The Queen's Journal, Volume 143, Issue 18

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the journal

Queen’s University

Vol. 143, Issue 18

F r i day , J a n ua ry 1 5 , 2 0 1 6

since

1873

Fall Campaign Period Begins Vandals target break Sir John survey A. event divides organizer Team LWT and CSG nominated as AMS Exec candidates

M ikayla W ronko Assistant News Editor

V ictoria G ibson Assistant News Editor

On Thursday, the AMS executive released the results of the fall reading week break survey to members of AMS Assembly. Commissioner of Academic Affairs Tyler Lively, ArtSci ’16, told the assembly that the AMS found that the results were evenly split between those in favour of the reading week and those opposed. The fall reading week presented in the survey would consist of a two-day break attached to a weekend. The tentative timing for a fall break is during Week 9, the week of Remembrance Day (Nov. 11). This would place Move-In Day and the beginning of Orientation Week on the Saturday before Labour Day and the start of classes

Originally published online on Jan.12

See Faculties on page 7

IN THIS ISSUE FEATURES Integrating Arts and Science studies

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EDITORIALS John A. doesn’t belong on a pedestal or a noose

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OPINIONS Your diet can help the environment

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ARTS Crowdfunding a way to escape record labels

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POSTSCRIPT

From top: Team LWT and Team CSG were ratified last night.

M ikayla W ronko Assistant News Editor AMS assembly ratified five Rector candidates and two AMS executive teams on Thursday night: Team CSG headed by Colin Zarzour and Team LWT headed by Tyler Lively. Team CSG is made up of Colin Zarzour for president, Sarah Anderson for vice president (operations) and Gregory Radisic for vice president (university affairs). Team LWT, meanwhile, is made up of Tyler Lively for president, Dave Walker for vice president (operations) and Carolyn Thompson for vice president (university affairs). Campaigning begins today and the voting period starts on Jan. 26 and lasts until Jan. 27. The assembly, which took place at 6:30 p.m. in Macdonald Hall, lasted for over four hours. During the assembly, student representatives also discussed the results of the fall reading week survey conducted by the AMS and a proposed restructuring of the Commission of Internal Affairs. A motion was passed in the fourth hour to extend assembly another half hour. Around this

When part-time jobs become nightmares

queensjournal.ca

time, the two executive teams came winter referendum ballet to the front of the room to answer (see a list of the approved “strictly personal questions”: questions at queensjournal. If you had to pick two animals ca). Questions from and combine them to represent the nullified fall you identity, what would they referendum — which be? If you had to pick one of had already been the following, what would you ratified — will also be pick and why? (The options were included on the winter Justin Bieber, Justin Timberlake or referendum ballet. Justin Trudeau.) Assembly also Motions to ratify five Rector approved a $1 candidates were struck down by increase for Queen’s members of Assembly, because Student Constable there’s no requirement in AMS (QSC) that Kyle policy to ratify the Rector Beaudry, VP candidates. The AMS doesn’t of Operations, have exclusive jurisdiction over had proposed. the election, as it’s shared with Beaudry said the Society of Graduate and QSC hadn’t had Professional Students. Instead, the a fee increase SGPS and AMS elections teams since 2011 and ratified the Rector candidates. needs one The following five candidates, in to combat alphabetical order, are running for training costs the position of University Rector and higher in the 2016 election: Zac Baum, wage rates CompSci ’17; Liam Dowling, to attract ConEd ’18; Julia Fulton, ArtSci s t u d e n t ’17; Rigers Rukaj, Sci ’17; and hires. Cam Yung, ArtSci ’16. Members of AMS Assembly unanimously passed all motions approving questions regarding student fees appearing on the

To see our Election Calendar go to page 7

page 19 Online:

PHOTOS BY VICTORIA GIBSON

SUPPLIED BY IAN MACALPINE

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“I’m calmer now that I’m chain smoking,” Arthur Milnes said, puffing on a small section of a cigarette. Mere hours earlier on Monday, Milnes — who had organized a birthday tribute to Sir John A. Macdonald — was targeted in an act of vandalism alongside Kingston MP Mark Gerretsen. Both Gerretsen and Milnes’ cars were doused in red paint, while Milnes’ tires had been slashed and police found a burned Canadian flag underneath the vehicle. The tribute to the first prime minister, which went ahead as planned later in the day, was protested by the Indigenous activism group Idle No More. The group burned an effigy of Macdonald in protest of celebrating the figure. The group, which hasn’t been linked to the events, denounced the acts of vandalism in a comment to The Journal. The group “object[s] to all forms of violence as an ethic,” Idle No More media representative Natasha Stirrett told The Journal via Facebook Messenger. The group protested the tribute with the intention of raising awareness of MacDonald’s contribution to Indigenous colonization in Canada. Milnes — a journalist, speechwriter and historian — says the vandalism was an unpleasant early morning surprise. He had woken up early, he said, when he noticed an unread message from Gerretsen he had received during the night. In the message, Gerretsen told Milnes that an unknown person had dumped red paint over his car while it was parked in front of his family’s home. As the minutes passed, Milnes began to wonder how a vandal found Gerretsen’s address, and considered his own, unlisted address. He realized he may be next. “If they’re going for Mark on See Burned on page 6


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