Galway's Only Student Newspaper | |
Type | Online student newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
School | University of Galway |
Editor-in-chief | Emma van Oosterhout |
Founded | 2001 |
Language | English and Gaeilge |
Headquarters | Áras na MacLéinn University of Galway Galway, Ireland |
Circulation | 6000[ citation needed ] |
Website | sin |
SIN Newspaper (Student Independent News) is a student newspaper in Galway, Ireland with a readership of 15,000 students. [1] Its offices are based at the University of Galway. SIN is published online and covers news about Galway events on and off campus, while its entertainment and features sections aim to entertain and provoke debate and shape opinion. It is produced in both print and online. [2] It is an up-to-date source of Galway and national student news. [3] Both the newspaper and website are funded by the University of Galway Students' Union [4] SIN accepts articles from past and present students and lecturers and staff. [5] SIN was founded in 2001 and replaced the University College Galway student periodical Unity, which was published from 1959 until the late 1990s. SIN was printed in tabloid size across 32 pages until 2020 when it moved online due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [6]
The SIN website, Sin.ie, hosts a gallery, articles, author profiles, newspaper archives. [7]
In 2023, SIN and Sin.ie received nominations for Journalism relating to Travel, Features Writer of the Year (Arts & Pop Culture), and Journalism relating to Road Safety, winning for the latter, in Smedia awards. [8]
On 9 December 2008, Ministers Eamon O'Cuiv and Batt O'Keefe were the subject of a protest by a small group of students who were highlighting the issue of third level fees. During Minister O'Cuiv's attempt to enter the Quadrangle to meet with University authorities, the students attempted to block his entrance. The minister engaged in a scuffle and was seen to forcibly grab a student protester, which was photographed by the SIN editor. [9] The photograph was used on the RTÉ News website, [10] The Irish Times [11] and appeared in many other local and national papers and news sites. [12] [13] The story was picked up by the national press and the minister was forced to explain his actions in the photograph.[ citation needed ]
SIN also reported on an incident that took place on 2 February 2009 when former Taoiseach Bertie Ahern was prevented from speaking at the university's Literary and Debating Society, again by a small group of protesters involved in the free fees movement. SIN had a full report of the incident on its website within twenty minutes of the incident; [14] the report was cited in several of the subsequent local and national coverage of the incident.[ citation needed ]
Following the controversial RAG week of 2009, SIN and Sin.ie provided comprehensive coverage of the university's decision to withdraw support and NUI Galway Students' Union commitment to continue running the charity week in future years. [15]
The University of Galway is a public research university located in the city of Galway, Ireland.
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The University of Galway Students' Union is the representative body of students at the University of Galway in Ireland. Among its former leaders is Michael D. Higgins, the ninth President of Ireland.
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Free Education for Everyone (FEE) was an Irish student campaign group which was set up in September 2008 in University College Dublin (UCD) to fight the proposed re-introduction of university fees. FEE was active in Ireland's main universities, including University of Limerick (UL), University College Dublin (UCD), Trinity College Dublin (TCD), NUI Maynooth (NUIM), University College Cork (UCC) and NUI Galway (NUIG) and Queen's University Belfast.
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The Literary & Debating Society is a student society at the University of Galway. It was founded as the Literary and Scientific Society in 1846, and incorporated into the then Queen's College, Galway, in 1852. It has as its objective "the promotion of oratory among the students of the University, and the faculty of clear thinking and sound reasoning upon matters which may be deemed to be of vital importance".
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The Burkes are an Irish family from Castlebar, County Mayo, known for their religious activism and frequent involvement in legal cases and protests in Ireland. The family are fundamentalist evangelical Christian Protestants. Family members are parents Sean and Martina Burke and their ten children: Ammi, Elijah, Enoch, Esther, Isaac, Jemima, Josiah, Keren, Kezia, and Simeon. Subjects of their protests include student rights and the LGBT community in Ireland. The family are not known to associate with any Evangelical group in the West of Ireland.