Lundagård’s existential rights are in the independent thinking. Therefore Karin Olsson encourages the future Lundagård to avert political control and rebuke the owner who calls for grandeur and obedience. ...
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Lundagård 95 years
It was an ordinary Sunday morning in February, and the familiar smell of Swedish punch and pyttipanna was spreading across the corridors at the AF building. Walking up to the editorial tower took longer than usual, as my shoes kept getting stuck in the subtle muck covering the steps. ...
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Are there any preps or alcowhores in Malmö Nation? Lundagård’s own scandal-reporter went on a gonzo journalistic mission which resulted in the first reader-outburst in Lundagård’s web-edition. ...
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There is a financial crisis in Sweden, and in order to develop their web-section, Lundagård hires an unemployed artist. The question is, however, what lasting impression the student newspaper made in its first, stumbling years of being on the Web. ...
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Periodically, Lundagård has reported diligently about students’ situation in countries outside of Sweden as well. In 1988, Påhl Ruin, a member of staff, set out on a journey to Warsaw, to report on students being part of the Polish union movement Solidarity. ...
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The word CRISIS does well on a newspaper placard, but describes Lundagård badly during the second half of the seventies. ...
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In the 50s Lundagård was dedicated to picturesque student journalism. During the 60s, “the rag” turned into a fighting publication. ...
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In 1950, Åke K G Lundquist printed Lundagård’s most talked-about cover. Where students only saw filth, he saw something else. ...
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During the Second World War, Sweden was officially neutral. But as the gaze turns inward, the picture becomes muddy. Lundagård is no exception. The newspaper mirrors the moral and intellectual crisis of the time. ...
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The modern woman made her entry during the 1920s. The right to vote was soon followed by the right to attend upper secondary school and the right to a governmental job. But not everyone was happy. Lundagård was in turmoil; offended and disappointed men raised their voice about a crisis in the female identity. ...
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