The following narrative
summarizes the first three years of the Southeast Journalism Conference's
existence. It is an edited version of a file that is maintained by the
secretary-treasurer.
Since its beginning as an
idea of Alabama professor David Sloan, the Southeast Journalism Conference
has worked hard to meet its two original purposes: 1) to encourage greater
interest in student journalism and 2) to create closer ties among journalism
schools in the Southeast United States.
In November 1985 Sloan wrote
a letter proposing a new organization based on those purposes and mailed
it to all journalism programs in the South listed in the Journalism
Directory, which is published annually by the Association for Education
in Journalism and Mass Communication. By January 1986 about 12 schools
had indicated interest in joining, and later that spring Sloan met with
representatives from four of those schools at an AEJMC regional meeting
in Knoxville, Tenn. It was agreed that the group would use the constitution
of the long-established Southwest Journalism Congress as an early model
and begin formal operation in the 1986-87 school year.
It was also decided that
the SEJC would sponsor two primary annual activities during its formative
years - a publications contest and a convention, both for students at
member schools. Fifty-one categories of newspaper and magazine writing,
editing, layout, photo and advertising competition were set up. One
category, an overall sweepstakes trophy for the school with the most
awards, was deleted at the 1987 faculty business meeting, leaving 50
regular categories at that time. The convention would be held at the
home school of the faculty president, and the faculty vice president
would become the president the following year.
By June 1986 Sloan reported
that 24 schools from Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana,
Mississippi and Tennessee had applied for charter membership.
As the first president of
SEJC, University of Alabama-Birmingham professor Byron St. Dizier organized
an extensive student publications contest and a three-day inaugural
convention set for Feb. 19-21, 1987. St. Dizier estimated that several
hundred contest entries were received from 13 schools, and attending
the first convention were 60 representatives from Alabama, Alabama-Birmingham,
Samford, Middle Tennessee, Austin Peay, Georgia State, Southeastern
Louisiana and Northeast Louisiana.
The first convention got
under way in conjunction with a Sigma Delta Chi meeting that featured
reporters who had covered a recent civil rights march that received
national attention in Forsyth County, Ga. The following day featured
workshops and discussions on freelancing, student press law, terrorism,
the media and media careers.
Most speakers were working
journalists from the Birmingham Post-Herald, Birmingham News and Southern
Living magazine who had also served as contest judges. A keynote luncheon
address was delivered by Cable News Network's Jerry Levin, a correspondent
who was held hostage by terrorists. Levin called for the United States
to put more effort into gaining the release of other kidnapped American
journalists. Socials were held Friday night for both faculty members
and for students - a tradition that has lasted through the years.
At Saturday's business meetings
the SEJC constitution was adopted, Lori Martin of Austin Peay was elected
as the SEJC's first student president, Crystal Nelms of Middle Tennessee
was chosen student program director for the 1988 convention, and Middle
Tennessee publications director Jackie Solomon was elected faculty president.
It was decided that literary magazines and yearbooks would not be included
in competitions and that the organization should research the possibility
of including broadcast categories.
For the second convention,
held April 21-23, 1988, at Murfreesboro, Tenn., most sessions utilized
students as speakers. Discussions were devoted to media ethics, open
meetings and records laws, newsroom management, community journalism,
sports writing, cutline writing and newspaper readership studies.
The highlight, a lecture
by Draper Hill of the Detroit News on the development of the American
editorial cartoon, was sponsored by the Middle Tennessee mass communication
department as part of a seminar on political cartooning.
About 60 representatives
from Alabama, Alabama-Birmingham, Middle Tennessee, Austin Peay, Belmont,
Georgia State, Southeastern Louisiana and Northeast Louisiana attended,
and students from 12 schools won awards in the publications contest,
judged by staffs of the Nashville Banner, Tennessean, the Tennessee
Associated Press and United Press International bureaus.
For 1988-89, vice president
Joe Mirando of Southeastern Louisiana University was elected faculty
president, Thom Storey of Belmont was elected vice president and Southeastern
Louisiana's Brian Federico was elected both student president and convention
program director.
Convention No. 3, held March
2-4, 1989, in Hammond, La., introduced the student research competition
category to the SEJC and featured sessions such as investigative reporting,
an update on the new journalism vs. objectivity debate, the question
of whether creativity and journalism can co-exist, opportunities in
freelancing, wire service and news bureau work, as well as workshops
on various areas of newspaper production.
Richard Benedetto, political
writer for USA Today, gave the luncheon keynote address on the putting
together of USA Today. In the address, which concluded with a lively
question-and-answer period, Benedetto discussed the origins and back-room
beginnings of the paper.
A record 662 entries in 52
categories were submitted by the 14 schools participating in the conference.
Newspaper writing, editing and layout categories and all photography
entries were judged by 23 reporters and editors of the New Orleans Times-Picayune
and all magazine entries were evaluated by the staff of Louisiana Life
magazine. All 14 schools participating in the conference received awards.
The Saturday business meetings
concluded with the research paper competition being accepted as a new,
permanent category for the conference. Thom Storey of Belmont College
became the faculty president, and Leonard Teel of Georgia State University
was elected faculty vice president. Following a decision in the student
business meeting to combine the student coordinator and president positions,
Ian Campbell from Belmont College was elected student president.
Convention Locations:
1987 - University
of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Ala.
1988 - Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, Tenn.
1989 - Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond, La.
1990 - Belmont College, Nashville, Tenn.
1991 - Georgia State University, Atlanta, Ga.
1992 - University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, Miss.
1993 - University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
1994 - Northeast Louisiana University, Monroe La.
1995 - Emory University, Atlanta, Ga.
1996 - Mississippi College, Jackson, Miss.
1997 - Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
1998 - Spring Hill College, Mobile, Ala.
1999 - University of Louisiana-Lafayette, Lafayette, La.
2000 - Georgia College, Milledgeville, Ga.
2001 - Mississippi University for Women, Columbus, Miss.
(Note: This was the year of the tornado. Everything went smoothly
Thursday night and Friday morning, and then shortly after the Friday
luncheon a strong tornado devastated the area, causing millions of dollars
in damage. All power to the area was knocked out. The convention hotel
was wrecked, but no one had been hurt because almost everyone was at
the campus when it hit. SEJC officers made an emergency decision to
cancel the rest of the convention.)
2002 - Austin Peay State University, Clarksville, Tenn.
2003 - University of West Florida, Pensacola, Fla.
2004 - Troy State University, Troy, Ala.
2005 - Louisiana Tech University, Ruston, La.
2006 - Emory University, Atlanta, Ga. (20th anniversary)
2007 -