The McGill Tribune Vol. 39 Issue 1

Page 1

The McGill Tribune TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 2019 | VOL. 39 | ISSUE 1

McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE

Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University

EDITORIAL

FEATURE

GAME REPORT

I’d rather be a Martlet

Signed and sealed

McGill men’s rugby dominates against Harvard

PG. 5

PGs. 8-9

PG. 16

(Leanne Young / The McGill Tribune)

Tribune Explains: Campus construction

PG. 2

Frosh sends troubling messages about drinking culture Makena Anderson Contributor Following a significant backlash in past years regarding the toxic nature of many Canadian Frosh weeks, McGill has

made attempts to improve the experiences of incoming students. Frosh coordinators across faculties have, in consultation with staff and the administration, implemented new policies that seem to have improved student well-being and safety during Frosh. In recent years, the university has

emphasized consent education and renewed its commitment to inclusivity through programs like Access Allies, during which leaders receive additional training sessions to welcome first years. While many aspects of the week have changed, McGill remains one of the few Canadian

universities to continue to promote the consumption of alcohol during Frosh. In continuing to legitimize wet Frosh weeks, McGill introduces students to an inextricable link between intense alcohol consumption and social events during students’ undergraduate tenures. PG. 6

Introducing a new understanding of stress

Recent McGill study provides insights into the hippocampus and stress-caused disorders Sophia Gorbounov Contributor In Aug. 2019, a team led by McGill professor and researcher Tak Pan Wong published a new study about the hippocampus and its ability to

retain memories of stressful experiences. Published in the Journal for Neuroscience, the study detailed new connections to mental disorders such as depression and posttraumatic stress disorder. By exposing mice to

In conversation with Kid Smoko

OAP’s closing act is a “post-genre” renegade Noah Simon Contributor

social stress in the form of physical threats from other mice, Wong and his team found that negative memory traces were left on the hippocampus, the part of the brain primarily responsible for memory and spatial recognition. PG. 13

Starting a band is easy— the difficult part is standing out. That’s a main concern for Kid Smoko, a New Jersey band that closed out the final Friday of McGill’s Open Air Pub (OAP). With irresistible songs and energy to spare, Kid Smoko forces audiences to pay attention. And much like their enigmatic name,

their sound is hard to pin down. “We’re post-genre,” said Michael Burke, one of the band’s two vocalists and a founding member. “I just wanted to make a Soundcloud band [...] Like Lil Uzi [Vert] vocals over indie beats.” Listening to their music is very much the rollercoaster that this description suggests. Since their 2018

album Not Your Son up until their newest single, “Tommy Boy,” out next week, Kid Smoko has been displaying their versatility at every turn. Jumping from song to song, listeners will be able to identify a wide variety of musical styles, ranging from hip hop and indie pop to punk and various forms of electronic music, often all within the same track. PG. 12


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