• Editor’s Note: How Do You Take Your Coffee?

    A couple weeks ago, I was catching up with my old university roommate on the phone. She just got engaged, so we were discussing wedding plans. The conversation turned to […]

  • Our Ink, Our Stories: A Folded Butterfly

    On the inside of Victoria Wood’s left elbow, is a tattoo of a folded butterfly. The tattoo is small, consisting of only thin, black lines. To anyone who doesn’t know […]

  • SHORE Launches New App to Provide Abortion Resources

    In January, Lyndsey Butcher, the executive director of SHORE Centre (Sexual Health, Options, Resources, Education) attended the Fierce Founders Bootcamp at Communitech. As the first not-for-profit to be invited into […]

  • A letter from the (new) editor

    Oh, hello. Welcome to the first page of The Community Edition. I’m so happy you chose to pick up our precious newspaper. Or, if you’re reading this online, you clicked […]

  • Lego Saved Her Life

    Grace Stemp-Morlock refers to her time before becoming a Lego artist as her “crazy year.” “It began with six weeks in the psych ward in KW. It ended with suicide […]

  • Our Ink, Our Stories: A Rose and a Reaper

    Erica O’Donnell has been collecting tattoos heavily for the past year and a half now. The Kitchener native has a series of neo-traditional tattoos on both of her arms; in […]

  • If Streets Could Talk: Galt

    When I was 12, I had about two hours of freedom between the time school was out and the time my mother arrived home from work. From 3pm to 5pm, […]

  • Coffee Without Compromise

    Andrew Thom, of Unicorn Brew Bar, really loves coffee. Comparable to how a painter lights up with passion when talking about art, or how a musician can’t be without their […]

  • KOI Festival and Hardcore Nostalgia in KW

    Apparently 2007 was the golden age of the hardcore music scene. The “rebirth”of KW”s KOI Festival hopes to reignite that spirit and community with their 2017 comeback.

  • The KPL Really Wants to Reach Millennials with Chapter One

    Chapter One is the library’s new venture aimed at engaging with KW’s twentysomethings