Frosh issue 2014

Page 1

the watch

September 2014

Remembering Abby


the watch

VOL. 32 NO. 1 - SEPTEMBER 2014 watchmagazine.ca watcheditors@gmail.com TWITTER @kingswatch INSTAGRAM @watchmagz

A Letter From the Editors Although it’s exciting to take on a new role at The Watch, it’s very eerie at the same time. One of our first stories was the passing of our classmate Abby Bryant.

tion of Lysistrata, the dancer in provided laughter and light to the Wardroom, the sunshine Halifax and King’s. of Alex Hall. For this we would like to thank It’s hard to imagine that she Megan Drover and Sandra struggled to breathe, and Bryant. Without them, this even harder to imagine that celebration of Abby’s life could we won’t being seeing her not have happened. around campus again. Although King’s won’t be the We hope this issue of The same without her, we hope Watch provides some level of that Abby’s philosophical spirit remembrance for everyone and love of life continues on with this year’s Frosh. who had met Abby.

We both had very different relationships with her. Nick knew her through the halls of King’s – the short, sweet and feisty presence. Grace had her as an early morning bathroom companion, with conversations occurring between We believe the words and - Nick and Grace brushes. memories of those who knew Always smiling and laughing, her best are the best way to Abby was the woman in the share, not only her last days, COVER PHOTO: ERICA GUY Classic’s in the Quad produc- but all the days that she

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// EDITORS-IN-CHIEF

ONLINE EDITOR

PUBLISHER

TREASURER

Nick Holland Grace Kennedy

To be elected

Rachel Ward

To be hired

CONTRIBUTORS

Sophie Allen-Barron Haleigh Atwood Keili Bartlett

Alexandra Cooke Megan Drover Bethany Hindmarsh

Rebecca Hussman John Last Dina Lobo

LAYOUT

PUBLISHING BOARD

COPY EDITOR

Nick Holland Grace Kennedy

To be appointed

To be hired

2 FROSH 2014 @kingswatch

Be green. Share and recycle this issue.

Patrick McCutcheon Shelby Rutledge


the watch IN THIS ISSUE

NEWS 4 INSIDE KING’S The places you don’t always see at school

5 NEWS BULLETIN The top stories you need to know about

6 FYP THROUGH THE RED Where did the students and your money go?

7 AN OPINION ON MONEY Bethany Hindmarsh gives her take on this year’s budget

ABBY 9 REMEMBERING ABBY An interview with Abby’s mother brought out her remembrances

10 BECOMING THE BRYANTS Reflecting on the loss of a loved one

11 JUST BREATHE A poem by Abby Bryant

FEATURES 12 SWIMMING SOCIETY WANTS ONE HOUR OF THE WEEK How that one hour can make a difference

13 FIVE YEARS SONG How far the King’s Choir has come in five years

CHOOSING A MAJOR 14 CHOOSING A MAJOR Tips on figuring out your university degree

15 FITTING IN

Why day students tend to be the outsiders

16 WAYS TO GET OFF CAMPUS The places you’ll want to see around town

18 JAZZ AND BLUES

Is jazz really all that important today?

19 NOT YOUR AVERAGE ARMWRESTLER

Meet the national arm-wrestling champion who doesn’t fit the stereotype

For more content visit watchmagazine.ca

@kingswatch FROSH 2014 3


INSIDE KING’S President George Cooper’s Office

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Photo: Nick Holland

1 | An Honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of Alberta 2 | A certificate of recognition from the Montreal Neurological Institute at McGill for work President Cooper did as a Killam Trustee to provide support for clinicians and researchers at the school. 3 | A member of the Order of Canada 4 | Photos of Cooper, himself.

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5 | A certification from His Majesty King Carl XVI Gustaf, King of Sweden, who knighted Cooper as Officer - First Class of the Royal Order of the Polar Star in 2006. 6 | A picture of Oxford University, the college where Cooper graduated with D.C.L . It’s also the oldest college in the English speaking world and it’s where Cooper went to school with former president Bill Clinton. 7 | A bird’s eye picture of those who attended a dinner at the gar-

den of Trinity College at Oxford in 1983. 8 | Because recycling is a good thing. 9 | Not his favourite pen, but the one Cooper currently uses to write his signature. 10 | The air conditioner that he gets to use during the summer. |w


NEWS BULLETIN Summer Services BY KEILI BARTLETT

As the summer wraps up, so does the test season for the university’s new Conference Services. Previously, Sodexo controlled renting rooms at King’s during the summer season. The residences and other campus facilities, with the exception of the Senior Common Room, Board Room and Journalism School spaces, are available to rent for a variety of events from May to August. Sodexo’s contract was not renewed for the 2014 summer season. “The university just wanted to take control of it and have it as an in-house service,” said Alex Doyle, director

Security Shifts

of facilities and now head of Conference Services at King’s. The goal of the “test case” program was to break even, Doyle said. The university had to buy new equipment for Conference Services, as well as pay students and the one full-time employee. He said the test during the summer was successful, and they are breaking even. The new service hopes to hopes to host camps during the summer season along with renting rooms out.. “Whether it’s children’s camps or adult learning camps, physical fitness camps - we’re looking to

expand, to maximize the space,” said Doyle. Jobs will be available to students through such camps, or as part of hosting conferences and other events, much like working through Sodexo at Prince Hall. While Conference Services is aiming to draw in conferences from outside the university, the application process for student renting and events will remain the same. For strictly university functions, there will continue to be no cost for students, staff and faculty. Outside conferences will have a fee attached to them, allowing more revenue for the university and more flexibility for

student employment. “The only effect it has on students is actually positive because what we’ll be doing is, hopefully, hiring a lot more students over the summer months,” Doyle said. “What we wanted to do with this was to basically create a job bank for the students. The more camps we have, the more residences we have filled. The more we can create this community conference services, then that’s just going to create more jobs.” The Conference Services hopes to expand into the academic term after the summer of 2015. |w

BY HALEIGH ATWOOD WITH FILES FROM JOHN LAST

Patrol is seeing changes this year as its budget is being cut in half and making room for a new security service. Down from $124,000 to $62,000, the cuts come as there was a decision to have across-the-board reductions factored into each department. Then there’s Northeastern Security Protection Services, which started on campus on April 27 at noon. The company was hired to aid Patrol with the maintenance of daily security and campus protection. “We have to have a security company provide services to the university,” said George Cooper, president of King’s. “I’m sure we’re the only university in the world that doesn’t have professional security looking after us.” Cooper added insurance was also an issue. He said, “If somebody came in and shot the place up… first

thing the insurance company would say is, ‘Who was your security?’”

Patrol will handle the residences and any issues with students.”

caused the university to depend solely on Patrol for security.

But the addition of the service brings with it cuts to hours and student staff. There will be a 30 per cent drop in the hours worked by students on Patrol and the number of employees is being cut from 50 to 35.

Nicholas Hatt, the dean of residence, confirmed that drop of 30 per cent in hours.

For two years Patrol was looking after student conflicts as well as locking up, surveying campus buildings after hours and dealing extensively with vandals and break-ins.

While there have been several changes to Patrol’s schedule, the director of facilities, Alex Doyle, assured all cuts are minimal and that the facilities department is “working very hard to create good student jobs that will support you during the year.” Doyle said the first issue that was brought to him was about confusing campus security with campus interaction. “Northeastern was hired to have security on campus,” he said. “They will be professional security for the outside of our buildings while

Hatt, who is in charge of Patrol, commented via email that these job cuts are a drop in the bucket to overall student campus jobs. Although it may seem like a drastic change, Daniel Whitten, one of three student supervisors for this year’s Patrol, is hopeful the interaction between Northeastern Security and Patrol will go smoothly. “Now we have an extra resource, an extra person to call,” said Whitten. “Now you’ll see us more in residences than in other places. Patrol will be taking care of students.” In the past King’s had both a security service and a Patrol team until budget cuts

It was announced in May that the shift in security would coincide with the closure of residence, allowing for a lengthy adjustment period before the fall semester. Both Doyle and Whitten believe there will be no overtly noticeable security changes for upper year students, and Patrol and Northeastern Security should eventually work as a seamless team. “We need to form a rhythm with security and get to know them as people,” Whitten said. |w

@kingswatch FROSH 2014 5


FYP Through the Red By John Last

This year, enrolment in the Foundation Year Programme (FYP) is down – way down – to 254 students from over 300 just a year ago. While no administration officials will say FYP enrolment numbers in the mid-200s constitute a major issue, all acknowledge that this year’s low figures come at a particularly bad time. The college’s operations budget, which covers the day-to-day activities of the school, and its growing salaries budget, is 89 per cent funded by student fees, and budget shortfalls over the past half decade have already put the college almost $1 million in deficit.

In addition, King’s is phasing in a series of new “academic innovations” to increase the appeal of its upperyear programs. Students in the School of Journalism will now be able to take courses for credit at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, and partnerships with Dalhousie will offer Contemporary Studies Programme students courses in non-Western philosophical traditions.

students.

These academic changes in response to enrolment set the stage for tension between the faculty’s pedagogical concerns and the administration’s financial ones. Expenses – salaries predominant among them – continue to rise even as enrolment declines. Perpetual growth in the revenue

For now, the administration’s desire to see more bodies in Alumni Hall is unlikely to affect the Foundation Year’s programming, though administration officials have considered – and rejected – the idea. While both Fitzpatrick and Cooper suggested in passing that structural changes could be made to

“We’ve made it very clear... that these decisions cannot be made without the primary focus being pedagogical,” he said. “We have to be in constant engagement with (the administration), reminding them of this fact, and insisting upon the central importance of teaching, which, after all, is what we do.”

George Cooper, the president and vice chancellor, Jim Fitzpatrick, the bursar, and public budget documents all said acrossthe-board budget cuts, salary reviews and staff cutbacks in areas such as maintenance are all underway in the search to save the university from crippling debt, and in particular the administration is trying to draft a unified strategy to attract new students and encourage current students to stay. King’s has a problem with retaining students after first year, as they move on to greener academic shores, building on the foundations laid by FYP. As part of a plan to retain students, and the income from their tuition, FYP professors will be required to keep tabs on their students’ academic progress using an increasingly formalized process of consultations with failing students. “The faculty’s done a pretty darn fine job... of keeping an eye out for students as they progress here at King’s,” said Cooper. “I think it probably needs to become more intense in future than it has in the past, more structured.” Though the process has not yet been formally established, Cooper suggested that a series of red flags – a missed paper, a poor midterm, declining quality of work – will be used to mark out students for additional consultation with professors and an expanded Student Services department in the Registrar’s Office. 6 FROSH 2014 @kingswatch

from students, be it through greater enrolment, higher fees, or larger perstudent subsidies, will be necessary to sustain the university’s operations. In other words, King’s needs more students in its naturally limited programs. FYP, for example, is restrained by the size of its facilities, in particular Alumni Hall, but this has not prevented administration advocating for a more densely packed programme. While programme director Daniel Brandes advocates for a smaller programme of 275 FYP students, with tutorials of no more than 15 students, Cooper and Fitzpatrick hope every one of Alumni Hall’s 320 seats are filled in 2015-16. “Everything should grow to some degree,” said Fitzpatrick. For his part, Brandes is adamant that no changes will be made to the notoriously challenging programme to attract a greater number or variety of

the programme to double its capacity -- for example, through rotating lecture schedules – they acknowledged it would not benefit the programme, the “core of (King’s) marketing.” Much more likely are further expansions in more lucrative and less academically sensitive areas, such as the new master’s programmes in Journalism and Fine Arts. The Journalism programme has almost tripled its enrolment already in the past five years, altering both administrative structure and admissions standards in the process. Although this is good news for those programs, as the money generated by journalism and fine arts students are returned to their disciplines, enrolment across the college needs to increase to allow for balanced financial stability. “We’re particularly sensitive to enrolment,” said Fitzpatrick, referencing the size of the university.


“We’re fighting against demographics.” These demographics are an acrossthe-board decline in enrolments in the humanities, not just in Nova Scotia but across Canada and the United States. Administration officials are eager to point to a series of broader issues that have caused the decline of the small liberal arts college like King’s – shifts in employment patterns, rising student debt, and a changing conception of universities among them. Yet, despite these trends, King’s maintained a fairly consistent number of FYP students, about 310, between 2009 and 2012. While 2012 saw a drop of more than 20 students, 2013-14 saw a resurgence in numbers, to 306, seeming

to mark a return to consistency. Retention throughout first year has also remained constant – about 20 students leave each year without completing FYP, but this has not worsened as humanities education wanes globally in popularity. This year’s drop, coming on the heel of disastrous flooding in the Chapel and Alexandra Hall, and the unceremonious departure of the former bursar Gerald Smith, is less of a negatively sloping trend than a sudden, precipitous cliff. And should enrolment numbers continue to decline – or fail to improve – administration and faculty may truly have to panic as King’s overburdened budget plunges deeper into the red. |w

For now, while the students’ union fights for more education funding from government, King’s By Bethany Hindmarsh continues to rely on raising fees. In an issue of the journal Canadian This year, the administration is celLiterature published in the spring of ebrating a donation for merit-based this year, Laura Moss (UBC) asks entrance scholarships that does litthis important question: “What if, in- tle to help low-income and otherwise stead of thinking of the humanities as marginalized students who wish to in a state of crisis as we so often do, attend the university. Indeed, while we think of the humanities as an eco- King’s has used donations to bolster scholarship funds, need-based bursystem that is failing to thrive?” saries will be reduced by $12,000 When we compare University of in the coming year, while student King’s College 2014-2015 budget to fees continue to rise. The universithe university’s 2014-2015 enrolment ty’s fundraising strategies continue numbers, one thing is clear: if King’s to prioritize donations from the most continues to depend on enrolment to affluent Nova Scotians, perpetuatdrive 90% of budgeted revenue, the ing the notion that university educainstitution cannot thrive. Student fees tion should only be provided to the should never constitute core opera- wealthy, by the wealthy. tional funding. In order to achieve financial sustainability, King’s will need So how can King’s operate without taking advantage of those who are to seek adequate public support. least able to provide the school with In fact, the whole community should real financial stability? What would be a part of the search for sustain- set the university on the path toward able solutions—not simply a board sustainable budgeting? and administration that decide the direction of the university in closed To answer these questions, it helps meetings. If King’s is to become a tru- to think about what can make King’s ly sustainable institution, its adminis- environmentally sustainable. trators and board members will need to champion transparency. Students, Over the past year, four fossil fuel difaculty, and staff should all be given vestment campaigns have sprung up the opportunity to bear witness to the in Halifax (Divest Dal, Divest SMU, full decision-making process around Divest King’s, and a municipal divestboth institutional investments and op- ment campaign aimed at the HRM City Council). These campaigns are erational budgeting. calling on public intuitions to live up to their mission statements and to serve

An Opinion On Money

Do you have something to say about this article? Send us a Letter to the Editors at watcheditors@gmail.com

the public good by refusing to invest in destructive industries. Advocates of divestment argue that it makes no sense to be using funds kept in trust for the future in ways that jeopardize the future of the student body—and of the earth. Although divestment campaigns target university endowments rather than operating budgets, and although divestment may not necessarily catalyze dramatic revenue increases for universities, some of the principles of these campaigns can carry over to the way we think about operational funding. Students who care about sustainability pay close attention to their composting choices, their energy bills, and their food purchases, but tuition is by far the largest line item in the average student budget. It makes perfect sense that students are asking questions about the financial ethics and sustainability priorities of the institutions that are dealing with financial difficulty by placing still greater burdens on their poorest members. The King’s community is a living thing that needs quality nourishment from a variety of sources; it cannot survive on the returns from contaminated investments, nor can it survive on student fees alone. In the end, King’s—like other ecosystems—will need to demonstrate both diversity and integrity in order to avoid collapse.|w @kingswatch FROSH 2014 7


Abby Photo: Facebook.com


REMEMBERING ABBY By Nick Holland

The loss of a child is nothing easy for a mother to overcome, but after the death of King’s student Abby Bryant, the celebration of her life and accomplishments became most important to her mother. Sandra Bryant still does become emotional when talking about her daughter’s passing, but she said the important thing is to stay positive and remember the happy times she had with Abby. Those happy times were all the time, said Sandra. She said everyday Abby shined with a smile that will certainly be remembered. “Abby was the type of person (who) couldn’t do wrong. She was kind of all good, so if Abby did it, it was okay. And I don’t think anyone out there would ever argue that,” she said. When Abby was just three years old she was diagnosed with Leukemia and at five she received a bone marrow transplant. The chemotherapy and radiation treatment prolonged her life, but it caused her to develop pulmonary fibrosis – a condition that causes the lungs to harden. By the time Abby was in her late teens her lungs practically smothered her. They became so hard that they couldn’t breathe. “If you were to ask her she’d tell you (she was) a 19-year-old girl, in an 80-year-old body who looked like they were 12,” Sandra said. “So it was challenging for her, the whole time, as far as athletics because she wanted to be part of everything, but couldn’t because of her lack of breath.” When Abby was in the hospital Sandra said she would walk along the halls making everyone else feel good. “These people were all 70 and getting older and here she is 20, and guess who’s gone?”

Even though some days made it nearly impossible to breathe, Sandra said Abby was always smiling. The amount of charity work Abby did for the fight against cancer was one of the ways she tried to bring happiness to others. She was one of the five people who brought The Friends of Gilda’s to Halifax – a society that offers free support for anybody affected by cancer. It initially started in New York City as Gilda’s Club Worldwide after Gilda Radner, who was most famous for her work on Saturday Night Live, was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. As a child Abby wanted to include everyone around her. A vacation to Bermuda was just one example. “She walked along the beach and asked everybody to dinner. ‘Would you like to come to our house for dinner?’ And here we are in a hotel,” Sandra said. And in Disneyland, during the parades, Abby wanted to be part of it. So little Abby, dressed as Buzz Lightyear, took it upon herself in the spurt of the moment and joined the parade. Abby loved everything about King’s – the professors, her friends and especially the Foundation Year Programme. To her and her mother King’s was the Harry Potter School because of the design. She fell in love with philosophy. “Everybody told her how hard that (FYP) course was and how many books you had to read, but it didn’t stop her,” Sandra said. “She loved it and once she got into it, she did phenomenal.”

in May at St. Mary’s Basilica in Halifax. The church, which seats hundreds, overflowed with people and even a crowd gathered in the streets. Even in Abby’s room, in the bureau under her bed, lay stacks and stacks of cards with condolences. So many that they had to be categorized into piles – who Sandra was able to respond to and the cards she may never have time to get to.

“I don’t want to make a difference, I want to be the difference.” “What’s so crazy is that Abby didn’t know. She would be amazed,” Sandra said. “She didn’t know that she was accepted. She didn’t understand that people liked her.” But people did like her, especially her girlfriend Megan Drover. “I was so happy that she had found love, that nothing could lessen that,” Sandra said.“ To me there’s no other beauty than that. And how lucky she was. And I love Megan. She is just the dearest, sweetest woman.” When asked how she wants her daughter to be remembered Sandra said, “As a sweet, caring, talented, young woman.” “She wanted to make the world a better place,” she added. “I believe that Abby did make the world a better place.” |w

Abby once said, “I don’t want to make a difference, I want to be the difference.” And a difference she became. There was a memorial service for her back

@kingswatch FROSH 2014 9


“I really think that Abby tried her best not to let this affect her life. She still tried her best to go to school, she wanted to still do Taekwondo, which was crazy. She still travelled and spent time with her friends. She lived a very normal life with this condition. But obviously sometimes it seemed like she wanted to slow down, but you know, you can see that was in her that she wanted to do everything. She tried her best to do everything no matter how bad she felt. But she always wanted to live normally, and I think she was pretty successful at doing that.”

“The funeral was unlike any funeral I have ever attended... I actually spoke in the basilica, and looking out on all the people, I was like ‘Wow, Abby sure touched a lot of people.’ And it was crazy. And after the funeral the house looked like a jungle, there was so many flowers and cards and emails and messages, what have you not. People from my high school, that I didn’t even realize knew about Abby and I, were sending me cards and messages, and it was very touching to see all these people reach out to the Bryant family and I, and all her friends.”

“I’ve never really shared this with anybody before, but we always used to wonder if Darren, who was our main tutor, knew that we were a couple. Because we would always sit there and laugh at each other – I feel like he caught on after a while, because one day when I was talking through the A&A building, he came out of a room and I was by myself, and he looked at me, and he kind of stopped for a second, and then he asked me where Abby was. And I thought that was really sweet.”

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Becoming the Bryants By Megan Drover From the moment I met Abby Bryant I knew she was an incredible human being. There was something about her that captured my full attention whenever she was around, and somehow she seemed to have every positive human quality that exists topped off with the perfect sense of humor. I am beyond grateful that it was me she chose as her other half and that she wanted to make me part of her family. I first met Abby at King’s in 2012 when we were both placed in the same FYP tutorial with Darren Dyck. It was not long before we discovered that we only lived a few doors down from each other in Alex Hall. Abby and I spent most of our time together, and no matter what we did, we always had a great time. I can honestly say that every day with Abby was a beautiful day, even if it wasn’t. Every memory that I share with Abby is precious, and although I wish I could share them all with you, it is beyond me to put everything I feel into words. However, what stands out the most in my mind are some of the little things. For example, regularly slow dancing to Pearl Jam’s “Just Breathe” which was eventually labeled as our song, as well as having tea parties, painting watercolors together and just taking it easy at home. Fortunately, we were also able to spend holidays like Easter and Christmas together in both Halifax and Newfoundland, and attend an Ozzy Osbourne concert together this past April. Just as I found a home in Halifax with the Bryant family, she developed a love for Newfoundland during her numerous visits to my hometown throughout the past few years. We were very fortunate to have so much support around us, in and out of the King’s community. To this day, I am still in disbelief that Abby is no longer physically with us. It is really rough, but I am trying my hardest to keep a smile on my face because I know that is what Abby would want to see. Abby gave my life value and taught me so many important things about life, but also taught me that it is okay to be who I am. Regardless of who you are, everyone was born from their mother, and what an incredible mother Abby has. If you know Sandra Bryant, you know how fabulous she is. Sandy taught me how to live through the eyes of my heart, and to pursue all my endeavors passionately. Through watching her and Abby together, I have learned strength, courage and ingenuity. But what I want to thank her for most is for giving me the greatest gift I’ve ever received. |w

PHOTO: HALEY STEELE


Just Breathe

By Abby Bryant

They say just breathe Take a deep breath It’s not that simple I try to explain But I’m treading In deep water Communicating desperately But our minds might as well Be hollow Hollow All I receive are echoes Of previous worries I have no cure None of us do There is no cure for living We all at some point stop breathing We all seem to search to maximize And immortalize our lives. What if we lived one breath at a time? We speak as though breathing is easy Because it is innate But just because something is innate Doesn’t mean it’s easy. Half the time we don’t notice Our breath, it’s just there, Something we do. When did breathing become the uncool kid That all the other body parts ignored? Think about the phrase ‘catch your breath’ You have to catch it because you’ve lost control of it. Find control over your breath and your life will only benefit from it.

PHOTO: ERICA GUY

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SWIMMING SOCIETY LOOKS FOR ONE HOUR WOMEN ONLY SWIM BY KEILI BARTLETT On the surface, the proposal for a women-only hour at Dalhousie University’s Sportsplex may seem to exclude swimmers, but its intention is the opposite. When the Halifax YMCA on South Park Street closed this May, members had to go elsewhere to workout. But for some, there are no other options. At the time of its closure, the YMCA was the only organization in Halifax that hosted regularly structured swimming lessons for women to learn how to swim without the presence of men. Now there are none. In April, the Dalhousie/King’s College Swimming Society started working with the Nova Scotia Association of Women and discovered that many of its members want a women-only hour. The president and co-founder of the society, Harry Critchley, also approached the Women’s Committee of the Dalhousie Muslim Student Association (DMSA) about what requirements they would need. The absence of men is a crucial concern for many adult women learning to swim, particularly for Muslim women, who also need windows looking into the pool to be covered during lessons. “It just seemed like there was really no place where these people could go and take structured lessons. Like, the Canada Games Centre has an open swim for two hours every Sunday. They have one hour for men and one hour for women, but no one was teaching lessons,” said Critchley. Zahraa Charri is an active member of the DMSA and encouraged her friend Ghaida to start the Women’s Committee section of the association. Raised in Halifax, she does not know how to swim. “I’ve been to the beach maybe twice while wearing the hijab,” said Charri, “but I think one of the hard things is that it’s already really hot, unless you wear the hijabi swimsuit. It’s kind of like a scuba diving suit, but a little more comfortable and it has a fabric that kind of 1212 The Watch 2014 | April 2014 | @kingswatch FROSH @kingswatch

makes it looser around the waist and the buttocks and the breast area, so that it fits the appropriate swimwear. I personally would never wear (the hijabi swimsuit), just because it looks really odd and not comfortable, but the swimwear that’s required and how much you have to cover up is hard to do at public beaches.”

that there would be a women-only session for swimming pools and beaches,” said Charri. Although the Swimming Society was hoping to have the process of creating the lessons started for the end of September, Dalhousie has not released a timeframe for the proposal.

Open swims are not enough for adults Kathie Wheadon-Hore, the director of facility and business learning to swim, services for athletand new immigrants are four times more “I thought it would be a really good idea ics and recreational likely to drown than to start the Women’s Committee up so that services at Dalhousie had plans to talk native Canadians, a about the proposal women in the Muslim community can voice recent study discovered. Restricted ac- their concerns on things that are not being this summer in orcess to women-only met on campus,” said Charri. “The whole der to process it, but many of the people pool times plays its goal of the committee was to try to ease the involved were on varole in these statistransition of international Muslim women cation. The Dalplex tics. would be accountCharri’s mother had from their society into this one that’s a little able for both the more co-ed.” a near-death expeprogram and regular rience in the water business, so the necwhen she was younger, and before essary measures are being evaluated. she began wearing the hijab, Charri “It’s not that we’re against it at all,” said also nearly drowned while swimming. Wheadon-Hore, “but to close the pool “I would be obviously flailing around or for an hour for a special group, we something like that, I would get swept want to make sure there is a demand away from the kiddie pool. I kind of from our students. Our first priority is choked on the water. It wasn’t a big and remains our students, and that’s deal, but it was to my mom,” she said. what we look at first with proposals. If we can do it, we surely will.” In order to break down more barriers, not only would the lessons have expe- Although Critchley is concerned about rienced instructors – all of whom are the delay, he agrees with the student students at King’s or Dalhousie – but priority. they would also be free. “That’s really the only intention of our Last year, the DMSA tried to start a program,” said Critchley, “is just to imsimilar proposal, but had trouble get- prove accessibility to a really important ting it approved by Dalhousie. aspect of Canadian life, and also to make people feel safe and comfortable “I’m really thankful that the Swimming in an aquatic environment. So they can Society… could really help us with this. fully take advantage of these things I think it’s a really good program be- that tend to be cherished Canadian cause Dalhousie promotes multicultur- pastimes. al diversity on campus and, especially since they are trying to get more inter- “It’s also breaking down the illusion national students on campus, it would that, at this point, swimming lessons be really nice if they were to encour- are accessible to everyone.” |w age the facilities that most of the international students are used to. Back home, you would almost always expect


Five Years Song

BY patrick Mccutcheon

The Chorus’ external-coordinator, Elizabeth Orenstein, has found rehearsals to be fun and educational for everyone, regardless of their experience.

Photo: King’s Chorus In its fifth year, the King’s Chorus continues to welcome those who sing in showers as well as choirs. Choir member Bethany Draper, a recruiter for the University of King’s College, remembers first coming upon the choir in 2010 when she marched into a rehearsal impatient to pick up her older brother. “I was sitting there telling myself, ‘what the heck—this is right up my alley!’” Draper then auditioned for the Chorus and, like many who do, she became a member. She has been with the Chorus as they sang masses and performed more contemporary music, like Love Songs for Springtime in 2013. One of the youngest student societies amongst a number of Canada’s oldest, the King’s Chorus was founded in January 2010 when Nick Halley, the assistant-director of the King’s Chapel Choir, realized he was turning away talented singers with nowhere to perform. “We wanted to make another environment for people to sing at King’s,” Halley says. “I mentioned it to students Ted Williams and Tim Blackwood. Teddy asked me, ‘If I start it will you direct it?’ And I said of course.”

“Nick manages to stop a rehearsal and explain musical theory and technique, and then we’re right back in rehearsal,” she says. “My musical skill has gone up exponentially since joining the chorus.” Orenstein, along with internal coordinator Anne White, are now paid members of the Chorus’ executive, which was restructured last April. Previously, Halley had been responsible for securing funding for the society, building up awareness and handling communication between its members—all while serving as its director. “Ideally the Chorus would be like a non-profit musical group, with a creative director—Nick—and an executive with hired positions to do administrative work, so Nick could focus on pulling off fantastic shows,” Orenstein says. Halley and the executive of the Chorus are already planning a concert for the end of each semester in the upcoming academic year, with both celebrating the society’s fifth anniversary. The fall concert will be in honor of St. Cecelia, the patron saint of music, and the spring concert will be “a mind-blowing collaboration of musicians,” as Orenstein puts it. Auditions for the Chorus occur in early September, and White maintains auditions will remain as open and stressfree as when she first tried out.

Williams, now a graduate of King’s, quickly posted posters for the makeshift chorus on a Friday night. There were upwards of 80 tryouts the following Sunday.

“My initial audition was painless. I sang part of a folk song and then Nick played a few chords on the piano and asked me to match the pitch,” she explains.

To Halley’s shock, the speedy creation of the Chorus and its non-competitive accessibility had little impact on its first concert, where they performed Handel’s Zadok the Priest.

Those auditioning can sing any song of their choosing, which encourages many renditions of Happy Birthday. Despite re-audition not being a requirement, some members even return to sing it.

“This huge sound was coming out of what was supposed to be an amateur chorus. I’ve never forgotten that sound,” he says. Hosting a diverse group of students, alumni, faculty and community members, the King’s Chorus has spent its first five years recreating and improving on the sound Halley heard at that first concert, despite the member turnover each school year. A core group of members is always present each new semester, however, providing new singers something to connect to.

For the new school year, Nick Halley hopes students eschew their nervousness when thinking about auditioning and simply audition. “People show up and they say, ‘Oh I can’t sing, I was told that by my second grade teacher,’ or, ‘when I sing in the shower my roommate slams the door shut and runs out of the house screaming,’” Halley laughs. “But I’ve seen so many new members who caught the singing or music bug in the Chorus. They absolutely catch fire.” |w @kingswatch FROSH 2014 13


Choosing a Major By Shelby Rutledge Does your program fit with what you want to achieve? Fit with your personality and your strengths? If not, you may want to consider switching into something different before it’s too late. Victoria Herron went back to being a first-year student at Dalhousie University after deciding to switch her major from science to commerce. During Herron’s first year of university she felt stuck in the science program, thinking the program was her only option at Dalhousie. When she set aside some time to really think about her major, Herron had a life changing moment. Over the summer, Herron went to Dalhousie’s Career and Academic Advising Centre. She got the chance to explain what her concerns were and completed some quizzes. These quizzes revealed Herron’s personality and interests were best suited for business careers, not scientific labs. “That got me thinking,” says Herron. “What am I going to do with my Bachelor of Science? So I jumped right into the Commerce program – and I love it!” However, before changing programs students should think twice about what’s at stake. “You have to consider a major similar to a road trip between two cities,” the CollegeTransfer.Net website explains. “Changing the destination may mean you will take different roads altogether - and even back track on different roads to get to your new destination,” “Like the analogy, the new destination and road trip may end up costing you more in time and money.” Randii Sullivan, a career services advocate at Dalhousie University, has seen lots of students stumble when picking their academic program. Sullivan advises students to take it easy and to set aside time to reflect on what they really want to achieve. “The first way we help students is really by getting to know them,” says Sullivan. “So sitting down with students and having a conversation with them; finding out what they are passionate about, finding out why they like the work they do – was it a particular project that they worked on, or an internship that they enjoyed 14 FROSH 2014 @kingswatch

and wanted to move into that kind of field?” However, students can jump into a program without really thinking about what they want out of it at the end. For Sullivan, she decided to take time to travel and think about what she really wanted. “It was through my experiences of being a residence assistant and working within the career center, being involved in things on campus, and even my exchange that I went on helped me decide that I wanted to go into medicine,” says Sullivan. Before choosing or changing a major, Sullivan advises students to take time for themselves, and really get to know who they are and who they want to become. If this includes travelling to a new place or just taking a new yoga class, students should do it!

to when they get lost. Herron only applied to one university: Dalhousie. “It was really the only university that I wanted to go to in Nova Scotia,” says Herron. “Dalhousie just seems probably one of the biggest universities in Nova Scotia, and it has a great science program,” says Herron. “I don’t think I want to be anywhere else. I love being in the heart of the city. I am close to the water and shopping. And again, I love the wonderful programs here at Dal – I couldn’t have asked for anything better.“ Herron is now a third-year student, and is beginning to get ready for a new school year. As she sits on the counter, legs crossed, wearing her casual business clothes, she is now in a degree she can see herself completing.

Once Sullivan can narrow down “After graduawhat field the tion, I would realstudent wants ly like to work for to go into, she is able to help “You have to consider a major similar a large national to a road trip between two cities... or international connect them Changing the destination may mean company, somewith better reyou will take different roads altogeth- where here in sources to help them complete er - and eve n back track on different Canada or even their research roads to get to your new destination.” in New York,” says Herron. before committing to a specific “My dream job program. would to become the Chief FinanSullivan introduces students to cial Officer of a company, or even the Dal online job centre, where to own a company,” says Herron. students can search for their field What if Herron had not put in so of interest and can receive more much thought and dedication into information about the careers and choosing the perfect program? how to get there. Sullivan also tries Best-case scenario: she would to connect students with someone have stayed confused in the in their decided profession so they Bachelor of Science program not can have a cup of coffee, sit back knowing which classes to take or and talk about the job. what career to aspire to. WorstTo avoid frustration, losing cred- case scenario: Herron could have its, and losing money: students failed or dropped out of university. should complete their research Herron and Sullivan are both on before jumping into a new pro- the same page about how experigram. encing new things can lead young “(It’s about) knowing where you people into a whole new direction want to go, know what your pre- in life. requisites are, have all of your “Students should take time to encourses lined up, and even start joy their years at university, exlooking at internships ahead of plore different programs and to time,” says Sullivan. take time in deciding what they By creating a goal and plan at the really want to complete after gradstart of their education, students uating from university,” says Sulliwill have something to look back van. |w


FITTING IN AS A DAY STUDENT By Dina Lobo

It’s no secret students living in residence often dominate the first year population on campus at King’s. Being the small school it is, residence students can easily notice those they don’t see around campus all day, which can make day students feel isolated. This is why, for some day students, frosh week can be vital in determining how they fit into the King’s community. Emma Reid, a third-year King’s student who spent her first year in residence, said she had many opportunities to make friends throughout the year. “In residence there are so many situations where you are forced to get to know people around you, whether it’s your roommate or going to meal hall, whereas day students don’t get that opportunity,” she said. President of the Day Students’ Society (DSS), Colleen Earle understands the isolation day students may feel. “Local students and students who live on residence have a very different idea of what the King’s community is,” Earle said. “One thinks of it as nice and inclusive and the other doesn’t know half the people they spend 2 hours a day for 200 days. I’m still meeting people who I did FYP with and I’m going into my fourth year.” Along with advocating on behalf of day students, the goal of the DSS is to make sure those students feel supported throughout the year. “Many of our first-year local day students feel isolated and it’s our job

to be a friendly face on campus and help foster a community that they feel comfortable in,” said Earle.

wasn’t set up. “We had to drag mattresses in and there were no blankets or pillows.

Partying has always been an aspect of the university experience. Lauren Sweeney, a day student who attended frosh week, believes forging friendships during that week is important.

“Most importantly there was no key for us to enter the building. A resident student with a key would have to let us in or we couldn’t get in.”

“It would be really hard to go to the parties because I didn’t have a place to crash, so it was good to know someone in residence,” she said. The DSS first year representative, Madeline Higgins, said she understands the importance of having a place to stay at night as she lives outside the city in Tantallon. “For day students who live farther out, it’s not just (about) meeting friends,” she said. “Making friends on residence is really important since all the resident students are part of frosh week. You can make those connections and then sleep on their floors.” The frosh van is available to day students who need a lift to and from King’s, which is provided by the DSS, but Earle finds it challenging for the remainder of the year to integrate those living outside the city. Though the van helps with transportation, finding a place to sleep became an issue. The Day Bay was understood as a room for day students to stay at during frosh, but Sweeney was left unimpressed. “I remember we played circles because it wasn’t where they told us it would be,” she said. After finding the room she quickly realized it

Reid said she feels there is an unfair burden put on day students. She said, “It’s almost treated like day student culture isn’t real kings student culture in a way because they don’t have all the same experiences as the resident students.” Then there’s Prince Hall. Most residence students eat there roughly three times a day because of the meal plans. Though day students are welcome prices of meals can range from $8.45 for lunch up to $11.00 for dinner. The DSS has tried finding opportunities to integrate day and residence students, but due to miscommunication between day students and the executives of the society, the DSS has not been very popular with the majority of day students at King’s. “I know last year the president really wanted to do the Fall Ball and we all worked on that, but the turn out wasn’t that great because we didn’t have enough communication or we didn’t advertise it enough,” Higgins said. Earle hopes to work on that for the upcoming semester. “I’m still not entirely sure how to fix this problem, but it’s one of the things that I’d really like to work hard on this year.” |w @kingswatch FROSH 2014 15


OUT OF THE FISHBOWL

BY SOPHIE ALLEN-BARRON

You’ll soon find that King’s is a cosy community. You may even find the term “fishbowl” bandied about. While our school’s small size and closeknit campus are some of the best parts of the first year experience, it’s importance to get off campus (and no, Dal doesn’t count as off campus) every now and again. From a native Haligonian, here are some suggestions for post-tutorial and weekend jaunts. |w 4

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Photo: Google map data 2014 1616 The Watch 2014 | April@kingswatch 2014 | @kingswatch FROSH


Tucked away in the South End, just as Inglis turns to Barrington, Schooner Books houses hundreds of used and rare books. They’re no stranger to King’s students – about half of their Philosophy section is comprised of past and present FYP books. Stop by in September when you’re feeling enthusiastic, or later in the year when you need a new read and a dose of that old-book-binding-glue smell to jolt you out of a philosophical daze.

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Getting there: 5378 Inglis street – the 9 goes right past it, but the 1, 10 and 14 all come close. Maud Lewis: do you love her yet? Folk art may not be for everyone, but her bright flowers and snow-tromping deer hold undeniable charm. Imagine being so committed to an aesthetic that you painted your entire house, appliances included! Nova Scotian darling Maud did just that, and her entire house now sits inside the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia. Its diminutive size makes it perfect for res room décor inspiration. Kidding, please do not paint your walls. Sticky tack is the way to go. Anyway, a rainy afternoon inside AGNS with the Maud Lewis house and the other collections on display is one of the cosier experiences on offer in downtown Halifax.

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Getting there: 1723 Hollis street – the 1 will get you to Barrington, then just walk down 2 (short) blocks to Hollis. Easy peasy. You’ll surely find yourself at Point Pleasant Park sometime during your time in Halifax. Probably catching the sunrise post-all-nighter, but who’s to say? Even after a full eight hours the natural beauty is worth the walk. Dogs! Trees! Water, and lots of it! Plus anchor statues, heather, old barracks and seals if you’re lucky. Go in September and take advantage of some of the most beautiful weather out of the year. PPP even offers two conveniently placed ice-cream stores: one on the water side, and one by the top entrance to the park. Treat yo’self while you enjoy some PARK and RECREATION. Tom Haverford and Donna Meagle (probably) not included.

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Getting there: not the 1, for once. The 9 is the only direct route, but you’d be as well off to simply walk. It’s an adventure?!

People talk a good game about the Seaport Farmers’ market, and it’s definitely worth a visit. But wait! While the Brewery Market doesn’t share the same bustle as its glossy new counterpart, some of the best Saturday morning treats can be found within its walls. Prepare to be charmed by exposed brick while munching on the best pierogi yet found in Halifax, or an incredible cinnamon roll from Mary’s Bread Basket. Bring that frosh week tote along and pick up some veggies or spices for late night res kitchen experimentation (rumour has it garam masala goes wonderfully with tater tots). The market’s streetside neighbour Chocolates by Design’s Choco Café makes incredible hot chocolate perfect for brightening the gray days of November, and December, and January, and...

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Getting there: 1496 Lower Water street – just a short walk from the 1 stop on Spring Garden before Barrington. Only open on Saturdays, but absence makes the heart grow fonder. Those seeking a stereotypically blissful morning experience – waking up over a coffee and flaky croissant perhaps, before leisurely combing small shops for treasures – need to make their way to the Hydrostone Market. Home to the Halifax location of Chester-based French bakery Julien’s, it’s perfect for a sweet solo breakfast or a friendly meetup (though don’t fret if Starbucks is more your scene, there’s one across the street. Do your thing). While the afternoon away in the shops there – olive oil lovers can sample to their heart’s content at Liquid Gold, and magpies can find something sparkly at its neighbour Lady Luck. Even non-knitters or crocheters stand to be entranced by the selection at L.K. Yarns – its colour-compartmentalised wall of New Brunswick-spun Briggs and Little is a sight to behold. If you stay until lunch (or dinner) the Hydrostone offers meals from sushi to pizza to complete a perfect mini-retreat.

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Getting there: the 1 and a short walk, or a short walk and the 7.

BA, BSc and BJH students alike will be able to find something at Atlantic News. Their selection of newspapers and magazines goes unmatched in the city, and their themed window displays are always a delight to walk past. Most excitingly, they’ve recently teamed up with a number of food trucks. Stop by on a weekend night and you may find donuts, bibimbap or fries on offer in their small lot, ready to be enjoyed with a side of your publication of choice. Best of all, if you aren’t into chasing paper(s), they’ll happily hold copies at the desk for you.

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Getting there: the 1 or the 10, with walking on each side. It’s also just down the block from our fancy new library! Reading material for days. Of age and need to celebrate a birthday/finishing a paper/finishing the Odyssey/finishing this list? Try The Fireside. Their decent prices are only ameliorated by the special on Martini Mondays, or five dollars for a drink, down from the usual seven. To embrace and celebrate your Haligonian-ness, try the Harbour Fog martini. With peach schnapps, and cake vodka it may sound ridiculous, but the murky blue drink both looks and tastes far better than the actual harbour. The Fireside’s perpetual candlelight and cushy chairs make it one of the nicest places to be when the weather turns blustery.

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Getting there: 1500 Brunswick street, just off Spring Garden – the 1 will get you there. @kingswatch FROSH 2014 17


HOW IMPORTANT IS JAZZ TODAY? By Rebecca Hussman

79-year-old Julian Priester is a jazz legend. The trombonist and composer was in town during the Halifax Jazz Festival in July to perform his iconic 1974 album Love, Love. He chose to perform that album alongside his longtime friend Jerry Granelli at the festival because the technology used was ahead of its time, said Priester. “Would you believe that after 40 years it’s still contemporary?” he said. “A lot of jazz fans are finding out about it. It has generated a lot of curiosity because it... stimulates the imagination.” But when asked about the relevance of Jazz today he highlighted its purposes from the past. “It has been taken into hospitals and institutions and performed for people who are having various mental and physical illnesses. It has a therapeutic effect.” Priester added jazz has been filtered for some years now. “When you look at popular music, if you know anything about Jazz and its history and the sounds of Jazz, you can actually hear it being used in popular music,” he said. “And if you listen to a lot of rap you can hear it.” He partly believes that the practice of music sampling, reworking a song from the past, is a positive thing. However, the fact that jazz is being filtered more frequently into

being filtered more frequently into popular music disappoints the authentic artist in him. “On the one hand, you know, I applaud that. On the other hand, I’m upset by it,” Priester said. “I think that in doing that, the rappers are missing an opportunity to exercise their creative energies, and come up with ideas on their own, to back themselves up, rather than using something that’s already existing.” Since Priester was a jazz composition and history professor for over 30 years, the historian in himself is quick to identify an interesting parallel between the use of sampling by young artists today and the use of improvisational techniques by jazz artists during the twentieth century. “At a certain stage in the music, it was taken away from the youth in the country, and the instruments themselves cost so much money so they couldn’t afford any. So, they improvised, used their bodies, and they were using their voices to create rhythm,” he said.

“It is a logical progression from using the body and the feet and other things to provide instruments that they couldn’t afford to buy; sampling follows in those footsteps.” But the artistic approach of focusing on experimentation, open-mindedness and newness stuck with Priester. “My sons think I should be making more money than I’m making, and if I was playing more commercial music, I probably would be making more money,” he said. “But I’m happy. I’m happy doing what I do. It shouldn’t be about the money, No. It’s art.” By his own definition, Priester has led a lifelong, wildly successful artistic career and he has no plans to stop doing what he loves. He’s currently working on another album titled Afru*ition, which has no set release date at this time. As for the future of jazz? “I envision a bright future for this music that we used to call Jazz,” he said with a laugh. |w

18 FROSH 2014 @kingswatch

PHOTO: NICK HOLLAND


NOT YOUR AVERAGE ARM-WRESTLER

BY ALEXANDRA COOKE

A slender woman standing at five foot two, Melissa Louvelle isn’t the first one who comes to mind when thinking about arm-wrestling. But the 20-yearold Saint Mary’s University commerce student from Porter’s Lake, N.S. defied stereotypes at her first national arm-wrestling championship in May. The competition was held in Charlottetown, P.E.I., and Louvelle competed in the 60 kg and under weight class. She came in first place with her left arm, and second with her right. “I get a lot of ‘you don’t look like an arm-wrestler,’” she says. “But you don’t have to look like one.” She says that lots of muscles doesn’t have much of an effect - the outcome of a game often depends on aspects such as wrist strength and grip. Louvelle has perfected a few techniques of her own - keep the wrist elevated and using either side or back pressure. She describes arm-wrestling as a very technical sport. “It doesn’t matter how much weight you can lift. It’s all about practice and learning the technical aspect.” Louvelle has been interested in arm-wrestling since she was a young girl – her father was an arm-wrestler himself. But she’s only been involved with it for less than a year. She’s been participating in other sports since she was five, and has been a gymnast for 11 years. However, her biggest supporter when she started out was Randy Bayers, her boyfriend and fellow arm-wrestler. He participated in

the national competition as well, and he got third place for both arms in the 86 kg weight class. “It doesn’t come easy. There’s always something to beat and always something you can improve on. You can’t be perfect,” Louvelle says. Her favourite part about the sport is the team aspect, despite it being a one-person sport. She’s been given advice from her opponents, and described hanging out with her rivals and getting to know them after competitions. “For people who are in it, it’s their life. People who don’t do it don’t know,” she says. “It’s an extremely awesome, supportive sport. Even if you’re against someone, they’ll still give you tips.” For now, arm-wrestling as a sport isn’t getting as much attention as Louvelle would like. She said that most people know it as an activity people do in bars or at parties. There’s also a lack of women who compete in the sport. But it’s now gaining more publicity from competitions, and Louvelle hopes that more people will be supporting and will start participating. For those interested in arm-wrestling, her advice is simple – just give it a try. “Don’t be scared to try it! When I first started out, I was terrified. But as soon as you go up, you’ll fall in love.” Louvelle is looking forward to the world competition in September, which is being held in Lithuania. |w

PHOTO: ALEXANDRA COOKE

@kingswatch FROSH 2014 19


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