Dinner is served
Max Marcus serves up absurd comedy in Jaqueline Andrade’s What’s For Dinner. (Lindsay Duncan)
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Big cuts for small program
The Canadian Studies program’s future is uncertain due to a proposed 39 per cent cut to the department’s 2008-09 budget. Caroline Caron, program co-ordinator for Canadian studies, said the cuts would hinder the program’s expansion plans. The department operates on an average $35,000 budget each year. The proposed budget cuts would move the budget down to $21,000 for next year. Although the cuts haven’t been finalized, Caron said the department is operating on the basis they will occur. Caron said the department was planning to add new compulsory courses by the 2009-10 academic year, but no longer has the budget for it.
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Art as outreach
Low-key and indistinct from the outside, 173 Princess St. is a large, beautiful space, a former video rental store and is currently the home to an unusual art exhibit this week called Art On The Street, courtesy of the Street Health Centre. An outreach centre that provides medical and psychological care for people with addictions and living on the street, Kingston’s Street Health Centre is a place of refuge for Kingston residents facing tough times.
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Building bikes and community
Tucked away a few blocks north of Princess Street is a small patch of grass, a picnic table and playground. Officially called Friendship Park, the park was known colloquially for years as “Needle Park,” because its out-of-the-way location made it a haven for drug-users. Now, it’s known around the neighbourhood as “Bike Park.”
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Campus fires raise alarm bells
Two fire-alarm evacuations in the past week have raised concerns about fire safety as Queen’s campus undergoes construction. On Sunday night, an unattended pan of grease started a fire in the in the JDUC International Centre. Earlier in the week, Stauffer Library was evacuated after smoke was discovered near the basement. This summer, a faulty desk fan caused a fire in the AMS General Manager Claude Sherren’s office, costing an estimated $20,000 to $30,000 in damage.
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Contradicting the code
Proposed changes to the University’s Code of Conduct are meeting resistance from a group calling the draft the “Queen’s Patriot Act.” Students for Accessible Education members said they fear specific clauses in the proposed code will infringe on their right to civil disobedience and force students to snitch on their peers. The code, which was last revised in 1991, was placed under review in accordance with a recommendation made in May 2005 by the Senate Committee on Non-Academic Discipline (SONAD).
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