THE UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN’S MAIN CAMPUS IS SITUATED ON TREATY 6 TERRITORY AND THE HOMELAND OF THE MÉTIS.

THE UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN’S MAIN CAMPUS IS SITUATED ON TREATY 6 TERRITORY AND THE HOMELAND OF THE MÉTIS.

Culture

  • By November 15, 2013

    East of Eden is an established local presence now, but the band may never have came to be had it not been for a forgotten Kijiji ad.

  • U of S Students promote sustainable living

    By November 13, 2013

    From Nov. 12-15 the University of Saskatchewan Students Union will be holding it’s Sustainability Week in an effort to help provide social awareness to students.

  • University students game for charity

    By November 10, 2013

    On Nov. 2 at 8a.m., nearly 100 University of Saskatchewan students belonging to it’s Gamers Club began a 24-hour gaming marathon called Extra Life to raise money for the Children’s Hospital Foundation of Saskatchewan.

  • Yoga for your Brain cards foster creativity during productivity slumps

    By November 9, 2013

    Yoga is known for helping with flexibility while also improving concentration, putting people into a more meditative state — and a new phenomenon known as Zentangle explores a form of yoga purely for the mind.

  • Matthew Good talks mussels and pneumonia

    By November 9, 2013

    An interview with the artist about his new album ‘Arrows of Desire’.

  • Local author’s debut plays on social stereotypes

    By November 8, 2013

    Canadian author Adam Pottle visits the often polarizing and other times humanizing view on the world through the journal entries of Dr. Dexter Ripley, who has been diagnosed with peroneal muscular atrophy, in his novel ‘Mantis Dreams’.

  • The Deep Dark Woods croon their way into the past

    By November 8, 2013

    The Deep Dark Woods warble off the beaten path and into uncharted musical soundscapes in their newest album, Jubilee.

  • Alice Munro’s Nobel Prize a triumph for Canadian literature

    By November 7, 2013

    Alice Munro was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature by the Swedish Academy this year as a “master of the modern short story.” She is the thirteenth woman to receive the award, along with the second Canadian after expatriate Saul Bellow received the same prize in 1976.