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The Daily Barometer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Daily Barometer
Cover of the Jan. 23, 2017 edition of The Baro
TypeStudent newspaper
FormatTabloid
Owner(s)Orange Media Network [1]
EditorDelaney Shea [2]
Founded1896 (as the College Barometer)
Headquarters428 Student Experience Center 2251 SW Jefferson Way
Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331
United States
Circulation7,000 daily (as of 2014)[3]
ISSN1080-6814
Websitedailybaro.orangemedianetwork.com

The Daily Barometer is an independent campus newspaper of Oregon State University, in Corvallis. It is published weekly during the fall, winter, and spring quarters, and monthly during the summer.

Also known as The Baro, the news team covers local news and events and brings awareness to important student issues. Students serve as editors, reporters, and photographers to cover news through the newspaper, website, social media, and online videos.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • The history of the barometer (and how it works) - Asaf Bar-Yosef

Transcription

Aristotle famously said, "Nature fears of empty space" when he claimed that a true vacuum, a space devoid of matter, could not exist because the surrounding matter would immediately fill it. Fortunately, he turned out to be wrong. A vacuum is a key component of the barometer, an instrument for measuring air pressure. And because air pressure correlates to temperature and rapid shifts in it can contribute to hurricanes, tornadoes and other extreme weather events, a barometer is one of the most essential tools for weather forecasters and scientists alike. How does a barometer work, and how was it invented? Well, it took awhile. Because the theory of Aristotle and other ancient philosophers regarding the impossibility of a vacuum seemed to hold true in everyday life, few seriously thought to question it for nearly 2,000 years -- until necessity raised the issue. In the early 17th century, Italian miners faced a serious problem when they found that their pumps could not raise water more than 10.3 meters high. Some scientists at the time, including one Galileo Galilei, proposed that sucking air out of the pipe was what made water rise to replace the void. But that its force was limited and could lift no more than 10.3 meters of water. However, the idea of a vacuum existing at all was still considered controversial. And the excitement over Galileo's unorthodox theory, led Gasparo Berti to conduct a simple but brilliant experiment to demonstrate that it was possible. A long tube was filled with water and placed standing in a shallow pool with both ends plugged. The bottom end of the tube was then opened and water poured out into the basin until the level of the water remaining in the tube was 10.3 meters. With a gap remaining at the top, and no air having entered the tube, Berti had succeeded in directly creating a stable vacuum. But even though the possibility of a vacuum had been demonstrated, not everyone was satisfied with Galileo's idea that this empty void was exerting some mysterious yet finite force on the water. Evangelista Torricelli, Galileo's young pupil and friend, decided to look at the problem from a different angle. Instead of focusing on the empty space inside the tube, he asked himself, "What else could be influencing the water?" Because the only thing in contact with the water was the air surrounding the pool, he believed the pressure from this air could be the only thing preventing the water level in the tube from dropping further. He realized that the experiment was not only a tool to create a vacuum, but operated as a balance between the atmospheric pressure on the water outside the tube and the pressure from the water column inside the tube. The water level in the tube decreases until the two pressures are equal, which just happens to be when the water is at 10.3 meters. This idea was not easily accepted, as Galileo and others had traditionally thought that atmospheric air has no weight and exerts no pressure. Torricelli decided to repeat Berti's experiment with mercury instead of water. Because mercury was denser, it fell farther than the water and the mercury column stood only about 76 centimeters tall. Not only did this allow Torricelli to make the instrument much more compact, it supported his idea that weight was the deciding factor. A variation on the experiment used two tubes with one having a large bubble at the top. If Galileo's interpretation had been correct, the bigger vacuum in the second tube should have exerted more suction and lifted the mercury higher. But the level in both tubes was the same. The ultimate support for Torricelli's theory came via Blaise Pascal who had such a mercury tube taken up a mountain and showed that the mercury level dropped as the atmospheric pressure decreased with altitude. Mercury barometers based on Torricelli's original model remained one of the most common ways to measure atmospheric pressure until 2007 when restrictions on the use of mercury due to its toxicity led to them no longer being produced in Europe. Nevertheless, Torricelli's invention, born of the willingness to question long accepted dogmas about vacuums and the weight of air, is an outstanding example of how thinking outside of the box -- or the tube -- can have a heavy impact.

History

On March 16, 1896, the first issue of a monthly called The Barometer rolled off the presses at Oregon Agricultural College, today's Oregon State University.[4] The first editor was F.E. Edwards.[4] The publication continued as a monthly for some eleven years before expanding to a weekly publication cycle in 1907.[4] The paper was financed by an allocation of 10 percent of the student fund — a quota specified in the OAC Student Body Constitution.[4]

The paper underwent further expansion during the 1907–08 academic year, moving from a four-column 12-inch page to a five-column 16-inch page at that time, thereby emerging as the largest college weekly on the Pacific coast.[4] Coming with growing size and responsibility, the editor and business manager were allotted a salary beginning in 1909.[4]

In 1922 became a daily paper, publishing five times per week.

In 2016, The Daily Barometer began printing weekly as The Baro, with daily news content delivered via videos and online content.[5]

Notable alumni

  • David Gilkey - photojournalist
  • Lindsay Schnell[6] - USA Today reporter
  • Nick Lilja[7] - NBC/ABC meteorologist

Awards and honors

College Media Association

David L. Adams Apple Awards[8]

2017
Best Newspaper (4-year, more than 10,000) — First Place
Best News Delivery — First Place
Best Tweet — First Place
Best Facebook Page — Third Place

Associated Collegiate Press

National Pacemaker Awards

2017[9]
Individual Awards
2014
Story of the Year (Editorial/Commentary) — First Place: Editorial Staff, "Hey, NCAA: Southpaw's not an outlaw"[10]
2013
Story of the Year (Feature Story)—National Finalist: Warner Strausbaugh, "What I cherish is my strength"[11]
Photo Excellence (General News Photo)—Fifth Place: Vinay Bikkina[12]

Society of Professional Journalists

National Mark of Excellence Awards

2016
Best Sports Column Writing - Brian Rathbone
2014
Best All-Around Daily Student Newspaper-Regional Winner[13]
2011
Best All-Around Daily Student Newspaper-Regional Winner[14]
2010
Sports Photography-National Finalist: Jeffrey Basinger "Just a Little Hurling" [15]
2006
Sports Photography—National Winner: Peter Strong "Beavers bring home national title from Omaha"[16]
2005
Editorial Cartooning—National Finalist: Albert Pineda[17]
Breaking News Reporting—National Finalist: Dan Traylor, "Continuing coverage of missing woman" [17]
2002
Best All-Around Daily Student Newspaper—Second Place Nationally (tie)[18]
2001
Best All-Around Daily Student Newspaper—National Winner[19]
Feature Writing—National Winner: "Five Hearts" series, Matthew D. LaPlante[19]

Region 10 Mark of Excellence Awards

2017[20]
Best All-Around Daily Student Newspaper
General News Photography - Zbigniew Sikora
Photo Illustration - Zbigniew Sikora
Online/Digital News Videography
2016
Best All-Around Daily Student Newspaper (Finalist)
Best Sports Column Writing - Brian Rathbone
Best Editorial Writing (Finalist)
Best Sports Photography (Finalist) - Zbigniew Sikora
Best General News Reporting (Finalist) - Ellie Magnuson, Amy Schwartz, Lauren Sluss

Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association

2008 - Best Columnist: Nick Lilja [21]
2010 - Best Photography: Jeffrey Basinger
2014 - Best Special Section: Staff
2014 - Best Editorial: Staff [22]
2014 - Best Review: Shelly Lorts [22]
2014 - Best Sports Photo: Neil Abrew [22]
2014 - Best Photography: Jackie Seus [22]
2014 - Best Cartooning: Ryan Mason [22]
2015 - Best Sports Story: Josh Worden [23]
2015 - Best Cartoonist: Ryan Mason
2015 - General Excellence: Staff

External links

References

  1. ^ "About Us". Archived from the original on 2020-06-09. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  2. ^ "The Daily Barometer - About Us". Archived from the original on 2020-06-10. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  3. ^ 2014-2015 advertising rates & information. Accessed 09 October 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "The OAC Barometer," in The Orange: Volume 2. Corvallis, OR: Junior Class of the Oregon Agricultural College, 1908. (unpaginated)
  5. ^ Chronological history of Oregon State University - 1890 to 1899 Archived 2010-06-02 at the Wayback Machine accessed October 21, 2007
  6. ^ "Lindsay Schnell | USA TODAY". USA Today.
  7. ^ "Nick Lilja". NickleBlock Forecasting. Archived from the original on 2020-09-18. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  8. ^ "Apple Awards 2017". College Media Association. Retrieved 2017-08-09.
  9. ^ "ACP - 2017 Newspaper Pacemakers".
  10. ^ "ACP - 2014 Story of the Year".
  11. ^ "ACP - 2013 Story of the Year".
  12. ^ "ACP - 2013 Photo Excellence Awards".
  13. ^ Society of Professional Journalists: Mark of Excellence Awards 2014 Region 10 Winners/Finalists
  14. ^ Society of Professional Journalists: Mark of Excellence Awards 2011 Region 10 Winners/Finalists
  15. ^ Society of Professional Journalists: Mark of Excellence Awards 2010 National Winners/Finalists
  16. ^ Society of Professional Journalists: Mark of Excellence Awards 2006 National Winners/Finalists
  17. ^ a b Society of Professional Journalists: Mark of Excellence Awards 2005 National Winners/Finalists
  18. ^ Society of Professional Journalists: Mark of Excellence Awards 2002 National Winners/Finalists
  19. ^ a b Society of Professional Journalists: Mark of Excellence Awards 2001 National Winners/Finalists
  20. ^ "Orange Media Awards & Accolades". Student Leadership & Involvement. 2017-03-30. Retrieved 2018-08-14.
  21. ^ "2008 Collegiate Newspaper Contest: Winners page". Archived from the original on 2009-12-05. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  22. ^ a b c d e http://orenews.com/pub/doc/judgments-results-2014.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  23. ^ "Feature Story Archive".
This page was last edited on 27 December 2023, at 18:33
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