Alternative University Newspapers
November 6th, 2009 by archives staffWe’re all familiar with the University of Montana’s long-running daily, the Kaimin. The Mansfield Library holds issues of the student-run newspaper dating back to 1898. In that 111-year run, however, the Kaimin has faced its fair share of challengers, detractors, and lampooners. The UPUBs collection in the Archives holds many student publications from years past, including numerous attempts at alternative student journalism. We’ve picked out a few examples to share with you here.
The Karnival was an annual publication by journalism students. The May 7, 1915 issue (shown below) included a tongue-in-cheek news story about a tick that infiltrated President Craighead’s office, a ballot for “the Most Beautiful Girl in the School,” and a report on the University baseball team’s victory over the Bozeman “Aggies.” (Here and throughout, click image to see full size.)
“Established in the year of A.P. (After Prohibition) Two,” the Stag brought a humorous approach to University news and gossip. Self-dubbed “An International Peddler of Bunk” and the “Official Newspaper of Simpkins Hall,” the Stag admitted in a November 13, 1921 issue that it had no political prejudices, “for Townley, Haywood or Trotsky have not yet offered us any bribes, altho we are always open to anything reasonable.” The editor, Waino S. Nyland, attempted to keep students up-to-date with the “submerged nine-tenths” of news that didn’t make the regular papers, including student-professor conversations from the classroom:
[Professor] Elrod: How many species of the sex are there?
Russel Lewis: Three.
Elrod: Name them.
Lewis: Male, Female, and insects.
Continuing the spoof tradition, the Abattoir was published by Sigma Delta Chi, a fraternity for journalism students. The editors of “The World’s Worstest Newspaper” worked hard to put all the latest gossip in print, then hoped for the best:
In the same issue excerpted above (February 21, 1936), the editors take a shot at their Bozeman counterparts: “the editors of the Aggies’ substitute for the Sears-Roebuck catalog.” Also included are a thorough gossip column covering each of the fraternities and sororities and an “obituary” column full of the editors’ nominations, including “Charlotte Randall because she’s no prize but thinks she is… Atha Quinn – because she’s a typical Delta Gamma – nuff sed… Bartenders who put a big head on beer… Stegner and Porter – the gold dust twins who claim to be referees. The first blind men we ever saw without their dogs… Seldon Frisbee for that Foresters’ ball escapade.” Two more articles are included below:
On the more serious side, some newspapers took direct aim at the Kaimin and delighted in criticizing the established paper and “scooping” stories that the Kaimin editors didn’t catch. One such paper, Unser Kampf, was published in Spring and Fall of 1958. It took frequent issue with the Kaimin, although it also defended it from others’ criticisms (see issue pictured below). Unser Kampf’s editorials and news flashes included national as well as local news. Frequent targets besides the Kaimin included the University’s student government, the Student Store, the administration, and the paper’s own critics.
Similar to Unser Kampf was the Evening Deviate, which likewise aimed to “scoop” news stories, like a Griz-Cat basketball victory, before the Kaimin could get to them: “Say you saw it first in the Deviate…!” (Issue below is undated, but likely from 1958 or 1959).
Other alternative newspapers were actually published by the Journalism Department and Kaimin staff. Hit & Run (1969) was one such paper, which lasted for three invective- and obscenity-filled issues (first issue pictured below). The second issue was dedicated “to the anonymous men who got the ball rolling with the Boston Tea Party and whose only fault was that they stopped the revolution TOO SOON.”
Posted by Micah Everson





















