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E.J. Mitchell Shifted from Nashville

Editor Moves to Cherry Hill, N.J., in Musical Chairs

Everett J. Mitchell, who was named the first African American editor of the Nashville Tennessean less than two years ago, was transferred today to a smaller Gannett Co. paper, the Courier-Post in Camden/Cherry Hill, N.J., in a round of musical chairs involving Gannett editors. Mitchell is now executive editor of the New Jersey paper.

 

 

Derek Osenenko, executive editor at the Courier-Post, was named editor of Gannett News Service, based at Gannett headquarters at McLean, Va.

Osenenko “replaces Mark Silverman, who moves to The Tennessean in Nashville as editor and vice president/Content and Audience Development. Everett J. Mitchell, formerly vice president/News and editor at The Tennessean, was selected to replace Osenenko as executive editor in Cherry Hill,” a Gannett news release said. Silverman had been editor and publisher of the Detroit News before Gannett sold it last year.

“It’s been a rushed morning,” Joyce Gabriel, managing editor of the Courier-Post, told Journal-isms. “I’m happy,” she said of Mitchell’s appointment. “He has such good credentials. Everybody was impressed. He seems very nice.”

Mitchell was introduced to the staff and met with other managers, going out with the publisher to get a look at the circulation area, Circulation Director Jim Gregory said.

Silverman met with the Nashville staff at about 10:15 a.m., when the announcement was made, a reporter said. The Tennessean newsroom has about 190 people.

Mitchell returns to the Northeast to “lead a fine newspaper in a very competitive market,” Tennessean Publisher Ellen Leifeld said on the paper’s Web site. “Under his leadership in Nashville the newsroom has provoked closer scrutiny of public policy. He has an opportunity to do the same in New Jersey in a very competitive newspaper environment.”

“I’m very grateful that he brought back that investigative drive,” she later told Journal-isms. “The newspaper is happy about that and the community is happy about that.”

Leifeld was named president and publisher of the Tennessean a year ago, replacing Leslie Giallombardo, who resigned and announced plans to form her own business.

Mitchell, then 42, was managing editor of the Detroit News when he took over the Nashville job in December 2004 from Frank Sutherland. His previous experience as an executive editor had been at Gannett’s Statesman Journal in Salem, Ore., before he took the Detroit job.

Mitchell told the Tennessean staff when he was named that he would concentrate on public service journalism, watchdog journalism, First Amendment journalism and “news that makes a difference in people’s lives.”

Among the journalists of color who joined the staff under Mitchell were investigative reporter Melvin Claxton, Leavett Biles, assistant presentation editor, and Alan Whitt, assistant managing editor for sports.

Last year, the paper published an investigation of the Tennessee Highway Patrol that found that troopers were hired because of their political connections, and reported that some had criminal backgrounds. Another story, also by reporters Brad Schrade and Trent Siebert, exposed sexual harassment in state government.

Referring to the Tennessee Highway Patrol and Gov. Phil Bredesen, a December story by Schrade said, “A months-long investigation by The Tennessean has shown that two-thirds of THP officers proposed for promotions under Bredesen had made campaign donations or had relatives or patrons who did. Of those, half were recommended over troopers with better scores on impartial exams.

“Revelations about those promotions were one factor contributing to the forced departures this month of Pitts” — Lynn Pitts, ousted as the head of the patrol — “and his superiors, Safety Commissioner Fred Phillips and Deputy Commissioner Tom Moore. Bredesen said the department is permeated by cronyism.”

The Tennessean’s circulation is 172,879 daily and 233,134 Sunday, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations. The Courier-Post’s is 69,000 daily and 84,000 Sunday, Gregory said. Its newsroom has about 130 people, according to Gabriel. The Courier-Post competes with the Philadelphia media for South Jersey readers and has an African American publisher, Mark Frisby.

Mitchell did not return telephone calls seeking comment.

At a session at the American Society of Newspaper Editors’ 2005 convention on ASNE’s Diversity Leadership Institute, a retreat for newspaper editors, Silverman said, “We have spent years and years of hiring people of color and trying to make them white.”

As reported here at the time, he added: “And as soon as they act white they get promoted.” Otherwise, it’s “she’s too quiet and he’s too loud. Society values diversity on paper, as long as you act white.”

Silverman and other panelists said editors must break out of their comfort zones and respect cultural differences.

“I have known Silverman for years and have been impressed with his work for many years,” Leifeld told Journal-isms.

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Leonard Sykes Jr., Milwaukee Journalist, Dies at 53

“To say Leonard Sykes Jr. was well-connected in Milwaukee’s central city is a bit of an understatement,” Meg Jones reported today in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

 

Leonard Sykes Jr.

“As urban affairs reporter for the Journal Sentinel, Sykes wrote about issues affecting Milwaukee as well as organizations and groups dedicated to making the community a better place.

“He was known for helping out co-workers with ideas and sources for stories and for knowing most of the community’s movers and shakers whose phone numbers filled his Rolodex. And he shined his journalistic spotlight on issues he knew were important.

“His last article, which ran in June in the Journal Sentinel the day before he had a massive stroke, focused on the growing momentum of a national effort to reconnect fathers with their children.

“Sykes, 53, died Sunday in Milwaukee. He had been on life support since he suffered a stroke on Father’s Day while visiting his father in Chicago.”

In his column on Sunday, Eugene Kane wrote, “Without Sykes around, I find myself appreciating his contributions more profoundly than ever. The precarious nature of his ailment brings a sobering realization about the fragile mortality we all face. Many readers can no doubt relate to the potential for catastrophic illness visited on friends or family. It leads to soul-searching that helps keep personal priorities squarely in place.

“The newspaper will miss Sykes for his institutional knowledge of a city that can’t easily be replaced because of his encyclopedia-like recall and his passion for writing about important issues all too often ignored by most journalists.”

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Hartford Courant Reporter Ends VOA Arrangement

“After questions were raised about his being paid by the government, The Courant’s Washington bureau chief will no longer appear as a panelist on the Voice of America,” William Weir reported Saturday in the Hartford Courant.

“As part of an arrangement approved by The Courant, Washington Bureau Chief David Lightman had appeared frequently on ‘Issues In the News,’ a weekly radio show on the U.S. government-sponsored Voice of America. For each appearance he received $100. According to the VOA’s website, his most recent appearance was Sept. 3,” the story continued.

“It can certainly be seen as a conflict, and that’s why we’re stopping it,” Clifford Teutsch, the Courant’s editor, said in the story.

Teutsch said Lightman’s editors had approved the payment arrangement several years ago. The stipend was considered fair, he said, because topics discussed on the show were often outside his reporting duties and required research and preparation on his own time.

Meanwhile, Jesus Diaz Jr., publisher of the Miami Herald and the Spanish-language El Nuevo Herald, told readers Sunday that, “The past week has been painful for many in the Cuban community and for employees at The Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald. Many have questioned the motives behind the dismissal of two El Nuevo Herald reporters and a freelance writer who did a significant amount of work for us while simultaneously working for and being paid by Radio and TV Martí.

“I approved the dismissals because, as the publisher of these newspapers, I am deeply committed to the separation between government and a free press. Further, our employees violated our conflict-of-interest rules. . . .

“I am concerned about our readers’ reaction to columnists Carl Hiaasen’s and Ana Menendez’s opinion columns in today’s paper,” he continued. “My first reaction was to keep both columns, which represent Carl’s and Ana’s opinions, from running in the paper at this time because I believe they may inflame sentiments in the Cuban community.

“However, many in our organization have told me that doing so would be the equivalent of suffocating the very freedom of the press I was trying to protect when we dismissed the El Nuevo Herald reporters. Therefore, the articles are published in today’s paper.”

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Black, Latino Students Back 1st Amendment Less

“U.S. high school students know more about the First Amendment than they did two years ago, but they are increasingly polarized in how they feel about it, according to an update of a groundbreaking survey funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation,” the organization reported today.

It also said, “While the study finds that white students are more supportive of First Amendment freedoms than African-American or Hispanic students, income disparities between racial and ethnic groups also contribute to these differences.”

The study was released on Constitution Day. The U.S. Constitution was signed by 55 delegates to the Constitutional Convention 219 years ago.

“U.S. high school students are far more likely to take classes that teach about the First Amendment than two years ago, according to the survey. And more students now support protections for the news media. They also are more in favor of their right to report in their own newspapers without school officialsâ?? approval,” a news release said.

“But more students today think the First Amendment, as a whole, goes too far in the rights it guarantees. A gap is widening between those who support this fundamental law and those who donâ??t. And teachers, while themselves increasing their appreciation of the First Amendment, donâ??t think schools are doing a great job of teaching it.”

“We see progress,” Eric Newton, Knightâ??s director of Journalism Initiatives, said in the release, “but there are still serious problems.”

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Greensboro Paper Recounts City’s Gay “Purge”

“On Feb. 4, 1957, a Guilford County grand jury emerged from its closed session and issued a bundle of indictments of a scope unlike any before or since â?? against 32 men accused of being homosexual,” Lorraine Ahearn wrote Sunday in the Greensboro (N.C.) News & Record.

“After witnesses named the men during police interrogations, the suspects were tried one by one in a Greensboro courtroom for crimes against nature, almost exclusively with consenting adults.

“The now-obscure episode, which some longtime residents came to call ‘the purge,’ was the largest attempted roundup of homosexuals in Greensboro history and marked one of the most intense gay scares of the 1950s.

“Unlike sweeps of subsequent decades, involving raids on public parks and gay bars, Greensboro’s 1957 trials focused on private acts behind closed doors.

“The purpose, in the words of the police chief, was to ‘remove these individuals from society who would prey upon our youth,’ and to protect the town from what a presiding judge called ‘a menace.’

“Some 32 trials in the winter and spring of 1957 would end in guilty verdicts, 24 of them resulting in prison terms of five to 20 years, with some defendants assigned to highway chain gangs.

“Based on dozens of interviews over a four-week period with those who recall it, this is the story of what happened.”

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Native Women Hurt More by Domestic Violence

“Reporter Jodi Rave has spent much of the past year reporting on the reasons for – and solutions to – the disproportionate rate of domestic violence against Native women. This is the first installment in an occasional series,” the Missoulian in Missoula, Mont., told readers today.

 

Jodi Rave

“While the White House announced last fall that domestic violence decreased 59 percent during the last decade, the same can’t be said in Native communities,” her story said.

“‘The numbers seem to be going up,’ said Sarah Deer, Tribal Law and Policy Institute attorney in Minneapolis. ‘But we don’t know if domestic violence is becoming more frequent or if more people are reporting.’

“It is estimated that in their lifetimes, one in three Native women will be raped. Six in 10 will be physically assaulted.

“Native women experience 66 percent of the violent crimes committed against Native people.”

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