The Georgetown Voice

The Georgetown Voice is the student-run biweekly campus news magazine at Georgetown University. It has a circulation of approximately 1,000 and prints an edition every other Friday, as well as maintains a daily online presence.

The Georgetown Voice
TypeStudent news magazine
Editor-in-chiefRoman Peregrino[1]
Staff writers80 regular
FoundedMarch 4, 1969[2]
HeadquartersGeorgetown University
Circulation1,000
Websitewww.georgetownvoice.com

The Voice was founded in March 1969 at the height of the Vietnam War, when a group of senior editors at The Hoya, Georgetown University's campus newspaper, left in order to comment on topics off as well as on campus.[3] The debut editorial, published March 4, 1969, explained the organization's goals and purposes:

“Our editorial policy will view and analyze issues in a liberal light. We shall not limit our editorial content to campus topics. We promise to present and analyze national and local issues of concern to the student, whose concern should spread beyond the campus … We shall attempt with all our energy to inform the community, to make the community conscious of controversial subjects by an open presentation and discussion of relevant issues, to communicate a culture, and to entertain our readers.”[4]

The Voice consists of Editorial, News, Sports, Feature, Leisure (arts & entertainment), Voices (non-fiction submitted by the campus community), Design, Multimedia, and Podcast sections. While the Voice is explicitly liberal in its editorial content, its news reporting is objective. It is primarily known for its in-depth pieces featured on the cover, as well as its Leisure section that focuses on less well-known film, art, theatre, music and food in the District of Columbia. In 2006, the Voice also founded a blog, Vox Populi, which published until 2015. In 2014, the Voice started Halftime, a sports and leisure blog devoted to content beyond camps and the District.

On April 11, 2007, the Voice was quoted on the Senate floor as Democratic Senator Robert Menendez from New Jersey got into a lengthy argument with President Bush’s Special Envoy to Sudan Andrew Natsios over whether the classification of genocide still holds in Darfur.[5]

References

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