Main Page Content:
Student MediaRSS feed
-

More student editors sacked over cartoons

Posted by Martin Stabe on 16 February 2006 at 14:40
Tags: International, Muhammad cartoons, Student Media

Two more student newspaper editor — this time in the United States — have been suspended after printing the controvertial cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad.

Editor-in-chief Acton Gorton and opinion editor Chuck Prochaska of the Daily Illini, an indendent student newspaper at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, were suspended by the paper’s editoral board after claims they had not properly consulted other editors before deciding to run the cartoons.

-

Learn journalism on your iPod

Posted by Martin Stabe on 13 February 2006 at 11:52
Tags: Podcasting, Student Media, Training

Students at a top American journalism school will be among the first to be able to download their lectures as free podcasts.

Recordings of courses at the University of Missouri journalism school will be among those available for available for free download as podcasts produced as part of a pilot project involving Apple Computer and six US universities, the Financial Times reports.

“Our students are digital natives and what we’re trying to do is meet them where they already are,�? Keith Politte, development officer at the Mizzou’s j-school told the FT.

-

Student editor apologises for Muhammad cartoon

Posted by Martin Stabe on 13 February 2006 at 10:01
Tags: Muhammad cartoons, Newspapers, Student Media

The student newspaper editor who was suspended with two other journalists after they became the first and only newspaper in Britain to print the controvertial cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad has broken his silence.

Speaking to the Western Mail, Tom Wellingham, the editor of Cardiff University’s student rag, Gair Rhydd, apologised for running the cartoons:

“The reproduction of one of the controversial cartoons of the prophet Mohammed in our most recent edition was a na ve and ill-considered course of action which caused needless offence to Muslim students and members of the community alike.

“The cartoon was not reproduced as part of some frivolous defence of freedom of speech, but was a genuine mistake on our part which arose from a desire to give context to a small and balanced world news piece reporting the developing international situation surrounding the cartoons.

“We apologise for the harm we recognise we have caused.”

Yesterday’s editon of the Gair Rhydd — the first published since the last week’s edition containing the cartoons was recalled and pulped — also contained a full-page statement from the university’s Islamic Society calling for peaceful protest. The statement described the article as “not only unthoughtful and irresponsible but a cruel and heartless act by the newspaper involved” which “only serves to intensify and stir frustration evident amongst Muslims at the present time.”

1 comment

-

Student hacks slam student hacks

Posted by Martin Stabe on 10 February 2006 at 14:17
Tags: Muhammad cartoons, Student Media

In a leader published today, the Oxford Student newspaper has rounded on its counterpart at Cardiff University, Gair Rhydd, for publishing the cartoon
showing the Prophet Muhammad with a bomb-shaped turban.

“The Cardiff University student newspaper Gair Rhydd’s decision to be the first and only newspaper in Britain to print the cartoons is nothing short of infantile attention-seeking,” the Student thundered in an attack on its rival for annual student journalism prizes.

Thousands of copies of the Cardiff student newspaper were recalled and pulped this week after it ran the cartoon. The editor, Tom Wellingham, and two other student journalists were suspended by their students’ union. Wellingham is reported to be ‘devastated’ by his suspension.

Meanwhile, back amidst the dreaming spires, four editors of the Hertford college magazine Simpkinsfaced university action” after an issue of the rag had to be removed from circulation “for publishing potentially offensive material”.

1 comment

-

Student editor ‘devastated’ by cartoon suspension

Posted by Martin Stabe on 9 February 2006 at 12:42
Tags: Muhammad cartoons, Newspapers, Student Media

The student editor who was suspended from his students union for allowing the publication of the cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad is ‘devastated’, the South Wales Echo reports.

The editor of Cardiff University’s student newspaper, Gair Rhydd, Tom Wellingham, was suspended along the paper’s news editor and correspondent. Journalists at the student rag say he has returned to his parents’ home in England.

-

Advertisement

E-mail Newsletter Signup

-

Advertisement

-

Advertisement