![]() ![]() Distinguished nationally by one of the highest graduation rates among all U.S. Santa Clara University, a comprehensive Jesuit, Catholic university located 40 miles south of San Francisco in Californiaís Silicon Valley, offers its more than 9,000 students rigorous undergraduate curricula in arts and sciences, business, and engineering masterís degrees in business, education, counseling psychology, pastoral ministry, and theology and law degrees and engineering doctoral degrees. She is a journalist with extensive experience in print and digital, including The Mercury News and Chicago Sun-Times, as well as producing stories for radio. Leslie Griffy joined the editorial team in 2018. He has written for Orion, The Believer, Salon, and other publications, and he is a three-time champion on Jeopardy! The design team includes designer Jane Hambleton of Cuttriss & Hambleton, with consulting provided by DJ Stout, partner with global design firm Pentagram.īefore taking the helm at S anta Clara Magazine more than a decade ago, Saum served as editor-in-chief at The Commonwealth Club of California, where he founded the organization’s magazine and edited the collection of speeches Each a Mighty Voice. The editorial team at the helm of the magazine includes editor Steven Boyd Saum and managing editor Leslie Griffy. The magazine is also about to launch a reimagined digital magazine-the biggest transformation for its online presence in more than a decade. Complimentary copies are available by request at. Subscriptions are offered free of charge to alumni and friends of Santa Clara University. The print magazine has a circulation of over 100,000. Santa Clara Magazine is published by Santa Clara University. Awards also recognized illustrations by Edel Rodriguez (“Grounds for Detention,” Spring 2018) and Paul Blow (“Nobel Beginnings,” Spring 2018) and editorial design for “The Kid” (Summer 2017) featuring an illustration by Tim O’Brien. In October, the University College and Design Association honored the magazine with an unprecedented ten awards of excellence: Summer 2017 won for cover design and for illustration by Tim O’Brien Fall 2017 won for cover design, for an illustration by Brian Stauffer, and for overall design Spring 2018 won for cover and overall design and three editions were recognized as a group for design excellence. CPA, which presented its awards in June, honored the magazine with 13 awards total, noting, “The bold and captivating design of this magazine is matched by equally strong writing and reporting.” In recent months the magazine was honored by its peers at other Jesuit universities as the top magazine published by a Jesuit university and by the Catholic Press Association (CPA) with Alumni Magazine of the Year. Santa Clara Magazine is no stranger to national awards this year. Setting “a Standard for the Entire Industry” Photography: “Coffey Park” by photographer Noah Berger, Spring 2018 Single edition design excellence: Summer 2017.It depicts Billy the Kid as a figure torn between good and evil-inspired by the most recent novel by writer Ron Hansen, who teaches at Santa Clara University. The magazine also brought several honorable mentions in the OZZIE awards for design:Ĭover: “The Good, the Bad, and the Kid,” illustrated by Tim O’Brien for the summer 2017 edition. Body of work by a single writer: For a range of stories by editor Steven Boyd Saum, ranging from election observing in Belarus (the last dictatorship in Europe) to a look back at when the 101st Airborne was sent into Little Rock, Arkansas, to ensure nine African-American children could attend high school.The writers honored were Kerry Benefield, John Nova Lomax, and Matt Morgan. Series of articles: “Aftermath of Disaster,” bringing together stories on how people have coped in the aftermath of the tragic Wine Country fires, Hurricane Harvey, Hurricane Irma, and the earthquake that struck near Mexico City in 2017.The magazine also garnered a pair of honorable mentions in the EDDIE awards for editorial excellence: government for understanding the dire consequences of climate change but pursuing policies that have worsened it. The lawsuit is brought on behalf of 21 young people suing the U.S. The cover feature story was by writer Deborah Lohse, “The Most Important Lawsuit on the Planet,” taking a deep dive into the case Juliana v. Stauffer regularly contributes work to The New York Times, TIME Magazine, The New Yorker, and other leading publications. Santa Clara Magazine won the top cover award for its fall 2017 edition, which featured an illustration by artist Brian Stauffer on the theme “Justice for All.” Stauffer depicted the Washington Monument as a factory smokestack before an orange-colored sky-a spare and startling image. ![]()
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