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I never really had any intention of leaving," says Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Jim Sheeler, who recently resigned from the Rocky Mountain News in order to take a position at the University of Colorado in Boulder. "The Rocky's been a great place for me, and the staff is incredibly friendly." After a barely perceptible pause, he adds, "The staff that's left..."

Talk about a telling aside. Like many metropolitan dailies across the country, the Rocky is steadily shedding employees, and not just long-timers who've accepted buyout packages that provide compensation keyed to their years of service. Increasingly, editorial types of every age and description are choosing to go elsewhere rather than remain in an industry that's either in transition or dying, depending upon one's level of fatalism.

CU has been a major beneficiary of the ongoing exodus, with three Pulitzer champs leaping to the university over the past six months. Last September, Dave Curtin, a onetime Colorado Springs Gazette scribe who took the 1990 feature-writing trophy for "Adam & Megan," a moving tale about two young burn victims, came aboard as assistant director of executive communications; his duties include editing speeches and op-ed pieces by CU chancellor G.P. "Bud" Peterson. Then, on February 19, Glenn Asakawa, who was part of the Rocky photography crew awarded a 2000 Pulitzer for images captured following the shootings at Columbine High School, began a new job as a staff photographer in CU's communications department. And Sheeler's agreed to teach a journalism course focusing on his specialty, storytelling. The gig doesn't begin until the fall, but he bid farewell to the Rocky on Valentine's Day, in part because of another significant item on his agenda. Final Salute: A Story of Unfinished Lives, a book based on "Final Salute," which earned the 2006 feature-writing Pulitzer for its portrait of an officer charged with informing family members that a loved one died in combat, will be published by Penguin Press on May 6, and Sheeler is scheduled to star in a coast-to-coast book tour.

Like his fellow CU toilers, Curtin looks back with fondness on his life in print. "I had a thirty-year Colorado newspaper career," he says. "I took the grand tour of the state and enjoyed every stop." He kicked things off at the Littleton Independent circa 1975 while still a student at Bear Creek High School, and after earning a CU journalism degree, he wrote for a succession of publications: the Boulder Daily Camera, the Greeley Tribune, the Durango Herald, the aforementioned Gazette, and the Denver Post, beginning in 1997. But after nine years at the Post, during which he often covered education-related topics, he began to wonder how much longer his job would be there for him. "I wanted to determine my own destiny," he allows, "and that seemed increasingly unlikely in the newspaper business." So he kept his eyes open for other opportunities and found one at Metropolitan State College, where he served as a spokesman for nine months before sliding into his current slot at CU. Since then, he's stayed in touch with many friends from his reporting days, and he admits that quite a few "have expressed envy that I've gotten out and said they'd like to do the same thing." In other words, they're on the lookout, too.

Like Curtin, Asakawa has a CU sheepskin to his credit, and after receiving it in the late '80s, he snapped for the Daily Camera and the Los Angeles Daily News before joining the Rocky team. He won deserved plaudits for his Columbine photos, but spending so much time delving into the tragedy proved "a very difficult professional experience," he says. "It was so hard, and being part of the community just made it that much harder." In the end, he opted for a change in scenery, switching to the Post in 2000. He talks up his experience there, lavishing praise on his boss, assistant managing editor/photography Tim Rasmussen. But as a family man (he's married, with two school-age kids), he began to worry about his financial prospects if the newspapering downturn continues. "The opportunities here at CU are much more long-term," he believes. "It's nice being able to look five or ten years down the road and realize there's still a lot to be pursuing at the university and higher ed." Indeed, he's even considered seeking a master's degree so that he can teach at the school.

Sheeler's already gone through this process. He'd nearly completed masters requirements at CU in 1990 when he was hired by the Daily Camera, and as the years passed, he kept promising himself he'd finish things up one day. In 2007, he finally did via a thesis that expanded on a March 2007 Rocky story about a campaign to secure the Distinguished Service Cross for Lieutenant Colonel Felix Sparks, a war hero who was nearly ninety years old and in failing health. Sparks died a few months later, and Sheeler, whose singular obituaries form the basis of the 2007 book Obit, did the honors.

Write Your Comment show comments (2)
  1. Awesome! Maybe they can teach Max Karson how to write well, and teach the editors of the Campus Press the difference between good journalism vs. bad. Schweeeeet!

  2. The future of print journalism is not lost if they quit trying to do what broadcast journalism has become adept at doing -- report the headlines first -- and switch to what can never be done in a 20-second sound bite, which is to report all sides of the issue in depth. An analysis of the personalities, the history of the issue, the veracity of the statements made, etc, would, in my judgment, be of enough value to readers to motivate them to pay for and read a paper. You are not selling papers because too often you are not printing anything we can't get just as well elsewhere for free.

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