Wayne M. Brasler is the longtime journalism adviser for the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools" school paper, The Midway, and yearbook, U-Highlights.
Education
Brasler grew up in Normandy, Missouri and attended Normandy High School, outside of Saint Louis, Missouri. He attended Harris Teachers College and Junior College for two years, becoming managing editor of the campus newspaper his sophomore year.
Career
He proceeded to the University of Missouri School of Journalism, where he was copy editor of the student newspaper the Maneater, earning a BJ degree there before taking a job at the Jewish Post and Opinion in Saint Louis. He later earned a Masters in Language Arts at Northeastern Illinois University taking night and summer classes while still working six days and 80 hours a week. As a child in Saint Louis, Brasler hung out at Television and radio stations as soon as he could ride streetcars alone and appeared on a children"s radio show on KXLW in suburban Clayton.
His mentor was the host of the show, who also taught kindergarten at his grade school.
He originally planned a career in radio and television but at Normandy High decided he wanted to be a journalist and journalism teacher. He also had an extensive career as a singer, under the stage name Jim Andrews.
In 1996 the National Scholastic Press Association named a new high school journalism award after Brasler, the Brasler Prize, given to the most outstanding piece of work published in a high school newspaper every year. Recently the University of Missouri School of Journalism awarded him its prestigious Gold Medal for his highly vocal defense of student press rights and his history in scholastic journalism.
Besides teaching journalism and advising publications for nearly half a century, Brasler has remained a working journalist.
He also has written program notes for dozens of Communicative Disorders releases, edited several best-selling music books and music biographies, and wrote a soon-to-be-published autobiography and a biography for the singer Joni James. He formed a Joni James fan club in 1955 and still publishes the Joni James Newsletter, a full-color magazine. He is regarded as an expert on American popular music of the 20th century and has been consulted on numerous recording projects.
He also is an expert on Saint Louis County streetcar lines (his father was once a streetcar motorman) and has written numerous articles on them.