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TUSCALOOSA - Tom Bennett, Atlanta Journal-Constitution editor and
a national freedom of information leader, will give a lecture at
The University of Alabama on Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2003 in Room 180
(Knox Hagood Room) of Reese Phifer Hall. The event is free and open
to the public.
His lecture is titled “Opening the Thicket,” and it
will discuss a plan to conduct a public records access survey of
Alabama’s 67 counties in 2003. College students, journalists
and others from throughout the state will participate in the survey.
Following Bennett’s lecture, there will be a panel presentation
and discussion of Freedom Of Information issues. Bennett, representatives
of local and student media, local government and University faculty
will serve on the panel.
“Tom Bennett will share information that is the government
reporter’s best friend,” said Dr. Ed Mullins, chair
of the journalism department and former AJC editorial staff member.
“He knows more about the traditions and laws of openness than
any journalist I know. Any citizen, student or professional journalist
who has ever been denied access or who wants to learn more about
how to gain access to public meetings or documents will not want
to miss this meeting.”
Bennett is a 1965 graduate of Florida State University. He has
been with the AJC for almost 20 years, working as a writer and editor
in sports and news and in administration. He is a vocal advocate
of open meetings and records and founded the Georgia First Amendment
Foundation. He served as host of the National Freedom of Information
Coalition’s Atlanta meeting in 1999. Bennett has served as
SPJ sunshine chair in Georgia since 1994.
Bennett is serving as an unpaid consultant for Alabama’s
audit, a project of the Alabama Associated Press Managing Editors
Association and ALACOG, the state’s FOI organization housed
in the journalism department (www.alacog.org) . Gregory Enns, managing
editor of the Tuscaloosa News, is chair of the survey.
Bennett is the author of several books, including “Atlanta’s
Half-Century: Through the Eyes of Furman Bisher and Celestine Sibley;”
“The Pro Style: A Guide to Understanding the NFL;” “The
NFL’s Official Encyclopedic History of Professional Football;”
and “NFL Playbook.”
Bennett is the Elmo Ellis Professional in Residence for the journalism
department in the College of Communication and Information Sciences,
and earlier in the day he will meet with the student chapter of
the Society of Professional Journalists and student publication
staffs.
Elmo Ellis Scholars are funded by an endowment contributed by Elmo
Ellis of Atlanta. He was the only UA student to serve as chief editor
for the three major campus publications -- the Crimson White, the
Corolla and the Rammer-Jammer. Today Ellis is an author, vice president
emeritus of Cox Communications and an active columnist. He is a
member of the C&IS Hall of Fame, a National Alumnus of the Year,
and recipient of the Hugo Black Award, the University’s highest
honor.
The College of Communication
& Information Sciences is among the largest and most prestigious
communication colleges in the nation. Graduating more than 12,000
students, C&IS is consistently 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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