TheNewhouse School of Public Communications (formallyS. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications; also as theNewhouse School) is the communications and journalism school ofSyracuse University inSyracuse, New York. The school was named after publishing magnateSamuel Irving Newhouse Sr., founder ofAdvance Publications, who provided the founding gift in 1964.[4]
The school enrolls approximately 2,000 undergraduate students, 180 residential master’s degree students, 200 online master's degree students, and 15 doctoral degree candidates as of 2022.[5] Undergraduate admissions are highly selective.[5] The school has about 80 full-time faculty members and about 50 adjunct instructors.[5] Mark J. Lodato has been the dean of the Newhouse School since July 2020.[3]
The department became a separate School of Journalism in 1934,[2][9] withMatthew Lyle Spencer serving as the founding dean.[10][11][12] The new school was housed in the Yates Castle (Renwick Castle) from 1934 until the buildings demolition in 1954.[13][14][15] The school was moved into the Old Gym from 1953 until that building was razed in 1965.[16]
In 1932, Syracuse University became the first university in the nation to offer a college credit radio course. In 1947, SU launchedWAER, one of the nation's first college radio stations.[8][17][18] With the emergence of television, SU was the first to offer instruction in the field in 1956.[8]
Newhouse 1, Designed byI. M. Pei.Newhouse 2 Building & Dick Clark Studios at the Waverly Ave entrance.Newhouse 3, built in 2007, features theFirst Amendment etched in six-foot-high letters on its curving glass windows.
In 1964, supported by a $15 million gift fromSamuel Irving "S. I." Newhouse Jr.,[1] the Newhouse Communications Complex was officially inaugurated in Newhouse 1, an award-winning building designed by architectI. M. Pei, which housed the School of Journalism.[19] The building was dedicated by PresidentLyndon B. Johnson, who delivered his famous "Gulf of Tonkin Speech" on the Newhouse Plaza.[19][20]
In 1971, the School of Journalism merged with the Department of Television-Radio and was renamed the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.[1][21] A second building, Newhouse 2, was dedicated in 1974 with a keynote address byWilliam S. Paley, chairman of the board ofCBS.[22][23] It cost $7.2 million to build.[8]
In 2003, the Newhouse School received a $15 million gift from the S. I. Newhouse Foundation and the Newhouse family to fund the construction of the third building in the Newhouse Communications Complex. The $31.6 million 74,000-square-foot (6,900 m2) modern structure, designed by the formerPolshek Partnership,[24] features the First Amendment etched in six-foot-high letters on its curving glass windows. Newhouse 3 was dedicated on September 19, 2007, with a keynote address from theChief Justice of the United StatesJohn Roberts.[25][26]
In September 2014, the school completed an $18 million renovation of the Newhouse 2 building, creating the Newhouse Studio and Innovation Center, which featuresDick Clark Studios, theAlan Gerry Center for Media Innovation and the Diane and Bob Miron Digital News Center.[27]Oprah Winfrey attended and spoke at the dedication ceremony.[28]
In January 2020,Donald E. Newhouse donated $75 million to the School through the Newhouse Foundation.[29][30]
Deans of the Newhouse School of Public Communications
This article's list of alumnimay not follow Wikipedia'sverifiability policy. Pleaseimprove this article by removing names that do not have independentreliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriatecitations.(August 2018)
Marv Albert, sportscaster, CBS Sports, NBC Sports, TNT Sports, MSG Networks, YES Network
^Price, Warren C. (1 March 1951)."News Notes".Journalism Quarterly.28 (2):285–297.doi:10.1177/107769905102800231.ISSN0022-5533.S2CID220594742. Retrieved28 December 2020.Prizes are being awarded for the best paintings and photographs of the School of Journalism Building at Syracuse University... familiarly known as "The Castle."... The journalism building will be torn down soon to make room for an expanded Medical Center.
^"Radio Station Offering Good Music Listed".The Post-Standard. Syracuse, New York. April 9, 1955. p. 4. Retrieved24 October 2020 – viaNewspapers.com.The exception, of course, is our own Syracuse University FM station. WAER. at 88.1 on the dial. They give us much of the music of the great masters...