On March 14 th, the Durham climbing centre held its annual bouldering competition, Send Fest. A high-energy event, complete with a DJ, some very stylish T-shirts and 25 brain-scrambling boulders for ...
"I can listen to Ethel Cain’s music and see so clearly our shared experience of womanhood whilst also being able to acknowledge the unique problems that I cannot relate to." Hannah Andrews ...
Heart-achingly human.” Stage Reviewer Anna Pile and Contributor Alice Groth collaboratively review The Hunchback of Notre Dame ...
The Gorton and Denton by-election, held on 26 February, marked a significant development in British politics. The underperformance of the Conservative Party and Labour’s loss of a parliamentary seat ...
With Reform UK leading in the polls, Rhys Love thinks its high time we discuss their fantastical economic proposals, simultaneously cruel and nonsensical. As Farage himself said of Reform UK's new ...
Inspired by the entrepreneurial spirit of US property developers changing historic vistas into car parks, the City of Durham and the University have addressed the issue of oversubscribed student ...
William Lock explores how the film industry’s 'inclusion' failed the reality of Tourette’s Syndrome where empathy becomes transactional when the social cost of understanding is too high.
Approximately 30 students and staff gathered for an ‘Action Day’ demonstration on 12th March in support of the ‘Durham Dump Barclays’ campaign. The campaign protests Durham University’s financial ...
AI can calculate, but can it care? While algorithms promise efficiency, they often ignore the "human attunement" that actually keeps A&E departments running, argues.
Evidence of someone who wondered how three years would sit on a person,' writes Callum Minford in his reflective piece on the ending of university life.
Archie Phillips discusses Mexico's execution of the notorious drug lord 'El Mencho' and the United States' capture of Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro. He argues that both cases are proof positive ...