Crowded Bookshelf: Cyberpunk Central
It’s not often that a single series can be called genre-defining, but that’s William Gibson’s Sprawl trilogy for you.
It’s not often that a single series can be called genre-defining, but that’s William Gibson’s Sprawl trilogy for you.
With all the summer films being shown in theaters right now, there are lots of options to choose from. Still, if there are no films that you want to see, how about a film that changes with every performance?
In early July, Chevron Canada began the conversation around discontinuing full service in Coquitlam.
The DSU’s newest app is gaining a strong user base locally, and turning heads elsewhere in the province. Engagement on the platform is at an all time high for Douglas.
Foreign buyers will now have to pay an additional 15 per cent tax on Metro Vancouver property, according to new legislation passed by the provincial government on July 25. The legislation came into effect on August 2.
On July 19, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, within his position as Minister of Youth, announced the details of the Prime Minister’s Youth Council, via an open discussion on Twitter.
On Thursday June 23, the Leave side for Brexit prevailed: 52 per cent to 48 per cent. It seemed for a time as though the world had been turned upside down. I’ve danced about the edge of many a conversation claiming how it’s a victory for racism, Britain made the wrong choice, and voters were so horribly out-of-the-loop and misinformed. My own contributions have been virtually nonexistent.
You are a runner in a relay race. As your teammate approaches you, you see her hand extend, holding the baton. Your feet move to keep pace as she draws nearer. The fingers in your hands blossom out, creating a target, not just for the baton, but also for the responsibility, the confidence, the weight of the entire collective. You are the runner; you are the next editor-in-chief of the Other Press.
In the aftermath of the British referendum that found Britain leaving the European Union, many who voted to leave found themselves longing for what once was.
In a move that has shocked many in academia and delighted warriors of the keyboard, various universities around Canada and the USA have begun accepting Facebook posts as scholarly articles.