the
Queen’s University
journal
Vol. 144, Issue 5
TAPS services to be locked for HoCo
F r i day , S e p t e m b e r 1 6 , 2 0 1 6
1873
New admin positions attract ire
agnes fall launch
Board decision comes with sanctions to address drinking culture
since
Former and current professors point to lack of new faculty positions
VICTORIA GIBSON News Editor
BLAKE CANNING Assistant News Editor
For the weeks surrounding Homecoming and Frost Week this year, Queen’s Pub and The Underground will have their doors locked shut, following a hardline decision by the AMS Board of Directors. On Wednesday, the Board called a special meeting to address the “workplace culture” of the AMS Pub Service, known as TAPS. Instances of hazing lead to vandalism and student hospitalizations during a night of staff initiation. In a Sept. 15 press release, the AMS wrote that the Board had struck a special committee “to investigate the issue,” chaired by former Board chair Mike Blair, Sci’ 17. The committee also includes a representative from the University. During the meeting, the Board took immediate actions to cease any TAPS socials for the remainder of the year, and to place an AMS Human Resources representative in all service staff interviews during the Fall and Winter hiring periods. As well, the future TAPS training week is set to be completely dry. The last action taken by the Board was the shut-down of QP and The Underground during both Homecoming and Frost Week. When asked why repercussions were being placed on alumni and non-TAPS students, rather than focusing discipline solely on internal figures, Vice President (Operations) Dave Walker held firm. “The AMS Board of Directors felt that it was necessary to send a strong message to both the management now as well as the future,” Walker wrote in an email to
Last Thursday, Principal Daniel Woolf announced the hiring of two vice-principals, one of which will take on a newly-created position in Queen’s administration. After six years as the vice-principal (finance and administration), Caroline Davis has been appointed as the inaugural vice-principal (facilities, properties and sustainability). “[Davis] will play a leading role as Queen’s advances institutional priorities such as classroom renewal, major capital projects, deferred maintenance, and sustainability initiatives including the Climate Action Plan,” Principal Daniel Woolf wrote in a statement to The Journal. In light of Davis’ move, her former role will be subsequently filled by former Associate Vice-Principal (Finance) Donna Janiec. However, with the addition of a new administrative role, some individuals in the Queen’s community have expressed public concern about the disproportionally lesser additions to teaching staff. “What does the sprawling nature of [today’s] department mean? What does it reflect about the meaning of the University?” Geoffrey Smith, a former Queen’s professor, asked in an interview with The Journal. The questions were framed by discussion of increasing student enrolment, as well as the lack of hires in struggling faculties like the School of Computing, which hasn’t hired a new group of professors since 1995. The faculty, as of last year, expected to lose 14 of their 28 faculty members by 2017. Meanwhile, student enrolment in
treasure and tales Queen’s Early Collections *
comrade objects Ciara Phillips *
THE NATIONAL FILM BOARD OF CANADA’S STILL PHOTOGRAPHY DIVISION, 1941-1971 The Other NFB Story on page 11
See Internal on page 3
GALLERY
See We on page 3
INSIDE THIS ISSUE FEATURES
OPINIONS
SPORTS
POSTSCRIPT page 19
Class of 2020 fills campus with Frosh Week excitement
The road not often taken to medical school
Dear High Schools: stop sugarcoating university
Remembering a football legend, Coach Hargreaves
page 4
page 6
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page 13
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A story of rags to readings