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Meet ProPublica’s 2022 Class of Emerging Reporters

3 years 2 months ago

ProPublica’s Emerging Reporters Program, now in its eighth year, is focused on providing financial resources and mentorship to students for whom investigative journalism might otherwise be inaccessible, so they can pursue early career opportunities in the field.

Participants receive a $9,000 stipend, a trip to the annual NICAR investigative journalism conference, occasional training and presentations by speakers. They’ll also be paired one-on-one with ProPublica journalists, who can help counsel them on stories, build their connections in the industry and expose them to the varied paths for careers in investigative journalism. Past Emerging Reporters have gone on to work at The New York Times, The Atlantic, THE CITY, Vox and other outlets.

Our goal is to encourage the next generation of journalists who seek to shine a light on abuses of power and produce stories of moral force that provoke change. In choosing the class, we look for students who demonstrate an early dedication to journalism as a career, through internships, work at local news outlets or campus publications. And where those opportunities — which are often unpaid — aren’t accessible, we look for other ways the student has shown an eagerness and drive to learn the craft.

The 2022-2023 academic year’s class of outstanding student journalists are from Florida and New Mexico, Colorado and Shanghai. They represent a range of collegiate journeys, and their desire to learn and pursue ambitious, important stories inspired us. Through their work, the students have already shown not only their dedication to the craft, but a yearning to tell stories with the potential for impact.

They have investigated university labor disputes and inaccurate health insurance directories that can lead to big bills for patients. They’ve helped launch hyperlocal news outlets and worked as full-time reporters in addition to carrying a full course load. Some of them are editors and reporters at their school newspapers, while others are preparing to look for their first professional newsroom jobs.

We’re so excited to support them.

Meet our 2022 class:

Chad Bradley is a senior at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication majoring in journalism and minoring in American Indian studies. Bradley’s reporting focuses on indigenous communities and tribal nations, and he hopes to improve coverage and understanding of the issues Indigenous people face. They currently fact-check with PolitiFact Arizona for the 2022 midterm elections and previously reported for Carnegie-Knight News21 and Cronkite News. Bradley is from northwestern New Mexico and is a member of the Navajo Nation.

Kevin Palomino is a junior at the University of Oklahoma majoring in journalism and minoring in international studies. Palomino serves as the president of his school's chapter of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists. For the past two years, he was a reporter at Telemundo Oklahoma, covering news stories ranging from death penalty executions to Oklahoma's wild, severe weather. Palomino was born in Chihuahua, Mexico, and immigrated to Oklahoma with his family in 2005.

Yiwen Lu is a senior studying economics and political science at University of Chicago, where she serves as the managing editor for The Chicago Maroon. Her reporting focuses on subjects at the intersection of business and technology. Lu previously worked at The Washington Post, USA TODAY, NBC Chicago and The Charlotte Observer. She also participated in the Politico Student Journalism Institute and the Asian American Journalists Association’s Voices program in 2022. Lu is from Shanghai, China.

Alexandra Caban-Echevarria is a senior at Muhlenberg College, majoring in both media & communication and English. She is a managing editor at The Muhlenberg Weekly and the assistant editor of the Allentown Voice, a nonprofit news project covering Allentown’s affordable housing crisis. She worked as part of the inaugural team of journalists on the project and currently runs the project’s social media channels.

Alex Perry is a junior at Northwestern University double majoring in economics and journalism with a minor in data science. Currently a part-time associate copy editor at Axios, Perry has interned at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, The Macon Telegraph and the Johns Creek Herald. She is also currently a managing editor at The Daily Northwestern. She’s passionate about investigative business journalism, as well as the business of journalism, and wants to report on the media industry.

Nadia Bey is a senior at Duke University, where she is digital strategy director and former managing editor of the daily student newspaper, The Chronicle. Bey was the first intern on McClatchy’s North Carolina investigations team, writing about health, policy and gun violence for The Charlotte Observer and its sister papers in summer 2022. Her interests include public health, data, education and labor. She is from Huntersville, North Carolina.

Cameron Pugh is a senior at Williams College, where he studies English and Africana studies. Pugh currently serves as the managing editor of The Williams Record, and before that he served as a section editor for the paper’s arts section. He has been an investigative reporting intern at GBH News — at Boston’s local NPR station — where he contributed to covering labor trafficking in Massachusetts and beyond. He is from Port St. Lucie, Florida.

Irie Sentner is a junior at Columbia University studying political science and creative nonfiction. He serves as the university news editor for the Columbia Daily Spectator, is an incoming intern on the NBC News digital politics desk and previously interned for the New York Post. He is originally from Durango, Colorado.

by Talia Buford

The revitalization of St. Louis as a technology and manufacturing hub

3 years 2 months ago
St Louis has always been a great city; it became a gateway to the West in the early 1800s and 1900s when it served as a major port city on the Mississippi for passengers and cargo alike. Over the past few years, St. Louis has rebranded itself as a geospatial, manufacturing and technology hub to attract new industries, innovation and a professional and skilled workforce. It is paramount that St Louis city and St. Louis County come together to make a conscientious effort to change the course of perceived…
Sekhar Prabhakar, Tejas Sekhar, Dr. William Powell, Prakash Rao

Carl’s Drive-In Owner Wants to Create a Burger-and-Entertainment Destination in Winghaven

3 years 2 months ago
From St. Louis Magazine: Carl’s Drive-In, the 16-stool burger-and-root-beer spot on Manchester Road in Brentwood, is looking to grow. David Kraemer, a longtime Carl’s fan who bought the drive-in in 2021, is eyeing a piece of property in Winghaven on Highway 40, off the DD exit, with a plan for a burger-and-entertainment destination out west. Should his plan be approved by […]
Shruthi Beedu

Newly launched St. Louis tech council creates charitable arm

3 years 2 months ago
TechSTL, the St. Louis technology council that launched earlier this year, has expanded with the creation of a charitable arm and scholarship fund. It says its newly launched TechSTL Foundation and Scholarship Fund will help advance its efforts to support the region’s technology sector and workforce initiatives.
Nathan Rubbelke

This Destination Playground Includes a Zip Line and Waterfall

3 years 2 months ago
From St. Louis Magazine:  The area between Brentwood Boulevard and Hanley Road is scheduled to get a major glow-up that includes a bonkers new playground. Just how bananas are we talking? It’s planned to span 3 acres and has a price tag of $7 million. Brentwood Bound is a $79.6 million flood mitigation project that seeks to […]
Shruthi Beedu

City of St. Louis Says It Wants Thousands of New Residents

3 years 2 months ago
From St. Louis Business Journal:  A study from the city of St. Louis’ development agency is pitching a way to lure thousands of new residents in a bid to reverse decades of population loss: earnings and payroll tax credits. The St. Louis Development Corp. study, done in conjunction with consultant PGAV and released Wednesday, is […]
Shruthi Beedu

Blocker Sophia Ivnik Is Key Part Of Father McGivney's Girls Volleyball Team, Is A Byron Carlson Petri & Kalb Female Athlete Of The Month  

3 years 2 months ago
GLEN CARBON - Senior middle blocker Sophia Ivnik has shown great leadership and has also been a rallying point around the girls' volleyball team at Father McGivney Catholic High School during the 2022 season. After two Gateway Metro Conference wins Sept. 27 over Centralia Christ Our Rock Lutheran and Sept. 29 over Maryville Christian, Ivnik has played well. having two service points for the season, with 62 kills, 95 blocks, 44 assists and seven digs in matches through the win over the Lions, helping the Griffins to a 14-8 record going into the final month of the season. She's also one of the team's leaders and hardest workers, helping to set the standard for the younger players to follow and a player the others rally around for leadership and strength. For her efforts both on and off the court, Ivnik has been selected as a Byron Carlson Petri & Kalb Female Athlete of the Month. Ivnik, who plays for head coach Jake Williams, was feeling very good after the sweep over COR on Sept. 2

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Development Underway to Revitalize North St. Louis

3 years 2 months ago
From St. Louis Business Journal:  City living has become fashionable again. We are seeing investment in north St. Louis and across the U.S. as cities are welcoming new urban dwellers, primarily young professionals and retirees seeking easy, environmentally friendly access to entertainment, recreation and jobs. As developers and the real estate market respond, policymakers and […]
Shruthi Beedu

An Open Cover Letter

3 years 2 months ago
An Open Cover Letter JW Mon, 10/03/2022 - 19:15

To you it may concern,

I am applying for the job you posted.

In order to expedite this process, here are my constraints.

Conceptually and practically I believe I understand what I applied for.

I consider myself a generalist and web builder (production artist).
Developer leans more to "programming from scratch" and I am more hack than writer.

However, I have been doing "Full Stack", since I started over 20 years ago.
FullStack: DNS, Web, Mail, eCommerce
My sites have always been optimized for different platforms, so I haven't used apps.

I recently did a crash course on Full Stack as it is now and ok.
It seems a lot like Flash to me, but it's still all about the schema.
I could work on an existing project, but probably not write from scratch.

I started out with Filemaker, Lasso a Merchant Account and PayPal.
Graduated to hand-coding SQL when PHP was released. (yep)
After literally trying all the different CMSs, I ended up on Drupal.

Drupal is what I've built on for 20 years, through all the painful changes/versions.
It's always been able to fill the need and I've never needed anything else.

Most jobs seem to be looking for WordPress.
I recently did a few installations of Wordpress.
It's smooth, can be managed without CLI and has a lot of modules.
(also free on my very expensive former rackspace now liquidweb grandfathered cloudsites)
I can handle doing these sites for a paycheck.
It's open source and the PHP is straightforward.

My wife (breadwinner) works at City Hall and does not drive.
My dog is used to me being home and will have to be let out at lunch.
Hybrid or work from home is ideal, but if the location is between/adjacent to Downtown and Princeton Heights, I can make it work for on-site.

(to be continued – with the good part)

PS. Feel let me know that I am not a fit ASAP. I'm a little ADD and I don't have that kind of time to waste.

PSS. If you're already sold, click here to schedule an appt.

 

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OSF HealthCare Saint Anthony's Health Center Welcomes New Clinical Psychologist  

3 years 2 months ago
ALTON – OSF HealthCare Saint Anthony’s Health Center is pleased to add a new clinical psychologist to its staff to better serve the Alton community and surrounding areas. The addition of Ari Lakritz, PsyD, ensures increased access for patients in need of behavioral health and psychological testing services at the OSF Saint Anthony’s Health Center – Psychological Services office at 1 Saint Anthony’s Way in Alton. In addition to providing clinical assessment and outpatient therapy treatment, Dr. Lakritz will provide psychological testing for diagnoses that include ADHD, chronic pain and cognitive impairments including dementia, post stroke, concussion and IQ testing/learning disabilities. Dr. Lakritz received a Bachelor of Arts in psychology from Yeshiva University in New York, and he received both a Master of Arts and Doctor of Psychology in Clinical Psychology from William Paterson University. Dr. Lakritz interned with Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital

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Maplewood Jack in the Box closes

3 years 2 months ago
The Maplewood Jack in the Box closed permanently on Monday. That’s according to an employee on the site, signs in the windows, and Google. The location, at 7520 Manchester Road, is owned by Foodmaker Inc. It was built in 1970 according to county records.
Doug Miner