SPUN: Hot Chip

By Amanda Hu

British electropop sensation Hot Chip’s latest effort, Made In The Dark, is one of the catchiest things to come out this year. It houses head-bopping, base-heavy tracks that make you want to dance practically forever, then dies down into slower, calmer pieces. Kicking it all off is “Out At The Pictures,” starting with a synthy,… Continue reading SPUN: Hot Chip

A stirring tale of romance and drowning

By Stephanie Mamayson

Lies, money, deceit, and death–it’s the perfect, albeit predictable, formula for a murder mystery. But it’s not necessarily the tale that stands out, it’s the way that the story is told. Based on the story of English serial killer George Joseph Smith, The Drowning Girls is the fifth and final offering in the Alberta Theatre… Continue reading A stirring tale of romance and drowning

Putting a human face on autism

By Jordyn Marcellus

More than anything, people are afraid of something different. Despite all the trappings of political correctness, there are too many people who find mocking the disabled–people with Down Syndrome or autism–comedy gold. Looking at the autistic spectrum through pop culture’s lens, autistic kids are excessive geniuses or completely isolated social misfits. Society has de-valued them… Continue reading Putting a human face on autism

Penny Lane loses battle to scan IDs

By Daniel Pagan

The Alberta Privacy Commissioner’s ruling hammer won out in a thunderous fight with the SecureBar ID-scanning program. Privacy Commissioner Frank Works ordered the Tantra nightclub to stop scanning patrons’ driver licences on Wed., Feb 20. Work also ordered the club to destroy all the personal information it already stored. Work explained that the Penny Lane… Continue reading Penny Lane loses battle to scan IDs

Journalist questions the U.S.’s role in Iran

By Olivia Komorowski

An American covert war is being waged in the Middle East. Foreign correspondent Reese Erlich is working to expose it. His new book, The Iran Agenda: The Real Story of U.S. Policy and the Middle East Crisis, deals with the tangled web of allies, spies and propaganda that stems from the American search of support… Continue reading Journalist questions the U.S.’s role in Iran

Federal budget ’08: Student loan changes

By Martin Lussier

After much anticipation, interest rates on national loans were addressed. The Harper government announced $123 million commitment over four years to streamline and modernize the Canada Student Loans Program beginning in 2009-10. The funds will be divided into; $23 million towards building an online application and management portal for students, $26 million to reduce the… Continue reading Federal budget ’08: Student loan changes