Going postal Western student Sarah Botelho sends out her first EP >> pg. 4
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WESTERN UNIVERSITY • CANADA’S ONLY DAILY STUDENT NEWSPAPER • FOUNDED 1906
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
Student sues Western for 2009 Social Sci arrest Former Western student Irnes Zeljkovic is currently in court for his lawsuit against Western University and Campus Community Police Services for excessive use of force during his arrest in 2009. Zeljkovic was arrested on October 14, 2009 in the Social Science Centre, where the arrest was videotaped by fellow students who later uploaded a video onto YouTube. To date, the video has been viewed over 400,000 times. The video shows Zeljkovic being arrested by six officers who use punches, kicks and strikes with batons to subdue him while repeatedly shouting, “Stop resisting!” Zeljkovic is suing the university and campus police for $950,000 in damages. Campus Police and Western declined to comment for this story. At the time of the arrest, Zeljkovic was suffering from an acute psychotic episode while inside the Social Science Centre. Zeljkovic was originally charged with mischief, resisting arrest, assault and escaping custody but completed a mental health diversion program and the charges were later dropped. Michael Burgess, expert witness for the plaintiff on use of force, testified yesterday that the officers also used pepper spray in the altercation according to reports submitted by campus police officers. Additionally, the extent and style of force used was not consistent with training materials released by Ontario Police College. The trial is expected to continue for the next week. • Katie Lear
Inside
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Mayoral candidate Steve Gardner
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Unpaid internships crackdown •P3 Faces of Western: Luke Swanek •P5 Editorial: unpaid internships a bitter pill •P6 Purple Pipe Athlete of the Week: Amanda Boyles
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TODAY high 21 low 10
TOMORROW high 23 low 12 VOLUME 108, ISSUE 19
Grad Club faces financial difficulty as costs mount
Kelly Samuel • GAZETTE
SAVE ME, I’M DROWNING. The graduate students on-campus watering hole, the Grad Club, located in Middlesex College, is in serious financial difficulties this year. The Society of Graduate Students may be levying a fee on its members in order for the establishment to stay open at its current location.
Increased rent compounds $100,000 lost already this year Kevin Hurren NEWS EDITOR-AT-LARGE @KevinAtGazette
Graduate students may have to open their minds — and their wallets — if they hope to keep the Grad Club afloat. A subsidiary of the Society of Graduate Students, the on-campus pub has long been considered a place for graduate students and professors to unwind between and after classes. But in this past fiscal year, the Grad Club ended with a loss of over $100,000. Now, as the university raises the pub’s occupancy fee from $9,700 a month to $11,000, the pub may be in jeopardy of losing its Middlesex College location. “It’s become an issue,” said Raquel Rodrigues, accounting manager for SOGS. “The occupancy fee the university wants to charge […] obviously the Grad Club cannot afford.”
This increased fee is a consequence of several factors, explained Rodrigues. Not only is the square footage price for on-campus space going up, but issues with the janitorial union have also caused a campus-wide spike. Many of the just over 5,000 graduate and PhD students at Western do pay a membership fee to SOGS, but these funds go towards the organization’s other pursuits and goals. According to SOGS vice-president finance Indranil Chakraborty, the rise in occupancy fees for the pub is an unfortunate result of the university not seeing where the true value of the Grad Club lies. “They don’t consider the Grad Club as a community space or an educational space – they consider it a business space,” Chakraborty said. “This is where we have a difference.” By community and educational space, Chakraborty refers to the exchange of ideas and knowledge that frequently occurs between
colleagues in the Grad Club. By creating this environment, explained Chakraborty, isolation between TAs, professors and other graduate students is broken down. “We are not saying we will not pay the occupancy fees,” Chakraborty said. “We say make it less so that we can survive.” This isn’t the first time the Grad Club has had to deal with increased costs. In 2004, the Grad Club expanded its space to include a larger kitchen — hoping to offer its patrons diverse food options. In order to do so, the Club had to pay $15,000 to the university for the rights to serve food. This fee, in addition to the $500,000 cost of the actual expansion, had to be fully covered by revenues of the pub. Now, with pre-existing deficits and the increased occupancy fees, SOGS may have to adopt a more involved relationship with the pub. “The SOGS membership fee has been stagnant for a number of years
[…] but if the university doesn’t start treat the Grad Club like an educational space then we may have to increase it by maybe a few dollars to make it more sustainable,” Chakraborty said. “We haven’t decided anything yet, but we have discussed in [SOGS] council that in the next budget there is a high probability we’ll be doing that.” Grad Club management will also be looking into potential menu alterations, including increased prices for certain drinks. But even with these changes on the horizon, Chakraborty is confident that SOGS will not jeopardize the Grad Club’s role on campus. “We will be running the Grad Club efficiently and economically viable, but at the same time economically viable doesn’t mean it should be a business model only. The executive all want to keep the Grad Club a community space, whether the university helps us or not.”