Photo illustration: Anthony Gerace. Sources: Hill Street Studios / Andersen Ross Photography Inc / David Soanes Photography / Leon Halip / Getty Images

How College Journalists Are Reshaping Media

The future of journalism is being written at America’s college newspapers

Theodore Ross
GEN
Published in
24 min readFeb 15, 2021

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In November 2019, former U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions came to Northwestern University to make a speech he called “The Real Meaning of the Trump Agenda.” Sessions, who had been invited by the College Republicans, had been out of office for a year. But he was still an infamous figure of the Trump administration, an anti-migrant, anti-asylum, anti-LGBTQ+, anti-marijuana henchman who introduced “kids in cages” to American history.

His presence at a liberal school like Northwestern was bound to be viewed as a provocation. One student Facebook group called for a “Night of Action” protest in a parking lot outside Lutkin Hall, where Sessions was speaking. Another group of about 150 students went up to the building itself, banging on doors and windows and trying to make enough noise to disrupt the speech. One student broke a window with a skateboard, and others forced their way inside and were thrown out by campus police. The protesters shouted slogans like “I-C-E, K-K-K, how many kids have you killed today?” and “Fuck Jeff Sessions!” Sessions’ supporters countered with chants of “We’re not racists!” and “Trump 2020! Make America great again!” as they were escorted from the event by the police.

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Theodore Ross
GEN
Writer for

Producer, writer, editor. Author, Am I a Jew? a memoir.