Richardson, Jonesborough publisher, now heads TPA
Transcription
Richardson, Jonesborough publisher, now heads TPA
The Tennessee Press 12 Haven “If in other lands the press and books and literature of all kinds are censored, we must redouble our ef- C M Y K forts here to keep them free. If in other lands the eternal truths of the past are threatened by intolerance, we must provide a safe place for their perpetuation.” Franklin D. Roosevelt 32nd U.S. president, 1938 JULY 2013 TPA to judge SCPA advertising; want to help? Tennessee Press Association (TPA) members will judge the South Carolina Press Association’s (SCPA) Advertising Contest on Friday, July 12, at the TPA offices in Knoxville. The judging will take place from 9:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. SCPA came to TPA Executive Director Greg Sherrill with the request for assistance on June 19, and eight TPA members responded with offers to help. If you would like to participate, contact Robyn Gentile, member services manager, at (865) 584-5761 x105 or rgentile@tnpress.com. TPAers are in the process now of judging the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association Better Newspaper Contest. That is being done online and is to be completed no later than July 12. GOAL: $1,000,000 $900K $800K $700K BELIEVERS Contributors to the TPAF ‘I Believe’ campaign thus far: • Hollow & Hollow LLC • Cannon Courier, Woodbury • Jim Charlet, in memory of Martha C. Charlet • Chattanooga Times Free Press • Nathan Crawford, In Memory of James Walter Crawford Sr. and C.T. (Charlie) Crawford Jr. • Crossville Chronicle, In Memory of Perry Sherrer • Gannett Foundation The Jackson Sun The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville The Tennessean, Nashville • Joe Hurd, The Courier, Savannah • Jones Media, In Memory of Edith O’Keefe Susong and Quincy Marshall O’Keefe The Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater The Daily Post Athenian, Athens The Daily Times, Maryville The Greeneville Sun The Herald-News, Dayton The Newport Plain Talk News-Herald, Lenoir City The Rogersville Review • Kennedy Newspapers, Columbia • Lakeway Publishers, Morristown Citizen Tribune, Morristown The Elk Valley Times, Fayetteville Grundy County Herald, Tracy City The Herald-Chronicle, Winchester Manchester Times The Moore County News, Lynchburg The Tullahoma News • The Milan Mirror-Exchange • News Sentinel, Knoxville • The Paris Post-Intelligencer, In Memory of W. Bryant Williams • Republic Newspapers The Courier News, Clinton • Richard Rowlett, Rowlett Advertising Service, Goodlettsville • Union City Daily Messenger • Bill and Anne Williams, Paris, in honor of Michael Williams’ presidency of TPA $600K $500K $400K $302,600 5-13 $300K $200K $100K No. 1 JULY 2013 Vol. 77 Richardson, Jonesborough publisher, now heads TPA Lynn J. Richardson, publisher of the Herald & Tribune, Jonesborough, is the new president of the Tennessee Press Association (TPA). TPA is a trade association composed of 26 daily newspapers and 95 non-daily newspapers. Richardson, the fourth woman to lead TPA, succeeds Michael B. Williams, publisher of The Paris PostIntelligencer. Other officers elected at TPA’s Business Session during the 144th anniversary Summer Convention June 13-15 in Memphis were Jason P. Taylor, president of the Chattanooga Times Free Press, vice president for daily newspapers; Joel Washburn, managing editor of The McKenzie Banner, vice president for non-daily newspapers; and John Finney, vice president of the Buffalo River Review, Linden, treasurer. Directors elected for two-year terms are Keith Wilson, publisher of the Kingsport Times-News, District 1; Chris Vass, metro editor of the Chattanooga Times Free Press, District 3; Hugh Jones, publisher of the Shelbyville Times-Gazette, District 5; Mark Palmer, publisher of The Daily Herald, Columbia, District 7; and Daniel Richardson, distribution manager for Magic Valley Publishing, District 9. Continuing their terms as directors are Jack McElroy, editor of the News Sentinel, Knoxville, District 2; Darren Oliver, advertising director of the Overton County News, Livingston, District 4; Joe Adams, publisher of The Lebanon Democrat, District 6; Brad Franklin, marketing director of The Lexington Progress, District 8; and Eric Barnes, publisher of The Daily News, Memphis, District 10. Michael B. Williams will continue on the board for one year as immediate past president. The TPA Board of Directors elected trustees to serve on the Tennessee Press Association Foundation (TPAF) Board of Trustees for three-year terms. Re-elected trustees were Nate Crawford, Nashville; Doug Horne, Republic Newspapers, Knoxville; and Janet Rail, publisher of the Independent Appeal, Selmer. TPAF officers elected at the TPAF Board of Trustees meeting were Gregg K. Jones, president of Jones Media Inc., Greeneville, re-elected president, and Victor Parkins, editor of The Mi- INSIDE RICHARDSON HUFFORD HONOR Richardson lan Mirror-Exchange, re-elected vice president. Officers and directors of the Tennessee Press Service (TPS), business affiliate of TPA, are Jeffrey D. Fish- man, president, and Victor Parkins, vice president. David Critchlow Jr., editor of the Union City Daily Messenger, and Jana Thomasson, publisher of The Mountain Press, Sevierville, were elected to the board during the TPS Stockholders’ Meeting on June 15. Continuing to serve on the six-member TPS Board are Ralph C. Baldwin, chief financial officer of Jones Media Inc., Greeneville, and Jason P. Taylor. TPS will elect officers in November. Lynn J. Richardson was named general manager of the Herald & Tribune, a 4,228 paid-circulation non-daily in Washington County, in 1999. She was promoted to publisher in 2004. Art Powers, former publisher of the Johnson City Press and a past TPA president, commented on Richardson’s new TPA role. “Lynn will do an outstanding job as TPA president, I’m certain. She is so dedicated to her work and community that I’m sure that work ethic will follow her in this new post. The association is in great hands in the coming year! Congratulations, Lynn. I’m very proud of you!” Mark Stevens, publisher of the Elizabethton Star and former publisher of The Erwin Record, recalled, “I first met Lynn when I was an intern at the Johnson City Press in the summer of 1989, and we immediately hit it off and have been very good friends since. I’m so proud of Lynn and that she will be leading TPA. “Lynn is an immensely talented and creative person, and she will put her enthusiasm for newspapers to good use for the entire membership,” Stevens said. Richardson started her career in journalism writing part-time for the Bluefield (W.Va.) Daily Telegraph while in college. After graduation, she went to work at her alma mater, serving as Concord College’s director of public information. In 1979, she was hired by the Johnson City Press-Chronicle to start and direct the newspaper’s first Newspapers In Education (NIE) program. In that role, she was responsible for all curriculum writing, promotions, marketing and training. In her work with NIE, Richardson was first introduced to the Tennessee Press Association, serving twice as chairman of the organization’s NIE Committee. During her tenure, the Johnson City Press’ NIE program grew from 500 participants, ultimately reaching 18,000 students each week throughout the 11 school systems in the area. She has served as a contributing writer for the Governor’s Study Partner Program Curriculum, Tennessee Teacher Magazine, The Tennessee Reading Teacher and the Newspaper Association of America and has served as a speaker and focus session leader for national Newspaper Association of America conferences. Lynn spearheaded the Jimmy Ellis Memorial Photojournalism Lab project at East Tennessee State University and directed “Passport To The World,” a Tennessee Press Association statewide competition for educators. SEE RICHARDSON, PAGE 3 AWARDS LUNCHEON REMINDER ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Leading the three press organizations for 2013-14 are Gregg K. Jones, Jones Media Inc., Greeneville, Tennessee Press Association (TPA) Foundation, left; Lynn J. Richardson, Herald & Tribune, Jonesborough, Tennessee Press Association; and Jeffrey D. Fishman, The Tullahoma News, Tennessee Press Service. 2 3 PARKINS MAN OF YEAR 4 TPA,TPAF, TPS LEADERS 6-7 ADVERTISING GIBSON 8 DISCLOSURE LAWS 9 SLIMP 10 11 WHO: Newspaper staff members WHAT: UT-TPA State Press Contests Awards Luncheon WHEN: Noon, Friday, July 19 WHERE: Millennium Maxwell House Hotel, 2025 Rosa L. Parks Blvd., Nashville RESERVATIONS: The deadline for hotel reservations at the special TPA rate has passed, but one can check with the hotel at (615) 259-4343. To make luncheon reservations, call TPA at (865) 584-5761 x105 or x100. NOTE: A photographer engaged by UT will make photos of first place winners as awards are presented. Please stay a while after the luncheon to have photos made as follows: General Excellence winners, Meeman winners, first, second and third place winners by groups. The TPA photographer will make group photos. IN CONTACT Phone: (865) 584-5761 Fax: (865) 558-8687 Online: www.tnpress.com The Tennessee Press 2 (USPS 616-460) Published quarterly by the TENNESSEE PRESS SERVICE, INC. for the TENNESSEE PRESS ASSOCIATION, INC. 435 Montbrook Lane Knoxville, Tennessee 37919 Telephone (865) 584-5761/Fax (865) 558-8687/www.tnpress.com Subscriptions: $6 annually Periodicals Postage Paid At Knoxville, TN POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Tennessee Press, 435 Montbrook Lane, Knoxville, TN 37919. The Tennessee Press is printed by The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Greg M. Sherrill.....................................................Editor Elenora E. Edwards.............................Managing Editor Robyn Gentile..........................Production Coordinator Angelique Dunn...............................................Assistant The Tennessee Press is printed on recycled paper and is recyclable. www.tnpress.com The Tennessee Press can be read on OFFICIAL WEBSITE OF THE TENNESSEE PRESS ASSOCIATION TENNESSEE PRESS ASSOCIATION Lynn J. Richardson, Herald & Tribune, Jonesborough........................President Jason P. Taylor, Chattanooga Times Free Press............................Vice President Joel Washburn, The McKenzie Banner.........................................Vice President John Finney, Buffalo River Review, Linden.........................................Treasurer Greg M. Sherrill, Knoxville.....................................................Executive Director DIRECTORS Keith Wilson, Kingsport Times-News.....................................................District 1 Jack McElroy, News Sentinel, Knoxville................................................District 2 Chris Vass, Chattanooga Times Free Press............................................District 3 Darren Oliver, Overton County News, Livingston................................District 4 Hugh Jones, Shelbyville Times-Gazette................................................District 5 Joe Adams, The Lebanon Democrat......................................................District 6 Mark Palmer, The Daily Herald, Columbia.............................................District 7 Brad Franklin, The Lexington Progress..................................................District 8 Daniel Richardson, Magic Valley Publishing, Camden.........................District 9 Eric Barnes, The Daily News, Memphis...............................................District 10 Michael B. Williams.....................................................Immediate Past President TENNESSEE PRESS SERVICE Jeffrey D. Fishman, The Tullahoma News.............................................President Victor Parkins, The Milan Mirror-Exchange..................................Vice President Ralph C. Baldwin, Jones Media Inc., Greeneville..................................Director David Critchlow Jr., Union City Daily Messenger..................................Director Jason P. Taylor, Chattanooga Times Free Press......................................Director Jana Thomasson, The Mountain Press, Sevierville................................Director Greg M. Sherrill.............................................................Executive Vice President TENNESSEE PRESS ASSOCIATION FOUNDATION Gregg K. Jones, The Greeneville Sun...................................................President Victor Parkins, The Milan Mirror-Exchange...................................Vice President Richard L. Hollow, Knoxville.....................................................General Counsel Greg M. Sherrill.....................................................................Secretary-Treasurer CONTACT THE MANAGING EDITOR TPAers with suggestions, questions or comments about items in The Tennessee Press are welcome to contact the managing editor. Call Elenora Easterly Edwards, (865) 457-5459; send a note to P.O. Box 502, Clinton, Tenn. 377170502; or email ElenoraEdwards@Comcast.net. The deadline for the August issue is July 8. JULY 2013 Dean Coombs, you’re my hero I’ll grant you that it’s a little unusual for a new tion. The newspaper doesn’t have a website. Heck, Tennessee Press Association president to write The Crescent office doesn’t even have a computer. her first column about someone who lives in a difCoombs hasn’t stepped far away from the way ferent state. the newspaper was produced when his grandfaIt’s probably even more odd that I’m writing ther bought it in 1917. News is handed in typed about someone I don’t even know. or written on paper. He takes that information But stay with me. After you read this, maybe and whatever else he has gathered that week and you’ll feel like you know me a little better. heads over to his 90-year-old Linotype machine to You see, I’m a sap when it comes to a good story start pounding out stories to fill the paper’s fourabout newspapers and the people who work in our page edition with local events, birth and death anYOUR industry. That’s why I feel it is such an honor to be nouncements, legal notices and the like. the president of this organization, and it’s why I Thompson describes a scene at The Crescent. PRESIDING feel compelled to tell you about Dean Coombs. “On any given Tuesday,” he writes, “if you venREPORTER I’ve never met Dean, but I sure would like to one ture past the creaky door and the piles of paper of these days. and boxes and photos, you’ll find Dean Coombs He is surely one of the last of his kind – a one- Lynn J. Richardson marinating in the smell of hot lead, dust and the stop newspaper man who does it all. slow decay of old newsprint, tending an ancient Coombs is the publisher, the editor, pressman printing press that emanates a rhythmic whirand mechanic for a tiny newspaper, The Crescent of Saguache, swoosh.” Colo. For those of us who operate small newspapers in small He goes into even more detail as he outlines Coombs’ weekly towns with small staffs, this man even makes us look like we process: “forging each line of text, or slug, from molten lead, are running mega media organizations. which he arranges among ads and graphics engraved into As if that isn’t impressive enough, as far as anyone knows, wood or metal, into a chase, a rectangular metal frame. Coombs’ newspaper is also the last newspaper in America After all that, it is secured into the press. The case and type printed using only letterpress technology. are inked and the newsprint rolls over them.” I stumbled across an article about Coombs when I was readEven the mailing labels, Thompson said, are printed on an ing my online edition of the “Rural Blog.” Finding out about old codger of a machine that dates back to the 1920s. him that way is sort of ironic, now that I think about it. There probably are very few of us who have ever seen a In a story written by Jonathan Thompson for the High Coun- newspaper produced that way and even fewer who have partry News, you can almost smell and feel the atmosphere at The ticipated in such a process. The list of newspapers that would Crescent, a paper in its 134th year of spreading pertinent news remain in business if it were still done that way would no to the 500 or so local residents of Saguache in southern Colo- doubt be very short. rado. That painstaking, labor-intensive method of putting out a Thompson does a good job of telling the story of Coombs – newspaper requires a dedication far beyond what many would a man who came into this business through family tradition be willing to commit. and a lot of hard work. It takes someone who really believes in the importance of a His grandfather, Charles Ogden, bought The Crescent in 1917. newspaper in the local community to continue that way. After his death, Coombs’ mother took over the paper. I wonder how our newspapers would fare if those methods Coombs became the publisher in 1978. After his mother’s were still used today? Do we still have that kind of determideath in 2002, it was all his. nation, that deep-down, dogged determination to get the job As I read Thompson’s article, I wondered about this do-it- done? all newspaper guy. Did he always want to be in the newspaper I’d sure like to think so. business, or did he just land in the middle of it and decide to Now don’t think for a minute that I’m proposing we go back make the best of it? to Linotypes and letterpresses. It’s too late for that. We’ve You just have to wonder about a person who lives his life this moved too far away from those roots. way. So I Googled him, wanting to put a face to the story. He Our new technology gives us opportunities we never was easy to find. Again, given Coombs’ apparent aversion to dreamed possible. all things digital, another irony. But even though we’ve embraced our digital future, let’s The photos I saw on my screen showed him hard at work, hope we haven’t moved so far away that we can’t learn from with a scruffy grayish beard and wire-rimmed glasses. He and admire Coombs’ spirit and his commitment to community looked a lot like I expected him to, somehow. journalism. That’s something to which we all should aspire. I also guessed that he would look really tired and maybe I’d like to meet him one day and tell him, face to face, that more than a little overwhelmed. I guessed wrong. I surely I think he is something pretty special and that I admire the didn’t expect to see him looking so happy. work he does every day at The Crescent. But until then, I’ll just In all of the photos, Coombs is smiling. In a few shots, he put my thoughts here, on this printed page. Dean Coombs, you’re my hero. is flat out grinning as he proudly stands there in front of his newspaper office. Maybe he is smiling because he knows if you or I want to LYNN J. RICHARDSON is publisher of the Herald & Tribune, read a copy of The Crescent, we would have to get a subscrip- Jonesborough. tion – to the print edition – which is, of course, the only edi- TPA has two new associate members The Tennessee Press Association has two new associate members, approved by the Board of Directors at its Feb. 6 meeting. The new associates are Vanderbilt University and Medical Center and The Maximum Times. Contact information for them follows: • Vanderbilt University and Medical Center News Service Contact: Elizabeth P. Latt, assistant vice chancellor elizabeth.p.latt@vanderbilt.edu News and Communications 110 21st Avenue S., Ste. 802 Nashville, Tenn. 37203 (615) 322-2706 www.vanderbilt.edu • The Maximum Times Contact: Tony Vick, #276187 RMSI 6-A-211 7475 Cockrill Bend Blvd. Nashville, Tenn. 37209-1048 The Tennessee Press JULY 2013 Signing up for Creative Cloud? Do it soon! BY KEVIN SLIMP TPS technology director When I was a college student living in Texas, I got used to hearing people say, “Boy, howdy.” This wasn’t a greeting, as you might think. It was more along the lines of Slimp “You’re not kidding!” It’s struck me as funny that, as I thought about the best way to explain the reaction to Adobe’s Creative Cloud announcement, the first words that came to mind were, “Boy, howdy.” Did Adobe open a huge can of worms by moving to the Creative Cloud model? Boy, howdy. Did they ever. Is the creative and publishing world up in arms about it? Boy, howdy. Are they ever. Is there anything we can do about Creative Cloud? Probably not. For those who have been hiking the Appalachian Trail for the past two months and aren’t familiar with the changes at Adobe, here’s the short version: You no longer buy Adobe software. You lease it. Think of your cable company. For a monthly fee, you have access to hundreds of channels, even though you probably don’t watch more than three or four. Cable seemed like a good idea when I moved into my place three years ago. I got 200 channels, HBO, high-speed Internet and a phone line for $99 per month. It’s hard to argue with that. What I haven’t been able to figure out is how my cable bill went from $99 per month to over $200 without my noticing it. And I don’t even get HBO anymore. And that’s the catch about Creative Cloud, isn’t it? Sure, we get InDesign, Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, Acrobat InCopy and a couple of dozen other apps. But let’s face it, how many of our people use more than two or three Adobe applications? And that price of $30 per month per user? That sounds like an OK deal. $360 per year for the latest version of Adobe software. But what about next year? That price is only guaranteed for the length of the one-year agreement. And, unless something changes, the $30 per month goes up to $50 for folks who sign up after July 31 – I’m talking at the end of this month. So beginning Aug. 1, that $360 moves up to $600 annually. Are people upset? Boy, howdy. There are blogs and online communities dedicated to complaining about the changes at Adobe. They’ve recently been compared to Quark, whose corporate attitude in the 1990s led to their quick descent from their lofty perch as king of the creative world. In 1997, Publish Magazine asked me to write an editorial comparing Adobe to Quark. Not a software comparison, but a comparison of the companies. At the time, it seemed like just about all of Quark’s customers were tired of their corporate “take it or leave it” attitude. Quark customers left in droves after the release of Adobe InDesign. Over the next few years, the king of the creative world was sitting at the bottom of the heap, looking up at the new king. I’ve received calls and emails from publishers from New York to California. I even received a call from Jeff Fishman last week while I waited for a flight in Boston. He was attending a meeting of the National Newspaper Association board, wanting to know what our alternatives are as an industry. Apparently it was the board’s “hot” topic at that moment. My answer: “Not much.” At this moment, however, I’m letting my mind play “What if ?” The game is played something like this: • What if Quark got together with Corel and packaged the latest version of QuarkXpress with Corel Paintshop Pro and sold the bundle for $699? • What if Quark bundled QuarkXPress with GIMP, a free Photoshop “clone” application and made some tweaks so the two applications could work seamlessly together, like InDesign and Photoshop? The problem with playing “What if ?” is that it’s just a game. It looks like none of these scenarios are going to happen. I just got off the phone with Gavin Drake, vice president of marketing at Quark, and it sounds like they’re not planning any bundles or making any plans to take on the Creative Cloud. And let’s face it. If Quark’s not interested in competing with Adobe on the publishing front, who will? I’m not worried about the changes with Adobe software. We can always keep producing newspapers and other publications the way we always have. What does worry me is that companies like Adobe and Quark don’t see the traditional publishing world as a market worth concern any longer. So what’s my advice? There doesn’t seem to be a viable option to Adobe Creative Cloud at the moment. Eventually you will be forced to upgrade equipment and software and, when you do, you’ll probably sign up for Creative Cloud. In the meantime, read carefully. The price goes up significantly after July 31. If you are going to upgrade software, do it before then. Otherwise, you’ll spend $240 extra per user over the next year. Am I a little frustrated that we don’t seem to have other options? Boy, howdy, am I ever. But like everyone else, there doesn’t seem to be much I can do about it at this point. I’d love to hear your thoughts about the changes at Adobe. Email those to me at kevin@kevinslimp.com. 11 HOW TO CONTACT US Tennessee Press Association Mail: 435 Montbrook Lane, Knoxville, TN 37919 Phone: (865) 584-5761 Fax: (865) 558-8687 Web: www.tnpress.com Email: (name)@tnpress. com Those with boxes, listed alphabetically: Laurie Alford (lalford) Pam Corley (pcorley) Angelique Dunn (adunn) Beth Elliott (belliott) Robyn Gentile (rgentile) Frank Gibson (fgibson) Earl Goodman (egoodman) Kathy Hensley (khensley) Greg Sherrill (gsherrill) Kevin Slimp (kslimp) Umbrella illustration courtesy of Adbuilder.com Kayretta Stokes (kstokes) David Wells (dwells) Border War Golf Tournament Monday, September 9, 2013 Tessa Wildsmith (twildsmith) Heather Wright (hwright) Advertising email: A bene¿t to raise funds for Kentucky Journalism Foundation Tennessee Press Association Foundation This tournament for members, associate members and other parties connected to TPA and KPA will take place at Fairvue Plantation Country Club in Gallatin, Tennessee. Registration is $75 per player, inclusive of green fee, cart, range balls, beverage cart, food and awards reception. Fees are considered a donation to the newspaper foundations and are non-refundable. Tennessee players register by email to: Bob Atkins, bobntn@bellsouth.net knoxads@tnpress.com Tennessee Press Service Mail: 435 Montbrook Lane, Knoxville, TN 37919 Phone: (865) 584-5761 Fax: (865) 558-8687 Web: www.tnadvertising. biz Tennessee Press Association Foundation Mail: 435 Montbrook Lane, Knoxville, TN 37919 Phone: (865) 584-5761 Fax: (865) 558-8687 Web: www.tnpress.com The Tennessee Press 10 JULY 2013 The Tennessee Press JULY 2013 3 FORESIGHT WORTH REPEATING Disclosure laws on contributions must be upheld BY EDITORIAL BOARD News Sentinel, Knoxville That a recent review that found more than 50 candidates — including some of the Legislature’s top leaders — failed to report contributions from political action committees or corporations is more proof that Tennessee disclosure laws should not be undermined. The Registry of Election Finance found the discrepancies during an annual “crosscheck” review mandated by state law. The review matches donations listed on candidates’ disclosure forms with donations listed on PAC and corporate disclosure forms. A bill sponsored by House Republican Caucus Chairman Glen Casada would do away with the requirement for disclosure by corporations, which would cripple the crosscheck process. Casada was one of lawmakers who failed to fully report contributions. He did not report two $1,000 contributions from PACs. House Democratic Caucus Chairman Mike Turner, who fiercely opposed Casada’s bill, had more unreported donations than anyone else — 18 totaling $19,875. In all, 51 legislative candidates failed to report 180 contributions totaling $144,875. East Tennessee lawmakers with undisclosed contributions from PACs or corporations include Rep. Joe Armstrong, D-Knoxville, with seven totaling $3,900; Rep. Kent Calfee, RKingston, with three totaling $1,250; Rep. John Ragan, R-Oak Ridge, with two totaling $1,000; Sen. Frank Niceley, R-Strawberry Plains, with two totaling $700; Rep. Andrew Farmer, R-Sevierville, with one for $1,000; and Rep. Dennis Powers, R-Jacksboro, with one for $250. Drew Rawlins, executive director of the Bureau of Ethics and Campaign Finance, said the 181 listed contributions amount to only about 2.5 percent of all contributions made to state candidates by PACs and corporations last year. He termed the results “pretty good.” In the aggregate, yes. Sometimes a candidate or campaign treasurer can inadvertently leave off a contribution. The fact that Gov. Bill Haslam failed to report one PAC contribution for $1,000 is understandable in light of the large number of contributions he received. But those with multiple undisclosed contributions such as Turner and Senate Republican Caucus Chairman Bill Ketron, who had eight cited donations totaling $6,100, are more troubling. Campaign disclosure laws are in place so the public knows who is donating money to the people who would be stewards of taxpayer funds. Turner’s unreported PAC money is in addition to the Old Hickory Democrat’s already formidable fundraising — his reported contributions for 2012 added up to $67,975. Casada said that since the Citizens United decision in the U.S. Supreme Court, corporations are people “in the eyes of the law” and, like individuals, should not have to file a contribution report to the Registry. However, corporations are allowed to give much more money than individuals. People can give a maximum of $1,500 to a House candidate or $3,800 to a Senate candidate. PACs and corporations can give up to $7,500 to a House candidate and $11,200 to a Senate candidate. The crosscheck provision of state 2013 law allows election officials to identify candidates who fail to file accurate financial disclosure forms — not to punish them, necessarily, but to ensure that they ultimately reconcile their financial reports. Casada’s bill failed in the House by just two votes in the recently ended session, but he has said he will revive it next year. Speaker Beth Harwell, who opposes it, will have to keep a coalition of responsible Republicans and Democrats together in blocking its passage. Campaign spending continues to spiral upward with no end in sight, and the people of Tennessee deserve to know who is bankrolling the people who represent them in Nashville. Transparency is vital to the integrity of the election process and must be preserved. (May 26, 2013) Kids say thanks for newspapers at NIE appreciation luncheon You probably didn’t realize you’re reading a textbook right now. For thousands of children and even adults in McMinn and Meigs Counties, the newspaper has become part of their educational experience. “Newspapers aren’t part of education. They are education,” said McMinn County Sheriff Joe Guy during Thursday’s Newspapers In Education Sponsor Appreciation Luncheon. “They’re a living document that, each day, tells us what’s going on.” The Daily Post-Athenian’s NIE program is a non-profit, cooperative effort between schools and newspapers to create lifelong readers and leaders by promoting the use of newspapers as an educational resource. More than 3,400 newspapers are distributed to all McMinn and Meigs county, Athens and Etowah city schools, Athens-McMinn Adult Education, KIDS Connection after-school program, and the McMinn County Justice Center’s GED program through NIE sponsorships. “We had 101 teachers using the program this year – our largest amount ever,” said DPA NIE Coordinator Lu Shep Baldwin. “Our program continues to grow and be successful because of the educational systems, businesses, and organizations that support it.” NIE also co-sponsors the annual Family Fun Fair with Tennessee Wesleyan College and McMinn Living Well to promote literacy and healthy lifestyles for youngsters. In addition to newspapers in the classrooms, NIE provides the KidScoop page, serial stories and summer reading activities inside editions of The DPA. “This program provides educators with the most relevant and current textbook: The local newspaper,” said DPA Publisher Mike Miller. “The content in the newspaper enables teachers to supplement programs and textbooks they use while also opening a discussion of current events and promoting social awareness among their students. And, that couldn’t happen without our supporters.” “The DPA’s NIE program stands head and shoulders above any others in the communities we serve,” added Gregg K. Jones, chief executive officer of Jones Media Inc., The Daily PostAthenian’s parent company. The McMinn County Sheriff ’s Department has used NIE for 10 years in its Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program and now uses it to help inmates obtain their GEDs. Guy said seeing how inmates use The Daily Post-Athenian reminds him of the need for newspapers. “Sometimes, we forget just how important the local newspaper is because we’re inundated with information through the Internet and social media,” Guy said. “In jail, you don’t have social media, so when the newspapers come in, they don’t survive long. The inmates literally eat those papers up. They read every word and pass them around. It’s the only contact with the outside they really have. Seeing that makes you realize the value of the newspaper.” Newspapers are just as important for KRISTI NELSON BUMPUS | ETSPJ Members of the cast of the 2013 edition of the ETSPJ Front Page Follies, from left, director Terry Silver-Alford, John McNair, David Haley Lauver, Cindy Hassil, Michael Holtz, Lisa Hood Skinner, Ernie Roberts, Ingrid Ruffin, Cathy Jenkins and Megan Venable Smith. Not pictured: Adina Chumley, Regina Mays, Hubert Smith and Amanda Womac. CHARLIE DANIEL | ETSPJ Hufford is honoree for 35th Front Page Follies Reserve your place for an entertaining evening at the 35th Annual Front Page Follies, through which the East Tennessee Society of Professional Journalists (ETSPJ) raises money for journalism and electronic media scholarships at the University of Tennessee and Pellissippi State Community College. The July 13 event, in addition to poking light-hearted fun at news, and folks who make the news, will honor UT journalism professor Bonnie Hufford. Hufford, who teaches editing, writing, graphics and international communications, has edited and written for the AssociHufford ated Press, Whittle Communications, WKYC-TV and sev- eral daily newspapers and advertising/public relations agencies. She is a two-time UT College of Communication and Information Outstanding Faculty Member, and she has won the SPJ President’s Award for public service twice. The evening begins at 6 p.m. with a reception featuring cocktails and hors d’oeuvres in the lobby of the Clarence Brown Theatre on the UT campus, be- fore the 7:30 p.m. show. Admission is $75 per ticket for general seating. Limited blocks of premium seats at $100 per ticket are available. A portion of the ticket price is a taxdeductible contribution to UT. One may buy tickets by contacting Megan Venable Smith at (865) 974-6903 or msmith93@utk.edu, or one may order online and pay by credit card at www.etspj.org. RICHARDSON: Jonesborough publisher heads TPA FROM PAGE ONE In the community, Richardson has worked with the Chamber of Commerce as marketing chairman for Focus 2015 and for “Hands of Friendship,” a food and supply relief project for Rybinsk, Russia. She has served as East Tennessee State University’s ETSU Pride Week co-chairman and on the boards of the Newspaper Association of America’s Youth and Education Board, the QUEST Foundation and the Northeast Tennessee Tourism Association. Richardson has received several ADDY awards over the years from the Tri-Cities Metro Advertising Federation, as well as an international award from Editor & Publisher for promotion of Newspapers In Education. Under her leadership, the newspaper has received the TPA’s General Excellence Award as well as multiple awards for investigative, editorial, news and feature writing, photography, newspaper design, promotions and ad design. The paper has also received recognitions from The Washington Post and Presstime magazine for its Community Awareness Project with the Town of Jonesborough. She lives with her husband, Dean Batchelder, in Elizabethton, and they have three children, Keely Goodwin, Matt Batchelder and Cory Richardson. Later this summer, Richardson will also have a new title – grandmother – as she and her family joyfully anticipate the arrival of their first grandchild. Richardson is a native of Princeton, W.Va. and a graduate of Concord College in Athens, W.Va. She has a bachelor of science degree in elementary education with a specialization in music from Concord College in Athens, W.Va. and a certification in journalism from East Tennessee State University in Johnson City. The TPA was founded in 1870-71 for the purpose of creating a unified voice for the newspaper industry in Tennessee. Today, TPA continues to provide assistance to its 121 member newspapers by monitoring legislative activities, providing training programs, issuing press credentials, maintaining a website and providing regular meetings and forums to foster the exchange of information and ideas. The TPA presidency rotates among TPA’s three divisions of Tennessee, east, middle and west, and alternates each year between a daily and nondaily publication. It is customary that a person serve two terms as vice president before being elected president. JULY 4-5: TPA offices closed for Independence Day 10-14: International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Conference, St. Norbert College, Green Bay, Wis. 12: TPA members judge South Carolina Press Association advertising contest, 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., TPA headquarters, Knoxville 12: Period ends for online judging of Washington Newspaper Publishers Association Better Newspaper Contest 13: ETSPJ Front Page Follies, 6 p.m., Clarence Brown Theatre, Knoxville 19: UT-TPA State Press Contests Awards Luncheon, noon, Millennium Maxwell House Hotel, Nashville AUGUST 25-27: Society of Professional Journalists Annual Convention, Anaheim, Calif. SEPTEMBER 9: First Border War golf tournament, to benefit TPA Foundation and Kentucky Press Association Foundation, Fairvue Plantation Country Club, Gallatin 12-15: NNA Convention & Trade Show, Phoenix, Ariz. OCTOBER 17-19: 16th Institute of Newspaper Technology, UT-Knoxville NOVEMBER 8: SNPA-TPA Publishers Summit, Nashville 2014 FEBRUARY 5-7: TPA Winter Convention & Press Institute, Nashville NOTE: The Government Affairs Committee meeting set for July 19 has been canceled. THE DAILY POST-ATHENIAN, ATHENS Athens City Schools KIDS Connection students hold up signs to thank sponsors of The DPA’s Newspapers in Education program at the close of their musical performance during an NIE Sponsor Appreciation Luncheon. public officials, Guy noted. “It’s a litmus test of how people feel about the job public officials are doing,” he said. “It’s a valued asset. The Sheriff ’s Department is committed to continuing its sponsorship, and I’d encourage others to do so, as well.” Angie Dahle, Director of the Athens City School System’s KIDS Connection after-school program, called the newspaper “a great tool.” “KIDS Connection is an extension of the school day, so we incorporate elements of what the kids have already been doing in class,” Dahle said. “Math projects, science projects, language arts, community involvement, parent involvement – all the things we need to do we can do with the newspaper. For Halloween, the kids have even dressed up as mummies using the newspaper. There are so many fun and interactive opportunities through NIE.” Dahle said she has made presentations and pitches at the National AfterSchool Association conference and with struggling programs around Tennessee about the importance of NIE. “A lot of programs struggle with community involvement,” Dahle not- ed. “We have one of the best. Everyone here works together.” Joyce Simpson, an art instructor at Central High School, has used the newspaper in her classroom for various projects, including an art history lesson on Vincent Van Gogh, which she shared during the NIE luncheon. “NIE has provided a great way for my students to express themselves and share with others their experiences,” Simpson said. “We want to make sure students are retaining what they’re learning, and the newspaper helps us do that very well.” President names committee chairmen TPA President Lynn J. Richardson has selected chairmen for all 2013-14 committees. They are the following: Advertising: Leslie Kahana, Chattanooga Times Free Press Circulation: To be announced next month Contests: Terri Likens, Roane County News, Kingston Futures: Gregg K. Jones, Jones Media Inc., Greeneville Government Affairs: Elizabeth K. Blackstone, Kennedy Newspapers, Columbia, co-chairman, and Joel Washburn, The McKenzie Banner, cochairman. Washburn automatically became the co-chairman when he was elected TPA vice president last month. Hall of Fame Administrative: Dr. Peter Gross, UT School of Journalism and Electronic Media Journalism, Education & Literacy: Janet Rail, Independent Appeal, Selmer Membership: Mark Stevens, Elizabethton Star Nominating: Michael B. Williams, The Paris Post-Intelligencer (an auto- matic appointment of the immediate past president) Postal: Joe Adams, The Lebanon Democrat Winter Convention and Press Institute: Jason P. Taylor, Chattanooga Times Free Press (an automatic appointment as the senior vice president of TPA) Summer Convention: Jana Thomasson, The Mountain Press, Sevierville Technology: John Finney, Buffalo River Review, Linden AP moves offices of Nashville bureau Leek, Clipping Bureau tabber, retires from TPS The offices of the Associated Press Nashville Bureau have been moved from Centerview Drive in Brentwood into the John Seigenthaler Center on the campus of Vanderbilt University. Contact information is as follows: The Associated Press John Seigenthaler Center 1207 18th Ave. S. Ste. 261A Nashville, Tenn. 37212 (615) 373-9988 or (800) 453-1282 [FAX] (615) 376-0947 apnashville@ap.org Brenda Leek, whose service with Tennessee Press Service reached back further than anyone else on the current staff, retired June 7. She was a tabber in the Clipping Bureau. Look for further information in the August issue of The Tennessee Press. The Tennessee Press 4 JULY 2013 Parkins among Milan Chamber People of the Year Milan’s People of the Year for 2012 were honored recently when the Chamber of Commerce held its annual membership banquet at Milan Middle School. One of them was Victor Parkins, editor of The Milan Mirror-Exchange. An overflow crowd, estimated at more than 300 people, attended the gala with the theme: “Glitz, Glamour and Grow.” The award recipients were kept secret until announced at the banquet. The Man of the Year Award went to Parkins and the Woman of the Year to Linda West, the Chamber administrative assistant since 1987; the Steve Marsh Pinnacle Award for small business, to the Crocker-Carter Law firm; and Educator of the Year to Deidre Maxwell, a pre-kindergarten teacher at Milan Elementary School. Musical entertainment and the playing of the National Anthem were pro- vided by the Milan High School jazz band directed by John Scruggs. The catered dinner was served by students in the school Beta Clubs and Milan High Spanish Club. Joey Johnson, pastor of Whitehall Baptist Church, gave the invocation. Mayor Chris Crider introduced special guests and summarized recent efforts to make Milan more attractive to potential businesses and industry. Blake Brown described Man of the Year winner Parkins as a “strong man of faith and a family man.’“ In his role as newspaper editor, Parkins was called by one nominator as a “voice for the Milan community.” “With the untimely passing of his father (Bob Parkins), he assumed the reins of one of the best newspapers in Tennessee, and certainly the best in West Tennessee, based on numerous awards for excellence and quality in reporting,” said the nomination of Parkins. “However, the significance of his role is in his desire to keep the citizens of Milan not just an informed 2013 UT – TPA State Press Contests Awards Luncheon Millennium Maxwell House Hotel Nashville, Tennessee Noon Friday, July 19, 2013 Register online at: www.tnpress.com THE MILAN MIRROR-EXCHANGE Victor Parkins, editor of The Milan Mirror-Exchange, center, was named Man of the Year at a Chamber of Commerce banquet. public, but a thinking public. His editorials are always on timely topics; his comments combined with factual information are thought-provoking, and in many cases have led the citizenry to better decisions in action through voting, letters to Congress and other forms of action on the part of our community.” Parkins put “his heart and soul” in trying to save jobs at the Milan arsenal, said one nominator. Mayor Chris Crider described Parkins as a wonderful advisor and confidant, invaluable “not only as a friend, but on a professional level as well.” Mr. Parkins’ nomination packet in- cluded numerous letters citing his contributions, Brown noted. “He is willing to put friends in front of himself,” said one letter. “He is always willing to help a friend in need and go the extra mile. He would lend a helping hand or let someone borrow equipment or anything else they need to help them out. He would, at a moment’s notice, drop what he was doing to help someone in need. He also extends friendship to children of his friends by willingly spending time with them hunting, fishing, fourwheeler riding or just having conversations with them. My son loves him like family.” People cited Parkins’ support of school programs, work with the Chamber, involvement in Lions Club and dedication to his church and support for other denominations. “He truly cares about the citizens of Milan,” said one supporter. His pastor, Scott Bloodworth, said Parkins was a person of the highest character, steeped in Milan’s traditions. “He’s Milan’s man when it comes to ensuring our community’s future and safeguarding our heritage,” said Bloodworth. Parkins previously served as presiSEE PARKINS, PAGE 5 WORTH REPEATING History repeats itself BY CLAY MORGAN Editor The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro I apologize for being away the last couple of weeks. It has been an extraordinarily busy time professionally and personally. Fortunately, it has been as rewarding as it has been busy. I read a comment the other day – I think on Twitter – that we are returning to the days of pamphlet journalism. Whoever wrote that may very well be correct. Much of the journalism of the early days, particularly the 17th and 18th centuries, was in the form of pamphlets. These were often arguments for or against a particular government, law or right. Not at all what we think of as journalism today. For example, I have heard the pamphlet Common Sense by Thomas Paine referred to as an early piece of American journalism, and that may well be the case. However, it is clearly a piece of writing that makes an argument that the Americas should be free of British rule. One thing it is not is impartial. It presents a strong argument, more like an extended editorial than a piece of independent “news reporting.” Today, are we witnessing the same thing with social media? Are people reporting and presenting news and information from a particular point of view and with the purpose of convincing people of a particular idea? 9 Court made right call in mosque public notice case ENGRAVINGS BY STEVE SHORT The Milan Mirror-Exchange The Tennessee Press JULY 2013 OK. Memes probably aren’t the pamphlets of our time. However, there is no doubting the ability of social media to inform large groups of people and sway opinion. And it can be done from a deliberately specific perspective or with deliberate intention, much like the pamphlets of old. Are memes or Facebook posts or tweets the pamphlets of our time? Are they the product of citizen journalism; people trying to sway opinion? I don’t know. While I have some concerns with the way news is presented on social media, it is a powerful communication tool, just like the ability to print and sell 100,000 copies of Common Sense was in 1776. (May 6, 2013) The state Court of Appeals’ reversal of a The notice ran three weeks before the of high public interest and import. Murfreesboro judge’s ruling in a public notice meeting. Most of the court cases from the case involving a controversial Muslim mosque There was no zoning issue to be refirst challenge of the Sunshine Law in was good reason to exhale. solved. That had been taken care of 1974 to the present have relied on the It was the right ruling on a bad lawsuit. We may before the local Islamic community principle that the amount and method have dodged a bullet because bad cases sometimes bought the property. Zoning issues of providing notices should be based result in bad law. typically lead to public hearings and on the “totality of the circumstances The court said Chancellor Robert Corlew erred thus more detailed notices. Rutherford as would fairly inform the public.” by finding that the public notice the Rutherford County accommodates its citizens by That basically means the government County Regional Planning Commission ran May having one meeting a month at night should tailor its policies so the level of PUBLIC 2, 2010 in The Murfreesboro Post was inadequate. for that purpose. notice provided should be proportional Corlew had ruled it should have appeared in In this case, the land was already to the public interest involved. POLICY more places than the Post, which at the time was zoned residential, and “religious” use In 1974, leaders in the City of MemOUTLOOK phis said they didn’t know what “ada newspaper that published only on Sunday and is permitted by right under the counmaintained a website. ty’s zoning ordinance. equate” meant. The state Supreme The appeals court decision actually turned on Opponents of the mosque claimed Frank Gibson Court said they should know. Later, it the content of the public notice. Islam is not a religion and that adherents was things like posting notice on a bank “This litigation has included many twists and to Islam are dangerous to American society, but window the day before a BMA meeting and usturns and volumes of filings, but this decision to block construction, they hung their hat on the ing vague language to describe the business on discusses only what relates to the narrow issue adequacy of the public notice. the agenda or not mentioning that a controveron appeal,” Judge Andy Bennett wrote. The appeals court noted that the planning com- sial matter would be discussed at an out-of-state Later he noted that facts in the mission did everything the law school board retreat that were ruled as not meetcase that were “relevant” were required – it notified the pub- ing adequacy standard. “undisputed.” That suggested lic by usual means when and The most troubling part of cases like the emoSuch cases ‘can be to me that the case bordered on where the planning commis- tion-generated mosque litigation is they can be used by some to enbeing frivolous. sion was meeting. used by some to encourage legal mischief. courage legal mischief.’ Though not one of the “relThe court’s unanimous Rutherford County officials sought legislation evant” issues, the court made opinion explained that the es- in the General Assembly earlier this year to denote of the fact the public notablished case law about Ten- fine “adequate” notice in the statute. It was in tice appeared in print and on nessee’s Sunshine Law (Open response to Chancellor Corlew’s now-tainted the newspaper’s website and through an “over- Meetings Law) only requires notices of “special opinion. One early draft would have put them on sight” the county failed to put the meeting notice meetings” to include details such as the agenda. government websites. and the agenda on its website until after the May The Sunshine Law defines “special meeting” as TPA discouraged that effort as premature be24 meeting. any meeting “not previously scheduled by stat- cause the law should not be changed on some The issue was whether the notice of the regu- ute, ordinance, or resolution, or for which notice knee-jerk reaction. lar bimonthly meeting should have included the is not already provided by law.” The case was still on appeal. The chancellor’s fact the commission would be considering a site The court explained that more detailed notices decision was clearly wrong, ill-advised and uninplan for construction of the religious complex in are required for “special” meetings because by formed, and we believed it would be overturned a sparsely-populated outskirt of Murfreesboro. definition those are meetings reserved for matters because he made a very simple question overly complicated. Rutherford County officials had followed the law. Those were the same reasons TPA did not file or join in an amicus brief in the matter. The News Sentinel, Knoxville, had a story three days after the appeals court opinion came down. Under the headline “Knox County meeting notifications under scrutiny,” the newspaper quoted Knox County Attorney Richard (Bud) Armstrong as saying the county needed to do something in response to Corlew’s decision. “When the decision came out of Murfreesboro, it gave a lot of people heartburn,” he said. “But the truth of it is that it’s a really tough topic.” The newspaper reported that the decision in Rutherford “could lead to many local governments changing the way they notify the public when individuals and legislative bodies want to meet.” Armstrong said the chancellor’s “judgment has merit” and he has advised his county commission that it, too, should take heed. “Ever since the case came out, the rope has been pulled a little tighter, and I think we need to start complying to a tighter position,” the newspaper quoted him as saying. We should all favor improvement in government policies on public notices. That’s why TPA proposed the legislation this year to improve the way notices are delivered. But, we have to beware of proposed changes based on a unique set of facts. Many times when legislation is considered something gets lost in the process. It’s usually transparency that gets lost in the compromises. FRANK GIBSON is TPA’s public policy director. One can reach him at (615) 202-2685 or fgibson@ tnpress.com. Quiz question stumps some on public notice Paulson is communication dean BY KENT FLANAGAN Executive director Tennessee Coalition for Open Government A quiz on open government topics revealed that nearly three-fourths those who took the online test did not know that only Tennessee citizens are guaranteed access to state Flanagan and local public records. The Tennessee Sunshine Quiz included 15 questions to test a person’s knowledge about public records as well as the state’s Sunshine Law on access to public meetings of city councils, county commissions and other public boards. In March about 350 people completed the quiz, which was sponsored by the Tennessee Coalition for Open Government (TCOG) through the support of the Tennessee Press Association, the Tennessee Association of Broadcasters and the Associated Press. All are TCOG members. The quiz was produced as part of Sunshine Week, a national initiative by the American Society of Newspaper Editors to promote greater openness in government. The Tennessee Public Records Act of 1957 states that public records shall be open to “any citizen of Tennessee.” But government agencies don’t apply that clause uniformly, and most officials interpret it to mean that they must deny requests from people who are not Tennessee residents. “It is a frequently abused section of the law,” Frank Gibson told AP. Earlier this year, the United States Supreme Court affirmed the right of states to limit public records access to only citizens in a case from Virginia, which along with Tennessee and a handful of other states have similar laws on records access. Responses to another question in the quiz showed that about 40 percent did not know that the Tennessee General Assembly is not covered by the state Sunshine Law, which does cover all other public state, county or local governing bodies. Another Sunshine Law question stumped about one-third of the respondents. The question asked for a true or false response to this statement: “Two members of your local county commission meet for lunch and discuss matters that the commission will vote on at its next meeting. As a quorum of the commission is not present, this lunch meeting is not a violation of the Sunshine Act.” The correct response is false. However, chance meetings of members of a public body do not violate the Sunshine Law as long as the members do not discuss official business that is to come before their commission, council, board or committee. Anyone wanting to review state laws on public records or open meetings can download copies of the statutes from the Tennessee Press Association website, www.tnpress.com. The list of more than 350 exceptions to the TPRA is being updated this summer and will be posted on TCOG’s website, www.tcog.info. One can reach Kent Flanagan at (615) 957-2825 or kent.flanagan@gmail.com. First Amendment advocate and former journalist Ken Paulson is the new dean of the Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, College of Mass Communication, effective Paulson July 1. He was president and chief executive officer of the First Amendment Center in Nashville and was editor-in-chief at USA Today from 2004 to 2009 and was a founder of the newspaper in 1982. He continues his involvement as a columnist on USA Today’s board of contributors and covers First Amendment issues and media. He also has “significant ties to the music industry,” said Brad Bartel, university provost, who cited in an email sent to faculty Paulson’s positions as deputy chair of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame and his appointment to the Music City Music Council. University President Sidney McPhee echoed Bartel’s enthusiasm. “We were impressed by the breadth of Ken’s experience,” McPhee said in a press release by MTSU News and Public Affairs. “He has led a national news organization, traveled the country with a rock ’n’ roll band to tout the First Amendment and hosted a national television program. His career has touched all of our college’s disciplines.” Paulson said he sees a lot of opportunity for growth in the College of Mass Communication. “There’s an opportunity for innovative communication colleges to craft new and bold approaches, fueling these professions with fresh perspectives and insights – and graduates with the skills to maximize both,” he said in the press release. Paulson earned his bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri and a juris doctor degree from the University of Illinois College of Law. He will be replacing Dr. Roy Moore, who has held the position of dean since 2008. Moore plans to remain with the College of Mass Communication as a professor. The Tennessee Press 8 Tennessee’s advertising networks: Helping your local customers extend their reach BY BETH ELLIOTT Networks advertising manager David Wells, Tennessee Press Service (TPS) advertising director, and I just returned from a refresher training course at The Mountain Press Elliott in Sevierville. It was a great day to drive to the foot of the Smoky Mountains and an even better time meeting the folks at The Mountain Press. David discussed how TPS is here to help bring new business to TPA members and how we must work together in order to accomplish this. The refresher course was about Tennessee’s advertising networks. During the session I could see the wheels spinning as to the types of businesses that could benefit from getting their message in multiple markets through one-point-of-contact – the local advertising rep. Tennessee’s advertising networks (TnSCAN, TnDAN and TnNET) are powerful tools sales reps can offer their existing clients. Imagine your local chamber of commerce is wanting to bring in crowds not only in your county, but from surrounding counties. The task would be daunting for them to search the markets they want to reach. Contact each of these newspapers. Send the ads to each newspaper. Receive invoices from each newspaper. And, finally, have to cut checks to each newspaper. All this is wrapped up in a nice package with Tennessee’s advertising networks. What a powerful sales tool your rep has to offer! The power the networks have to offer is not limited to chambers of commerce. Any business that has a need to reach outside your area is a good fit. The possibilities are just about everywhere. Become familiar with the networks. If an extended reach is part of your clients’ needs analyses, remember to tell them about this easy, effective and affordable way to reach a region of Tennessee, the Southeast or the whole nation. In addition to the networks helping your local clients extend their reach, TPS is having a contest for sales reps at participating newspapers. Sell a TnSCAN, TnDAN or TnNET ad and get your name entered in a monthly drawing. The winner will receive a $50 gift card. Every rep who sells an ad gets a chance to win. Double your chances by selling an ad in the monthly selected category. For July, you can win a $50 wild card (that’s a collection of gift cards, not a sleazy store). The monthly category for July is vacation/ stay-cation destinations. The winner of May’s drawing was Teresa Hicks of the Johnson City Press. The competition was strong. Congratulations to all reps who sold network ads in May! If you would like a refresher course for your reps or have questions about the contest, please contact David or me at (865) 584-5761. TPS is here to help you! Protest regardless “There may be times when we're powerless to prevent injustice but there must never be a time when we fail to protest.” Elie Wiesel Nobel Peace Prize laureate, 1986 JULY 2013 Paper mill in Calhoun, once known as Bowater, idles last newsprint machine BY DAVID FLESSNER Chattanooga Times Free Press A generation ago, Bowater’s paper mill in Calhoun was one of America’s biggest producers of newsprint and one of the biggest land owners in southeast Tennessee. Next week [mid-March], Bowater’s successor company, now known as Resolute Forest Products, will shut down its last newsprint machine there after decades of shedding forest lands and mill jobs in response to the shrinking size and circulation of its newspaper customers. Resolute officials said the “indefinite idling” of the newsprint machines will cost another 150 mill jobs, cutting the remaining staff at the Calhoun plant below 500 by the end of the month. Resolute continues to operate two specialty paper machines in Calhoun, making papers for circulars, flyers and other higher-grade paper publications. “From the time I joined the company 26 years ago, production (in Calhoun) is probably half of what it once was,” said Douglas Breckenridge, a sales representative for Resolute Forest Products. “Newspapers are much narrower than they used to be and today’s printing presses use far less paper.” After Bowater and Abitibi-Consolidated merged in 2007 to create the third largest pulp and paper company in North America, the company shut down two of its five paper production machines in Calhoun in 2008. Debbie Johnston, director of public affairs for Resolute, said the Calhoun newsprint machine was not as efficient as other company mills in Augusta, Ga. and Grenada, Miss., where the company has invested more than $30 million to upgrade operations. “The idling (in Calhoun) comes as a result of a decrease in demand for newsprint, coupled with high operating costs for the machine,” she said. The decision follows Resolute’s acquisition this week of the 49 percent interest in Calhoun Newsprint Co., owned by The Herald Publishing Co., LLC, its joint-venture partner for the newsprint operations. The Calhoun mill produced 215,000 metric tons per year and supplied newsprint for dozens of newspapers in the Southeast, including the Chattanooga Times Free Press. A plant in Augusta, Ga. will now supply such newsprint. (March 13, 2013) REWRITES FROM THE TENNESSEE PRESS JULY 1963 John M. Jones Sr., The Greeneville Sun, presented President’s Awards to J. Zollie Howard, Memphis PressScimitar, and John Finney, The Daily Herald, Columbia. The Millington Star became the first three-time winner of the Grand Award in the UT-TPA State Press Contests. Bill Frame, The Lebanon Democrat, assumed the 1963-64 presidency of TPA. The need for careful handling of desegregation news stories was reviewed at wire service meetings at the summer convention in Chattanooga. The TPS board of directors was reelected: Guy Easterly, The LaFollette Press, president; J. Bill Frame, The Lebanon Democrat; Donald Brookhart, Crossville Chronicle; and W.T. Franklin, The Lexington Progress. Three Tennessee newspapers converted to offset (cold type) printing. They were the Cookeville Citizen; Putnam County Herald, Cookeville; and the Sparta Expositor-News Pictorial. Franklin Yates, Shelbyville TimesGazette, spent six weeks in Russia and eight other Iron Curtain countries as a member of the American Newspapers Study Mission. JULY 1988 John Paul Jones, publisher of The Daily News, Memphis, was installed as Tennessee Press Service Advertising Placement Snapshot ROP: Network: May 2013: $384,540 $68,685 Year* as of May 31: $2,677,680 $385,351 *The Tennessee Press Service Inc. fiscal year runs Dec. 1 through Nov. 30. TPA president for 1988-89. Persis Corp., the parent company of the Honolulu Advertiser, planned to buy The Knoxville Journal. Bob Atkins, publisher of the News Examiner, Gallatin, was re-elected president of TPS, and Tom Hill, publisher of The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge, was re-elected TPAF president. Members of Virginia Press Association who judged the UT-TPA contests for 1988 praised the entries as exciting, excellent and handsome. The Tennessean, Nashville, and The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, swept photojournalism honors at the annual United Press International Tennessee Association of Newspapers annual competition. Sam Kennedy, chairman of the TPA Legislative Committee, termed a Metro Nashville policy of not making available wreck reports involving fatalities a “sham.” Ralph C. Baldwin was named publisher of The Daily Post-Athenian, Athens. He succeeded James Gray. Baldwin had been general manager of a newspaper in Aberdeen, N.C. Newspapers were experimenting with ink made from soybean oil. The Tennessee Press JULY 2013 PARKINS OBITUARIES John Anderson Retired from The CA BY MAX FILBY AND L. TAYLOR SMITH The Commercial Appeal, Memphis John Anderson, retired marketing and promotions manager for The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, was an innovator in his field. “He led the way Anderson in developing the newspaper’s research division when the competitive media landscape demanded more than just raw circulation numbers,” said Paul Jewell, the newspaper’s marketing director. “He was a pioneer in developing the analytics that have become commonplace in the industry today.” Anderson died June 13 after a battle with lymphoma. He was 85. Anderson was originally from Arkansas. During the Great Depression his family moved from Chicago to Pace, Miss. and eventually to Memphis. After graduating high school and completing a brief stint in the Navy, he enrolled at Memphis State College. He graduated in 1950 with a double major in English literature and business sales management. He met his wife-to-be, Wanda, at Treadwell High School when he was in the 10th grade, and they married on May 31, 1952. During their 61 years together, they raised two children. “We did a lot of traveling in the last 10 years,” his wife said. “Those are some of the fondest memories I have of him.” Anderson started at The Commercial Appeal in 1953 as the circulation and promotions manager. “He led Memphis Publishing Co.’s promotions and community relations department back in the days when there were two thriving newspapers, The Commercial Appeal in the morning and the Press-Scimitar in the afternoon,” Jewell said. “I’m sure there are many, many men and women in Memphis who remember winning bicycles, trips and other prizes in carrier contests that were coordinated by John.” During his free time, Anderson volunteered with his son’s Boy Scout troop and his daughter’s Girl Scout troop. He became an avid photographer through his work as a promotions manager. And his family can’t help but boast about his talent in the kitchen. “He made wonderful spaghetti,” his daughter, Suzanne, said. “He used to watch all of those cooking shows. He was a great chef.” Anderson donated his body to the 5 University of Tennessee in Memphis to aid in research. Besides his wife, he leaves the daughter, Suzanne Anderson Leslie of Memphis; a son, John Anderson Jr. of Knoxville; and a granddaughter. (June 16, 2013) Allen W. Pettus Tennessean journalist BY BRIAN HAAS The Tennessean, Nashville Allen W. Pettus, a longtime journalist at The Tennessean, Nashville, and avid outdoorsman, died June 18. He was 91. A Nashville native, Pettus worked for The Tennessean Pettus for more than 40 years, joining the staff as a reporter in 1946 after serving in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. He held various positions over the next several decades, including financial editor, Sunday and magazine editor and executive assistant to the publisher, from 1970 until he retired in 1987. “After he got out of World War II … he went down and just camped on the front door until he got a job,” said his son, Bill Pettus, who lives in Brentwood. “He was a company man. He very much believed in The Tennessean, its goals and purposes.” He was a talented storyteller who loved the great outdoors. In 1972 he implored Tennessean readers to “Make friends with a mountain” and wrote lovingly of the Smoky Mountains, a region that remained close to his heart. “You don’t have to be a mountain climber to discover the solitude of the Smokies,” he wrote on Sept. 17, 1972. “There are many walking trails for ‘just plain folks,’ too – and a different world lies just around the bend.” John Seigenthaler, chairman emeritus of The Tennessean, said Pettus was one of the kindest, most open-minded journalists he ever knew. In a newsroom filled with cantankerous personalities, he said Pettus was notable – for his kindness. “I don’t know that I ever knew anybody who brought his faith to work everyday in as meaningful a way as Allen did,” Seigenthaler said. “He sort of stood out because he was just such a good guy.” Pettus retired in 1987 and focused mainly on traveling. In his advanced years, he made it a mission to keep his mind sharp and to help others his age do the same. In 1999, The Tennessean wrote about him helping to lead senior brain teaser games at the Maryland Farms YMCA pool in Brentwood. More recently, at Bethany Health & Rehabilitation, he’d lead fellow seniors in “Laff with Allen” before Bingo Night, in which he’d spin yarns about Nashville history and anecdotes from his life, such as the time Amelia Earhart visited The Tennessean. “He described what he was trying to do as helping the old folks to be more mentally alert and more active,” Bill Pettus said. “I think that kind of symbolized his life – he tried to help others.” (June 19, 2013) Natalie W. Smith Late publisher’s daughter Natalie Wells Smith, daughter of the late Horace V. Wells Jr., founder, editor and publisher of the Clinton Courier-News, died unexpectedly June 12 while on a family Smith outing in Fairfield Glade. She was 76. A Clinton native, Smith resided in Bradenton, Fla. She graduated from Clinton High School, attended Maryville College and received a B.S. in education degree from the University of Tennessee. She continued her education with a master’s in library science from Peabody College and then completed a law degree. Her enthusiasm for education continued late in life as she was proud to help remodel and dramatically improve the library at First Presbyterian Church in Sarasota, Fla. She tried to better herself at all of her many hobbies, including tennis, golf, daily exercise, prolific reading and educational travel, and she enjoyed the symphony and the theater. She had a lifelong love for music and was learning to play the hammered dulcimer. She was preceded in death by her parents, Horace Vinson Wells Jr., in 1994 and Dorothy Overall Wells, in 1969, as well as her sister, Nancy Wells Townsend. She leaves her husband, James R. (Jim) Smith; three children, Bill Wiesehuegel, Susan Cress and Robert Wiesehuegel; sisters, Katrina Counts and Dorothy Cunningham; stepchildren, Kim Smith, Greg Smith and Kyri Smith; and six grandchildren. A memorial service was held at Fairfield Glade Community Church on June 22, and another will be held at the First Presbyterian Church, Sarasota, on July 7. (Adapted, Crossville Chronicle, June 19, 2013) Read The Tennessee Press —then pass it on! FROM PAGE 4 dent of the Chamber. Parkins was surrounded by a large group of family as he received the award. “Thank you from the bottom of my heart; I’m truly honored,” he told the audience. “A lot of people out there are just as deserving of this award as I am. But I do deeply care for this community and love this community and town. It’s the only place I’ve really ever been and I’m probably stuck with it.” He thanked his family for attending, including a “gaggle of sisters” and some who traveled from afar. He thanked wife, Carol, saying, she “has put up with a lot. I know it’s not easy on her all of the things I get myself caught up in. She’s a very supportive wife and I love her for that.” Parkins has the rare distinction of being the child of two previous Man and Woman of the Year winners, the late Bob Parkins and Dorris Parkins. “I certainly couldn’t be here without my mother; she continues to amaze me every day,” he said. “She’s an incredible woman. I wish my father could be here. We sure do miss him, and he was a great example for me and a lot of other people.” He encouraged people to become involved in the Chamber of Commerce. MARKETPLACE ADVERTISING DIRECTOR needed for the largest daily newspaper in the Upper Cumberlands of Tennessee. This is a full-time position with the 110-year-old Herald-Citizen in Cookeville, Tennessee. Duties include: managing, training and motivating our five- to seven-person sales staff in newspaper and online sales. Marketing degree or appropriate sales and management experience a must. This position offers: salary with bonus based on performance, paid employee health insurance, paid vacation and sick days, five paid holidays, 401K plan with company match, mileage paid for travel while on the job, company-paid life insurance policy. This is an outstanding opportunity for the right person! Send resume and qualifications to: mike.delapp@herald-citizen.com or mail to Mike DeLapp, P.O. Box 2729, Cookeville, Tenn. 38501. Have a job opening? Post your open positions and review resumes in the employment area of www.tnpress.com. The Tennessee Press 6 District 9 Daniel Richardson Magic Valley Publishing Camden Since June 2013 Ashland City Times The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville The Dickson Herald The Stewart-Houston Times, Dover The Gallatin News Gallatin News Examiner The Lebanon Democrat The Wilson Post, Lebanon Mt. Juliet News The Tennessean, Nashville The Portland Leader Robertson County Times, Springfield The News-Democrat, Waverly Dresden Enterprise The Tri-City Reporter, Dyer State Gazette, Dyersburg The Fulton Leader The Humboldt Chronicle Weakley County Press, Martin The Milan Mirror-Exchange The Paris Post-Intelligencer Lake County Banner, Tiptonville The Gazette, Trenton Union City Daily Messenger District 10 Eric Barnes The Daily News Memphis Since July 2008 2013-14 TPA officers, directors, members District 7 Mark Palmer The Daily Herald Columbia Since June 2013 District 6 Joe Adams The Lebanon Democrat Since December 2010 PRESIDENT Lynn J. Richardson Herald & Tribune, Jonesborough VICE PRESIDENT DAILIES Jason P. Taylor Chattanooga Times Free Press 6 9 Bulletin Times, Bolivar The Camden Chronicle Chester County Independent, Henderson Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon The Jackson Sun The Lexington Progress The McKenzie Banner The News Leader, Parsons The Courier, Savannah Independent Appeal, Selmer 10 VICE PRESIDENT NON-DAILIES Joel Washburn The McKenzie Banner TREASURER John Finney Buffalo River Review, Linden Pickett County Press, Byrdstown Carthage Courier Citizen-Statesman, Celina Dale Hollow Horizon, Celina Herald-Citizen, Cookeville Crossville Chronicle Jackson County Sentinel, Gainesboro The Hartsville Vidette Fentress Courier, Jamestown Macon County Chronicle, Lafayette Macon County Times, Lafayette LaFollette Press Livingston Enterprise Overton County News, Livingston Independent Herald, Oneida Scott County News, Oneida The Sparta Expositor Morgan County News, Wartburg IMMEDIATE PAST PRESIDENT Michael B. Williams The Paris Post-Intelligencer 1 4 7 5 District 2 Jack McElroy News Sentinel Knoxville Since June 2008 The Courier News, Clinton Roane County News, Kingston News Sentinel, Knoxville News-Herald, Lenoir City The Daily Times, Maryville The Union News Leader, Maynardville The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge Tennessee Star Journal, Pigeon Forge The Mountain Press, Sevierville The Claiborne Progress, Tazewell District 5 Hugh Jones Shelbyville TimesGazette Since June 2007 Elk Valley Times, Fayetteville The Moore County News, Lynchburg Manchester Times Southern Standard, McMinnville The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Shelbyville Times-Gazette Smithville Review Grundy County Herald, Tracy City The Tullahoma News The Herald-Chronicle, Winchester Cannon Courier, Woodbury 2 8 7 District 4 Darren Oliver Overton County News Livingston Since June 2010 Your Community Shopper, Ardmore Hickman County Times, Centerville The Daily Herald, Columbia The Fairview Observer Lewis County Herald, Hohenwald The Democrat-Union, Lawrenceburg Marshall County Tribune, Lewisburg Buffalo River Review, Linden Pulaski Citizen The Wayne County News, Waynesboro District 8 Brad Franklin The Lexington Progress Since June 2006 The Crockett Times, Alamo Bartlett Express Brownsville States Graphic Collierville Herald The Leader, Covington Germantown News The Commercial Appeal, Memphis The Daily News, Memphis Memphis Business Journal The Millington Star The Lauderdale County Enterprise, Ripley The Lauderdale Voice, Ripley The Fayette Falcon, Somerville The Tennessee Press JULY 2013 JULY 2013 3 District 1 Keith Wilson Kingsport Times-News Elected June 2011 and served previously Grainger Today, Bean Station Bristol Herald Courier Elizabethton Star The Erwin Record The Greeneville Sun The Standard Banner, Jefferson City Johnson City Press Herald & Tribune, Jonesborough Kingsport Times-News Citizen Tribune, Morristown The Tomahawk, Mountain City The Newport Plain Talk Rogersville Review District 3 Chris Vass Chattanooga Times Free Press Since November 2008 The Daily Post-Athenian, Athens Polk County News, Benton Chattanooga Times Free Press Hamilton County Herald, Chattanooga Cleveland Daily Banner The Herald-News, Dayton The Dunlap Tribune Jasper Journal The Bledsonian-Banner, Pikeville South Pittsburg Hustler The Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater TPA officers’ terms are one year; directors’ terms are two years. Even-numbered districts serve until June 2014; odd-numbered districts serve until June 2015. TPAF officers, trustees TPS officers’ terms are one year; directors’ terms are three years. TPAF officers’ terms are one year; trustees’ terms are three years. TPS officers, directors PRESIDENT Gregg K. Jones The Greeneville Sun PRESIDENT Jeffrey D. Fishman The Tullahoma News VICE PRESIDENT Victor Parkins The Milan Mirror-Exchange DIRECTOR Ralph C. Baldwin Jones Media Inc. Greeneville DIRECTOR David Critchlow Jr. Union City Daily Messenger DIRECTOR Jason P. Taylor Chattanooga Times Free Press DIRECTOR Jana Thomasson The Mountain Press Sevierville Bob Atkins, Hendersonville Eric Barnes, The Daily News, Memphis Jim Charlet, Brentwood Nate Crawford, Nashville David Critchlow Jr., Union City Daily Messenger John Finney, Buffalo River Review, Linden Jeffrey Fishman, The Tullahoma News R. Jack Fishman, Citizen Tribune, Morristown R. Michael Fishman, Citizen Tribune, Morristown Brad Franklin, The Lexington Progress Dale Gentry, The Standard Banner, Jefferson City Tom Hill, trustee emeritus VICE PRESIDENT Victor Parkins The Milan Mirror-Exchange Doug Horne, Knoxville Hugh Jones, Shelbyville Times-Gazette John M. Jones Sr., Greeneville, trustee emeritus John M. Jones Jr., The Greeneville Sun Sam D. Kennedy, Kennedy Newspapers, Columbia Hershel Lake, Pulaski Publishing Steve Lake, Pulaski Citizen Jack McElroy, News Sentinel, Knoxville Victor Parkins, The Milan Mirror-Exchange Mike Pirtle, Murfreesboro Walter T. Pulliam, Knoxville, trustee emeritus Janet Rail, Independent Appeal, Selmer GENERAL COUNSEL Richard L. (Rick) Hollow Knoxville Darrell Richardson, The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge Lynn Richardson, Herald & Tribune, Jonesborough Pauline D. Sherrer, Crossville Chronicle Larry K. Smith, LaFollette, trustee emeritus Jason Taylor, Chattanooga Times Free Press Joel Washburn, The McKenzie Banner Scott Whaley, Henderson Bill Williams, Paris Michael Williams, The Paris Post-Intelligencer Keith Wilson, Kingsport Times-News The Tennessee Press 8 Tennessee’s advertising networks: Helping your local customers extend their reach BY BETH ELLIOTT Networks advertising manager David Wells, Tennessee Press Service (TPS) advertising director, and I just returned from a refresher training course at The Mountain Press Elliott in Sevierville. It was a great day to drive to the foot of the Smoky Mountains and an even better time meeting the folks at The Mountain Press. David discussed how TPS is here to help bring new business to TPA members and how we must work together in order to accomplish this. The refresher course was about Tennessee’s advertising networks. During the session I could see the wheels spinning as to the types of businesses that could benefit from getting their message in multiple markets through one-point-of-contact – the local advertising rep. Tennessee’s advertising networks (TnSCAN, TnDAN and TnNET) are powerful tools sales reps can offer their existing clients. Imagine your local chamber of commerce is wanting to bring in crowds not only in your county, but from surrounding counties. The task would be daunting for them to search the markets they want to reach. Contact each of these newspapers. Send the ads to each newspaper. Receive invoices from each newspaper. And, finally, have to cut checks to each newspaper. All this is wrapped up in a nice package with Tennessee’s advertising networks. What a powerful sales tool your rep has to offer! The power the networks have to offer is not limited to chambers of commerce. Any business that has a need to reach outside your area is a good fit. The possibilities are just about everywhere. Become familiar with the networks. If an extended reach is part of your clients’ needs analyses, remember to tell them about this easy, effective and affordable way to reach a region of Tennessee, the Southeast or the whole nation. In addition to the networks helping your local clients extend their reach, TPS is having a contest for sales reps at participating newspapers. Sell a TnSCAN, TnDAN or TnNET ad and get your name entered in a monthly drawing. The winner will receive a $50 gift card. Every rep who sells an ad gets a chance to win. Double your chances by selling an ad in the monthly selected category. For July, you can win a $50 wild card (that’s a collection of gift cards, not a sleazy store). The monthly category for July is vacation/ stay-cation destinations. The winner of May’s drawing was Teresa Hicks of the Johnson City Press. The competition was strong. Congratulations to all reps who sold network ads in May! If you would like a refresher course for your reps or have questions about the contest, please contact David or me at (865) 584-5761. TPS is here to help you! Protest regardless “There may be times when we're powerless to prevent injustice but there must never be a time when we fail to protest.” Elie Wiesel Nobel Peace Prize laureate, 1986 JULY 2013 Paper mill in Calhoun, once known as Bowater, idles last newsprint machine BY DAVID FLESSNER Chattanooga Times Free Press A generation ago, Bowater’s paper mill in Calhoun was one of America’s biggest producers of newsprint and one of the biggest land owners in southeast Tennessee. Next week [mid-March], Bowater’s successor company, now known as Resolute Forest Products, will shut down its last newsprint machine there after decades of shedding forest lands and mill jobs in response to the shrinking size and circulation of its newspaper customers. Resolute officials said the “indefinite idling” of the newsprint machines will cost another 150 mill jobs, cutting the remaining staff at the Calhoun plant below 500 by the end of the month. Resolute continues to operate two specialty paper machines in Calhoun, making papers for circulars, flyers and other higher-grade paper publications. “From the time I joined the company 26 years ago, production (in Calhoun) is probably half of what it once was,” said Douglas Breckenridge, a sales representative for Resolute Forest Products. “Newspapers are much narrower than they used to be and today’s printing presses use far less paper.” After Bowater and Abitibi-Consolidated merged in 2007 to create the third largest pulp and paper company in North America, the company shut down two of its five paper production machines in Calhoun in 2008. Debbie Johnston, director of public affairs for Resolute, said the Calhoun newsprint machine was not as efficient as other company mills in Augusta, Ga. and Grenada, Miss., where the company has invested more than $30 million to upgrade operations. “The idling (in Calhoun) comes as a result of a decrease in demand for newsprint, coupled with high operating costs for the machine,” she said. The decision follows Resolute’s acquisition this week of the 49 percent interest in Calhoun Newsprint Co., owned by The Herald Publishing Co., LLC, its joint-venture partner for the newsprint operations. The Calhoun mill produced 215,000 metric tons per year and supplied newsprint for dozens of newspapers in the Southeast, including the Chattanooga Times Free Press. A plant in Augusta, Ga. will now supply such newsprint. (March 13, 2013) REWRITES FROM THE TENNESSEE PRESS JULY 1963 John M. Jones Sr., The Greeneville Sun, presented President’s Awards to J. Zollie Howard, Memphis PressScimitar, and John Finney, The Daily Herald, Columbia. The Millington Star became the first three-time winner of the Grand Award in the UT-TPA State Press Contests. Bill Frame, The Lebanon Democrat, assumed the 1963-64 presidency of TPA. The need for careful handling of desegregation news stories was reviewed at wire service meetings at the summer convention in Chattanooga. The TPS board of directors was reelected: Guy Easterly, The LaFollette Press, president; J. Bill Frame, The Lebanon Democrat; Donald Brookhart, Crossville Chronicle; and W.T. Franklin, The Lexington Progress. Three Tennessee newspapers converted to offset (cold type) printing. They were the Cookeville Citizen; Putnam County Herald, Cookeville; and the Sparta Expositor-News Pictorial. Franklin Yates, Shelbyville TimesGazette, spent six weeks in Russia and eight other Iron Curtain countries as a member of the American Newspapers Study Mission. JULY 1988 John Paul Jones, publisher of The Daily News, Memphis, was installed as Tennessee Press Service Advertising Placement Snapshot ROP: Network: May 2013: $384,540 $68,685 Year* as of May 31: $2,677,680 $385,351 *The Tennessee Press Service Inc. fiscal year runs Dec. 1 through Nov. 30. TPA president for 1988-89. Persis Corp., the parent company of the Honolulu Advertiser, planned to buy The Knoxville Journal. Bob Atkins, publisher of the News Examiner, Gallatin, was re-elected president of TPS, and Tom Hill, publisher of The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge, was re-elected TPAF president. Members of Virginia Press Association who judged the UT-TPA contests for 1988 praised the entries as exciting, excellent and handsome. The Tennessean, Nashville, and The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, swept photojournalism honors at the annual United Press International Tennessee Association of Newspapers annual competition. Sam Kennedy, chairman of the TPA Legislative Committee, termed a Metro Nashville policy of not making available wreck reports involving fatalities a “sham.” Ralph C. Baldwin was named publisher of The Daily Post-Athenian, Athens. He succeeded James Gray. Baldwin had been general manager of a newspaper in Aberdeen, N.C. Newspapers were experimenting with ink made from soybean oil. The Tennessee Press JULY 2013 PARKINS OBITUARIES John Anderson Retired from The CA BY MAX FILBY AND L. TAYLOR SMITH The Commercial Appeal, Memphis John Anderson, retired marketing and promotions manager for The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, was an innovator in his field. “He led the way Anderson in developing the newspaper’s research division when the competitive media landscape demanded more than just raw circulation numbers,” said Paul Jewell, the newspaper’s marketing director. “He was a pioneer in developing the analytics that have become commonplace in the industry today.” Anderson died June 13 after a battle with lymphoma. He was 85. Anderson was originally from Arkansas. During the Great Depression his family moved from Chicago to Pace, Miss. and eventually to Memphis. After graduating high school and completing a brief stint in the Navy, he enrolled at Memphis State College. He graduated in 1950 with a double major in English literature and business sales management. He met his wife-to-be, Wanda, at Treadwell High School when he was in the 10th grade, and they married on May 31, 1952. During their 61 years together, they raised two children. “We did a lot of traveling in the last 10 years,” his wife said. “Those are some of the fondest memories I have of him.” Anderson started at The Commercial Appeal in 1953 as the circulation and promotions manager. “He led Memphis Publishing Co.’s promotions and community relations department back in the days when there were two thriving newspapers, The Commercial Appeal in the morning and the Press-Scimitar in the afternoon,” Jewell said. “I’m sure there are many, many men and women in Memphis who remember winning bicycles, trips and other prizes in carrier contests that were coordinated by John.” During his free time, Anderson volunteered with his son’s Boy Scout troop and his daughter’s Girl Scout troop. He became an avid photographer through his work as a promotions manager. And his family can’t help but boast about his talent in the kitchen. “He made wonderful spaghetti,” his daughter, Suzanne, said. “He used to watch all of those cooking shows. He was a great chef.” Anderson donated his body to the 5 University of Tennessee in Memphis to aid in research. Besides his wife, he leaves the daughter, Suzanne Anderson Leslie of Memphis; a son, John Anderson Jr. of Knoxville; and a granddaughter. (June 16, 2013) Allen W. Pettus Tennessean journalist BY BRIAN HAAS The Tennessean, Nashville Allen W. Pettus, a longtime journalist at The Tennessean, Nashville, and avid outdoorsman, died June 18. He was 91. A Nashville native, Pettus worked for The Tennessean Pettus for more than 40 years, joining the staff as a reporter in 1946 after serving in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. He held various positions over the next several decades, including financial editor, Sunday and magazine editor and executive assistant to the publisher, from 1970 until he retired in 1987. “After he got out of World War II … he went down and just camped on the front door until he got a job,” said his son, Bill Pettus, who lives in Brentwood. “He was a company man. He very much believed in The Tennessean, its goals and purposes.” He was a talented storyteller who loved the great outdoors. In 1972 he implored Tennessean readers to “Make friends with a mountain” and wrote lovingly of the Smoky Mountains, a region that remained close to his heart. “You don’t have to be a mountain climber to discover the solitude of the Smokies,” he wrote on Sept. 17, 1972. “There are many walking trails for ‘just plain folks,’ too – and a different world lies just around the bend.” John Seigenthaler, chairman emeritus of The Tennessean, said Pettus was one of the kindest, most open-minded journalists he ever knew. In a newsroom filled with cantankerous personalities, he said Pettus was notable – for his kindness. “I don’t know that I ever knew anybody who brought his faith to work everyday in as meaningful a way as Allen did,” Seigenthaler said. “He sort of stood out because he was just such a good guy.” Pettus retired in 1987 and focused mainly on traveling. In his advanced years, he made it a mission to keep his mind sharp and to help others his age do the same. In 1999, The Tennessean wrote about him helping to lead senior brain teaser games at the Maryland Farms YMCA pool in Brentwood. More recently, at Bethany Health & Rehabilitation, he’d lead fellow seniors in “Laff with Allen” before Bingo Night, in which he’d spin yarns about Nashville history and anecdotes from his life, such as the time Amelia Earhart visited The Tennessean. “He described what he was trying to do as helping the old folks to be more mentally alert and more active,” Bill Pettus said. “I think that kind of symbolized his life – he tried to help others.” (June 19, 2013) Natalie W. Smith Late publisher’s daughter Natalie Wells Smith, daughter of the late Horace V. Wells Jr., founder, editor and publisher of the Clinton Courier-News, died unexpectedly June 12 while on a family Smith outing in Fairfield Glade. She was 76. A Clinton native, Smith resided in Bradenton, Fla. She graduated from Clinton High School, attended Maryville College and received a B.S. in education degree from the University of Tennessee. She continued her education with a master’s in library science from Peabody College and then completed a law degree. Her enthusiasm for education continued late in life as she was proud to help remodel and dramatically improve the library at First Presbyterian Church in Sarasota, Fla. She tried to better herself at all of her many hobbies, including tennis, golf, daily exercise, prolific reading and educational travel, and she enjoyed the symphony and the theater. She had a lifelong love for music and was learning to play the hammered dulcimer. She was preceded in death by her parents, Horace Vinson Wells Jr., in 1994 and Dorothy Overall Wells, in 1969, as well as her sister, Nancy Wells Townsend. She leaves her husband, James R. (Jim) Smith; three children, Bill Wiesehuegel, Susan Cress and Robert Wiesehuegel; sisters, Katrina Counts and Dorothy Cunningham; stepchildren, Kim Smith, Greg Smith and Kyri Smith; and six grandchildren. A memorial service was held at Fairfield Glade Community Church on June 22, and another will be held at the First Presbyterian Church, Sarasota, on July 7. (Adapted, Crossville Chronicle, June 19, 2013) Read The Tennessee Press —then pass it on! FROM PAGE 4 dent of the Chamber. Parkins was surrounded by a large group of family as he received the award. “Thank you from the bottom of my heart; I’m truly honored,” he told the audience. “A lot of people out there are just as deserving of this award as I am. But I do deeply care for this community and love this community and town. It’s the only place I’ve really ever been and I’m probably stuck with it.” He thanked his family for attending, including a “gaggle of sisters” and some who traveled from afar. He thanked wife, Carol, saying, she “has put up with a lot. I know it’s not easy on her all of the things I get myself caught up in. She’s a very supportive wife and I love her for that.” Parkins has the rare distinction of being the child of two previous Man and Woman of the Year winners, the late Bob Parkins and Dorris Parkins. “I certainly couldn’t be here without my mother; she continues to amaze me every day,” he said. “She’s an incredible woman. I wish my father could be here. We sure do miss him, and he was a great example for me and a lot of other people.” He encouraged people to become involved in the Chamber of Commerce. MARKETPLACE ADVERTISING DIRECTOR needed for the largest daily newspaper in the Upper Cumberlands of Tennessee. This is a full-time position with the 110-year-old Herald-Citizen in Cookeville, Tennessee. Duties include: managing, training and motivating our five- to seven-person sales staff in newspaper and online sales. Marketing degree or appropriate sales and management experience a must. This position offers: salary with bonus based on performance, paid employee health insurance, paid vacation and sick days, five paid holidays, 401K plan with company match, mileage paid for travel while on the job, company-paid life insurance policy. This is an outstanding opportunity for the right person! Send resume and qualifications to: mike.delapp@herald-citizen.com or mail to Mike DeLapp, P.O. Box 2729, Cookeville, Tenn. 38501. Have a job opening? Post your open positions and review resumes in the employment area of www.tnpress.com. The Tennessee Press 4 JULY 2013 Parkins among Milan Chamber People of the Year Milan’s People of the Year for 2012 were honored recently when the Chamber of Commerce held its annual membership banquet at Milan Middle School. One of them was Victor Parkins, editor of The Milan Mirror-Exchange. An overflow crowd, estimated at more than 300 people, attended the gala with the theme: “Glitz, Glamour and Grow.” The award recipients were kept secret until announced at the banquet. The Man of the Year Award went to Parkins and the Woman of the Year to Linda West, the Chamber administrative assistant since 1987; the Steve Marsh Pinnacle Award for small business, to the Crocker-Carter Law firm; and Educator of the Year to Deidre Maxwell, a pre-kindergarten teacher at Milan Elementary School. Musical entertainment and the playing of the National Anthem were pro- vided by the Milan High School jazz band directed by John Scruggs. The catered dinner was served by students in the school Beta Clubs and Milan High Spanish Club. Joey Johnson, pastor of Whitehall Baptist Church, gave the invocation. Mayor Chris Crider introduced special guests and summarized recent efforts to make Milan more attractive to potential businesses and industry. Blake Brown described Man of the Year winner Parkins as a “strong man of faith and a family man.’“ In his role as newspaper editor, Parkins was called by one nominator as a “voice for the Milan community.” “With the untimely passing of his father (Bob Parkins), he assumed the reins of one of the best newspapers in Tennessee, and certainly the best in West Tennessee, based on numerous awards for excellence and quality in reporting,” said the nomination of Parkins. “However, the significance of his role is in his desire to keep the citizens of Milan not just an informed 2013 UT – TPA State Press Contests Awards Luncheon Millennium Maxwell House Hotel Nashville, Tennessee Noon Friday, July 19, 2013 Register online at: www.tnpress.com THE MILAN MIRROR-EXCHANGE Victor Parkins, editor of The Milan Mirror-Exchange, center, was named Man of the Year at a Chamber of Commerce banquet. public, but a thinking public. His editorials are always on timely topics; his comments combined with factual information are thought-provoking, and in many cases have led the citizenry to better decisions in action through voting, letters to Congress and other forms of action on the part of our community.” Parkins put “his heart and soul” in trying to save jobs at the Milan arsenal, said one nominator. Mayor Chris Crider described Parkins as a wonderful advisor and confidant, invaluable “not only as a friend, but on a professional level as well.” Mr. Parkins’ nomination packet in- cluded numerous letters citing his contributions, Brown noted. “He is willing to put friends in front of himself,” said one letter. “He is always willing to help a friend in need and go the extra mile. He would lend a helping hand or let someone borrow equipment or anything else they need to help them out. He would, at a moment’s notice, drop what he was doing to help someone in need. He also extends friendship to children of his friends by willingly spending time with them hunting, fishing, fourwheeler riding or just having conversations with them. My son loves him like family.” People cited Parkins’ support of school programs, work with the Chamber, involvement in Lions Club and dedication to his church and support for other denominations. “He truly cares about the citizens of Milan,” said one supporter. His pastor, Scott Bloodworth, said Parkins was a person of the highest character, steeped in Milan’s traditions. “He’s Milan’s man when it comes to ensuring our community’s future and safeguarding our heritage,” said Bloodworth. Parkins previously served as presiSEE PARKINS, PAGE 5 WORTH REPEATING History repeats itself BY CLAY MORGAN Editor The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro I apologize for being away the last couple of weeks. It has been an extraordinarily busy time professionally and personally. Fortunately, it has been as rewarding as it has been busy. I read a comment the other day – I think on Twitter – that we are returning to the days of pamphlet journalism. Whoever wrote that may very well be correct. Much of the journalism of the early days, particularly the 17th and 18th centuries, was in the form of pamphlets. These were often arguments for or against a particular government, law or right. Not at all what we think of as journalism today. For example, I have heard the pamphlet Common Sense by Thomas Paine referred to as an early piece of American journalism, and that may well be the case. However, it is clearly a piece of writing that makes an argument that the Americas should be free of British rule. One thing it is not is impartial. It presents a strong argument, more like an extended editorial than a piece of independent “news reporting.” Today, are we witnessing the same thing with social media? Are people reporting and presenting news and information from a particular point of view and with the purpose of convincing people of a particular idea? 9 Court made right call in mosque public notice case ENGRAVINGS BY STEVE SHORT The Milan Mirror-Exchange The Tennessee Press JULY 2013 OK. Memes probably aren’t the pamphlets of our time. However, there is no doubting the ability of social media to inform large groups of people and sway opinion. And it can be done from a deliberately specific perspective or with deliberate intention, much like the pamphlets of old. Are memes or Facebook posts or tweets the pamphlets of our time? Are they the product of citizen journalism; people trying to sway opinion? I don’t know. While I have some concerns with the way news is presented on social media, it is a powerful communication tool, just like the ability to print and sell 100,000 copies of Common Sense was in 1776. (May 6, 2013) The state Court of Appeals’ reversal of a The notice ran three weeks before the of high public interest and import. Murfreesboro judge’s ruling in a public notice meeting. Most of the court cases from the case involving a controversial Muslim mosque There was no zoning issue to be refirst challenge of the Sunshine Law in was good reason to exhale. solved. That had been taken care of 1974 to the present have relied on the It was the right ruling on a bad lawsuit. We may before the local Islamic community principle that the amount and method have dodged a bullet because bad cases sometimes bought the property. Zoning issues of providing notices should be based result in bad law. typically lead to public hearings and on the “totality of the circumstances The court said Chancellor Robert Corlew erred thus more detailed notices. Rutherford as would fairly inform the public.” by finding that the public notice the Rutherford County accommodates its citizens by That basically means the government County Regional Planning Commission ran May having one meeting a month at night should tailor its policies so the level of PUBLIC 2, 2010 in The Murfreesboro Post was inadequate. for that purpose. notice provided should be proportional Corlew had ruled it should have appeared in In this case, the land was already to the public interest involved. POLICY more places than the Post, which at the time was zoned residential, and “religious” use In 1974, leaders in the City of MemOUTLOOK phis said they didn’t know what “ada newspaper that published only on Sunday and is permitted by right under the counmaintained a website. ty’s zoning ordinance. equate” meant. The state Supreme The appeals court decision actually turned on Opponents of the mosque claimed Frank Gibson Court said they should know. Later, it the content of the public notice. Islam is not a religion and that adherents was things like posting notice on a bank “This litigation has included many twists and to Islam are dangerous to American society, but window the day before a BMA meeting and usturns and volumes of filings, but this decision to block construction, they hung their hat on the ing vague language to describe the business on discusses only what relates to the narrow issue adequacy of the public notice. the agenda or not mentioning that a controveron appeal,” Judge Andy Bennett wrote. The appeals court noted that the planning com- sial matter would be discussed at an out-of-state Later he noted that facts in the mission did everything the law school board retreat that were ruled as not meetcase that were “relevant” were required – it notified the pub- ing adequacy standard. “undisputed.” That suggested lic by usual means when and The most troubling part of cases like the emoSuch cases ‘can be to me that the case bordered on where the planning commis- tion-generated mosque litigation is they can be used by some to enbeing frivolous. sion was meeting. used by some to encourage legal mischief. courage legal mischief.’ Though not one of the “relThe court’s unanimous Rutherford County officials sought legislation evant” issues, the court made opinion explained that the es- in the General Assembly earlier this year to denote of the fact the public notablished case law about Ten- fine “adequate” notice in the statute. It was in tice appeared in print and on nessee’s Sunshine Law (Open response to Chancellor Corlew’s now-tainted the newspaper’s website and through an “over- Meetings Law) only requires notices of “special opinion. One early draft would have put them on sight” the county failed to put the meeting notice meetings” to include details such as the agenda. government websites. and the agenda on its website until after the May The Sunshine Law defines “special meeting” as TPA discouraged that effort as premature be24 meeting. any meeting “not previously scheduled by stat- cause the law should not be changed on some The issue was whether the notice of the regu- ute, ordinance, or resolution, or for which notice knee-jerk reaction. lar bimonthly meeting should have included the is not already provided by law.” The case was still on appeal. The chancellor’s fact the commission would be considering a site The court explained that more detailed notices decision was clearly wrong, ill-advised and uninplan for construction of the religious complex in are required for “special” meetings because by formed, and we believed it would be overturned a sparsely-populated outskirt of Murfreesboro. definition those are meetings reserved for matters because he made a very simple question overly complicated. Rutherford County officials had followed the law. Those were the same reasons TPA did not file or join in an amicus brief in the matter. The News Sentinel, Knoxville, had a story three days after the appeals court opinion came down. Under the headline “Knox County meeting notifications under scrutiny,” the newspaper quoted Knox County Attorney Richard (Bud) Armstrong as saying the county needed to do something in response to Corlew’s decision. “When the decision came out of Murfreesboro, it gave a lot of people heartburn,” he said. “But the truth of it is that it’s a really tough topic.” The newspaper reported that the decision in Rutherford “could lead to many local governments changing the way they notify the public when individuals and legislative bodies want to meet.” Armstrong said the chancellor’s “judgment has merit” and he has advised his county commission that it, too, should take heed. “Ever since the case came out, the rope has been pulled a little tighter, and I think we need to start complying to a tighter position,” the newspaper quoted him as saying. We should all favor improvement in government policies on public notices. That’s why TPA proposed the legislation this year to improve the way notices are delivered. But, we have to beware of proposed changes based on a unique set of facts. Many times when legislation is considered something gets lost in the process. It’s usually transparency that gets lost in the compromises. FRANK GIBSON is TPA’s public policy director. One can reach him at (615) 202-2685 or fgibson@ tnpress.com. Quiz question stumps some on public notice Paulson is communication dean BY KENT FLANAGAN Executive director Tennessee Coalition for Open Government A quiz on open government topics revealed that nearly three-fourths those who took the online test did not know that only Tennessee citizens are guaranteed access to state Flanagan and local public records. The Tennessee Sunshine Quiz included 15 questions to test a person’s knowledge about public records as well as the state’s Sunshine Law on access to public meetings of city councils, county commissions and other public boards. In March about 350 people completed the quiz, which was sponsored by the Tennessee Coalition for Open Government (TCOG) through the support of the Tennessee Press Association, the Tennessee Association of Broadcasters and the Associated Press. All are TCOG members. The quiz was produced as part of Sunshine Week, a national initiative by the American Society of Newspaper Editors to promote greater openness in government. The Tennessee Public Records Act of 1957 states that public records shall be open to “any citizen of Tennessee.” But government agencies don’t apply that clause uniformly, and most officials interpret it to mean that they must deny requests from people who are not Tennessee residents. “It is a frequently abused section of the law,” Frank Gibson told AP. Earlier this year, the United States Supreme Court affirmed the right of states to limit public records access to only citizens in a case from Virginia, which along with Tennessee and a handful of other states have similar laws on records access. Responses to another question in the quiz showed that about 40 percent did not know that the Tennessee General Assembly is not covered by the state Sunshine Law, which does cover all other public state, county or local governing bodies. Another Sunshine Law question stumped about one-third of the respondents. The question asked for a true or false response to this statement: “Two members of your local county commission meet for lunch and discuss matters that the commission will vote on at its next meeting. As a quorum of the commission is not present, this lunch meeting is not a violation of the Sunshine Act.” The correct response is false. However, chance meetings of members of a public body do not violate the Sunshine Law as long as the members do not discuss official business that is to come before their commission, council, board or committee. Anyone wanting to review state laws on public records or open meetings can download copies of the statutes from the Tennessee Press Association website, www.tnpress.com. The list of more than 350 exceptions to the TPRA is being updated this summer and will be posted on TCOG’s website, www.tcog.info. One can reach Kent Flanagan at (615) 957-2825 or kent.flanagan@gmail.com. First Amendment advocate and former journalist Ken Paulson is the new dean of the Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, College of Mass Communication, effective Paulson July 1. He was president and chief executive officer of the First Amendment Center in Nashville and was editor-in-chief at USA Today from 2004 to 2009 and was a founder of the newspaper in 1982. He continues his involvement as a columnist on USA Today’s board of contributors and covers First Amendment issues and media. He also has “significant ties to the music industry,” said Brad Bartel, university provost, who cited in an email sent to faculty Paulson’s positions as deputy chair of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame and his appointment to the Music City Music Council. University President Sidney McPhee echoed Bartel’s enthusiasm. “We were impressed by the breadth of Ken’s experience,” McPhee said in a press release by MTSU News and Public Affairs. “He has led a national news organization, traveled the country with a rock ’n’ roll band to tout the First Amendment and hosted a national television program. His career has touched all of our college’s disciplines.” Paulson said he sees a lot of opportunity for growth in the College of Mass Communication. “There’s an opportunity for innovative communication colleges to craft new and bold approaches, fueling these professions with fresh perspectives and insights – and graduates with the skills to maximize both,” he said in the press release. Paulson earned his bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri and a juris doctor degree from the University of Illinois College of Law. He will be replacing Dr. Roy Moore, who has held the position of dean since 2008. Moore plans to remain with the College of Mass Communication as a professor. The Tennessee Press 10 JULY 2013 The Tennessee Press JULY 2013 3 FORESIGHT WORTH REPEATING Disclosure laws on contributions must be upheld BY EDITORIAL BOARD News Sentinel, Knoxville That a recent review that found more than 50 candidates — including some of the Legislature’s top leaders — failed to report contributions from political action committees or corporations is more proof that Tennessee disclosure laws should not be undermined. The Registry of Election Finance found the discrepancies during an annual “crosscheck” review mandated by state law. The review matches donations listed on candidates’ disclosure forms with donations listed on PAC and corporate disclosure forms. A bill sponsored by House Republican Caucus Chairman Glen Casada would do away with the requirement for disclosure by corporations, which would cripple the crosscheck process. Casada was one of lawmakers who failed to fully report contributions. He did not report two $1,000 contributions from PACs. House Democratic Caucus Chairman Mike Turner, who fiercely opposed Casada’s bill, had more unreported donations than anyone else — 18 totaling $19,875. In all, 51 legislative candidates failed to report 180 contributions totaling $144,875. East Tennessee lawmakers with undisclosed contributions from PACs or corporations include Rep. Joe Armstrong, D-Knoxville, with seven totaling $3,900; Rep. Kent Calfee, RKingston, with three totaling $1,250; Rep. John Ragan, R-Oak Ridge, with two totaling $1,000; Sen. Frank Niceley, R-Strawberry Plains, with two totaling $700; Rep. Andrew Farmer, R-Sevierville, with one for $1,000; and Rep. Dennis Powers, R-Jacksboro, with one for $250. Drew Rawlins, executive director of the Bureau of Ethics and Campaign Finance, said the 181 listed contributions amount to only about 2.5 percent of all contributions made to state candidates by PACs and corporations last year. He termed the results “pretty good.” In the aggregate, yes. Sometimes a candidate or campaign treasurer can inadvertently leave off a contribution. The fact that Gov. Bill Haslam failed to report one PAC contribution for $1,000 is understandable in light of the large number of contributions he received. But those with multiple undisclosed contributions such as Turner and Senate Republican Caucus Chairman Bill Ketron, who had eight cited donations totaling $6,100, are more troubling. Campaign disclosure laws are in place so the public knows who is donating money to the people who would be stewards of taxpayer funds. Turner’s unreported PAC money is in addition to the Old Hickory Democrat’s already formidable fundraising — his reported contributions for 2012 added up to $67,975. Casada said that since the Citizens United decision in the U.S. Supreme Court, corporations are people “in the eyes of the law” and, like individuals, should not have to file a contribution report to the Registry. However, corporations are allowed to give much more money than individuals. People can give a maximum of $1,500 to a House candidate or $3,800 to a Senate candidate. PACs and corporations can give up to $7,500 to a House candidate and $11,200 to a Senate candidate. The crosscheck provision of state 2013 law allows election officials to identify candidates who fail to file accurate financial disclosure forms — not to punish them, necessarily, but to ensure that they ultimately reconcile their financial reports. Casada’s bill failed in the House by just two votes in the recently ended session, but he has said he will revive it next year. Speaker Beth Harwell, who opposes it, will have to keep a coalition of responsible Republicans and Democrats together in blocking its passage. Campaign spending continues to spiral upward with no end in sight, and the people of Tennessee deserve to know who is bankrolling the people who represent them in Nashville. Transparency is vital to the integrity of the election process and must be preserved. (May 26, 2013) Kids say thanks for newspapers at NIE appreciation luncheon You probably didn’t realize you’re reading a textbook right now. For thousands of children and even adults in McMinn and Meigs Counties, the newspaper has become part of their educational experience. “Newspapers aren’t part of education. They are education,” said McMinn County Sheriff Joe Guy during Thursday’s Newspapers In Education Sponsor Appreciation Luncheon. “They’re a living document that, each day, tells us what’s going on.” The Daily Post-Athenian’s NIE program is a non-profit, cooperative effort between schools and newspapers to create lifelong readers and leaders by promoting the use of newspapers as an educational resource. More than 3,400 newspapers are distributed to all McMinn and Meigs county, Athens and Etowah city schools, Athens-McMinn Adult Education, KIDS Connection after-school program, and the McMinn County Justice Center’s GED program through NIE sponsorships. “We had 101 teachers using the program this year – our largest amount ever,” said DPA NIE Coordinator Lu Shep Baldwin. “Our program continues to grow and be successful because of the educational systems, businesses, and organizations that support it.” NIE also co-sponsors the annual Family Fun Fair with Tennessee Wesleyan College and McMinn Living Well to promote literacy and healthy lifestyles for youngsters. In addition to newspapers in the classrooms, NIE provides the KidScoop page, serial stories and summer reading activities inside editions of The DPA. “This program provides educators with the most relevant and current textbook: The local newspaper,” said DPA Publisher Mike Miller. “The content in the newspaper enables teachers to supplement programs and textbooks they use while also opening a discussion of current events and promoting social awareness among their students. And, that couldn’t happen without our supporters.” “The DPA’s NIE program stands head and shoulders above any others in the communities we serve,” added Gregg K. Jones, chief executive officer of Jones Media Inc., The Daily PostAthenian’s parent company. The McMinn County Sheriff ’s Department has used NIE for 10 years in its Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program and now uses it to help inmates obtain their GEDs. Guy said seeing how inmates use The Daily Post-Athenian reminds him of the need for newspapers. “Sometimes, we forget just how important the local newspaper is because we’re inundated with information through the Internet and social media,” Guy said. “In jail, you don’t have social media, so when the newspapers come in, they don’t survive long. The inmates literally eat those papers up. They read every word and pass them around. It’s the only contact with the outside they really have. Seeing that makes you realize the value of the newspaper.” Newspapers are just as important for KRISTI NELSON BUMPUS | ETSPJ Members of the cast of the 2013 edition of the ETSPJ Front Page Follies, from left, director Terry Silver-Alford, John McNair, David Haley Lauver, Cindy Hassil, Michael Holtz, Lisa Hood Skinner, Ernie Roberts, Ingrid Ruffin, Cathy Jenkins and Megan Venable Smith. Not pictured: Adina Chumley, Regina Mays, Hubert Smith and Amanda Womac. CHARLIE DANIEL | ETSPJ Hufford is honoree for 35th Front Page Follies Reserve your place for an entertaining evening at the 35th Annual Front Page Follies, through which the East Tennessee Society of Professional Journalists (ETSPJ) raises money for journalism and electronic media scholarships at the University of Tennessee and Pellissippi State Community College. The July 13 event, in addition to poking light-hearted fun at news, and folks who make the news, will honor UT journalism professor Bonnie Hufford. Hufford, who teaches editing, writing, graphics and international communications, has edited and written for the AssociHufford ated Press, Whittle Communications, WKYC-TV and sev- eral daily newspapers and advertising/public relations agencies. She is a two-time UT College of Communication and Information Outstanding Faculty Member, and she has won the SPJ President’s Award for public service twice. The evening begins at 6 p.m. with a reception featuring cocktails and hors d’oeuvres in the lobby of the Clarence Brown Theatre on the UT campus, be- fore the 7:30 p.m. show. Admission is $75 per ticket for general seating. Limited blocks of premium seats at $100 per ticket are available. A portion of the ticket price is a taxdeductible contribution to UT. One may buy tickets by contacting Megan Venable Smith at (865) 974-6903 or msmith93@utk.edu, or one may order online and pay by credit card at www.etspj.org. RICHARDSON: Jonesborough publisher heads TPA FROM PAGE ONE In the community, Richardson has worked with the Chamber of Commerce as marketing chairman for Focus 2015 and for “Hands of Friendship,” a food and supply relief project for Rybinsk, Russia. She has served as East Tennessee State University’s ETSU Pride Week co-chairman and on the boards of the Newspaper Association of America’s Youth and Education Board, the QUEST Foundation and the Northeast Tennessee Tourism Association. Richardson has received several ADDY awards over the years from the Tri-Cities Metro Advertising Federation, as well as an international award from Editor & Publisher for promotion of Newspapers In Education. Under her leadership, the newspaper has received the TPA’s General Excellence Award as well as multiple awards for investigative, editorial, news and feature writing, photography, newspaper design, promotions and ad design. The paper has also received recognitions from The Washington Post and Presstime magazine for its Community Awareness Project with the Town of Jonesborough. She lives with her husband, Dean Batchelder, in Elizabethton, and they have three children, Keely Goodwin, Matt Batchelder and Cory Richardson. Later this summer, Richardson will also have a new title – grandmother – as she and her family joyfully anticipate the arrival of their first grandchild. Richardson is a native of Princeton, W.Va. and a graduate of Concord College in Athens, W.Va. She has a bachelor of science degree in elementary education with a specialization in music from Concord College in Athens, W.Va. and a certification in journalism from East Tennessee State University in Johnson City. The TPA was founded in 1870-71 for the purpose of creating a unified voice for the newspaper industry in Tennessee. Today, TPA continues to provide assistance to its 121 member newspapers by monitoring legislative activities, providing training programs, issuing press credentials, maintaining a website and providing regular meetings and forums to foster the exchange of information and ideas. The TPA presidency rotates among TPA’s three divisions of Tennessee, east, middle and west, and alternates each year between a daily and nondaily publication. It is customary that a person serve two terms as vice president before being elected president. JULY 4-5: TPA offices closed for Independence Day 10-14: International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors Conference, St. Norbert College, Green Bay, Wis. 12: TPA members judge South Carolina Press Association advertising contest, 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., TPA headquarters, Knoxville 12: Period ends for online judging of Washington Newspaper Publishers Association Better Newspaper Contest 13: ETSPJ Front Page Follies, 6 p.m., Clarence Brown Theatre, Knoxville 19: UT-TPA State Press Contests Awards Luncheon, noon, Millennium Maxwell House Hotel, Nashville AUGUST 25-27: Society of Professional Journalists Annual Convention, Anaheim, Calif. SEPTEMBER 9: First Border War golf tournament, to benefit TPA Foundation and Kentucky Press Association Foundation, Fairvue Plantation Country Club, Gallatin 12-15: NNA Convention & Trade Show, Phoenix, Ariz. OCTOBER 17-19: 16th Institute of Newspaper Technology, UT-Knoxville NOVEMBER 8: SNPA-TPA Publishers Summit, Nashville 2014 FEBRUARY 5-7: TPA Winter Convention & Press Institute, Nashville NOTE: The Government Affairs Committee meeting set for July 19 has been canceled. THE DAILY POST-ATHENIAN, ATHENS Athens City Schools KIDS Connection students hold up signs to thank sponsors of The DPA’s Newspapers in Education program at the close of their musical performance during an NIE Sponsor Appreciation Luncheon. public officials, Guy noted. “It’s a litmus test of how people feel about the job public officials are doing,” he said. “It’s a valued asset. The Sheriff ’s Department is committed to continuing its sponsorship, and I’d encourage others to do so, as well.” Angie Dahle, Director of the Athens City School System’s KIDS Connection after-school program, called the newspaper “a great tool.” “KIDS Connection is an extension of the school day, so we incorporate elements of what the kids have already been doing in class,” Dahle said. “Math projects, science projects, language arts, community involvement, parent involvement – all the things we need to do we can do with the newspaper. For Halloween, the kids have even dressed up as mummies using the newspaper. There are so many fun and interactive opportunities through NIE.” Dahle said she has made presentations and pitches at the National AfterSchool Association conference and with struggling programs around Tennessee about the importance of NIE. “A lot of programs struggle with community involvement,” Dahle not- ed. “We have one of the best. Everyone here works together.” Joyce Simpson, an art instructor at Central High School, has used the newspaper in her classroom for various projects, including an art history lesson on Vincent Van Gogh, which she shared during the NIE luncheon. “NIE has provided a great way for my students to express themselves and share with others their experiences,” Simpson said. “We want to make sure students are retaining what they’re learning, and the newspaper helps us do that very well.” President names committee chairmen TPA President Lynn J. Richardson has selected chairmen for all 2013-14 committees. They are the following: Advertising: Leslie Kahana, Chattanooga Times Free Press Circulation: To be announced next month Contests: Terri Likens, Roane County News, Kingston Futures: Gregg K. Jones, Jones Media Inc., Greeneville Government Affairs: Elizabeth K. Blackstone, Kennedy Newspapers, Columbia, co-chairman, and Joel Washburn, The McKenzie Banner, cochairman. Washburn automatically became the co-chairman when he was elected TPA vice president last month. Hall of Fame Administrative: Dr. Peter Gross, UT School of Journalism and Electronic Media Journalism, Education & Literacy: Janet Rail, Independent Appeal, Selmer Membership: Mark Stevens, Elizabethton Star Nominating: Michael B. Williams, The Paris Post-Intelligencer (an auto- matic appointment of the immediate past president) Postal: Joe Adams, The Lebanon Democrat Winter Convention and Press Institute: Jason P. Taylor, Chattanooga Times Free Press (an automatic appointment as the senior vice president of TPA) Summer Convention: Jana Thomasson, The Mountain Press, Sevierville Technology: John Finney, Buffalo River Review, Linden AP moves offices of Nashville bureau Leek, Clipping Bureau tabber, retires from TPS The offices of the Associated Press Nashville Bureau have been moved from Centerview Drive in Brentwood into the John Seigenthaler Center on the campus of Vanderbilt University. Contact information is as follows: The Associated Press John Seigenthaler Center 1207 18th Ave. S. Ste. 261A Nashville, Tenn. 37212 (615) 373-9988 or (800) 453-1282 [FAX] (615) 376-0947 apnashville@ap.org Brenda Leek, whose service with Tennessee Press Service reached back further than anyone else on the current staff, retired June 7. She was a tabber in the Clipping Bureau. Look for further information in the August issue of The Tennessee Press. The Tennessee Press 2 (USPS 616-460) Published quarterly by the TENNESSEE PRESS SERVICE, INC. for the TENNESSEE PRESS ASSOCIATION, INC. 435 Montbrook Lane Knoxville, Tennessee 37919 Telephone (865) 584-5761/Fax (865) 558-8687/www.tnpress.com Subscriptions: $6 annually Periodicals Postage Paid At Knoxville, TN POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Tennessee Press, 435 Montbrook Lane, Knoxville, TN 37919. The Tennessee Press is printed by The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Greg M. Sherrill.....................................................Editor Elenora E. Edwards.............................Managing Editor Robyn Gentile..........................Production Coordinator Angelique Dunn...............................................Assistant The Tennessee Press is printed on recycled paper and is recyclable. www.tnpress.com The Tennessee Press can be read on OFFICIAL WEBSITE OF THE TENNESSEE PRESS ASSOCIATION TENNESSEE PRESS ASSOCIATION Lynn J. Richardson, Herald & Tribune, Jonesborough........................President Jason P. Taylor, Chattanooga Times Free Press............................Vice President Joel Washburn, The McKenzie Banner.........................................Vice President John Finney, Buffalo River Review, Linden.........................................Treasurer Greg M. Sherrill, Knoxville.....................................................Executive Director DIRECTORS Keith Wilson, Kingsport Times-News.....................................................District 1 Jack McElroy, News Sentinel, Knoxville................................................District 2 Chris Vass, Chattanooga Times Free Press............................................District 3 Darren Oliver, Overton County News, Livingston................................District 4 Hugh Jones, Shelbyville Times-Gazette................................................District 5 Joe Adams, The Lebanon Democrat......................................................District 6 Mark Palmer, The Daily Herald, Columbia.............................................District 7 Brad Franklin, The Lexington Progress..................................................District 8 Daniel Richardson, Magic Valley Publishing, Camden.........................District 9 Eric Barnes, The Daily News, Memphis...............................................District 10 Michael B. Williams.....................................................Immediate Past President TENNESSEE PRESS SERVICE Jeffrey D. Fishman, The Tullahoma News.............................................President Victor Parkins, The Milan Mirror-Exchange..................................Vice President Ralph C. Baldwin, Jones Media Inc., Greeneville..................................Director David Critchlow Jr., Union City Daily Messenger..................................Director Jason P. Taylor, Chattanooga Times Free Press......................................Director Jana Thomasson, The Mountain Press, Sevierville................................Director Greg M. Sherrill.............................................................Executive Vice President TENNESSEE PRESS ASSOCIATION FOUNDATION Gregg K. Jones, The Greeneville Sun...................................................President Victor Parkins, The Milan Mirror-Exchange...................................Vice President Richard L. Hollow, Knoxville.....................................................General Counsel Greg M. Sherrill.....................................................................Secretary-Treasurer CONTACT THE MANAGING EDITOR TPAers with suggestions, questions or comments about items in The Tennessee Press are welcome to contact the managing editor. Call Elenora Easterly Edwards, (865) 457-5459; send a note to P.O. Box 502, Clinton, Tenn. 377170502; or email ElenoraEdwards@Comcast.net. The deadline for the August issue is July 8. JULY 2013 Dean Coombs, you’re my hero I’ll grant you that it’s a little unusual for a new tion. The newspaper doesn’t have a website. Heck, Tennessee Press Association president to write The Crescent office doesn’t even have a computer. her first column about someone who lives in a difCoombs hasn’t stepped far away from the way ferent state. the newspaper was produced when his grandfaIt’s probably even more odd that I’m writing ther bought it in 1917. News is handed in typed about someone I don’t even know. or written on paper. He takes that information But stay with me. After you read this, maybe and whatever else he has gathered that week and you’ll feel like you know me a little better. heads over to his 90-year-old Linotype machine to You see, I’m a sap when it comes to a good story start pounding out stories to fill the paper’s fourabout newspapers and the people who work in our page edition with local events, birth and death anYOUR industry. That’s why I feel it is such an honor to be nouncements, legal notices and the like. the president of this organization, and it’s why I Thompson describes a scene at The Crescent. PRESIDING feel compelled to tell you about Dean Coombs. “On any given Tuesday,” he writes, “if you venREPORTER I’ve never met Dean, but I sure would like to one ture past the creaky door and the piles of paper of these days. and boxes and photos, you’ll find Dean Coombs He is surely one of the last of his kind – a one- Lynn J. Richardson marinating in the smell of hot lead, dust and the stop newspaper man who does it all. slow decay of old newsprint, tending an ancient Coombs is the publisher, the editor, pressman printing press that emanates a rhythmic whirand mechanic for a tiny newspaper, The Crescent of Saguache, swoosh.” Colo. For those of us who operate small newspapers in small He goes into even more detail as he outlines Coombs’ weekly towns with small staffs, this man even makes us look like we process: “forging each line of text, or slug, from molten lead, are running mega media organizations. which he arranges among ads and graphics engraved into As if that isn’t impressive enough, as far as anyone knows, wood or metal, into a chase, a rectangular metal frame. Coombs’ newspaper is also the last newspaper in America After all that, it is secured into the press. The case and type printed using only letterpress technology. are inked and the newsprint rolls over them.” I stumbled across an article about Coombs when I was readEven the mailing labels, Thompson said, are printed on an ing my online edition of the “Rural Blog.” Finding out about old codger of a machine that dates back to the 1920s. him that way is sort of ironic, now that I think about it. There probably are very few of us who have ever seen a In a story written by Jonathan Thompson for the High Coun- newspaper produced that way and even fewer who have partry News, you can almost smell and feel the atmosphere at The ticipated in such a process. The list of newspapers that would Crescent, a paper in its 134th year of spreading pertinent news remain in business if it were still done that way would no to the 500 or so local residents of Saguache in southern Colo- doubt be very short. rado. That painstaking, labor-intensive method of putting out a Thompson does a good job of telling the story of Coombs – newspaper requires a dedication far beyond what many would a man who came into this business through family tradition be willing to commit. and a lot of hard work. It takes someone who really believes in the importance of a His grandfather, Charles Ogden, bought The Crescent in 1917. newspaper in the local community to continue that way. After his death, Coombs’ mother took over the paper. I wonder how our newspapers would fare if those methods Coombs became the publisher in 1978. After his mother’s were still used today? Do we still have that kind of determideath in 2002, it was all his. nation, that deep-down, dogged determination to get the job As I read Thompson’s article, I wondered about this do-it- done? all newspaper guy. Did he always want to be in the newspaper I’d sure like to think so. business, or did he just land in the middle of it and decide to Now don’t think for a minute that I’m proposing we go back make the best of it? to Linotypes and letterpresses. It’s too late for that. We’ve You just have to wonder about a person who lives his life this moved too far away from those roots. way. So I Googled him, wanting to put a face to the story. He Our new technology gives us opportunities we never was easy to find. Again, given Coombs’ apparent aversion to dreamed possible. all things digital, another irony. But even though we’ve embraced our digital future, let’s The photos I saw on my screen showed him hard at work, hope we haven’t moved so far away that we can’t learn from with a scruffy grayish beard and wire-rimmed glasses. He and admire Coombs’ spirit and his commitment to community looked a lot like I expected him to, somehow. journalism. That’s something to which we all should aspire. I also guessed that he would look really tired and maybe I’d like to meet him one day and tell him, face to face, that more than a little overwhelmed. I guessed wrong. I surely I think he is something pretty special and that I admire the didn’t expect to see him looking so happy. work he does every day at The Crescent. But until then, I’ll just In all of the photos, Coombs is smiling. In a few shots, he put my thoughts here, on this printed page. Dean Coombs, you’re my hero. is flat out grinning as he proudly stands there in front of his newspaper office. Maybe he is smiling because he knows if you or I want to LYNN J. RICHARDSON is publisher of the Herald & Tribune, read a copy of The Crescent, we would have to get a subscrip- Jonesborough. tion – to the print edition – which is, of course, the only edi- TPA has two new associate members The Tennessee Press Association has two new associate members, approved by the Board of Directors at its Feb. 6 meeting. The new associates are Vanderbilt University and Medical Center and The Maximum Times. Contact information for them follows: • Vanderbilt University and Medical Center News Service Contact: Elizabeth P. Latt, assistant vice chancellor elizabeth.p.latt@vanderbilt.edu News and Communications 110 21st Avenue S., Ste. 802 Nashville, Tenn. 37203 (615) 322-2706 www.vanderbilt.edu • The Maximum Times Contact: Tony Vick, #276187 RMSI 6-A-211 7475 Cockrill Bend Blvd. Nashville, Tenn. 37209-1048 The Tennessee Press JULY 2013 Signing up for Creative Cloud? Do it soon! BY KEVIN SLIMP TPS technology director When I was a college student living in Texas, I got used to hearing people say, “Boy, howdy.” This wasn’t a greeting, as you might think. It was more along the lines of Slimp “You’re not kidding!” It’s struck me as funny that, as I thought about the best way to explain the reaction to Adobe’s Creative Cloud announcement, the first words that came to mind were, “Boy, howdy.” Did Adobe open a huge can of worms by moving to the Creative Cloud model? Boy, howdy. Did they ever. Is the creative and publishing world up in arms about it? Boy, howdy. Are they ever. Is there anything we can do about Creative Cloud? Probably not. For those who have been hiking the Appalachian Trail for the past two months and aren’t familiar with the changes at Adobe, here’s the short version: You no longer buy Adobe software. You lease it. Think of your cable company. For a monthly fee, you have access to hundreds of channels, even though you probably don’t watch more than three or four. Cable seemed like a good idea when I moved into my place three years ago. I got 200 channels, HBO, high-speed Internet and a phone line for $99 per month. It’s hard to argue with that. What I haven’t been able to figure out is how my cable bill went from $99 per month to over $200 without my noticing it. And I don’t even get HBO anymore. And that’s the catch about Creative Cloud, isn’t it? Sure, we get InDesign, Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, Acrobat InCopy and a couple of dozen other apps. But let’s face it, how many of our people use more than two or three Adobe applications? And that price of $30 per month per user? That sounds like an OK deal. $360 per year for the latest version of Adobe software. But what about next year? That price is only guaranteed for the length of the one-year agreement. And, unless something changes, the $30 per month goes up to $50 for folks who sign up after July 31 – I’m talking at the end of this month. So beginning Aug. 1, that $360 moves up to $600 annually. Are people upset? Boy, howdy. There are blogs and online communities dedicated to complaining about the changes at Adobe. They’ve recently been compared to Quark, whose corporate attitude in the 1990s led to their quick descent from their lofty perch as king of the creative world. In 1997, Publish Magazine asked me to write an editorial comparing Adobe to Quark. Not a software comparison, but a comparison of the companies. At the time, it seemed like just about all of Quark’s customers were tired of their corporate “take it or leave it” attitude. Quark customers left in droves after the release of Adobe InDesign. Over the next few years, the king of the creative world was sitting at the bottom of the heap, looking up at the new king. I’ve received calls and emails from publishers from New York to California. I even received a call from Jeff Fishman last week while I waited for a flight in Boston. He was attending a meeting of the National Newspaper Association board, wanting to know what our alternatives are as an industry. Apparently it was the board’s “hot” topic at that moment. My answer: “Not much.” At this moment, however, I’m letting my mind play “What if ?” The game is played something like this: • What if Quark got together with Corel and packaged the latest version of QuarkXpress with Corel Paintshop Pro and sold the bundle for $699? • What if Quark bundled QuarkXPress with GIMP, a free Photoshop “clone” application and made some tweaks so the two applications could work seamlessly together, like InDesign and Photoshop? The problem with playing “What if ?” is that it’s just a game. It looks like none of these scenarios are going to happen. I just got off the phone with Gavin Drake, vice president of marketing at Quark, and it sounds like they’re not planning any bundles or making any plans to take on the Creative Cloud. And let’s face it. If Quark’s not interested in competing with Adobe on the publishing front, who will? I’m not worried about the changes with Adobe software. We can always keep producing newspapers and other publications the way we always have. What does worry me is that companies like Adobe and Quark don’t see the traditional publishing world as a market worth concern any longer. So what’s my advice? There doesn’t seem to be a viable option to Adobe Creative Cloud at the moment. Eventually you will be forced to upgrade equipment and software and, when you do, you’ll probably sign up for Creative Cloud. In the meantime, read carefully. The price goes up significantly after July 31. If you are going to upgrade software, do it before then. Otherwise, you’ll spend $240 extra per user over the next year. Am I a little frustrated that we don’t seem to have other options? Boy, howdy, am I ever. But like everyone else, there doesn’t seem to be much I can do about it at this point. I’d love to hear your thoughts about the changes at Adobe. Email those to me at kevin@kevinslimp.com. 11 HOW TO CONTACT US Tennessee Press Association Mail: 435 Montbrook Lane, Knoxville, TN 37919 Phone: (865) 584-5761 Fax: (865) 558-8687 Web: www.tnpress.com Email: (name)@tnpress. com Those with boxes, listed alphabetically: Laurie Alford (lalford) Pam Corley (pcorley) Angelique Dunn (adunn) Beth Elliott (belliott) Robyn Gentile (rgentile) Frank Gibson (fgibson) Earl Goodman (egoodman) Kathy Hensley (khensley) Greg Sherrill (gsherrill) Kevin Slimp (kslimp) Umbrella illustration courtesy of Adbuilder.com Kayretta Stokes (kstokes) David Wells (dwells) Border War Golf Tournament Monday, September 9, 2013 Tessa Wildsmith (twildsmith) Heather Wright (hwright) Advertising email: A bene¿t to raise funds for Kentucky Journalism Foundation Tennessee Press Association Foundation This tournament for members, associate members and other parties connected to TPA and KPA will take place at Fairvue Plantation Country Club in Gallatin, Tennessee. Registration is $75 per player, inclusive of green fee, cart, range balls, beverage cart, food and awards reception. Fees are considered a donation to the newspaper foundations and are non-refundable. Tennessee players register by email to: Bob Atkins, bobntn@bellsouth.net knoxads@tnpress.com Tennessee Press Service Mail: 435 Montbrook Lane, Knoxville, TN 37919 Phone: (865) 584-5761 Fax: (865) 558-8687 Web: www.tnadvertising. biz Tennessee Press Association Foundation Mail: 435 Montbrook Lane, Knoxville, TN 37919 Phone: (865) 584-5761 Fax: (865) 558-8687 Web: www.tnpress.com The Tennessee Press 12 Haven “If in other lands the press and books and literature of all kinds are censored, we must redouble our ef- C M Y K forts here to keep them free. If in other lands the eternal truths of the past are threatened by intolerance, we must provide a safe place for their perpetuation.” Franklin D. Roosevelt 32nd U.S. president, 1938 JULY 2013 TPA to judge SCPA advertising; want to help? Tennessee Press Association (TPA) members will judge the South Carolina Press Association’s (SCPA) Advertising Contest on Friday, July 12, at the TPA offices in Knoxville. The judging will take place from 9:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. SCPA came to TPA Executive Director Greg Sherrill with the request for assistance on June 19, and eight TPA members responded with offers to help. If you would like to participate, contact Robyn Gentile, member services manager, at (865) 584-5761 x105 or rgentile@tnpress.com. TPAers are in the process now of judging the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association Better Newspaper Contest. That is being done online and is to be completed no later than July 12. GOAL: $1,000,000 $900K $800K $700K BELIEVERS Contributors to the TPAF ‘I Believe’ campaign thus far: • Hollow & Hollow LLC • Cannon Courier, Woodbury • Jim Charlet, in memory of Martha C. Charlet • Chattanooga Times Free Press • Nathan Crawford, In Memory of James Walter Crawford Sr. and C.T. (Charlie) Crawford Jr. • Crossville Chronicle, In Memory of Perry Sherrer • Gannett Foundation The Jackson Sun The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville The Tennessean, Nashville • Joe Hurd, The Courier, Savannah • Jones Media, In Memory of Edith O’Keefe Susong and Quincy Marshall O’Keefe The Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater The Daily Post Athenian, Athens The Daily Times, Maryville The Greeneville Sun The Herald-News, Dayton The Newport Plain Talk News-Herald, Lenoir City The Rogersville Review • Kennedy Newspapers, Columbia • Lakeway Publishers, Morristown Citizen Tribune, Morristown The Elk Valley Times, Fayetteville Grundy County Herald, Tracy City The Herald-Chronicle, Winchester Manchester Times The Moore County News, Lynchburg The Tullahoma News • The Milan Mirror-Exchange • News Sentinel, Knoxville • The Paris Post-Intelligencer, In Memory of W. Bryant Williams • Republic Newspapers The Courier News, Clinton • Richard Rowlett, Rowlett Advertising Service, Goodlettsville • Union City Daily Messenger • Bill and Anne Williams, Paris, in honor of Michael Williams’ presidency of TPA $600K $500K $400K $302,600 5-13 $300K $200K $100K No. 1 JULY 2013 Vol. 77 Richardson, Jonesborough publisher, now heads TPA Lynn J. Richardson, publisher of the Herald & Tribune, Jonesborough, is the new president of the Tennessee Press Association (TPA). TPA is a trade association composed of 26 daily newspapers and 95 non-daily newspapers. Richardson, the fourth woman to lead TPA, succeeds Michael B. Williams, publisher of The Paris PostIntelligencer. Other officers elected at TPA’s Business Session during the 144th anniversary Summer Convention June 13-15 in Memphis were Jason P. Taylor, president of the Chattanooga Times Free Press, vice president for daily newspapers; Joel Washburn, managing editor of The McKenzie Banner, vice president for non-daily newspapers; and John Finney, vice president of the Buffalo River Review, Linden, treasurer. Directors elected for two-year terms are Keith Wilson, publisher of the Kingsport Times-News, District 1; Chris Vass, metro editor of the Chattanooga Times Free Press, District 3; Hugh Jones, publisher of the Shelbyville Times-Gazette, District 5; Mark Palmer, publisher of The Daily Herald, Columbia, District 7; and Daniel Richardson, distribution manager for Magic Valley Publishing, District 9. Continuing their terms as directors are Jack McElroy, editor of the News Sentinel, Knoxville, District 2; Darren Oliver, advertising director of the Overton County News, Livingston, District 4; Joe Adams, publisher of The Lebanon Democrat, District 6; Brad Franklin, marketing director of The Lexington Progress, District 8; and Eric Barnes, publisher of The Daily News, Memphis, District 10. Michael B. Williams will continue on the board for one year as immediate past president. The TPA Board of Directors elected trustees to serve on the Tennessee Press Association Foundation (TPAF) Board of Trustees for three-year terms. Re-elected trustees were Nate Crawford, Nashville; Doug Horne, Republic Newspapers, Knoxville; and Janet Rail, publisher of the Independent Appeal, Selmer. TPAF officers elected at the TPAF Board of Trustees meeting were Gregg K. Jones, president of Jones Media Inc., Greeneville, re-elected president, and Victor Parkins, editor of The Mi- INSIDE RICHARDSON HUFFORD HONOR Richardson lan Mirror-Exchange, re-elected vice president. Officers and directors of the Tennessee Press Service (TPS), business affiliate of TPA, are Jeffrey D. Fish- man, president, and Victor Parkins, vice president. David Critchlow Jr., editor of the Union City Daily Messenger, and Jana Thomasson, publisher of The Mountain Press, Sevierville, were elected to the board during the TPS Stockholders’ Meeting on June 15. Continuing to serve on the six-member TPS Board are Ralph C. Baldwin, chief financial officer of Jones Media Inc., Greeneville, and Jason P. Taylor. TPS will elect officers in November. Lynn J. Richardson was named general manager of the Herald & Tribune, a 4,228 paid-circulation non-daily in Washington County, in 1999. She was promoted to publisher in 2004. Art Powers, former publisher of the Johnson City Press and a past TPA president, commented on Richardson’s new TPA role. “Lynn will do an outstanding job as TPA president, I’m certain. She is so dedicated to her work and community that I’m sure that work ethic will follow her in this new post. The association is in great hands in the coming year! Congratulations, Lynn. I’m very proud of you!” Mark Stevens, publisher of the Elizabethton Star and former publisher of The Erwin Record, recalled, “I first met Lynn when I was an intern at the Johnson City Press in the summer of 1989, and we immediately hit it off and have been very good friends since. I’m so proud of Lynn and that she will be leading TPA. “Lynn is an immensely talented and creative person, and she will put her enthusiasm for newspapers to good use for the entire membership,” Stevens said. Richardson started her career in journalism writing part-time for the Bluefield (W.Va.) Daily Telegraph while in college. After graduation, she went to work at her alma mater, serving as Concord College’s director of public information. In 1979, she was hired by the Johnson City Press-Chronicle to start and direct the newspaper’s first Newspapers In Education (NIE) program. In that role, she was responsible for all curriculum writing, promotions, marketing and training. In her work with NIE, Richardson was first introduced to the Tennessee Press Association, serving twice as chairman of the organization’s NIE Committee. During her tenure, the Johnson City Press’ NIE program grew from 500 participants, ultimately reaching 18,000 students each week throughout the 11 school systems in the area. She has served as a contributing writer for the Governor’s Study Partner Program Curriculum, Tennessee Teacher Magazine, The Tennessee Reading Teacher and the Newspaper Association of America and has served as a speaker and focus session leader for national Newspaper Association of America conferences. Lynn spearheaded the Jimmy Ellis Memorial Photojournalism Lab project at East Tennessee State University and directed “Passport To The World,” a Tennessee Press Association statewide competition for educators. SEE RICHARDSON, PAGE 3 AWARDS LUNCHEON REMINDER ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Leading the three press organizations for 2013-14 are Gregg K. Jones, Jones Media Inc., Greeneville, Tennessee Press Association (TPA) Foundation, left; Lynn J. Richardson, Herald & Tribune, Jonesborough, Tennessee Press Association; and Jeffrey D. Fishman, The Tullahoma News, Tennessee Press Service. 2 3 PARKINS MAN OF YEAR 4 TPA,TPAF, TPS LEADERS 6-7 ADVERTISING GIBSON 8 DISCLOSURE LAWS 9 SLIMP 10 11 WHO: Newspaper staff members WHAT: UT-TPA State Press Contests Awards Luncheon WHEN: Noon, Friday, July 19 WHERE: Millennium Maxwell House Hotel, 2025 Rosa L. Parks Blvd., Nashville RESERVATIONS: The deadline for hotel reservations at the special TPA rate has passed, but one can check with the hotel at (615) 259-4343. To make luncheon reservations, call TPA at (865) 584-5761 x105 or x100. NOTE: A photographer engaged by UT will make photos of first place winners as awards are presented. Please stay a while after the luncheon to have photos made as follows: General Excellence winners, Meeman winners, first, second and third place winners by groups. The TPA photographer will make group photos. IN CONTACT Phone: (865) 584-5761 Fax: (865) 558-8687 Online: www.tnpress.com