The Silhouette - November 10

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www.thesil.ca

McMASTER UNIVERSITY'S STUDENT NEWSPAPER / THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2011

The Silh uette

YOUR VOICE ON CAMPUS

Est. 1930

VOLUME 82, NO. 13

Phoenix relocation set for January on the main floor of the Refectory building, above Bridges Café. “We’ve been working on this If all goes according to plan, the project for three years,” said Jessica transition will be seamless. Merolli, president of the Gradu As it normally would, the Phoe- ate Students Association (GSA). In nix will close for the holidays after the same way that the MSU owns December exams. When it reopens TwelvEighty, the not-for-profit for second term in January, the Phoenix is owned by the GSA. Pheonix will be in its new location The renovation will be funded Sam Colbert Managing Editor

Tuition hike on the horizon for Ontario students Payment framework expires at end of year

from other campus establishments, like TwelvEighty. “We’re building on the older feel,” said Merolli. “It’s not a modern-looking restaurant; it’s kind of that mix, like a gastro-pub. We really want to keep the pub element of the look of the Phoenix.” Though the new kitchen will allow for more specials and menu

additions, the Phoenix menu won’t change drastically in the move. Burgers, for example, will continue to be a staple, especially with the addition of a charbroiler to the kitchen. “We’re still going to have the microbreweries on tap – we’re still going to have a lot of beers on tap, a lot of variety,” added Merolli. • PLEASE SEE GSA, A4

GO MAC GO FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 2004, THE MCMASTER MARAUDERS WILL PLAY FOR THE YATES CUP. FACING THE DEFENDING CHAMPION WESTERN MUSTANGS WON’T BE AN EASY TASK, BUT A WIN WOULD CAP ONE OF MCMASTER’S BIGGEST-EVER WEEKS IN CIS SPORT.

Brian Decker Executive Editor

The Ontario Liberals’ plan to give a 30 per cent discount on tuition may end up costing some students a little bit more. The Liberals’ election promise, which offered a 30 per cent decrease in the cost of tuition to students from households earning less than $160,000 per year, may be followed by a rise in the overall cost of tuition starting next year. The current framework that dictates tuition fees expires at the end of the 2011/12 school year. “Universities can’t really withstand having no new revenue, because they’re going to spend $420 million on this new grant,” said Sam Andrey, Executive Director of the Ontario Undergraduate Student Alliance. Whether tuition increases at the current rate of five per cent per year is still to be determined. Andrey said OUSA is advocating for a lower increase rate, but that no increase at all is unlikely. “We know changing [the tuition increase rate] to something lower is on the table. That’s something we’re going to be advocating for.” “With the 30 per cent reduction, I think there is a very low appetite on the part of the government to compensate an outright freeze.” The plan to offer students a tuition discount is set to take place in January, but many of the details of how it will be implemented and distributed are currently pending confirmation. Residents of Ontario in fulltime, first entry programs (excluding law, medicine and graduate programs) will be eligible to apply for a tuition break for the winter semester, but the process of how and where students apply has not yet been determined. Andrey said for the winter 2012 semester only, approved students will likely receive a cheque equivalent to 30 per cent of tuition, and that a true 30 per cent discount on tuition won’t start until September. “In all likelihood, it will be something like an $800 cheque for most students,” said Alvin Tejdo, OUSA’s Director of Communications, of the 30 per cent discount in January. Tejdo said many students could potentially be caught unaware of the cheque’s availability. “It’s going to be really important to tell people to apply for it,” he said. The process by which students’ financial means are approved – determining whether their household earns less than $160,000 – is yet to be established. The slow implementation of the remaining details is partially due to the change in governing officials. After the Oct. 8 election, Glen Murray became the new Minister of Training, Colleges and Universities, replacing John Milloy. There are also new education critics to be appointed in the opposition. Andrey said other changes coming to Ontario campuses in the coming year include increasing the availability of mental health counsellors and the construction of three new campuses in the GTA, with the sites still to be determined.

by graduate student fees, which means that prices will generally be unaffected. The new location will feature a higher capacity, a larger patio and an expanded kitchen. But given the success of the Phoenix in its current Wentworth House location, project managers have tried to maintain the rustic feel that differentiates the bar

OUR SPORTS SECTION HAS YOU COVERED. EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT HOW MCMASTER AND WESTERN MATCH UP IN THE BIG GAME IS IN ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR BRANDON MEAWASIGE’S PREVIEW.

GOING TO THE GAME? EXECUTIVE EDITOR BRIAN DECKER MAKES THE CASE THAT THIS GAME MATTERS TO EVERYONE IN THE MCMASTER COMMUNITY.

S4 AND S5

FOOTBALL ISN’T THE ONLY VARSITY SPORT MAKING A SPLASH THIS WEEK. CHECK THE REST OF OUR SPORTS SECTION FROM FOR EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT WHAT MAC’S SPORTS TEAMS ARE UP TO.

C1

S1 TO S8

A6

ER opens its doors

THIS WEEK... OPINIONS

KNOW UWO? INSIDEOUT EDITOR NATALIE TIMPERIO TAKES A LOOK AT THE DIFFERENT STUDENT CULTURES - AND STEREOTYPES - OF WESTERN AND MAC.

INSIDEOUT

Kacper Niburski

Assistant News Editor

THE COMMONWEALTH MAY COST US MORE THAN WE CAN AFFORD.

COMPARING MAC AND WESTERN ON THE SOCIAL STAGE

SEE A7

SEE C1

BUSINESS

ANDY

FOLLOW THE LAUNCH OF CANADA’S NEXT TOP AD EXEC

SAM ROBERTS AFFIRMS HIS OPENENDED MUSICAL VISION

SEE C9

SEE D4

...IN THE SIL

Watermelons. Helium balloons. Cookies with pink icing. While such novelties could very well describe the perfect picnic, these instead were present at the Children’s Emergency Department open house on Nov. 5. Having closed their doors to anyone older than eighteen years of age since Apr. 4, the open house served as an invitation from the hospital to the broader community to showcase both what has been built and what currently goes on in the Children’s Emergency Department at McMaster Children’s Hospital. Visitors were given a look into various areas of the Emergency Department, from the trauma rooms to the casting areas for broken bones. Additionally, demonstrations of IVs and cast moldings were performed for children. The entire emergency has been tailored to meet the needs of children. Waiting and treatment areas are more spacious to accommodate

family comfort, from bulky strollers to worrisome grandparents. Separated ambulances and walkin entrances, as well as an isolated trauma bay and treatment room, serve to minimize a child’s exposure to the more gruesome aspects of medicine. Dona Teles, Clinical Manager for the Children’s Emergency Department, stressed this design layout, saying “the point of the Children’s Emergency Department’s infrastructure was to limit the experience with needless trauma.” Unique to the hospital is an overwhelmingly child-friendly environment. Bright colours highlight an otherwise bleak hospital exterior. Areas have been designed as to mirror the urban landscape. Interactive screens with a variety of games function as apt distractions. Together, these unique features further assist the children and families during the stressful time of a hospital emergency. “We did not want it [the Emer• PLEASE SEE ER, A3


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