Columbia Daily Spectator
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Columbia Daily Spectator | |
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| Type | Daily newspaper |
| Format | Broadsheet |
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| Owner | Independent |
| Founded | 1877 |
| Headquarters | New York, New York |
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| Website: www.columbiaspectator.com | |
Columbia Daily Spectator is the daily newspaper, written by Columbia University undergraduates, servicing the university community and the neighborhood of Morningside Heights. It is published in the Spectator Building at 112th and Broadway in New York, New York. Founded in 1877, it is the oldest continually operating college news daily in the nation after The Harvard Crimson, and has been financially independent of the university since 1962. It is printed weekdays during the academic term. In addition to serving as a campus newspaper, The Spec, as it is commonly known, also reports the latest news of the surrounding Morningside Heights community. The paper is delivered each day to over 150 locations throughout the Morningside Heights neighborhood and counts a readership of over 10,000.
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[edit] Organization
Spectator's writing departments, each headed by an editor, include campus news, city news, sports, arts and entertainment, and opinion. The other non-writing departments, also headed by their own respective editors, include photography, new media, production, copy, and business. The business department, which oversees the newspaper's advertising and finances, is headed by the publisher.
Spec is currently run by the 132nd managing board. First-time writers at Columbia begin their time at the paper with a 1- to 2-month trial period, during which they learn the basics of writing an article and publish their first articles. At some point, when their department editor sees fit, they become staff writers. Each November and December, students run for positions at the paper, a grueling process that takes nearly a month. They begin by "shadowing," or sitting with the current editors or associate editors and learning the editing process. Next they write proposals for their desired position. The students then take an editing test made up by their department editor that tests them on the fundamentals of editing. Finally, they go through the "Turkey Shoot," an interview in which the current managing board grills the applicant on why the writer feels that they would be a good fit for the position. The results of the application process, including the new managing board are announced in mid-December, the weekend before finals.
[edit] Recent spinoffs
In 2005, Spec started printing La Página, a weekly flyer in Spanish with translations of some of the week's English content most relevant to neighborhood readers.
The next year, in February 2006, the paper launched a series of blogs, aptly named SpecBlogs. They were the third Ivy League paper to do this, after the Harvard Crimson 's Sports Blog (December 2005) and The Daily Pennsylvanian 's TheBuzz (January 2006). SpecBlogs, however, soon became defunct. Another blogging effort, launched in October 2006 to cover the 2006 midterm elections, proved more successful. The organization has now launched a new blogging domain, with sharp new design and a more focused vision. The Sports and News departments focus their blogging around specific issues, like an athletic team's season or the recent visit of Iran president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to campus.
In September 2006, Spectator staff launched The Eye, a weekly magazine featuring investigative pieces and commentary on Columbia and New York City. The name of The Eye relates both to the fact that one "spectates" with it and urban theorist Jane Jacobs' notion that "eyes on the street" help keep neighborhoods safe. The magazine is appropriately subtitled "Columbia on the Street".
[edit] Current Management
Editor in Chief: Tom Faure
Publisher: Manal Alam
Managing Editor: Amanda Sebba
Eye EIC: Alexandria Symonds
Eye Managing Editor Features: Hayley Negrin
Eye Managing Editor A&E: Alison Bumke
Opinion: Miriam Krule
Campus News: Jacob Schneider
City News: Melissa Repko
Sports: Kavitha Davidson and Matt Velazquez
Arts & Entertainment: Elizabeth Simins
Copy Editor: Jordan Fraade
Photo Editor: Linda Carrion
Production Editors: Haley Vecchiarelli and Madeleine Lopeman
Finance: Darrow Slade Godeski Merton
Sales: Michael Topol
Alumni: Julia Feldberg
Online Editor: Lara Chelak
[edit] Recent Editors in Chief
2008, 132nd MB - Tom Faure
2007, 131st MB - John Davisson
2006, 130th MB - Steve Moncada
2005, 129th MB - Megan Greenwell
2004, 128th MB - Nick Summers
2003, 127th MB - Telis Demos
2002, 126th MB - Alice Boone
2001, 125th MB - Michael Mirer
2000, 124th MB - Dan Laidman
1999, 123rd MB - Nathan Hale
1998, 122nd MB - Eli Sanders
1997, 121st MB - Kim Van Duzer
1996, 120th MB - Hans Chen
1995, 119th MB - Peter Freeman
1994, 118th MB - Ruth Halikman
1993, 117th MB - Elizabeth Berke
1992, 116th MB - Kristina Nye
1991, 115th MB - Kirsten Danis
1990, 114th MB - Julie Zuckerman
1989, 113th MB - Josh Gillette
1988, 112th MB - Tracy Connor
1987, 111th MB - Sara Just
1986, 110th MB - Jacqueline Shea Murphy
[edit] Recent Publishers
2008, 132nd MB - Manal Alam
2007, 131st MB - John Mascari
2006, 130th MB - John Mascari
2006, 130th MB - Jacob Olson
2005, 129th MB - Chase Behringer
2004, 128th MB - Tanner Zucker
2003, 127th MB - Amit Melwani
[edit] Notable Spec Alumni
- David Alpern, former senior writer and current contributing editor for Newsweek
- Lou Antonelli, Texas-based science fiction and fantasy author
- R.W. Apple, senior staff writer for The New York Times, serving as a foreign correspondent for over 30 years
- Roone Arledge, sportscaster and head of ABC News; created 20/20 and Nightline in addition to Monday Night Football
- Naftali Bendavid Deputy Washington bureau chief of the Chicago Tribune and author of The Thumpin': How Rahm Emanuel and the Democrats Learned to Be Ruthless and Ended the Republican Revolution
- Arnold Beichman, conservative commentator
- Kate Boo, writer for The New Yorker and winner of the Pulitzer Prize
- Marcus Brauchli, Former Managing Editor of the Wall Street Journal
- Bennett Cerf, co-founder of Random House
- Elizabeth Cohen, CNN reporter
- Matthew Cooper, Portfolio columnist
- Morris Dickstein, noted literary critic and professor at CUNY
- Joe Ferullo, Vice President of Programming and Development for CBS Paramount Domestic Television
- Max Frankel, executive editor of The New York Times
- Ruth Franklin, senior literary editor at The New Republic
- Robert Friedman, former international editor of Fortune
- Julius Genachowski, technology executive and adviser to Senator Barack Obama
- Ralph J. Gleason, music critic
- Dan Janison, reporter and columnist for New York Newsday
- Jack Kerouac, Beat Generation novelist
- Vi Kyuin Wellington Koo, Chinese diplomat
- Tony Kushner, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright; author of Angels in America
- Langston Hughes, poet, novelist and playwright
- John R. MacArthur, publisher of Harper's magazine
- Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Academy award-winning movie director
- Dienda Madiq, music promoter
- Michael Mukasey, US Attorney General
- Michael Musto, New York City journalist and media gadfly
- Jed Perl, author and art critic of The New Republic
- Ted Rall, political cartoonist
- Warren St. John, New York Times reporter
- Dick Wald, former president of NBC
- Steven Waldman, journalist and founder of Beliefnet.com
- Michael Waldman, speechwriter and advisor for President Bill Clinton
- Sharon Waxman, New York Times reporter
- James Wechsler, chief editor of the New York Post
- Herman Wouk, author
- Paul Zimmerman, columnist for Sports Illustrated (as "Dr. Z")
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Columbia Daily Spectator online
- The Eye weekly magazine
- SpecBlogs


