Photo by Chris Meyer Neither sleet nor snow nor frost of day can keep Hoosier students away from their appointed rounds. This image was taken on the lawn of the IU Art Museum on the Bloomington campus, looking west towards the HPER building through the "Indiana Arc," a sculpture by Charles Perry.

Today's Feature

Journalism, where art thou?

 

“Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.”
—Thomas Jefferson, 1787

Jefferson’s tongue-in-cheek remark certainly didn’t take into account the ever-changing landscape of journalism in the 21st century. According to a new book by IU researchers, the number of full-time U.S. journalists has dwindled during the last decade, and a new report, “Citizen Media: Fad or the Future of News,” addresses the impact and sustainability of local web site news by “citizen journalists” whose organization’s require no revenue. (Image courtesy of the Library of Congress)

  • Who’s minding the news desk?
  • Read Newswire online
  • ‘Citizen Media: Fad or the Future of News’
  • 50 years after Little Rock, Counts photo lives in time
  • Hoosier State Press Association honors James Brown
  • Additional top stories

     

     

    Rallying for the life sciences

    Students, faculty, staff and alumni will bring their institutional message to the Indiana Statehouse Feb. 20.

    Technology and art

    IU Bloomington's ArtsWeek extends through a month of activities. A reception Feb. 23 will mark the 23rd year.

    Future shock

    In his landmark 1970 book, futurist Alvin Toffler predicted the ascendancy of the "knowledge economy." At the Kelley School's Business Conference in Indianapolis, he will focus his attentions on "revolutionary wealth" and its effects on energy and the environment.

    Accidental discovery

    Basic research may not be as flashy as the experimental or the applied, and scientists are often surprised by the eventual outcomes of their work.

    Honoring service

    In death, Ruth Freudenheim was “still taking care of people,” said her niece at a ceremony honoring anatomical donors at the IU School of Medicine-Northwest.

    Hajab

    Novelist Mohja Kahf left the crowd at IU South Bend thinking about the importance of the veil in the Muslim world.