The Queen's Journal, Issue 20

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F r i d ay , N o v e m b e r 11 , 2 0 11 — I s s u e 2 0

j the ournal Queen’s University — Since 1873

Academics

Fine arts admissions suspended Students’ concerns brought to AMS Assembly result in the creation of a new committee to investigate decision B y S avoula S tylianou Assistant News Editor AMS Assembly voted to create a committee last night that will investigate the University’s decision to suspend admissions into the fine

arts program. On Wednesday, University administration sent an email to fine arts students informing them that the program wouldn’t accept any new students for the 2012-13 academic year.

In an interview with the Journal, 30 fine arts students gathered in the Polson Room of the JDUC to express their concerns. Anicka Vrana-Godwin, BFA ’13, said she’s angry about the decision to suspend the program.

“It’s punishment because they haven’t done their research. No one knows about fine arts at Queen’s, yet graduates do great things … they have no idea what we can pull off,” she said. Heather Smith, BFA ’12, said

she’s glad she was in fourth year when this decision was made. “If I was a first year, I would immediately be looking to transfer schools.” The motion passed at the Nov. 10 AMS assembly was brought forth by Ebonnie Hollenbeck, BFA ’13. It reads: “That AMS Assembly strike a committee composed of the AMS executive, [Arts and Science Undergraduate Society] executive, the rector and members of the society to investigate the suspension of the enrolment in the bachelor of fine arts program, the implications the suspension has on the future of the program, why students were not properly informed of the decision and how this will impact students currently enrolled in the program.” The motion also states that where possible, the committee should work to restore enrolment to the program for next year. AMS Vice President of Operations Ashley Eagan said See Assembly on page 7

Local Business

Fine arts students congregated in the JDUC yesterday to speak to the Journal about the program’s suspension of future admissions.

Photo By Asad Chishti

Feature

Interest in ceremony persists Remembrance Day gathering in Grant Hall will honour alumni who died in military service B y J anina E nrile Assistant Features Editor Brian Yealland is expecting another full house at today’s Remembrance Day ceremony in Grant Hall. The University Chaplain said the ceremony has consistently attracted 1,000 students, faculty and staff since he started at Queen’s in 1983.

“It’s fascinating to me that in the years that I had been here, I have seen the interest in Remembrance Day grow considerably,” he said. “The students arrive here directly or vaguely aware that Queen’s has had a significant role in the war efforts of the First and Second World War,” he said. More than 1,000 Queen’s students served in both World

Wars. 189 students and faculty members died in the First World War and 175 died in the Second World War. The Canadian Officer Training Corps at Queen’s offered a full academic credit for military training during the Second World War. Students wrote qualifying exams at the end of their training in one of five fields: artillery, engineering,

Dialogue

Arts

SpORTS

Criminal identification procedures are incorrectly depicted on TV.

Two reviews of Footloose the musical.

Women’s soccer competes in a national semifinal tomorrow in Montreal.

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signals, infantry and field medicine. “It’s not hard to transport yourself to a time when you’re a 19- or 20-year-old student and a war breaks out and you’re called to leave your studies and find yourself serving in some capacity days later,” Yealland said. “The idea of that is a pretty stark one.” Principal Daniel Woolf will offer a short reflection to round out the 20-minute Remembrance Day ceremony. The 700-seat Grant Hall is always standing room only when the event begins, Yealland said. “We’ve had a whole variety of people give an address but this is the first time in my memory that the principal will,” he said. “It’s exciting.” The Chaplain said he isn’t worried about students losing interest in the event. In 1917, then-principal Daniel Miner Gordon wrote an article in the Journal. “The war has made havoc among our ranks, taking not only See Queen’s on page 3

Goat barely afloat B y M eaghan Wray Assistant News Editor The Sleepless Goat workers co-operative is facing financial difficulty. The restaurant and coffee shop, located on the corner of Princess and Wellington Streets, is known for its sale of fair trade coffees and vegetarian or vegan food options. According to an email sent to the Journal on Nov. 9 by Sleepless Goat employee Alex Mann, the co-operative’s situation may result in the business’ closure at the end of the month. “We’ve reached a pretty desperate situation financially,” she wrote. Mann wrote that the co-operative is in the process of organizing fundraising initiatives.Workers’ co-operatives are enterprises owned and democratically controlled by the employees, instead of having a top-down management model. All employees own equal assets of the business. Workers from the Sleepless Goat declined to do interviews with the Journal because a collective decision on how to approach the situation hasn’t been reached.


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