Editor-in-Chief Jim Ryan says goodbye to ‘The Post’
Leading this publication for the past year has been one of the greatest pleasures of my life. This column is my last. Friday is my final day on the job.
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Leading this publication for the past year has been one of the greatest pleasures of my life. This column is my last. Friday is my final day on the job.
The Post’s list of employees who have garnered summer internships, permanent jobs or study-abroad placement is 35-strong — and growing.
Editor Jim Ryan wraps up The Post’s weeklong series about student debt, asks for suggestions about what the topic of The Post’s next in-depth series should be.
The Post picked up seven awards at a Society of Professional Journalists regional conference held at Ohio University this past weekend.
Post editor Jim Ryan welcomes alumni to campus and highlights portions of his “State of The Post” speech.
If there’s anything happening here that you need to know about while you’re soaking up the sun (or watching Netflix in your childhood bedroom), you can count on us to be your source of Athens and OU news.
More than 19,900 of you read The Post online yesterday. Thousands more read The Post in print, though that number is more difficult to tabulate.
We realize that we will not be universally liked by everyone at Ohio University. That’s not our job. But we’re also exceptionally proud of the work we do, and we’re going to keep doing it by soliciting reader feedback and using it to improve our coverage every day.
Every print edition of The Post offers a new opportunity for us to present information in a new and exciting way, and each paper is designed with readers in mind.
When an ethics question arises, who you gonna call?
The Post’s Publishing Board and top editors have opened up editor-in-chief applications a bit earlier than usual this year.
It’s the time of the semester where it’s common for the editor to proclaim something along the lines of, “New year, new Post,” touting the sweeping improvements made to the publication while students were away from campus.
A colleague of mine recently asked for my home address. Without hesitation, I replied: “325 Baker.”
I often hear that a journalist’s instincts take over in the midst of a breaking news event.
Following the serious mishap in Wednesday's paper, The Post is working on improving accuracy, especially with photographs.
A common refrain I hear from students is that many don’t know what The Post is or where they can find one of its newspapers. That seems ludicrous to me — we drop off newspapers at 250 locations around Athens County — but it serves as a reminder that The Post staff has not done enough to promote its brand in recent years.
On the day of last spring’s Student Senate elections, I had a conversation with a classmate who said she cast her ballot based on The Post’s endorsements.
Members of The Post’s editorial board meet to decide what will be featured on the next day’s front page every day at 4:30 p.m.
Today’s journalists are constantly juggling stories they think will do well online and ones that are essential to their mission of informing their readers. The Post is no exception to that trend.
The hype surrounding Homecoming Week and Ohio’s football game on Saturday has reminded me of a frequent question I was asked when I covered Bobcats sports as an underclassman.