The Dalhousie Gazette

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The Dalhousie Gazette
Logi
TypeBi-Weekly Student Newspaper
FormatTabloid
PublisherThe Dalhousie Gazette Publishing Society
Editor-in-chiefLane Harrison
News editorAdam Inniss
Opinion editorAmanda King
Sports editorLuke Dyment
Founded1868
LanguageEnglish
Headquarters6136 University Ave., Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4J2
Circulation1,200
ISSN0011-5819
OCLC number1080355152
Websitedalgazette.com

The Dalhousie Gazette (more commonly referred to as the Gazette) is the main student publication at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The paper first began publishing in 1868, making it the oldest continually operating student newspaper in North America followed by The Harvard Crimson (1873) and The Columbia Daily Spectator (1877). (The Brunswickan, printed out of the University of New Brunswick, actually predates The Gazette by a year, but began printing in magazine format). The founding editors were J.J. Cameron (who went on to found the Queen's Journal), A.P.Seeton, and W.E. Roscoe.

The Gazette's weekly circulation is 2,000, making it Halifax's third-largest free print publication. The Gazette is run, financed and published by the Dalhousie Gazette Publishing Society, a group of students made up from the Gazette's editors and contributors. The society operates independently of the Dalhousie Student Union, though the paper does charge an annual student levy through the DSU (approx $5.00 per student each academic year) as a means of complementing its advertising income.

The Gazette's primary mandate is to scrutinize and report on the financial, social and administrative powers of the Dalhousie Student Union, its student societies, and the Dalhousie University administration. Within this mandate, the Gazette also covers events and news related to the Dalhousie community, student body and alumni.

As one of Halifax's major independent publications, the Gazette's Dalhousie-centric mandate has often been expanded to include issues outside of the university community proper. Recent publication years of the Gazette gave seen a large emphasis on international events, local artists and regional politics. Reflecting this independent disposition, the Gazette's layout has dispensed with front-page story copy, printing instead a full-cover graphic (usually a photograph) and large teasers with page numbers under the fold.

Along with their Dalhousie counterparts, University of King's College students have made significant contributions to the paper despite being outside of the Gazette's levy umbrella. Aside from providing the paper with many staff reporters and photographers, King's students and alumni have recently filled some of the Gazette's top editorial positions. The Editors-in-Chief for the 2012/2013 and 2013/2014 years were King's alumni, and significant portions of the newspaper's editorial staff over the years has come from King's.

A typical issue of the Gazette in 2013/2014 was 24 11x10 pages, with approximately 800 words appearing per page. As of 2020, the Gazette has 11 paid positions: an editor-in-chief, news editor, opinions editor, arts & lifestyle editor, sports editor, visual editor, online editor, copyeditor, page designer, business and administration manager and a distribution manager.

Notable alumni[]

  • Ernest Buckler, OC, novelist
  • Rt.Hon. Joe Clark, 16th Prime Minister of Canada
  • George Elliott Clarke, Canada's parliamentary poet laureate
  • Jan Crull, Jr., attorney, investment banker, filmmaker and Native American rights advocate
  • Darrell Dexter, Premier of Nova Scotia (2009–2013)
  • Duncan Cameron Fraser, 8th Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia
  • Joseph Howe, journalist, politician and Canadian statesman who contributed a few articles to the Dalhousie Gazette during the Hants County byelection of 1869 (he was already sixty-five years of age). It was also in 1869 that Howe joined the Canadian Cabinet only to resign his position in 1873 to become Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia (he died the same year)
  • Kenneth Leslie, Canadian poet
  • Robert McNeil, television reporter, e.g. "McNeil-Lehrer Report" (American PBS)
  • Hugh MacLennan, CC, author, five-time Governor General's award winner
  • Lucy Maude Montgomery, CBE. author of Anne of Green Gables
  • James Macdonald Oxley, author, lawyer

Gazette editors-in-chief[]

  • 2021/22 Lane Harrison
  • 2020/21 Tarini Fernando
  • 2019/20 Rebecca Dingwell
  • 2018/19 Kaila Jefferd-Moore
  • 2017/18 Kaila Jefferd-Moore
  • 2016/17 Eleanor Davidson
  • 2015/16 Jesse Ward/Sabina Wex
  • 2014/15 Jesse Ward
  • 2013/14 Ian Froese
  • 2012/13 Katrina Pyne
  • 2011/12 Dylan Matthias
  • 2010/11 Joel Tichinoff
  • 2009/10 Josh Boyter
  • 2008/09 Julie Sobowale
  • 2007/08 John Packman
  • 2006/07 Rafal Andronowski
  • 2005/06 Christopher LaRoche
  • 2004/05 Quentin Casey
  • 2003/04 Malcolm Repo Kempt
  • 2002/03 Caitlin Kealey
  • 2001/02 Kip Keen
  • 2000/01 Kip Keen
  • 1999/00 Natalie MacLellan
  • 1998/99 Natalie MacLellan
  • 1997/98 John Cullen
  • 1996/97 Shelley Robinson (Managing Editor)
  • 1995/96 Jennifer Horsey (Managing Editor) / Sam McCaig (Editor)
  • 1994/95 Judy Reid (Managing Editor) / Lilli Ju (Editor)
  • 1993/94 Ryan Stanley
  • 1992/93 Jenn Beck/Miriam Korn
  • 1991/92 Shannon Gowans/Chris Lambie/Marie-France Leblanc/Jerry West
  • 1990/91 Allison Johnston/Alex Burton
  • 1988/89 Sandy MacKay
  • 1974/75 Peter Clarke
  • 1973/74 Margaret Bezanson/Ken MacDougall
  • 1926/27 Andrew Olding Hebb
  • 1872/74 James Macdonald Oxley

(It was under the Bezanson/MacDougall editorship that the Gazette adopted the tabloid format with a front page graphic rather than a story or photograph. All of the front pages in 1973/74 were cartoons done by whose weekly creations reflected the major news event affecting Dalhousie that week.)

See also[]

External links[]

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