Tuesday 24th June 2025
Blog Page 1435

What does ‘cool’ mean?

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The discussion of what it is to be cool is one that has doubtless been had over and over again. However, through some freak of circumstance I, despite my self-avowed predilection for wasting time by reading about pop culture, have never encountered any of these discussions. So I decided there might be some value in a completely fresh approach to the topic.

When we were young, the cool kids were the ones who were good at sport, and the ones who messed around in class. Some might take the second example to indicate that being cool is disobeying authority. This would be consistent with many other examples of what seems to be stereotypically cool: smoking and drinking aged fifteen, taking drugs and putting up posters on the walls of your rented house using blu-tak even though you know it stains them. However, it is more helpful to take the two examples in conjunction and say that being cool is being different, standing out. After all, murder isn’t cool, no matter how much you like GTA (and I really like GTA) and nor is most crime that has an easily perceivable victim.

But being different isn’t always cool, either. What if you stand out from everyone else by being the only person you know who doesn’t flush the toilet? That’s not cool, man. Being cool has to be standing out for the right reasons. But how can we define the right reasons? It can’t be the reasons which are socially acceptable, because being cool isn’t really supposed to be socially acceptable. Nor, obviously, can it be the reasons which aren’t socially acceptable.

All this confusion could easily give rise to a defeatist attitude which would claim that ‘cool’ is completely subjective and therefore beyond definition. But we could say that the word ‘good’ is subjective depending on our attitude and yet still have an idea of what the word actually means. What makes someone cool is a matter of subjectivity, but the act of being cool is still basically constant. Being cool is always, in every situation, standing out for the right reasons, but we want a more distinct definition.

Perhaps the most pertinent point that I realized about halfway through thinking about this column was that it definitely isn’t cool to write a column wondering what ‘cool’ means. By extension, it isn’t cool to try to be cool. Obviously. Some might take this even further, and say that it isn’t cool to try period. This is really just a clumsy Hollywood stereotype, though. Think of Dave Grohl on stage. He’s trying pretty fucking hard. And he’s pretty fucking cool. Sorry, Dave Grohl and the F word sort of come hand in hand. So maybe, I thought, being cool is being good at things. But still there are exceptions. Being really good at analyzing themes in Petronius’ Cena Trimalchionis, as I would like to be, is not cool.

So if ‘cool’ is something we want to be, but to which we are forbidden from aspiring, perhaps definition is impossible. Not only is ‘cool’ a subjective adjective but it also a subjective concept; it has become too intrinsic a part of our culture for us to even understand what it means any more.

Letter from Cowley

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My year away takes place in an area steeped in culture; from the Roman road on the Eastern frontier to the conveniently placed KFC, my new home is a fascinating and bustling region with lots to be explored. Yet I have become accustomed to the pitying looks of my fellow students when I reveal where I live: “How do you commute?” “Is it safe?” and “WHY?” are frequent, concerned questions thrown at me. I should like to take this opportunity to dispel some myths about living in Cowley, from cuisine to climate, language to locals.

When I say there is a lot to be explored around my new home, I pretty much exclusively mean restaurants. Cowley Road is home to fifty three restaurants, cafés and takeaways that I pass on the fifteen minute walk to my house. Cowley hosts Nepalese cuisine, an American diner, a Nando’s and a sushi bar, so we’re unlikely to go hungry. The area also boasts a wide variety of hairdressers and not one but two questionable-looking ‘adult shops’ (yet to be explored). We might not have a Topshop or the gorgeous architecture of the city centre, but we’ve got a lot of food, good hair and interesting… personal lives. The climate here is cold, particularly when your housemates don’t know how to turn the thermostat on. People walk around in huge (and often shiny) jackets, although it is unknown to me whether they are protecting against the cold or indulging the latest fashions. We tend to commute to places within the city centre for a more temperate and affordable experience, as heating is expensive.

The culture in Cowley came as a massive surprise to me; the Polish supermarket offers a variety of what I assume are Polish foods, and if you’re less adventurous, Tesco has a section for exciting-looking foods from far away as well. But it’s not all about food; we also have a Bangladesh Islamic Centre and Mosque and a Methodist Church, going some way towards illustrating the ethnically diverse population to which Cowley is home. Not content with being figuratively colourful, many of the buildings on the main Cowley Road are adorned with bright and beautiful graffiti art, displaying the wealth of talent that the area has to offer. Cowley is a large contributor to Oxford’s music scene, with venues such as the O2 Academy Oxford and the Art Bar, where events such as Jazz Nights, Itchy Feet and a Chas and Dave performance entertain and enrich us. Finally, we host the annual Cowley Road Carnival featuring music, dancers, ethnic cuisine and a parade which generally attracts around 20,000 people. 

The locals are different to those you find walking down Turl Street in their red corduroy trousers of a Sunday even- ing; they shout and they ignore all forms of road safety (cycling can be treacher- ous), but they’re living real lives. I think this may be the thing I value most from my year ‘abroad’; whilst I’m cramming my head full of abstract philosophical ideas, these people are learning life les- sons. In bursting the ‘Oxford bubble’, Cowley has given me a sense of how peo- ple actually live, and what I’m going to be plunged into when I take off my sub fusc and enter the real world.

The sense of community in Cowley is quite a rare phenomenon; residents are more than willing to give up their time to work in the many charity shops or volunteer at the local children’s hospice, our neighbours let us climb over their wall when we’re locked out, and people just generally do nice stuff for one another. People are politically active and are respectful of one another’s culture; people are proud to live here, and now I am too.

So, how do I commute? Grudgingly, on a bike, in the rain, avoiding thousands of buses. Is it safe? It doesn’t offer the warm fuzzy feeling that your college can provide you with, but it’s no less safe than any other of Oxford’s suburbs in reality. And why? I moved here because it’s cheaper and we found a nice house, but I’ve gained so much more than a double bed and some savings. Cowley has offered me some insight into life post-University, the chance to try new things (still haven’t braved the sushi though) and a small amount of experience in living a real life, and it’s one that I’d recommend to anyone who doesn’t mind cleaning their own kitchen.

Love,

Abby

xxxx

Interview – MS MR

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Lizzy Plapinger and Max Hershenow, the two parts of New York alternative pop duo MS MR, begin our interview by combining forces to open a beer for me without the aid of a bottle opener, efforts which are much appreciated. They’re here in Oxford on a European tour to promote their debut album, Secondhand Rapture, a work of artistic genius and musical beauty. With comparisons to superstars like Florence & the Machine and Lana Del Rey flying around, great things appear to be in store for these so-called noir pop artists. I have the honour of welcoming the pair to our city for the first time ever, and Lizzy admits she “expected Oxford to be pretty posh”, though Max notes that they “went to a university quite similar to this in that it’s old and castley”. He is referring to Vassar College, where they met in 2007, a university recently named the most selective liberal arts college in the US.

Their artistic education has shone through all of their music endeavours up to this point, with the duo showing impressive creativity over the release of their album, particularly with regard to technology. The band gathered a lot of hype on Tumblr, and are well-known for their progressive approach to social media, though Lizzy says “I don’t think we’re doing anything revolutionary that any other person hasn’t done or couldn’t do.” One thing that’s especially notable about MS MR’s development and creative ideal is the impressive use of visuals so consistent within the band’s work. Alongside the album, they released a set of visual accompaniments called Secondhand Captures. These include weird and wonderful cartoons, artfully-shot films packed full of metaphor and surrealist sets of abstract images. Lizzy explains the motivation behind this unusual approach to music videos, saying that “sometimes, the music becomes the background to the image but you want the music to drive the image.”

“I think a lot about the context that I listen to music in”, says Max, explaining his desire “to control that environment and to place the music in the context that we wanted to place it in”. He mentions that music these days is mostly consumed via computer screen, and via internet, and both Lizzy and Max agree that music in general is moving towards a more online medium. Lizzy seems excited by this, enthusing about how “the two worlds have never been so seamlessly and importantly alike now, given the context that we consume music in”.

They keep coming back to that word, “context”, and it’s clear that they have both given great thought to the overall conception of their music and themselves as artists. Maybe this is because of the unusual way in which their music came to light. As Lizzy explains, before the band was formed she owned (and still owns) a music label, and had never made any music before, while this is Max’s first musical project as well. “There’s something unique about hearing the first few songs a band have created. Most musicians are making music when they’re 12 or 13. They get their first batch of material out, they learn from their mistakes, they reinvent their sound and take a couple of years to settle into it.”

It’s so refreshing to find in MS MR a band with such an honest, intelligent and well-informed conception of themselves, as well as a hit-filled debut album and the potential to make brilliant music for years to come. What’s more, Lizzy tells me that “everyone’s invited along for the entire ride with us. People have seen where we’ve started and they’ll see where we end. I think it’s going to be an incredible journey.”

#copsoffcampus London protests: Live Blog

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19:16 – To sign off with a modicum of clarity, here are a few quick facts from today’s protest:

  • It began at 14:00 outside the University of London Union’s buildings.
  • During the protest, Senate House (the administrative HQ of the University of London was briefly occupied. 
  • The blanket injunction on protest on the UoL’s Bloomsbury campuses has been breached.
  • The demonstration lasted around 4 hours, taking in locations such as Whitehall, Picadilly, and Buckingham Palace, before returning to the ULU building. 
  • Some vandalism of bins has been reported, but at this time there is little news of arrests. 
  • The demonstration was largely peaceful, despite isolated pockets of ‘over-excited’ protesters.

That’s about that then, I’ve been @samuelevolpe.

18:35 – Reaction to the BBC Six O’Clock news has been somewhat mixed too though, with many on twitter attacking the corporation for being slow to pick up on the protests, and then for focusing upon isolated examples of vandalism. We at Cherwell will leave you to make your own minds up about today’s coverage, but we have done our best to provide some!

18:30 – Now reaction is beginning to trickle in, and it’s not all supportive I’m afraid. The usual establishment-types are tweeting about damage to bins – perhaps fairly – whilst it comes to my attention that various twitter accounts masquerading as policeman have enjoyed using patronising references to “mummy and daddy” in response to our reporting…  On a more positive note, here is a nice summarising tweet from Max Long:

17:54 – Estimates that there are only around 150 protesters remaining really do suggest that today’s events are on their last legs. Which is a shame because as some tweeters on the hashtag have suggested, there was definite potential for the protest to merge with a screening of the new Hobbit film. To be serious for a second though, it seems worthwhile to let Michael Chessum – courtesy of C4 – explain why he, and everyone else, has spent the day protesting. 

17:42 – It appears that the protest has now turned into a tour of the West End. No bad thing according to this correspondent…

17:32 – Spoke too soon, the splinter group is heading down Picadilly, and confused celebrities have been spotted. 

17:28 – There’s a definite sense that things are winding down out there. More as we get it. 

17:16 – As intimated below, it seems that the protest has split into two, with one group now back at ULU, and the other continuing on past Buckingham Palace. 

17:09 – We’re hearing that the protesters are attempting to regroup. With University of London Union president Michael Chessum instrumental in rallying the troops. Chessum was of course intimately involved in the controversy which kick-started this whole affair, as he was arrested last month having organised a protest against the closure of the University of London union. 

16:59 – A potential candidate for ‘chant of the day’ has emerged. “Lamborghinis for the masses not just for the ruling classes” will take some beating. (Although that level of luxury for all is potentially quite unrealistic?)

16:58 – Apparently the protest has spread, with sit-in ‘occupations’ taking place in both Manchester and Aberdeen.

16:45 – Twitter is buzzing with reaction to the demonstration today. Most of it on the hashtag #copsoffcampus seems supportive.

16:31 – As the protest bears down upon Whitehall and Downing Street, anti-government feeling is obvious from chants of “here we come Tory scum”. Understandably there is a huge police presence around government buildings.

16:24 – The protest is now moving towards the Strand, and thankfully Max Long is reporting that the majority of protesters are showing restraint. 

16:02 – Things are taking a sinister turn as police vehicles are attacked. 

15:55 – Cherwell’s correspondent on the ground is reporting that protesters are now occupying both sides of Southampton Row, and vociferous anti-police chanting can be heard.

15:45 – The effects of the protest are being felt by Londoners throughout the city, with Cherwell alumni voicing worries about the effect upon public transport.

15:42 – As the demonstration moves from SOAS towards Russell Square by all accounts the crowds are massive, and leaving an impression:

15:36 – Cherwell’s very own Max Long is now on the scene as the protest continues. 

14:55 – Reports indicate that Senate House is currently being occupied by protesters. Here at Cherwell we have an incline that this occupation may be rather brief however…

14:24 – As the protest gathers steam around London, our attention has been drawn to this piece by the union Unite, who show overwhelming support for the protesters. http://www.unitetheunion.org/news/student-demos-crackdown-condemned-by-unite/

14:00 – Demonstration begins at University of London Union, Malet Street. 

Oxford students support “Cops Off Campus” day of action

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A demonstration began at 2pm today in central London, attended by a number of Oxford students, to protest against the violence of police towards university students, as well as showing solidarity with university staff and opposing the privatisation of student debt.

Recent reports suggest that student protestors from around the UK have joined the march through central London, and a large number of similar protests are set to take place in university towns and cities in the rest of the country.

Some of the protestors have reportedly attempted to enter Senate House, a research library near Russell Square, despite occupiers of the building last week being evicted by the police last Wednesday.

A group of Oxford students has also issued a statement to show solidarity with students across the UK who have been the victims of repressive policing in recent days.

The statement, signed at press time by 83 students and staff members from 27 Oxford colleges and Oxford Brookes, was issued in advance of a national “Cops Off Campus” day of action called today. One notable name among the signatories was new OUSU president-elect Louis Trup, who could not be reached for comment.

The open letter states that Oxford students and staff are “deeply disturbed by the disproportionate and violent reaction of the police, security and university managements to student protests over the last week during national strike action against pay cuts”.

The national protest, which is being attended by nearly 3000 people according to its Facebook event, was organised in response to a series of violent police crackdowns on student protests and occupations in a number of universities across the country. It is unclear how many Oxford students are among them, though a small group of Wadham students had organized a solidarity Facebook group.

Last Wednesday, private security employees stormed the University of London’s Senate House building in order to evict an occupation in support of better pay and working conditions for university staff, seizing protesters and handing them over to police. A day before the occupation began, a High Court judge had granted a six month injunction banning occupation-style protests at the University. Video later surfaced on the internet of a police officer punching a student, and police made five arrests in a crowd of scarcely more than 100.

In a demonstration against police brutality held the following day, between 34 and 43 students, including the editor of the University of London’s student paper, Oscar Webb, were arrested amidst violent confrontations between police and protesters. London police officers were recorded striking protesters with batons and dragging them by the hair.

According to the Oxford activists, the issues at play go beyond the role of university administrations and security forces in squelching dissent. The statement by Oxford students and staff links the struggle against police repression to broader issues facing universities.

It reads, “The freedom to protest is a healthy part of any society, but is particularly important for students and staff now facing an unprecedented assault on public higher education. In the context of the sell-off of student loans, sweeping cuts to pay and conditions, cuts to courses and student numbers, privatisation, and talk of raising the tuition fee cap yet again, there is every reason for those who value education to voice their dissent loudly and clearly.”

Edmund Schluessel, a member of the National Union of Students’ Executive Council, confirmed to Cherwell that the increased reliance on police and security forces to counter protest was directly related to lecturers’ campaigns for fair pay. “Vice chancellors are attacking students as a proxy because they can’t make lecturers and other staff back down in their demand for fair pay,” he said.

While the centre of gravity of the Cops Off Campus movement presently lies at other universities, Oxford activists maintain that the issues are nevertheless deeply relevant to the collegiate University. Nathan Akehurst, a third-year History and Politics student at Lincoln and organiser in the recent lecturer strike, told Cherwell, “Oxford has one of the largest security apparatuses in the country, has victimised protesters in the past, and until 2001 had a full-scale private police force.”

Akehurst stressed that Oxford students should be doing more to support the Cops Off Campus cause. “Strengthening the campaign here sends a clear message to the University that suppressing dissent will not be tolerated by the student body,” he said.

“Protest rights are not negotiable, and now more than ever the student body needs to be standing together against issues such as low staff pay, the sell-off of our loans and the spectre of £16,000 tuition fees.”

 

JCR VP apologises for "inappropriate" link in email

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The outgoing Magdalen JCR Vice President has apologised for sending out an email which contained a hyperlink to an image of self-harm last Thursday. The email sought to address bullying in Magdalen College, but nonetheless attracted criticism from students for the graphic image.

In his final email to the JCR before the end of his tenure, Jamie Miles listed the failures and successes of his time as VP. In one section, which was addressed “to the bullies”, he highlighted a recent bullying problem in college and quoted an email he had sent to someone who had been reported for bullying. It read, “Just remember that one day, one of your vindictive or sarcastic remarks might be enough to push someone over the edge. People have enough stuff to cope with in this place.”

Miles has been criticised for embedding a hyperlink in the text, linking the phrase “over the edge” to a graphic image of a slashed wrist, thus exposing anybody who clicked on it to violent imagery without any warning.

He immediately sent an apologetic follow-up email, expressing regret over what he described as “a foolish act” and requesting that anyone who had not clicked on the link should not go back and look at it.

Miles told Cherwell that his email had been trying to address an all-too-prevalent bullying problem in the Magdalen JCR that had been present over the last term. When asked to expand upon the nature of the incidents, Miles said that he could not comment on these incidents because they are currently being investigated by the college.

Cameron Quinn, a fourth year at Magdalen, said, “Some people in the college find it personally amusing to antagonise others for sport. This is, as Jamie said in his e-mail, a disgrace, and it was both brave and necessary to bring it up. Unfortunately, Jamie chose to make this very important point in a way that perhaps wasn’t completely thought through, and that’s a shame, because it may mean that the people in college who bully people escape attention and blame.”

Another student added, “I understand that he wanted to send an important message out but he did so in a completely inappropriate way.”

When asked about the possibility of bullying culture at Magdalen, a spokesperson for OUSU’s Mind Your Head campaign stressed the importance of students recognising the psychological impact of bullying. They told Cherwell, “We know that bullying is linked to a number of negative outcomes, including increased rates of depression, anxiety, substance abuse, and suicide, particularly when it occurs alongside existing mental health conditions.

“In the event that a student is feeling abused in any way, there are a number of resources available for them in Oxford including peer supporters, welfare reps, and the counselling service.”

Introduction to… Lieder

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German “Lieder” (“songs” normally sung by one singer with a piano accompaniment)  are one of the most intense and successful examples of music and poetry mixing in Western Civilisation. If the words “Western Civilisation” put you off, or the mention of classical music causes an impending sense of hopelessness before an inevitable boredom, that is exactly why you should give them a chance. Lieder offer a chance to listen to classical music in the format of 3 minute long pop songs, a format that helps break down many of the barriers that can get in the way of enjoying classical music. The melodies are often set to poems from a golden age of German poetry, spreading from Sturm and Drang write through to late Romantic poetry. It is as if Miley Cyrus were channeling Elizabeth Bishop. Or it is as if Beethoven wrote a song and got Elizabeth Bishop to do the words, or vice versa, a song about a young boy pricking his hand on a rose or an evening by the fire, and Miley Cyrus stunned by how excellent this song was, and indeed how shallow her oeuvre in comparison up to that point had been, took a long and rewarding and with retrospect life-redeeming look in the mirror and developed a life long interest in Lieder and their best singer Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. In such a case let us all be Miley Cyrus’s.

1. Seligkeit (Text by Ludwig Heinrich Christoph Hölty, Music by Schubert, sung by Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b4muPgyvInE

My favourite Lied, the opening words “Joys without number bloom in heaven’s hall” are an expression of the “Seligkeit” (blissfulness) of the title of the song. But it is really the refrain and the yearning of “O da möcht’ ich sein, Und mich ewig freun!” (“O there I’d like to be, and endless rejoice”), the only sentence I could understand when I first heard the song, that I really love.

2. Die Taubenpost (Text by Johann Gabriel Seidl, Music by Schubert, sung by Heinrich Schlusnuss)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IM-yHRqRsg

The tale of a carrier pigeon, the song builds until the repeated statement that the pigeon is called “Sehnsucht” (“longing”) and is the emissary of the loyal lover. Perhaps the last song Schubert ever wrote before his early death, the song seems somehow too joyful.

3. Der Doppelgänger (Text by Heinrich Heine, Music by Schubert, sung by Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fKVnL9JvuO8 

Showing the emotional versatility of Lieder, one of Heine’s most famous poems is put to music capturing the narrator’s horror and misery, as he sees his “Doppelgänger” before the house of his beloved.

4. An Syliva/Heidelröslein

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHas4Fss1fA / http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QG-B8inb9YE

The two most feel-good and catchy of the Lieder. “An Syvia” takes a song from Shakespeare’s Gentlemen of Verona and immortalises it for a German audience, while Goethe’s “Heidelröslein” is a simple and yet hypnotising take of a young boy who pricks his hand on a rose.

5. Dörthe

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQRXu8pKUIo

It is difficult to trace a link between these songs and German songs today. Nonetheless, and ever if this song defiles the aforementioned German songs just by its presence on this list, Dörthe, a parody of a heartfelt love song by comedian Rainald Grebe is irresistable. It also proves to all those xenophobes out their who have nevertheless clicked on an article about German classical music and read to this point, that the Germans have a sense of humour.

This website has to be recommended for all Lieder fans http://www.recmusic.org/lieder/

Why this is a golden age of journalism

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Don’t listen to the reactionaries and don’t listen to (many of) the journalists themselves: today is a golden age for journalism and we should be happy about it. There has been a broadly successful transition for most newspapers from print to being online when it comes to maintaining readership and more newspaper articles are read than ever before. Yes, none of the newspapers are making money yet from the internet. But newspapers have nearly always been funded by a combination of patronage, advertising and consumer fees and we are now just in a transition phase. There has always been censorship in newspapers, and whether it is dictated by the patrons, advertisers or the consumers, the internet will probably do little to change that balance.

No-one in our age group seems to buy newspapers, or to have ever really bought newspapers, certainly not daily, but everyone now reads newspapers online. Engagement with newspapers among young people is more thorough now that it was. And through social media more articles are being read, shared and discussed than ever before. Editors exercise the same influence in selecting and prioritising content as they always did, only now it is not by choosing which page the scoop goes on, but how often and where it is posted with social media.

It is also better for journalism, a medium that until recently was relatively transient, that everything is now archived and easily accessible to everyone (bar the incoming threat of pay-walls). Analysing attitudes over a time period, or tracing media bias, is now far easier. This rise in public discussion of articles also seems to be positively affecting student activism. The ability to discuss or share articles that portray or react to events that are important to certain causes means that journalism is as close now to the centre of political and social developments in the public consciousness as it ever was. The difference now is that the media is under more scrutiny than ever and factual errors and heinous insults are more quickly outed. We can hope then that newspapers working with activists, or rather activists working through andagainst newspapers, might play a broadly progressive role

A widely spread fear exists that the internet will simply splitter into endless erroneous blogs. But the popularity of websites which provide a variety of content from different authors still seems to be vastly higher than any blogs belonging only to an individual. Clive Martin writes for Vice, Guido Fawkes writes a column for the Sun. Even the most successful individual blogs or most idiosyncratic writers want to work with traditional collective news platforms.

The troubling form of employment in the industry is a problem. Even senior journalists seem to struggle to earn enough. Only two equally blind hopes seem to combat this negative image of the state of affairs. The first is that the current impasse on the profit side of newspapers is overcome as a new balance is found, hopefully one that does not involve Paywalls but more lucrative advertising. The second is that a different culture of journalism develops, a journalism where most people work as journalists outside of their times spent doing other jobs, a bit like students working for student newspapers. Journalist and activist, journalist and lecturer, journalist and social worker, maybe that will be the new professional journalist of the future. This does not mean that established journalists have the right to pull the ladder up beneath them by not offering any employment schemes, nor should they offer internships that do not assist those without financial support or who do not live in London. That is a kind of professional self harm.

There is much nostalgia for newspapers that used to come out daily as if the world was somehow slower before. Of course even then there were morning and evening papers, telegrams etc. But the real point is that newspapers have always been connected to delivering news speedily. Journal comes from jour, they were out as quickly as possible. This increased speed of delivery of news content is another positive element in the world of journalism, one that builds its popularity and increases demand. 24 hour news should create three times more jobs.

Oxford is an example of this golden age of journalism. We have three substantial and interesting student news outlets that deliver daily content, news broadcasting sites, magazines (some connected to activism networks), all of which interact with themselves and with a fair share of the student body. They also influence our student politics, with the Tab recently notably claiming they crowned Trup. Journalism is going through a financially rough time, but money aside, this may be the start of a golden age. And it’s our responsibility to be optimistic, as we student journalists might well be the journalists of the future, in whatever guise journalism then takes.

Port Meadow death confirmed as student

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The man found dead in a tent at Port Meadow on Sunday afternoon has been named as Andrew Kirkman, a student at Balliol College.

Sir Drummond Bone, Master of Balliol College, said in a statement this afternoon, “It is with deep sadness that we can confirm that Andrew Kirkman, a second year undergraduate at Balliol College reading Physics and Philosophy, died on Sunday on Port Meadow. Our thoughts and condolences go out to Andrew’s parents and his family and close friends at this extremely difficult time.

“Andrew was a friendly and thoughtful student and a valued contributor to the life of the College. We are offering support and counselling to all those at the College who have been affected by this tragedy.”

Kirkman, 20, was discovered by a passer-by at around 12.30pm on Sunday. A police spokesman said there were no suspicious circumstances and officers were treating the death as unexplained. He is belived to have mixed together chemicals to make the lethal compound hydrogen sulphide.

Within an hour of the discovery, Port Meadow had been cordoned off and six people were treated at the scene by paramedics after being exposed to the dangerous chemicals.

A statement on behalf of Andrew’s parents reads, “Andy was loved by everyone who knew him. He was a kind young man who took great pleasure in helping other people. He will be sorely missed. We ask for the privacy of his family to be respected.”

Port Meadow was re-opened to the public earlier today.

Interview: Dr Timothy Hands

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Just over Magdalen Bridge, Magdalen College School’s gates face the porters’ lodge of St Hilda’s. Students use Christ Church’s recreation ground for PE; their cross country pitch overlooks Merton. With such proximity to Oxford University, it’s no surprise that MCS’s Oxbridge success rate is so high: this year, a record 47 pupils left for Oxford and Cambridge.

Much of the academic success of MCS has been attributed to its headmaster, Dr Tim Hands. Known for his criticism of government education policy over the last 30 years, this year he was elected chairman of the Headmasters’ and Headmistresses’ Conference, which represents many independent schools in the UK. For Hands, one of the main outcomes of increasingly centralised education policy has been decreased access to the UK’s top universities for students from state schools.

He explains his objection to the government’s education policy. “I work in the independent sector now through a belief that a politicised state is a restrainer of and meddler with education. You ask me, why does this school do well? We avoid change. Governments by and large have, whether a red or blue colour, introduced diverse and confusing educational initiatives.”

This is one of the main barriers to university access, Hands claims. “If you’re constantly having to teach a new exam, you can’t get stability and rhythm in what you’re doing. All teachers are currently preparing for exams they don’t know the shape of, they don’t know the mark scheme for, they don’t know the specification for. It’s very wearing.” These changes favour independent school candidates because, “the more complicated you make systems, and the more you change them, the more disadvan taged those without advice are.”
He is critical of the coalition’s education reforms. Addressing the Headmasters’ and Headmistresses’ Conference last month, he said that the last half century has been characterised by, “the intrusion of the government and the disappearance of the child” through education reform. Today, he is similarly scathing.

“Essentially the way Michael Gove wants to move the syllabus is to how it was when I was an undergraduate at Oxford — Middlemarch and so on. And you know, Middlemarch isn’t the best fare for everyone doing English at A-Level. There should be options that allow pupils to differentiate.”

Hands’ belief in improving access rests on his life experiences. He was a “state school educated Cambridge reject”, only coming to Oxford for postgraduate study at St Catz and Oriel. His father grew up “in what was then condemned as a slum, and isn’t there anymore”. His family’s experience has influenced his understanding of how background can influence academic attainment. He speaks of how his father “couldn’t work in his home, because he didn’t have his own room, and the sound of the piano and guitar playing penetrated everywhere. So although he’s fantastically philosophical about things, you can see your background has to help.”

Nevertheless, he says, the impact of a students’ social background is exacerbated by the way Oxford approaches admissions. At other universities, bright students with the right grades would get in — at Oxford, the dependence on aptitude tests undermines this. When Cambridge introduced the A*, “Oxford said, we want aptitude tests. And you can see the advantage of that, you can strip down background and teaching and so on, but I’ve never been convinced that there’s such a thing as an exam you can’t prepare for.”

This, says Hands, has handed success to independent schools. There remains opposition to the A* grade, but the new grade is the only guarantor that intelligent state school students will be identified. For example, Gordon Brown opposed the A* because, “he felt that it would highlight achievement in the independent sector. Well, there’s only one way to make things better, and that’s confront problems and sort them. This was just him burying his head in the sand.”

Despite the importance of grades, schools must provide more than academic success. If schools are defined by league tables, they will encourage students to do useless, “easy” subjects. “The reason people do General Studies is to ratchet up another A-Level. That’s another high grade, which means your league position is higher. The Department for Education uses league tables as a mechanism, whereas we don’t believe in league tables. They tell you nothing about its pastoral care, its extra curricular activities, which are two of the tripos you need.”

There is a lack of aspiration in many schools, which further undermines access. “Before working in Oxford, which is by and large a middle class city, with higher educational aspiration, I worked in Portsmouth — it’s a poor area, which outputs peace or war depending on your reading of the Royal Navy. I had two students in my independent school who had places at Cambridge to read Maths, who turned them down to go to Warwick. They were suspicious of Cambridge and they thought Warwick was more friendly, a better deal. So raising aspiration has got to be an important thing, and all schools should be doing that.”

The problem exists across the country. As Hands notes, “The Sutton Trust [an educational research charity] has shown that some schools will not recommend people to go to Oxford and Cambridge. Now these are fantastic universities, and the idea that you wouldn’t recommend people that were suitable to have a look or to take a try, that seems to me something that is regrettable.”

With these odds stacked against state school applicants, how do students from MCS compare? Are private school leavers over-prepared for Oxford, whether they deserve a place or not? Hands says not. “The flaw is that this idea presupposes that Oxford tutors are stupid people. It’s a very simplistic view that you can prepare for interview, and you know when you sit down with your tutor they go through that. They have minds that go right to the heart of the issue. It’s good to have help, but to have interview after interview is just counterproductive.”

Yet the press frequently suggests that independent schools heavily prep their students. He explains this through the fact that newspapers “want to sell”.

“There’s a stated policy of one newspaper, which I won’t name, that it wants to make you worried if you have your child at an independent school, or worried if you have your child at a state school… There are two myths in the press: one that Oxford discriminates in favour of independent schools, and one that it discriminates against them. Both of them can’t be true, and in reality, neither is.”

This expression of faith in the admissions process goes further than most teachers, and is surprising considering Hands’ broader critique of access. However, considering MCS’s success in Oxbridge admissions, it’s understandable.