Forty volumes of student journalism at Douglas College
By Jacey Gibb, Editor-in-chief
Writing an appropriate opening to this Feature has been daunting.
A brief history of 40 volumes worth of the Other Press? Should I assume youâre someone whoâs never enjoyed our paper before? Can I dive into the paperâs lore and expect youâll know everything Iâm referring to? History is something Iâve grown to appreciate as Iâve gained more of it myself. Without documentation, those things called memories can dissolve into blips in our cranial databanks.
The Other Press has been a mainstay at Douglas College since 1976, over time producing 39 volumes. As of this issueâs printing, weâre now in Volume 40. Didnât know Douglas College has a newspaper? Weâre a relatively large publication compared to other college/university newspapers, with a core staff of 16 people and a collective of dedicated contributors, made up almost exclusively of Douglas students and alumni. We publish weekly during the fall and winter semesters, monthly during the summer, and weâre open 24/7 over at theotherpress.ca.
To commemorate this literary milestone of 39 volumes past, I decided to round up some Other Press history and compile it into one digestible word count. Weâve got some insight into how the paper first came to fruition in â76, a look at how the content has changed since then (spoilers: a lot), and there are even some words from Other Press graduates.
A healthy alternative since â76
Letâs start this memory-train off in 1976, when the Other Press made its official debut as the second newspaper at Douglas College.
An article by Terry Glavin in the 20-year anniversary issue of the Other Press tells the story of how a small group of hopeful writers gathered for an all-nighter to construct the premiere issue. âAll we knew is that some of us knew how to write, and some of us knew how to use a camera, and when it came down to it thatâs what we wanted to do.â Most of them were in Douglasâ then-journalism program and were dissatisfied with the college newspaper, the Pinion, which âappeared maybe once or twice a semester.â
One night, the group of rogue writers asked the program head/then-editor of the Pinion, Charlie Giordano, if they could use the newspaperâs production equipment. He gave the go-ahead and then left for the night. When Giordano came back the next morning, Glavin and company were still there, putting the final touches on what became the first issue of the Other Press. The team then pooled their money and trekked out to Hacker Press in Abbotsford for the official printing.
Where did the paperâs name come from? Even Glavin couldnât recall. âWe hadnât quite decided what to call the thing. All we knew for certain was that we wanted to produce something other than the Pinion. So the name fell to the Other Press.â
Fashion and other funny business
In our office at the New Westminster campus, youâll find a bookshelf lined with blue yearbooks of Other Press volumes past. The oldest, from â77, contains Volumes Four and Five.
Structurally, the paper is unrecognizable from what it once was. Separate sections didnât even make their debut until the third issue of Volume Four and were limited to Letters, Arts, and Sports, though campus content and opinions pieces existed without mastheads. Makes the current setup look pretty sweet, right?
You wouldnât know by looking at it, but a tent pole section of the Other Press, Life & Style, is relatively newâat least in relation to the paper overall.
Originally pitched in 2010 as the Fashion half-section by then-Contributor Stephanie Trembath, the section was meant to help fill the gaps between Arts and Opinions, where topics like designer trends and style pieces could find a home. By the next semester, Fashion had become a full section and eventually underwent a name change to Life & Style, adding things like recipes and a recurring sex column.
âThe Life & Style section is a constant reminder that you have to have confidence in your ideas,â says Trembath, on how it felt to be a pioneer for the Other Press. âIf youâre passionate about something, it will resonate in your work.â
You know that Humour section you like so much? The one at the back of the newspaper? The final pages of the Other Press didnât use to be so funny, as it wasnât until 2005 that the first signs of a Humour section began to manifest, initially as the âWTFâ section. These two pages included a column called âI heart Spam,â where the Managing Editor would write replies to spam emails, and âLast Call,â an advice column. Maybe the second part isnât exactly humorous, but within the year, a comics page was added.
The Humour section you know and love came in 2011 from former Editor-in-chief, Liam Britten. In the November 22 issue, Britten provided a quote for the Lettitor, introducing the new section in a signature satire-style: âI am thrilled to be at the helm of the Humour section. I feel Humour is one of, if not the most important sections in the paper, so all the other section editors can shove it. Iâm dedicated to news. Hard news. I will look under every stone, at the bottom of every beer glass, and in every strip club back room to find the truth. I donât believe in journalistic bias, because bias is just another word for racism. And racism is bad; even a Swedish person knows that. So read Humour. Itâs got the good stuff.â
The Other Highlights
While my initial goal was to focus on the newspaperâs creative history and evolution as a publication, what would a throwback piece be without including some previous staffâs antics?
In the same anniversary piece mentioned before, Glavin recalls an âincidentâ where one of the staffers took a chainsaw to the office wall in an attempt to increase the roomâs total square feet. âI donât know what was going through the mind of the principal, George Wootten, when he came by to talk to us about the incident and could barely make out the people in our new office from the thick blue haze of marijuana smoke.â In their defence, this was the â70sâand who doesnât like more square footage?
While Iâm certainly more liberal with my language than some Editors before me, the occasional f-bomb in my article pales in comparison to what former Editor Tim Crumley did during one late-night production session: âWe were reading the masthead, which is essentially a list of credits saying who did what in the paper. We were trying to proof it for typos and such, when we realized that there was a credit given to the readers of the paper. It simply said âReadersâŚYou.â We flipped. We went berserk. If the readers of the paper didnât know they were the readers of the paper, they must be idiots. No, they must be fuckheads. So there it was, the next day. âReadersâŚYou, fuckhead.â We got more mail about that than any article we printed that year. Hmm.â
Other gems from the Other Pressâ past that came up during my research include: the time Britten wrote a serious movie review of a porno; when an article written about how feminism provides easier sex caused womenâs groups around campus to vandalize newspaper stands and tack a copy to the office door with âThis is what sexism looks likeâ across the cover; and when Trevor Hargreaves, along with several others, hatched a plan to rename âthe Western regional conference the âFurther Upper Canada Canadian University Pressâ conference.â In 2006, the FUCCUP conference was heldâan event that remains immortalized on Urban Dictionary under the definition for âFUCCUP.â
An-Other 40 volumes
Depending on whom you ask, four years can be a long time.
As I mentioned before, we have a series of âyearbooksâ from volumes past. A brief glance at the 2009 volumeâs staff list reveals that not a single name can be found in the issue youâre reading now (with the exception of Angela Szczur, then Website Editor/IT extraordinaire and now Business Managerâand girl got married, so even her nameâs different).
An almost 100 per cent staff turnover rate in four years may sound problematic, but Iâm looking with my glass-half-full goggles. I see a publication that refuses to grow stale. I see a staff that comes to the paper to give it their creative-all and then get the heck out, leaving room for someone else to create their own vision.
Looking back at issues past, I feel confident in saying weâre living in an Other Press renaissance. Never before have the pages been as glossy or robust with great content. If 40 is the new 30, then itâs safe to say weâre just getting started.