News
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News
Bursting Pipes on Loyola Campus
The extreme cold temperatures led to the freezing and bursting of the sprinkler system pipes in the SP Building Monday Feb. 15.
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News
Montreal City Employees Take Apart Homeless Camp
Montreal “blue collar workers” dismantled a makeshift camp outside of the Champ-de-Mars metro station on Feb. 4, displacing five homeless people and disposing of many of their belongings, including blankets and sleeping bags.
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The Cost of an Unsafe Event
Controversial YouTube blogger and sexual education activist Laci Green was paid $16,000 for speaking at a student-organized event at Concordia University last semester.
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Concordia Students Organize Panel on Pipeline Resistance
The panel called, “No Pipelines: What’s Next?” took place on the seventh floor of Concordia’s Hall building on Tuesday.
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Annual March for Missing and Murdered Women in Montreal to Take Place on Valentine’s Day
“It’s for all women,” emphasized Chantel Henderson, an organizer of this year’s seventh Annual Montreal Memorial March to Honour the Lives of Missing and Murdered Women.
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Concordia’s CFO Gets $235,000 Severance After 3 Months in Office
The severance package is stipulated in Trudel’s contract as being a year’s salary, according to documents obtained by The Link in an access to information request.
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Jamaican Association of Montreal Helping Local Community
The Jamaica Association of Montreal is a community organization where Jamaica’s culture and food were celebrated and offers social services for the community.
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Concordia Students Help Out Historic Business in McGill Ghetto
Concordia business and engineering students have begun a six-week initiative to aid one of Montreal’s oldest not-for-profit organizations, The Yellow Door.
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Anti-Consumerism Week Coming to Concordia
The Concordia Student Union is hosting Anti-Consumerism Week starting Feb. 15.
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International Students Could Face Hikes
Quebec’s education ministry has yet to release its university budget model for next year, but the province is considering slashing subsidies again and allowing universities to raise international tuition by 25 per cent to recoup the losses.