The Muse (student paper)

The Muse, successor to the Memorial Times, began publishing in 1950 in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, as an unnamed paper. That paper held a contest to choose a new name, the winner being a professor who named the paper after all of the following:

  • a bastardization of the Greek letters Μ and υ, for Memorial University;
  • a reference to the Greek goddesses of the arts;
  • a joke, saying this was MU's (Memorial University's) paper;
  • and the role of a paper as a place where students could muse.

Beginning with a small editorial staff controlled by the student union, The Muse grew into an autonomous student-run paper. In the early years of publication, it was a campus gossip tabloid; in the late 1960s it developed an activist flair which attracted the attention of the provincial government and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), with the latter including The Muse in their investigations of supposedly Marxist organizations. In the late eighties, the paper was enlivened by the women's movement, and followed a more activist agenda, including special coverage of gay, lesbian and bisexual issues not discussed in the mainstream media, and a boycotted list of advertisers. The Muse incorporated in 2002 as The Muse Publications Inc, and became fully autonomous from the Memorial University students' union in January 2003.

The Muse focuses on campus life, Newfoundland and Labrador, university research, campus, municipal, provincial and federal politics, local music and sports, and periodically reports on world politics and social justice.

During the fall and winter semesters The Muse distributes 12,000 copies a week to various parts of multiple campuses, and throughout St. John's. Circulation ceases during the summer months.

The Muse is a member of Canadian University Press (CUP), a non-profit co-operative and newswire service owned by about 70 student newspapers at post-secondary schools in Canada.

In January 2004, the Muse hosted the Canadian University Press national conference (CUP 66) for the first time in the paper's history. The conference was awarded to The Muse over the Gateway (newspaper) of the University of Alberta at the Montreal CUP conference in 2003 (CUP 65). The conference was held at the Fairmont Newfoundland Hotel.

Many writers with The Muse have gone on to successful careers - not only in journalism, but in arts, business, music, law and politics.

At CUP 71, held in Saskatoon during January 2009, the Muse officially became the sister paper of the Fulcrum at the University of Ottawa. Since January of 2010, the Muse has been on the verge of bankruptcy, and has been under investigation by the CRA (canadian revenue agency). In fall of 2017, after 7-8 years of cutting the size of the print paper, the chief editor of the muse announced plans to temporarily stop print production of the Muse, MUN St. John’s newfoundland atlantic Canada’s student newspaper. It was supposed to go back to print in January of 2018, but that hasn’t happened. Also, the muse has failed to cover the MUNSU march of 2018 general election. Articles have been submitted but not published.

Well-known Muse contributors

gollark: Isn't writing, what, 5000 years old?
gollark: No, I mean how you would check that they were able to write and speak pre-language.
gollark: I'm not sure how you'd check something like that anyway.
gollark: I don't really follow early human evolution at all.
gollark: I don't know Hebrew at this time, but if it is anything like any natural language ever it isn't regular enough to be meaningfully machine-parseable.

See also

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