Clackamas Print

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Clackamas Print

The front page of the "Crisis in leadership" special edition of The Clackamas Print, from September 27, 2006.
Type Student newspaper
Format Tabloid

Owner
Editor Sam Krause
Katie Wilson
Founded 1966
Price Free
Headquarters 19600 S Molalla Ave
Oregon City, OR 97045
Flag of the United States United States

Website: ClackamasNews.net

The Clackamas Print is the student newspaper of Clackamas Community College. It was established in 1966. According to the newspaper's staff and information box, its goal is to "report the news in an honest, unbiased, professional manner." The Print has a loose relationship with Clackamas News Online, the college's video journalism outlet.

Contents

[edit] Distribution

The paper is distributed every Wednesday, typically excluding the first two weeks of a term and finals week. It is distributed across the college's main campus by hand and mailed to the satellite campuses.

[edit] Staff

Participation in The Print is offered through credit courses in Clackamas Community's journalism department. The staff consists of students who have signed up for at least one of the two production-oriented classes: one focusing on the writing and photography used in the paper, the other to design each week's layout.[1]

[edit] Crisis in leadership

In the fall of 2006, The Print broke a story about the college's president, Earl P. "Joe" Johnson, after he was asked to step down by eleven of the college deans.[2] The incident drew attention not only toward Johnson himself, but also toward The Print. After the story was picked up by other area papers, including The Oregonian, columnist Andy Parker interviewed Print Co-Editor-In-Chiefs Sam Krause and Katie Wilson about their coverage of the situation.[3] Krause and Wilson later won a first-place award from the 2007 Collegiate Newspaper Contest for their editorial on Johnson's separation from the college.[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Clackamas Community College Fall Preview 2007 (Page 67), Clackamas Community College, 2007, <http://www.clackamas.edu/documents/schedule-fp.pdf>. Retrieved on 24 May 2007 
  2. ^ Pardington, Suzanne (2006-11-10), “College severs ties with its president”, The Oregonian 
  3. ^ Parker, Andy (2006-11-29), “College needs a class in transparency”, The Oregonian 
  4. ^ 2007 Collegiate Newspapers Contest: Winners Page. Retrieved on 2007-05-24.