Ryan, a hard-nosed reporter and workhorse, began his long tenure as a capitol reporter with United Press International in the early 1960s. When UPI closed shop, the University of Nevada journalism graduate and capitol press corps legend became the Las Vegas Sun’s statehouse reporter.
Read More »Hall of Fame
The Nevada Newspaper Hall of Fame honors men and women who have had a significant impact on journalism in the state. Members are elected each year by vote of the Nevada Press Association board of directors.
Ty Cobb
September 23, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Ty Cobb
A kid from the Comstock, Cobb become one of the West’s newspaper legends. He was sports editor of the Nevada State Journal in Reno from 1937 to 1958 and later became the newspaper’s managing editor. He continued to write a column after his retirement in 1975. Cobb labored tirelessly for …
Read More »E.B. Steninger
September 22, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on E.B. Steninger
With Chris Sheerin, he co-owned the Elko Daily Free Press from 1945-1968. The University of Nevada, Reno graduate supervised production at the Elko paper. The photo at right is from Northeastern Nevada Museum in Elko and is dated circa 1929. The photo above is cropped from this picture (below) taken …
Read More »David Sanford
September 20, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on David Sanford
David W. Sanford was the youngest of three family members to build the rural newspaper powerhouse Mason Valley News – “The Only Newspaper That Gives A Damn About Yerington” – and then continued his journalism career when the family sold the three-newspaper corporation to Gannett/Reno Gazette-Journal. David did just about …
Read More »Brian Greenspun
September 20, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Brian Greenspun
Brian Greenspun was groomed to be his parents’ successor in running the Las Vegas Sun, the feisty Everyman’s newspaper launched by Hank Greenspun and his wife, Barbara, with their purchase of the Las Vegas Free Press in 1950. Both parents also are members of the Hall of Fame. He is …
Read More »Ed Vogel
September 14, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Ed Vogel
Ed Vogel got his start in journalism as a teen in Michigan where a weekly newspaper paid him $1.50 a story to cover high-school sports. After graduating from the University of Michigan, he pursued his love of newspapers at jobs in New Mexico and Texas before joining the Las Vegas …
Read More »Guy Richardson
September 14, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Guy Richardson
Guy Richardson started his career in 1963 as a linotype operator for the Nevada State Journal and the Reno Evening Gazette. He later became a wire editor and in 1975 the entertainment editor. During his nearly 30 years in the business, Guy became close friends with Sammy Davis Jr., Joan …
Read More »Jack McCloskey
September 14, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Jack McCloskey
After launching the Mineral County Independent-News in the Depression, McCloskey punctuated pomposity, phoned governors with answers and publicly spanked other newspapers. His weekly column “Jasper” spanned more than six decades. Born in Goldfield and reared in Tonopah, he started in the business as a paperboy. After launching the Mineral County …
Read More »Mike O’Callaghan
September 14, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Mike O’Callaghan
The popular two-term Nevada governor known for his no-nonsense style joined the Las Vegas Sun as executive editor and columnist after leaving public office. In addition to being named a Sun executive, the decorated veteran of the Korean War and former high school teacher also became publisher of the Henderson …
Read More »John Smetana
September 14, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on John Smetana
Smetana, whose 40-year journalism career included 21 at the Reno Gazette-Journal, was the kind of newsman who made things better — the stories he edited, the newspapers he worked for, the reporters he mentored. Born in 1943 in Melrose Park, Ill., Smetana was inducted into the U.S. Army in 1965 …
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