SSMU Elections 2009
Each year during election season, The Daily barrels through a series of interviews with all the runners for a SSMU executive position, and publishes a… Read More »SSMU Elections 2009
Each year during election season, The Daily barrels through a series of interviews with all the runners for a SSMU executive position, and publishes a… Read More »SSMU Elections 2009
ANC minister Ronnie Kasrils examines Israel with South Africa in mind for McGill’s Israeli Apartheid Week
What makes Citizen Kane flawed cinematic gold
If I have to read about that one more time… Dear McGill Daily, Can you please stop printing articles and letters about the following topics:… Read More »Letters
For-sale signs, clearance sales, and two-for-one deals are tell-tale signs that Canada’s in an economic crisis, but outside of Montreal restaurant Taverne Crescent, a sign… Read More »News brief: Restaurants in recession
Publicity campaign seeks public recognition for Quebec atheists
Through the 21 years that I’ve seen – unless you take out the first one to two-and-a-half, as they remain a blur – I’ve always… Read More »Aristotle’s Lackey: How suburban education brainwashes women
What virtual reality porn has to tell us about the state of society
Don’t bank on Tykwer’s conspiracy flick, The International
I had been looking forward to The Daily’s special issue on geeks for weeks. I was really excited, but I didn’t tell any of my… Read More »Public Editor: Geeks wasn’t up to special issue standards
Flash mob raises awareness without moving a muscle
What? Fudgey-Gooey Brownies How Much? About $6 for chocolate and butter, plus all other standard baking ingredients Why? Because brownies are better from scratch We… Read More »Friends with food: How to earn some brownie points
Robert Fisk challenged Canada’s involvement in Afghanistan and the Middle East
Ricky Kreitner was hacking pretty hard at the Piñata Diplomacy when this tasty morsel came flying: “After all the uproar about Bush’s surge – the… Read More »Comment: Bloody Iraq is no success
Most executive candidates run unopposed, allowing them to avoid giving concrete promises