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Sports

JT coming: The return of Jayson Tatum

Jayson Tatum returned from injury to the Boston Celtics after 298 days out with a torn Achilles tendon, which required reconstructive surgery. As impressive as it is that Tatum—someone who is 6’8” and 210 pounds—was able to return in under a year, what is more impressive is that the Celtics managed to remain one of the best teams in the National Basketball Association (NBA) despite his absence. 

The Celtics always had talent with their trio of Jaylen Brown, Derrick White, and Payton Pritchard leading the way, but second place in the Eastern Conference is exceeding expectations nonetheless. People on social media point to Brown as the driver of Boston’s success and label him as an MVP candidate, but this represents a fundamental misunderstanding of what makes the Celtics so good. Brown is having a career-best season, but he is far from being an MVP—if anyone was the team’s most valuable member, it would be Head Coach Joe Mazzulla

In the Celtics’ previous two seasons, which included an NBA Championship run in 2024, Mazzulla’s team shot an absurdly high number of three-pointers each game. Boston averaged 48.23 attempts per game from behind the arc in the 2024-25 season, a full three attempts more than the next most in NBA history. By stretching the defence through the threat of shooting, Boston’s players could attack in isolation without other players being able to help defensively for fear of giving up a three. With the losses of Tatum and Kristaps Porzingis, the team went into this season with less shooting and athleticism, so they took a different approach.

With Tatum sidelined, Payton Pritchard stepped into a bigger role and has excelled at pretty much everything Boston hangs their hat on. Boston has become a pick-and-roll-heavy team this season, running the action at the third-highest frequency in the NBA and generating 0.93 points per possession out of the pick-and-roll, also good for third in the league. Where Boston has the ultimate advantage is their league-lowest turnover frequency. Limiting turnovers has been a major reason why Boston has been so good this year, and that starts with Pritchard. The Celtics have also placed an emphasis on generating steals, deflections, and offensive rebounds  to gain more possessions than opponents and attack a defence that is in scramble mode. 

While Pritchard and Brown have helped to fill the void that Tatum left on offence, Derrick White serves as the team’s ultimate connective piece. Despite his shooting struggles this season, White has been one of the most impactful guards. He could score five points in a game and still remain his team’s most valuable player because he impacts the game in so many different ways: By playing great defence, generating extra possessions, and consistently making the correct reads offensively. Another driver of Boston’s success has been the emergence of Neemias Queta. Boston lost all three of their rotation ‘big men’ in the off-season, something that felt like it would be their Achilles’ heel. Queta has emerged as a starting-calibre ‘big’ and that has been good enough to keep the Celtics afloat.

With Tatum back, a great coach, and the help of players like Pritchard, White, and Brown, the Celtics look poised to make a deep playoff run. In what should have been a gap year for Boston, they have positioned themselves as one of the Eastern Conference favourites. Their unexpected success is a testament to the organizational excellence that Boston has exemplified for decades, from the front office to the coaching staff to the entire roster.

Out on the Town, Student Life

Feeling lucky? The best St. Patrick’s Day bar crawl in Montreal

Montreal is about to turn green for St. Patrick’s Day celebrations, kicking off on Tuesday, March 17. The city will come alive with music, raised pints, and celebrations—the perfect occasion for McGill students to blow off steam at the time-honoured Irish pubs serving up an exciting line-up of festivities. Eat some Lucky Charms, throw on all the green garb you have, and follow this guide to make the most of St. Patrick’s Day in Montreal. 

McKibbins Irish Pub – Rue Bishop Location

McKibbins Irish Pub is a slice of Ireland right in the heart of Montreal. While the location on St. Laurent is a popular watering hole for McGillians, head down to their location on 1426 Rue Bishop to kick off your celebrations. On St. Patty’s, the pub will feature live music from musicians Jono Trio and Tebo and the Mercenaries starting at 12:00 p.m. 

Hurley’s Irish Pub

After McKibbins, continue on to Hurleys Irish Pub. A Montreal landmark since 1993, Hurleys is located at 1225 Rue Crescent and hosts live music every night. Rest assured that its St. Patrick’s Day celebration is not one to miss! Hurleys serves 19 beers on tap, not to mention a long list of Irish whiskeys that are sure to warm you up inside and out to combat Montreal’s mid-March chilly weather. If whiskey isn’t your drink of choice, keep it simple with an excellent pour of Guinness, highly rated by one of Guinness’ Master Brewers

McLeans Pub

For traditional Irish music and celebrations, McLeans Pub on 1210 Rue Peel will host Belfast Andi and Patrick Hutchinson on March 17. For the 34th year in a row, they will host The Riley Band on March 23, the day of Montreal’s St. Patrick’s Day parade. McLeans is known for its wide selection of imported and domestic beers, complete with a cozy atmosphere, pool, and foosball tables upstairs. Kick back, relax, and enjoy the atmosphere of this iconic Montreal destination on one of its most iconic days of the year.  

Maison Publique McLeans

Next door to McLeans Pub, Maison Publique McLeans, located at 1420 Peel, offers a similar energy in a more intimate setting. Housed within a historic Montreal establishment, the bar blends traditional Irish charm with a lively atmosphere, friendly staff, and plenty of TVs for sports fans. From March 17 to 22, Maison Publique McLeans will host comedy nights, live music, DJs, and weekend brunch featuring traditional Irish music. 

Peel Pub

Despite closing its doors eight months ago after 63 years of business, Peel Pub, located at 1196 Rue Peel, is set to re-open on St. Patrick’s Day. This legendary spot, believed by many to be the oldest pub in town, is a long-standing Montreal institution patronized by locals and tourists alike. The pub’s new ownership has been working hard to set the place up for Montreal’s seminal celebration, renovating the space with 24 draft-beer lines, including six Quebecois craft beers. Don’t miss the chance to ring in a new era of The Peel Pub this upcoming Tuesday, March 17! 

Ye Olde Orchard Pub & Grill 

Ye Olde Orchard Pub & Grill, located at 1189 Rue de la Montagne, will serve up a special menu during the month of March for St. Patrick’s Day, mixing Montreal classics with Irish flair. Head to Ye Olde as the final stop on your St. Patrick’s Day Crawl for a delicious feast. To start, order the Paddy’s Poutine or the Irish Nachos, then tuck into the Bangers n’ Mash with Guinness gravy, or the corned beef sandwich with fries. The Tribune recommends washing down your meal with the Irish Maid cocktail, complete with Jameson Whiskey, Lemon Juice, Elderflower Syrup, and Cucumber Syrup. If you’re still not ready to finish off the night, order a round of Dublin Drops with your friends for the ultimate St. Patrick’s Day challenge: A drop-shot of Jameson and Bailey’s into half a pint of Guinness—but work quickly, as the drink will curdle if left unfinished for more than a minute. 

Features

The thrift solution

Thrifting emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a response to industrialization and urbanization. Today, many characterize it as one of the easiest counterweights to overconsumption. Long before sustainable fashion became a buzz phrase, secondhand stores and donation networks formed a parallel clothing economy—part necessity, part community infrastructure, and part subculture. 

Now, thrifting offers a simple moral equation, a choice individuals can make without waiting for policy change or corporate reform: //Buy used instead of new, and keep clothing in circulation longer.// 

The concept aligns with how circular fashion is often described—by keeping clothes on the rack through practices like resale, repair, and reuse, fewer resources are wasted making brand-new replacement items. In that sense, thrifting becomes a genuine harm-reduction strategy as it diverts clothing from landfills and can reduce demand for new production. Yet, in recent years, the belief that thrifting alone can resolve the harms of fast fashion has grown far more complicated

WHEN CIRCULARITY HITS THE WALL

Fashion production accounts for 10 per cent of total global carbon emissions—roughly equivalent to the emissions of the European Union—and around 85 per cent of textiles end up in landfills each year. Thrifting, then, appears to offer a plausible solution. In practice, however, thrift shops receive more donations than they can sell through traditional or secondhand retail avenues, pushing large volumes of clothing into secondary channels beyond standard resale. Discussion surrounding circular fashion often emphasizes consumer behaviour while overlooking the fashion industry’s routine overproduction and disposal of unsold stock. 

A 2025 study by Loughborough University challenged the economic logic behind many circular business models, arguing they tend to generate lower profit margins compared to selling new garments—meaning that if circular models actually reduce new production, fashion revenues would shrink. And if they merely operate alongside continued production, the environmental gains are likely to be negligible. The study further argues that a shift toward lower-margin circular models could lead to more precarious employment in second-hand clothing sorting and recycling, due to stagnant wages and worsening working conditions. Even at its most efficient, circularity cannot fully counter a production model built on excess—nor can it unsettle the society’s pressure to constantly consume.

Thrift shopping can meaningfully reduce harm compared to buying new—but it does not, on its own, undo an overconsumption mindset, nor does it erase the barriers that shape who can shop sustainably. The question then isn’t whether thrifting is ‘good’ or ‘bad,’ but when it functions as a genuine alternative to new consumption—and when it becomes a greener-looking version of the same cycle. 

MONTREAL’S THRIFT ECONOMY

Montreal’s wide secondhand landscape reflects a similar dynamic. On one end are donation-based chains that still function, for many shoppers, as a baseline source of clothing: Predictable locations, broad inventory turnover, and the expectation of lower prices. On the other end are curated vintage and resale shops, where stock is handpicked, trends are named and merchandised, and secondhand is sold not as a cheaper alternative, but as a cultivated aesthetic. In a city where personal style is part of everyday identity, especially among students, thrifting has become both a practice and a performance: A way to stretch budgets, signal values, and participate in a distinctly //Montreal// fashion culture.  

Students and organizers working within the thrifting ecosystem describe sustainability as something that is both widely embraced and unevenly lived. In an interview with //The Tribune//, Selena Menez Nielsen, U2 Arts and director of communications of P[h]assion McGill—a student-led nonprofit that organizes fashion-based fundraisers for AIDS Community Care Montreal—highlighted the different opinions shaping the thrifting discourse.

Nielsen shared that she has seen strong interest in thrifting and secondhand shopping—an enthusiasm she read as part of a broader shift in awareness around sustainability among students. However, she also cautioned that it can be vulnerable to the same dynamics that drive mainstream fashion, such as trend cycles, social validation, and volume. 

“Within the thrift pop-up, I think a lot of people were receptive to the idea that […] we were promoting sustainability through [thrifting],” said Nielsen. “And a lot of people, especially right now, are really receptive to thrifting, and also like purchasing second-hand clothing.”

The interest in shopping second-hand, she said, does not automatically mean people are consuming less. Nielsen described an online environment in which thrifting is celebrated even as people keep buying in high volume. 

“It’s more so the consumption aspect,” Nielsen said. “If you’re buying copious amounts of garments, even if [they’re] thrifted, it kind of defeats the purpose of thrifting.”

In Montreal, those questions not only show up in shopping habits but also in cost. Alina Lu, a U4 management student and co-president of P[h]assion McGill, said that she has noticed the prices of second-hand clothing rising. 

“It’s almost like a vicious cycle where people now see thrifting as a trend,” Lu said. “Then they’ll go to thrift stores, and then thrift stores see this as an opportunity to drive their prices up. I definitely think there is a bit of privilege in curated thrifting and being able to thrift as a choice and not as a need.”

At the same time, Lu cautioned against gatekeeping secondhand shopping and sustainability, arguing that the issue is not who thrifts, but how people participate in the practice and shape the market around it. 

“There shouldn’t be a limit or a restriction on who gets to thrift. I think that’s also wrong,” Lu said. “When people are buying bins or reselling at exorbitant prices online, that I think is deserved criticism. But, if we’re criticizing and limiting who gets to thrift, that’s not helping the cause at all.”

IS PROFIT THE POINT?

As curated vintage shops multiply and online reselling becomes more visible, thrifting is no longer just framed as a sustainable practice, but also as a market. For some shoppers, that shift has turned secondhand into an ethical debate: If the clothing was donated, what counts as fair pricing and who is entitled to make money from it?

In an interview with //The Tribune//, Emile Nault, a manager at ThriftStop, said that criticism often targets resellers and scalpers specifically—people who buy secondhand items and list them again at higher prices. But Nault rejected the idea that reselling is inherently unethical, arguing that this practice can keep more items in circulation than would otherwise be possible. 

“Some people think it’s unethical for some people to make money through [reselling], because they think that they steal the clothing and [resell] for more money,” Nault said. “But I think that, in fact, they are just saving more pieces of clothing than what was possible [….] The more people there are to give a second life to any type of goods, the more beneficial it is to the planet.”

Laurette Dubé, Professor Emerita in the Desautels Department of Marketing, made a similar argument, pushing back against what she described as a reflexive moral hierarchy between commercial and non-commercial models. Dubé called the idea that “making money is wrong” a long-standing myth, and argued that revenue alone does not determine whether a secondhand outlet is ethical or harmful. For Dubé, the ethical question is less about whether there is monetary profit and more about what access a store creates—who it serves, what rate it prices at, and how it fits into the surrounding community. 

“Look at what [the stores] do,” she said in an interview with //The Tribune//. “[Look at] the type of clothes [and] the pricing they have. You can also look at their embedding within their neighbourhood and their community. That’s where I think you can have differentiating criteria that are relevant, […] because the NGO […] also needs resources.” 

Dubé also emphasized that the relationship between fast fashion and thrifting should be understood as part of the same lifecycle. She described an “ecosystem” of clothing, where the more garments are produced, the more important it becomes to reuse before disposing of them. In this ecosystem, reuse is materially better than treating clothing as disposable inventory. 

“This ecosystem perspective is possibly something that is not understood and thought through enough,” Dubé said. “Fast fashion and thrift stores, for me, should go together in some way. The more you produce, the more you want to reuse before [disposing].”

THE ACCESS GAP

Even when secondhand options exist, the shopping process itself can be a barrier. In-store thrifting is often built around browsing, physical sorting, and trying items on—steps that can be difficult for people with limited mobility or other access needs. 

Danika Zandboer, a Concordia Master’s student in Studio Arts, said the practical realities of thrifting actively shape her experience and how much she buys. 

“Functionally, it’s hard [to overconsume] because there’s a bit more of a digging component to finding stuff,” Zandboer said. “So, at least for me, I feel more intentional [when thrifting].”  

Zandboer also pointed to the physical demands that are built into the same process that makes shopping intentional. 

“Thrifting requires, generally speaking, more of a physical presence in this space to try things on,” she said. “Although that’s not necessarily true, because there are [places] where you can buy things online. But since [the items] are one of a kind, and there’s less regulation about listings, it maybe does make it a bit harder.”

An Aalborg University study on secondhand consumption suggests that barriers aren’t only about willingness; they are often practical, embodied, and unevenly distributed. A later study on secondhand purchasing across product categories found that consumers describe distinct barriers that shape whether they buy secondhand at all, including concerns about trust, hygiene perceptions, and the transaction process. For people living with disabilities, the act of acquiring clothing itself can create barriers to everyday participation and daily life. 

For other shoppers, the barrier is not only about physical limitations or transportation, but the way secondhand spaces interact with mental health. In an interview with //The Tribune//, Hanbyeol Kim, U3 Arts, described contamination fears linked to Obsessive Compulsive Disorder that can make thrifting difficult and escalate anxiety—even when shopping secondhand aligns with her values. 

“Sometimes, if I’m in a thrift store, all of a sudden I start thinking, ‘Oh my God, who were the people that had these clothes, [did they] wash them properly? And then I get really stressed out and [need to] leave,” they said. “If I’m seeing a few things like stains that don’t just look like paint, I think, ‘You know what, I’d rather just buy something brand new from a store.’” 

For Kim, the sustainable choice isn’t a simple moral decision—it can be shaped by stress responses and accessibility needs that don’t disappear in a thrift aisle. Taken alongside time, mobility, and pricing barriers, her experience highlights that buying secondhand is not equally accessible for everyone. 

NOT A CURE BUT A PRACTICE

Ultimately, thrifting isn’t a cure-all, and it cannot bear the full weight of fast fashion and habitual overconsumption. But it still remains one of the most materially meaningful interventions available at the consumer level, reducing harm in a system that depends on replacement—even when it’s not equally available to everyone. 

Montreal has already built a fashion identity around discovery, reinvention, and secondhand fashion statements. If thrifting is going to last beyond trend cycles, it has to move from novelty to routine—with fewer purchases overall, not just different ones. And this shift starts with ordinary questions: Why am I buying this? How long will I wear it? What am I replacing—or am I just adding? Thrifting matters most when it becomes a default starting point for consuming less, wearing clothes longer, and recognizing when you already have enough. Secondhand alone cannot solve the problem that follows us into every aisle: //more//

Sports

Fasting at full speed: The extraordinary challenge of Ramadan for Muslim athletes

Picture this: You wake at 4:30 a.m. to eat a pre-dawn meal, knowing it’s your last chance to eat or drink until sunset. By evening, you will have run 10 kilometres or competed in front of millions of spectators, all without a single sip of water or morsel of food. For Muslim athletes observing Ramadan, this is reality for an entire month.

Ramadan, the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar, requires Muslims to fast from sunrise to sunset as one of the Five Pillars of Islam. No food. No water. No exceptions during daylight hours. For athletes, this creates an extraordinary challenge where they must compete at elite levels while deprived of basic sustenance. Research on Algerian soccer players, for example, found significant declines in speed and endurance while fasting, with 70 per cent of athletes reporting that their performance suffered. Yet worldwide, Muslim athletes continue competing at the highest levels while maintaining their observance.

The Premier League showcased this during the 2025-26 season, with 55 Muslim players across its 20 clubs navigating Ramadan while fighting for titles. Liverpool FC’s Mohamed Salah habitually observes his fast even as his team chases Premier League titles. This year, Salah and his teammates are set to compete in the high-stakes Round of 16 in the Champions League against Galatasaray S.K. on March 10, where he will once again likely have to break his fast on the side of the field. Analysts consistently acknowledge potential dips in form during crucial matches, highlighting that competitive calendars do not pause for faith.

In the National Basketball Association (NBA), Kyrie Irving became the most visible advocate for Muslim athletes during Ramadan. After disclosing his conversion to Islam, Irving scored 34 points in a 2022 playoff victory against the Cleveland Cavaliers while fasting, later explaining how he felt connected to millions of Muslims worldwide observing alongside him.

The challenges extend beyond physical deprivation. Fasting disrupts sleep patterns, as athletes wake before dawn for suhoor and stay up after sunset for iftar and prayers. The body shifts from glucose to fat utilization after 12 to 16 hours without food. Dehydration becomes critical for sports requiring constant movement. Yet athletes from Lamine Yamal at FC Barcelona to Jaylen Brown with the Boston Celtics continue competing at elite levels.

Some sports organizations have implemented accommodations. Since 2021, the Premier League allows referees to pause matches briefly around sunset, enabling fasting players to break their fast with dates and water. Manchester United hosted its second historic Ramadan iftar celebration at Old Trafford in February 2026. Clubs like LA Galaxy in Major League Soccer (MLS) have detailed how they provide tailored nutrition plans emphasizing high-fibre carbohydrates and lean proteins at sunrise to maximize energy throughout the day, with glycogen-replenishing meals at sunset to aid in recovery. Alongside this nutrition work, many clubs adjust training schedules to evenings, and work with sports scientists to optimize their players’ performance whilst observing Ramadan.

However, approaches vary dramatically. While the Premier League embraces accommodation, France’s Football Federation banned official pauses for breaking fasts in the name of neutrality, forcing players like Achraf Hakimi to wait until halftime. Even where protocols exist, acceptance isn’t guaranteed. During Leeds United’s match against Manchester City on Feb. 28, audible boos erupted when play paused for Muslim players to break their fast. Despite messages on stadium screens explaining the stoppage, Pep Guardiola and anti-discrimination group Kick It Out made sure to condemn the fans’ callous disrespect. This patchwork approach highlights the need for universal standards respecting religious observance while maintaining competitive integrity. 

Sports bodies ought to formalize and universalize their support systems, provide education for coaches and teammates, and recognize that accommodation is not special treatment—it is equality. Muslim athletes should not have to choose between their faith and their profession, especially amongst the additional struggles that come with their careers or religious alignments. 

As Jaylen Brown noted: “Ramadan is something special. It’s something that’s saved my life in a lot of ways [.…] Some things are bigger than basketball.” 

The extraordinary commitment of athletes who fast while competing demands strong institutional support. It is simply the bottom line for allowing athletes of all ages, shapes, sizes, and crafts to honour both their faith and career without compromise.

News

Panel examines Islamophobia and ICE enforcement

On Feb. 24, the Teaching Palestine: Pedagogical Praxis and the Indivisibility of Justice initiative held an online open classroom on Islamophobia to examine historical and contemporary forms of anti-Muslim racism, immigration enforcement, and political repression. The event, titled “Enemy Alien/ICE, Racism & Empire,” was the first session of their Ramadaniyat series

The panel was moderated by Rabab Abdulhadi, director of the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Studies program at San Francisco State University (SFSU). She opened the event with a moment of silence honouring the victims of global conflicts, including Israel’s ongoing genocide in Palestine. 

Abdulhadi said the series was launched after the cancellation of the only class on Islamophobia at SFSU, which raised concerns about academic freedom. 

“We felt it was necessary to continue this conversation publicly,” Abdulhadi explained. 

She also emphasized that the discussion is particularly crucial in the context of the Trump administration’s use of the Enemy Alien Act to ‘divide and conquer’ immigrant populations.

Throughout the discussion, panellists described Islamophobia as part of a long-standing pattern of racialized state power. Hatem Bazian, lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley, described Islamophobia as a persistent form of racism directed at Muslims. He argued that while the issue is widely recognized, institutions and policymakers often only engage with it symbolically.

“Data shows continued high levels of Islamophobic sentiment,” Bazian said. “Absence or only symbolic engagement with addressing Islamophobia limits Muslim, Arab, and Palestinian freedom to participate and speak up in civil society.”

The event’s title references the legal concept of the enemy alien used by the United States during World War II to justify the internment of Japanese Americans. Abdulhadi said similar legal frameworks and rhetoric have re-emerged in contemporary immigration enforcement, particularly through U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations targeting immigrants and international students.

Panellists then discussed several individual cases to illustrate these dynamics.

Amal Thabateh, a staff attorney with the legal advocacy organization Creating Law Enforcement Accountability and Responsibility (CLEAR), discussed the case of Leqaa Kordia, a 33-year-old Palestinian woman currently held in ICE detention in Texas. According to Thabateh, Kordia was arrested during a pro-Palestine protest in 2024. Although the charges were dropped, she was detained by immigration authorities in 2025 while pursuing a green card.

Thabateh said immigration judges have twice ordered Kordia released on bond, but government appeals have kept her detained.

“It is no secret that Leqaa is being targeted and continues to be confined because of her advocacy for Palestine and because she is Palestinian,” Thabateh said. “She is experiencing her second Ramadan in detention [….] It’s really inhumane, the conditions she’s endured.”

Palestinian author and journalist Laila El-Haddad explained that Kordia’s case shows how intersecting identities can increase vulnerability within immigration systems.

“She is quadruply vulnerable,” El-Haddad said. “She is Muslim, she is a woman, she is Palestinian, and she has a precarious legal status. All of those characteristics have been weaponized.”

Another panellist, Momodou Taal, a doctoral student at Cornell University, described his experience with disciplinary action and immigration scrutiny following pro-Palestine activism on campus. Taal said he was suspended after participating in protests calling for university divestment from companies linked to Israel. 

In March 2025, Taal’s legal advisors warned he could become a target of immigration enforcement, and he chose to self-deport from the United States.

After returning to the United Kingdom, where he holds citizenship, Taal said he was detained by counter-terrorism police under Schedule 7 of the UK Terrorism Act, which allows authorities to question individuals at the border without suspicion.

During the six-hour interrogation, he said officers asked questions about his views on Palestine and his religious identity.

For the panellists, cases like Kordia’s and Taal’s illuminate broader patterns linking Islamophobia, national security, and political repression.

“The crises we’re facing with Islamophobia are part of a long history of empire, colonialism, capitalism and racism,” Bazian said.

Speakers encouraged participants to follow cases like Kordia’s and raise awareness about immigration detention and surveillance targeting Muslim and pro-Palestinian communities.

“Say her name,” Thabateh urged attendees. “Spread the word. Too many people still don’t know about her case.”

Science & Technology

GameDev McGill: From inspiration to invention

Have you ever wondered what it takes to make a video game? The Game Development Student Society (GameDev) at McGill sets out to answer this question. Whether you dream of designing the next Super Mario, or you are simply interested in what actually happens in the digital universe, GameDev turns your curiosity into creation.

Kelly Lio, U3 Engineering and Vice President External of GameDev McGill, explained in an interview with The Tribune that the club hosts monthly social events where members come together and exchange ideas.

“People come and show their games and whatever they’ve worked on. It’s very fun, and we always have pizza for everyone,” Lio said. “A lot of the time, some people I know have been like, ‘I’m trying to make this game a reality, but I don’t know how to do art, or I don’t know how to code’ […] [and] they find other people in the club and collaborate.”

Lio then emphasized GameDev’s inclusive environment, particularly through its collaboration and mentorship.

“[The club] can bring a sense of community as well,  and we never discriminate against those who don’t know [or] are less experienced,” she said. “Having a club or a community can help, [allowing] those who are more experienced to share their knowledge.”

Lio also explained that sponsorships provide most of GameDev’s funding.

“We basically don’t use money from the school,” Lio said. “This year we have around ten companies, including Ubisoft and Behaviour [Interactive] [as sponsors] [….] In exchange, they have places for promotions, prizes, and involvement in our club.”

President Hussein Serageldin, U3 Arts, highlighted some of the club’s other achievements in an interview with The Tribune.

“We do a bunch of […] workshops and talks, social events, demo nights, and studios. We’re trying to be as active as possible, so a few events a week,” Serageldin said. “There are two games that came from out of the club that have done tremendously well. One of them is called Starvaders. You can find it online, there’s a bunch of people who made YouTube videos about it. There was another one called ANEURISM IV [….] It has over 100,000 sales publicly.”

Other notable games created by members of the club include Feline Fortress, Nebula’s Descent, and Sleep Herd. While managing a club of 400 members may be a challenge to many McGillians, Serageldin enjoys working with a group of students deeply passionate about game-making.

“Having to worry about the club falling apart at any point, but also trying to elevate it as much as possible, can be stressful,” Serageldin said. “This year we had a recruitment season. We got over 190 new members [….] I’m not a very lenient president. We’re very intense. But everybody does so amazing and really wants to do good for the club, and so everything runs smoothly.”

Every year, GameDev McGill hosts McGameJam—Quebec’s largest games hackathon. McGameJam 2026 took place from Jan. 30 to Feb. 1, during which around 400 participants were given 48 hours to develop a game. Lio, who won this year’s McGameJam, shared that attending such events is a great way to network and discover postgraduate pathways.

“[McGameJam] is the biggest event we host, and we [even] have a dedicated executive for it,” Lio said. “A lot of our members, or at least the alumni, have a lot of experience in the industry, so it’s a very good way to break into [the industry] [….] The sponsors are especially important because they come directly to us during GameJam. We host a career fair, they are […] right there, and you can connect with them.”

Lio reaffirmed that community is the most important aspect at GameDev McGill.

“It’s a club that aims to help students be in a community where they can focus on making games, whether it’s as an artist, a programmer, sound designer, or just a level designer,” Lio said. “That’s the main goal at GameDev McGill.”

Interested students should note that GameDev McGill is currently recruiting executives for the 2026-2027 school year. The deadline to apply is March 15.

Album Reviews, Art, Arts & Entertainment, Books

What we liked this winter break

Shrinking – Loriane Chagnon, Staff Writer

Shrinking returned to Apple TV+ for its third season, delivering a well-needed dopamine surge after midterms. Created by Bill Lawrence, Brett Goldstein, and Jason Segel, the show follows the life of grieving therapist Jimmy, who begins breaking the ethical guidelines of his trade by telling his clients exactly what he thinks. The show’s supporting cast is incredible and makes it worth returning to every season. Harrison Ford shines in what I consider the best role of his career as the cynical senior therapist Paul, who has Parkinson’s disease.

The show balances humour with rawness and honesty whilst exploring deep themes and navigating the personal growth of every character. This season explores parenthood, aging, loneliness, and learning how to love again after surviving a tragedy. Interestingly, for this season, Shrinking has also cast Michael J. Fox, who famously played Marty McFly in Back to the Future, as Gerry, a patient with Parkinson’s disease. This marks the inspiring return of the actor who retired due to his Parkinson’s diagnosis. Fox’s dynamic with Ford is funny and effortless, revealing the skill of two of Hollywood’s biggest movie stars.

If you need a show to make you smile, cry, laugh, or feel hopeful again—look no further—Shrinking delivers exactly what you have been craving. 

Blue Sisters by Coco Mellors – Alexandra Lasser

Brutal fights, long silences, devastating losses, and stubborn distances will never undo love formed through a shared childhood. Coco Mellors’s second book, Blue Sisters, explores the sacred and unbreakable bond between sisters. The story follows three of the Blue sisters as they spiral and recover from the loss of the fourth. 

Mellors introduces each sister as a stereotype: The responsible lawyer, Avery; the reckless partier, Lucky; the tough boxer, Bonnie; and the unassuming teacher, Nicky, whose death rocked them all. However, with each page, these seemingly solid identities crumble, revealing the humbling truth that they are all lost, in pain, and desperately in need of emotional support. Avery, for instance, is only responsible so long as someone else is in crisis, but who is she when she is the one in shambles? Nicky’s unexpected death exposed the fallacy of their constructed identities most of all, in that her outwardly conventional life was a coping mechanism for severe endometriosis and an addiction to painkillers.

Though some themes are perhaps slightly overdone—the put-upon, responsible eldest and the plight of the beautiful—Blue Sisters delivers an emotionally rewarding tale with lifelike and sympathetic characters. The ending doesn’t bring a shiny resolution to all that life has thrown at the Blue family, but it provides closure as each sister decides to pursue happiness and stability. 

The Vanishing Cherry Blossom Bookshop by Takuya Asakura and translated by Yuka Maeno – Bianca Sugunasiri 

The companionship of the soft pages of a book never seems quite so compelling as when one is in a time of need. When sorrow or worry overwhelm us, we seek comfort in what is steady and familiar. For many, that comfort lies in the pleasant voice of a story. Takuya Asakura’s voice paints a space between the real and imagined that whimsically emulates the experience of seeking comfort from a book within periods of waywardness. 

The Cherry Blossom bookshop is a mysterious entity—a melange of coffee shop and bookstore—complete with a charming young waitress, Sakura and her deific cat, Kobako. Appearing only to those facing hardship, the bookshop toes the line between a world of logic and the universe beyond. Once inside the bookshop, you are invited backwards into your past, offered memories that defy explanation, and given the clarity to continue intentionally forward. 

Although a fiction, Asakura draws emotion from your chest as tangibly as a physical ache. Each bookshop patron occupies a different sphere of tragedy: A guilt-ridden daughter facing the death of her distanced mother, an elderly gentleman grasping at fading memories of his passed lover, and a pair of twins growing apart and into themselves. The magic woven within these pages takes root in your soul and follows you—demands from you compassion, capriciousness, and childlike wonder. 

Sports

China’s Eileen Gu carves a new path at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics

On Feb. 22, the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics came to an end. While the Olympic Games featured talented athletes from all over the globe, some aspects of the event sparked controversy. One of these conversations was centred on American-born freestyle skier Eileen Gu.

Gu is an international superstar: A superb athlete, a fashion model, and a student of quantum physics at Stanford University. At 22, Gu has become one of the most decorated skiers of all time. In 2022, she made her debut at the Beijing Winter Olympic Games, making history as the youngest Olympic freestyle skiing champion. Gu was the first freestyle skier to win three medals in one Olympic Games, winning gold in the big air and halfpipe events and silver in slopestyle.

At this year’s Games, Gu built on past successes, adding three more medals to her collection—two silvers and one gold—and defending her title in the women’s freeski halfpipe event. She left the Milano Cortina Games as the single most-decorated freestyle skier in history.

However, while Gu is the pinnacle of success on the slopes, her achievements have created a great divide between supporters and critics. Back in 2019, after competing for Team USA in three World Cups, Gu took to Instagram to announce that she would no longer be competing for the United States and would instead represent the People’s Republic of China.

Her decision faced major backlash at the time. She claimed that by honouring her mother’s identity and her biracial background, she wanted to inspire young girls in China, acting as a representation of a successful Chinese-American woman athlete in an underrepresented sport. Her goal was “to unite people, promote common understanding, create communication, and forge friendships between nations.”

Gu’s decision continues to spark debate seven years after her initial announcement. Some applaud Gu for embracing both her American and Chinese identities, but others criticize the decision, questioning her choice to ski for China given their complicated human rights history and fragile relationship with the United States. US Vice President JD Vance claims that she is the product of an American system but is choosing not to compete for her country. Others are taking to social media to brand her as a “traitor.”

Many of these criticisms are rooted in the compensation Gu receives from the Chinese Olympic Committee. As a Chinese athlete, she is paid more than she would be if she continued to compete under Team USA. However, a majority of her current earnings come from partnerships rather than the Chinese government. She is also a symbol of the fight to close the gender pay gap in sports, as she is one of the highest-paid female athletes in the world. 

While questioning Gu’s decision to compete for Team China is reasonable, these critiques walk a fine line between questioning and aggression. In 2022, Gu reported that the criticism escalated to harassment: She was physically assaulted, received death threats, and her dormitory at Stanford was robbed. Beyond this escalation, critics have unfairly compared her to other Asian-American athletes from similar backgrounds who chose to compete for Team USA, like figure skater Alysa Liu. These comparisons assume that athletes with similar ethnic backgrounds should make the same choices, ignoring personal and cultural factors that shape each athlete’s identity.

Instead of pitting high-achieving women athletes like Liu and Gu against one another, the media needs to uplift the narratives of two women athletes with similar stories, both achieving greatness. Liu and Gu are models for future generations, not rival stories.
Gu’s decision to represent China will likely always remain controversial. But framing her choice as just a matter of financial incentives or resources overlooks the context in which it was made. Gu’s decision reflects her genuine connection to her Chinese identity and heritage. Instead of reducing her choice to opportunism, we need to ask more nuanced questions: Why do athletes sometimes feel compelled to represent countries other than their birthplace? What does this reveal about the political climate of the United States, particularly as anti-immigration and xenophobic sentiments resurface? Gu’s decision shows that nationality in sport is not just about opportunity or funding, but is centred on belonging and identity.

Montreal, News

Demonstrators rally outside City Hall demanding that Martinez Ferrada make Montreal a sanctuary city

“So, so, so, solidarité ! Avec, avec, avec les sans papiers!”

On March 7, around 100 demonstrators gathered outside the Montreal City Hall for a rally demanding that Mayor Soraya Martinez Ferrada make Montreal a sanctuary city. According to Solidarité sans frontières—one of the organizations that held the rally—making Montreal a sanctuary city would allow everyone in the community to feel protected regardless of their legal status. This includes increasing undocumented immigrants and foreign workers’ accessibility to housing, employment, healthcare, and social aid.

The rally started at 2:00 p.m. when Samira Jasmin, a representative from Solidarité sans frontières,  explained the need for Montreal to become a sanctuary city.

“In Montreal, tens of thousands of residents live and work in fear of being arrested and deprived of their dignity and human rights,” Jasmin said. “They do not have any political, economic, or social rights. They suffer from violence and exploitation in their workplaces as much as in their own homes.”

Jasmin then posed a question to the Martinez Ferrada government.

“What have you done to represent and defend the rights of immigrants of precarious status, […] their right to live and exist, as well as their most fundamental rights?”

The next speaker was a representative from Women of Diverse Origins. In her speech, she read out a letter her colleague Dolores Chew wrote to Martinez Ferrada.

“Soraya, you are familiar with how people flee persecution, violence, and torture in our countries of origin and come here to build lives in peace and security,” she said. “The Head Tax imposed on Chinese migrants, the Continuous Journey Clause that impacted migrants mostly from the Punjab in India, the exclusion from voting rights, and on and on [….] The precarity of asylum seekers is part of a historical trajectory in Canada of laws that are put in place to exclude racialized populations.”

The representative also emphasized the need for immediate action in order to protect the city’s most vulnerable.

“On the eve of International Women’s Rights Day, we highlight the particularly critical situation of undocumented migrant women in precarious situations,” she said. “They are exposed to exploitation and abuse in their work environments [….] Fighting for women’s rights also means ensuring that the most vulnerable among us have access to services and resources. Soraya, sanctuary city now!”

A representative from the Defund the Police Coalition also gave a speech. The coalition, which comprises over 80 civil groups, aims to reduce the power and impunity of the Service de police de la ville de Montréal (SPVM) and the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA). They demanded that the Martinez Ferrada government shift the municipal budget’s priority to invest in services that support the Montreal community and its marginalized groups. The representative stressed that municipal politicians must shift away from exploiting migrant identities during political campaigning.

“The mayor of Montreal, a former migrant herself, has used this position to help her get elected in the municipal elections, while doing nothing for the migrant community,” the representative explained. “The weaponization of the migrant community to gain votes while standing idly by mass deportation and massive budget cuts of provincial support for migrants show how identity politics do not work [….] We are here to stand in solidarity with undocumented folks across Canada to demand the regularization of everyone and to demand that Montreal become a sanctuary city.”

The representative concluded her speech by emphasizing the policies that the Martinez Ferrada government must implement.

“Soraya Martinez Ferrada can prove that she cares about her constituents by doing three simple things,” she pointed out. “End the collaboration between the SPVM and CBSA. Ban arbitrary street checks, reduce the police budgets, and stop funding racial abuse and dystopian surveillance technologies. Use that money to fund social services that will help everyone, including undocumented folks.”

*All quotes were translated from French

Research Briefs, Science & Technology

McGill researcher Danielle Berbrier investigates new therapeutic for women with PCOS

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a disease characterized by excess hormone production from the ovaries, resulting in irregular menstrual cycles and fertility issues. PCOS affects around one in ten women, making it one of the most common endocrine disorders among women of reproductive age. Beyond its relationship to menstruation and fertility, PCOS is also associated with significant long-term cardiometabolic consequences, such as hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and obesity.

Hyperglycemia—elevated blood sugar levels—is a key culprit in PCOS-related cardiometabolic complications. High blood sugar can result in endothelial dysfunction, in which the thin layer of cells lining blood vessels cannot circulate blood and maintain a balanced cardiovascular system. Endothelial dysfunction is particularly common among women with PCOS.

These complications led Danielle Berbrier, a recent PhD graduate of McGill’s Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education and current first-year medical student in McGill’s School of Medicine, to search for a potential intervention.

In her recent study, published in the American Journal of Physiology, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Berbrier investigated the role of ketone monoester (KME) as a therapeutic for mitigating high blood sugar and endothelial impairments in women with PCOS. Berbrier employed a double-blind randomized control design, comparing 10 females with PCOS and 10 matched controls.

Berbrier’s desire to study PCOS stemmed from the lack of attention the syndrome has received in scientific research thus far.

“You put 10 women in a room, and the stats say one out of 10 should have it,” Berbrier said in an interview with The Tribune. “The other part that drove me was how understudied it was and how there’s no real universal treatment for [PCOS]. The more [I] worked with women and heard their stories of what they’ve been through, it felt like the least I could do was do research in this area.”

Berbrier’s study found that women with PCOS had higher blood glucose levels when administered the oral glucose tolerance test—a drink containing  75 grams of sugar—compared to their controls, which could be a marker of pre-diabetes or metabolic impairment. Researchers then administered KME and placebo supplementation to determine whether the treatment altered blood sugar levels.

“We found that [women with PCOS] had higher glucose levels and that their blood vessel health was impaired following that glucose [ingestion], but with a quick shot of KME, both their glucose levels and vascular health improved,” Berbier said.

The findings also demonstrated that KME’s ability to reduce hyperglycemia improved endothelial function, which is critical for preventing cardiovascular disease.

“Endothelial dysfunction is one of the earliest indicators of cardiovascular disease risk, and it’s a key role in the development of hypertension and atherosclerosis [….] It could also occur way before cardiovascular disease even happens,” Berbrier explained.

Other studies have found that ketogenic diets may improve hormone levels in women with PCOS. So, could KME supplementation through dietary sources achieve similar benefits for women with PCOS who have hyperglycemia and endothelial dysfunction?

“The dose of KME that the participants took was really high and so acute, […] ketone diets would take longer to see those types of benefits,” Berbier said. “It would be a hard comparison just because of dosing differences, but both [avenues] are promising.”

Berbier emphasized how meticulous her recruitment of participants was, noting that it represents both a strength and a limitation to the study’s findings.

“Anyone on Metformin or Ozempic were excluded, [which] ended up excluding a lot of females who were in the obese category,” Berbrier explained. “So, not by design, but by my rigorous inclusion criteria, I studied a non-obese cohort, which allowed me to look at the syndrome through its intrinsic symptoms with no confounding variables.”

However, up to 80 per cent of women with PCOS are obese. Berbrier noted that her findings are therefore not fully generalizable and suggested further investigation with more diverse cohorts of participants.

Given the increased prevalence of cardiometabolic diseases among females with PCOS, early intervention strategies are critical to preserving long-term health. PCOS must be addressed as being related not just to reproductive issues, but as having further significant cardiometabolic implications. Berbrier’s study helps address those implications through KME treatment, a promising avenue.

This work was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and was conducted in the Cardiovascular Health and Autonomic Regulation Lab under the supervision of Dr. Charlotte Usselman.

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