First Nations minor proposed
Student initiative may bring McGill up to speed
Student initiative may bring McGill up to speed
“I’m glad to be with you…here at the end of all things.” – Frodo Baggins Terrible, isn’t it? After all the sweat, tears, laughter and… Read More »Life Lines: Steps to the end of the tunnel with little feet
The longevity and complexity of the Arab-Israeli conflict, along with the contention it arouses when discussed, have always interested me and made me to want… Read More »Hyde Park: Thinking against your bias
Citizen’s Summit aims to increase participation in local structures
Grassroots media, including campus radio, offer a vital alternative to the homogenous mainstream, especially in Canada, where a clutch of corporations own most of our… Read More »Hyde Park: Alternative media amplifies diverse voices
Government claims Galloway is a national threat
While I know that humans are more complex than molecules – in that molecules lack such important human characteristics as consciousness, agency, reason, and so… Read More »The Conversationalist: Don’t call me molecule: a glimpse into law and nature
Decoding the “black box” of computer surveillance
What would Raphael Lemkin, the audacious author of the 1951 Genocide Convention and the man who coined the word “genocide,” think of Sudanese president Omar… Read More »Hyde Park: When justice is not enough
Canadians push the government to lend money to the national broadcaster
Refugee Rights Day Monday, April 6, 12:30 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. Wendy Patrick room, Wilson Hall, 3506 University The Social Work Department of McGill University… Read More »What’s the haps
The “No Olympics on Stolen Native Land” stickers pasted all around McGill have become something of a symbol of radical thought. Their message is explicit,… Read More »Hyde Park: Unpacking the sticky simplicity
Experts discuss sexual difference at the First Scientific Day of the Chair on Sex, Gender, and Mental Health
A closer look at the history of Montreal’s greenest circus
Remembered 40 years after the fact for the destruction of computers, speakers recall forgotten racial tension