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Varsity (Cape Town)

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University of Cape Town student newspaper

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Varsity
Vuvuzela Logo
TypeStudent newspaper
FormatOnline
Print
Founded1942
HeadquartersLevel 4
Steve Biko Student Union Building
University of Cape Town
Websitevarsitynewspaper.substack.com

Varsity is the official student newspaper of the University of Cape Town (UCT), printed since 1942.

History

The paper was founded as a result of the burgeoning cultural tensions on campus between Afrikaans and English students. The student representative council (SRC) sought to control these tensions by uniting the English student newspaper UCTattle and the Afrikaans medium publication Die Spantou. The SRC aimed to lessen the widening gap in political opinion advocated by each of these mouthpieces by launching a bilingual student newspaper.

A storm of controversy met the decision to abolish the original papers. The first Varsity constitution even had a clause forbidding comment on politics at UCT. The SRC was firm that "racial friction and political bitterness must be eliminated". The SRC took Varsity Newspaper firmly under its wing, with much indignation from the student body. The first editor, NC Gracie, chose the name claiming UCT had the right to the name "being the oldest with the most inspiring record and the greatest tradition of tolerance and unity".

The newspaper grew in popularity and developed independence from the SRC. The paper maintained a spirit of liberalism during the apartheid years, with successive editors jailed and many editions incensing the National Party government. Varsity provided an important function during the years of censorship since it operated under different constraints to the mainstream press who were often prevented from reporting on the country's growing liberation struggle.

Many former staffers at Varsity have continued to work in the media industry in South Africa.

See also

References

  1. "Varsity website". Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  2. UCTattle, 1941-10-08
  3. Varsity, April 18, 1942

External links

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