REDMEN W IN FIRST OF SEASON, PAGE 20
SUPERPOWER DISCOVERY, PAGE 16
T ribune Published by the Students' Society of McGill University
ww w.m cgilltribune.com
Volum e 26 Issue 4 • Septem ber 26,2006
Thieves break into Leacock lockers AUS minimizes damage M
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Last Thursday, 74 lockers in the basement of the Leacock Building were vandalized. A still unknown per son or persons cut the locks and rifled through the contents of the lockers most likely between 6:30 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. As of Friday evening, some students had reported missing items, mostly of little value. Arts Undergraduate Society VicePresident Communications Phil Holdsworth was in the AUS office when the vandalism occurred, but was un aware of it at the time. Fie only found out later when a student approached him asking why his lock had been cut. It was then that Floldsworth checked the lockers and realized that there was more than just one lock that had
been cut. After speaking with AUS Presi dent R.J. Kelford, all of the members of AUS Executive were called and told to report to the office. McGill Security was also called but the AUS Executive found them to be very unhelpful. "We were looking to them for help, and when we explained the situation all they had to say was'Yeah, that is bad.'They didn't offer any sup port or guidance," said Kay Turner, AUS VP external. Kelford also had problems with security. Fie said that he found se curity rude in dealing with the situa tion. According to Kelford, they didn't show up for 20 minutes after the first call was placed and left before any See SECUR ITY on page 6
Library service desk in jeopardy Art history student groups fight to find alternatives K r istin M
A proposed reorganization of the Blackader-Lauterman Library of Architecture and Art is in the works and may end up closing the service desk permanently. Janine Schmidt, the Trenholme Director of Libraries, issued a docu ment in May 2006 to McGill librarians that presented a plan to "close the service point of the library and leave the collection part unattended," ac cording to Marilyn Berger, the head li brarian at Blackader-Lauterman. "She's not clear on whether the study sec tion will stay open or not,"she said.
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The fate of the book collection is also unclear. Blackader sits two floors above Redpath and serves students in Ar chitecture, Art History and Commu nication Studies and Urban Planning. According to the library's website, the staff answers roughly 10,000 refer ence questions every year. It goes on to note that over the years "the library staff [have] authored or collaborated on a number of specialized publica tions designed to improve access to material in the library and the archi tectural archives.” See BLACKADER on page 3
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