History
The newspaper traces its origins back to 1846, when ''Hamilton Student'' was founded by student and abolitionist George Gavin Ritchie as "a semi-monthly mirror of Religion, Literature, Science and Art." The newspaper was shut down and Ritchie expelled by the college, then called Madison University, after he published an editorial criticizing New York residents for opposing African-American male suffrage, though he continued to publish the ''Hamilton Student'' as "''The Hamilton Student and Christian Reformer''." For over two decades, there was no official student newspaper for the university. In 1868, Colgate restarted the campus newspaper under the name ''Madisonensis'', and the modern staff considers this as its official foundation. The newspaper's name was officially changed to the ''Colgate Maroon'' in 1916. An independent paper, the ''Colgate News'', emerged in 1969, as a less liberal alternative to the official student newspaper. The newspaper takes its current name from the merger of the two campus weeklies in 1991.Circulation
''The Colgate Maroon-News'' has a circulation of 2,250 print copies, which are distributed around campus, the Village of Hamilton, and to subscribing alumni.Information – Maroon News – Colgate UniversityStaff
In a typical year, ''The Colgate Maroon-News'' has approximately 75 student members.References
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