The McGill Tribune Vol. 22 Issue 10

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Sports 22 www.mcgilltribune.com

M c G I L L Vol. 22 Issue 10

R I B U N E

Published by the Students' Society of McGill University since 1981

Tuesday, November 5, 2002 F T A A S T R IK E ON THE GROUND

Mark Sward ON THE PROTEST

Seth Offenbach

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ON THE PO LITICS

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James Grohsgal ON THE M ESSAGE

Kate Rhodes ON PEACE AND VIOLENCE

JENNY GEORGE

Thousands of dem onstrators filled Place des Arts Thursday evening to protest the inclusion of education in the Free Trade Area of the Americas.

PLUS PHOTOS by Jenny George, Patrick Fok and Nathan Lebioda

Full c o v e r a g e b e g in s o n p a g e 4

Big evil liz a rd s ru le th e w o rld Next stop: n atio n als P anthea Lee World domination by a myste­ rious species with reptilian D N A is on the horizon. The Nazis were dis­ ciples o f black magic and the Holocaust was a Jewish concoction. The Mormon church is actually the centre o f operations for global satanic activities. World leaders reg­ ularly participate in blood-drinking and human sacrifice rituals. This is the world according to 50-year-old David Icke, a former professional soccer player and BBC

sports announcer from Leceister, England who presented a seminar entitled “Children o f the Matrix” at l’Université du Quebec à Montréal last Saturday, October 26. Over 700 people, from as far away as Alberta and Florida, gathered to hear him speak. Having just published his 10th book, Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Centre Disaster, in which he dismisses the general pop­ ulace’s perception o f September 1 1 as a “monumental lie,” Icke has been billed as the world’s most con­ troversial speaker. His work focuses

mainly on proving his charge o f psychological fascism in today’s society, an assertion he supports with intricate webs o f theories. “To control the world, all you have to do is control the norms people believe to be reality,” he stresses. Icke, often dubbed a New-Age floozie by British media, began his unconventional journey in 1990, after a psychic informed him that spiritual forces had christened him the chosen one who is to change the world, as he recounts in his See SATANIC, page 10

R O A D TO G L O R Y G O E S O N ...

SATURDAYNOV9TH12:30PM. NATIONALSUPREMACYISONTHELINE. REDMENFOOTBALL... THETRADITIONCONTINUES ONLY$5FORSTUDENTS

DE Steve Young, led nation in QB sacks

M en's soccer team wins Q uebec Ed Gliicksman Last weekend, the M cGill Redmen soccer team put a halt to any speculation regarding its poten­ tial to overcome pressure situations, w inning the Quebec Student Sports Federation (QSSF) title and shutting out both o f its opponents in playoff action. O n Friday, the Redmen beat Concordia 2-0 at home with goals from rookies Alex Scott and Jonathan Warin.

The provincial crown was then secured on Sunday afternoon when McGill beat first-place Université du Montréal by a score o f 1-0. Justin Kerr’s early goal and the reli­ able goalkeeping o f Dustin Diedricksen highlighted the Red ‘n’ W hite’s impressive triumph over Les Carabins. Ex-M cGill coach Pat Raimondo watched from the oppo­ sition dugout as his old colours took home their 17th provincial men’s soccer title since 1972. See NATIONALS, page 21

Your McGill REDMEN are one win away from hosting a NATIONAL BOWL GAME, but now they face their toughest test. This SATURDAY, November 9th, BE THERE as the REDMEN bat­ tle their bitter rivals, the Concordia Stingers, at Percival Molson Stadium at 12:30 p.m.

McGill ATHLETICS


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