Varsity (Cambridge)

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Type Weekly newspaper
Format Tabloid

Owner Varsity Publications Ltd
Editor Emily Stokes
Founded 1931
Political allegiance None
Price Free in colleges and shops of Cambridge
Headquarters 11-12 Trumpington Street, Cambridge, CB2 1QA, UK

Website: www.varsity.co.uk

Varsity is the older of Cambridge University's main student newspapers (The Cambridge Student is the other, younger, one). Unlike most student newspapers, the design of the newspaper is allowed to change radically with the arrival of new student editors[citation needed].

Contents

[edit] History

Varsity has one of the longest histories of British student newspapers. Founded in 1931, the paper went bankrupt the following year with losses of £100. It was re-established in 1947. In the mid-1970s, it merged with the radical campaigning student paper Stop Press.

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 BBC's Jeremy Paxman, film director Michael Winner, the late television presenter Richard Whiteley, Financial Times editor Andrew Gowers, novelist Robert Harris and historian Jonathan Spence. International Herald Tribune fashion writer and author Suzy Menkes was the newspaper's first female editor.

Some of Sylvia Plath's earliest poems and J G Ballard's first published story were written for the paper. Meanwhile, legendary comic Peter Cook met his first wife while posing for a Varsity May Ball photoshoot.

Naturally, the paper has also launched the careers of many news journalists, including in recent times Observer Political Editor Gaby Hinsliff, Guardian New York correspondent Oliver Burkeman, Guardian music critic Alexis Petridis, Independent reporter Oliver Duff and Independent columnist Johann Hari. Controversial BBC and Evening Standardreporter Andrew Gilligan, later famed for a row with 10 Downing Street, was once a news editor. Other notable contributors who have had later success in other fields include Michael Frayn, Germaine Greer, Clive James and even the Prince of Wales.

Advertising in Varsity 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 and it was the first student newspaper in the UK to produce a colour section. In 2005, Varsity became the first student newspaper to publish entirely in full-colour. Varsity's management and funding structure means that it is independent from both the University and Cambridge 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 are Oxford's Cherwell, on whose model Varsity was founded, and The Saint of the University of St Andrews.

Stories first revealed in Varsity have often gone on to receive coverage in the UK's national press. In recent years reports to capture wider attention have included the leak of the name of the Cambridge's latest vice-Chancellor, news about student protests concerning higher education funding, and a host of lighter reports about undergraduate excesses.

Other stories have had a more lasting significance. In May 1953, Varsity may have been the first newspaper in the world to carry a report on James Watson and Francis Crick's discovery of the structure of DNA. [1]

[edit] Organisation

Varsity is published by Varsity Publications, a not-for-profit company and a registered charity. The company also produces a number of other student publications such as BlueSci - a student science magazine - and the The Mays - a collection of short stories and poems by Cambridge and Oxford students. The "Mays" have been published annually since 1992 and are most famous for launching the career of novelist Zadie Smith. She was first noticed by literary agencies after her short story Private Tutor appeared in the 1997 collection.

[edit] Awards

The paper was successful in the Guardian Student Media Awards 2004 where it won the prize for best columnist (Archie Bland) and came runner-up in best sports writer category (Sam Richardson). In 2005 Varsity writer Sam Richardson won the Guardian's Student Diversity Writer of the Year award.

[edit] Recent editors

The editor for Michaelmas 2006 is Emily Stokes.

  • Lent 2006: Jon Swaine and Amy Goodwin
  • Michaelmas 2005: James Dacre
  • Lent 2005: Amol Rajan
  • Michaelmas 2004: Archie Bland
  • Lent 2003: Reggie Vettasseri and Laura-Jane Foley
  • Michaelmas 2003: Tom Ebbutt
  • Lent 2003: Oliver Duff and Luke Layfield
  • Michaelmas 2002: Katy Long
  • Lent 2002: Rob Sharp
  • Michaelmas 2001: Adam Joseph and Julian Blake

The Lent term editor also edits a single edition at the start of Easter term, and a separate editor controls a special edition May Week issue at the end of the academic year. Raj Bavishi and Rachel Divall edited the 2006 May Week special.

[edit] Staff

Though Varsity's editors are not paid, they are supported by a full-time Business Manager (in charge of sourcing advertising to fund the publications, and running the office on a day-to-day basis) and a part-time Company Secretary (in charge of finance, accounts, tax and administration).

The 2006-7 Business Manager is Adam Edelshain. The Company Secretary is Pat Dalby.

Recent Business Managers:

  • 2005-6: Chris Adams
  • 2004-5: Eve Williams
  • 2003-4: Sam Gallagher
  • 2002-3: Tim Nixon

Varsity also has a Board of Directors made up of University academics, long-term associates of the newspaper and student members.

[edit] Premises

Image:Trumpingtonstreet.jpg
Trumpington Street, Cambridge - (c) Michael Derringer - www.derringer.co.uk

For the past 16 years, Varsity has been based in offices at 11-12, Trumpington Street. The newspaper is set to move from this 'temporary' home to new offices on the University's New Museums site in 2007.


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