The McGill Tribune Vol. 23 Issue 16

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Real change in Canadian press

Bovine Betsy still eating her sister

Reviewing the suds and duds of SnoAP

FEATURES, PAGE 11

OP/ED, PAGE 8

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Tuesday, January 13, 2004

Published by the Students' Society o f M cGill U niversity since 1981

Vol. 23 Issue 16

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McCord exhibition not all crap Museum explores influence of Mark Kerr

NICO LE LEAVER

Disappointed Redmen looked on as their team sputtered to a tie with Concordia. See page 17.

AUS considers Arts building fee Jennifer lett

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Funding for the proposed Arts building on the comer of rue Peel and avenue Dr.Penfield is uncertain, and students may be asked to help foot the bill. The university’s current plans require between $30- and $40-million; $ 15-million for the first phase of construction and $ 15- to $25million for a second expansion phase. The 18 departments in the Arts faculty are housed across campus in the Arts building, 688 Sherbrooke, me McTavish, and Wilson Hall. “Because we re scattered all over the place, there are people that are working not in prox­ imity, and any benefits that you could get from

those people working in proximity are lost, said Associate Dean of Arts Chris Ragan. While the first phase of construction would move Arts departments closer together, the second phase would create more space for undergraduate and graduate students. In par­ ticular, Ragan said, the faculty needs mediumsize classrooms that seat 75 to 100 students. Space is also needed to accommodate the 45 professors the faculty has hired over the last two years and the 25 it expects to hire this year. Thus far the university has received $1million from a single donor, as well as a few smaller donations. The university has also See NO COMMITMENT page 2

With the recent caricature of Scots in movies and television commercials, the impressionable could be excused for viewing these people as simply whisky-swilling, hag­ gis-munching idiots. “The Scots—Dyed-in-the-Wool Montrealers,” the newest exhibition at the McCord Museum, seeks to dispel the one­ dimensional peasant image. The exhibition, which opened last year and runs until September, takes the Conquest of French North America in 1763—in which many Scots played an instrumental role—as its starting point. “The Scots" then proceeds to examine how these settlers came to control many workings of the city in the 18th, and continuing through to the 19th, century. The curators do an excellent job of com­ bining a wide variety of materials to construct the story of the Scots in Montreal. The exhi­ bition relies heavily on the McCords hold­ ings, many of them family heirlooms that have been donated to the museum. Furthermore, many paintings of the influen­ tial men of the time cover the walls. The mas­ sive portraits of stem Scotsmen are enough to scare off any young patron. Perhaps sensing the imposing nature of some of the material, the curators set up sev­ eral interactive exhibits geared for a younger crowd. The first is a replica of a curling rink that allows visitors to toss miniature rocks through the house. The second display of note is a Nintendo GameCube with a Tiger Woods PGA tour game. The purpose of the exhibit, perhaps a bit of a stretch, is to complement the display showing that the Scots invented the sport. More interesting than the video game is the fact that present day Parc Jeanne-Mance was the site of a golf course for the Scottish leisure class. The city park has gone from golf clubs to bongo drums in little more then a century. The exhibition connected the success of the Scots in Montreal to their religious beliefs. Many of the Scottish in Canada belonged to the Presbyterian Church. Due to the church’s emphasis on education, a major­ ity of them learned to read, a necessary skill for studying the scriptures. With many of them educated, the Scots as a group had greater success than other immigrant groups

WHITE OUT WEEKEND!

e a r ly S c o ts

in Montreal at the time. While the McCord Museum deserves praise for its overall vision for “The Scots, the curators approached the other extreme when combating the traditional view of the group. Granted, Scottish men and women shaped the city’s commerce, finance, industry and modes of transportation; however, many emigrants from the island did not belong to the influential business class. These Scots of lower status are alluded to in the concluding panel without significant discussion in the overall exhibit. There is a possible logistical explanation for the absence of the working class in “The Scots.” Artifacts from this segment of Montreal’s population were likely not kept. Garments and household tools were used until they lost their usefulness and then dis­ carded. While the curators might have been hampered by this historical reality, they owed the audience a greater exploration through othef means, possibly making use of multimedia technology. Many will go to this exhi­ bition expecting to discover more about their Scottish ancestry. Those who lived in the slums played a role in that history as much as the people who lived in the mansions around the McGill campus and Westmount did. ■ m S S M U to

sion to a mentary commission. NEWS, PACE 7 ■ “I don’t really like to start shitting where I sleep when I talk about rap.” A&E, PAGE 14

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teams went headwith their crosstown rivals last weekend. SPORTS, PACE 17

Wear ONLY white to McGill hoops Friday!

Fri. Jan. 16: McGILL BASKETBALL vs. Bishops, 6 pm _______________ irst> F 00 f a n s r e c e iv e F R E E ' ‘O u r Sun. Jan. 18: BIGGEST HOCKEY GAME OF THE YEAR! CARNIVAL SHOWDOWN! Redmen host UQTR, McConnell Arena, 7pm Pre-game party 4:30 pm @ Bar des Pins

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