{{Short description|Student magazine of the University of Wollongong}} {{more citations needed|date=April 2023}} {{Use dmy dates|date=June 2015}} {{Use Australian English|date=June 2015}} {{Infobox newspaper | name = The Tert | logo = The Tert logo.svg | image = The Tert 2025 Issue 2 front cover.png | caption = Cover of Issue 2, 2025 | type = Quarterly [[student publication|student magazine]] | school = [[University of Wollongong]] | founded = {{start date and age|1962|09}} | custom_label = Price | custom_data = Free | chief_editor = Serena Emanuele | staff_writers = | language = [[English language|English]] | publisher = [[Wollongong Undergraduate Students' Association]] | publishing_country = {{flagcountry|Australia}} | oclc = | website = [https://www.thetert.com/ thetert.com] | free = [https://archivesonline.uow.edu.au/nodes/view/674 archivesonline.uow.edu.au] }}
'''''The Tert''''' (formerly '''''Tertangala''''') is the [[Student publication|student magazine]] of the [[University of Wollongong]]. First established as a [[newspaper]] in September 1962, the publication is older than the institution itself, which was separated from the [[University of New South Wales]] in 1975. In 2010, ''The Tert'' transitioned to a [[magazine]]. It is managed by an elected representative of the [[Wollongong Undergraduate Students' Association]].
==Content== Written and edited by student volunteers, the [[magazine]] features [[local news]], [[Work of art|artwork]], [[poetry]], [[Opinion journalism|opinion pieces]], [[Arts criticism|film and music criticism]], and [[Interview|interviews]]. Occasionally issues are structured around a theme to spark inspiration for writers. The magazine also contains updates from elected representatives of the [[Wollongong Undergraduate Students' Association]] (WUSA).
Prior to 1967, ''The Tert'' was [[Apoliticism|apolitical]], but soon began commenting on local student [[Australian Labor Party|Labor]] and [[Liberal Party of Australia|Liberal]] clubs, and the push to solidify the [[University of Wollongong]] (UOW) as an independent institution.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=Organ |first=Michael |date=2009 |title=The Sixties at Wollongong: student affairs in a regional Australian university |url=https://www.academia.edu/2799098/The_Sixties_at_Wollongong_student_affairs_in_a_regional_Australian_university |journal=Illawarra Unity: The Sixties |volume=9 |issue=1 |url-access=registration |access-date=3 May 2026}}</ref> It also wrote scathingly about the [[Vietnam War]] and [[Conscription in Australia|conscription]].<ref name=":1" />
==History== ''The Tert'' was first published as ''Tertangala'' in September 1962, when the school was still an external campus of the [[University of New South Wales]] (UNSW), making the paper older than UOW itself, which was established in 1975.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |title=Tertangala – Archives Online |url=https://archivesonline.uow.edu.au/nodes/view/674 |access-date=3 May 2026 |publisher=[[University of Wollongong]]}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=About Us |url=https://www.thetert.com/about-us/ |access-date=3 May 2026 |website=The Tert}}</ref><ref name=":3">{{Cite web |last=Khochaiche |first=Zeina |last2=Haghighi |first2=Ariana |date=10 April 2024 |title=Student Media Spotlight: The Tertangala |url=https://honisoit.com/2024/04/student-media-spotlight-the-tertangala/ |access-date=3 May 2026 |website=[[Honi Soit]]}}</ref> The newspaper's first issue was a four-page publication welcoming new students to Open Day, featuring [[Satire|satirical]] and journalistic articles, plus [[Advertising|advertisements]] for local businesses.<ref name=":1" />
''The Tert'' has a radical editorial tradition,<ref name=":4" /> and many of its former editors have transitioned into active political and artistic life. Past editors and staff members have also gone on to write for other publications, such as ''[[The New York Times]]'', ''[[The Guardian]]'', ''[[Rolling Stone Australia / New Zealand|Rolling Stone Australia]]'', ''[[The Australian]]'' and [[Vogue (magazine)|''Vogue'']].{{Citation needed|date=May 2026}}
All copies of ''The Tert'' from 1962 to 2010 are archived by the University of Wollongong library, and are available online.<ref name=":2" /> ''The Tert'' was originally printed by the ''[[Illawarra Mercury]]'', [[South Coast Times and Wollongong Argus|''South Coast Times'']] or the Students' Union.<ref name=":1" />
== Name == The name ''Tertangala'' was thought to mean "smoke signals" in the local [[Dharawal language]], a tribute to [[Wollongong]]'s [[BlueScope|industrial history]].<ref name=":2" /> The name originated when the university was a campus of UNSW, and was chosen to correspond with its sister paper ''[[Tharunka]]'' (later ''Gamamari'') whose name was thought to mean "message stick".<ref name=":0">{{Cite magazine |last=Noel |first=Anh |date=2023-12-12 |title=Why Tharunka needs to change its name |url=https://www.arc.unsw.edu.au/uploads/2023-Tharunka-T3-digital.pdf |access-date=2024-06-01 |website=[[Tharunka]] |publisher=[[Arc @ UNSW Limited]] |pages=4–8 |language=en-au |format=PDF |publication-place=Sydney |volume=2023 |issue=3}}</ref> In 2000, then-editor James Breach confirmed the name ''Tertangala'' was completely made up, not having roots in any [[Australian Aboriginal languages|Aboriginal language]], and not being used in consultation with the local Aboriginal community.<ref name=":0" />
For decades the names ''Tertangala'' and ''The Tert'' have been used interchangeably, at the discretion of the [[editor-in-chief]]. In 2025, the original name was officially dropped.
== Management == ''The Tert'' is managed by the Tert coordinator, a position within WUSA elected by Wollongong students. They act as the [[editor-in-chief]] and represent the interests of the newspaper at council meetings.
Throughout its history, ''The Tert'' was funded by WUSA through membership fees collected from students. The introduction of [[voluntary student unionism]] significantly reduced the capacity of WUSA to continue to fund the publication. Following a long campaign in 2007 by the students involved, the University of Wollongong guaranteed $24,000 funding a year until 2010 in an effort to support the publication.{{Citation needed|date=May 2026}}
== Recognition == Throughout the years, ''The Tert'' has won multiple awards, including a merit award for cover design and an [[investigative journalism]] award for a feature article about the re-opening of a [[Smelting|copper smelter]] in [[Port Kembla, New South Wales|Port Kembla]].{{Citation needed|date=May 2026}} ''The Tert'' was also named one of the top five [[List of student publications in Australia|student publications in the country]].{{Citation needed|date=May 2026}}
== Controversies ==
=== WUSA conflicts === The WUSA constitution includes a provision designed to check the Tert coordinator's editorial power, by allowing the president [[veto]] over any publishable content. This level of [[Censorship|editorial control]] has caused controversy through the paper's history.
In 2004, ''The Tert'' was blocked from reporting on the WUSA leadership of then-president Michael Szafraniec, which was referred to as the "Micktatorship" by students. Szafraniec "extensively vetted the newspaper's content" and removed allegations against his name, which included [[embezzlement]], verbal abuse and non-payment of wages.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Stella |first=Joe |date=24 May 2004 |title=At a stroke: how censorship renders student media pointless |url=http://www.thedailygrind.net/work/features/content.php?id=522_0_12_0_M |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040913081408/http://www.thedailygrind.net/work/features/content.php?id=522_0_12_0_M |archive-date=13 September 2004 |access-date=3 May 2026 |website=The Daily Grind}}</ref>
Robert Bruce Keanan Brown, the paper's editor from 1988 to 1990, resigned in an open letter citing the "[[Bureaucracy|bureaucratisation]]" of the magazine as his main reason for leaving.{{Citation needed|date=May 2026}} He stated that:
{{blockquote| "Tertangala is the property of the Students, NOT of the SRC... it cannot be made to serve the purposes of the political junketeers that infest the SRC." }}
=== Inappropriate content === ''The Tert'' has been accused of being depraved, pornographic, obscene and offensive by residents and local media on more than one occasion. The first was following a Commem Week edition of the publication called ''Daily Moron'' in 1974. Locals took issue with the magazine's liberal use of the word "[[fuck]]".{{Citation needed|date=May 2026}}
During 2009, the WUSA Queer Collective produced the "Sexuality and Gender" issue of ''The Tert'', without the consent of the magazine staff. The edition received some student criticism relating to "offensive" material.{{citation needed|reason=Unsubstantiated|date=September 2015}} The Queer Collective confirmed that the publication was intentionally offensive, consistent with a long tradition of subversive student journalism at UOW.
In 2019 the magazine was accused by UOW that their "Debauchery Edition" was incompatible with the university's Safe and Respectful Communities policy.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Herring |first=Andrew |date=1 August 2019 |title=Tertangala ‘debauchery issue’ edition offensive |url=https://www.uow.edu.au/media/2019/tertangala-debauchery-issue-edition-offensive.php |access-date=4 May 2026 |website=[[University of Wollongong]]}}</ref> The then-coordinator of the magazine issued a statement instead pointing the finger at the administration which had refused to introduce compulsory consent courses and to combat [[sexual assault]] off-campus.<ref name=":4">{{Cite web |date=2019-08-02 |title=UOW lashes out at 'offensive' student debauchery magazine |url=https://www.illawarramercury.com.au/story/6307298/uow-lashes-out-at-offensive-student-debauchery-magazine/ |access-date=2023-04-11 |website=Illawarra Mercury |language=en-AU}}</ref>
== Contributors ==
=== Notable alumni === [[Dr. Karl]] used to write for ''The Tert'' while studying at the [[University of Wollongong]] in the 1960s,<ref name=":3" /> and he ran for the position of editor in 1966 but was unsuccessful.
[[Van Badham]] edited the magazine in 1997.<ref name=":3" /> Van is now an award-winning Australian playwright.
=== Editors === * 1980 – Jay Caselberg, James Hartley * 1993 – Kathryn Goldie * 1995 – Damien Cahill * 1997 – [[Van Badham]] * 1998 – Stuart Hatter * 2000 – James Beach * 2013 – Andre Charadia, Chloe Higgins * 2016 – Claudia Poposki, Jake Cupitt * 2017 – Aisha Sini, Kurtis Hughes * 2018 – Laura Thomas, Jarrett Wall * 2019 – Co-ordinator: Alec Hall; Magazine Editor: Emily Jenkins; Digital Editor: Sarah Gore * 2020 – Co-ordinator: Kal Slater; Magazine Editor: Caleb Connolly; Digital Editor: Grace Crivellaro * 2021 – Co-ordinator: Eliza Lourenco; Magazine Editor: Lia Stamatopoulos * 2022 – Co-ordinator: River McCrossen * 2023 – Co-ordinator: Alec Hall; Magazine Editor: River McCrossen * 2024 – Co-ordinator: Will Olteanu * 2025 – Co-ordinator: Serena Emanuele; Editor in Chief: Emma Cranby; Head of Graphics: Jade Grimson and Hannah Harper; Head of Socials: Molly Duggan * 2026 – Co-ordinator: Serena Emanuele; Newspaper Editor: Aleksandar Sekulovski; Magazine Editor: Asher Wood; Head of Graphics: Jade Grimson
==See also== * [[University of Wollongong]] * [[Wollongong Undergraduate Students' Association]] * [[List of student publications in Australia]]
==References== {{reflist}}
==External links== * [https://www.thetert.com/ Official website] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20080719173634/http://www.wusa.uow.edu.au/oldsite/tert/ Back issues of the magazine (Internet Archive)] * [http://archivesonline.uow.edu.au/nodes/view/674 ''Tertangala'' back issues (1962-2010)]
<div class="Boxmerge">{{University of Wollongong}} {{AusStudentNews}} </div>
[[Category:Student newspapers published in Australia]] [[Category:Newspapers established in 1962]] [[Category:University of Wollongong]] [[Category:1962 establishments in Australia]]