Fred Dimbleby
Fred, a second-year Historian at Keble, was the paper's editor for Trinity Term 2018 alongside Matt Roller. He started out as Cherwell's comment editor last Hilary.
Missing Oxford comma leads to $5m settlement
The lack of the controversial piece of grammar led to a settlement in the labour dispute
Uni awards highest share of top grades in country
No humanities students were awarded thirds in 2017
John Bird: Tackling the big issues
John Bird talks about the possible solutions to homelessness and the role that the Big Issue plays on the streets
Colleges fail to pay the Oxford Living Wage
St. Anne’s and Wycliffe Hall also pay less than the real living wage to some staff
Student dresses as Stephen Hawking at LMH bop
The able-bodied student chose the costume for the 'dress as your degree' theme
Syrian refugee receives offer from Balliol
Sulaiman Wihba described the news of his offer as "unbelievable"
Oxford SU stays neutral on NSS boycott
Last year a University-wide protest last year led to Oxford being one of only four Universities to be left out of the survey results.
Peter Preston Obituary: A journalist who believed in action
Peter Preston, who died last week, knew that no one should escape scrutiny.
Sensitive data stolen from exclusive Oxbridge club
The society has warned its 5000 members about 'suspicious activity'
University trawled sensitive data to drive donations
The records of almost 200,000 Oxford alumni have been inspected since August 2007.
Revealed: how Richardson splashes the cash on flights, hotels, and hospitality
£69k has been spent on VC’s expenses since taking job
No, saving Cellar was not a true victory for people power
Saving Cellar was an important victory, writes Fred Dimbleby, but pointless divisions are stopping students from uniting to fight for more significant causes
Oxford SU “angered and dismayed” by vice-chancellor homophobia comments
Richardson, who earns £350,000 a year, said that it wasn't her job to make students "feel comfortable"
New College bursar slams Louise Richardson’s “grossly excessive” pay
The New bursar said it was "hard to see value for money" in the Oxford Vice Chancellor's £350,000 salary