OPINION âBan on pedestrian cellphone use obscures real dangerâ pg. 06
NEWS â$20 Million donated to the Montreal Neurological Instituteâ pg. 04
The McGill Tribune
EDITORIAL: REPORT ON SYSTEMIC DISCRIMINATION IN MCGILL FACULTY REVEALS NEED FOR ACTION pg. 05 TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 2017 VOL. 36 ISSUE 14 PUBLISHED BY THE SPT, A STUDENT SOCIETY OF MCGILL UNIVERSITY McGILLTRIBUNE.COM
Edible insects: How five McGill grads are changing the future of food Lessons in entrepreneurship with Aspire Food Group Erin Dwyer Contributor
Dumpster diving provides an alternative source of food for students and locals. (Alexandra Gardiner / The McGill Tribune)
From the Cheap Seats: World Juniors game exciting but struggles to fill seats AndrĂ© Morin Contributor Hockey is a religion in Canada. People here go to ridiculous ends to watch the best game on earthâmyself included. So as I headed over to the Bell Centre on Wednesday night to see Canada and Sweden face
off in the semi-finals of the annual World Juniors tournamentâcontested between U20 national teams from around the worldâI expected to be one of the tens of thousands of rambunctious fans filling up the stands. My expectations couldnât have been further from reality. The arena was shockingly empty. Had
this been a preliminary round game between Latvia and the Czech Republic, the attendance issues would have been understandable, but even Team Canada was unable to fill the seats. Those who did show were treated to an exciting game with multiple lead changes ending in
an upset 5-2 victory for the home side. Most of the meager crowd was checkered red and white, with blue and yellow polka dots marking pockets of Swedish fans. A giant Canadian flag was unfolded and passed around the rink, but struggled to stay afloat at some points where the crowd got thin.
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Drake wins the game of egos
Though rap norms are shifting, personal beefs continue to influence music
Noah Sutton Multimedia Editor In Dr. Dreâs 1993 tripartite diss track called âFuck Wit Dre Day,â Dre delivered the ethos of rap beef: âyou fucked with me, now itâs a must that I fuck with you.â Diss tracks historically do not get radio playâpartially because of
their violent content, and partially because rappers focus on lyrical muscle rather than catchy hooks. But for Toronto rapper Drake, wit over force, catchy punchlines and memes have been his diss weapons of choice. In the past, Drake has been able to step away from the old norms of beef and only engage when he knows the outcome will be
favorable. Yet, on his latest single, âTwo Birds One Stone,â Drake makes a move towards forceâ becoming uncharacteristically aggressive when launching attacks towards Meek Mill, Pusha T and Kid Cudi. In âTwo Birds One Stone,â Drake finally responds to Pusha T by questioning his well-documented
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drug dealing past. Drake also goes after Kid Cudi, labelling him as âcrazy.â Finally, Drake references his past beef with Meek Mill, a longtime adversary. Millâs accusation in 2015 that Drake used a ghostwriter was a clear invitation to drop the gloves. We can only guess Meek expected that rap fans would abandon Drake as a fraud, but none of this happened.
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âThe test was simple,â former McGill MBA student Mohammed Ashour wrote in an email to The McGill Tribune. âWould you be willing to drop out of school to pursue this idea, even if you lost the Hult Prize?â The Hult Prize brought together Ashour and his classmates Gabe Mott, Shobhita Soor, Jesse Pearlstein, and Zev Thompson to participate in the prestigious international competition in social entrepreneurship. The team would go on to launch Aspire Food Group, with a mission of providing alternate forms of sustainable protein. âI wanted to form a team where each individual brings a unique point of view and set of skills,â Ashour said. âNot just demographic and cultural diversity, which are critical, but also diversity in thought, experience, and worldview.â The teams were assigned the daunting tasks of tackling food security and poverty, particularly in urban slums. Around that time, Ashour ran into friend and Montreal physician Dr. Mohamed Slim. âI struck up the topic about food security and poverty and he narrated a story about insects as food,â Ashour said. âThat was the spark.â Protein is a vital macronutrient; but, animal protein is often extremely expensive and resource intensive. With these limitations, protein deficiency is common worldwide. Dr. Slim recommended the team seek out a creative alternative.
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