Yellow Jacket (newspaper)

The Yellow Jacket is the student newspaper for Waynesburg University. The newspaper is produced entirely by Waynesburg University students and is incorporated into many classes within the university's Department of Communication.[1] The Yellow Jacket features news on campus and community news, student opinion, coverage of the Presidents' Athletic Conference sports teams, and other topics of student or faculty interest. The Yellow Jacket publishes weekly during the academic year in print[2] and online.[3] The newspaper has been published under the Yellow Jacket nameplate since 1924, though student newspapers at Waynesburg University (then Waynesburg College) date back to 1894. Federal Judge John Clark Knox served as the first student editor of the first student newspaper at Waynesburg College.

The Yellow Jacket
Waynesburg University
Student produced since 1924
TypeStudent Weekly Newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)Waynesburg University
Founded1924
Headquarters51 W College St.
Waynesburg, Pennsylvania 15370
CityWaynesburg, Pa
CountryUnited States
Circulation1,200 weekly
Websitewww.theyellowjacket.org
Free online archiveshttps://issuu.com/wuyellowjacket

The Yellow Jacket is a member of the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association and is affiliated with the Waynesburg University student chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists.

Awards and nominations

The student staff of the Yellow Jacket has been recognized with over three dozen awards by the Society of Professional Journalists' Mark of Excellence competition and the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association. In addition to individual or team awards, the newspaper has been recognized by SPJ with the Best All-Around Non-Daily Newspaper award in Region 4 twice (2004 and 2016) and a regional finalist in 2003, 2013, and 2014.[4][5][6][7] In 2016, a team of student writers—Kimmi Baston, Anthony Conn, Teghan Simonton, and Mattie Winowitch—were named by SPJ as the National Winner in the In-Depth Reporting Category[8] for a series on opioid abuse in Southwestern Pennsylvania.

gollark: And value that over actual money.
gollark: Which I suppose can make some sense if you assume that it's "rational" in that people... like surprises, or something, but...
gollark: People *play the lottery*, too.
gollark: People somehow can't accept positive-sum games.
gollark: > A core proposition in economics is that voluntary exchanges benefit both parties. We show that people often deny the mutually beneficial nature of exchange, instead espousing the belief that one or both parties fail to benefit from the exchange. Across 4 studies (and 7 further studies in the Supplementary Materials), participants read about simple exchanges of goods and services, judging whether each party to the transaction was better off or worse off afterwards. These studies revealed that win–win denial is pervasive, with buyers consistently seen as less likely to benefit from transactions than sellers. Several potential psychological mechanisms underlying win–win denial are considered, with the most important influences being mercantilist theories of value (confusing wealth for money) and naïve realism (failing to observe that people do not arbitrarily enter exchanges). We argue that these results have widespread implications for politics and society.

References

  1. "Department of Communication". waynesburg.edu. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  2. "ISSUU: Yellow Jacket". Issuu.com.
  3. "The Yellow Jacket". Yellow Jacket. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  4. "Student newspaper named regional winner". waynesburg.edu. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  5. "Region 4 Mark of Excellence Awards winners announced in Athens, Ohio". www.spj.org. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  6. "Yellow Jacket lauded with SPJ and PNA awards". waynesburg.edu. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  7. "Region 4 Mark of Excellence Awards winners announced in Detroit - Society of Professional Journalists". www.spj.org. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
  8. "Mark of Excellence Awards - Society of Professional Journalists". www.spj.org. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
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