Minnesota Daily
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| The Minnesota Daily | |
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MNDaily.com logo |
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| Type | Daily/Weekly newspaper |
| Format | Broadsheet |
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| Owner | The Minnesota Daily Board of Directors |
| Publisher | Emily Banks, Michael Marino, Katherine Groth |
| Editor | Vadim Lavrusik, Lisa Zehner |
| Editor-in-Chief | Emily Banks |
| Associate Editor | Mitchell Anderson, Mike Rose, Allison Wickler, Karlee Weinmann |
| Founded | 1900 |
| Language | American English |
| Price | Free |
| Headquarters | Minneapolis, Minnesota |
| Circulation | 24,000 (Daily) |
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| Website: www.mndaily.com | |
The Minnesota Daily is the campus newspaper of the University of Minnesota Twin Cities, published every weekday while school is in session, and published weekly on Wednesdays during summer sessions. Published since 1900, the paper is one of the largest student-run and student-written newspapers in the United States and the fourth-largest paper in the state of Minnesota. The paper is independent from the University, but receives $550,000 worth of University funding.[1]
The Daily has a distribution of 24,000 copies per day - available at over 200 locations on and near campus free of charge, as it is largely funded by advertising. A typical edition has about a dozen pages, with a special sports section every Monday and arts & entertainment section every Thursday. The Daily also provides readers with several special issues, including voters guides, employment guides, housing guides, survival guides (published the first day of school) and even parody issues - distributed during finals weeks.
The Minnesota Daily is entirely student-run and student-written, with an average staff of 175 students per semester. The newspaper dually operates as a training institution, providing students with real work experience in journalism, photography, editing, advertising sales, marketing, finance, graphic design, editorial & advertising production, human resources, information systems, public relations, survey research and web programming. In addition, many students gain leadership and delegation skills in the Daily's many management positions.
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[edit] History
Starting in 1877, the student newspaper/magazine at the University of Minnesota was called the Ariel.[2] In 1899, another local newspaper called Football was started by Horace Bagley, Mike Luby and Clarence Miller.[3] Unlike the Ariel, it was published daily. In response, the publishers of the Ariel decided to become a daily paper as well, giving birth to the Minnesota Daily.
There have been a number of notable individuals to work at the paper, including former NAACP leader Roy Wilkins, longtime CBS correspondent Harry Reasoner, radio personality Garrison Keillor and musician Bob Dylan.
The Minnesota Daily was the first college newspaper to provide access to its coverage via the Internet in 1990. The Daily website publishes each day's stories in addition to exclusive web videos, photo slideshows, and additional features.
In 2001, the popular A&E section of the Daily was suddenly shut down by student managers of the paper, which generated much criticism among readers and Daily alumni. Garrison Keillor, who had written for the section while a student at the university, said the choice to shutter the section "is not a decision that journalists would have made, and it diminishes the prestige of the paper." The section was quickly relaunched.[4]
[edit] Awards
The Minnesota Daily won numerous awards in 2005, some highlights from each conference are:
Associated College Press:
- Best of the Midwest
- All-American Rating
- First Place (four-year college broadsheet)
- Best Arts & Entertainment Section
CNBAM:
- Best in Category: Media Kit
- First Place (classified group promotion - Housing Guide)
Society of Professional Journalists:
- Best All-Around Daily Student Newspaper (2nd place)
- 14 Marks of Excellence
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.sua.umn.edu/groups/funding/fees/final-recommendations-08-09.pdf
- ^ Reed, Travis (2000-02-23). Early Daily dominated by sports. Retrieved on 2007-08-08.
- ^ The General Alumni Association; Martin Newell (editor) (1928). The History of Minnesota Football. The General Alumni Association of the University of Minnesota, p 11.
- ^ Monaghan, Peter (March 2001). "At the U. of Minnesota, a Death at the Daily". Chronicle of Higher Education (March 23, 2001).
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