The McGill Tribune Vol. 27 Issue 13

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Published by the Students' Society o f McGill University

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Volum e 27 Issue 13 • N ovem ber 27, 2007

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Kicked o u t o f CFS D e -fr e e z e p r o te s t h e a ts th e s tr e e ts P ro s p e c tiv e m e m b e r­ sh ip n o t e x te n d e d K

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By a vote from member universities at the Annual General Meeting last week, the Students'Society of McGill University lost prospective membership in the Canadian Federation of Students. On Wednesday, Nov. 21, a motion put forward by the National Executive to extend SSMU's prospective membership term to ac­ commodate the February CFS referendum was voted down by member universities. Consequently, the prospective membership, which expired Nov. 16, leaves SSMU with no federal representation and unable to hold a CFS-monitored referendum in February. Three university students' societies heavily criticized SSMU's actions: the Post-Graduate Students'Society of McGill University, the Concordia Student Union and the Dawson College Student Union. PGSS President Amy Cox, who spoke at the AGM, asserted that SSMU has undermined the student movement and also in­ terfered with DCSU internal issues while at CFS-Quebec. "The representatives of SSMU have undermined all those three core elements; they were working in bad faith," Cox said. "They undermined democracy by interfering in [DCSU's] internal organization." According to the CFSby-laws book I, a potential member uni­ versity can join the national and provincial organizations through a 12-month long prospective membership. During this time a student-wide referendum must be run by an oversight commit­ tee comprised of two members from the local society, and two CFS-appointed representatives. The referendum for SSMU, which would originally have taken place during the fall election period, was delayed by the recommendation of the CFS National Execu­ tive in order to accommodate the ongoing court battle in CFS-Q. Back in September, unresolved disputes over CFS-Q lead­ ership and representation led to frozen assets and the organi­ zation's paralysis in court, which will remain unresolved until early December. Former CFS-Q Deputy Speaker Mahdi Altalibi, currently a Ui arts student at McGill, had been elected to his position as a Daw­ son College student in the summer of 2007. His elected position was challenged bytheCSUand PGSS, which eventually led to CFSQ's paralysis in court. Altalibi asserted that these accusations were illegitimate, and rather aimed to undermine SSMU initiatives. "At first, [CSU] had no problems, but once they found out that we actually had a plan, that's when the CSU expressed their unhappiness with the plan," Altalibi said. While SSMU Vice-President External Max Silverman main­ tained that there was nothing in the CFS by-laws that required SSMU to delay the CFS referendum, the question was postponed in good faith, though only under the condition that a writ­ ten agreement was drafted to bind CFS to hold a referendum in February. "CFS toid us that we couldn't hold the referendum as long See CFS on page 4

Freezing stu d e n ts brave th e w eath er to rally ag ain st th e tuition d e freeze, aim ing to spark a conversation w ith Charest.

R ev isitin g S h a k e s p e a r e 's siste r s M cG ill p re se n ts th e B ard 's s h re w d e s t c o m e d y C

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Shrew ThingsIHateAboutYou

Friday Nov. 30 - 191)00

McGill ATHLe TICS

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Not a lot of things created 400 years ago can boast consis­ tent quality in the face of their incredible longevity. Shakespeare's theatre famously stands out as the fairest example of artwork that has been approached from a million angles and still proves itself open to original interpretation and fresh appeal. is one of the playwright's early comedic works that in recent times has lent itself to adaptations in musicals, film— remember ?—opera and television From a fear of exhausting Shakespeare's source material, some outlandish performances have risked overlooking or mis­ interpreting the playwright's intention, but McGill University's Department of English Drama and Theatre Program has brought this play back to its roots and in so doing, paid homage to Shake­

FIGURE SKATING m m

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McConnell Arena .w h it t le * . m c g U l.c a

TheTamingofthe to

speare's truly innovative and near inexhaustible genius. Using the play's original form and script, though injecting it with fresh style and imaginative characterisation, the company has pulled off an impressive production to which the Bard himself would be proud to put his name. is a comedy of wit that juxtaposes the stories of the sisters Bianca (Jacquelin Blakey) and Katharina (Rosa Gaia Saunders), the former of whom is forbidden by their father to marry before the latter. The love of Bianca for Lucentio (Alex Gravenstein) recalls the sickly-sweet mode of fairy tales, and is hindered only by the humourous pestering of alternative suitors who present themselves at the exacting behest of Bianca's father Baptista (Mitchell Clohan).

TheTamingoftheShrew

See AMBIGUITY on page 12

HOCKEY REDMEN Wednesday Nov. 28 - I9h00 Concordia McConnell Arena

BASKETBALL Friday Nov. 30 Martlets* lShOO Redman* 20b00 Laval McGill Sports Centre


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