Z
'
P u blish ed by th e S tu d e n ts'S o c ie ty o f McGill U niversity
A r c h it e c t u r e
C a f é
A d m in is t r a t io n trie s to fo rc e on July 18, 2007, McGill Ancillary Ser Ken Sun Students may soon have to say goodbye to the famous café and hangout spot on campus. Possibly the result of a grand scheme to in tegrate the Architecture Students' Society into one of the larger stu dent groups like the Engineering Undergraduate Society or McGill's Students' Society, Ancillary Services has announced that the café will either be taken over by Ancillary Services or turned into a student lounge. In an e-mail to the School of Architecture Director David Covo
NFL PREVIEW: THE W H OLE NINE YARDS, PAGE 20
m
FILL U P T H ETA N K , SUPERSIZE, PAGE 12
w w w .m cg illtrib u n e.co m
f ig h t in g s t u d e n t
to
V olu m e 2 7 Issue 1 • S e p te m b e r 5 ,2 0 0 7
s t a y
a s s o c ia t io n
to
a liv e in te g r a te
vices Director Alan Charade implied that the popular Architecture Café will be replaced by a Chartwell's-run cafeteria. "The primary goal of McGill Food Services for the Architecture Café is to offer an affordable and quality dining experience...while maintaining the integrity of past operations,"Charade wrote. He went on to say that these changes would either take place by July 31, or alternatively, the School of Architecture could "repatriate [the See STUDENT on page 7
S w im m in g t h e
O s h e a g a
W a l k t h e v i l l a g e in t h e p a r k tertainment Group in collaboration John Semley Nowadays, you can't swing a cat without hitting a music festival. From California's Coacherella to Tennessee's Bonnaroo to this week's Bumbershoot Festival in Seattle, it seems as if any abandoned airstrip or swatch of unused farmer's land is being allo cated to accomodate bevies of musicans and comparably large swarms of fans, all unified by various shades of insobriety. Although the presentday progeny of the earliest rock fes tivals (Monterey Pop et al) may have bent to the seemingly inescapable will of corporate sponsorship and resultantly lost some of the courrter-whatever wild abandon of their ancestors, there is no doubt that the festival environment provides an ex cellent forum for music fans to enjoy a vast array of music and other enter tainments. Now celebrating its second year, Montreal’s own Osheaga (pro nounced O-SHE-A-GA) Music and Arts Festival, presented by Gillette En
F O
O
T B A L L
with Greenland, Higher Ground and MEG Montreal, assembles a large and fairly varied selection of musical acts for two days at Parc Jean Drapeau. As with Osheaga's inaugural outing, this year's festival boasts four stages and over fifty bands, largely culled from the various subgenres of alt/indie rock/pop. Headlining the main stage this Saturday, Sept. 8th are the Smashing Pumpkins, gracing Montreal with a stop on their speciously-endorsed "reunion tour", the first since the group disbanded in 2000. British sen sations Bloc Party, the more contem porary, pertinent headliner, will take the stage Sunday night. "It's a differentfeeling, really,"said Bloc Party bassist and backing vocal ist Gordon Moakes in regards to the experience of playing a larger festival like Osheaga. Unlike a regular club or theatre show, where many bands regularly perform what is more-orSee ROCK on page 17
R E D M
Students resort to desperate measures for their 50-cent, fair trade coffee.
E N
H O M E O P E N E R - “ S E A O F R E D ” THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER Ô,19h00 - UNIVERSITÉ DE MONTRÉAL - MOLSON STADIUM Doors Open at 18h00 - Live band!! SpiriX Cheerleaders Halftime Show Students wearing RED have a chance to win weekend passes to the OSHEAGA music festival. Student opening day price |2. ww w.athletics.m cgill.ca
iD* WHITE T-SHIRTS ARE SACK! Got yours t* m for only SIS and receive free artramton to IS pre-s*teclesl varsity games «I whichall concessions an* « old for $2 or ondter Available at RedbetJ Sports Shop