Cherwell (newspaper)

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Cherwell
Cherwell 1 June 2018.png
Front page of Cherwell on 1 June, 2018
TypeWeekly newspaper during Oxford University term time
FormatCompact
Owner(s)Oxford Student Publications Limited
Founder(s)Cecil Binney and George Adolphus Edinger
EditorSasha Mills and Irene Zhang
Founded1920; 101 years ago (1920)
LanguageEnglish
HeadquartersSalter’s Yard, Oxford, OX1 4LA
CountryUnited Kingdom
Circulationc. 15,000[1]
ISSN0308-731X (print)
1742-3597 (web)
WebsiteCherwell.org
  • Media of the United Kingdom
  • List of newspapers

Cherwell is a weekly student newspaper published entirely by students of Oxford University. Founded in 1920 and named after a local river, Cherwell is a subsidiary of independent student publishing house Oxford Student Publications Ltd. Receiving no university funding, the newspaper is one of the oldest student publications in the UK.

History[]

Cherwell was conceived by two Balliol College students, and , on a ferry from Dover to Ostend during the summer vacation of 1920 while the students were travelling to Vienna to do relief work for the Save the Children charity. Edinger recalls the early newspaper having a radical voice: "We were feeling for a new Oxford …. We were anti-convention, anti-Pre War values, pro-feminist. We did not mind shocking and we often did." The publication was independent of the University of Oxford and it was entirely financed, staffed, and owned by students.[2]

Early editions combine this seriousness with whimsy and parochialism. The first editorial gives the newspaper's purpose as being "to exclude all outside influence and interference from our University. Oxford for the Oxonians".[citation needed]

Cherwell was the only newspaper printed in Britain during the UK General Strike of 1926, other than the British Gazette and the British Worker, during which time it was produced at the offices of the Daily Mail in London.[citation needed]

Throughout the 1920s Cherwell had a strong literary focus, and a policy of not editing literary contributions. Undergraduate contributors included Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, John Betjeman, L. P. Hartley, Cecil Day-Lewis and W. H. Auden.[citation needed]

The newspaper's focus broadened over the coming decades until January 1953, when the owners of the paper decided to turn it into a university newspaper.[3] In 1946 Cherwell was briefly banned by the university for distributing a survey on the sex lives of undergraduates, and in 1954 ran a series of pin-up photographs entitled "Girls of the Year". In 1970 then-editor Peter Stothard published a current Oxford theatre poster featuring a naked female, possibly a first for a British newspaper. Under his editorship Cherwell also published a backless photo of Gully Wells, considered very daring for the time. Both editions caused much comment. In 1973 the paper became a 'cause celebre' in the national papers when the Cherwell published a photo of General Editor with a topless model. This resulted in a personal fine by the proctors for David Soskin.[citation needed]

In 1964, the newspaper's longest-running feature was created, the "John Evelyn" gossip column, and it has run almost uninterrupted since then; its founding editors were Christopher Meakin and Michael Morris. Meakin then moved over to become Editor of Isis the following term, in days when the parallel undergraduate magazine (although not then linked with Cherwell) also appeared weekly. Over the decades, many famous people have been the subject of "John Evelyn"'s wry and faux-condescending style, among them future Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto, politician Jonathan Aitken, and actor Imogen Stubbs. In 1981, Hugh Grant is described as "New College's answer to Brooke Shields", and his unsuccessful attempts to infiltrate a ball with his date are reported. Cherwell's Editor in Michaelmas Term 1964 had been Patrick Marnham, who on leaving Oxford became a staff journalist on Private Eye, the British satirical magazine, and was author of the standard reference book on the history of the magazine which Marnham wrote as its 21st birthday celebration in 1982. The Editor for the following Hilary Term 1965 was Martin Linton, who became the Labour member of parliament for Battersea. Linton's News Editor on Cherwell, Sarah Boyd-Carpenter, is better known today as Baroness Hogg.[citation needed]

In the mid-1970s Cherwell survived one of its periodic financial crises, and politically the paper campaigned against Oxford University's investments in apartheid-era South Africa.[citation needed]

Cherwell and the English language[]

The Oxford English Dictionary lists the terms 'sherry party' and 'Marxism' (as pertaining to the Marx Brothers) as having been coined in Cherwell.[4][5] Additions from recent decades are lacking probably because Cherwell is only sporadically lodged at copyright libraries, and because it is not included in electronic text search systems such as LexisNexis. Xerox University Microfilms has micro-fiche copies of the paper for some years, especially the 1970s.[citation needed]

Notable Cherwell contributors[]

  • Harold Acton[6]
  • Jeffrey Archer (Sports columnist, Member of Parliament, novelist, House of Lords)[7]
  • W. H. Auden[7]
  • Arthur David Beaty (Editor; British writer, pilot and psychologist)
  • John Betjeman[8]
  • H. S. Bhabra (Arts editor; author and broadcaster)[7]
  • Sarah Boyd-Carpenter (Editor, journalist on The Economist; became Baroness Hogg)[7]
  • Emma Brockes (Editor; journalist on The Guardian)[7]
  • John Brooke-Little (Editor, founder of the Heraldry Society)[7]
  • Nick Cohen ("John Evelyn"; journalist)[7]
  • Susan Cooper (Editor; author of children's books), first woman to edit newspaper[9]
  • Alex Cox (cartoonist, film director)[7]
  • Michael Crick (Editor; BBC Newsnight and Channel 4 News reporter and biographer)[7]
  • Howard Davies (writer; economist, CBI director-general; deputy governor Bank of England, director, London School of Economics)[7]
  • Evan Davis (journalist BBC Radio 4 Today presenter)[7]
  • Cecil Day-Lewis
  • David English (Editor; editor of the Daily Mail)
  • Hadley Freeman (Editor, journalist and author)[7]
  • Graham Greene[8]
  • Sarah Hargreaves (Editor; head of Editorial Standards and Training at BBC Television)[7]
  • L. P. Hartley
  • Rupert Murdoch (advertising; global newspaper proprietor)
  • Michael Heseltine (advertising; publisher, Member of Parliament and deputy prime minister)
  • Rony Robinson (Editor; writer, playwright and Broadcaster, anchor of BBC Radio Sheffield
  • Roger Laughton (Editor) BBC producer Great Railway Journeys of the World so devising Michael Palin's career as a television traveller; senior BBC executive; chief executive of Meridian Television chair of media school at Bournemouth University)
  • Tim Heald (journalist; devised Sixth Form Opinion while still at Sherborne) Daily Mail, The Sunday Telegraph, author and novelist; authorised royal biographer Princess Margaret, Duke of Edinburgh)
  • Edward Heath
  • Peter Preston (Editor; editor-in-chief of The Guardian)
  • Nicholas Lloyd (Editor; editor of the Daily Express)
  • Patrick Marnham (Editor; chief reporter on and historian of Private Eye; expert on the "Goldenballs" criminal libel case; journalist on Punch[7]
  • Martin Linton (Editor, journalist on The Guardian, Member of Parliament for Battersea)
  • Simon Jenkins (Oxford Union correspondent; editor of The Times)[7]
  • Peter Mandelson (journalist, political contributor; Member of Parliament, peer)[7]
  • Peter Sissons (Sports editor, 1963; BBC TV news presenter[7]
  • Martin Sixsmith (Editor, sports editor, news editor; former BBC Moscow correspondent)[7]
  • Christina Lamb (journalist; journalist)[7]
  • Owen Matthews ("John Evelyn"; author, journalist)[7]
  • Evelyn Waugh[10]

Cherwell.org[]

Cherwell has had a website since Trinity 1996, with the current website developed by Mack Grenfell in 2016.[citation needed]

The site is updated every day during term and regularly during the vacation. It contains all of the articles from the print edition, as well as breaking news, videos, features, arts reviews, sport reports and podcasts such as the soap opera podcast . Students use the website to vote on the paper's regular feature, Fit College and also to post comments on articles.[citation needed]

In 2008, Cherwell won the 'Guardian Student Media' award for Best Student Website.[11]

Sources[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Advertising | Cherwell".
  2. ^ "Cherwell History Pt 1 – the Founders".
  3. ^ "Cherwell History Pt 4 – 'The Cherwell Renaissance'".
  4. ^ "sherry party, n." Oxford English Dictionary. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  5. ^ "Marxism, n.2". Oxford English Dictionary. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  6. ^ https://books.google.de/books?id=smXoCwAAQBAJ. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Editor (18 April 2011). "Cherwell – independent since 1920". Cherwell. Retrieved 21 August 2021.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Bage, David Brown and Tom. "University of Oxford: Cherwell editors quit over racist, explicit parody". ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  9. ^ Charles Butler, Four British Fantasists: Place and Culture in the Children's Fantasies of Penelope Lively, Alan Garner, Diana Wynne Jones, and Susan Cooper (Rowman & Littlefield, 2006), page 14.
  10. ^ https://books.google.de/books/about/A_Little_Learning.html?id=RkEeAQAAIAAJ&redir_esc=y. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  11. ^ Baraniuk, Chris. "Cherwell win website of the year award". Cherwell. Archived from the original on 29 January 2009. Retrieved 25 March 2010.

External links[]

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