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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The journalism
department in the College of Communication and Information Sciences
at The University of Alabama is continuing to develop new journalism
outreach programs, according to Dr. Ed Mullins, professor and department
chair.
This fall began the second year for www.DatelinePickens.com,
a site devoted to community news and information in Pickens County,
just west of Tuscaloosa. John Latta, a part-time instructor and
executive editor of Trucker’s News, a Randall Publishing
Co. magazine in Tuscaloosa, is the editor. The site was founded
and advised by the late Dr. Bailey Thomson, UA journalism professor
who died on Nov. 26.
“We are committed to keeping the Black Belt project going,”
Mullins said. “It is but one of many begun in the department
by Dr. Thomson, but it was one that he believed in strongly because
it is in keeping with so many of our objectives in teaching, research
and outreach.”
Student writers update the site each week with in-depth stories
about the county’s economy, health, culture, civic affairs
and recreation. Their contributions have made Pickens, formerly
underserved by the state’s news media, a rich source for readers
all over the world.
This experience has deepened the journalism department’s
commitment to community journalism and what Thomson called “service
journalism.” Rural counties need more information about key
subjects such as health care, emergency response, job creation and
environmental hazards. Thomson believed that UA students, as part
of the department’s emphasis on community journalism, should
get first-hand experience in covering these subjects.
A second site will be launched in January, again with Latta serving
as editor. The new Web site will serve a county in the Black Belt,
soon to be announced.
Graduate students in advanced reporting classes will provide the
staff writers. Student free-lancers also will be necessary, as they
are with Dateline Pickens.
Funding for this project is part of UA’s economic development
efforts in rural Alabama. The department also has received grants
from the New York Times Company Foundation for Black Belt outreach
projects, including ongoing reporting for Dateline Alabama, the
award-winning news Web site of C&IS.
Another project of the department, funded by a grant from the
Alabama Press Association Journalism Foundation, sends students
briefly to small newspapers to work and learn about life on small
newspapers. More than two dozen Alabama papers have been hosts for
these brief visits.
The College of Communication
& Information Sciences is among the largest and most prestigious
communication colleges in the nation. C&IS has graduated more
than 12,000 students and consistently is ranked among the top 10
in number of doctoral degrees awarded and in many of its research
programs. C&IS graduates have won four of the six Pulitzer Prizes
awarded to University of Alabama alumni, and the forensics and debate
squad, housed within the College, has garnered 14 national championships.
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