Tribune The McGill
Published by the Tribune Publication Society Volume No. 31 Issue No. 20
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Concordia student strike Protest for free education Editorials Popcorn recipes Raspberry Pi John K. Samson Martlet basketball RSEQ
3 4 8 11 16 18 21
Women’s History month (pages 12-13)
Martlets storm to RSEQ gold medal (p. 21)
The Martlets embrace after winning the RSEQ championship. (Sam Reynolds / McGill Tribune)
Dean Manfredi’s Open Forum marked by low turnout Kyla Mandel Managing Editor Discussions on safe space and flawed consultation processes marked the sparsely attended first meeting of Dean of Arts Christopher Manfredi’s Open Forum on March 1. With just over 30 people in the audience, this first of four open meetings focused discussion on the four main issues raised by the Jutras Report on the events of Nov. 10 with regards to free expression and peaceful assembly. Following Principal Heather Munroe-Blum’s response to the
Jutras Report on Feb. 13, a nine-person advisory group was created to assist Dean Manfredi in hosting the Open Forum and producing a written report on the views articulated therein, the process of which is to be finished by June 8 and formally presented to Munroe-Blum by October. “I think that all of us have a responsibility to ensure that the quality of the discussion is as high as possible and that really depends on the participants themselves. [It] depends on their being here and depends on their making intelligent contributions respectfully on various subjects,” Manfredi said in his open-
ing remarks. The issue of what peaceful assembly entailed, as well as what should be designated as private versus public space on campus dominated the discussion. “I do think that there are ethics of peaceful demonstration and perhaps students should actually come to have a discussion about that,” Catherine Lu, a political science professor, said. “When [you] occupy the building ... you are the same people asking for respect and recognition of the things you do, and you’re disrespecting the people who you want to
hear you,” Dave D’Oyen, U2 arts, said of the actions of student occupiers and on the issue of deliberately concealing one’s identity. “If you’re brave enough to stand up for something then you should be brave enough to accept the consequences that are going to follow,” he added. The idea of instituting a specific space for peaceful assembly was met with apprehension. “Part of the action inherently is to disrupt something,” Josh Redel, VP Communications for the Engineering Undergraduate Society and member of the Open Forum adviso-
ry committee, said. “So if you have a designated corridor that’s far away from classrooms and administration buildings and therefore it doesn’t disrupt anything, what’s the point then? They’re never going to use it.” Discussion then turned to the validity of people’s feelings towards the events and atmosphere on campus and the relation that had to private space. “One thing I would like to ask is why people are afraid of students,” Lu said. Caroline Baril, who works in th principal’s office, referenced her See “OPEN FORUM” on page 3