Tuskegee's Student Editor Speaks Out
By J.J. McCorvey
Black College Wire
A college newspaper should convey the truth and should be
a catalyst for change. Students should be able to view the
newspaper as their collective voice issued regularly,
without hindrance and free from outside influence. Sadly, at
Tuskegee University, this is not the case.
 |
| J.J. McCorvey |
For nearly two years, I have experienced unbelievable
frustration as the managing editor of the Campus Digest, and
this frustration is shared with the editor-in-chief, the
staff, and those of the student body who are disappointed
each month when their school newspaper is absent from the
stands.
The general reason for most of the problems that plague
the Digest is that Tuskegee, one of the most prestigious
historically Black institutions of higher learning, does not
have a communications or journalism program. In fact, there
is not even one journalism course. But this does not mean
that our school newspaper cannot and should not be nurtured
into something great. There are dedicated students on the
staff who firmly believe this; however, it seems as though
the Tuskegee University administration does not.
Two computers sit in our office -- one that has basic
word processing and Internet available, and one that barely
starts up. Neither is capable of any page design for our
newspaper. Our four graphic designers share one laptop from
the administration's Office of Marketing and Communications.
This gets tedious, of course, as I have, on many occasions,
driven on and off campus transporting this one laptop to
different designers.
When the staff was notified that we would finally be
receiving a new computer, we were all elated, and looked
forward to a drastic improvement in the design process.
Imagine my disappointment as I opened the box to find only a
CPU -- a computer with no monitor. That was in November. The
CPU still sits without a monitor to this day. It doesn't
work with our old, outdated monitors.
Most of the time, however, equipment dilemmas seem to be
the very least of our concerns. The absence of a
communications or journalism program means the Campus Digest
is supervised and funded directly under the school's
administration. Even our adviser is an administrator within
the Office of Marketing and Communications.
Though I consider our adviser a dear friend for whom I
have the utmost respect, I cannot deny the obvious conflict
of interest that occurs between his duties as an
administrator of Tuskegee University and adviser to the
Campus Digest. Through this administrative link, the
university president, Dr. Benjamin F. Payton, holds a quiet
power over our newspaper that has stifled its creativity and
content for far too long.
There are several incidents that would demonstrate this,
but one in particular stands out. On March 15, 2007,
students and faculty were notified that the National
Architectural Accrediting Board elected not to extend the
accreditation of the Tuskegee University Architecture
Program. This was, of course, a very controversial issue on
campus. I felt that students needed to know the truth about
what happened, so I decided to write an article to present
both sides -- that of the president and that of the
architecture students. I interviewed the president as well
as the students affected by the accreditation loss. After
working on this article for several days, I finally
submitted it to our adviser for our May 2007 issue.
To my dismay, I learned that President Payton was somehow
able edit my article, himself, extracting not only quotes he
had given me, but also quotes of other students and sections
of my own writing. These edits had already taken days away
from the issue's publication process, and I had no choice
but to concede to the edits or not have the article appear
at all. Even after the editing occurred, the May 2007 issue
of the Campus Digest -- including my article -- was never
published.
The apparent injustice here is that once a newspaper,
especially a college newspaper, loses its truth -- its duty
-- it becomes no more than a marketing tool. When a
photographer is reprimanded for an honest picture of one of
the school's dilapidated buildings; or a reporter is told
that an article might "incite protest"; or the editors are
told which stories should be on the front page of the
newspaper, there is a problem. Quite often we work under the
pervasive sense of always wanting to "pretty things up" for
the public eye. This is not truth. This is not journalism.
This is not the voice of a student newspaper.
This article is simply a discussion we had hoped to have
with our president. The editor-in-chief and I want so badly
to voice these concerns and improve the condition of our
paper, but our attempts to meet with the president have
proved fruitless. We even had a meeting scheduled, for which
we carefully prepared, but it was cancelled. The
editor-in-chief has been to his office at least three times
since then to reschedule, but his secretary has consistently
informed us that his schedule is full. It is difficult for
two graduating editors, who are involved in academic and
extracurricular activities, to persist in the face of
repeated rejection.
Who knows what myriad problems within the Campus Digest
could be solved through one meeting, or, say, several
meetings, with our president? The frequency of our
newspaper, for example, could be improved if we could
publish it online. The staff was told we would have to go
through the president to achieve this, and he refuses to
meet with us.
The intent of this exposition is not at all to demean my
school or administration in any way, but rather to stir the
powers-that-be to take action and discard the current
approach to our newspaper. I am proud to be a graduating
senior at Tuskegee University, but we must build the
school's newspaper to be as prominent and prestigious as the
university's name.
Maybe improvement of the Campus Digest will increase
student involvement and interest in it, and possibly ignite
a spark toward the formation of a journalism or
communications program. But, in reality, that will never
happen with without at least a meeting. I owe that legacy to
the underclassmen rising to leadership after me. They
deserve that much.
Articles in the "Voices" section
represent the opinions of the individual writers and do not
necessarily reflect the views of Black College Wire.
J.J. McCorvey is a student at Tuskegee University and
managing editor of the Campus Digest, Tuskegee's student
newspaper.
|