Honi Soit
WEEK 6, SEMESTER 2, 2021
FIRST PRINTED 1929
IN THIS EDITION
Logic takes the Uni by storm JULIETTE MARCHANT / P. 10
SRC election profiles / P. 9 & 10
Arts dean dodges questions LILY CAMPBELL & TOM WILLIAMS / P. 4
Uni denies 4000 casuals conversion CLAIRE OLLIVAIN / P. 4
Into the garden maze SHANIA O’BRIEN / P. 17
L
ike most of my articles, this one began with a dream. Alice and I were tasked with running a marathon through a hedge maze, the light at the end of the tunnel being a football match at Redfern Station. Deep emerald shrubs turned to dull concrete as we raced through.
Once Upon a Stupol...
I
Not every Stupol story ends with a happily ever after...
t was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of truth, it was the epoch of lies, it was the season of Left, it was the season of Right, they were going direct to Heaven, they were going direct the other way — in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some
of its noisiest hacks insisted on its being remembered, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only. It is a truth universally acknowledged that a campaign thirsty for a win must develop preference deals. This was becoming a growing reality for a group of editor hopefuls who, fresh off an election loss in 1997, were raring to edit in 1999. With the taste of Honi glory on their tongues, this group of creative friends concocted a plan like no other,
JULIETTE MARCHANT / P. 14 and so, the Frankenstein’s monster of Honi tickets was born. “What better way is there to win an election than to have representatives from every faction on a single ticket?” thought the enterprising crew. So they took to the streets to find their ideal melting pot of political opinions, identity groups, and other campus niches. By the time elections rolled around, the team known as QuarkXPress for Honi (affectionately named after the then-dominant lay-out
software) was almost impossibly diverse and absurdly large. The now 16 person ticket had members from the Labor Left, Labor Right, the far left, the Women’s Collective, college boys, debaters, revue types, engineers, they even had a secret weapon — someone that could speak young Liberal. The plan went off without a hitch! An endorsement from almost every ticket on campus was claimed, and over 80% of the vote was won. But the real battle started in the SRC dungeons.