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=Ames Tribune=

The Ames Tribune is a daily newspaper serving Ames, Iowa. Founded in 1868, the newspaper, which won a Pulitzer Prize in 1997, was locally-owned until its sale to the Omaha World-Herald in 1999. It is currently owned by Gannett.

Intelligencer, Times and early Ames newspapers
The first newspaper in Ames was The Reflector, which began in 1867 and was published by Hezekiah Gilbert. The length of its run is disputed, ranging from a few months to a couple years.

The Ames Intelligencer began as a weekly publication around April 1868 with Alfred McFadden as the first editor-publisher. John Watts and W.S. Alexander acquired the paper in 1876, but Watts became the sole publisher in 1877. It was sold to John E. Duncan in 1882.

In 1885, The Monitor began publication as a weekly by E.W. Clark. Clark sued Duncan for libel after Duncan accused Clark of being a liar and thief in an issue of the Intelligencer. Duncan was found guilty and ordered to pay $1 in March 1886. Clark died later that month, and The Monitor ceased publication five months later.

In 1889, the Intelligencer was sold to husband-and-wife publishers Henry and Sarah Wilson and then brothers Fred and Laurence Hodson in 1894.

In May of 1892, Lon and Ella Hardin began the weekly newspaper The Ames Times, which directly competed with the Intelligencer as they both published on Thursday evenings. In 1906, the Hodson Brothers sold the Intelligencer to Freeman R. & M. C. Conway, and on November 9, 1911, The Ames Intelligencer became the Ames Daily Intelligencer, publishing every Monday through Saturday. It was acquired by William G. Williams, of Mason City, in September of 1912. In that same month, The Ames Times was renamed the Ames Evening Times and became a tri-weekly.

Not finding financial success as a daily, the Intelligencer ceased as a daily on April 14, 1913 and returned to weekly distribution on April 24. In May, it was renamed the Ames Weekly Tribune. In April 1918, it became a tri-weekly and renamed the Ames Tri-Weekly Tribune. The Evening Times expanded to a daily on February 11, 1916.

In June of 1919, Williams oversaw the Tribune Publishing Co. acquire the Ames Evening Times, and the two newspapers were merged beginning July 1 as The Ames Daily Tribune and Ames Evening Times.

Merged newspapers
In 1921, J. L. Powers, of Cedar Rapids, purchased the newspaper from Williams. On December 30, 1929, the newspaper shortened its name to the Ames Daily Tribune-Times and moved into new facilities on 5th Street. The new building, called the Tribune Building, housed the editorial, business and printing operations. Powers' wife managed the printer and his son was the business and advertising manager.

In 1986, the Tribune was bought by Michael Gartner and Gary Gerlach, two former executives at The Des Moines Register. Gartner won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing at the Tribune.

21st century
The Omaha World-Herald Company bought the Ames Tribune in 1999 from Gartner, Gerlach, and the estate of David Belin. Stephens Media purchased the Tribune from the Omaha World-Herald Company in 2010. In 2015, the Stephens Media newspapers were sold to New Media Investment Group. New Media acquired Gannett Company in 2019, making the Tribune a sibling publication to The Des Moines Register.

=Iowa State Daily=

The Iowa State Daily is an independent student newspaper serving Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, that is published in print and online. It was founded in 1890, and is largely funded by advertising revenues. The Iowa State University Student Government helps pay for its distribution on campus.

The paper is published five days a week during the fall and winter semesters. In 2017, the Daily moved from publishing in print once a week during the summer to solely digital content. The Daily's printed circulation is 5,038.

Lawrence Cunningham was hired in July 2014 as the general manager, overseeing the organization's advertising department. Following Laura Widmer's resignation as the organization's CEO in November 2014, the Iowa State Daily Publication Board named Cunningham as her replacement in December 2014. Mark Witherspoon has served as the student newspaper's editorial adviser since 1999. Beginning in the fall of 2006, he became a full-time adviser.

History
In the spring of 1890, without any support from the college or officials, a group of Iowa Agricultural College students led by F.E. Davidson began The I.A.C. Student, which began publishing on August 7, 1890.

The first issue stated:We shall try to publish a "college newspaper". The Iowa Agricultural College is our field and we shall endeavor to advance the institute in every manner possible. We shall not attempt to run scientific or literary magazine, and we doubt if there is a demand for our ideas on politics and religion. It is our object to create a genuine college newspaper, one free from all alliances, and in this work we invite all the friends of the institute to help us."

The I.A.C. Student was a bi-weekly newspaper until 1894, when it became a weekly publication.

In March 1897, the I.A.C. Student was formally renamed The Student as it went from 8 pages to around 16 pages per issue. In 1900, The Student began publication twice a week. Two years later the newspaper was renamed yet again, this time to The Iowa State Student. It was about this time that the first courses in journalism were offered at Iowa State. In fall of 1905, a course in agricultural journalism was added to the course catalog. Home Economic students received a journalism course in 1911. Engineering journalism was added in 1920. The Department of Technical Journalism was created in 1927.

During the newspaper's first 25 years it began to make a transition from personal and editorial-based stories to more news stories such as the assassination of President William McKinley, the fire that burnt down the Old Main Building, and the death of the college's former president William M. Beardshear. Most of the news stories were positive reports on the school's developments. Critical stories were rare but The Student did run a few. Sports coverage was another important coverage area. Baseball and football had been essentials at I.A.C for years, but basketball also became a popular sport, even though it took a while for the college to pick up on its popularity.

On September 14, 1914, the newspaper undertook the task of publishing three days a week. The Student also accepted some suggestions by then university president Raymond Pearson. An editorial board made up of a couple faculty and about half a dozen students would have complete control over the editorial and business aspect of each issue. The paper would also be very cautious of printing anything to critical as to protect the reader. The newspaper's size also declined during this period to only about four pages by 1918 because of the war.

In 1924, the Student united with Iowa Agriculturalist, Iowa Homemaker, and Iowa Engineer to create the Collegiate Press (later called the Iowa State University Press). The Collegiate Press and the College agreed to establish it as a nonprofit corporation and the College set aside the east basement of Agricultural Hall for printing. The acquiring of a Model A Duplex Press in 1926, allowed for morning publication.

During the 1920s and 1930s The Iowa State Student focused on everything at Iowa State and left state, national and even city headlines out. The construction of the Memorial Union, the addition of new bells at the Campanile, the first VEISHEA celebrations, and the shocking death of football player Jack Trice were heavily covered.

In March 1938, The Iowa State Student began publishing five times a week and was renamed The Iowa State Daily Student.

An agreement between the College and the Collegiate Press resulted in the building of Collegiate Press Building. The building was renamed to "Press Building" in 1956, and to its current name of "Hamilton Hall" in 1984, after Carl Hamilton, who served for three years as head of the Department of Technical Journalism as well as two years in University Relations, and 17 years as Vice President for Information and Development. Hamilton also served as editor of The Iowa State Student from 1934 - 1935.

During the World War II, The Iowa State Daily Student was forced to reduce the size from eight pages to four pages. By 1942, nearly every story and advertisement was linked to the campus's war effort and included sections "War Detail" and "Iowa State Men in the Services."

Women were also largely covered during this time with a section entitled "Women in Society." This was due to the fact that most of Iowa State's men had gone to fight in the war.

After the war, the newspaper began to publish stories for a wider audience, and not just for the students of Iowa State. On June 8, 1947, The Iowa State Daily Student was renamed The Iowa State Daily. Then editor Lee Schwanz observed that the generation on campus was made up of people who had been in the war and been to Europe and the Pacific, so he made a move toward covering more international, national, state, and local news.

In the Spring 2017 semester the Daily began publishing an e-newsletter to all 36,000 plus students at the University.

Beginning in the Fall 2017 semester, the Daily began printing on tabloid sized print. The decision was made as a way to save money over the more expensive broadsheet that had been used prior.

As of the summer of 2020, the Daily has stopped publishing a print product due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Daily has since been operating exclusively digitally.