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Editor's Note

BLOG - Max Jones, Tribune-Star Editor lets readers know what's on his mind

Max Jones: Evolving with an industry — and with our readers

Newspapers, it is said, are living, breathing organisms that reflect the times in which they exist and the values of the communities they serve. In order to meet the changing needs and wants of their wide and diverse audience of readers, newspapers must evolve right along with them.
Some phases of a newspaper’s evolution can be dramatic, such as a major redesign in the appearance and organization of both content and presentation. Others are subtle adjustments that occur constantly without notice from most readers.
Then there are those middle phases that are more noticeable, although have only minor, if any, impact on readers. One of those came about this week when the Tribune-Star reduced the width of the single printed page by one-half inch to 111/2 inches.
Page size reductions have been an industry-wide trend in recent years. The price of newsprint — the term for the paper we print on — has been rising steadily, so newspaper companies have reduced page sizes in an effort to control that sizable expense.
In addition to the physical changes in your newspaper, we also initiated content and organizational adjustments this week. One has to do with the repositioning to Page A3 of a few types of local news that our readers find essential. These items, formerly scattered throughout the paper, mostly involve police, fire and court news, as well as calendars and vital statistics. The page will carry the header “In Touch … with the Wabash Valley”.
Another change involves a redesign of section headers (those typographical elements at the top a cover page that labels the section’s content, such as Business or School Zone).
The final change is designed to streamline and improve the process of reporting errors to our newsroom. Readers will now find a detailed explanation of how to report errors to us on Page A2 each day.
Here is what it says:
The Tribune-Star’s journalists and content handlers strive to be accurate and fair in all phases of reporting, writing, photography and presentation. We correct errors as soon as possible.
To report an error:
• In obituaries — call (812) 231-4223. If you are connected to voicemail, please leave your name, phone number and brief message describing the error. An obituary clerk will return your call. The obituary desk is staffed daily, including weekends, from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. E-mail: obituary@
tribstar.com.
• In news stories — You may contact the news reporter directly (phone numbers and e-mail addresses are usually posted at the end of an article), or Assistant Editor Susan Duncan at (812) 231-4333, susan.duncan@
tribstar.com.
• In sports stories — You may contact the sports reporter directly (phone numbers and e-mail addresses are usually posted at the end of an article), or Sports Editor Todd Golden at (812) 231-4272, todd.golden@tribstar.com. Sports Department e-mail: sports@tribstar.com.
• In calendars, event listings and community news briefs — Contact community@tribstar.com, or Community News Editor Sheila TerMeer at (812) 231-4221, sheila.termeer@tribstar.com.
• If you want to make a general comment about the accuracy or fairness of any of our news stories, photographs, headlines, story selections and placement, or editorials, please contact Editor Max Jones at (812) 231-4336, max.jones@tribstar.com.

• • •

As always, I welcome questions, comments and suggestions about these changes to your newspaper. When a newspaper evolves, it must do so with its readers and customers in mind. Feedback is key for us as we move forward and look for ways to improve and meet reader needs.

Jones can be reached at (812) 231-4336, or by e-mail at max.jones@tribstar.com.

April 04, 2008 10:12 pm

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New twist in covering Vigo County politics

“I don’t belong to any organized party: I am a Democrat.”
— Will Rogers

That piece of cowboy wisdom was not, of course, inspired by the current state of affairs in Vigo County’s Democratic Party. But it could have been.
One need not be an astute observer of local politics to know that the Democratic Party infrastructure here is cracked and fragmented. It’s been that way for a long time. What has happened in the past 18 months, however, makes traditional partisan wars between Democrats and Republicans pale in terms of overt tension and hostility.
The fundamental split has little to do with political philosophy and much to do with loyalties and allegiances to party factions and figureheads. The main factions of the party today center around two individuals — Bob Wright and Joe Anderson. Both are longtime attorneys and have enjoyed varying degrees of political success. Wright has been prosecutor. Anderson was a judge. Both have served as chairmen of the county’s Democratic Central Committee.
There have even been times when these men and their factions were allies, although that has certainly not been the case in recent election cycles.
Mostly, these rival factions have done battle only during party primaries. That all changed in 2006 when Wright stepped aside as prosecutor and he gave his support to deputy prosecutor Sarah Mullican. She won the hotly contested primary over several candidates. But this time the party did not close ranks behind her. Instead, some of the defeated Democrat candidates and their supporters publicly backed Republican Terry Modessit, who ultimately won in the general election.
The public split emerged again last year in the Terre Haute mayoral race. Incumbent Mayor Kevin Burke, who was seen as aligned with the Wright faction, won handily in the primary over Jim Horrall, the Anderson faction’s candidate. Rather than heal the rift for the general election, the Anderson faction joined with other anti-Burke forces in the community to openly back Republican Duke Bennett, who rode the unlikely coalition to a narrow victory in the general election.
Then things got really interesting.
One of the visible Democrats opposing Burke — and supporting Bennett — was attorney Mike Ellis, an Anderson ally. When the Democratic Central Committee took action to remove Mike Ellis as its secretary because of his perceived party disloyalty, he resigned his post and formed a new club, the FDR Democrat Club, to act as chief rival to the official Democratic Party.
And that brings us to a new primary season in which voters not only must size up candidates based on experience and qualifications, but also assess their alliances to political factions.
As a news organization with the responsibility of covering local politics and trying to make sense out of this on behalf of our readers, the ongoing battle for control of the Democratic Party presents unique reporting challenges. How best to approach the issue is something yet to be determined, and feedback from readers would be a valuable tool for us.
A fundamental question is, do you as readers and potential voters want to know the faction with which a candidate is aligned, if any? Or does any of this “political insider” stuff really matter to you?
Some political alliances will be obvious. Others will be less so. And there will be candidates who try to walk a fine line between the factions so as not to be seen as aligning themselves either way. How should the newspaper best explain this complex political landscape so that it is relevant to readers?
Bottom line, readers should be able to get what they want and need from our news coverage of local politics and elections. And they should get it delivered to them in a manner they view as accurate, complete, fair and in proper context.
I invite your comments.
Jones can be reached at (812) 231-4336, or by e-mail at max.jones@tribstar.com.

March 03, 2008 09:30 am

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Editor's Note: Teaming up to help readers understand Indiana’s tax issues

Being part of a national newspaper ownership group has its benefits. CNHI (Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.) has been the Tribune-Star’s parent company since the fall of 2000, and included in its group are a number of other daily newspapers in Indiana, including the Kokomo Tribune, the Herald Bulletin in Anderson, the News and Tribune of Jeffersonville and New Albany, the Logansport Pharos-Tribune, the Lebanon Reporter, and the Goshen News.
Recently, a small group of editors from CNHI’s Indiana properties embarked on a project to focus on the state’s ongoing property tax crisis and how it will impact the upcoming session of the Indiana General Assembly.
The Tribune-Star teamed up with editors at Kokomo, Anderson, Jeffersonville/New Albany and Lebanon to produce the written content, photographs and graphics for the three-day series that will begin on Sunday.
The Herald Bulletin produced the material for Sunday’s Part 1, while the Kokomo Tribune produced Part 2, scheduled for Monday. The Tribune-Star was responsible for Part 3, which will appear in Tuesday’s newspaper. The News and Tribune of Jeffersonville/New Albany created the artwork to accompany the series, both in print and online.
The series has been made available to all of CNHI Indiana’s daily and weekly newspapers. It is expected to get wide play throughout the state.
In addition to news content, our team produced editorials to run each day of the series. Even two original editorial cartoons were crafted to accompany the editorial series.
The Tribune-Star will publish most of the content generated for series. Part 1 details how Indiana’s system of taxation and government evolved — or failed to evolve — over the past 100-plus years. Part 2 explains how the 2007 property tax crisis triggered calls for local government reform. Part 3 focuses on the various legislative proposals on the table as the General Assembly convenes on Tuesday.
The series provides a wealth of information on a major topic of interest for Hoosiers. We commend it to readers’ attention. As always, we would very appreciate your feedback.

• • •

We need to set the record straight on a photograph published on Page A1 of last Saturday’s Tribune-Star (Dec. 29). The large photo, showing Terre Haute’s Mayor-elect Duke Bennett shaking hands with outgoing Mayor Kevin Burke, generated numerous comments from readers, who found the photo both compelling and entertaining because of the strained expressions on the faces of its subjects.
The photo appeared to show a spontaneous action on the part of Burke and Bennett, and we presented it as such.
Subsequently, it came to my attention, and the attention of other senior editors, that the content of the photo was not spontaneous. In fact, the handshake took place following a suggestion to Burke by our newspaper’s photographer.
Had we known that the action in the photo occurred at the suggestion of our photographer, we would have used the photo differently, if at all. If it had been used, we would have explained in the photo’s caption that it was, in effect, a posed scene.
It is not uncommon for us to publish some types of feature or documentary photos in which the photographer heavily influences the scene. In most cases, the nature of those kinds of photos is obvious to readers. When it’s not obvious, it is our practice to explain that.
We did not do that in this case, and I feel it is important that readers know the truth behind the creation of this particular photo.

Max Jones can be reached via e-mail at max.jones@tribstar.com.

January 04, 2008 04:17 pm

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Editor's Note: Tribune-Star staffers compete well for state honors

Each year, the Hoosier State Press Association conducts what it calls a “Better Newspaper Contest” in which Indiana newspapers of similar sizes compete in a broad range of journalistic categories from news reporting, feature writing, sports writing, page design and photography. There are even categories for Web sites and related content.
When newspapers choose to enter such contests, they do so because it gives them an opportunity to compete with their peers and see where they stack up.
When the Tribune-Star enters the HSPA contest, we are putting our work up against some of the best newspapers in a state with some very good newspapers. Our division is for newspapers with paid circulations of between 18,000 and 40,000. Among our chief competitors are the Herald-Times in Bloomington, The Journal and Courier in Lafayette, the Star-Press in Muncie, and newspapers in Columbus, Anderson, Kokomo, Elkhart, Marion and Fort Wayne.
Awards for 2007 were announced last weekend at a banquet in Indianapolis, and I am proud to report that the Tribune-Star once again did well. We brought home seven awards in all, three of them for first place.
Here is a rundown of this year’s T-S awards:
First Place
Headline Writing — Chad Steenerson, a copy editor here for the past six years, has earned a reputation as one of the most talented headline writers in the state. His first-place award this year was not his first. In fact, he is the perennial winner in this category in the HSPA contest, as well as other statewide contests. Chad is a skilled wordsmith who has a unique ability to capture the essence of news and feature stories and write headlines for them that are often bright and witty.
Sports Event Coverage — Todd Golden, sports editor, and Tom James, sports correspondent, won top prize for their excellent coverage of the Indianapolis Colts’ Super Bowl victory last February. Todd and Tom made for a great team as they trekked to Miami and supplied our readers for an entire week with some of the best coverage of the Super Bowl provided by any news organization anywhere.
Sports News or Feature Coverage — David Hughes, a veteran sports reporter, captured top prize for his poignant feature story about Erica Sell, a student at Terre Haute South Vigo who was fighting cancer while still playing softball for her high school’s team. David’s story was among the best stories published by the Tribune-Star all year, so we’re pleased that he received such high recognition for his work in the HSPA contest.
Second Place
News Coverage with No Deadline Pressure by a Team — This team award goes to our reporting staff, headed by Assistant Editor Susan Duncan, for outstanding work covering the canonization of St. Mother Theodore Guerin in October 2006. This event carried a high degree of interest for our readers, and the staff rallied to produce high quality work over a sustained period.
Use of Graphics — Zach Taylor, news editor, and Elizabeth Goodman, a former copy editor and page designer, teamed up to capture this honor. Zach produced eye-popping photo illustrations for his portion of the entry, while Elizabeth’s contribution was an excellent timeline graphic on St. Mother Theodore Guerin.
Third Place
Ongoing News Coverage — Mark Bennett, feature writer and columnist, was honored for his inspired work while in Rome for the Guerin canonization. Covering a major story in a foreign country is no easy task, even for a seasoned professional like Mark. His work was top-notch, and he is most deserving of this award.
Web site — Producing a superb online edition requires vision and execution. A lot of people contribute, but I particularly want to commend Shaun Hussey, Web developer, James Willis, copy editor, and Sheila TerMeer, community news editor, for the time, care and attention they give to this increasingly important newspaper function.
Congratulations to this year’s winners. Their work has made us proud.
The Tribune-Star and its readers are blessed with a talented, hard-working and productive staff of journalists who time and again rally to the cause of creating a daily newspaper that meets the needs of a large, diverse audience. I feel privileged to work among them.

December 07, 2007 07:32 pm

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Editor's Note: ’07 election letters reflected intensity

Our readers love to write letters, and election politics is one of their favorite subjects.
The recent epic mayoral tussle produced a virtual flood of submissions. Emotions ran high in many of the narratives. Election results showed voters almost evenly divided over this race, so it’s no surprise that the volume of letters received and published reflected a high degree of intensity.
Letters about the election began to trickle in during late September, with the flow increasing steadily in mid-October and becoming heavy in late October. In all, we devoted far more space to election-related letters this year than ever before.
What’s more, by using our online edition at www.tribstar.com, we were able to publish more last-minute letters than in previous elections. All printed space allocated for letters through Monday, election eve, had been filled by Friday, Nov. 2. Letters that arrived via e-mail after 6 p.m. that day and throughout last weekend were posted on our Web site by Monday morning.
Unfortunately, type-written or hand-written letters that arrived past that point could not be used because we simply did not have the time to re-type and process them for publication. There were approximately 15 of those, with about 10 endorsing Duke Bennett (almost all of those came in one packet dropped off at our front desk Monday morning), and the others endorsing Kevin Burke.
Ordinarily we don’t publish political letters on Election Day. I made an exception to that practice this year when City Council Member Todd Nation submitted an e-mail letter over the weekend addressing his unauthorized inclusion in the Democrats for Duke flier attacking Mayor Burke.
Why did I make that exception? Nation was unopposed in his race, so he gained no advantage. His letter did not endorse or attack any other candidate. It did sharply criticize the Democrats For Duke mailer produced and distributed by Joe Selliken, calling it a “disservice” to all political candidates and to the community. Nation wanted voters to know that he did not endorse the tactics used, even though Selliken and his associates had included him in its mailing. It was a newsworthy letter on an important subject that arose in the waning moments of the election. It deserved to be published in a timely fashion.
Of course, some of those dishing the dirt in that mailing were offended by Nation’s letter and my decision to use it on Election Day. No surprise, really. They thought they had a free shot at their target for which they would not be held accountable. They did not like it a bit when that turned out not to be the case. So be it.

Bouquets
• To all those who took the opportunity to exercise their cherished right to vote in Tuesday’s municipal election. While voter turnout was light at 30 percent, those who did cast ballots are to be commended for their efforts.
• To Terre Haute North Vigo High School graduate Nate Blank for getting his college basketball career off to a great start with his team, Gardner-Webb, winning twice this week. The biggest victory was against powerhouse Kentucky in Lexington. Blank scored 12 points in that monumental upset.

You can say that again
“I think, obviously, when you have change in progress, you’re going to rub someone the wrong way, and I think that’s probably what [Mayor Kevin] Burke did. And a lot of times that’s hard to overcome, depending on who you rub the wrong way.”
— Ann Murphy of Terre Haute commenting on the results of Tuesday’s municipal election

November 09, 2007 03:53 pm

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Editor's Note: As election nears, the spotlight gets hotter

The degree of interest in any election among potential voters — who also happen to be all newspapers’ avid and loyal readers — is always most intense the last two weeks of a political campaign. That’s why we target the majority of our pre-election coverage to the final 10 days or so before voters go to the polls.
For this year’s Terre Haute municipal election, our extensive coverage of the candidates and the issues driving the campaign will kick off on Sunday with an in-depth review of the upcoming mayoral race.
In the past, mayoral races have often been decided in the spring Democratic primary because of the inability of the local Republican Party to generate viable candidates. There has not been a Republican mayor in Terre Haute since Leland Larrison served one term in the late 1960s. The closest any Republican came to ending that drought was George Ralston, who put a scare into the Democratic machine headed by Mayor Pete Chalos in 1991.
Republicans have a strong mayoral candidate in Duke Bennett this year, and that has kept interest in the mayoral race higher than it otherwise would have been, especially since incumbent Mayor Kevin Burke easily defeated his primary opponents by garnering around 57 percent of the vote.
Our coverage of local City Council races begins on Monday with the spotlight on District 1. Tuesday will feature District 2, Wednesday District 3, Thursday the at-large race, Friday features District 5, and Saturday District 6.
We will also publish stories on the municipal elections in Clinton (Tuesday), Sullivan (Wednesday), and Brazil (Thursday).
Information for voters on polling sites and other items of interest will be published on Sunday, Nov. 4. We will also publish a sample ballot again this year. We have not yet determined what day that will run. We will keep you posted.
The Tribune-Star’s editorial board will also issue candidate endorsements on our editorial pages in the mayoral and council races on Wednesday and Thursday.
• The Tribune-Star and League of Women Voters of Vigo County will team up again to co-sponsor a candidate forum at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Franklin Elementary School, 1600 Elm St.
This forum is for Terre Haute City Council candidates and will feature questions from a panel as well as from those attending the event.
The format of this forum will be similar to the one we sponsored with the League in the primary. Each candidate will give an opening statement, and will then answer the questions posed. The order of candidates answering questions will rotate so to keep things as fair as possible. At the end of the two-hour event, each candidate will give a closing statement.
All but one candidate has confirmed attendance at the forum, so it should be an excellent event for all involved.

October 26, 2007 03:47 pm

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Debate format allowed candidates to shine

The Tribune-Star has been teaming up with the League of Women Voters of Vigo County and other local organizations to sponsor candidate forums and debates for years. It’s a worthwhile service to provide newspaper readers, who research shows also happen to be among the most likely voters any time there is an election.
Thinking back over all the events we’ve sponsored, I can’t recall one that was any better than the mayoral debate Tuesday night between incumbent Kevin Burke and challenger Duke Bennett.
Let me quickly acknowledge that the room we used in the basement of the Vigo County Public Library was too small for such a large audience. There weren’t enough seats for everyone, and the crush of people trying to get in made the room too warm. On top of that, it was difficult for everyone to hear for a while until the audio system was properly adjusted.
Despite the flaws, it was still the best local candidate forum/debate I have ever witnessed or helped conduct.
The debate format was a key reason for the event’s success. In addition to directly answering questions posed to them, candidates had ample opportunity to respond and rebut to their opponent’s comments. The debate on any topic did not end until the candidates had no more to say. Neither could lob any verbal bombs into the discussion that the other did not have an opportunity to address or rebut. That’s good for the candidates and the audience.
Speaking of the audience, they are another reason the event turned out so well. More than 250 people were counted as attending, which is more than double the number which attended the mayoral forum at the library during the primary election season.
Give the candidates some credit, too. They are classy individuals who showed considerable courage and commitment to their causes. It’s not easy participating in such an event. It was a pressurized situation with a lot at stake. To do well requires practice, preparation and the ability to stay keenly focused for a lengthy period of time.
Both candidates did an excellent job and deserve the support they’ve won from their supporters.
Who won the debate? Either side can lay claim to victory. And rightly so. Both took full advantage of the opportunity to articulate their platforms, elaborate on their philosophies of local government, and present a vision for the future of this city.
Next up will be an Oct. 30 forum at the library featuring candidates for City Council. More on that as the event draws near.
Also, the Terre Haute Neighborhood Association will conduct a mayoral debate on Oct. 16 at 7 p.m. at Sarah Scott Middle School.
All this leads up to Election Day, which is Nov. 6.
Bouquets
• To Clabber Girl Corp., Marla DeHart, Greg Gibson and Tim Dora for being the big winners of this year’s Chamber of Commerce awards. All have been important players in the resurgence of downtown Terre Haute.
Coming Sunday
The U.S. Supreme Court’s entry into the fray over Indiana’s voter ID law will do nothing to calm the partisan nature of the debate over this bad practice. See Perspective, Page D2
You can say that again
“Please ignore the naysayers and the negative slander, and help this community be the best it can be.”
— Terre Haute developer
Greg Gibson, when accepting the “Vision — A level Above” award from the Chamber of
Commerce on Wednesday

October 05, 2007 09:39 pm

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It's time for mayoral candidates to debate

If you think the Terre Haute mayoral campaign has been relatively quiet so far, you’re right. But all that is about to change.
On Tuesday, Republican challenger Duke Bennett will face off with Democratic incumbent Kevin Burke to debate the pressing issues and ideas that affect the city’s government, taxpayers and the future.
The debate will be at 7 p.m. in the basement of the Vigo County Public Library’s main branch at Seventh and Poplar in downtown Terre Haute. It will last approximately 90 minutes.
As in the spring, the event is sponsored by the Tribune-Star and the League of Women Voters of Vigo County. What will be different this time, however, is the format employed. While the question-and-answer format used in the primary election forum gave potential voters a useful glimpse at the four Democrats and three Republicans seeking their party’s nomination for mayor, it often left candidates unable to respond effectively to statements from their opponents in a timely manner, if at all.
That won’t be the case this time. With only two candidates sharing the spotlight, this event will come closer to being a true debate in which candidates have plenty of opportunity to answer questions, comment on issues, and respond to, or even rebut, statements made by their opponent.
After each candidate makes an opening statement, representatives from the League and the Tribune-Star will ask a series of questions. Candidates will alternate on who answers first.
Each candidate will then be able to respond to the other’s statement. The exchange will end when either candidate chooses not to make further comment.
Written questions from the audience will be encouraged. They can be passed to League of Women Voters representatives, who will pass them along to the moderator for use as time permits.
Anyone who cannot attend the event but would like to pose a question for the candidates, send me your question to the e-mail address at the end of this column, or to the Tribune-Star, P.O. Box 149, Terre Haute IN 47808, or by phone at (812) 231-4336 (leave your message in voice mail if I don’t answer).
Candidates will also be given time to make closing statements at the end of the 90-minute period.
The event is open to the public and to all other media. That would seem obvious, given that the library is a public facility and the event is a mayoral debate. It’s an appropriate notation, however, because last spring, when WTWO sponsored a live mayoral forum at Ivy Tech Community College, the station’s general manager took steps to exclude a news crew from competing station WTHI-TV.
WTWO deserves praise for its public-spirited efforts to inform voters by conducting a live forum. But efforts to eject a competing station from a public, taxpayer-supported facility was a boneheaded maneuver.
Our news department will be reporting on the event, of course, for our print and online editions. We also plan to make a video of the entire debate and post it online (www.tribstar.com) soon after the event ends.
I I I
The Tribune-Star bid farewell this week to news reporter Laura Followell, whose last day as a staff member was Wednesday.
Laura has been on the police beat — with some general assignment sprinkled in — since the first of the year, when she became a full-time reporter after several months as an intern and part-timer. She earned her bachelor’s degree from Indiana State University just last December.
Laura is leaving us to pursue her dream of attending law school. She is a talented young woman with a great future no matter where the road takes her. We hate to see her go, but wish her well.
Jones can be reached by e-mail at max.jones@tribstar.com.

October 01, 2007 10:14 am

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Editor's Note: More and better police news? It could happen

Can the Tribune-Star help residents of 12 Points and surrounding areas get a better handle on crime in their neighborhoods? Those who attended a public meeting Monday night at the Maple Avenue United Methodist Church sure think so.
During the meeting, which was billed as an organizational meeting for a neighborhood watch program, at least one resident was critical of the newspaper’s content, or lack thereof, and suggested there should be more police reports in the daily edition so residents would know if there had been a rash of burglaries or vandalism in their neighborhood.
Terre Haute Police Chief George Ralston agreed, saying he would also like to see more local police news published daily. A detailed list of incidents is compiled by the police department each day. That list is made available to the media, the chief explained, but “it’s never published.”
A reporter is assigned each day to visit or contact local law-enforcement agencies to gather police news, including reviewing the “blotter” to which Ralston referred. The reporter primarily looks for felony arrests, traffic accidents that involve injuries, or other incidents deemed newsworthy to our general readership, such as robberies, assaults, major thefts, etc.
We do not publish the entire blotter, which can be quite lengthy. Nor do we currently glean items from that list for publication in an abridged list. We are, however, willing to review and reconsider that practice.
The speaker at the 12 Points meeting, as well as Chief Ralston, are absolutely right in their view that police blotter information can be quite valuable to newspaper readers. Assistant Editor Susan Duncan contacted Chief Ralston and she and I have arranged a meeting with the chief for Oct. 2 to discuss the issue of enhanced coverage of police news in your Tribune-Star, both in print and online.
As a result, we hope to come up with new ideas and options for presenting police news. We will then invite readers to review those options and assess their value. Specifically, a “coffee with the editors” in the 12 Points area will be scheduled in which readers will be asked to join us for a discussion about their newspaper and how we can better serve their needs as readers and citizens.
More information about this meeting will be forthcoming. Stay tuned.
• • •
On Friday, Sept. 14, the Tribune-Star published a photograph of Indiana State University President Lloyd Benjamin delivering his fall address on campus.
The photo contained regrettable content that discerning readers could conclude was intended to make light of the president or hold him up to ridicule.
Publication of that photograph represented an unfortunate lapse in judgment by the newspaper. I have written a personal apology to President Benjamin for this lapse. Today, I also apologize to our readers. You should expect more from your newspaper and we will strive to prevent any future breach of journalistic standards.
• • •
A letter published in Readers’ Forum following the recent downtown blues festival complained that the event featured no local talent.
That letter prompted life-long Terre Haute resident Larry Long to call me and point out that his band — Boondocks Blues — opened the festival. Not only is Long a member of the band and a talented local musician, he tends to most of the bands bookings and business.
While other members of the band were from outside the area, he wanted readers to know that the local music scene was indeed represented by his presence.

Max Jones can be reached via
e-mail at max.jones@tribstar.com, or by phone at (812) 231-4336.

September 21, 2007 05:37 pm

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After summer’s lull, let the campaign begin

Labor Day marks the traditional kickoff to the political season. Campaigns for various offices and seats on the ballot in this year’s municipal election have been on a low boil since the May primaries.
But with a little more than two months to go before Election Day (Nov. 6), it’s time to turn up the heat.
The marquee race this year is, of course, for mayor of Terre Haute. The Democrat, Kevin Burke, seeks re-election to a second term. His Republican challenger is Duke Bennett, who ran unsuccessfully against Burke four years ago.
Burke’s primary victory was the first for a Democratic mayoral incumbent since the late Pete Chalos defeated a field of challengers in the spring of 1991. Despite a sometimes heated campaign, Burke easily claimed renomination.
Republican Bennett is a more intriguing candidate than those Burke faced in the spring. But Republicans rarely run well in Terre Haute municipal elections. From a voter’s perspective, however, Bennett’s presence makes this a more compelling election than it otherwise might be. He is smart, articulate, credible, qualified for the job, and able to engage in a meaningful, substantive discussion about the city’s future and what local government’s role in that future should be.
It will be much easier for voters to understand and follow the debate this fall than it was in the spring. The primary free-for-all sometimes clouded more issues than it cleared up. With only two candidates for mayor this fall, the positions and political philosophies of the candidates should be less difficult to discern.
The Tribune-Star will be an involved observer of the political campaigns this fall. We will co-sponsor, with the League of Women Voters of Vigo County, a debate on Oct. 2 between Burke and Bennett, and we also plan to conduct editorial board sessions with each candidate before making our own endorsement in late October.
The format of the Oct. 2 debate should be more appealing to potential voters and observers because candidates will have more opportunity to challenge each other’s views and offer rebuttals. It should be great political theater, and hopefully voters will feel enlightened as well
In addition to our traditional print coverage of the debate, we also plan to produce a video of the entire debate that will be viewable from our Web site a short time after the debate ends. That way, those who are not able to attend can still view the event at their convenience.
We are also giving serious consideration to creating a Web video of our editorial board’s interview of each candidate.
Also in the planning stage is a forum for candidates in City Council races. We’re still working on a format for that forum.
More information will be passed along to readers as it becomes available. We hope all of you will be tuning in to this important election.


Bouquets

• To all who gathered in Terre Haute on Tuesday to commemorate Women’s Equality Day. The event was conducted in observance of the 87th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote.
• To the Dorsett family of Terre Haute, longtime owner and operator of Dorsett Mitsubishi. The dealership was named No. 1 Diamond Chapter of Excellence Dealer in the U.S. by Mitsubishi Motors.
Coming Sunday

The proposal by the Vigo County School Corp. to reduce the number of credits needed for a general diploma in order to reduce the dropout rate makes sense. See Perspectives, Page D2
You can say that again

“I think it has been a fun program, one that has gotten people excited about the arts in Terre Haute.”
— David Vollmer, director of Swope Art Museum, commenting on the “Horsing Around” project featuring 30 painted fiberglass colts
designed by local artists

September 01, 2007 06:27 pm

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