Media
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USA Today Joins Starbucks in ‘Race Together’ Project
Newspaper Joins Coffee Shops in “Race Together” Project “In this country, the only thing more mockable than a white liberal trying to do the right thing when it comes to race is when a corporation, burdened by alternating priorities of profit and conscience, tries to get a piece of the righteous action,” Tony Norman wrote…
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Let’s Pay Homage to the Education Law Designed to Help Students From Low-Income Families
Voting Rights Act Isn’t Only Great Society Law in Peril Along with the 50th anniversary of the Selma-to-Montgomery March and the Voting Rights Act, this year marks another milestone: 1965 saw passage of the education law designed to help disadvantaged and special-needs children, particularly those of color. The law is up for renewal this year,…
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President Obama and Chicago Columnist Clarence Page Trade Jokes and Memories at Washington Dinner
Barons of D.C. Journalism Take Steps Toward Diversity The Gridiron Club, celebrating its 130th anniversary dinner Saturday night, is evolving. This year’s gathering of Washington journalists and the people they cover took place with an African American president of the club and a black president of the United States, both on the dais. A veil…
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Ebony Delays Issue in Advertising Rate Dispute
Company Maintains Advertisers Shortchange Black Media The March issue of Ebony magazine was never published because the parent Johnson Publishing Co. was in a dispute with advertisers over rates, CEO Desireé Rogers told Journal-isms on Friday. The dispute has been settled to Johnson’s satisfaction, and a combined March-April issue is planned, Rogers said by telephone.…
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Professor Encourages His Inmate Students to Write Their Own Obits Based on the Life They Plan to Lead
Some Say Assignment Demonstrates Power of Journalism “In the wrong writer’s hands, an obituary can be a dull collection of biographical facts, the type of article that journalism professor William Drummond calls the ‘lowest common denominator’ of newspaper writing,” Chris Megerian wrote last week in the Los Angeles Times, in a piece accompanied by a…
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Black Journalists Back From ‘Africa’s Last Colony’ Tell Overlooked Story
Long-Overlooked Story Told of Continent’s “Palestine” A year ago, the Moroccan government paid expenses for representatives of the U.S. black press to visit their country. Morocco controls what is called “Africa’s last colony,” but that was hardly mentioned. That “last colony” — Western Sahara — is a place that few Americans are familiar with. It…
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Children of Color Likely to Be Majority of Kids in US by 2020
“Around the time the 2020 Census is conducted, more than half of the nation’s children are expected to be part of a minority race or ethnic group,” the U.S. Census Bureau reported on Tuesday. “This proportion is expected to continue to grow so that by 2060, just 36 percent of all children (people under age…
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Supreme Court Ruling Supports Whistleblowers and the News Groups That Report Their Stories
Media, Whistleblowers Both Win in Supreme Court Ruling “Were media lawyers asleep at the wheel when a major whistleblower case came through the Supreme Court this term?” Kimberly Chow wrote Monday for the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. “While all eyes were turned on Jim Risen and efforts to revise Justice Department policies on when it subpoenas…
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FCC’s Open-Internet Vote Receives Mixed Reviews
Hispanic Journalists Rejoice; Rainbow PUSH Not So Much “In approving strong net neutrality regulations, the Federal Communications Commission fulfilled a decade long desire by public interest advocates, technology firms and Democrats to tighten government oversight of the Internet to prevent abuses by broadband service providers,” Jim Puzzanghera reported Friday for the Los Angeles Times. “But…