InTune Magazine is a UO student-run platform dedicated to giving Black students a voice and a place to express their creativity while highlighting Black student resources.
Since the approval of “name, image, and likeness” (NIL) rules, dozens of SOJC students have supported UO athletes in exploring sponsorships and endorsements through Oregon Accelerator.
Danielle Austen '16, a journalism major who cut her teeth on Duck TV, landed a job at the true crime show "48 Hours" as associate producer of development. She says Duck TV prepared her to work in live TV.
Journalism student Chandlor Henderson, who attended the National Association of Black Journalists convention in July, was in a quandary over the value of Donald Trump’s invitation to the event.
Eugene NPR station KLCC has published a story that originally appeared in the SOJC’s Flux magazine. The story chronicles numerous encounters with the hairy beast known as both Bigfoot and Sasquatch.
A SOJC contingent of students and faculty attended World Press Freedom Day in Santiago, Chile, where student reporters produced blogs, podcasts and photography for the UO-UNESCO Crossings website.
Networking with UO alumni and working for the student-led Duck TV station helped four SOJC students get news, sports and weather jobs at local TV news stations.
Advertising major Charlie Nguyễn ’24 worked with real clients at Allen Hall Advertising and created a magazine for his portfolio. It paid off with an advertising job at a prestigious New York firm.