3-AWARDS Sec.9-08AMDfinal.indd
Transcription
3-AWARDS Sec.9-08AMDfinal.indd
The Tennessee Press 28 - Awards 2008 University of Tennessee-Tennessee Press Association SEPTEMBER 2008 State Press Contests Awards GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARDS September 2008 Special section GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARDS GREG WILLIAMSON | THE LEAF-CHRONICLE, CLARKSVILLE THE LEAF-CHRONICLE, CLARKSVILLE Group IV CMYK CMYK From left, Multi-media editor Robert Smith, reporter Jamie Dexter, reporter Eric Snyder, reporter Ann Wallace, managing editor Chris Smith and night editor Brian Dunn THE ERWIN RECORD THE ERWIN RECORD Group I From left, Cody Lewis, Brenda Sparks, Kevin Lewis, Donna Rea, Mark A. Stevens, Anthony Piercy, Keith Whitson, Lesley Hughes and Eileen Rush LAUREN ZECHMAN | SOUTHERN STANDARD, McMINNVILLE SOUTHERN STANDARD, McMINNVILLE Group III Front to back, Charlie Johnson, Publisher Patricia Zechman, Duane Sherrill, Margaret Hobbs, Lisa Hobbs, Seth Wright, Rob Nunley, Dale Stubblefield and James Clark. Not in the photo is Veola Sutherland. BRAD ALEXANDER | MEMPHIS BUSINESS JOURNAL SAM SIMPKINS | THE TENNESSEAN, NASHVILLE MEMPHIS BUSINESS JOURNAL Group II THE TENNESSEAN, NASHVILLE Group V From left: Seated, staff reporters Trey Heath, Andy Ashby, Chris Sheffield and Toby Sells; standing, staff reporter Einat Paz-Frankel, production artist Angela Snell, managing editor Terry Hollahan, researcher Jason Bolton, editor Bill Wellborn, design editor Lee Swets and Web editor Jane Donahoe From left, entertainment editor Linda Zettler, senior editor Deborah Fisher, sports editor Larry Taft, managing editor Meg Downey, director of online content Knight Stivender, senior editor Alan Whitt, photo editor Tom Stanford, editor Mark Silverman, city editor Mike Kennedy and business editor Randy McClain INSIDE AWARDS LUNCHEON UT-TPAAWARDS LIST 2 3-20 NEWS PHOTOS EDITORIALS 3-5 3-7 FEATURE PHOTOS 6-10 PERSONAL COLUMNS 8-12 SPORTS PHOTOS 11-13 HUMOR COLUMNS 13, 16-18 BEST ADS TAPME AWARDS 19 22-23 SEPTEMBER 2008 CMYK (Left) Contests Committee Chairman Victor Parkins welcomes people to the State Press Contests Awards Luncheon July 18 in Nashville. TPA President Tom Griscom talks about newspapers’ central role in the U.S. society. pete against each other, primarily in Group III. The 2008 divisions were as follows: Group I—Combined weekly circulation of 5,000 or less; Group II—Combined weekly circulation of 5,001-15,000; Group III—Combined weekly circulation of 15,001-50,000; Group IV—Combined weekly circulation of 50,001-200,000; and Group V—Combined weekly circulation of 200,001 and more. In earlier years, there were four circulation categories, two non-daily and two daily. The Nebraska Press Association judged a total of 1,394 contest entries from 77 association newspapers. The Leaf-Chronicle earned the most first place honors, with eight. It won for make-up and appearance, local features, best personal humor column, best spot news story, best education reporting, investigative reporting, public service and best sports photograph. The Tennessean won six first-place awards, for sports writing, Sunday editions, editorials, best spot news story, best feature photograph and best sports Contests! Contests! Yes, it’s true. Awards were just conferred. But the 2009 awards period ends in just four months. And this year the deadlines will come earlier than usual, in January 2009. So, don’t rest on your laurels. Get busy and start stashing away potential entries for the Ad/Circ Ideas Contest and the UT-TPA State Press Contests. Awards period: Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 2008 Deadlines: January 2009 photograph. The Memphis Business Journal won six first place awards, for make-up and appearance, editorials, best single editorial, best news reporting, best education reporting and investigative reporting. The Oak Ridger won five first place awards, for make-up and appearance, local features, best single feature, best personal humor column and best feature photograph. UT has co-sponsored the annual contest since 1940. The university’s Edward J. Meeman Foundation honored nine newspapers for their accomplishments in editorial writing and public service journalism with $200 awards in the categories of best single editorial, editorials and public service. The monetary awards were increased from $100 for the first year. The foundation was established in 1968 at UT to fund the contests as well as journalism scholarships and faculty fellowships. One newspaper, the Memphis Business Journal, won two awards for best single editorial and editorials. Other newspapers receiving Meeman awards were the News Sentinel, Knoxville, The Leaf-Chronicle and The Newport Plain Talk, public service; the Kingsport Times-News, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, The Wilson Post, Lebanon, and The Milan Mirror-Exchange, best single editorial; and Grainger Today, Bean Station, editorials. Winners of four first place awards: •LaFollette Press, for best single feature, sports writing, best feature photograph and best sports photograph; •News Sentinel, for best single feature, best news reporting, headline writing and public service; •The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, for local features, best personal column, best education reporting and investigative reporting; and •The Erwin Record, for local features, community lifestyles, sports writing and best news reporting. Winners of three first-place awards: • Chattanooga Times Free Press, for make-up and appearance, community lifestyles and best news photograph; • Herald-Citizen, Cookeville, for sports writing, best news reporting and best special issue or section; •Shelbyville Times-Gazette, for sports writing, best spot news story and best special issue or section; •Southern Standard, McMinnville, for best news reporting, headline writing and promotion of newspapers; •The Humboldt Chronicle, for makeup and appearance, public service and best special issue or section; •The Mountain Press, Sevierville, for community lifestyles, editorials and best feature photograph; and •The Wilson Post, Lebanon, for community lifestyles, best single editorial and investigative reporting. Other first place award winners: •Chester County Independent, Henderson, best personal humor column and best feature photograph; •Grainger Today, Bean Station, editorials and best personal column; •Kingsport Times-News, best single editorial and best single advertisement; The Mt. Juliet News, best education reporting and investigative reporting; •The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, best single editorial and best news photograph; •The Leader, Covington, best spot news story and headline writing; •The Milan Mirror-Exchange, best single editorial and best sports photograph; •The Newport Plain Talk, best education reporting and public service; •Bristol Herald Courier, best special issue or section; •Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon, best single feature; •Citizen Tribune, Morristown, headline writing; •Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough, best news photograph; •Hickman County Times, Centerville, best personal humor column; •Johnson City Press, best personal humor column; •Macon County Chronicle, Lafayette, community lifestyles; •Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater, best news photograph; •Overton County News, Livingston, best single advertisement; •Roane County News, Kingston, best news photograph; EDITOR’S NOTE We are printing in this Awards Section all the first place winning entries from five instead of the former four circulation groups in the following categories: Best Single Editorial, Best Personal Column, Best Personal Humor Column, Best News Photograph, Best Feature Photograph, Best Sports Photograph and Best Single Ad. Most of the photos were run very large and in color on the newspaper pages. We wish we were able to print the winning photos in color, as large and in the same compelling manner as when they were originally published. Thanks to all the newspaper staffers who sent their photos or in other ways provided information for this section. —Elenora E. Edwards Managing editor •Robertson County Times, Springfield, best personal column; •The Daily Herald, Columbia, promotion of newspapers; •The Daily News, Memphis, local features; •The Daily Times, Maryville, best single feature; •The Greeneville Sun, best personal column; •The Lebanon Democrat, editorials; •The Millington Star, headline writing; •The Paris Post-Intelligencer, best personal column; •The Portland Leader, best spot news story; •The Rogersville Review, best special issue or section; •The Standard Banner, Jefferson City, public service; and •Union City Daily Messenger, best sports photograph. The complete list of winners is available at www.utk.edu/news/docs/ tpa2008.pdf and is printed in this section, beginning on Page 3. Winners from 2000 through 2008 are posted on www.tnpress.com. A slide show of first place images is available at www.tnpress.com/statepresscontests.html. Tom Overton, Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater, will serve as 2008-09 contests chairman. Awards luncheon and training factoids •Total number of attendees: 219, including staff members and speakers •Member newspapers represented: 55, with 200 attendees •Dailies: 21, with 74 attendees •Non-dailies: 34, with 126 attendees •Attended training: 61 Drive-In Training - 27 Drive-In Training photos UT, TPA announce State Press Contests winners Newspapers across Tennessee won top awards in the University of Tennessee-Tennessee Press Association’s 2008 State Press Contests. General Excellence winners and their points were as follows: The Erwin Record, 55; Memphis Business Journal, 46; Southern Standard, McMinnville, 64; The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, 66; and The Tennessean, Nashville, 71. They received the awards July 18 at the Millennium Maxwell House Hotel in Nashville. Seventy-seven newspapers submitted a total of 1,394 entries that were judged by the Nebraska Press Association. The 2008 contests mark the sixth consecutive General Excellence Award for The Erwin Record. Both the Southern Standard and The Tennessean have received seven General Excellence Awards out of the 10 years since the points-based award, formerly called Sweepstakes, was established in 1999. The Leaf-Chronicle has won the award three times, and this was a first for the Memphis Business Journal. Victor Parkins, 2007-08 Contests Committee chairman, presided. TPA President Tom Griscom acknowledged the large turnout of newspaper staff members. He said it was important to let people know “what newspaper people do, why, and why it is important to those we serve.” Hank Dye, UT vice president for public and government relations, presented awards. Charles Primm, communications coordinator, announced winners, and Amy Rummel, media specialist, took individual award photos. Amy Blakely, assistant director of media relations, handled a PowerPoint presentation. Jay Mayfield, communications coordinator, assisted Dye. Also attending was Gina Stafford, UT assistant vice president and director of media relations. A change in the contests for this year added a fifth division for competition, those divisions being based on total weekly paid circulation instead of non-daily or daily status. This change caused dailies and non-dailies to com- The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 •Attended luncheon: 207 •Member paper with the most attendees: The Tennessean, Nashville, with 18 •Universities represented: 2, with 8 attendees •Training session with the most attendees: “Get Your Audience in Gear,” with Adell Crowe, with 39 attendees Win Anderson, The News-Democrat, Waverly Donna Rea, The Erwin Record, and husband, Larry Sara Withrow and Scott Broden, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Andrew Oppmann, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Drive-InTraining chairman Chris Fletcher, The Daily Herald, Columbia Hugh Jones, Shelbyville TimesGazette CMYK The Tennessee Press 2 - Awards Mary Reeves, Shelbyville TimesJim Wozniak, Johnson City Press, and John Kiener, Herald Gazette and Tribune, Jonesborough A ‘sweepstakes’ history The UT-TPA State Press Contests began many years ago, in 1940. During a period at about the mid-20th century, a sweepstakes awards was established. Later it was abandoned. Then the Sweepstakes Award was reestablished in 1999 as a points-based award. At that time, points were assigned as follows: first place (6 points), second place (5 points), third place (4 points), fourth place (3 points), fifth place (2 points), sixth place (1 point). The newspaper in each of the four contests divisions (Group One, Group Two, Group Three and Group Four) with the highest total points in its group received the Sweepstakes Award. In 2006, the category of General Excellence replaced the Sweepstakes Award. Since 2007, only five places are awarded, with points as follows: first place (5 points), second place (4 points), third place (3 points), fourth place (2 points) and fifth place (1 point). 1999 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: Chester County Independent, Henderson Group II: The Review Appeal, Franklin Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2000 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: Chester County Independent, Henderson Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2001 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: The Rutherford Courier, Smyrna Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2006 General Excellence Award winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: LaFollette Press Group III: The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2002 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I : Chester County Independent, Henderson Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: Chattanooga Times Free Press 2007 General Excellence Award winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: The Standard Banner, Jefferson City Group III: The Daily Herald, Columbia Group IV: The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 2003 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I : The Erwin Record Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2004 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2005 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Commercial Appeal, Memphis Note: a fifth division was added to the State Press Contests for 2008. All divisions are based upon total weekly paid circulation, which meant some dailies and non-dailies competed in the same division. The divisions are as follows: Group I: Combined weekly circulation of 5,000 or less Group II: Combined weekly circulation of 5,001-15,000 Group III: Combined weekly circulation of 15,001-50,000 Group IV: Combined weekly circulation of 50,001-200,000; Group V: Combined weekly circulation of 200,001 and above 2008 General Excellence Awards winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: Memphis Business Journal Group III: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group IV: The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Group V: The Tennessean, Nashville Crowe talks elements of effective site BY ELENORA E. EDWARDS Managing editor Four things are important to make a newspaper Web site effective: good content, elements the readers will return for, the possibility of comment and a sense of community. That was the message of Adell Crowe’s presentation during TPA Drive-In Training July 18 in Nashville. Crowe had the close attention of those who attended her session. Her sense of humor was apparent throughout. One of Crowe’s first points was to recommend people read a speech Tom Curley, president of Associated Press Managing Editors, made and which can be found at www.ap.org. Moving into her main topic, Crowe urged attendees to write as clearly as possible and not to write leads that are too long. On the Web, she said, content must be scannable. She suggested using little or no punctuation in each sentence and to alternating sentence length. People love “air” when reading, she said. “This is more true on the Web than in print.” Crowe said a site must contain basic rules for responding to some comments that will be “hurtful.” Be nice. Respond only once, directly to the person who commented. Always start a comment by thanking the writer for reading the site and taking time to comment. She also injected that such comments can provide tips that lead to newspaper stories. The Web site must touch the community, Crowe said. The newspaper can visit organizations such as the PTA and invite them to participate in the site. One newspaper includes a ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS music page on its Web Crowe site, gives karma points information that people will refer to and gives away prizes. regularly, such as weather and local USA Today features individual government contact information. readers. Veryimportant, she said, is to make it Crowe has extensive newspaper expepossible for readers to comment on what rience. She is former head of training is on the site. And she suggested setting for USA Today. CMYK WORTH REPEATING Fact, opinion and the Crafton mess BY MARK SILVERMAN Editor, The Tennessean, Nashville This is the difference between a reporter, a columnist and an editorial writer: A reporter investigates an issue or chronicles an event, places the news in context, seeks all sides and avoids judging who is right or wrong. A columnist views the news through the prism of his or her personal experience and values, and provides a perspective that sometimes assigns praise or blame. An editorial writer goes through the fact-gathering process of a reporter and then presents a point of view as a columnist might. But unlike the columnist, the point of view is that of the newspaper’s editorial board rather than his or her personal opinion. Confusing? It can be to a reader. Unless you’re involved in journalism, it can be difficult to imagine that a reporter can keep his or her personal views out of a story. It also can be difficult to believe that a newspaper’s editorial positions have no influence on news coverage. But that’s the case — and that’s the reason mainstream newspapers and their Web sites have for so long been the most credible information sources in their communities. Understanding that separation of duties is especially difficult when it comes to some issues — such as the English-only crusade by Metro Councilman Eric Crafton. Our reporting has shown that claims made by Crafton are exaggerated and misleading. Our columnists have questioned both the practical reasons for his proposal and the moral underpinnings of his campaign. Our editorial board has called for the defeat of this year’s ballot petition — just as it hailed former Mayor Bill Purcell’s veto of the council proposal last year. That’s because it believes the initiative is misguided, impractical, dangerous to individuals’ health and well-being, a detriment to the region’s growth, and racist. The next news event will probably come this week, when the council takes up Councilman Ronnie Steine’s measure asking fellow members to urge voters to reject Crafton’s initiative. Our news coverage will continue to probe both the motivation of those behind the measure and its possible unintended consequences. We also will try to discover the identity of those putting up the money behind the petition drive. The very fact that the financing sources have been kept secret raises suspicions that some backers might have unsavory agendas. It is possible that there’s nothing nefarious about the funding and, indeed, you might find yourself in agreement with the supporters. But don’t you want to know who is bankrolling Crafton before you sign on? That’s one reason for our continued reporting on the issue. We’ll continue to report the public safety impact of signs, of telephone messages and of conversations held in a language that many lawful residents find difficult to understand. And we’ll continue to report on the barriers faced by many people who want to learn English but can’t because of limited access to classes and other reasons. We’ll report about the likely impact of Crafton’s measure on the ability of our region and our state to attract businesses like Nissan and Volkswagen. (Would Crafton’s backers have banned the German translators who facilitated the negotiations to bring the automaker to Tennessee?) What about reporting the other side of the issue — exploring substantive reasons that argue for enacting the measure? We’ve tried—and we will continue to try. But once you get past the pat phrases and look for concrete examples of how this proposed law might improve life in Davidson County, it becomes difficult to find the other side. Our columnists will continue to express their views — sometimes tied to news events and sometimes flowing from their sense of right and wrong. And our editorial board will continue to urge residents and officials to do what it believes is right. Our position is that an English-only law is potentially dangerous from public safety and economic development standpoints; further, we believe it to be a morally reprehensible measure that appeals to some well-meaning people on an emotional basis in the same way that Adolf Hitler appealed to some Germans’ national pride after World War I. The roles of reporters, columnists and editorial writers will always differ — even if their work may suggest the same conclusions on some stories. (Aug. 3, 2008) SEPTEMBER 2008 WORTH REPEATING Grainger Today revisits why we do what we do While awards are certainly nice to receive, last week’s UT-TPA Awards ceremony was a time for Grainger Today to reflect why we do what we do. Newspapers play many roles in a community. None of those roles is any more important than providing solid news content and meaningful commentary. The role of newspapers in keeping an eye on government and closely scrutinizing public policy has been around as long as journalism itself. In an open and free society, an open, free and candid press is crucial. It is disturbing to see many newspapers shrink back from that role, turning into little more than community newsletters with editorial pages that are either full of personal humor columns, syndicated columns or, in some cases, no editorial page at all. An open, free and unfettered press was closely tied to the American Revolution, and it can be strongly argued that without it, the colonies would have never been rallied to the cause of independence. The framers of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights ensured the freedom of the press with the First Amendment, making the kind of government oppression and control from which colonialists sought their liberty unconstitutional in the new United States. After the Revolutionary War and the signing of the Constitution, the press kept a close eye on the new government and its newly elected officials. In the mid-1800s the Penny Press exposed government corruption and abuses of power, expanding even further the role of the public watchdog. During the 19 th century Joseph Pulitzer forever changed the face of American journalism, distinguishing himself as the foe of political corruption. During that time of aggressive, proactive, open and free press, Mark Twain coined the phrase, “Never pick an argument with a man who buys ink by the barrel.” As the 20th century began, William Randolph Hearst continued with the same kind of media activism, causing his detractors to label his journalistic style “yellow journalism,” but building a media empire hallmarked by exposing corruption, providing a forum for social commentary and setting high standards for editorial candor. Newspapers are directly tied to our form of government and way of life in America. In many parts of the world the press is not free and neither are the people. The trend of newspapers in this country to eliminate or water down editorial pages is something to worry about. At Grainger Today we are proud to follow in the footsteps of great newspapermen such as Edward J. Meeman, who fought against political corruption and championed civil rights causes throughout his illustrious journalism career in the state of Tennessee. Page one is the face of a newspaper. Advertising revenue is its lifeblood. The editorial page is its heart and soul. At Grainger Today we are committed to serving Grainger County in these ways. Everyone may not always like the facts we report. Readers may not always agree with editorials. Letters to the editor will not always be popular or reflect prevailing public opinion. However, stimulating the public dialogue can never be a bad thing. As proud as we are of being recognized by our peers for excellence in journalism, our greatest source of pride is the humbling privilege of serving the citizens of Grainger County. (July 23, 2008) ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Al Cross talks about covering economic and business coverage by newspapers. He is director of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues at the University of Kentucky, Lexington. The Rural Blog, www.uky.edu/comminfostudies/IRJCI/blog.htm, carries stories about journalism and issues and is both a source of stories of interest to newspapers and a source of story ideas. The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 2 AWARDS MAKE-UP AND APPEARANCE Group I 1. The Humboldt Chronicle •Headline/Photo combination was excellent on front page and sports page •Very pleasing to the eye •Excellent overall 2. The Erwin Record. Anthony D. Piercy, Mark A. Stevens, Lesley Hughes, Keith Whitson, Brenda Sparks 3. Lake County Banner, Tiptonville 4. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Jim Zachary, Ann Cason, Robert Turner 5. The Portland Progressive Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Lee Swets •The design is clean and attractive •Good use of graphics •Good headline font 2. Nashville Business Journal. Anne Pringle, Dave Raiford, Garrison Wells, Scott Takal, Todd Stringer, Carol Smith 3. The Daily News, Memphis 4. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Mia Rhodarmer 5. The Herald-News, Dayton. John Carpenter,Tiffany Soyster, Max Hackett, Cathy Barnes Group III 1. The Oak Ridger Layout is excellent. I especially liked the dominant art. It is easy to follow stories & know which photo, headline goes with which. Liked the use of graphic on Feb. 15 in economic development story. Don’t like centered headlines. I prefer left-justified, except over features. Photo quality & content was very good. Loved the Valentine’s Day feature package! It wouldn’t hurt to air things out a little & go with 4 stories on front instead of 5. Would like to see subheads on all stories to make it more consistent. Don’t like subheads italicized. Overall - the best of the lot. Sports was excellent. 2. The Newport Plain Talk 3. Southern Standard, McMinnville 4. The Tullahoma News 5. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. David Melson, Carol Spray, Mary Cook Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Attractive – good looking newspaper from an appearance standpoint. This paper is just a cut above the rest of the class because of its general appearance, mechanic production, good use of photos & graphics. Also a good mix of ads & news on each page and its overall design was hard to beat. 2. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville 5. Citizen Tribune, Morristown Group V 1. Chattanooga Times Free Press Good use of color! Front page makes you want to read inside Index important on front page! Keep up the good work! 2. News Sentinel, Knoxville 3. Kingsport Times-News 4. Johnson City Press 5. The Jackson Sun BEST SPOT NEWS STORY Group I 1. The Portland Leader. Smokefree Tennessee, Sonya Thompson Definitely a hot-button topic right now. Loved the lead! This story gave a great, human-interest perspective to the issue. I liked it very much. 2. The Middle Tennessee Times, Smithville. Newborn found in restaurant trash, Chris Tramel 3. The Portland Progressive. Man saves firefighter 4. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Utility stymies records request, Sarah McCarty 5. The Millington Star. Man dies in police custody Group II 1. The Leader, Covington. The great escape, Greg Little Love the tongue-in-cheek approach; even your officials seemed to play along. Very well written. Interesting topic with “slice of life appeal.” 2. The Courier, Savannah. Estranged husband ambushes, wounds wife, Ron Schaming 3.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Crops are just dried up 4. The News Examiner, Gallatin. Local businessman accused of $53 million scam, Katrina Cornwell 5.The Herald-News, Dayton. Possible tornado rips up Dayton, Max Hackett Group III 1. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Holton execution, Clint Confehr Haunting. An excellent piece of journalism. Nothing can beat an eye witness report. 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Voluntary manslaughter, Duane Sherrill 3. Roane County News, Kingston. Father & son burn in fire 4. The Oak Ridger. Tragedy strikes; youth dips 5. Southern Standard, McMinnville. I figured I was a goner, James Clark Group IV 1.The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Man kills himself at council meeting, Eric Snyder, Jason Austin •Great lede, very dramatic •Use of BO’s quotes before his death really tell the story •evokes emotion, a man with no where else to turn but to death •image of his wife throwing herself on him! SEE AWARDS, PAGE 4 Awards - 3 Dept. of Children’s Services dropped ball BY BOB PARKINS The Milan Mirror-Exchanges Little Austin Cash, who was a vibrant, bright, 19-monthold boy, is fighting for his life in the Memphis LeBonheur Children’s Hospital, a victim of alleged child abuse. Today he’s lying Parkins in critical condition with a cracked skull, brain damage, lifeless and blind. Physicians say his condition isn’t likely to improve if he lives. The sad thing is that the Gibson County Department of Children’s Services (DCS) had been forewarned that the child, who was practically raised by great-grandparents in Milan, was in danger while in the hands of the tot’s father and stepmother, who now live in Martin. The court had granted the real father 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group I The Milan Mirror-Exchange partial custody of the child between him and the child’s mother who lives in Milan. The great-grandparents noticed signs of abuse early on when the child left Milan to stay with the father in Martin. When Austin was returned, they noticed burns and bruises on the child after visits with the boy’s real dad. Once, the boy’s lips were parched from apparent dehydration and lack of nourishment, the grandparents noticed. They made several pictures and urged the DCS to keep the child away from an environment of obvious abuse. But they got no relief from DCS counselors who assured them that they had visited the Martin home and things would improve. It didn’t; instead things got much worse for the child. On the night of July 28, Austin was taken to Volunteer Hospital with lifethreatening head injuries and airlifted to Memphis LeBonheur. (See story on page 1). The child’s father and stepmother were arrested on charges of aggravated child abuse and neglect. They are currently in jail unable to make bond and have been bound over to the Weakley County Grand Jury in September. The stepmother had several children of her own who have been placed in foster homes. The tragic truth is that this alleged abuse could have been prevented had the ball of justice not been dropped by someone who wasn’t doing their job. We pray there’s hope for little Austin. His relatives are devastated. He deserves better and so do the taxpayers of Gibson County. Someone needs to face the music in this blatant case of irresponsibility! (Aug. 14, 2007) EDITOR’S NOTE: Bob Parkins, editor and publisher of The Milan Mirror-Exchange, died April 17. ENGRAVINGS The Shelbyville Times-Gazette was awarded the 2007 Kohl’s Distribution Excellence Award in recognition of its commitment to providing errorfree distribution of Kohl’s preprinted advertising section. “Your newspaper has shown that planning and teamwork among departments creates the ideal distribution process,” Kohl’s officials wrote in a letter accompanying the award. | Sherry Hasty was employee of the month of August at The Tullahoma News. She works in accounting and has been with the paper 24 years. She has received the same honor before and also was named employee of the year. | The Jackson Sun was the recipient of the 2008 Performing Star Award of Leadership Jackson. Roy W. Heatherly, president and publisher, accepted the award. 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group I Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough CHARLIE MAUK | HERALD AND TRIBUNE, JONESBOROUGH Sad farewells were said as the 730th Quartermaster company from Gray and Erwin headed off for training in Mississippi. (July 10, 2007) Mauk CMYK The Tennessee Press 26 - Drive-In Training FROM PAGE 3 BEST NEWS REPORTING Group I 1. The Erwin Record. NFS secrecy Excellent news coverage. Solid reporting. Very smooth, easy to read style. A superb effort.The reporter’s digging was impressive. Great leads and excellent word choice. 2. GraingerToday, Bean Station. Utility district, Jim Zachary, Sarah McCarty, Barbara Womack 3. The Millington Star. Woods road to recovery 4. The Millington Star. Carruthers’ death 5. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. MRSA, Heather E. Seay Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Housing crisis Many excellent entries in this class, but this one topped the field on the basis of the quality & volume of information & analysis of a very complex topic. 2. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Strategic plan 3. The Herald-News, Dayton. County sales tax, Max Hackett 4. The Courier, Savannah. Teen attempts suicide/school security, Ron Schaming 5. The News Examiner, Gallatin. You better back up Group III 1. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Mary Winkler stories, Duane Sherrill Wow – excellent story, obviously of huge local interest. You do a great job summarizing the long hearings & not bogging them down in detail, while also giving the readers some color – describing the scene, the people, etc. I would have liked to see more community reaction – maybe a story on the church or on community at large. 2. The Oak Ridger. No more waiting; Vietnam War family, Beverly Majors 3. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. Judge orders closing of local strip club, Ken Walker 4. The Lebanon Democrat. Third general sessions judge issue, J.R. Lind BY ELENORA E. EDWARDS Managing editor BNP B NP G Gp. p. IIII MELISSA KINTON | MONROE COUNTY ADVOCATE AND DEMOCRAT, SWEETWATER Reba Campbell, 84, drove her car into Sweetwater Creek on Oct. 12. Sweetwater police officers were nearby and arrived within seconds, jumped in and pulled her from the cold water. (Oct. 12, 2007) Kinton 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group II Monroe County Advocate and Democrat, Sweetwater Mayor Willie Herenton’s reasons for wanting to build a new football stadium to replace the Liberty Bowl boil down to two arguments: Renovating the existing stadium would be a waste of money, and “the opportunity is before us” to build something new. Those are weak arguments for a proposal that could cost in the neighborhood of $200 million. We’ve faced this question before. Visionaries phrase it this way: Why fix up the old building when we can build a new building? Pragmatists ask this question: Why build a new building when we can fix up the old one? Sometimes the facts come down on the side of the visionary, and sometimes they support the pragmatist’s view. We’ve talked to the mayor, we’ve examined both scenarios, and this time we stand behind the pragmatists when we say no to the mayor’s proposal. We strongly disagree that renovating Exploring the world of earmarks, those special funds members of Congress secure every year, was explained July 18 by Bill Allison, a senior fellow with the Sunlight Foundation in Washington, D.C. Earmarks are funds tacked onto larger funding bills. Traditionally, they’ve had little control or attention. Allison pointed out that in fiscal year 2008 there were 12,000 earmarks amounting to $18.3 million and that not every earmark is crooked, bad or a waste. Other basic information about the earmarks Allison provided is that every year there are some 34,000 requests, an average of 78 per member of Congress. He added that more fund-raisers are held at the time earmarks are requested, in March and April, than at any other time. To check on earmarks in one’s state, a reporter can go to www.taxpayers.net and find, in a blue box on the left, a report on FY 2008’s earmarks. Clicking on that will bring up an extensive spreadsheet, Allison noted. Allison led those attending the session through the discovery process with a PowerPoint presentation and references to various Web sites. To request an earmark, a member of the House must file a letter. These provide good information. The letters are available in a downloadable Excel format. Allison said that a good resource on earmarks is Steve Ellis, who can be contacted at (202) 5468500, extension 126. Allison said Ellis “knows everything and is a good guy.” Allison noted that information about fiscal year 2009 earmarks may not be available until after the federal election in November. The earmarks request procedure is different for the Senate, as a letter must be filed, but it states merely that the senator has no financial interest in the request, but it does not specify the beneficiary. Allison pointed out some earmarks that appeared to be favors for lobbyists and others that were “interesting though not corrupt.” He suggested that earmarks are indicative of a systemic problem, that sometimes a contribution to the congressman or congresswoman’s funds is the only way to get one’s attention. Only a fraction of the earmarks are ever investigated or evaluated by the press, other watchdogs or by voters. Allison provided a list of Web sites that can help someone trying to look into them: www.capitolwords.org www.congresspedia.org www.earmarkwatch.org www.fedspending.org Allison ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS www.followthemoney.org www.fortune535.org www.governmentdocs.org www.louisdb.org www.maplight.org www.metavid.org www.opencongress.org www.opensecrets.org www.publicmarkup.org www.speechology.org www.theopenhouseproject.org The site for the Sunlight Foundation is www.sunlightfoundation.com. SEE AWARDS, PAGE 5 We see no reason to raze Liberty Bowl BY EDITORIAL STAFF Memphis Business Journal The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Allison walks through check on earmarks AWARDS •Great writing throughout. 2. The Daily Times, Maryville. He’s going to kill me, Jessica Stith 3. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Feds raid local homes, Brandon Puttbrese 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Life without parole, Jeff Farrell 5. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Man dies after being struck with ax, D. Frank Smith Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville. Gore wins Nobel Prize, Leon Alligood Well crafted. Incredible background and in-depth research. Great editorial decision to cover every angle. It’s obvious this was a huge, well thought-out team effort. 2. Bristol Herald Courier. Shock, despair 3. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Warehouse fire 4. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Tornado, Ryan Harris 5. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Plane crash, Lauren Gregory CMYK SEPTEMBER 2008 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group II Memphis Business Journal the stadium is a waste of money. The Liberty Bowl is structurally sound and functional. It’s an architecturally appealing structure. It has not outlived its usefulness. If you haven’t done so lately, take a drive by the Liberty Bowl. Go ahead and tour the perimeter of the entire site that is home to the stadium, the Children’s Museum and the Mid-South Coliseum, and was once home to Libertyland and Tim McCarver Stadium. Take a few moments to contemplate the potential for redeveloping the site. And then ask yourself why a new football stadium must be a factor in this vision. The site is currently anchored by two viable tenants: the Liberty Bowl and The Children’s Museum. The rest of the 170 acres is essentially a blank slate. Tear down the Coliseum, bulldoze the detritus that was once Libertyland, clear out the fairgrounds and you have created a developer’s playground. We urge the mayor to revisit the facility assessment report conducted by architecture firm Looney Ricks Kiss, which priced renovations at $34.2 million, and the renovation study submitted by SSR Ellers/HOK, which proposed spending $95 million to spruce up the facility. Find a middle ground between those proposals and spearhead the effort to create a new and improved Liberty Bowl. The University of Memphis, the teams playing in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl and Southern Heritage Classic, and the fans deserve a better facility than the one we have now. We hope the mayor doesn’t let his vision for a better fairgrounds get obscured by his desire for a new stadium. Let the Liberty Bowl stand. (Feb. 2-8, 2007) BNP 3 In the earmarks session, from left, Jennifer Peebles, The Tennessean, Nashville; J. Todd Foster, managing editor, Bristol Herald Courier; and Brad Schrade, The Tennessean, with Jim Charlet, Brentwood, in the background Scripps Howard Foundation announces Journalism Awards DAVID DOONAN | ROANE COUNTY NEWS, KINGSTON Doonan Roane County Sheriff’s Deputy Bob Childs sadly looks over the wreckage from the car accident that killed Heather Mitchell and her young daughters. (July 20, 2007) 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group III Roane County News, Kingston The Scripps Howard Foundation May 9 announced the winners of its annual National Journalism Awards, honoring the best in print, Web and electronic journalism and journalism education for 2007. The awards, open to all U.S. news organizations and college journalism educators, recognize excellence in 17 categories such as editorial writing, human interest writing, environment, investigative, business/economics, Washington and public service reporting, commentary, photojournalism, radio and television reporting, Web reporting, college cartooning, editorial cartooning and journalism education. The awards also honor distinguished service to the First Amendment. “These awards celebrate the role of journalism in a democratic society and we are proud to recognize the nation’s best writers, photographers, cartoonists, editors and teachers,” said Mike Philipps, the Foundation’s president and chief executive officer. “Our country and our communities are better places because of the work honored by these awards.” The Scripps Howard Foundation is the philanthropic arm of The E. W. Scripps Co. The National Journalism Award winners of particular interest to Tennessee are as follows: Distinguished service to the First Amendment—News Sentinel, Knoxville, which received $10,000 and the Edward Willis Scripps award for exposing an abuse of Tennessee’s Open Meetings Act and successfully challenging that violation in the courts. Journalism teacher of the year—Dr. Elinor Kelley Grusin, professor, Department of Journalism, University of Memphis, who received $10,000 and the Charles E. Scripps award. Her school also received a $5,000 grant. The award is given in cooperation with the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Drive-In Training - 25 ENGRAVINGS Bennett wins cartoonists award C l ay B e n n e t t , Chattanooga Times Free Press, added the Ink Bottle Award to his honors during the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists (AAEC) Bennett convention June 28 in San Antonio, Texas. In April, Bennett was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for work the previous year at the Christian Science Monitor. Also in April, Bennett won the 2007 Thomas Nast Award for best international editorial cartoons from the Overseas Press Club of America. Bennett has been with the Chattanooga Times Free Press since late 2007, and he is a member of the Washington Post Writers Group. In fact, Bennett has received so many honors (including the 2002 Pulitzer) that the AAEC played a video spoofing his prize prowess and gave him a trophy for “Outstanding Distinguished Excellence in Winning Awards” before presenting him the Ink Bottle plaque for contributions to the AAEC and editorial cartooning. AAEC President Nick Anderson of the Houston Chronicle and WPWG said a major reason for the Ink Bottle honor was Bennett’s work as AAEC president in 2005-06. During that “tumultuous and eventful” time, recalled Anderson, Bennett worked on such things as finding a new management company fo r t h e A A E C , u p g r a d i n g t h e organization’s Web site, diversifying the AAEC’s membership by attracting more alternative cartoonists, and responding to the eliminations of high-profile cartoonist positions at the Los Angeles Times and The Sun of Baltimore. “That was a dark harbinger” of more cartoonist cuts to come, said Anderson. “Clay was very eloquent in our defense.” Bennett also responded to the huge reaction in the Muslim world to the Muhammad cartoons published in Denmark. He did this through proxies such as Anderson because Bennett didn’t want to further endanger thenkidnapped Christian Science Monitor colleague Jill Carroll. And Bennett later aided the AAEC by helping to coordinate an online auction of cartoons to raise much-needed funds for the organization. NAA recognizes industry’s best Industry professionals attending the Newspaper Association of America’s Marketing Conference recognized the brightest leaders in their profession. The conference was in February in Orlando, Fla. Awards of interest to Tennesseans follow. The Tony Mineart Newspaper Merchandiser of the Year Awards honor retailers who have demonstrated a long-term cooperative effort to sell and market newspapers in their stores and who model the industry’s cutting edge approach to single-copy promotions. •MAPCO Express, nominated by The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, for the Elvis Week promotion Newspaper Carriers of the Year Awards were created to honor newspaper carriers for outstanding achievement. Entrants competed in local and regional-level competitions before moving on to the national level. •Sharon Miser, senior category, The Greeneville Sun The Display Federation Sales and Marketing Leadership Award is presented to an individual for significant and sustained excellence in serving the newspaper industry both inside and outside his or her organization in the field of advertising. •Leslie Giallombardo, vice president of advertising, Gannett Co., McLean, Va. She is the former publisher of The Tennessean, Nashville. NAAF cites outstanding NIE programs The News Sentinel, Knoxville, won two first place awards from the Newspaper Association of America Foundation (NAAF), which recognized outstanding Newspaper in Education and youth content programs for their efforts to encourage the use of newspapers in the classroom. The awards were presented as part of the Young Reader Seminar May 15-18 in Phoenix, Ariz. The newspaper was the only one to win two first place NIE Content Awards. They were as follows: For original curriculum, 60,001 to 149,999 circulation—News Sentinel, Knoxville, Alice W. Dollar, NIE manager For special projects, 60,001 to 149,999 circulation—News Sentinel, Knoxville, Alice W. Dollar, NIE manager “Newspaper in Education programs, coupled with newspaper content aimed at young people, do more than provide teachers a valuable teaching tool; this early exposure is often the spark that motivates students to read newspapers throughout their life,” explained Margaret Vassilikos, senior vice president and treasurer of NAAF. “This relationship has benefits beyond readership. Recent Foundation research indicates that people who use newspapers in the classroom and read newspaper teen content are more likely to become civically engaged adults,” she said. CMYK The Tennessee Press 4 - Awards SEPTEMBER 2008 Tennessee Press Association Drive-In Tr Training FROM PAGE 4 September 2008 Special section FAC director Policinski talks about the people and the First Amendment CMYK BY ELENORA E. EDWARDS Managing editor Gene Policinski laid it on the line for people attending the TPA Drive-In Training. “Newspapers fundamentally will save the republic,” he said. “Fair, accurate, complete, truthful, biased or unbiased—newspapers are essential to the way the country functions.” Policinski, executive director of the First Amendment Center (FAC), revealed that he began his journalism career in 1969 at a 1,600-circulation newspaper in Greenfield, Ind. He has worked for other news media, notably USA Today, and since 2004 has been executive director of the FAC at Vanderbilt University in Nashville and in Washington, D.C. and vice president since 2007. Policinski was the keynote speaker at the annual training event, which was held July 18 at the Millennium Maxwell House Hotel in Nashville. He said that newspapers don’t point out enough the role they play in our society. “On the street, that’s real life democracy—that’s what you do,” he said to the 60 people in attendance. Policinski talked about the 2007 State of the First Amendment Survey (SOFAS) commissioned annually by the FAC. A new one will be out around Sept. 16, Constitution Day, he said. Sixty-four percent of people know that free speech is part of the First Amendment, the speaker pointed out, but only 19 percent know that religion is part of it. Sixteen percent know the amendments sets out a free press; 16 percent, right to assembly; and 3 percent, the right to petition the government. Three out of 10 Americans can’t name any of the five freedoms, Policinski said. And when asked in 2002 if the First Amendment goes too far in guaranteeing rights, 41 percent strongly agreed. But, changes in the people’s opinions about freedoms is changing, Policinski noted. In 2007, in answer to the same question, only 14 percent strongly agreed. And, 55 percent strongly disagreed. The change, the speaker suggested, has been the result of 9/11 and fear of the loss of freedoms in the climate since. “The public has reset itself, clearly,” he said. Referring again to the 2007 SOFAS, Policinski noted that in 2000, when people were asked if the press had too much freedom, 51 percent said yes. But in 2007, 34 percent said the press had too much, with 13 percent saying it had too little freedom and 50 percent saying it was about right. “These are great numbers, good news,” he commented. It isn’t all good news, he said, noting that when asked if the news media try to report the news without bias, in 2005, only 13 percent said yes, and in 2007, only 16 percent. An interesting factor, Policinski said, is that Americans are beginning to become accustomed to having a publication identify its stand on certain issues. This might not be a bad thing, he asserted, as if a news medium clearly knows what is going on, why not express an opinion about it? Another question on the survey is whether falsifying or making up stories is a widespread problem. This is important, Policinski said, because it has to do with trust. In 2005, 40 percent strongly agreed there was a widespread problem, with 25 percent mildly agreeing, 20 percent mildly disagreeing and 11 percent strongly disagreeing. But in 2007, the numbers improved, with 36 percent saying they strongly agreed, 26 percent mildly agreeing, 22 percent mildly disagreeing and 12 percent strongly disagreeing. “Who told you about Enron and Jason Blair?” the speaker asked. There is more research, more attempts to correct errors than in any other institution, Policinski said. It will pay off, he said. Newspapers need to talk to people about veracity, have a way to fix errors and have correction columns. Americans are looking for things they can trust and are beginning to wake up to talk about ways to acknowledge errors. In another area, people were asked if the government should be able to require news media to offer an equal amount of time to conservatives and liberals. On TV, 38 percent strongly agreed; on radio, 35 percent; and in newspapers, 36 percent. Those who mildly agreed were 26 percent, TV; 26 percent, radio; and newspapers, 26 percent. If there is not vigorous objection, there may be some congressmen who want to regulate newspapers as well as other media. It is frightening that some want to reinstate the Fairness Doctrine, Policinski said. When in 2007 asked if they thought that running a certain amount of “positive news” in return for being granted a license was appropriate, 21 percent strongly agreed and 19 percent mildly agreed, the speaker said. “We do not teach our youth to worry about the heavy hand of government,” Policinski said. “Editors don’t either,” he added. Newspapers must not give up their ground of providing the information the people need as well as what they want, the speaker said. Another question on the survey was whether journalists should be allowed to keep their sources confidential. In the 1997 survey, 58 percent strongly agreed and 27 percent mildly agreed. In 2007, 27 percent strongly agreed and 32 percent mildly agreed. Despite a 10-year attack on the concept of using confidential sources, the public still thinks it is OK. And 50 percent of newsrooms say they have rules about confidential sources, Policinski said. “If we use them sparingly, it will be OK,” he opined. When asked if newspapers should be allowed to freely criticize the U.S. military about its strategy and performance, in 2004, 32 percent strongly agreed and 24 percent mildly agreed, while in 2007, 39 percent strongly agreed and 21 percent mildly agreed. Policinski then turned his remarks to the state of the student press. Asked if public school students should be allowed to report on controversial issues in a student newspaper without the approval of school officials, in 2005, 20 percent agreed and in 2007, 25 percent. In a similar question about college students, who are adults, in 2001, 33 percent strongly agreed and 23 percent mildly agreed, and in 2007, 34 percent strongly agreed and 27 percent mildly agreed. But a Knight Foundation survey of high school students showed they thought it was all right for the government to read a story to say it was OK. However, when it came to music, 75 percent said they should have free speech in music. ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Policinski Policinski said as a society we don’t To a question on using anonymous teach students about the First Amend- sources, the speaker said we should be ment or about defending it, but the as transparent as possible. In letters to student press is a great opportunity the editor, ask people to use their names, for young people to learn, especially which is “very American.” Use reasonif they have support from the local able editorial judgment with letters to news unit. the editor, just as one does with news, In comments during questions, Po- he suggested. “A writer can’t just rant; licinski suggested that in addition to he has to have something to say.” running a story based on investigative “People are looking to us to tell reporting, a newspaper also tell what it them what we stand for,” Policinski took to do the story. said. “We are in the information and “Local is trustworthy,” he said. “The opinion business,” but we should not closer you are to your source, the more allow “blather.” credibility you have.” He noted, “Of “People are looking for someone they course, you can fritter it away, but if can trust, a friend, someone in their you have credibility, you have gold.” county they can rely on,” Policinski He added that newspapers need to hold said. the government accountable, tell people He provided printed information on about cookies and taxes, say “good job” the First Amendment Center, where and tell them a good time to buy a car. one can for free use columns on First “The more we touch people and let them Amendment topics. The Web site is touch us, the better we are.” www.fac.org. ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Andrew Oppmann, left, and Kent Flanagan; Robyn Gentile in background The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Awards - 5 AWARDS 5. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Stories on Jerry Cooper’s plight, James Clark Group IV 1. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Elementary school fire, Mary Jo Denton School coverage is first-rate. 2. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Bo Wood suicide, Eric Snyder, Jason Austin, Ann Wallace 3. Elizabethton Star. When do we start digging? Steve Burwick 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. School funding, Derek Hodges, Stan Voit 5. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Drought relief, Jimmy Settle, Nate Karlin Group V 1. News Sentinel, Knoxville. A dozen done There are few things more gratifying than seeing the newspaper come out as the hero. Many reporters go through the diligent work of government coverage, and the News Sentinel is leading the way. 2. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. MLGW favoritism, Trevor Aaronson, Michael Erskine 3.The Jackson Sun.The Winkler story, Tonya Smith-King 4. The Tennessean, Nashville. DNA tests expose inconsistency, Melvin Claxton, Sheila Burke 5. Johnson City Press. Downed plane INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING Group I 1. Mt. Juliet News. Sticks & stones, Laurie Everett Fantastic! This series was an interest- ing and riveting read from beginning to end. It provided everything – factual info, personal stories and helpful tips. Great job! 2. The Erwin Record. Zero tolerance, Lesley Hughes, Anthony D. Piercy 3. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Head Start abuse, Steve Short 4. Smithville Review. Prescription drug abuse 5. Lake County Banner, Tiptonville. Capable & personable Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Will Sears Crosstown rise again? John Scruggs, Andy Ashby What a great story! This was quite an effort and was very well written. Both writers drew me into the various aspects of the story. The research done on projects at other Sears buildings was tremendous. I find absolutely nothing negative to say about this work. Excellent! 2. Memphis Business Journal. Doctor shortage, Toby Sells 3. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Director of schools selection, Melissa Kinton 4.The Daily News, Memphis. Prostitution plagues Memphis, Rosalind Guy 5. LaFollette Press. Jellico’s financial woes, Natasha LaFayette Group III 1. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Zack Owensby, Mandy Maxwell Good - the variety of story topics. It was both news and investigative. 2. The Oak Ridger 3. The Lebanon Democrat. Laurie Everett 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group IV The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro AARON THOMPSON | THE DAILY NEWS JOURNAL, MURFREESBORO Christian Golczynski, 8, receives the flag from his father’s casket from Lt. Col. RicThompson during the graveside at Wheeler Cemetery in Bedford County. Golczynski’s father, Marcus, was killed the week before. (April 5, 2007) CMYK The Tennessee Press 24 - Drive-In Training Thompson SEE AWARDS, PAGE 6 No longer publish squabble BY SAM HATCHER, JOHN B. BRYAN AND JENNIFER HORTON The Wilson Post, Lebanon We’re tired and we’ve heard from a number of our readers who are equally as tired of reading about the ongoing “he said, she said” saga between Lebanon City Councilor William Farmer and Mayor Don Fox. Please let this serve as notice to both that we’re not publishing more of the same. If they choose to continue their feud, we urge them to use another newspaper or another source but do not rely on The Wilson Post. Simply stated, our newspaper is not about this. And furthermore, we do not believe this represents good government. The majority in our community, we believe, are sick of this entire mess. And, as for our newspaper, we apolo- 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group III The Wilson Post, Lebanon gize to our readers for inflicting the pain of this ongoing city hall squabble on you and promise in the days ahead we will focus on matters of much greater importance including profiles of distinguished citizens, local sports, schools and education, and business growth and development. Our community is on the threshold of a prosperous future, but in the meantime it seems some of our elected officials have their heads in places where the sun doesn’t shine and are apparently blind to what’s happening around them. (Sept. 28, 2007) 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group V Chattanooga Times Free Press Henry DAN HENRY | CHATTANOOGA TIMES FREE PRESS Kathy and Darrell Chambers sob after receiving the flag that covered the casket of their son Lance Cpl. William Craig Chambers July 8 at Anderson Memorial Gardens in Ringgold, Ga. (July 9, 2007) AWARDS FROM PAGE 5 CMYK SEPTEMBER 2008 4. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Brian Mosely 5. Roane County News, Kingston Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Gangs in Clarksville, Eric Snyder The gang problem stories not only document the current reality, but offer solutions. They are complete and professional. 2. The Daily Times, Maryville. Immigrant: Judge told me to go home, Rick Laney 3. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Water without fluoride, Nate Karlin 4. The Daily Herald, Columbia. City loses 500K, Samantha Ballard 5. The Greeneville Sun. Businessman alleges unfair treatment, Nelson Morais Group V 1. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. On the take, Marc Perrusquia Political corruption exposed through excellent reporting. The investigation was thorough, the writing concise. 2. The Tennessean, Nashville. Poor oversight, Clay Carey 3. Bristol Herald Courier. It’s your money, J. Todd Foster, Kathy Still, David McGee, Mac McLean, Debra McCown 4.TheTennessean, Nashville.TN Mine enriched Gore, Bill Theobald 5. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. FEMA folly, Trevor Aaronson BEST EDUCATION REPORTING Group I 1. Mt. Juliet News. Bullying. Part 1 - great use of narrative writing Part 2 - amazing story by principal, nice reporting Part 3 - Great interview w/inmate *Great service to community, powerful writing, an important topic Also great use of graphic for series Bus drivers - great feature, Laurie Everett 2. The Millington Star 3. The Milan Mirror-Exchange 4. The Erwin Record. Lesley Hughes, Anthony D. Piercy, Mark A. Stevens 5. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. Tony Smith, Heather E. Seay, Lynn J. Richardson, Sarah Winters Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Michael Sheffield Solid piece of work. Entertaining as well as informative & important. Excellent! 2. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Steve Marion 3.The Leader, Covington. Echo Gaines Denmark 4. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Melissa Kinton, Tommy Millsaps 5. The Herald-News, Dayton. Tiffany Soyster, Max Hackett Group III 1. The Newport Plain Talk Tennessee Press Association FROM PAGE 22 Scanner oven - great unique feature on youth; interesting lede gets reader into story Removed - nice coverage of a big issue in community; clear writing helps to follow confusing story; great use of sources to tell the story 2. Crossville Chronicle. Josh Hayes 3. Southern Standard, McMinnville 4. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. John B. Bryan, Tommy Bryan, Zack Owensby 5. The Lebanon Democrat. Laurie Everett, J.R. Lind, Sara McCarty, Andy Reed Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Ann Wallace Great! You hit some very serious topics here and really get into the details. Good writing. You go into subjects as varied as school bus a/c, ELL, the state report card and still go deeper to discuss the schools that “passed,” “failed,” and changed status from before in detail. 2. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Skyler Swisher 3. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Scott Broden 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville 5. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Bobbie Bruton Group V 1.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Kristina Goetz, Marc Perrusquia, Dakarai Aarons A most impressive job of investigative reporting. I realize you were fortunate to have the subject matter to report on, but you took it to a level of excellence SEE AWARDS, PAGE 7 Pickard thanks the following: •The University of Tennessee Office of Public Relations and members of the staff Hank Dye, Amy Blakely, Charles Primm, Amy Rummel, Karen Collins and Gina Stafford, the College of Communication and Information and the School of Journalism and Electronic Media for the excellent relationship that has existed for 68 years. During this time UT has participated in the implementing of the UT-TPA State Press Contests and has provided plaques and certificates and assisted in various other facets of the awards event. •Victor Parkins, editor of The Milan Mirror-Exchange, 2007-08 Contests Committee chairman, •Members of the 2007-08 TPA Contests Committee for their contributions, guidance and support of the contests. JULIE PICKARD | CHESTER COUNTY INDEPENDENT, HENDERSON 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group I Chester County Independent, Henderson Hender sonview apartment kids enjoy playing in the drainoff water after a rain shower. (Aug. 9, 2007) Sheriff should give statistics on firing five BY SAM STOCKARD The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro The Rutherford County Sheriff ’s Office is shirking its responsibility to the public by refusing to divulge the reason for firing five jail personnel. After an internal Stockard probe, four jail officers and one maintenance man were released two weeks ago for “improper conduct with inmates.” Now that the sheriff ’s office investigation is complete and the employees have been fired, it’s time to let the people know exactly why. “Improper conduct” isn’t specific enough. We can only imagine what’s being said community-wide about the firings, and it can’t be good, because when information is lacking, people’s imaginations run wild. Instead of turning over personnel files, the sheriff’s office is hiding behind 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group IV The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro state law that exempts records from Tennessee’s Open Records Act if they are part of an ongoing investigation. The sheriff ’s office makes a good argument, but only to a point. Turning the case over to the District Attorney’s Office to determine whether any of the five should be charged with criminal conduct is the right thing to do. The sheriff ’s office removes itself from any potential conflict of interest by allowing another agency to handle the criminal investigation. But since the sheriff ’s internal probe is complete and the five have been fired, that part of the matter is finished. Consequently, the employee records and investigation should be public record. We trust the DA to conduct an impartial investigation into this matter. Whether people know why they were fired won’t impact his case one bit. The public will know eventually, anyway, once the DA completes the investigation. By keeping the specifics secret, the sheriff’s office is playing hideand-seek with the Open Records Act and doing a disservice to the public. The jail is an $11.2 million operation, and people expect it to be run efficiently, which we believe it is. After serving time there, inmates typically say they don’t want any part of 940 New Salem Highway again. That’s the way it should be. Yet, the public should also know what is going on inside the walls of the county jail, and if five employees have to be fired, the sheriff should tell the people why. They deserve to know, because even though those five are on the sheriff ’s payroll, they work for the taxpayers. The people’s right to know always outweighs any desire by the sheriff ’s office to conceal the information – even if temporarily – about how the jail and sheriff ’s office are running. (June 10, 2007) The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Long is recipient of SCMA’s Green Award TAPME 2. Daryl Sullivan, The Daily Times, Maryville, Musical Silhouette 3. Lindsay McDonald, The Jackson Sun, Catchin’ a Ride 2. David Fuzzell, Union City Daily Messenger, Big Swing 3. Dallus Whitfield, The Lebanon Democrat, Cheers! Sports photography 1. Robert Smith, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, What a Special Night 2. Robert Smith, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, Quit Pulling 3. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Home Run Sports photography 1. David Fuzzell, Union City Daily Messenger, Big Swing 2. Dallus Whitfield, The Lebanon Democrat, Season End 3. Danny Parker and Jimmy Jones, Shelbyville Times-Gazette, Foot to Nose Photojournalism 1. Andrew McMurtrie, The Jackson Sun, Homeless in Jackson 2. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Fallen Hero 3. Karen Kraft, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, In the Garden Photojournalism 1. Danny Parker, Shelbyville TimesGazette, Reason to Rock 2. Chris Menees, Union City Daily Messenger, Days of Yesteryear 3. Donna Ryder, Union City Daily Messenger, Open County Fair & Nutrition Day Individual achievement/ body of work in photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 2. Daryl Sullivan, The Daily Times, Maryville 3. Karen Kraft, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Individual achievement/ body of work in photography 1. Curt Habraken, The Mountain Press, Sevierville 2. Chris Menees, Union City Daily Messenger 3. Donna Ryder, Union City Daily Messenger DIVISION III WRITING Daily deadline reporting 1. J.R. Lind,The Lebanon Democrat, State Judiciary Reprimands Local Judge 2. Clint Confehr, Shelbyville Times-Gazette, Holton Executed 3. Angela Williams, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, New Hope Thrift Store Destroyed Bare necessity Features reporting 1. Gail Crutchfield, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, Price of Freedom 2. J. R. Lind, The Lebanon Democrat, Queen’s Pigeon Alights in Watertown 3. Derek Hodges, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, Putting the Brakes on DUI Sports/outdoors reporting 1. Mike Hutchens, Union City Daily Messenger, It’s Official - Wood Resigns 2. Andy Reed, The Lebanon Democrat, Umpire Retires 3. Cobey Hitchcock, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, Against All Odds Business news 1. Angela Williams, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, It Doesn’t Rate Well 2. J. R. Lind, The Lebanon Democrat, Changing Face of Manufacturing Costs Jobs 3. Derek Hodges, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, Home or Business? Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award: Brian Mosely, Shelbyville Times-Gazette, Somalis in Shelbyville PHOTOGRAPHY Spot news photography 1. Kay Rose, Shelbyville Times-Gazette, Farewell for a Hero 2. Chris Menees, Union City Daily Messenger, Safe and Sound 3. Chris Menees, Union City Daily Messenger, Topsy-Turvy Test Feature photography 1. Curt Habraken, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, School’s Out Awards - 23 “The press was protected so it could bare the secrets of government and inform the people.” Hugo L. Black, Former U.S. Supreme Court justice, 1971 Dale Long, circulation director of The Greeneville Sun, was awarded the William C. Green Jr. Award by the Southern Circulation Managers Association at its 89th Long annual conference in April in Baton Rouge, La. The Sun is the “flagship” newspaper of Jones Media, based in Greeneville. Long also has responsibilities for overseeing production operations of the Sun, including prepress, printing and post-printing, as well as other Jones has been a member of the Tennessee Press Association Circulation Committee since 1995 and has served as its chairman. Long has played many roles in SCMA and has held various positions leading up to his becoming president in 2006. When presenting the award, current SCMA President Dean Blanchard said of Long, “Even though he is from Tennessee, his heart is as big as the state of Texas.” Long and his wife of 29 years, Linda Kay, have a daughter, Autumn Malone. She and her husband, Cody, have a daughter, Kylie. News Sentinel wins ETSPJ Best of Show More than 80 journalists and guests attended the annual Golden Press Card Awards of the East Tennessee Society of Professional Journalists (ETSPJ) May 10 at The Foundry to congratulate winners of this year’s competition. Mia Rhodarmer, editor of the Monroe County Advocate and Democrat, Sweetwater, ETSPJ vice president/ Golden Press Card, was in charge of the contest and banquet. She was assisted by Dr. Dorothy Bowles, professor at the University of Tennessee School of Journalism and Electronic Media, Knoxville. Clint Brewer, president of national SPJ, spoke. He is editor of The City Paper, Nashville, and former editor of The Lebanon Democrat. WORTH REPEATING Sometimes if you don’t toot your own horn, that horn goes untooted. Or something like that. Pardon this break from the usual critique of the issues of the day to let us engage in a mild form of self-congratulation. The Mountain Press, the newspaper we thank you for reading, did quite well in two state contests, the results of which were announced last week. The paper won 15 awards, including three for first place, in the Tennessee Press Association contest. We competed against a number of Tennessee newspapers in that category, with a weekly circulation of as much as three times what ours is. Then the next day the Associated Press Managing Editors group announced winners of the state AP contest, and we won four first place awards–more than any other small daily in the state. In addition to those awards we won three third-place citations. Newspaper people don’t work for glory or prizes, but they are nice when they do come. Each year we gather up our best work in the different categories and send them in, hoping to do well but never knowing. Entries are judged very subjectively, usually by a single journalist in another state. Sometimes we don’t win when we think we should have, and win when we doubted we would. The trick is not to get too exhilarated when you win or too down when you Media publications. He is active in the community as well, being a member of the Kiwanis Club, Greene County Partnership, Greene County United Way and Brown Springs Baptist Church. He is president of the USS Greenville Inc., a Greenevillebased support group for the crew of the nuclear submarine named after the East Tennessee city. He is a member of the local Moose Lodge. Long is a graduate of West Greene High School and attended Walters State Community College. In his professional field, he has attended the Inland Press Foundation Circulation Academy and don’t. But when you do well, it’s nice to share it with our readers. Our newsroom works hard to produce quality stories and photos each day. We never miss a day of publication, and every day is different, with new content, new ads, new photos and new things to enjoy. Small-town journalism as we practice it is the most fun, because you are closer to the people, and what you do seems to mean more and have more impact than big-city papers. We produce a lot of refrigerator journalism – stories that families cut out and attach to the door of the refrigerator. It’s fun when we go to someone’s house and see clippings displayed in that way. But we also enjoy the more serious stories, when we point out wrongdoing or enlighten a community to something going on they need to know. We do a lot of that. The recognition of our work by judges in the two contests is cake icing, a pat on the back to make summer seem more bearable. But mostly it means we are doing some good things that, hopefully, are appreciated by our readers. Thanks for spending time with The Mountain Press. (The Mountain Press, Sevierville, July 24, 2008) Read The Tennessee Press, then pass it on The top two awards overall are the Horace V. Wells, Jr. Community Service Award and the Golden Press Card Award given to the top entrant among all the Award of Excellence winners in all categories. Wells was the founder and longtime editor and publisher of the Clinton Courier-News. The Wells Award went to Scott Barker, Rebecca Ferrar, Ansley Haman and Hayes Hickman of the News Sentinel, Knoxville, for “Knox County Turmoil,” and the WBIR-TV News Team won for “Knox County Files.” The judges said, “This is an ultimate public service with continuing commitment to follow through.” The Golden Press Club Award was shared by the two news media on the same subject. For this award, the News Sentinel’s entry was “Knox County Chaos” by Rebecca Ferrar and Ansley Haman. For the first time, ETSPJ held a high school essay contest in which the chapter winner will go on to the national SPJ level to compete with contemporaries from across the country for scholarships worth up to $1,000. The ETSPJ winner was Christopher Bernard of Knoxville, who was presented a certificate and a check for $50 during the GPC banquet. Larry Van Guilder, editor of the Halls Shopper-News, was contest chairman. One can see the complete list of winners, including many newspapers, at www.etspj.org. TPA Winter Convention Feb. 4-6 Tennessee Press Association 2009 Press Institute & Winter Convention DoubleTree Hotel • Downtown Nashville CMYK The Tennessee Press 6 - Awards SEPTEMBER 2008 CMYK TAPME awards presented July 19 in Nashville The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, was the big newspaper winner July 19 in the annual journalism competition sponsored by the Tennessee Associated Press Managing Editors. For newspapers with more than 40,000 daily circulation, The Commercial Appeal won seven first place awards: features reporting, sports/outdoors reporting, business news, feature photography, sports photography, photojournalism and individual achievement/body of work in photography. Additionally, the paper’s Marc Perrusquia won the Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award for a story, “Culture of Corruption.” The award was established to honor Malcolm Law, associate editor of The Jackson Sun, who died in December 1972. The award pays tribute to the dedication of Law to the concept of the Associated Press as a news cooperative. The Tennessean, Nashville, was awarded first place for Web site and sports photography. Rounding out the divisional first-place winners, the News Sentinel, Knoxville, won for daily deadline reporting, and the Chattanooga Times Free Press won for spot news photography. For newspapers with daily circulation between 10,000 and 40,000, The Jackson Sun won five first-place awards: deadline reporting, feature reporting, sports/outdoors reporting, best Web site and photojournalism. Additionally, Tonya Smith-King of the Sun won the Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award for a story on Mary Winkler. In the same division, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, won for spot news photography and feature photography. The Daily News Journal’s Aaron Thompson won for individual achievement/body of work in photography. Other first-place winners in the division were The Daily Herald, Columbia, for business news, and The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, for sports photography. For newspapers with less than 10,000 circulation daily, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, won four first place honors: feature reporting, business news, feature photography and individual achievement/body of work in photography (Curt Habraken). The Shelbyville Times-Gazette won first place for spot news photography and photojournalism. The Union City Daily Messenger won for sports/outdoors reporting and sports photography. The Lebanon Democrat won for daily deadline reporting. Brian Mosely of the Shelbyville Times-Gazette won the Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award for his work on Somalis in Shelbyville. Best of Show Awards were chosen from among those who placed first in selected categories. The print award went to Marc Perrusquia of The Commercial Appeal for his series titled “Culture of Corruption,” and the photography award went to Aaron Thompson of The Daily News Journal for his series of photographs titled “Fallen Hero.” Both received $100. The complete awards list follows. DIVISION I WRITING Daily deadline reporting 1. Staff, News Sentinel, Knoxville, McClung Warehouse Fire 2. Ashley Rowland, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Firefighter Funeral 3. Marc Perrusquia, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Herenton Sex Plot Features reporting 1. Daniel Connolly, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Immigration’s Impact 2. Melvin Claxton and Sheila Burke, The Tennessean, Nashville, DNA 3. Mary Powers,The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Brain Surgery Sports/outdoors reporting 1. Ron Higgins, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Larry Finch Battles Back 2. Scott Cacciola, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Rampage Jackson 3. Mark Wiedmer, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Art of Fatherhood Business news 1. Tom Charlier and Jane Roberts, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Boll Weevil 2. Chas Sisk and Jennifer Brooks, The Tennessean, Nashville, A New Middle Tennessee 3. Naomi Snyder, The Tennessean, Nashville, McLean Stories Web site 1. Staff,TheTennessean, Nashville, www. tennessean.com Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award: Marc Perrusquia, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Culture of Corruption PHOTOGRAPHY Spot news photography 1. Dan Henry, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Soldier Funeral 2. Gillian Bolsover, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Remembering Our Veterans 3. Angela Lewis, ChattanoogaTimes Free Press, Welcome Home Honorable mention, J. Miles Carym News Sentinel, Knoxville, Remember My Brother Feature photography 1. Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Smoke 2. Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Memorial Day 3. Shelley Mays, The Tennessean, Nashville, Hand of Thanks Sports photography 1. (TIE) Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Dodge Ball 1. (TIE) Bill Kingsley, The Tennessean, Nashville, Fiery Crash 2. Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tongue Tied 3. Dan Henry, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Brake Adjustment Photojournalism 1. (TIE) Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Pit Bulls 1. (TIE) Karen Pulfer Focht, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Brain Surgery 2. Clay Owen, News Sentinel, Knoxville, Faithful to the End 3. (TIE) Andy McFee, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Leukemia Twins 3. (TIE) Mike Brown, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Convocation Individual achievement/ body of work in photography 1. Karen Pulfer Focht, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 2. Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 3. (TIE) Larry McCormack, The Tennessean, Nashville 3. (TIE) Mike Brown, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis Sports photography 1. Robert Smith, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, What a Special Night 2. Robert Smith, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, Quit Pulling 3. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Home Run Photojournalism 1. Andrew McMurtrie, The Jackson Sun, Homeless in Jackson 2. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Fallen Hero 3. Karen Kraft, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, In the Garden Individual achievement/ body of work in photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 2. Daryl Sullivan, The Daily Times, Maryville 3. Karen Kraft, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro DIVISION III WRITING Spot news photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro House Fire 2. Katie Morgan, The Jackson Sun, Still Have Each Other 3. John A. Gillis, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Escape From Fire Feature photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, A Son’s Loss SEE TAPME, PAGE 23 DIVISION II WRITING Daily deadline reporting 1. Tonya Smith-King and Pete Wickham, The Jackson Sun, Winkler Verdict 2. Wendy Isom and Ned Hunter, The Jackson Sun, Selmer in Mourning 3. Jessica Stith, The Daily Times, He’s Going to Kill Me Features reporting 1. Tracie Simer, The Jackson Sun, Homeless in Jackson 2. Mark Boxley, The Daily Times, Maryville, The Cop and the Addict 3. Adam Sparks, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, They Were Coming Here Sports/outdoors reporting 1. Joshua Parrott, The Jackson Sun, Dream Come True 2. Adam Sparks, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, They Were Coming Here 3. Roger Garfield, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, A Cardinal Honor for Jordan Business news 1. Greg Menza, The Daily Herald, Columbia, GM Plant 2. Ned Hunter, The Jackson Sun, Waiting to Fly 3. Tim Adkins, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Formula for Success Web site 1. Staff, The Jackson Sun, www.jacksonsun.com Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award: Tonya Smith-King, The Jackson Sun, The Winkler Story PHOTOGRAPHY Spot news photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, House Fire 2. Katie Morgan, The Jackson Sun, Still Have Each Other 3. John A. Gillis, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Escape From Fire Feature photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, A Son’s Loss 2. Daryl Sullivan, The Daily Times, Maryville, Musical Silhouette 3. Lindsay McDonald, The Jackson Sun, Catchin’ a Ride AP BEST OF SHOW The Commercial Appeal, Memphis Story by Marc Perrusquia, photos by Jim Weber The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 6 Awards - 7 AWARDS beyond that of your peers. Great use of multiple sources and presented in an easy to read, easy to understand format. An outstanding job of reporting on an issue that has great impact on the school & community. 2. The Tennessean, Nashville 3. Chattanooga Times Free Press 4. Johnson City Press. Sam Watson, Ben Ingram, Jim Wozniak 5. Bristol Herald Courier. Debra McCown, Khristopher J. Brooks LOCAL FEATURES Group I 1.The Erwin Record. Mark A. Stevens, Lesley Hughes, Jerry Hilliard, Anthony D. Piercy, David Thometz, Brenda Sparks •Tremendous graphics for super power. Well written. “Little Joe” is fun. Need extracted quote on jump for “Super Power.” Please. Hilliard gives great photo of inmate. It makes the page. •Pastor retires is well done. When you look at “In Good Hands” and Minister Killed pieces, it’s clear this newspaper stands out in its class, probably ANY class. Legends of the Fall is icing on the cake. The experience of judging your fine newspaper has me wishing for the next issue. 2. Mt. Juliet News. Laurie Everett 3. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Shirley Nanney 4. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough 5. The News Leader, Parsons Group II 1. The Daily News, Memphis •Every lead pulled me immediately into the story. •Nice variety of feature content, from profiles to public interest. •Great job in educating readers about things they may otherwise take for granted. 2. Memphis Business Journal 3. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City 4. The Courier, Savannah. Terry VanEaton, Linda Folkerts 5. The Gallatin Newspaper. Marjorie Lloyd, Tim Nixon Group III 1. The Oak Ridger Wonderful page design, placement and visual appeal! •Had a job to do. . .Very nice! This wonderful man tells the story in his words, not the writer’s. •Shoulder feature - Lots of useful info with a unique graphic to draw you in. All in all - very well done. . .substance, local flavor and eye appeal! 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. James Clark 3. The Newport Plain Talk. Kathy Barnes-Hemsworth, Duay O’Neil, Jim Hekel 4. Shelbyville Times-Gazette 5. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. Ken Walker, Steve McCadams, GlennTanner, Leslie Sensing Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Good use of color Loved the story on the sophomore basketball players Home & Garden story was very current & insightful Weekly column, out of context, is a bit jaw dropping, but very entertaining Story on Hookah bar was surprising – would be neat to try one out Superb story in Living Section faith & grief 2. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Chris Fletcher, Skyler Swisher, Greg Menza 4. The Greeneville Sun. Bob Hurley, Wayne Phillips, Lisa Warren, Jim Feltman, Todd DeHaven 5. The Mountain Press, Sevierville Group V 1. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis •Story subjects were interesting. Photos complimented the subject matter. SEE AWARDS, PAGE 8 NATASHA LAFAYETTE | LAFOLLETTE PRESS LaFayette 2007 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group II LaFollette Press Julianna Sidener enjoys the cool streams of water at the grand opening of LaFollette’s Splash Park on Sept. 21. (Sept. 27, 2007) Lack of honesty, not money, is real problem BY STAN WHITLOCK Kingsport Times-News At a recent Kingsport roundtable discussion on the need for K-12 education reform, Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen encouraged local business leaders to hold “the Whitlock political structure” accountable for education decisions. The governor, a Democrat, then proceeded to take a shot at several Northeast Tennessee Republican lawmakers who, as Bredesen put it, “happily voted” for education funding reform in the General Assembly session recently ended but not for the 42-cent per pack increase in cigarette taxes to fund it. “You can’t let people get away with that,” the governor said. But Bredesen’s attempt to paint targets on the backs of his political opposites on an issue as critical as education is disingenuous, especially in a year when the state’s extra revenues could have easily funded this latest K-12 initiative. As the governor also well knows, the principal problem in Tennessee’s public schools isn’t a matter of money, but mendacity. The Tennessee Department of Education is not being forthright about the academic abilities of the majority of its students. The department recently claimed, for example, that 87 percent of Tennessee students 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group V Kingsport Times-News are proficient in eighth grade math. A national test, however, shows that only 21 percent actually exhibit that skill level—a difference of 66 points on a 100-point scale. Gov. Bredesen’s answer to that has been to complain to the Times-News editorial board about the No Child Left Behind law and to promise a tougher high school curriculum and greater accountability—albeit when his term of office has effectively ended—in exchange for an extra half-billion in new funding for schools beginning right away. Like President (George W.) Bush, who argues that border security isn’t possible apart from a larger comprehensive reform of immigration policies, Gov. Bredesen claims that Tennessee schools can’t adopt more stringent academic standards without first receiving hundreds of millions of dollars in new annual funding. Each of these assertions is false on its face. It’s obvious that securing our border with Mexico has absolutely nothing to do with what happens to the estimated 12 million illegals now in this country. Similarly, an accurate assessment of Tennessee students’ academic abilities isn’t dependent on extra K-12 funding. It doesn’t cost any more to record an “F” on a student’s report card than it does an “A”—although it likely keeps the Department of Education in Nashville from being burned to the ground by angry parents. State Rep. Nathan Vaughn, a Kingsport Democrat who was also in attendance at the governor’s roundtable, praised Bredesen, noting that on the subject of education reform, the governor had “looked at what was the right thing to do as compared to what was the politically expedient thing to do and made the tough decisions.” But what’s difficult about Gov. Bredesen or Rep. Vaughn offering one of their major constituencies—the education lobby—a vast amount of new money? If Gov. Bredesen and Rep. Vaughn really want to demonstrate how tough and courageous they are, they might make a small start by ceasing to pat themselves on the back for pouring even more hundreds of millions in tax dollars into a state education system that has spectacularly failed to prepare a majority of this state’s children for productive lives. There isn’t anything faintly difficult or courageous or right about rewarding the Department of Education in this state for a job poorly done. Earlier this year in an editorial board meeting, Times-News editors discussed Tennessee’s lack of honesty in accurately assessing the abilities of public school students with local lawmakers. To his credit, Rep. Vaughn readily admitted the problem but then observed, “Most parents don’t want to hear that stuff about their kids.” Perhaps Rep. Vaughn is right—but then again, who can say? The choice to know, or not to know, the true academic abilities of their children has cynically and systematically been denied to Tennessee’s parents year after year by state educators. The result is that even if parents suspect the truth about their child’s abilities, the state provides false and ultimately disastrous assurance that all is well. Well, that is, until the child tries to tackle college and can’t get past his required freshmen courses or applies for a job and can’t land it because he never mastered fractions in middle school. If Gov. Bredesen is sincere about himself and others in the “political structure” being held accountable for public education in this state, here’s our challenge: start raising proficiency standards across the board, say 10 percent a year, until they match the proficiency standards embodied in the U.S. Department of Education’s National Assessment of Educational Progress tests. Commit to doing that and report the results each year, so that parents, students and others can see for themselves whether Tennessee schools are succeeding or failing. That would be tough. That would be courageous. And it would be the right thing to do. (June 28, 2007) CMYK The Tennessee Press 22 - Awards The Tennessee Press Good ole’ boying not good enough CMYK BY JIM ZACHARY Editor, Grainger Today, Bean Station The words “good ole’ boy” can mean a lot of different things. A good ole’ boy can simply be a hard working, salt of the earth, simple living, trustworthy Zachary fellow who would do anything in the world to help family, friends and neighbors. In that case, give us more good ole’ boys. A good ole’ boy can be the kind of a guy who spends all his time in a bass boat, in the deer woods, or chasing a coon dog. A good ole’ boy can be someone who grew up here, has lived here his entire life, gone to the same church, held down the same job, knows everybody and everybody knows him. Those varieties of good ole’ boys you can live with. In fact, a good ole’ boy can be the best neighbor you’ll ever have. However, sometimes, the words “good ole’ boy” mean something far more unseemly, unsavory and unwanted. Does anyone deny there is a good ole’ boy network, where it is not a matter of what you know, but who you know? I am not too crazy about Wikipedia, the free Internet encyclopedia. Principally, I don’t care much for Wikipedia because anyone can contribute to it, regardless of their level of expertise, the accuracy of their definitions, strength of their credentials or validity of their observations. However, a Wikipedia entry hits the nail right square on the head with this offering: “The good ole’ boy network describes a system of social networking and perceptions alleged to exist prevalently among certain communities and social strata in the United States. Although the term originated in the South, these networks can be found throughout the U.S. and the rest of the Western world. It is typically taken to refer to informal legal, judicial, social, religious, business, and political associations among white males (“good ol’ boys”); however, in modern times can be composed of either or both sexes. In some areas, the good ole’ boy network is said to still exert considerable influence over many aspects of local government, business, and law enforcement. Usage of the term can often imply a wrongful exclusion of others from the network; however, often the emphasis is on inclusion of a member, as in, “doing a good ole’ boy a favor” (Wikipedia). When elected officials do dirty deals, hire relatives, do favors for payola, look the other way when their friends and family mess up, try to sneak, hide and slip some piece of public business or legislation through without taking ownership, violate open meetings legislation, and generally behave in an underhanded way, sometimes we say, “they good ole’ boy-ed it.” Last week I sat in a public meeting 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group I Grainger Today, Bean Station up in Rogersville that lasted all of four seconds (yes that is a bit of an exaggeration, but not much, replace seconds with minutes and you’d be pretty doggone close) where a new director of schools was hired. There were no discussions, no deliberations, no public considerations, just a couple of brief rehearsed statements, a motion, a second, and a quick vote. Yep, they good ole’ boy-ed it, all right, and wait, it gets better, or worse, I should say. Now the state of Tennessee says, “all decisions,” and all DELIBERATIONS, “toward a decision” must be done in public (T.C.A. 8-44-102). That means no private meetings, no telephone calling for strategizing, no emailing among officials regarding their vote, and no private retreats where they discuss the public’s business. These things are all good ole’ boy-ing, and all violate the law. The law further says, “Any action taken at a meeting in violation of this part shall be void and of no effect.” Now, I say all of this to commend the Grainger County Board of Education. While they did, at one point, discuss “closing” their deliberations, when hiring a new director, they checked with their lawyer and opted to keep the meetings open and then they thoroughly discussed their choices between the final two candidates in open meetings. They voted, by voice vote, and re-voted and voted again. They continued to deliberate in open meetings, each member working to convince fellow members. They could have chosen to go the good ole’ boy route, but they did not. Granted, it took them a while to reach a decision and the “stalemate” and even a suggestion the top two candidates meet and decide among themselves who should be the director of schools was a bit comical, at best, but the BOE kept it all open and above board, shall we say. As I left the Rogersville meeting I was a little ashamed of my hometown and of Hawkins County. I was, at the same time, a bit proud of Grainger County. Then, when I saw the local newspaper coverage up there and the way the controversy was not so much as alluded to, it made me appreciate working for a publication such as Grainger Today that prides itself in strong community journalism and in providing an open and free public forum. Oh, and I said it gets better—when the whirlwind vote was taken by the Rogersville City School Board, the person hired happened to be the wife of a member of the board itself (though, he did not vote). Regardless of how qualified or unqualified, even Wikipedia would have that classified as the “good ole’ boy network,” hard at work. At least, that’s the way it seems to me. (June 6, 2007) SEPTEMBER 2008 AWARDS Awards - 21 GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARDS - FRONT PAGES FROM PAGE 7 Layout, esp. using white space, also attracted me to the stories. Keep up the good work. 2. Chattanooga Times Free Press 3. News Sentinel, Knoxville 4. Bristol Herald Courier 5. The Tennessean, Nashville BEST SINGLE FEATURE Group I 1. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Special D-Day, Shirley Nanney Watch AP Style. Good, emotional story that held my interest. 2. Lake County Banner, Tiptonville. Hurschel knows 3. The Erwin Record. Addressed to a friend, David Thometz 4. The Erwin Record. Wanted: Ad in Record, Jerry Hilliard 5. Chester County Independent, Henderson. WWII Vet, James A. Webb Group II 1. LaFollette Press. Act of vigilantism, Susan Sharp Fantastic! This story made me angry and sad all at the same time. Your presentation of the facts in this case was wonderful! 2.The News Examiner, Gallatin. Game changed Gallatin 3. The Knoxville Journal. The quiet side of the game 4. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Blue’s backpacks, Steve Marion 5. Carthage Courier.The gift of inspiration, Scott Winfree Group III 1. The Oak Ridger. Momma they got me a heart, Beverly Majors •A wonderful, horrible story magically told. Quotes from both families are amazing. Very compelling human interest story. A masterfully job by Majors. Give her a raise immediately! 2. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Her life once stolen, Sam Hatcher 3. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Will to walk, James Clark 4. The Oak Ridger. Soldier dies in Iraq 5. Roane County News, Kingston. Couple celebrates 70 years Group IV 1. The Daily Times, Maryville. Cop & addict, Mark Boxley “Alcoa Office” - strong - impressive story makes you wonder what Boxley will write about next. 2. The Greeneville Sun. 10 years ago today, Bill Jones, Tom Yancey, Bryan Gillespie 3. Cleveland Daily Banner. Passport, cane 4. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. Duty 5. The Greeneville Sun. Fragile start, Lisa Warren Group V 1. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Faithful to the end The subject matter was compelling The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 THE ERWIN RECORD Group I MEMPHIS BUSINESS JOURNAL Group II SCOTT FRAKER | THE OAK RIDGER, OAK RIDGE Mira Ryczke Kimmelman of Oak Ridge spent five and a half years in ghettos and labor and concentration camps in Germany and Poland during World War II. She told her chilling yet inspirational life story to attendees of a local Women’s History Month program. (April 13, 2007) Fraker 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group III The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge – very well written & illustrated. Most readers can relate – a primer on attitudes about death and dying. It takes the reader through – compassionately – the final stages of life. 2. The Jackson Sun. Searching for home, Tracie Simer 3.TheTennessean, Nashville. Lessons from losing, Leon Alligood 4. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Menace unabashed, Cindy Wolff 5. Bristol Herald Courier. It’s Conway, Joe Tennis COMMUNITY LIFESTYLES Group I 1. The Erwin Record. David Thometz, Jerry Hilliard, Anthony D. Piercy, Mark A. Stevens, Brenda Sparks, Bryan Stevens Pictures were great. Articles well written. Interesting variety of topics. 2. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Ron Park, Shirley Nanney 3. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. Heather E. Seay, Kristen Swing, Charlie Mauk, Ron Caylor, Sarah Winters, Bea Casey, Lynn J. Richardson 4. The Millington Star 5. The News Leader, Parsons Group II 1. Macon County Chronicle, Lafayette Nice consistency in articles. Good color pictures. Nice articles – easy reads. By far the best in this group!! 2. The Gallatin Newspaper. Marjorie Lloyd, Gary Grace 3. The Rogersville Review. Ellen Myatt 4. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Phylis Bellamy, Mia Rhodarmer 5. The Herald-News, Dayton Group III 1. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Dana Bryson no comment 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville 3. Crossville Chronicle. Laura Gwinn 4. The Lebanon Democrat 5. The Tullahoma News. Tamara Belinc Group IV 1. The Mountain Press, Sevierville Enjoyable reading featuring array of national & local lifestyle news. Entertaining info from celebrity news & local. SEE AWARDS, PAGE 9 SOUTHERN STANDARD McMinnville Group III THE LEAF-CHRONICLE Clarksville Group IV THE TENNESSEAN Nashville Group V CMYK 8 - Awards MAKE-UP AND APPEARANCE AWARDS - FRONT PAGES THE HUMBOLDT CHRONICLE Group I MEMPHIS BUSINESS JOURNAL Group II THE OAK RIDGER Oak RIdge Group III THE LEAF-CHRONICLE Clarksville Group IV CHATTANOOGA TIMES FREE PRESS Group V FROM PAGE 19 4. The Tennessean, Nashville. 100 Years in Nashville 5. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Paid in Full SUNDAY EDITIONS Dailies 1. The Tennessean, Nashville •Wow! Where do you start? There aren’t enough good things to say about this paper. Great in-depth writing, local issues and local voices. Great color quality and pages that are easy to read and easy to use. Not that I’d suggest such a thing, but if a newspaper could keep somebody home from church, this would be it. 2. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 3. The Jackson Sun 4. Chattanooga Times Free Press 5. Johnson City Press CMYK PROMOTION OF NEWSPAPERS Dailies 1. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Baby contest, Thomas Browne Awesome idea! Followed through with enough meat to see that it succeeds. AWARDS 2. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Talent search 3. The Daily News, Memphis. Law week, Jen Simmons 4. Johnson City Press. Her, Suzanne Huron 5. Elizabethton Star. Trustworthy source, Eveleigh Hatfield, Harvey Prichard, Phyllis Davis Non-dailies 1. Southern Standard, McMinnville. US campaign I loved it! Your “turn to us” is a terrific inventive campaign. Awesome! 2. The Erwin Record. Promotion series, Mark A. Stevens, Anthony D. Piercy, Lesley Hughes, Betty Davis, Brenda Sparks, Keith Whitson, David Thometz 3. The Gallatin Newspaper. Who we are 4. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. Stuck on Charlie, Ron Caylor, Charlie Mauk, Lynn J. Richardson 5. Lake County Banner, Tiptonville. Valentine BEST SINGLE ADVERTISEMENT Dailies 1. Kingsport Times-News. Tomato Fest III As the last entry in this category I looked at, the ad really jumped out at me. The use of color, the easy-toread font & the size used for the font all helped to make up an attractive & informative ad. Great composition! 2. Bristol Herald Courier. Farmers Market 3. The Greeneville Sun. Donate life 4. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Adopt me, Emily Goad 5.The Paris Post-Intelligencer. All they want for Christmas, Jacquta Burke Non-dailies 1. Overton County News, Livingston. Santa’s office help, Darren Oliver Very personal touch. The kids’ costumes and naming them I am sure caught reader’s eye to see if they knew any of them. Nice incorporation of the bank’s slogan with Santa’s Office. 2. Carthage Courier. Red hot buys 3. Macon County Chronicle, Lafayette. World finance 4. The Erwin Record. We play hard, Anthony D. Piercy, Cathy Huskins, Mark A. Stevens 5. The News Leader, Parsons. Home & garden show, Mark Trimmer It is likely that an Oct. 7 meeting in Nashville will help many voters across America decide who they want to be our next president. That’s when the third of three presidential debates will be held at Belmont University. We began brainstorming our coverage plans last week. Now, the Belmont “debate” won’t be a classic political debate — two candidates standing at podiums fielding questions from a moderator or a panel. Rather, a town hall meeting format will have the candidates answer questions and talk with a group of undecided voters from across the country, folks selected by the commission that stages the debates. This will be the final debate for the candidates. Its timing in early October and its open format suggest the Belmont session may play a critical role in the campaign. But why plan coverage so early, especially when the event will be covered by national political reporters anyway? One of our missions is to cast national issues in a local context. To make the Belmont debate especially meaningful, we intend to show the potential impact on Tennessee of the candidates’ stands on the issues that by then will have become central to the campaign. All Sides, Angles Covered We’ll look at the issues in advance of the Belmont meeting — outlining the stakes, noting previous positions and pointing out any factual flaws with the claims or promises. Afterward, we will assess what was said — again, from a Tennessee perspective. We will interview the people at the town hall session for their take, and we will ask for your views as well. We also will provide coverage of the thousands of people who will come to Nashville for the event — national print, broadcast and online media as well as political operatives for both campaigns. We hope to share with you their observations of the campaign as well as their view of Nashville. Fact is, while this will be an important moment in the presidential campaign, it also will be a very big moment for Belmont University and Nashville. It will place the university and the city on the world stage for a reason other than the music industry, health care or our other calling cards. To accomplish our coverage goals, we’ll likely have four reporters assigned to the debate — before, during and after. Two editors will work on the coverage, plus at least two photographers and one videographer. We will provide updates from Belmont on Tennessean.com throughout the debate. We’re also toying with another idea — creating our own town hall meeting for selected local residents. Perhaps we will ask representatives of each campaign to participate. Perhaps we will conduct our town hall online. Perhaps we will invite voters to discuss the issues at a meeting at The Tennessean offices or at another venue. As we develop our coverage plans, I’d like to hear from you. Would such a local town hall meeting approach be worthwhile? What other coverage would you like to see? Please let me know. It’s not too soon to plan. (June 29, 2008) ENGRAVINGS T he Tennessee Education Association awarded two statewide School Bell Awards for excellence in media coverage of education May 9 in Nashville. Ann Wallace, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, won for outstanding coverage by an an individual reporter, and Alice Dollar, Newspaper in Education manager at the News Sentinel, Knoxville, won for outstanding coverage by a large daily newspaper. SCMA elects three The Southern Circulation Managers Association elected three Tennesseans to the board of directors at its 79th annual conference April 20 through 23 in Baton Rouge, La. Jim Boyd of the News Sentinel, Knoxville, was named second vice president. Glen Tabor of the Kingsport Times-News was elected treasurer, and Dale Long of The Greeneville Sun was named director at large. Wendi C. Thomas, columnist with The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, has been inducted into the Scripps Journalism Hall of Fame after winning multiple first place awards in Thomas Scripps writing contests for commentary. The newspaper celebrated with her on July 14 She joins the likes of Geoff Calkins, Alan Spearman and the now-departed David Waters of The Commercial Appeal in the hall of fame. Thomas attended Memphis schools and Butler University in Indiana, where she graduated with a degree in journalism. She has been a reporter or an editor at The Indianapolis Star, The Tennessean, Nashville, and at the Charlotte (N.C.) Observer. In August 2003, Wendi returned to Memphis after a 14-year absence to be the metro columnist for her hometown paper. Her column appears on Sundays. | John Sale, Jim Weber and Alan Spearman won the National Press Photographers Association first quarter of 2008 Best Use of Photography Clip Contest. They are with The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. The clip was the front page of Feb. 7, lead headline, “Lives Lost and Tarred,” about a tornado’s effect in West Tennessee. | The Office of Communications and Marketing at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has won 23 awards from the Volunteer Chapter of the Public Relations Society of America, including two first place awards for Tennessee Today, the new faculty/staff communications program. In all, UT won 28 awards. In addition to the 23 won by UT Knoxville’s Office of Communications and Marketing, the UT system won two awards and the Institute of Agriculture won three awards. The honors were announced April 10 at the annual awards dinner sponsored by the local PRSA chapter. Of the 23 awards garnered by UT’s Office of Communications and Marketing, seven were Awards of Excellence, nine were Awards of Quality and seven were Awards of Merit. “We have a great staff,” then-Vice Chancellor for Communications Tom Milligan said. “It’s important that we measure our work against the very best in our city and region. It’s very gratifying to be supporting University of Tennessee and have our good work recognized by our peers.” The Office of Communications and Marketing won Awards of Excellence for Tennessee Today in both the internal relations and electronic newsletters categories. The faculty/staff newsletter is distributed weekly in print, as well as daily in electronic and Web forms. Assistant Director of Media Relations Amy Blakely won two Awards of Excellence for writing, one for press releases detailing how renowned UT forensic anthropologist Bill Bass was enlisted to examine the exhumed remains of the Big Bopper and one for a Tennessee Alumnus feature about Fr. Bernard O’Connor, a UT alumnus now working at the Vatican. UT Knoxville’s Office of Communication and Marketing won Awards of Quality for the following: •Tennessee Governor’s Academy publicity efforts, in the category of public service. Those most involved were Media Relations Coordinator Jay Mayfield and Angie Dobbs. •The Donor Leadership Appreciation Event invitation designed by Baker. •“Homegrown Music,” a Tennessee Alumnus feature written by Blakely. •eTorch, a monthly electronic newsletter delivered to alumni. Those most involved were Editor Diane Ballard and Web Designer Leigh Shoemaker. •The Ready for the World Web site designed by Darren Hughes. •The UT National Alumni Association Tour Program direct mail materials designed by Lee Hume. •The safety program, which included Fort Sanders Safety Day, posters, booklets and other crisis communications materials. Those involved included the Media + Internal relations team, Powell and Designer Jill Sanders. •“Where in the World is Smokey?” a community relations project aimed at focusing attention on the Ready for the World initiative. The program is coordinated by Blakely. •“Alexander and Gordon at Forefront of Scientific Leadership,” a column written by Mayfield. The office won Awards of Merit for: •“AUTumn in Knoxville” faculty/ staff appreciation event publicity materials designed by Dobbs. •The “Taking PrecaUTions” safety poster series written and edited by Powell and designed by Sanders. •“Harry Potter,” a press release written by Blakely about a law professor who is a Potter aficionado. •Reaching Out, a magazine about UT’s community service and outreach efforts edited by Powell and designed by Sanders. •utk.edu, the university’s main Web site designed by Hughes. •Cultural Attraction Series direct mail materials edited by Mary Marshburn and designed by Dobbs. •“All That Glitters Is Orange,” a brochure describing services provided by the Office of Communications and Marketing, written and edited by Powell and designed by Sanders. The UT system office received two Awards of Excellence, one for President John Petersen’s 2007 tour of campuses and one for “A Statewide Campus,” the 2007-2008 TV commercial. The Institute of Agriculture received Awards of Quality for a TV news story on UT Extension’s Tai Chi program, written and produced by Chuck Denney and Doug Edlund, and its Third Thursday newsletter, written by Margot Emery and designed by Donna Hundley. The Institute won an Award of Merit for “Do You Want to Help the World?”, an undergraduate recruitment catalog written by Mary Albrecht and designed by Rich Maxey. The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 AWARDS ENGRAVINGS Belmont debate to spotlight Nashville BY MARK SILVERMAN Editor, The Tennessean, Nashville SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 8 2. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 3. Citizen Tribune, Morristown 4. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville 5. Elizabethton Star. Bryan Stevens, Janie McKinney, Robin Johnson Group V 1. Chattanooga Times Free Press Wonderful, wonderful sections from pets to hats to a 47-year-old in a marching band.You provided your readers with touching down-to-earth well-written, nicely packaged stories. 2. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 3. The Tennessean, Nashville 4. News Sentinel, Knoxville 5. Bristol Herald Courier SPORTS WRITING Group I 1. The Erwin Record. Kevin Lewis, Bryan Stevens, Lesley Hughes, Anthony D. Piercy Strong writing on unusual sports (by Bryan Stevens) leads to an excellent section. Staff covered wide range of sports including individuals & coaches and former players. 2. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Shirley Nanney, Jim Steele, Lorna Jablionski, Ron Park, John Latham, David Hampton 3. Smithville Review 4. The Middle Tennessee Times, Smithville. Brent Arnold 5. Herald And Tribune, Jonesborough. Heather E. Seay, Steven LeMaster Group II 1. LaFollette Press. Dwane Wilder Very nice leads (though they could be shorter & more crisp) Wonderful blend of personal side of sports outside the lines with game account. Use of interesting & non-typical treatments of writing a plus. Tons of quotes – reader gets it straight from the coach’s/athlete’s mouth first hand. Very well done! Congratulations. 2. Carthage Courier. Scott Winfree 3.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Darren Reese 4. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Corbitt Hollingsworth, John Taylor 5. The Herald-News, Dayton. Cathy Barnes Group III 1. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Danny Parker, Gary Johnson •Both writers showed great expertise in their writing skills. Sentence structure was excellent, the stories were easy to read from start to finish. •Some leads were stronger than the others in capturing attention, but overall they were well written. •I especially enjoyed the features on Ryan Morton and the one on the QB- Awards - 9 Wedding planning craziness well worth end results BY ERIC MILLER Robertson County Times, Springfield Planning a wedding is a lot like the Iraq war—seemingly easy to accomplish goals that end up causing a lot of suffering and costing a great2 deal of time and money. Of Miller course, fairy tales aren’t cheap and for the 50 percent of marriages that don’t end in more suffering and more money spent, the effort is all worth it in the end. Now, I’ve just gotten married so, statistically speaking, the jury’s still out, the chips have yet to fall where they may and other such whatnot. That said, I believe that my wife and I have what it takes to die of old age within feeble reach of one another and I’m not just saying that to justify the cost of our fairy tale. When I first proposed to my wife—in Spanish because I could pretend I meant to ask her to pass the butter if her reaction were less than favorable—I believed planning a wedding would be quick and easy. Preacher, church, flowers, food and you’re out. And, of course, being boastfully faux-confident like a man who sees his fiancee’s ex-boyfriend and says, “I could take him,” I told my bride-to-be that planning a wedding could easily be done in three months. One case of antacids and three separate but similarly empty bank accounts Center friendship: Those stories did an excellent job of drawing in interest. 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville 3. The Tullahoma News 4. The Lebanon Democrat 5. The Newport Plain Talk. Seth Butler, Paul Meador Group IV 1. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Buddy Pearson, Craig Delk •All-around quality writing. Stories all opened with solid leads that drew me into the story. Preview stories had me looking ahead to games with anticipation. Game stories were actual stories instead of 1st quarter-4th quarter playby-play. Excellent work! 2. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Justin Lamb, Marion Wilhoite, Ryan Callahan 3.The DailyTimes, Maryville. Leonard Butts, John Brice 4. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville 5. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Jason Davis, Cobey Hitchcock, Lionel Green Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville •Mr. Kuharsky does a great job of telling these stories, the ones away from the bright lights and adoring enablers. Real stories about real people who happen to be involved with sports. 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group II Robertson County Times, Springfield later, this shell-shocked groom and his sparkling bride were at the altar. Despite three months of epic stress, we managed to get everything together. All of the groomsmen had their tuxedos and the bridesmaids were wearing their matching dresses and all had made it safely to our sides at the altar. I bit my tongue as four more junior bridesmaids that I felt to be entirely unnecessary lined up behind the bridesmaids, which I guess was in case any of them wanted to tag out. Then, four flower girls with a justhappy-to-be-here-and-ooh-a-shinyobject attitude later, my bride walked down the aisle. Her startling beauty stopped my grumbling and reminded me to enjoy the moment. Hand-in-hand, we ascended the stairs and entered our fairy tale. That is, of course, if fairy tales ended with a punch-line. After months of stress and hard work and managing to pull together a beautiful ceremony, we were absolutely blindsided by the preacher. Dressed in a suit with a red shirt and red tie that made me think of how the devil would have been dressed in a bad ‘80s movie and aided by an interpreter to translate the Spanish ceremony into English, the preacher turned the altar into a stage and he chewed the scenery like he was trying to win an award. We were treated to nearly an hour of what was a mixture of wedding ceremony, premarital counseling and a sermon full of brimstone. Random is an accurate way to describe the preacher’s approach. I believe it may be the first wedding ceremony to ever feature the word “fornicate” in two languages and I will swear on a stack of Bibles that he asked everyone in the audience to give their spouses “some honey” right there in the church, which I am reasonably sure meant he wanted everyone to kiss each other. Except for the bride and I, of course. Instead of telling us when to kiss, we just waited until he paused and then waited some more to make sure that pause wasn’t some sort of trick before I lifted my wife’s veil and gave her the wedding kiss we had been practicing for weeks for that very moment. Seeing my wife sleeping peacefully nearby as I write this and despite the fact that her family is now waiting for us to announce that she is pregnant, I know now that I would go through everything all over again and wear a chicken suit at the altar if that’s what I had to do to marry the love of my life. Of course, if I could do it all over again—and this is the part where I offer advice to those who are starting to plan their weddings—I wholeheartedly recommend a leisurely courthouse wedding. (Sept. 5, 2007) EDITOR’S NOTE: Eric Miller is now with the Hendersonville Star News. CMYK The Tennessee Press 20 - Awards •The stories aren’t the same ol’-same ol’ and that’s refreshing. 2. The Jackson Sun 3. Johnson City Press 4.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Jim Masilak 5. Chattanooga Times Free Press EDITORIALS Group I 1. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Jim Zachary •These are what editorials should be – hard-hitting, clear, persuasive, full of righteous indignation and about public bodies and public policies that matter to people. This newspaper is fulfilling its duties as part of the democratic system. Way to go! 2. Mt. Juliet News. Laurie Everett 3. The Millington Star 4. Smithville Review 5.The Erwin Record. Mark A. Stevens, Janice Willis-Barnett, Ralph Hood, Ray Knapp, Connie Denney, Charles Holt Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Terry Hollahan, Jane Donahoe •Good topics and good writing that keeps things moving and kept me reading. SEE AWARDS, PAGE 10 JEFF FARRELL | THE MOUNTAIN PRESS, SEVIERVILLE Firefighter Lynn Rawlings hangs upside down as he simulates a construction rescue during a training exercise. (April 4, 2007) Farrell 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group IV The Mountain Press, Sevierville SEPTEMBER 2008 What a beautiful Christmas it was for me and my wife! BY C. ERNEST WILLIAMS The Paris Post-Intelligencer It was a beautiful Christmas Day in South Texas, and the celebration of the incarnation of the Son of God became deeper for me than it had ever been before. Williams I spent the day watching my wife die of breast cancer. It may seem odd to write that it was a beautiful and intimate experience, but it was just that. She had been diagnosed with the disease 13 years ago and had enjoyed nine years free of any symptoms. We traveled the North American continent together in a recreational vehicle, served churches together in three states and enjoyed a wonderful retirement. Four years ago, her cancer was found to be active again, and since then there has been a regular routine of chemotherapy and radiation treatments. These also were shared and became CMYK FROM PAGE 9 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group III The Paris Post-Intelligencer part of the story of our marriage. Even as she progressed from a walker to a wheelchair to a hospital bed and finally a hospice facility, each step was a new adventure in which I learned anew how to love her. Ginny was a nurse. She had the temperament and the intellect to be a superb nurse. She practiced pediatric nursing in Albany, N.Y. and Trenton, N.J. Then after marrying me in 1973, she spent 14 years with St. Joseph’s Infant Home in suburban Cincinnati, Ohio—first as a volunteer, then renewing her license in Ohio and joining the staff as a nurse, and then becoming director of nursing. St. Joseph’s was a special place for special children who were severely brain-damaged, multiply-handicapped and profoundly retarded. Some had been resuscitated at AWARDS 2. LaFollette Press. Linn Hudson 3. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Linda Brewer 4. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City 5. The Herald-News, Dayton. John Carpenter Group III 1. The Lebanon Democrat. Amelia Hipps The writer writes decisively and lays out the facts that lead to her conclusion, bringing the reader along. Well-written and very readable. Congratulations! 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville 3. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. Bill Williams 4. The Oak Ridger 5. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Sam Hatcher, John B. Bryan Group IV 1. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Stan Voit Engaging writing about important public issues. Shorter paragraphs – and shorter editorials – would be even better. But these pieces definitely serve the public. 2. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Chris Fletcher 3. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Alane S. Megna 4. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Sam Stockard 5. The Daily Times, Maryville. Dean Stone Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville. Mike Morrow I like the challenges these editorials present to readers: 1) What’s needed to keep hockey team. 2) A great endorsement for mayor – challenging voters to make good choice. 3) And, best of all, seeking support for Fisk University and keeping artwork in Nashville! 2.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Editorial Board 3. Bristol Herald Courier. Andrea Hopkins 4. Chattanooga Times Free Press 5. Kingsport Times-News birth, when death would have been certain and might have been more benevolent. Some had been born with abnormalities. One had fallen on his head from a third-floor window. One had been beaten into insensibility by an adult. Virginia, as director of nursing, had to deal with the families of these children. One parent might devote such exclusive attention to the care of this child that the spouse and other children were left out, and a separation occurred. Another parent might be so unable to accept a “defective” child that he or she would abandon the family. Ginny showed amazing patience and compassion in dealing with these families. In her position, she was in charge of planning an expansion of the facility. The state passed a law which said that any facility which had more than eight patients was a hospital and had to have a doctor on hand 24 hours a day and a number of other things St. Joseph’s couldn’t afford. So it was decided that several eightpatient cottages would be built on the It takes a reporter “Federal whistleblower legislation protects employees who step forward with accounts of wrongdoing in government or corporate America.... Yet without a committed reporter on BEST SINGLE EDITORIAL Group I 1. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. DCS dropped the ball, Bob Parkins Well crafted. Very emotion-packed. This editorial gets its point across well. A nice, big screaming headline would have been more effective, though. Do not use exclamation points. Let your words be the exclamation point. This piece stands head and shoulders above the rest. Good job. 2. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Tabling county business, Jim Zachary 3. Mt. Juliet News. Questionable backgrounds, Laurie Everett 4. The Millington Star. Patience crucial 5. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Absurdity, Ron Park Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. We see no reason SEE AWARDS, PAGE 11 campus. My wife was the one responsible for planning the kind of facilities that would be needed for nearly doubling their clientele of 32 children. She did it excellently, and I was very proud of her. Ginny was also a minister’s wife, and loved it. She loved the Lord Jesus, loved His church and loved the pastor. Together, we did things I would not have been able to do alone. In several churches, she prepared, and I led, a Passover celebration in which the words and acts of Jesus at His last Passover with His disciples were presented. Congregations learned to eat borscht, gefilte fish, matzo ball soup, lox and other Jewish delicacies. They learned what piece of bread Jesus broke—the second of a group of three!—what cup he passed and what normally happens at the time when Jesus got down and washed the disciples’ feet. She loved being hostess at events in the manse; she loved teaching children in the Sunday school and directing youngsters in Christmas and Palm Sunday presentations; and loved preening me to make me look as good as possible Partipilo If...then hand to bring the story to the public’s attention, these individuals would be whistling in the dark.” Neal Shapiro President, NBC News, 2004 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group V The Tennessean, Nashville FROM PAGE 18 before entering the sanctuary. I loved walking out after the benediction, taking her by the hand, and leading her to the doorway to greet the people with me as they departed—and the people loved it, too. Christmas was always special between us, and never more than this year. She acknowledged my presence, although she could no longer speak. She knew we were together, and was calm and free of pain. The image in my mind, strangely, was that of a pilot preparing to land an airliner. It doesn’t happen all at once. There is a sequence of events. You feel the power cut back to the engines; you see the lights go on; you feel it when the wing flaps go down; you hear the landing gear clunk down into position; and finally comes the touch down. I watched Ginny as if she were going down a checklist, as one body system after another shut down until she finally came in for a perfect, almost imperceptible landing. She could not have received a more beautiful Christmas gift. (Jan. 15, 2007) “If journalists cannot be trusted to guarantee confidentiality, then journalists cannot function and there cannot be a free press.” Judith Miller Reporter, The New York Times, 2004 JOHN PARTIPILO | THE TENNESSEAN, NASHVILLE Willie Daniels, left, and Rick Harding, in the basket, take down the S on the BellSouth Building in downtown Nashville. The building, often called the Batman building, will be renamed the AT&T Building. AT&T bought BellSouth (in 2006). (April 4, 2007) The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 gration; crime, freedom of information 3. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. DUI, Jeff Ferrell, Derek Hodges, Stan Voit 4. The Greeneville Sun. Director of schools; rediscover Greeneville 5. The Daily Times, Maryville. Community; fire victims, Anna C. Irwin, Iva Butler, Jessica Stith, Bonny C. Millard Group V 1. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Taking a stand Thank you from the rest of us for standing up for what is right. This is why we are in the business – it is our job & duty to keep government honest. 2. Bristol Herald Courier. Government salaries 3. The Tennessean, Nashville. Escaping justice 4. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Faces of the homeless 5. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Memphis & the world BEST SPECIAL ISSUE OR SECTION Group I 1. The Humboldt Chronicle. Got Berries, April Jackson, Danny Wade, Beverly Ward I loved the wide array of pictures and articles that described the event. Sounds like the community is very involved with this festival & through this section there are many color photos/ads to bring it all together & enjoyable to look through. 2. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Visitors Guide, Jim Zachary 3. The Millington Star. Progress 2007 4. Mt. Juliet News. Our Home 5. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. A Storybook Christmas, Ron Caylor, Kristen Swing, John Kiener, Sarah Winters, Charlie Mauk, Bea Casey, Heather E. Seay, Lynn J. Richardson Group II 1. The Rogersville Review. Old Times Advertising sales is phenomenal in this section. Print quality is good. Paper took a novel subject – old times – & made it to 4 sections of money. Good historical articles – like Sultana sinking, etc. 2. Macon County Chronicle, Lafayette. Heart of True Love 3. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Skyway News, Mia Rhodarmer, Melissa Kinton, Tommy Millsaps, Michael Thomason, Dan Baker, Megan Stitz, JeanTallent, Sharon Livingston, Phylis Bellamy 4.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Community 2007 5. The Courier, Savannah. Hardin County Visitors Guide, Terry VanEaton Group III 1. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Tennessee Walking Horse Celebration, The Advertising & News Staff of The Shelbyville Times-Gazette AWARDS A beautiful edition paying tribute to the celebration of the heartbeat of your community. 2. The Newport Plain Talk. A Place Called Home 3. Crossville Chronicle. Pride 4. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Remember When 5. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. The Holidays, Gay Francisco, Leslie Jensing Group IV 1. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Playmakers, Buddy Pearson, Thomas Corhern, Craig Delk Good variety of stories and pictures, advertising, etc.The area covered is very extensive and must be very appreciated. I’m impressed with the schedule and preview. I also thought the “Players to Watch” and “Games to Watch” added to the section. 2. Elizabethton Star. A Salute to All Carter Co. Veterans, Rozella Hardin, Janie McKinney, Franklin Robinson, Awards - 19 ENGRAVINGS Bryan Stevens 3. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Common Threads 4. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Salute to Fort Campbell 5. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. World Champions Group V 1. Bristol Herald Courier. Straight & Narrow on the Crooked Road This is obviously a major investment of time & resources for the paper. Excellent use of color, great ad support. Section is “earmarked” & divided well for the reader. A collector’s edition. I wanted to keep reading, but had to move on. The only part I would criticize is the cover – which is a little too “busy” & confusing for my taste. 2.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Stax ‘n Soul 3. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Chattanooga Now MainStreet Media, LLC, the parent company of The Wilson Post, has been selected one of the Future 50 businesses in the Nashville region by the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce. The award is presented annually to 50 fastest-growing privately-owned companies headquartered in Middle Tennessee. “This year’s competition was made especially difficult,” said Charles Sueing, chairman of the Chamber’s small business council, because of the number of nominees. “It goes to show the strength of these companies, despite the challenges of a less-than-perfect economy,” he said MainStreet Media owns and publishes community newspapers in Middle Tennessee and also publishes senior lifestyle periodicals in Middle Tennessee and Florida. The company also operates a web press publishing division in Lebanon, where it prints its own Tennessee publications as well as several other nearby publications. The publishing division prints advertising inserts for newspapers, company newsletters, tourism maps, school newspapers and provides other commercial printing products for customers outside the company. In Tennessee, MainStreet Media’s newspaper holdings, besides The Wilson Post in Lebanon, include community newspapers in Franklin, Smithville, Lafayette and Gallatin. It also publishes Mature Lifestyles, a monthly magazine distributed in five Middle Tennessee counties. Other senior lifestyle titles are in Sarasota, Fort Myers, Tampa, St. Petersburg and Ocala, Fla. The Future 50 awards are sponsored by the Bank of America, The Tennessean, Nashville, KraftCPAs and Frost Brown Todd. Recipients are to be honored at a banquet Sept. 18. (From The Wilson Post, Lebanon, Aug. 6, 2008) SEE AWARDS, PAGE 20 CMYK The Tennessee Press 10 - Awards 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single ad Dailies Kingsport Times-News (Aug. 10, 2007) Andy Barnes 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single ad Non-dailies Overton County News, Livingston (Dec. 19, 2007) Darren Oliver Tiny, pampered poodle is Mom’s favorite child BY SANDY BRITT The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Like a lot of mothers, mine is a bit crazy, and what she’s most crazy about is her little dog, Bennie. Bennie, a tiny poodle mix, is Mom’s entire focus. She loves Britt him more than my sister or me. That’s a GOOD thing—it keeps her mind on him and off my sister, me and all the things we should or shouldn’t be doing. Mom loves to sit on the porch with Bennie on her lap. When she noticed he liked to rest his head on the chair’s arm, she thought the metal was too hard for his little chin, so she wrapped and taped a towel around it for padding, much to the amusement of the neighbors. But that was the least of her Bennie worries. One time, during winter, Sis left the house and forgot to let Bennie back in from their fenced-in yard. Mom lost her mind, and my phone burned with the 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group IV The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville news of my sister’s unforgivable sin. Mom became obsessed with the notion that they’d forget to let him in ALL of the time, and poor Bennie would freeze into a Popsicle just like Lot’s wife turned into a pillar of salt. She insisted on buying a little dog house to keep on the back porch, so Bennie could find comfort during the horrible hour or so he might have to spend outside if forgotten. But then a new worry: Mom fretted Bennie would be too stupid to go into the dog house. She’d call me and say, “What if he won’t go inside? What if they forget he’s outside again?” I told her dogs aren’t people, they have fur, and that even the dumbest dog knows how to go into a shelter. But it was a lost cause. Mom isn’t content unless she’s worrying herself—or one of her daughters—to death. Mom got the dog house despite her fears, and guess what? Bennie LOVES it. He wants to be in it ALL of the time! Is Mom happy? Yes, because he won’t freeze to death and no, because now he’s “OUT THERE all the time.” She’ll ask me over the phone, “Guess where Bennie is?” I think she’s miffed he’d rather be in the dog house than in with her. Is everyone OK now? Nope. One day, Mom saw Bennie sitting in the yard, “and it was so windy his little ears were just blowing back.” I’m surprised she didn’t put a ski mask on him. This brought my next bright idea: I mailed Bennie a little coat, more for her than for him, because I think he’s smothered enough. The snazzy little coat was rain-resistant, because I know how Mom’s mind works. When it arrived in the mail, she called. Did she tell me how cute it was? Say thank you? NO. She said it was “too small” and that the material would “keep the cold in against his skin.” I realize now that worrying is what makes Mom happy, and with Bennie around, she’ll be deliriously so for a long, long time. (March 7, 2007) CMYK Dickensian park sure to draw large crowds BY JAN HEARNE Johnson City Press Pardon the pun, but England has great expectations for its soon-to-open Dickens World, a theme park based on the novels and times of Charles Dickens. Hearne My friend Sammy in Louisville, Ky. brought this bit of good news to my attention, knowing I would appreciate the humor. Promotional materials say the park “will take visitors on a fascinating journey through Dickens’ lifetime as they step back into Dickensian England and are immersed in the urban streets, sounds and smells of the 19th century.” Eeew. According to one Dickens biographer, Peter Ackroyd, “If a late 20th-century person were suddenly to find himself in a tavern or house of the period. he would be literally sick—sick with the smells, sick with the food, sick with the atmosphere around him.” What, pray tell, are these people 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group V Johnson City Press thinking? Still, the creators of Dickens World say “great attention has been paid to the authenticity of the time, characters and story lines” in order to create “a host of captivating attractions,” including—drum roll—Victorian school room. Excuse me while I catch my breath. Can you imagine telling an average American child he is going to visit a Victorian school room for vacation? “Will they have bras there?” he might ask, making a connection, however wrong, between Victorian and Victoria’s Secret ads. Your response will only add to the letdown. Imagine slumped shoulders and the reply, “I think I’d rather stay home and watch TV.” It is unlikely Americans will ever have a theme park built around one of our great authors. We can barely keep their old homeplaces intact. (I would, of course, pay good money to visit Hunter S. Thompson World, but I’m not sure such an attraction would be able to keep visitors safe.) England, however, is sparing no expense to honor its great Dickens. Dickens World in Chatham Maritime Kent will cost £62 million, which in American dollars is, well, a whole lot of money. Based on the illustration at the Dickens World Web site, this money is being spent to re-create a 19th century slum along with a shopping mall, rides, themed restaurants, bars and a multiplex cinema, just as you would find them in “Oliver Twist.” Maybe I missed the part where Fagin spends the day’s take on towels and scented soap from a bath boutique. Dickens World sounds like a 21st-century romanticized version of England in the 1800s. It’s hard to tell whether they are leaning toward realism or whimsy when they promise “a host of costumed characters.” If I remember correctly, some of Dickens’ novels were peopled with pickpockets, beggars, thieves and ladies of the evening. Should you visit this Dickens World, I suggest you keep tabs on your wallet. (April 22, 2007) Milligan gone; Nichols takes communications post Margie Nichols, formerly chief of staff to University of Tennessee President John W. Petersen, has been named interim vice chancellor for communications for the Knoxville campus. Nichols succeeds Tom Milligan, who became executive vice chancellor for university relations at the University of Massachusetts Amherst on Sept. 1. Nichols joined UT in November 2007 as a member of the president’s senior staff. Milligan has represented UT at Tennessee Press Association awards events in recent years. He joined UT in February 2005 after working in public relations at Colorado State for about 13 years. Prior to his public relations work, he worked in newspaper and radio. SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 17 AWARDS 3. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Faces of the homeless, Kathleen Greeson 4. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. RX: don’t smoke, Mark Weber 5. Johnson City Press. Don’t fry BEST SPORTS PHOTOGRAPH Group I 1. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Off to the races, Victor Parkins Love the composition & intensity 2. The Erwin Record. Slam dunk, Lesley Hughes 3. The News Leader, Parsons. Best of the West, Christian Anglin 4. The Portland Leader. This hurdle’s a breeze 5. The Humboldt Chronicle. Cardinal slugger, Barry DeLoach Group II 1. LaFollette Press. On the ball, Dwane Wilder Wow! What an expression! 2. The Courier, Savannah. T-ball at its finest, Amy Reid 3. Carthage Courier. Head-knocker, Eddie West 4.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Eye on backhand 5. The Courier, Savannah. Cardinal senior, Brian Reid Group III 1. Union City Daily Messenger. Splitting the difference, David Fuzzell This one has it all – good exposure, nice crop, eye-catching color reproduction, no background distractions and perfect timing. Definitely ‘got the shot.’ 2. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Tough start, Jimmy Jones 3. The Lebanon Democrat. One win short, Dallus Whitfield 4.The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Acrobatic set, Tommy Bryan 5. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Whew! Statebound champs, Danny Parker Group IV 1.The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Face mask? Robert Smith Great action shot! Football is a brutal game and the photographer captures the moment! 2. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Comeback kids, Ben Winters 3. The Daily Times, Maryville. Coach celebrates, Daryll Sullivan 4. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Breaking backboard, Tony Marable 5. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Rico Foster & Abby Graham Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville. Titans receiver, George Walker Great shot 2. The Tennessean, Nashville. Nashville Superspeedway, Billy Kingsley 3. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Skaters 4. Johnson City Press. Teenagers rule 5. Kingsport Times-News. The Bloomingdale Shooters PUBLIC SERVICE Group I 1. The Humboldt Chronicle. College quest, April Jackson, Danny Wade no comment 2. Chester County Independent, Henderson.Tech center, Ed Farrell, Julie Pickard, Holly Roeder 3. Mt. Juliet News. Sticks & stones, Laurie Everett 4. GraingerToday, Bean Station. Utility district, Jim Zachary, Sarah McCarty 5. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Child abuse Group II 1.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. 3 great subjects done very well 2. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Melissa Kinton, Tommy Millsaps 3. The Gallatin Newspaper. Marjorie Lloyd, Josh Nelson, Julie Brackenbury, Gary Grace 4. Hickman CountyTimes, Centerville. Bradley A. Martin 5. insufficient entries Group III 1. The Newport Plain Talk. Relay for Life, Duay O’Neil Wow! Your coverage of this event seems to make even more events appear and the phenomenal success can’t be argued! 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. 200th/spelling bee/forum 3. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Somali/ horse industry/SSA, René Capley, John I. Carney, Brian Mosely 4. The Lebanon Democrat. Brooks House, Jason Cox, Hayli Morrison, Dallus Whitfield, Bill Cook, Evan McMorris-Santoro, J.R. Lind, Sara McCarty, Laurie Everett, Amelia Morrison Hipps, Kimberly Jordan, Marie Corhern 5.The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Weather, Jennifer Horton, Zack Owensby,Tommy Bryan, Megan E. Bryan, Sam Hatcher, John Bryan Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Suicide; gangs; teen drinking The topics were very timely, of extreme importance to the community. The series (all there presented) were well thought out and planned, with both positive & negative sides explored, and solutions or avenues to solutions investigated & presented. An editorial stance was also presented in each instance, which is important, I feel, in public service. Covering a story is our job. Exploring all facets of a problem & offering solutions is public service. 2. The Daily Herald, Columbia. ImmiSEE AWARDS, PAGE 19 The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 10 Clear, logically structured, fun to read 2. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Get priorities straight, Linda Brewer 3.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Board’s ouster 4. Manchester Times. Don’t blame city 5. LaFollette Press. Pressing issues, Awards - 11 AWARDS Linn Hudson Group III 1. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. No longer will The Post publish the squabble, Sam Hatcher Well-put! Even while admitting your paper’s role. Often editorials are arrogant and ego-centric; this one is definitely not. 2. The Lebanon Democrat. School boards should have taxing authority, Amelia Morrison Hipps 3. Roane County News, Kingston. Time for Pinnacle Pointe developers to repay, Terri Likens SEE AWARDS, PAGE 12 Auctions gone, but lessons linger BY BOB HURLEY The Greeneville Sun Tobacco auctions once fed me, and now that they are gone, I’m hopeful that you will allow me the courtesy to say goodbye. I owe them that. There is no way to Hurley prove this, but when I tell you that I am the last columnist in history to be taught in a tobacco field, you can believe it. That revelation came to me this week when I heard that there would be no tobacco auctions in Greeneville this fall. The auction system that fed me and taught me as a child is gone from Greeneville, never to return. I know. I know. You probably don’t give a hoot that this part of our past is finally over with and done. But some of us do care. It would be too much of a stretch for me to say that all I ever needed to know to write this column was learned while working in tobacco, so I won’t say that. But I can safely say that you wouldn’t be reading this if I hadn’t first learned my lesson so well in the tobacco fields of western Greene County. I didn’t come today to toot tobacco’s horn. That’s not my job. Besides, the big tobacco companies are still paying big bucks to the well-dressed crowd on Madison Avenue to do that. Frankly, I wouldn’t have the job anyway. It is way over my head. Marilda says she thinks we will live to see the day when cigarette smoking is outlawed in this country. As for me, I don’t know. Like I said, hot-button issues like this one are way over my head. But it is clear that we are moving in the direction that Marilda favors. If cigarettes were invented today, they would be illegal, she keeps reminding me. All that from a country girl who grew up on a tobacco farm? She can tell you more than you want to know about tobacco hornworms and sweating in the August sun, but if you choose to smoke around her, may the Lord have mercy on your cigarette-smelling head. Cigarettes have always been made in cities with names such as Winston-Salem, Durham and Richmond, but it was in Greeneville and scores of other much 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group IV The Greeneville Sun smaller towns like it where farmers and tobacco companies came face to face at tobacco auctions. The auctions that have been held the past two years have been little more than reminders that an era is now gone. But the real decline started earlier when the tobacco companies jointly agreed to pay billions of dollars to settle a lawsuit by farmers in North Carolina who had charged the companies had been fixing prices for years. For as long as I can remember, there have been questions about the auction system, but, hey, it was all we had in 1957 when I was 13 and hungry as a stray dog all the time. And my mama always had questions about smoking. She begged me not to smoke. But I had to be cool like Bogart, and like John Wayne, “The Duke,” as we called him. Even big-league baseball players told me it was cool to smoke in those slick magazine ads. My mama knew we had to have the money from tobacco just like she knew cigarettes were bad news for me after I began smoking them in my foolish high school days. Merle Travis knew it in the late 1940s when he penned a country hit for Tex Williams called “Smoke, Smoke, Smoke That Cigarette.” Sing along if you have the breath: “Smoke, smoke, smoke that cigarette. Puff, puff, puff until you smoke yourself to death. Tell Saint Peter at the Golden Gate that you hate to make him wait, but you’ve just got to have another cigarette.” Williams, a chain smoker, died of lung cancer. So did The Duke. So did some of those big-league baseball players who looked so cool in Look and Life magazines. Nobody made me smoke. Quite the opposite: I broke my mama’s heart every time I would light up. It was so easy to be stupid when I was 13 years old, 10 feet tall and bulletproof. Henry Emerson Hurley, my oldest grandson, will be two years old this fall. I’ve already begun telling him that he is far too smart to repeat the sins of his poor old granddaddy. I have also begun telling Henry the story of how tobacco not only fed me when I was a lad, but how it also taught me to work and live in a world that was only slightly competitive in the 1950s compared to the world he is facing. It would not be right, it seems to me, to let the old auction system fade away into history without at least some acknowledgement that it not only bought groceries and shoes on the dusty roads at Mohawk, but that it also built schools and churches and even hospitals. I will be the whipping boy. It raised me and provided me the only educational credentials I have ever received. Remember, there are no college degrees on my wall. There is only a fading diploma from a high school on the backroads of Mohawk, dated 1962. The tobacco culture that once so completely dominated my life has now all but disappeared from Mohawk. There might be a tobacco farmer or two left with a Mohawk address, but you’d need a full tank of gas to find them. But just before the last door is closed on the last burley barn at dear old Mohawk, could I just say a word or two of thanks and farewell to the people who spent their lives teaching me to write this column by growing a crop that much of the world would one day come to loathe? They are the same people who taught me that hard work is not only a requirement to get along in this life, but that it can be very rewarding as well. I didn’t know it at the time, but I loved those people in the 1950s. I love them even more today. I feel compelled to tell their story. I wish there were some way to tell every story of every tobacco farmer who touched my life with a lesson I use every time you read one of my columns. The passing of 50 years has only made me appreciate those people more. They didn’t know it at the time, but they were filling my life with the kinds of gentle lessons and memories that every kid needs and deserves. “Who was the best teacher you ever had?” Marilda asked a few nights ago during one of our front porch sessions with the lightning bugs. “Tobacco,” I said without giving it a second’s thought. Later that night, after Marilda had drifted off to sleep beside me, I wondered where I’d be and what I’d be doing if I hadn’t had tobacco for a teacher. (July 21, 2007) CMYK The Tennessee Press 18 - Awards VICTOR PARKINS | THE MILAN MIRROR-EXCHANGE Milan sophomore Dominique Hoyle ran wind sprints during the Bulldogs’ first workout of the 2007 season. The Dogs will continue workout sessions until their season opener. (July 10, 2007) Parkins 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group I The Milan Mirror-Exchange Jones gets ETSU Excellence Award The East Tennessee State University Foundation and ETSU recognized Tim P. Jones with the Margin of Excellence Award during the Distinguished President’s Trust annual dinner for the university’s top contributors held recently in Kingsport. The Margin of Excellence Award was established in 2002 to acknowledge individuals who “go above and beyond the call of duty” in supporting the mission of ETSU and the Foundation. Each honoree receives a medallion and crystal bowl. Jones, who was vice president and general manager of Carl Jones Newspapers until the sale of that media group by his family, has been a leading force in the Johnson City community through volunteerism and support of civic is- sues, ETSU said. He and his family were instrumental in making the Johnson City Public Library a reality and have advocated other initiatives beneficial for the city’s downtown area. Jones has also exhibited outstanding commitment and devotion to ETSU, serving as Foundation chairman from 2003-07. During his tenure, alumni and friends of the university gave more than $69 million to the Foundation, almost $28 million of which was designated for scholarships and other endowments. In 1997, the ETSU Alumni Association named him an honorary alumnus. He and his wife, Valda, are members of the President’s Trust Platinum Society and the ETSU Legacy Circle for their generous support for the ETSU Foundation. SEPTEMBER 2008 AWARDS FROM PAGE 11 FROM PAGE 16 4. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. The media as a weapon, David Melson 5. Crossville Chronicle. Something has to give with the DA, Mike Moser Group IV 1. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Sheriff should give speech, Sam Stockard It’s great to see a newspaper take a stand like this. The public does have a right to know. Without your efforts, they would not have a chance. Keep the heat on. 2. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. City needs leaders 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia. New dog needed, Chris Fletcher 4.The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Don’t shut people out, Alane S. Megna 5. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Alcohol haze, Stan Voit Group V 1. Kingsport Times-News. Lack of honesty I enjoyed your choice of words & sound thinking. Top notch editorial. 2. Bristol Herald Courier. Bring back ETSU football, J. Todd Foster 3. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Lee’s apology, Blake Fontenay 4. News Sentinel, Knoxville. 2008 can’t DAVID FUZZELL | UNION CITY DAILY MESSENGER DWANE WILDER | LAFOLLETTE PRESS CMYK South Fulton’s Molly Ledbetter is safe at third base after sliding through the legs of Obion Central’s Audrey Gilliam during softball action at Troy. (March 27, 2007) Eleven-year-old Brian Holt shows great determination while trying his hand at bunting at the free baseball/ softball camp hosted last week by Campbell County High School. (July 19, 2007) 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group II LaFollette Press Fuzzell 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group III Union City Daily Messenger Getting to know you, Memphis BY CHRIS PECK Editor The Commercial Appeal, Memphis Tomorrow marks five years for me as editor of The Commercial Appeal. I ’ ve l ive d i n Memphis more years than it took to graduate from college. While here, Peck my father died. My mustache turned gray. My children left the house to strike out on their own. I know it’s only been five years. I know I came from the outside, from way out West. My observations about Memphis pale in comparison to narratives that stretch back before Dr. (Martin Luther) King’s assassination, before Elvis got famous, before the yellow fever. In Memphis, five years is barely the flash of a firefly in terms of understanding the layers, nuances, relationships. But know this: I have tried to listen to Memphis—to the sounds of its summer nights, the blues that fill the air, the voices black and white, rich and poor, that so vividly tell the tale of this city. I have tried to learn from Memphis— from the relics at the Pink Palace to the AWARDS Calkins 5. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Numbers mislead, Wendi C. Thomas Wilder SEE AWARDS, PAGE 16 The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group V - Dailies The Commercial Appeal, Memphis artwork on the walls of the Cotton Museum. I have soaked in the history and the context that have shaped Memphis from the days when Front Street was the center of things and Nashville and Atlanta weren’t what they are. I have tried to like Memphis—by searching for Aretha Franklin’s house, attending the COGIC convention in the fall, visiting The Grove for Ole Miss football in autumn and Cotton Carnival galas in spring. I’ve embraced what is here. This is what Memphis asks of those who have any hope of being let in on her secrets. Because I’ve worked as editor in a town where the newspaper has been a force for 167 years, I have been let in just a little. I’m not local enough yet to have gone to a wedding reception at the Memphis Country Club, or to have been invited to a black person’s home for family dinner. But I have glimpsed behind the curtain of civility and hospitality these last five years. Three images have burned into my soul so far: •A long and slow surrender. When she visits the Center for Southern Folklore in Downtown, singer Kate Campbell often sings her Southern anthem “Look Away.” It’s a play on “Dixie” and one stanza sticks in my mind: It’s a long and slow surrender, retreating from the past; It’s important to remember, to fly the flag at half mast. That song has helped me know what Memphians mean when they say in this once Union-occupied city that the Civil War is not over. No, it’s not over. Not by a long shot. Memories of a proud Southern heritage, tinged with confusion over what was noble in the past and what was immoral, persist. A thought: Perhaps Memphis should focus on the next war now. In the next 100 years the city must battle not for its Southern heritage, but for its share of the wealth and privilege that comes from nurturing bright young minds, embracing creative ideas and building a culturally rich, accepting community. Let’s go there. •The conundrum of Beale Street and Bellevue Baptist. A strange tension pulls at Memphis. By day, the city’s more unscrupulous citizens hatch inventive white-collar schemes and outrageous frauds for cheating the system in one of the nation’s most corrupt civic environments. By night, just blocks away from Beale Street, there’s a whole lot of sinning going on: drinking, whoring, murdering, burglaries, bribes and drive-bys. Come Sunday, everyone’s praying. TV preachers, Bellevue Baptists, all the Protestant faiths plus Muslims, Jews and, lately, Latino Catholics are asking for guidance, forgiveness and blessings. What’s up with that? Other places in America have both less sinning and less praying than Memphis. A thought: Perhaps Memphis should talk more about helping people do the right thing first, and spend less effort punishing and saving those who mess up. One idea: Focus on cutting teen pregnancies by educating young men and offering birth control for young women. •Stuck on race. Memphis can’t give it up about race. Even though most everybody eats grits and barbecue and shares an appreciation for azaleas, the city divides most everything else down to black vs. white. In local politics, real estate, even on the radio dial, the color of your skin takes precedence over your heart, brain or guts. Sometimes, you get the sense that Memphians find it easier to fall back on the stereotypes, assumptions and past practices than to try something new to break the mold of history and perception. A thought: Focus on a new civil rights movement, a personal campaign where a black family and a white family volunteer to do something together for Memphis. I am humble about these ideas. It’s not easy, nor simple, to sort through the challenges of this vital and real place. I know more about Memphis, but I don’t know enough. What I do say is that today, when I hear people from out West or, God forbid, the North, spout fuzzy ideas about the South, I say, come to Memphis. When friends, family and colleagues from elsewhere begin to utter seemingly profound statements about race, poverty and evangelical politics in America, I politely say it again—come to Memphis if you want to learn. I came. I’ve learned. Memphis has afforded me an education far beyond the bounds of any classroom: Pimento cheese. Al Green’s church. Rum Boogie Cafe. Room 306 at the Lorraine Motel. Graceland on Aug. 16. Fixin’ to ... Loving on .... So precious. Thanks, Memphis, for five unforgettable years. (Dec. 16, 2007) HEADLINE WRITING Group I 1. The Millington Star I’m sure it helps to have written the story and be able to write a headline you know what the story is all about. I really liked the tennis headline “II-Love.” I may copy your idea and use it myself this spring sports season! 2. The News Leader, Parsons 3. Chester County Independent, Henderson. Ed Farrell 4. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. Ron Caylor 5. The Erwin Record. Keith Whitson Group II 1.The Leader, Covington. Echo Gaines Denmark - Very clever headlines -The “Tricks,Treats” headline is clever, but it’s always risky to put a funny headline on a news story. I think it works, however, in this case. 2. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Linda Brewer 3. The Gallatin Newspaper. Julie Brackenbury 4. Memphis Business Journal. Bill Wellborn 5. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Mia Rhodarmer Group III 1. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Not 2 hurt 2 text, Seth Wright Wonderful combo of text & font 2. The Oak Ridger. Pottty trained golfers 3. The Lebanon Democrat. Trooper fired, Nick Fowler 4.The Paris Post-Intelligencer. It shook hard, then it blew, Ken Walker 5. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Half of our water is gone, David Melson Group IV 1. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. Dying to leave Fantastic! All others in this category should study your headlines. I hope your “Dying to Leave” made an impact. Great job! 2. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Sandy Britt, Brian Dunn 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Hot button, Chris Fletcher 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Ode to Koi 5. Elizabethton Star. Wes Holtsclaw Group V 1. News Sentinel, Knoxville I like, “Once mined, now yours” for feature story, and I like how you can also write news headlines, too. 2. Kingsport Times-News 3. The Tennessean, Nashville. Mark Smith 4. Johnson City Press 5. Bristol Herald Courier. Jerry Shell BEST NEWS PHOTOGRAPH Group I 1. Herald And Tribune, Jonesborough. Tears for freedom, Charlie Mauk All of the photos in this grouping were excellent. You really captured the emotion of the moment. Great job! 2.The Erwin Record. Atrocious, Lesley Hughes 3. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Near tragedy, Scarlet Elliott 4.The News Leader, Parsons. Robbery suspects, Christian Anglin 5. The Portland Leader. Goodbye Group II 1. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Car overturns, Melissa Kinton Great shot – woman’s expression at just the right time! 2. Hickman CountyTimes, Centerville. Rollin’, Bradley A. Martin 3. Carthage Courier.Tractor overturns, Eddie West 4. Independent Appeal, Selmer. Cars for kids 5. The News Examiner, Gallatin. Fringe areas Group III 1. Roane County News, Kingston. Fatal accident I almost cried when I saw this photo – you could tell how difficult it was for this police officer to walk through the duties of the day. You knew the lead before you even looked at the first paragraph. 2. Crossville Chronicle. Lightning strikes, Mike Moser 3. ShelbyvilleTimes-Gazette. Farewell for a hero, Kay Rose 4. The Tullahoma News. A kiss goodbye for dad, Justin Hornkohl 5. The Oak Ridger. Tragedy strikes Group IV 1. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Receiving a flag, Aaron Thompson A very touching photo! 2.The Greeneville Sun. Chased down, Jim Feltman 3. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Carl Brandon, Turner Hutchens 4.The Mountain Press, Sevierville. On the scene, Curt Habraken 5. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Disbelief, Greg Williamson Group V 1. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Farewell to the fallen, Dan Henry The emotional impact of this photo is beyond words. 2. News Sentinel, Knoxville. I hope you rot in jail 3.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Breach of security, Mike Brown 4. The Tennessean, Nashville. Statue honors firefighter, Larry McCormack 5. Bristol Herald Courier. End of the road, Andre Teague Awards - 17 ‘Fore’-warned is forearmed BY RICHARD B. ESPOSITO Publisher The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group III The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge Getting someone’s attention is easy if you know the right word. Loggers commonly yell “Timber!” when felling trees. Photographers often will say “Cheese!” to Esposito get their subject’s attention. And in the world of golf, if you here (sic) the word “Fore!” it’s best to duck for cover, because in golf jargon “Fore!” means the golfer playing behind you took an errant swing and the golf ball is heading your way. Oak Ridge recently got national attention when a local resident decided to submit videos to a Knoxville TV station of several disrespectful golfers brandishing more than their golf equipment in her backyard just off the 18th Hole of the Centennial golf course. This homeowner had been saying “Cheese!” with her video camera as golfers routinely used a tree as a urinal. Not one, not two, not three, but several incidences of golfers urinating in plain view have been captured on film for everyone, including national TV viewers, to see. Not exactly the kind of image our fair city wants. Word has it she has accumulated 18 hours of video to back up her claims of indecent public urination. Urinating golfers isn’t something unique. It does happen elsewhere. But why, guys (we’re assuming the film doesn’t include any squatting women), must you relieve yourself on the 18th Hole? Surely, despite your weak bladders, you could have putted out and taken the extra 80 steps to the Club House. Suggestions of limiting alcohol intake to the “back nine” (holes 10 through 18 for you non-golfers) doesn’t make much sense. Unless you’re playing pro, beer is the beverage of choice for golfers. And for us rookie golfers, our greatest enjoyment is driving the golf cart, looking for lost balls, and drinking beer. This frustrated homeowner decided to take action. And since exposing the matter to the press, she now has an orange port-a-potty visible from her kitchen window. We can’t expect Centennial to place portable restrooms on every hole. This wouldn’t be practical. So what’s a homeowner to do? She and her family could move. Obviously the glamour of living on a golf course has been “tainted” with the activities of urinating golfers. If she ever considers this course of action perhaps the following advertisement might be helpful to her Realtor: “Gorgeous two-story brick home located on prestigious golf course. Four bedrooms, three full baths, and one partial bath with oak tree decor. Enjoy outside living on the deck. Great for entertaining and ‘bird watching.’” But why move? With so many photographs of wayward golfers, she might consider a different approach. Do what the Washington, D.C. madam is threatening to do by exposing her clients to public ridicule. Why not enlarge the photos of the culprits so we can print them in The Oak Ridger? We could feature them like missing kids on milk cartons with a caption that reads “Have you seen this man?” This might curtail future urination visits and offer a whole new definition of “yellow” BEST FEATURE PHOTOGRAPH Group I 1. Chester County Independent, Henderson. Rare summer splash, Julie Pickard Great composition and crop. Kids and water are wonderful subjects and the unusual location makes this pic a keeper. 2. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. And now, the Good Life 3. The Portland Leader. A kiss of thanks, Sonya Thompson 4. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Telling secrets, Shirley Nanney 5. The Erwin Record, As he rode out of sight, Brenda Sparks Group II 1. LaFollette Press. LaFollette splash park, Natasha LaFayette This has all the elements of good photography – patience, framing, innovation and skilled use of equipment. 2. The Daily News, Memphis. American Paper Optics, Brad Johnson 3.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Doing the Turkey Tango, Steve Marion 4. LaFollette Press. Learning to fish, Dwane Wilder 5. Overton County News, Livingston. Cruisin’, Dewain E. Peek Group III 1. The Oak Ridger. Holocaust survivor Great idea of putting the survivor in the forefront with a picture from her youth. The photographer put some thought into creating an image which grabs the reader. The best of the class by far! 2. Union City Daily Messenger. Big swing, David Fuzzell 3.TheTullahoma News. Gone country, Greg Altum 4. Roane County News, Kingston. Exhibition farm journalism. Another option to deter this bad behavior might include the presence of a family pet. I recommend a 90-pound German shepherd trained in the proper rules of engagement. Teaching him to stay out of bounds of the course might be challenging, but no harder than training an adult male to stop peeing against the tree in your yard, I suppose. With golf season now in full swing more attention needs to be placed on golf etiquette. The recent United Way golf tournament was a good start. The Golf Committee did its best to retain civility on the Country Club course. They strategically positioned this volunteer at the Third Hole. This Par 3 offered a cash prize to anyone making a hole-inone. Needless to day, I had one eye on the green and the other on the stand of pine trees along the fairway. And like typical golf tournaments, this one offered “goody-bags” to participating golfers. During the pre-game speech, I explored the contents of one expecting to find the usual trinkets. Sure enough, it included a golf towel—ideal for cleaning your club, golf ball, or hands if necessary. I also found several colorful tees and a small bag of plastic ball markers (perfect for marking the spot)—and not one but two 12-ounce plastic stadium cups. I assume one could be used for your beverage and the other ... well let’s leave that up to your imagination. My parents always brought along an empty coffee can during long road trips when I was a kid. One thing’s for sure. Now that the lid’s been blown off this peeing situation, it will be harder for golfers to relieve themselves on the golf course. And by the looks of the brown trees along the course I’m now beginning to wonder if it was due to the recent hard freeze or if we don’t have a more serious situation on our hands—or should I say in our hands? (May 8, 2007) 5. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. Jail garden, Glenn Tanner Group IV 1. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Just hanging around, Jeff Farrell no comment 2. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. A few pointon 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Line of defense, Thomas Johns 4. Cleveland Daily Banner. River relaxation, David Davis 5. Cleveland Daily Banner. I’m a winner, Donna Kaylor Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville. Landmark to get new letters, John Partipilo Fantastic picture! Will you take picture when new letters are in place? 2. Kingsport Times-News. Fun fest pet dog SEE AWARDS, PAGE 18 CMYK 12 - Awards AWARDS Worlds apart: Ice, ice, baby FROM PAGE 12 CMYK come soon enough 5. The Tennessean, Nashville. Real solution for U, Mike Morrow BEST PERSONAL COLUMN Group I 1. Grainger Today, Bean Station. The way it seems, Jim Zachary The writer uses clever word play to send the message to his readers – the importance of conducting the public’s business in public. The best entry in a tough class! 2.The Westmoreland Observer. Under my skin 3. The Erwin Record. It’s a rocky road, Mark A. Stevens 4. The Hartsville Vidette. Letting go of the old home place, Liz Ferrell 5. The Millington Star. With love to our champion Group II 1. Robertson County Times, Springfield. Wedding planning craziness, Eric Miller A unique personal experience well recounted! Very readable, good analogy to Iraq War. Nice variety of sentence structure and good pacing. 2. Memphis Business Journal. Never be convinced, Bill Wellborn 3. The News Examiner, Gallatin. The woman behind 4. Overton County News, Livingston. North County Lines, Robert Forsman 5. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Greenback tour, Mary E. Hinds Group III 1. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. What a beautiful Christmas, C. Ernest Williams The object of a personal column is to allow the reader to see the subject through the writer’s eyes. A touching story told in the most heart-felt way. 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Kill your husband, James Clark 3. Crossville Chronicle. The judge... common man, Mike Moser 4. Union City Daily Messenger. Anchoring dreams, Glenda Caudle 5. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Ducker’s sentence too long, Duane Sherrill Group IV 1. The Greeneville Sun. Tobacco auctions gone, Bob Hurley Wow – a great personal story that also tells a lot of history, a lot about the region. I love the inner conflict you set up – loving the farmers and the life, and growing up to see what the product did to your heroes. Lovely prose, powerful memories. I love the sentence, “I will be the whipping boy.” It came at the right moment. Altogether delightful. 2. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Alzheimer’s breaks hearts, Buddy Pearson 3. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. List making not always a sign, Margaret Shuster SEPTEMBER 2008 4. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. What have you done? 5. The Daily Times, Maryville. Making sense of the senseless, Steve Wildsmith Group V 1.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Getting to know you Memphis, Chris Peck Appreciated your assessment on your “new” town. We were told once that it takes 30 years to really be a part of a community. 2. The Tennessean, Nashville. Rosh Hashana, Gail Kerr 3.The Jackson Sun. Filing a complaint, Tom Bohs 4. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Veterans, Sam Venable 5. Johnson City Press. Experience proves BEST PERSONAL HUMOR COLUMN Group I 1. Chester County Independent, Henderson. Aunt Madge’s bra caused power outage, Steve Oden Great stories about kids and boredom are all too rarely told well. Great job! 2. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Milan’s resident psychic, Steve Short 3. The Bartlett Express. This just in from North Pole, Rick Jacobs 4.The Milan Mirror-Exchange.Tomcat spared the knife, Bob Parkins 5. The News Leader, Parsons. TWRA officers resolve hostage situations Group II 1. Hickman CountyTimes, Centerville. Ice, ice baby, Donna S. Wallace This is something that, I think, everyone can relate to. This column had me smiling the entire time, partially because we’re from Nebraska and had lived in Little Rock, Ark. for several years (we remember when the snow “storms” would be reported on!) Wonderful, humorous column – I’d look for it the next time I had the newspaper in my hands. 2. The Herald-News, Dayton. The joys & trials of being a self-employed couple 3. Overton County News, Livingston. North County Lines, Robert Forsman 4. Memphis Business Journal. Dream of traveling horizontal, Bill Wellborn 5. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Playing possum, Linda Brewer Group III 1. The Oak Ridger. Forewarned is forearmed The writer took an obvious black eye to his community and was able to poke fun at the subject, while also making a point that people need to knock off what they were doing. Very nice tongue in cheek humor. 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Getting a taste of candy bar sales BY DONNA S. WALLACE Hickman County Times, Centerville The Yankee and I have decided that if we passed a law that stated that the networks could only report real news with real facts and only things that really mattered, there’d Wallace be a lot more time to air quality programs like Desperate Housewives and WWF Wrestling. Here’s your homework for the week: Sit down and watch the news. I mean really watch it. Pay attention to what is being said. There’s a whole lotta blarney and not much substance. Recently, I was watching The Today Show, and they were interviewing some kind of financial expert and she was all hot and bothered about the possibility of identity theft. I agree that we should all be aware of this. The thing this woman was warning everyone about was those newfangled little credit cards that are about the size of your thumb. You don’t have to sign a slip, you just pass it in front of the speedy reader and go on your way. Apparently, these things are very popular at fast food restaurants in the big cities. The woman was very theatrical in warning just how easy it would be for someone to get your information from this card if he had a portable scanner that was made just for the purpose of stealing your identity. They wouldn’t even have to see the card, just touch their hand held scanner to the outside of your purse. The interviewer was aghast—positively aghast—at how easy it would be for someone to steal your identity this way. Then as an afterthought they casually mentioned that such a machine does not actually exist yet, but if someone was clever enough to build one, then we would all be in danger of losing our identity! Also, most of these little credit cards have a security chip built in that would prevent just such an event from occurring. I looked at the Yankee and said, “Maybe I’m just a little bit slow on the uptake, but did they just spend the 3. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Bike riding more fun with brakes, Duane Sherrill 4. Union City Daily Messenger. Slumber party, Chris Menees 5. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. I can cook, John I. Carney Group IV 1.The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville.Tiny, pampered poodle, Sandy Britt Hilarious. I can completely identify. There is just something to be said with those afflicted with puppy love. 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group II Hickman County Times, Centerville last 20 minutes warning us all that we have to take drastic measures to protect ourselves from something that doesn’t even exist?” “Yuh-huh,” he sighed. Well, let me jot that down on my list of things to fear, right after the boogey-man, but before the monster under my bed. The next night, we were watching the 10 o’clock news. You know you live in Middle Tennessee when you stay up ‘til 10 p.m. just so you can see what Darian Trotter is wearing. That man has got some fashion sense, wooo-eeee! But he doesn’t have any eyelids. You watch the news tonight and see if that ain’t so. The big news was all about the “great snowfall.” All one-half inch of it. Now, I know that northerners make fun of us for closing our schools and rushing to the grocery store and buying up all the toilet paper and bread when we hear the word snow. And I know they think we don’t know how to drive in snow. I would argue two things in our defense: 1. Our snow tends to be wetter than theirs and is mostly ice, or melts a little and then refreezes as ice. No one can drive well on ice. 2. They have nice little six-inch ditches running parallel to their flat roads. Our roads tend to be a little steeper than their and our ditches range from 4 to 40 feet deep and are to be avoided at all cost. Still, I was embarrassed for u all when the reporter went down on one knee and scraped up a pathetic little handful of snow and acted like our blizzard was every bit as bothersome as the one that just buried New York. I was still chuckling about it on Saturday afternoon when Sean and I headed out to El Monte for our usual weekly pigfest. The ride up Toy Hill Road was a little dicey, and I became somewhat alarmed, but once at the top I never gave it another thought. Going down the hill has never been a problem. Until Saturday. 2. Elizabethton Star. Bed pans, urinals, Frank Robinson 3. The Daily Times, Maryville. The rise & fall of the Spoon brothers, Steve Wildsmith 4. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. iPhone’s call too strong, Maria Rice McClure 5. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Words of wisdom Group V 1. Johnson City Press. Dickensian What a horrible idea for a theme We came home all full of tacos and burritos and rice and nachos. We started down the hill very slowly, taking all the safety precautions that my father, the Mayor, taught me years ago. Halfway down my tire hit a piece of sand sticking up out of the ice and we began to spin around. It sounded like a Pentecostal prayer meeting, what with the both of us calling loudly on the name of the Lord. There was a four-foot ditch on the one side of us and a 40-foot drop off on the other and there we sat crossways of the road on the side of a steep hill in a 1995 Nissan Thimble. Sean being Sean, he immediately started yelling at me. “What have you done? I thought you were a good driver!” “You’re the one who just had to have a taco, El Nino!” So, we talked to the Lord some more and He got us back to the top of the hill. We tried Greer Road, and that didn’t work out too well either. Side note to the person who owns the last house on the right just before you drop off the hill: It was not a drunk out there doing donuts in your driveway Saturday night, just a panicky blond in a stick shift. I hope your flowers grow back. At this point, we started trying to think of the names of people whom I hadn’t offended too badly and who might be willing to put us up for the night. There was no one. Finally, we made our way back to Brown Hollow Road and came home the long way, taking that little tin can that the Yankee calls a car through several creeks and over a few fallen logs. I think it might have survived if I hadn’t already drug the front end out from under it in the ditch line on Greer Road. So when the Yankee came home and asked why his car was sitting in the driveway with all four wheels fallen off and big chunks of the frame littering the yard, I looked him square in the eye and said, “I don’t know. It could be that gang of thugs that’s going around perpetrating hate crimes against little foreign cars. It was on the news.” And don’t y’all tell him any different. (Feb. 26, 2007) park. I have read a lot of Dickens, and I cannot imagine ever wanting to visit the orphanage from Oliver Twist or the mansion from Great Expectations. Good column on a funny subject. 2. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Time for more state changes, Sam Venable 3. The Tennessean, Nashville. Soda cans set scene for romance, Gail Kerr 4. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Dogs have place in football, Geoff SEE AWARDS, PAGE 17 The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Awards - 13 How Madge’s bra caused a power outage BY STEVE ODEN Chester County Independent, Henderson “ M i s t e r, w h y can a bird sit on a power line and not get fried?” asked a fifth-grader during my electrical safety demonstration at a local school. I smiled. “Because Oden the bird’s body becomes part of the circuit through which current flows. The electricity cannot get to ground through the bird. It simply flows through. But, if the bird had a longer tail, and it touched the neutral line underneath, while it sat on the live feed...” “ZAAAPPP!” the class cried in unison. Nodding, I added that it wouldn’t be good for the bird or electric consumers. “Sometimes, power outages are caused by odd instances of animals contacting conductors. I’ve seen power outages involving snakes, hawks, owls, possums, raccoons, bats, lizards, big grasshoppers, even a tree frog.” One student pointed out that kites could trigger power outages. “Possible,” I agreed. “It’s very dangerous to fly kites around high-voltage lines. Power interruptions can also be caused by helium balloons, trees, storms, lightning, construction equipment, and auto accidents.” Not knowing how the teacher would react to adult material, I neglected to mention my Aunt Madge’s brassiere. It happened like this: During an early summer’s morning in Appalachia, two young nephews visiting their aunt and uncle’s farm were bored with the barn cats, the hound’s puppies, being chased by the goat, and poking wasp nests under the eave of the smokehouse. Uncle had promised to take them fishing down at the creek, but he was busy replacing the wheel bearing on his old truck. The sky’s blue was crackling; the sun slanted cheery rays through the dust raised by scratching yard chickens and their broods. Ground shadows chased feathery clouds across the hay field, where my cousin and I lay on our backs and played the “I-dare-you game.” “I dare you to put a toad frog in Uncle Bunk’s choppers’ glass,” challenged my cousin, referring to the bedside container in which Uncle kept his false teeth at night. The feat lacked novelty; it had been done before with minnows and tadpoles by our older siblings. I shot back, “I dare you to light a fire cracker and throw it in the outhouse hole.” Again, the dare had an expected consequence and no excitement. We knew our fireworks were too weak and the only result would be a pop, sizzle, and puff of smoke. “I wish we had some dynamite,” said my cousin, wistfully dreaming of the outhouse lifting from explosive force and launching itself into orbit, 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group I Chester County Independent, Henderson The back porch screen door slammed, and Aunt Madge appeared, burdened with a basket of wet laundry, fresh from the wringer washer. The legs of Uncle Bunk’s overalls stood out stiffly from the starch and having been compressed between the rollers. Our aunt was a thickset woman, with thighs the size of molasses barrels and a bust that the word “substantial” failed to adequately describe. In fact, when she performed in the church ladies choir, Aunt Madge always stood in the front row. This kept her from toppling the singer in front when she took a deep breath and belted out an alto verse. She spied us in the field and waved with a dish rag. Bemused, we watched her hang the washing: towels, socks, our jeans and tee-shirts, and her underwear. “I got an idea,” whispered my cousin, “something that’s never been done before in this family.” I was immediately interested. He explained the plot, and I became—as usual—his henchman. The plan was simple and used the most basic theories of engineering and physical dynamics. When Aunt Madge was safely back in the house, we raided Uncle Bunk’s garden and snatched a pair of green watermelons—Rocky Fords, an heirloom variety known for making round fruit—about four pounds each in weight. I caught Old Taze, the mule our uncle had retired when he purchased a McCormick Farmall tractor. We put the mule’s harness around his neck and attached leather traces to the wire that Uncle Bunk had stretched between cedar posts for the clothes line. All the wet laundry was removed except for Aunt Madge’s brassiere. Into the cups we loaded the watermelons. There was room to spare. My cousin’s Great Idea involved using Old Taze to stretch the clothes line and the elastic straps of the bra, then releasing the harness traces to see if the watermelons would be propelled across the barnyard. It seemed reasonable to us that we were creating a giant slingshot. Neither of us had considered how to stop Old Taze and trigger the brassiere cannon, so the mule just kept on walking after I said, “Giddy-up!” The clothes line twanged with tension, but we expected the bra straps to break before Old Taze yanked the cedar posts out of the ground. I ran one way; my cousin fled in the opposite direction. The experiment seemed doomed. But wet elastic is an amazing material. At the point where no more tension could be applied without disastrous effects, the bra tore loose and launched itself into the air...the cup-cushioned watermelons looping one over the other. With the first—and only—launch, we achieved 40 feet of height and about twice in distance. Unfortunately, our field of fire centered the REA transformer pole at the corner of the barnyard. “BOOM!” Lights went out, up and down the hollow. When the rural electric cooperative linemen responded to the outage, they found a charred and sodden brassiere, the DDD cups containing steaming watermelon rind, dangling from the power line. They got a laugh out of it. My cousin and I got a “whupping.” To my knowledge, it was the sole power outage ever caused by a piece of lady’s lingerie, and might still be. (May 10, 2007) Boot camp set for circulators Anderson, Randles and Associates will host its 15th Newspaper Circulation Bootcamp Sept. 17 and 18 in Atlanta. It is designed for publishers, general managers, circulation directors, midlevel and future circulation executives, editors and financial managers. Led by Don Michel and Phil Hanna, the program will focus on what newspaper executives should know about the circulation department and how to build circulation volume. For more information and a registration form, go to www.andersonrandles.com. ROBERT SMITH | THE LEAF-CHRONICLE, CLARKSVILLE Tennessee Titans running back LenDale White has his helmet pulled off by San Diego Chargers Matt Wilhem during the fourth quarter at LP Field in Nashville. The Titans lost in overtime 23-17. (Dec. 10, 2007) Smith 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group IV The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville GEORGE WALKER IV | THE TENNESSEAN, NASHVILLE Walker 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group V The Tennessean, Nashville Titans receiver Justin Gage (12) pulls in a touchdown pass as Jaguars defender Rashean Mathis (27) watches during the fourth quarter. Gage had his best game as aTitan with seven receptions for 90 yards. (Nov. 12, 2007) CMYK The Tennessee Press 16 - Awards The Tennessee Press 14 - Awards SEPTEMBER 2008 The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Awards - 15 ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS THIRD PLACE WINNERS – UT-TPA STATE PRESS CONTESTS FIRST PLACE WINNERS – UT-TPA STATE PRESS CONTESTS Carthage Courier; Terri Likens, Roane County News, Kingston; Echo Gaines Denmark, The Leader, Covington; Holly Roeder, Chester County Independent, Henderson; Duay O’Neil, The Newport Plain Talk; Glenna Howington, Citizen Tribune, Morristown; Jimmy Hart, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro; Darren Reese, The Standard Banner, Jefferson City Peek, Overton County News, Livingston; Scott Fraker, Beverly Majors, Darrell Richardson, Richard Esposito, Donna Smith, The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge; and Glenna Howington, Citizen Tribune, Morristown. Back row, Craig Delk and Buddy Pearson, Herald-Citizen, Cookeville; Lesley Hughes, Donna Rea, Anthony Piercy and Mark Stevens, The Erwin Record; Leon Alligood, The Tennessean, Nashville; Jim Zachary, Grainger Today, Bean Station; Mike Morrow, The Tennessean, Nashville; Duay O’Neil, The Newport Plain Talk; Terri Likens, Roane County News, Kingston; Brad Martin, Hickman County Times, Centerville; Bill Wellborn and Andy Ashby, Memphis Business Journal; Danny Parker, Shelbyville Times-Gazette; Jimmy Hart, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro; Ken Walker, The Paris Post-Intelligencer TRACKS CMYK Staff members of newspapers winning first place awards (from left): Front row, Echo Gaines Denmark,The Leader, Covington; Natasha LaFayette, LaFollette Press; J.Todd Foster, Bristol Herald Courier; George Walker IV and John Partipilo,TheTennessean, Nashville; SonyaThompson, The Portand Leader; Deborah Fisher and Mark Silverman, The Tennessean, Nashville; Jim Wozniak, Johnson City Press; Charlie Johnson, Southern Standard, McMinnville; Dana Bryson,The Wilson Post, Lebanon; Shirley Nanney, Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Middle row, Victor Parkins, The Milan Mirror-Exchange; Derek Hodges, The Mountain Press, Sevierville; Holly Roeder and Julie Pickard, Chester County Independent, Henderson; Lynn Richardson, Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough; Kevin Lewis, The Erwin Record; Glenda Caudle, Union City Daily Messenger; Kim Cook,The Standard Banner, Jefferson City; Dewain (From left) Front row, J.Todd Foster, Bristol Herald Courier; Mark Stevens and Lesley Hughes, The Erwin Record; Sonya Thompson, The Portland Leader; Shirley Nanney, Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon; Jim Wozniak, Johnson City Press; Scarlet Elliott, The Milan Mirror-Exchange; Sharon Patrick, Southern Standard, McMinnville. Back row, Eddie West, MEEMAN WINNERS – UT-TPA STATE PRESS CONTESTS Staff members of newspapers winning Edward J. Meeman Awards for editorials or public service, from left, Jack McElroy, News Sentinel, Knoxville; Jim Zachary, Grainger Today, Bean Station; Duay O’Neil, The SECOND PLACE WINNERS – UT-TPA STATE PRESS CONTESTS Staff members of newspapers winning second place awards are (from left): Front row, Darrell Richardson and Beverly Majors, The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge; J. Todd Foster, Bristol Herald Courier; Brad Martin, Hickman County Times, Centerville; Glenda Caudle, Union City Daily Messenger; Buddy Pearson, Herald-Citizen, Cookeville; Shirley Nanney, Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon; Melanie Day, The Milan Mirror-Exchange; Donna Smith, The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge; Sharon Patrick, Southern Standard, McMinnville; Steve Marion, ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Newport Plain Talk; Jimmy Hart, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro; and Bill Wellborn, Memphis Business Journal. Rhonda Whaley has been named general manager of The Daily PostAthenian, Athens, bringing to the position 20 years of experience. She has served as accounting manager and business manager. A native of McMinn County, Whaley has lived in Etowah since 1988, the year she took the job as accounting manager at The DPA. She also is regional coordinator for Jones Media in the Tennessee Valley. | Lee Ann Krueger has been named publisher of The Collierville Herald by American Hometown Publishing of Franklin. She spent the last six years with the Shelby Sun Times in Germantown. | J. Stewart Bryan III, chairman of the board of directors of Media General Inc., has announced he will retire, perhaps by the end of September. Media General owns the Bristol Herald Courier. ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Back row, David Harrison,The Westmoreland Observer; Lesley Hughes, Anthony D. Piercy and Mark Stevens, The Erwin Record; Scott Winfree, Carthage Courier; Holly Roeder, Chester County Independent, Henderson; Duay O’Neil, The Newport Plain Talk; Glenna Howington, Citizen Tribune, Morristown; Toby Sells, Memphis Business Journal; Jim Zachary, Grainger Today, Bean Station; Jimmy Hart, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Stop: Safety vests to be required; NNA has them The National Newspaper Association (NNA) is taking orders for the regulation safety vests that all newspaper employees covering accidents or other stories along federal highways will be required to wear. The proper garment is an ANSI Class II-2004-107 safety vest. NNA’s vest will be orange with reflective markings and a Velcro™ closure. In large letters on the back will be the word PRESS, and below that, NNA’s logo. Cost per vest will be small to XL, $15 each plus ship- ping cost. Larger sizes will be $17 each plus shipping. For advance orders, one should call (573) 882-5800. These regulations were established by the U.S. Department of Transportation and will become effective Nov. 24. All media representatives who are working within the rights-of-way of federal-aid highways will be required to wear highvisibility garments. “All workers within the right-of-way of a federal-aid highway who are exposed either to traffic (vehicles using the highway for purposes of travel) or to construction equipment within the work area shall wear high-visibility safety apparel,” the regulation states. NNA President Steve Haynes, Oberlin (Kan.) Herald, is unhappy about the plans to require the vests and has written to FHWA to seek clarification for the application of the new safety vest rule. News media members were added after urging by the Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety. (From www.nna.org) ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Back and front views of the safety vest Leon Alligood laughs heartily as he and Dr. Roy Moore, his new boss, chat for the first time. Dr. Moore is the new dean of the Middle Tennessee State University College of Mass Communications. Alligood joined the School of Journalism Aug. 1 as an instructor. Both were at Drive-In Training and the awards luncheon July 18 in Nashville. Dorris Parkins, left, and daughter Paris attended the awards luncheon July 18.The family newspaper is The Milan Mirror-Exchange. ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Jimmy Hart, foreground, and Scott Broden listen in one of the training sessions July 18. Both are with The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Hart is editor. CMYK ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS The Tennessee Press 14 - Awards SEPTEMBER 2008 The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Awards - 15 ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS THIRD PLACE WINNERS – UT-TPA STATE PRESS CONTESTS FIRST PLACE WINNERS – UT-TPA STATE PRESS CONTESTS Carthage Courier; Terri Likens, Roane County News, Kingston; Echo Gaines Denmark, The Leader, Covington; Holly Roeder, Chester County Independent, Henderson; Duay O’Neil, The Newport Plain Talk; Glenna Howington, Citizen Tribune, Morristown; Jimmy Hart, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro; Darren Reese, The Standard Banner, Jefferson City Peek, Overton County News, Livingston; Scott Fraker, Beverly Majors, Darrell Richardson, Richard Esposito, Donna Smith, The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge; and Glenna Howington, Citizen Tribune, Morristown. Back row, Craig Delk and Buddy Pearson, Herald-Citizen, Cookeville; Lesley Hughes, Donna Rea, Anthony Piercy and Mark Stevens, The Erwin Record; Leon Alligood, The Tennessean, Nashville; Jim Zachary, Grainger Today, Bean Station; Mike Morrow, The Tennessean, Nashville; Duay O’Neil, The Newport Plain Talk; Terri Likens, Roane County News, Kingston; Brad Martin, Hickman County Times, Centerville; Bill Wellborn and Andy Ashby, Memphis Business Journal; Danny Parker, Shelbyville Times-Gazette; Jimmy Hart, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro; Ken Walker, The Paris Post-Intelligencer TRACKS CMYK Staff members of newspapers winning first place awards (from left): Front row, Echo Gaines Denmark,The Leader, Covington; Natasha LaFayette, LaFollette Press; J.Todd Foster, Bristol Herald Courier; George Walker IV and John Partipilo,TheTennessean, Nashville; SonyaThompson, The Portand Leader; Deborah Fisher and Mark Silverman, The Tennessean, Nashville; Jim Wozniak, Johnson City Press; Charlie Johnson, Southern Standard, McMinnville; Dana Bryson,The Wilson Post, Lebanon; Shirley Nanney, Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Middle row, Victor Parkins, The Milan Mirror-Exchange; Derek Hodges, The Mountain Press, Sevierville; Holly Roeder and Julie Pickard, Chester County Independent, Henderson; Lynn Richardson, Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough; Kevin Lewis, The Erwin Record; Glenda Caudle, Union City Daily Messenger; Kim Cook,The Standard Banner, Jefferson City; Dewain (From left) Front row, J.Todd Foster, Bristol Herald Courier; Mark Stevens and Lesley Hughes, The Erwin Record; Sonya Thompson, The Portland Leader; Shirley Nanney, Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon; Jim Wozniak, Johnson City Press; Scarlet Elliott, The Milan Mirror-Exchange; Sharon Patrick, Southern Standard, McMinnville. Back row, Eddie West, MEEMAN WINNERS – UT-TPA STATE PRESS CONTESTS Staff members of newspapers winning Edward J. Meeman Awards for editorials or public service, from left, Jack McElroy, News Sentinel, Knoxville; Jim Zachary, Grainger Today, Bean Station; Duay O’Neil, The SECOND PLACE WINNERS – UT-TPA STATE PRESS CONTESTS Staff members of newspapers winning second place awards are (from left): Front row, Darrell Richardson and Beverly Majors, The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge; J. Todd Foster, Bristol Herald Courier; Brad Martin, Hickman County Times, Centerville; Glenda Caudle, Union City Daily Messenger; Buddy Pearson, Herald-Citizen, Cookeville; Shirley Nanney, Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon; Melanie Day, The Milan Mirror-Exchange; Donna Smith, The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge; Sharon Patrick, Southern Standard, McMinnville; Steve Marion, ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Newport Plain Talk; Jimmy Hart, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro; and Bill Wellborn, Memphis Business Journal. Rhonda Whaley has been named general manager of The Daily PostAthenian, Athens, bringing to the position 20 years of experience. She has served as accounting manager and business manager. A native of McMinn County, Whaley has lived in Etowah since 1988, the year she took the job as accounting manager at The DPA. She also is regional coordinator for Jones Media in the Tennessee Valley. | Lee Ann Krueger has been named publisher of The Collierville Herald by American Hometown Publishing of Franklin. She spent the last six years with the Shelby Sun Times in Germantown. | J. Stewart Bryan III, chairman of the board of directors of Media General Inc., has announced he will retire, perhaps by the end of September. Media General owns the Bristol Herald Courier. ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Back row, David Harrison,The Westmoreland Observer; Lesley Hughes, Anthony D. Piercy and Mark Stevens, The Erwin Record; Scott Winfree, Carthage Courier; Holly Roeder, Chester County Independent, Henderson; Duay O’Neil, The Newport Plain Talk; Glenna Howington, Citizen Tribune, Morristown; Toby Sells, Memphis Business Journal; Jim Zachary, Grainger Today, Bean Station; Jimmy Hart, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Stop: Safety vests to be required; NNA has them The National Newspaper Association (NNA) is taking orders for the regulation safety vests that all newspaper employees covering accidents or other stories along federal highways will be required to wear. The proper garment is an ANSI Class II-2004-107 safety vest. NNA’s vest will be orange with reflective markings and a Velcro™ closure. In large letters on the back will be the word PRESS, and below that, NNA’s logo. Cost per vest will be small to XL, $15 each plus ship- ping cost. Larger sizes will be $17 each plus shipping. For advance orders, one should call (573) 882-5800. These regulations were established by the U.S. Department of Transportation and will become effective Nov. 24. All media representatives who are working within the rights-of-way of federal-aid highways will be required to wear highvisibility garments. “All workers within the right-of-way of a federal-aid highway who are exposed either to traffic (vehicles using the highway for purposes of travel) or to construction equipment within the work area shall wear high-visibility safety apparel,” the regulation states. NNA President Steve Haynes, Oberlin (Kan.) Herald, is unhappy about the plans to require the vests and has written to FHWA to seek clarification for the application of the new safety vest rule. News media members were added after urging by the Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety. (From www.nna.org) ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Back and front views of the safety vest Leon Alligood laughs heartily as he and Dr. Roy Moore, his new boss, chat for the first time. Dr. Moore is the new dean of the Middle Tennessee State University College of Mass Communications. Alligood joined the School of Journalism Aug. 1 as an instructor. Both were at Drive-In Training and the awards luncheon July 18 in Nashville. Dorris Parkins, left, and daughter Paris attended the awards luncheon July 18.The family newspaper is The Milan Mirror-Exchange. ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Jimmy Hart, foreground, and Scott Broden listen in one of the training sessions July 18. Both are with The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Hart is editor. CMYK ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS AWARDS Worlds apart: Ice, ice, baby FROM PAGE 12 CMYK come soon enough 5. The Tennessean, Nashville. Real solution for U, Mike Morrow BEST PERSONAL COLUMN Group I 1. Grainger Today, Bean Station. The way it seems, Jim Zachary The writer uses clever word play to send the message to his readers – the importance of conducting the public’s business in public. The best entry in a tough class! 2.The Westmoreland Observer. Under my skin 3. The Erwin Record. It’s a rocky road, Mark A. Stevens 4. The Hartsville Vidette. Letting go of the old home place, Liz Ferrell 5. The Millington Star. With love to our champion Group II 1. Robertson County Times, Springfield. Wedding planning craziness, Eric Miller A unique personal experience well recounted! Very readable, good analogy to Iraq War. Nice variety of sentence structure and good pacing. 2. Memphis Business Journal. Never be convinced, Bill Wellborn 3. The News Examiner, Gallatin. The woman behind 4. Overton County News, Livingston. North County Lines, Robert Forsman 5. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Greenback tour, Mary E. Hinds Group III 1. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. What a beautiful Christmas, C. Ernest Williams The object of a personal column is to allow the reader to see the subject through the writer’s eyes. A touching story told in the most heart-felt way. 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Kill your husband, James Clark 3. Crossville Chronicle. The judge... common man, Mike Moser 4. Union City Daily Messenger. Anchoring dreams, Glenda Caudle 5. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Ducker’s sentence too long, Duane Sherrill Group IV 1. The Greeneville Sun. Tobacco auctions gone, Bob Hurley Wow – a great personal story that also tells a lot of history, a lot about the region. I love the inner conflict you set up – loving the farmers and the life, and growing up to see what the product did to your heroes. Lovely prose, powerful memories. I love the sentence, “I will be the whipping boy.” It came at the right moment. Altogether delightful. 2. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Alzheimer’s breaks hearts, Buddy Pearson 3. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. List making not always a sign, Margaret Shuster SEPTEMBER 2008 4. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. What have you done? 5. The Daily Times, Maryville. Making sense of the senseless, Steve Wildsmith Group V 1.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Getting to know you Memphis, Chris Peck Appreciated your assessment on your “new” town. We were told once that it takes 30 years to really be a part of a community. 2. The Tennessean, Nashville. Rosh Hashana, Gail Kerr 3.The Jackson Sun. Filing a complaint, Tom Bohs 4. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Veterans, Sam Venable 5. Johnson City Press. Experience proves BEST PERSONAL HUMOR COLUMN Group I 1. Chester County Independent, Henderson. Aunt Madge’s bra caused power outage, Steve Oden Great stories about kids and boredom are all too rarely told well. Great job! 2. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Milan’s resident psychic, Steve Short 3. The Bartlett Express. This just in from North Pole, Rick Jacobs 4.The Milan Mirror-Exchange.Tomcat spared the knife, Bob Parkins 5. The News Leader, Parsons. TWRA officers resolve hostage situations Group II 1. Hickman CountyTimes, Centerville. Ice, ice baby, Donna S. Wallace This is something that, I think, everyone can relate to. This column had me smiling the entire time, partially because we’re from Nebraska and had lived in Little Rock, Ark. for several years (we remember when the snow “storms” would be reported on!) Wonderful, humorous column – I’d look for it the next time I had the newspaper in my hands. 2. The Herald-News, Dayton. The joys & trials of being a self-employed couple 3. Overton County News, Livingston. North County Lines, Robert Forsman 4. Memphis Business Journal. Dream of traveling horizontal, Bill Wellborn 5. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Playing possum, Linda Brewer Group III 1. The Oak Ridger. Forewarned is forearmed The writer took an obvious black eye to his community and was able to poke fun at the subject, while also making a point that people need to knock off what they were doing. Very nice tongue in cheek humor. 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Getting a taste of candy bar sales BY DONNA S. WALLACE Hickman County Times, Centerville The Yankee and I have decided that if we passed a law that stated that the networks could only report real news with real facts and only things that really mattered, there’d Wallace be a lot more time to air quality programs like Desperate Housewives and WWF Wrestling. Here’s your homework for the week: Sit down and watch the news. I mean really watch it. Pay attention to what is being said. There’s a whole lotta blarney and not much substance. Recently, I was watching The Today Show, and they were interviewing some kind of financial expert and she was all hot and bothered about the possibility of identity theft. I agree that we should all be aware of this. The thing this woman was warning everyone about was those newfangled little credit cards that are about the size of your thumb. You don’t have to sign a slip, you just pass it in front of the speedy reader and go on your way. Apparently, these things are very popular at fast food restaurants in the big cities. The woman was very theatrical in warning just how easy it would be for someone to get your information from this card if he had a portable scanner that was made just for the purpose of stealing your identity. They wouldn’t even have to see the card, just touch their hand held scanner to the outside of your purse. The interviewer was aghast—positively aghast—at how easy it would be for someone to steal your identity this way. Then as an afterthought they casually mentioned that such a machine does not actually exist yet, but if someone was clever enough to build one, then we would all be in danger of losing our identity! Also, most of these little credit cards have a security chip built in that would prevent just such an event from occurring. I looked at the Yankee and said, “Maybe I’m just a little bit slow on the uptake, but did they just spend the 3. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Bike riding more fun with brakes, Duane Sherrill 4. Union City Daily Messenger. Slumber party, Chris Menees 5. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. I can cook, John I. Carney Group IV 1.The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville.Tiny, pampered poodle, Sandy Britt Hilarious. I can completely identify. There is just something to be said with those afflicted with puppy love. 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group II Hickman County Times, Centerville last 20 minutes warning us all that we have to take drastic measures to protect ourselves from something that doesn’t even exist?” “Yuh-huh,” he sighed. Well, let me jot that down on my list of things to fear, right after the boogey-man, but before the monster under my bed. The next night, we were watching the 10 o’clock news. You know you live in Middle Tennessee when you stay up ‘til 10 p.m. just so you can see what Darian Trotter is wearing. That man has got some fashion sense, wooo-eeee! But he doesn’t have any eyelids. You watch the news tonight and see if that ain’t so. The big news was all about the “great snowfall.” All one-half inch of it. Now, I know that northerners make fun of us for closing our schools and rushing to the grocery store and buying up all the toilet paper and bread when we hear the word snow. And I know they think we don’t know how to drive in snow. I would argue two things in our defense: 1. Our snow tends to be wetter than theirs and is mostly ice, or melts a little and then refreezes as ice. No one can drive well on ice. 2. They have nice little six-inch ditches running parallel to their flat roads. Our roads tend to be a little steeper than their and our ditches range from 4 to 40 feet deep and are to be avoided at all cost. Still, I was embarrassed for u all when the reporter went down on one knee and scraped up a pathetic little handful of snow and acted like our blizzard was every bit as bothersome as the one that just buried New York. I was still chuckling about it on Saturday afternoon when Sean and I headed out to El Monte for our usual weekly pigfest. The ride up Toy Hill Road was a little dicey, and I became somewhat alarmed, but once at the top I never gave it another thought. Going down the hill has never been a problem. Until Saturday. 2. Elizabethton Star. Bed pans, urinals, Frank Robinson 3. The Daily Times, Maryville. The rise & fall of the Spoon brothers, Steve Wildsmith 4. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. iPhone’s call too strong, Maria Rice McClure 5. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Words of wisdom Group V 1. Johnson City Press. Dickensian What a horrible idea for a theme We came home all full of tacos and burritos and rice and nachos. We started down the hill very slowly, taking all the safety precautions that my father, the Mayor, taught me years ago. Halfway down my tire hit a piece of sand sticking up out of the ice and we began to spin around. It sounded like a Pentecostal prayer meeting, what with the both of us calling loudly on the name of the Lord. There was a four-foot ditch on the one side of us and a 40-foot drop off on the other and there we sat crossways of the road on the side of a steep hill in a 1995 Nissan Thimble. Sean being Sean, he immediately started yelling at me. “What have you done? I thought you were a good driver!” “You’re the one who just had to have a taco, El Nino!” So, we talked to the Lord some more and He got us back to the top of the hill. We tried Greer Road, and that didn’t work out too well either. Side note to the person who owns the last house on the right just before you drop off the hill: It was not a drunk out there doing donuts in your driveway Saturday night, just a panicky blond in a stick shift. I hope your flowers grow back. At this point, we started trying to think of the names of people whom I hadn’t offended too badly and who might be willing to put us up for the night. There was no one. Finally, we made our way back to Brown Hollow Road and came home the long way, taking that little tin can that the Yankee calls a car through several creeks and over a few fallen logs. I think it might have survived if I hadn’t already drug the front end out from under it in the ditch line on Greer Road. So when the Yankee came home and asked why his car was sitting in the driveway with all four wheels fallen off and big chunks of the frame littering the yard, I looked him square in the eye and said, “I don’t know. It could be that gang of thugs that’s going around perpetrating hate crimes against little foreign cars. It was on the news.” And don’t y’all tell him any different. (Feb. 26, 2007) park. I have read a lot of Dickens, and I cannot imagine ever wanting to visit the orphanage from Oliver Twist or the mansion from Great Expectations. Good column on a funny subject. 2. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Time for more state changes, Sam Venable 3. The Tennessean, Nashville. Soda cans set scene for romance, Gail Kerr 4. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Dogs have place in football, Geoff SEE AWARDS, PAGE 17 The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Awards - 13 How Madge’s bra caused a power outage BY STEVE ODEN Chester County Independent, Henderson “ M i s t e r, w h y can a bird sit on a power line and not get fried?” asked a fifth-grader during my electrical safety demonstration at a local school. I smiled. “Because Oden the bird’s body becomes part of the circuit through which current flows. The electricity cannot get to ground through the bird. It simply flows through. But, if the bird had a longer tail, and it touched the neutral line underneath, while it sat on the live feed...” “ZAAAPPP!” the class cried in unison. Nodding, I added that it wouldn’t be good for the bird or electric consumers. “Sometimes, power outages are caused by odd instances of animals contacting conductors. I’ve seen power outages involving snakes, hawks, owls, possums, raccoons, bats, lizards, big grasshoppers, even a tree frog.” One student pointed out that kites could trigger power outages. “Possible,” I agreed. “It’s very dangerous to fly kites around high-voltage lines. Power interruptions can also be caused by helium balloons, trees, storms, lightning, construction equipment, and auto accidents.” Not knowing how the teacher would react to adult material, I neglected to mention my Aunt Madge’s brassiere. It happened like this: During an early summer’s morning in Appalachia, two young nephews visiting their aunt and uncle’s farm were bored with the barn cats, the hound’s puppies, being chased by the goat, and poking wasp nests under the eave of the smokehouse. Uncle had promised to take them fishing down at the creek, but he was busy replacing the wheel bearing on his old truck. The sky’s blue was crackling; the sun slanted cheery rays through the dust raised by scratching yard chickens and their broods. Ground shadows chased feathery clouds across the hay field, where my cousin and I lay on our backs and played the “I-dare-you game.” “I dare you to put a toad frog in Uncle Bunk’s choppers’ glass,” challenged my cousin, referring to the bedside container in which Uncle kept his false teeth at night. The feat lacked novelty; it had been done before with minnows and tadpoles by our older siblings. I shot back, “I dare you to light a fire cracker and throw it in the outhouse hole.” Again, the dare had an expected consequence and no excitement. We knew our fireworks were too weak and the only result would be a pop, sizzle, and puff of smoke. “I wish we had some dynamite,” said my cousin, wistfully dreaming of the outhouse lifting from explosive force and launching itself into orbit, 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group I Chester County Independent, Henderson The back porch screen door slammed, and Aunt Madge appeared, burdened with a basket of wet laundry, fresh from the wringer washer. The legs of Uncle Bunk’s overalls stood out stiffly from the starch and having been compressed between the rollers. Our aunt was a thickset woman, with thighs the size of molasses barrels and a bust that the word “substantial” failed to adequately describe. In fact, when she performed in the church ladies choir, Aunt Madge always stood in the front row. This kept her from toppling the singer in front when she took a deep breath and belted out an alto verse. She spied us in the field and waved with a dish rag. Bemused, we watched her hang the washing: towels, socks, our jeans and tee-shirts, and her underwear. “I got an idea,” whispered my cousin, “something that’s never been done before in this family.” I was immediately interested. He explained the plot, and I became—as usual—his henchman. The plan was simple and used the most basic theories of engineering and physical dynamics. When Aunt Madge was safely back in the house, we raided Uncle Bunk’s garden and snatched a pair of green watermelons—Rocky Fords, an heirloom variety known for making round fruit—about four pounds each in weight. I caught Old Taze, the mule our uncle had retired when he purchased a McCormick Farmall tractor. We put the mule’s harness around his neck and attached leather traces to the wire that Uncle Bunk had stretched between cedar posts for the clothes line. All the wet laundry was removed except for Aunt Madge’s brassiere. Into the cups we loaded the watermelons. There was room to spare. My cousin’s Great Idea involved using Old Taze to stretch the clothes line and the elastic straps of the bra, then releasing the harness traces to see if the watermelons would be propelled across the barnyard. It seemed reasonable to us that we were creating a giant slingshot. Neither of us had considered how to stop Old Taze and trigger the brassiere cannon, so the mule just kept on walking after I said, “Giddy-up!” The clothes line twanged with tension, but we expected the bra straps to break before Old Taze yanked the cedar posts out of the ground. I ran one way; my cousin fled in the opposite direction. The experiment seemed doomed. But wet elastic is an amazing material. At the point where no more tension could be applied without disastrous effects, the bra tore loose and launched itself into the air...the cup-cushioned watermelons looping one over the other. With the first—and only—launch, we achieved 40 feet of height and about twice in distance. Unfortunately, our field of fire centered the REA transformer pole at the corner of the barnyard. “BOOM!” Lights went out, up and down the hollow. When the rural electric cooperative linemen responded to the outage, they found a charred and sodden brassiere, the DDD cups containing steaming watermelon rind, dangling from the power line. They got a laugh out of it. My cousin and I got a “whupping.” To my knowledge, it was the sole power outage ever caused by a piece of lady’s lingerie, and might still be. (May 10, 2007) Boot camp set for circulators Anderson, Randles and Associates will host its 15th Newspaper Circulation Bootcamp Sept. 17 and 18 in Atlanta. It is designed for publishers, general managers, circulation directors, midlevel and future circulation executives, editors and financial managers. Led by Don Michel and Phil Hanna, the program will focus on what newspaper executives should know about the circulation department and how to build circulation volume. For more information and a registration form, go to www.andersonrandles.com. ROBERT SMITH | THE LEAF-CHRONICLE, CLARKSVILLE Tennessee Titans running back LenDale White has his helmet pulled off by San Diego Chargers Matt Wilhem during the fourth quarter at LP Field in Nashville. The Titans lost in overtime 23-17. (Dec. 10, 2007) Smith 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group IV The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville GEORGE WALKER IV | THE TENNESSEAN, NASHVILLE Walker 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group V The Tennessean, Nashville Titans receiver Justin Gage (12) pulls in a touchdown pass as Jaguars defender Rashean Mathis (27) watches during the fourth quarter. Gage had his best game as aTitan with seven receptions for 90 yards. (Nov. 12, 2007) CMYK The Tennessee Press 16 - Awards SEPTEMBER 2008 AWARDS FROM PAGE 11 FROM PAGE 16 4. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. The media as a weapon, David Melson 5. Crossville Chronicle. Something has to give with the DA, Mike Moser Group IV 1. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Sheriff should give speech, Sam Stockard It’s great to see a newspaper take a stand like this. The public does have a right to know. Without your efforts, they would not have a chance. Keep the heat on. 2. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. City needs leaders 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia. New dog needed, Chris Fletcher 4.The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Don’t shut people out, Alane S. Megna 5. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Alcohol haze, Stan Voit Group V 1. Kingsport Times-News. Lack of honesty I enjoyed your choice of words & sound thinking. Top notch editorial. 2. Bristol Herald Courier. Bring back ETSU football, J. Todd Foster 3. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Lee’s apology, Blake Fontenay 4. News Sentinel, Knoxville. 2008 can’t DAVID FUZZELL | UNION CITY DAILY MESSENGER DWANE WILDER | LAFOLLETTE PRESS CMYK South Fulton’s Molly Ledbetter is safe at third base after sliding through the legs of Obion Central’s Audrey Gilliam during softball action at Troy. (March 27, 2007) Eleven-year-old Brian Holt shows great determination while trying his hand at bunting at the free baseball/ softball camp hosted last week by Campbell County High School. (July 19, 2007) 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group II LaFollette Press Fuzzell 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group III Union City Daily Messenger Getting to know you, Memphis BY CHRIS PECK Editor The Commercial Appeal, Memphis Tomorrow marks five years for me as editor of The Commercial Appeal. I ’ ve l ive d i n Memphis more years than it took to graduate from college. While here, Peck my father died. My mustache turned gray. My children left the house to strike out on their own. I know it’s only been five years. I know I came from the outside, from way out West. My observations about Memphis pale in comparison to narratives that stretch back before Dr. (Martin Luther) King’s assassination, before Elvis got famous, before the yellow fever. In Memphis, five years is barely the flash of a firefly in terms of understanding the layers, nuances, relationships. But know this: I have tried to listen to Memphis—to the sounds of its summer nights, the blues that fill the air, the voices black and white, rich and poor, that so vividly tell the tale of this city. I have tried to learn from Memphis— from the relics at the Pink Palace to the AWARDS Calkins 5. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Numbers mislead, Wendi C. Thomas Wilder SEE AWARDS, PAGE 16 The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group V - Dailies The Commercial Appeal, Memphis artwork on the walls of the Cotton Museum. I have soaked in the history and the context that have shaped Memphis from the days when Front Street was the center of things and Nashville and Atlanta weren’t what they are. I have tried to like Memphis—by searching for Aretha Franklin’s house, attending the COGIC convention in the fall, visiting The Grove for Ole Miss football in autumn and Cotton Carnival galas in spring. I’ve embraced what is here. This is what Memphis asks of those who have any hope of being let in on her secrets. Because I’ve worked as editor in a town where the newspaper has been a force for 167 years, I have been let in just a little. I’m not local enough yet to have gone to a wedding reception at the Memphis Country Club, or to have been invited to a black person’s home for family dinner. But I have glimpsed behind the curtain of civility and hospitality these last five years. Three images have burned into my soul so far: •A long and slow surrender. When she visits the Center for Southern Folklore in Downtown, singer Kate Campbell often sings her Southern anthem “Look Away.” It’s a play on “Dixie” and one stanza sticks in my mind: It’s a long and slow surrender, retreating from the past; It’s important to remember, to fly the flag at half mast. That song has helped me know what Memphians mean when they say in this once Union-occupied city that the Civil War is not over. No, it’s not over. Not by a long shot. Memories of a proud Southern heritage, tinged with confusion over what was noble in the past and what was immoral, persist. A thought: Perhaps Memphis should focus on the next war now. In the next 100 years the city must battle not for its Southern heritage, but for its share of the wealth and privilege that comes from nurturing bright young minds, embracing creative ideas and building a culturally rich, accepting community. Let’s go there. •The conundrum of Beale Street and Bellevue Baptist. A strange tension pulls at Memphis. By day, the city’s more unscrupulous citizens hatch inventive white-collar schemes and outrageous frauds for cheating the system in one of the nation’s most corrupt civic environments. By night, just blocks away from Beale Street, there’s a whole lot of sinning going on: drinking, whoring, murdering, burglaries, bribes and drive-bys. Come Sunday, everyone’s praying. TV preachers, Bellevue Baptists, all the Protestant faiths plus Muslims, Jews and, lately, Latino Catholics are asking for guidance, forgiveness and blessings. What’s up with that? Other places in America have both less sinning and less praying than Memphis. A thought: Perhaps Memphis should talk more about helping people do the right thing first, and spend less effort punishing and saving those who mess up. One idea: Focus on cutting teen pregnancies by educating young men and offering birth control for young women. •Stuck on race. Memphis can’t give it up about race. Even though most everybody eats grits and barbecue and shares an appreciation for azaleas, the city divides most everything else down to black vs. white. In local politics, real estate, even on the radio dial, the color of your skin takes precedence over your heart, brain or guts. Sometimes, you get the sense that Memphians find it easier to fall back on the stereotypes, assumptions and past practices than to try something new to break the mold of history and perception. A thought: Focus on a new civil rights movement, a personal campaign where a black family and a white family volunteer to do something together for Memphis. I am humble about these ideas. It’s not easy, nor simple, to sort through the challenges of this vital and real place. I know more about Memphis, but I don’t know enough. What I do say is that today, when I hear people from out West or, God forbid, the North, spout fuzzy ideas about the South, I say, come to Memphis. When friends, family and colleagues from elsewhere begin to utter seemingly profound statements about race, poverty and evangelical politics in America, I politely say it again—come to Memphis if you want to learn. I came. I’ve learned. Memphis has afforded me an education far beyond the bounds of any classroom: Pimento cheese. Al Green’s church. Rum Boogie Cafe. Room 306 at the Lorraine Motel. Graceland on Aug. 16. Fixin’ to ... Loving on .... So precious. Thanks, Memphis, for five unforgettable years. (Dec. 16, 2007) HEADLINE WRITING Group I 1. The Millington Star I’m sure it helps to have written the story and be able to write a headline you know what the story is all about. I really liked the tennis headline “II-Love.” I may copy your idea and use it myself this spring sports season! 2. The News Leader, Parsons 3. Chester County Independent, Henderson. Ed Farrell 4. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. Ron Caylor 5. The Erwin Record. Keith Whitson Group II 1.The Leader, Covington. Echo Gaines Denmark - Very clever headlines -The “Tricks,Treats” headline is clever, but it’s always risky to put a funny headline on a news story. I think it works, however, in this case. 2. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Linda Brewer 3. The Gallatin Newspaper. Julie Brackenbury 4. Memphis Business Journal. Bill Wellborn 5. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Mia Rhodarmer Group III 1. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Not 2 hurt 2 text, Seth Wright Wonderful combo of text & font 2. The Oak Ridger. Pottty trained golfers 3. The Lebanon Democrat. Trooper fired, Nick Fowler 4.The Paris Post-Intelligencer. It shook hard, then it blew, Ken Walker 5. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Half of our water is gone, David Melson Group IV 1. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. Dying to leave Fantastic! All others in this category should study your headlines. I hope your “Dying to Leave” made an impact. Great job! 2. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Sandy Britt, Brian Dunn 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Hot button, Chris Fletcher 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Ode to Koi 5. Elizabethton Star. Wes Holtsclaw Group V 1. News Sentinel, Knoxville I like, “Once mined, now yours” for feature story, and I like how you can also write news headlines, too. 2. Kingsport Times-News 3. The Tennessean, Nashville. Mark Smith 4. Johnson City Press 5. Bristol Herald Courier. Jerry Shell BEST NEWS PHOTOGRAPH Group I 1. Herald And Tribune, Jonesborough. Tears for freedom, Charlie Mauk All of the photos in this grouping were excellent. You really captured the emotion of the moment. Great job! 2.The Erwin Record. Atrocious, Lesley Hughes 3. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Near tragedy, Scarlet Elliott 4.The News Leader, Parsons. Robbery suspects, Christian Anglin 5. The Portland Leader. Goodbye Group II 1. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Car overturns, Melissa Kinton Great shot – woman’s expression at just the right time! 2. Hickman CountyTimes, Centerville. Rollin’, Bradley A. Martin 3. Carthage Courier.Tractor overturns, Eddie West 4. Independent Appeal, Selmer. Cars for kids 5. The News Examiner, Gallatin. Fringe areas Group III 1. Roane County News, Kingston. Fatal accident I almost cried when I saw this photo – you could tell how difficult it was for this police officer to walk through the duties of the day. You knew the lead before you even looked at the first paragraph. 2. Crossville Chronicle. Lightning strikes, Mike Moser 3. ShelbyvilleTimes-Gazette. Farewell for a hero, Kay Rose 4. The Tullahoma News. A kiss goodbye for dad, Justin Hornkohl 5. The Oak Ridger. Tragedy strikes Group IV 1. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Receiving a flag, Aaron Thompson A very touching photo! 2.The Greeneville Sun. Chased down, Jim Feltman 3. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Carl Brandon, Turner Hutchens 4.The Mountain Press, Sevierville. On the scene, Curt Habraken 5. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Disbelief, Greg Williamson Group V 1. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Farewell to the fallen, Dan Henry The emotional impact of this photo is beyond words. 2. News Sentinel, Knoxville. I hope you rot in jail 3.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Breach of security, Mike Brown 4. The Tennessean, Nashville. Statue honors firefighter, Larry McCormack 5. Bristol Herald Courier. End of the road, Andre Teague Awards - 17 ‘Fore’-warned is forearmed BY RICHARD B. ESPOSITO Publisher The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group III The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge Getting someone’s attention is easy if you know the right word. Loggers commonly yell “Timber!” when felling trees. Photographers often will say “Cheese!” to Esposito get their subject’s attention. And in the world of golf, if you here (sic) the word “Fore!” it’s best to duck for cover, because in golf jargon “Fore!” means the golfer playing behind you took an errant swing and the golf ball is heading your way. Oak Ridge recently got national attention when a local resident decided to submit videos to a Knoxville TV station of several disrespectful golfers brandishing more than their golf equipment in her backyard just off the 18th Hole of the Centennial golf course. This homeowner had been saying “Cheese!” with her video camera as golfers routinely used a tree as a urinal. Not one, not two, not three, but several incidences of golfers urinating in plain view have been captured on film for everyone, including national TV viewers, to see. Not exactly the kind of image our fair city wants. Word has it she has accumulated 18 hours of video to back up her claims of indecent public urination. Urinating golfers isn’t something unique. It does happen elsewhere. But why, guys (we’re assuming the film doesn’t include any squatting women), must you relieve yourself on the 18th Hole? Surely, despite your weak bladders, you could have putted out and taken the extra 80 steps to the Club House. Suggestions of limiting alcohol intake to the “back nine” (holes 10 through 18 for you non-golfers) doesn’t make much sense. Unless you’re playing pro, beer is the beverage of choice for golfers. And for us rookie golfers, our greatest enjoyment is driving the golf cart, looking for lost balls, and drinking beer. This frustrated homeowner decided to take action. And since exposing the matter to the press, she now has an orange port-a-potty visible from her kitchen window. We can’t expect Centennial to place portable restrooms on every hole. This wouldn’t be practical. So what’s a homeowner to do? She and her family could move. Obviously the glamour of living on a golf course has been “tainted” with the activities of urinating golfers. If she ever considers this course of action perhaps the following advertisement might be helpful to her Realtor: “Gorgeous two-story brick home located on prestigious golf course. Four bedrooms, three full baths, and one partial bath with oak tree decor. Enjoy outside living on the deck. Great for entertaining and ‘bird watching.’” But why move? With so many photographs of wayward golfers, she might consider a different approach. Do what the Washington, D.C. madam is threatening to do by exposing her clients to public ridicule. Why not enlarge the photos of the culprits so we can print them in The Oak Ridger? We could feature them like missing kids on milk cartons with a caption that reads “Have you seen this man?” This might curtail future urination visits and offer a whole new definition of “yellow” BEST FEATURE PHOTOGRAPH Group I 1. Chester County Independent, Henderson. Rare summer splash, Julie Pickard Great composition and crop. Kids and water are wonderful subjects and the unusual location makes this pic a keeper. 2. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. And now, the Good Life 3. The Portland Leader. A kiss of thanks, Sonya Thompson 4. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Telling secrets, Shirley Nanney 5. The Erwin Record, As he rode out of sight, Brenda Sparks Group II 1. LaFollette Press. LaFollette splash park, Natasha LaFayette This has all the elements of good photography – patience, framing, innovation and skilled use of equipment. 2. The Daily News, Memphis. American Paper Optics, Brad Johnson 3.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Doing the Turkey Tango, Steve Marion 4. LaFollette Press. Learning to fish, Dwane Wilder 5. Overton County News, Livingston. Cruisin’, Dewain E. Peek Group III 1. The Oak Ridger. Holocaust survivor Great idea of putting the survivor in the forefront with a picture from her youth. The photographer put some thought into creating an image which grabs the reader. The best of the class by far! 2. Union City Daily Messenger. Big swing, David Fuzzell 3.TheTullahoma News. Gone country, Greg Altum 4. Roane County News, Kingston. Exhibition farm journalism. Another option to deter this bad behavior might include the presence of a family pet. I recommend a 90-pound German shepherd trained in the proper rules of engagement. Teaching him to stay out of bounds of the course might be challenging, but no harder than training an adult male to stop peeing against the tree in your yard, I suppose. With golf season now in full swing more attention needs to be placed on golf etiquette. The recent United Way golf tournament was a good start. The Golf Committee did its best to retain civility on the Country Club course. They strategically positioned this volunteer at the Third Hole. This Par 3 offered a cash prize to anyone making a hole-inone. Needless to day, I had one eye on the green and the other on the stand of pine trees along the fairway. And like typical golf tournaments, this one offered “goody-bags” to participating golfers. During the pre-game speech, I explored the contents of one expecting to find the usual trinkets. Sure enough, it included a golf towel—ideal for cleaning your club, golf ball, or hands if necessary. I also found several colorful tees and a small bag of plastic ball markers (perfect for marking the spot)—and not one but two 12-ounce plastic stadium cups. I assume one could be used for your beverage and the other ... well let’s leave that up to your imagination. My parents always brought along an empty coffee can during long road trips when I was a kid. One thing’s for sure. Now that the lid’s been blown off this peeing situation, it will be harder for golfers to relieve themselves on the golf course. And by the looks of the brown trees along the course I’m now beginning to wonder if it was due to the recent hard freeze or if we don’t have a more serious situation on our hands—or should I say in our hands? (May 8, 2007) 5. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. Jail garden, Glenn Tanner Group IV 1. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Just hanging around, Jeff Farrell no comment 2. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. A few pointon 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Line of defense, Thomas Johns 4. Cleveland Daily Banner. River relaxation, David Davis 5. Cleveland Daily Banner. I’m a winner, Donna Kaylor Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville. Landmark to get new letters, John Partipilo Fantastic picture! Will you take picture when new letters are in place? 2. Kingsport Times-News. Fun fest pet dog SEE AWARDS, PAGE 18 CMYK 12 - Awards Tiny, pampered poodle is Mom’s favorite child BY SANDY BRITT The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Like a lot of mothers, mine is a bit crazy, and what she’s most crazy about is her little dog, Bennie. Bennie, a tiny poodle mix, is Mom’s entire focus. She loves Britt him more than my sister or me. That’s a GOOD thing—it keeps her mind on him and off my sister, me and all the things we should or shouldn’t be doing. Mom loves to sit on the porch with Bennie on her lap. When she noticed he liked to rest his head on the chair’s arm, she thought the metal was too hard for his little chin, so she wrapped and taped a towel around it for padding, much to the amusement of the neighbors. But that was the least of her Bennie worries. One time, during winter, Sis left the house and forgot to let Bennie back in from their fenced-in yard. Mom lost her mind, and my phone burned with the 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group IV The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville news of my sister’s unforgivable sin. Mom became obsessed with the notion that they’d forget to let him in ALL of the time, and poor Bennie would freeze into a Popsicle just like Lot’s wife turned into a pillar of salt. She insisted on buying a little dog house to keep on the back porch, so Bennie could find comfort during the horrible hour or so he might have to spend outside if forgotten. But then a new worry: Mom fretted Bennie would be too stupid to go into the dog house. She’d call me and say, “What if he won’t go inside? What if they forget he’s outside again?” I told her dogs aren’t people, they have fur, and that even the dumbest dog knows how to go into a shelter. But it was a lost cause. Mom isn’t content unless she’s worrying herself—or one of her daughters—to death. Mom got the dog house despite her fears, and guess what? Bennie LOVES it. He wants to be in it ALL of the time! Is Mom happy? Yes, because he won’t freeze to death and no, because now he’s “OUT THERE all the time.” She’ll ask me over the phone, “Guess where Bennie is?” I think she’s miffed he’d rather be in the dog house than in with her. Is everyone OK now? Nope. One day, Mom saw Bennie sitting in the yard, “and it was so windy his little ears were just blowing back.” I’m surprised she didn’t put a ski mask on him. This brought my next bright idea: I mailed Bennie a little coat, more for her than for him, because I think he’s smothered enough. The snazzy little coat was rain-resistant, because I know how Mom’s mind works. When it arrived in the mail, she called. Did she tell me how cute it was? Say thank you? NO. She said it was “too small” and that the material would “keep the cold in against his skin.” I realize now that worrying is what makes Mom happy, and with Bennie around, she’ll be deliriously so for a long, long time. (March 7, 2007) CMYK Dickensian park sure to draw large crowds BY JAN HEARNE Johnson City Press Pardon the pun, but England has great expectations for its soon-to-open Dickens World, a theme park based on the novels and times of Charles Dickens. Hearne My friend Sammy in Louisville, Ky. brought this bit of good news to my attention, knowing I would appreciate the humor. Promotional materials say the park “will take visitors on a fascinating journey through Dickens’ lifetime as they step back into Dickensian England and are immersed in the urban streets, sounds and smells of the 19th century.” Eeew. According to one Dickens biographer, Peter Ackroyd, “If a late 20th-century person were suddenly to find himself in a tavern or house of the period. he would be literally sick—sick with the smells, sick with the food, sick with the atmosphere around him.” What, pray tell, are these people 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal humor column Group V Johnson City Press thinking? Still, the creators of Dickens World say “great attention has been paid to the authenticity of the time, characters and story lines” in order to create “a host of captivating attractions,” including—drum roll—Victorian school room. Excuse me while I catch my breath. Can you imagine telling an average American child he is going to visit a Victorian school room for vacation? “Will they have bras there?” he might ask, making a connection, however wrong, between Victorian and Victoria’s Secret ads. Your response will only add to the letdown. Imagine slumped shoulders and the reply, “I think I’d rather stay home and watch TV.” It is unlikely Americans will ever have a theme park built around one of our great authors. We can barely keep their old homeplaces intact. (I would, of course, pay good money to visit Hunter S. Thompson World, but I’m not sure such an attraction would be able to keep visitors safe.) England, however, is sparing no expense to honor its great Dickens. Dickens World in Chatham Maritime Kent will cost £62 million, which in American dollars is, well, a whole lot of money. Based on the illustration at the Dickens World Web site, this money is being spent to re-create a 19th century slum along with a shopping mall, rides, themed restaurants, bars and a multiplex cinema, just as you would find them in “Oliver Twist.” Maybe I missed the part where Fagin spends the day’s take on towels and scented soap from a bath boutique. Dickens World sounds like a 21st-century romanticized version of England in the 1800s. It’s hard to tell whether they are leaning toward realism or whimsy when they promise “a host of costumed characters.” If I remember correctly, some of Dickens’ novels were peopled with pickpockets, beggars, thieves and ladies of the evening. Should you visit this Dickens World, I suggest you keep tabs on your wallet. (April 22, 2007) Milligan gone; Nichols takes communications post Margie Nichols, formerly chief of staff to University of Tennessee President John W. Petersen, has been named interim vice chancellor for communications for the Knoxville campus. Nichols succeeds Tom Milligan, who became executive vice chancellor for university relations at the University of Massachusetts Amherst on Sept. 1. Nichols joined UT in November 2007 as a member of the president’s senior staff. Milligan has represented UT at Tennessee Press Association awards events in recent years. He joined UT in February 2005 after working in public relations at Colorado State for about 13 years. Prior to his public relations work, he worked in newspaper and radio. SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 17 AWARDS 3. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Faces of the homeless, Kathleen Greeson 4. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. RX: don’t smoke, Mark Weber 5. Johnson City Press. Don’t fry BEST SPORTS PHOTOGRAPH Group I 1. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Off to the races, Victor Parkins Love the composition & intensity 2. The Erwin Record. Slam dunk, Lesley Hughes 3. The News Leader, Parsons. Best of the West, Christian Anglin 4. The Portland Leader. This hurdle’s a breeze 5. The Humboldt Chronicle. Cardinal slugger, Barry DeLoach Group II 1. LaFollette Press. On the ball, Dwane Wilder Wow! What an expression! 2. The Courier, Savannah. T-ball at its finest, Amy Reid 3. Carthage Courier. Head-knocker, Eddie West 4.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Eye on backhand 5. The Courier, Savannah. Cardinal senior, Brian Reid Group III 1. Union City Daily Messenger. Splitting the difference, David Fuzzell This one has it all – good exposure, nice crop, eye-catching color reproduction, no background distractions and perfect timing. Definitely ‘got the shot.’ 2. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Tough start, Jimmy Jones 3. The Lebanon Democrat. One win short, Dallus Whitfield 4.The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Acrobatic set, Tommy Bryan 5. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Whew! Statebound champs, Danny Parker Group IV 1.The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Face mask? Robert Smith Great action shot! Football is a brutal game and the photographer captures the moment! 2. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Comeback kids, Ben Winters 3. The Daily Times, Maryville. Coach celebrates, Daryll Sullivan 4. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Breaking backboard, Tony Marable 5. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Rico Foster & Abby Graham Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville. Titans receiver, George Walker Great shot 2. The Tennessean, Nashville. Nashville Superspeedway, Billy Kingsley 3. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Skaters 4. Johnson City Press. Teenagers rule 5. Kingsport Times-News. The Bloomingdale Shooters PUBLIC SERVICE Group I 1. The Humboldt Chronicle. College quest, April Jackson, Danny Wade no comment 2. Chester County Independent, Henderson.Tech center, Ed Farrell, Julie Pickard, Holly Roeder 3. Mt. Juliet News. Sticks & stones, Laurie Everett 4. GraingerToday, Bean Station. Utility district, Jim Zachary, Sarah McCarty 5. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Child abuse Group II 1.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. 3 great subjects done very well 2. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Melissa Kinton, Tommy Millsaps 3. The Gallatin Newspaper. Marjorie Lloyd, Josh Nelson, Julie Brackenbury, Gary Grace 4. Hickman CountyTimes, Centerville. Bradley A. Martin 5. insufficient entries Group III 1. The Newport Plain Talk. Relay for Life, Duay O’Neil Wow! Your coverage of this event seems to make even more events appear and the phenomenal success can’t be argued! 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. 200th/spelling bee/forum 3. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Somali/ horse industry/SSA, René Capley, John I. Carney, Brian Mosely 4. The Lebanon Democrat. Brooks House, Jason Cox, Hayli Morrison, Dallus Whitfield, Bill Cook, Evan McMorris-Santoro, J.R. Lind, Sara McCarty, Laurie Everett, Amelia Morrison Hipps, Kimberly Jordan, Marie Corhern 5.The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Weather, Jennifer Horton, Zack Owensby,Tommy Bryan, Megan E. Bryan, Sam Hatcher, John Bryan Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Suicide; gangs; teen drinking The topics were very timely, of extreme importance to the community. The series (all there presented) were well thought out and planned, with both positive & negative sides explored, and solutions or avenues to solutions investigated & presented. An editorial stance was also presented in each instance, which is important, I feel, in public service. Covering a story is our job. Exploring all facets of a problem & offering solutions is public service. 2. The Daily Herald, Columbia. ImmiSEE AWARDS, PAGE 19 The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 10 Clear, logically structured, fun to read 2. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Get priorities straight, Linda Brewer 3.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Board’s ouster 4. Manchester Times. Don’t blame city 5. LaFollette Press. Pressing issues, Awards - 11 AWARDS Linn Hudson Group III 1. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. No longer will The Post publish the squabble, Sam Hatcher Well-put! Even while admitting your paper’s role. Often editorials are arrogant and ego-centric; this one is definitely not. 2. The Lebanon Democrat. School boards should have taxing authority, Amelia Morrison Hipps 3. Roane County News, Kingston. Time for Pinnacle Pointe developers to repay, Terri Likens SEE AWARDS, PAGE 12 Auctions gone, but lessons linger BY BOB HURLEY The Greeneville Sun Tobacco auctions once fed me, and now that they are gone, I’m hopeful that you will allow me the courtesy to say goodbye. I owe them that. There is no way to Hurley prove this, but when I tell you that I am the last columnist in history to be taught in a tobacco field, you can believe it. That revelation came to me this week when I heard that there would be no tobacco auctions in Greeneville this fall. The auction system that fed me and taught me as a child is gone from Greeneville, never to return. I know. I know. You probably don’t give a hoot that this part of our past is finally over with and done. But some of us do care. It would be too much of a stretch for me to say that all I ever needed to know to write this column was learned while working in tobacco, so I won’t say that. But I can safely say that you wouldn’t be reading this if I hadn’t first learned my lesson so well in the tobacco fields of western Greene County. I didn’t come today to toot tobacco’s horn. That’s not my job. Besides, the big tobacco companies are still paying big bucks to the well-dressed crowd on Madison Avenue to do that. Frankly, I wouldn’t have the job anyway. It is way over my head. Marilda says she thinks we will live to see the day when cigarette smoking is outlawed in this country. As for me, I don’t know. Like I said, hot-button issues like this one are way over my head. But it is clear that we are moving in the direction that Marilda favors. If cigarettes were invented today, they would be illegal, she keeps reminding me. All that from a country girl who grew up on a tobacco farm? She can tell you more than you want to know about tobacco hornworms and sweating in the August sun, but if you choose to smoke around her, may the Lord have mercy on your cigarette-smelling head. Cigarettes have always been made in cities with names such as Winston-Salem, Durham and Richmond, but it was in Greeneville and scores of other much 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group IV The Greeneville Sun smaller towns like it where farmers and tobacco companies came face to face at tobacco auctions. The auctions that have been held the past two years have been little more than reminders that an era is now gone. But the real decline started earlier when the tobacco companies jointly agreed to pay billions of dollars to settle a lawsuit by farmers in North Carolina who had charged the companies had been fixing prices for years. For as long as I can remember, there have been questions about the auction system, but, hey, it was all we had in 1957 when I was 13 and hungry as a stray dog all the time. And my mama always had questions about smoking. She begged me not to smoke. But I had to be cool like Bogart, and like John Wayne, “The Duke,” as we called him. Even big-league baseball players told me it was cool to smoke in those slick magazine ads. My mama knew we had to have the money from tobacco just like she knew cigarettes were bad news for me after I began smoking them in my foolish high school days. Merle Travis knew it in the late 1940s when he penned a country hit for Tex Williams called “Smoke, Smoke, Smoke That Cigarette.” Sing along if you have the breath: “Smoke, smoke, smoke that cigarette. Puff, puff, puff until you smoke yourself to death. Tell Saint Peter at the Golden Gate that you hate to make him wait, but you’ve just got to have another cigarette.” Williams, a chain smoker, died of lung cancer. So did The Duke. So did some of those big-league baseball players who looked so cool in Look and Life magazines. Nobody made me smoke. Quite the opposite: I broke my mama’s heart every time I would light up. It was so easy to be stupid when I was 13 years old, 10 feet tall and bulletproof. Henry Emerson Hurley, my oldest grandson, will be two years old this fall. I’ve already begun telling him that he is far too smart to repeat the sins of his poor old granddaddy. I have also begun telling Henry the story of how tobacco not only fed me when I was a lad, but how it also taught me to work and live in a world that was only slightly competitive in the 1950s compared to the world he is facing. It would not be right, it seems to me, to let the old auction system fade away into history without at least some acknowledgement that it not only bought groceries and shoes on the dusty roads at Mohawk, but that it also built schools and churches and even hospitals. I will be the whipping boy. It raised me and provided me the only educational credentials I have ever received. Remember, there are no college degrees on my wall. There is only a fading diploma from a high school on the backroads of Mohawk, dated 1962. The tobacco culture that once so completely dominated my life has now all but disappeared from Mohawk. There might be a tobacco farmer or two left with a Mohawk address, but you’d need a full tank of gas to find them. But just before the last door is closed on the last burley barn at dear old Mohawk, could I just say a word or two of thanks and farewell to the people who spent their lives teaching me to write this column by growing a crop that much of the world would one day come to loathe? They are the same people who taught me that hard work is not only a requirement to get along in this life, but that it can be very rewarding as well. I didn’t know it at the time, but I loved those people in the 1950s. I love them even more today. I feel compelled to tell their story. I wish there were some way to tell every story of every tobacco farmer who touched my life with a lesson I use every time you read one of my columns. The passing of 50 years has only made me appreciate those people more. They didn’t know it at the time, but they were filling my life with the kinds of gentle lessons and memories that every kid needs and deserves. “Who was the best teacher you ever had?” Marilda asked a few nights ago during one of our front porch sessions with the lightning bugs. “Tobacco,” I said without giving it a second’s thought. Later that night, after Marilda had drifted off to sleep beside me, I wondered where I’d be and what I’d be doing if I hadn’t had tobacco for a teacher. (July 21, 2007) CMYK The Tennessee Press 18 - Awards VICTOR PARKINS | THE MILAN MIRROR-EXCHANGE Milan sophomore Dominique Hoyle ran wind sprints during the Bulldogs’ first workout of the 2007 season. The Dogs will continue workout sessions until their season opener. (July 10, 2007) Parkins 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best sports photo Group I The Milan Mirror-Exchange Jones gets ETSU Excellence Award The East Tennessee State University Foundation and ETSU recognized Tim P. Jones with the Margin of Excellence Award during the Distinguished President’s Trust annual dinner for the university’s top contributors held recently in Kingsport. The Margin of Excellence Award was established in 2002 to acknowledge individuals who “go above and beyond the call of duty” in supporting the mission of ETSU and the Foundation. Each honoree receives a medallion and crystal bowl. Jones, who was vice president and general manager of Carl Jones Newspapers until the sale of that media group by his family, has been a leading force in the Johnson City community through volunteerism and support of civic is- sues, ETSU said. He and his family were instrumental in making the Johnson City Public Library a reality and have advocated other initiatives beneficial for the city’s downtown area. Jones has also exhibited outstanding commitment and devotion to ETSU, serving as Foundation chairman from 2003-07. During his tenure, alumni and friends of the university gave more than $69 million to the Foundation, almost $28 million of which was designated for scholarships and other endowments. In 1997, the ETSU Alumni Association named him an honorary alumnus. He and his wife, Valda, are members of the President’s Trust Platinum Society and the ETSU Legacy Circle for their generous support for the ETSU Foundation. SEPTEMBER 2008 What a beautiful Christmas it was for me and my wife! BY C. ERNEST WILLIAMS The Paris Post-Intelligencer It was a beautiful Christmas Day in South Texas, and the celebration of the incarnation of the Son of God became deeper for me than it had ever been before. Williams I spent the day watching my wife die of breast cancer. It may seem odd to write that it was a beautiful and intimate experience, but it was just that. She had been diagnosed with the disease 13 years ago and had enjoyed nine years free of any symptoms. We traveled the North American continent together in a recreational vehicle, served churches together in three states and enjoyed a wonderful retirement. Four years ago, her cancer was found to be active again, and since then there has been a regular routine of chemotherapy and radiation treatments. These also were shared and became CMYK FROM PAGE 9 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group III The Paris Post-Intelligencer part of the story of our marriage. Even as she progressed from a walker to a wheelchair to a hospital bed and finally a hospice facility, each step was a new adventure in which I learned anew how to love her. Ginny was a nurse. She had the temperament and the intellect to be a superb nurse. She practiced pediatric nursing in Albany, N.Y. and Trenton, N.J. Then after marrying me in 1973, she spent 14 years with St. Joseph’s Infant Home in suburban Cincinnati, Ohio—first as a volunteer, then renewing her license in Ohio and joining the staff as a nurse, and then becoming director of nursing. St. Joseph’s was a special place for special children who were severely brain-damaged, multiply-handicapped and profoundly retarded. Some had been resuscitated at AWARDS 2. LaFollette Press. Linn Hudson 3. News-Herald, Lenoir City. Linda Brewer 4. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City 5. The Herald-News, Dayton. John Carpenter Group III 1. The Lebanon Democrat. Amelia Hipps The writer writes decisively and lays out the facts that lead to her conclusion, bringing the reader along. Well-written and very readable. Congratulations! 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville 3. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. Bill Williams 4. The Oak Ridger 5. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Sam Hatcher, John B. Bryan Group IV 1. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Stan Voit Engaging writing about important public issues. Shorter paragraphs – and shorter editorials – would be even better. But these pieces definitely serve the public. 2. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Chris Fletcher 3. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Alane S. Megna 4. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Sam Stockard 5. The Daily Times, Maryville. Dean Stone Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville. Mike Morrow I like the challenges these editorials present to readers: 1) What’s needed to keep hockey team. 2) A great endorsement for mayor – challenging voters to make good choice. 3) And, best of all, seeking support for Fisk University and keeping artwork in Nashville! 2.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Editorial Board 3. Bristol Herald Courier. Andrea Hopkins 4. Chattanooga Times Free Press 5. Kingsport Times-News birth, when death would have been certain and might have been more benevolent. Some had been born with abnormalities. One had fallen on his head from a third-floor window. One had been beaten into insensibility by an adult. Virginia, as director of nursing, had to deal with the families of these children. One parent might devote such exclusive attention to the care of this child that the spouse and other children were left out, and a separation occurred. Another parent might be so unable to accept a “defective” child that he or she would abandon the family. Ginny showed amazing patience and compassion in dealing with these families. In her position, she was in charge of planning an expansion of the facility. The state passed a law which said that any facility which had more than eight patients was a hospital and had to have a doctor on hand 24 hours a day and a number of other things St. Joseph’s couldn’t afford. So it was decided that several eightpatient cottages would be built on the It takes a reporter “Federal whistleblower legislation protects employees who step forward with accounts of wrongdoing in government or corporate America.... Yet without a committed reporter on BEST SINGLE EDITORIAL Group I 1. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. DCS dropped the ball, Bob Parkins Well crafted. Very emotion-packed. This editorial gets its point across well. A nice, big screaming headline would have been more effective, though. Do not use exclamation points. Let your words be the exclamation point. This piece stands head and shoulders above the rest. Good job. 2. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Tabling county business, Jim Zachary 3. Mt. Juliet News. Questionable backgrounds, Laurie Everett 4. The Millington Star. Patience crucial 5. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Absurdity, Ron Park Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. We see no reason SEE AWARDS, PAGE 11 campus. My wife was the one responsible for planning the kind of facilities that would be needed for nearly doubling their clientele of 32 children. She did it excellently, and I was very proud of her. Ginny was also a minister’s wife, and loved it. She loved the Lord Jesus, loved His church and loved the pastor. Together, we did things I would not have been able to do alone. In several churches, she prepared, and I led, a Passover celebration in which the words and acts of Jesus at His last Passover with His disciples were presented. Congregations learned to eat borscht, gefilte fish, matzo ball soup, lox and other Jewish delicacies. They learned what piece of bread Jesus broke—the second of a group of three!—what cup he passed and what normally happens at the time when Jesus got down and washed the disciples’ feet. She loved being hostess at events in the manse; she loved teaching children in the Sunday school and directing youngsters in Christmas and Palm Sunday presentations; and loved preening me to make me look as good as possible Partipilo If...then hand to bring the story to the public’s attention, these individuals would be whistling in the dark.” Neal Shapiro President, NBC News, 2004 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group V The Tennessean, Nashville FROM PAGE 18 before entering the sanctuary. I loved walking out after the benediction, taking her by the hand, and leading her to the doorway to greet the people with me as they departed—and the people loved it, too. Christmas was always special between us, and never more than this year. She acknowledged my presence, although she could no longer speak. She knew we were together, and was calm and free of pain. The image in my mind, strangely, was that of a pilot preparing to land an airliner. It doesn’t happen all at once. There is a sequence of events. You feel the power cut back to the engines; you see the lights go on; you feel it when the wing flaps go down; you hear the landing gear clunk down into position; and finally comes the touch down. I watched Ginny as if she were going down a checklist, as one body system after another shut down until she finally came in for a perfect, almost imperceptible landing. She could not have received a more beautiful Christmas gift. (Jan. 15, 2007) “If journalists cannot be trusted to guarantee confidentiality, then journalists cannot function and there cannot be a free press.” Judith Miller Reporter, The New York Times, 2004 JOHN PARTIPILO | THE TENNESSEAN, NASHVILLE Willie Daniels, left, and Rick Harding, in the basket, take down the S on the BellSouth Building in downtown Nashville. The building, often called the Batman building, will be renamed the AT&T Building. AT&T bought BellSouth (in 2006). (April 4, 2007) The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 gration; crime, freedom of information 3. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. DUI, Jeff Ferrell, Derek Hodges, Stan Voit 4. The Greeneville Sun. Director of schools; rediscover Greeneville 5. The Daily Times, Maryville. Community; fire victims, Anna C. Irwin, Iva Butler, Jessica Stith, Bonny C. Millard Group V 1. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Taking a stand Thank you from the rest of us for standing up for what is right. This is why we are in the business – it is our job & duty to keep government honest. 2. Bristol Herald Courier. Government salaries 3. The Tennessean, Nashville. Escaping justice 4. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Faces of the homeless 5. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Memphis & the world BEST SPECIAL ISSUE OR SECTION Group I 1. The Humboldt Chronicle. Got Berries, April Jackson, Danny Wade, Beverly Ward I loved the wide array of pictures and articles that described the event. Sounds like the community is very involved with this festival & through this section there are many color photos/ads to bring it all together & enjoyable to look through. 2. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Visitors Guide, Jim Zachary 3. The Millington Star. Progress 2007 4. Mt. Juliet News. Our Home 5. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. A Storybook Christmas, Ron Caylor, Kristen Swing, John Kiener, Sarah Winters, Charlie Mauk, Bea Casey, Heather E. Seay, Lynn J. Richardson Group II 1. The Rogersville Review. Old Times Advertising sales is phenomenal in this section. Print quality is good. Paper took a novel subject – old times – & made it to 4 sections of money. Good historical articles – like Sultana sinking, etc. 2. Macon County Chronicle, Lafayette. Heart of True Love 3. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Skyway News, Mia Rhodarmer, Melissa Kinton, Tommy Millsaps, Michael Thomason, Dan Baker, Megan Stitz, JeanTallent, Sharon Livingston, Phylis Bellamy 4.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Community 2007 5. The Courier, Savannah. Hardin County Visitors Guide, Terry VanEaton Group III 1. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Tennessee Walking Horse Celebration, The Advertising & News Staff of The Shelbyville Times-Gazette AWARDS A beautiful edition paying tribute to the celebration of the heartbeat of your community. 2. The Newport Plain Talk. A Place Called Home 3. Crossville Chronicle. Pride 4. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Remember When 5. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. The Holidays, Gay Francisco, Leslie Jensing Group IV 1. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Playmakers, Buddy Pearson, Thomas Corhern, Craig Delk Good variety of stories and pictures, advertising, etc.The area covered is very extensive and must be very appreciated. I’m impressed with the schedule and preview. I also thought the “Players to Watch” and “Games to Watch” added to the section. 2. Elizabethton Star. A Salute to All Carter Co. Veterans, Rozella Hardin, Janie McKinney, Franklin Robinson, Awards - 19 ENGRAVINGS Bryan Stevens 3. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Common Threads 4. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Salute to Fort Campbell 5. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. World Champions Group V 1. Bristol Herald Courier. Straight & Narrow on the Crooked Road This is obviously a major investment of time & resources for the paper. Excellent use of color, great ad support. Section is “earmarked” & divided well for the reader. A collector’s edition. I wanted to keep reading, but had to move on. The only part I would criticize is the cover – which is a little too “busy” & confusing for my taste. 2.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Stax ‘n Soul 3. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Chattanooga Now MainStreet Media, LLC, the parent company of The Wilson Post, has been selected one of the Future 50 businesses in the Nashville region by the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce. The award is presented annually to 50 fastest-growing privately-owned companies headquartered in Middle Tennessee. “This year’s competition was made especially difficult,” said Charles Sueing, chairman of the Chamber’s small business council, because of the number of nominees. “It goes to show the strength of these companies, despite the challenges of a less-than-perfect economy,” he said MainStreet Media owns and publishes community newspapers in Middle Tennessee and also publishes senior lifestyle periodicals in Middle Tennessee and Florida. The company also operates a web press publishing division in Lebanon, where it prints its own Tennessee publications as well as several other nearby publications. The publishing division prints advertising inserts for newspapers, company newsletters, tourism maps, school newspapers and provides other commercial printing products for customers outside the company. In Tennessee, MainStreet Media’s newspaper holdings, besides The Wilson Post in Lebanon, include community newspapers in Franklin, Smithville, Lafayette and Gallatin. It also publishes Mature Lifestyles, a monthly magazine distributed in five Middle Tennessee counties. Other senior lifestyle titles are in Sarasota, Fort Myers, Tampa, St. Petersburg and Ocala, Fla. The Future 50 awards are sponsored by the Bank of America, The Tennessean, Nashville, KraftCPAs and Frost Brown Todd. Recipients are to be honored at a banquet Sept. 18. (From The Wilson Post, Lebanon, Aug. 6, 2008) SEE AWARDS, PAGE 20 CMYK The Tennessee Press 10 - Awards 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single ad Dailies Kingsport Times-News (Aug. 10, 2007) Andy Barnes 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single ad Non-dailies Overton County News, Livingston (Dec. 19, 2007) Darren Oliver FROM PAGE 19 4. The Tennessean, Nashville. 100 Years in Nashville 5. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Paid in Full SUNDAY EDITIONS Dailies 1. The Tennessean, Nashville •Wow! Where do you start? There aren’t enough good things to say about this paper. Great in-depth writing, local issues and local voices. Great color quality and pages that are easy to read and easy to use. Not that I’d suggest such a thing, but if a newspaper could keep somebody home from church, this would be it. 2. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 3. The Jackson Sun 4. Chattanooga Times Free Press 5. Johnson City Press CMYK PROMOTION OF NEWSPAPERS Dailies 1. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Baby contest, Thomas Browne Awesome idea! Followed through with enough meat to see that it succeeds. AWARDS 2. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Talent search 3. The Daily News, Memphis. Law week, Jen Simmons 4. Johnson City Press. Her, Suzanne Huron 5. Elizabethton Star. Trustworthy source, Eveleigh Hatfield, Harvey Prichard, Phyllis Davis Non-dailies 1. Southern Standard, McMinnville. US campaign I loved it! Your “turn to us” is a terrific inventive campaign. Awesome! 2. The Erwin Record. Promotion series, Mark A. Stevens, Anthony D. Piercy, Lesley Hughes, Betty Davis, Brenda Sparks, Keith Whitson, David Thometz 3. The Gallatin Newspaper. Who we are 4. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. Stuck on Charlie, Ron Caylor, Charlie Mauk, Lynn J. Richardson 5. Lake County Banner, Tiptonville. Valentine BEST SINGLE ADVERTISEMENT Dailies 1. Kingsport Times-News. Tomato Fest III As the last entry in this category I looked at, the ad really jumped out at me. The use of color, the easy-toread font & the size used for the font all helped to make up an attractive & informative ad. Great composition! 2. Bristol Herald Courier. Farmers Market 3. The Greeneville Sun. Donate life 4. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Adopt me, Emily Goad 5.The Paris Post-Intelligencer. All they want for Christmas, Jacquta Burke Non-dailies 1. Overton County News, Livingston. Santa’s office help, Darren Oliver Very personal touch. The kids’ costumes and naming them I am sure caught reader’s eye to see if they knew any of them. Nice incorporation of the bank’s slogan with Santa’s Office. 2. Carthage Courier. Red hot buys 3. Macon County Chronicle, Lafayette. World finance 4. The Erwin Record. We play hard, Anthony D. Piercy, Cathy Huskins, Mark A. Stevens 5. The News Leader, Parsons. Home & garden show, Mark Trimmer It is likely that an Oct. 7 meeting in Nashville will help many voters across America decide who they want to be our next president. That’s when the third of three presidential debates will be held at Belmont University. We began brainstorming our coverage plans last week. Now, the Belmont “debate” won’t be a classic political debate — two candidates standing at podiums fielding questions from a moderator or a panel. Rather, a town hall meeting format will have the candidates answer questions and talk with a group of undecided voters from across the country, folks selected by the commission that stages the debates. This will be the final debate for the candidates. Its timing in early October and its open format suggest the Belmont session may play a critical role in the campaign. But why plan coverage so early, especially when the event will be covered by national political reporters anyway? One of our missions is to cast national issues in a local context. To make the Belmont debate especially meaningful, we intend to show the potential impact on Tennessee of the candidates’ stands on the issues that by then will have become central to the campaign. All Sides, Angles Covered We’ll look at the issues in advance of the Belmont meeting — outlining the stakes, noting previous positions and pointing out any factual flaws with the claims or promises. Afterward, we will assess what was said — again, from a Tennessee perspective. We will interview the people at the town hall session for their take, and we will ask for your views as well. We also will provide coverage of the thousands of people who will come to Nashville for the event — national print, broadcast and online media as well as political operatives for both campaigns. We hope to share with you their observations of the campaign as well as their view of Nashville. Fact is, while this will be an important moment in the presidential campaign, it also will be a very big moment for Belmont University and Nashville. It will place the university and the city on the world stage for a reason other than the music industry, health care or our other calling cards. To accomplish our coverage goals, we’ll likely have four reporters assigned to the debate — before, during and after. Two editors will work on the coverage, plus at least two photographers and one videographer. We will provide updates from Belmont on Tennessean.com throughout the debate. We’re also toying with another idea — creating our own town hall meeting for selected local residents. Perhaps we will ask representatives of each campaign to participate. Perhaps we will conduct our town hall online. Perhaps we will invite voters to discuss the issues at a meeting at The Tennessean offices or at another venue. As we develop our coverage plans, I’d like to hear from you. Would such a local town hall meeting approach be worthwhile? What other coverage would you like to see? Please let me know. It’s not too soon to plan. (June 29, 2008) ENGRAVINGS T he Tennessee Education Association awarded two statewide School Bell Awards for excellence in media coverage of education May 9 in Nashville. Ann Wallace, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, won for outstanding coverage by an an individual reporter, and Alice Dollar, Newspaper in Education manager at the News Sentinel, Knoxville, won for outstanding coverage by a large daily newspaper. SCMA elects three The Southern Circulation Managers Association elected three Tennesseans to the board of directors at its 79th annual conference April 20 through 23 in Baton Rouge, La. Jim Boyd of the News Sentinel, Knoxville, was named second vice president. Glen Tabor of the Kingsport Times-News was elected treasurer, and Dale Long of The Greeneville Sun was named director at large. Wendi C. Thomas, columnist with The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, has been inducted into the Scripps Journalism Hall of Fame after winning multiple first place awards in Thomas Scripps writing contests for commentary. The newspaper celebrated with her on July 14 She joins the likes of Geoff Calkins, Alan Spearman and the now-departed David Waters of The Commercial Appeal in the hall of fame. Thomas attended Memphis schools and Butler University in Indiana, where she graduated with a degree in journalism. She has been a reporter or an editor at The Indianapolis Star, The Tennessean, Nashville, and at the Charlotte (N.C.) Observer. In August 2003, Wendi returned to Memphis after a 14-year absence to be the metro columnist for her hometown paper. Her column appears on Sundays. | John Sale, Jim Weber and Alan Spearman won the National Press Photographers Association first quarter of 2008 Best Use of Photography Clip Contest. They are with The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. The clip was the front page of Feb. 7, lead headline, “Lives Lost and Tarred,” about a tornado’s effect in West Tennessee. | The Office of Communications and Marketing at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has won 23 awards from the Volunteer Chapter of the Public Relations Society of America, including two first place awards for Tennessee Today, the new faculty/staff communications program. In all, UT won 28 awards. In addition to the 23 won by UT Knoxville’s Office of Communications and Marketing, the UT system won two awards and the Institute of Agriculture won three awards. The honors were announced April 10 at the annual awards dinner sponsored by the local PRSA chapter. Of the 23 awards garnered by UT’s Office of Communications and Marketing, seven were Awards of Excellence, nine were Awards of Quality and seven were Awards of Merit. “We have a great staff,” then-Vice Chancellor for Communications Tom Milligan said. “It’s important that we measure our work against the very best in our city and region. It’s very gratifying to be supporting University of Tennessee and have our good work recognized by our peers.” The Office of Communications and Marketing won Awards of Excellence for Tennessee Today in both the internal relations and electronic newsletters categories. The faculty/staff newsletter is distributed weekly in print, as well as daily in electronic and Web forms. Assistant Director of Media Relations Amy Blakely won two Awards of Excellence for writing, one for press releases detailing how renowned UT forensic anthropologist Bill Bass was enlisted to examine the exhumed remains of the Big Bopper and one for a Tennessee Alumnus feature about Fr. Bernard O’Connor, a UT alumnus now working at the Vatican. UT Knoxville’s Office of Communication and Marketing won Awards of Quality for the following: •Tennessee Governor’s Academy publicity efforts, in the category of public service. Those most involved were Media Relations Coordinator Jay Mayfield and Angie Dobbs. •The Donor Leadership Appreciation Event invitation designed by Baker. •“Homegrown Music,” a Tennessee Alumnus feature written by Blakely. •eTorch, a monthly electronic newsletter delivered to alumni. Those most involved were Editor Diane Ballard and Web Designer Leigh Shoemaker. •The Ready for the World Web site designed by Darren Hughes. •The UT National Alumni Association Tour Program direct mail materials designed by Lee Hume. •The safety program, which included Fort Sanders Safety Day, posters, booklets and other crisis communications materials. Those involved included the Media + Internal relations team, Powell and Designer Jill Sanders. •“Where in the World is Smokey?” a community relations project aimed at focusing attention on the Ready for the World initiative. The program is coordinated by Blakely. •“Alexander and Gordon at Forefront of Scientific Leadership,” a column written by Mayfield. The office won Awards of Merit for: •“AUTumn in Knoxville” faculty/ staff appreciation event publicity materials designed by Dobbs. •The “Taking PrecaUTions” safety poster series written and edited by Powell and designed by Sanders. •“Harry Potter,” a press release written by Blakely about a law professor who is a Potter aficionado. •Reaching Out, a magazine about UT’s community service and outreach efforts edited by Powell and designed by Sanders. •utk.edu, the university’s main Web site designed by Hughes. •Cultural Attraction Series direct mail materials edited by Mary Marshburn and designed by Dobbs. •“All That Glitters Is Orange,” a brochure describing services provided by the Office of Communications and Marketing, written and edited by Powell and designed by Sanders. The UT system office received two Awards of Excellence, one for President John Petersen’s 2007 tour of campuses and one for “A Statewide Campus,” the 2007-2008 TV commercial. The Institute of Agriculture received Awards of Quality for a TV news story on UT Extension’s Tai Chi program, written and produced by Chuck Denney and Doug Edlund, and its Third Thursday newsletter, written by Margot Emery and designed by Donna Hundley. The Institute won an Award of Merit for “Do You Want to Help the World?”, an undergraduate recruitment catalog written by Mary Albrecht and designed by Rich Maxey. The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 AWARDS ENGRAVINGS Belmont debate to spotlight Nashville BY MARK SILVERMAN Editor, The Tennessean, Nashville SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 8 2. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 3. Citizen Tribune, Morristown 4. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville 5. Elizabethton Star. Bryan Stevens, Janie McKinney, Robin Johnson Group V 1. Chattanooga Times Free Press Wonderful, wonderful sections from pets to hats to a 47-year-old in a marching band.You provided your readers with touching down-to-earth well-written, nicely packaged stories. 2. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 3. The Tennessean, Nashville 4. News Sentinel, Knoxville 5. Bristol Herald Courier SPORTS WRITING Group I 1. The Erwin Record. Kevin Lewis, Bryan Stevens, Lesley Hughes, Anthony D. Piercy Strong writing on unusual sports (by Bryan Stevens) leads to an excellent section. Staff covered wide range of sports including individuals & coaches and former players. 2. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Shirley Nanney, Jim Steele, Lorna Jablionski, Ron Park, John Latham, David Hampton 3. Smithville Review 4. The Middle Tennessee Times, Smithville. Brent Arnold 5. Herald And Tribune, Jonesborough. Heather E. Seay, Steven LeMaster Group II 1. LaFollette Press. Dwane Wilder Very nice leads (though they could be shorter & more crisp) Wonderful blend of personal side of sports outside the lines with game account. Use of interesting & non-typical treatments of writing a plus. Tons of quotes – reader gets it straight from the coach’s/athlete’s mouth first hand. Very well done! Congratulations. 2. Carthage Courier. Scott Winfree 3.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Darren Reese 4. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Corbitt Hollingsworth, John Taylor 5. The Herald-News, Dayton. Cathy Barnes Group III 1. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Danny Parker, Gary Johnson •Both writers showed great expertise in their writing skills. Sentence structure was excellent, the stories were easy to read from start to finish. •Some leads were stronger than the others in capturing attention, but overall they were well written. •I especially enjoyed the features on Ryan Morton and the one on the QB- Awards - 9 Wedding planning craziness well worth end results BY ERIC MILLER Robertson County Times, Springfield Planning a wedding is a lot like the Iraq war—seemingly easy to accomplish goals that end up causing a lot of suffering and costing a great2 deal of time and money. Of Miller course, fairy tales aren’t cheap and for the 50 percent of marriages that don’t end in more suffering and more money spent, the effort is all worth it in the end. Now, I’ve just gotten married so, statistically speaking, the jury’s still out, the chips have yet to fall where they may and other such whatnot. That said, I believe that my wife and I have what it takes to die of old age within feeble reach of one another and I’m not just saying that to justify the cost of our fairy tale. When I first proposed to my wife—in Spanish because I could pretend I meant to ask her to pass the butter if her reaction were less than favorable—I believed planning a wedding would be quick and easy. Preacher, church, flowers, food and you’re out. And, of course, being boastfully faux-confident like a man who sees his fiancee’s ex-boyfriend and says, “I could take him,” I told my bride-to-be that planning a wedding could easily be done in three months. One case of antacids and three separate but similarly empty bank accounts Center friendship: Those stories did an excellent job of drawing in interest. 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville 3. The Tullahoma News 4. The Lebanon Democrat 5. The Newport Plain Talk. Seth Butler, Paul Meador Group IV 1. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Buddy Pearson, Craig Delk •All-around quality writing. Stories all opened with solid leads that drew me into the story. Preview stories had me looking ahead to games with anticipation. Game stories were actual stories instead of 1st quarter-4th quarter playby-play. Excellent work! 2. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Justin Lamb, Marion Wilhoite, Ryan Callahan 3.The DailyTimes, Maryville. Leonard Butts, John Brice 4. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville 5. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Jason Davis, Cobey Hitchcock, Lionel Green Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville •Mr. Kuharsky does a great job of telling these stories, the ones away from the bright lights and adoring enablers. Real stories about real people who happen to be involved with sports. 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group II Robertson County Times, Springfield later, this shell-shocked groom and his sparkling bride were at the altar. Despite three months of epic stress, we managed to get everything together. All of the groomsmen had their tuxedos and the bridesmaids were wearing their matching dresses and all had made it safely to our sides at the altar. I bit my tongue as four more junior bridesmaids that I felt to be entirely unnecessary lined up behind the bridesmaids, which I guess was in case any of them wanted to tag out. Then, four flower girls with a justhappy-to-be-here-and-ooh-a-shinyobject attitude later, my bride walked down the aisle. Her startling beauty stopped my grumbling and reminded me to enjoy the moment. Hand-in-hand, we ascended the stairs and entered our fairy tale. That is, of course, if fairy tales ended with a punch-line. After months of stress and hard work and managing to pull together a beautiful ceremony, we were absolutely blindsided by the preacher. Dressed in a suit with a red shirt and red tie that made me think of how the devil would have been dressed in a bad ‘80s movie and aided by an interpreter to translate the Spanish ceremony into English, the preacher turned the altar into a stage and he chewed the scenery like he was trying to win an award. We were treated to nearly an hour of what was a mixture of wedding ceremony, premarital counseling and a sermon full of brimstone. Random is an accurate way to describe the preacher’s approach. I believe it may be the first wedding ceremony to ever feature the word “fornicate” in two languages and I will swear on a stack of Bibles that he asked everyone in the audience to give their spouses “some honey” right there in the church, which I am reasonably sure meant he wanted everyone to kiss each other. Except for the bride and I, of course. Instead of telling us when to kiss, we just waited until he paused and then waited some more to make sure that pause wasn’t some sort of trick before I lifted my wife’s veil and gave her the wedding kiss we had been practicing for weeks for that very moment. Seeing my wife sleeping peacefully nearby as I write this and despite the fact that her family is now waiting for us to announce that she is pregnant, I know now that I would go through everything all over again and wear a chicken suit at the altar if that’s what I had to do to marry the love of my life. Of course, if I could do it all over again—and this is the part where I offer advice to those who are starting to plan their weddings—I wholeheartedly recommend a leisurely courthouse wedding. (Sept. 5, 2007) EDITOR’S NOTE: Eric Miller is now with the Hendersonville Star News. CMYK The Tennessee Press 20 - Awards •The stories aren’t the same ol’-same ol’ and that’s refreshing. 2. The Jackson Sun 3. Johnson City Press 4.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Jim Masilak 5. Chattanooga Times Free Press EDITORIALS Group I 1. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Jim Zachary •These are what editorials should be – hard-hitting, clear, persuasive, full of righteous indignation and about public bodies and public policies that matter to people. This newspaper is fulfilling its duties as part of the democratic system. Way to go! 2. Mt. Juliet News. Laurie Everett 3. The Millington Star 4. Smithville Review 5.The Erwin Record. Mark A. Stevens, Janice Willis-Barnett, Ralph Hood, Ray Knapp, Connie Denney, Charles Holt Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Terry Hollahan, Jane Donahoe •Good topics and good writing that keeps things moving and kept me reading. SEE AWARDS, PAGE 10 JEFF FARRELL | THE MOUNTAIN PRESS, SEVIERVILLE Firefighter Lynn Rawlings hangs upside down as he simulates a construction rescue during a training exercise. (April 4, 2007) Farrell 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group IV The Mountain Press, Sevierville The Tennessee Press Good ole’ boying not good enough CMYK BY JIM ZACHARY Editor, Grainger Today, Bean Station The words “good ole’ boy” can mean a lot of different things. A good ole’ boy can simply be a hard working, salt of the earth, simple living, trustworthy Zachary fellow who would do anything in the world to help family, friends and neighbors. In that case, give us more good ole’ boys. A good ole’ boy can be the kind of a guy who spends all his time in a bass boat, in the deer woods, or chasing a coon dog. A good ole’ boy can be someone who grew up here, has lived here his entire life, gone to the same church, held down the same job, knows everybody and everybody knows him. Those varieties of good ole’ boys you can live with. In fact, a good ole’ boy can be the best neighbor you’ll ever have. However, sometimes, the words “good ole’ boy” mean something far more unseemly, unsavory and unwanted. Does anyone deny there is a good ole’ boy network, where it is not a matter of what you know, but who you know? I am not too crazy about Wikipedia, the free Internet encyclopedia. Principally, I don’t care much for Wikipedia because anyone can contribute to it, regardless of their level of expertise, the accuracy of their definitions, strength of their credentials or validity of their observations. However, a Wikipedia entry hits the nail right square on the head with this offering: “The good ole’ boy network describes a system of social networking and perceptions alleged to exist prevalently among certain communities and social strata in the United States. Although the term originated in the South, these networks can be found throughout the U.S. and the rest of the Western world. It is typically taken to refer to informal legal, judicial, social, religious, business, and political associations among white males (“good ol’ boys”); however, in modern times can be composed of either or both sexes. In some areas, the good ole’ boy network is said to still exert considerable influence over many aspects of local government, business, and law enforcement. Usage of the term can often imply a wrongful exclusion of others from the network; however, often the emphasis is on inclusion of a member, as in, “doing a good ole’ boy a favor” (Wikipedia). When elected officials do dirty deals, hire relatives, do favors for payola, look the other way when their friends and family mess up, try to sneak, hide and slip some piece of public business or legislation through without taking ownership, violate open meetings legislation, and generally behave in an underhanded way, sometimes we say, “they good ole’ boy-ed it.” Last week I sat in a public meeting 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best personal column Group I Grainger Today, Bean Station up in Rogersville that lasted all of four seconds (yes that is a bit of an exaggeration, but not much, replace seconds with minutes and you’d be pretty doggone close) where a new director of schools was hired. There were no discussions, no deliberations, no public considerations, just a couple of brief rehearsed statements, a motion, a second, and a quick vote. Yep, they good ole’ boy-ed it, all right, and wait, it gets better, or worse, I should say. Now the state of Tennessee says, “all decisions,” and all DELIBERATIONS, “toward a decision” must be done in public (T.C.A. 8-44-102). That means no private meetings, no telephone calling for strategizing, no emailing among officials regarding their vote, and no private retreats where they discuss the public’s business. These things are all good ole’ boy-ing, and all violate the law. The law further says, “Any action taken at a meeting in violation of this part shall be void and of no effect.” Now, I say all of this to commend the Grainger County Board of Education. While they did, at one point, discuss “closing” their deliberations, when hiring a new director, they checked with their lawyer and opted to keep the meetings open and then they thoroughly discussed their choices between the final two candidates in open meetings. They voted, by voice vote, and re-voted and voted again. They continued to deliberate in open meetings, each member working to convince fellow members. They could have chosen to go the good ole’ boy route, but they did not. Granted, it took them a while to reach a decision and the “stalemate” and even a suggestion the top two candidates meet and decide among themselves who should be the director of schools was a bit comical, at best, but the BOE kept it all open and above board, shall we say. As I left the Rogersville meeting I was a little ashamed of my hometown and of Hawkins County. I was, at the same time, a bit proud of Grainger County. Then, when I saw the local newspaper coverage up there and the way the controversy was not so much as alluded to, it made me appreciate working for a publication such as Grainger Today that prides itself in strong community journalism and in providing an open and free public forum. Oh, and I said it gets better—when the whirlwind vote was taken by the Rogersville City School Board, the person hired happened to be the wife of a member of the board itself (though, he did not vote). Regardless of how qualified or unqualified, even Wikipedia would have that classified as the “good ole’ boy network,” hard at work. At least, that’s the way it seems to me. (June 6, 2007) SEPTEMBER 2008 AWARDS Awards - 21 GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARDS - FRONT PAGES FROM PAGE 7 Layout, esp. using white space, also attracted me to the stories. Keep up the good work. 2. Chattanooga Times Free Press 3. News Sentinel, Knoxville 4. Bristol Herald Courier 5. The Tennessean, Nashville BEST SINGLE FEATURE Group I 1. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Special D-Day, Shirley Nanney Watch AP Style. Good, emotional story that held my interest. 2. Lake County Banner, Tiptonville. Hurschel knows 3. The Erwin Record. Addressed to a friend, David Thometz 4. The Erwin Record. Wanted: Ad in Record, Jerry Hilliard 5. Chester County Independent, Henderson. WWII Vet, James A. Webb Group II 1. LaFollette Press. Act of vigilantism, Susan Sharp Fantastic! This story made me angry and sad all at the same time. Your presentation of the facts in this case was wonderful! 2.The News Examiner, Gallatin. Game changed Gallatin 3. The Knoxville Journal. The quiet side of the game 4. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Blue’s backpacks, Steve Marion 5. Carthage Courier.The gift of inspiration, Scott Winfree Group III 1. The Oak Ridger. Momma they got me a heart, Beverly Majors •A wonderful, horrible story magically told. Quotes from both families are amazing. Very compelling human interest story. A masterfully job by Majors. Give her a raise immediately! 2. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Her life once stolen, Sam Hatcher 3. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Will to walk, James Clark 4. The Oak Ridger. Soldier dies in Iraq 5. Roane County News, Kingston. Couple celebrates 70 years Group IV 1. The Daily Times, Maryville. Cop & addict, Mark Boxley “Alcoa Office” - strong - impressive story makes you wonder what Boxley will write about next. 2. The Greeneville Sun. 10 years ago today, Bill Jones, Tom Yancey, Bryan Gillespie 3. Cleveland Daily Banner. Passport, cane 4. Citizen Tribune, Morristown. Duty 5. The Greeneville Sun. Fragile start, Lisa Warren Group V 1. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Faithful to the end The subject matter was compelling The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 THE ERWIN RECORD Group I MEMPHIS BUSINESS JOURNAL Group II SCOTT FRAKER | THE OAK RIDGER, OAK RIDGE Mira Ryczke Kimmelman of Oak Ridge spent five and a half years in ghettos and labor and concentration camps in Germany and Poland during World War II. She told her chilling yet inspirational life story to attendees of a local Women’s History Month program. (April 13, 2007) Fraker 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group III The Oak Ridger, Oak Ridge – very well written & illustrated. Most readers can relate – a primer on attitudes about death and dying. It takes the reader through – compassionately – the final stages of life. 2. The Jackson Sun. Searching for home, Tracie Simer 3.TheTennessean, Nashville. Lessons from losing, Leon Alligood 4. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Menace unabashed, Cindy Wolff 5. Bristol Herald Courier. It’s Conway, Joe Tennis COMMUNITY LIFESTYLES Group I 1. The Erwin Record. David Thometz, Jerry Hilliard, Anthony D. Piercy, Mark A. Stevens, Brenda Sparks, Bryan Stevens Pictures were great. Articles well written. Interesting variety of topics. 2. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Ron Park, Shirley Nanney 3. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. Heather E. Seay, Kristen Swing, Charlie Mauk, Ron Caylor, Sarah Winters, Bea Casey, Lynn J. Richardson 4. The Millington Star 5. The News Leader, Parsons Group II 1. Macon County Chronicle, Lafayette Nice consistency in articles. Good color pictures. Nice articles – easy reads. By far the best in this group!! 2. The Gallatin Newspaper. Marjorie Lloyd, Gary Grace 3. The Rogersville Review. Ellen Myatt 4. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Phylis Bellamy, Mia Rhodarmer 5. The Herald-News, Dayton Group III 1. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Dana Bryson no comment 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville 3. Crossville Chronicle. Laura Gwinn 4. The Lebanon Democrat 5. The Tullahoma News. Tamara Belinc Group IV 1. The Mountain Press, Sevierville Enjoyable reading featuring array of national & local lifestyle news. Entertaining info from celebrity news & local. SEE AWARDS, PAGE 9 SOUTHERN STANDARD McMinnville Group III THE LEAF-CHRONICLE Clarksville Group IV THE TENNESSEAN Nashville Group V CMYK 8 - Awards MAKE-UP AND APPEARANCE AWARDS - FRONT PAGES THE HUMBOLDT CHRONICLE Group I MEMPHIS BUSINESS JOURNAL Group II THE OAK RIDGER Oak RIdge Group III THE LEAF-CHRONICLE Clarksville Group IV CHATTANOOGA TIMES FREE PRESS Group V SEPTEMBER 2008 CMYK TAPME awards presented July 19 in Nashville The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, was the big newspaper winner July 19 in the annual journalism competition sponsored by the Tennessee Associated Press Managing Editors. For newspapers with more than 40,000 daily circulation, The Commercial Appeal won seven first place awards: features reporting, sports/outdoors reporting, business news, feature photography, sports photography, photojournalism and individual achievement/body of work in photography. Additionally, the paper’s Marc Perrusquia won the Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award for a story, “Culture of Corruption.” The award was established to honor Malcolm Law, associate editor of The Jackson Sun, who died in December 1972. The award pays tribute to the dedication of Law to the concept of the Associated Press as a news cooperative. The Tennessean, Nashville, was awarded first place for Web site and sports photography. Rounding out the divisional first-place winners, the News Sentinel, Knoxville, won for daily deadline reporting, and the Chattanooga Times Free Press won for spot news photography. For newspapers with daily circulation between 10,000 and 40,000, The Jackson Sun won five first-place awards: deadline reporting, feature reporting, sports/outdoors reporting, best Web site and photojournalism. Additionally, Tonya Smith-King of the Sun won the Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award for a story on Mary Winkler. In the same division, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, won for spot news photography and feature photography. The Daily News Journal’s Aaron Thompson won for individual achievement/body of work in photography. Other first-place winners in the division were The Daily Herald, Columbia, for business news, and The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, for sports photography. For newspapers with less than 10,000 circulation daily, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, won four first place honors: feature reporting, business news, feature photography and individual achievement/body of work in photography (Curt Habraken). The Shelbyville Times-Gazette won first place for spot news photography and photojournalism. The Union City Daily Messenger won for sports/outdoors reporting and sports photography. The Lebanon Democrat won for daily deadline reporting. Brian Mosely of the Shelbyville Times-Gazette won the Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award for his work on Somalis in Shelbyville. Best of Show Awards were chosen from among those who placed first in selected categories. The print award went to Marc Perrusquia of The Commercial Appeal for his series titled “Culture of Corruption,” and the photography award went to Aaron Thompson of The Daily News Journal for his series of photographs titled “Fallen Hero.” Both received $100. The complete awards list follows. DIVISION I WRITING Daily deadline reporting 1. Staff, News Sentinel, Knoxville, McClung Warehouse Fire 2. Ashley Rowland, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Firefighter Funeral 3. Marc Perrusquia, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Herenton Sex Plot Features reporting 1. Daniel Connolly, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Immigration’s Impact 2. Melvin Claxton and Sheila Burke, The Tennessean, Nashville, DNA 3. Mary Powers,The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Brain Surgery Sports/outdoors reporting 1. Ron Higgins, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Larry Finch Battles Back 2. Scott Cacciola, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Rampage Jackson 3. Mark Wiedmer, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Art of Fatherhood Business news 1. Tom Charlier and Jane Roberts, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Boll Weevil 2. Chas Sisk and Jennifer Brooks, The Tennessean, Nashville, A New Middle Tennessee 3. Naomi Snyder, The Tennessean, Nashville, McLean Stories Web site 1. Staff,TheTennessean, Nashville, www. tennessean.com Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award: Marc Perrusquia, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Culture of Corruption PHOTOGRAPHY Spot news photography 1. Dan Henry, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Soldier Funeral 2. Gillian Bolsover, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Remembering Our Veterans 3. Angela Lewis, ChattanoogaTimes Free Press, Welcome Home Honorable mention, J. Miles Carym News Sentinel, Knoxville, Remember My Brother Feature photography 1. Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Smoke 2. Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Memorial Day 3. Shelley Mays, The Tennessean, Nashville, Hand of Thanks Sports photography 1. (TIE) Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Dodge Ball 1. (TIE) Bill Kingsley, The Tennessean, Nashville, Fiery Crash 2. Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tongue Tied 3. Dan Henry, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Brake Adjustment Photojournalism 1. (TIE) Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Pit Bulls 1. (TIE) Karen Pulfer Focht, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Brain Surgery 2. Clay Owen, News Sentinel, Knoxville, Faithful to the End 3. (TIE) Andy McFee, Chattanooga Times Free Press, Leukemia Twins 3. (TIE) Mike Brown, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Convocation Individual achievement/ body of work in photography 1. Karen Pulfer Focht, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 2. Mark Weber, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 3. (TIE) Larry McCormack, The Tennessean, Nashville 3. (TIE) Mike Brown, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis Sports photography 1. Robert Smith, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, What a Special Night 2. Robert Smith, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, Quit Pulling 3. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Home Run Photojournalism 1. Andrew McMurtrie, The Jackson Sun, Homeless in Jackson 2. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Fallen Hero 3. Karen Kraft, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, In the Garden Individual achievement/ body of work in photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 2. Daryl Sullivan, The Daily Times, Maryville 3. Karen Kraft, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro DIVISION III WRITING Spot news photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro House Fire 2. Katie Morgan, The Jackson Sun, Still Have Each Other 3. John A. Gillis, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Escape From Fire Feature photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, A Son’s Loss SEE TAPME, PAGE 23 DIVISION II WRITING Daily deadline reporting 1. Tonya Smith-King and Pete Wickham, The Jackson Sun, Winkler Verdict 2. Wendy Isom and Ned Hunter, The Jackson Sun, Selmer in Mourning 3. Jessica Stith, The Daily Times, He’s Going to Kill Me Features reporting 1. Tracie Simer, The Jackson Sun, Homeless in Jackson 2. Mark Boxley, The Daily Times, Maryville, The Cop and the Addict 3. Adam Sparks, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, They Were Coming Here Sports/outdoors reporting 1. Joshua Parrott, The Jackson Sun, Dream Come True 2. Adam Sparks, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, They Were Coming Here 3. Roger Garfield, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, A Cardinal Honor for Jordan Business news 1. Greg Menza, The Daily Herald, Columbia, GM Plant 2. Ned Hunter, The Jackson Sun, Waiting to Fly 3. Tim Adkins, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Formula for Success Web site 1. Staff, The Jackson Sun, www.jacksonsun.com Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award: Tonya Smith-King, The Jackson Sun, The Winkler Story PHOTOGRAPHY Spot news photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, House Fire 2. Katie Morgan, The Jackson Sun, Still Have Each Other 3. John A. Gillis, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Escape From Fire Feature photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, A Son’s Loss 2. Daryl Sullivan, The Daily Times, Maryville, Musical Silhouette 3. Lindsay McDonald, The Jackson Sun, Catchin’ a Ride AP BEST OF SHOW The Commercial Appeal, Memphis Story by Marc Perrusquia, photos by Jim Weber The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 6 Awards - 7 AWARDS beyond that of your peers. Great use of multiple sources and presented in an easy to read, easy to understand format. An outstanding job of reporting on an issue that has great impact on the school & community. 2. The Tennessean, Nashville 3. Chattanooga Times Free Press 4. Johnson City Press. Sam Watson, Ben Ingram, Jim Wozniak 5. Bristol Herald Courier. Debra McCown, Khristopher J. Brooks LOCAL FEATURES Group I 1.The Erwin Record. Mark A. Stevens, Lesley Hughes, Jerry Hilliard, Anthony D. Piercy, David Thometz, Brenda Sparks •Tremendous graphics for super power. Well written. “Little Joe” is fun. Need extracted quote on jump for “Super Power.” Please. Hilliard gives great photo of inmate. It makes the page. •Pastor retires is well done. When you look at “In Good Hands” and Minister Killed pieces, it’s clear this newspaper stands out in its class, probably ANY class. Legends of the Fall is icing on the cake. The experience of judging your fine newspaper has me wishing for the next issue. 2. Mt. Juliet News. Laurie Everett 3. Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon. Shirley Nanney 4. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough 5. The News Leader, Parsons Group II 1. The Daily News, Memphis •Every lead pulled me immediately into the story. •Nice variety of feature content, from profiles to public interest. •Great job in educating readers about things they may otherwise take for granted. 2. Memphis Business Journal 3. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City 4. The Courier, Savannah. Terry VanEaton, Linda Folkerts 5. The Gallatin Newspaper. Marjorie Lloyd, Tim Nixon Group III 1. The Oak Ridger Wonderful page design, placement and visual appeal! •Had a job to do. . .Very nice! This wonderful man tells the story in his words, not the writer’s. •Shoulder feature - Lots of useful info with a unique graphic to draw you in. All in all - very well done. . .substance, local flavor and eye appeal! 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. James Clark 3. The Newport Plain Talk. Kathy Barnes-Hemsworth, Duay O’Neil, Jim Hekel 4. Shelbyville Times-Gazette 5. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. Ken Walker, Steve McCadams, GlennTanner, Leslie Sensing Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Good use of color Loved the story on the sophomore basketball players Home & Garden story was very current & insightful Weekly column, out of context, is a bit jaw dropping, but very entertaining Story on Hookah bar was surprising – would be neat to try one out Superb story in Living Section faith & grief 2. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Chris Fletcher, Skyler Swisher, Greg Menza 4. The Greeneville Sun. Bob Hurley, Wayne Phillips, Lisa Warren, Jim Feltman, Todd DeHaven 5. The Mountain Press, Sevierville Group V 1. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis •Story subjects were interesting. Photos complimented the subject matter. SEE AWARDS, PAGE 8 NATASHA LAFAYETTE | LAFOLLETTE PRESS LaFayette 2007 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group II LaFollette Press Julianna Sidener enjoys the cool streams of water at the grand opening of LaFollette’s Splash Park on Sept. 21. (Sept. 27, 2007) Lack of honesty, not money, is real problem BY STAN WHITLOCK Kingsport Times-News At a recent Kingsport roundtable discussion on the need for K-12 education reform, Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen encouraged local business leaders to hold “the Whitlock political structure” accountable for education decisions. The governor, a Democrat, then proceeded to take a shot at several Northeast Tennessee Republican lawmakers who, as Bredesen put it, “happily voted” for education funding reform in the General Assembly session recently ended but not for the 42-cent per pack increase in cigarette taxes to fund it. “You can’t let people get away with that,” the governor said. But Bredesen’s attempt to paint targets on the backs of his political opposites on an issue as critical as education is disingenuous, especially in a year when the state’s extra revenues could have easily funded this latest K-12 initiative. As the governor also well knows, the principal problem in Tennessee’s public schools isn’t a matter of money, but mendacity. The Tennessee Department of Education is not being forthright about the academic abilities of the majority of its students. The department recently claimed, for example, that 87 percent of Tennessee students 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group V Kingsport Times-News are proficient in eighth grade math. A national test, however, shows that only 21 percent actually exhibit that skill level—a difference of 66 points on a 100-point scale. Gov. Bredesen’s answer to that has been to complain to the Times-News editorial board about the No Child Left Behind law and to promise a tougher high school curriculum and greater accountability—albeit when his term of office has effectively ended—in exchange for an extra half-billion in new funding for schools beginning right away. Like President (George W.) Bush, who argues that border security isn’t possible apart from a larger comprehensive reform of immigration policies, Gov. Bredesen claims that Tennessee schools can’t adopt more stringent academic standards without first receiving hundreds of millions of dollars in new annual funding. Each of these assertions is false on its face. It’s obvious that securing our border with Mexico has absolutely nothing to do with what happens to the estimated 12 million illegals now in this country. Similarly, an accurate assessment of Tennessee students’ academic abilities isn’t dependent on extra K-12 funding. It doesn’t cost any more to record an “F” on a student’s report card than it does an “A”—although it likely keeps the Department of Education in Nashville from being burned to the ground by angry parents. State Rep. Nathan Vaughn, a Kingsport Democrat who was also in attendance at the governor’s roundtable, praised Bredesen, noting that on the subject of education reform, the governor had “looked at what was the right thing to do as compared to what was the politically expedient thing to do and made the tough decisions.” But what’s difficult about Gov. Bredesen or Rep. Vaughn offering one of their major constituencies—the education lobby—a vast amount of new money? If Gov. Bredesen and Rep. Vaughn really want to demonstrate how tough and courageous they are, they might make a small start by ceasing to pat themselves on the back for pouring even more hundreds of millions in tax dollars into a state education system that has spectacularly failed to prepare a majority of this state’s children for productive lives. There isn’t anything faintly difficult or courageous or right about rewarding the Department of Education in this state for a job poorly done. Earlier this year in an editorial board meeting, Times-News editors discussed Tennessee’s lack of honesty in accurately assessing the abilities of public school students with local lawmakers. To his credit, Rep. Vaughn readily admitted the problem but then observed, “Most parents don’t want to hear that stuff about their kids.” Perhaps Rep. Vaughn is right—but then again, who can say? The choice to know, or not to know, the true academic abilities of their children has cynically and systematically been denied to Tennessee’s parents year after year by state educators. The result is that even if parents suspect the truth about their child’s abilities, the state provides false and ultimately disastrous assurance that all is well. Well, that is, until the child tries to tackle college and can’t get past his required freshmen courses or applies for a job and can’t land it because he never mastered fractions in middle school. If Gov. Bredesen is sincere about himself and others in the “political structure” being held accountable for public education in this state, here’s our challenge: start raising proficiency standards across the board, say 10 percent a year, until they match the proficiency standards embodied in the U.S. Department of Education’s National Assessment of Educational Progress tests. Commit to doing that and report the results each year, so that parents, students and others can see for themselves whether Tennessee schools are succeeding or failing. That would be tough. That would be courageous. And it would be the right thing to do. (June 28, 2007) CMYK The Tennessee Press 22 - Awards AWARDS FROM PAGE 5 CMYK SEPTEMBER 2008 4. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Brian Mosely 5. Roane County News, Kingston Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Gangs in Clarksville, Eric Snyder The gang problem stories not only document the current reality, but offer solutions. They are complete and professional. 2. The Daily Times, Maryville. Immigrant: Judge told me to go home, Rick Laney 3. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Water without fluoride, Nate Karlin 4. The Daily Herald, Columbia. City loses 500K, Samantha Ballard 5. The Greeneville Sun. Businessman alleges unfair treatment, Nelson Morais Group V 1. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. On the take, Marc Perrusquia Political corruption exposed through excellent reporting. The investigation was thorough, the writing concise. 2. The Tennessean, Nashville. Poor oversight, Clay Carey 3. Bristol Herald Courier. It’s your money, J. Todd Foster, Kathy Still, David McGee, Mac McLean, Debra McCown 4.TheTennessean, Nashville.TN Mine enriched Gore, Bill Theobald 5. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. FEMA folly, Trevor Aaronson BEST EDUCATION REPORTING Group I 1. Mt. Juliet News. Bullying. Part 1 - great use of narrative writing Part 2 - amazing story by principal, nice reporting Part 3 - Great interview w/inmate *Great service to community, powerful writing, an important topic Also great use of graphic for series Bus drivers - great feature, Laurie Everett 2. The Millington Star 3. The Milan Mirror-Exchange 4. The Erwin Record. Lesley Hughes, Anthony D. Piercy, Mark A. Stevens 5. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. Tony Smith, Heather E. Seay, Lynn J. Richardson, Sarah Winters Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Michael Sheffield Solid piece of work. Entertaining as well as informative & important. Excellent! 2. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Steve Marion 3.The Leader, Covington. Echo Gaines Denmark 4. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Melissa Kinton, Tommy Millsaps 5. The Herald-News, Dayton. Tiffany Soyster, Max Hackett Group III 1. The Newport Plain Talk Tennessee Press Association FROM PAGE 22 Scanner oven - great unique feature on youth; interesting lede gets reader into story Removed - nice coverage of a big issue in community; clear writing helps to follow confusing story; great use of sources to tell the story 2. Crossville Chronicle. Josh Hayes 3. Southern Standard, McMinnville 4. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. John B. Bryan, Tommy Bryan, Zack Owensby 5. The Lebanon Democrat. Laurie Everett, J.R. Lind, Sara McCarty, Andy Reed Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Ann Wallace Great! You hit some very serious topics here and really get into the details. Good writing. You go into subjects as varied as school bus a/c, ELL, the state report card and still go deeper to discuss the schools that “passed,” “failed,” and changed status from before in detail. 2. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Skyler Swisher 3. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Scott Broden 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville 5. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Bobbie Bruton Group V 1.The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. Kristina Goetz, Marc Perrusquia, Dakarai Aarons A most impressive job of investigative reporting. I realize you were fortunate to have the subject matter to report on, but you took it to a level of excellence SEE AWARDS, PAGE 7 Pickard thanks the following: •The University of Tennessee Office of Public Relations and members of the staff Hank Dye, Amy Blakely, Charles Primm, Amy Rummel, Karen Collins and Gina Stafford, the College of Communication and Information and the School of Journalism and Electronic Media for the excellent relationship that has existed for 68 years. During this time UT has participated in the implementing of the UT-TPA State Press Contests and has provided plaques and certificates and assisted in various other facets of the awards event. •Victor Parkins, editor of The Milan Mirror-Exchange, 2007-08 Contests Committee chairman, •Members of the 2007-08 TPA Contests Committee for their contributions, guidance and support of the contests. JULIE PICKARD | CHESTER COUNTY INDEPENDENT, HENDERSON 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best feature photo Group I Chester County Independent, Henderson Hender sonview apartment kids enjoy playing in the drainoff water after a rain shower. (Aug. 9, 2007) Sheriff should give statistics on firing five BY SAM STOCKARD The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro The Rutherford County Sheriff ’s Office is shirking its responsibility to the public by refusing to divulge the reason for firing five jail personnel. After an internal Stockard probe, four jail officers and one maintenance man were released two weeks ago for “improper conduct with inmates.” Now that the sheriff ’s office investigation is complete and the employees have been fired, it’s time to let the people know exactly why. “Improper conduct” isn’t specific enough. We can only imagine what’s being said community-wide about the firings, and it can’t be good, because when information is lacking, people’s imaginations run wild. Instead of turning over personnel files, the sheriff’s office is hiding behind 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group IV The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro state law that exempts records from Tennessee’s Open Records Act if they are part of an ongoing investigation. The sheriff ’s office makes a good argument, but only to a point. Turning the case over to the District Attorney’s Office to determine whether any of the five should be charged with criminal conduct is the right thing to do. The sheriff ’s office removes itself from any potential conflict of interest by allowing another agency to handle the criminal investigation. But since the sheriff ’s internal probe is complete and the five have been fired, that part of the matter is finished. Consequently, the employee records and investigation should be public record. We trust the DA to conduct an impartial investigation into this matter. Whether people know why they were fired won’t impact his case one bit. The public will know eventually, anyway, once the DA completes the investigation. By keeping the specifics secret, the sheriff’s office is playing hideand-seek with the Open Records Act and doing a disservice to the public. The jail is an $11.2 million operation, and people expect it to be run efficiently, which we believe it is. After serving time there, inmates typically say they don’t want any part of 940 New Salem Highway again. That’s the way it should be. Yet, the public should also know what is going on inside the walls of the county jail, and if five employees have to be fired, the sheriff should tell the people why. They deserve to know, because even though those five are on the sheriff ’s payroll, they work for the taxpayers. The people’s right to know always outweighs any desire by the sheriff ’s office to conceal the information – even if temporarily – about how the jail and sheriff ’s office are running. (June 10, 2007) The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Long is recipient of SCMA’s Green Award TAPME 2. Daryl Sullivan, The Daily Times, Maryville, Musical Silhouette 3. Lindsay McDonald, The Jackson Sun, Catchin’ a Ride 2. David Fuzzell, Union City Daily Messenger, Big Swing 3. Dallus Whitfield, The Lebanon Democrat, Cheers! Sports photography 1. Robert Smith, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, What a Special Night 2. Robert Smith, The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, Quit Pulling 3. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Home Run Sports photography 1. David Fuzzell, Union City Daily Messenger, Big Swing 2. Dallus Whitfield, The Lebanon Democrat, Season End 3. Danny Parker and Jimmy Jones, Shelbyville Times-Gazette, Foot to Nose Photojournalism 1. Andrew McMurtrie, The Jackson Sun, Homeless in Jackson 2. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Fallen Hero 3. Karen Kraft, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, In the Garden Photojournalism 1. Danny Parker, Shelbyville TimesGazette, Reason to Rock 2. Chris Menees, Union City Daily Messenger, Days of Yesteryear 3. Donna Ryder, Union City Daily Messenger, Open County Fair & Nutrition Day Individual achievement/ body of work in photography 1. Aaron Thompson, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 2. Daryl Sullivan, The Daily Times, Maryville 3. Karen Kraft, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Individual achievement/ body of work in photography 1. Curt Habraken, The Mountain Press, Sevierville 2. Chris Menees, Union City Daily Messenger 3. Donna Ryder, Union City Daily Messenger DIVISION III WRITING Daily deadline reporting 1. J.R. Lind,The Lebanon Democrat, State Judiciary Reprimands Local Judge 2. Clint Confehr, Shelbyville Times-Gazette, Holton Executed 3. Angela Williams, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, New Hope Thrift Store Destroyed Bare necessity Features reporting 1. Gail Crutchfield, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, Price of Freedom 2. J. R. Lind, The Lebanon Democrat, Queen’s Pigeon Alights in Watertown 3. Derek Hodges, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, Putting the Brakes on DUI Sports/outdoors reporting 1. Mike Hutchens, Union City Daily Messenger, It’s Official - Wood Resigns 2. Andy Reed, The Lebanon Democrat, Umpire Retires 3. Cobey Hitchcock, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, Against All Odds Business news 1. Angela Williams, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, It Doesn’t Rate Well 2. J. R. Lind, The Lebanon Democrat, Changing Face of Manufacturing Costs Jobs 3. Derek Hodges, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, Home or Business? Malcolm Law Investigative Reporting Award: Brian Mosely, Shelbyville Times-Gazette, Somalis in Shelbyville PHOTOGRAPHY Spot news photography 1. Kay Rose, Shelbyville Times-Gazette, Farewell for a Hero 2. Chris Menees, Union City Daily Messenger, Safe and Sound 3. Chris Menees, Union City Daily Messenger, Topsy-Turvy Test Feature photography 1. Curt Habraken, The Mountain Press, Sevierville, School’s Out Awards - 23 “The press was protected so it could bare the secrets of government and inform the people.” Hugo L. Black, Former U.S. Supreme Court justice, 1971 Dale Long, circulation director of The Greeneville Sun, was awarded the William C. Green Jr. Award by the Southern Circulation Managers Association at its 89th Long annual conference in April in Baton Rouge, La. The Sun is the “flagship” newspaper of Jones Media, based in Greeneville. Long also has responsibilities for overseeing production operations of the Sun, including prepress, printing and post-printing, as well as other Jones has been a member of the Tennessee Press Association Circulation Committee since 1995 and has served as its chairman. Long has played many roles in SCMA and has held various positions leading up to his becoming president in 2006. When presenting the award, current SCMA President Dean Blanchard said of Long, “Even though he is from Tennessee, his heart is as big as the state of Texas.” Long and his wife of 29 years, Linda Kay, have a daughter, Autumn Malone. She and her husband, Cody, have a daughter, Kylie. News Sentinel wins ETSPJ Best of Show More than 80 journalists and guests attended the annual Golden Press Card Awards of the East Tennessee Society of Professional Journalists (ETSPJ) May 10 at The Foundry to congratulate winners of this year’s competition. Mia Rhodarmer, editor of the Monroe County Advocate and Democrat, Sweetwater, ETSPJ vice president/ Golden Press Card, was in charge of the contest and banquet. She was assisted by Dr. Dorothy Bowles, professor at the University of Tennessee School of Journalism and Electronic Media, Knoxville. Clint Brewer, president of national SPJ, spoke. He is editor of The City Paper, Nashville, and former editor of The Lebanon Democrat. WORTH REPEATING Sometimes if you don’t toot your own horn, that horn goes untooted. Or something like that. Pardon this break from the usual critique of the issues of the day to let us engage in a mild form of self-congratulation. The Mountain Press, the newspaper we thank you for reading, did quite well in two state contests, the results of which were announced last week. The paper won 15 awards, including three for first place, in the Tennessee Press Association contest. We competed against a number of Tennessee newspapers in that category, with a weekly circulation of as much as three times what ours is. Then the next day the Associated Press Managing Editors group announced winners of the state AP contest, and we won four first place awards–more than any other small daily in the state. In addition to those awards we won three third-place citations. Newspaper people don’t work for glory or prizes, but they are nice when they do come. Each year we gather up our best work in the different categories and send them in, hoping to do well but never knowing. Entries are judged very subjectively, usually by a single journalist in another state. Sometimes we don’t win when we think we should have, and win when we doubted we would. The trick is not to get too exhilarated when you win or too down when you Media publications. He is active in the community as well, being a member of the Kiwanis Club, Greene County Partnership, Greene County United Way and Brown Springs Baptist Church. He is president of the USS Greenville Inc., a Greenevillebased support group for the crew of the nuclear submarine named after the East Tennessee city. He is a member of the local Moose Lodge. Long is a graduate of West Greene High School and attended Walters State Community College. In his professional field, he has attended the Inland Press Foundation Circulation Academy and don’t. But when you do well, it’s nice to share it with our readers. Our newsroom works hard to produce quality stories and photos each day. We never miss a day of publication, and every day is different, with new content, new ads, new photos and new things to enjoy. Small-town journalism as we practice it is the most fun, because you are closer to the people, and what you do seems to mean more and have more impact than big-city papers. We produce a lot of refrigerator journalism – stories that families cut out and attach to the door of the refrigerator. It’s fun when we go to someone’s house and see clippings displayed in that way. But we also enjoy the more serious stories, when we point out wrongdoing or enlighten a community to something going on they need to know. We do a lot of that. The recognition of our work by judges in the two contests is cake icing, a pat on the back to make summer seem more bearable. But mostly it means we are doing some good things that, hopefully, are appreciated by our readers. Thanks for spending time with The Mountain Press. (The Mountain Press, Sevierville, July 24, 2008) Read The Tennessee Press, then pass it on The top two awards overall are the Horace V. Wells, Jr. Community Service Award and the Golden Press Card Award given to the top entrant among all the Award of Excellence winners in all categories. Wells was the founder and longtime editor and publisher of the Clinton Courier-News. The Wells Award went to Scott Barker, Rebecca Ferrar, Ansley Haman and Hayes Hickman of the News Sentinel, Knoxville, for “Knox County Turmoil,” and the WBIR-TV News Team won for “Knox County Files.” The judges said, “This is an ultimate public service with continuing commitment to follow through.” The Golden Press Club Award was shared by the two news media on the same subject. For this award, the News Sentinel’s entry was “Knox County Chaos” by Rebecca Ferrar and Ansley Haman. For the first time, ETSPJ held a high school essay contest in which the chapter winner will go on to the national SPJ level to compete with contemporaries from across the country for scholarships worth up to $1,000. The ETSPJ winner was Christopher Bernard of Knoxville, who was presented a certificate and a check for $50 during the GPC banquet. Larry Van Guilder, editor of the Halls Shopper-News, was contest chairman. One can see the complete list of winners, including many newspapers, at www.etspj.org. TPA Winter Convention Feb. 4-6 Tennessee Press Association 2009 Press Institute & Winter Convention DoubleTree Hotel • Downtown Nashville CMYK The Tennessee Press 6 - Awards SEPTEMBER 2008 Tennessee Press Association Drive-In Tr Training FROM PAGE 4 September 2008 Special section FAC director Policinski talks about the people and the First Amendment CMYK BY ELENORA E. EDWARDS Managing editor Gene Policinski laid it on the line for people attending the TPA Drive-In Training. “Newspapers fundamentally will save the republic,” he said. “Fair, accurate, complete, truthful, biased or unbiased—newspapers are essential to the way the country functions.” Policinski, executive director of the First Amendment Center (FAC), revealed that he began his journalism career in 1969 at a 1,600-circulation newspaper in Greenfield, Ind. He has worked for other news media, notably USA Today, and since 2004 has been executive director of the FAC at Vanderbilt University in Nashville and in Washington, D.C. and vice president since 2007. Policinski was the keynote speaker at the annual training event, which was held July 18 at the Millennium Maxwell House Hotel in Nashville. He said that newspapers don’t point out enough the role they play in our society. “On the street, that’s real life democracy—that’s what you do,” he said to the 60 people in attendance. Policinski talked about the 2007 State of the First Amendment Survey (SOFAS) commissioned annually by the FAC. A new one will be out around Sept. 16, Constitution Day, he said. Sixty-four percent of people know that free speech is part of the First Amendment, the speaker pointed out, but only 19 percent know that religion is part of it. Sixteen percent know the amendments sets out a free press; 16 percent, right to assembly; and 3 percent, the right to petition the government. Three out of 10 Americans can’t name any of the five freedoms, Policinski said. And when asked in 2002 if the First Amendment goes too far in guaranteeing rights, 41 percent strongly agreed. But, changes in the people’s opinions about freedoms is changing, Policinski noted. In 2007, in answer to the same question, only 14 percent strongly agreed. And, 55 percent strongly disagreed. The change, the speaker suggested, has been the result of 9/11 and fear of the loss of freedoms in the climate since. “The public has reset itself, clearly,” he said. Referring again to the 2007 SOFAS, Policinski noted that in 2000, when people were asked if the press had too much freedom, 51 percent said yes. But in 2007, 34 percent said the press had too much, with 13 percent saying it had too little freedom and 50 percent saying it was about right. “These are great numbers, good news,” he commented. It isn’t all good news, he said, noting that when asked if the news media try to report the news without bias, in 2005, only 13 percent said yes, and in 2007, only 16 percent. An interesting factor, Policinski said, is that Americans are beginning to become accustomed to having a publication identify its stand on certain issues. This might not be a bad thing, he asserted, as if a news medium clearly knows what is going on, why not express an opinion about it? Another question on the survey is whether falsifying or making up stories is a widespread problem. This is important, Policinski said, because it has to do with trust. In 2005, 40 percent strongly agreed there was a widespread problem, with 25 percent mildly agreeing, 20 percent mildly disagreeing and 11 percent strongly disagreeing. But in 2007, the numbers improved, with 36 percent saying they strongly agreed, 26 percent mildly agreeing, 22 percent mildly disagreeing and 12 percent strongly disagreeing. “Who told you about Enron and Jason Blair?” the speaker asked. There is more research, more attempts to correct errors than in any other institution, Policinski said. It will pay off, he said. Newspapers need to talk to people about veracity, have a way to fix errors and have correction columns. Americans are looking for things they can trust and are beginning to wake up to talk about ways to acknowledge errors. In another area, people were asked if the government should be able to require news media to offer an equal amount of time to conservatives and liberals. On TV, 38 percent strongly agreed; on radio, 35 percent; and in newspapers, 36 percent. Those who mildly agreed were 26 percent, TV; 26 percent, radio; and newspapers, 26 percent. If there is not vigorous objection, there may be some congressmen who want to regulate newspapers as well as other media. It is frightening that some want to reinstate the Fairness Doctrine, Policinski said. When in 2007 asked if they thought that running a certain amount of “positive news” in return for being granted a license was appropriate, 21 percent strongly agreed and 19 percent mildly agreed, the speaker said. “We do not teach our youth to worry about the heavy hand of government,” Policinski said. “Editors don’t either,” he added. Newspapers must not give up their ground of providing the information the people need as well as what they want, the speaker said. Another question on the survey was whether journalists should be allowed to keep their sources confidential. In the 1997 survey, 58 percent strongly agreed and 27 percent mildly agreed. In 2007, 27 percent strongly agreed and 32 percent mildly agreed. Despite a 10-year attack on the concept of using confidential sources, the public still thinks it is OK. And 50 percent of newsrooms say they have rules about confidential sources, Policinski said. “If we use them sparingly, it will be OK,” he opined. When asked if newspapers should be allowed to freely criticize the U.S. military about its strategy and performance, in 2004, 32 percent strongly agreed and 24 percent mildly agreed, while in 2007, 39 percent strongly agreed and 21 percent mildly agreed. Policinski then turned his remarks to the state of the student press. Asked if public school students should be allowed to report on controversial issues in a student newspaper without the approval of school officials, in 2005, 20 percent agreed and in 2007, 25 percent. In a similar question about college students, who are adults, in 2001, 33 percent strongly agreed and 23 percent mildly agreed, and in 2007, 34 percent strongly agreed and 27 percent mildly agreed. But a Knight Foundation survey of high school students showed they thought it was all right for the government to read a story to say it was OK. However, when it came to music, 75 percent said they should have free speech in music. ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Policinski Policinski said as a society we don’t To a question on using anonymous teach students about the First Amend- sources, the speaker said we should be ment or about defending it, but the as transparent as possible. In letters to student press is a great opportunity the editor, ask people to use their names, for young people to learn, especially which is “very American.” Use reasonif they have support from the local able editorial judgment with letters to news unit. the editor, just as one does with news, In comments during questions, Po- he suggested. “A writer can’t just rant; licinski suggested that in addition to he has to have something to say.” running a story based on investigative “People are looking to us to tell reporting, a newspaper also tell what it them what we stand for,” Policinski took to do the story. said. “We are in the information and “Local is trustworthy,” he said. “The opinion business,” but we should not closer you are to your source, the more allow “blather.” credibility you have.” He noted, “Of “People are looking for someone they course, you can fritter it away, but if can trust, a friend, someone in their you have credibility, you have gold.” county they can rely on,” Policinski He added that newspapers need to hold said. the government accountable, tell people He provided printed information on about cookies and taxes, say “good job” the First Amendment Center, where and tell them a good time to buy a car. one can for free use columns on First “The more we touch people and let them Amendment topics. The Web site is touch us, the better we are.” www.fac.org. ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Andrew Oppmann, left, and Kent Flanagan; Robyn Gentile in background The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Awards - 5 AWARDS 5. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Stories on Jerry Cooper’s plight, James Clark Group IV 1. Herald-Citizen, Cookeville. Elementary school fire, Mary Jo Denton School coverage is first-rate. 2. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Bo Wood suicide, Eric Snyder, Jason Austin, Ann Wallace 3. Elizabethton Star. When do we start digging? Steve Burwick 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. School funding, Derek Hodges, Stan Voit 5. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Drought relief, Jimmy Settle, Nate Karlin Group V 1. News Sentinel, Knoxville. A dozen done There are few things more gratifying than seeing the newspaper come out as the hero. Many reporters go through the diligent work of government coverage, and the News Sentinel is leading the way. 2. The Commercial Appeal, Memphis. MLGW favoritism, Trevor Aaronson, Michael Erskine 3.The Jackson Sun.The Winkler story, Tonya Smith-King 4. The Tennessean, Nashville. DNA tests expose inconsistency, Melvin Claxton, Sheila Burke 5. Johnson City Press. Downed plane INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING Group I 1. Mt. Juliet News. Sticks & stones, Laurie Everett Fantastic! This series was an interest- ing and riveting read from beginning to end. It provided everything – factual info, personal stories and helpful tips. Great job! 2. The Erwin Record. Zero tolerance, Lesley Hughes, Anthony D. Piercy 3. The Milan Mirror-Exchange. Head Start abuse, Steve Short 4. Smithville Review. Prescription drug abuse 5. Lake County Banner, Tiptonville. Capable & personable Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Will Sears Crosstown rise again? John Scruggs, Andy Ashby What a great story! This was quite an effort and was very well written. Both writers drew me into the various aspects of the story. The research done on projects at other Sears buildings was tremendous. I find absolutely nothing negative to say about this work. Excellent! 2. Memphis Business Journal. Doctor shortage, Toby Sells 3. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Director of schools selection, Melissa Kinton 4.The Daily News, Memphis. Prostitution plagues Memphis, Rosalind Guy 5. LaFollette Press. Jellico’s financial woes, Natasha LaFayette Group III 1. The Wilson Post, Lebanon. Zack Owensby, Mandy Maxwell Good - the variety of story topics. It was both news and investigative. 2. The Oak Ridger 3. The Lebanon Democrat. Laurie Everett 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group IV The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro AARON THOMPSON | THE DAILY NEWS JOURNAL, MURFREESBORO Christian Golczynski, 8, receives the flag from his father’s casket from Lt. Col. RicThompson during the graveside at Wheeler Cemetery in Bedford County. Golczynski’s father, Marcus, was killed the week before. (April 5, 2007) CMYK The Tennessee Press 24 - Drive-In Training Thompson SEE AWARDS, PAGE 6 No longer publish squabble BY SAM HATCHER, JOHN B. BRYAN AND JENNIFER HORTON The Wilson Post, Lebanon We’re tired and we’ve heard from a number of our readers who are equally as tired of reading about the ongoing “he said, she said” saga between Lebanon City Councilor William Farmer and Mayor Don Fox. Please let this serve as notice to both that we’re not publishing more of the same. If they choose to continue their feud, we urge them to use another newspaper or another source but do not rely on The Wilson Post. Simply stated, our newspaper is not about this. And furthermore, we do not believe this represents good government. The majority in our community, we believe, are sick of this entire mess. And, as for our newspaper, we apolo- 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group III The Wilson Post, Lebanon gize to our readers for inflicting the pain of this ongoing city hall squabble on you and promise in the days ahead we will focus on matters of much greater importance including profiles of distinguished citizens, local sports, schools and education, and business growth and development. Our community is on the threshold of a prosperous future, but in the meantime it seems some of our elected officials have their heads in places where the sun doesn’t shine and are apparently blind to what’s happening around them. (Sept. 28, 2007) 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group V Chattanooga Times Free Press Henry DAN HENRY | CHATTANOOGA TIMES FREE PRESS Kathy and Darrell Chambers sob after receiving the flag that covered the casket of their son Lance Cpl. William Craig Chambers July 8 at Anderson Memorial Gardens in Ringgold, Ga. (July 9, 2007) FROM PAGE 3 BEST NEWS REPORTING Group I 1. The Erwin Record. NFS secrecy Excellent news coverage. Solid reporting. Very smooth, easy to read style. A superb effort.The reporter’s digging was impressive. Great leads and excellent word choice. 2. GraingerToday, Bean Station. Utility district, Jim Zachary, Sarah McCarty, Barbara Womack 3. The Millington Star. Woods road to recovery 4. The Millington Star. Carruthers’ death 5. Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough. MRSA, Heather E. Seay Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Housing crisis Many excellent entries in this class, but this one topped the field on the basis of the quality & volume of information & analysis of a very complex topic. 2. The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Strategic plan 3. The Herald-News, Dayton. County sales tax, Max Hackett 4. The Courier, Savannah. Teen attempts suicide/school security, Ron Schaming 5. The News Examiner, Gallatin. You better back up Group III 1. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Mary Winkler stories, Duane Sherrill Wow – excellent story, obviously of huge local interest. You do a great job summarizing the long hearings & not bogging them down in detail, while also giving the readers some color – describing the scene, the people, etc. I would have liked to see more community reaction – maybe a story on the church or on community at large. 2. The Oak Ridger. No more waiting; Vietnam War family, Beverly Majors 3. The Paris Post-Intelligencer. Judge orders closing of local strip club, Ken Walker 4. The Lebanon Democrat. Third general sessions judge issue, J.R. Lind BY ELENORA E. EDWARDS Managing editor BNP B NP G Gp. p. IIII MELISSA KINTON | MONROE COUNTY ADVOCATE AND DEMOCRAT, SWEETWATER Reba Campbell, 84, drove her car into Sweetwater Creek on Oct. 12. Sweetwater police officers were nearby and arrived within seconds, jumped in and pulled her from the cold water. (Oct. 12, 2007) Kinton 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group II Monroe County Advocate and Democrat, Sweetwater Mayor Willie Herenton’s reasons for wanting to build a new football stadium to replace the Liberty Bowl boil down to two arguments: Renovating the existing stadium would be a waste of money, and “the opportunity is before us” to build something new. Those are weak arguments for a proposal that could cost in the neighborhood of $200 million. We’ve faced this question before. Visionaries phrase it this way: Why fix up the old building when we can build a new building? Pragmatists ask this question: Why build a new building when we can fix up the old one? Sometimes the facts come down on the side of the visionary, and sometimes they support the pragmatist’s view. We’ve talked to the mayor, we’ve examined both scenarios, and this time we stand behind the pragmatists when we say no to the mayor’s proposal. We strongly disagree that renovating Exploring the world of earmarks, those special funds members of Congress secure every year, was explained July 18 by Bill Allison, a senior fellow with the Sunlight Foundation in Washington, D.C. Earmarks are funds tacked onto larger funding bills. Traditionally, they’ve had little control or attention. Allison pointed out that in fiscal year 2008 there were 12,000 earmarks amounting to $18.3 million and that not every earmark is crooked, bad or a waste. Other basic information about the earmarks Allison provided is that every year there are some 34,000 requests, an average of 78 per member of Congress. He added that more fund-raisers are held at the time earmarks are requested, in March and April, than at any other time. To check on earmarks in one’s state, a reporter can go to www.taxpayers.net and find, in a blue box on the left, a report on FY 2008’s earmarks. Clicking on that will bring up an extensive spreadsheet, Allison noted. Allison led those attending the session through the discovery process with a PowerPoint presentation and references to various Web sites. To request an earmark, a member of the House must file a letter. These provide good information. The letters are available in a downloadable Excel format. Allison said that a good resource on earmarks is Steve Ellis, who can be contacted at (202) 5468500, extension 126. Allison said Ellis “knows everything and is a good guy.” Allison noted that information about fiscal year 2009 earmarks may not be available until after the federal election in November. The earmarks request procedure is different for the Senate, as a letter must be filed, but it states merely that the senator has no financial interest in the request, but it does not specify the beneficiary. Allison pointed out some earmarks that appeared to be favors for lobbyists and others that were “interesting though not corrupt.” He suggested that earmarks are indicative of a systemic problem, that sometimes a contribution to the congressman or congresswoman’s funds is the only way to get one’s attention. Only a fraction of the earmarks are ever investigated or evaluated by the press, other watchdogs or by voters. Allison provided a list of Web sites that can help someone trying to look into them: www.capitolwords.org www.congresspedia.org www.earmarkwatch.org www.fedspending.org Allison ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS www.followthemoney.org www.fortune535.org www.governmentdocs.org www.louisdb.org www.maplight.org www.metavid.org www.opencongress.org www.opensecrets.org www.publicmarkup.org www.speechology.org www.theopenhouseproject.org The site for the Sunlight Foundation is www.sunlightfoundation.com. SEE AWARDS, PAGE 5 We see no reason to raze Liberty Bowl BY EDITORIAL STAFF Memphis Business Journal The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 Allison walks through check on earmarks AWARDS •Great writing throughout. 2. The Daily Times, Maryville. He’s going to kill me, Jessica Stith 3. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro. Feds raid local homes, Brandon Puttbrese 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville. Life without parole, Jeff Farrell 5. The Daily Herald, Columbia. Man dies after being struck with ax, D. Frank Smith Group V 1. The Tennessean, Nashville. Gore wins Nobel Prize, Leon Alligood Well crafted. Incredible background and in-depth research. Great editorial decision to cover every angle. It’s obvious this was a huge, well thought-out team effort. 2. Bristol Herald Courier. Shock, despair 3. News Sentinel, Knoxville. Warehouse fire 4. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Tornado, Ryan Harris 5. Chattanooga Times Free Press. Plane crash, Lauren Gregory CMYK SEPTEMBER 2008 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group II Memphis Business Journal the stadium is a waste of money. The Liberty Bowl is structurally sound and functional. It’s an architecturally appealing structure. It has not outlived its usefulness. If you haven’t done so lately, take a drive by the Liberty Bowl. Go ahead and tour the perimeter of the entire site that is home to the stadium, the Children’s Museum and the Mid-South Coliseum, and was once home to Libertyland and Tim McCarver Stadium. Take a few moments to contemplate the potential for redeveloping the site. And then ask yourself why a new football stadium must be a factor in this vision. The site is currently anchored by two viable tenants: the Liberty Bowl and The Children’s Museum. The rest of the 170 acres is essentially a blank slate. Tear down the Coliseum, bulldoze the detritus that was once Libertyland, clear out the fairgrounds and you have created a developer’s playground. We urge the mayor to revisit the facility assessment report conducted by architecture firm Looney Ricks Kiss, which priced renovations at $34.2 million, and the renovation study submitted by SSR Ellers/HOK, which proposed spending $95 million to spruce up the facility. Find a middle ground between those proposals and spearhead the effort to create a new and improved Liberty Bowl. The University of Memphis, the teams playing in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl and Southern Heritage Classic, and the fans deserve a better facility than the one we have now. We hope the mayor doesn’t let his vision for a better fairgrounds get obscured by his desire for a new stadium. Let the Liberty Bowl stand. (Feb. 2-8, 2007) BNP 3 In the earmarks session, from left, Jennifer Peebles, The Tennessean, Nashville; J. Todd Foster, managing editor, Bristol Herald Courier; and Brad Schrade, The Tennessean, with Jim Charlet, Brentwood, in the background Scripps Howard Foundation announces Journalism Awards DAVID DOONAN | ROANE COUNTY NEWS, KINGSTON Doonan Roane County Sheriff’s Deputy Bob Childs sadly looks over the wreckage from the car accident that killed Heather Mitchell and her young daughters. (July 20, 2007) 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group III Roane County News, Kingston The Scripps Howard Foundation May 9 announced the winners of its annual National Journalism Awards, honoring the best in print, Web and electronic journalism and journalism education for 2007. The awards, open to all U.S. news organizations and college journalism educators, recognize excellence in 17 categories such as editorial writing, human interest writing, environment, investigative, business/economics, Washington and public service reporting, commentary, photojournalism, radio and television reporting, Web reporting, college cartooning, editorial cartooning and journalism education. The awards also honor distinguished service to the First Amendment. “These awards celebrate the role of journalism in a democratic society and we are proud to recognize the nation’s best writers, photographers, cartoonists, editors and teachers,” said Mike Philipps, the Foundation’s president and chief executive officer. “Our country and our communities are better places because of the work honored by these awards.” The Scripps Howard Foundation is the philanthropic arm of The E. W. Scripps Co. The National Journalism Award winners of particular interest to Tennessee are as follows: Distinguished service to the First Amendment—News Sentinel, Knoxville, which received $10,000 and the Edward Willis Scripps award for exposing an abuse of Tennessee’s Open Meetings Act and successfully challenging that violation in the courts. Journalism teacher of the year—Dr. Elinor Kelley Grusin, professor, Department of Journalism, University of Memphis, who received $10,000 and the Charles E. Scripps award. Her school also received a $5,000 grant. The award is given in cooperation with the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Drive-In Training - 25 ENGRAVINGS Bennett wins cartoonists award C l ay B e n n e t t , Chattanooga Times Free Press, added the Ink Bottle Award to his honors during the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists (AAEC) Bennett convention June 28 in San Antonio, Texas. In April, Bennett was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for work the previous year at the Christian Science Monitor. Also in April, Bennett won the 2007 Thomas Nast Award for best international editorial cartoons from the Overseas Press Club of America. Bennett has been with the Chattanooga Times Free Press since late 2007, and he is a member of the Washington Post Writers Group. In fact, Bennett has received so many honors (including the 2002 Pulitzer) that the AAEC played a video spoofing his prize prowess and gave him a trophy for “Outstanding Distinguished Excellence in Winning Awards” before presenting him the Ink Bottle plaque for contributions to the AAEC and editorial cartooning. AAEC President Nick Anderson of the Houston Chronicle and WPWG said a major reason for the Ink Bottle honor was Bennett’s work as AAEC president in 2005-06. During that “tumultuous and eventful” time, recalled Anderson, Bennett worked on such things as finding a new management company fo r t h e A A E C , u p g r a d i n g t h e organization’s Web site, diversifying the AAEC’s membership by attracting more alternative cartoonists, and responding to the eliminations of high-profile cartoonist positions at the Los Angeles Times and The Sun of Baltimore. “That was a dark harbinger” of more cartoonist cuts to come, said Anderson. “Clay was very eloquent in our defense.” Bennett also responded to the huge reaction in the Muslim world to the Muhammad cartoons published in Denmark. He did this through proxies such as Anderson because Bennett didn’t want to further endanger thenkidnapped Christian Science Monitor colleague Jill Carroll. And Bennett later aided the AAEC by helping to coordinate an online auction of cartoons to raise much-needed funds for the organization. NAA recognizes industry’s best Industry professionals attending the Newspaper Association of America’s Marketing Conference recognized the brightest leaders in their profession. The conference was in February in Orlando, Fla. Awards of interest to Tennesseans follow. The Tony Mineart Newspaper Merchandiser of the Year Awards honor retailers who have demonstrated a long-term cooperative effort to sell and market newspapers in their stores and who model the industry’s cutting edge approach to single-copy promotions. •MAPCO Express, nominated by The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, for the Elvis Week promotion Newspaper Carriers of the Year Awards were created to honor newspaper carriers for outstanding achievement. Entrants competed in local and regional-level competitions before moving on to the national level. •Sharon Miser, senior category, The Greeneville Sun The Display Federation Sales and Marketing Leadership Award is presented to an individual for significant and sustained excellence in serving the newspaper industry both inside and outside his or her organization in the field of advertising. •Leslie Giallombardo, vice president of advertising, Gannett Co., McLean, Va. She is the former publisher of The Tennessean, Nashville. NAAF cites outstanding NIE programs The News Sentinel, Knoxville, won two first place awards from the Newspaper Association of America Foundation (NAAF), which recognized outstanding Newspaper in Education and youth content programs for their efforts to encourage the use of newspapers in the classroom. The awards were presented as part of the Young Reader Seminar May 15-18 in Phoenix, Ariz. The newspaper was the only one to win two first place NIE Content Awards. They were as follows: For original curriculum, 60,001 to 149,999 circulation—News Sentinel, Knoxville, Alice W. Dollar, NIE manager For special projects, 60,001 to 149,999 circulation—News Sentinel, Knoxville, Alice W. Dollar, NIE manager “Newspaper in Education programs, coupled with newspaper content aimed at young people, do more than provide teachers a valuable teaching tool; this early exposure is often the spark that motivates students to read newspapers throughout their life,” explained Margaret Vassilikos, senior vice president and treasurer of NAAF. “This relationship has benefits beyond readership. Recent Foundation research indicates that people who use newspapers in the classroom and read newspaper teen content are more likely to become civically engaged adults,” she said. CMYK The Tennessee Press 4 - Awards Crowe talks elements of effective site BY ELENORA E. EDWARDS Managing editor Four things are important to make a newspaper Web site effective: good content, elements the readers will return for, the possibility of comment and a sense of community. That was the message of Adell Crowe’s presentation during TPA Drive-In Training July 18 in Nashville. Crowe had the close attention of those who attended her session. Her sense of humor was apparent throughout. One of Crowe’s first points was to recommend people read a speech Tom Curley, president of Associated Press Managing Editors, made and which can be found at www.ap.org. Moving into her main topic, Crowe urged attendees to write as clearly as possible and not to write leads that are too long. On the Web, she said, content must be scannable. She suggested using little or no punctuation in each sentence and to alternating sentence length. People love “air” when reading, she said. “This is more true on the Web than in print.” Crowe said a site must contain basic rules for responding to some comments that will be “hurtful.” Be nice. Respond only once, directly to the person who commented. Always start a comment by thanking the writer for reading the site and taking time to comment. She also injected that such comments can provide tips that lead to newspaper stories. The Web site must touch the community, Crowe said. The newspaper can visit organizations such as the PTA and invite them to participate in the site. One newspaper includes a ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS music page on its Web Crowe site, gives karma points information that people will refer to and gives away prizes. regularly, such as weather and local USA Today features individual government contact information. readers. Veryimportant, she said, is to make it Crowe has extensive newspaper expepossible for readers to comment on what rience. She is former head of training is on the site. And she suggested setting for USA Today. CMYK WORTH REPEATING Fact, opinion and the Crafton mess BY MARK SILVERMAN Editor, The Tennessean, Nashville This is the difference between a reporter, a columnist and an editorial writer: A reporter investigates an issue or chronicles an event, places the news in context, seeks all sides and avoids judging who is right or wrong. A columnist views the news through the prism of his or her personal experience and values, and provides a perspective that sometimes assigns praise or blame. An editorial writer goes through the fact-gathering process of a reporter and then presents a point of view as a columnist might. But unlike the columnist, the point of view is that of the newspaper’s editorial board rather than his or her personal opinion. Confusing? It can be to a reader. Unless you’re involved in journalism, it can be difficult to imagine that a reporter can keep his or her personal views out of a story. It also can be difficult to believe that a newspaper’s editorial positions have no influence on news coverage. But that’s the case — and that’s the reason mainstream newspapers and their Web sites have for so long been the most credible information sources in their communities. Understanding that separation of duties is especially difficult when it comes to some issues — such as the English-only crusade by Metro Councilman Eric Crafton. Our reporting has shown that claims made by Crafton are exaggerated and misleading. Our columnists have questioned both the practical reasons for his proposal and the moral underpinnings of his campaign. Our editorial board has called for the defeat of this year’s ballot petition — just as it hailed former Mayor Bill Purcell’s veto of the council proposal last year. That’s because it believes the initiative is misguided, impractical, dangerous to individuals’ health and well-being, a detriment to the region’s growth, and racist. The next news event will probably come this week, when the council takes up Councilman Ronnie Steine’s measure asking fellow members to urge voters to reject Crafton’s initiative. Our news coverage will continue to probe both the motivation of those behind the measure and its possible unintended consequences. We also will try to discover the identity of those putting up the money behind the petition drive. The very fact that the financing sources have been kept secret raises suspicions that some backers might have unsavory agendas. It is possible that there’s nothing nefarious about the funding and, indeed, you might find yourself in agreement with the supporters. But don’t you want to know who is bankrolling Crafton before you sign on? That’s one reason for our continued reporting on the issue. We’ll continue to report the public safety impact of signs, of telephone messages and of conversations held in a language that many lawful residents find difficult to understand. And we’ll continue to report on the barriers faced by many people who want to learn English but can’t because of limited access to classes and other reasons. We’ll report about the likely impact of Crafton’s measure on the ability of our region and our state to attract businesses like Nissan and Volkswagen. (Would Crafton’s backers have banned the German translators who facilitated the negotiations to bring the automaker to Tennessee?) What about reporting the other side of the issue — exploring substantive reasons that argue for enacting the measure? We’ve tried—and we will continue to try. But once you get past the pat phrases and look for concrete examples of how this proposed law might improve life in Davidson County, it becomes difficult to find the other side. Our columnists will continue to express their views — sometimes tied to news events and sometimes flowing from their sense of right and wrong. And our editorial board will continue to urge residents and officials to do what it believes is right. Our position is that an English-only law is potentially dangerous from public safety and economic development standpoints; further, we believe it to be a morally reprehensible measure that appeals to some well-meaning people on an emotional basis in the same way that Adolf Hitler appealed to some Germans’ national pride after World War I. The roles of reporters, columnists and editorial writers will always differ — even if their work may suggest the same conclusions on some stories. (Aug. 3, 2008) SEPTEMBER 2008 WORTH REPEATING Grainger Today revisits why we do what we do While awards are certainly nice to receive, last week’s UT-TPA Awards ceremony was a time for Grainger Today to reflect why we do what we do. Newspapers play many roles in a community. None of those roles is any more important than providing solid news content and meaningful commentary. The role of newspapers in keeping an eye on government and closely scrutinizing public policy has been around as long as journalism itself. In an open and free society, an open, free and candid press is crucial. It is disturbing to see many newspapers shrink back from that role, turning into little more than community newsletters with editorial pages that are either full of personal humor columns, syndicated columns or, in some cases, no editorial page at all. An open, free and unfettered press was closely tied to the American Revolution, and it can be strongly argued that without it, the colonies would have never been rallied to the cause of independence. The framers of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights ensured the freedom of the press with the First Amendment, making the kind of government oppression and control from which colonialists sought their liberty unconstitutional in the new United States. After the Revolutionary War and the signing of the Constitution, the press kept a close eye on the new government and its newly elected officials. In the mid-1800s the Penny Press exposed government corruption and abuses of power, expanding even further the role of the public watchdog. During the 19 th century Joseph Pulitzer forever changed the face of American journalism, distinguishing himself as the foe of political corruption. During that time of aggressive, proactive, open and free press, Mark Twain coined the phrase, “Never pick an argument with a man who buys ink by the barrel.” As the 20th century began, William Randolph Hearst continued with the same kind of media activism, causing his detractors to label his journalistic style “yellow journalism,” but building a media empire hallmarked by exposing corruption, providing a forum for social commentary and setting high standards for editorial candor. Newspapers are directly tied to our form of government and way of life in America. In many parts of the world the press is not free and neither are the people. The trend of newspapers in this country to eliminate or water down editorial pages is something to worry about. At Grainger Today we are proud to follow in the footsteps of great newspapermen such as Edward J. Meeman, who fought against political corruption and championed civil rights causes throughout his illustrious journalism career in the state of Tennessee. Page one is the face of a newspaper. Advertising revenue is its lifeblood. The editorial page is its heart and soul. At Grainger Today we are committed to serving Grainger County in these ways. Everyone may not always like the facts we report. Readers may not always agree with editorials. Letters to the editor will not always be popular or reflect prevailing public opinion. However, stimulating the public dialogue can never be a bad thing. As proud as we are of being recognized by our peers for excellence in journalism, our greatest source of pride is the humbling privilege of serving the citizens of Grainger County. (July 23, 2008) ELENORA E. EDWARDS | TPS Al Cross talks about covering economic and business coverage by newspapers. He is director of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues at the University of Kentucky, Lexington. The Rural Blog, www.uky.edu/comminfostudies/IRJCI/blog.htm, carries stories about journalism and issues and is both a source of stories of interest to newspapers and a source of story ideas. The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 FROM PAGE 2 AWARDS MAKE-UP AND APPEARANCE Group I 1. The Humboldt Chronicle •Headline/Photo combination was excellent on front page and sports page •Very pleasing to the eye •Excellent overall 2. The Erwin Record. Anthony D. Piercy, Mark A. Stevens, Lesley Hughes, Keith Whitson, Brenda Sparks 3. Lake County Banner, Tiptonville 4. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Jim Zachary, Ann Cason, Robert Turner 5. The Portland Progressive Group II 1. Memphis Business Journal. Lee Swets •The design is clean and attractive •Good use of graphics •Good headline font 2. Nashville Business Journal. Anne Pringle, Dave Raiford, Garrison Wells, Scott Takal, Todd Stringer, Carol Smith 3. The Daily News, Memphis 4. Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater. Mia Rhodarmer 5. The Herald-News, Dayton. John Carpenter,Tiffany Soyster, Max Hackett, Cathy Barnes Group III 1. The Oak Ridger Layout is excellent. I especially liked the dominant art. It is easy to follow stories & know which photo, headline goes with which. Liked the use of graphic on Feb. 15 in economic development story. Don’t like centered headlines. I prefer left-justified, except over features. Photo quality & content was very good. Loved the Valentine’s Day feature package! It wouldn’t hurt to air things out a little & go with 4 stories on front instead of 5. Would like to see subheads on all stories to make it more consistent. Don’t like subheads italicized. Overall - the best of the lot. Sports was excellent. 2. The Newport Plain Talk 3. Southern Standard, McMinnville 4. The Tullahoma News 5. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. David Melson, Carol Spray, Mary Cook Group IV 1. The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Attractive – good looking newspaper from an appearance standpoint. This paper is just a cut above the rest of the class because of its general appearance, mechanic production, good use of photos & graphics. Also a good mix of ads & news on each page and its overall design was hard to beat. 2. The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro 3. The Daily Herald, Columbia 4. The Mountain Press, Sevierville 5. Citizen Tribune, Morristown Group V 1. Chattanooga Times Free Press Good use of color! Front page makes you want to read inside Index important on front page! Keep up the good work! 2. News Sentinel, Knoxville 3. Kingsport Times-News 4. Johnson City Press 5. The Jackson Sun BEST SPOT NEWS STORY Group I 1. The Portland Leader. Smokefree Tennessee, Sonya Thompson Definitely a hot-button topic right now. Loved the lead! This story gave a great, human-interest perspective to the issue. I liked it very much. 2. The Middle Tennessee Times, Smithville. Newborn found in restaurant trash, Chris Tramel 3. The Portland Progressive. Man saves firefighter 4. Grainger Today, Bean Station. Utility stymies records request, Sarah McCarty 5. The Millington Star. Man dies in police custody Group II 1. The Leader, Covington. The great escape, Greg Little Love the tongue-in-cheek approach; even your officials seemed to play along. Very well written. Interesting topic with “slice of life appeal.” 2. The Courier, Savannah. Estranged husband ambushes, wounds wife, Ron Schaming 3.The Standard Banner, Jefferson City. Crops are just dried up 4. The News Examiner, Gallatin. Local businessman accused of $53 million scam, Katrina Cornwell 5.The Herald-News, Dayton. Possible tornado rips up Dayton, Max Hackett Group III 1. Shelbyville Times-Gazette. Holton execution, Clint Confehr Haunting. An excellent piece of journalism. Nothing can beat an eye witness report. 2. Southern Standard, McMinnville. Voluntary manslaughter, Duane Sherrill 3. Roane County News, Kingston. Father & son burn in fire 4. The Oak Ridger. Tragedy strikes; youth dips 5. Southern Standard, McMinnville. I figured I was a goner, James Clark Group IV 1.The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville. Man kills himself at council meeting, Eric Snyder, Jason Austin •Great lede, very dramatic •Use of BO’s quotes before his death really tell the story •evokes emotion, a man with no where else to turn but to death •image of his wife throwing herself on him! SEE AWARDS, PAGE 4 Awards - 3 Dept. of Children’s Services dropped ball BY BOB PARKINS The Milan Mirror-Exchanges Little Austin Cash, who was a vibrant, bright, 19-monthold boy, is fighting for his life in the Memphis LeBonheur Children’s Hospital, a victim of alleged child abuse. Today he’s lying Parkins in critical condition with a cracked skull, brain damage, lifeless and blind. Physicians say his condition isn’t likely to improve if he lives. The sad thing is that the Gibson County Department of Children’s Services (DCS) had been forewarned that the child, who was practically raised by great-grandparents in Milan, was in danger while in the hands of the tot’s father and stepmother, who now live in Martin. The court had granted the real father 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best single editorial Group I The Milan Mirror-Exchange partial custody of the child between him and the child’s mother who lives in Milan. The great-grandparents noticed signs of abuse early on when the child left Milan to stay with the father in Martin. When Austin was returned, they noticed burns and bruises on the child after visits with the boy’s real dad. Once, the boy’s lips were parched from apparent dehydration and lack of nourishment, the grandparents noticed. They made several pictures and urged the DCS to keep the child away from an environment of obvious abuse. But they got no relief from DCS counselors who assured them that they had visited the Martin home and things would improve. It didn’t; instead things got much worse for the child. On the night of July 28, Austin was taken to Volunteer Hospital with lifethreatening head injuries and airlifted to Memphis LeBonheur. (See story on page 1). The child’s father and stepmother were arrested on charges of aggravated child abuse and neglect. They are currently in jail unable to make bond and have been bound over to the Weakley County Grand Jury in September. The stepmother had several children of her own who have been placed in foster homes. The tragic truth is that this alleged abuse could have been prevented had the ball of justice not been dropped by someone who wasn’t doing their job. We pray there’s hope for little Austin. His relatives are devastated. He deserves better and so do the taxpayers of Gibson County. Someone needs to face the music in this blatant case of irresponsibility! (Aug. 14, 2007) EDITOR’S NOTE: Bob Parkins, editor and publisher of The Milan Mirror-Exchange, died April 17. ENGRAVINGS The Shelbyville Times-Gazette was awarded the 2007 Kohl’s Distribution Excellence Award in recognition of its commitment to providing errorfree distribution of Kohl’s preprinted advertising section. “Your newspaper has shown that planning and teamwork among departments creates the ideal distribution process,” Kohl’s officials wrote in a letter accompanying the award. | Sherry Hasty was employee of the month of August at The Tullahoma News. She works in accounting and has been with the paper 24 years. She has received the same honor before and also was named employee of the year. | The Jackson Sun was the recipient of the 2008 Performing Star Award of Leadership Jackson. Roy W. Heatherly, president and publisher, accepted the award. 2008 STATE PRESS CONTESTS First place award Best news photo Group I Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough CHARLIE MAUK | HERALD AND TRIBUNE, JONESBOROUGH Sad farewells were said as the 730th Quartermaster company from Gray and Erwin headed off for training in Mississippi. (July 10, 2007) Mauk CMYK The Tennessee Press 26 - Drive-In Training SEPTEMBER 2008 CMYK (Left) Contests Committee Chairman Victor Parkins welcomes people to the State Press Contests Awards Luncheon July 18 in Nashville. TPA President Tom Griscom talks about newspapers’ central role in the U.S. society. pete against each other, primarily in Group III. The 2008 divisions were as follows: Group I—Combined weekly circulation of 5,000 or less; Group II—Combined weekly circulation of 5,001-15,000; Group III—Combined weekly circulation of 15,001-50,000; Group IV—Combined weekly circulation of 50,001-200,000; and Group V—Combined weekly circulation of 200,001 and more. In earlier years, there were four circulation categories, two non-daily and two daily. The Nebraska Press Association judged a total of 1,394 contest entries from 77 association newspapers. The Leaf-Chronicle earned the most first place honors, with eight. It won for make-up and appearance, local features, best personal humor column, best spot news story, best education reporting, investigative reporting, public service and best sports photograph. The Tennessean won six first-place awards, for sports writing, Sunday editions, editorials, best spot news story, best feature photograph and best sports Contests! Contests! Yes, it’s true. Awards were just conferred. But the 2009 awards period ends in just four months. And this year the deadlines will come earlier than usual, in January 2009. So, don’t rest on your laurels. Get busy and start stashing away potential entries for the Ad/Circ Ideas Contest and the UT-TPA State Press Contests. Awards period: Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 2008 Deadlines: January 2009 photograph. The Memphis Business Journal won six first place awards, for make-up and appearance, editorials, best single editorial, best news reporting, best education reporting and investigative reporting. The Oak Ridger won five first place awards, for make-up and appearance, local features, best single feature, best personal humor column and best feature photograph. UT has co-sponsored the annual contest since 1940. The university’s Edward J. Meeman Foundation honored nine newspapers for their accomplishments in editorial writing and public service journalism with $200 awards in the categories of best single editorial, editorials and public service. The monetary awards were increased from $100 for the first year. The foundation was established in 1968 at UT to fund the contests as well as journalism scholarships and faculty fellowships. One newspaper, the Memphis Business Journal, won two awards for best single editorial and editorials. Other newspapers receiving Meeman awards were the News Sentinel, Knoxville, The Leaf-Chronicle and The Newport Plain Talk, public service; the Kingsport Times-News, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, The Wilson Post, Lebanon, and The Milan Mirror-Exchange, best single editorial; and Grainger Today, Bean Station, editorials. Winners of four first place awards: •LaFollette Press, for best single feature, sports writing, best feature photograph and best sports photograph; •News Sentinel, for best single feature, best news reporting, headline writing and public service; •The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, for local features, best personal column, best education reporting and investigative reporting; and •The Erwin Record, for local features, community lifestyles, sports writing and best news reporting. Winners of three first-place awards: • Chattanooga Times Free Press, for make-up and appearance, community lifestyles and best news photograph; • Herald-Citizen, Cookeville, for sports writing, best news reporting and best special issue or section; •Shelbyville Times-Gazette, for sports writing, best spot news story and best special issue or section; •Southern Standard, McMinnville, for best news reporting, headline writing and promotion of newspapers; •The Humboldt Chronicle, for makeup and appearance, public service and best special issue or section; •The Mountain Press, Sevierville, for community lifestyles, editorials and best feature photograph; and •The Wilson Post, Lebanon, for community lifestyles, best single editorial and investigative reporting. Other first place award winners: •Chester County Independent, Henderson, best personal humor column and best feature photograph; •Grainger Today, Bean Station, editorials and best personal column; •Kingsport Times-News, best single editorial and best single advertisement; The Mt. Juliet News, best education reporting and investigative reporting; •The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, best single editorial and best news photograph; •The Leader, Covington, best spot news story and headline writing; •The Milan Mirror-Exchange, best single editorial and best sports photograph; •The Newport Plain Talk, best education reporting and public service; •Bristol Herald Courier, best special issue or section; •Carroll County News-Leader, Huntingdon, best single feature; •Citizen Tribune, Morristown, headline writing; •Herald and Tribune, Jonesborough, best news photograph; •Hickman County Times, Centerville, best personal humor column; •Johnson City Press, best personal humor column; •Macon County Chronicle, Lafayette, community lifestyles; •Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater, best news photograph; •Overton County News, Livingston, best single advertisement; •Roane County News, Kingston, best news photograph; EDITOR’S NOTE We are printing in this Awards Section all the first place winning entries from five instead of the former four circulation groups in the following categories: Best Single Editorial, Best Personal Column, Best Personal Humor Column, Best News Photograph, Best Feature Photograph, Best Sports Photograph and Best Single Ad. Most of the photos were run very large and in color on the newspaper pages. We wish we were able to print the winning photos in color, as large and in the same compelling manner as when they were originally published. Thanks to all the newspaper staffers who sent their photos or in other ways provided information for this section. —Elenora E. Edwards Managing editor •Robertson County Times, Springfield, best personal column; •The Daily Herald, Columbia, promotion of newspapers; •The Daily News, Memphis, local features; •The Daily Times, Maryville, best single feature; •The Greeneville Sun, best personal column; •The Lebanon Democrat, editorials; •The Millington Star, headline writing; •The Paris Post-Intelligencer, best personal column; •The Portland Leader, best spot news story; •The Rogersville Review, best special issue or section; •The Standard Banner, Jefferson City, public service; and •Union City Daily Messenger, best sports photograph. The complete list of winners is available at www.utk.edu/news/docs/ tpa2008.pdf and is printed in this section, beginning on Page 3. Winners from 2000 through 2008 are posted on www.tnpress.com. A slide show of first place images is available at www.tnpress.com/statepresscontests.html. Tom Overton, Monroe County Advocate & Democrat, Sweetwater, will serve as 2008-09 contests chairman. Awards luncheon and training factoids •Total number of attendees: 219, including staff members and speakers •Member newspapers represented: 55, with 200 attendees •Dailies: 21, with 74 attendees •Non-dailies: 34, with 126 attendees •Attended training: 61 Drive-In Training - 27 Drive-In Training photos UT, TPA announce State Press Contests winners Newspapers across Tennessee won top awards in the University of Tennessee-Tennessee Press Association’s 2008 State Press Contests. General Excellence winners and their points were as follows: The Erwin Record, 55; Memphis Business Journal, 46; Southern Standard, McMinnville, 64; The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, 66; and The Tennessean, Nashville, 71. They received the awards July 18 at the Millennium Maxwell House Hotel in Nashville. Seventy-seven newspapers submitted a total of 1,394 entries that were judged by the Nebraska Press Association. The 2008 contests mark the sixth consecutive General Excellence Award for The Erwin Record. Both the Southern Standard and The Tennessean have received seven General Excellence Awards out of the 10 years since the points-based award, formerly called Sweepstakes, was established in 1999. The Leaf-Chronicle has won the award three times, and this was a first for the Memphis Business Journal. Victor Parkins, 2007-08 Contests Committee chairman, presided. TPA President Tom Griscom acknowledged the large turnout of newspaper staff members. He said it was important to let people know “what newspaper people do, why, and why it is important to those we serve.” Hank Dye, UT vice president for public and government relations, presented awards. Charles Primm, communications coordinator, announced winners, and Amy Rummel, media specialist, took individual award photos. Amy Blakely, assistant director of media relations, handled a PowerPoint presentation. Jay Mayfield, communications coordinator, assisted Dye. Also attending was Gina Stafford, UT assistant vice president and director of media relations. A change in the contests for this year added a fifth division for competition, those divisions being based on total weekly paid circulation instead of non-daily or daily status. This change caused dailies and non-dailies to com- The Tennessee Press SEPTEMBER 2008 •Attended luncheon: 207 •Member paper with the most attendees: The Tennessean, Nashville, with 18 •Universities represented: 2, with 8 attendees •Training session with the most attendees: “Get Your Audience in Gear,” with Adell Crowe, with 39 attendees Win Anderson, The News-Democrat, Waverly Donna Rea, The Erwin Record, and husband, Larry Sara Withrow and Scott Broden, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Andrew Oppmann, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Drive-InTraining chairman Chris Fletcher, The Daily Herald, Columbia Hugh Jones, Shelbyville TimesGazette CMYK The Tennessee Press 2 - Awards Mary Reeves, Shelbyville TimesJim Wozniak, Johnson City Press, and John Kiener, Herald Gazette and Tribune, Jonesborough A ‘sweepstakes’ history The UT-TPA State Press Contests began many years ago, in 1940. During a period at about the mid-20th century, a sweepstakes awards was established. Later it was abandoned. Then the Sweepstakes Award was reestablished in 1999 as a points-based award. At that time, points were assigned as follows: first place (6 points), second place (5 points), third place (4 points), fourth place (3 points), fifth place (2 points), sixth place (1 point). The newspaper in each of the four contests divisions (Group One, Group Two, Group Three and Group Four) with the highest total points in its group received the Sweepstakes Award. In 2006, the category of General Excellence replaced the Sweepstakes Award. Since 2007, only five places are awarded, with points as follows: first place (5 points), second place (4 points), third place (3 points), fourth place (2 points) and fifth place (1 point). 1999 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: Chester County Independent, Henderson Group II: The Review Appeal, Franklin Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2000 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: Chester County Independent, Henderson Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2001 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: The Rutherford Courier, Smyrna Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2006 General Excellence Award winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: LaFollette Press Group III: The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2002 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I : Chester County Independent, Henderson Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: Chattanooga Times Free Press 2007 General Excellence Award winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: The Standard Banner, Jefferson City Group III: The Daily Herald, Columbia Group IV: The Commercial Appeal, Memphis 2003 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I : The Erwin Record Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2004 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Tennessean, Nashville 2005 Sweepstakes Award winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group III: The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro Group IV: The Commercial Appeal, Memphis Note: a fifth division was added to the State Press Contests for 2008. All divisions are based upon total weekly paid circulation, which meant some dailies and non-dailies competed in the same division. The divisions are as follows: Group I: Combined weekly circulation of 5,000 or less Group II: Combined weekly circulation of 5,001-15,000 Group III: Combined weekly circulation of 15,001-50,000 Group IV: Combined weekly circulation of 50,001-200,000; Group V: Combined weekly circulation of 200,001 and above 2008 General Excellence Awards winners Group I: The Erwin Record Group II: Memphis Business Journal Group III: Southern Standard, McMinnville Group IV: The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville Group V: The Tennessean, Nashville The Tennessee Press 28 - Awards 2008 University of Tennessee-Tennessee Press Association SEPTEMBER 2008 State Press Contests Awards GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARDS September 2008 Special section GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARDS GREG WILLIAMSON | THE LEAF-CHRONICLE, CLARKSVILLE THE LEAF-CHRONICLE, CLARKSVILLE Group IV CMYK CMYK From left, Multi-media editor Robert Smith, reporter Jamie Dexter, reporter Eric Snyder, reporter Ann Wallace, managing editor Chris Smith and night editor Brian Dunn THE ERWIN RECORD THE ERWIN RECORD Group I From left, Cody Lewis, Brenda Sparks, Kevin Lewis, Donna Rea, Mark A. Stevens, Anthony Piercy, Keith Whitson, Lesley Hughes and Eileen Rush LAUREN ZECHMAN | SOUTHERN STANDARD, McMINNVILLE SOUTHERN STANDARD, McMINNVILLE Group III Front to back, Charlie Johnson, Publisher Patricia Zechman, Duane Sherrill, Margaret Hobbs, Lisa Hobbs, Seth Wright, Rob Nunley, Dale Stubblefield and James Clark. Not in the photo is Veola Sutherland. BRAD ALEXANDER | MEMPHIS BUSINESS JOURNAL SAM SIMPKINS | THE TENNESSEAN, NASHVILLE MEMPHIS BUSINESS JOURNAL Group II THE TENNESSEAN, NASHVILLE Group V From left: Seated, staff reporters Trey Heath, Andy Ashby, Chris Sheffield and Toby Sells; standing, staff reporter Einat Paz-Frankel, production artist Angela Snell, managing editor Terry Hollahan, researcher Jason Bolton, editor Bill Wellborn, design editor Lee Swets and Web editor Jane Donahoe From left, entertainment editor Linda Zettler, senior editor Deborah Fisher, sports editor Larry Taft, managing editor Meg Downey, director of online content Knight Stivender, senior editor Alan Whitt, photo editor Tom Stanford, editor Mark Silverman, city editor Mike Kennedy and business editor Randy McClain INSIDE AWARDS LUNCHEON UT-TPAAWARDS LIST 2 3-20 NEWS PHOTOS EDITORIALS 3-5 3-7 FEATURE PHOTOS 6-10 PERSONAL COLUMNS 8-12 SPORTS PHOTOS 11-13 HUMOR COLUMNS 13, 16-18 BEST ADS TAPME AWARDS 19 22-23