fellows" 2003 and "Covering Race Relations" in 1997.

    Fernanda da Escóssia came to the "Reporting on Race Relations" seminar in 2003 while working at Jolha de S.Paulo newspaper. She now reports that she's moved to O GLOBO newspaper, the second national newspaper, based in Rio de Janeiro. Congratulations!

    Terri Fleming works for a non-profit organization, the Downtown Fond du Lac Partnership, in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. She's really enjoying her work. Terri graduated as a 2001 "Ethics Fellow"and was then the Editor/Vice President of The Gazette in Colorado Springs.

    Angie Kucharski has been promoted from News Director to Vice President of News/Station Manager at KCNC-TV, the CBS O&O in Denver. Angie is a frequent visiting faculty member in our "Producing Newscasts" seminars.

    Wanda Lloyd, executive director of Vanderbilt University's Diversity Institute, has been named executive editor of the Montgomery Advertiser in Alabama. She will be the first black editor of that newspaper in a state capital where much civil rights history took place. Wanda has been to Poynter for ASNE judging and other events.

    Mark O'Keefe was named the editor of Religion News Service, effective September 2004. He spent the past four years as a national correspondent covering values and philanthropy for Newhouse News Service. Mark attended Poynter's 2004 "Values & Ethics in the News" Seminar.

    Jennifer O'Malley has switched jobs since she attended the 2004 "Newspaper Reporting, Writing & Editing: A Coaching Approach" seminar. She came as assistant city editor at the Indianapolis Star and is now the news editor for the Associated Press in Indiana. She has a new team to work her coaching magic on!

    Leianne Pereira is excited about her job. She's a General Assignment Reporter at CFTO, a Toronto affiliate station, part of CTV, which is a major television network in Canada. Leianne appreciates everything she learned in the 2003 "TV Power Reporting for Reporters & Photojournalists" Seminar.

    Ricardo Pimentel has moved to the Midwest! Ricardo, who was an "Ethics Fellow" in 2003 had been Editorial Columnist at The Arizona Republic. He's moved into Milwaukee to work at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel as the Editorial Page Editor. Enjoy those bratwursts, Ricardo!

    Denise Reagan is a frequent visitor to Poynter and has moved from Savannah to Florida. She's now the News Art Director at the Sun-Sentinel in Ft. Lauderdale. Welcome to sunshine!

    Kalimah Redd attended our "Reporting on Race Relations" Seminar in 2002. She's changed jobs to become a reporter for Globe South in Boston. Kalimah had been a reporter at the Portland Press Herald.

    Kim Schumacher, a graduate of "TV & Radio Power Reporting" 2001 has moved from News 13 in Myrtle Beach to WRIC-TV in Richmond, Va.

    Adam Sharp, who attended the first "Leadership Academy" seminar in 2001, is now the Deputy Communications Director for U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu in Washington.

    Tim Wieland was promoted to News Director at KCNC-TV in Denver. Tim was a participant in Poynter's "Leadership for TV & Radio News Directors" 2003 seminar.

    Jan Winburn is a great friend of Poynter, having taught in several writing and leadership seminars. She's moved from The Baltimore Sun to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Jan will join the projects department, working in the newsroom to identify great stories and guide mid-range and shorter-term enterprise. She'll work with reporters directly on some stories, and on others she'll serve as an editing coach.

    March 31, 2004:

    Before
    Richard before his haircut.
    During
    Richard during his haircut.
    After
    Richard after his haircut.

    Richard Adkins cuts his Locks for Charity. He decided to get a major haircut and donate the tresses to charity. He arranged the donation to the Florida-based organization through the David Wade Salon in  Raleigh, N.C. His hair had to make at least a 10" ponytail for donation. Richard was a Power Reporting Seminar 2003 grad and Visiting Faculty.

    Michelle Eisenberg is a staff reporter and photographer at the Middletown Transcript, a weekly paper in the Dover Post Company in Delaware. She was a 2002 graduate of the News Writing and Reporting for College Graduates Fellowship program at Poynter. Michelle also was a winner in the Maryland-Delaware-DC Press Association 2003 Editorial Contest for Division F: Non-dailies from 10,000 and under. She won in the category Medical/Science, 1st place for "A Local Woman Shares Courageous Battle with Breast Cancer."

    Hollis Towns, managing editor at Michigan's Kalamazoo Gazette, has been named managing editor of the Cincinnati Enquirer. Hollis attended Poynter's first Reporting on Race Relations Seminar in 1996.

    March 15, 2004:

    Paul Aker is headed to Seattle to work at KING-TV. Paul was a participant in our Enterprise and Investigative Reporting for Broadcasters Seminar while working at KAKE-TV in Wichita.

    Geo Beach was elected to be on the Board of Directors at the Association of Independents in Radio. AIR is a 400-member organization of audio producers and allied professionals.

    Tim Brown has accepted an Assistant Professor position at the University of Central Florida in Orlando.

    Angshuman Das was a Media Leadership Fellow Graduate in Chip Scanlan's 1996 Seminar, entitled Storytelling on Deadline. Angshuman is currently a new media producer in Kolkata, India.

    Fernanda da Escossia attended our Reporting on Race Seminar in 2003. After almost 10 years at Folha de S. Paulo, she is moving to the O Globo Newspaper, based in Rio de Janeiro.

    Robin Rowland (who attended the August, 1996 Computer Assisted Reporting Seminar) is the Toronto-based Photo Editor and producer for CBC.ca, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation website. He was part of the CBC news Online team that won the Online Journalism Award last fall for service journalism for its coverage of SARS.

    Heidi Williams was a 2003 graduate of the Reporting on Race Relations Seminar at Poynter. She has left the Augusta Chronicle to join her husband in upstate South Carolina. She'll be working for the Anderson Independent-Mail newspaper, covering Oconee County.

    Kristen Young volunteers at the Denver Voice, a homeless newspaper in Colorado, through the Urban Servant Corps program. She joined the staff of the Voice in August, after two years of Peace Corps service in Moldova. Kristen previously worked at the Charleston (W.Va.) Daily Mail for two years following her summer at Poynter, where she attended the 1998 News Reporting and Writing Fellowship for College Graduates program.

    Feb. 23, 2004:

    Mike Abrams, who attended a Leadership and Ethics Seminar for College Editors (in '93), is now the Portsmouth Editor for The Pilot in Norfolk, Virginia. He just attended our week-long leadership seminar for Mid-Level Managers.

    Tokunbo Awoshakin completed Chip Scanlan's 2002 Newspaper Writing & Editing Seminar. Shortly after that, he was selected to be the Kattering W. Fanning Fellow at the Kettering Foundation. He has since returned to his job as Washington, D.C. Bureau chief of The Anchor newspaper, published in association with The Independent of London.

    Heather Bailey is now a Copy Desk Team leader at The Charlotte Observer in N.C. She had been the Features Editor at the Santa Barbara News-Press in Califiornia when she came to the New Leaders in the Newsroom seminar in October,2002.

    Jared Burden came to Roy Peter Clark's Writing & Editing Fellowship Program in the summer of 1984. He's now a lawyer in the Shenandoah Valley, working for Wharton, Aldhizer & Weaver but has published some magazine features and short fiction in the last 20 years.

    Miriam Lewin was one of our foreign journalists from Argentina who attended a 1998 Ethics Seminar. She was then working as an Investigative Reporter at Channel 13, in Telenoche Investiga, where she completed an investigation on child abuse which involved the most famous Catholic priest of her country, father Julio Grassi. After 11 years, she accepted an offer to move to another station, where she co-anchored and produced another investigative reporting show, Puntodoc.

    Carolyn Mungo, a very frequent visitor to Poynter, won the Anna Quindlen Award for Excellence in Journalism on Behalf of Children and Families. One print and one broadcast award is given out every year. Without her knowing it, Carolyn was nominated by Child Protective Services in Harris County, Houston, Texas.

    Chris Nguyen, a grad of the 2003 Reporting & Writing the Untold Stories Seminar, has moved from Special Projects Reporter at The Sun in San Bernardino, Calif., to working with AP in Los Angeles.

    Cynthia Wang came to Ethics for College Journalists in 1991. She was then a student at Northwestern. Cynthia now tells us she's Associate Bureau chief for People magazine in Los Angeles.

    Jan. 9, 2004:

    David Waters, former Columnist and Visiting Faculty in our 2003 Reporting on Faith, Religion & Values Seminar, has been named Associate Editor of The Commercial Appeal in Memphis.

    John Lansing, a good friend to the Poynter family, has been named executive vice president for Scripps Networks.

    Mary Flood, who was a Poynter Ethics Fellow in 2002, was recently interviewed on NPR's Morning Edition about the latest developments in the Enron case. Mary is the Legal and Investigative Reporter at the Houston Chronicle.

    Jo Cates, who was the first Chief Librarian at Poynter in 1985, has been named Dean of the Library at Columbia College.

    Dec. 31, 2003:

    Updates from a few folks in the 1996 College Ethics & Leadership Seminar

    Ed Fletcher writes for The Sacramento Bee's capitol bureau.

    Michael Landauer now works at the Arlington Morning News. For the past few years, he's been writing suburban editorials and managing Opinions pages in suburban sections and zoned editions for The Dallas Morning News. He's also the lead editorial writer in Collin County.

    Michael Raum attended law school and then clerked for a federal trial judge in Fargo, N.D., for two years. He's now living in D.C., where he's a trial attorney for the Department of Justice, tax division. Michael litigates tax cases in federal trial and bankruptcy courts.

    Big things from members of the Poynter Ethics Fellows 2002 class

    Margie Nichols, WBIR news director, will now be working as director of communications and government relations for the city of Knoxville. She will also be in charge of policy development.

    Pam Fine is now the Managing Editor of the Indianpolis Star.

    Joyce Dehli has been promoted to Managing Editor at the Wisconsin State Journal.

    Other folks

    Chelsea Carter, a correspondent for The Associated Press in Orange County, Calif., has been named an AP national writer. She attended a Newspaper Writing & Editing Seminar in 2000.

    One of our recent graduates in the Visual Journalism Fellowship Program wrote with good news. Edmund Fountain has been offered the spring photo internship at the Concord Monitor. He has also won two awards in the COPY contest!

    Kehrt Reyher, a participant from the 1980's in both design and management seminars, is the principal owner of Media & Marketing Polska (MMP), Poland's leading media trade magazine, based in Warsaw.

    Joe Lopez works in Boulder, Colo., at a PR firm and writes for Heritage, the in-flight magazine of Vietnam Airlines. He was a graduate of the Media, Management & Entrepreneurship program in 1993.

    Brenda Box (Public Radio '02) is now as associate producer at NPR in Washington, D.C.

    Susan Ladd has been promoted to features editor at the News & Record of Greensboro, N.C. She was formerly assignments editor and enterprise editor at the paper. Susan attended the seminar on Writing, Editing, and Design for Assignment Editors in 2000.

    Deborah Potter, former Poynter faculty and Executive Director of NewsLab, has accepted a job as Executive Director of RTNDF, the training and research affiliate of RTNDA.

    Oct. 16, 2003:

    Conroy Chino
    , a broadcast seminar alum, has been appointed secretary of the New Mexico Department of Labor by New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson. The former Investigative Reporter resides in Albuquerque.

    Matthew Hilk was promoted to Assistant Newss Director at WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh. Matthew was a participant in the 1999 Producing TV Newscasts Seminar.

    Chris Nguyen, Special Projects Reporter for The Sun in San Bernardino, Calif., was part of the team who won a National Journalism Award for Web Reporting. The series entitled "Teens Who Kill" was published in the Sun for seven consecutive days and continues to be available online. Nguyen participated in the 2003 Reporting & Writing the Untold Stories seminar.

    Bode Opeseitan, a 2002 Poynter Ethics Fellow, has been appointed editor of his weekend paper, thee Nigerian Tribune, in Oyo, Nigeria.

    Mizanur Rahman
    , a Poynter Ethics Fellow and Visiting Faculty at Poynter, left The Virginian-Pilot and is now Bureau Chief of the Northeast Tarrant Bureau of The Dallas Morning News.

    Dan Serra, who participated in Reporting, Editing, Designing for Business Sections in 1999, is now  assistant business editor at The Colorado Springs Gazette.


    Dan Serra, who participated in Reporting, Editing, Designing for Business Sections in 1999, is now  assistant business editor at The Colorado Springs Gazette.Sept. 25, 2003:

    Ann-Marie Adams, formerly of the Hartford Courant, is a journalism fellow at Quinnipiac University. She's currently writing a book on school desegregation. She was in the 2001 seminar "Untold Stories" and the 2002 News Writing and Editing workshops.
    May 7, 2003:

    The Honorable Carol Beier has been appointed to the Kansas Court of Appeals. She graduated from one of Poynter's early graduate school management courses.

    Melissa Block is the new anchor for "All Things Considered" on National Public Radio. She came to Ethical Decision-Making in 1992.

    Paula Bock from The Seattle Times is the winner of the Ernie Pyle Award for Human Interest Writing. She has been Visiting Faculty at Poynter.

    Cesar Brioso, who attended the Leadership for New Leaders (October 2002) Seminar is USA Today's Baseball Editor.

    Wright Bryan joined Ball State University as Web News Editor for the Center for Media Design. Wright participated in the Tough Choices: Doing Ethics Seminar in 1999.

    Rebecca Catalano, a summer graduate of Poynter, won a 2002 National Award for Education Reporting. She placed second for features and her piece was entitled "Bobby's New Game." Rebecca works at the Mobile Register in Mobile, Ala.

    Bill Chronister is now the Night Business Editor at the St. Petersburg Times. He participated in the Writing & Editing Seminar in 2001.

    Eric Eyre won a 2002 National Award for Education Reporting. His series entitled "Closing Costs: The Long Haul and Broken Promises" won the first prize for a series award. Eric works at the Charleston Gazette in West Virginia and attended the 1999 Magazine Writing Seminar.
     
    Claude Jackson was accepted at the Pre Law School Institute in Albuquerque, N.M. This is an exclusive summer program for Native American students entering their first year of law school. Claude was a participant in the Newspaper Writing & Editing 2001 Seminar.

    David Molpus, an early participant in a Writing for Radio Seminar, has been re-assigned to NPR's Business Desk in Florida. He works mainly on the changing nature of the workplace.

    Eric Nazarenus was promoted to Assistant News Director at WGAL-TV in Lancaster, Penn. Eric attended the Leadership for New Leaders Seminar in October of 2002.

    Rolando Otero has accepted the job of Deputy Director for Photography at the Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel. He was a participant in the Photojournalism Ethics & Leadership 1998 Seminar.

    Laure Quinlivan, visiting faculty in the 2002 Power Reporting for Reporters and Photojournalists Seminar, won first prize for a 2002 National Award for Education Reporting. She works as an Investigative Reporter at WCPO-TV in Cincinnati, Ohio, and her story was entitled "Lawrenceburg Education Fund."

    Adrienne Wilson is now working at the State Capitol in Salem, Oregon reporting for a variety of the public radio stations in the Northwest. She attended the Reporting for Public Radio Seminar in 2002.


    May 2, 2003:
    Claudia Banks
    , a 2000 alumni of the writing, editing and design for assignment editors seminar, has been named the Chicago Tribune's Chicago Bureau Chief, Metro. Banks had been Associate Editor in Business, focusing on Small Business for the Tribune. The change took effect April 21. 

     
    April 7, 2003:
    Mark Ginther has become News Director at WHO-TV in Des Moines, Iowa, effective April 7. Prior to the move, he was Asst. News Director at KSTP/KSTC Television, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minn.

    February 24, 2003:
    Amy Morris, who attended Poynter's 2001 "Tough Choices: Doing Ethics" seminar, has taken a job as Executive Producer at WLS-TV in Chicago. She had been E.P. for KSTP-TV in Minneapolis. 
      
    February 13, 2003:
    New Seattle Times posts for Boardman, Banaszynski
    David Boardman becomes Managing Editor; Jacqui Banaszynski will become associate managing editor for special projects and staff development.

     
    February 12, 2003:
    Denis Finley is named Managing Editor of the Virginian-Pilot.
    Finley had been deputy managing editor for presentation of the Virginian-Pilot. The change takes effect March 3.

     
    January 6, 2003:
    Debra Adams Simmons is named Managing Editor of the Akron Beacon Journal.
    Adams Simmons had been deputy managing editor at the Virginian-Pilot. The change takes effect mid-February.



    AWARDS

    Jason Johnson
    writes that he's a demographics reporter with the San Francisco Chronicle. He won first place for environmental reporting for newspapers with over 150,000 circulation from the NABJ Salute to excellence Awards. His story covered the poor health conditions for minorities in the Bay area. Jason attended a past writing program.

    Our friend Carolyn Mungo from KHOU-TV in Houston won 2 more Emmy awards! One was for best writing and the other was for feature reporting. This was the Lone Star Emmy region. She's been to Poynter many times, including first as a 1996 Reporting on Race participant. We've invited her back as visiting faculty several times.

    John Blake and Bill Lobdell both won awards at the Religion Newswriters Association 2004 annual conference. Both were participants in the 2003 Reporting on Faith, Religion and Values November seminar. John works at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and Bill reports for the L.A. Times. Great job!

    Geo Beach has been named a finalist in the 2004 Golden Reel Awards for his NPR "All Things Considered" essay "A Numeric Grammar." He attended the '98 "Don Murray Colloquium II: Persuasive Writing Conference." Geo has also been appointed to the Board of Distinguished Judges & Advisors of the International Radio Awards at the New York Festivals.

    John Blake, Religion Reporter with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, has written his first book. It's entitled "Children of the Movement"and has just been released. The book is already posted on Amazon.com. John came to our "Reporting on Faith, Religion, and Values" 2003 seminar.

    Rogger Bustamante, newspaper designed of Al Día in Costa Rica, has won the Bronze medal at the Malofiej Awards in Spain. This award recognizes the world's best in infographic design. Rogger was a participant in the 2003 "Diseño, Tipografía y Color para Diarios en Español" seminar, led by Mario Garcia.

    Clyde Hughes and others at The Blade in Toledo, Ohio deserve kudos for the Pulitzer for Investigative Reporting. Clyde was in the 2000 "Reporting on Race Relations" seminar.

    Melissa McCoy, assistant managing editor, and others at the Los Angeles Times celebrated in April winning five Pulitzer Prizes. Melissa was in our 2003 "Ethics Fellows" class.

    Stephen Stock deserves a hand for his achievement in winning a 2004 George Foster Peabody award. Stephen is a 2004 "Ethics Fellow" and an Investigative Reporter at WESH-TV. He won for "Building Homes; Building Problems," which exposed shoddy new home construction that prompted a flurry of legistive actions.

    Alan Zagier, Senior Writer at the Naples Daily News, writes that his paper recently won the Scripps Howard Foundation's Edward Meeman Award for national Environmental Reporting for a 15-part series on the Gulf of Mexico's declining heath. It was entitled "Deep Trouble: The Gulf in Peril." Alan was one of the project's writers and helped line editor. Alan is a 2001 graduate of the "New Leaders in the Newsroom" as well as several other seminars.

    Big congrats to 2001 Poynter Ethics Fellow Jeff Seglin. His "The Right Thing" collection of business ethics columns (from his New York Times column) was just named one of the best business books of 2003 by Library Journal. Way to go, Jeff!

    Stuart Watson, Investigative Reporter at WCNC-TV in Charlotte, N.C., (Enterprise Broadcast Seminar) won the national Scripps Howard Award for his dental clinic investigation. Congratulations!

    Kelley Benham, Feature Writer at the St. Petersburg Times, and a product of Poynter's student journalism programs and Roy Peter Clark's tutelage, has won the Ernie Pyle award.

    Susan Ladd, features editor at the News & Record in Greensboro, N.C., won the Carl Bell Award for outstanding editing from the AP News Council for the second consecutive year. Susan attended the Writing, Editing, and Design for Assigning Editors seminar in 2000.

    David Waters won a Wilbur Award for The Commercial Appeal in Memphis, Tenn., in the category of best newspaper column. His winning entry was entitled "Faith Matters." David taught as visiting faculty in Reporting on Faith, Religion & Values Seminar, November of 2003.

    Poynter friend and visiting faculty member, Carolyn Mungo, won two Emmys!

    Tom De Walt won an award from the California Newspaper Publishers Association (CNPA). Second place 2002. The category was Information Graphics/Illustration. It's no coincidence that this was the first major info-graphic he pitched, wrote, and designed after attending the "Information Graphics" Seminar in 2002.

    Poynter alumni Mike Jenner, executive editor of The Bakersfield Californian (former visiting faculty) and Bob Christie, Californian city editor, (Jan. 2003 Leadership for Mid-Level Editors), received the 2003 Bill Farr Award from the California First Amendment Coalition (CFAC) and the California Society of Newspaper Editors. The Farr Award goes annually to an institution or individual who has performed exemplary work in the open government or press freedom arena and is named for Farr, a journalist who went to jail rather than reveal a source.

    CFAC General Counsel Terry Francke noted that Jenner and Christie and their newspaper have been tireless champions of open government in Kern County, pushing reporters routinely to use open government laws when necessary to pry open meetings or records; sponsoring open government training for their community; and at one point suffering a union-organized subscription boycott when they persisted in demanding payroll information for public employees.

    Todd Frankel won a 2002 SPJ Sigma Chi Delta award in feature writing for "Day Zero" at The Herald in Everett, Wash. He attended Poynter as a summer newswriting fellow. He is now a reporter with The St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

    In January, Susan Ladd won the Carl K. Bell Award for editing from the N.C. Associated Press for editing and coaching on "Thrown Away," the story of a local drug addict and prostitute who was murdered and thrown in a dumpster. The same story won the Thomas Wolfe Award for staff writer Nancy McLaughlin. Ladd is Enterprise Editor at the News & Record of Greensboro, and attended the "Writing, Editing and Design for Assigning Editors" seminar at Poynter in May 2000.  

    Posted by La'Shawn Ware 10:11 AM
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    Jul. 19, 2007

    Location

    No media institution stands alone. The Poynter Institute lives in a community with some pretty fine neighbors. St. Petersburg, Fla., boasts a thriving arts community, with a number of museums and art galleries. Blocks away in downtown St. Pete, you can catch a baseball game, watch a movie, go shopping, or take a stroll in any of a number of parks. Right across the street is Tampa Bay and the University of South Florida, and the beach is only a short drive away.

    · All Childrens Hospital
    · Bayfront Medical Center
    · Baywalk
    Our neighborhood
    Gratzzi's Ristorante
    Gratzzi at Baywalk
    Our neighborhood
    City of St. Petersburg
    The Coliseum
    · Salvador Dali Museum
    Our neighborhood
    Salvador Dali Museum
    Salvador Dali
    · Florida Holocaust Museum
    Our neighborhood
    Florida Holocaust Museum
    Florida Holocaust Museum
    · Florida International Museum-A Smithsonian Affiliate

     
    · The Pier
    Our neighborhood
    City of St. Petersburg
    The Pier
    · Progress Energy Park — Home of Al Lang Field
     


    · St. Petersburg Times
    · St. Petersburg Times Arena at the Bayfront Center
    · Tropicana Field-Home of the Tampa Bay Devil Rays