The McGill Tribune Vol. 26 Issue 8

Page 1

* 9 • ft«

f

O L Y M P IC

T

t

M A R T L E T , P A G E 21

r

i

1

b

K o n d a - F o ley

Cinema du Parc is reopening, ironically, just in time for Avenue du Parc to change its name. Many aspects of the theatre will remain the same: it will still be a repertory theatre, still be cheaper than.the AMC and the films will still be primarily English. There will be some changes though; hipsters will have to find something new to wallpaper their kitchens with as the new owner de­ cided not to print monthly programs. Roland Smith, the man responsible for reopening the cinema, put an offer on the theatre before it was even widely known that it was having troubles. However, as ne­ gotiations continued Daniel Langlois, then owner, had to close. Eventually the deal came through and Smith decided to re­

B I L L S , P A G E 12

... ..... —

_

n

www.mcgilltribune.com

P a r c c in e m a r e o p e n s N e w film s h it t h e t h e a t r e O c t. 2 7 o ve

B R ID E S A N D

u

Published by the Students' Society of McGill University

D

ft

V

..---- • 1 1

e

Volume 26 Issue 8 «October 24,2006

K is s m y B o u r a s s a

open as soon as possible, only 17 days after signing all of the papers. Having been pro­ fessionally involved in repertory cinema for Over 4 0 years, Smith has connections with distributors all over the world and plans to use that to his advantage. He plans to get films which have not even been released in Quebec by obtaining them straight from the producer or rights owner. Smith is working on career retrospec­ tive screenings for Pedro Almodovar (Talk to Her, Volver), David Lynch (Eraserhead, Lo st H ighw ay), Luchino Visconti ( The Leo p ­ ard) and Federico Fellini (8 'A, La D o lce Vita). Smith has invested in Digiscreen equipment that will allow video works to be shown as though they are 35 mm. When asked why

See REPERTORY on page 19

F a ilu r e t o a d v e r t is e G A c o n s t it u t io n a lit y q u e s t i o n e d K a te S

p ir g e n

Following the Students' Society first Regular General Assembly on Oct 5 , many complaints have been made concerning the democratic nature of McGill's GAs. Criti­ cisms centre on the issue of scant publicity and low attendance that was not represen­ tative of the general student body, as well as a lack of public awareness of the oppor­ tunity to put motions on the agenda. According to the SSMU Constitution, GAs must be "widely publicized by the So­ ciety with all the necessary effort so that quorum is reached," and SSMU must an­ nounce the agenda for the GA in The Tri­ bune, The M cG ill D aily and Le D élit "as soon * as it is available." "If advertisements didn't get printed, that's certainly a mistake," said SSMU Presi­ dent Aaron Donny-Clark. "It was definitely our intention to and we budgeted to ad­ vertise in all three papers. We budgeted an awful lot of money for that." However, the agenda itself never ap­ peared in the Tribune and the full text of the motions put forth at the assembly was posted on the SSMU Web site only after they were ratified at the assembly, causing some students to question the democracy of the GA.

"They didn't publicize the event, they didn't follow their own constitution and these are some of the same people that are saying that since these motions passed they're part of SSMU policy,"said Conserva­ tive McGill Vice-President John Menzies. Liberal McGill President Simon Bes­ sette echoed his sentiments. "It's all about getting people informed about what they can vote on. If there is a breach of the constitutionality of the GA, it stands to reason that the motions should also be thrown out." Donny-Clark said that SSMU would continue to "operate on the assumption that [the GA] was conducted according to the constitution," claiming that he would need to be convinced that the agenda was not published properly before consider­ ing whether the motions that were ratified were unconstitutional. Donny-Clark stated that if members of the Society are concerned about the legiti­ macy of the GA, they are free to develop a case with Student Advocacy. Although the letter of the constitu­ tion wasn't followed, the SSMU executive believes that the GA was constitutional in general.

SeeGAon page 3

V O LLEYB A LL MARTLETS & REDMEN R ed

M c G ill

&

W h ite G a m e

Friday Oct 27th 6PM(W) & 8PM (M) v s . U n iv e rs ité d e M o n tr e a l

Montrealers protest the proposed rechristening of Avenue du Parc to honour Robert Bourassa. For the Tribune's view on the serious business that is renaming streets, see Editorial on page 9.

SOCCER

MARTLETS & REDMEN Friday Oct 27th 6PM(W) & 8PM(M) vs. UQAM

FO O TB A LL LAST HOME GAME OFTHESEASON Saturday October 28th 1PM vs. Bishop’s University T k « R E D M E N ’S

M cG ill Sp o tts C o m p lo t ■1 M o [vo ta S u d i a l a

to k » * c t o t k r P L A Y O F F S

a t M o Iso f t S t a -d lu la


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.