Syracuse University

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SU's Newhouse School awards first fellowships for freelance legal reporting

October 09, 2008


Wendy S. Loughlin
wsloughl@syr.edu



Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications has
announced the first round of winners in the Carnegie/Newhouse School Legal
Reporting Fellowships. The new fellowship program supports freelance journalists
reporting on legal issues, awarding four of them $3,000 each and providing
Newhouse journalism students as paid research assistants.


"We were impressed and gratified by the response from so many journalist
applicants," says Mark Obbie, director of the Newhouse School's Carnegie Legal
Reporting Program
and an associate professor of magazine journalism. "Proposals
came from around the country, focused on a wide range of legal issues and offered
a rich variety of enterprising projects that will benefit both the public and our
students."


The four fellowship winners for the 2008-09 academic year are:


  • Jim Edwards of Jersey City, N.J., who is researching a Web-based project
    to survey judicial conflicts of interest;

  • Chandra R. Thomas of Atlanta, whose project focuses on the mass
    incarceration of the untreated mentally ill;

  • Anita Wadhwani of Nashville, who is working on a prospective series that
    examines the way family courts handle allegations of domestic violence in
    child custody disputes; and

  • Sharon Weinberger of Washington, D.C., whose project will examine a
    legally murky intersection between ethics and fraud in military contracting.


The fellowships are open to freelance journalists working in any medium who can
demonstrate the need for a grant to subsidize their reporting and research
expenses. The winners were chosen by a panel of experienced journalists and legal
experts at the Newhouse School and the SU College of Law.


In addition, six Newhouse journalism majors have been chosen to serve as the legal
reporting fellows' research assistants. They will be paid a stipend to perform
research and reporting work under the supervision of the working reporters and
Newhouse School faculty.


"This was our chief motivation in creating this program," Obbie says. "Teaching is
our highest priority-and, in this case, teaching quality legal reporting. By pairing
our students with professionals, we give our students practical experience that goes
beyond what they can do as reporters and editors on campus."


The student research assistants are:




  • Melanie Hicken, a senior newspaper journalism, history and political science
    major from Stevenson Ranch, Calif.;

  • Timothy Martinez Jr., a senior newspaper journalism and political science
    major from Alhambra, Calif.;

  • Jamie Munks, a senior newspaper journalism and political science major
    from Granby, Conn.;

  • Kristen Putch, a senior newspaper journalism and history major from Ilion,
    N.Y.;

  • Cynthia Schweigert, a senior broadcast journalism and political science
    major from Cuba City, Wis.; and

  • Claire Zillman, a senior newspaper journalism and history major from
    Maywood, Ill.


Obbie says the school will decide in early 2009 whether to continue the program in
the 2009-10 year with a new round of applications and awards.


The Carnegie/Newhouse School Legal Reporting Fellowships are part of the
Newhouse School's Carnegie Legal Reporting Program. Supported by a grant from
the Carnegie Corp. of New York and its Carnegie Journalism Initiative, the program
provides a number of services designed to teach students about the workings of the
American legal system and the role of the news media in covering the law.
Additional funding for this year's fellowships is provided by SU's Institute for the
Study of the Judiciary, Politics and the Media
.


For more information, contact Obbie at (315) 443-2848 or mjobbie@syr.edu, or see
http://newhouse.syr.edu/legal.