}
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mannequins protesting assault

February 7, 2025

Building a Safe Environment: How Justice Policies Shape Our University Community

by Joseph Ventresca

February 7, 2025

Stone Cold Precision: The Humber Women’s Curling Team’s Championship Pursuit

by Khalia Henry

February 5, 2025

Starving for Solutions: North Etobicoke’s Urgent Need for Food Security

by Elayna Medeiros

February 5, 2025

Rising Gastroenteritis Outbreak at University of Guelph Raises Concerns for UofG-H Campus

by Daisy Charlie

Shelf of books

February 5, 2025

Textbook Tug-of-War

by Aidan Corbett

Hoodies displaying the text

February 5, 2025

Fashion Fail

by Elayna Medeiros

January 20, 2025

How adopting Indigenous perspectives can help address climate and mental health issues

by Alexia Panagopoulos

Two first aid kits laying on a white table, one is blue and the other red.

January 19, 2025

How to Save a Life

by Joshua Ramagnano

January 9, 2025

What’s cooking on the Guelph-Humber/Humber campus

by Joseph Ventresca

Woman bites on a pencil furiously in front of a laptop

December 19, 2024

A guide to course selection at Guelph-Humber

by Aidan Corbett

Three women holding various sports equipment posed in front of a camera

December 19, 2024

Beyond the Sidelines: Breaking Barriers in Women’s Sports

by Isabella Di Franco

photo of mini house model with keys beside it

December 19, 2024

Brampton renting crisis: the international student predicament

by Micaela Bellomo

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Land Acknowledgement

The University of Guelph-Humber and Humber College are located within the traditional and treaty lands of the Mississaugas of the Credit. Known as Adoobiigok, the “Place of the Black Alders” in the Mississauga language, the region is uniquely situated along Humber River Watershed, which historically provided an integral connection for Anishinaabe, Haudenosaunee, and Wendat peoples between the Ontario Lakeshore and the Lake Simcoe/Georgian Bay regions. Now home to people of numerous nations, Adoobiigok continues to provide a vital source of interconnection for all. We acknowledge and honour the land we are walking on, the moccasin tracks of our ancestors and the footprints of the future generations to come.

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