November 16, 2007
Vol. 135, Issue 21

Mike Wheeler, chair of the Sydenham Ward Tenants and Ratepayers Association, says the student housing area is like ‘a mould.’ (Joshua Chan)

Uneasy bedfellows

Mike Wheeler says he can appreciate the benefits of having a university in Kingston. He said the academic environment compliments the growth of industry in the city. Wheeler, a retired Alcan employee and chair of the Sydenham Ward Tenants and Ratepayers Association, said he saw the mixing of the intellectual community with the city at large on a regular basis. But Wheeler also sees some inherent problems, including the expansion of the student housing area. He said expansion of the University campus may help with space issues in the short term, especially lack of parking, but it won’t solve the lack of space.

Paying the price for loans

Matt Dylag sees a bite taken out of his bank account every month when interest on his line of credit is deducted it. The third year law student is using both the Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP) and a student line of credit to fund his education. He said he took out a line of credit from RBC Royal Bank when he began his second year in the program.

Offering a refuge for education

In December 2003, Agot Thon boarded a flight from Nairobi Airport to London, and on to Toronto. She flew into Kingston the next morning. Two years after graduating from high school, Thon left the Kakuma Refugee Camp in northern Kenya to enroll at Queen’s in the Faculty of Nursing in 2004 through the Student Refugee Program. Thon left her birthplace, Sudan, in 1986 at the age of five to live in Itang refugee camp in Ethiopia for six years. She moved to Kenya’s Kakuma Refugee Camp in 1993.

AMS services exempt from fee renewal

Under a new AMS student fee policy, AMS corporate services will no longer have to renew their fees. The policy has been in discussion for several years by AMS executives and student managers. The idea of allowing corporate services to be exempt from the triennial review came up because these services are considered essential to the entire student body, said Greg McKellar AMS information officer.

Rankings don’t need school input

This week, Maclean’s magazine released their 17th annual list of university rankings in terms of overall academic success. It was the first edition of the rankings published after 22 universities dropped out of Maclean’s survey last year. Previously, the rankings relied heavily on information the universities gave the magazine.

City loses taxes on University property

Queen’s as economic powerhouse

Students tuning out CFRC

CFRC needs to market itself if the Queen’s community is going to realize what they’re tuning out on.

A call for academic diversity

It’s profoundly troubling that the administration has managed to pacify our need and our right to have input on the available curricula with a mere bubble-sheet survey.

Famine has a taste for the unusual

On the east end of Cataraqui Street, a stone’s throw away from the frosty waters of the Kingston Inner Harbour, sits a run-down factory that, upon first sight, looks frighteningly similar to the imagined locale of childhood nightmares.

Rugby runs out of steam

Despite passionate support from about 120 Gaels fans who made the two-and-a-half-hour-trip to Markham, the men’s rugby team couldn’t come up with a win in their OUA championship match against the Brock Badgers Saturday.

The nomenclature of you

As Shakespeare’s renowned heroine Juliet asked, “What’s in a name?” We often take names for granted, never thinking about what they might mean. But if you could choose your name, you might put a little more thought into those words on your birth certificate.

Issue in photos

View all images from vol. 135, issue 21.