Skip to main content

Feb. 16, 2017

Page 2

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Emma Ockerman

FROM THE EDITOR’S DESK

MANAGING EDITOR Elizabeth Backo DIGITAL MANAGING EDITOR Seth Archer ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR Hayley Harding

‘Post’ has covered McDavis legacy for almost 13 years

EDITORIAL

NEWS EDITORS Kaitlin Coward, William T. Perkins SPORTS EDITOR Charlie Hatch CULTURE EDITORS Alex Darus, Sean Wolfe OPINION EDITOR Chuck Greenlee COPY CHIEF Rachel Danner

ART

ART DIRECTOR Abby Day DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY Alex Driehaus GRAPHICS DIRECTOR Samantha Güt SPECIAL PROJECTS DESIGNER Matt Ryan

DIGITAL

DIGITAL PRODUCTION EDITOR Hannah Debenham SOCIAL MEDIA DIRECTOR Hannah Wintucky BLOGS EDITOR Jeremy Hill SENIOR MULTIMEDIA PRODUCER Patrick Connolly BUSINESS MANAGER Matthew Barnett

Send us your letters

THE

POST

ISSUE 20, VOLUME 107 1 PARK PLACE, ROOM 325 EDITOR@THEPOSTATHENS.COM PHONE | 740.593.4010 FAX | 740.593.0561

ONLINE

Do you ever find something in The Post thoughtprovoking, questionable or even infuriating? Let us know! We are always interested in hearing about the way our readers respond to our content every day.

POST BLOGS thepostathens.com/blogs

IN PERSON Baker Center, Room 325

FACEBOOK thepostathens

ONLINE thepostathens.com/letters

TWITTER @ThePost

BY EMAIL letters@thepostathens.com

Front Desk Hours

Your opinion is welcome. Letters should be fewer than 500 words. Longer submissions will be considered as guest commentaries, but space is limited. All letters must be signed by at least one individual; anonymous letters will not be accepted. The Post does not accept letters soliciting donations or news releases. Please include your year and major if you are a student. Letters can be submitted online at www.thepostathens.com, by email at editor@ thepostathens.com or at The Post’s front desk in the media wing on the third floor of Baker University Center. We reserve the right to edit submissions for clarity, vulgarity and Associated Press Style.

Cost: 10 words: $3 students, $3.75 businesses, $.10 each additional word. Free lost and found daily, space permitting

The Post is an independent newspaper run by Ohio University students. We distribute the paper free of charge in Athens, Ohio, when classes are in session. Editorial page material represents the opinions of the editors, columnists and letter writers. Opinions expressed are independent of Ohio University and our printer

9 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Monday through Friday. Closed Saturday and Sunday. 1 Park Place Baker University Center, Room 325 Athens, OH 45701 (740) 593-4010

Advertising Policies The Post will not print advertisements that violate local, state or federal laws. All advertisements must display good taste. The Post reserves the right to refuse any advertisement. If questions arise, the editor will make the final decision. The Post will not run real estate or employment advertisements that discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, sexual orientation or national origin. All advertisements are

subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act. Phone numbers will not be printed in the Personals section. If errors are found in a classified ad, please notify The Post by 4 p.m. the day the ad runs. Though The Post cannot be responsible for errors, a corrected ad will run free of charge on the next publication date. Cash refunds will not be given. Notify The Post by 4 p.m. of cancellations for the following day.

I

t is rare that The Post’s staff members have the opportunity to attempt to contextualize one person’s legacy in a way that can nearly carry an entire print edition. So often, those people we interview often — or often hope to interview — are stacked into quotes that contribute to the ingredients of a broad-picture story. Athens city officials and Ohio University administrators are often the voices and perspectives behind some of The Post’s most important reporting, but rarely are they the subject itself. In a way, that can be a good thing. The Post has been reporting on President Roderick McDavis’ administration for nearly 13 years. The nature of a student-run publication has allowed dozens of Post reporters to enter and exit Cutler Hall over the decade, attempting to explain the complexities of higher education while still navigating it ourselves. Often, our reporting has focused on issues that trace a history far longer than the reporter’s time on campus. Our aim, of course, was to hold the highest office on campus accountable. A glance at our archives suggests we devoted the reporting required. But, The Post’s archives also suggest we rarely wrote about McDavis’ life. Perhaps that was because public figures need some semblance of a private life, too. An additional cause — at least in recent years — was a sizable decrease in media availability. Now, when it comes to context, The Post leans on more than a decade’s worth of reporting to bolster student and faculty opinion from years ago. Seeing the good and bad moments relies on the strength of reporting done far before some of us wrote our first Post story. We were fortunate enough that some of those moments were retold or relayed to us for this print issue by McDavis and others close to him. We’re equally fortunate for the reporters past and present who contributed to this special edition. Whether it was the success of OU’s athletic teams, student demonstrations on campus or complex university budgets, it is promising to know The Post was there — and will continue to be — as an institution supported by more than a century’s worth of its history. As we move into a new era on campus, The Post hopes to continue that reporting so that an alumnus glancing through our archives might not only see breaking news and in-depth reporting on university issues, but also what we see each day: people. We thank McDavis and his staff for being a part of our reporting over the years, and we look forward to covering another administration with equal dedication. Emma Ockerman is a senior studying journalism and editor-in-chief of The Post. Want to talk to her? Tweet her at @eockerman or email her at eo300813@ohio.edu.

Cover illustration by Chance Brinkman-Sull


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Feb. 16, 2017 by The Post - Issuu