The McGill Tribune Vol. 39 Issue 18

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The McGill Tribune TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11 2020 | VOL. 39 | ISSUE 18

Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University

McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE

EDITORIAL

FEATURE

GAME REPORT

Standing in solidarity with Wet’suwet’en

Ask me anything

PG. 5

PG. 8-9

Cabillo-Abante shines for Martlet Basketball at Beach Night PG. 15

(Leanne Young / The McGill Tribune)

The Med Café reimagined

PG. 14

McGill begins Black History Month celebrations with Opening Ceremony

Keynote speaker Prof. Wendy Greene spoke on natural hair discrimination Tasmin Chu Staff Writer McGill held its fourth annual Black History Month Opening Ceremony at the Faculty of Law on Feb. 3. The event was a collaboration between the Office of the Provost and Vice-Principal

(Academic) Christopher Manfredi, the Black Students’ Network of McGill (BSN), and the McGill African Students’ Society (MASS). The ceremony featured keynote speaker Professor Wendy Greene, who presented “Rooted: Locking Black Hair to Human Rights Activism,” a talk about discrimination against natural hair. Greene is the first African American woman to be a ten-

ured faculty member at Drexel University’s Kline School of Law. Greene first became interested in the legal precedent around natural hair discrimination while working at a labour employment firm. According to Greene, natural hair discrimination refers to policies in schools and workplaces that target hairstyles worn by Black individuals. PG. 2

Patching holes in broken hearts An in-depth look at the human aorta reveals the faults of traditional grafts Madison McLauchlan Contributor In the complex circulatory system of the human body, no artery is as vital as the aorta. This large vessel takes oxygen-rich blood from the chambers of the heart and delivers it to the brain, muscles, digestive system, and other sites of metabolism in the body. Aortic aneurysms,

one of the leading causes of death in Canada, occur when the aortic wall is weakened and bulges out, causing the vessel to rupture. To treat aortic aneurysms, doctors commonly use grafts to patch the weak points in a vessel with a more rigid material. Despite this life-saving procedure, in most cases, these prostheses are only a temporary fix.

Complications can arise from surgery or from the graft itself, and the suture between the aorta and the graft is sometimes a source of postoperative infection. According to Dr. Marco Amabili, a professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at McGill, prosthetics currently on the market are too stiff to properly mimic a human aorta. PG. 7

New McCord exhibit depicts Griffintown as a fractured landscape Photographer Robert Walker captures Montreal’s evolving neighbourhood Jonathan Giammaria Staff Writer Urban redevelopment looms over Montreal with a constancy that borders on parody. Whether these changes impact a single street or an entire neighbourhood: The threat of an orange cone is ever-present. Since 2013, Griffintown—downtown’s southwestern neighbour-

hood, historically home to Irish industrial workers—has been Montreal’s most recent target for urban renewal. In collaboration with photographer Robert Walker, McCord Museum premiered Griffintown - Evolving Montreal on Feb. 7, a photo exhibit documenting the quarter’s identity in flux. The exhibition is one of many that McCord will curate to

document Montreal’s evolution as a whole. Walker is a veteran street photographer whose subjects have included the urban landscapes of New York, Paris, and Toronto. In a video that accompanies the exhibit, Walker notes that he does not intend to gauge gentrification’s impact on Griffintown as a historical or social artefact. PG. 11


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