There's no shortage of dire reports about local U.S. newspapers. In the same week that the owner of Vermont's 132-year-old Hardwick Gazette announced he would.
The Hardwick Gazette, the 132-year-old weekly newspaper of record in its namesake Northeast Kingdom town, will sell its building and shift to a remote newsroom.
Economics 101 [Re "Nowhere to Go," August 4]: The story on Vermont's housing crisis, while in many ways informative, is nevertheless lacking a crucial, seldom-acknowledged.
Jenny Grosvenor Senior Lecturer, Department of English and Interim Student Media Adviser and her Student Team Photo credit Hardwickgazette.com
“Journalism is necessary. It is vital. We need stories of resilience and stories that tap into our sense of compassion, Grosvenor said. “The kind that recreates experience and requires us to empathize.”
In a world constantly in communication, there is no question that we are going to need journalists who are committed to truth and justice. In her new role as Student Media Advisor, Grosvenor seeks to provide the guidance the next generation of reporters, commenters, broadcasters, and writers will need to face that commitment head-on. She comes to the job with a reputation as someone who puts students first.