Katharine Lackey

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I’m Hired, Now What? …. Fail.

Oh, wait. That’s right, I’m not.

But the College of Communications must think enough seniors have been hired to send out this notice for a Lockheed Martin presentation.

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Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 10:39 am.

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Death of a Newspaper

Sorry, I couldn’t resist. Made it myself.

Any other suggestions for captions?

deathofanewspaper

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 8:58 pm.

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Even Superman can’t save us now

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Are newspapers full of kryptonite? It would appear so, as no Superman has come forward with a viable solution to save our failing industry. Sure, we say ‘Go online! Get involved with multimedia. Start a blog. Draw viewers that way.’ But the basic fundamentals of the newspaper business remain broken. Advertisers are not paying for newspaper ads or online ones, at least in the numbers to support the industry.

And while an industry bailout has been proposed, the strings attached are far too disconcerting to consider.

The Associated Press has made a list of newspapers throughout the country that have cut the number of publication days within the last year. It is staggering. While the foldings of major publications such as the Rocky Mountain News and cuts at Gannett and other news conglomerates have made headlines across the nation, it appears that small papers have been suffering as well — several of the papers on the AP’s list are one’s I’ve never heard of.

It makes me wonder that if smaller papers are starting to cut back production and eventually do fail, where will readers in small towns go for local news? I’m sure the internet will pick up some, if not much, of the slack, but not in the same form.

When the Rocky Mountain News closed, Denver wasn’t left without a newspaper. It was, however, left without a competing paper, which could still mean that citizens aren’t getting as much access to the news as before.

If you haven’t already seen it, watch Rocky Mountain News’ Final Edition video.


Final Edition from Matthew Roberts on Vimeo.

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 8:40 pm.

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Critical Mass bikes in downtown State College

Every last Friday of the month, bikers take to the street of State College, as well as cities around the world, to promote biking as an alternate form of transportation.


Critical Mass bikes in downtown State College from Katharine Lackey on Vimeo.

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 6:14 pm.

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Penn State community rallies at Old Main for Employee Free Choice Act

More than 100 students, professors and locals met on the steps of Old Main Friday afternoon to rally for the Employee Free Choice Act, urging Penn State President Graham Spanier and Sen. Arlen Specter to support the bill that would help workers more easily form unions.


Penn State community rallies at Old Main for Employee Free Choice Act from Katharine Lackey on Vimeo.

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 6:09 pm.

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State College chicken owners describe lifestyle

Chris Uhl and Dana Stuchul try to live a sustainable lifestyle by producing as much food as they can from their own backyard. Though the pair ran into issues with the borough council last year, an ordinance was eventually passed to allow them to keep chickens in their backyard.


State College chicken owners describe lifestyle from Katharine Lackey on Vimeo.

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 7:45 pm.

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Skate Penn provides unique boarding venue

Christian Pfeifer, co-founder of Skate Penn, discusses the shop which offers the only skateboarding services in downtown State College, Pa.


Skate Penn provides unique boarding venue from Katharine Lackey on Vimeo.

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 7:44 pm.

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Blogroll

Alana Taylor

Andrew Dunn

Bryan Murley

Daniel Bachhuber

Daniel Victor

Dave Lee

Greg Linch

Hilary Lehman

Howard Owens

Jared Silfies

Jay Rosen

Jeff Jarvis

Jessica DaSilva

Kyle Hansen

Mark Potts

MediaShift

Megan Taylor

Mindy McAdams

Online Journalism Blog

Pat Thornton

Ryan Sholin

Sean Blanda

Tomorrow’s News, Tomorrow’s Journalists

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 2:49 pm.

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Resume

KATHARINE LACKEY

klackey23@gmail.com

www.katharinelackey.com

EXPERIENCE

The News Leader, Staunton, Va.

June 2009 – present

•  Copy Editor/Page designer: Designed pages and edited stories for a 20,000 circulation daily newspaper covering Augusta County, Va.; wrote headlines and cutlines; designed and edited weekly feature sections including those for entertainment, home and real estate and lifestyles; edited online versions of the stories; created graphics such as bar graphs and pie charts for some stories.

USA Today

October 2009-present

•  Correspondent: Produced six to eight bylined stories each year for the nation’s highest circulation daily newspaper; provided feeds for Virginia for other reporters’ stories; sent weekly email with news tips, trends and story pitches; alerted USA Today to breaking news in Virginia.

May 2008-August 2008

•  News Intern: Produced stories on national topics and trends; conducted research on trends; provided feeds to other reporters on a number of states; compiled and edited an ‘Across the USA’ chart for a special charity section; compiled a state-by-state look at bridge conditions a year after the Minneapolis bridge collapse; remained on the correspondents’ staff as a freelancer during the school year.

The Daily Collegian, State College, Pa.

September 2006–May 2008

•  Copy Editor: Edited articles for style, grammar and content for a 20,000 circulation daily newspaper covering the Penn State community; fact checked all daily and special section stories; designed inside pages; wrote headlines and cutlines; published articles online

•  Reporter: Wrote in-depth features and breaking news stories; interviewed prominent newsmakers including Valerie Plame Wilson and Sen. Barack Obama; localized national as well as state affairs and trends.

AARP.org

July-August 2007

•  Editorial Intern: Generated feature ideas; edited text; researched topics of interest to the 50-plus demographic; helped set up video interviews; pitched stories.

EDUCATION

The Pennsylvania State University: Bachelor of Arts in Journalism; Minors in Animal Science and Equine Science; Major GPA: 3.65; Graduated May 2009

SKILLS

Proficient in basic HTML, Photoshop, Audacity, SoundSlides, Final Cut Express and Quark; Working knowledge of InDesign and Illustrator.

AWARDS

•  Recipient of USA Today’s Hainer Award, which recognizes the paper’s best work each day, for a state-by-state bridge chart; honorable mention for two articles in one publication.

•  2009 Columbia Scholastic Press Association’s Gold Circle Awards, 2nd place for personality profile for “Valerie Plame talks of future” feature published in February 2008.

•  Society of Professional Journalists 2009 Region I Mark of Excellence, third place for feature photography

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 2:49 pm.

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Featured Clips

USA TODAY

In-school banks dispense financial sense

When students at Carter High School in Strawberry Plains, Tenn., forget their lunch money, they don’t have to worry about going hungry.

Instead, they wander over to one of the five tellers who work at the student-run bank, where they can withdraw money from their savings accounts or fill out short applications for a $5 loan, all without leaving the building, says Lynn Raymond, a banking and finance teacher at the school.”We’re easing them into learning about borrowing money and the responsibilities that go along with that,” Raymond says of the experience students receive at the bank, which opened Feb. 16 in partnership with First Century Bank.

“It’s just so important because so many people get in trouble financially,” she says.

To read the full story: In-school banks dispense financial sense

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Study: People would donate kidney for money
Paying people for living kidney donations would increase the supply of the organs and would not result in a disproportionate number of poor donors, a study by researchers from the University of Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center concludes.

The study, published this month in the Annals of Internal Medicine, asked 342 participants whether they would donate a kidney with varying payments of $0, $10,000 and $100,000. The study called for a real-world test of a regulated payment system.The possibility of payments nearly doubled the number of participants in the study who said they would donate a kidney to a stranger, but it did not influence those with lower income levels more than those with higher incomes, according to Scott Halpern, one of the study’s authors and senior fellow at the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Bioethics.

To read the full story: Study: People would donate kidneys for money

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Eco-conscious rest easy going green eternally

If you’re living a green lifestyle, it turns out you can take it with you.

Cemeteries and funeral homes across the USA are offering environmentally friendly burials featuring formaldehyde-free fluids for embalming and biodegradable caskets made of pine, wicker or even cardboard.

Green burials are available in nearly 30 cemeteries nationwide, up from a handful at the start of 2008, says Joe Sehee, executive director and president of the Green Burial Council, a non-profit organization that encourages environmentally sustainable death care.

To read the full story: Eco-conscious rest easy going green eternally

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Sales of personal breathalyzers spike

A growing number of people are using personal breathalyzers to test themselves, family members and friends for alcohol impairment.

The personal breathalyzer market is valued at $215.2 million, up from $27.9 million in 2005, according to Susan Eustis, president and CEO of WinterGreen Research, which does market analysis for industries such as health care and telecommunications.

Both AAA and law enforcement officials question the accuracy of personal breathalyzers and discourage their use in making decisions about driving.

To read the full story: Sales of personal breathalyzers spike

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Energy Dept. awards money for electric cars

The federal government and some states are plugging into the future of electric cars with subsidies to develop charging stations. But their plans are generating opposition.

The U.S. Department of Energy awarded $2.4 billion in stimulus money in August to build electric vehicles and support them with charging stations. The goal is to promote clean energy and reduce U.S. dependence on oil, says David Sandalow, assistant secretary of Energy for policy and international affairs.

The largest of 48 approved projects — out of 250 proposals for stimulus grants— is with Arizona-based Electric Transportation Engineering Corp. (eTec), which signed a $99.8 million contract with the Energy Department last month. Some of the money will pay for charging stations in 11 cities in five states by 2011, according to Colin Read, vice president of corporate development for Ecotality, eTec’s parent company.

To read the full story: Energy Dept. awards money for electric cars

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Thieves skim credit card data at fuel pumps

gaspumpx-largeCustomers and police agencies across the USA are dealing with another pain at the pump — thieves who install hard-to-detect electronic devices at stations to steal credit and debit card data.

The skimmed data are used to create cards used at the victims’ expense, says James Van Dyke, president and founder of Javelin Strategy and Research, a financial consulting firm that focuses on fraud and identity theft.

To read the full story: Thieves skim credit card data at fuel pumps


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Amish cases highlight beliefs

Andy Swartzentruber and Sam Yoder, of tiny Ebensburg, Pa., face sentencing Thursday for violating state sewage laws. The two Amish men were found guilty in April of building outhouses without sewage permits and of discharging untreated sewage into the ground.

The men, who chose not to have legal representation, sent a handwritten letter to the Sewage Enforcement Agency in January explaining their reasons:

“We feel this sewage plan enforcement along with its standards is against our religion (beliefs). Our forefathers and the church are conscientiously opposed to install the sewage method accordingly to the world’s standards.”

To read the full story: Amish cases highlight beliefs

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Shipping containers become distinctive housing on land

An outside-the-box idea has some architects and home-buyers turning to inside-the-box eco-friendly, affordable housing that uses as building blocks the 8-by-40-foot steel containers often left vacant at seaports.

Mainly an “experiment” at this time, the homes have the potential to take off in the industry, said Bill Gati, a member of the American Institute of Architects Custom Residential Design Committee.

“It’s cutting-edge, and people that use it are considered mavericks and trail blazers,” he said.

To read the full story: Shipping containers become distinctive housing on land

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New toll lanes make drivers pay to avoid congestion

Already facing $4 a gallon at the pump, drivers in a growing number of states are tempted to pay even more for a quicker ride home.

Transportation agencies are increasingly looking to reduce congestion and make more use of sometimes under-utilized high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes.

Some are developing plans to allow vehicles that don’t have the required number of passengers to use the lanes if they are willing to pay.

There are high-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes in Seattle, Denver, San Diego, Minneapolis and Salt Lake City. Construction in at least five states is slated to begin in the next year.

To read the full story: New toll lanes make drivers pay to avoid congestion

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eticketxElectronic citations speed up ticketing process for police

Police agencies and troopers in several states are tossing out handwritten tickets in favor of electronic citations as a way to improve accuracy and save time.

With the quick swipe or scan of a driver’s license, officers are able to enter the location, type of violation and print the ticket all from a handheld device, said Chief Deputy Derrick Cunningham of the Montgomery County (Ala.) Sheriff’s Office.

To read the full story: Electronic citations speed up ticketing process for police

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New GPS-savvy, solar signs help bus riders connect in real time

As the demand for customer-friendly, real-time information increases, more cities, counties and states are going high tech at the bus stop.

Cities are investing thousands of dollars in solar and Global Positioning System technology to provide up-to-the-minute information to passengers on when the next bus will arrive as more people opt for public transit.

“With the gas prices rising, transit is becoming more and more of an option for people to afford to get to work. We need to try and improve the experience of transit and make it more easily usable for our citizens,” said Lorin Swirsky, information technology manager for Broward County (Fla.) Transportation Department.

To read the full story: New GPS-savvy, solar signs help bus riders connect in real time

THE DAILY COLLEGIAN

plame2Valerie Plame talks of future

Valerie Plame Wilson was on a covert operation.

Her mission was clear as she walked briskly through downtown State College.

Finally, she found her target: a store open before 11 on a Sunday morning where she could buy Nittany Lion sweatpants and knit hats for her 8-year-old twins in an effort to turn them into Penn State fans.

In the 23 years since Wilson attended Penn State, the former CIA spy’s life has taken several unexpected turns, culminating in the leak of her identity in The Washington Post.

To read the full story: Valerie Plame talks of future

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One-on-one with Obama

As a crowd of nearly 22,000 prepared to invade Old Main lawn, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., stood in a dairy barn.

But before they arrived at the Penn State Dairy Complex, Obama, along with Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., went back to the Penn Stater Conference Center Hotel around 10 a.m. in sweatpants after a pick-up game of basketball at the Bryce Jordan Center. Obama cordially greeted a small crowd eagerly awaiting his arrival in the lobby, shaking hands and taking pictures.

An hour later, everyone climbed into buses and SUVs, led by a police escort to travel to the Dairy Complex, where Obama received a tour of the facilities.

With Casey at his side, Obama met several Penn State agricultural representatives and learned about the university’s research, in areas from animal rumination to biodiesel and energy efficiency.

To read the full story: One-on-one with Obama

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 2:49 pm.

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