The McGill Tribune TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 2018 | VOL. 37 | ISSUE 16
Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University
EDITORIAL Task Force on Respect and Inclusion must start and end with student experiences
FEATURE
FIGHTING THE FLU
Learning to Learn
Can vitamin C really cure the common cold?
PGs. 8-9
PG. 13
Substituting traditional learning methods in higher education
PG. 5
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Chopping, chanting, and chainsaws at MacDonald Campus
(Miya Keilin / The McGill Tribune)
McGill’s greatest lumberjacks at the annual Woodsmen Competition Miya Keilin Staff Writer On Jan. 27, the McGill Woodsmen team hosted its annual competition at MacDonald Campus. More than 130 competitors from seven schools competed in 14 events throughout the day. A decently sized crowd milled about the area, traveling from event
to event to cheer on their friends and family members while classic rock hits from the 1980s blared from nearby speakers, completing the atmosphere of friendly lumberjack competition. A woodsmen team is composed of six members. McGill has four teams, two men’s and two women’s, all of which competed Saturday. Each competes in four team events,
and each team member does a singles and a doubles event. The singles events include pole climb, super swede, single buck, chainsaw, axe throw, and water boil, plus a Mac Campus specialty—the snowshoe race. The doubles events all revolve around chopping: The standing block chop, quarter split, and underhand chop are differentiated only by the ori-
entation of the block that is being chopped. The team events are pulp toss, log roll, swede, and cross cut. And yes, all the events are as awesome as their names suggest. In the morning, 10 events took place in designated areas across the field. In the five corrals, marked off by red “danger” tape, competitors held the standing block chop, quarter split, super swede, chainsaw, and single buck.
PG. 16
Threat of fentanyl looms over AUTS’ Into the Woods offers comical recreational drug users on and action-packed escapism campus Magic, whimsy, and fantasy fill Moyse Hall
Survey reveals important precautionary measures rarely used by McGill drug users Isabella Lyons
Contributor After several reports of overdoses in Quebec caused by fentanyl—a synthetic opioid that can be deadly, even when ingested in minute doses—Dr. Carole Morissette, the medical chief of Montreal Public Health, issued a public warning on Jan. 12 urging recreational drug
users to abstain from using cocaine and other powdered drugs that can easily be laced with fentanyl in its powdered form. The drug cannot be detected with 100 per cent accuracy by any testing method. Powdered drugs include any stimulant, depressant, or hallucinogen which can be ingested through insufflation— snorting or sniffing. This includes cocaine, MDMA, Adderall, and ketamine.
PG. 2
Anthony Schokalsky Contributor
Lately, it seems we’re all forced to face a little darkness every day. When the sun sets at 4 p.m., and January feels never-ending, students can use a good chuckle and a few dance numbers—all of which the Arts Undergraduate Theatre Society (AUTS) provides in
spades with its wonderfully charming rendition of Stephen Sondheim’s Into the Woods (1989). Before the play even begins, Katie Miller’s set design is striking, its grandness and whimsy filling Moyse Hall. While often underappreciated, set design can make or break an audience’s immersion, and here the set does not disappoint. The homes of
Cinderella (Sunny Sheffman), the Baker (Cathal Rynne) and his wife (Emma Corber), Jack (Matt Milton) and his mother (Maya Lewis), all evoke the musical’s eccentric, though gloomy, Brothers Grimm motif. Unfortunately, the costume design does not fit the set’s aesthetic. Hip and flashy, almost none of the costumes fit the dark, fantastical theme of Into the Woods.
PG. 12