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Sports writer/Crawfordsville, Ind.

Discussion in 'Journalism Jobs' started by koolbreeze, Jun 27, 2008.

  1. Songbird

    Songbird Well-Known Member

    Is it anywhere near Anderson? Stayed there a few times.
     
  2. Other side of Indy.
     
  3. 0-fer

    0-fer Member

    Crawfordsville, located northwest of Indianapolis off Interstate 74, is just under an hour from Indy and a half hour from Lafayette.
    The town itself is nothing special. It has one kind of cool bar, which conveniently is right next door to the JR offices, and the rest is pretty much garbage. There is very little in the way of nice scenery in Cville unless you're partial to the landscape variety.
    It will probably seem like a quaint place until you start hearing from readers and realize the whole county is chock full of idiots.
    The notion of covering Purdue is worth mentioning.
    As long as Heater is in charge, covering Purdue, IU, Notre Dame, the Pacers and the Colts are possibilities. He came late last fall and we actually went from barely mentioning the big sports colleges and franchises to putting every Colts game story, off the wire, on the front and trying to get as much major college coverage, off the wire, into the section as possible.
    He indicated this coming fall he'd like to actually cover some of that stuff instead of using AP. My feel on that is if you can manage the prep stuff and layout and a job that essentially takes you over 40 hours a week and want to cover any of the big sports stuff, you'll have the opportunity. I don't know how much of that is going to come on your own dime, but just having the chance might be worth the $10/hour you'll be making.
     
  4. 0-fer

    0-fer Member

    Re Songbird: Crawfordsville is pretty small, but not like one stoplight small. From places like Covington, Veedersburg, Thorntown and the like, Cville is actually the big town where people go to buy groceries or shop at Wal-Mart. I'd liken it to Greencastle if you're at all familiar, or maybe Lebanon, Ind. I'm trying to compare it to towns in different states, and the best I've come up with is that Crawfordsville is like a town off the interstate that you drive through, maybe stop to grab some food, on your way to your intended destination. It has like two fairly nice restaurants, then it has an Applebee's, BW3s, a few Mexican places, and most of the fast food joints you'd find elsewhere. Cville doesn't stink literally, but figuratively many would - and do - agree it does.

    Re Panther: You can easily go to Lafayette for much better bars, although you should note there WILL be a state trooper or county sheriff on U.S. 231 between Crawfordsville and Lafayette every night.
    Lafayette also provides a better dating scene as, if you're interested in girls, it's pretty slim pickings in Cville, although if you're interested in guys you've got a lot more options since there is an all-male D3 college in town - which you'll cover with entirely too much copy - and for some reason some of those guys stick around town.
    If you're from a big city, it will definitely be a culture shock and it will likely be a long time, if ever, before you look back at Crawfordsville as a decent area to live and work.
     
  5. crimsonace

    crimsonace Well-Known Member

    Crawfordsville is like a lot of small towns that aren't close to very much. It's very similar to Greencastle, 30 miles to the south, which I lived/worked in for a year (and made $15K doing it). There's not a lot to do in town, and there aren't a lot of 20-something single people to do anything with (other than the 20-something single people that you probably won't be going out of your way to hang around). The big annual event is the Ben Hur Festival (author Lew Wallace is from Crawfordsville), which is one of those shut-down-the-town-square and have a craft fair things. The other big event for the locals is the county fair, but that's pretty much par for the course in most Indiana counties.

    There is competition -- there is another paper (called "The Paper") that circulates Montgomery County, founded when a few local merchants got upset with the J-R's cutbacks in coverage a few years back (at least that's what the story that's been told me is ... thirdhand from a former J-R staffer) and decided to put their money where their mouth is and bankroll a paper. Crawfordsville is one of the smallest towns in the country with competing dailies.

    Purdue is 30 minutes away, and that's probably where you'll end up going for fun. There is an all-male D3 school in Wabash College (which is one of the top academic schools in the country ... just ask them). Indianapolis is a 45-minute drive away, and you should have opportunities to cover the Colts/Pacers/IMS events. Crawfordsville is far enough away from Indy that its readers see the J-R as their primary paper, so they want to read the pro stuff -- not just the HS coverage, so you should be able to cover those things if you want to. They used to cover IU and Purdue regularly, as well, but that's when they had a 3-person staff.

    The cool thing is, you'll get to cover the single-best small-college event in the country -- the DePauw-Wabash Monon Bell football game. I've been to quite a few Big Ten games, but nothing matches the atmosphere and on-field intensity I've experienced at the Monon Bell game. Wabash is usually a pretty strong football program (bonus: alma mater of Pete Metzelaars, who was a starter on Wabash's national championship basketball team in the early 1980s).

    In addition to Wabash, there are three high schools in the county, all mid-sized -- the town school (Crawfordsville HS, home of Indiana's first basketball state champions ... Crawfordsville is the home of the first basketball game ever played in Indiana), plus two consolidated county schools north & south of town. They have in the past provided some coverage of 4 or 5 fringe area schools outside the county, but I'm not sure they do that anymore. Crawfordsville HS won the Indiana 3A baseball title this year, and seems to be strong at both diamond sports. North Montgomery was a football power a decade or so ago, but other than that, they really don't stand out athletically.

    For those with a mind to do some history enterprise stuff, there's some really cool opportunities. We're two years away from the 100th anniversary of Crawfordsville being the inaugural state champions in basketball. Wingate, which is a few miles up the road in the North Montgomery district, won back-to-back state titles in 1913-14 with an enrollment of less than 20 boys. One of them, Homer Stonebreaker, is considered the greatest of the early Indiana basketball players. They backed it up in 1919, when Wingate went to Chicago and won the national prep invitational (they & Crawfordsville both got suspended from the IHSAA that year over some recruiting spat, and faced each other in the finals of the national tournament instead).
     
  6. playthrough

    playthrough Moderator Staff Member

    Dammit crimsonace, could you please tell us some things we don't know? The Homer Stonebreaker thread went 20 pages last year.
     
  7. 0-fer

    0-fer Member

    Homer Stonebraker was an 8-foot, 2-ton mountain of a man. His family crest is a picture of a barracuda eating Neil Armstrong.
     
  8. 0-fer

    0-fer Member

    Interviews start Monday. If you plan to apply, do so with haste.
     
  9. agateguy

    agateguy Member

    I'm getting the sense that Crawfordsville would be for most people what Chicago was to Lewis Grizzard.
     
  10. Songbird

    Songbird Well-Known Member

    The question is, who was "Crawford," and why did he get a ville named after him?
     
  11. thebigd

    thebigd Member

    Hey O-fer, does indiana get much snow?
     
  12. 0-fer

    0-fer Member

    It gets some snow. Nothing like the Northeast, but depending on how mild the winter is, you could see a dozen or so days with 2-3 inches (a good winter) or about as many days with 2-3 inches along with two or three stretches where it dumps over 6 inches.
     
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