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KHQ-TV:
LIVE AT UM
Reporter and photographer spend five days
teaching and working with journalism students
Following
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon, most TV stations cut local news to allow more coverage
of national events.
KHQ-TV, of
Spokane, Washington, was no exception.
KHQ anchor
and reporter Dana Haynes, as well as the station's chief photographer
Jeff Hite, had only a one-hour time slot to report the tragedys
effects on their community.
Both Haynes
and Hite taught Sept. 27-Oct. 1 at The University of Montana School
of Journalism as part of Broadcasters-in-Residence, a program
administered by the Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass
Communication. The program, which is funded with an $11,000 grant
from the Knight Foundation, will bring six more KHQ-TV employees
to the university this year to work with broadcast journalism
students.
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Photos
by J-students, alumni
to decorate
Alumni Association calendar
This spring thousands of people from across the nation will
tack a photo taken by University of Montana student Oona
Palmer to their walls for 30 days.
Palmers photograph, which includes a couple standing
near the Clark Fork River at sunset, is featured as June
in the UM Alumni Associations 2002
School of Journalism calendar. The publication includes
12 photographs taken by journalism students and alumni.
It will be distributed to the Alumni
Associations
dues paying members, which number more than 7,000.
Im excited to be a part of the calendar,
Palmer said. Its a great opportunity for students
to showcase their work, and it reaches a pretty large audience.
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Dennis
McAuliffe named secretary of Native American Journalists Association
Ray
Fenton: Studied and taught, journalism, PR in the 1940s
High
School press reports to second Grizzly J-Camp
Full stories
Archives
October 2000
November 2000, December
2000, February 2001,
March 2001, April
2001,
May-Summer
2001
Issues
before 10/2000
Editor: Michael
Downs, visiting assistant professor
Reporter: Katherine Sather
Parents
of alumnus
create fellowship
in his memory
Anthony Pollner
died last May in a motorcycle accident in England. After his death,
his parents wanted to find a way to honor their sons memory.
They turned to the University of Montana and with the staff of
the School of Journalism created the T. Anthony Pollner Fellowship.
The
fellowship will bring an accomplished reporter to the University
of Montana journalism school each year to work with its students
with a special focus on the staff of the Kaimin. A committee is
in the process of selecting the first Pollner fellow to work at
UM this spring. Future Pollner guests will teach each fall semester.
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story
Student
documentary
"Anaconda: The Legacy"
wins national SPJ award;
Graduating senior wins
for Kaimin sports story
A documentary produced by University of Montana radio-television
students has received the National Mark of Excellence award from
the Society for Professional Journalists. Ryan Divish, a May 2001
graduate and former Kaimin sports editor, also won a Mark of Excellence
award for his article, "Reluctant Hero."
The award went to "Anaconda: The Legacy," which examines
the history and aftereffects of mining in a western Montana community.
The documentary was produced by UM's Student Documentary Unit
during the spring 2000 semester, and it aired on Montana PBS.
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