Student Life
Exclusive: Oxford Union announces Trinity term card
Cherwell can exclusively reveal that former Home Secretary Sir James Cleverley, President of Goldman Sachs John E. Waldron, and rapper Tinie Tempah are all set to speak at the Oxford Union this term.
The debating society will see political figures such as Prime Minister Kamil Idris of Sudan, who, late last year, proposed an initiative to end the Sudanese civil war to the United Nations. Other speakers include the UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Francesca Albanese, journalist Mehdi Hasan, and the US Senator for Vermont, Democrat Bernie Sanders, who is set to appear virtually.
In addition to this, the Union will host dance coach and TV personality Abby Lee Miller, who gained notoriety on the American reality television show Dance Moms, as well as the former Welsh footballer Ian Rush.
The Trinity term card will include a debate on “whether today’s youth activism is driving meaningful political change or increasingly slipping into performative visibility”. This will see speakers such as Oxford content creator Oliver’s Oxford, Director of the Good Law Project, Jolyon Maugham, and British politician Fiona Lali.
A debate on “whether Israel has ever sincerely pursued peace with Palestine, or whether the peace process has been more symbolic than real” will feature University of Exeter Professor Ilan Pappé, General Secretary of the Palestinian National Initiative, Mustafa Barghouti, and former Israeli politician, Einat Wilf.
There will also be a visit from the controversial Reform Party candidate in the highly-publicised Denton and Gorton byelection earlier this year, Matt Goodwin, who will speak in a debate “on whether Reform is a credible governing force capable of delivering change, or a protest movement better suited to opposition”. He will be joined by speakers including the former leader of the Scottish National Party in Parliament, Ian Blackford, and Liberal Democrat politician Josh Babarinde.
The Union’s term card will also include social events, such as an Al-Andalus-inspired ball taking place on 29th May, and a Union House Party promising cheap drinks and beer pong on 9th May.
In addition, on the 23rd-24th May, the debating society will host The Prince, a play written by Oxford graduate Kofo Braithwaite that follows a fresher’s involvement with the Oxford Union.
Regarding the forthcoming term, Union President Arwa Elrayess told Cherwell: “I’m so proud to present the Oxford Union’s Trinity 2026 Term Card… I hope this term is defined by substance, strong governance, and real momentum.”
Student Life
Oxford ranks second to Cambridge in Complete University Guide
The University of Oxford has ranked second behind the University of Cambridge in the Complete University Guide’s 2027 league table, marking the second consecutive year that Cambridge has claimed the top spot.
The largest discrepancies between the two institutions were in “quality of research” and “admissions standards”. While Oxford trails Cambridge marginally across several metrics, including graduate prospects and spending on academic services, the most significant gaps were in “research intensity” and “entry standards”. In both categories, Oxford scored 95%, compared to Cambridge’s 100%.
Meanwhile, Oxford exceeded Cambridge’s score in two more welfare-oriented measures: “student satisfaction” and “student-staff ratio”. Oxford received a student satisfaction score of 80%, compared to Cambridge’s 79%, while Oxford had 9.3 students per academic staff member, compared to Cambridge’s 10.7.
The Complete University Guide rankings are based on data drawn from publicly available sources. Research intensity, for instance, is calculated as “a measure of the proportion of teaching staff involved in research”. Since research intensity is measured only by reference to its relationship to teaching, the Complete University Guide recognises that the measure “can be an underestimate of the actual research intensity”.
“Entry standards” are calculated according to “the average UCAS tariff score of new undergraduate students”, equivalent to the proportion of A’s and A*’s achieved at A level. Oxford’s lower score may therefore reflect its entry requirements, which are, typically, lower than Cambridge’s. Notably, neither interview performance nor admissions tests are factored into the Complete University Guide’s data.
Students at both universities offered differing views on the ranking. Isaac, a second-year engineering student at Cambridge, told Cherwell that Oxford should use the result as motivation to improve its performance relative to leading international universities. However, Archie, a second-year psychology student at Oxford, was more sceptical of league tables, telling Cherwell: “There are loads of different university rankings and they often disagree…. I don’t think it makes sense to put too much stock in all the rankings.”
The University of Oxford was contacted for comment.
Student Life
Slow down, you crazy child: What Oxford student theatre can learn from garden plays
Student theatre strives to be as professional as possible, but the annual garden play offers something unique: permission to have fun. In Trinity Term, as students pivot between the library and Examination Schools, another ritual takes over college quads. Outdoor productions appear across the city, transforming lawns and gardens into temporary stages. For director and producer Magdalena Lacey-Hughes, these productions represent something increasingly rare in Oxford drama: the freedom to be creative without the pressure of being perfect.
Garden plays are as much a part of Oxford life as exams when the academic year draws to a close. After watching the Queen’s College garden play’s performance of Guys & Dolls on its closing night, I met with its director, Lacey-Hughes, expecting to discuss the challenges of outdoor theatre. Instead, our conversation turned to a bigger question: why does Oxford drama take itself so seriously?
After arriving at Oxford eager to throw herself into student theatre, Lacey-Hughes found the Oxford drama scene surprisingly difficult to navigate. “I never really got my foot in the door until Trinity of first-year,” where she choreographed Fiddler on the Roof, the Queen’s garden play that year. “I think I just really didn’t understand how student drama worked here. It was very confusing because it is super decentralised.” It was through subsequent productions inspired by this one that Lacey-Hughes met George Robson, and the pair collaborated to launch Crazy Child Productions in Michaelmas.
Though her passion for the innumerable opportunities offered by Oxford’s extensive drama scene is tangible when she talks about her projects, she is candid about the anxiety which surrounds the field. Students are deeply invested in producing high-quality work, but that ambition can create its own culture: feedback from Oxbridge Onstage last term noted that “Oxford’s drama is very serious and often quite dark.”
For Lacey-Hughes, part of the issue lies in Oxford’s fixation with professionalism. “I think it comes with the slight pretentious air that everything here has,” she reflects. “There is this real emphasis on putting on plays that have huge legacies so that they can reinterpret themselves.” Over the past year, she has noticed the same impulse when people discuss production companies. “People ask ‘what do you do?’ and you would respond ‘we try to make student drama as professional as possible’. In reality, that is not achievable.”
It’s rather ironic here as Lacey-Hughes is hardly arguing from the sidelines: Guys & Dolls operated on a budget comparable to some Oxford Playhouse productions, complete with a live orchestra and professional technical support. Yet what stood out most was not the scale of the production but its atmosphere, as audience members were pulled onstage, handed props, heckled, and encouraged to become part of the performance. The result was collective enjoyment shared by the case and audience alike.
She attributes her talent for generating fun to her own experience and familiarity with different aspects of productions. “You want to expect a lot from people, but you also have to respect that they have a lot to do alongside rehearsals.” Cast members balanced the production with choirs, rowing, journalism, and exams. Drawing on her role as Welfare Officer for Oxford University Drama Society (OUDS), she believes that “respecting time and making people feel valued in the space is very important.”
What, then, prevents student theatre from embracing that same sense of playfulness? For Lacey-Hughes, the problem is a culture: “I do think that there is a slight lack of understanding and appreciation for things that are just inherently creative.” Looking at the prevalence of tragedies and dramatic reinterpretations of established classics, she argues that Oxford often mistakes seriousness for artistic value. “We think things are only impressive when people are able to cry onstage,” she says, “rather than when they are able to make you laugh.”
Part of this seriousness stems from the structure of Oxford drama itself. For newcomers, success is often less dependent on talent or funding than understanding an unusually decentralised system. Pressure mounts when there is, in fact, a ‘right way’ to produce student drama. “It’s very confusing – you have to know it to be a part of it,” Lacey-Hughes explains. Production companies sit at the centre of that system. Prior to each term they bid for venues, apply for funding, and build reputations over time. The official OUDS advice makes one thing clear: without a Student Production Company, you cannot apply for funding. In theory, anyone can establish one, but the reality is that the necessary experience, contacts, and institutional knowledge often accumulate within established groups, making it easier for some productions to succeed over others.
It is partly this culture which inspired Crazy Child Productions, the company that Lacey-Hughes runs alongside George Robson. Far from the rigidity of other production companies, their company is characterised by an intention rather than a theme. “We are just kind of doing everything really,” she laughs. Their productions range from canonical student dramas such as The Glass Menagerie to student-written and translated work. Lacey-Hughes grins as she tells me about a recent production, Stories From an Abandoned Warehouse, “it was actually the first time Stories has ever been staged in the UK.”
Reflecting on their company’s purpose, she emphasises accessibility: Crazy Child Productions work with students who want to stage a single project without building an entire production company around it. Recent productions have included “some friends who wanted to do one thing and not set up a whole production company,” while Stories was organised by a postgraduate student who did not have the time to establish a whole brand. “We don’t intend to take it out of Oxford,” she says. “We want people to use it and the resources which we have built up.”
The playful nature of garden plays offer escape from these pressures of Oxford theatre. “The pressure is off a bit more,” Lacey-Hughes believes. Freed from some of the expectations attached to studio-based productions, gardens provide space for experimentation: earlier this term, Lady Margaret Hall hosted an unrehearsed performance of Twelfth Night, while St Edmund Hall staged The Harrowing of Hell.26 in a crypt.
The freedom of garden plays stems partly from their refusal to behave like conventional theatre. “You aren’t going to feel as immersed when it is seven o’clock outside, the sun is setting, there’s a bird over there and you can hear the ambulance on the road.” Rather than undermining the experience, she believes these interruptions create a different relationship between audience and performance. “It is a whole different type of world-building,” she explains, “because the immersion is pretty much shattered.”
That freedom comes at a cost. Outdoor productions are technically demanding. Lacey-Hughes explains the difficulties of hiring an external professional in sound design while the weather itself became a concern. “On the first night our orchestra tent was breaking due to the rain,” she recalls. Such a small team meant that “a lot of that fell to me; I was holding up the tent for around two hours on the Wednesday.”
College regulations can limit staging decisions as well, particularly around audience movement and health-and-safety policies. Yet Lacey-Hughes maintains that these restrictions often produce better creative solutions. “One thing I changed this year was bringing the orchestra into view. I wanted them to be there, and it worked for the show itself having them be appreciated.”
“In some ways, you are allowed more creativity because you have a completely different space to work with, but also colleges are much stricter.” In Guys & Dolls, Queen’s itself becomes part of the performance. “The window is a feature each year – it is the thing to look out for,” she says. This year, she reorientated the stage so that the window was on display the whole time; when actors were not using it as part of the set, residents were using it as, well, a window. “Initially I was annoyed,” she laughs. “Then I was like, ‘fine’. We should have started charging them for a ticket.”
The same elements which make garden plays less immersive also make them creatively exciting. “Even a black-box theatre is limited in certain ways,” she argues. “That is what makes creativity really powerful, when you use it well and when you have limitations. You cannot be creative when you have all the opportunities available to you.”
Perfectionism and professionalism are factoring pressures in student societies beyond theatre. In an urge to create portfolios and eagerness to enter industries immediately upon graduation, the rush to seem accomplished appears to overshadow the earnest and crucial learning experience of student societies. In a busy Michaelmas ahead, Crazy Child Productions does not seem to be slowing down: they are bidding for the Oxford Playhouse an O’Reilly show as you read, meanwhile two first-year students have already booked the Burton Taylor Studio. So what do they want their production company to be known for, for their audiences to take away? After a moment’s consideration, Lacey-Hughes responds, “‘You can’t be everything before your time’ is a really cringe answer, but that is definitely part of it.”
Student Life
Bangladesh July Revolution leaders speak at Oxford Union as protesters clash outside
Protesters clashed outside the Oxford Union this evening during a panel discussion on the 2024 Bangladeshi July Revolution, entitled “The Student-Led Uprising and the Future of Post-Revolutionary Bangladesh”. The debate began at 6.30pm and features several prominent figures from the revolution, including Shadik Kayem, described as a key coordinator of the July uprising and vice president of the Dhaka University Central Student Union, and Hasnat Abdullah, an MP with the National Citizen Party, one of the central organisers of the Students Against Discrimination movement.
Approximately 400 people attended the protest and counter-protest. Four police vans and two police cars could be seen at the scene, with Brasenose College deploying porters to guard nearby college accommodation. The protesters and counter-protesters were separated by police into parts of the street.
This is a breaking news story. Cherwell will update this article as more information becomes available.
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