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The Menton Times - Volume II, No. 7

Page 1

VOLUME II, NO. 3

NOVEMBER 2022

NEWS

Student Strike Shuts Campus By Colette Yamashita Holcomb, English Section Editor As the sun rose over campus on Tuesday morning, dozens of students were already hard at work assembling a “blocus,” or blockade, using dumpsters, metal gates and wooden pallets embellished with various signage at the school gates. Organized by the campus student union and an open-access general assembly Monday, the blockade drew students across language tracks, nationalities and grades to band together, blocking campus access in alliance with national strikes on pension reform. SEE PAGE 2

NEWS

OPINION

Menton Hosts the 89th Edition of the Lemon Festival Are We Desensitized to the Environmental Crisis?

By Catarina Writer

The 89th edition of the Fête du Citron was themed rock and opera, with the mascot being John Lemon — a pun for John Lennon, the famous member of the Beatles and rock singer. The majestic lemon structures at Jardin Biovès all resemble rock and opera singers, and every Thursday during the festival, a parade stopped the city and displayed even more lemon-made structures and rock and opera music. SEE PAGE 4

By Ghazal Khalife, Guest its devastating repercusWriter sions on our survival. A common attitude towards As everyone returned from the course was that of nona long vacation looking chalance, not towards the forward to starting the new question of climate change year, students were slight- itself but rather regarding ly apprehensive about the the need to study such a 18-hour-long intensive widely explored and “recourse named “Ecological dundant” topic. As a stuLiteracy.” The school had dent who insisted on atsent an email containing tending each one of these three required readings long — at times triggering for this course, each ex- — lectures, I have noticed plaining a different angle that perhaps this course of the environmental cri- links to a greater overarchsis, whether the associated ing theme. inequalities, the economic SEE PAGE 7 challenges posed by it or

On Monday morning, February 20th, 2023, as the first students stumbled onto the premises of the campus, the seating area near the main entrance was transformed into the open-air exhibition space for the Unissued Diplomas project. The posters, pictures

and symbolic diplomas were put up there a day earlier by a group of four Ukrainian students on our campus — Elyse Demkiw, Daniel Guzman, Yevheniia Yefymova and myself, Anna Hazolyshyn. The exhibition organized on the Menton campus was only

Vita, Staff

From Feb. 11 to 26, our once-deserted “lemon town” became packed with tourists from all over the world to attend Menton’s renowned Fête du Citron. Composed of parades (called corsos) from the train station to Place St. Roch, endless lemon-themed souvenirs and even 30-euro NFTs on sale, Menton’s Lemon Festival brought over 250,000 people to the small town. To Menton’s economy and tourism, this annualfestivity is crucial.

The Campus Hosts the Exhibition for the OneYear Anniversary of the Full-Scale Invasion of Ukraine By Anna Hazolyshyn, Staff Writer

one part of a more global student-led initiative of the same name, held in 45+ universities worldwide, SEE PAGE 15


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