McGill Tribune Vol. 38 Issue 15

Page 1

The McGill Tribune TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 2019 | VOL. 38 | ISSUE 15

Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University

EDITORIAL

FEATURE

Keeping Montreal’s transportation on the track to accessibility

Pipelines, blockades, and sovereignty

PG. 5

PGs. 8-9

McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE

SPORTS Martlet basketball falls short against Concordia PG. 16 (Gabe Helfant / The McGill Tribune)

Arisha Khan named McGill’s 145th Rhodes Scholar for Youth Welfare Advocacy

PG. 3

McGill misses provincial deadline for sexual assault and violence policy Nina Russell Staff Writer The McGill administration missed the Jan. 1 deadline set by the Quebec government to adopt an updated sexual assault and violence policy. The deadline was part of Quebec’s Bill 151, which was passed in Dec. 2017 and requires all higher education institutions

to revise their sexual assault and violence policies in accordance with a new set of regulations. McGill’s Policy Against Sexual Violence was ratified in 2016 and is currently under revision to reflect the provincial government’s new requirements. As it stands, McGill’s policy fails to adhere to some of the requirements of Bill 151, such as the existence of a stand-

Local gin and geniality

At the southwest warehouse of Montreal’s star micro-distillery Cirka Distilleries, rows of awards line a public tasting counter. Cirka’s sleek website echoes this artisanal aesthetic and invites guests to peek behind the curtain by touring their space, breaking the seemingly intricate process of distillation down into simple steps. The Cirka building is an open warehouse with high

ceilings and is filled with the sweet, heady smell of gin botanicals. Weaving in between barrels and past humming machines, distiller Isabelle Rochette expertly explains the three steps of the distillation process to visitors: Cooking the grain, turning starch into fermentable sugar, and then fermentable sugar into alcohol through fermentation with yeast, and, finally, extracting and refining the alcohol. From start to finish, production takes place between three rooms; the bottling line is laid out a stone’s

with Quebec, [and], through our schedule, we’re going to look at what adjustments we need to make to be 100 per cent in agreement with the Quebec policy. In fact, we were the first to [have a policy] in 2016, so I think the journalists in some of these cases did not do the full work of really looking at the facts, but we did not miss the deadline in terms of the big policy.” PG. 3

Soup & Science: Animal edition

Cirka Distilleries welcomes visitors

Leyla Moy Contributor

alone policy and clearly-defined regulations regarding professor-student relationships. Principal and Vice-Chancellor Suzanne Fortier denied that McGill had missed the deadline and suggested that media coverage claiming otherwise lacked nuance. “McGill had a sexual violence policy in 2016, so we didn’t miss the deadline,” Fortier said. “Our schedule didn’t work perfectly

throw from where the grain is cooked at the beginning of the process. In the back is what Rochette refers to as the ‘controlled chaos’ warehouse, which houses everything from bottles, grain, product packaging, and whiskey barrels. Whiskey needs to be aged for three years to be labelled as such in Canada—the same standard as in Scotland—and Cirka plans to release their first batch by the end of the year. PG. 7

McGill researchers discuss their fields in open sessions Kate Lord, Celia Hameury, Krithika Ragupathi, Grace Hu Contributors

At McGill’s biannual intersection of science and lunch, Redpath Museum hosted Soup and Science, providing students with a look into some of the most interesting and exciting research currently underway at the university. In a se-

ries of short, three-minute presentations last week, professors from a wide array of scientific disciplines spent their lunchtimes sharing their passion for research and describing how undergraduate students can get involved. The McGill Tribune reports on their favourite presentations. Neural cell torpedoesMonday, January 14 -

Celia Hameury In her presentation on cellular changes in the cerebellum, a section of the brain crucial for sensory coordination and motor movement, Alanna Watt, associate professor in the Department of Biology, discussed the dramatic changes scientific hypotheses can undergo over the course of experimentation and research. PG. 13


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.