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The Changing Story roundtable and gallery reception is March 27, 6:30 p.m. | JRH auditorium and gallery

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Through Our Eyes Week 12

November 14, 2018

Below are some of our favorite photos from this week’s Through Our Eyes. Each week the selections are chosen by WKUPJ students. Stay tuned for more to come!

First Place

Miles Hoskins, a lifelong resident of Mt. Sterling, KY., runs the Montgomery County Historical Society. Hoskins works to find, preserve, and share a wealth of historical resources regarding Montgomery County. | Nic Huey

Runner Up

Tyron shows his cousins Demarcus and Duke how to do a wheelie on a bike in Kentwood, Louisiana. “Man, I know y’all cant do a wheelie like me,” Tyron said. | Michael Blackshire

Honorable Mentions

Joseph A. Madrid, 11, of Henderson marches in remembrance of his uncle and namesake, Joseph R. Madrid who was lost to suicide in May of 2018. Madrid and his grandmother, Cathy Roy, carried 22 posters with the names of children lost to suicide. Roy is part of a Facebook group for grieving mothers who have lost children to suicide, and she wanted to honor as many lost children as she could said Roy. Bowling Green, Kentucky 2018. | Reed Mattison

Category: Through Our Eyes
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about wkuvjp

Western Kentucky University Visual Journalism and Photography, a leading nationally ranked program, is not only about visual storytelling based in still and moving image acquisition, but it is also about instilling passion, inspiration, dedication and love for what you do.

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MOUNTAIN WORKSHOPS

Since 1976, the Mountain Workshops has been gathering stories of our shared history. This unprecedented visual collection of a rich past reveals the everyday life of the people and places that make our Commonwealth unique and truly, one-of-a-kind.

We believe in the power of human connection through storytelling, and we create and preserve a valuable cultural archive of Kentucky life.

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