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s:k_shortt [2025/01/04 07:22] sallyrs:k_shortt [2025/01/04 07:37] (current) sallyr
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 Ken Shortt Ken Shortt
   
-Ken Shortt started a weekly Yukon newspaper in 1960 in competition to the //[Whitehorse] Star.// The new paper began as the  weekly //Advertiser// and was quickly renamed the //Yukon News.// Shortt had a full time job so the paper was put together in his spare time. In 1965, Shortt expanded the paper to a daily through a partnership with Dave Robertson who volunteered his time in order to learn the business. The partnership broke down after a year or so and Shortt found that trying to produce the //Yukon Daily News// by himself was too much so the paper went back to being a weekly in the late 1960s. By that time, Shortt was running the paper, a printing company, and a monthly magazine.((Penny Graham and Tony Richards, //Paper Trails: A History of British Columbia & Yukon Community Newspapers.// Arch Communications, 1999: 227-228.)) +Ken Shortt started a weekly Yukon newspaper in 1960 in competition to the //[Whitehorse] Star.// The new paper began as the  weekly //Advertiser// and was quickly renamed the //Yukon News.// Shortt had a full time job so the paper was put together in his spare time. In 1965, Shortt expanded the paper to a daily through a partnership with Dave Robertson who volunteered his time in order to learn the business. The partnership broke down after a year or so and Shortt found that trying to produce the //Yukon Daily News// by himself was too much so the paper went back to being a weekly in the late 1960s. By that time, Shortt was running the paper, a printing company, and a monthly magazine.((George Affleck, //Paper Trails: A History of British Columbia & Yukon Community Newspapers.// Arch Communications, 1999: 227-228.)) 
  
-Shortt sold the newspaper to a group of businessmen but their skills were not up to the task and Shortt was compelled to buy the newspaper back. He built the readership back up and after a couple of years Dave Robertson bought the paper [in 1970]. By 1986, the //Yukon News// circulation surpassed the //Star’s// and was making a good and regular profit. In 1989, Robertson sold the paper to his son Steven who went on to lead the paper into awards for design and journalism.((Penny Graham and Tony Richards, //Paper Trails: A History of British Columbia & Yukon Community Newspapers.// Arch Communications, 1999: 227-228.))+Shortt sold the newspaper to a group of businessmen but their skills were not up to the task and Shortt was compelled to buy the newspaper back. He built the readership back up and after a couple of years Dave Robertson bought the paper [in 1970]. By 1986, the //Yukon News// circulation surpassed the //Star’s// and was making a good and regular profit. In 1989, Robertson sold the paper to his son Steven who went on to lead the paper into awards for design and journalism.((George Affleck, //Paper Trails: A History of British Columbia & Yukon Community Newspapers.// Arch Communications, 1999: 227-228.))
  
s/k_shortt.1736000540.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/01/04 07:22 by sallyr