Type | Student newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) | Newcastle University Students' Association |
Editor-in-chief | Tyler Bridges (NUSA Media Officer, 2019- present) |
Founded | 1954 |
Political alignment | Left-wing |
Language | English |
Headquarters | Callaghan, NSW |
Website | OPUS MAGAZINE |
Opus is a student newspaper published at the University of Newcastle, Australia by the Newcastle University Students' Association (NUSA). Opus was founded in 1954 by then economics lecturer Cyril Renwick, at what was then the Newcastle University College of the University of New South Wales, in the Newcastle suburb of Callaghan. Renwick proposed a student journal to promote student unity and expression. Teaming up with his secretary's husband, George Kirkby, the first edition of Opus was a four-page broadsheet newspaper replete with the refinement and formality of 1950s journalism. [1]
The format and style of Opus has changed many times throughout its history. The 1970s the publications name was briefly changed to The Stockton Ferry. In a 1998 interview, the late emeritus Professor Godfrey Tanner explained that
"[The Stockton Ferry was] the brainchild of James Beisers and his co-editor who were into drug reform. The idea being that readers would be encouraged to take short trips after reading its contents." [1]
A special edition of the magazine, released in 2002, and edited by BA graduate Matthew Glenn Ward commemorated the life of Godfrey Tanner, a prominent classics professor at the university who had died that year.
Opus takes its name from the former Newcastle City motto, finis coronat opus which is Latin for "completion crowns the work".
The implementation of voluntary student unionism by the Howard government in 2006 had a significant impact on the viability of student media across Australia, compulsory student union membership fees having been the major source of income for most. Opus has been able to continue publishing despite the new law.
Opus was rebranded and relaunched in 2016 after a period of stagnation.
Opus is edited by the UNSA Media Officer and a team of volunteers.
In 2018, Opus became a newspaper again, published monthly.
In 2020, Opus was taken over by UNSA and returned to reoccurring magazine publication with online publication as well.
Greater Newcastle is a regional metropolitan area and the second-most-populated district in New South Wales, Australia. It includes the cities of Newcastle and Lake Macquarie; it is the hub of the Lower Hunter region, which includes most parts of the local government areas of City of Newcastle, City of Lake Macquarie, City of Maitland, City of Cessnock and Port Stephens Council.
The University of Newcastle is a public university in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. Established in 1965, it has a primary campus in the Newcastle suburb of Callaghan. The university also operates campuses in Central Coast, Singapore, Newcastle City in the Hunter as well as Sydney.
Tertangala is the student magazine of the University of Wollongong.
{{Infobox Australian place | type = suburb | name = Stockton | city = Newcastle | state = nsw | image = Stocktonpano.jpg | caption = The northern breakwater in Stockton at the entrance to Newcastle Harbour | coordinates = 32°54′54″S151°47′4″E | alternative_location_map = Australia Hunter Central Coast | pushpin_label_position = right |zoom=10| pop = 4160 | pop_year = 2016 census | pop_footnotes = | density = 1133.8 | density_footnotes = | est = | postcode = 2295 | elevation = 6 | elevation_footnotes = | area = 3.7 | area_footnotes = | timezone = AEST | utc = +10 | timezone-dst = AEDT | utc-dst = +11 | dist1 = 16 | dir1 = N | location1 = Newcastle | dist2 = 1 | dir2 = N | location2 = Newcastle | lga = City of Newcastle | region = Hunter | county = [[Nwecastle, New South Wales|Newcastle] | parish = Stockton | stategov = Newcastle | fedgov = Newcastle | maxtemp = 21.8 | maxtemp_footnotes = | mintemp = 14.2 | mintemp_footnotes = | rainfall = 1131.3 | rainfall_footnotes = | near-n = Fern Bay | near-ne = Pacific Ocean | near-e = Pacific Ocean | near-se = Newcastle East | near-s = Newcastle | near-sw = Newcastle | near-w = Carrington | near-nw = Kooragang }}
The University of Newcastle Students' Association (UNSA) is the student organisation at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia (UON). The organisation provides a range of student services and supports campus life activities and events. UNSA facilitates the UON's elected Student Representative Council (SRC) which is the peak representative body for all students at the University.
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Ronald Godfrey Tanner FRGS was an Australian professor of classics, associated for the greater part of his career with the University of Newcastle. Educated at Melbourne and Cambridge, Tanner was appointed to Newcastle University College (NUC) in 1959 and became renowned at the institution for his enthusiastic involvement in student life and for his eccentric character.
Newcastle Boys' High School was a government-funded single-sex selective high school, located in Waratah, a suburb of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. The school was active between 1929 and 1976, after which time it became a co-educational non-selective school.
Hermes is the annual literary journal published by the University of Sydney Union. It is the oldest such journal in Australasia.
The Newcastle Sun was a newspaper published in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. It had previously been published as The Northern Times.
The Stockton Bridge is a road bridge that carries the Nelson Bay Road across the Hunter River, between Kooragang and Stockton in the Hunter Region of New South Wales, Australia. The bridge and Nelson Bay Road serve as the main transport route between Newcastle and the Tilligerry and Tomaree peninsulas in Port Stephens. The bridge carries motor vehicles and a central grade-separated shared cycleway and footpath.
The Stockton ferry service is a ferry service in Newcastle, New South Wales. Operated by Newcastle Transport under contract to Transport for NSW, it crosses the Hunter River from the Newcastle CBD at Queens Wharf to Stockton.
Claire Lamont was a British academic who was Emeritus Professor of English literature at Newcastle University and a specialist in the oeuvres of Jane Austen and Sir Walter Scott. She was a winner of the British Academy's Rose Mary Crawshay Prize in 1983.