2006.12.03: December 3, 2006: Headlines: Safety: Journalism: Congress: Investigative Journalism: Dayton Daily News: Dayton Daily News Editor Jeff Bruce directed "Casualties of Peace," a project about the dangers faced by Peace Corps volunteers and testified on Peace Corps Safety before Congress
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2006.12.03: December 3, 2006: Headlines: Safety: Journalism: Congress: Investigative Journalism: Dayton Daily News: Dayton Daily News Editor Jeff Bruce directed "Casualties of Peace," a project about the dangers faced by Peace Corps volunteers and testified on Peace Corps Safety before Congress
Dayton Daily News Editor Jeff Bruce directed "Casualties of Peace," a project about the dangers faced by Peace Corps volunteers and testified on Peace Corps Safety before Congress
Recently promoted to editor-in-chief of Cox Ohio Publishing, Bruce also was editor of the DDN when it was recognized three times as Best Newspaper in Ohio by the Society of Professional Journalists. Journalistic efforts under his direction included "Casualties of Peace," a project about the dangers faced by Peace Corps volunteers. His testimony before Congress on Peace Corps Safety can be read here.
Dayton Daily News Editor Jeff Bruce directed "Casualties of Peace," a project about the dangers faced by Peace Corps volunteers and testified on Peace Corps Safety before Congress
Bruce led 'DDN' to three Best Newspaper in Ohio honors ; After nearly 30 years with Cox Newspapers, the retiring editor plans to keep writing and traveling.
Dec 3, 2006
Dayton Daily News
Caption: Dayton Daily News Editor Jeff Bruce testifies before Congress on Peace Corps Safety in 2004.
DAYTON -- The Art of Wine Tasting and a stack of whodunits on the desk of Dayton Daily News Editor Jeff Bruce suggest the life of someone with a little time on his hands.
Come Jan. 1, that could well describe Bruce, who is retiring at the end of the year.
Bruce, who has been with Cox Newspapers nearly 30 years, came to Dayton nine years ago from The Tribune Newspapers in suburban Phoenix.
"It's something I've thought about for a long time, but only recently decided to act on," Bruce, 57, told a packed newsroom Friday afternoon gathered to hear the announcement.
He and his wife, Sandy, live in Beavercreek. They have one daughter, Kacey, who is attending Ohio University, and a son, Logan, who plans to attend Wright State University.
Recently promoted to editorin-chief of Cox Ohio Publishing, Bruce also was editor of the DDN when it was recognized three times as Best Newspaper in Ohio by the Society of Professional Journalists. Other journalistic efforts under his direction included the "Flight of Angels" project about the crash of American Connection Flight 5966 and "Casualties of Peace," a project about the dangers faced by Peace Corps volunteers. Another DDN project during his tenure, "The Foreign Game," about American schools bending rules to attract talented foreign athletes, was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize in 2002.
DDN Publisher Doug Franklin said Bruce's leadership during the "reinvention" of the DDN has gained readership and recognition nationally for innovation.
"Because of Jeff's leadership," Franklin said, "the Dayton Daily News and its reinvention project was included in the '10 That Do It Right' story in the July edition of Editor and Publisher."
Bruce said he is very competitive, and he's "embraced the kinds of challenges" the industry is facing. "That's what has kept me going. We live in the most competitive time in the history of newspapering. At the end of the day, it's not technology that wins, it's the people."
He said he doesn't plan to retire in the true sense, but will continue writing and traveling. He's completed a book he calls "pulp fiction," and is working on another. "I haven't found a publisher," he said.
Bruce said that moving to the Miami Valley from the Phoenix area nine years ago "was a big change. We didn't know how we'd like it. But we have fallen in love with the Dayton area. We have made so many friends. We love the cultural scene and all the amenities. People are very lucky to live here.
"We are very, very proud to have spent this time in Dayton."
Contact this reporter at (937) 225-2353 or cmong@DaytonDailyNews.com.
His testimony before Congress on Peace Corps Safety can be read here.
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Headlines: December, 2006; Safety and Security of Volunteers; Journalism; Congress; Investigative Journalism; Ohio
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Story Source: Dayton Daily News
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Safety; Journalism; Congress; Investigative Journalism
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