The Periodic Column: A second domestication

Sometime between 11,000 and 40,000 years ago, early humans domesticated wolves. There are theories, but, in the end, no one’s quite sure how it happened. One of the most widely accepted of these theories is that wolves followed human groups to scavenge from the carcasses left behind after human hunts. The presence of the wolves […]

Continue Reading

New book of poems pays tribute to Al Purdy

Beyond Forgetting, a new collection of poems edited by Howard White and Emma Skagen, celebrates the life of Canadian poet Al Purdy, who died in 2000. The book features poems by writers who have met, known, or been inspired by Purdy.  Beyond Forgetting is being released to honour 100 years since Purdy’s birth, and it […]

Continue Reading

Let’s Talk?: Overcoming apathy

Here we are, team—a year after the  #metoo movement began. And I don’t know about y’all, but I am exhausted.  How? How are we still having the exact same conversations about sexual consent, victim shaming, and due process as when we started? I mean, really, the only difference is that the issues have become more […]

Continue Reading

Local symphonies and choirs to perform Bach and Pärt pieces

Conductor Brian Wismath inspires not only choral performance regulars but also skeptics of live music to put their uncertainty aside and feel the magic of the music on November 2. Wismath will be working to ensure a faultless collaborative performance of Bach’s Magnificat by The Victoria Choral Society and Arvo Pärt’s Adam’s Lament by Vox Humana […]

Continue Reading

25 Years Ago in Nexus: October 24, 2018 issue

If they only knew then: Our November 1, 1993 issue featured a story talking about how the Camosun College Student Society (CCSS) recently approved a Canadian Federation of Students (CFS) fee increase. The CCSS had recently joined the national student organization; the CFS expelled the CCSS from the CFS in 2018 after ongoing tensions over […]

Continue Reading

Tech Talk: Student tech discounts

Between tuition and textbooks, being a student can cost a lot. But there are some companies offering benefits only to students. It can be their marketing effort trying to entice you to their products early on so you use them after school, but if they are standard in your industry there might be no harm […]

Continue Reading

Open Space: To like or not to like the word “like”

When did we get so lazy about speaking our own language? I’m guilty of it myself: the insertion of “like” into every sentence, for example, using it as an adjective, an adverb, a preposition. Using “like” can send the meaning of one very simple sentence into many different directions, and we don’t ever think about […]

Continue Reading

Unpacking the Bags: Tips for finding jobs after graduation

Finding a job after graduation can be one of the greatest challenges for international students. There are many variables—such as deadlines, interviews, emails, resumes, and cover letters—to be taken into consideration. All this needs to be done in a different language and culture, which can be overwhelming for us. So here are some tips for […]

Continue Reading

Trying to conjure Bloody Mary at Camosun’s Lansdowne campus

Ever have one of those moments when you question your sanity? Welp, for me, that moment happened on a recent Saturday night in one of the bathrooms in the Richmond House at Camosun’s Lansdowne campus. I stood huddled in the corner of a rusty bathtub, heart pounding, thoroughly regretting my life choices, including eating Mucho […]

Continue Reading