Washington Square News
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Berliner |
Owner(s) | Independent |
Founded | 1973 |
Headquarters | New York, New York |
Website | nyunews.com |
The Washington Square News is the daily student newspaper of New York University and serves the NYU, Greenwich Village, and East Village communities. The paper, better known as WSN, has a circulation of 10,000 and an estimated 40,000 readers online. It is published in print on Monday, in addition to online publication Tuesday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters, with additional issues published in the summer.
WSN is run solely by NYU students, with the paper's senior staff mostly composed of undergraduates. Its offices are located at 75 3rd Ave.
The paper is editorially independent from the university and is solely responsible in selling advertisements to fund its production.[1]
The term for the position of editor-in-chief is one calendar year, beginning in the spring semester and ending in the fall semester. The term for all other editorial positions is one semester. The editor-in-chief for Spring and Fall 2016 is Alex Bazeley.
History
The newspaper was born in 1973 as the result of NYU's merging of their two campuses: the University Heights campus in the Bronx had published The Heights Daily News, while the Washington Square campus in Lower Manhattan originally published The Washington Square Bulletin.
In 2000, WSN launched its website nyunews.com.
Awards
In 2009, reporters Marc Beja and Adam Playford (Editor-in-Chief, 2008) won 1st place in the category of "Best News Story" from the New York State Press Association and National Winner in the category of "In-depth reporting" from the Society of Professional Journalists. At the same time Alvin Chang (Editor-in-Chief, 2007) won best columnist.
Washington Square News won an Associated Collegiate Press Pacemaker award in 2004, that same year it was awarded the title of Overall Best Newspaper.[2]
In 2003, the paper won seven first-place awards in the Division 1 "Better College Newspaper Contest" of the New York State Press Association.
Notable former staff
- Renu Aldrich, Managing Director at Bear Stearns; noted publicist
- Bill Bastone, editor, The Smoking Gun
- Cindy Behrman, Advertising Editor, Suddler & Hennesey; writer, Village Voice and New York Press (deceased July 22, 2008)
- Marc H. Bell, CEO of Penthouse Media Group
- Russell Berman, The Hill reporter
- Matt Buchanan, editor, Eater[disambiguation needed]
- Alvin Chang, reporter, Vox
- Fred Clarke, Democratic Party communications guru; now IBM Communications Manager
- Kevin Coyle, attorney, author, actor
- Katherine Creag, television reporter, Good Day New York
- Charles Dharapak, photojournalist
- Jill Filipovic, Feministe
- Karen Epper-Hoffman, business and technology journalist, analyst Forrester Research
- Bradley Hope, reporter, Wall Street Journal
- Eileen "E.P." Gunn, 'Eco-Nomics' columnist, TheStreet.com, freelance writer/editor/lecturer
- Christopher Haraden, Managing Editor of The Hull Times
- Gary He, freelance photojournalist
- Annette Heist, Producer of NPR Science Friday
- Jay Hochberg, NJPA Prize-winning political columnist turned Press Secretary; Masonic educator
- Eric Kohn, senior editor and chief film critic at Indiewire
- Jessica Letkemann, Editor of billboard.com
- Mark Mueller, Staff Writer, Newark Star-Ledger (shares 2005 Pulitzer Prize)
- Jon Mummolo, Washington Post Reporter
- Lindsay Noonan, Writer/Producer at CNN
- Andrew Nusca, editor, Fortune
- Amy Odell, editor, Cosmopolitan
- Brian O'Keefe, Senior Editor of Fortune Magazine
- Kira Peikoff, author, The Unholy Grail
- Adam Playford, editor, Tampa Bay Times
- David E. Rovella, National Legal Editor at Bloomberg News, Attorney
- Gene Weingarten, Washington Post columnist; 2008, 2010 Pulitzer Prize winner
- Scott Wenger, assistant managing editor, Daily News (New York)
See also
References
- ^ Elizabeth Castro (2004-11). "Next Generation Radio Project". 2004 National College Media Convention. NPR. Retrieved 2008-10-03.
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(help) - ^ "Washington Square News Voted Best Undergraduate Paper". The Villager. 2004-03-14. Retrieved 2008-10-03.