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Varsity (Cambridge)

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Student newspaper at the University of Cambridge

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Varsity
Varsity issue 827
TypeWeeklynewspaper
FormatCompact
OwnerVarsity Publications Ltd
EditorCatherine Lally and Vivienne Hopley-Jones
Founded1931; 94 years ago (1931)
Headquarters16 Mill Lane, Cambridge, CB2 1RX
CirculationUp to 10,000[verification needed][1]
ISSN1758-4442
Websitewww.varsity.co.uk

Varsity is the oldest ofCambridge University's mainstudent newspapers. It has been published continuously since 1947 and is one of only three fully independent student newspapers in theUK. It moved back to being a weekly publication in Michaelmas 2015, and is published every Friday during term time.

Varsity has received recognition at the now defunctGuardian Student Media Awards.[2]

History

[edit]

Varsity is one of Britain's oldest student newspapers.[1] Its first edition was published on 17 January 1931, asVarsity: the Cambridge University Illustrated[3] (laterThe Varsity Weekly, and then theCambridge Varsity Post.[citation needed] However, the first few years sawVarsity get off to a shaky start. In 1932, a controversy about some of its stories resulted in the editor being challenged to a duel,[citation needed] and the following year the paper went bankrupt (having lost £100).[citation needed]

Revival

[edit]

A variety of attempts to reviveVarsity led to the paper resurfacing periodically over the following decade,[citation needed] but it was not until 1947 that the paper was re-established permanently in its current form. Harry Newman Jr (1921–2001), a graduate ofHarvard University andHarvard Business School, then studying for apostgraduate degree atSt John's College, Cambridge, decided that Cambridge needed a proper American-style campus newspaper modelled onThe Harvard Crimson.[4] With the post-war rationing of newsprint, only publications that had existed before the War could be allocated paper, and so the obsolete publication nameVarsity was used.[citation needed]

In a letter published inVarsity at the end of the year 1971–1972, Harry Newman wrote,[5]

Varsity began over a bottle of sherry in John's, matured over a bottle of port in Caius and blossomed with a firkin of ale over the Victoria Cinema, where we pecked out the first issue on trestle tables (without chairs). / Several of us—Bill Watson (Professor of Social Anthropology),David Widdicombe (distinguished Q.C.),John Noonan (American Professor of Canon Law), Dave Reece (Canadian Diplomat), Bill Howell (prominent architect), and Geoffrey Neame, among others—felt that what the University needed, in addition to its latest organisation, Y.A.S. (Yet Another Society), was an American-style college newspaper. ... It was truly an international effort, British (all three), Canadian, American, Hungarian, and Indian.[This quote needs a citation]

Varsity's headquarters in 1947 was above the Scotch Hoose, "a restaurant at the corner of the Market and Market Street".[This quote needs a citation] Newman goes on to note that Geoffrey Neame, "a leading light among theNightclimbers of Cambridge and the Gentlemen of Caius",[This quote needs a citation] was the first post-1947 layout editor. The first managing editor was the Scotsman "Wee Willie Watson", a former fighter pilot. On 19 April 1947,Varsity reappeared, its first issue headlining the coming visit of the thenPrincess Elizabeth to the university (a visit that ultimately would be cancelled). Its first print run was of 5,000 copies.[citation needed]

1950s–1960s

[edit]

In the 1950s,Varsity's offices were in a former shop inSt Edward's Passage, next door to theArts Theatre. The second editor (after Newman) wasDavid Widdicombe, aQueens' College student who was also chairman of theLabour Club. In 1955, a one-off Oxford edition of the paper was produced by the then editorMichael Winner. Since then the paper has concentrated on the Cambridge audience.

In 1956, the staff, worried about debts, questionedVarsity's legal status. Solicitors were consulted, who advised that any debts arising from its considerable turnover (advertising income, printing costs etc.) or damages awarded for libel etc. would be the personal responsibility of the current editor.Varsity was promptly converted into alimited liability company – "Varsity Publications Ltd", with a share capital of £100. 50% of the shares were taken by the printers, 20% by the Don who was the senior treasurer and the rest, at £1 per head, by the staff at that time.

1970s–1980s

[edit]

In the mid-1970s,Varsity merged with the radical campaigning student paperStop Press. Thereafter, it was known asStop Press with Varsity for several years, before reverting to its original title in the late 1980s.[citation needed]

1990s–present

[edit]

Varsity moved back to being a weekly publication in Michaelmas 2015, after having been a fortnightly publication since Michaelmas 2012.[citation needed]Varsity is published every Friday during the University of Cambridge's term time, so there are 21 issues a year.

The Lent term editor also edits a single edition at the start of Easter term, and a separate editor controls a special editionMay Week issue (or, in some years, daily May Week issues) at the end of the academic year.[citation needed]

Famous contributions

[edit]

Notable contributors

[edit]

Many of those who wrote for the paper during their student days have since gone on to achieve distinction in later life. Famous ex-editors include the formerBBC news presentersJeremy Paxman andDavid Frost, film directorMichael Winner, the television presenterRichard Whiteley, formerFinancial Times editorAndrew Gowers,Independent editorAmol Rajan,i editorOliver Duff, novelistRobert Harris, novelist and biographerGraham Lord, historianJonathan Spence,Factory Records founderTony Wilson and BBC1'sEastEnders executive producerMatthew Robinson.International Herald Tribune fashion writer and authorSuzy Menkes was the newspaper's first female editor. Some ofSylvia Plath's earliest poems andJ. G. Ballard's first published story were written for the paper. Plath also posed in a bathing suit for an article she wrote about summer fashion-wear for the ladies. Meanwhile, comicPeter Cook met his first wife while posing for aVarsityMay Ball photo shoot.

The paper has also launched the careers of many news journalists, including in recent times formerObserver Political EditorGaby Hinsliff,Guardian New York correspondentOliver Burkeman,Guardian music criticAlexis Petridis, author and columnistIain Hollingshead,Guardian columnistArchie Bland,Sunday Times columnistCharlotte Ivers,[6] theIndependent's New York business correspondent Stephen Foley,The Sunday Times News Review Editor Martin Hemming, as well as formerIndependent columnistJohann Hari. TheBBC andEvening Standard reporterAndrew Gilligan was once a news editor. Other notable contributors who have had later success in other fields includeMichael Frayn,Germaine Greer,Clive James,Gavin Lyall,Robert Jenrick[7] andCharles III.

Some notable editors of theVarsity includeAndrew Rawnsley (1983–4),Archie Bland (Michaelmas 2004),Amol Rajan (Lent 2005),Laura-Jane Foley (Lent 2004), andJames Dacre (Michaelmas 2005).

Recent editors[1]

YearTermEditor(s)
2025MichaelmasBen Curtis & Charlie Rowan
2025EasterSophie Ennis & Anuk Weerawardana
2025LentSophie Denny and Wilf Vall
2024MichaelmasAlice Mainwood and Grace Cobb
2024EasterAlice Mainwood and Felix Armstrong
2024LentDaniel Hilton and Michael Hennessey
2023MichaelmasIsabel Dempsey and Taneesha Datta
2023EasterHannah Gillott and Erik Olsson
2023LentMegan Byrom and Famke Veenstra-Ashmore
2022MichaelmasFergal Jeffreys and Jacob Freedland
2022EasterJuliette Guéron-Gabrielle and Lotte Brundle
2022LentEmaan Ullah and Bethan Moss
2021MichaelmasNick Bartlett and Isabel Sebode
2021EasterMeike Leonard and Elizabeth Hagh
2021LentGaby Vides and Georgina Buckle
2020MichaelmasRich Bartlett
2020EasterCaterina Bragoli and Gabriel Humphreys
2020LentLottie Reeder and Jess Ma
2019MichaelmasMaia Wyn Davies and Stephanie Stacey
2019EasterIsobel Bickersteth
2019LentVivienne Hopley-Jones and Catherine Lally
2018MichaelmasNoella Chye
2018EasterAnna Jennings
2018LentDaniel Gayne
2017MichaelmasElizabeth Howcroft and Patrick Wernham
2017EasterPatrick Wernham
2017LentMillie Brierley
2016MichaelmasLouis Ashworth and Callum Hale-Thomson
2016EasterEleanor Deeley
2016LentJames Sutton
2015MichaelmasTom Freeman
2015LentTalia Zybutz
2014MichaelmasAmy Hawkins
2014LentEmily Chan
2013MichaelmasAlice Udale-Smith
2013LentSalome Wagaine and Aliya Ram
2012MichaelmasCharlotte Keith
2012LentLouise Benson and Madeleine Morley
2011MichaelmasRhys Treharne and Laurie Martin
2011LentAlice Hancock and Lara Prendergast
2010MichaelmasJoe Pitt-Rashid
2010LentEmma Mustich and Laurie Tuffrey
2009MichaelmasRobert Peal and Anna Trench
2009LentHugo Gye and Michael Stothard
2008MichaelmasPatrick Kingsley
2008LentTom Bird and George Grist
2007MichaelmasLizzie Mitchell and Elliot Ross
2007LentJoseph Gosden and Hermione Buckland-Hoby (Issue 1), Joseph Gosden and Natalie Woolman (Issue 2–9)
2006MichaelmasEmily Stokes (Issues 1–2), Mary Bowers and Jonny Ensall (Issue 3–9)
2006LentJon Swaine and Amy Goodwin
2005MichaelmasJames Dacre
2005LentAmol Rajan
2004MichaelmasArchie Bland
2004LentReji Vettasseri andLaura-Jane Foley
2003MichaelmasTom Ebbutt
2003LentOliver Duff and Luke Layfield
2002MichaelmasKaty Long
2002LentRob Sharp
2001MichaelmasAdam Joseph and Julian Blake
2001LentTom Royston and Sarah Brealey
2000MichaelmasEd Hall
2000LentJonti Small
1999MichaelmasDavid Peter

Stories broken

[edit]

Early years

[edit]

Stories first revealed inVarsity have often gone on to receive coverage in the UK's national press. In May 1953,Varsity was only the third newspaper in the world to carry a report onJames Watson andFrancis Crick's discovery of the structure of DNA, after theNews Chronicle andThe New York Times. The discovery was made in Cambridge on 28 February 1953; the first Watson/Crick paper appeared inNature on 25 April 1953. SirLawrence Bragg, the director of theCavendish Laboratory, where Watson and Crick worked, gave a talk atGuy's Hospital Medical School in London on 14 May 1953 which resulted in an article by Ritchie Calder in theNews Chronicle of London, on 15 May 1953, entitled "Why You Are You. Nearer Secret of Life." The news reached readers ofThe New York Times the next day; Victor K. McElheny, in researching his biography, "Watson and DNA: Making a Scientific Revolution", found a clipping of a six-paragraphNew York Times article written from London and dated 16 May 1953 with the headline "Form of 'Life Unit' in Cell Is Scanned." The article only ran in an early edition and was then pulled to make space for news deemed more important.Varsity ran its own 130-word front-page article on the discovery on 30 May 1953 under the headline "X-Ray Discovery".

Recent years

[edit]

In recent years, reports to capture wider attention have included the leak of the name of Cambridge's latest vice-Chancellor, news about student protests concerning higher education funding, and a host of lighter reports about undergraduate excesses. In 2014Varsity collaborated withCambridge's Students' Union to survey the rate of sexual assault at the university; the findings of the survey,[8] attracted widespread attention from the national press.[9][10][11]

In July 2021, Varsity broke a national story regarding the university's proposed £400m deal with the United Arab Emirates.[12] Varsity journalists were then credited when the story was covered by The Times.[13] The news was later broken that the deal had been called off following revelations around the UAE's links to Pegasus spyware through an interview with Vice-Chancellor Stephen Toope.[14] The story appeared on the front cover ofThe Guardian,[15] with Varsity journalists receiving writing credits.

Current organisation

[edit]

Varsity is published by Varsity Publications Ltd, a not-for-profit company which directly funds The Varsity Trust,[16] a UK registered charity with the principal object of furthering the education of students in journalism.[17] The company also produces a number of other student publications such asThe Mays—a collection of short stories and poems by Cambridge and Oxford students.[18]The Mays have been published annually since 1992, and are most famous for launching the career of novelistZadie Smith.[19] Her work appears in the 1996 and 1997 short-story editions. These attracted the attention of a publisher, who offered her a contract for her first novel. Smith decided to contact a literary agent and was taken on by A. P. Watt.[20] Smith returned to guest-edit the anthology in 2001.[21]

Advertising inVarsity has traditionally been seen as highly useful by graduate recruiters hoping to attract Cambridge students. As a result, the newspaper is able to distribute free copies to members of the university (without relying on student union funding),[citation needed] and was the first student newspaper in the UK to produce a colour section.[citation needed] Hence,Varsity's management and funding structure means that it is independent from both the university andCambridge University Students' Union. In this respect it is unlike the vast majority of similar publications in other UK universities; the only other student newspapers to operate similarly areOxford'sCherwell and The Oxford Blue, as well asThe Saint of theUniversity of St Andrews.[citation needed]

Unlike most student newspapers, the design of the newspaper is allowed to change radically with the arrival of new student editors.[citation needed]

Awards

[edit]

20th century

[edit]

For several consecutive years in the 1950s and 1960s the paper won the award for Britain's best student newspaper. (In the mid-1950s it was temporarily banned from entering for the award on grounds that it was "too professional" and other publications should be given a chance to win.)

21st century

[edit]

In the 2001 Guardian Student Media Awards it was shortlisted intwo categories for best feature writer (Rend Shakir) and best student critic (Alex Marshall) It was successful in the 2004Guardian Student Media Awards where it won the prize for best columnist (Archie Bland) and came runner-up in best sports writer category (Sam Richardson).[22] In 2005 Varsity writer Sam Richardson won the Guardian's Student Diversity Writer of the Year award.[23]

In 2006, Sophie Pickford was the runner-up for best sports writer of the year.[24]

In 2007,Varsity won theGuardian Student Media Awards' Student Publication Design of the Year.[25]

Varsity won six prizes at theGuardian Student Media Awards in November 2009, over a third of the prizes in session, was nominated for a further two, and former editor Patrick Kingsley was named Student Journalist of the Year. Michael Stothard won in the Best Reporter category; Zing Tsjeng was the Best Feature Writer; Ben Riley-Smith was Best Sports Reporter; while Charlotte Runcie was awarded Best Columnist, with Rob Peal runner-up.[26][needs update]

Current board and staff

[edit]

Varsity has a board of directors made up of university academics, long-term associates of the newspaper, and student members.[citation needed] As of March 2022, the chairman is Mike Franklin.[16]

Varsity's editors are not paid, but their work is supported by a full-time business manager and company secretary (responsible for sourcing advertising to fund the publications, running the office on a day-to-day basis, finance, accounts, tax and administration). The current business manager and company secretary is Mark Curtis.

Varsity is now based at the Old Examination Hall on theNew Museums Site in the former Godwin Laboratory. Previously,Varsity was based at 11–12Trumpington Street. The newspaper's move from this "temporary" home, to the new offices, occurred in August 2007, after a 16-year tenancy.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"About Varsity | Varsity".Varsity Online. Retrieved16 November 2023.
  2. ^Freddy Mayhew (2010)."Guardian cancels student media awards to save costs". Press Gazette.
  3. ^Hooke Library Staff (2010)."Bibliographic record forVarsity". Cambridge University Library. Archived fromthe original on 3 May 2018. Retrieved12 July 2008.
  4. ^Starr, Kevin (1995). "Judge John T. Noonan, Jr.: A Brief Biography".Journal of Law and Religion.11 (1):151–176.doi:10.2307/1051628.JSTOR 1051628.S2CID 159824444.
  5. ^Newman, Harry (1972). "[Title unknown]".Varsity (Spring).
  6. ^Ivers, Charlotte (25 April 2014)."Somebody Else's Cambridge".Varsity.Archived from the original on 20 April 2023.
  7. ^"Varsity"(PDF).archive.varsity.co.uk. No. 540. 27 April 2001. Retrieved9 January 2018.
  8. ^Elwell, Martha; Wilkinson, Hannah (25 April 2014)."88% of sexual assaults unreported".Varsity. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  9. ^Sanghani, Radhika (28 April 2014)."One in six Cambridge University students groped, but they're too 'ashamed' to report it, study finds".Telegraph.Archived from the original on 25 March 2017. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  10. ^Hurst, Greg (17 May 2014)."Half Cambridge's female students sexually harassed".The Times. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  11. ^Page, Libby; Young-Powell, Abby (2 May 2014)."Sexual harassment: the campus issue that won't go away".The Guardian. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  12. ^Haigh, Elizabeth; Georgia Goble (7 July 2021)."Documents reveal proposed £400 million collaboration between University of Cambridge and United Arab Emirates".Varsity.
  13. ^Yeomans, Elizabeth; Georgia Goble; Elizabeth Haigh (8 July 2021)."University of Cambridge in talks over UAE tie-up".The Sunday Times.
  14. ^Goble, Georgia; Nick Bartlett (15 October 2021)."'It's a privilege to be at the helm of an institution so important': An exclusive interview with Vice-Chancellor Stephen Toope".Varsity.
  15. ^Adams, Richard; Georgia Goble; Nick Bartlett (14 October 2021)."Cambridge University halts £400m deal with UAE over Pegasus spyware claims".TheGuardian.com.
  16. ^abVarsity Trust Staff (24 March 2017)."The Varsity Trust".VarsityTrust.org.uk. Retrieved13 March 2022.
  17. ^Wales, The Charity Commission for England and."About Charities".charity-commission.gov.uk. Retrieved24 March 2017.[dead link]
  18. ^Shaw, William (17 July 2016)."Review: 'The Mays 24'".The Oxford Culture Review. Retrieved27 October 2024.
  19. ^Edemariam, Aida (3 September 2005)."Learning Curve".The Guardian.
  20. ^"AP Watt". Archived fromthe original on 19 May 2011. Retrieved7 March 2011.
  21. ^"The Mays XIX: Guest Editors". Archived fromthe original on 30 August 2011. Retrieved7 June 2011.
  22. ^Harris, Rob (15 November 2004)."Student Media Awards 2004".The Guardian. London. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  23. ^Guardian Staff (2 November 2005)."Student Media Awards 2005".The Guardian. London. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  24. ^Guardian Staff (9 November 2006)."Student Media Awards 2006".The Guardian. London. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  25. ^Guardian Staff (26 November 2007)."Student Media Awards 2007".The Guardian. London. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  26. ^Guardian Staff (26 November 2009)."Guardian Student Media Awards, 2009: Winners".The Guardian. London. Retrieved27 May 2010.

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