Sunday, March 17, 2013
Ball State Daily News wins CSPA Awards
The Ball State Daily News online operation won two Silver Crowns and 23 Gold Circle Awards from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, including national first-place honors for photography and commentary.
Former Editor-in-Chief Benjamin Dashley took first place for general or humor commentary with his essay, "Distant first: Live your life to the fullest." Dashley also won a first for short newswriting.
Photo Editor Bobby Ellis won a first for sports photography. SungMin Lim won the top award for personality profile and Tyler Poslosky took a first place for sports commentary.
The awards are for work produced in 2011-12. The Gold Circles were among 5,503 entries from college students across the United States.
The Gold and Silver Crown Awards are the CSPA's highest recognition for overall excellence, and the Daily News online operation was among 1,344 student outlets in the Crown competition. The Daily News won Silver Crowns for fall 2011 and spring 2012. A year ago the newspaper won the Gold Crown for online.
In the Crown competition, CSPA this year judged the Daily News and other outlets as hybrid print-online operations, which the collegiate press association said was a category for "publications moving from print to pixels."
The CSPA, operated by Columbia University since 1925, is an international student press association whose awards recognize the best student media work in the country. The group announced the awards at the Spring College Media Convention, which was held March 14-16 in New York City.
Here is a list of all the Ball State awards:
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cspa/docs/contests-and-critiques/gold-circle-awards/recipients/2013-collegiate-circles.html
DM4. News feature
2. Bobby Ellis, “Muncie firefighters,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
3. Devan Filchak, “Restoring hope,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM5. In-depth news/feature story
CM. Sarah Boswell, “Poor lifestyles a chronic,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM6. Editorial writing
3. Staff, “Our view: Can’t extinguish compassion,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM7. Personal opinion: On-campus issues
2. Benjamin Dashley, “Letter from the Editor: Keep it clean and classy,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM8. Personal opinion: Off-campus issues
3. Evie Lichtenwalter, “From the other side: Richard Mourdock’s rape remark is ignorant,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
CM. Ashley Dye, “The dysessertation: Mitt Romney says single-parent families trigger gun violence,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM9. General or humor commentary
1. Benjamin Dashley, “Distant first: Live your life to the fullest,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
3. Ashley Dye, “The dysessertation: Do as you please,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM10. First person experience
3. Benjamin Dashley, “Distant first: Loan refunds,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
CM. Victoria Ison, “Kaleidoscope truth: Serve anyway,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM11. Sports commentary
1. Tyler Poslosky, “Poz’s Points: Golfer courageous,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
CM. Steven Williams, “Pitches & throws: Ball State,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM14. Personality profile
1. SungMin Lim, “Family comes first as gay couple,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM17. Entertainment reviews
CM. Michelle Johnson, “Reggie rock: Shut up and play,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM24. Headline writing
2. Staff, bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN.
DM25. Caption writing
2. Staff, bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN.
DM26. Briefs writing
1. Benjamin Dashley, “Breaking: Two robbed at gunpoint,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
2. Evie Lichtenwalter, “Breaking: Armed robbery reported,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN.
3. Benjamin Dashley, “Breaking: Oprah to come to Ball State,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN.
DM29. Single sports photograph
1. Bobby Ellis, “Trick play,” bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
DM38. Typography: Overall look of the entire website
CM. Staff, bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN.
DM40. News Online Design Web site
2. Staff, bsudailynews.com, Ball State University, Muncie, IN;
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Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Sunday, November 11, 2012
IU, Ball State students take top Keating awards
Victoria Ison, Claire Wiseman and Katie Mettler took 2nd, 3rd and
1st place honors in this year's Keating Feature Writing contest.
The Indianapolis Press Club Foundation sponsors and runs the
Keating writing challenge program, which features 10 finalists representing
Indiana’s best and sharpest college journalism students.
Mettler was awarded first place and prize money of $2,500
for her feature story.
Finishing in second and earning $1,250 was Victoria Ison of
Ball State University, and Claire Wiseman of Indiana University earned third
place and $750.
The Fountain Square Historic District in Indianapolis was
the site and subject matter for the Keating program’s 2012 Writing Challenge.
Keating finalists were dropped off at Fountain Square at 11:30 a.m. Saturday
morning and given four hours to develop and write a feature story. The
Indianapolis Star provided space in its newsroom for the finalists to craft
their stories.
The program is named in honor of Tom Keating, a popular
former Indianapolis Star columnist and Lilly Endowment executive who died in
1985 at the age of 45.
Forty students from colleges around the state entered the
contest. A panel of judges chose 10 finalists who competed Saturday. Besides the top finishers, the finalists
included: Kirsten Clark of Indiana University; Ellen Kobe of DePauw University;
Michael Majchrowicz of Indiana University; Jake New of Indiana University;
Andrew Owens of the University of Notre Dame; Samuel Stryker of Notre Dame and
Jessica Wray of Franklin College.
Board members of the Indianapolis Press Club Foundation
presented the awards and cash prizes Saturday night at the Skyline Club in
downtown Indianapolis.
Jeffrey H. Smulyan, chairman, president and CEO of Emmis
Communications, was the keynote speaker. He spoke about how the media need to
find new business models for their products.
Each Keating finalist also received $100 and a copy of the
book “Indiana Faces and Other Places,” a collection of Keating’s work for The
Star from 1966-1982.
Since its inception in 1986, the Keating program has donated more than $116,000 to Indiana college and university students.
Note: Read the winning and finalist entries in the contest.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Ball State Daily News wins top CSPA awards
The Ball State Daily News has won 14 first-place Gold Circle
Awards from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, including the top
national awards for sports, news features, commentary and overall design.
The prizes were among
a total 91 Gold Circles won by the newspaper this year, including 37 in the Digital Media
category for work on its website, bsudailynews.com/.
The Daily News took
first, second and third place in the informational graphics category with work
from Evan Backstrom, Chelsea Kardokus and Greg Hudson.
Teddy Cahill took
first in sports writing, and Devan Filchak won the top News Feature prize.
Dylan Buell, the
newspaper’s photo editor at the time, won the top award for General or Humor
Commentary with his essay on, “What not to bring to Ball State.”
The first prize in
Informational Graphics went to Stephanie Meredith. Chelsea Kardokus, meanwhile,
won first-place Gold Circles for Sports Page Design and Typography.
Earlier
this year the Daily News won a Gold Crown Award, the highest prize for
overall excellence from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, for
its online operation.
CSPA is an international student media organization founded in 1925 and based at Columbia University in New York.
The 29th Gold Circle
Awards were among 10,444 entries from across the country.
Monday, April 16, 2012
Daily News wins SPJ awards

The Ball State Daily News won first place in editorial writing and general column writing in this year’s regional Mark of Excellence Awards from the Society of Professional Journalists.
The Editorial Writing award went to Rhett Umphress, Benjamin Dashley and Sarah Boswell. Benjamin Dashley won first place in General Column Writing.
Other staffers winning awards included Dylan Buell for photography and Daniel Sipocz for in-depth reporting.
Those were among nine Daily News awards in the contest, which honors the best collegiate journalism in the U.S. and this year included more than 4,000 entries in the group’s 12 regions.
SPJ announced the Region 5 winners covering Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky, on Saturday at its spring conference at the Marriott Downtown in Indianapolis.
The first-place winners advance to the national competition round, where winners will be announced in late April.
Daily News takes Ind Collegiate Press awards

The Ball State Daily News took 28 awards in the annual Indiana Collegiate Press Association contest on Saturday, including first-place honors in non-deadline news, sports and features photo, illustration and advertising.
Dylan Buell won both first and second place in Best Sports Photo.
“This photo really captures the tension and movement that the play had,” the judge said of Buell’s first-place picture. “The defender feels like he is going to keep moving and fall out of the photo.”
Bobby Ellis won first place in Best Feature Photo for “Reaching Greater Heights,” of which the judge said: “The cool angle of this photo reflects how exciting a rock climbing competition can be.”
Tiffany Ruesser took first place in Best Illustration for her “Super Cardinal,” a Page 1 illustration playing off the “Superman” theme for this year’s Homecoming football game.
“Possibly the best single page in the entire competition,” the judge wrote “Love this illustration, and spoofing the Daily Planet took this page to the next level. Clean, sophisticated and just awesome.”
A records-based reporting project by Editor-in-Chief Sarah Boswell won first place in the Best Non-Deadline News Reporting category.
“Strong use of public records law to show how BSU police deal with complaints about campus police officers,” the judge wrote.
A dozen other Daily News editorial entries won awards in the Newspaper Division I category for dailies printing three or more times per week.
In the Advertising division, Madison Stevens of the Daily News won three first-place awards for Most Creative Use of Ad Copy, Best Ad layout and Best Use of Photography or Graphic Art.
Fellow designer Elizabeth Wojdyla took a first-place award for Best Electronic Ad – Display, and nine other Daily News entries also won awards in the Advertising category.
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Crocker Stephenson visits Daily News

Crocker Stephenson of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, winner of the Eugene S. Pulliam National Journalism Writing Award at Ball State University, talks with student editors today at the Daily News.
"I write long features, but I love covering breaking news - it's such an adrenaline rush," he said.
Earlier:
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporter wins Pulliam writing award
(3/15/2012)
Crocker Stephenson, a reporter for Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, has won the 2012 Eugene S. Pulliam National Journalism Writing Award presented annually by Ball State University's Department of Journalism.
Stephenson is being honored for his Oct. 2 article "83 Minutes of Life Delivers Lifetime of Memories, Grieving for Couple." The reporter will be recognized April 11 at the department's annual luncheon with a plaque and the $1,500 prize, presented on behalf of the Pulliam family, sponsors of the annual writing award.
The award winner also will give his presentation "Finding Story: A Narrative Nonfiction Writer's Journey" as part of the journalism department's professional-in-residence series. The event, which is free and open to the public, begins at 7:30 p.m. April 11 in Cardinal Hall in the L.A. Pittenger Student Center.
The annual national writing competition, which dates back to 1960, has a distinguished history and legacy. Three past winners have later won Pulitzer Prizes.
Stephenson's award-winning article, part of a yearlong series on Milwaukee's infant mortality crisis, used in-depth reporting and a classic narrative structure to explore the impact one short life had on many people.
Stephenson has been a reporter at the Milwaukee Sentinel (later Milwaukee Journal Sentinel) for 25 years. In recent years, he has written on social issues that impact the lives of children, including child welfare, child abuse and infant mortality.
By Marc Ransford, Media Relations Manager
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Monday, March 19, 2012
Daily News wins online Gold Crown

The Ball State Daily News has won a Gold Crown Award, the highest prize for overall excellence from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, for its online operation, bsudailynews.com/.
The CSPA competition included 182 digital publications. Eight Gold Crowns were awarded, and 30 publications received the second-highest award, the Silver Crown.
The student newspaper's digital operation includes stories and photos from its print edition, online-only content and updates throughout the day and on weekends. Sports writers and other staffers produce streaming video programming, and a social media unit supports Twitter feeds and Facebook updates with breaking news.
Last month the Daily News digital operation won 37 online news awards in the association’s annual Gold Circle competition, including first-place for sports, informational graphics, video feature package and humor writing.
CSPA is an international student media association operated by Columbia University since 1925. The latest awards were presented in New York on Sunday.
Full list of awards:
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cspa/docs/contests-and-critiques/crown-awards/recipients/2012-collegiate-crown.html
Monday, February 20, 2012
Daily News wins top digital media awards

The Ball State Daily News has won 37 Gold Circle Awards in online news from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, including first-place honors for sports, informational graphics, video feature package and humor writing.
The student journalists took both first- and second-place awards in three categories.
Teddy Cahill won best online sports story with, “Lembo era starts with emotional victory,” and Andrew Mishler won second place with, “Cardinals fall 3-1 to Boilermakers.”
Stephanie Meredith took first place in informational graphics with “Looking back on a decade,” and Mark Townsend won second with “Sports by the numbers.”
In the general humor or commentary category, photographer Dylan Buell took first place with “What not to bring to Ball State” and Benjamin Dashley won second for “An open letter to the person who stole my bike.”
The top video feature package award went to Justin Tyler for his “Midnight showing of ‘Harry Potter.’”
The work was among 4,956 entries from schools across the country and was published on bsudailynews.com, the student newspaper’s website, from Nov. 2, 2010 to Nov. 1, 2011.
Because the awards are dated by the year in which they are presented, these are known as the 2012 Gold Circle Awards for Digital Media.
The CSPA Gold Circles are among the highest awards earned by student journalists in the United States. The association was founded in 1925 and is owned by Columbia University.
Full list of the awards:
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cspa/docs/contests-and-critiques/gold-circle-awards/recipients/2012-collegiate-circles.html
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Daily News wins Gold Circle Awards

The Ball State Daily News has won eight national first-place awards in the annual Columbia Scholastic Press Association contest, including the top prizes for sports and in-depth news reporting.
CSPA announced its Gold Circle Awards on Tuesday. The Daily News won 45 of them, including a first place, in-depth coverage, for sportswriter Daniel Sipocz for a story on Title IX. Andrew Mishler and Tyler Poslosky shared the first place sports coverage award.
Chelsea Kardokus took first place awards in computer-generated illustration and typography, and designers Jen Minutillo and David Downham won the top prizes for opinion page and op-ed page design.
Earlier this year, the Daily News took 11 first-place Gold Circle Awards in the video and online categories.
CSPA, founded in 1925, supports student print and online journalists, and is affiliated with the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
http://cspa.columbia.edu/docs/contests-and-critiques/gold-circle-awards/recipients/2011-collegiate-circles.html
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Down to basics - lite video
A cell phone is about as light as you can go. Here's a test piece I shot and edited on my iPhone 4. Note that you can do a reporter voice track, interview, b-roll and natural sound with these devices.
A simple way to get started is to work with whatever's handy. That could be a point-and-shoot still camera with video capability, and the editing programs that ship with most computers these days.
As a free place to start for PC users, I like Windows MovieMaker. Here's a tutorial from Microsoft that covers the basics:
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-vista/Getting-started-with-Windows-Movie-Maker
Note that if your camera creates QuickTime files (.MOV extension) you'll need a program to convert those to AVI files. A piece of freeware from Pazera will do a good job:
http://download.cnet.com/Pazera-Free-MOV-to-AVI-Converter/3000-2194_4-10798308.html
Note that most of the default settings will work fine, though you may need to change the audio codec setting from "auto" to "copy original audio stream."
Another iPhone example
This was the first piece I shot with my iPhone, during some down time in Las Vegas during a conference. It's rough, but you get an idea of the possibilities:
Monday, April 18, 2011
Daily News wins top design award
The Ball State Daily News won best overall design of a newspaper and three other awards today in the annual College News Design Contest.
Stephanie Stamm won first place in sports page design for “Cardinal Comeback.” Judges cited “great presentation, use of typography and organization.”
Jen Minutillo and Chelsea Kardokus took second place awards for newspaper page design and the broadsheet: front page category.
This was the 23rd annual contest, which is sponsored by the Society of News Design at the University of Missouri in Columbia.
MORE: http://ssnd.wordpress.com/
Friday, February 18, 2011
Caring for wounded vets

Marine Lance Cpl. James Blake Miller, photographed by Luis Sinco of the Los Angeles Times. More on the photo HERE
I was talking to a friend the other day and remembered some of the veterans I met during a series of stories a few years ago.
(By the way, one of the best pieces on returning veterans and PTSD is "The Marlboro Marine" by Luis Sinco.)
I met with soldiers at Brook Army Medical Center in San Antonio, at a conference in Florida and at Fort Knox, Ky., on the way to writing about the care of wounded soldiers.
Here is one of those stories. I've never forgotten these soldiers.
Tending to our wounded; Some vets face tangle of red tape
JOHN STRAUSS. Indianapolis Star
ORLANDO -- Chief Warrant Officer Cody Sharp, an Army helicopter pilot in Iraq, got used to people shooting at him.
In April, his Kiowa Warrior had been taking fire all day.
"Baghdad was crazy that day," he said. "But I didn't look at it as being dangerous. It was just part of the job."
He spotted a dozen men with AK-47 rifles and rocket-propelled grenades and dropped the helicopter's nose, preparing to fire. At the last second, he turned away -- an old woman and a child were near the gunmen.
In the moment that he spared their lives, his changed forever. Gunfire enveloped his cockpit, seriously wounding him and forcing his helicopter down.
More than seven months later at the Road to Recovery Conference here for wounded veterans, Sharp, 41, a south Texas native still unable to use his deeply scarred left arm, talked about the day matter-of-factly.
For Sharp and about 10,000 other wounded vets, memories of combat can be troubling. But the more immediate problem isn't the past -- it's the future.
Conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan have produced the highest number of U.S. casualties in two generations.
Those conflicts have borne a new generation of wounded -- many of them from National Guard or reserve units -- who face a lifetime of painful reminders of their time at war.
The Vietnam War, when 153,000 soldiers were wounded before it ended nearly 30 years ago, was the last time this many American soldiers returned home to recover from the wounds of war.
Veterans advocates and some soldiers say the system that is supposed to care for the injured is buckling under the strain.
The Defense Department, in a casualty report this past week, listed 1,069 troops killed in action, 10,177 wounded in action and 367 who died in noncombat situations out of 300,000 troops who have been deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan operations. Soldiers with Indiana ties account for 41 of the deaths. The Defense Department reports also show 189 Hoosiers among the wounded as of the end of November.
In the first Gulf War, from 1990 to 1991, U.S. and coalition forces quickly turned back an Iraqi occupation force from Kuwait in open terrain, without the costly house-to-house urban fighting going on today.
That war claimed 382 American soldiers' lives, including 12 from Indiana, and wounded 467 out of a force of 584,000.
The war in Vietnam claimed 58,000 U.S. lives, including 1,485 from Indiana, out of 3.4 million soldiers who served in Southeast Asia.
More wounded are expected in Iraq as the U.S. fighting force grows from about 130,000 to 150,000.
Short on protection
A conflict that was expected to end quickly has stretched into 21 months, fraying the military supply line in other ways.
The troops are said to be short of advanced body armor and armored vehicles. In a rare moment of wartime candor between soldiers and the chain of command, troops at a town hall-style meeting with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in Kuwait on Wednesday aired a blunt range of complaints about equipment and extended deployments.
That many of the wounded have made it home alive at all is a success. Body armor, extraordinary advances in field medicine and rapid evacuation to hospitals have saved thousands.
The New England Journal of Medicine this past week showed the impact of advances: In World War II, 70 percent of wounded Americans survived. In Vietnam, 76 percent; and in Iraq and Afghanistan, the survival rate is 90 percent.
Dr. Atul Gawande, a surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, wrote the article after researching military medicine and the system for rapid battlefield response, which includes surgical kits carried in backpacks.
"As lifesaving as the new strategies have been, teams have been forced to confront numerous unanticipated circumstances," he wrote. "The war has gone on far longer than planned, the volume of wounded soldiers has increased, and the nature of the injuries has changed."
Gawande found that, while more soldiers are surviving because of body armor, their unprotected limbs are often severely damaged.
Bureaucratic maze
The growing legion of survivors, many with injuries that will require a lifetime of care, often emerge from the fog of war into a tangle of red tape that is the veterans-care bureaucracy.
The five-day meeting at Walt Disney World, which ends today, was sponsored by the Coalition to Salute America's Heroes. The gathering was organized to provide information and guidance to about 150 wounded soldiers and to help them understand a system that often leaves them in limbo for as long as four months awaiting disability benefits.
"It's a good thing that the men and women called up to serve didn't say, 'I'll get back to you in 120 days,' " Army Staff Sgt. Mike Sutherland, of San Antonio, said in one session.
Later, in the same emotional meeting, Spc. David Calhoun, of Ludowici, Ga., who lost the use of his legs in a mine explosion, held up his Purple Heart medal.
"This is the medal that no one wants to get," he said. "It's nice, but it won't feed my family."
Army Reserve Sgt. Chris Leverkuhn, of Lafayette, who lost part of his right leg in a January ambush west of Baghdad, said he expects to learn next month the amount of his disability benefits.
He's heard disappointment from other soldiers about the red tape they faced in the disability benefits system.
"They figure out how much they think you deserve for everything that's wrong with you," he said. "Sometimes, it's a ridiculous number they give you."
Army pilot Sharp, a 15-year veteran based at Schofield Army Barracks in Hawaii, never thought about disability payments before his own injury.
"You don't worry about that when you're in the Army and out doing your job," he said. "Nobody ever talks to you about that, and you don't discuss it.
"So the next thing that happens, you're in a hospital. You're worried about getting well and seeing your family. And the next step after that is, 'OK, now what do I do?'
"That's where I am now, and I really don't have a clue."
David Autry, spokesman for the Disabled American Veterans, said from his office in Washington that such complaints are common and stemmed in part from an overworked, underfunded system.
"There is a lot of red tape, and benefits are not automatically bestowed on you," he said. "You have to apply for them, and you have to be deemed worthy, through an eligibility process that is sometimes quite confusing and daunting."
Helping wounded soldiers understand their benefits and the programs available for them would go a long way, Autry said.
In one recent sign of progress, the Department of Labor has developed the Transition Assistance Program, which provides career counseling and help with job searches, including resume preparation.
John Molino, a deputy undersecretary of defense attending the conference, acknowledged there have been many complaints and said the Pentagon would work with groups like the coalition to support veterans.
"We need to join hands," he said. "We will not work as adversaries. We will work as partners, and we'll stay focused on who we're trying to help -- the service members who have been injured."
For its part, the Department of Veterans Affairs claims dramatic improvements the past three years.
"The department has begun the largest and most extensive restructuring of its health care system in history," a report from the agency says. "The claims backlog has been significantly reduced; claims processing has nearly doubled; waiting times for appointments have decreased."
Indeed, not every soldier was critical.
Former Sgt. Mary Herrera, wounded near Fallujah while serving with an Army Reserve military police unit from Phoenix, said the system had worked for her, and she had received her benefits.
Herrera, 23, was a turret gunner on a Humvee when her convoy was ambushed by rifle fire, rocket-propelled grenades and mines in November 2003.
She lost the use of her right arm, received a medical discharge and plans to attend Rice University in Houston, where she now lives.
'It's not just you'
Herrera thought some soldiers at the conference were unfairly critical of the disability benefits process. "It helps to be patient and understand that it's not just you," she said. "There are a lot of people to take care of."
What the returning wounded need, she said, is a better understanding of their options and the help that's available for them in returning to civilian life.
Many of the most horribly wounded have found in each other a way to move toward the rest of their lives.
Robert "B.J." Jackson, of Des Moines, Iowa, was wounded severely while serving with a military police unit of the Iowa National Guard.
As he lay in a coma at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, his wife, Abby, approached a vet in a wheelchair to ask a pointed question: "How does it feel to lose a leg?"
The man seemed surprised, and she explained, "My husband has lost both his legs, and I just want to know what he's going to go through."
Jackson, 23, said the other soldier instantly became his guide and support through the tough recovery.
"He came to my bed every day. He was by my side through everything."
Jackson has done the same for others. And although he could hide his prosthetic legs under pants, he chose to wear shorts at the conference, as something of a statement.
He has decorated the plastic and metal limbs in flaglike, red, white and blue designs. Another set of his legs is decorated with NASCAR logos saluting his racing heroes.
"A lot of these soldiers have injuries and scars that they can't cover up -- so why should I?" he said.
"Actually, a lot of people you talk to here wear their scars with pride. We didn't go over there to get injured. But we did get hurt, and we wake up every day and make the best of it."
- John Strauss, Dec 12, 2004. pg. A.1
-----
Where vets can find help
The United States has 25 million living military veterans, about three-quarters of whom served in wartime.
About 70 million people, about a quarter of the U.S. population, are potentially eligible for Veterans Affairs benefits because they are veterans, family members or survivors of veterans.
Where to find help
* U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, (800) 827-1000, www.va.gov. The Web site includes a list of service organizations to help former soldiers.
* Disabled American Veterans, (859) 441-7300, www.dav.org. Nonprofit organization of 1.2 million members founded in 1920 and dedicated to building better lives for disabled veterans and their families.
Source: Department of Veterans Affairs, Disabled American Veterans
VA disability benefits
About 2.5 million U.S. veterans receive disability compensation.
Basic disability benefits range from $106 monthly (for those rated 10 percent disabled), to $2,239 (100 percent disabled).
Additional allowances are made for those with dependents and for those whose disability leaves them unable to work or who need assistance with daily living. Such factors can increase compensation to as much as $6,404 monthly.
Disability benefits are not subject to federal or state income tax and are adjusted to reflect cost-of-living increases.
Source: Department of Veterans Affairs
Survival rates
A total of 11,246 soldiers have been wounded or killed in action in the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts. The percentage of U.S. soldiers who survived their wounds:*
Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts - 90%
Persian Gulf War - 76%
Vietnam War - 76%
Korean War - 75%
World War II - 70%
World War I - 79%
* Casualty figures for the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts are as of Friday.
Sources: Department of Defense, The New England Journal of Medicine
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Daily News wins top CSPA online awards

The Ball State Daily News won 11 first-place Gold Circle Awards today for online coverage from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, including the top awards for breaking news, features, sports and video.
The honors were among 34 CSPA online Gold Circles won by the student newspaper today for work produced in 2009-10.
The Daily News won five of the six awards in the news interactive category, including first place by Designer Mark Townsend.
The top award for online news writing went to News Editor Sharon Hernandez for her story about the return of David Letterman to campus.
First place in breaking news went to Editor-in-Chief Sarah Boswell for her coverage of the search for a bicyclist suspected of sexual assaults.
Columnist Frank Hood won the general commentary award for his look at ways the university could save money in the face of state cutbacks.
Managing Editor Rhett Umphress won the top sports news and sports commentary awards. And Features Editor Tara Jones won a first place for her first-person account of a near-death illness.
Others winning first-place awards were:
Sarah Phinney and Michael Ponce, best video news package: "Blake Mycoskie speaks about Toms Shoes."
Jessica Beck and Thomas Yau, photo and audio slideshow, "Soundslide: While River Clean-Up."
Teddy Cahill, sports feature, "Football: Growing up tough."
Kelly Dickey, news features, "Ball State alumna, her partner compete for dream wedding."
CSPA, founded in 1925, supports student print and online journalists, and is affiliated with the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
Full list of awards:
http://cspa.columbia.edu/docs/contests-and-critiques/gold-circle-awards/recipients/2011-collegiate-circles.html#N10014
Saturday, February 12, 2011
ND prof on breaking-news errors - 'Don't rush it'
Police and Secret Service agents subdue gunman John Hinckley Jr. after the shooting of President Ronald Reagan on March 30, 1981. Photo: Wikimedia CommonsThe on-again, off-again departure of Egypt's Hosni Mubarak – he finally stepped down after conflicting reports had him either leaving or staying– hit an increasingly familiar theme in the media.
The reasonable response to any piece of major breaking news today would be, “Is it true?” And a Notre Dame professor of American studies and journalism sees more room for doubt all the time.
Robert Schmuhl was reminded of this during last month’s coverage of the shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. At one point, false reports circulated that she had been killed.
“I think it was an illustration of speed becoming more important than accuracy,” Schmuhl said.
“And I think one of the dangers that we run into today is that there are so many different outlets competing for news that there is almost a mania to be the first with a story like that."
Schmuhl directs the John W. Gallivan Program in Journalism, Ethics & Democracy at Notre Dame and is the author of books including “Statecraft and Stagecraft: American Political Life in the Age of Personality.”
He spoke Feb. 11 with host Ed Ferenc on “America's Work Force Radio” originating from WERE-AM, Cleveland.
(A podcast of the show can be heard here. The interview begins at 15:10.)
Schmuhl noted that it was 30 years ago next month that Ronald Reagan was the victim of an assassination attempt. ABC News (video), and others in the hectic live coverage of that day incorrectly reported that press secretary Jim Brady had been killed.
“I remember the outrage that was directed at ABC, and I can remember the moment itself when Frank Reynolds, the anchor, said ‘Nail this down – let’s get this right,’” Schmuhl said.
The national response was different after the false reports about Giffords.
“There was some mention that these news institutions got it wrong, but it wasn’t a big deal. Why? Because we’ve become so jaundiced in our view of the media - ‘Oh another mistake?’ And that really is what contributes to a decline in trust in all of the different sources of media.”
The days are long past when a television anchor would be called “the most trusted man in America” in a national poll as Walter Cronkite of CBS was in 1972.
Cronkite is said to have lived by a version of the old journalism maxim, “Get it first, but first get it right.”
Schmuhl said newsrooms have to resist competitive pressures if they want to protect their credibility.
“You don’t rush it,” he said.
“The impulse now is to get it up on the Web, get it on the air, when it really should be, ‘is this factual, is this accurate, is this the best version of the truth that we can provide our audience right now?’”
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