- Broadside collection, Eberstadt collection (x)
- Civil Rights and Social Justice (x)
- News Media History (x)
- Dormitories (x)
- African Americans and mass media (x)
- Search results
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Title
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Interview with Dr. Edward Trayes
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Identifier
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camh-dob-012389
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Creator
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Daniels, George L., Turner, Karen M., Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
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Contributor
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Trayes, Edward J. (Edward John)
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Topic
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Journalism, African Americans and mass media, Education
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Dates
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9/17/20
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Resource
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Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications Trailblazers of Diversity collection
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Description
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Ed Trayes is a professor emeritus of journalism at Temple University. Trayes joined the faculty in l967 and has taught a wide range of courses, including news editing, photography, media management, communication research, publication graphics and design, and electronic information gathering. He co-founded and has headed the MA and PhD. in communications programs within the School of Media and Communication. He is the first recipient of the Freedom Forum Journalism Teacher of the Year Award. He also has been honored as a Temple University Great Teacher.
Trayes is co-founder and director of the Dow Jones Newspaper Fund Editing and Minority Intern Program (1967 to present). This effort seeks to upgrade the editing talent pool nationwide. Participating newspapers include The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal and Newsday.
Trayes also is the founding editor of Mass Communication Review, an international journal he edited from 1972 to 1986. Trayes has worked with newspapers, broadcast operations, corporations and not-for-profit organizations across the U.S. and in Mexico, Central America and South America. Trayes is also a founding member of the School of Media and Communication faculty.
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Title
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Interview with Dr. Kenneth Campbell
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Identifier
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camh-dob-012393
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Creator
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Daniels, George L., Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
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Contributor
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Campbell, Kenneth (Journalist)
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Topic
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Journalism, African Americans and mass media, Education
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Dates
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6/12/20
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Resource
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Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications Trailblazers of Diversity collection
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Description
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Dr. Kenneth Campbell is the head of the mass communication sequence in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of South Carolina in Columbia. He has worked there since 1988. Dr. Campbell is a former journalist and copyeditor for the Niagara Falls Gazette, Greensboro News & Record, Miami Herald, St. Petersburg Times, Boston Globe and Philadelphia Inquirer. For years, he was director of the School of Journalism and Mass Communications’ Southeastern Multicultural Newspaper Workshop that trained minority journalists. He has taught in journalism workshops in Zambia and Greece and participated in a faculty development experience in Cameroon. He was selected to the prestigious Kellogg National Fellows Program for leadership development, which included study in Austria, Mexico, Brazil, South Africa and Russia. Campbell's research addresses First Amendment legal history, media coverage of lynchings, and representation of African Americans in the media, including news, advertising and entertainment programming.
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Title
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Interview with Professor Burnis R. Morris
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Identifier
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camh-dob-012392
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Creator
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Daniels, George L., Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
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Contributor
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Morris, Burnis Reginald
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Topic
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Journalism, African Americans and mass media, Education
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Dates
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9/14/20
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Resource
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Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications Trailblazers of Diversity collection
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Description
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Burnis R. Morris, Carter G. is the Carnegie Woodson Professor of Journalism and Mass Communications at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia. Professor Morris is known nationally for his work advising and training professional journalists who cover philanthropy and tax-exempt issues and as author of two books suggesting methods for such coverage. His work also has become closely associated with Dr. Carter G. Woodson, known to many as the “Father of Black History.” With Dr. Alan Gould in 2016, Professor Morris co-founded The Dr. Carter G. Woodson Lyceum, a program created through the Drinko Academy and the School of Journalism and Mass Communications, and now serves as its director. Professor Morris is known nationally for his work to improve news coverage of tax-exempt organizations, and he has received more than $1 million in grants supporting the work and other programs he created at Marshall University and the University of Mississippi. Professor Morris earned a B.A. in Journalism from the University of Mississippi in 1973 and an M.P.A. in Public Administration from the University of Dayton in 1977.