Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame

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Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame The Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame was created in 1966 to recognize those who have made significant
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By Gena AsherA young teen watching local TV news,  dreamed to be that reporter with all the details.  A couple wanted en...
01/05/2024

By Gena Asher
A young teen watching local TV news, dreamed to be that reporter with all the details.

A couple wanted ensure that their communities were armed with information to improve their lives and right wrongs.

A few had big plans – until a need to investigate tough issues and tell stories that need telling diverted their attention to journalism careers.

Whatever their motivations, the newest members of the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame share a common thread: They are passionate about the need for news and the power it can convey to citizens and audiences.

Seven journalists with Hoosier roots were inducted into the hall April 27 at the Woodland Country Club in Carmel, Indiana. Executive Director Larry Taylor and Board President Stephanie Salter welcomed the record crowd and introduced the newest members.

“This is a time to honor and celebrate, and we are so grateful to have our seven inductees joined by their family, coworkers past and present, mentors and IJHF members to share this moment,” Salter said.

The work and lives of journalists celebrated April 27, 2024 Included Bill Benner, Sandra Chapman, Eric Deggans, Francisco Figueroa, Max Jones, Wallace Terry and Kathy Tretter.

Here are some scenes from the day of celebration with pictures by Linda Negro.

The Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame and an overflow crowd welcomed the new class of Inductees Saturday, April 27. Each m...
28/04/2024

The Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame and an overflow crowd welcomed the new class of Inductees Saturday, April 27. Each member of the talented class was inspirational. Particularly heart-warming were the 30 members of the Francisco Figueroa family who attended.
Figueroa (1896-1951) was the printer publisher and editorial contributor to Indiana’s first Spanish language newspaper, El Amigo Del Hagar ( A Friend of the Home) in Northwest Indiana.
His only living daughter accepted the honor for her father.

Inductees included:
Bill Benner
For more than three decades, Benner was a sports reporter, writer and columnist at the Indianapolis Star, then wrote a sports column for the Indianapolis Business Journal for another decade. During his long tenure, he covered local and global sports, from high school and local professional teams to Olympics and PanAm games.

Sandra Chapman
Broadcaster Sandra Chapman started as a reporter at WISH-TV in Indianapolis, then moved into her dream beat on an investigative team. After 10 years, she moved to WTHR-TV in Indianapolis, focusing on investigative journalism for 17 years, breaking big stories and winning awards. She continues to shed light on important stories as a documentarian for Prince Media Group, which she leads.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/sandra-chapman-9623265/

Eric Deggans
Eric Deggans started out as a print journalist, eventually spending several years at the Tampa Bay Times, reporting from different beats, including music and entertainment. He shifted to radio broadcast in 2013, when he became NPR’s first full-time television and media critic, a position he holds today. Deggans also is author of Race Baiter, published in 2012.

https://ericdeggans.com/

Francisco Figueroa
Francisco Figueroa, 1896-1951, was the printer, publisher and editorial contributor to Indiana’s first Spanish language newspaper, El Amigo del Hogar (A Friend of the Home), in the northwest Indiana steel-producing region. Part of the Mexican migrant community drawn to the area after the turn of the century to work in the mills, Figueroa and his family operated the print shop that eventually became home to the newspaper, which documented the experiences of the immigrant community.

https://indianahistory.org/blog/the-legacy-of-figueroa-printers-indianas-first-spanish-language-newspaper/

Max Jones
Terre Haute Tribune-Star editor Max Jones has spent more than 40 years in journalism, much of it as a leader respected by his staff, fellow journalists and community. Under his leadership, the newspaper has tackled issues that affect not only Terre Haute but also surrounding areas and the state. As leader in the profession, he has supported fellow journalists and news organizations as well as First Amendment rights and open government.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/maxjones2/

Wallace Terry
Wallace Terry, 1938-2003, was a journalist, documentarian and author who covered war and civil rights for a variety of national newspapers and magazines. From his first job at the Washington Post at age 19, Terry went on to report for national publications as well as author two books, Bloods and Missing Pages. His wrote and narrated Guess Who’s Coming Home, a documentary about Black soldiers in Vietnam.

https://www.wallaceterry.com/career

Kathy Tretter
Along with family members, Kathy Tretter sought to preserve local newspapers by purchasing the Ferdinand News and the then-Dale News in 1990. Today, she is owner and publisher of the Spencer County Leader (an expanded version of the Dale News) and the Ferdinand News, where she edits, reports and writes columns. The award-winning newspapers continue to inform and provide a voice for area residents.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/kathy-tretter-689aa212/

To attend:
The 57th annual induction ceremony, which includes lunch and a program featuring each inductee, is open to the public. Tickets are $60 each for adults and $30 each for children 12 or younger, $20 of which is tax deductible. Tables of eight are available for $480. To purchase tickets, email the hall of fame at [email protected].

The Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame is a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization. IJHF and its archives are housed at Butler University in Indianapolis.

17/02/2024

View Kathy Tretter’s profile on LinkedIn, the world’s largest professional community. Kathy has 1 job listed on their profile. See the complete profile on LinkedIn and discover Kathy’s connections and jobs at similar companies.

Seven will be inducted into the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame in AprilSeven trailblazers, innovators and defenders of ...
16/02/2024

Seven will be inducted into the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame in April

Seven trailblazers, innovators and defenders of press freedom will join the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame in ceremonies April 27 at Woodland Country Club in Carmel.

The new members include editors and reporters, broadcasters and authors who served readers and viewers in markets large and small, local and around the world. They join more than 200 members inducted into the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame since its founding in 1966.

The IJHF board solicits nominations from the public through October. At a November meeting, the board selects outstanding journalists for induction the following spring.

"The only tough part of being on the IJHF board is narrowing the field of nominees down to about a half-dozen inductees,” said Stephanie Salter, president of the board. “This year was tougher than ever with a record number of worthy journalists presented for our consideration. The seven we selected truly represent the best of the best."

This will be the first year the hall is partnering with Butler University to promote and preserve the work of Indiana journalists, past and present. https://www.ijhf.org/news/hall-partners-with-butler-university

“We already are seeing the benefits of this through our collaboration with students and others at Butler as we prepare for the induction ceremony,” Salter said. “This represents a new chapter in our organization’s story.”

Here is the IJHF Class of 2024:

Bill Benner
For more than three decades, Benner was a sports reporter, writer and columnist at the Indianapolis Star, then wrote a sports column for the Indianapolis Business Journal for another decade. During his long tenure, he covered local and global sports, from high school and local professional teams to Olympics and PanAm games.

Sandra Chapman
Broadcaster Sandra Chapman started as a reporter at WISH-TV in Indianapolis, then moved into her dream beat on an investigative team. After 10 years, she moved to WTHR-TV in Indianapolis, focusing on investigative journalism for 17 years, breaking big stories and winning awards. She continues to shed light on important stories as a documentarian for Prince Media Group, which she leads.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/sandra-chapman-9623265/

Eric Deggans
Eric Deggans started out as a print journalist, eventually spending several years at the Tampa Bay Times, reporting from different beats, including music and entertainment. He shifted to radio broadcast in 2013, when he became NPR’s first full-time television and media critic, a position he holds today. Deggans also is author of Race Baiter, published in 2012.

https://ericdeggans.com/

Francisco Figueroa
Francisco Figueroa, 1896-1951, was the printer, publisher and editorial contributor to Indiana’s first Spanish language newspaper, El Amigo del Hogar (A Friend of the Home), in the northwest Indiana steel-producing region. Part of the Mexican migrant community drawn to the area after the turn of the century to work in the mills, Figueroa and his family operated the print shop that eventually became home to the newspaper, which documented the experiences of the immigrant community.

https://indianahistory.org/blog/the-legacy-of-figueroa-printers-indianas-first-spanish-language-newspaper/

Max Jones
Terre Haute Tribune-Star editor Max Jones has spent more than 40 years in journalism, much of it as a leader respected by his staff, fellow journalists and community. Under his leadership, the newspaper has tackled issues that affect not only Terre Haute but also surrounding areas and the state. As leader in the profession, he has supported fellow journalists and news organizations as well as First Amendment rights and open government.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/maxjones2/

Wallace Terry
Wallace Terry, 1938-2003, was a journalist, documentarian and author who covered war and civil rights for a variety of national newspapers and magazines. From his first job at the Washington Post at age 19, Terry went on to report for national publications as well as author two books, Bloods and Missing Pages. His wrote and narrated Guess Who’s Coming Home, a documentary about Black soldiers in Vietnam.

https://www.wallaceterry.com/career

Kathy Tretter
Along with family members, Kathy Tretter sought to preserve local newspapers by purchasing the Ferdinand News and the then-Dale News in 1990. Today, she is owner and publisher of the Spencer County Leader (an expanded version of the Dale News) and the Ferdinand News, where she edits, reports and writes columns. The award-winning newspapers continue to inform and provide a voice for area residents.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/kathy-tretter-689aa212/

To attend:
The 57th annual induction ceremony, which includes lunch and a program featuring each inductee, is open to the public. Tickets are $60 each for adults and $30 each for children 12 or younger, $20 of which is tax deductible. Tables of eight are available for $480. To purchase tickets, email the hall of fame at [email protected].

The Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame is a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization. IJHF and its archives are housed at Butler University in Indianapolis.

View Kathy Tretter’s profile on LinkedIn, the world’s largest professional community. Kathy has 1 job listed on their profile. See the complete profile on LinkedIn and discover Kathy’s connections and jobs at similar companies.

RSVP today.
21/12/2023

RSVP today.

Panel discussion explores the untold story of Indianapolis’s Indiana Avenue & the community’s activism to resist erasure in the 1970s & 80s.

Celebrate Indiana journalism with the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame new website.https://ijhf.org/
27/04/2022

Celebrate Indiana journalism with the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame new website.
https://ijhf.org/

You know because we were there.Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame   News Featured Apr 14, 2022 Hall inducts five Apr 14, 2022 After a two-year delay, the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame welcomed five new members in an induction ceremony April 9 in Indianapolis. Read More → Apr 14, 2022 NominationsKn...

Support the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame.Help us tell the stories of great moments in Indiana journalism and the peop...
23/11/2021

Support the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame.
Help us tell the stories of great moments in Indiana journalism and the people who captured them. Your help will give us the ability to celebrate the role that journalism plays in every community. We do this by recognizing top journalists, recording their stories and presenting examples of excellence.

The Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame Inc needs your help today! Click to donate.

13/09/2021

The Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame luncheon to induct new members is being postponed until April 9, 2022.
After hearing from inductees, board members and supports, reviewing the latest Covid 19 data, and discussing all the options with our colleagues, we feel it is in everyone's best interest to again postpone the 55th Induction Ceremony until spring 2022.
The new date is April 9, 2022 at the Marriott North at Keystone.
If you already have made reservations you can contact executive director Larry Taylor.

With recent cancellations, questions on existing reservations, and growing expressions of concern about making reservations, it became increasingly clear that holding the event this month did not create the sense of security and comfort we all needed. Over the last half century, the induction has been about celebrating achievements and being recognized with families, colleagues, and friends in attendance. In recent days we felt that you would not be experiencing this as had past members of the Hall of Fame.
With your valuable input we felt it was better to move the event till April 9, 2022.

Three months ago we again felt confident that the event would surely take place but kept in our minds there could be another Covid 19 surge and fallout impacting the event. Thus, we felt it was prudent to refrain from depositing any checks, or processing any credit cards for reservations or memorial/tribute gifts. We will contact everyone in the next two weeks to determine how they wish these payments to be handled. One option is your reservations can be honored next spring.

We know this is disappointing news to you and yours as it is to the board and our friends at Indiana University Media School that have worked so hard to make this happen. We just look forward to holding a great event at the right time when everyone feels more confident and comfortable. Thanks for your extreme patience and understanding and look forward to the spring season and surely an end to much of the uncertainty that has pervaded our lives for a full 18 months.

Stay safe and healthy and we will be in touch soon. Let us know if you have any comments or suggestions.

23/07/2021

The Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame induction ceremony is back

It’s time to celebrate journalism again.
The Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame induction was postponed twice last year. Finally, the ceremony is back on and planned for September 25 at Marriott North at Keystone in Indianapolis.
The board excited to tell you about the 2021 class of inductees who include:
A mentor, nicknamed “newsroom mother,” who helped to diversify her news staffs, a photojournalist who caught the moment the bat met the ball for Pete Rose’s 3,000th hit, an empathetic reporter whose work revealed the culture of sexual abuse at USA Gymnastics, and two editors who directed newsrooms through decades of “wrenching” change are among the 2020 inductees to the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame.
Leisa Richardson, the Executive Editor of the State Journal Register in Springfield, Ill.; Tim Evans, investigative and consumer reporter for the Indianapolis Star; the late Ed Reinke, photojournalist for The Associated Press; Tim Harmon, retired Editor of the South Bend Tribune and currently editorial writer for the Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette, and Bob Zaltsburg, who recently retired after 33 years as Editor of the Bloomington Herald-Times, will be honored in the ceremony which begins with a reception at 10:30 a.m. September 25 at the Marriott North at Keystone, Indianapolis.

Meet each inductee:
Tim Evans has been celebrated for his work exposing the culture and policies at USA Gymnastics that resulted in hundreds of gymnasts being abused. Colleagues and bosses credit his work ethic, never-ending mentoring and ability to be a team player. He was the first reporter to confront USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar about sexual abuse allegations. In addition to his investigative reporting, Evans brings the same thorough, compassionate approach to his work as a consumer reporter with “his baby” -- the Hoosier Call to Action consumer hotline. The program allows people in Indiana to reach out to volunteers who help solve their problems, be they as small as a $25 gift card never received to thousands of dollars in insurance payments never paid. So far, the program has saved Hoosiers more than $1.5 million. In addition, it has kept people from eviction, restored water service and helped resolve a dispute among neighbors. In the process Evans has changed state and federal laws for the benefit of the people of Indiana.
Tim Harmon, a Kentucky transplant and an Indiana University graduate, is described as a compassionate, patient mentor who “never lost enthusiasm for a story well told.” He worked as Managing Editor of the Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette, the Managing Editor of the Times of NW Indiana and the Editor of the South Bend Tribune. He led the Tribune through the transition from afternoon to morning publication, shoring up the bureau system, and developed convergence relationships with sister radio stations, all with tightening resources. After he “retired,” Harmon returned to the Journal-Gazette, on an interim basis, as an editorial writer. Interim turned into permanent and he wrote award-winning editorials until he retired again. Although he could confine his research to phone interviews and Internet searches, colleagues say, he often choose to attend city council meetings or community forums and listen to debates firsthand.
Ed Reinke was a visual storyteller who worked for the Cincinnati Enquirer before joining the Associated Press. Colleagues say, “he saw what others didn’t,” often capturing decisive moments. With his signature red plaid jacket, he was equally as comfortable at local football games as he was at national and international sports events, from the Olympics and World Series to the Kentucky Derby and the Masters golf tournament. He covered the Ronald Reagan administration and the Bill Clinton inauguration. Reinke died in 2011 after suffering a fatal head injury during a fall while covering an auto race. He is remembered with a scholarship at IU, where he learned photojournalism from Will Counts, and with the Reinke Grant for Storytelling. He is also remembered today with a red plaid sticker with his name that is displayed on the cameras of many photographers who knew him.
Leisa Richardson, a graduate of Ball State, has helped diversify news staffs, hiring dozens of people of color and women, as she has worked in newsrooms from the Anderson Herald-Bulletin and the Cincinnati Enquirer. She also worked 17 years at the Indianapolis Star in a variety of jobs from Metro/ Region editor to Regional Planning Director. She is currently Executive Editor of the Springfield, Ill., State Journal Register. Colleagues say her “impact has been wide and deep” over her 40-year career. She was the first African American to lead a mainstream daily newsroom in Indiana and has led organizations for journalists of color for decades. One of those is the UNITY Journalists of Color, which represents several other organizations.

Bob Zaltsburg, the son of a department store owner, had plans to follow a mentor to Louisville after a few years at the Bloomington Herald Telephone. But after working several years, half the time as a news reporter and half as a sports reporter, he got the signal that his bosses considered him editor material. He stayed in that position for 33 years, retiring as Editor of what became the Herald-Times. He led the newspaper through the transition from afternoon to morning circulation, through the addition of a Sunday edition, into the digital age and, along the way, collected two Blue Ribbon Newspaper honors. He was involved in the Bloomington community as well as state and national journalism organizations. Colleagues say his respectful, steady hand allowed him to “run the newspaper the way a top-notch conductor runs a symphony.”
About us:
Established in 1966, the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame honors media professionals with Indiana ties in its annual induction ceremony. It is a partner of the Indiana University Media School, which houses its archives and materials. The Hall strives to preserve the history and stories of journalism in Indiana.
Attend the ceremony:
The event begins with a 10:30 a.m. reception September 25, 2021, at the Marriott North at Keystone in Indianapolis, followed by lunch at 11:30 a.m. and program at 12:30 p.m.
Tickets are $50 each, $25 for children 12 and younger. Contact Lawrence Taylor, [email protected], to purchase tickets, sponsorships or program ads. Deadline to purchase tickets is September 17.
Support the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame through sponsorships: Friend $25-$99, Supporter $100-$249, Partner $250-$999, Patron $1,000-$2,499, Benefactor $2,500-$4,999, Sustainer $5,000 and above. You may also purchase ads in the program which are $250 for a full page, $150 for a half page and $100 for a quarter page.

19/07/2021

Save the Date:

Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame is back and will induct new members to the Hall of Fame on September 25, 2021.

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