The McGill Tribune Vol. 25 Issue 24

Page 1

Vol. 25 Issue 24 I Monday, March 13, 2006

PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS' SOCI ETY OF MCGI LL UNIVERSITY

A rts appoints Manfredi dean S tu d e n ts

hail p o litic a l s c i e n c e

c h a ir as th e

rig h t c h o ic e

DANIEL AMIN

The Conter era fades away as presidential candidates look to the future. See pages 6 and 7 for our endorsements.

A s p ir in g e x e c s s q u a r e o f f C a n d id a te s s tr u g g le t o NIALL MACKAY ROBERTS On Wednesday, the Students' Society held debates in the Shatner building between candidates for next year's execu­ tive council. Of the six positions available, four are contested and will be appearing on ballots until voting closes this Wednesday. The other two, including External and Clubs and Services, have been acclaimed. Debate attendance showed a marked increase from last year, when the SSMU Council room was only half full at the event's peak, Upwards of 60 students came to listen to candidates discuss their platforms in a generally cordial and orderly

s e t th e m s e lv e s a p a rt

atmosphere, a number of whom also stood in line to question candidates directly. Communications and Events The race for the Communications and Events portfolio pits Dena O'Hara, U3 Biochemistry, against Gill Prendergast, cur­ rent vice-president communications for the Arts Undergraduate Society. Both candi­ dates are bilingual. The majority of debate between O'Hara and Prendergast was subdued throughout the evening. In her opening statement, O'Hara spoke generally about updating the SSMU website and reversing negative stereotypes surrounding Frosh,

while Prendergast focused on diversifying SSMU events and using alternative media to promote them. In perhaps the only point of con­ tention, a student asked both candidates if they supported using SSMU to advertise political events sponsored by campus clubs. Dena spoke in favour of the idea, saying SSMU had "the duty to give space in our mass e-mails." Prendergast, however, left the issue undecided. "The issue is up in the air... It's some­ thing I would discuss with the executive."

Professor Christopher Manfredi, chair of the Department of Political Science, has been appointed to the position of dean of the Faculty of Arts. His term begins June 1 and will last five years. "Every great university needs a strong Faculty of Arts," Manfredi said, "and I want McGill to be a great uni­ versity." An advisory committee gave Manfredi its unani­ mous approval, and his selection was met with tremen­ dous approval from the Arts. Undergraduate Society executive. "We think it’s great,” said AUS Vice-President External Jacob Itzkowitz. "Most of the executive is in Political Science. We think he's a great professor and we're very excited." Adrian Angus, AUS vice-president academic, served on the committee that chose Manfredi. He said that Manfredi's vision for the faculty is what distinguishes him. "As a member of the committee, I have full confi­ dence that Professor Manfredi will be a great Dean of Arts," Angus said. Manfredi said he was excited about the new chal­ lenges he will face as dean. He acknowledged that the faculty currently faces many challenges itself, including classroom crowding, graduate, student funding and stu­ dent advising. The state of advising in the faculty has been a par­ ticular complaint among students for years. Manfredi said he has no specific plans to fix this, but has started consulting with student groups on the issue, a move that Angus applauded. "It's the number one student priority" Angus said. "I hope it's the number one faculty priority." Manfredi conceded that many, students are unsatis­ fied with the number of advisors and that faculty advis' ing needs improvement. "If students say it's a problem, then it needs to be looked at," he said. There has also been discussion in recent years about the possibility of a new Arts building. While the new dean wouldn't dismiss the idea, he was not opti­ mistic that it would become a reality anytime soon.

See ATTENDANCE, page 3

The Tribune is seeking applications for the 2006-07 Editorial Board.

B e a T r ib u n e e d ito r. 2006-07

See CHALLENGES, page 4

Applications should be addressed to Editor-in-Chief Liz Allemang

News Editors (3)

Production Manager

Features Editors (2)

Design Editors (3)

Arts & Entertainment Editors (2)

Photo Editors (2)

Sports Editors (2)

Copy Editor

Opinion Editor

Online Editor

and include a cover letter, CV and three published clips or other relevant samples of work. Drop off applications in the McGill Tribune office, Shatner 110, by Friday, March 24 at 3:30 pm.


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