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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- The University of Alabama will host the Alabama
Scholastic Press Association (ASPA), annual state convention
on Feb. 27-28.
The convention welcomes high-school journalism students and teachers
from across the state to attend sessions devoted to newspapers,
yearbooks, literary magazines, broadcasts, photography and desktop
publishing.
The Alabama high-school journalist, adviser and administrator
of the year will be announced, as well as the results of ASPA’s
winter competitions. The recipient of the $2,500 J.B. Stevenson
Scholarship, made by the Alabama Press Association will also be
announced.
A number of journalists, journalism educators and media professionals
are scheduled to speak and lead informative workshops at the ASPA
Convention. These professionals include:
- Joseph Bryant, former editor of The Crimson
White (the UA student newspaper), is a reporter for The Birmingham
News.
- Butler Cain is news
director of Alabama Public Radio.
- Ashley Clayton is
editor in chief of the Corolla, the UA yearbook.
- Thorun Crawford has
been in the yearbook business for over 13 years as an adviser
and then as a Walsworth sales representative. Her customers have
won many ASPA and CSPA awards, including gold medals.
- Bryan Crowson is
a copy desk chief at The Birmingham News. He has 19 years of newspaper
experience, including a decade as a reporter and nine years on
the copy desk.
- Lauren Davidson is
a managing editor of The Crimson White and president of the UA
chapter of the Society for News Design.
- Pam Doyle is an associate
professor of telecommunications and film at UA, where she specializes
in teaching broadcast news.
- Andy Duncan is a
former high-school yearbook editor, is director of the Alabama
Scholastic Press Association and assistant director of student
media at UA. His fiction collection “Beluthahatchie and
Other Stories” won a World Fantasy Award.
- Ben George is sports
director at WVUA (90.7 FM), the UA student radio station.
- Lemanski Hall is
a former offensive linebacker with the Houston and Tennessee Oilers,
Chicago Bears, Dallas Cowboys and Minnesota Vikings.
- Roy Hoffman is a
staff writer for the Mobile Register and a faculty member in the
M.F.A. creative-writing program at Spalding University in Lexington,
Ky., teaching fiction and creative nonfiction. His books include
a non-fiction collection, “Back Home: Journeys Through Mobile,”
and two novels, “Almost Family” and “Chicken
Dreaming Corn.” His byline has appeared in Esquire, The
New York Times Book Review, The Oxford American, Southern Living
and The Washington Post. A photo of Roy sitting on a dock in Mobile
Bay is in the coffee-table book “Shalom, Y’all: Images
of Jewish Life in the American South.”
- John Huddleston is
weekend sports anchor and sports reporter for WVUA-TV (Channel
7) in Tuscaloosa. He is producer of Tider Insider TV, a weekly
look into Crimson Tide athletics and recruiting. He formerly worked
at College Sports Southeast in Birmingham.
- Regan Huff developed
the Newsroom Studio at Birmingham’s McWane Center and is
co-author of “Journalism: A Survival Guide.”
- David Knight is a
public information officer for the Lancaster, S.C., schools. He
has advised two award-winning newspapers, a literary magazine
and a broadcast journalism program. His personal honors include
a Pioneer Award from the National Scholastic Press Association
and a $12,000 Education’s Unsung Hero Award sponsored by
the financial services company ING. One of the most sought-after
workshop leaders in scholastic journalism, he has a funny, high
energy style like no other.
- Hank Lazer is a poet,
a performance artist and assistant vice president for undergraduate
programs at UA.
- Sheri Monfee represents
Herff Jones yearbooks. A graphic artist, she has worked in publishing
for more than 20 years, at a daily newspaper and a commercial
printer as well as the Herff Jones plant in Montgomery.
- Michael Palmer is
a staff photographer at The Tuscaloosa News. His photo of a distraught
neighbor, Mike Harris, carrying an injured child, 6-year-old Whitney
Crowder from tornado wreckage in December 2000 was reported nationwide.
“Instead of just walking up with a camera to my face,”
Palmer said, “I approached them as a human being first.”
- Tiffany Schwarz is
assistant managing editor and special editions editor at The Crimson
White. She is president of the UA chapter of the Society of Professional
Journalists.
- Terry Siggers is
a production and technology manager of the Office of Student Media
at UA.
- Thomas Spencer is
a state higher education reporter at The Birmingham News. He formerly
wrote for The Anniston Star and The Birmingham Weekly.
- Bruce Watterson,
vice president of public relations at Shorter College in Rome,
Ga., is contests and judging coordinator for both secondary and
collegiate divisions of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association.
A frequent workshop leader, Watterson holds the JEA Medal of Merit,
the CSPA Gold Key and the NSPA Pioneer Award. He recently put
the 2004 CSPA Crown winners on CD.
- Bonita Weaver is
editor of the Marr’s Field Journal, UA’s undergraduate
literary magazine, and senior editor of the New College Review.
She is senior English major.
The per-person registration fee is $40 for ASPA member publications
and $50 for non-member publications and includes a bowling party
Friday night and a continental breakfast Saturday. Registration
for this convention begins at 9 a.m. Friday, Feb. 27, in the Ferguson
Theater.
For more information contact the ASPA office at 205/348-9298,
or Andy Duncan at aduncan@sa.ua.edu.
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