Difference between revisions of "First Publication of the Student, 1887"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with "The ''Student'' was first published on 8 November 1887. The brainchild of Robert Cochrane Buist (1860-1939), it first appeared as an eight-page quarto costing a penny. It...") |
|||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
When Buist graduated in 1888, the ''Student'' was adopted as the official organ of the [[Students' Representative Council]]. It assumed both a more formal and a more critical tone and set as its object 'faithfully to record the passing events of University life' and 'to form a bond of union between present and absent sons of our Alma Mater'. | When Buist graduated in 1888, the ''Student'' was adopted as the official organ of the [[Students' Representative Council]]. It assumed both a more formal and a more critical tone and set as its object 'faithfully to record the passing events of University life' and 'to form a bond of union between present and absent sons of our Alma Mater'. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Other University Events in 1887 == | ||
+ | |||
+ | *[[Opening of University Union, 1887|Opening of University Union]] | ||
+ | *[[Foundation of University Hall, 1887|Foundation of University Hall]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == See Also == | ||
+ | |||
+ | *[[Foundation of Students' Representative Council, 1884]] | ||
[[Category:Events|First Publication of the Student, 1887]][[Category:Incomplete|First Publication of the Student, 1887]] | [[Category:Events|First Publication of the Student, 1887]][[Category:Incomplete|First Publication of the Student, 1887]] |
Revision as of 15:30, 1 August 2014
The Student was first published on 8 November 1887.
The brainchild of Robert Cochrane Buist (1860-1939), it first appeared as an eight-page quarto costing a penny. It was issued fortnightly and contained portraits of professors with critical sketches of their work, reports of sporting events, articles, reviews, and a fortnightly series of songs with music.
When Buist graduated in 1888, the Student was adopted as the official organ of the Students' Representative Council. It assumed both a more formal and a more critical tone and set as its object 'faithfully to record the passing events of University life' and 'to form a bond of union between present and absent sons of our Alma Mater'.