WWU Journalism Student Features
Klipsun writers win AEJMC Magazine Contest
Klipsun Magazine writers earned two national awards in the 2024 Student Magazine Contest sponsored by the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
The annual contest, organized by AEJMC’s Magazine Media Division, drew 137 entries from 21 colleges and universities across nine categories.
Next generation of Western journalists seize opportunities
News-ed major Franny Vollert shares her experiences of attending two college journalism events on opposite sides of the country – the Georges Conference on College Journalism, held at Harvard University, and the Best of the Pacific Northwest College Journalism Symposium, held at the Seattle Times.
Fall 2023 publications update
Meet the Fall 2023 editors of The Front, The Planet and Klipsun and learn what they have been working on. Video by Desiree Erdmann.
Spring 2023 Graduation Photos
Spring 2023 journalism grads celebrate their accomplishments in Red Square.
Breakout Magazine brings back music journalism
Breakout creator Natalie Vinh recruits journalism students to contribute features, photos and music reviews.
When COVID-19 hit Bellingham at the start of 2020, it wasn’t long before the community’s iconic music scene went silent. To the dismay of young local artists and DIY music-lovers alike, gone were the drunken walks to go sit or sway in a crowded living room covered in string lights and brimming with guitar riffs and drumbeats. But this fall, after vaccinated students started returning to Western Washington University, Bellingham saw not only the return of house shows and live music, but something else as well: music journalism.
More Than A Click Away
I lift my head and slap at my phone, hoping to silence the incessant ringing of the 9:50 a.m. alarm. Eyes barely cracked, I reach over the side of my bed and pull up my laptop from where I left last night working on an assignment well past midnight.
Groggily, I click the link to join a Zoom meeting for my 10 o’clock class. I leave the camera off. I fall asleep again for the first ten minutes.
It’s unlikely I’ll find a reason to leave bed before noon.
Two Weeks in Tunisia
In a lush park in the middle of downtown Tunis, sisters Chahira, 21, and Nawres, 19, sat on a park bench. I held out my phone and pressed record as they began to share their experiences of being young people during Tunisia’s 2011 uprisings.
“There’s one memory that I couldn’t forget. A boy who was probably 15-16 years old set himself on fire in our school and died,” Chahira said. “I was twelve years old at the time and I remember that we didn’t go to school for almost two weeks because of that incident.”
Klipsun turns 50
Klipsun’s 50th anniversary spawned a unique opportunity for former and current staff to discuss their respective time as employees, what their generation stood for and what types of social issues they tackled with the magazine.
The diverse mix of past and present staff members shared stories, lessons and laughs while looking over Klipsun issues from a number of generations during a celebration of Klipsun’s 50th birthday on Saturday, Oct. 19, 2019.
Society of Student Journalists of Color founded at Western
For many young journalism students at Western, writing and editing for the Western Front is their very first time working for a newspaper. It can feel almost like a simulation, bouncing between sitting in a lecture hall, interviewing sources and communicating with editors on a daily basis. The Western Front tells the stories of the many living, breathing communities on Western’s campus, and like any long-standing news organizations, there is always room for improvement.
Western journalism students win Key Award
On September 21, 2018, The Washington Coalition for Open Government (WCOG) awarded two Western journalism students Asia Fields and Erasmus Baxter with the Key Award. They were honored and recognized for reporting on the university’s handling of sexual harassment and sexual assault through utilizing Public Records Act.