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Dateline: September
23, 2004
Enterprise wins national press award
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
The National
Newspaper Association recognized The Clarendon Enterprise as a national
award winner during the NNA’s 118th Annual Convention and Trade Show in
Denver, Colo., last Saturday.
The Enterprise
received a second place plaque in the association’s 2004 Better
Newspaper Contest for Best Special Issue among newspapers with
circulations under 3,000 for its 125th Anniversary Edition, which was
published June 5, 2003.
“This is a very
prestigious honor for our newspaper,” said Publisher Roger Estlack. “To
be recognized on a national level is rare for a paper our size, a first,
as far as we know, for any Clarendon paper.”
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.,
presented the awards during the “Toast to the Winners” reception at
Denver’s Adam’s Mark Hotel. Ashlee Kidd and Roger Estlack attended the
convention to represent the Enterprise.
The NNA contest is
the only national competition recognizing the best in community
journalism.
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 first place from the West Texas Press
Association’s Better Newspaper Contest. The edition was also 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.
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. |