February 7, 2005: Headlines: COS - Malaysia: Journalism: Editor and Publisher: Malaysia RPCV Bruce Anderson Folds Pugnacious 'AVA Oregon'
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February 7, 2005: Headlines: COS - Malaysia: Journalism: Editor and Publisher: Malaysia RPCV Bruce Anderson Folds Pugnacious 'AVA Oregon'
Malaysia RPCV Bruce Anderson Folds Pugnacious 'AVA Oregon'
Malaysia RPCV Bruce Anderson Folds Pugnacious 'AVA Oregon'
Bruce Anderson Folds Pugnacious 'AVA Oregon'
By E&P Staff
Published: February 07, 2005 2:15 PM ET
CHICAGO Bruce Anderson is folding his AVA Oregon weekly, just three months after he attempted to replicate in the Pacific Northwest the formula that gained nationwide admiration -- and local loathing -- when he ran the mucking raking Anderson Valley Advertiser in northern California.
AVA Oregon's phone number has been switched to an unlisted number, a recording Monday afternoon said. Anderson did not immediately respond to an e-mail seeking comment.
The editor and publisher announced on the front page of AVA Oregon that the current issue, dated Feb. 3, would be its last, according to The Register-Guard in his newly adopted hometown of Eugene, Ore.
"I'm out of money, and out of business," Anderson wrote, according to the article. "I could borrow but I have no way of paying it back. Start-up costs were quadruple what I'd expected."
In the article, Anderson said he planned to stay in Eugene, but would help edit the California AVA, which he sold to the newspaper's wine industry columnist for $20,000, exactly what Anderson paid for the paper in 1984. Anderson said subscribers would receive refunds "when I've cleared away the accrued financial wreckage," he wrote, according to the Register-Guard.
In California, Anderson built a loyal national following with articles from contributors such as the leftist political writer Alexander Cockburn, and with his own iconoclastic reporting on the activities of Mendocino County politicians, judges, schools superintendents, and political activists. Cockburn called him the best weekly editor in the nation.
Anderson also stirred tremendous enmity in some radical environmentalist circles with his reporting on the circumstances of a car bombing that injured the now-deceased activist Judi Bari.
Much of that enmity followed him to Eugene, where some local activists lobbied retailers to refuse to sell the weekly.
Anderson and his new beginning in Eugene were featured in a story in the current issue of E&P. He was also profiled in recent weeks and months by The New York Times and The Sacramento Bee.
When this story was posted in February 2005, this was on the front page of PCOL:
 | The Peace Corps Library Peace Corps Online is proud to announce that the Peace Corps Library is now available online. With over 27,000 index entries in 430 categories, this is the largest collection of Peace Corps related stories in the world. From Acting to Zucchini, you can use the Main Index to find hundreds of stories about what RPCVs with your same interests or from your Country of Service are doing today. |
 | Bush's FY06 Budget for the Peace Corps The White House is proposing $345 Million for the Peace Corps for FY06 - a $27.7 Million (8.7%) increase that would allow at least two new posts and maintain the existing number of volunteers at approximately 7,700. Bush's 2002 proposal to double the Peace Corps to 14,000 volunteers appears to have been forgotten. The proposed budget still needs to be approved by Congress. |
 | RPCVs mobilize support for Countries of Service RPCV Groups mobilize to support their Countries of Service. Over 200 RPCVS have already applied to the Crisis Corps to provide Tsunami Recovery aid, RPCVs have written a letter urging President Bush and Congress to aid Democracy in Ukraine, and RPCVs are writing NBC about a recent episode of the "West Wing" and asking them to get their facts right about Turkey. |
 | Ask Not As our country prepares for the inauguration of a President, we remember one of the greatest speeches of the 20th century and how his words inspired us. "And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you--ask what you can do for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man." |
 | Latest: RPCVs and Peace Corps provide aid Peace Corps made an appeal last week to all Thailand RPCV's to consider serving again through the Crisis Corps and more than 30 RPCVs have responded so far. RPCVs: Read what an RPCV-led NGO is doing about the crisis an how one RPCV is headed for Sri Lanka to help a nation he grew to love. Question: Is Crisis Corps going to send RPCVs to India, Indonesia and nine other countries that need help? |
 | The World's Broken Promise to our Children Former Director Carol Bellamy, now head of Unicef, says that the appalling conditions endured today by half the world's children speak to a broken promise. Too many governments are doing worse than neglecting children -- they are making deliberate, informed choices that hurt children. Read her op-ed and Unicef's report on the State of the World's Children 2005. |
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Story Source: Editor and Publisher
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