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Students in new SOC class witness primary elections, meet presidential candidates and make documentaries on election issues

By Patricio Chile on 1/17/08

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While Sens. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and John McCain, R-Ariz., were winning their respective parties' New Hampshire primaries, 28 AU students documented the political event as part of a School of Communication course.

In the course, "Special Topics in News Media: Covering the 2008 Presidential Election," students divided into six small groups. Each group produced a three to five-minute documentary that focused on a specific issue, according to Dotty Lynch, an SOC professor who teaches the course with SOC professors Lynne Perri and Bill Gentile. Three other SOC professors - former USA Today White House correspondent Richard Benedetto, former ABC News correspondent James Wooten and political reporter Jules Witcover - also advised the students during the trip. All three will continue to be involved throughout the remainder of the course.

The experience allowed the students to see the primary process and the candidates in a new light. After a visit to a Clinton speech Jan. 7, many of the students were engaged in discussing her positions on the issues, Lynch said.

"It gave them a much better sense of how people were making up their minds," she said.

Observing the candidates up close also allowed the students to see them as regular people rather than icons. Cait Douglas, a senior in SOC and the School of Public Affairs, said she saw Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., and McCain speak. The physical and emotional tolls on both candidates were visible, according to Douglas, but she said their passion impressed her.

"They were lacking as much sleep as we were," Douglas said. "They're people, too."

Douglas and her group members are producing a documentary on young veterans from Iraq and how their service has influenced who they are supporting in the 2008 election. The group's work details two such veterans - one campaigning with other veterans on behalf of McCain and another who is against the war and came to New Hampshire to protest at different primary events, according to Douglas.
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