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New journalism director takes office

Bath - Jane Briggs-Bunting sat in the middle of her new condominium surrounded by open space, a few boxes filled with pictures and a rocking chair - one of the two places to sit in her canary yellow living room.

The cable guy had left and MSU's new School of Journalism director was trying to figure out how the new system functions.

She was waiting for the moving company to deliver some more of her furniture as she began this interview.

"You get to the point when you are in chaos," Briggs-Bunting said. "I'm leaving everything I know - my husband's not here, my horse isn't here.

"I'll miss my chickens, they lay good eggs."

Besides getting used to the fire engine red-flowered wallpaper in her bathroom, Briggs-Bunting also has been adjusting to her new life as a Spartan since Aug. 1, when she officially began working.

Briggs-Bunting replaced Steve Lacy, who served as director for the school for the past five years and will be returning as a faculty member.

"I'll probably run in there and just sit and listen to people," she said. "I'm a member of a team."

But at first Briggs-Bunting wasn't sure she would fit in at MSU because she didn't have a doctoral degree.

"Actually I ignored the ad," she said. "I said 'They wouldn't want me.'"

She came around once she realized there was a balance of academia and real world experience ingrained in members of the journalism faculty.

But Briggs-Bunting is not new to the world of academia. For the past 24 years she worked for Oakland University in a variety of positions including director of the school's journalism program, professor and adviser to the student-run Oakland Post. This year she was inducted into the Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame.

Prior to that, she worked as a general assignment and cops reporter for the Detroit Free Press and as a reporter for People and Life magazines.

"She has a strong record as a teacher and as an administrator, and someone who is committed to high standards in journalism and defending First Amendment rights," said James Spaniolo, dean of the College of Communication Arts and Sciences.

And Briggs-Bunting makes no joke of her passion for the First Amendment.

"The First Amendment is my heart and soul," she said, adding the right to be free and question the government is a powerful tool for the press and the people.

While adviser at The Oakland Post, newspaper members challenged a closed meeting held by the university's Board of Trustees.

Briggs-Bunting will also be the instructor for media law and computer-assisted reporting courses along with her duties as director.

"My job is to teach students," she said. "I don't want you to graduate and work at McDonald's."

But MSU students can expect classes taught by Briggs-Bunting to be rigorous, said Rebecca Wyatt, Oakland Post editor in chief and a former student of Briggs-Bunting.

"She has a reputation of having a tough class," Wyatt said. "(The law class) was a very demanding class.

"The knowledge you walked away with that class was wonderful."

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