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CITY: Cessna lands on Parc

Major street turned into runway

Kayvon Afshari

Tam-tams participants quickly became eyewitnesses to a private Cessna airplane safely landing on Avenue du Parc near the George-Étienne Cartier monument at 4 p.m. Sunday.

BREAKING NEWS: Tragedy at Dawson

Ben Lemieux

One girl has been confirmed dead and as many as 20 people were hospitalized after a gunman opened fire at Dawson College earlier today. At 12:41p.m., a young man wearing a black trench coat entered the school through the ground floor doors on Boulevard de Maisonneuve, drew a firearm and began shooting at students in the main cafeteria.

CAMPUS: Hema-Quebec's speedy return questionable

Blood agency afraid that on-campus dynamics haven't changed

Matt Campbell

Héma-Québec is still unsure about returning to McGill after a controversial though effective protest staged by radical sexual rights group Second Cumming during last January's blood drive. The demonstration was in protest of the blood agency's policy barring men who have sex with men from donating blood.

CAMPUS: SSMU ditches room fees

Shatner opens its doors

Kate Spirgen

Making good on a central campaign promise, Students' Society executives announced last week that rooms in the Shatner Building can now be booked free of charge. Beginning last Friday, internal clubs, faculty associations, media, SSMU recognized groups and others are now able to use the rooms without the customary bill.

CAMPUS: SSMU delays handbooks

Executives cites poor taste as reason for re-write

Josh Stark

A recent controversy over the content of the SSMU handbook has resulted in a three week delay in its realease due to the firing of the two original editors. Genevieve Friesen and Sara Kipp-Ferguson, the original editors for the handbook, were let go in August when the finished product was deemed unacceptable by Students' Society executives, said Vice-President University Affairs Finn Upham.

CAMPUS: Mercury takes over

Online course evaluations replace paper

Kelly Harris

The course evaluation process will move one step closer to transparency and accessibility this fall. After first being explored in the fall of 2003 and pilot tested in the winter of 2004, McGill Online Evaluations will be launched campus-wide in December under the name "Mercury.

CITY: Conference hopes to bring religions together

Montreal event to open discussions on post 9/11 views on faith

Farid Uddin Rifai and Julien Naggar

Five years after the terrorist attacks of September 11th, a McGill professor is hoping that he can help the religions of the world address and challenge the negative perceptions that have sprung up following the fall of the World Trade Center. This week, Montreal's Palais de Congrès will play host to World Religions after September 11: A Global Conference.

CAMPUS: Web site offers alternative to traditional text

Ads in e-books get mixed reactions in academic community

Elaine Radman and Julia Vanderham

Going back to school may be becoming less painful on your wallet with the introduction of free online books. Freeload Press Company is offering online versions of textbooks, workbooks and study guides in the popular PDF format at no cost. The catch? The pages also contain advertisements, making textbooks appear more like magazines and causing controversy within the academic world.

NATIONAL: McGill number eight in counterculture

Student drug activism makes for higher education

Kate Spirgen

McGill students can now brag to their friends at UBC about a new top-ten ranking, but its not one that university administrators will be talking about. In the October issue of cannabis magazine High Times, McGill has been ranked as the number eight counterculture school in North America.

CAMPUS: Wireless worries

McGill's wireless effect in the classroom

Joshuah Touyz

As early as the nineties, McGill was at the forefront of developing a wireless network. Today that network provides over 2,500 wireless access points, each covering 250 square feet, and the university is in the process of upgrading its coverage and launching a three-year project to better integrate users around the campus.

UP TO SPEED

The oldest person in the world, Ecuadorian Maria Esther de Capovilla, died on Monday at age 116. She was born in 1889, the same year as Adolf Hitler and Charlie Chaplin. American Elizabeth Bolden, who is 11 months younger, now holds the record. l In other Hitler news, Hitler's Cross restaurant in Mumbai will change its name and remove Nazi swastikas from the billboard and menus after complaints from the Jewish community.

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