Editorial: Waste isn’t normal
The generation of waste is a built-in feature of the consumer-based society we live in; more often than not, a product’s life ends in a… Read More »Editorial: Waste isn’t normal
The generation of waste is a built-in feature of the consumer-based society we live in; more often than not, a product’s life ends in a… Read More »Editorial: Waste isn’t normal
Sara Ahmed challenges the figure of the happy housewife
A meditation on the finer points of feces
Another year, another SSMU election. And as usual, nobody cared. This year’s explosion of indifference saw approximately 24,000 undergraduates cast just 3,631 ballots: a whopping… Read More »Hyde Park: We’re spending $120,000 on that?
Communication gaps block student research from real-world implementation
Holly Dressel puts second-hand shopping doubts to rest
“It is, in fact, nothing short of a miracle that the modern methods of instruction have not yet entirely strangled the holy curiosity of inquiry.”… Read More »Piñata Diplomacy: What Matt Damon teaches us about education
The Daily’s Max Halparin traces the toxic flows of e-waste
Correction appended Until recently, McGill had one of the strictest student residence alcohol policies in Canada, but only loosely enforced the guidelines. Now, the new… Read More »Floor fellows clash with new boss
Montreal’s other anglo university hopes to compost 100 tonnes of organic refuse by 2012
Back Off! seeks to unite activists through art
Fridge Door Gallery’s latest vernissage lives up to the hype
I’m a pretty gentle gent. I drink green tea and buy wine for the pictures on the bottles. I own a plant, believe in true… Read More »Life Lines: A gentle gent’s appeal to the world’s weather jocks
Julie Doiron’s fragile songs have the intimacy of a basement tape session
When Pope Benedict XVI said that condom distribution wouldn’t solve the AIDS crisis – but would actually exacerbate the epidemic – he put millions of… Read More »Editorial: The myth of Papal infallibility