The Concordian

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theconcordian

life

sports

Meet the new cupcake masters P. 9

T HE

Stingers miss out on hardware P. 17

STRIKE IS ON

Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011

arts Go on and CEASE it P. 13

music Cello: it’s not just for the orchestra anymore P. 14

opinions Why is a ConU board member promoting asbestos? P. 20

Volume 29 Issue 11

Students vote to strike on Nov. 10

Photos by Navneet Pall

CSU appoints new CEO with byelections just weeks away

JB rules that former CEO was not hired ASFA and GSA approve strike mandate according to proper procedure at special general meeting Alyssa Tremblay Morgan Pudwell, and from Tomer Joel Ashak Staff writer Graduate students and arts and science undergraduates voted in favour of an academic strike mandate for Nov. 10, the day of the provincewide protest against tuition hikes, at a special general meeting held last Thursday. Out of the 570 students present at the SGM, six undergraduate and two graduate students voted against the mandate and one student abstained, according to ASFA’s records. “This is our opportunity as Concordia students and as an English school in Montreal to show that we have a school spirit strong enough to stand together united with one message,” said Concordia Student Union VP external and projects Chad Walcott. “That message is ‘no’ to this tuition increase.” ASFA VP external and sustain-

ability Paul Jerajian called the meeting’s outcome “a major step for ASFA.” The CSU organized the SGM along with ASFA and the Graduate Students’ Association. There were no faculty or administrative representatives at the meeting and the strike mandate as it currently stands does not exclude the possibility of academic consequences for strikers. According to Jerajian, a motion which states the meeting’s result still needs to be approved by the faculty in order to have a clear academic amnesty. Walcott said that the CSU is sending the SGM result to the administration to inform them of the ASFA strike mandate. Meanwhile, Provost David Graham sent out a recommendation to faculties and departments to be lenient on Nov. 10 in matters of attendance and late assignments, Walcott said.

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Assistant news editor The Concordia Student Union has replaced its chief electoral officer after a unanimous decision by the judicial board nullified the hiring of CEO Bram Goldstein. About 20 people packed into the CSU conference room to attend the judicial board hearing last Tuesday evening which saw heated exchanges between Goldstein and the JB. “I think this whole thing’s a circus,” said Goldstein, who was repeatedly asked by JB chair Cassie Smith to “refrain from making accusations.” Goldstein criticized CSU president Lex Gill for being absent at the hearing and said that the JB was keeping him from “telling the truth.” Frustration was also visible from the plaintiffs, student union vice-presidents Laura Glover and

Shavit, who represented last year’s 2010-2011 CSU council, regarding the format of the hearing, which both parties questioned and argued about at length. In an interview, Shavit described the hearing process as “peculiar” and said that Smith “did not seem to know what format she was using, and what procedures she was conducting the hearing with.” Shavit said that Goldstein’s dismissal might be grounds for unlawful termination and is appealing the JB’s ruling. In response, Smith said in an interview that while there was “some mild confusion over the speaking order,” the issue was “ultimately determined by the board with input from all parties and that all of the parties involved [...] consented to the format of the hearing at the time.”

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