The McGill Tribune TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1 2019 | VOL. 39 | ISSUE 4
Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University
McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE
EDITORIAL
FEATURE
TRIBUNE EXPLAINS
“It Takes All of Us” needs more
Across the generations
Student voting
PG. 5
PGs. 8-9
PG. 7
(Leanne Young / The McGill Tribune)
500,000 people march for climate justice in Montreal
PG. 2
Jane Goodall returns to McGill
Forty years after her first Beatty Lecture, famed primatologist shares her story Ronny Litvack- Katzman Staff Writer Jane Goodall began her second Beatty Lecture as she did her first: By saying hello to the audience in “chimpanzee.” Goodall, best known for her work in studying Afri-
can chimpanzees and her later humanitarian and environmental activism, spoke on Sept. 26 at the 65th anniversary of McGill’s Beatty Lecture series. It had been forty years since Goodall visited McGill in 1979 to give her first Beatty Lecture. Then, still an upand-coming researcher, Goodall was invited to present a
portion of her ground-breaking work on the complex behavioural dynamics of wild chimpanzees. At the time, the event’s organizers feared that she would not draw a large enough crowd to fill a lecture hall. They ended up needing an extra room for the overflow of people waiting to hear her speak. PG. 13
McGill men’s soccer survives late scare against UQAM McGill picks up second win at annual Homecoming game Jack Armstrong Contributor McGill men’s soccer (2–3–3) returned to action with a victory against the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) Citadins (2–3–2) on Sept. 27, ending a three-game winless streak.
McGill remained composed in an intense game that featured over 30 fouls and six yellow cards. Thirdyear forward Dalen Saheb led the way with a goal and an assist in the critical 2–1 Homecoming win for McGill. “It was pretty important
Art POP installation is a creative oasis Theatre Rialto came alive for the festival’s main exhibit Patrick Gilroy Contributor
to get the win,” fourthyear forward Mehdi IbnBrahim said after the game. “We’re definitely desperate for points to get into the playoffs, and for sure the crowd helped us win. We are definitely pushing closer to the playoffs now, and we are in contention.” PG. 15
Viewers would be forgiven, upon entering Art POP’s main exhibition Tout ce qui arrive, arrive dans les verbes, for thinking that they had come to the wrong room. A set of lockers that line the left wall and a ‘douches/ showers’ sign are among
the first things to notice in the venue. This exhibition, which ran from Sept. 25 to 29 at Studio Rialto, is part of the visual-arts strand of POP Montreal International Music Festival. Aside from the unique infrastructure of the space, which was originally a dance studio, the cloths that dominate the west side
of the installation are the most eye-catching part of the exhibit. These cloths, like many pieces in the room, evoke natural forms: One appears to display the figure of a pig, the other a face shrouded by butterflies and leaves. Neither work displays the artist’s name, which is true of many pieces in the room. PG. 12