Mission statements. It's a set of standards(?) made up at the start of a company or endeavor. I have heard some companies require employees to memorize and know the mission statement. Does this affect daily work output or increase the quality of a product or service? Just curious. I haven't done any research on it. Who made the first mission statement? (I tried googling it without success.) It was a little difficult to dig this one up, because The Press began nearly 60 years go. I love that there is a tiny glimpse of hope for small newspapers. Hyper-local coverage is what differentiates them from all other news sources.
Here is a organizational chart outlining The Riverdale Press. It was required for my internship class. This is my attempt to apply creativity to the assignment. New goal: apply creativity to everything! School work, job work, life, callings, chores, whatever you can think of. (And now I'm off to find inspiration!)
5.26.2011
Living a longer, healthier life
I whipped out an article this week for The Press' yearly section: 50+. It's geared towards older adults and the elderly. We got some local doctors and experts to talk us. I love deadlines. I actually really liked writing this once I had content. There's a little opportunity for voice and it's a magazine-ish article.
Check out the article on the website. It's on the third cue under top stories. The Riverdale Press has some great stories and content.
Check out the article on the website. It's on the third cue under top stories. The Riverdale Press has some great stories and content.
5.25.2011
The Jazzy Life
This week The Riverdale Press' Focus On page (feature page of our weekly newspaper) was on a young jazz musician who performs in jazz hotspots though he hasn't graduated from high school yet. I like this design, but I love my first one on Bronx Week. It was fun to design something musical.
My concept was to spell "jazz" with music notes. I wanted the design to be more simple, and while it is, it might be a tad cluttered. What do you think? Does it look professional enough? That is my goal.
Anyways, I hope you enjoy. Check out another post tomorrow with a link to my article in The Press' special 50+ Section this week. (It's all about health for adults 50 years and older.) To read any of my articles from my internship, just visit www.riverdalepress.com and search for Jordan Carroll.
My concept was to spell "jazz" with music notes. I wanted the design to be more simple, and while it is, it might be a tad cluttered. What do you think? Does it look professional enough? That is my goal.
Anyways, I hope you enjoy. Check out another post tomorrow with a link to my article in The Press' special 50+ Section this week. (It's all about health for adults 50 years and older.) To read any of my articles from my internship, just visit www.riverdalepress.com and search for Jordan Carroll.
Design by Jordan Carroll, article by Adam Wisnieski |
5.19.2011
Bronx Week: Designing a feature page for real newspaper
This is a draft of the page that ran. A few tweaks were made after this. |
I also had my second byline run in this week's paper. Check out the link here.
Basically several groups in the area received awards for community service. I love writing about Boy Scouts. Probably just remind me of my brothers.
And nurses rallies. Can't forget about those. I interviewed a bunch of union workers from a local hospital. You can see that article at riverdalepress.com.
I've decided I love writing obituaries and in a greater effort to improve my writing, will attempt to make them more colorful, interesting and creative.
5.10.2011
Bylines & Broadway
Marry Poppins on Broadway. |
Check out my article later this week on riverdalepress.com. You can find it under obituaries.
I feel like I haven't posted in eons. Well, I've been working on updating the web, copy editing, writing a few briefs.
Last weekend, I saw my first broadway ever. Mary Poppins. I felt like I was 8 years old again. I thought it was brilliant. Definitely a great show for kids and families visiting New York. The effects and sets themselves made it wonderful. The house transformed from the first floor, to the attic where the children slept. There was a park. The roofs and chimney's. And the best part: I paid $32 for my ticket. Went to the box office when it opened and got some of the last, cheap tickets. It was great.
This week I will see Wonderland (which is apparently ending its run this weekend? Correct me if I'm wrong.) and possibly Phantom of the Opera. My family is visiting and they have a 9 year old daughter they want to take to a show. The obstacle is finding a show appropriate for children that you dont have to pay $200 per ticket. We've debated Wicked, Phantom, Lion King, Mary Poppins. What would you see?
5.06.2011
What am I doing?
That's a wonderful question to ask. (I often wonder.)
The past week and a half, I've been working as an intern at The Riverdale Press in Riverdale/Bronx, NY. As I mentioned in earlier posts, it's a weekly community newspaper. Here are some things I contributed to this past week's issue:
Bin Laden's death leads to thoughts of lives lost (My contribution is at the end of the story.)
I've also had the chance to write two obituaries.
Beloved Horace Mann teacher dies at 85
Thomas P. Reilly, who worked at Horace Mann for 44 years, died at St. Joseph’s Medical Center on April 27. He was 85.
Mr. Reilly retired from Horace Mann in 1996. He served as chair of the upper division foreign languages department for 32 years and worked as a foreign language teacher there for 44 years.
“Tom was not only a dedicated, skillful teacher of foreign languages, a fastidious scholar — he spoke 11 languages — but he was also … a compassionate advisor to generations of students,” Bernice Hauser, Horace Mann’s director of intercampus activities, wrote in an e-mail.
Born in Waterbury, Conn. on July 7, 1925, Mr. Reilly attended the University of Connecticut, Middlebury College, University of Grenoble-France, Laval University, University of Mexico, Columbia University, New York University and Naugatuck High School. He served in the army during World War II.
Mr. Reilly was an avid traveler who liked to tell stories. During his lifetime, he visited more than 150 countries and every continent. One of Mr. Reilly’s hobbies involved traveling on each of his milestone birthdays. On his 40th birthday, he traveled to Timbuktu, his 50th was celebrated on the shores of the Amazon, his 60th in Russia and his 70th birthday in Turkey. Mr. Reilly also enjoyed diverse foods, lighthouses and bridges, his nephew, Jack Rutigliano, said.
Mr. Reilly served as president of the Kingsbridge Historical Society for 13 years and was a member of the National Rail Society and Canal Society.
Mr. Reilly is survived by his sister, Ann Rutigliano, and her husband, Frank, of Watertown, Conn., his brother, Eugene J. Reilly, of Prospect, Conn. and several nieces and nephews. Mr. Reilly was predeceased by his sister, Mary Mukosey.
Mr. Reilly’s wake was held at Buckmiller Funeral Home in Prospect, Conn. on May 2. His funeral took place at St. Mary’s Church in Naugatuck, Conn. on May 3. He was buried at St. James Cemetery in Naugatuck.
In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the Make-A-Wish Foundation or Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals.
Scoutmaster Jack Tobin touched many lives
Jack Tobin, a past Riverdale resident and scoutmaster, died at home from cancer on April 19. He was 69.
Mr. Tobin was a Boy Scout scoutmaster for Troop 240 during the 1960s, according to friend Arthur J. Pann.
“We have lost a friend, a larger then life individual. Someone who had an impact on so many lives and that impact most of the time we didn’t even realize until much later in our lives,” Mr. Pann wrote in an e-mail. “He was so important to many of you in helping to make each of you what you are today. He helped me in so many ways. Jack was everything to me. He was my dear friend, he was like an older brother and I guess a father figure as well. Whatever it was, I loved him and always will.”
Serving more than 10 years as the troop’s scoutmaster, Mr. Tobin impacted many lives, young and old.
“Jack’s presence inspired and helped me carry out the task put in front of me,” Avi Rubinsztejn, one of Tobin’s acquaintances, wrote in an e-mail. “Leadership is not always the spoken word, but the supportive feeling of encouragement.”
Born in New York on Sept. 14, 1941, Mr. Tobin attended DeWitt Clinton High School and New York University.
He moved to Margate, Fla. in 1970. He was heavily involved in local politics and the Florida House of Representatives for 16 years.
Mr. Tobin is survived by his wife and childhood sweetheart of 49 years, Lesley, and children, David Tobin, of Boca Raton, Fla. and Lauren Adam of, Margate, Fla. He is also survived by four grandchildren, Mollie Adam, Shaina Tobin, Ben Tobin and Mitchell Tobin.
Mr. Tobin’s funeral was held at Temple Beth-Am in Margate on April 22 and more than 600 people attended, according to Mr. Pann. His burial followed at the Star of David Cemetery in south Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Scout Troop 240 is planning to honor Mr. Tobin in the near feature.
“The impact he had on hundreds of boys that grew up in Riverdale is still going on,” Mr. Pann said.
I also wrote a small brief about a boy in the area who was collecting books for his Eagle Scout project.
Boyle collects books for needy
John Boyle, a local teen and Boy Scout, is involved in nearly every sport his high school has to offer but still manages to find time to help the local community.
For his Eagle Scout project, John organized a children’s book drive that amassed more than 1,600 books for children, young adults and adults. On May 1, John and his troop met at the Church of the Visitation to sort and pack the books so they could be sent to hospitals, homeless shelters, community centers, correctional facilities and other organizations.
To collect the books, John distributed flyers asking for donations throughout the community, his apartment building and fellow troop members’ buildings. Although John’s original goal was to gather 400 books, he quickly surpassed that number.
“He realized there was an interest. The people and children couldn’t believe [the books] were free,” John’s mother, Peggy Boyle, said. “He wanted to launch a bigger project for his Eagle Scout project and expanded the drive to other agencies and organizations in the Bronx.”
“He’s a very reserved and humbled kid with a good heart, and he takes his community service serious,” she added.
More than 10 agencies and organizations, including Fordham Bedford Children’s Center, Refuge House, Montefiore Children’s Hospital, Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services, Westchester Medical Center Children’s Hospital and Bedford Correctional Facility Children’s Center, will receive books.
Bedford Correctional Facility Children’s Center will give the books to incarcerated mothers, who will tape themselves reading and give the tape to their children to bring home on Mother’s Day.
At this point, I'm sure you're marveling at my masterpieces. Please take into consideration that this is my first week on the job. As a lowly intern.
The past week and a half, I've been working as an intern at The Riverdale Press in Riverdale/Bronx, NY. As I mentioned in earlier posts, it's a weekly community newspaper. Here are some things I contributed to this past week's issue:
Bin Laden's death leads to thoughts of lives lost (My contribution is at the end of the story.)
I've also had the chance to write two obituaries.
Beloved Horace Mann teacher dies at 85
Thomas P. Reilly, who worked at Horace Mann for 44 years, died at St. Joseph’s Medical Center on April 27. He was 85.
Mr. Reilly retired from Horace Mann in 1996. He served as chair of the upper division foreign languages department for 32 years and worked as a foreign language teacher there for 44 years.
“Tom was not only a dedicated, skillful teacher of foreign languages, a fastidious scholar — he spoke 11 languages — but he was also … a compassionate advisor to generations of students,” Bernice Hauser, Horace Mann’s director of intercampus activities, wrote in an e-mail.
Born in Waterbury, Conn. on July 7, 1925, Mr. Reilly attended the University of Connecticut, Middlebury College, University of Grenoble-France, Laval University, University of Mexico, Columbia University, New York University and Naugatuck High School. He served in the army during World War II.
Mr. Reilly was an avid traveler who liked to tell stories. During his lifetime, he visited more than 150 countries and every continent. One of Mr. Reilly’s hobbies involved traveling on each of his milestone birthdays. On his 40th birthday, he traveled to Timbuktu, his 50th was celebrated on the shores of the Amazon, his 60th in Russia and his 70th birthday in Turkey. Mr. Reilly also enjoyed diverse foods, lighthouses and bridges, his nephew, Jack Rutigliano, said.
Mr. Reilly served as president of the Kingsbridge Historical Society for 13 years and was a member of the National Rail Society and Canal Society.
Mr. Reilly is survived by his sister, Ann Rutigliano, and her husband, Frank, of Watertown, Conn., his brother, Eugene J. Reilly, of Prospect, Conn. and several nieces and nephews. Mr. Reilly was predeceased by his sister, Mary Mukosey.
Mr. Reilly’s wake was held at Buckmiller Funeral Home in Prospect, Conn. on May 2. His funeral took place at St. Mary’s Church in Naugatuck, Conn. on May 3. He was buried at St. James Cemetery in Naugatuck.
In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the Make-A-Wish Foundation or Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals.
Scoutmaster Jack Tobin touched many lives
Jack Tobin, a past Riverdale resident and scoutmaster, died at home from cancer on April 19. He was 69.
Mr. Tobin was a Boy Scout scoutmaster for Troop 240 during the 1960s, according to friend Arthur J. Pann.
“We have lost a friend, a larger then life individual. Someone who had an impact on so many lives and that impact most of the time we didn’t even realize until much later in our lives,” Mr. Pann wrote in an e-mail. “He was so important to many of you in helping to make each of you what you are today. He helped me in so many ways. Jack was everything to me. He was my dear friend, he was like an older brother and I guess a father figure as well. Whatever it was, I loved him and always will.”
Serving more than 10 years as the troop’s scoutmaster, Mr. Tobin impacted many lives, young and old.
“Jack’s presence inspired and helped me carry out the task put in front of me,” Avi Rubinsztejn, one of Tobin’s acquaintances, wrote in an e-mail. “Leadership is not always the spoken word, but the supportive feeling of encouragement.”
Born in New York on Sept. 14, 1941, Mr. Tobin attended DeWitt Clinton High School and New York University.
He moved to Margate, Fla. in 1970. He was heavily involved in local politics and the Florida House of Representatives for 16 years.
Mr. Tobin is survived by his wife and childhood sweetheart of 49 years, Lesley, and children, David Tobin, of Boca Raton, Fla. and Lauren Adam of, Margate, Fla. He is also survived by four grandchildren, Mollie Adam, Shaina Tobin, Ben Tobin and Mitchell Tobin.
Mr. Tobin’s funeral was held at Temple Beth-Am in Margate on April 22 and more than 600 people attended, according to Mr. Pann. His burial followed at the Star of David Cemetery in south Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Scout Troop 240 is planning to honor Mr. Tobin in the near feature.
“The impact he had on hundreds of boys that grew up in Riverdale is still going on,” Mr. Pann said.
I also wrote a small brief about a boy in the area who was collecting books for his Eagle Scout project.
Boyle collects books for needy
John Boyle, a local teen and Boy Scout, is involved in nearly every sport his high school has to offer but still manages to find time to help the local community.
For his Eagle Scout project, John organized a children’s book drive that amassed more than 1,600 books for children, young adults and adults. On May 1, John and his troop met at the Church of the Visitation to sort and pack the books so they could be sent to hospitals, homeless shelters, community centers, correctional facilities and other organizations.
To collect the books, John distributed flyers asking for donations throughout the community, his apartment building and fellow troop members’ buildings. Although John’s original goal was to gather 400 books, he quickly surpassed that number.
“He realized there was an interest. The people and children couldn’t believe [the books] were free,” John’s mother, Peggy Boyle, said. “He wanted to launch a bigger project for his Eagle Scout project and expanded the drive to other agencies and organizations in the Bronx.”
“He’s a very reserved and humbled kid with a good heart, and he takes his community service serious,” she added.
More than 10 agencies and organizations, including Fordham Bedford Children’s Center, Refuge House, Montefiore Children’s Hospital, Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services, Westchester Medical Center Children’s Hospital and Bedford Correctional Facility Children’s Center, will receive books.
Bedford Correctional Facility Children’s Center will give the books to incarcerated mothers, who will tape themselves reading and give the tape to their children to bring home on Mother’s Day.
At this point, I'm sure you're marveling at my masterpieces. Please take into consideration that this is my first week on the job. As a lowly intern.
5.03.2011
Front page of BYU's Daily Universe: Wave of emotion
My article on the celebrations at Ground Zero Sunday night was published in BYU's student paper The Daily Universe today. Check out this link to read my full article featured in The Daily Universe today or visit universe.byu.edu or newsnet.byu.edu/pdf. |
5.02.2011
Mentioned in the SL Trib
So apparently a blogger for the Salt Lake Tribune referenced my blog today in regards to my coverage of Osama bin Laden's death and the celebrations happening in NYC.
Here's the link. Check it out.
Osama got Jimmered?
VIDEO: Singing at Ground Zero Sunday night
Sorry for the poor quality. Used my iphone4 in the moving crowd.
Ground zero the center of NYC celebrations
People crowded in the streets near ground zero in the early morning hours after President Obama confirmed the death of terrorist Osama bin Laden. |
After a long and busy weekend, the news of Osama bin Laden's death swarmed around NYC as we all tuned in to hear the words of President Obama. The press conference did not occur until midnight approached.
More than nine years later, the United States has brought bin Laden to justice for his heinous crimes against the thousands of Americans who were innocently slaughtered in the attacks of 9/11.
My trip to ground zero last night was a long and memorable one. Arriving after 12:30 a.m. the streets surrounding the memorial were swelling with people, flags and news agencies. The crowds chanted "U.S.A.," "Osama, hey hey hey, goodbye" and lines from the "Star Spangled Banner."
Men climbed up the traffic light poles and anything that could give them a view of the patriotic scene. President Obama spoke of another uniting of the American people and this congregation after his announcement was just that: a uniting of New Yorkers supporting the truths and principles this nation was founded upon: justice and freedom, and remembering their friends and family who had fallen.
While the scene seemed to be unruly at times and barring on disrespectful (chants of "F#$% Osama") it was overall a grand gesture of America's feelings: joy, pride, relief and some fear.
American flags are selling out all over the city.
Today, the NYPD has upped their security in every part of the city: Grand Central, Times Square, ground zero, the subway system and airports. The thought did cross our minds as we rushed to ground zero last night: will there be rogue retaliation for bin Laden's death? Will we be able to prevent it?
Every news agency is covering this frantically. Fox New's big bumble last night was comical. (Their website banner completely misspelled Osama bin Laden's name and every other word in their headline.) The New York Daily News did not let this opportunity pass them by (they never do). Their headline is being called the most flashy/forward in the world. Check out this link to see the cover.
I was surprised at the small number of interns who decided to go to out and see the news.
I am a journalist. To me, that means going where the news is. Being a part of historical moments and communicating what happened. I have such unique opportunities here and must take advantage of them. Otherwise, why leave Utah and the BYU bubble?
I encourage everyone to reflect and remember 9/11 today and how it has changed us and our country.
(This post is not a criticism nor intended to be a comment on other's weaknesses. It is an observation of the events which is followed by my definition or purpose of my career choice.)
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