The Daily Orange
The Daily Orange, commonly referred to as The D.O.,[4] is an independent student newspaper published in Syracuse, New York. It is free and published once a week during the Syracuse University academic year.
Type | Student newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
School | Syracuse University |
Owner(s) | The Daily Orange Corporation |
Founder(s) | Irving R. Templeton[1] |
Editor-in-chief | Anish Vasudevan |
Managing editor | Kyle Chouinard |
Launched | September 15, 1903[2] |
Headquarters | 230 Euclid Ave Syracuse, New York United States 13210[3] |
Circulation | 6,000 |
Website | www |
Free online archives | Archives |
It was one of the first college papers to become fully independent from its parent college. Its alumni work at nearly every major newspaper in the nation — The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Dallas Morning News, The Boston Globe — in a variety of reporting, editing, design and photography roles.
Publisher reported circulation for 2018 was 6,000 copies, with an online circulation of about 3,000,000 during publishing months. The paper's content is published online daily and the print edition is published every Thursday during the academic year.
History
Early years
The first copy of the newspaper was published on September 15, 1903.[2][5][6][7] Irving R. Templeton, co-founder of the Orange Publishing Company, served as the founding editor of the newspaper.[1][2][8][9] The newspaper set up operations in the Steele Hall,[3][10][11] and accepted advertising.[12][13] From 1903 until at least 1922, a copy cost two cents[2] and the annual subscription cost $2.50 annually,[14][15][16] and all students received mandatory subscription.[17][18]
Syracuse was the third university after Brown and Columbia to have a printing shop owned and operated by students and the first university to own it completely. The printing plant was owned by a corporation known as the Orange Publishing Company, the directors and stockholders of which were all students.[10][19][20] The newspaper even manufactured its own paper with the help of SU students from the College of Forestry.[21]
The D.O. operated as the official university paper but often had fractious relationship with the administration.[12][22][23]
In 1910, The D.O. published an issue that was managed by an all-female team,[24] which later became an annual tradition.[25] In 1939, Elizabeth C. Donnelly, of Syracuse, became the first female to be elected the editor-in-chief.[26]
In 1927, The D.O. started carrying news of the world affairs through the United News Press service making it one the few college papers to do so.[27] In 1933, it was ranked amongst the best college newspapers.[28]
Towards independence
In the mid-1960s, student newspapers all over the U.S. began pressing for separation from the control of the university administration.[29] The D.O. was considered part of SU; the administration had installed a paid business manager and sold advertising to assure enough money to print every day. The administration could possibly influence the content of the paper based on financial holds, which created friction between the administration and the paper. This relationship was further strained by The Daily Orange's criticism over how the school handled highly charged situations such as the racism on the football team and the Vietnam protests.[30][31] In the summer of 1970, The D.O. briefly stopped printing due to lack of financial support.[32]
A major turning point in D.O. history occurred in 1971. In April 1971, the university refused to back The D.O. in a $938,000 libel suit, and also decided to install a new editor without the input of the D.O. staff.[30][33] In May 1971, the editorial staff decided to sever the ties that existed with the administration.[32]
On October 26, 1971,[34] the 'new' D.O. was formed by a merger of The Daily Orange daily (revolutionary socialist) and two weeklies – Dialog (moderate) and Promethean (Liberal Democratic).[30][31][32][35][36] The new paper became a student organization that received funding for production costs from the Student Government Association (now known as the Student Association). A referendum vote determined whether the student body would continue to contribute a portion of its fee.[37]
Full independence
In December 1991, editor-in-chief Jodi Lamagna and her staff decided to refuse any further funding from SGA.[38][39][40] In the process, The D.O. became one of the few completely independent student newspapers in the country.[31][32] Since then, The D.O. has operated with complete financial independence from the university, raising funds necessary for publishing a daily paper through advertising revenue and fundraising. Though it still maintains a business relationship with the university, in regards to its status as a student group and its housing agreement, its relationship with administrators has no bearing on its editorial content.[41]
In 1999, the D.O. editors and then SU Chancellor Kenneth Shaw signed an agreement giving The D.O. rights to deliver papers on campus, the ability to lease 744 Ostrom Ave from the university as an office building, and access to all university buildings and administrators necessary for reporting purposes.[42]
In 2005, The D.O. underwent a layout redesign to give paper renewed sense of ‘identity’. This revamp included new logo partially designed by Jim Parkinson.[43]
In 2008, the D.O. dropped to the Friday print edition due to declining advertising sales.[44][45] The Tuesday print edition was dropped starting in fall 2018 to focus on digital content.[46] The Wednesday print edition was dropped in Fall 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[47] As of 2023, the D.O. prints only on Thursday mornings.[7][48]
In 2019, the paper moved its office from 774 Ostrom Ave to 230 Euclid Ave due to SU construction plans.[3][49]
In 2020, the D.O. launched a membership program for readers.[50][51]
The Special Collections Research Center of the Syracuse University libraries has an archived collection of the published papers.[52]
CIA lawsuit
In the early 1980s, The Daily Orange was a plaintiff in a lawsuit against the CIA.[53] The D.O. had sued the CIA to obtain documents relating to alleged CIA activity on campus during the late 1960s and early 1970s.[54] Syracuse lost the case when district judge Howard G. Munson ruled that the issues were exempt from disclosure.[55]
Comics
The D.O. was the first student newspaper to have comics. The paper has produced many famous cartoonists, such as Vaughn Bodē, Robb Armstrong (creator of Jump Start), Brad Anderson (creator of Marmaduke), Steve Ellis and Nicholas Gurewitch (creator of The Perry Bible Fellowship).[56][57] Pulitzer Prize winner Jim Morin served as editorial cartoonist during his senior year at SU.[58]
Awards and rankings
The paper has in the past decade won numerous awards, including more than a dozen "story of the year" awards in several categories from the Associated Collegiate Press and top-story honors from the William Randolph Hearst Foundation.
The Princeton Review has ranked the D.O. the best college newspaper every year since 2016.[59][60][61][62][63]
The D.O. was named the best all-around student newspaper in the country by the Society of Professional Journalists in 2017.[64] It is also the best-designed student newspaper in the country, as voted at the University of Missouri Student Society for News Design awards in 2005.
In 2021, College Choice ranked the D.O. #2 in the nation.[65]
During the 2021-22 academic year, the D.O. was ranked first in the total number of articles published by students newspapers in the U.S., with 4,969 articles published.[66]
Notable alumni
- Robb Armstrong, author of Jump Start comic strip[56]
- Jessica Cutler, photo editor, The Washingtonienne
- Meredith Goldstein, Living|Arts writer, The Boston Globe
- Nicholas Gurewitch, author of The Perry Bible Fellowship comic strip, The Guardian[57]
- Mike Kelly, columnist, The Record
- Larry S. Kramer, former president and publisher, USA Today[30]
- Michael Kranish, political reporter, The Washington Post
- Steve Kroft, journalist & long-time correspondent for 60 Minutes[67]
- Jerre Mangione, writer and scholar of the Sicilian-American experience[68]
- Jim Morin, Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist, Miami Herald[58]
- Jeff Passan, national baseball writer, ESPN
- Jayson Stark, national baseball writer, The Athletic and MLB Network contributor
- Eli Saslow, Pulitzer Prize winning reporter at The Washington Post
In popular culture
References
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The CIA claims that it can neither confirm nor deny the existence of any covert activity at Syracuse University because the fact of such activity's existence or non-existence is itself protected under Executive Order 12,065. Executive Order 12,065, § 3-505, 3 C.F.R. 190, 199 (1979)
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