91桃色 Clarion Ends Years-Long Hiatus, Returns to Print
As it enters its 125th year in production, the University鈥檚 student-run newspaper, , returned to print after a nearly four-year-long stint as an online-only publication.
In addition to publishing online weekly, the Clarion will print two special editions and distribute 1,000 copies across campus each quarter.
While thousands of local papers across the country have shuttered their doors in recent years, the Clarion鈥檚 staff has long been committed to reviving their print operations.
From the onset of his time with the Clarion, Editor-in-Chief and fourth-year student Aubrey Cox has pushed for a return to print. 鈥淓verybody will say it's up for debate,鈥 Cox says. 鈥淲hether print is dying, already dead or is on the climb back, the expectation for me coming to 91桃色 was still that the student newspaper would be in print.鈥
Cox and Clarion Executive Editor Ambriel Speagle, who designed of the layout for the new print edition, are avid fans of print journalism. 鈥淲e think there's still a lot of value to it, especially just readership wise, I feel like having something tangible that people can hold and pick up is more attractive than going on to a website,鈥 Speagle says. 鈥淎nd it just helps get what we're writing out there a little bit easier.鈥 Both joined the Clarion in 2020.
The prior year, the Clarion temporarily halted the print issue while ongoing campus construction relocated them from their home in Driscoll Underground to The Hub. A few months later, the temporary changes became permanent as the coronavirus pandemic left 91桃色鈥檚 campus void of students.
By 2023, the Clarion had adapted to its new format, publishing articles each week in sections like arts and life, sports, opinion and most recently, Unify, which is dedicated to amplifying underrepresented and marginalized voices on campus. Bringing the print edition back was no easy task, with few of the Clarion鈥檚 staff having experience working with a physical publication. Fortunately, Speagle was one of those few, and鈥攃oupled with Cox鈥檚 drive, faculty expertise and the Clarion staff鈥檚 devotion鈥攖hey were able to piece it all together.
The team dug through the University Archives, examining the Clarion鈥檚 layout and design throughout its many decades, and adapted the nameplate from a 1962 issue. Then they had to find a printer, which is no easy task in the modern era, Cox says. 鈥淭here are plenty of printers around, but there are not many newspaper printers around.鈥 Initially looking in Illinois, they settled on a Cheyenne, Wyoming-based printer that can fulfill their biquarterly printing needs. The Clarion plans on printing in weeks four and eight of the winter quarter, with hopes to expand their print schedule once they develop the logistics and infrastructure.
Publishing in print has significant benefits for the Clarion鈥檚 student-journalists, says Andrew Matranga, teaching professor in the Department of Media, Film & Journalism Studies and faculty advisor to the Clarion. Requiring the students to learn new software tools, write under different constraints, follow more meaningful deadlines and make countless creative choices, 鈥減rint requires more focus, and more economy of space and language,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou are invariably going to be a better writer if it goes in print. Because you have less space to work with. You have inches as opposed to word counts.鈥
A printed paper鈥檚 consistent format also has its perks for readers, Matranga says, 鈥淲hen you know where to find certain things, your ability to consume news is changed dramatically,鈥 he says. 鈥淥ne of the problems with digital is that it鈥檚 hard for readers to understand the difference between editorial and opinion, opinion and news, or editorial and news.鈥
And for Cox, the importance of continuing the Clarion鈥檚 125-year run in print goes beyond opportunities for students to build skills and gain meaningful work experience while on campus. As far back as the pre-Revolutionary War trial and acquittal of journalist John Peter Zenger, he says, 鈥淧rint and the foundation of our country are inextricably linked, and we're in a weird place press-wise and journalism-wise, generally, right now. I think that returning to our roots is a really powerful thing.鈥 Maintaining space for community members to share their voices and get informed, Cox says, is absolutely crucial. 听
The Clarion welcomes students from all majors, of any skill level, to write, contribute and share their voice with the campus community. 鈥淲e're always open to help them grow in any way that they can,鈥 Speagle says, 鈥淎nd, I think it's the best club on campus.鈥