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Updated October 2013Adviser’s Guide to using the ASNE/MCT Campus High School Newspaper ServiceTable of contents TOC \o "1-2" \h \z \u Questions? Need help? PAGEREF _Toc177534673 \h 1Welcome! PAGEREF _Toc177534674 \h 2About this service PAGEREF _Toc177534675 \h 2Restrictions on visual content/Getting access to archives/Getting access for yearbooks PAGEREF _Toc177534676 \h 2Use it to supplement, not supplant, student content PAGEREF _Toc177534677 \h 3Logging on PAGEREF _Toc177534678 \h 3How do I find stories? PAGEREF _Toc177534679 \h 3Can we localize a story or topic? PAGEREF _Toc177534680 \h 3What types of stories will I find? PAGEREF _Toc177534681 \h 3What are trim indicators on stories? PAGEREF _Toc177534682 \h 3How do I find visuals? PAGEREF _Toc177534683 \h 3What types of visuals are offered? PAGEREF _Toc177534684 \h 3How do I download photos? PAGEREF _Toc177534685 \h 3How do I download graphics? PAGEREF _Toc177534686 \h 3How do I download illustrations and caricatures? PAGEREF _Toc177534687 \h 3How do I download editorial cartoons? PAGEREF _Toc177534688 \h 3How do I download comics? PAGEREF _Toc177534689 \h 3How do I download crossword puzzles? PAGEREF _Toc177534690 \h 3How do I download horoscopes? PAGEREF _Toc177534691 \h 3Giving credit where credit is due PAGEREF _Toc177534692 \h 3Web-ready content PAGEREF _Toc177534693 \h 3Are there things on the MCT Campus site I can’t use? PAGEREF _Toc177534694 \h 3Frequently asked questions PAGEREF _Toc177534695 \h 3Is there software I need to utilize MCT Campus offerings? PAGEREF _Toc177534696 \h 3What if I have trouble converting from one program to another? PAGEREF _Toc177534697 \h 3What kind of software do I need? PAGEREF _Toc177534698 \h 3Basic terms of service PAGEREF _Toc177534699 \h 3Questions? Need help?Please do not contact MCT Campus with technical concerns or queries about content.Contact the ASNE staff instead: E-mail support@. Our help desk is staffed Monday to Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. Central time. Welcome!The American Society of News Editors/MCT High School Newspaper Service is a valuable tool to help you improve coverage and expand the depth of your high school student newspaper. Teachers may also use the material in their journalism classes.About this serviceASNE, a non-profit professional organization whose members are the top editors of daily newspapers, administers this service in partnership with McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.MCT Campus is a national wire service operated by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services to deliver McClatchy and Tribune Media Services editorial content to college newspapers for a fee. They also offer a similar service to professional daily newspapers. MCT Campus is a joint venture of The McClatchy Co. and the Tribune Co., two major media companies.Through an exclusive arrangement with ASNE, MCT Campus provides stories, photos, graphics, illustrations and Web content to high school newspapers. ASNE charges a one-time application fee of $100. There is no annual fee. Hundreds of college and university newspapers pay a much higher annual fee based on how often they publish, and get more than their money’s worth.The coverage is essential, broad and deep, with contributions from daily newspapers around the country and bureaus abroad. Every week, MCT Campus moves 125 news and feature stories, 20 story packages, five news graphics and four feature graphics, eight editorial cartoons, special Web content, plus horoscopes, crosswords, and comics. Restrictions on visual content/Getting access to archives/Getting access for yearbooksBy signing up for the ASNE/MCT Campus High School Newspaper Service, you have access to two weeks worth of visuals content. If you try to access material older than that, the system will reject your request and deny access. The timeframe is longer for other content.The Visuals Premium Archive, an archive that has more than 1 million items, is available from MCT Campus for an additional fee. For $200 per school year, high schools may gain access to the complete archives of the service – more than 1 million individual items are available. It is limited to high school newspapers. A yearbook service is available, as well. It is $300 per school year. With that service, you may use material for either your newspaper or your yearbook.Neither pro-rating nor discounts are offered on these services, which are steeply discounted from what college and commercial newspapers pay.To sign up for these services, contact Tony Regan at 800-245-6536, ext. 6698 or apregan@. Download a form here: . If you can pay with a credit card, do; it’ll be much faster.Use it to supplement, not supplant, student contentASNE and MCT Campus offer this service to dramatically improve the resources available to scholastic journalism.The material you now have access to is meant to supplement – not replace – the work of teen journalists. We hope the material strengthens student-written stories and makes your publication look more professional. Here’s the bottom line: Just as daily newspapers are expected to deliver the best local coverage in their communities, your newspaper should strive to be an accurate, contextual, diverse, stimulating reflection of the school community. In short, the work of the student staff is something the school community can’t get anywhere else.You and your students will be challenged to use your best news judgment to ensure that the student newspaper remains just that. For example, it may be tempting to simply download a MCT Campus story about what’s going on in Iraq and make it the lead story on the front page. But your readers are better served by a lead story written by the student staff about the effect the war has had on the school community, accompanied by a MCT Campus graphic and a sidebar that details national statistics. While the MCT Campus story likely will have more sources and be more authoritative, take it as a challenge to improve the caliber of the student-produced pieces.MCT Campus should spark creativity in your students. On the feature pages, a MCT Campus story about how rappers influence teen clothing choices can be accompanied by a local roving photographer feature that asks students whether they emulate an artist’s dress and why.Photo headshots, caricatures and editorial cartoons from MCT Campus can enhance your editorial/opinion page, but should never replace youth views and letters. On the entertainment pages, horoscopes, crosswords and comics should not crowd out student efforts.The school newspaper is a vital part of the educational process for students. It enhances writing, reading, critical thinking, judgment, team-building and promotes maturity and thoughtfulness. And everyone who reads the school newspaper has a tangible example of why a free and unfettered press is important to have in school – and in our democratic society.As MCT Campus material is used in your school newspaper, you and your students will be held to the journalistic standards and practices that the professional press abides by. It means:Grasping the basics of copyright law and giving proper credit to all MCT Campus material you use. Being nimble about judging how time affects the shelf life of news. For example, a graphic on Iraq war casualties that moved during the summer is not valid months later. Understanding the difference between a photo and photo illustration, how to best use them and why readers must never be misled.We’ve provided some basics in this user guide, but the finer points of best journalistic practices and journalism ethics are too wide ranging to fully cover here. Check out lesson plans and teaching tips on ASNE’s Web site for ideas on how to challenge your students to think through these matters. Logging onPlease bookmark this address on your computer: You should type a search term. Once you hit the “Two Weeks of Visuals” button you will be presented with all the visuals that match your search from the last two weeks.Once you click to download any of these images, you will be presented with a dialog box asking for your user name and password.Type in the user ID and password that ASNE assigned to you when your school signed up.The user name and password are both ALL LOWER CASE.Forget your user ID or password? Click on “Forgot username/password?” link on How do I find stories?Once you are on the MCT Campus site, you have four ways to search. 1. Search by keyword with the search bar at the top of each page. 2. Search by keyword on the Search page. 3. Check the Stories section of the site, where the latest stories are available. 4. Check the daily Budget, which helps you look ahead at the stories for the day. MCT Campus budgets (list and description of stories and other elements, such as photos and graphics) are updated at 8 a.m., 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. Eastern time. Each budget is organized by subject, i.e., News, Sports, Entertainment.Here is an example of a budget line: To build relationships: Work hard, listen well RELATE-LISTEN:CS—Take time to listen. Say “I love you” at least once a day. Laugh a lot. Engage, as the bumper sticker says, in random acts of kindness. Strengthening relationships among family, friends and lovers shouldn’t be hard. After all, these are the people we really love. But experts say many relationships break down over simple lack of communication. 700 by Carolyn Click. MOVED TEXT | HTML | PHOTO | GRAPHICThe budget line offers the following information: The slug (newspaper jargon for the story name), which in this example is RELATE-LISTEN: CS. If the story has not moved, the slug will not be a link. If the story has moved, the slug will either link to a story page that can be saved as a Microsoft Word document or a Web page, or the slug will link to a search page that has a list of stories. The first item on the list will be the most recent version of the story. The word count, which in this example precedes the byline in "700 by Carolyn Click."The word MOVED, if present, indicates that the story is available to download and use. If the story has not moved, the budget line will include "Story moving later." Check the budget later to see if the story has moved.A TEXT link, which opens a plain text file that can be saved.An HTML link, which opens a page that can be saved as a Microsoft Word document or a Web page.Links such as GRAPHIC, PHOTO, ILLUSTRATION and CARICATURE, if present, link to a search page from which this art can be downloaded.Can we localize a story or topic?Yes, by all means. However, it should be a separate story.Do not drop student copy into a MCT Campus story.What types of stories will I find?Stories are organized into these categories:Campus News (colleges).National News.World News.Sports.Entertainment.Lifestyle.Opinion.Health, Fitness.Relationships.Science.Technology.Environment.Corrections. Despite everyone’s best efforts, errors sometimes occur. If there’s a correction on a MCT Campus story that you ran in your school newspaper, do the right thing and run the correction as well. If your school newspaper does not have a corrections policy, it should. To help you devise a policy, check out the following tips: are trim indicators on stories? To assist editors in preparing copy for publication, longer stories moving on MCT Campus include trim indicators to allow for quicker editing when space is limited. A trim is a place where the story can be cut. The format for trim indicators is: BC-CMP-JOBMARKET:TB – nationalJob market jolts college grads(HAS TRIM)(story text)(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)or(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)(text)(END OPTIONAL TRIM)How do I find visuals?You have four ways to search for visuals on MCT Campus. BE SURE TO READ ABOUT THE VISUALS DOWNLOAD RESTRICTIONS ON PAGE 2.Search by keyword with the search bar at the top of each page. Search by keyword on the Search page. You may only use items that say Graphics OR Photos. Check the Visuals section of the site, where the latest visuals are available. Check the daily budget, which helps you look ahead at the items that will be posted that day. MCT Campus budgets are updated at 8 a.m., 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. Eastern time. Each budget is organized by subject, i.e., News, Sports, Entertainment.What types of visuals are offered?Photos.Newsmaker Mugs. (The terms mug or hedshot are commonly used in newsrooms to refer to a head and shoulders photo of a subject).Columnist Mugs.Graphics.Illustrations.Caricatures.OnePages. (These are full pages on content that can be dropped into a newspaper. Remember that local, original content is the most important element in a high school newspaper. We suggest that you use these sparingly, if at all.)How do I download photos?All photos are in JPEG format. They may be opened by any application that supports standard JPEG images. Captions may be viewed via Photoshop's File Info window. To download a photo, find the image on the search results page and click on the “Download” link. From the "Download" link, you can save the JPEG image. To use the photos, we recommend using Photoshop or Photoshop Elements software by Adobe. How do I download graphics?Many graphics on MCT Campus are created to be used as standalones. That means there is no accompanying story, though your students should feel free to build one around the topic if they wish. Each graphic contains information on column sizing (using standard newspaper columns), pixels and/or dots per inch. Just click on the “DOWNLOAD” button to transfer the graphic on to your computer.To use the graphics, you will need FreeHand MX software by Macromedia or Adobe Illustrator version 10 and above.You will need Stuffit Expander for all files that end in .sit.How do I download illustrations and caricatures? In general, illustrations and caricatures are best used with a lifestyle or entertainment story, the opinion page, or with a sports feature or column. Most of the illustrations and caricatures supplied by MCT Campus are not meant for news pages.All illustrations and caricatures are in .jpg format. They may be opened by any application that supports standard .jpg images. The captions may be viewed via Photoshop's File Info window. To download, find the image on the search results page. You can either preview the image or click the “Download” link. From the "Download" link, you can save the .jpg image. Illustrations and caricatures include information on column sizing, pixels and/or dots per inch.To use the graphics and illustrations, you will need FreeHand MX software by Macromedia or Adobe Illustrator version 10 and above.You will need Stuffit Expander for all files that end in .sit.How do I download editorial cartoons?Editorial cartoons are most appropriate on your editorial or op-ed pages. Op-ed refers to opposite the editorial page, on which many daily newspapers run guest columns and opinion pieces, editorial cartoons, letters from readers, etc. Many high school newspapers combine the editorial page and op-ed content on a single page.Be mindful of when the cartoon was created. Most are topical or attached to breaking news or trends and have a relatively short shelf life. Running a dated editorial cartoon can inadvertently change its intent and meaning.To download an editorial cartoon on a Macintosh, click and hold on the "Download" link. In the pop-up menu, select "Save file as ...." Select this option and save the TIFF file to your desktop. To download an editorial cartoon on a Windows PC, right-click the download link. In the pop-up menu, select "Save target as ...." Select this option and save the TIFF file to your desktop.How do I download comics?ASNE/MCT Campus features seven comic strips that move every Tuesday:Some comics are designed to run weekly, others twice a week. That’s far more than you can ever consider using. Since your high school newspaper is likely to publish once a month, pick whatever you think will be most entertaining for your audience.To download a comic on a Macintosh, click and hold on the "Download" link. In the pop-up menu, select "Save file as ...." Select this option and save the TIFF file to your desktop. To download a comic on a Windows PC, right-click the download link. In the pop-up menu, select "Save target as ...." Select this option and save the TIFF file to your desktop.How do I download crossword puzzles? Crosswords are offered in two formats, the Daily Crossword TIFF file and the Weekly Crossword Package. Because of your high school newspaper’s production cycle, you’ll likely be better off using a weekly puzzle.To download the Daily Crossword TIFF on a Macintosh, click and hold on the "Download" link. In the pop-up menu, select "Save file as ...." Select this option and save the TIFF file to your desktop. To download the Daily Crossword TIFF on a Windows PC, right-click the download link. In the pop-up menu, select "Save target as ...." Select this option and save the TIFF file to your desktop. The Weekly Crossword Package is a folder containing a week of crossword puzzles, and it includes QuarkXPress pages and EPS files of each of the puzzles. To download the weekly package, click on "Download" and save the file to your desktop.How do I download horoscopes?You’ll have a choice between daily and weekly listings. Because of your production cycle, it will probably make most sense for you to run the weekly listing closest to your distribution date. The Mystic Stars weekly horoscopes column by Lasha Seniuk posts every Monday.Giving credit where credit is dueCopyright law and plagiarism are topics we take very seriously. By signing up for this service, you have created an opportunity to discuss these matters with your students. The Student Press Law Center, based in Arlington, Va., is an excellent source for information on these matters. Go to: these protocols to credit material you use from the MCT Campus:Story byline and dateline: By John JonesChicago Tribune Chicago (MCT) -- Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their... End of story/cutline: (c) 2004, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by McClatchy/Tribune Information Services. Photo, photo illustration, caricature and graphic credits shall include the name of the originating newspaper followed by a slash, then MCT. For example: Kansas City Star/MCTEditorial cartoons:By Wayne StayskalTribune Media ServicesIn addition, the cartoon itself will contain the words like “MCT Campus” “Tribune Media Services” or the name of the originating newspaper in a ics:By Billy O’KeefeTribune Media ServicesIn addition, the comic itself will contain the words like “MCT Campus” “Tribune Media Services” or the name of artist.Horoscopes At the top of the listings:By Lasha SeniukMcClatchy/Tribune News ServiceAt the bottom of the listings:(c) 2006, TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES INC. Distributed by McClatchy /Tribune Information Services.You do not have to run the following line: For a private consultation, please visit .Crossword PuzzlesAt the top or bottom of the puzzle:Distributed by McClatchy/Tribune Information Services.Web-ready contentMCT Campus offers three types of content that can easily be utilized in your online high school newspaper:Web-Ready graphics: Ready-to-publish informational graphics are available in Flash format. Download includes coding to embed image on a page or publish in a popup window. You’ll find detailed instructions on the site.Animations: Ready-to-publish news and feature animations and video reports are available in QuickTime. Each download includes three versions of the animation with natural sound and voiceover: QuickTime, RealPlayer and Windows Media, so you can match with other video offerings on your high school newspaper site.Special Reports: MCT Campus' special video reports can also be posted to your Web site. These online movies include video, animation, interviews and narration.Are there things on the MCT Campus site I can’t use?Yes, several things off limits. Sorry!The Visuals Premium Archive is only available to subscribers to that service. See page 2 for information about it.Extra, Extra!MCT Campus Plus??MCT Regional NewsYour students can’t enter contests sponsored by MCT Campus that are listed on the site. They are the Student Society of News Design College News Design Contest, College Cartoonist and Reporter of the Year contests. Tell your students that once they get to college, they should by all means go for it!Ditto for the jobs and internships. Most of the listings are for professional journalists, and the internships are generally geared toward college students with some journalism experience and driver’s licenses.The “MCTlivewire” weekly newsletter is aimed at college campus newspaper subscribers, but does have information that high school students would be interested in as well. You can sign up to receive it.Frequently asked questionsHow do I get logged on?Go to .Do a search there and any link you try to download after that search is conducted will prompt you for your user name and password.Your user name and password are case sensitve.I’ve forgotten my login information.Click on “Forgot your username/password?” link on When I click on a photo or graphic I see, “Contact Us. Note: All usernames and passwords are case-sensitive.”This is the message you’ll see when your login is invalid for the content you are trying to get. Your login allows you to access visual material that is less than two weeks old. Anything older than that is in the archives.Material you can use as part of the ASNE/MCT High School Newspaper Service will say PHOTOS for current pictures and PHOTOS ARCHIVE for older ones; likewise, it will say GRAPHICS or GRAPHICS ARCHIVES. Please see page 2 for information on that.When I try to download something other than a story or photo, it fails.A “cookie” is set on your browser when you log in. Every time you download something, the server checks to see if you have one.Because of the way cartoons and crosswords are downloaded (they are often TIFF files and can’t be rendered on a browser screen), you are saving the “You need to log in” message instead of the image.A quick way to solve this is to “pretend” to download a photo first, set the cookie, then downloading the content you were after.Can I use content from the service in my yearbook?NO!If you do, you will violate the user agreement, we will expel your school newspaper from the service, and the school might be liable for a possible copyright lawsuit.MCT does offer a special version just for yearbooks. See page 2 for this contact information.Who do I contact if I have a question about a story, photo, graphic, etc. or have a special request?Contact the ASNE staff at support@.Please do not contact MCT Campus.Is there software I need to utilize MCT Campus offerings?Stuffit Expander: (You'll need this if you download a .sit file in order to unstuff it.)Adobe Acrobat Reader: Player: Explorer: : Player: : Media Player: if I have trouble converting from one program to another?We are happy to help you, but we cannot help you convert files from, say, Quark Xpress to Pagemaker or tell you how to get InDesign to read a Freehand file. That falls outside of our expertise. If you are using that kind of file often, you should invest in the software needed to read it properly.What should we do if we don’t have the fonts used in the graphics? You have a few choices:You could buy the font from a font dealer. Try a search engine for the exact name of the font you’re looking for and you will probably find it. Install it and view the graphic the way it was created. (Please keep in mind that graphics are often created on Macs, so there could be font differences from Windows.)You could change the graphic. The ASNE/MCT Campus Newspaper Service gives you permission to change graphics slightly as part of the terms of service. It is common for newspapers to have style rules for graphics, and your rules could simply be that the font used is one that you already own.Can I sign up for the free e-mail newsletter on the MCT Campus site?Yes!Can you explain some of the common acronyms that refer to computer graphics?All of the following formats can be read in Photoshop and most other photo editing programs. The GIF format (with the extension .gif) is mostly used to publish images on the Web. GIF stands for Graphics Interchange Format. Generally, GIFs handle monochromatic images in an efficient manner (things like logos, banners, etc.). JPEG (with the extension .jpg) is a compressed graphic file format that is most suitable for on-screen use and is typically used for displaying photos in the Web. JPEG is an acronym for Joint Photographic Experts Group, the original name of the committee that devised the standard. PDF (with the extension .pdf) stands for Portable Document Format, which is created on Adobe Systems software. This format will let you save virtually any document – from a simple Word file to a graphically rich page – in a compact form. It can then be viewed and printed by a broad range of hardware and software. TIFF (with the extension .tif) stands for Tagged Image File Format. It is commonly used for storing scanned images in a format that keeps all original scanned image data intact. Because it is a bitmapped image, a full color TIFF of a photo can require significant memory and disk space. The TIFF format is commonly used for material that is being printed, since it allows specific color information for each pixel. Browsers cannot read it. Many of the cartoons and comics are delivered in TIFF format.EPS (with the extension .eps) stands for Encapsulated PostScript. Many software programs allow you to save as EPS and import EPS files; it is often used in situations where multiple programs might encounter a file. Also created by Adobe, it predates PDF files, and generally can be used in the same situations that PDFs are. It is harder to use than the PDF format and creates larger files.Can you explain other common acronyms I might encounter? SIT is a Stuffit document, commonly used on Macintoshes. This is similar to a .zip document on a PC. Most expander programs can handle this, most notably Stuffit Expander.MOV is a Quicktime movie file. Quicktime software is available free at . Animations carried by the system include this as one of the choices.RM is a Real movie file. Real software is free at . Animations carried by the system include this as one of the choices.WMV is a Windows Media Player file. Windows Media Player software is free at . Animations carried by the system include this as one of the choices.FH9 is a Freehand 9 file. Freehand is vector-based illustration software comparable to Adobe Illustrator. It must be purchased from Macromedia or a retailer (see above for details on how to get an education version). Trial versions are crippled so they cannot save or export files.QXD is a Quark Xpress file. Quark Xpress is a page layout program that is the standard in daily newspaper journalism. It must be purchased from Quark or a retailer.What kind of software do I need?To use photos, the best software to use is Photoshop or Photoshop Elements by Adobe. You could also seek out “photo editing software” on a search engine for freeware or shareware. To use the graphics and some illustrations, you will need FreeHand MX software by Macromedia or Adobe Illustrator version 10 or above.To use the OnePages and read the weekly crossword puzzles, you will need Quark Xpress software from Quark (the daily crosswords are regular images you can use in Photoshop). Some graphics are posted in the Stuffit format -- .sit. To read them, you’ll need Stuffit Expander. This is available online at . To use it you will need to download the trial version of the software – BUT YOU DO NOT NEED TO BUY IT. You can unstuff for free.There are several Web sites where the cost of the software is significantly marked down for schools. Here are several sites that offer educational discounts on these software programs:Academic Superstore Tech Software Engine Resourceshttp//Gradware’s Ed have a question that hasn’t been addressed here or have a comment about MCT Campus content.Contact ASNE at support@asne. Be sure to include your name, school and name of the newspaper.Please do not contact MCT Campus.If you have a technical question about the Web site, please include any error messages that have appeared. Just copy and paste it into the e-mail. Also, it’s very helpful to include the computer platform (Windows 98, Macintosh OS X, etc.) and browser you use (Internet Explorer 6, Netscape 4.7, Mozilla 1.2.1, etc.). Thanks!Basic terms of serviceBe sure to share this with your students and make sure everything is clearly understood. If there is a violation of any of these terms, ignorance will not be accepted as an excuse.Users agree not to hack, disrupt, damage or otherwise cause harm to the system.Material may be used only in the official high school student newspaper (ink on paper, online or both). The material may also be used in the classroom to teach journalism.Use of the material in yearbooks, literary magazines, school or school district newsletters, personal Web sites or any other publication is strictly prohibited. Schools that violate this policy will lose the privilege of using the ASNE/MCT Campus High School Newspaper Service and may face legal action for copyright violation.The material may only be used for editorial purposes. It may not be used in advertising or for promotional purposes.We must be able to reach the newspaper adviser for updates and other matters. A valid e-mail address is a condition of using the service. We may disable the service if we are unable to reach the adviser.MCT and ASNE are not liable for loss or damage arising from the use and dissemination of this material.Stories and photo captions may be lightly edited, as long as the editorial intent or substance does not change. You may localize a story, but it must be a separate piece. Please do not drop student copy into a MCT Campus story.The content of photos may not be changed or manipulated, either physically or electronically. Photos may be cropped for size. Color photos may be published as black and white images.A graphic may be lightly edited or updated, as long as the editorial intent does not change. Fonts may be changed to match your newspaper’s style; style changes for capitalization and the like are also permitted. Color graphics may be published as black and white graphics.In keeping with basic journalism standards, proper and full crediting of stories, bylines, photo captions, graphics, comics, photos and other material must follow specifics detailed on page 7.Every time material is used in an issue, the newspaper’s staff box must carry the following sentence: “Some material courtesy of American Society of Newspaper Editors/MCT Campus High School Newspaper Service.”Up to 35 items from the service may be used per issue of your high school newspaper, either in print or on the Web. If you wish to use the material for anything other than the school newspaper and/or online publication, you must contact ASNE and get written permission from MCT.Material may be downloaded by a teacher or by a student who is under the direct supervision of the journalism adviser or teacher.The password and user name should be kept by the journalism teacher and not distributed.ASNE must be notified when there is a change in faculty staffing (journalism teacher/newspaper adviser or principal).If you’re unsure of a policy or have questions, contact ASNE at support@. ................
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