The M cGill Tuesday, October 5, 2010
THE TRIBUNE’S NHL PICKS, PAGES 18-19
THE JOB APPLICATION YOU DREAM OF, PAGE 15
Published by the Tribune Publication Society Volume No. 30 Issue No. 6
Fans get hands dirty at Pop Montreal
S S M U w ill s u p p o r t c a m p u s fo o d b o y c o tt L a t e s t s h o t f i r e d in f i g h t By Theo Meyer_____________ ____ Managing Editor
An enthused concert-goer helps paint Hollerado’s van after their show at Le Divan Orange. See Pop Montreal coverage on pages 9 -12 . ( Adam Scotti / McGill Tribune )
E n g in e e rs b a n Q P IR G
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In an effort to pressure the McGill administration to reopen the Architecture Café, the McGill Students’ Society Council voted to support a student boycott of McGill Food and Dining Services at its meeting on Thursday, despite the vocal opposition of several council lors. The motion, brought to council by Arts Senator Tyler Lawson and Arts Representative Kallee Lins, represents the most direct attempt to engage students in SSMU’s efforts to convince administrators to recon sider McGill’s summertime decision to close the popular student-managed café. Erin Hale, a former McGill Daily editor, first proposed the idea for a campus-wide boycott of Food and Dining Services shortly after the September 21 rally outside the Leacok Building, where of hundreds of students gathered in support of reopening the café. Hale started a Facebook event urging students to boycott all McGill Food Services, which had more than 3,000 mem bers at press time. Lawson and Lins proposed the motion after seeing the groundswell of student support for the boycott.
The Engineering Undergradu ate Society Council banned the Quebec Public Interest Research Group from using its resources for up to one year at their meeting last Tuesday. The ban will prevent QPIRG from booking table space in any en
gineering building on campus. The ruling followed last week’s incident between members of QPIRG and the QPIRG Opt-Out Campaign, a campus group that en courages undergraduates to opt-out of paying QPIRG’s $3.75-per-semester fee. According to the QPIRG Opt-Out campaign, QPIRG support ers allegedly attempted to prevent Opt-Out Campaign members from
According to Lawson, the motion commits SSMU to supporting the .boycott until McGill releases the financial data showing that the café was losing money—a major point of contention for Architecture students, who have claimed that the café was in the black—and agree to discuss reopening the café. The motion ex empts students with prepaid meal plans, however, as well as first-year students in residence. “The point is to try and get some consultation on the issue,” Lawson said. However, several councillors declined to support the motion on Thursday, with four dissenting and five abstaining, with the latter group including SSMU President Zach Newburgh. One of the most vocal councillors who opposed the mo tion was Lauren Hudak, a Science representative to SSMU and an oc casional Tribune contributor. “I felt that we could do some thing more constructive, more posi tive, in trying to get the administra tion to listen to the demands of stu dents,” Hudak said. Along with other councillors, Hudak argued that passing a mo tion supporting the boycott did not address students’ frustrations with the administration, which contracts See “ MOTION” on page 3
b o o k in g ta b le s fo r o n e y ea r
E n g in e e r in g U n d e r g r a d u a t e S o c ie t y r e a c t s to in c id e n t w ith Q P I R G By Zach Connerty-Marin Contributor
for A rch C afé
distributing their fliers, which re sulted in Opt-Out members calling McGill Security. But Rae Dooley, a member of the QPIRG Board of Directors, said the situation wasn’t enitrely one-sid ed. Members of QPIRG alleged that Jess Wieser, leader of the Opt-Out Campaign grabbed Maddie Ritts a QPIRG board member. “We weren’t the only people
O p t-O u t C am p aig n
being confrontational in that envi ronment,” Dooley said. “Our stu dents could have just as much called security.” Allan Cyril', vice president in ternal of the EUS, said that although QPIRG could have also acted in for mal avenues at the time of the inci dent, they did not. “QPIRG didn’t call security and didn’t make a complaint to us at
the time,” he said. The EUS Council responded by passing the ban last Wednesday, citing concerns about how the inci dent reflects on their ability to man age table bookings in Engineering buildings. “We have to show we are re sponsibly administering [our re sources], or there’s a risk we might See “QPIRG” on page 3
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