Arthur is making our Twitch livestream debut on April 1st, 2021, at 8:00pm with our First Annual Fundraiser and Telethon! Over the upcoming days, we are aiming to hit our 2021 fundraising goal of $10,000.
Your money goes to: •Good paying jobs for content creators •Year-round operation •New tech for content production •The freedom to remain independent
Didn’t I just write this one? Arthur returns to the polls alongside the rest of Canada, and brings election night coverage from the ground. In a very serious piece, in which we relay all of the weight and severity a federal election deserves, we detail the goings on, thoughts and words of the night directly from the election night rally, held at the Canadian canoe museum. Spoiler, I have no canoe anecdotes to share.
The Association are calling for students to demonstrate outside City Hall on Monday night, though some have expressed concerns that the event overlaps with the voting period for the federal election.
Arthur Newspaper returns for a very spooky edition. Spooky as in, you know, Hallowe'en and also Head of The Trent. This issue, your editors bring the annual Trent University homecoming right to your page. Including "Overheard at Head of the Trent", a snapshot of missed connections during the rowing regatta. Plus, you scream, I scream, we all scream as the student union met for the first time this academic year. Inside, co-editor Evan Robins reflect on celebrity death and worship in a time of global turmoil, Abbigale Kernya opens up about her failed vegetarianism, and Arthur journalists investigate, interview, poke and prod everything from films to professors.
Arthur Newspaper returns for a very spooky edition. Spooky as in, you know, Hallowe'en and also Head of The Trent. This issue, your editors bring the annual Trent University homecoming right to your page. Including "Overheard at Head of the Trent", a snapshot of missed connections during the rowing regatta. Plus, you scream, I scream, we all scream as the student union met for the first time this academic year. Inside, co-editor Evan Robins reflect on celebrity death and worship in a time of global turmoil, Abbigale Kernya opens up about her failed vegetarianism, and Arthur journalists investigate, interview, poke and prod everything from films to professors.
THE LAST ONE: Abbigale and Evan had hoped to end this show on a more somber and hopeful note. That is until the mayor of Peterborough, Jeff Leal, dropped a racial slur during a guest lecture at Trent University. The news, so they say, stops for no one.