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Earlier this month, a York Catholic science teacher had his last day of school in 44 years.

Sam Spiese — who graduated from York Catholic in 1964 and returned four years later to teach — is retiring after teaching generations of students in the same school he attended.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. York Catholic science teacher Sam Spiese reviews a graded final exam with junior Katie Deats on the last day of school on Friday, June 1, 2012.

As a former prep school student, I really enjoyed spending time with Spiese in his last few hours as a teacher. High school wasn’t that long ago for me, but being back in the halls of a private school populated with uniforms, antiquated desks and teacher-student relationships that are more akin to friendships really brought me back.

My editor chose this photo, among two others, to run:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. York Catholic science teacher Sam Spiese takes a moment in his empty homeroom classroom, which his homeroom students decorated in celebration of his upcoming retirement, on the last day of school on Friday, June 1, 2012.

…but I also like this one, which is similarly framed:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. York Catholic science teacher Sam Spiese collects textbooks from his junior homeroom class at the end of the last day of school on Friday, June 1, 2012. After 44 years of teaching and serving in various leadership roles, Sam Spiese is retiring from York Catholic. Spiese, who graduated from York Catholic in 1964, said, “I keep getting old; they (the students) stay the same age. That’s the problem.”

Which would you choose, and why?

Yesterday, I went to State College not for Penn State (for once) but, rather, a local team making its first state championship baseball game appearance. West York, who had lost the district semifinal football game last fall to Lampeter-Strasburg, was facing them again — this time, for the state title in baseball.

Sure enough, the West York Bulldogs delivered their comeuppance in a 9-6 victory over the L-S Pioneers.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York’s Brock Gladfelter hoists the state championship trophy toward West York fans after defeating Lampeter-Strasburg to win the school’s first-ever state championship in baseball on Friday, June 15, 2012, at Penn State in State College.

As the only photographer sent to the game, I was responsible for two section fronts, a slideshow’s worth of photos, a video and, of course, a bit of social media as well. After some pre-trip brainstorming with editor Brad and fellow photographer Jason, I walked into the stadium three hours before West York and L-S took the field, and started working right away: I explored the stadium, found the team and didn’t stop until after the game was over.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York’s first baseman Brandon Kinneman kneels in prayer during batting practice at Medlar Field before playing the state championship game against Lampeter-Strasburg on Friday, June 15, 2012. Kinneman’s grandmother Maryland Slonaker passed away on Wednesday, June 13, and a post-victory huddle was held in the outfield in memory of Slonaker and others close to the West York team.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York pitcher Kaden Hepler stretches with a band before playing the state championship game against Lampeter-Strasburg on Friday, June 15, 2012.

The game itself wasn’t my best in terms of shooting for action. Unlike any other high school baseball game or even any Revs game, I was pretty limited in my mobility by the officials as well as by the geography of the dugouts. But, as reporter John assured me, state championship games are all about emotion — and I did get plenty of that.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York’s Brandon Kinneman celebrates in a dogpile among his fellow players and coaching staff after defeating Lampeter-Strasburg 9-6 for the school’s first-ever state championship.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York head baseball coach Roger Czerwinski leads the team and staff in a moment of silence in the outfield in memory of family members and close friends of the team who have passed recently, before greeting West York fans after defeating Lampeter-Strasburg to win the school’s first-ever state championship in baseball on Friday, June 15, 2012, at Penn State in State College.

For my video — thanks to Jason’s suggestion — I focused on the starting pitcher, Kaden Hepler, who ended up pitching 23 of 26 innings in West York’s state playoff games:

Check out a slideshow of more photos, too.

After I was done chasing storms a few weeks ago, I rushed to Spring Grove to photograph its commencement ceremony. It was a high-energy but dignified affair, and the reporter pointed out to me a special friendship he had just discovered:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Spring Grove Area High School graduate Melanie Zavatchan leans over to move the tassel of her friend Carly Smith, to indicate Smith’s new status as a high school graduate, at the conclusion of the commencement ceremony on Friday, June 1, 2012. Smith suffered a traumatic brain injury when she was in the third grade, and Zavatchan has remained her friend and led fundraisers in support of her.

Be sure to read more about Carly and Melanie in Tim’s article.

I love Star Wars. I grew up on Star Wars. I thought the Force was real: When I was six or seven, I tried to make the pantry door open as I sat and stared at it from the kitchen table five feet away. On multiple occasions.

That’s a true story.

(As a mature adult, I now know the Force isn’t real, but it’d be cool if it were. And I still love Star Wars.)

So I was thrilled to be assigned to photograph local Jedis. With little kids. And lightsabers. On May the Fourth, naturally.

Belated photos:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Capital City Jedi Knights member Aaron Chernak waits as fellow Jedi Maranda Lender retrieves her lightsaber from a car trunk at the York Emporium on Friday, May 4, 2012. Capital City Jedi Knights, a non-profit performance group based in the Harrisburg area, does charity work by choreographing lightsaber fights and drawing in crowds for events at which they entertain.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Capital City Jedi Knights members Aaron Chernak and Maranda Lender demonstrate some lightsaber tactics to a small crowd in the York Emporium on Saturday, May 4, 2012.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Laura Owens, 10 of Latimore Township in Adams County, mouths pleadingly to her father Sam, off-camera, after she found out during a Saturday, May 4, 2012, presentation at the York Emporium that the Capital City Jedi Knights and possibly Darth Vader were scheduled to make an appearance the next day at a comic book store.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Capital City Jedi Knights member Maranda Lender teaches some lightsaber techniques to Katarina Holmes, 8 of West Manchester Township, in the York Emporium parking lot on Saturday, May 4, 2012.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dressed as Princess Leia, Laura Owens, 10 of Latimore Township in Adams County, takes a break from lightsaber training to watch a nearby Sith lord duke it out with another youngster in the York Emporium parking lot on Saturday, May 4, 2012.

I’m from Houston, which means I can recall quite a few major storms wreaking havoc on my psyche as well as causing actual damage. Summers mean tornadoes and hurricanes, and I dreaded battening down the hatches every time a potentially dangerous storm threatened to roll through our area. Actually, I’m pretty sure my bedroom window in my parents’ house still has dried-out residue from when we duct-taped all the windows prior to Hurricane Rita, which was supposed to be Houston’s version of Katrina (but wasn’t, fortunately).

In short, I’m personally not a big fan of big storms.

But none of that matters, now that I’m a photojournalist.

When tornado warnings cropped up and strong winds began hurtling through York County last Friday, my editor had me head toward the potentially affected areas. As he directed me, on the phone, to head from Red Lion through Winterstown and then toward Shrewsbury, he concluded with, “Above all, be careful and aware of your surroundings.”

He later (today) revealed that he had visions of my car getting lifted into the air — with me in it. At the time, I was more concerned by the amount of water on the road, how I could avoid hydroplaning and whether I’d make it to Spring Grove in time to cover their commencement ceremony for two newspapers.

As I made my way through the waterlogged roads of southern York County, I happened upon some tornado damage. Except, I didn’t know it was tornado damage.

Pieces of Styrofoam littered the road, so I followed the trail with my eyes and saw, just off the road, that a big metal roof was blown off a home and a large tree branch had been split from the trunk. I turned off the road to check out the damage, but there was no one anywhere. No emergency crews, no puzzled or distraught homeowner. There wasn’t a way for me to quickly ascertain whether that damage had just happened or occurred a while ago. I returned to the main road.

Then, emergency vehicles passed me going in the opposite direction. So I turned around and followed them… right back to the house I’d just checked out.

I didn’t find out until a week later (today), but turns out I’d encountered the only confirmed tornado damage in the county.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Winterstown firefighter Rick Dean helps collect the Styrofoam insulation that was scattered after the metal roof of Larry Miller’s North Hopewell Township trailer home was blown off and came to rest against a tree near his wood pile on Friday, June 1, 2012. The aluminum roof of Larry Miller’s trailer home in North Hopewell Township was blown off during the storm on Friday, June 1, 2012. Miller, 67, was not inside his home at the time, and said the roof that was blown off was constructed above an already-existing metal roof on his home.

So I made some pictures and talked to the homeowner (no injuries)…

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Styrofoam insulation and a broken tree branch litter the yard behind Larry Miller’s North Hopewell Township trailer home after a storm passed through on Friday, June 1, 2012.

…and then went on to Spring Grove to photograph graduation. Which, I suppose, will be my next blog post.

I had only shot one track-and-field competition — and, since I was to focus only on the track events, I had never shot any field events — until I was assigned to make pictures of Jared Allison.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dallastown’s Jared Allison ties up his training shoes as Palmyra Springs senior Shawn Mayer watches Cumberland Valley senior Chase Gehr use the rings before they all began a pole-vaulting training session on Wednesday, April 25, 2012, at the indoor training facility VaultWorx in Camp Hill. Dallastown’s Jared Allison — one of the best pole vaulters in the state — trains at VaultWorx, which is an indoor facility in Camp Hill.

At the time that reporter John and I followed Jared during one of his pole-vaulting training sessions at an indoor facility, the high school senior had his eye on breaking the state record and capturing the gold at the state championships, which were about a month away.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dallastown’s Jared Allison works on his lift method during a training session at the indoor facility VaultWorx in Camp Hill on Wednesday, April 25, 2012.

I did my best in the indoor facility. The light situation was terrible. One end of the large, tall-ceilinged room was lit with blue-white fluorescents, the other end (where the landing pad was) was lit with dim orange lamps and finally, just beyond the landing pad, were windows that let in a good amount of sunlight. Not the ideal situation for decent white balance.

But I had fun. Pole-vaulting is such a fundamentally strange sport, as John alluded to in his profile of Jared, and I had never shot it before. So it was a challenge on multiple levels — lighting and exposure, the novelty of the sport — but it was fun.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dallastown’s Jared Allison runs with the pole during a training session on Wednesday, April 25, 2012, at the indoor facility VaultWorx in Camp Hill.

Be sure to check out John’s full article, which includes more photos.

And as for the state championship? Jared didn’t get the gold or break the state record — but that’s okay.

Before you fire up the grill and make today even hotter, go plant a flag. Or pause to think about those who have served and are serving.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. A flag planted at William D. Willard’s grave waves over his grave marker on Thursday, May 17, 2012, in the Mt. Rose Cemetery. Volunteers from the local B’nai Brith Youth Organization planted flags on veterans’ graves in the Mt. Rose Cemetery in Spring Garden Township on Thursday, in anticipation of Memorial Day.

Last summer, I blogged a series of “It’s hot out there” photos. Since the heat’s not going away any time soon, I figure I’ll pick up where I left off.

So, all that said… go to a pool. It’s Memorial Day weekend, after all.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Lincolnway Swimming Pool lifeguard Nathan Bahn, 18, scrubs the lime scale deposits off the barriers of a tower structure that children climb to access two of five slides at the pool, on Thursday, May 24, 2012. Like other outdoor pools in the area, Lincolnway Swimming Pool will be open starting on Memorial Day weekend — specifically, Saturday.

I’ve only shot softball three times (including a doubleheader, so four games), and every time, Central York has won.

More significantly, each time I’ve covered their games, the Panthers have won by scoring a run in either the last inning in regulation or the last, pre-tiebreaker inning.

The first time:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Central York’s Courtney Hastings slides safely into home in the seventh inning against Spring Grove to score the game’s only run on Thursday, March 29, 2012. Central York defeated Spring Grove 1-0 in softball at home on Thursday, March 29, 2012.

The second:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Central York softball players gather at home plate to cheer on pitcher Taylor Rohrbaugh, far left, as she runs home after hitting a homerun in the ninth inning of the YAIAA softball championship game on Wednesday, May 16, 2012, at New Oxford Senior High School. Central York defeated Littlestown 4-2 in nine innings.

And the third — last night’s:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Central York’s Kelsey Wisner hugs Courtney Hastings after Hastings hit a walk-off double that allowed Central York to defeat Elizabethtown 1-0 in nine innings on Thursday, May 24, 2012, at Millersville University to advance to the PIAA District 3 softball semifinal.

A few weeks ago, I had a crazy idea for a crazy assignment.

The assignment: Christian School of York students would spend the night “homeless” outside their school to raise awareness as well as collect donations for a local non-profit that assists homeless mothers and their children.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Christian School of York freshmen Luke Dixon and Ethan Miller carry a piece of cardboard to the side of the school where they planned to build their “homeless” shelter on Friday, April 13, 2012. Christian School of York high school students are camping outside the school in cardboard boxes as part of the second annual “Homeless Night Out” to benefit Bridge of Hope of York County’s homeless women and children. The students held a drive for household items to donate to Bridge of Hope, and about a dozen are spending the night in cardboard boxes to experience what homeless life might be like.

The idea: Shoot a video that would show the students setting up camp in their cardboard boxes, return to shoot more video at some point in the night and come back again in the morning as they woke up.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Christian School of York freshman Ashleigh Martin talks to fellow freshman Ellie Blair, not shown, as she decorates the side of their “homeless” shelter with duct tape on Friday, April 13, 2012. Blair and Martin acknowledged their awareness that their experience won’t be truly like that of homeless people, but it would still be an eye-opener for them.

Fortunately, two girls — Ashleigh and Ellie — agreed to let me follow them on their adventure. Check it out:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. York Academy Regional Charter School kindergarten teacher Tracy Zeiders dances with second-grade student Sophia Sy during a dance party rewarding students with good behavior on Thursday, April 5, 2012. York Academy Regional Charter School students who acted by the school’s “positive behavior” standards earned a dance party in the school’s top floor, with music provided by a parent who is a DJ.

I made these pictures a while ago, but I still remember watching the kids as they entered the school’s media room, timid and confused at first… but then they saw the lights and heard the music and started having fun.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. York Academy Regional Charter School first-grade student Tawfiz Bolyard, left, sticks his tongue out while dancing near the DJ booth with fellow first-grade student Paris Martin and kindergarten student Amari Dickson on Thursday, April 5, 2012. York Academy Regional Charter School students who acted by the school’s “positive behavior” standards earned a dance party in the school’s top floor, with music provided by a parent who is a DJ.

And they got really into it. Really into it.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Flanked by other classmates, York Academy Regional Charter School first-grade student Amari Dickson shows her moves during a dance party at the school on Thursday, April 5, 2012. York Academy Regional Charter School students who acted by the school’s “positive behavior” standards earned a dance party in the school’s top floor, with music provided by a parent who is a DJ.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. About 130 paper lanterns were floated out onto the Susquehanna River from the John Wright Restaurant boat ramp in the York County Youth Development Center’s first-ever Tea Light Lantern Float festival on Saturday, May 5, 2012. People could sponsor a lantern for $10 in support of the center, and lanterns were retrieved further downstream by a center employee in a boat. The paper lanterns consisted of paper bags glued to Styrofoam boards, which were painted and decorated by York County Youth Development Center students. The paper bags were sprayed with “peace” and “hope” stencils and filled with a layer of sand, on which tea lights were placed.

I’ve been awfully close to it, but I’d never set foot in Susquehanna River waters until last night. As people set paper lanterns adrift in a lantern float festival, I waded down a boat ramp as deep as my shorts — and the boat ramp — would allow me.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Daniel Braun, 9 of Wrightsville, right, sends out a lighted paper lantern to York County Youth Development Center community outreach coordinator Tony Zorbaugh, who sent the lanterns further out into the Susquehanna River off of the John Wright Restaurant boat ramp on Saturday, May 5, 2012.

And then I remembered that the moon was supposed to be a “super moon.” It wasn’t quite super at the time, but it was getting there:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. The “super moon” rises over the Wrightsville bridge as three paper lanterns float downstream on the Susquehanna River on Saturday, May 5, 2012.

Spot news from last week:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Tierra Lenker of Dover Township holds her face in her hands after she crashed her car into the front lobby of Metro Bank in West Manchester Township on Thursday, April 26, 2012. West Manchester Township police said she hit the gas instead of the brakes while parking at the bank.

Flag dedication:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Members of the West York VFW gather for a group photo before the dedication ceremony for the new flag and flagpole installed in front of the NHS School in West Manchester Township on Thursday, April 12, 2012. With help from the West York VFW and Ladies Auxiliary, the NHS School in West Manchester Township purchased a flagpole, flag and lights that are now installed in front of the building. The school currently serves children on the autism spectrum.

This photo ran large in the next day’s paper. When Jeff saw it, his first reaction was, “That photo is so not ‘you.'”

“What do you mean? I took it.”

“I know you took it. But it’s not very ‘you.’ It’s graphical.”

“So what? I can shoot graphically. I’m versatile.”

I relish that I’m still able to surprise even my photographer boyfriend sometimes.

Dana Perino speaks

I photographed former White House press secretary Dana Perino a few weeks ago, and learned that we’re not all that different. She read the newspaper every day as a child (under orders from her father). I read the newspaper every day as a child. She was a journalist. I’m a journalist.

Maybe one day, I’ll be White House press secretary. (Ha. Ha.)

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Former White House press secretary Dana Perino spoke to a full auditorium in York College's Collegiate Performing Arts Center about her role as press secretary for George W. Bush, and also offered a few tips on how to seize opportunities and advance professionally.

Last night, I shot a spectacularly weird football game. It was played on the ice rink… with turf carpets laid directly on top of the ice:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. A crack in the turf's seam shows the ice underneath at the American Indoor Football game played on Saturday, April 14, 2012, at the York City Ice Arena.

It was an American Indoor Football league exhibition-style game, and it was by far the strangest one I’ve photographed. The “field” was 50 yards long, and the goalposts were suspended from the ceiling. Early in the first quarter, management decided to have the game played in only one direction after a player slid on the carpet — which then slipped on the ice — in the far end zone.

Most significantly, the players and the ball were prone to crash into the crowd at any point.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Harrisburg Stampede linebacker Vincent Tiberi is brought down by the Virginia Badgers against the boards as members of the crowd pass by during the third quarter on Saturday, April 14, 2012, at York City Ice Arena. The game was played like an exhibition game to gauge interest in York, with the Stampede winning 70-24.

Almost as significantly, the unevenness of the turf carpet meant extra caution had to be taken.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Bumps in the turf carpet and breaks in the seams were an inevitable obstacle throughout the game between the Harrisburg Stampede and the Virginia Badgers on Saturday, April 14, 2012, at the York City Ice Arena. A referee in the fourth quarter tripped on the carpet and hit his head.

But everyone seemed to have fun. And if the higher-ups think the game was a big-enough hit, who knows? Maybe one day York will have its own indoor football team.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. The Virginia Badgers team occupied the visitors hockey bench at the rink in the York City Ice Arena.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Members of the Harrisburg Stampede Starletz dance team perform their number during a dance-off against the Virginia Honey Badgers dance team during halftime on Saturday, April 14, 2012, at the York City Ice Arena.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. The Virginia Badgers give the kickoff return during the third quarter against the Harrisburg Stampede on Saturday, April 14, 2012, at the York City Ice Arena.

We don’t usually cover races, but last Saturday’s 5K at John Rudy County Park was different.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. A Pennsylvania Game Commission officer attaches a ribbon with fallen wildlife conservation officer David Grove's name printed on it to a flag that memorializes the seven PGA officers who have been killed in the line of duty, prior to the start of the first annual WCO David L. Grove Memorial Run 5K race on Saturday, April 7, 2012, at John Rudy County Park. The pre-race ceremony honoring the seven fallen officers also featured a squad that shot a volley that marked the beginning of the race.

Full cutline: The first annual WCO David L. Grove Memorial Run 5K race featured about 400 participants from seven states — and one from Australia — in John Rudy County Park. The race was organized by Pennsylvania Game Commission deputy wildlife conservation officer Jason Raup and Special Permits Enforcement Division chief Chad Eyler, and will benefit a scholarship fund established in Grove’s name. Grove was a wildlife conservation officer who was shot and killed when attempting to apprehend two deer poachers near Gettysburg in Nov. 2010.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. American flag in hand, John Crone of York Township stands ready near the start line of the first annual WCO David L. Grove Memorial Run 5K race on Saturday, April 7, 2012, at John Rudy County Park. Crone said he participates in every race that memorializes a fallen law enforcement or memorial officer, and that, as a retired Marine, he carries the American flag even while jogging.

Be sure to check out the video I produced, as well.

© 2008. The sign outside The Maneater's door in the old offices. Taken in Feb. 2008 on Fuji 800 film.

The Maneater — the official student newspaper of the University of Missouri — has deservedly encountered a lot of heat recently because of poor decisions made in the publication of its annual April Fool’s issue.

A lot of heat.

For those unfamiliar with background information, The Maneater is a student-run campus newspaper that’s (almost) financially independent of the university. Because journalism-major upperclassmen are usually engrossed in their sequence work and in the journalism school’s various affiliated newsrooms, the majority of the Maneater staff is underclassmen.

© 2008. News editor Elliot works in the newsroom in Feb. 2008. Taken on Fuji 800 film.

As a former Maneater photographer (2006-07) and photo editor (2007-08), I’m now reviving a belated defense that I drafted almost exactly two years ago, albeit for different reasons. I am also writing this as my own, personal response to a letter another former Maneater editor wrote in support not of the current editors or their decisions but, rather, in support of the newspaper’s status as an independent entity from the university.

Because the aforementioned letter, written by Derek Kravitz, will be submitted as a letter to the Maneater editors, I won’t re-publish large chunks of it here. So for now, I’d like to expound upon this statement:

But we would not be where we are today without The Maneater and we echo the sentiments of Maneater alumni who continue to support the paper and the best university in the country.

I’m not proud of the language used and decisions made by the editors who have since resigned. But I’m proud to have been a staffer and editor at The Maneater. What’s more, I count myself lucky for it: True to Derek’s words, I know I wouldn’t be where I am today if not for that paper.

I came to Missouri in 2006 fully intending to pursue reporting and joined the paper as a designer and reporter, but — to the chagrin of my parents — began picking up photo assignments. My editor Rae couldn’t have been more patient or helpful. I can say with absolute certainty that I was among the least technically proficient photographers on staff, but Rae challenged and encouraged me. I picked up more and more assignments; learned from fellow staffers about exposure, techniques, gear, composition and more; and eventually was hired to take Rae’s place as photo editor the next year.

If not for The Maneater , it might have been years before I picked up a DSLR camera or learned anything tangible about photojournalism or storytelling. If not for The Maneater, I wouldn’t have been offered my first internship. Who knows where I’d be now, had I not landed that first berth of professional experience?

© 2007. Ryan - Rae's predecessor as photo editor - takes over the photo desk as former copy chief Jamie peers over his shoulder during production night.

The Maneater has had its moments, good and bad, and most recently, it certainly crossed the line. But let’s not overlook the Maneater‘s inherent value as a learning, student-run newspaper:

  • As unprofessional as others — including journalism school faculty — may perceive the Maneater to be throughout the years, that was not at all my experience. Rae and the other editors were strict about staffers’ behaving professionally and respectfully in the field, and we were always expected to come back with a story or photos, no matter how difficult the circumstances or subjects were. When the 2007-2008 editorial board took the reins, we did our absolute best to carry that torch of professionalism.
  • The Maneater trains and helps underclassman journalism students in a way that no pre-sequence class did, at least when I was still in school. Even if it’s “just” a story about a student organization’s barbeque, staffers are learning how to report, interview, write, take photos, produce multimedia and more. They are learning all these things by doing them for public consumption (not just a class) — an incredible opportunity that the journalism school doesn’t afford most students until their third year of college.
  • Speaking from a photojournalism perspective, I believe that former Maneater photographers constitute the majority of in-sequence photojournalism students who are already good or above-average storytellers and who are technically proficient. Of course, many students are good at what they do without having worked at The Maneater. But my observation is that most of the students who enter the sequence already comfortable with themselves as proficient photographers are those who’ve worked as Maneater staff at some point.

I’m not saying that we at the ‘eater were always all business. There were impromptu wrestling matches in the newsroom, the copy desk kept a near-sacred toy dinosaur and I tortured my photographers by opening every production night in the photo cave with Old Crow Medicine Show’s “Wagon Wheel.” Maneater people worked together, lived together, studied together and went on adventures together. It was college.

© 2008. News editors Michael, Anna, Elliot and Roseann take a break during one of the 2007-2008 staff's last production nights in May 2008.

To the current Maneater staff, and other student journalists: You are still young, so make your mistakes now and learn from them. (I did.) You’ve got a lot of years ahead of you, so buckle up, take the wheel and enjoy the ride.

To everyone who’s jeering at and judging The Maneater: Stop. The editors who resigned have learned their lessons. They weren’t the first (student) journalists to err, but they won’t be the last. Life goes on.

This, from my prospective, is the ultimate takeaway: Maneater staffers and editors mess up sometimes. But more often than not, they get it right when it comes to helping along the next generation of student journalists and upholding the newspaper’s reputation as a passionate, forward-thinking place to work and learn.

Yesterday late afternoon, we heard reports of a traffic incident clogging up both northbound lanes of I-83 near Loganville. Then we learned that a backhoe being hauled on a tractor-trailer had struck the Loganville overpass bridge, that PennDOT was inspecting the bridge before opening the highway up for traffic and that it’d be a while before the highway would be opened up for traffic. Then we started hearing about people setting up lawn chairs as they waited.

So I headed down there, parked my car where it wouldn’t be a problem and hiked out to the overpass.

This was the centerpiece on our front page today:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. A woman walks back to her car as two young children skip beside her on the center shoulder of I-83 northbound, just south of the North Street bridge at the Loganville exit on Thursday, April 5, 2012. A tractor-trailer carrying a backhoe clogged up both northbound lanes on I-83 for three hours after the backhoe hit the bridge that serves as the exit.

And here’s a “cigar guy” photo that wasn’t published:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. A PennDOT worker smokes a cigar as he and other workers cleaned up the area underneath the bridge and inspected the underside of the bridge where the backhoe had struck.

Softball was one of the few mainstream sports I’d never shot, at least until yesterday.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Central York's Courtney Hastings slides safely into home in the seventh inning against Spring Grove to score the game's only run on Thursday, March 29, 2012.