Student Media Culture


Amendments Are Made to Be Broken

  The Republican National Convention, held last week in St. Paul, Minnesota, drew national attention not only because it launched the official nomination of John McCain as the Republican candidate for president, but also because of protests outside the convention that led to hundreds of arrests. Protesters from all over the country gathered to demonstrate against the war in Iraq, and what began as non-violent protest quickly got out of hand when police overreacted. Protesters initially gathered at the capitol building, intendi


Alternative campus papers

 

Journalism students at UT Austin have launched a satirical campus paper, entitled “The Yellow Journalist” and conservative students at Colorado State University, upset over the “F--- Bush” Collegian Editorial, have launched “The Ram Republic.”

Read more from Texas Read more from


Freedom Of Information Action at Michigan State University

  The Michigan State Supreme Court sent a lawsuit filed by Michigan State student newspaper, The State News, back to a lower court for further review last week, effectively sending the paper back to square one nearly two years after the suit was filed. The case began when campus police denied the paper's Michigan Freedom of Information Act request for police reports involving an assault on campus in Februa


Student Journalists Explore Their Future Field at Camp Take a Stand

  Camp Take a Stand, an intensive investigative journalism workshop for students, was recently held at Wesleyan University. Twenty-five student journalists from across the country assembled for a week-long series of discussion panels on the future of print journalism, and skill-building sessions to develop investigative journalism skills with a faculty of distinguished local and national journalists. As part of the workshop, each of the students was charged with writing a story on a topic of their choice. More about


Networking Site Safety

  Two USC juniors have turned what began as a class project into a national business: Portcard.net, a service that verifies online identities. The service allows people age 21 and older to authenticate their online identity, proving they are who they say they are. The user fills in basic information and the site pulls background information about the user from public databases and credit records. The user must then answer a series of randomly selected personal questions in less than a minute each. The questions are designed so that only the real person would be able to answer correctly


Behind the Music

Those of you who read our last installment might remember the controversy over the November 28th issue cover of Dartmouth College’s conservative student newspaper, The Dartmouth Review. Today, we’re doubly pleased to bring you this follow-up—the editor of the Dartmouth Review has issued a very eloquent apology for the issue cover, which he believes served to close down dialogue rather than promote it. At the same time, however, he stands by the contents within the issue as thoughtful, important, and worthy of consideration. And we agree. So check out the editorial apology and the story behind


Promoting Protest the Unauthorized Way

  Former White House Chief of Staff Andy Card came to the University of Massachusetts to give a lecture, which prompted students to organize protests that were (as is often the case) promoted by email. Problems arose, however, when a student sent an email rallying others to the English department listserve—something the University’s Office of Information Technologies said should not have been possible without an administrative password. The student pleaded innocence, saying he mistakenly sent it (twice) to the wrong email list, but required no password to do so. No disciplinary action


Art as Activism

By Michaelia Fosses, NSNS Staff Writer Two young men walk down a dirt road, seemingly in chase of two boys playing soccer barefoot with a homemade ball. A few children gather to look on.   This is just one of the many photos from Project Focus, a student organization and traveling photography exhibit whose first show features photos taken by 16 children living in the slums around Kampala, Uganda. Patricia Blauvelt, a junior communication major at the University of Illinois at Chicago and Public Relations Director for Project Focus, says the group’s goal was giving a voice to an o


Plays and Politics

  A variety of student groups at Columbia University are producing four plays this semester, in an effort to tie the arts of the past with the politics of today.  The first of the four plays was Shakespeare's Macbeth, which students hoped would promote a discussion on the topic of tyranny. 3/5/07  Read More from Columbia University


Facebook Takes Stalking to a New Level

  Maybe you saw it on the News Feed: personal information posted on Facebook may be impossible to fully delete.  Facebook representatives stated that this is to provide users with the option to restore their accounts and have their old information – including friends, photos, and applications – available. By agreeing to Facebook’s Terms and Conditions of Use, the user agrees to allowing the site to archive copies of personal content, even after a user’s profile has been removed.

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Student Media Culture