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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Two University of Alabama telecommunication
and film graduates took home top honors in the William Randolph
Hearst Journalism Awards Competition in San Francisco in early June.
Jeremy King, a May graduate from Alabaster, Ala., won first place
in radio reporting and Brandi Srader, a May graduate from Doniphan,
Mo., placed third in radio reporting. Both King and Srader had to
place in the top five in earlier competitions to compete in San
Francisco. King competed in San Francisco last year.
Out of the five national finalists in radio news, two of
them were from Pam Doyles program, which is remarkable when
you consider the quality of the competition that Hearst represents,
said Dr. Loy Singleton, professor and chair of telecommunication
and film in the College of Communication
and Information Sciences. The Hearst awards and the competition
associated with them are considered to be the Academy Awards of
collegiate broadcast journalism.
Butler Cain, news director at Alabama Public Radio, says of King
and Srader, I really have enjoyed working with both of them.
I have confidence in them that they will continue to do well in
this industry.
Dr. Pam Doyle, associate professor of telecommunication and film
in the College of Communication and Information Sciences, said UA
broadcast students have been placing in the top 15 in the Hearst
competition for the last several years and that the department is
very excited to have students place first and third.
It really is an indication of the success we have had blending
professional success here in the College with excellence in the
classroom, Singleton said. The Colleges acquisition
of a commercial television station along with the continued success
of APR means that our students are going to be even more intensely
involved in the daily production of broadcast news.
The Hearst Journalism Awards Program is presented annually under
the auspices of the Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass
Communication with full funding by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation.
The programs mission is to encourage and support excellence
in journalism and journalism education in Americas colleges
and universities.
There are six writing, three photojournalism, two radio broadcast
news and two television broadcast new competitions each academic
year, beginning in October and ending in April.
The competition year culminates in June with the National Writing,
Photojournalism and Broadcast News Championships and is open to
selected winning students from the monthly competitions.
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