William J. Drummond

William Joe Drummond (born September 29, 1944, Oakland, California) is an American journalist. He teaches at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.[1][2]

He graduated from the University of California, Berkeley with bachelor's degree, and from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism with a master's degree. He was a White House Fellow in 1976. He was associate press secretary to President Jimmy Carter. In 1977, he was a founding editor of “Morning Edition,” at NPR.[3]

Awards

  • 1986 Hillman Prize, Broadcast
gollark: Krist effectively just unconditionally trusts the node, so SC and basically everyone use the krist.ceriat.net one.
gollark: Unless that got fixed.
gollark: It is also really hard and has one long-standing bug which you have to manually patch.
gollark: Krist is not distributed/decentralized. Anyone can run a node, given that they're willing to go through the horrible, horrible configuration and meddling involved (it's unsupported and thus quite irritating), but they won't network together.
gollark: You can't just "disable the anti-siri protection".

References

  1. http://journalism.berkeley.edu/faculty/drummond/
  2. "Journalists are kneading to learn balance", San Francisco Chronicle, Annie Nakao, March 7, 2004
  3. "Drummond, William J. 1944–", Contemporary Black Biography, 2004, Saunders, Shellie
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