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Afa M Footbl__2006Footballme
TTaabbllee ooff CCoonntteennttss This is Air Force Football 2005 Results Defensive Records . 122-123 Note from Fisher DeBerry . 1 Season Statistics . 88-90 All-Time Letterwinners . 124-128 Game Day at Falcon Stadium. 2-3 Team/Individual Highs . 91 Past Season Results. 129-133 Air Force Football Traditions . 4-5 Player career highs . 92 Post-Season Recaps . 134-137 Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy. 6-7 Misc. Statistics . 93-94 Bowl Quick Facts . 137 Bullard Award. 8-9 Game-by-Game Statistics . 95-96 Bowl Records . 138 Falcons in the Pros . 10 2005 Game Recaps . 97-100 Air Force Academy fast facts . 11 Media Table of Contents . 12 Mountain West Conference Covering Air Force . 140 MWC Story. 102 Future Schedules. 140 Academy CSTV . 103 Media Guidelines . 141 The Air Force Academy . 14 2006 Composite Schedule . 104 Local Media Outlets . 142 Academy Senior Leadership. 15 2005 Team Statistics . 105 Academy Map / Directions. 143 Athletic Administration. 16 2005 Individual Statistics . 106 Note pad . 144 Academy Athletics . 17 Falcon Mascot. 18 History Falcon Stadium . 19 All-Americans. 108 Sports Medicine . 20-21 All-Conference Honorees . 109 Pagentry of Air Force Football. 22-23 All-American Profiles. 110-113 Falcon Athletic Center . 24 All-Star Games . 113 Rushing Records. 114-115 Coaches Passing Records . 116-117 Fisher DeBerry . 26-29 Total Offense Records . 118 Richard Bell . 30 Kicking Records . 119 Ron Burton . 31 Scoring Records . 120 Dean Campbell . 32 Receiving Records . 121 Dick Enga . 33 Paul Hamilton . 34 Pete Hurt . 35 Credits Brian Knorr. 36 The 2006 Air Force Football Media Guide is a product of the Academy’s Athletic Tom Miller . -
Staring Death in the Face During Times of War: When Ethics, Law, and Self-Censorship in the News Media Hide the Morbidity of Authenticity Clay Calvert
Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy Volume 25 Article 4 Issue 1 Symposium on Censorship & the Media 1-1-2012 Staring Death in the Face during Times of War: When Ethics, Law, and Self-Censorship in the News Media Hide the Morbidity of Authenticity Clay Calvert Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndjlepp Recommended Citation Clay Calvert, Staring Death in the Face during Times of War: When Ethics, Law, and Self-Censorship in the News Media Hide the Morbidity of Authenticity, 25 Notre Dame J.L. Ethics & Pub. Pol'y 87 (2012). Available at: http://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndjlepp/vol25/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy at NDLScholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy by an authorized administrator of NDLScholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STARING DEATH IN THE FACE DURING TIMES OF WAR: WHEN ETHICS, LAW, AND SELF- CENSORSHIP IN THE NEWS MEDIA HIDE THE MORBIDITY OF AUTHENTICITY CLAY CALVERT* & MIRELIs TORRESt INTRODUCTION Photos are trickier than words, because their content is in large measure emotional, visceral, and because you can't edit their content. That's how Bill Keller, executive editor of The New York Times, succinctly describes the difficulty and dilemma posed in deciding which wartime images newspapers should publish.' A recent, real-life scenario illustrates the problem: during a Taliban ambush in the Helmand province of southern Afghanistan, a U.S. -
Intimate Perspectives from the Battlefields of Iraq
'The Best Covered War in History': Intimate Perspectives from the Battlefields of Iraq by Andrew J. McLaughlin A thesis presented to the University Of Waterloo in fulfilment of the thesis requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 2017 © Andrew J. McLaughlin 2017 Examining Committee Membership The following served on the Examining Committee for this thesis. The decision of the Examining Committee is by majority vote. External Examiner Marco Rimanelli Professor, St. Leo University Supervisor(s) Andrew Hunt Professor, University of Waterloo Internal Member Jasmin Habib Associate Professor, University of Waterloo Internal Member Roger Sarty Professor, Wilfrid Laurier University Internal-external Member Brian Orend Professor, University of Waterloo ii Author's Declaration I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. This is a true copy of the thesis, including any required final revisions, as accepted by my examiners. I understand that my thesis may be made electronically available to the public. iii Abstract This study examines combat operations from the 2003 invasion of Iraq War from the “ground up.” It utilizes unique first-person accounts that offer insights into the realities of modern warfare which include effects on soldiers, the local population, and journalists who were tasked with reporting on the action. It affirms the value of media embedding to the historian, as hundreds of journalists witnessed major combat operations firsthand. This line of argument stands in stark contrast to other academic assessments of the embedding program, which have criticized it by claiming media bias and military censorship. Here, an examination of the cultural and social dynamics of an army at war provides agency to soldiers, combat reporters, and innocent civilians caught in the crossfire. -
Media History Monographs 15:1 (2012-2013) ISSN 1940-8862
Media History Monographs 15:1 (2012-2013) ISSN 1940-8862 When Objectivity Works: David Halberstam’s Vietnam Reporting Ronald Seyb Skidmore College Most Americans accept that Vietnam was America’s first “living room war” as readily as they accept that it was America’s first military defeat. Even many scholars have privileged television’s coverage of the war in their analyses of the press’s role in shaping public perceptions of the conflict. This article seeks to correct this imbalance by assessing David Halberstam’s Vietnam reporting. It argues that while Halberstam’s field reporting in Vietnam is rightly praised for giving readers an up close view of the conflict, it was the reporting that he did away from the field on the Buddhist Crisis that displayed most clearly the virtues of journalistic objectivity as a professional norm that allows reporters to, in the words of Donald McDonald, “discover and communicate the coherence of a complex, unfolding reality.” ©2012 Ronald Seyb Media History Monographs 15:1 Seyb When Objectivity Works: David Halberstam’s Vietnam Reporting Americans’ collective memory of the Viet- perception of the war in ways that would have nam War consists principally of a pastiche of long-term consequences for their profession: televised images: A Marine igniting with a Zippo In this brief but crucial period they would . lighter the thatch roof of a Vietnamese villager’s . establish the standards for a new gen- home, a Buddhist monk immolating himself in eration of war correspondents—and tele- downtown Saigon, a South Vietnamese General vision as well. These were provocative, casually executing a suspected Vietcong death new, adversarial standards that broke from squad leader, and a seemingly endless line of the old and would be used to chronicle grievously wounded soldiers being hustled on America’s disaster in Vietnam and events stretchers to waiting helicopters.1 long after. -
Harrison Salisbury, the Vietnamese Enemy, and Wartime
From Behind Enemy Lines: Harrison Salisbury, the Vietnamese Enemy, and Wartime Reporting During the Vietnam War A thesis presented to the faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts Annessa C. Stagner June 2008 2 © 2008 Annessa C. Stagner All Rights Reserved 3 This thesis titled From Behind Enemy Lines: Harrison Salisbury, the Vietnamese Enemy, and Wartime Reporting During the Vietnam War by ANNESSA C. STAGNER has been approved for the Department of History and the College of Arts and Sciences by Chester J. Pach, Jr. Associate Professor of History Benjamin M. Ogles Dean, College of Arts and Sciences 4 ABSTRACT STAGNER, ANNESSA C., M.A., June 2008, History From Behind Enemy Lines: Harrison Salisbury, the Vietnamese Enemy, and Wartime Reporting During the Vietnam War (165 pp.) Director of Thesis: Chester J. Pach, Jr. On December 24, 1966, Harrison Salisbury became the first mainstream American journalist to report from North Vietnam during the Vietnam War. From his position behind enemy lines, the New York Times reporter revealed that America’s bombing campaign was causing many more civilian casualties than the Johnson administration had acknowledged. Additionally, he challenged how Americans perceived their enemy by portraying North Vietnam’s culture and political ideology as legitimate. Evaluation of governmental and public responses to his stories reveals the significance of these reports. They sparked controversy that undermined American and international confidence in the Johnson administration’s credibility, decreased support for U.S. policies towards North Vietnam, and put increased pressure on the Johnson administration to increase efforts towards peace. -
Celebrating 50 Years of Genesis Magazine, Part I the Ignatian Guild Proudly Presents the 45Th Annual Fashion Show The
The Quarterly Magazine of St. Ignatius College Preparatory, San Francisco, Fall 2014, Annual Report Celebrating 50 years of Genesis Magazine, Part I THE IGNATIAN GUILD PROUDLY PRESENTS THE 45TH ANNUAL FASHION SHOW the NOVEMBER 1 & 2, 2014 A.M.D.G. September 2014 Dear Friends of St. Ignatius, In September 1964, Rev. Harry Carlin, S.J., began his term as President- genesis Rector at St. Ignatius High School, then located at 222 Stanyan Street just below USF. Fifty years later, I begin my term as President of St. A Report to Concerned Individuals Ignatius College Preparatory, while also serving as the Superior of the Vol. 50, No. 4 Fall 2014 local Jesuit Community. I am sure that Fr. Carlin had already formulated Rev. Edwin B. Harris, S.J. ’63 President & Superior of the SI Jesuit Community a plan for moving the high school when he assumed office, and Genesis Mr. Patrick M. Ruff magazine has chronicled very well the story of how that plan developed Principal and evolved over these many years. The saga of our school at 2001 37th Mr. Joseph A. Vollert ’84 Avenue in the Sunset District has concluded its 45th year, the longest Vice President for Development stint at any of the six locations of SI in San Francisco. We have come Mr. Ken Stupi ’78 Vice President for Finance & Administration a long way from the one-room school that originally opened up where Ms. Marielle A. Murphy ’93 Bloomingdale’s is now located on Market Street. Director of Development Mr. John J. Ring ’86 We inaugurated our 2014–15 academic year with frosh orientation for 374 students and their Director of Alumni Relations parents on Aug. -
Annual Town Report Dedication Honor Roll
ANNUAL REPORT of the TOWN OF DENNIS FOR THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2011 TABLE OF CONTENTS TO COME IN MEMORIAM 2011 The Town of Dennis lost the following valued employees and volunteers this year.* Donald Grant Cattanach Donald worked for many years at the Highlands Golf Course as a Ranger and Starter. Mary Dumas Mary was a secretary for the Dennis Senior Center. John Malloy John Malloy was a member of the Library and Dennis Public Library Boards. Richard R. Palmer Richard was a member of the Capital Outlay Committee. Robert G. Potter Robert worked many years for the Dennis Police Department as a Police Officer, Firearms Instructor and Mechanic. Lois A. Powers Lois worked for many years in the Police and DPW Departments. Raymond Theodore Speakman Ray worked for over 30 years as a Wiring Inspector for the Town. Richard Swanson Richard was a member of the Caretaker of Veterans’ Graves Committee. *We sincerely apologize if we have inadvertently overlooked anyone- A common mistake when such a task is undertaken. 1 The 2011 Town of Dennis Annual Report is dedicated to Peter Howes David Talbott Richard Howes Richard Howes, Peter Howes and David Talbott The Town of Dennis is unique in that it owns the home of the man our Town was named for, the Josiah Dennis Manse. Built in 1691 of first growth timbers it was rapidly deteriorating over the past twenty years and needed immediate attention. Peter Howes of the Manse Museum Committee volunteered to spearhead the quest for funds. He wrote a large number of grant proposals and was very successful. -
Civil Liberties in Uncivil Times: the Ep Rilous Quest to Preserve American Freedoms Kenneth Lasson University of Baltimore School of Law, [email protected]
University of Baltimore Law ScholarWorks@University of Baltimore School of Law All Faculty Scholarship Faculty Scholarship 2007 Civil Liberties in Uncivil Times: The eP rilous Quest to Preserve American Freedoms Kenneth Lasson University of Baltimore School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.law.ubalt.edu/all_fac Part of the Civil Rights and Discrimination Commons, Constitutional Law Commons, and the National Security Law Commons Recommended Citation Civil Liberties in Uncivil Times: The eP rilous Quest to Preserve American Freedoms, 2 London Law Review 2 (2007) This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at ScholarWorks@University of Baltimore School of Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@University of Baltimore School of Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. bepress Legal Series Year Paper Civil Liberties in Uncivil Times: The Perilous Quest to Preserve American Freedoms Kenneth Lasson University of Baltimore This working paper is hosted by The Berkeley Electronic Press (bepress) and may not be commercially reproduced without the permission of the copyright holder. http://law.bepress.com/expresso/eps/1090 Copyright c 2006 by the author. Civil Liberties in Uncivil Times: The Perilous Quest to Preserve American Freedoms Abstract The perilous quest to preserve civil liberties in uncivil times is not an easy one, but the wisdom of Benjamin Franklin should remain a beacon: “Societies that trade liberty for security end often with neither.” Part I of this article is a brief history of civil liberties in America during past conflicts. -
Pressepolitik in Den US- Kriegen Des 20
Die andere Front: Pressepolitik in den US- Kriegen des 20. Jahrhunderts Inauguraldissertation zur Erlangung des Doktorgrades der Philosophischen Fakultät der Universität zu Köln vorgelegt von Andreas Elter Saarbrücker Str. 5 51107 Köln Köln, April 2003 ii Danksagung Angeregt wurde diese Dissertation durch den verstorbenen Leiter der Anglo- Amerikanischen Abteilung der Universität zu Köln, Prof. Jürgen Heideking. Unmittelbar nach Abschluss meines Studiums im Jahre 1996 kamen Prof. Heideking und ich in mehreren Gesprächen gemeinsam zu der Auffassung, dass bei der Untersuchung US- amerikanischer Kriege des 20. Jahrhunderts häufig ein ganz entscheidender Aspekt fehlte: Nämlich eine übergreifende Analyse der Pressepolitik, die vor allem die Bedeutung der Medienlenkung im Krieg herausarbeitet. Auf dieser Grundlage entstand überhaupt erst mein Entschluss, eine entsprechende Dissertation vorzulegen. Daher soll hier an erster Stelle Prof. Heideking gedankt werden. Durch einen beruflich bedingten Umzug nach Mainz und den Tod Prof. Heidekings verzögerte sich der Start des Projekts um drei Jahre. Eine Initialzündung für die Wiederaufnahme und Vervollständigung der Recherchen stellte dann 1999 ein Aufenthalt als "Visiting Media Fellow" der RIAS-Kommission am "Institute for Public Policy" der Duke University in North Carolina dar. Die Leiterin des Instituts, Ellen Mickiewicz, gewährte mir unter anderem auf Grund ihrer Erfahrungen einer Beratertätigkeit für den ehemaligen US-Präsidenten Jimmy Carter tiefe Einblicke ins Innenleben pressepolitischer Zusammenhänge und Kontakte zu amerikanischen Journalisten. Ihr und den anderen Lehrkräften der Duke University, insbesondere Prof. David Paletz, gebührt ebenfalls Dank. In den USA haben mich darüber hinaus Martin Bohley (CNN Atlanta), Susan Tifft (New York Times), Rick Atkinson (Washington Post), Albert Dagliesh (Presseabteilung des Pentagon) sowie die freundlichen Damen und Herren im CBS und NBC-Archiv sowie an der Library of Congress und den National Archives bei meinen Recherchen unterstützt. -
Fall 2010 Journalism 349 T/395: Reporting the World
Fall 2010 Journalism 349 T/395: Reporting the World: A Critical Examination of the U.S. News Media Classes: T/Th 12:30 - 2 Instructor: Tracy Dahlby Telephone: 512-471-6272 Email: [email protected] Teaching Assistant: Monica Chadha Objectives This course is designed to provide students with a dynamic way of looking at, thinking about, and reporting the world, both abroad and at home. It will help you establish a framework for analyzing and understanding the events and processes that shape our lives in a global society. Our guiding considerations: How does the news we consume form our views of the world and influence our reporting? To what extent do such views jibe with or differ from what really occurs? As journalistic observers, how can we develop tools for obtaining a clearer picture of important events and trends? In attempting to answer such questions, we will focus on how to: . Think critically about what purpose the news media serve – and how we can use various news- and non-news media to see the world more clearly. Determine the extent to which the news media succeed or fail in conveying the reality of events on the ground and why. Drill down to fundamental layers of understanding about events, their political, economic, cultural and psychological complexities, and develop deep context on issues affecting our communities and us. Develop and hone our research, reporting and writing techniques. Distinguish the dos and don’ts of professional journalism, and consider the ethical compass points of fairness, accuracy and truth seeking as they relate to explaining the world around us. -
The Sugar Press the MAGAZINE for GREAT WESTERNERS • JUNE-JULY-AUGUST 1966 • Bruce F
Roof trusses for the new pnlp dryer war~house at Eaton form an intricate spider web for two riggers. Photo by Russ Smith. The Sugar Press THE MAGAZINE FOR GREAT WESTERNERS • JUNE-JULY-AUGUST 1966 • Bruce F. Stallings, veteran beetend foreman at Gering, retired on Aug. 1 with service dating back nearly SO years. Bruce spent his entire career at Gering, wher~ .he first worked campaigns in 1917 and ]Omed the year-around crew in 1925. He became a Steffen foreman in 1927 and a beetend foreman in 1945. • Ervin Lynn, veteran beetend foreman at Lovell, retired last April with service dating back SO years. Erv worked all the campaigns at Lovell since the opening of the mill in 1916, ex cept during 1924-25. He joined the year around crew in 1938 as an extra station man and became a beetend foreman in 1943. • Ralph W. Andrew, dump repair fo ··e man at Loveland, retired on July 1 with With gold watches in their hands, marking their 50th anniversary at Lovell, service dating back nearly 30 years. Jack Asay, left, and Erv Lynn appear with four of the 120 Sugar Tramps and wives who Ralph was named foreman at Loveland honored their retirement at a dinner on July 22. Both Jack and Erv worked the in l9Sl. Most of his earlier service was first campaign at Lovell. The others, from left, Cashier Hub Marten, Manager Chuck at Scottsbluff, where he joined the year Johnson, Supt. Dan Conwell, and Supt. Francis Wood of Billings, formerly at Lovell. around crew in 1940. -
New Hope for Marriage
New Hope for Marriage Louise Strait May 1975 Photo date and location unknown In the late sixties and early seventies we saw unique ways of working out man-woman relationships: trial marriages, group marriages, contract marriages, non-sanctioned marriages. None seemed to provide the answers and both men and women are taking their exits in greater numbers and variety of ways than ever before. So much so that the greeting card industry is now marketing "Just Divorced" party invitations to which people bring gifts like split peas and egg separators. "Announcing our new address... Splitsville," says another. The divorce rate, as a matter of fact, is still climbing. Last year it was up 6.2 percent from 1973. For the first time, the number of runaway wives has risen to equal that of runaway husbands. Some of the departures are bizarre: in one case a wife disappeared after she jumped out of their car at a red light, saying that she would clean the snow off the rear window. Does it matter so much? Is this problem of the essential husband-wife relationship within the family so significant? Vicki Tatz has pointed out the effects of family disintegration upon children and the aged. What about the husband and wife? Studies have shown that single and divorced people feel a high degree of stress and unhappiness. Because of our lifelong need to give and receive love, marriage is necessary not only for the sake of the children or the sake of society, but for the sake of those immediately involved the man and woman themselves.