Monday, March 29, 2010

147 Years and Counting

La Salle's "birthday" is March 20, when the state of Pennsylvania granted the University its charter (the year was 1863). The "charter" dinner -- or heritage dinner -- has faculty and staff serve dinner (and dessert!) to students. Channel 6 stopped by to film it, and got a great picture of the "Birthday Cake." The notion of faculty/staff serving the students is the appeal; TV has covered this in the past, and, I hope, in the future.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Getting closer...

After several weeks, Daily News columnist Jen Armstrong met with La Salle student Kara Harpel and a student at Logan Elementary School who have been bigsister/littlesister for four years. I'd mention the elementary student's name, but I probably would have to get permission to do that, so I'm going to hold off givin her name: but if she's reading this, I promise I'll post it!

Jen talked to the two students for about an hour. I normally don't stick around when a reporter meets the La Salle subject, but I'm glad I did because Jen asked a question that I didn't think to ask: did either of them have sisters? The answer is no, and perhaps that's one reason the two bonded. In more than two years of talking to Kara, I never thought to ask her that question!

Jen is looking into having a photographer take their pictures, and you know what that means: more permission forms, probably. But it will be worth it. (By the way, I was in the principal's office, and got a call from Jen saying she was on her way, when I was told that a permission slip was not filled it. I saw my life flash before my eyes.....)

Friday, March 5, 2010

Patience is required...

OK, the story with the student/3rd party will have to wait for at least two weeks (spring break). All the parties want to see this story in print, it's just getting everyone on the same page. The good news is the journalist is still interested in pursuing it. I'm not complaining but I stay a few hours after work one night in case I got an important phone call (I had to be in the office when I got the call, which, by the way, didn't resolve anything). Wednesday night I made a call and learned the story could not be done this past week. This is why people in my profession die young! No, only kidding....

Space is tight!

Again, I'm not complaining, but yesterday a newspaper published a list of La Salle student who were inducted into the University's Alpha Epsilon Society, which recognizes academic achievement with community service. I sent the info to the paper in January! But that's the reality of the business.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Always go through channels

I have a reporter scheduled to interview one of our students and a non-student for a story, and then I remembered: I forgot to go through channels and get a third party to OK the story because of the non-student factor. How do you spell stupid in Italian -- stunad???

I preach going through channels. I'm not going to give the specifics here, but students at another university, on their own, set up a memorial for a professor and, again I'm being deliberately vauge, when the media learned of this memorial it became a media storm. It was overblown (pun intended) coverage, but it was out there for a while until the school administration took several steps, which included an acknowledgement of the professor. If the students had gone through channels, both they and their school would have experienced a great deal less angst.

I can't imagine the 3rd party won't give an OK to this, but this is going to nag at me until I see the story in print.

On February 18, the Philadelphia Daily News published an oped by senior Kayleigh Reed on what she had learned and experienced from her course in and work on community journalism. This took some time: first, one editor passed on it, then another said let me think about it; they then thought it was OK but it needed some editing and additions, which Kayleigh was amenable too. Let's see if I can find a link for it:

http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/84678732.html

More updates: watched "A Man for All Season" in Br. Gerry Molyneaux's class on film and law. Alum Tim O'Toole did a great job in leading a class discussion afterwards. The Pennsylvania Law Journal is scheduled to do a story with photos in an upcoming issue, and, cross your fingers, KYW Newsradio will interview one of the lawyers participating for a story on March 3. If there's no more snow, it might have a chance to make it on the air.

Thanks to Kevin Grauke, assist. prof. of English at La Salle. At the Inquirer's request, he did a quick read and writing of a book review (and it was very good). Again, let's see if I can find a link to it:

http://www.philly.com/philly/entertainment/literature/85476592.html

This is the third review he has done for the paper.