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Page Location: Home » Archives » The American Editor » 1996 » June
ASNE convention to start, end earlier

Published: March 23, 1996
Last Updated: January 12, 2000
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Members can anticipate a shift in the next year's schedule. The 1997 convention will start - and end - earlier.

Responding to suggestions from members and attendance patterns, the 1997 annual meeting will begin with a can't-miss session on starting at 3 p.m. on Tuesday April 8. (The topic: "The Editor's Life and How It Can Be Better.") The final event of the convention will be the Friday luncheon, which will conclude by 2:30 p.m.

Other changes in the format are anticipated. The traditional early-bird sessions are being folded into the general sessions, which will start at 8 a.m. each day. Breakfast will be provided Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.

The opening session will be followed by a reception at the Newseum, the Freedom Forum's $50 million museum dedicated to the past, present and future of news. Interesting convention events are also planned for Wednesday and Thursday evenings.

There will be a keynote breakfast on Wednesday morning with a headliner speaker, modeled on the format pioneered at last April's convention.

Editors can expect a stronger-than-usual focus on newspaper issues at the convention sessions, and negotiations are under way with a number of headliners for the luncheon and breakfast speakers, according to Tim J. McGuire, editor of the Minneapolis Star Tribune and chair of the Convention Program Committee.

ASNE has received an acceptance, barring unforeseen developments, from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and the convention leaders are aggressively attempting to line up President Clinton and other prominent figures.

The "cornerstone" sessions of the convention will be a major presentation on how to think, two sessions devoted to newspaper content, and a session that presents the findings of three major ASNE studies under way in the current year. One is a readership study of newspaper's competitive advantages, another is a national survey of the attitudes and aspirations of the newsroom work force, and the third is a survey of editors probing how they spend their time and what their biggest challenges are.

Other topics to be addressed in sessions are an update on Web publishing and the future of newspapers,

The current anticipated schedule can be seen on ASNE's Web site (http:/www.asne.org/events/convschd.html). The Web schedule will be updated whenever there are significant changes and new confirmations.

Convention materials will be mailed to members in December. 

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