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Larry Doyle wins Thurber Prize

Posted by: Kit Donahue on 2008-10-08 09:03:57

Larry Doyle, a former TV writer-producer for "The Simpsons," was named the winner Monday of this year's Thurber Prize for American Humor. He was cited for the novel "I Love You, Beth Cooper." Read More >>

Tribute to Ponz in Gil Thorp comic strip

Posted by: Kit Donahue on 2008-09-04 12:09:21

Jeff Ponczak was a fan of the Gil Thorp comic strip and he was recently added into the strip as a new character.
Here is the link:
Click here to see Gil Thorp comic strip
Read More >>

Emma Johnson MSN Money column launches

Posted by: Emma Johnson on 2008-07-18 15:35:49

Emma Johnson's multimedia personal finance column recently launched on MSN Money. The series focuses on people in their 20s and 30s, and includes video, audio, graphic and text elements. Read More >>

proudly introducing... jean lachat photography

Posted by: Jean Lachat on 2008-07-17 22:48:52

I happily launched my own home-based photo studio this summer, specializing in documentary portraiture and pretty much anything that is not immoral or illegal! (or at least not that much!) Read More >>

Reporting Contest for College Students and Professionals!

Posted by: Adriana Colindres on 2008-07-17 22:13:52

Journalism organization Capitolbeat has separate reporting contests for college students and for professionals, as well as a conference open to all. Contest deadline is Aug. 1 for professionals and Sept. 10 for college students. Read More >>

Most recent new members:

Mike Bass, Chris Benson, Ty Bekiares, Nolan Larson, Alan Mutter, Ryan Ricker, Andrew Mason, Susan Rosenbaum, jay shatz, Natalie Rende,

Most recent donors:

Mike Bushman, Dana Dejanovich Maragos, Mary VanDeVelde Unseth, Kenneth and Kathleen Graesser, John David Reed, Channing Brown, Jean M. Franczyk, Cathy Martin Hall, Bill Choslovsky, Paul E. Veith,

Illini Media Hall of Fame - 2007

James Armsey

Daily Illini: 1937-41. Editor in chief, 1940-41.

University of Illinios: Bachelor of Science in journalism, 1941. Master of Arts in political science, 1946.

Inducted: 2007


Jim Armsey helped change the face of higher education in America. During his time at the Ford Foundation, Armsey shepherded hundreds of millions of dollars to universities and played a part in encouraging desegregation.

After graduation from the University, Armsey joined the U.S. Army and served in the War Department before going overseas as a public relations officer in World War II's India-Burma theater. In 1947, Armsey went to work as director of public relations for Henry Heald, then president of the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago. Armsey followed Heald to New York University as assistant to the president in charge of public affairs. And then in 1956, Armsey joined Heald at the Ford Foundation.

During his 21-year career at the Ford Foundation, Armsey served as director of programs in higher education, public broadcasting, journalism education and other activities. Armsey was responsible for grants of almost $500 million for education and cultural enrichment during his tenure.

Armsey also developed and spearheaded a massive program of unrestricted, private university-college matching grants in 1958. These programs gave colleges and universities across the country hundreds of millions of dollars in funding. Armsey was also a moving force in the desegregation of U.S. higher education by creating a policy that refused grants to universities that segregated its undergraduate curricula. As a result, undergraduate black students were admitted for the first time at Emory, Duke, Tulane and Vanderbilt universities and a cluster of other major private colleges.

Armsey also promoted journalism education through grants to start the Columbia Journalism Review, to launch an urban affairs program at Northwestern University, to initiate fellowship programs at Stanford University and to refinance the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University.