The McGill Tribune Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University
TUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 2019 | VOL. 38 | ISSUE 16
EDITORIAL
FEATURE
Students can’t afford Doug Ford
Looking back, moving forward
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STUDENT LIVING The best online resources for apartment hunting PG. 10
(Gabe Helfant / The McGill Tribune)
Tribune Explains: Deputy Provost, Student Life and Learning
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Reflecting on the Quebec Mosque shooting two years later Abeer Almahdi Opinion Editor I remember crying when I first heard about the Quebec City Mosque shooting. I saw the faces of my father, my uncles, and my friends in the faces of the victims. I remember asking how this could have happened in a country that claims to value
immigrants and diversity. I was stressed about college applications, since most of my options were in Canada, McGill being my first choice. My father, an Egyptian Muslim, tried to console me, telling me that a few bad apples shouldn’t ruin the bunch, and that, ultimately, I would be safer and happier in Canada than I would be back home. I believed him.
SEDE to be replanted in new offices McGill’s SEDE Office to redistribute functions to other departments
Krithika Ragupathi Contributor The McGill Reporter announced on Aug. 9 that McGill’s Social Equity and Diversity Education (SEDE) Office is being restructured to prioritize equity issues on campus. Toward the end of the 2017-18 academic year, students responded to these changes negatively and criticized the administration for
proceeding without consulting the student body, prompting the administration to hold upcoming consultations on Feb. 12. The SEDE office opened its doors in the fall of 2005 as a result of discussion among students, administration, and other community members on issues of harassment and discrimination on campus. Since then, SEDE has run various projects that focus on community engagement and
equity in education, including Homework Help at Kahnawá:ke Survival School, Black History Month, and Indigenous Awareness Week. “Basically, what we’re trying to do is take the different functions […of] the SEDE office and [put] them in locations where they’re going to be strengthened,” Fabrice Labeau, interim deputy provost (Student Life & Learning), said. PG. 2
I believed him all through my first semester. I believed him until I was walking home one night from a restaurant on St. Catherine street, when a man began to follow me home, yelling “Go back home, terrorist!” I started seeing posters around Milton-Parc by Generation Identity, a white-supremacist group that is known to recruit on university campuses, displaying
Islamophobic and anti-immigrant rhetoric. As an Egyptian-Canadian Muslim, I think that we must own up to and address our Islamophobia. Hate crimes against racialized people and religious minorities, especially Muslims, is on the rise. Islamophobia is more prevalent in Quebec than in any other province. PG. 6
Elementary, my dear Watson
Celebrating the 150th anniversary of the periodic table Morgan Sweeney Staff Writer Everything is made of something. Books are made of pages, which are made of paper, which is made of wood. All of these items are made up of molecular complexes that break down into tiny atoms. What differentiates these atoms from one an-
other is the number of subatomic particles, protons and neutrons, that compose them. This is what makes elements distinct from one another. For a long time, people didn’t know what anything was made of. This ignorance persisted until the protoscience of alchemy birthed chemistry almost four hundred years ago. Early chemists
initially found elements haphazardly, labelling and mislabelling them as they went, until the invention of the periodic table of elements. “Truth be told, chemical knowledge at the time was pretty chaotic,” Joe Schwarcz, director of the McGill Office for Science and Society, wrote in an email to The McGill Tribune. PG. 11