September 30, 2009

Transitional-program fans give U of T a failing grade

The University of Toronto has come under fire by students, community activists, and even former minister of education Zanana Akande over proposed changes to its Transitional Year Program, a specialized academic program that helps students without the usual educational credentials make the leap to university. The 38-year-old program has been particularly successful at recruiting high school dropouts,... [More >>]

September 29, 2009

Postcard from London: On climate change, new message is “Blame Canada”

Protesters demonstrating Canada's tar sands development outside the Canadian High Commission in London. Photo by Zoe Cormier. I was pretty sure I knew what the Canadian flag, held upside down, was supposed to represent. But I had to ask anyway. Last Monday afternoon, standing outside the Houses of Parliament in London in Parliament square, I held my cell phone aloft with a hundred other protesters,... [More >>]

September 29, 2009

Remembering Len Dobbin, Montreal’s most important jazz listener

Len Dobbin, the most important audience member in Montreal's jazz scene. Illustration by Aislin. In early fall of 1950, Len Dobbin stepped out of a listening booth on Rue Ste-Catherine in Montreal to find himself confronted by five New York jazz enthusiasts seeking potential founders for a satellite jazz appreciation society. Only 15 years old at the time, Dobbin had never met enough fans to think... [More >>]

September 28, 2009

How the University of Manitoba revolutionized HIV care in Nairobi

John Mathenke, a Nairobi sex worker, was diagnosed with HIV in early July. He is working with the Sex Workers' Outreach Program to educate other sex workers about HIV prevention. Photo by Siena Anstis. Blended into the colourful storefronts of Nairobi’s River Road area is the Sex Workers Outreach Program (SWOP), a discreet but accessible clinic offering HIV and STD testing and treatment to the... [More >>]

September 24, 2009

Why the CRTC must stand for net neutrality

A map of internet traffic produced by the Opte Project. Licensed under Creative Commons. For seven days in July, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission met in Gatineau, Quebec, to deliberate on the future of the Canadian internet. Until this summer, the CRTC took an essentially laissez-faire approach to the web: it was too new and too poorly understood to start carving out... [More >>]

September 23, 2009

Canadian independent video-game designers score big internationally

Gameplay in Critter Crunch for the Playstation 3. Image courtesy Capybara Games. On May 5, 2006, 35 Toronto area video-game developers converged in one spot with a particular goal in mind: to create an entire game, start to finish, in just three days. It was a daunting task, but in the end 10 completed games were assembled, while seven others came just short of the deadline. The Toronto Game Jam—or... [More >>]

September 22, 2009

Saskatchewan stems population crash with $20,000 payments to recent grads

Can $20,000 payments to recent grads prevent Saskatchewan from becoming the "Land of the Living Old"? It hasn’t been easy being Alberta’s neighbour these last few years. While Canada’s economic wunderkind enjoyed double-digit growth, next-door Saskatchewan saw the near-disappearance of the family farm and watched 35,000 residents in five years flee to other provinces. So when the Conservative... [More >>]

September 21, 2009

Terrance Houle reclaims the Hollywood Indian

Terrance Houle. Photo by Jarusha Brown. In a small bright room in downtown Toronto, a young Aboriginal woman is auditioning for a role she never expected to play. “I’d like to read the part of Billy Jack,” she says. With script in hand, the woman narrows her eyes and begins to read: “It’s my medicine bag. Got some owls feathers, sacred corn, snake teeth …”... [More >>]

September 18, 2009

Canada’s an urban nation. Why is our literature still down on the farm?

CanLit has the literary equivalent of the Y2K bug—it can’t flip over into this century Most Canadians live in cities. Why is our literature so relentlessly rural? Illustration by Graham Roumieu. When he delivers public lectures, editor and writer John Metcalf is fond of illustrating CanLit’s paradoxical obsession with tales of the rural past by describing the query letter he once received... [More >>]

September 17, 2009

Solidarity forever. Or until the litterbox is full.

In which the author finds his lefty credentials sorely tested by one malodorous cat Solidarity forever. Or until the litterbox is full. Illustration by David Donald. It’s hard enough to be a socially progressive, left-leaning, anti-globalization, conscientious sort in this world, but to be a socially progressive, left-leaning, anti-globalization, conscientious sort and be mildly inconvenienced? It’s... [More >>]

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