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Black Collegian News & Views
More HBCU Newspapers Increase Frequency
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James Miccolo Johnson/NABJ
Ruth Tisdale, who led the Hilltop at Howard University as it
went to daily publication, was presented the Student Journalist
of the Year award by Mashaun D. Simon at the National
Association of Black Journalists convention in August. |
By Darren Sands
Black College Wire
The Student
Voice at Albany State University -– previously published every two
weeks -- began circulating every week this semester. Tennessee State
University's the
Meter is producing a Thursday online edition. Florida A&M
University's the
Famuan and
the News Argus
of Winston-Salem State University also plan to increase their
publication frequency.
For these papers at historically black colleges and universities, the
benefits of increased publication, in print and online, are clear.
In most cases, it means more advertising revenue and increased
relevancy on campus. Putting out a higher volume of stories makes the
student journalists more attractive candidates for summer internships at
daily newspapers.
A
study of college students released over the summer by College
Publisher, a company that helps campus papers publish online, said,
"Student newspapers are recognized as the most influential and widely
read media channel on campus, and more than 500 student newspapers are
currently publishing online editions."
It added, "For the second straight year, an overwhelming number of
respondents believe that their newspaper's online edition is an
important part of their newsroom's ability to reach its readers."
Ashley Hindsman, editor-in-chief of the Student Voice, said of her
paper's increased publication: "This will put us in the ranking with a
lot of other school papers. I know we are ready and our staff is
growing."
Tennessee State's the Meter began producing a print edition on
Mondays and a Thursday online edition. It is publishing twice a week for
the first time in its history. Its Web site -- judged best online
newspaper at the
2006 HBCU National Newspaper Conference and Job Fair in February --
boasts an easy-to-navigate design, multimedia presentations and PDF
files of its news pages. Top editor Eddie Cole Jr. cites NYTimes.com and
USAToday.com as examples of excellence in online journalism.
"In order to be the best you have to imitate the best. For us to just
sit here and to just throw" news stories "on the Web site, that's
defeating the purpose," he said.
The
Hilltop of Howard University -– a pacesetter among newspapers at
HBCUs -- saw a smooth leadership transition from Ruth Tisdale, outgoing
editor and Student Journalist of the Year of the National Association of
Black Journalists, to Howard senior Ayesha Rascoe. Under Tisdale's
guidance, the paper became the only daily at an HBCU.
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Photo credit: Mike McCray/A&T Register
Legendary journalist Chuck Stone, left, was one of those who
inspired Eddie R. Cole Jr., editor of the Meter at Tennessee
State University, at the HBCU National Newspaper Conference and
Job Fair in February. |
Rascoe said part of her legacy will be to ensure that the Hilltop
remains a daily.
"I think that with any newspaper that you have to grow and get
better, you don't want to stay stagnant and stay in one place. We've
worked to improve the editing, reporting, writing, the photos; it's like
an assembly line. Just making sure that each part runs smoothly, and
making sure stories get in on time, and that we get it to the printer on
time."
Rascoe said that she hopes her legacy will be that she and her staff
"put out the best paper that we possibly could.
"Then I just want to make sure that it remains daily. I want us to
lay a foundation that says that we are a daily, and that we're going to
stay a daily."
Sidney Wright IV, editor of the Famuan, announced plans to include
news updates and national and international news around the clock on
thefamuanonline.com.
"We chose to include the 24-hour news section because we felt that as
a newspaper we had the responsibility to keep our readers informed 24
hours a day," Wright said in an interview.
The changes in format have come at a pivotal time for the Famuan. The
paper received both acclaim and criticism from members of the student
body for closely following two controversies on campus, one involving
Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity and the other, the "Marching 100" marching
band.
The Famuan reported that the band stole items from a Detroit hotel
during a road trip to play Delaware State University on Sept. 2. Then on
Sept. 11, the paper reported that dozens of band members were
academically ineligible. It also aggressively reported hazing charges
against five members of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity. The trial was to
begin Sept. 25, and Wright said the paper would continue to pursue that
story.
Although several papers have increased their publication frequency,
the online editions of others have yet to be published or even updated
this semester.
They include the Lincoln (Mo.) Clarion, the Dillard Courtbouillon,
Central State's the Gold Torch, the News Argus of Winston-Salem State,
Clark Atlanta's the Panther and the Hampton Script.
The Script Web site still has its provocative story about health-code
violations, from April 2004, as its centerpiece. In the story, the
Script revealed that the school had 261 health-code violations in its
cafeteria since 2001. When the Script refused to run a letter of
response by Acting President JoAnn Haysbert on the front page,
administrators responded by confiscating thousands of copies of the
newspaper.
Marvin Anderson, editor of the Script, said that while the paper
plans to begin publishing weekly, in order to get the online edition up
and running, "there are still some things we have to go through.
"After Howard went daily, that was really a wake-up call that we
really need to push harder. I know that we can do that, and we can do it
better. We have the resources because there are so many talented people
on this campus," he said.
Anderson said the Script had a Webmaster and was working to get an
online edition up and running. "I would love to see something online
before the end of the semester. I seriously just don't know," he said.
Brian Blount, head of the Mass Communications department at
Winston-Salem State, said he would facilitate an increase in the
publication frequency of the News Argus from once a month to every two
weeks. The department is seeking accreditation from the Accrediting
Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. Increasing
the publication frequency, he said, is a key part of the process.
The accrediting council "wanted to make certain that the students are
gaining valuable experience meeting deadline and being able to write
stories and publish them in a timely manner," Blount said.
Expecting things to be in order for the council's visiting team in
the fall of 2007, Blount said the effort to get accreditation requires
that students engage in and become familiar with the latest multimedia
technology driving the evolution of online journalism.
"Overall, everyone is pretty excited and students have been pretty
accommodating to make sure these things happen," he said.
Last February's HBCU Newspaper Conference at North Carolina A&T in
Greensboro revealed a number of commonalities among the publications.
Staffers
spoke of struggling to produce quality journalism while saddled with
staffers who were not as dedicated as they were, and of a lack of both
finances and administrative support concerning press freedoms.
Cole said that while he already planned to increase publication of
the Meter, the conference reinforced his plans and gave him the
opportunity to consult with a number of experts. "It came down to us
wanting to improve service to our community." Cole said.
Darren Sands is a student at Emerson College in
Boston and student representative for Region I of the National
Association of Black Journalists.
Posted Sept. 25, 2006 |