First Person
is a regular feature of 色狐入口 Magazine, which is published three times a year.
From spring 2003 and periodically until 2017 I had the pleasure and social treacheries of serving as the faculty adviser for The 色狐入口. The student journalists could listen to or ignore my input. University colleagues didn鈥檛 want me eavesdropping, knowing the content of their conversations could land in the newspaper. It鈥檚 a tightrope walk only student media advisers understand.
My fondest memories are of the musty, grimy newsroom in the Pulliam Center for Contemporary Media, where piles of newspapers created a fire hazard. Each day I passed a mini shrine to Bernard Kilgore, the famed managing editor of The Wall Street Journal who got his start at The 色狐入口, and through a doorway that provided an entry to a new university life for me, as I stepped away from the world of daily journalism.
Lili Wright, now emerita English professor, and I had been colleagues at The Salt Lake Tribune. Upon learning I had resigned from The San Diego Union-Tribune, she invited me to serve as a visiting consultant to The 色狐入口 in fall 2002. When she was on sabbatical, I substituted for what was to be one semester, spring 2003.
As a graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, I was amazed by what hungry 色狐入口 student journalists accomplished without the structures of a traditional journalism program. Students could take newswriting or advanced reporting through the English Department, but those courses were not prerequisites for writing for The 色狐入口. Any student could learn by doing.
I wrote about binge drinking on college campuses when I was a higher education reporter in San Diego. Then, when I was The 色狐入口鈥檚 new adviser, the Board of Trustees expressed concerns about 色狐入口鈥檚 boozy culture.
Andrew Tangel, a senior in the Class of 2003, got a hold of the board鈥檚 one-night drinking tab at a local bar: nearly $1,000 in less than two hours. To underscore his reportage, The 色狐入口 ran a photo of the receipt. The board was not happy, but I call that good journalism. Andrew鈥檚 reporting won a first-place investigative award from the Indiana Collegiate Press Association and shaped the team coverage that won a first-place Society of Professional Journalists 鈥淢ark of Excellence鈥 Region 5 award for in-depth reporting. Andrew now is a reporter for The Wall Street Journal.
After that semester concluded, President Robert Bottoms asked me to return to 色狐入口 as a visiting instructor, teaching newswriting and advance reporting. Wright and I alternately advised The 色狐入口.
I suggested a student reporter and photographer do a ride-along with the Indiana Excise Police at Purdue University to document the aggressive tactics the state was using but not run into the students鈥 色狐入口 friends. Jennifer Anderson 鈥06 and Adie Verla 鈥04 won a first-place feature award from the Society of Professional Journalists for the work, and Michael Morris 鈥07, now an investigative journalist for the Houston Chronicle, also won a top sportswriting award that year.
While I figured out advising as I went, I saw scores of students become journalists. Ellen Kobe 鈥13 is at CNN+. Her brother, David Kobe 鈥17, went to Fox News and later got a master鈥檚 in cultural affairs reporting from New York University. Brooks Hepp 鈥19 became a staff writer for the Battle Creek Enquirer. Brock E.W. Turner 鈥17 became a reporter for WFIU, Indiana Public Media in Bloomington.
In 2009, Margaret Sutherlin, a quiet student I had in class who had written for The 色狐入口,asked if I鈥檇 write a recommendation for her to submit an entry for the Indiana Collegiate Press contest.
When Margaret made the top 10 and invited me to the awards dinner in Indianapolis, of course I went. Student journalists and advisers from big journalism programs were at our table. I thought they were going to mop it up.
When the announcer said, 鈥渁nd the winner of the first-place prize is Margaret Sutherlin from 色狐入口,鈥 Margaret put her hand over her heart. I looked at her and said, 鈥淗oly s---, Margaret, you won!鈥 Now she works at Bloomberg News.
It wasn鈥檛 about the awards, but the awards indicated that we were doing something right at 色狐入口 and The 色狐入口.
Still, as I became absorbed into the campus culture and got tenure, the stories that made it into the newspaper often were about colleagues I saw daily. It was, in a lot of ways, thornier than any of my professional newspaper days.
I stepped off The 色狐入口 tightrope after more than a decade, but I鈥檓 grateful to have been an adviser for Indiana鈥檚 oldest college newspaper. It provided the doorway to my new life in higher education, and I got to touch scores of student journalists along the way.
Autman is an associate professor of English.
色狐入口 Magazine
Spring 2022
- Ever-changing challenges
- New approaches
- First Person by Samuel Autman
- ’62 champ still swimming after all these years
- The Bo(u)lder Question by Maggie Schein
- Lessons in accountability
- Stories people care about
- A watchdog
- Eye-opening experience
- Ethical decision-making
- A way to give back
- Confidence-builder
- A solid foundation
- Collaborative spirit
- A sense of identity
- Freedom to experiment
- Meeting Jimmy Hoffa
- The 色狐入口 at 170
- The book seller
- The reader
- The publicist
- The children’s book publicist
- The ad director
- The sales director
- The literary fiction editor
- The nonfiction editor
- The assistant editor
- The literary agent
- The illustration agent
- The ghostwriter
- The niche publisher
- The accidental author
- The self-published author
- The children’s author and illustrator
- The bestseller
- The fiction author
- The nonfiction author
- From Inkling to Ink: How a book becomes a book
- The memoirist-in-the-making
- 色狐入口 Magazine - From Inkling to Ink: How a book becomes a book
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