The McGill Tribune TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2018 | VOL. 38 | ISSUE 7
Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University
McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE
EDITORIAL
FEATURE
SPORTS
McGill should blaze a trail in the legal-cannabis era
Beyond the answer sheet
How we fell in love with our favourite teams
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PGs. 8-9
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(Dan Aponte / The McGill Tribune)
Café suspendu: a hidden gem on Mont Royal
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Home is where the hoco isn’t Hannibal de Pencier Columnist McGill homecoming has come and gone, unappreciated and hardly attended. Many students lament this apparent lack of pride and the absence of support for athletics at McGill, while most are simply
apathetic. But, university homecomings are not really about pride in athletics: They’re about partying. When McGill students decry our lack of school spirit, they’re usually referring to the absence of a Queen’s-style street party or mass hysterics in a sea of red. Perhaps such manifestations of pride aren’t something we should really be aspiring to. Rather than representing a unified
Sad girls and soft boys convene and cry
Celebrating LGBTQ+ History Month at McGill
Throughout October, the Institute for Gender, Sexuality, and Feminism (IGSF) has organized a diverse spread of events, featuring famous LGBTQ+ speakers, professors, and authors, as part of McGill’s
inaugural LGBTQ+ History Month. This achievement has initiated a conversation about LGBTQ+ culture and knowledge on campus, and the events have highlighted the achievements of the LGBTQ+ community. In celebration of this initiative, The McGill Tribune reflects on LGBTQ+ McGillians who have
and Science Games, to name a few. To our credit, McGill doesn’t conflate its parties with its identity in the same way some other schools seem to. McGill’s lack of uniform pride is a symptom of its cultural diversity. Queen’s and Western follow the American model of school pride, synonymous with fraternities and game-day tailgates. PG. 6
Mitski devastates at Club Soda
LGBTQ+ McGillians making a difference Anna Sixsmith Contributor
student culture, outbursts of ‘school pride’ at other schools’ homecomings are more indicative of an overly homogenized campus. If you go to a university like Queen’s or Western, conformity to the party mob is an inescapable requisite to participation in campus life. For massdebauchery enthusiasts, McGill is well covered with Carnival, Faculty Olympics,
Ariella Garmaise Managing Editor
made history on campus and beyond. Will Aitken Originally from the United States, Will Aitken is one of Canada’s most celebrated openly-gay film critics as well as a highly-regarded novelist and journalist. PG. 10
On Oct. 21, Mitski— or, as the marquee would have it, Mitsik—performed for a sold-out crowd at Club Soda. As anyone with a name too long or foreign to pronounce can attest, the switch of the ‘i’ and ‘k’ stings more than most typos. You can tour with Lorde and have an 8.8 on Pitchfork and
sell out a North American tour, and they’ll still spell your name wrong. Fittingly, albeit coincidentally, Mitski opened with “Remember my Name.” With the release of her most recent album, Mitski has achieved peak indie darling status. She is teetering on the brink of mainstream stardom, at a strange inflection point in her career. Her latest album,
Be the Cowboy, released on Aug. 17, is sonically reflective of this transition: With hits like “Why Didn’t You Stop Me,” “Lonesome Love,” and “Nobody,” Mitski takes her insightful and emo lyrics, as popularized on Puberty 2 and Bury Me at Makeout Creek, and sets them to pop melodies. The result is a sense of loneliness you can dance to. PG. 12