Monday 16th June 2025
Blog Page 1202

Preview: Living Together

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Another student production comes to the Oxford playhouse and once again its sure to be a must see. A tragicomedy chronicling a single household’s weekend in July, Living Together captures the tensions of family life.

It is part of The Norman Conquests trilogy by Tony and Olivier Award-winning playwright Alan Ayckbourn. Annie (Lizzy Mansfield), the youngest of three siblings, has stayed at home to care for her mother (Rebecca Hamilton), but asks for the help of her brother Reg (James Aldred) and sister-in-law Sarah (Sarah Mat- thews) when she plans to spend a weekend away with the philandering Norman (Freddie Bowerman). Complications arise as Norman’s wife Ruth (Mary Higgins), who also happens to be Annie’s sister, arrives, adding to the general frenzy.

In the midst of the chaos is Annie’s meek fiancée Tom (James Watson), who seems to have trapped Annie in an “eternal engagement” with his indecisive and clueless demeanor. Ten-sions continue to rise as the weekend unfolds and past experiences take their toll on the family.

Directors Laura Cull and Griffith Rees have had big ambitions for the production from the start, by trying to combine as many ele- ments as possible from all three parts of the trilogy into a single work. Characters rarely leave the stage in this naturalistic rendering, where even the character only mentioned in the script, the Mother, is given a voice in the improvised scenes.

While intimate conversations are going on in the living room, the audience will be able to see (and hear) the other characters walk- ing in the garden or talking in the bedroom. Discussions between varying characters will take place concurrently using ‘improv solutions’. The use of improv during rehearsals has served to create a fun atmosphere for the cast where each character is explored through past and present. In my time with the cast, I got to see the cast explore a time in the childhood of Reg, Ruth, and Annie. The improvised scene featured a time when the two girls came in after raking leaves while wounded Reg lay on the living room couch with a football injury next to Mother. This organic process has helped the cast build the lives of their characters memory by memory.

The set itself will feature products of these improv sessions, for example Annie’s childhood drawings or Reg’s paper airplanes in their respective bedrooms. The audience will get a taste of the meticulously crafted reality, and get an intimate view of how their individual decisions come to affect them all. Director Griffith Rees explains the importance of the set design, remarking, “It’s one thing to see a man seducing another man’s wife, but it’s entirely different to see a man seducing someone’s wife when you see the husband in the next room.”

With an energetic cast clearly devoted to the material, Living Together promises the audience a comprehensive view of Ayckbourn’s characters and their experiences.

 

 

 

 

Mr Spacey’s finest hour?

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In his final role as Director of the Old Vic, Kevin Spacey reassumes the character of Clarence Darrow, providing a brilliant account of the Ohio-born civil-liberties lawyer who fought many cases on the behalf of those whose voices were being censored and suppressed. His career spanned an incredible 50 years at the bar, covering the holy trinity of controversy in his time: race, religion and politics.

The one-man play, written by David W. Rintels, gives a sober reflection of both sides of the USA’s history of political dissent, with government bullying presented alongside constitutional law as a means to limit it. Foremost a criminal defence lawyer, Spacey beautifully plays the emotional tumult of Darrow’s success: he never let a client receive the death penalty, but it regularly meant defending the lives of those he knew to be guilty of the most vile crimes. For instance, Darrow represented the two child- murderers Leopold and Loeb in what would be called the “Trial of the Century”. After a colossal 12 hour long closing speech, he managed to reduce their death sentence to life in prison.

The Tennessee ‘Monkey Trial’ is perhaps Darrow’s most well-known case, where he defended the right of a school teacher to teach evolution. Still in monologue, he re-lived the cross-exam- ination of a Biblical scholar, pondering how Cain acquired a wife if, of the three other people supposedly alive, the only woman was meant to be his mother Eve.

Yet the ‘Sweet Trials’ would be his real chal-lenge. In 1925, a black family of 11 were arrested on the charge of murder after a white mob tried to forcibly remove the family from their home. One member of the mob died. Darrow’s closing remarks (lasting around seven hours), implored the all-white jury to recognise a “Law of Love”, and thus convinced them to produce a verdict of not-guilty for one of thedefendants, as well as causing the charges to be dropped for the rest.

Spacey’s interpretation of the trial was extremely impressive. He harnessed the opportunities presented by the theatre in the round by using one corner of the audience as the imagined jury to which he passionately pleaded, and the front row of another to show how, after the verdict came through, Darrow shook the hand of every member of courtroom present (I was lucky enough to be amongst that front row).

Kevin Spacey’s portrayal of this hero of American liberalism is a refreshing change from his famous roles as arch-pragmatists, such as Richard III or Frank Underwood. The raw emotion of Spacey was incomparable, and leaving aside the unnecessary and emotionally manipulative tinkling piano that accompanied his exit at the ends of the two acts, this produc- tion was exemplary. Surely amongst Spacey’s greatest theatrical performances as both actor and director.

Framing May Day: Festival of Flowers

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With May Day such an integral part of Oxford life, we were keen to capitalise on this for an editorial. For those of us who have already survived an Oxford May Day, the name summons up many, probably hazy, memories of what is necessary to pull an all-nighter. Of course amongst the recollections of increasingly fatigued dancing are the sounds of the beautiful Magdalen choir chiming at six o’clock in the morning. What’s often not thought about, however, are the origins of May Day. After a bit of research, we found out about the earliest May Day celebrations having ties to the Floralia, the Roman Goddess of Flowers, so we decided to use her as our fashion icon. Admittedly she probably doesn’t wear an eclectic mix of vintage and Topshop florals, nor bright pink lipstick, but Floralia was our inspiration nonetheless. 

Models: Nina Foster, Marie-Therese Alexis Png and Lucy Téa

Concept & Styling: Summer Taylor and Rosie Gaunt

Hair: Katie Jowett

Photographer: Holly Shackleton 

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Behind the Scenes…

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About our phographer, Holly Shackleton, and her work…

“I am in my first year studying photography at London College of Communications. My practice fits mainly into conceptual and fine art. I came up with the flower-box method, used for this shoot, during my project for my foundation year. I created it because I’m interested in challenging both myself and pho- tography through exploring alternative processes. This is why I use my flower-box rather than the over- done method of photoshop. I first used this method to photograph derelict pubs. The flowers I used in my box were picked from just outside these pubs. I liked the idea of actually using flowers which had lived and flourished outside the dying pubs so that they could act as a wreath to the closed pubs in my photography. I think the flower-box method worked particularly well in this May Day and Festival of Flowers themed edito- rial because of the way the shine of the Perspex box lends a misty and ethereal glow to the photography of the models. Also, as Rosie and Summer put it, the slight hazy feel perfectly captures May Day celebrations!” 

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Cricketers hit opponents for six

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The beginning of Trinity term means different things to different people. For those who enjoy watching people dressed in white stand in fields for hours on end shouting silly phrases, it can mean one thing, and one thing only: the start of the cricket season.

Both male and female teams have started this season strongly, building on the runaway successes of last year. After a season which ended with the retention of the T-20, One-Day and Test varsity trophies, the men’s team decided to kick off their season with a tour of Sri Lanka, where new captain Matthew Winter and tour manager Bill Frewin led the Blues on a successful training and team building exercise. Birthplace of such cricket icons as Kumar Sangakkara and Sanath Jayasuriya, the unique conditions made for an interesting change for cricketers brought up on green wickets and overcast skies.

Starting in Kandy, going through the capital Colombo to the test ground of Galle, the Blues played a host of teams, beating St Antony’s College, the University of Peradeniya, St Peter’s College, and the University of Jayawardenepura. A tough test for the Blues followed, the fi nal games being played against a very strong club side from Maggona. In games fraught with excellent cricket and high drama, the heroics of Agarwal, Mylavarapu and O’Gorman were not enough to prevent narrow losses. Back on home soil, pre-season has kicked off with games against St Edward’s and Teddington, whilst a number of OUCC players have joined the Oxford MCC (joint Oxford and Oxford Brookes) team, gaining valuable first-class experience. Abidine Sakande topped off a memorable game against Surrey bygaining the scalp of game-changing batsman (and insuff erable egoist) Kevin Pietersen.

Looking forward to the season, Winter said, “Though we have lost a couple of very influential players, we have got some really exciting talent joining us. “Freshers such as Hughes, Gnodde, Claughton and Harrison have already made a real impact on the side, and our all-rounder Owain Jones has returned to us having missed last season, which strengthens the team considerably.”

The women’s team finished their 2014 season brilliantly by thrashing their Cambridge counterparts, winning the T-20 game by eight wickets before batting from Tina Gough, Ellie Bath and bowling from Ridhi Kashyap secured the One-Day varsity trophy comprehensively by 140 runs. The team kicked off the season with a resounding 166-run win against Cambridge on Wednesday 22nd April. The victory was led by superb contributions in particular from Eleanor Bath and debutante Sian Kelly with the bat, and fellow debutante Immy Brown with the ball.

Training hard all winter, captain Ellie Ingram and incoming President Ridhi Kashyap are “full of confidence” about continued success in both league and varsity, describing their squad as being composed of “talented returning and new players all eager to contribute”. In the ‘big-three’ family of established university sport, cricket can come across as the slightly awkward older sibling. A switch to pay-per-view television coverage and the recent stagnation of the England team have invariably damaged the state of cricket on a national level.

The successes of last year have demonstrated the thriving and active cricket scene at Oxford, which will hopefully translate into another double-sweep of varsity trophies this summer. It would be “wonderful”, says Winter, “if students came to watch the games this summer”. With both teams composed of experienced Blues and exciting young talent, from a full range of years and colleges, dedicated to playing (and winning) with an exciting brand of stylish cricket, I’m sure many will.

Cyclists pedal to victory

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The last two weekends have certainly been busy ones for the Oxford Cycling Club, competing in opposite corners of the country in different BUCS competitions. On Sunday 19th April the team travelled to Somerset for the team trial championships, where three riders must work together to achieve the fastest time as a pack.

The women’s team, entering the competition as significant underdogs to Cambridge, overturned all odds to take a thrilling victory. The team of Liv Withers, Imogen Kempton and captain Tamara Davenne completed the undulating course in 59:50, a full minute ahead of their rivals. The favourites Cambridge came in second with a time of 1:00:43, and Sheffield took bronze in 1:02:16. In a packed men’s field, Oxford finished a strong 17th, illustrating their depth with further teams at 20th and 24th.

Following on from this success, the next weekend saw the peak of the cycling season, with a combined BUCS and varsity event. This was held in Cambridge, and riders competing individually over a 25 mile time trial course. Leading home the Oxford women’s team once again was Tamara Davenne who added another national medal to her collection by placing second in the race. She did this whilst also leading the BUCS team to a second place finish. Despite the home-field advantage, Oxford was also able to defeat Cambridge in the varsity match and completed a very successful fortnight for the squad.

The strength and depth of women’s cycling that Oxford now possesses is laudable. Oxford are now able to take on and beat the very best at a national level, competing far and wide. With a large amount of funding in recent years, most notably from Sky, cycling as an amateur sport has very much taken off in this country, with participation levels at an all-time high and Britain enjoying a large degree of success internationally on the road and track.

The Oxford road captain Alasdair Morrison explained the transformation in female cycling at the university to Cherwell, commenting, “The women’s cycling in Oxford has increased in strength greatly this year withthe move to a racing squad who have shown their strength across the board.” On both her individual and team success, women’s captain Tamara Davenne of Merton was quick to point out the difficulties of the team trial discipline, requiring a great deal of communication between the trio. Davenne told Cherwell, “I’m very pleased with our performance. The girls gave everything in the race [BUCS] allowing us to reach our main objective: riding the 23 miles of this hilly course in less than an hour.

“Riding a team time trial with people who have different strengths is not easy. Finding the highest pace everyone will be able to maintain for an hour and sticking together was our biggest challenge, and we managed it beautifully. This victory is the result of great team work and we can all be very proud of it.”

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With a young team, the club hope only to improve in the forthcoming year. The stage is set for further improvement and with a number of highly talented female riders coming through and breaking into the ranks of Oxford’s cycling team, for now women’s cycling looks to be very much on track for future success. 

The ultimate success at BUCS Nationals

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Whilst most of Oxford welcomed the arrival of 1st Week by sleeping off the post-collections hangover, the men and women of the Oxford University Ultimate Club (OW!) travelled to Nottingham and spent the weekend competing at the BUCS Outdoor Nationals, with the women’s team (WOW!) performing especially well and ultimately bringing home the national title.

If, like me, you have been in University Parks on a Saturday and have wondered what the swathes of people running around, chucking a frisbee to each other were in fact up to, the answer is: ultimate. My obliviousness and drastic over-simplification aside, ultimate is actually an immensely tactical sport with great popularity globally, with over 5.1 million registered amateurs and 2 professional leagues in the USA. Ultimate frisbee is increasing in popularity among students in the UK, with teams at over 60 universities that regularly compete in tournaments up and down the country. The BUCS weekend is the pinnacle of university-level ultimate, with the best of the best competing to become ultimate BUCS champions.

One of ultimate’s most appealing aspects is its high pace and intensity, which, in combination with having some common rules with other sports such as netball and American football, makes for a compelling game. It is non-contact, the Frisbee can only be held while stationary for 10 seconds and points are scored by catching the disc in the ‘endzone’.

Another of its quirks is its almost entirely self-refereed nature by the two sets of seven players on the field, which promotes the values of fair play, honesty, mutual respect and ‘the spirit of the game’ that run at the core of the sport.

Even at the professional level, the advent of referees with the power to make crucial decisions is a somewhat controversial introduction among ultimate purists, but it is the honesty of the amateur game that is certainly the sport’s most admirable feature.

Ultimate stays true to its roots in American student counter-culture, dating back around half a century and it absolutely has much that could be learned by other sports. The controversy that surrounded Chelsea players and referees in top-f light fixtures this year shows that the public don’t especially care for such actions and empathise with the difficulty of refereeing any fast paced sport. Are the days of players crowding referees in the top leagues of world football over? No.

But the message of respect that ultimate preaches is a healthy one for sporting values, regardless of discipline.

Returning to the national competition,  the tournament itself is the showpiece event of the outdoor, warm-weather ultimate season and this year’s edition in Nottingham proved to be a showcase for the silky skills of the women of WOW!, who were crowned national champions following an excellent run of games against Strathclyde, Southampton, Loughborough, Liverpool, the hosts Nottingham and Bangor. They then defeated the University of Birmingham in the final to take an historic BUCS title, comfortably securing the 8-5 win.

The men’s team didn’t fare as well, but battled admirably to claim 15th position, after a win against Durham (always nice). The University of Birmingham, whose ladies’ team was defeated by WOW! went on to win the men’s event. This caps off an excellent season for the women’s ultimate team, having beaten their Light Blue counterparts both outside and in. Unfortunately, neither the men’s first nor second teams could imitate this result, though the alumni did pull off an impressive victory over the Tabs.

In another extremely positive aspect, the men’s first and second teams, as well as the women’s team, have been awarded Spirit Winners on numerous occasions, demonstrating the applaudable attitude shown by the Oxford ulitmate players. Moving forward, this victory is fantastic for the promotion of a sport that is underrepresented in the university. This is despite its obvious nationwide and global popularity, so instead of looking on confusedly in University Parks on a Saturday morning, next time, why not get involved?

Dark Blue loss in varsity wiff-waff

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The university table tennis side met their match at varsity this year, with both men’s and women’s squads succumbing to Cambridge. Held on away turf for the first time at the University of Cambridge Sports Centre, Oxford appeared a little overwhelmed by the well-drilled and intense playing style of the Light Blues.

The women went first and it soon became apparent that Cambridge had the tactical edge, executing a series of superb cross table returns and down-the-line shots. A trickle of Oxford defeats in the opening games turned to a whitewash as Cambridge won 10-0. Credit must go to Kritica Dwivedi of Exeter College, who ruffled feathers in the Tab camp after a fantastic 2nd set in her last game, but unfortunately Oxford could not build on this momentum.

As ever, the men’s second team match was closely fought, as the teams appeared far more evenly matched. However, Cambridge clawed back from a 5-3 match deficit and, after an exciting finale, it finished in a 5-5 draw. In the penultimate doubles, the so-far lethal Dark Blue partnership of Joost van Deutekom and Hrishikesh Paranjape met their match, unable to capitalise on the opportunity to take the game. The last doubles was a nail biting encounter, going all the way to 13-13 in the fifth set. Ultimately, the consistency of the Cambridge pair won out and the Tabs snuck back in for the draw. Many of the matches were finely balanced, a couple of neat returns by Cambridge’s second team captain Martin Rohland and rising star Hampton Tao keeping them in play.

Oxford then looked to the men’s Blues match to save the day, but sadly it was not to be. A young Cambridge side played Oxford off the table, taking a 7-3 victory. The Dark Blues simply could not overcome star Tab players Joshua Bleakley and Wilson Chen who dominated the doubles and singles. Cambridge captain Harry Ness was involved in the most enthralling set of matches of the day, just about beating Oxford’s Maciej Jarocki 3-2 before narrowly losing to Dai Xi 3-1, with the last two games going to deuce, 10-12.

Nonetheless this was an encouraging performance from Oxford. For the first time since 2010, the Oxford Mens’ 1sts were able to put in individual victories against Cambridge and both Kris Hammerback and Dai Xi were unlucky not to record two wins, with both taking one of their opposing players to 5 sets.

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As in the reserves’ game it was the doubles which proved decisive, Oxford needing to win both in order to achieve a draw. Sadly, it seemed the Dark Blues lacked their opponents’ composure, as Cambridge brushed aside such a spirited comeback. Oxford should not be too disheartened by this result. A successful season for both squads, including wins against Brooke’s and a new partnership with kit supplier Top Spin augurs well for the future.

In the men’s event this was the most closely contested varsity for several years and suggests that perhaps the tide is beginning to turn with the wiff-waff.

A marathon effort for Oxford students

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The London Marathon is a British sporting staple; with its own BBC theme tune, and the fact that everybody knows somebody doing it. The runners range from the best of the best, going for that World Record, and the club runners seeking a PB, to bonkers costumes and runners dipping their toe into the world of 26.2 miles for the first time.

Though most students would balk at even walking that distance, Oxford had a remarkable contingent attempting one of the hardest challenges in sport.

Continuing our termly theme of Dark Blue domination, it was Oxford who came home victorious in both the men’s and women’s varsity marathon match (yes, that exists). Runners from the Cross Country Club took on their Light Blue rivals in a team competition, with three people to score in the men’s, and four in the women’s. Oxford’s Alex Betts, Tom Lamont and Tom Hughes won the men’s match, with a fastest time of 2:45:21. In the women’s match, Kate Niehaus was the fastest Blue in the field, with a time of 2:56:30. Liv Faull, Ligita Visockyte and Nora Petty made up the rest of the winning Dark Blue team. The Oxford team was far larger than that of the other place, demonstrating the strength and depth in long-distance running. It was one of the strongest Oxford performances for many years and spoke volumes of the strength in depth of long-distance Dark Blue running.

Another Oxford sportsman entering this year was President of OUHC, Michael Fernando. After losing a bet, he decided to run the 26.2 miles in full hockey goal keeping kit. He ran in aid of Cancer Research UK, in honour of his father, who sadly passed away on 2nd April, after suffering with bowel cancer for over five years. Incredibly, his marathon effort has raised nearly £40,000 for the charity, with him finishing in a time of 5:45:02.

Academics and students alike came together to attempt the UK’s premier marathon. Alexander Betts, the director of the Refugee Studies Cen- tre at the University of Oxford, raised just over £2,500 for the charity Asylum Welcome. Betts ran the marathon in a personal best of 2:45. He told Cherwell, “Winning varsity against Cambridge made it the perfect day!”

Isaac Virchis, a first year PPE student at Oriel, exceeded his fundraising target of £5,000 as he ran to raise money for Great Ormond Street Hospital. After months of gruelling training, Virchis came in with a final time of 4:12. Speaking to Cherwell, Virchis said, “I was on cloud nine for the first 21 miles, cruising at the right pace, and the finish was approaching with every step. Then it all went to pieces and you realise how far 26.2 miles is. Your legs are cramping and your knees feel like they might cramp every time your foot hits the pavement.

“But the crowds drive you on and before you know it, you’re turning right onto The Mall. 400 metres, 200 metres, 100 metres and then you cross the line. Nothing changes except before you were nothing, now you’re a marathon runner. As my motto went, ‘Pain is temporary, 26.2 miles is forever,’ and no one can take that away from you.”

Mark Carney, the Governor of the Bank of Eng- land and St Peter’s and Nuffield alumnus, was one of many hundred of Oxford alumni running the marathon. Carney raised over £60,000 for Cancer Research UK, putting in a highly impressive time of 3:31:35.

Perhaps the prize for the best Oxford costume went to Victoria Rees, who ran dressed as a rhino. Rees, a member of the modern pentathlon squad, seemed unfazed by the crowd interest in her outfit as she ploughed on through the miles.

Given this event falls immediately after collections, the size of the Oxford team out was impressive. The Oxford Tube was packed on Saturday night as coaches full of students and supporters travelled to London ahead of the race the next day.

These are just a few of the huge number of Ox- ford students, alumni and staff who ran on Sunday. Cherwell salutes everyone from the Oxford community who took part in the race. This was quite possibly the largest Oxford contingent ever to run the race, a sure indication that the proud tradition of scholar-athletes at our University is alive and well today.

Debate: Is it fair that Oxbridge has multiple teams on

Yes

Patrick Oisin Mulholland

“Okay, you all know the rules so let’s get on with it, shall we? Ten points for this starter question: Premiering in 1962 and currently in its 44th season, the popular TV quiz series, University Challenge, has been won most frequently by which institution?”

“BUZZ!”

“Magdalen, Solomon.”

“Magdalen College, Oxford.”

“Correct! University of Manchester would also have been acceptable. Your bonuses are on …”

University Challenge! Yes, it’s that time of year again. The final is upon us – or rather, it was a fortnight ago, but that is not to say the dust has settled. Far from it! In fact, the storm rages on relentlessly. With colleges from Oxbridge taking up the much-coveted places in the final two, it may not be difficult to guess why there is debate over the show’s current format. Since its inception, Oxford and Cambridge colleges, as sums of their respective parts, have taken home the trophy a grand total of 24 times. All in all, that’s slightly over half of the 44 tournaments that there have been. Still not latching on to what’s at issue here? Not to worry.

The question before us is one of propriety, of fairness. During a 1987 interview, Bamber Gascoigne, Jeremy Paxman’s predecessor, had this to say about the survival of the show,

“There was resistance, particularly… on the grounds that we were elitist… There were far more Oxford and Cambridge colleges that kept coming on.”

In fact, in the 37 matches broadcast in the most recent series, an Oxbridge college has featured in a staggering 22. Such an imbalance has renewed calls for an end to collegiate participation and the distillation of two teams – one for Oxford, one for Cambridge. This way we could expect 13 Oxbridge matches at the very most. Of course, that’s assuming the very unlikely state of affairs that both teams make the final after both having lost their first rounds and one of their quarter-final matches, and – further still – not having the chance to meet each other before the final! Pardon me while I take a deep breath…

Whilst such a viewpoint has my sympathies, I cannot help but feel it is rather misguided and here’s why – neither Oxford nor Cambridge are monoliths. Think about it. Each college retains its own identity and, but for an annual boat race and a shared old town, there is very little that truly unites us.

Intercollegiate rivalry is fierce. No matter how hard I try I will never be a Wadham zealot or even a student at St Hugh’s (the geographical approximation to Oxford of what the Falkland Islands are to the United Kingdom). For goodness sake, just look at Torpids! There’s a reason why my fellow Trinitarians go to the Thames to see The Lady Elizabeth recast as a trireme, emulating the Battle of Salamis. Few, if any students can find it within themselves to rejoice in another college’s triumphs. And – let’s be frank – if they did, it would be a little weird.

In any given year, University Challenge may reliably anticipate 120 applications before whittling them down to 28 TV-primed-teams. Speaking on BBC Radio 4, Peter Gwyn, the executive producer, outlined the tiresome efforts exerted in “cajoling” and “badgering” students to apply.

A thorough selection p rocess – including a test – ensures that the procedure is meritocratic, insofar as it is possible. The best teams progress.

Doubtless then, we find the same names cropping up again and again. Presently, there are three institutions that nurse a strong culture of competitive quizzing – they are Oxford, Cambridge and Manchester. Make no mistake about, in some of these institutions, quizzing is taken very seriously indeed. Some even go so far as to employ coaches. And, with all the tenacity of an Olympic weightlifting crew from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, they perfect their craft; the fruits of which we have seen in Manchester’s harvest in recent years under the watchful tuition of Stephen Pearson.

To this end, the collegiate approach is a godsend, not an injustice. In the words of Cameron Quinn, a finalist in this year’s contest, “What individual college teams allow for is a dilution of the concentration in Oxbridge of both cultivated quizzing skill and accumulated cultural capital.” This way, the programme remains not just enjoyable to watch, it also fulfils the equally important function of continuing to be competitive. The simple problem here is that pooling every ounce of talent into a single team from each of Oxford or Cambridge would almost certainly render them invincible.

In what has since become infamous, the Manchester team of 1975, featuring one David Aaronovitch, rattled off absurd answers in protest against ‘elitism’. Surely that cannot be a point of contention. I mean, come on – take a step back; you are partaking in a bourgeois test of bourgeois knowledge. “[Initiation into bourgeois culture and values] is one of the things universities are for,” explains Quinn, “and Oxbridge is the institutional initiator into the bourgeoisie par excellence.” It’s inescapable. There is no appreciable golden standard of fairness; it will always be a balancing act. And, with a respectable mix of semi-finalists year after year, I see little cause for complaint and little cause for change.

 

No

Sara Semic

I get as much enjoyment out of testing myself against the contestants on the intellectual battleground of University Challenge as the next person. However, by allowing the two most elite institutions in our higher education system to submit multiple teams, forming over a third of the contestants, the show upholds the bastions of privilege in our society and further perpetuates the Oxbridge bias. Although pitting rival colleges against each other might make entertaining TV, there’s no denying that Oxbridge has a disproportionately amplified voice in the media as it is – be that presenters whose alma mater is Oxford or Cambridge, or just general media coverage – and by consistently allowing inter-college matches to play out, we’re only dishing out more space and time devoted to Oxbridge.

Previous attempts at quashing the Oxbridge multi-team rule, such as in 1975 when a Manchester University team, headed by journalist David Aaronovitch, expressed their disdain by answering every question with “Trotsky” or “Lenin”, have failed to turn around the minds of the show’s producers. But 40 years on, why are we still complicit in allowing this preferential treatment? Why is it that Oxford and Cambridge’s collegiate system is still regarded as unique, qualifying the universities for multiple plus ones in this exclusive party when other universities, like Durham, have several colleges too? The reason given for why Durham’s colleges are collapsed into a single team, competing with Oxbridge colleges which have a fraction of their student cohort, is that they have not acquired ‘proper’ college status as defined by Oxbridge criteria. Despite the fact that here too we are taught within university faculties and by tutors across the whole board of colleges, Durham’s separate college identities can be cast aside because their raison d’être is seen as primarily for accommodation.

It makes perfect sense that the network of universities under the University of London qualify for separate teams, given that UCL and LSE are in fact stand-alone institutions with thousands of students. But how is it fair that whilst Sheffield University may submit one team, handpicked from its 24,000 students, so too can St John’s Oxford, with its 390 undergraduates and 250 postgraduates, simply because of its longer history or by virtue of its endowment being ten times that of Sheffield’s?

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Then there are those who profess that having a single Oxford and Cambridge team per series would result in the creation of a UC Frankenstein’s monster, an unbeatable ‘super’ team dominating the competition and turning it into Eggheads. The aficionados of the show love nothing better than to see non- Oxbridge teams conquer an Oxbridge team, and by having combined Oxbridge teams, this occurrence, they claim, would be much rarer.

But this assumption that combined Oxbridge teams would pool all the best players into one unstoppable team is predicated on the centuries-old notion of Oxbridge’s intellectual superiority and quite simply smacks of arrogance – the idea that no other miserly, redbrick university could have a shot at competing with such a formidable opponent is unfounded and downright snobbish. Yes, there might currently be a string of Oxbridge teams in the semis, but is that not to be expected given the inflated number of Oxbridge contestants? Furthermore, institutions like UCL, Durham, Imperial and Manchester have frequently been strong contenders, consistently making at least the quarter finals in many series.

It may be that Oxford or Cambridge will still have a winning team every few years competing as an inter-college amalgamation, but at least it will be on an equal playing field. We need to abandon the conceited and unproven assumption that an Oxford or Cambridge team would walk to victory. And we ought to stop glorifying the peculiarities and quirks that make Oxford and Cambridge so exclusive, and where better to do so than on such a well-known and liked TV programme?

The International Student

Running an entire country takes a great deal of trust and popular support. The difficulty comes when, as we see in Brazil at the moment, that trust and support erodes and a country’s newly elected leader is left with little power over their own fate. With only months passing since our presidential election, 63 per cent of the population now support impeaching our new president.

At the end of last year, Brazil was in an election frenzy. Two candidates were considered by most analysts to be the clear favourites: Dilma Rousseff (who was standing for the incumbent Workers’ Party) and Aecio Neves (representing the largest opposition party, the Social Democrats). The run up to the election was more fraught than any other in recent history. With violent fluctuations in the polls and a freak accident in which one of the main candidates, Eduardo Campos, tragically died in a helicopter collision, the battle for power made the contest taking place in the United Kingdom look remarkably smooth.

After months of tireless campaigning, in the end it was Rousseff who won the day, as she emerged with the narrowest electoral margin in modern Brazilian history. However, the road since has been anything but smooth.

Within weeks of the polls closing, people were voicing concerns that the Workers’ Party had defrauded the elections. While in many other countries this problem could be rectified by calling a recount of votes cast, our use of voting machines ruled out this possibility. The result it that the ruling party is plagued by the damning accusation of illegitimacy, undermining it at every turn.

Perhaps even more problematic have been the many corruption scandals that have come to light in the past months, detailing illegal interactions involving the Workers’ Party and Brazil’s most valuable company, Petrobras. Consider the English people realising that BP (but a BP with far larger assets and more control over the economy) had been running a huge scheme of bribery that washes billions of pounds out of the company directly to the Conservative Party. Terrifyingly for the people of Brazil, this is what has been happening at our largest petroleum company. The result has been widespread public condemnation of the party and the launching of an investigation which has led to the arrest of many people, including none other than three leading figures in the Workers’ Party.

Naturally, these events have played directly into the hands of the opposition. Somewhat unsurprisingly, the numbers calling for Rousseff to be impeached have been growing rapidly, despite the fact that there is still no direct proof that she was involved in the bribery scheme. Millions of people have taken to the streets in protest, while in a recent national poll 63 per cent supported her impeachment. The significance of this is shown by the fact that only four months after entering power, more people are now calling for her constitutional rejection than voted for her in the first place. Brazilian politics is unique in many ways.

However, what is true there (as of all other democracies and quasi-democracies) is that the Government must attempt to realise the will of the people. Fail this and your support will fail you. As shown so clearly in Brazil, that is politics.