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REVERBERATIONS
Across
the land, a new sense of vigor and purpose is spurring regional
dailies since September 11
BY
JOSHUA LIPTON AND JOHN GIUFFO
It has become the post-September 11
cliché to say that the attacks on New York and Washington
changed everything. But clichés have their kernels of truth.
Journalists and industry-watchers say that the events are making
newsroom managers more aware of the need for hard news. Coverage
of foreign events, government agencies, and the like is suddenly
in the forefront, and infotainment has receded, at least for now.
But how permanent are the changes?
Through this series of windows, cjr takes a look at the various
ways ten mid-sized and regional daily newspapers have been covering
the crisis. Some have the resources to chase stories overseas.
Others focus on the local impact, describing how the events affect
their readers' lives. But each region, and each newspaper, experience
the war on terrorism differently, and how they cover it reveals
something about their respective cultures.
No matter whom we spoke to, one theme repeatedly emerged: September
11 re-energized journalists and re-instilled in many of them the
sense that what they do matters. Whether that renewed sense of
purpose translates into a long-term commitment to excellence remains
to be seen. The ball is in the managers' court now.
MAXIMIZING
THE WEB VERSION
The Seattle Times understands that you've got to play to your
strengths. When terror hit and war broke out, the paper's resources
were limited. There were no foreign correspondents on staff, so
the paper relied on wire copy. But as the conflict came into focus,
the Times editors saw an opportunity to provide context. And they
saw their Web site as one important way to do that. "We aren't
going to be the ones who are always on the scene," says editor
Mike Fancher. "But we can do something that connects locally
with our readers."
A little more than a week after the attacks, the editors held
the first of a series of meetings to design a package that would
deal with the hydra-headed stories that sprang up. They had done
stories on Seattle-Tacoma airport's security and the effects of
attacks on Muslims and Arab-Americans in the area, but they felt
the events needed more than simply a day-by-day recounting of
the previous day's developments. Culture, religion, history, local
reactions, changes in the country's views of itself and the world
-- these all needed to be dealt with in a more comprehensive fashion.
"We were going through titles like mad: 'Terror in America,'
'America at War,'" says Joy Jernigan, a breaking-news producer
for SeattleTimes.com. The meetings resulted in an October 15 twelve-page
special print section titled "Understanding the Conflict,"
and an accompanying, enriched Web version (http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/news/nation-world/crisis/).
"What ran in the newspaper special section was very limited
compared to what we had on the Web," Jernigan says. And the
section is periodically expanded. "It's a living project,"
she says. Server space is much less expensive than newsprint,
and the designers and producers at SeattleTimes.com took advantage
of that with interactive multimedia features, photos, and links.
There's a section on U.S. foreign policy, focusing on the role
that past American actions might have played in shaping the anti-American
anger at the heart of much of the conflict. There's a section
on the military, where you can click through to a feature on Washington
state's role in national defense, with interactive maps that let
readers zoom in on the attributes of local shipyards and military
facilities. There are interactive maps of all of the countries
involved in the conflict, from Iran to the Central Asian Republics,
with highlights of their respective histories. There are features
about the cultural role of turbans and veils, explaining the significance
of the various types of head dressings and how to tell them apart.
There are RealPlayer streaming videos of key events, and a storehouse
of graphics from the pages of the newspaper. There's also a discussion
guide to help parents and teachers explain the events to children,
and a list of books and Web sites for readers looking to delve
further into the issues. "Understanding the Conflict"'s
tone is somber. There's no jingoistic "us versus them"
aspect to the features. They are presented even-handedly, and
serve as a quiet refutation of the notion that America need not
examine itself in the wake of the attacks.
SeattleTimes.com has nine editors and producers located in the
newsroom. Fancher says that the newspaper approached the Web version
with the same dedication that the print version received. "The
producers who are responsible for local news and nation/world
news sit across the aisle from the news desk and the metro desk,"
says Stanley Farrar, the managing editor for SeattleTimes.com.
"They're really very tightly integrated into the newsroom
operation."
Almost all newspapers put together special sections on their Web
sites that display material collected for the print version, but
The Seattle Times appears to understand the possibilities of the
Web better than most. It uses many multimedia features and often
gathers all the larger stories -- such as those arising from the
Microsoft antitrust trial, or a recent five-part investigative
series about two deaths related to drug trials at a nearby cancer
research facility -- into special Web sections that have added
sidebars, graphics, and videos.
"The limitations of print are the daily newshole and the
discontinuity of a long story that has many, many pieces,"
Farrar says in explaining the strengths of a Web site in a newsroom
where print is still king. But The Seattle Times, by paying the
requisite attention to the needs of its Web site staff, works
around both the limitations of print and the paper's own limited
resources. -- John Giuffo
FIGHTING BACKLASH
Since September 11, the San Jose Mercury News, like every other
paper in the country, has been full of stories about the war in
Afghanistan. But the Mercury News has also covered a second front,
right in its own backyard.
The paper circulates in one of the more ethnically diverse areas
in the country. By some measures, it is also a fairly well-integrated
area. Chinese and Indo-American immigrants, for example, direct
about 25 percent of Silicon Valley's high-tech companies. But
the terror attacks and the ensuing war exposed how fragile this
integration is.
In the wake of the attacks, a Yemeni immigrant in San Jose was
shot and killed, the suspected victim of a hate crime; a mother
of two from Iraq awoke to find the hallway in her Daly City apartment
smeared with feces; the local Sikh community complains of harassment;
some Middle Eastern immigrants say they are afraid to leave their
homes; and 66 percent of those responding to a Mercury News poll
said they favored heightened surveillance of Middle Eastern immigrants.
Thanks to the foundation laid by its Race & Demographics team,
which was formed in the mid-1990s, the Mercury News was prepared
to cover this backlash. "The idea was to continue covering
the increasing diversity of the Bay Area," says Ben Stocking,
who has edited the team since 2000. "What's different now
is the people affected by backlash." Before September 11,
the team consisted of Stocking and four reporters. Now reporters
and editors throughout the paper pitch ideas and contribute stories.
Stocking says this increased coordination and cross-pollination
among the various parts of the paper has produced some noteworthy
pieces.
For example, members of the R&D squad worked with reporters
from a suburban bureau and enterprise team to write backlash hits
home, a story about how some Bay Area residents, scared of becoming
hate crime victims, have stopped wearing traditional clothing,
such as veils and turbans. The paper's religion writer teamed
up with an R&D reporter for a piece about young Muslims struggling
to define their identity and religion in secular America.
The Mercury News complemented the team's coverage on its editorial
page. "People are shouting at women who wear head scarves,
frightening some into staying home," the editors wrote. "Children
are being harassed; parents are afraid to let them walk to school."
The editorial page also urged readers to express their support
for those who feel maligned and to challenge those who stereotype.
"International terrorists would love to see us turn against
ourselves," the editors wrote. "Let's deny them that
victory." -- Joshua Lipton
GIVING PEACE A CHANCE
Many of the passengers on United Airlines Flight 93 the morning
of September 11 were returning home to the San Francisco Bay area.
So when editors at the San Francisco Chronicle learned that terrorists
had crashed the airplane into the Pennsylvania countryside, they
dispatched a reporter and photographer to the scene. The paper
profiled the passengers, reported on their connections to northern
California, and reconstructed the final minutes of the doomed
flight.
The Bay Area's liberal credentials are legendary, however, and
anger among the residents at the attacks was soon rivaled by frustration
with the response of the United States government. The bombing
campaign in Afghanistan sparked demonstrations in the San Francisco
streets, and the Chronicle quickly found itself covering the most
vocal anti-war movement in the country.
There were stories on a candlelight vigil in Lafayette, California,
where people not only mourned the victims of September 11, but
also worried about violent reprisals from the U.S. military; on
a Berkeley city council resolution asking that the bombing in
Afghanistan stop "as soon as possible"; on a 5,000-strong
protest march in downtown San Francisco against the bombing campaign;
and on a conscientious objector in the Air Force.
Columnist Stephanie Salter took up the cause of the protesters.
"What we are doing in, above, and to Afghanistan is short-sighted,
counterproductive, and immoral," she wrote on October 17.
Salter received more than 1,500 e-mails from across the country,
running about six to one in support of what she wrote.
The Chronicle's editorial page, though, is more hawkish than many
of its readers. "We believe it will take military action
-- a relentless but focused counterattack -- to wipe out the terrorist
network that effectively declared war against us," a September
18 editorial argued. But the editors remain respectful of the
dissenting views in their community. Barbara Lee, a Democratic
congresswoman from Oakland, cast the only vote in the House against
a resolution authorizing President Bush to use military force
in Afghanistan. On the editorial page, the Chronicle took issue
with Lee's decision, but supported her right to cast such a contentious
vote: "To disagree with the government's approach at any
given time as Lee did is not an act of betrayal. It's an affirmation
of the democracy we're defending."
Managing editor Jerry Roberts says that covering all the anti-war
rallies and protests means fewer resources and less time for other
important stories. He says that the Chronicle did not, for instance,
cover last fall's local elections with its usual care and investigative
intensity.
But the tradeoff hasn't hurt sales. Since September 11, daily
circulation has ballooned by about 10,000 copies. Bay Area readers
seem to appreciate the Chronicle's coverage of the war, and of
the peace movement that opposes it. -- J.L.
COMMITMENT PAYS OFF
Afew days after September 11, Tim McNulty, the Chicago Tribune's
associate managing editor for foreign news, met in his office
with two colleagues to plot the paper's war coverage. It was still
early in the government's investigation, but all signs pointed
to one part of the world. McNulty tacked up a National Geographic
map of the Caspian region, and considered his options. He had
many; the Tribune, with its staff of ten international correspondents,
was ready.
Over the next few weeks, the paper sent Colin McMahon, its Moscow
correspondent, to Uzbekistan. Mike Lev, based in Beijing, went
to Pakistan. Liz Sly left London, also bound for Pakistan. Tom
Hundley, the Rome correspondent, also hit Pakistan and was then
in Iran for nearly two weeks. Paul Salopek, who won last year's
Pulitzer for international reporting for his coverage of Africa,
left South Africa and went to Saudi Arabia, where he tried to
track down the hijackers' family members before the Saudi government
"firmly suggested" that he leave. Then he went to Afghanistan,
where, with photographer Pete Souza, he trekked over the Hindu
Kush mountains in time to witness the liberation of Kabul.
"I've tried to keep up a rotation, depending on where they
are," says McNulty, who says he wants to be careful not to
burn out any of his foreign correspondents. So Uli Schmetzer,
who is based in Tokyo, and Laurie Goering, who was covering Mexico
and Central America from Mexico City, also went to Pakistan as
part of the rotation. Patrice Jones, who is in Rio, is expected
to head to the region soon.
But McNulty and other editors felt that the rotation left holes
in some important areas, so they sent Stephen Franklin, who covers
labor in Chicago but who has often reported overseas, to Tajikistan
and then into Afghanistan (see page 32). Noreen Ahmed-Ullah, a
metro reporter who speaks Urdu, was sent to the border between
Pakistan and Afghanistan. Metro reporter Ernie Torriero went to
Cairo to cover Arab reactions to the investigation and the war.
Photographers Souza and John Lee landed in Afghanistan and Pakistan,
respectively.
The U.S. government's investigation of the attacks also got extensive
attention overseas. Investigative reporter John Crewdson went
to Prague, Geneva, and Madrid as terror suspects were rounded
up. Stephen Hedges left the Washington bureau for London to get
the British angle. And Cam Simpson, from the metro desk, went
to Germany and reported on the arrests and investigations there.
The Tribune is able to invest so much in the story, according
to editors and others at the paper, because management recognizes
the need for a strong international staff. "If you look at
our newspaper over the last decade, we've had as many or more
foreign stories on page one as local stories," says George
De Lama, the deputy managing editor for news. So far, he says,
"we have not had one person, not one time, even raise the
issue of what it's been costing us to cover this."
It's uncertain to what extent the excesses of today will force
the belt-tightening of tomorrow. "My information is that
yeah, somewhere down the line, we have to pay for it," says
Don Wycliff, the public editor, the Tribune's version of an ombudsman.
But the Tribune newsroom doesn't seem too worried. Plans to reopen
a bureau in Delhi remain on track. "These events have underscored
a point I suspect the editors and a lot of other people here on
the news side have been making, which is that foreign news is
as important as local news," Wycliff says.
The result is foreign wartime coverage that Chicago Reader media
columnist Michael Miner calls "impressively comprehensive."
-- J.G.
POOLING GLOBAL EFFORTS
On September 3, local stories -- one on a proposed lakefront development
in Branson, Missouri, and another on a plan to overhaul I-70 --
anchored the front-page of The Kansas City Star. International
news filled just four pages inside the paper, a compilation of
wire-service articles from the AP, Knight Ridder, and The New
York Times.
But when the journalistic landscape shifted on September 11, it
was the ability of Knight Ridder to go global that proved so helpful
to the Star. On a few big stories in the past, Knight Ridder coordinated
the efforts of its various papers. The idea is to avoid duplication
of effort, and also to share the wealth, so that the chain's smaller
papers get access to international and national coverage they
would not get otherwise.
For this new war on terrorism, the idea of a chainwide team has
been extended. Coverage is channeled through Knight Ridder's Washington,
D.C., bureau where editors and reporters from the Star, The Miami
Herald, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and the San Jose Mercury News
were drafted to work together on stories, including one on aviation
safety (see Laurels, page 19).
Knight Ridder also dispatched eight reporters and three photographers
-- drawn from different papers -- to Central Asia to supplement
the chain's three full-time foreign correspondents, normally based
in Jerusalem, Berlin, and London. Copy and photos are wired to
the D.C. bureau, where stories are edited and packaged for Knight
Ridder papers all over the country.
So the Star gets breaking national news on the attack and investigation,
sometimes tailored to the interests of Missouri readers, without
having to send its own reporters to New York, Florida, and elsewhere.
"There are editors in D.C. who remember that a story has
a good Kansas City connection so they'll write it that way or
tell us about it," says Darryl Levings, the Star's assistant
managing editor for national news.
A bigger deal at the Star, though, is that two of its reporters
were among the eight that Knight Ridder sent to Central Asia.
Scott Canon got to Kandahar and Malcolm Garcia has been covering
news from Kabul. Garcia was sent, in part, because he had recently
reported from Sierra Leone, and so he had his requisite medical
shots as well as some seasoning. The Star has no foreign correspondents
of its own, says Levings, so the Knight Ridder system is a cost-effective
way for reporters to get experience abroad.
Back in Kansas City, Star editors and reporters found ways to
complement the broadened reach of their coverage. They wrote about
Chiefs' fans cheering the New York Giants when they took the field
at Arrowhead Stadium. They chronicled the plight of Folu Oladipo,
a young Kenyan immigrant living in Fayette, Missouri, who was
jailed as part of the federal roundup in the wake of the attacks.
And when anthrax spores turned up in a Kansas City post office,
the Star ran a detailed report on the decontamination process.
Matt Stearns, who wrote the September 3 piece on the lakefront
development, traveled to New York after the attack. Stearns and
another reporter followed a Missouri search and rescue team as
they assisted authorities at the World Trade Center. He accompanied
a young woman, a Kansas City native, as she returned to the apartment
downtown from which she had been evacuated on September 11.
When Stearns returned to the Star, he saw how his paper had adjusted
its priorities while he was away. He recently wrote a story about
a depressed town in southwestern Missouri lobbying for a casino.
"In another time," he says, "that would have had
a shot at the front page." --J.L.
WEATHERING THE CRITICS
Three days after three suicide bombers killed twenty-five Israelis
and injured almost two hundred more, President George W. Bush
went after a Texas-based Islamic charity suspected of funding
the group that claimed responsibility for the bombings. "Hamas
has obtained much of the money that it pays for murder abroad
right here in the United States," Bush said from the White
House's Rose Garden on December 4. "Money originally raised
by the Holy Land Foundation." He announced that the administration
had seized the assets of the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and
Development. The decision capped an eight-year investigation of
the group by the FBI, which charged that Holy Land money went
to compensate the families of suicide bombers.
The announcement was also a vindication of sorts for The Dallas
Morning News, which had published a controversial series of stories
since 1996 about the investigation into the country's largest
Muslim charity.
The Holy Land Foundation first came to the Morning News's attention
five years ago when Israel outlawed it and seized all its local
assets, claiming that it funneled money to Hamas. The editors
sent Steve McGonigle, a twenty-one-year veteran, to nearby Richardson
to look into the group.
McGonigle found some troubling connections between Holy Land and
Hamas, and over the next few years, he continued to report on
the charity as the government examined and reexamined its activities.
He reported that the FBI and the Treasury Department had been
investigating the foundation almost since the ban by Israel, and
that the government, having been frustrated by a lack of progress
against the group, deported four immigrant employees who were
said to have lied to obtain special work visas. His stories also
raised questions about the connections of Mousa Abu Marzook, the
political leader of Hamas, to Holy Land. In early 2001, the Morning
News ran a few stories about an Internet company that was located
across the street from Holy Land and whose officers had very close
business and familial connections to the charity. The FBI suspected
it of illegally shipping computer technology to Libya and Syria.
Local Muslim groups were angered by McGonigle's series and what
they called the paper's "biased coverage" of Holy Land.
"Dallas Morning News is a mouthpiece for Israel," read
the banners at an April 1996 protest by a group that called itself
Muslims Against Defamation. "When they first started, there
would be three or four hundred people out there carrying signs
that were very personal about one of the reporters," says
Pam Maples, the editor who worked with McGonigle on the later
Holy Land stories. Some protest supporters created a Web site,
DallasNotNews.com, to launch criticisms of the newspaper. It included
photos of McGonigle that labeled him "Public Enemy Number
One," she says. The first round of protests died down after
less than a year, but they flared up again in 2000, when McGonigle
followed up with more stories on Holy Land. The local chapter
of the Council on American-Islamic Relations joined in organizing
the second round of protests. In April 2000, Holy Land sued the
paper for defamation, but dropped the suit after the December
seizure. Representatives from the Council on American-Islamic
Relations and Holy Land did not respond to requests for comment,
but have said in the past that the foundation aids the families
of Palestinians jailed, killed, or deported by Israel but does
not fund Hamas or terrorist activities.
The editors say they remained receptive to protesters' claims,
and wanted to reassure local Muslims that they were investigating
a group, not a religion. "The newspaper has had a series
of meetings with a broad base of Muslims in this area," Maples
says. But through it all, The Dallas Morning News remained confident
of the accuracy of McGonigle's reporting, she says.
Even one of the Morning News's usual critics praised the stories.
"By and large, I'd say that these are good, solid reports,"
says Eric Celeste, an editor who writes a media column called
"Filler" for the Dallas Observer, a free weekly paper.
"They've really been out in front in showing how these groups
are funded." -- J.G.
HAVE BEARD, WILL TRAVEL
When metro reporter Mark Bixler got the internal memo that asked
for volunteers for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's new international
"Go Team," he jumped at the chance to fly around the
world to report a story at a moment's notice, and began to make
preparations. Passport in order? Check. Up to date on immunizations?
Check. Break news to -- and ask for understanding from -- new
girlfriend? Check. Grow beard? Check. He was set.
Bixler wasn't the only "Go Team" member with facial
hair foresight -- editor Bill Steiden also stopped shaving. Steiden
and Bixler don't think growing a beard will fool anyone, but friends
and colleagues who had been to the region told them beards made
fitting in a bit easier.
But Bixler's eagerness to change jobs, meanwhile, mirrors the
Journal-Constitution's willingness to change its structure to
meet the demands of the Big Story. A week after the attacks on
New York and Washington, senior editors met and reorganized the
newsroom staff. They formed a new "Crisis Team," composed
of three smaller teams, each focused on one aspect of the conflict.
Keith Graham, who was the world editor, steers the general terrorism
coverage. Bill Sanders, who was a metro editor, manages the reporting
on homeland defense and the military. Michele Foust left her assignment
as aviation editor to oversee economic coverage. And Scott Thurston
came from the business desk to direct the aviation-related coverage.
The Crisis Team also runs two "Go Teams" -- one domestic,
one international. These are groups of reporters who are ready
to fly off and cover big developments as they spring up.
The shifts came on the heels of another reorganization last summer,
when the then-new managing editor Julia Wallace cut the number
of editors, re-thought some beats, and reassigned 20 percent of
the staff to new or newly configured positions. "We needed
to: number one, build expertise, number two, devote resources
to it, number three, coordinate it," Wallace says. "We
understood that we have a different landscape that we have to
cover. We made those changes not knowing how long we'd have to
make them for." She credits the reorganization with allowing
the Journal-Constitution to get more in-depth stories about the
conflict than it might otherwise have been able to get. For example,
Wallace says that the new structure allowed them to more aggressively
cover the Centers for Disease Control, and to supply the Cox chain
with an important aspect of their national coverage.
The Journal-Constitution has no full-time foreign correspondents
(it uses foreign stories reported by Cox correspondents), but
five reporters were dispatched on a staggered basis to Afghanistan
and Pakistan. Bixler went to Egypt to report on a joint Egyptian-American
military exercise and to assess the Egyptian take on the war.
When, on November 12, American Airlines Flight 587 crashed in
the Rockaways, in New York City, members of the domestic "Go
Team" were soon on a plane to New York to report on the latest
aviation disaster, which was first suspected to be linked to terrorism.
Wallace says the speed and size of that mobilization would have
been impossible before the reorganization.
At least some of the editors at the Journal-Constitution think
that, while the current structure won't remain in place indefinitely,
the paper has experienced a re-awakening to the importance of
hard news, both domestic and international. "My sense is
that we're going to be interested in trying to maintain a level
of explanatory journalism for quite a while," says Bert Roughton,
Jr., who left his post as the growth and development editor to
head the Crisis Team. "I think it's been an exercise in broadening
everyone's horizons somewhat, and I think it will stick."
-- J.G.
SPREADING THE HERALD THIN
It is both a blessing and a curse for The Miami Herald that the
eyes of the country have been so frequently focused on South Florida
lately. First, there was a little boy named Elián, then
came last year's election debacle.
But those were just a prelude. In the days after the attacks,
when it was learned that Mohammed Atta and his posse lived and
learned how to fly airplanes in the region, the national media
swarmed once again to the Herald's backyard. And when the first
case of anthrax was discovered at a publishing company in Boca
Raton, it was as if the story were playing out according to some
absurd script. Here was an area of the country with more strange
events than all the Maines of Stephen King's nightmares. "We've
sort of been in news hell, if you will, since Thanksgiving of
1999," says Mark Seibel, the managing editor.
But the Herald's experience scrambling for leads on a national
story in an environment cluttered with competitors served the
paper well. Twenty reporters -- nearly the entire metro staff
-- fanned out across South Florida in a mad zig-zag with competing
journalists and federal investigators. "We have good sources,
a good CAR team, and, with Florida's public records laws, we were
able to get access to information that helped us find some of
these guys," says David Wilson, the night assistant managing
editor. For instance, it was the Herald that broke the story about
Mohammed Atta's night of drunken belligerence at the Shuckums,
a Polynesian-themed bar in Hollywood, in Broward County. "We
knew Mohammed Atta's movements and were able to put much of that
together. They were living in Hollywood and Daytona and going
to school there," Seibel says.
When the Florida legislature recently debated an attempt to weaken
Florida's famously strong sunshine laws in light of the way details
about the terror investigation were reported on, "one of
the things they cited," Wilson says, "was that, oft
times, reporters were beating investigators to suspects."
Meeting the challenges of the big stories has come at a price
that can't be measured on the balance sheet. Some other, less
explosive, stories fell through the cracks. "During the pursuit
of local angles on the hijackings, somewhere in there the county
commission approved the purchase of touch-screen voting machines,"
Seibel says. "We missed it, and we only reported it a couple
weeks late. That was last year's big story, and we couldn't keep
track of it, so we do have a resource crunch."
In the last couple of years, Seibel says, ten city-desk reporters
have lost their jobs because of Knight Ridder cutbacks. During
that same period, Knight Ridder reported a profit margin of just
over 20 percent in 2000, up from 13.6 percent in 1991.
But despite the cutbacks, staffers remain committed to doing the
best job possible with the resources available. "This is
a big-story place," Wilson says. "Whether it's a hurricane
or a crooked mayoral election. It's one of the things that makes
doing daily journalism in South Florida so challenging and so
interesting. And we're used to it." -- J.G.
COVERING FOR MARYLAND
Since September 11, a platoon of Baltimore Sun reporters has roamed
through conflict-weary Afghan villages and impoverished Pakistani
towns, covering the war for their Maryland readers. Dan Fesperman
interviewed Afghan exiles living in Pakistan, anxious about returning
to their liberated homeland. John Murphy wrote about child labor
among the Afghan refugees in Pakistan. Frank Langfitt profiled
a Pakistani Islamic school that preaches militant fundamentalism.
Will Englund penned a piece about his visit to Kunduz and an unexpected
encounter with a Taliban soldier.
For most U.S. dailies with 300,000 circulation, such an effort
would be extraordinary. But the Sun's commitment to global coverage
has long been a central part of the paper's mission. While the
media scaled back foreign coverage over the last twenty years
-- citing high costs and a lack of reader interest -- the Sun
maintained five full-time correspondents normally stationed in
London, Jerusalem, Johannesburg, Moscow, and Beijing. "The
editors here know that covering city hall is important,"
says foreign editor Robert Ruby. "But they've known that
covering the world is also something a paper should do."
Another reason the Sun devotes so much money and resources to
international coverage is the competitive market in which it operates.
"Most papers our size don't have to compete with The Washington
Post," says Tony Barbieri, the Sun's managing editor. "We
can't go to our readers with anything less than a complete newspaper.
We have to be as good as we can possibly be."
Conventional wisdom has it that readers don't care about foreign
news. Barbieri disagrees. A former foreign correspondent for the
Sun, he believes that readers are interested in events overseas
as long as those foreign people and places are covered in the
same thoughtful, analytical, and creative way that journalists
cover news at home. -- J.L.
BARON'S MOMENT
In choosing a successor to editor Matthew V. Storin, Boston Globe
publisher Richard Gilman broke tradition and hired from outside
the paper's own ranks. Gilman selected Marty Baron, the forty-six-year-old
executive editor of The Miami Herald, who in his eighteen months
at the helm in South Florida earned sterling reviews. Editor &
Publisher had named him editor of the year in April 2001. Within
six weeks of assuming his new post in Boston, those celebrated
credentials were tested.
Baron responded to the chain of events that began on September
11 by mobilizing his new employees to report on every dimension
of the story. Education editor Marilyn Garateix oversaw the writing
of obituaries for the Boston residents killed on the hijacked
airplanes. Neil Swidey and Marcella Bombardieri interviewed Abdullah
Mohammed Binladin, Osama bin Laden's brother, who lives in Boston.
The science and health reporters investigated the anthrax attacks.
The Hong Kong and Canada correspondents went to Pakistan, while
other reporters were sent to Europe.
"He imposed a sense of discipline, really making sure everything
got covered," says David Beard, a suburban editor, of Baron.
"It was a chance for him to direct."
Beard says that Globe readers were especially frustrated by the
failed security at Logan International Airport, where hijackers
boarded the two planes that crashed into the World Trade Center.
The Globe responded with a series of articles that exposed the
inept security at Logan: the low-wage, poorly trained security
guards; the X-ray machines that routinely failed to detect weapons;
the lack of professionalism among airport personnel. As a result
of those reports, the executive director of the Massachusetts
Port Authority resigned and the security chief at Logan was demoted.
Readers noticed this aggressive reporting, and daily circulation
rose in October by 30,000 copies. More important, Baron's handling
of the paper bolstered the relationship between the new editor
and his staff. "I think one of the things you realize is
how focused a leader he is," says Swidey, the Sunday metro
editor. "What September 11 did was allow everyone to see
how important it was to have someone with that focus, someone
capable of harnessing all of the talent in the newsroom."
Baron felt some scrutiny when he first stepped into the Globe's
newsroom. "I knew the staff was looking at me, seeing whether
the Globe had selected the right editor," he says. The September
11 attack eased that transition. Reporters learned to trust Baron,
and he says he learned to believe in them. "I think we've
got a very capable staff that can react extremely well to a news
story from many different angles." -- J.L.
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