The University Times
The front page of “The University Times” on January 21, 2014 | |
Format | Broadsheet |
---|---|
Editor | Edmund Heaphy |
Deputy editor | Sinéad Baker |
Founded | 2009 |
Headquarters | Mandela House, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland |
Circulation | 10,000 |
ISSN | 2013-261X |
Website |
universitytimes |
The University Times is a student newspaper for Trinity College Dublin. It is financially supported by the Students' Union but maintains a mutually agreed policy of editorial independence. universitytimes.ie is one of Ireland's leading student news websites, with a readership of over 10,000. The University Times Magazine is a culture and feature supplement published with The University Times. The current editor, Edmund Heaphy, is the seventh to hold the position since the newspaper replaced the Students' Union's community publication The University Record in 2009, and is the first editor independently elected – separate from the Students' Union's Communications Officer. He ran uncontested.
In April 2014, The University Times won "Publication of the Year" for the first time at the Union of Students in Ireland awards ceremony. It won the award for the second year in a row in 2015.[1]
Format
The newspaper is a sixteen-page broadsheet which is divided into sections: News, Features, Opinion and Sport. The news section concentrates on the news and goings-on of Trinity College Dublin.
Website
The paper's website, located at universitytimes.ie, is built on WordPress with a custom theme. Traffic to the website is primarily driven by social media, where much discussion of current events takes place between students and staff. In recent years the website has grown in prominence, to the point where volunteer writers are often more interested in having their work displayed on the website than in print - a radical change in attitudes from previous years.
Layout and design
The nameplate of The University Times is set in Utopia Std with a Semibold Display weight. There is a ligature on the Th in The. The rest of the paper is set in Utopia Std or Whitney of various weights. Each page of the paper contains a header that contains the name of the paper, page number, date, and section indicator. Sections have their own associated colours that are incorporated into the design.
Style
The University Times operates its own style manual based upon the Oxford Manual of Style. The manual indicates that the full title of the paper is The University Times noting that the, The is part of the title and that it gets a capital letter. Other publications with the definite article do not get a capital for example the Irish Times, the Guardian, and the New York Times. In the news section people are referred to by their full name at first mention and then only by their second name on subsequent mentions. Honorifics and academic titles are only used when appropriate.
Elected Editors
- 2009–2010: Robert Donohoe
- 2010–2011: Tom Lowe
- 2011–2012: Ronan Costello
- 2012–2013: Owen Bennet
- 2013–2014: Leanna Byrne
- 2014–2015: Samuel Riggs
- 2015–2016: Edmund Heaphy
Awards
The newspaper was awarded "Newspaper of the Year" at the Irish Student Media Awards in 2010, 2011 and 2012. Former editor Tom Lowe won Irish Student Journalist of the Year in 2011. In 2014, it was once again awarded "the 'Web Design of the Year" award, and received nominations for "Newspaper of the Year".[2] The University Times won the "Publication of the Year" category at the USI Student Achievement Awards. Aisling Curtis won the "Journalist of the Year" award for The University Times.
In 2015, The University Times won "Publication of the Year" for the second time, and Sinéad Baker, the newspaper's Assistant Editor, won "Journalist of the Year". Edmund Heaphy, the newspaper's Deputy Editor and Editor-elect, won the international College News Design contest organised by the Society for News Design and judged at the society's 37th annual conference in Washington DC. The judging panel consisted of Dan Zedek, Design Director and Assistant Managing Editor of the Boston Globe, SND President and Hearst Corporation Presentation Editor, Lee Steele, and Marianne Seregi, the Art Director of The Washington Post Magazine.[3]
References
External links
- Official website
- Trinity College, Dublin - official website
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