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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Dateline Alabama, the news Web site of The College
of Communication and Information Sciences at The University of Alabama, has
launched a new Web site in partnership with The Tuscaloosa News.
The partnership was formed to give the site, www.datelinealabama.com,
operated by the UA journalism department, access to The Tuscaloosa News’ Web
management system and to provide a more dynamic interface while expanding opportunities
for UA students to explore online journalism. In exchange for being the service provider
for Dateline, The News will have access to the site’s production for the first
24-hours after posting. After that, the content may be used by anyone as a free community
news service.
In September, Dateline Alabama was named by the Society of Professional Journalists
as the No. 1 independent college Web site in the nation.
“The new site combines features, in-depth reporting and commentary with the
latest in Web interactivity and multimedia technology,” said Dr. Ed Mullins,
professor of journalism and Dateline Alabama adviser. “Our goal is nothing less
than taking a new medium to new levels of journalistic excellence, community service
and audience involvement.”
He said the partnership presents the opportunity for faculty and students to explore
media convergence, community journalism and the business of news in partnership with
a commercial news operation.
“We are grateful to Tim Thompson, publisher of The Tuscaloosa News, and Dwayne
Fartherree, online editor of The News, for making this venture possible,” Mullins
said. “We also thank John Taylor, a former Dateline editor now in business for
himself, for his fine support over the past two years.”
Faculty, staff and graduate assistants in the journalism department oversee Dateline
Alabama. Content comes from student volunteers, students enrolled in communication
and other courses and from submissions by faculty, alumni and citizens.
Dateline Alabama won the 2003 Society of Professional Journalists National Mark
of Excellence award for best all-around independent online student publication and
best online opinion/commentary. The Web site and its outreach counterpart, Dateline
Pickens, also finished in the top three for depth reporting and feature reporting.
In 2002, Dateline Alabama captured SPJ’s Mark of Excellence first place online
award for spot news reporting. It has garnered more than 30 regional SPJ Mark of Excellence
awards since its inception in February 2000.
Plans to convert and redesign Dateline Alabama into a weekly news and feature online
magazine began this past summer. Dateline leaders will involve more students from
more disciplines within the University, said Patrick Beeson, Dateline Alabama editor.
A new course, “New Media Workshop,” will begin in spring 2005, in which
the main editors and section leaders will be enrolled for credit. A new “convergence” lab
will allow students from all communication disciplines to work together.
Beeson, a second year graduate student from Bristol, Tenn., said, “The new
Dateline Alabama is aimed at serving the campus with thoughtful, insightful, critical,
edgy, artistic and analytical content but content that is infused with humor and fun
as college life is, or most certainly ought to be.”
Major Highfield, a UA 2003 journalism graduate from Centre and a former Dateline
Alabama editor, will be the Web producer for the site. He is responsible for working
out the details of the delivery system shared with The Tuscaloosa News. “Fall
semester will be mostly getting things set up, recruiting a staff, learning some new
techniques for new media, but we will also produce some worthwhile news and feature
packages while learning our new roles,” Highfield said. “By spring we
fully expect to be in contention for best Web site again.”
Mullins said the partnership with The Tuscaloosa News will give Dateline Alabama
access to the latest in Web production technology without incurring the high costs
associated with the technology. “There were many things we could never afford
to do without The News as partner, for example, instant access to photo galleries,
streaming video and audio, forums and polls, an advertising maintenance system, and
a way to measure our audience, its characteristics as well as its size, all of which
will benefit our students and the future of the journalism field,” he said.
Students interested in writing, photography, editing, design, graphics, advertising
sales and technical aspects of Web production should contact Beeson or Highfield.
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