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Some of the smaller commencement ceremonies will still host keynote speakers, including King, who is scheduled to address Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism graduates on May 10.
The journalism program at USC dates back to 1916. In 1933, it became the School of Journalism within the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. In 1971, the USC Annenberg School for Communication was founded, supported by an $8-million [1] gift from Walter Annenberg. It was reorganized in 1994 to include the School of Journalism and the ...
USC Annenberg Press is a university press based in the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California.USC Annenberg Press publishes four peer-reviewed academic journals, namely the International Journal of Communication, Information Technologies & International Development, Case Studies in Strategic Communication and the Image of the Journalist in ...
The School of Journalism, which became part of the School for Communication in 1994, [12] features a core curriculum that requires students to devote themselves equally to print, broadcast and online media for the first year of study. USC's Annenberg School for Communication endowment rose from $7.5 million to $218 million between 1996 and 2007 ...
After the University of Southern California canceled its main commencement, students at other campuses with protests wonder if theirs will be next. As USC cancels commencement, Columbia students ...
What was supposed to be a time of celebration for Asna Tabassum – the University of Southern California’s 2024 valedictorian – has turned to disappointment after the university denied her ...
The Annenberg Center on Communication Leadership & Policy (CCLP) at the University of Southern California promotes interdisciplinary research in communications between the USC School of Cinematic Arts, Viterbi School of Engineering, and the separate USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, also funded by Walter Annenberg.
Walter Annenberg founded the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania in 1958. [2] The school, whose first class began in 1959, was initially a master's-only program. [3] The first Annenberg students were admitted in the Fall semester of 1959 and graduated in the Spring semester of 1960. [4]