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Newseum

 


Newseum Blends High-Tech
With Historical

The Newseum — a 250,000-square-foot museum of news — offers visitors an experience that blends five centuries of news history with up-to-the-second technology and hands-on exhibits.

The Newseum is located at the intersection of Pennsylvania Avenue and Sixth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., on America’s Main Street between the White House and the U.S. Capitol and adjacent to the Smithsonian museums on the National Mall. The exterior’s unique architectural features include a 74-foot-high marble engraving of the First Amendment and an immense front wall of glass through which passers-by can watch the museum fulfill its mission of providing a forum where the media and the public can gain a better understanding of each other.

The Newseum features seven levels of galleries, theaters, retail spaces and visitor services. Its 14 galleries, 15 theaters, two state-of-the-art broadcast studios and dozens of interactive activities offer a unique environment that takes museumgoers behind the scenes to experience how and why news is made.

Some of our visitors' favorites include:

  • The Pulitzer Prize Photographs Gallery, which boasts the most comprehensive collection of prize-winning photographs.

  • The News Corp. News History Gallery, where 500 years of newspaper front pages create a timeline of history as news.

  • The Berlin Wall Gallery, where visitors can stand beneath eight 12-foot-tall concrete sections of the original wall and a three-story guard tower.

  • The NBC News Interactive Newsroom, which provides fun for the whole family with news-themed games and the chance to give a live report on camera.

  • "I-Witness!", a 4-D time-travel adventure movie about three inspiring journalists and their impact on history.

"Visitors will come away with a better understanding of news and the important role it plays in all of our lives," said Newseum Executive Director and Senior Vice President Joe Urschel. "The new Newseum is educational, inspirational and a whole lot of fun."

To plan your visit, click newseum.org or call 888/NEWSEUM.

Every day, newseum.org features more than 500 newspaper front pages from around the world. Click here for links to the newspapers that participate. For an archive of past recaps, visit the Today’s Front Pages Archive here.

First Amendment Center
SPEECH
2nd Circuit won't halt NYC mayor's run for 3rd term
Panel finds no statutory or constitutional reason to block law allowing term-limits extension, saying "It is not the role of this Court to interject itself into city politics."


ANALYSIS
FCC's 'fleeting expletives' policy in place for now
By Tony Mauro — 2nd Circuit to conduct free-speech review. Analysis:
Thomas questions precedents

ANALYSIS
'Concurring' justice again questions precedent
By David L. Hudson Jr. — While colleagues decide FCC v. Fox on procedural grounds, Clarence Thomas addresses underlying free-speech issues.


PRESS
Wash. Legislature OKs tax
cut for newspapers

If bill becomes law, business and occupation tax on newspapers will be cut by 40% through 2015.


SPEECH
Court leaves FCC 'fleeting expletives' rules in place
Justices tell lower court to determine if policy is in line with First Amendment.


FREEDOM OF INFORMATION
Ohio high court: Governor largely followed records law
Justices find Ted Strickland erred by not acknowledging receipt of state representative's initial March 12 request and not providing timeline for documents' release.


COMMENTARY
In public schools, religion by any other name is still religion
By Charles C. Haynes — Kabballah Centre's 'Spirituality for Kids' program in L.A. schools doesn't comport with spirit of First Amendment.


NEWS RELEASE
Nashville hosts copyright conference
Members of the U.S. Copyright Office are holding a daylong discussion at the First Amendment Center today.


About Journalist Memorial

Newseum Journalists Memorial
The Journalists Memorial, located in the Newseum in Washington, D.C., pays tribute to reporters, photographers and broadcasters who have died reporting the news. The names of 1,913 individuals from around the world are etched on the glass panels of the soaring, two-story structure.


Diversity

American Indian Journalism Institute student applications due by March 1
An academic, scholarship and internship program run by the Freedom Forum at The University of South Dakota, the American Indian Journalism Institute is the premier journalism training and newsroom internship program for Native American college students. Click here
to read more about the program and complete an application.

Freedom Forum Names
11 Chips Quinn Scholars for Spring 2009 Internship Program

Eleven students and young journalists from diverse backgrounds have been named Chips Quinn Scholars for spring 2009 by the Freedom Forum Diversity Institute and participating news organizations.


Photojournalism students capture local flavor
Six photojournalism students
at the American Indian Journalism Institute in Vermillion, S.D., covered local events, traditions and people, producing a slideshow gallery
of their work. For samples of the AIJI students’ efforts in print, read two issues of the Native Journal.

Nancy Maynard, Champion of Newsroom Diversity, Dies at 61
Nancy Hicks Maynard, a pioneering African-American reporter and former co-publisher of the Oakland Tribune who dedicated her career to diversifying the nation’s newsrooms, died Sept. 21 in Los Angeles.


   Last system update: Thursday, May 7, 2009 | 19:55:21