Rants. Raves. T-shirts. All observations on the peculiarity of Provo life.

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

A Stunning Victory

I'm told that the Daily Universe is a rather good student newspaper, compared to those of other schools. I suppose it is - I haven't attended any other colleges, so I can't really say. They have some problems with their image on campus, but everybody knows that. Today's paper has a pretty interesting article - apparently the Universe won a handful of awards at a competition, 6 first-place awards and a few seconds and thirds.

Closer inspection makes the article a lot more fun.

The writer of the article mentions several times that the state-wide competition was not only for student newspapers, but also professional papers. Cool. Among them? The Tooele Transcript Bulletin and the Davis County Clipper. I couldn't be more proud that the Daily Universe team brought down the Tooele Transcript Bulletin juggernaut. When you can hang with Tooele, you can hang with anybody. It's a mandate. The start of an era.

The other fun part is the resurrection of that blasted feature they did on wolves a few months back. Remember? The entire paper was about wolves for a week or so. It was rough. It won an award, though, and the Universe folks are proud of it. The reefer on the front page was enough to show that:
Remember the wolf package?
The Daily Universe win six first place awards
See Page 8

And, of course, we know that every student, teacher, and staff member read every word of it when it was in the paper. If wolves aren't relevant to BYU students, then what is? The day we start having feature packages about on-campus, student-relevant topics is the day I turn elsewhere for BYU news. But that's me.

So, congrats to the Daily Universe team! One can only hope you'll pull off another stunning victory next year.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

My favorite part about the DailyU is their unfailing accuracy and dedication to presenting an unbiased opinion. Just look at all the BYUSA coverage . . . fair, informative, telling both sides of the story, printing a proportional amount of editorials. Immaculate coverage, really. Plus, the lack of grammarical and spelling mistakes is impressive. Who knew a board of lab students relunctantly writing for class credit could be so accomplished?