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March 21st, 1995
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S tu d e n ts ’ S o c ie ty o f M c G ill U n iv e rs ity
n RJ [ B U N E
Volume 14 Issue 23
In Domino Confido
Yeghoyan retires, here comes M yers By Sara Iean G reen______ ■
N ew s What the Tribune did until 2am last Friday morning... SSMU election results See Page 3
Juice, Genes, Joyride and a reminder not to drink the water. See Page 9
Editorial Is Canada the new international bad boy? See Page 6
ENTERTAINMENT Chokers, pagans and Led Zeppelin references galore See Page 13
SPORTS Inside scoops on McGill’s Anne Gildenhuys and Chad Wozney as well as a peek at the backsides of hock ey writers Mark Luz and Joe Wong. See Page 16 C o lu m n ists T. Frankel................Page 7 B. Van Dijk.............Page 7
Departments Crossword...............Page 8 Observer..................Page 8 What’s O n.............Page 19
Walksafe Network 398-2 498 Walking you from anywhere to anywhere. Sun-Thurs 7:00pm to 12:45am Fri-Sat 7:00pm to 2:30am
Inter-Residence Council pres ident H elena M yers won the SSMU p residential race last Thursday night, beating her near est opponent, Science Undergraduate Society president Steve Ahn by 251 votes. From the seventeen polling stations across campus, Myers received a total of 1,296 votes which accounted for 45 percent of the popular vote. Ahn and Red Herring candidate Steve Goodinson had 1045 and 533 votes respectively. Myers is now the second con secutive IRC president to be elect ed to the office of SSMU presi dent. She is preceded by Sevag Yeghoyan and Mark Luz, also IRC president in 1991-92. Myers is the first female president in five years. M yers procured the o v er whelming support of management students, collecting 265 votes which accounted for 65 percent of the vote at the management poll. Myers also got 54 percent of the votes cast at polls in the re si dences. Ahn secured 50 percent of the votes cast in the Burnside, M cC onnell E ngineering and Stewart Bio polls while 35 percent of votes at math and science polls w ent to M yers. G oodinson received most of his support at the Leacock, Redpath and Shatner polls where he received 53 percent of his total votes. An excited Myers told the Tribune that she is confident about being able to represent the
interests of all students in dealing with the administration. “This year there was a lack of respect from the dean of stu dents tow ards the S tu d en ts’ Society. I’m confident and opti mistic that that will change,” she said. “There is no reason for stu dents and administrators not to work together to make this a great university.” The president-elect is also looking forward to working with the other members of next year’s executive. “I’m completely committed to making the executive work as a team which SSMU hasn’t seen for a long time. We [will] be an executive that will be very active, visible, approachable and com mitted to accomplishing what we set out to accom plish,” said Myers. Ahn, although disappointed at losing the election, was very supportive of Myers. He is also confident that Myers will be able to work well with the other mem bers of the executive. “I think she’ll be one of the best presidents SSMU has ever had. She’s very charismatic,” said Ahn. “Due to what happened this year, 1 think the next executive is very aware about the possibility of [personality problems], I don’t think [Myers] will allow person ality conflicts to stand in the way of progress.” Red H erring candidate Goodinson also commented on See President Page 2
SSMU president-elect Helena Myers shares a special moment with current p rez Sevag Yeghoyan.
Professors unwilling to weather storm of separation • The conclusion o f a tw o-part series on how Quebec separation would affect students and professors at M cGill By H ugo C ameron_________ In light of recent speculation about the potential impact of a ‘yes’ vote in the forthcoming sovereignty referendum, the Tribune conducted a poll of 120 McGill professors regarding the probability of their leaving the province if it separates. The poll represents 10 percent of McGill faculty, making the poll accurate to within 4-5 percentage points. Professors were chosen at
random from over 50 departments ranging from Aerospace Medical Research to History; from Library Science to Math. In terms of prestige and appeal to new students, much depends on a university’s capacity to both retain its current professors and attract new research and teaching staff. The poll’s results demonstrate that the McGill administration may have a problem on its hands should Quebec separate.
AVAILABLE AT THESE T o LOCATIONS: #ljm E A T O N CEN TRE LEVEL I • S T .L A U R E N T • C o r n e r P r in c e A r th u r
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likely” to leave, while 25 percent were “unsure” what they would do. The remaining 40.8 percent consid ered themselves more likely to stay in Quebec than to leave, regardless of the referendum results. A conser vative estimate of these aggregated numbers suggests that McGill could face a loss of approximately onethird of its teaching and research staff if Quebec separates. What does this mean for the
The most striking results were evident in the responses to the ques tion: “If a ‘yes’ vote succeeds in the forthcom ing referendum and Quebec becomes sovereign, what is the likelihood you would leave McGill/Quebec?” (please see results table). A surprisingly large number (20 percent) of faculty responded that they would be “very likely” to leave McGill if Quebec decides to call its own shots. 14.2 percent indi cated that they were “somewhat
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