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Dateline: July 22, 2004
Enterprise
to receive national press award
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
The
Clarendon Enterprise was named a winner in the National Newspaper
Association’s 2004 Better Newspaper Contest by NNA officials in
Columbia, Missouri, last week.
The
Enterprise will receive a second place plaque for Best Special Issue among
newspapers with circulations under 3,000 for its 125th Anniversary
Edition, which was published last summer.
“As
far as we know, no Clarendon paper has won an award on this level
before,” said Publisher Roger Estlack. “We are very excited and very
pleased to bring this kind of recognition to Donley County.”
NNA
President Bob Sweeney, publisher and editor of Villager Newspapers in
Denver, Colo., and John Stevenson, chairman of the NNA Better Newspaper
Contest Committee and publisher of the Randolph Leader in Roanoke, Ala.,
announced and congratulated the contest winners.
These
NNA contests are the only national competitions recognizing the best in
community journalism. Winners will be recognized during the 118th Annual
Convention and Trade Show, September 15-18, in Denver, Colo.
Three
years of research went into preparing the Enterprise’s 20-page
anniversary edition, which gave an extensive history of the Texas
Panhandle’s first newspaper from its establishment as The Clarendon News
on June 1, 1878. The issue covered all changes in ownership, documented
mergers with other newspapers, and outlined the evolution of technology
used by the local paper from the 19th to the 21st century.
The
issue also included a timeline of major local news events and revealed
never before published information about the founder of Clarendon and the
newspaper, Rev. L.H. Carhart, and his family.
NNA
judges praised the Enterprise’s entry for its “solid writing, photos,
and layout,” noted that the photos tied in well with the stories, and
also had positive comments about the collage which created the front
cover.
The
125th Anniversary Edition has previously received first place from the
Panhandle Press Association and was named Best of Show during this
year’s Texas Press Association Mid-Winter Convention, beating out all
other first place winners regardless of size or frequency.
On
Saturday, the 125th Anniversary Edition also received first place from the
West Texas Press Association’s Better Newspaper Contest.
There
were more than 2,900 entries from 44 states and the District of Columbia
in this year’s national BNC contest. Of those entries, there were more
than 560 award winners.
The
Greeley (Colo.) Tribune topped the list with the most BNC wins, garnering
28 awards. The Enterprise lost the first place Best Special Issue award to
the Claremont Courier of Claremont, California.
Established
in 1885, the National Newspaper Association is the voice of America’s
community newspapers and the largest newspaper association in the country.
The nation’s community newspapers inform, educate, and entertain 150
million readers every week.
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