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Deadliest Year in a Decade

81 Journalists, Media Staffers Killed in 2006

“Eighty-one journalists and media staffers were killed worldwide in 2006, making it the deadliest year for reporters in more than a decade, Reporters Without Borders said Thursday,” as the Associated Press reported.

 

 

“Iraq was the most dangerous country for journalists last year, with 39 reporters and 26 other media workers killed, according to the Paris-based media advocacy group.

“It was the most dangerous year for journalists since 1994, which was marked by the Rwandan genocide, civil war in Algeria and conflict in the former Yugoslavia.

In running the story on its Web site, CBSNews.com linked to its stories about the May 29 car bombing in Iraq that wounded correspondent Kimberly Dozier and killed four other people, including her CBS camera crew. One of them, veteran cameraman Paul Douglas, 48, based in London, became the first black journalist killed in Iraq.

“Worldwide, 871 journalists spent time in jail in 2006, and China put more reporters behind bars than any other country, the report said. Thirty-two journalists were jailed in China last year. Cuba jailed 24 and Ethiopia 21.

“Reporters Without Borders raised concerns about democratic countries having ‘little ambition, and sometimes even giving up, in defending the values they are supposed to embody.’

“During the international uproar over cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, the international community did little to help journalists who were threatened or arrested, the report said.

“‘It was as if, fearing a fight with Arab and Muslim regimes, Europe, for one, renounced all desire to make itself heard,'” said the organization.

“In Latin America, the murder of nearly a dozen journalists in Mexico with virtual impunity, the continued imprisonment of more than a score in Cuba and the deteriorating situation in Bolivia (nevertheless the best-ranked country of the South in the Reporters Without Borders annual press freedom index) are all signals to the international community to be very vigilant,” according to the report’s introduction.

“Many African governments, especially those in the Horn of Africa, distrust media workers. The killers of journalists are also not being punished and are still being protected by governments and all-powerful politicians in Gambia and Burkina Faso.

“Dictatorships also seem to be tightening their grip on the Internet and at least 60 people are in prison for posting criticism of the government online. China, the leading offender, is being copied by Vietnam, Syria, Tunisia, Libya and Iran and more and more bloggers and cyber-dissidents are in jail.”

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Williams Interview With Bush Took 6 Years to Get

Juan Williamsinterview with President Bush for National Public Radio on Monday took six years to get, Williams said on Friday.

 

 

 

“It was my Don Quixote-like quest,” he told Journal-isms, one that started while he was host of NPR’s “Talk of the Nation.”

“There was a lot of mutual suspicion between NPR and the White House,” he said. “I’ve been through a number of officials who have come and gone at the White House.”

Williams, who is NPR’s senior correspondent and also a Fox News analyst, said White House concerns included whether Bush’s conservative base would be upset that the interview, Bush’s first on the air since his State of the Union address, did not go to a conservative talk-show host. Another was that Bush didn’t really favor radio as a medium.

“The pitch that we made to the White House was that this would be a great opportunity for the White House to talk about bipartisanship,” as NPR was in the midst of a series called “Crossing the Divide.” “That, plus the fact that Tony Snow is a friend I’ve known since ‘Fox News Sunday,'” he said, referring to the White House press secretary’s former life as a commentator. But then, Williams said, he’s known others in the White House as well over those six years and had not persuaded the White House to grant an interview.

Williams said he has been accepting congratulations for securing the one-on-one and that the reaction had been “overwhelmingly positive.” Several aspects of the conversation made news, even on Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show With Jon Stewart,” he said. However, some in the blogosphere, as well as listeners whose letters were read on NPR, accused Williams of pitching softball questions.

Williams said he had not seen the blog posts, but said of the letter writers, “They’re not journalists. Go look at the questions. These are exactly the right questions” a journalist would ask.

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Writer Says Biden Was Undone by the Transcription

“Whoever ends up performing the autopsy for Joe Biden’s presidential ambitions — unless he wins, defying the very law of gravity — will have plenty of valid choices for ’cause of death.’ Among them: ‘comma deficiency’,” Chris Wilson wrote Thursday for U.S. News & World Report.

“It all started a few days ago when Biden met a reporter for the New York Observer, Jason Horowitz, at a diner in Delaware to discuss his presidential ambitions. The article quotes Biden as saying of Democratic phenom Barack Obama: ‘I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy.’ . . .

“Biden told reporters yesterday that he was quoted accurately but out of context. This is wrong. Jason Horowitz crudely misquoted Joe Biden.

“At issue here is whether there should have been a comma after ‘African-American.’ In response to the firestorm, the Observer released the audio of Biden’s comment, transcribed here:

“BIDEN: I mean you got the first, sorta, mainstream African-American.

“HOROWITZ: Yeah.

“BIDEN: Who’s articulate and bright and—and clean and a nice-looking guy.

“HOROWITZ: Mm.

“It’s common practice to ‘clean up’ a source’s quotes, redacting the ‘ums’ and ‘sortas’ that just about everyone uses as mortar in their sentences. But Horowitz failed to insert a comma after ‘African-American,’ when there was clearly a pause in Biden’s sentence.

“This is not a trivial mistake. Removing the comma completely changes the meaning of the sentence . . .”

Meanwhile, in a commentary Wednesday by editor Jeffrey T. Kuhner, Insight magazine lashed out at the New York Times, which ran a story Monday, “Feeding Frenzy for a Big Story, Even if It’s False”:

“Insight never claimed — not once — that Obama had attended an Indonesian Madrassa as a young boy. What we did claim — and stand behind 100 percent — is that the Hillary Clinton camp had conducted an investigation into Obama’s Muslim background, and they had concluded he had been raised and educated as a Muslim,” Kuhner wrote.

The Biden comment and other issues in the nascent presidential race continued to generate discussion:

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Gannett’s New Approach Cited in M.E.’s Job Loss

The Gannett Co.’s intended conversion of nearly all of its newsrooms to customer-friendly “local information centers” has been cited as the reason at least one Gannett managing editor lost her job.

Sherri Brown Jackson, who was managing editor of the Alexandria (La.) Town Talk, said her executive editor wrote her, “As part of the company’s restructuring from the traditional news department to the Local Information Center, your position as Managing Editor will be eliminated effective Dec. 4, 2006.”

“Now there are three assistant managing editors, with no ME,” Jackson told Journal-isms.

In explaining the change from “newsroom” to “information center” in December, the company said:

“Increasingly, we are realizing that our customers are interested in much more than news from our products. While news remains our preeminent mission, other information — especially local information — is increasingly in demand. Calendars, recommendations, lifestyle topics as well as neighborhood level stories are all new elements that will have ongoing coverage across platforms. We are also embracing community interactivity in our sites with increased involvement. Changing the name acknowledges this additional responsibility and emphasizes that we are gathering news and information for websites, mobile devices and other products as well as for our daily newspapers.”

Paul Carty, editor of the Alexandria paper, did not return telephone calls on Friday. Another Gannett editor told Journal-isms that the new approach by Gannett, the nation’s largest newspaper company, is being implemented differently at each property. Sometimes it results in job additions, he said.

Meanwhile, Jackson has moved on. “Because I have not lost my passion for journalism, I’m launching a new niche publication, The Light, a bi-monthly community newspaper that will target blacks living in Central Louisiana. I’m excited,” she said.

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Texas Columnists Pay Tribute to Molly Ivins . . .

“One of the most succinct letters ever written to the Star-Telegram was meant as [a] put-down to me and one of my most beloved colleagues,” Bob Ray Sanders wrote Friday in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

 

 

“The writer simply pointed out that his favorite thing to read in our newspaper was ‘Bob Ray Sanders and Molly Ivins have the day off.'”

“That letter’s author didn’t know what a compliment he paid me. . . .

“She was indeed my soul mate, and the news of her death Wednesday from breast cancer, although not unexpected, has left an emptiness in my heart as well as on the pages of newspapers across the country.”

In the Dallas Morning News on Friday, Macarena Hernández recalled conversations with Ivins. “She told me not to fear nasty e-mails, that North Texas had had a hard time warming up to her, too. Before she hung up, she shared her mantra: ‘Give them hell.’

“Some would argue that for the last 16 months, I’ve been doing just that with this column and as an editorial writer.”

. . . With Macarena Hernández Making Announcement

After her column’s tribute to Molly Ivins, Macarena Hernández delivered news of her own:

“Beginning next week, I’ll have an opportunity to do that more, but from a different vantage point. I’m moving to the News Department, and I’ll be working on a project that will allow me to write more deeply about the issue I’m most passionate about — education and the important role it can play in the lives of immigrants.

“I won’t be writing this column any longer. I thank all of you who took time to read my work and those who sent e-mails and letters, even when you disagreed with me. And I ask you all, regardless of your political persuasions, to continue to engage with these pages, make them your own, and keep us all in check.

“And to those of you who don’t write in, I encourage you to do so. In the words of Molly Ivins: ‘Give them hell.'”

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Douglass, John H. Johnson on Ebony Greeting Cards

 

 

Johnson Publishing Co. has partnered with American Greetings to create greeting cards with historic Ebony cover images dating to 1948.

The covers feature baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson, abolitionist and editor Frederick Douglass, entertainers Josephine Baker and Duke Ellington, and Ebony founder John H. Johnson.

The inside of the Douglass card reads, “All the truth and beauty, all the peace and strength you are seeking are right there in your heart . . . Be still and listen. Be brave and believe.”

The Johnson card says: “‘Failure is a word I don’t accept.’ John H. Johnson — You can do great things.”

The cards are to be available in select Wal-Mart stores, Jewel-Osco, CVS, Eckerd, Rite Aid and Kmart, the company said on Friday.

 

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