FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Oct. 1, 2005
Mencher encourages SPJ members to improve writing
ISU
SPJ
Melvin Mencher,
professor emeritus at Columbia, told ISU’s Chapter of SPJ on Sept. 22 that
journalistic writing should be focused, clear and factual.
“The structure of
writing a news story is simplicity itself,” Mencher said. “Stories shouldn’t
zig-zag. ‘B’ should follow ‘A,’ and ‘C’ should follow ‘B,’ and so forth.”
The New York
native also encouraged members to use short, simple sentences.
“Most of your sentences
– 90 percent – ought to be S+V+O,” he said. “That’s subject, then
action verb, followed by a direct object.”
The University of
Colorado almunus said that journalists must be specific in what they write. He
pointed to a story in the Iowa State Daily that claimed the Hurricane Katrina
had wiped out African American culture in Louisiana.
“What does that
word culture mean there?’ Mencher said. “It’s too vague.”
The veteran
journalist, a Nieman Fellow at Harvard in 1952-53, worked for United Press
International, Albuquerque Journal, Fresno Bee and the Christian Science
Monitor.
In addition to
teaching at Columbia, Mencher was a professor at the University of Kansas and
the University of South Dakota.
“Mencher literally
wrote the news writing book,” said Michael Bugeja, director of the Greenlee
School. “He has been a force in journalism ever since I can remember.”
Mencher’s textbook
“News Reporting and Writing,” published by McGraw-Hill, first came out in 1977
and is now in its 10th edition. For most of those nearly three
decades it has been the standard textbook in reporting classes. The author
updates the book each month on the Internet with commentary on events and
trends in contemporary journalism.
Mencher, 78, is
not just known for his textbook but also for being an outstanding teacher. He
was named distinguished educator in 2002 by the Newspaper Division of
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
In other SPJ news
Livermore to speak: Lisa Livermore of
the Des Moines Register will be the chapter’s guest speaker on Wednesday, Oct.
5 at 7:30 p.m., in Hamilton Hall 172. Livermore, who works in the Ames bureau,
is a graduate of the University of Iowa, where she was a reporter for the Daily
Iowan. She was part of a team of reporters that drove to New York City on Sept.
11, 2001, to cover the attacks from a college student’s perspective. She will
be talking about her experiences as a reporter and about how to get started in
journalism by working for commercial newspapers.
ClubFest and Mini-ClubFest: The chapter took part in both the university-wide
ClubFest on Sept. 15 and the Greenlee Mini-ClubFest on Sept. 22. President
Chris Mackey reports a strong turnout for both.
-30-