Monday, November 29, 2010

All the President's Men

In All the President’s Men Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward serve as journalist for the Washington Post. What I love about this film is the drive that I see from Bernstein and Woodward. The film shows a picture of what it looks like to be passionate and follow after a craft.

Bernstein says, “I lived here all my life, I got a million contacts, but they’re all bus boys and bellhops.” What does it look like to make a name for yourself in journalism? What does it take to follow a story until it is settled and the details are known.

The tagline of the movie sums up the purpose of the two journalists: "At times it looked like it might cost them their jobs, their reputations, and maybe even their lives."

Maybe that is what good journalism is. 


Monday, November 22, 2010

Coming Home...or Whatever That Means

By Alyssa Maine


Wenham, MA-- David Denison, 21, a senior international affairs and philosophy major doesn’t really have a hometown. Denison was born in Brazil, lived in Israel for seven years, the Bahamas for one year, and Colorado for three years because his parents were missionaries. He then lived in Texas for another year and now lives in Massachusetts, where he attends Gordon College.
But being an American isn’t what Denison knew from experience; he knew that being American was to own ideals of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Throughout his childhood Denison lived in different countries, not spending any formative years in the U.S. While his parents were American, there was disconnect for Denison with his identity as American. While he might live on American soil, was he able to own those ideals? 
Denison is one of many at Gordon who struggle to define home like other students.
“My experiences were international,” Denison said.
The international experiences created a culture for him that was not traditionally American.
 “By all appearances I looked American,” Denison said. “But I didn’t feel American.”

Denison, 21, wanted to be considered American, even though he didn't feel American

Because Denison was the son of American born parents, the expectation that he knew what it meant to own an American identity was assumed of him.
Moving to Colorado for his freshman year of high school was a difficult time for Denison because he felt like a foreigner, never before living on American soil. Denison didn’t resonate with America as his home.
Like Denison, Timothy Sherratt, 57, is not at home in the United States. Teaching as a Professor of Political Studies at Gordon College, Sherratt is originally from the region of North Devon in England. He moved to America for graduate school. While in the United States Sherratt fell in love.
“[I] met my wife in America,” Sherratt said, “and haven’t been able to get away.”
Immigrating to America is different than in other countries. The struggle to be considered a legal immigrant is apparent and to be considered an individual within society. America as a home is much less of a physical place; it is a set of ideas. Sherratt stated.
“England is a place. It’s a home,” Sherratt said, “The United States is an idea, not a place.”
To be American is to place value on life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. These ideals are what create the theoretical America and a culture of America. These are the same ideals Denison hadn’t yet experienced before moving to Colorado.
Sophomore, Rebekah Kang is studying Spanish and communication arts at Gordon. As an international student her perception of America is different than a traditional American.
 “America is a place of freedom, diversity and iron[y],” Kang said. “Americans have strong characteristic of individualism, yet are generous and look after people and are understanding in general.”
Like Denison, Kang is learning what it means to be a foreigner in America.
While Denison looked the same, spoke the same and appeared the same he had troubled owning his American identity. During the first years of living in America, Denison only went to one movie with friends. The pressure to assimilate and be like other teenagers is what helped him transition his home to America.
 “Home to me has transitioned from hoping to find a geographic place,” Denison said, “simply finding a group of people or community whom I can define as such.”
The home that Denison has been searching for is not the same type of home that Professor Sherratt knows of.
“I’m not exactly sure how I view America,” Denison said, “That’s a terribly broad question. I’ve gotten fairly adjusted to it, and American life has become fairly normal for me.” 

Thursday, November 11, 2010

The Newseum

After spending a very long day at the Newseum in DC I have recovered my love of journalism. Not only was the day full of the biggest headlines of my lifetime so far, but it was the first time I had ever experienced the art and calling of journalism to be so highly valued.

Below are a collection of quotes I resonated with at the museum:

"Just because your voice reaches halfway around the world you are no wiser than when it reached only to the end of the bar" -Edward R.  Murrow, Broadcast Journalist

"There are three kinds of people who run toward the disaster not away: cops, firemen and journalists." -Rod Brecher, Newspaper Columnist

"If it makes you laugh, if it makes you cry, f it rips your heart out that's a good picture." -Eddie Adams, Pulitzer Prize Winning Photojournalist

"Let the people know the facts, and the country will be safe." Abraham Lincoln, US President 


"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." -1st Amendment, US Constitution 

Friday, November 5, 2010

The Salem News

Former Gordon Grad, Muriel Hoffacker, 22, and David Olson, editor of the Salem News visited a journalism class on November 4, 2010.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

9 Very Simple Things

Dan MacAlpine visited Jo Kadlececk's journalism class at Gordon College on October 21, 2010.  His purpose was to inspire and inform young journalists to cut the clutter and get to the story.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

A New Kind of Civil Rights


When I think of the Civil Rights Movement I can picture Martin Luther King Jr. speaking his infamous words of freedom for all, I can think upon what I have learned in U.S. history of the atrocities against African Americans and I can remember it for just that, history. And while this history at times can seem passive in my life, I have to wonder what the civil rights movement of my generation is?

The social justice movements of today, such as the Invisible Children or Not For Sale campaigns are the civil rights that my generation is fighting for.

The similarities are there. It is justice that these two generations are fighting for. Martin Luther King Jr. said, “If we are wrong, justice is a lie, love has no meaning. And we are determined here in Montgomery to work and fight until justice runs down like water, and righteousness like a mighty stream.” 

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Alums Just off the Grapevine

By Alyssa Maine 

A weekend of Homecoming flocked parents, alumni and current students to a myriad of networking and school spirited events, bringing together Fighting Scots from all years of life. With Gordon College alumni reclaiming their stomping ground, the weekend was not met without advice and encouragement for the next generation.

Serving the community as a journalist, Jon Phelps a 2008 Communication Arts alumnus offered 10 tips to future journalists. “Write as often as you can,” Phelps said, […and] keep a bag of tricks with you.”  While working at the Eagle Tribune Phelps has seen how his journalism studies at Gordon have prepared him to work in a temperamental and changing industry. The words from The Elements of Journalism have stuck with him, you are a voice for the voiceless, claim that and apply it to all that you do in life.

Alumnus, Mariwyn Grace Light, is now living in El Paso, Texas merging her love for the betterment of people with her passion for writing. As a graduate student at University of Texas at El Pas, she is currently studying Intelligence and National Security in hopes of working in the intelligence industry. Both Phelps and Light took journalism while students at Gordon and have found the application to their journeys. “Studying journalism,” Light said, “studying writing will no doubt help you wherever you go.”

Phelps and Light are just two examples of Gordon College graduates who have integrated what they have learned on the Grapevine with specific places that God has called them to be passionate about. 

Karl Belanger a 2010 Business Administration major with a Computer Science minor graduate has piloted his own company. Universal Technology Access is a company that is dedicated to technology training for visually impaired individuals in order to create more accessible technologies. Belanger is a natural advocate for those whose voices are not being heard. Being visually impaired has allowed Belanger to notice areas of technology that are not accessible to the visually impaired. With a passion for justice and a heart of service Belanger is synthesizing his own experience at Gordon with a passion for where God has called him.

255 Grapevine really is a place with an address and a certain zip. Gordon College trains students to think holistically about their Christian calling and place in the world. 

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Is Peace in our Future?


By Alyssa Maine 
Wenham, MA- 

Our world is one that deals with the tension between violence and peace daily. The newspapers are littered with stories of war and pop culture and our world has become a place where all too often we can see these two tensions side by side. The 28th International Day of Peace was held at Gordon on September 21st and it celebrated the creation of the Peace and Conflict Transformation minor.

Junior history major, Joanna Gallagher attended both Daniel Steele’s talk during Chapel and the Peace Minor celebration. After studying in Israel and Jordan during the summer, Gallagher had been challenge don her own view of peace. Having the peace major will allow students to explore how they view peace and conflict outside of the United States.
 
“I hope that we (students) are brave enough to embrace the challenge of becoming peace-builders,” Gallagher said,  “not pushing this work to the remote future or watering it down, but rather practicing it right now in the dorms and dining hall in all its complexity and difficulty.” 

Monday, September 20, 2010

Good Night and Good Luck

Journalism movies are not hard to come by. Watching How to Lose a Guy in Ten Days or Shattered Glass is intriguing and holds some sort of allure to it. Journalism becomes romantic.  But the reason I like Good Night and Good Luck, directed by George Clooney, is because it depicts the field of media in in its ethical dilemma. 

Our history will be what we make it. And if there are any historians about fifty or a hundred years from now, and there should be preserved the kinescopes for one week of all three networks, they will there find recorded in black and white, and in color, evidence of decadence, escapism and insulation from the realities of the world in which we live. We are currently wealthy, fat, comfortable and complacent. We have currently a built-in allergy to unpleasant or disturbing information. Our mass media reflect this. But unless we get up off our fat surpluses and recognize that television in the main is being used to distract, delude, amuse and insulate us, then television and those who finance it, those who look at it and those who work at it, may see a totally different picture too late.” 

Often times as a Communication Arts major I have found myself struggling with the tension between observing mass media and fixing mass media. What is my role as a student of communication? Where do am I able to know the flaws that exist and the solutions to those problems?

The film asks these questions, if not broadly, specifically. Television has the ability to portray a reality that may or may not exist. My role is to be ethical in how that reality is portrayed. 


More importantly, Good Night and Good Luck forces the audience to grapple with what is portrayed and how it is portrayed. Whether the reality concerns Joseph McCarthy or Barack Obama the media is the watchdog and should be held to a greater standard. 

Thursday, September 16, 2010

From Performing Arts to Liberal Arts

By Alyssa Maine

Wenham, MA— Dancer. Actor. Musician. At a performing arts school is the student just their performance or are they more than their art? When Matt Slipp decided to come to Gordon after three semesters at Juilliard he was searching to be considered something more than just his ability to sing opera.

Slipp, freshman Music and Psychology Major from Gorham, Maine spent a year and a half in New York only to realize that he desired to be more than just a voice. At Juilliard the mindset is to become nothing else, just a product and performer.
The philosophy for learning is drastically different at Gordon College. The mission is “to graduate men and women distinguished by intellectual maturity and Christian character, committed to lives of service and prepared for leadership worldwide.” The liberal arts education promises more than just a craft, rather a holistic and integrated view of oneself.

“I am not just a musician. I am a musician as well as a Christian,” Slipp said. “I am a whole human being and I get to experience that here at Gordon.”

Slipp has been blessed to have already made close friends since one of his best friends from Gorham goes to Gordon as well. The workload is greater, but Slipp is learning from his new education.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Jodi Hassett Sanchez: SOLD

"By telling their stories can we inspire others?"Jodi Hassett Sanchez poses this question on her website.  In her film, Sold: Fighting the New Global Slavery I was challenged to consider the perspectives that I approach a story from. Sanchez sheds light on some of the worst forms of slavery that exist today, in the hopes of inspiring others to become aware and make changes that can prevent inhumane actions from occurring. She dares journalists to look at what stories they are writing. Sanchez holds true to the old Elements of Journalism adage, "give a voice to the voiceless."

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Classic Book on Writing Remains Relevant for Modern Writers

Wenham, MA- Words count. Whether that medium is a text message, email or newspaper article, today’s words need to be concise, clutter free, and bold.

William Zinsser in his book, On Writing Well not only teaches relevant writing skills, but along the way offers encouragement and support for anyone who writes poorly, perfectly or anywhere in between. “Writing is hard work,” he says, “A clear sentence is no accident. Very few sentences come out right the first time, or even the third time. Remember this in moments of despair. If you find that writing is hard, it’s because it is hard,”

Journalist Christian Brink, 21, says “One thing I remember from my high school English class is that every word must earn its way onto the page and that is just what Zinsser gets at in his chapter on simplicity. I feel that young writers too often try to impress their audience with verbose language, which often clouds their original intent.”

Zinsser’s book, written over 30 years ago, still has value to today’s aspiring writers. “For me, Zinsser has awakened my eyes to what journalists should truly see. By no means are his tools obsolete for the modern day journalist. Above all, Zinsser’s points will make the work of today’s journalists more enjoyable and fulfilling” Stuart Knechtle, 22 says.

The writer has reason to persevere. “But all of them are vulnerable and all of them are tense. They are driven by a compulsion to put some part of themselves on paper, and yet they don’t just write what comes naturally,” Zinsser says, “They sit down to commit and act of literature, and the self who emerges on paper is far stiffer that the person who sat down tow rite. The problem is to find the real man or woman behind the tension.”

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Gordon Community Informed by Variety of News Sources

By Alyssa Maine

Wenham, MA- When Gordon student Joanna Gallagher, 20, wakes up in the morning and opens her laptop she wants to know what is going on globally. “BBC seems to highlight more international events that we should know about,” she says. Other news sources don’t always inform on what is occurring outside of America and for her a global awareness is important.

Students involved in the Gordon College Student Association (GCSA) on campus, Paulo Valaci, 21, and Jesse Adams, 21, get their news from The Wall Street Journal. Representative at Large, Tony Hoveln, 27, is a weekly Time Magazine reader following stories on the elections and most recently the oil spill at the Gulf.

Laurie Truschel, Director of Student ministries at Gordon College, stays informed of local happenings through the Salem News. Truschel can often be found getting her news, “on the go!” The radio has become her on the go source tuning into BBC and NPR.

Likewise, Barry Loy, Vice President for Student Development and Dean of Students, is drawn to the convenience of aggregate websites like yahoo.com and msn.com because its easy use. While he used to buy print journalism, he has made the switch to online news in order to save a little.

The Gordon Community reads their news in hopes of being more informed, and while there is not just one way to get that news, the community is seeking to know what is going on in the world.