Kim kozlowski detroit




















Depp's departure from Detroit in was years before the alleged molestation of a California boy that investigators say began in and continued into the following year while he was staying at the Prince of Peace Abbey in Oceanside, Calif. The alleged victim, now in his 40s, contacted authorities two months ago after learning Depp had not registered as a sex offender and was working around children, police said.

On Thursday, the California attorney general's office filed a count complaint charging Depp with child molestation in San Diego County. Riley Beggin closed out the category with an honorable mention for her piece: , pickups are cheating on diesel emissions; Michigan has no program to stop it. Ingrid Jacques swept the Editorial writing category with her column, Whitmer order endangers nursing homes; end it now , winning first place. Her piece on charter students earned second; third place went to Even in a crisis, school accountability is key.

Chambers also won second place with her story, Lack of high-speed internet leaves rural Michigan students disconnected from learning. Chambers closed out the Education category with her fourth-place win for her article, Schools in Michigan take hard look at teaching 'soft skills'. Neal Rubin won first place in the Explanatory Story category with his piece, Mill workers at Zug Island steel themselves for the end.

Second place in the category went to Kalea Hall and Jordyn Grzelewski for their story: Workers seek answers about their rights as pandemic rages on. Beth LeBlanc placed second with her story on the Edenville Dam failure.

Listen: Detroit News higher education reporter Kim Kozlowski on the impact of the Detroit Promise program on students in the city. Donate today ». Detroit Today Dynamic and diverse voices. Stay connected to Detroit. To go from that to an industry in which digital comes first is a significant change. It requires you to be extremely adaptable, willing to try new things and not be married to any old perception of what journalism should be. While Twitter represents an avenue for reporting news, it also serves as a way to interact, gather information, and develop sources, Bomey says, noting that even the high-speed newswires such as the Associated Press are now slower than social media.

The challenge, of course, is that the online world never sleeps. This is the philosophy that you have to have. For major news events such as the New York Auto Show this past March, Bomey focused on doing as much advance preparation as possible and then seamlessly switching among various platforms. That meant gathering background material for a press conference and then live video streaming that event on a new app that Twitter developed called Periscope.

Along with that came live tweets and posts on Snapchat and Instagram. You just have to be as vigilant as you can to set aside some time for yourself. Like Bomey, Justin Rogers began his journalism career just as the Internet was taking off. To be a sports journalist now, you have to have an elite level work ethic and love what you do. You have to be part of the conversation in terms of social interaction, and have to have a diverse multimedia skill set.

Rogers had anything but that when he graduated from Eastern in after majoring in English and minoring in philosophy. He had to work through college, so he had no time for the campus newspaper.

But Rogers, who had transferred to EMU after studying engineering at Kettering University, was determined to try journalism. He networked and contacted a bevy of sports editors, only one of whom gave him a shot.

Eric Braun, over at the then-fledgling digital operation of MLive, gave Rogers a job entering data.



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