SINCE 1944
VOLUME 79 ISSUE 12
April 8, 2024
Student run since 1944
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Menstrual Equity Project paves a green solution to period poverty
6 Motionball’s annual
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Why English? The importance of the humanities in a chaos-filled world
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Economics & Business:
Despite uncertainty, BU stands optimistic about finances, recruitment By Joseph Aubert Economics & Business Editor
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few months after receiving exemptions from the tuition hike, Bishop’s University finds itself exploring government funding to compensate for an anticipated $2 million annual loss and is lagging 15 to 20 per cent behind on recruitment for out-of-province students. Bishop’s Principal Sébastien Lebel-Grenier’s most recent update to the university community sheds light on the various impacts of government measures despite the exemption. He highlights Bishop’s strategy navigating the evolving higher education landscape for anglophone universities in Quebec. Funding envelopes for small and regional universities In an email sent to the community on Feb. 24, Lebel-Grenier stated that Bishop’s was exploring the possibility of gaining fairer access to provincial
funding envelopes for small and regional universities starting in 2024-2025. But what exactly are those envelopes? According to the ministry of higher education, the goal of these envelopes is to promote and support the particular missions of different institutions, including five Université du Québec institutions, Bishop’s University and others. Bishop’s is hoping to gain fairer access to these envelopes in order to compensate for the claw back on international student tuition by the Quebec government, set to result in recurring yearly losses of $2 million dollars for the university in the foreseeable future. When asked about this special funding formula, Lebel-Grenier emphasized the disparities in funding between different institutions: “Bishop’s historically has not had equal access to these envelopes.” The vast majority of the universities that benefit from these envelopes are members of the Université du Québec (UQ) network, he said. Read more on page 12
@thebishopscampus
10 Bishop’s rock song, poetry
dodgeball tournament closes fundraising year Graduating fine arts student 12 reflects on creative journey
Photo courtesy of Emily Crunican
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readings and The Mitre launch Bishop’s University shines in ERPSim debut
Features:
Photo courtesy of Shawna Chatterton-Jerome
Black Ash basket weaving demonstration by Stephen Jerome shares Mi’kmaw craft with community
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By Antonia Driscoll Contributor
uring the week of March 25, Bishop’s welcomed Stephen Jerome for two days of basket weaving workshops and a day of demonstration. Hailing from Gesgapegiag, Jerome is an ancestral Black Ash basketmaker and the owner of the shop ASHOLE. During the week, Jerome shared his knowledge and his craft with the community of both Bishop’s and the Université de Sherbrooke. Black Ash basket making requires a considerable amount of dedication, patience and practice. Jerome has mastered picking the perfect tree from the forest and works straight from the log, hand cutting, bending, and weaving the pieces to make extremely strong and beautiful baskets; he stood on a basket to show its strength. Passed on through generations, Jerome contributes to preserving this tradition of Mi’kmaw culture. Some of the attendees of the workshops were interviewed to reflect on this unique experience.
Layout design by Mikyah Fortune
Q: How does this artistry signify Mi’kmaw traditions and culture? Shawna Chatterton-Jerome, coordinator of Indigenous students support services at Bishop’s and niece of Stephen Jerome: [Black Ash basket making] has been in my family for generations and is still very much present in my community of Gesgapegiag. It is very meditative for me, and I want to make sure the tradition is still practiced throughout my generation and the next to come! So, it makes me happy to have my uncle come to BU and show and teach how beautiful this tradition of ours is! Q: How is this workshop an important addition to Bishop’s? Simon Daley (Kitigan Zibi First Nation), sociology student at Bishop’s: As university students, we do not make much. We work with theories, ideas and concepts. This is one of the few [chances] we get to make something, not only a physical item that takes hours to make but Read more on page 8
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