The McGill Tribune Vol. 24 Issue 26

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P U B L I S H E D BY T H E S T U D E N T S '

Curiosity delivers. Vol. 24 Issue 26

OPINION: No m ore groaning round here... o ur swan songs.

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A&E: S um m er already? Pray tell, what to do? Hint: Festivals.

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SPORTS: In the days of yore, th ese w ere o u r heroes. Sigh. Thursday, March 31, 2005

S OC I E T Y OF M C G I L L UNI VERSI TY

Separatism a t McGill PQ

le a d e r B e rn a rd

c a m p u s

L a n d r y 's u p c o m i n g

v is it t o

h ig h lig h ts s t u d e n t s p lit o v e r s o v e r e i g n ty

ROBERT CHURCH

education comes an increasing realization that one cannot destroy overwhelmingly successful A historic political first for McGill will take long-standing institutions without an attainable place next week, as former Quebec premier vision for the future." Kirk said that Landry has not been a posi­ Bernard Landry is set to become the first Parti tive influence on the province. Québécois leader to visit the university. "I guess I see him much like a crack deal­ Landry served as Premier from 2001 to 2003 and is currently the leader of the opposi­ er-trying to lure my oldest, dearest friend tion in the National Assembly. His speech next down some path that's destined to hurt every­ week, which is being organized by le Comité one involved," she said. "It makes me protective Souverainiste de l'Université McGill—a chapter and, quite frankly, a bit outraged." Jennifer Robinson, McGill associate vice­ of the PQ—will include topics such as global­ principal (communications),'said that the admin­ ization and immigration. Jennifer Drouin, president of le Comité, istration was not informed about the talk but anticipates that Landry will receive a warm wel­ welcomed Landry nonetheless. "As far as I can tell, we weren't invited or come from students. "It's a historic first," she said. "I think that informed," she said. "That said, our reaction is people will show up just out of interest in the that it's great. It's great for him to come to McGill. I expect Mr. Landry will be very warm­ idea." Drouin added that Landry's visit might help ly received." Political Science Professor Richard Schultz, bring together McGill's diverse student popula­ a Canadian politics expert who is currently on tion. "The whole point of the visit is building leave at the Kennedy School of Government at bridges between the anglophone and fran­ Harvard University, hopes that students will cophone communities," she said, "because a receive Landry politely. "He [has] a legitimate place in any univer­ PQ leader has never been to McGill before." According to Drouin, the club was formed sity," he said. "I fundamentally disagree with from provincial and federal parties and claims him, but I certainly do not agree with interfering with his right to speak." close to 60 members. Drouin said that the Liberal provincial gov­ "[The club is] a coalition of the PQ McGill cell [and] the Bloc Québécois McGill cell. It's a ernment, which is currently facing stiff protests way of having more inclusion because there from student groups over $ 103-million in cuts to are sovereignists that are not members of the bursaries, is destroying 'essential aspects of Quebec culture. PQ or Bloc." "[The current government] is quite simply Drouin added that the separatist movement has surprisingly sjjpig support in the McGill terrible," she said. "Its destroying everything that makes Quebec Quebec, which is the community. "I think it gets a fair amount [of support], social network that's really been at the basis of more than one would expect from McGill. Quebec society since the Quiet Revolution Quebec students are 30 per cent at McGill, began in the '60s." She added that inviting Landry to speak at and‘we know that sovereignists in the general population hover at somewhere around 40 per McGill is a way to include the community in cent or 50 per cent... We also have members Quebec politics. "McGill is ghettoized from the rest of who are uni-langue anglophones who support Quebec, and we're kind of separate," she the idea." Devon Kirk, president of Liberal McGill, said. "We need to work on getting past the had different ideas about the level of support for east-west divide in Montreal. ■ separatism among students. Landry will be speaking at Moot Court on "Thankfully the support for separatism at McGill is limited,” she said. "I think that with April 6. S a t ., A p r i l 2

T h e 2 0 0 4 -0 5 M c G ill A th le tic s A w a rd s G a la

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A Celebration of Excellence Thurs., Mar. 31 at 6:30pm

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A th le te tic k e ts o n s a le a t c lie n t s e r v ic e s - G 2 0

McGill Soccer Hosts The M en’s & W omen’s QSSF Indoor Cham pionship Saturday, April 2, 2005 starts at 9am w w w .a th le tic s .m c g ill.c a f o r g a m e tim e s

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