Love and heartbreak in Elizabethean England
The Savoy Society’s Yeomen of the Guard expertly melds music and words
The Savoy Society’s Yeomen of the Guard expertly melds music and words
Unmasking racism
Thinking twice about the Outremont microcosm
“We might test judgement by asking, on the issue of Iraq, who best anticipated how events turned out.” – Michael Ignatieff, in his 2007 essay… Read More »Piñata diplomacy: Righting our wrongs over Iraq
An Inside View of the Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda Monday, February 16, 11 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Chancellor Day Hall, Stephen Scott Seminar Room, 3644… Read More »What’s the haps
While evolution has formed the core foundation of biology, 150 years since Darwin’s theory of evolution, was published, it remains as controversial as ever. According… Read More »Darwin, DNA and, “many more details”
As Cultural Studies buzzwords dance flippantly over my head, I abandon my lecture for sanity in the form of online news reports. First, BBC tells… Read More »Comment: Martha’s hotness isn’t news
Plans to bailout bankrupt Hippodrome in conflict with community centre proposals for 2,500 social housing units
How to fix the Middle East crisis in two words
Working out of a new residential address, the group is no longer considered non-profit
Critical approach behind McGill’s 2009 production enhances its relevance
In my last column I introduced you to my friend Patrick* who, by the way, is a real person and not a figment of my… Read More »Aristotle’s Lackey: Patrick Part II – the secular fundamentalist
Canadians tend to look south for black history, pointing fingers at the U.S. for slavery and segregation while ignoring blemishes on our own history. As… Read More »Editorial: Bringing Canadian black history to class
In “Police shootings connected to racial profiling” (News, January 25), Samir Shaheen-Hussain was quoted as saying “the day Anas was killed there was extra police… Read More »Errata
Munroe-Blum defends top wages for top people