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And the outrage rolls on
Posted by on Friday, December 1, 2006 at 12:38 pm

While we wait for word on the Daily Trojan revote, here’s yet another angry letter to the USC administration from yet another slew of ex-editors — including several of my fellow colleagues and one of my former editors, Jennifer Medina, now the Hartford bureau chief of the New York Times (and author of many front-page articles on the Lamont-Lieberman race). I think it may be the best letter yet. Money quote:

The manner of the rejection and excuses offered are appalling and insubstantial, respectively. That the vice president of student affairs would veto the staff’’s selection for its editor is unconscionable. That the vice president of student affairs would then decline to comment on the record about his actions to the very students he is supposed to serve is perhaps arrogance, perhaps cowardice, but it is certainly not leadership. The “job descriptionâ€? defense offered by the administration is narrow, disingenuous and untenable. Fox’s election should stand.

Emphasis mine. I love it! Complete letter after the jump.

Members of the Media Board:

We, the undersigned, are proud to be University of Southern California alumni and Daily Trojan veterans. We find ourselves in our professional positions thanks in no small part to our education in Student Union 421. We are concerned and angered because the events of the past few days have provided the present student staff with an education of the worst sort and disgraced the university and newspaper we hold dear.

The administration should not have the right to bar a qualified, capable, elected editor who has done nothing unethical or illegal. The rejected editor, Zach Fox, has a vision for the paper, a vision that his staff supports and that the administration should also support, even if elements of the administration disagree with it. The editorial staff of the student newspaper should be sovereign, and the staff of the Daily Trojan has always operated as such. The administration is committing a grave transgression in violating the paper’’s rights to editorial freedom and self-determination. Its actions in this matter damage the reputation and integrity of both the University of Southern California and the Daily Trojan. If the administration has concerns about the way the editor intends to run the office, it can voice those concerns, but it is the editor’’s decision. If what Fox has proposed disagrees with the job description, perhaps it is time to change the job description. Its wording should not be sacrosanct. When it comes to the relationship between the university administration and the student news room, the administration that administers least administers best.

The manner of the rejection and excuses offered are appalling and insubstantial, respectively. That the vice president of student affairs would veto the staff’’s selection for its editor is unconscionable. That the vice president of student affairs would then decline to comment on the record about his actions to the very students he is supposed to serve is perhaps arrogance, perhaps cowardice, but it is certainly not leadership. The “job descriptionâ€? defense offered by the administration is narrow, disingenuous and untenable. Fox’s election should stand.

Further, it is our hope that the task force considering proposals regarding staff access to the Daily Trojan’’s financial information and input on its financial management is concentrating on how much input the staff should have and not whether it should see the books. The books should be open. Refusal to do so gives the appearance of impropriety, which is as foul as impropriety itself.

It seems clear that this situation has opened serious discussion about long-standing policies at the paper. Perhaps it should become a larger ongoing conversation. Any of us would be more than happy to speak with you about our experiences.

Sincerely,

Blake Hennon
Editor in Chief, Summer 2003, Fall 2003, Summer 2004
Now a copy editor for the Los Angeles Times

Jennifer Medina
Editor in Chief, Spring 2002
Now Hartford bureau chief for The New York Times

Yvonne Ngai
Managing Editor, Spring 2003
Now a copy editor for the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times

Kevin Pang
Lifestyle Editor/Design Director, Spring/Fall 2002
Now a staff reporter for the Chicago Tribune

Justin Chang
Lifestyle Editor, Fall 2001/Spring 2002
Now a copy editor and film critic for Variety

Sara Libby
Editor in Chief, Fall 2005
Now an editor for Creators Syndicate

Elizabeth Brotherton
Editor in Chief, Spring 2005
Now a staff writer for Roll Call (Washington, D.C.)

Peter A. Rasmussen
Editor in Chief, Spring 2003
Now a sports reporter for The Monitor (McAllen, Texas)

Kathleen Flynn
Editorial Director, Fall 2003
Now the business and development reporter for the Los Angeles Downtown News

Keith Wagstaff
Assignment Editor, Fall 2003
Now city editor for Citysearch (New York, NY)

James Rufus Koren
City Editor, Spring 2006
Now the education reporter for The Daily Telegram (Adrian, Mich.)

UPDATE: Some additional signatories have added their names to the letter:

Ryan Pearson
Editorial Writer, 2002
Now a staff writer for The Associated Press

Denise Martin
Lifestyle Editor, Spring 2002
Now a cable reporter for Variety

Esme Bermudez
Staff Writer, 2002
Now a staff writer for The Oregonian

Mike Cervantes
Editor in Chief, Spring 2004
Now production editor for the Los Angeles Daily Journal

UPDATE 2: Michael Jackson just sent out an e-mail in response to this letter. It was a “Reply to All,” but was addressed to Blake Hennon, from whom the letter was sent. Here’s what Dr. Jackson said:

Dear Blake:

Thanks very much for your thoughtful email. We will keep these thoughts in mind as we work with students to make sure the DT continues to be an excellent student newspaper and educational, training, and leadership development program for students.

I hope all else is well.

Sincerely,

Michael Jackson




One Response on “And the outrage rolls on”

  1. Rebecca Loy Says:

    It’s really nice to see so many former DT staffers who clearly care a great deal for the paper and its integrity. It truly speaks volumes about how much each of us gave to the paper while we were staffers or editors there.


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