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The Register-Guard is a daily newspaper in the western United States, published in Eugene, Oregon. It was formed in 1930 to merge two Eugene papers, the Eugene Daily Guard and the Morning Register. This paper serves the Eugene-Springfield area, as well as the Oregon Coast, the valley of the Umpqua River, and the surrounding area. By 2016, it has a circulation of around 43,000 Monday through Friday, about 47,000 on Saturday, and slightly below 50,000 on Sunday.

This newspaper is owned by GateHouse Media. From 1927 to 2018, it was owned by the Baker family Eugene, and family members served as editors and publishers for almost all of that time period. It is Oregon's second largest daily newspaper and, until its 2018 sale to GateHouse, is one of the few family newspapers left in the United States.


Video The Register-Guard



Sejarah The Guard

Pendirian

The Guard was launched in Eugene City, Oregon on Saturday, June 1, 1867, by John B. Alexander. The paper begins as a weekly organ expressing loyalty to the state-oriented Democratic Party and it joins the Republic's on-the-ground, Oregon State Journal, published by Harrison R. Kincaid.

The founding publisher Alexander was born around 1830 and came to Oregon from Illinois as a pioneer in 1852. Initially Alexander worked as a farmer, supplementing his income as a surveyor and local justice before studying printing trades that worked for his previous city project. Southern newspaper. Despite his own efforts as a short and unfortunate publisher, Alexander was unwittingly a descendant of a local newspaper dynasty in Oregon, with his two sons then publishing their own The Guard (following the term of some middle-class owners), while the grandson, George L. Alexander, will one day edit another Oregon paper, the Lebanese Express.

Alexander and his paper verbally endorsed the old class of governments from the former Confederate States and opposed opposition to the policies imposed on the South by the Northern Republic-based Republican Party. Such a view is not in line with the majority of Oregon people, however, with Republicans who dominated Oregon politics during the last quarter of the 19th century. Alexander was forced to liquidate his shares in his lost letters in 1868.

Ownership change

A short interregnum followed, in which ownership was transferred to J.W. Skaggs. Skaggs continued to push the rights agenda of Alexander/Democrat Party for five short weeks at the helm. However, the poor economy of the weekly paper did not change, and Skaggs immediately moved to dismantle the newly acquired white elephant. He cut his losses and avoided the stigma of financial failure for himself and the conservative political movement by giving paper directly to two people working for him as a printer, William Thompson and William Victor. According to Thompson's recollection, Skaggs sweetened the transfer of ownership by throwing two bundles of paper and two firewood ropes for the new owner.

The prominent partner in the new ownership pair, William Thompson (1846-1934), had come to Oregon from Missouri originally on a wagon train in the 1850s and had worked as a demon printer for Democrat Eugene City's democratic newspaper List and Reviews since the age of 16. The acquisition of the Guard only requires that he fulfill his contractual obligations "to run the paper and keep it alive." Here it is and Victor manages to do so successfully, Thompson earns a healthy $ 1,200 for his work before the paper sales for George J Buys and A. Eltzroth on 24 December 1869. Thompson will then move to Roseburg, Oregon, and there build a new newspaper, Roseburg Plaindealer.

George J. Buys bought his business partner Eltzroth in July 1870 and then remained only at the publishing table for more than seven years. He continues to fight for the Democrats, "first, last, and always" in competition with the Oregon State Journal and short-lived Eugene City Hawk-Eye, who pledge allegiance to the Party The equally short-lived Oregon Independence, which runs a full list of candidates for state and local offices in the 1874 election.

The purchase ended his tenure as the owner of The Guard in May 1877 when he sold to the original publishing sons, F.R. Alexander and W.R. Alexander. Their job as publishers was almost as short as their father, and in November 1878 they sold the paper again, this time to the brothers John R. Campbell and Ira Campbell, who will remain the owner for 30 years.

Growth

In 1890, Eugene Guard became a daily newspaper. Charles H. Fisher took over the paper in 1907 and published it until 1912 when E. J. Finneran bought the paper. Finneran bankrupted the newspaper in 1916, partly because of a refined press purchase that proved too expensive for a small newspaper. The University of Oregon college journalism briefly runs the paper during the curator under the guidance of Eric W. Allen.

In April 1916, Fisher returned with partner J. E. Shelton, forming The Guard Printing Company. Fisher continued to publish Capital Journal in Salem until 1921. In 1924, after Fisher died, Paul R. Kelty purchased the Guard and published it with his son, before selling it in 1927. The paper was purchased in 1927 by publisher Alton F. Baker, Sr., whose father had published The Plain Dealer. Three years later, Baker purchased the Morning Register and merged two papers on Nov. 17, 1930; The first Register-Guard edition is the next afternoon. Reporter William Tugman was recruited from The Plain Dealer to become the editor of the new newspaper.

Maps The Register-Guard



Post merge history

In 1953, Tugman was one of four editors in the country to sign a declaration against Senator Joseph McCarthy's question about James Wechsler's editor James Wechsler in a closed Senate hearing. Eugene S. Pulliam of the Indianapolis Star JR Wiggins of The Washington Post and Herbert Brucker of The Hartford Courant is another editor who signed the declaration, called the actions of Senator McCarthy "a danger to American freedom."

Alton F. "Bunky" Baker, Jr., son of Alton F. Baker, Sr., inherited the newspaper in 1961 and then passed it to his brother, Edwin. In the late 1980s, it was revealed to Alton F. "Tony" Baker III, who remained editor and paper publisher for more than 28 years, until 2015.

It was the evening paper on weekdays until 1983; last night's edition was on Friday, September 9th, and it dropped "Eugene" from the title. The Saturday edition shifted to the morning a dozen years earlier in 1971, the last evening edition was July 17th.

In August 1996, a photographer and journalist from the paper was captured by the United States Forest Service for unauthorized entry to a timber protest site in a national forest. The Register-Guard responded by prosecuting the Forest Service for violating the freedom of the First Amendment of the press. The criminal charges were later canceled and the civil suit was settled out of court.

Originally located in downtown Eugene, the newspaper was moved to its current location in northeast Eugene in January 1998. The former Register-Guard building was chartered by the University of Oregon and renamed Baker City Center for the Baker family. The building features printing facilities, archives, and continuing education programs, as well as the Oregon Career Information System.

In 2000, the company started negotiations with unions for new contracts, and during the negotiations prohibited the use of corporate email systems by unions. This led to allegations of unfair employment practices against newspapers, with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ruling for paper in December 2007 that employers may ban pro-union emails of employees from corporate email systems. The NLRB reconsidered its decision on email on June 26, 2011, under detention for review by the United States Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C. Upon review, the NLRB agrees with the Court that R-G violates the rights of union members by changing the rules. The new decision allows Register-Guard employees to send union-bound emails without restrictions. On December 27, 2014, the NLRB annulled its 2007 verdict with Purple Communications, Inc., granting union members the right to send union emails during non-employment times.

In the weeks following the September 11, 2001 attacks, newspapers saw a 1.6% increase in paper sales. In 2006, the newspaper received protests related to its policy including the announcement of births of same-sex couples. It was reported that managing editor Dave Baker was very helpful when the same first pair complained "until he talked to Alton Baker [III], and then he stopped returning our phone calls." In November 2008, the Register-Guard finally changed its policy and printed birth announcements featuring the names of the boy's parents.

In 2003, newspapers reduced the printing width to 12.5 inches (320 mm) to reduce costs, and subsequently shrank paper to 11 inches (280 mm) in 2009.

In 2009, two separate layoffs reduced newspaper staff by the equivalent of 41 positions; in August 2009, it has 305 full-time and part-time employees. Company management blames layoffs on "bad economies" and advertising revenues that are 16% below forecasts in May and about 25% for June, July, and the first half of August.

In May 2015, Tony Baker resigned as editor and publisher of ', after 28 years, making the end of an 88-year span in which someone from Baker's Family had headed the paper. He succeeded as an editor and publisher by N. Christian Anderson III, who has been the publisher of The Oregonian since 2009 and president of the Oregonian Media Group since 2013. Anderson began working in a new position in June. 1, 2015, but persisted for less than seven months. In mid-December 2015, Tony Baker, head of the Garda Publishing Company, announced that Anderson was "no longer the Editor and Publisher" of Watchlist , and that the Baker family took control again.. Tony Baker returns to Editor and Publisher positions. In July 2016, Logan Molen took over as Publisher and CEO of RG Media Company (The newspaper, marketing, advertising and digital services section of Guard Publishing Company), while Baker remained as Chairman of the Publishing Guards council.

Sales to GateHouse Media

In January 2018, Register-Guard announced its sale to the newspaper conglomerate GateHouse Media. The ownership of the newspaper was officially transferred on March 1 of that year, with Molen replaced as a publisher by GateHouse hiring Shanna Cannon.

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Awards

This paper won a tie for best feature photo in 1997 from the Association of Oregon Newspapers Publishers. In 1998, this paper took the first place for scientific reporting from the Pacific Northwest Society of Professional Journalists competition for Excellence in Journalism. The Register-Guard took first place in the same competition in 2001 for the best art coverage. In 1999, the paper was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for Spot News Photography, for his coverage of people's reaction to the shooting at Thurston High School in Springfield by student Kip Kinkel.

General Excellence Award from General Newspaper Publishers Association 2010 goes back to The Register-Guard, and so does the Best Associate's Overall Website award.

Brian Babb's final hour | News | The Register-Guard | Eugene, Ore.
src: cloud.registerguard.com


Blocked in Turkish

Since June 17, 2008, by court order, access to The Register-Guard website has been blocked in Turkey.

Nominate Us For The Register Guard Readers Choice Awards (Please ...
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See also

  • Alton Baker Park, named after founder Alton F. Baker, Sr.

Classifieds Marketplace, The Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore.
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References


Classifieds Marketplace, The Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore.
src: marketplace.registerguard.com


Further reading

Warren C. Price, The Eugene Register-Guard: Citizen of Its Community, Volume 1. Portland, OR: Binford & amp; Mort, 1976.
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External links

  • The Register-Guard website
  • Eugene Register-Guard, Google news archive. - PDF for 35.126 issues, from 1867 to 2008.

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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