Thursday, February 21, 2008

CBC at Mount A

Local singer/songwriter Julie Doiron and Fred Squire team up with The Superfantastics of Halifax on this week’s program of Fuse on CBC radio.

Recorded in Mount A’s Brunton Auditorium, the Sackville edition of Fuse airs on Saturday, February 23 at 3 p.m. (106.1 FM, CBC Moncton, http://www.cbc.ca/radio).

Fuse is a national CBC program that combines two different Canadian artists each week to collaborate on songs from each band. Usually done in studio in Ottawa, Fuse traveled to Sackville, for the first time, on February 12 to feature some East Coast talent with Sackville duo Julie Doiron and Fred Squire teaming up with The Superfantastics of Halifax.

Fuse came to Mount Allison following an invitation from student Sandy MacKay with the SAC Entertainment Committee. The bands performed in front of a full house of Mount Allison students and local residents.

In case you miss Saturday’s show, editions of Fuse are also available on CBC’s Radio 3 site at http://radio3.cbc.ca/. For more information please visit http://www.cbc.ca/fuse.

(photo credit: Hannah MacDonald)

Friday, February 15, 2008

Reunion Weekend 2008

All alumni are invited back to campus for a fun-filled weekend including class reunions, alumni banquet and awards, and fond Mount A memories!

Get together with old friends, tour around campus and see how the town of Sackville has changed through the years. Calling all graduating classes ending in 3 and 8!

Plan a trip to Mount A to celebrate your Reunion. Spread the word and tell your classmates!

Check out the REUNION WEB SITE for up-to-date info, complete schedule, accommodation info, and to see who's coming. And of course, to register!


Thursday, February 14, 2008

Cairo to Cape Town

Peter Loewen (’02) and Sam Millar ('99) will be riding their motorcycles from Cairo to Cape Town in July, and will arrive in the third week of August.

It promises to be an exciting, possibly dangerous, and certainly memorable trip. Importantly, they will be raising money for quite an important cause along the way, which they’ll be unveiling in a few weeks time.

In the meantime, they have a website up at: http://cairotothecape.blogspot.com

They'll be updating it regularly before and during the trip, and they’d love it if you checked in often. And please pass it around to your interested friends

Good luck, guys!



Friday, February 8, 2008

Looking back

Professor Steven Maynard ('85) has been teaching at the Queen's University History Department for 10 years.

A classroom discussion about a Anti-Racism Rally became a trip down memory lane for professor Steven Maynard. When some students made comments about expecting more fist-pumping from the rally crowd, Maynard said students back in his university days would have made a bigger fuss.

In fact, he was arrested for being one of those students. Back in Maynard’s university days at Mount A, he was working towards becoming a historian, but was also quite the activist.

In his 20s Maynard was arrested for standing up against pharmaceutical companies during the AIDS crisis of the 1980s.

“The pharmaceutical companies were taking far too long to release their life-saving drugs, while many people—our friends—were dying of AIDS,” he said.

For Maynard, getting arrested wasn’t a setback. “Sometimes in activism, you have to create a spectacle in order to get attention and make something happen.”

Maynard got quite a bit of media attention and a picture of the arrest appeared in newspapers.

Maynard said describing university students today as apathetic is too glib. He said he realizes there are students trying to create social change, but they need to do more.

“Get out there and do something splashy. Make some waves.”

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Black History Month - Heroes

Stanley Ratteray (’54) is featured in the Bermuda Sun’s list of heroes for Black History Month. Dr. Stanley Ratteray (1934-2003) was leader of the Progressive Group, which launched the successful Theatre Boycott in 1959, which ended segregation in movie theatres, restaurants and hotels.

As a UBP strategist and Cabinet Minister, he played a major role in political life during the 1960s and 1970s.

Dr. Ratteray graduated from Sandys Secondary School. At 15, he left the Island to attend Mount Allison University, where he obtained a Bachelor's Degree in History.

He began dental school at McGill University, while still completing his Bachelor's degree and at 23 graduated as a Doctor of Dental Surgery.

At that time Bermuda, unlike Canada, was a segregated society and Dr. Ratteray was eager to see this end. Beginning a long career in activism and politics, in 1959, as chairman of the Progressive Group, Dr. Ratteray and 17 other members organized the Theatre Boycott, which in two weeks, was successful in desegregating the movie theatres in Bermuda and served as a catalyst for desegregating restaurants and hotels too.

Later in 1959, he became a member of the Committee for Universal Adult Suffrage, supporting its campaign to abolish the property vote.

In 1964 Dr. Ratteray became a founding member of the United Bermuda Party. He was a member of the UBP delegation to the 1966 Constitutional Conference in London that laid down the framework for Bermuda's Constitution.

He was appointed to the Upper House (now the Senate) in 1968, becoming Minister of Education from 1969 to 1972. He had the task of integrating Bermuda's public schools, beginning with the island's 17 primary schools in 1971.

Dr. Ratteray retired from active politics in 1979.

In addition to his enthusiasm for the arts, he helped establish the Bermuda National Trust and also was deputy chairman of the Bermuda Mental Health Foundation.

Dentistry remained his first love. His periodic absences from the political scene were usually due to his desire to focus on his practice.

Read the full story.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Mount A receives $3 million for new student centre

Mount A students were given three million reasons to smile with today’s announcement by Post-Secondary Education, Training and Labour Minister Ed Doherty regarding government funding for the University’s new Student Centre.

Minister Doherty announced an investment of $3 million towards Mount Allison’s new student centre, which includes $1.5 million from the University Infrastructure Trust Fund.

The new student centre will allow centralization and accessibility of such services as the admissions office, bookstore, and student health centre, which are currently located at different points throughout the campus. It will also include a physical fitness complex, student council administrative offices, and space for the campus newspaper and radio station.

The new student services complex will also house an international student centre. Since December 2006 the former Trueman House has been undergoing extensive renovations to house the new student centre and includes many environmentally friendly design features such as solar reflective glazing on windows and low-flow plumbing fixtures.

A room housing a mural by Mount Allison graduate Alex Colville will be preserved in the renovation process. Construction work on Mount Allison University’s new student centre is expected to be completed in time for students beginning classes in September 2008.

Read full story.


Woodgrain Lights Exhibit

After graduating from Mount A's art program, Catherine Linfield (’93) began her career as an artist and sculptor.

Following a lifetime of painting and drawing she began experimenting with the images she saw ingrained in wood by highlighting certain areas and darkening others.

Through this process, Linfield created an art form she says she's never seen anywhere else.

Now, after years of touring across Canada and the United States, Linfield's art is back in New Brunswick and has been on display at the Capitol Theatre since Jan. 16. The exhibit runs until Feb.29.

Her exhibit, Woodgrain Lights, is at the Capitol Theatre Irving Lobby.

Monday, February 4, 2008

Florida Comes to Sackville


Mount A welcomes noted academic and author Richard Florida — Feb. 6

Sackville is living up to its designation as a 2008 Cultural Capital of Canada as Mount Allison University welcomes Richard Florida, celebrated academic and best-selling author of The Rise of the Creative Class and The Flight of the Creative Class, to campus.

Florida will deliver the Wilford Jonah Lecture in Convocation Hall at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, February 6.

His talk is entitled, “The Creative Class: The role of the artistic community in building towns and cities.” Everyone is welcome to attend and there is no admission charge.

Richard Florida is a noted American academic and author, with two recent best sellers to his credit — The Rise of the Creative Class and The Flight of the Creative Class. He also wrote The Breakthrough Illusion (1990) and Beyond Mass Production (1993), which have paved the way for his provocative looks on how creativity is revolutionizing the global economy.

He was recently named one of Esquire Magazine’s Best and Brightest, sharing the honour with such notables as Bill Clinton and Jeffrey Sachs. Richard Florida is head of the University of Toronto’s Martin Prosperity Institute and a professor of business and creativity at the Rotman School of Management. He is also a contributor to a myriad of publications, including the Globe and Mail, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal.

Mount Allison University President, Dr. Robert Campbell, says, “We’re ecstatic to welcome Richard Florida to Mount Allison. Florida’s writings on creativity and the global economy are known throughout the world. His visit is appropriate and timely, as Sackville was recently named a Cultural Capital of Canada for 2008.”

Florida earned his Bachelor’s degree from Rutgers College and his Ph.D from Columbia University. He has held professorships at George Mason University and Carnegie Mellon University, and has taught as a visiting professor at Harvard University and MIT.

The Wilford B. Jonah Lecture Series was established at Mount Allison University in 2000 through the generosity of Wilford B. Jonah, a member of the Class of 1936. The endowment created is intended to provide funds to enable the University to bring to campus persons of high international stature and prominence to give a public lecture and, where possible, to take part in a forum of discussion with students.

Past distinguished lecturers have included: Mordecai Richler, author and essayist; Dr. David Suzuki, scientist, broadcaster, and environmental advocate; world-renowned physicist Dr. Lawrence Krauss; and inventor of the personal computer and co-founder of Apple Computers, Steve Wozniak.

Commerce & Canadian Studies

Catch-up on Department News! Two newsletters have come out this week:

Commerce Newsletter
Canadian Studies Newsletter