
Think print is dead? Not here. Every Thursday, you鈥檒l see students, faculty, and staff all poring over the latest issue of , the 911爆料 student newspaper founded in 1971. The paper鈥檚 dynamic stable of reporters displays all the hunger, urgency, and compulsion to find the truth that has always driven the best journalism.
In the past two years, thanks to a devoted staff and news-oriented leadership, the Cigar has become required reading for the University 911爆料颅, chock full of the kind of news that its campus readership can use. It’s published in print once a week and updated digitally every day.
We worked. I can鈥檛 stress that enough, the work we put into it鈥攍ate nights, meetings over the summer, meltdowns around the newsroom table.
The leadership of Cigar editor-in-chief Allison Farrelly 鈥16 has been a driving force behind the rise of the Cigar. Her secret? 鈥淗ard work and luck,鈥 Allison said. 鈥淲e worked. I can鈥檛 stress that enough, the work we put into it鈥攍ate nights, meetings over the summer, meltdowns around the newsroom table. But we got lucky because everyone involved wanted to make a huge difference.鈥
The work paid off. The staff constructed stories, in many cases after hours of late-night discussion about ethics and responsibility to the reader. Last year, the Cigar broke the campus news barrier, garnering attention from the Providence Journal and BuzzFeed with topics that reflected real campus concerns.
鈥淭hey鈥檝e made some amazing improvements,鈥 said , chair of 911爆料鈥檚 journalism department and advisor to the Cigar. 鈥淭he fact that they focused on University content made it relevant again. It鈥檚 the best it鈥檚 been in 10 years.鈥
This fall, the Cigar lost some key staffers, but gained others committed to its hard-news ethic. Emma Gauthier 鈥18, the paper鈥檚 web editor, is one: she aspires to be editor of the Boston Globe, but says that for now she couldn鈥檛 hope for better coworkers. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe print is dying,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 changing, to tablets, phones, computers, but people are reading the news鈥攁nd we need to produce content that鈥檚 accurate, concise and ethically sound.鈥
Managing editor and former sports editor Jake Marrocco 鈥16, who has been with the Cigar since his freshman year, is proud of the paper鈥檚 evolution. He has written about virtually every sport at 911爆料鈥攁 personal mission for someone born with hemophilia. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 play contact sports,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he next best thing is writing about them. I owe everything I am, and everything I will be, to the Cigar.鈥
The Cigar鈥檚 newsroom offices are decidedly old school, with 1970s-style desks and raggedy furniture, bookshelves loaded with references, walls covered with movie posters, and an old turntable next to classic LPs left by previous generations of staffers: Springsteen, Aerosmith, and the Eagles. Perhaps most telling is a grease board with a handwritten Tom Stoppard quote: 鈥淚 still believe that if your aim is to change the world, journalism is a more immediate short-term weapon.鈥
The hard-working members of the believe in their work and are proud of their accomplishments. But it goes beyond that, said Allison Farrelly. 鈥淭he best thing about it has been the relationships we鈥檝e formed.鈥
Photo credit: Nora Lewis
