Quantcast The Daily Northwestern
College Media Network
  • Home

Famous anchor tells students to give

Michael Gsovski

Issue date: 10/11/07 Section: Campus
  • Print
  • Email
News anchor Jim Lehrer speaks to students and faculty at McCormick Auditorium on Wednesday.
Media Credit: Paul Takahashi
News anchor Jim Lehrer speaks to students and faculty at McCormick Auditorium on Wednesday.

Jim Lehrer, the host of PBS's "The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer," discussed journalism, and the "revolution" within it Wednesday afternoon in the half-full McCormick Auditorium in Norris University Center.

"Revolutions are seldom pleasant," Lehrer said. "The screams from newsrooms are those of panic."

But like any good journalist, his introduction was quickly followed by a summary of his findings: that the demise of mainstream media may be exaggerated.

"I think we have fear itself to fear," Lehrer said. "The bloggers are commentators, the search engines search. In the beginning, there must be journalism."

Lehrer spoke as this year's Minow Visiting Professor in Communications. He is most known for his work on "NewsHour," which he co-founded with Robert MacNeil in 1982 and has hosted ever since. Lehrer also has hosted 10 presidential debates and written 17 novels, two memoirs and three plays.

The Minow professorship was established by Northwestern alumni Josephine Minow and Newton N. Minow. Previous visiting professors included Walter Cronkite, Frank Rich and Judy Woodruff.

"No one better embodies the ideals of the Minow professorship," said John Lavine, dean of Medill. "Along with Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite, (Lehrer) is one of the greatest anchors of his or any age."

Lehrer began by lauding Newton Minow, a longtime NU professor and former Federal Communications Commission chairman, who famously called television "a vast wasteland."

"He is the guiding spirit of all of us trying to make something meaningful on television," Lehrer said. "Simply, directly and accurately put, Newt is a hero to the people."

Lehrer said that while journalism itself is in no danger of disappearing, the quality of journalism has to be maintained, if not improved.

"Enlightened discourse is not flourishing in this land," Lehrer said. "The growing result is Americans of all ages turning away from politics."

He then answered questions from the audience on topics ranging from the emergence of citizen journalists to Dan Rather's lawsuit against CBS.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

The DAILY encourages you to share your thoughts on this story. Please help us keep the discussion lively, but civil. Comments that are abusive to others, off-topic or vulgar, or comments that misrepresent someone's identity, will not be tolerated. We reserve the right to delete any comments in violation or to close comment threads on articles.

Please e-mail online@dailynorthwestern.com to flag a comment or for more information.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

NU Football Insider



Cats Corner

Photobucket

Advertisement