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Calamity at Queen’s: Provost’s panicked cuts consume a university older than Canada

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The institution is spiralling, with faculty and students calling the provost a hatchet man who is exaggerating its financial crisis

The gravest mistake so far of Queen’s University’s new Provost Matthew Evans, who is presiding awkwardly over an existential financial crisis at the Kingston, Ont., school, was to speak the truth but phrase it as a conditional.

“I’m concerned about the survival of this institution. Because unless we sort this out, we will go under,” he said.

It was true, on the whole, but provocatively put. And when he said this to faculty and staff at a town hall in December, it was received poorly. To their ears, it turned a sympathetic rallying cry into a callous death threat.

Even worse, when a recording of the private town hall leaked to the press, it called down the demon shadow of public attention upon them all, which is the last thing a university wants in its weaker moments, precisely because of the bias toward wildly exaggerated claims of imminent catastrophe.

Universities are not supposed to be in the headlines. Look at Harvard, not really the Queen’s of the South, but similar enough, scandalized by its own failed leader over a foreign war and a plagiarism scandal. They are supposed to be in the journals, not the papers. No news is good news in the ivory tower, and most news is bad.

So it is today with Queen’s, which used to swagger against McGill University and the University of Toronto, boasting all their academic heft without being in a big city. Now it is barely in the top dozen, and flirts with dropping out of the all-important U15.

The place is floundering, and campus tension is high. A hiring freeze is in place for the foreseeable future. Government support seems variously incompetent and hostile. Nearly all university revenue comes from tuition and government operating grants based on student numbers, but at the provincial level, tuition has been frozen by law for several years, costing Queen’s nearly a quarter of a billion dollars. At the federal level, just this week came news of a cap on international students, who pay four times the tuition charged to Canadians, and have not returned in pre-pandemic levels. By failing to meet projected targets for numbers of international students, with 152 fewer than planned, most in Arts and Science, the whole school has lost more than $12 million this year.

But this pressure and others, like inflation, apply to all Canadian universities, which has raised questions about why Queen’s is the only one spiralling. The common fear is that the administration is exaggerating the crisis and its urgency to drive through budget cuts too quickly, and ignoring pleas for clarity and patience.

Queen’s has got a deficit, not a death wish. Of course it won’t “go under,” which is why the provost’s threat has backfired so explosively. What will happen, which is what he meant all along, is they will make budget cuts whether faculty like it or not, such as eliminating any course that attracts fewer than ten students or five at the graduate level.

But this is easier said than done. National Post interviews with department heads and other Queen’s students and faculty reveal these cuts are being made in a hurried panic, dictated from on high without clear rationale, guided by blunt strategy that is laying waste to the traditional academic cornerstones of an ancient Canadian institution, older even than the country itself.

Some even see a wider effort to not only increase class sizes, but to force all undergraduates into a more streamlined curriculum, less specialized, denying them the chance to pursue their fields into the darker corners in their upper years. Nine students reading Kant each year, for example, might seem like a waste of a room. But none seems like a waste of a university.

“It defeats the point of a university education, particularly a liberal arts education,” said Ethan Chilcott, a senior student and teaching assistant in Classics and Archaeology, who has organized protest against cuts. “It’ll be like a big high school.”

Queen’s takes its liberal arts heritage seriously. When it opened its first classes in 1842, its first professor, the Reverend Peter Colin Campbell, taught classical literature. In its Memorial Room to the school’s war dead, there is an inscription around the wall, from Wordsworth, another provocative conditional: “We must be free or die, who speak the tongue that Shakespeare spake; the faith and morals hold which Milton held.”

Now, under the blanket ban on small classes, Queen’s Department of Classics and Archaeology has to cut all instruction in Latin and Ancient Greek beyond the first year introduction. Shakespeare would not approve. What’s a Classics department without Latin and Greek?

“Precisely. That’s the death of our department,” said department head Daryn Lehoux.

This will lead to the end of most upper-year language courses at Queen’s

Bronwyn Bjorkman, Queen’s head of Languages, Literatures and Cultures.

Interested in modern languages? Too bad. All second-year courses in Italian, Arabic and Hebrew will be cut next year, along with third-year Spanish and German. Upper-year Chinese barely makes it past the 10-student cut off with a dozen students on average, so it might survive. German is done a little differently and might still be available in connection with literature studies, but not for studying the language.

“That is as dire as it sounds,” said Bronwyn Bjorkman, department head of Languages, Literatures and Cultures. “This will lead to the end of most upper-year language courses at Queen’s.”

Over in Art History and Art Conservation, the class size cap will eliminate some of the technical courses in one of the only programs in Canada to offer technical art study, said department head Norman Vorano. “If we begin to see these types of restrictions on our graduate courses, I worry that it will seriously reduce our graduate art conservation program,” he said.

“Students come to Queen’s for the chance to work in close proximity to internationally recognized experts and this often occurs in upper-year undergraduate seminars. Some upper-year seminars are capped because of lab requirements. Other seminars are small because they involve student travel and field research. Other seminars have low enrolments because they offer highly specialized and deep subject matter engagement, precisely why students come to Queen’s,” Vorano said.

Queen's university students protest cuts
Queen’s University Master of Public Administration students Sarah Homsi and Thomas Goyer inside the Queen’s School of Policy Studies. The students are concerned about the potential temporary suspension of their program following a program review. Jan Murphy/Postmedia Network

The School of Music and Drama is in a similar situation, and so are some upper-year chemistry laboratory courses, among many others.

“We’re facing the devastation of the Faculty of Arts and Science,” said Samantha King, head of the School of Kinesiology and Health Studies.

“There’s still no sense of a vision for the university or for Arts and Science,” King said. “And there is an implicit devaluing of Arts and Science whenever leaders are asked about the vision that’s driving this and what we’re looking at at the other end. That’s a real concern.”

“There’s no pedagogical justification for making classroom sizes larger, they’re already too large,” said Dax D’Orazio, a postdoctoral fellow in political studies.

He said junior lecturers like him are at risk of losing the teaching experience that is crucial to graduate student training and a key part of the skills that traditionally transfer from graduate education to professional jobs, such as managing conflict and giving and receiving feedback.

“From my perspective as junior scholar, research is part of the heart of the institution but it’s not everything,” D’Orazio said.

There’s still no sense of a vision for the university or for Arts and Science

Samantha King, head of Queen’s School of Kinesiology and Health Studies.

As word of this calamity has spread through the residence halls and back home to tuition-paying parents, students and their parents have recently been calling professors in panic, wondering whether their department, or even their school, will exist by the end of their undergraduate degree. Reassurance is not always available.

For an old school in Canada’s first capital, this has been a painful existential exercise, not just reflecting changes in post-secondary education and how it is funded in Canada, but reflecting its own peculiar evolution from a Victorian theological college to an establishment liberal arts school and top research institution to an almost bankrupt winter camp for clever rich kids from Toronto, Ottawa and Shanghai.

Evans’ work so far has seemed to make things worse on the way to hopefully making them better. Hired last August, he has developed a reputation as a hatchet man who answers questions with rebuttals and provocations. In the faculty town hall in December, he was remarkably chippy for a crisis meeting, telling people that their questions were “predicated” on plainly ridiculous assumptions, such as that he can manipulate the Board of Trustees or that there is some secret stash of endless money.

You could not miss the scolding tone.

“Everyone was happy about it,” Evans said of the period a few years ago when the school was in surplus, before the provincial government imposed a tuition freeze, when Queen’s was flush with money from high-paying international students. “Now, when we’re in a situation where we have deficit, faculties, some faculties, are complaining about the fact that they have a deficit. Well, you didn’t complain about it when you were making surpluses and hanging on to those surpluses. So, you now have to deal with it when you have a deficit.”

By “some faculties” he meant Arts and Science, which is the biggest, but also carries a disproportionate amount of the deficit. Queen’s overall deficit this year was projected to be more than $62 million, but has now been revised down to $48 million, of which the Faculty of Arts and Science accounts for $37 million.

Evans said the urgency of the budget cuts is due to two reasons. One is that last May, the Board of Trustees signed off on a deficit budget for this year with a condition that in 2024-25 there be a deficit of no more than five per cent, with a balanced budget the next year. The other, as he put it to an audience member at the faculty town hall: “Frankly, if we don’t do it in that time, we will run out of money… Yes, we will… Do you want me to answer the question or not?… Honesty you’re getting. That’s your problem.

“If we carry on spending at that rate, we will run out of reserves by 2025-26. This faculty (Arts and Science) in fact will run out of reserves earlier than that. This faculty will run out of reserves next year,” he said.

In a presentation to the Queen’s Senate to discuss the operating budget and Queen’s academic mission and priorities for “rebalancing,” Evans said a “tax” of 1.5 per cent has been levied on all the school’s faculties and shared services to create a “deficit mitigation fund” that will be used to help the Faculty of Arts and Science eliminate its deficit on time. He also anticipates having to negotiate with other faculties and schools — applied science, business, medicine, law, education — for one-off subsidies to Arts and Science, which will test just how much the school values its largest faculty.

He denied there was any reserve money that could be spent to spread the cuts over a longer period. He said they cannot touch endowments, money for research or funds set aside for a new building.

“They have to be used for the purposes they were given. In the end, that’s why Laurentian went down,” Evans said at the December town hall. (Laurentian University in Sudbury filed for creditor protection in 2021, closing many of its programs.)

There is a cold irony, then, in the school’s recent project to legally review several historical awards established with donor funding “to assess original donor intent and what changes or revisions may be permitted,” as internal correspondence describes it.

Lehoux, for example, said he got a call from a donor who wanted to top up the funds of the Wallace Near Prizes, founded by the late W.W. Near, Esq. of Toronto, but was told by school the money could not be directed so explicitly, to the study of Latin and Greek.

“So the money is gone, I can’t give those prizes anymore,” Lehoux said. “My department has always turned a profit. We have never had a budget deficit. And we’re on the chopping block as if we’re the problem. It’s just that we’re a soft target.”

A Queen’s spokesperson said the school is reviewing and updating 500 or so student awards across all faculties, worth more than $4-million. Some are many decades old and use “restrictive terms with old or outdated language,” sometimes by designating a student in a program that is no longer offered.

A statement read: “In order to change the terms of awards such as these, it is necessary in most cases to go through the courts who set a high bar in terms of making any changes the university may want to make to the original terms of these awards that were set when the original donation was made. We are working to update and adjust these terms to provide more flexibility so we can distribute all available funding to students while respecting the spirit of the original gift.”

The Faculty of Arts and Science is led by Dean Barbara Crow, who has a different reputation than Evans as a leader. She has barely answered any questions about this crisis, to the point of joining a town hall for the faculty’s undergraduate student society and sitting mum in the audience. She presided over the surplus years that Evans described, boosting salary spending for various new administrative positions.

Provost Evans declined an interview with National Post. Through a spokesperson, Dean Crow first declined an interview, then said she was reconsidering, then declined.

On Tuesday night this week, Evans was to address the student government assembly. It promised to be dramatic. Faculty planned to show up, as students had done at their fateful town hall in December. On the agenda was an item for discussion asking the Arts and Science Undergraduate Society executive why they have not lobbied Dean Crow for answers, given her lack of transparency. “When will there be an opportunity for students to get answers? How do we know she will actually attend?”

Barely 24 hours before it was to begin, the provost cancelled, according to a report by the Queen’s Journal, the student paper that has closely followed the saga.

The provost’s withdrawal, abrupt and late, recalled his curt exit from the town hall in December. At the end, he grimaced as he noticed students walking into the auditorium, silently protesting the cuts at the meeting from which they had been formally excluded, holding signs and wearing campus merch.

“Oh god,” Evans muttered, exasperated, then stood up and left.

 

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Alouettes receiver Philpot announces he’ll be out for the rest of season

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Montreal Alouettes wide receiver Tyson Philpot has announced he will be out for the rest of the CFL season.

The Delta, B.C., native posted the news on his Instagram page Thursday.

“To Be Continued. Shoutout my team, the fans of the CFL and the whole city of Montreal! I can’t wait to be back healthy and write this next chapter in 2025,” the statement read.

Philpot, 24, injured his foot in a 33-23 win over the Hamilton Tiger-Cats on Aug. 10 and was placed on the six-game injured list the next week.

The six-foot-one, 195-pound receiver had 58 receptions, 779 yards and five touchdowns in nine games for the league-leading Alouettes in his third season.

Philpot scored the game-winning touchdown in Montreal’s Grey Cup win last season to punctuate a six-reception, 63-yard performance.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 12, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Tua Tagovailoa sustains concussion after hitting head on turf in Dolphins’ loss to Bills

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MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa sustained a concussion for the third time in his NFL career, leaving his team’s game Thursday night against Buffalo after running into defensive back Damar Hamlin and hitting the back of his head against the turf.

Tagovailoa remained down for about two minutes before getting to his feet and walking to the sideline after the play in the third quarter. He made his way to the tunnel not long afterward, looking into the stands before smiling and departing toward the locker room.

The Dolphins needed almost no time before announcing it was a concussion. The team said he had two during the 2022 season, and Tagovailoa was diagnosed with another concussion when he was a college player at Alabama.

Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said Tagovailoa would get “proper procedural evaluation” and “appropriate care” on Friday.

“The furthest thing from my mind is, ‘What is the timeline?’ We just need to evaluate and just worry about my teammate, like the rest of the guys are,” McDaniel said. “We’ll get more information tomorrow and take it day by day from here.”

Some players saw Tagovailoa in the locker room after the game and said they were encouraged. Tagovailoa spoke with some players and then went home after the game, McDaniel said.

“I have a lot of love for Tua, built a great relationship with him,” said quarterback Skylar Thompson, who replaced Tagovailoa after the injury. “You care about the person more than the player and everybody in the organization would say the same thing. Just really praying for Tua and hopefully everything will come out all right.”

Tagovailoa signed a four-year, $212 million extension before this season — a deal that makes him one of the highest-paid players in the NFL — and was the NFL’s leading passer in Week 1 this season. Tagovailoa left with the Dolphins trailing 31-10, and that was the final score.

“If you know Tua outside of football, you can’t help but feel for him,” Bills quarterback Josh Allen said on Amazon following the game. “He’s a great football player but he’s an even greater human being. He’s one of the best humans on the planet. I’ve got a lot of love for him and I’m just praying for him and his family, hoping everything’s OK. But it’s tough, man. This game of football that we play, it’s got its highs and it’s got its lows — and this is one of the lows.”

Tagovailoa’s college years and first three NFL seasons were marred by injury, though he positioned himself for a big pay bump with an injury-free and productive 2023 as he led the Dolphins into the playoffs. He threw for 29 touchdowns and a league-best 4,624 yards last year.

When, or if, he can come back this season is anyone’s guess. Tagovailoa said in April 2023 that the concussions he had in the 2022 season left him contemplating his playing future. “I think I considered it for a time,” he said then, when asked if he considered stepping away from the game to protect himself.

McDaniel said it’s not his place to say if Tagovailoa should return to football. “He’ll be evaluated and we’ll have conversations and progress as appropriate,” McDaniel said.

Tagovailoa was hurt Thursday on a fourth-down keeper with about 4:30 left in the third. He went straight ahead into Hamlin and did not slide, leading with his right shoulder instead.

Hamlin was the player who suffered a cardiac arrest after making a tackle during a Monday night game in January 2023 at Cincinnati, causing the NFL to suspend a pivotal game that quickly lost significance in the aftermath of a scary scene that unfolded in front of a national television audience.

Tagovailoa wound up on his back, both his hands in the air and Bills players immediately pointed at him as if to suggest there was an injury. Dolphins center Aaron Brewer quickly did the same, waving to the sideline.

Tagovailoa appeared to be making a fist with his right hand as he lay on the ground. It was movement consistent with something that is referred to as the “fencing response,” which can be common after a traumatic brain injury.

Tagovailoa eventually got to his feet. McDaniel grabbed the side of his quarterback’s head and gave him a kiss on the cheek as Tagovailoa departed. Thompson came into the game to take Tagovailoa’s spot.

“I love Tua on and off the football field,” Bills edge Von Miller said. “I’m a huge fan of him. I can empathize and sympathize with him because I’ve been there. I wish him the best.”

Tagovailoa’s history with concussions — and how he has since worked to avoid them — is a huge part of the story of his career, and now comes to the forefront once again.

He had at least two concussions during the 2022 season. He was hurt in a Week 3 game against Buffalo and cleared concussion protocol, though he appeared disoriented on that play but returned to the game.

The NFL later changed its concussion protocol to mandate that if a player shows possible concussion symptoms — including a lack of balance or stability — he must sit out the rest of the game.

Less than a week later, in a Thursday night game at Cincinnati, Tagovailoa was concussed on a scary hit that briefly knocked him unconscious and led to him being taken off the field on a stretcher.

His second known concussion of that season came in a December game against Green Bay, and he didn’t play for the rest of the 2022 season. After that, Tagovailoa began studying ways where he may be able to fall more safely and protect himself against further injury — including studying jiu-jitsu.

“I’m not worried about anything that’s out of my hands,” McDaniel said. “I’m just worried about the human being.”

___

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Too much? Many Americans feel the need to limit their political news, AP-NORC/USAFacts poll finds

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NEW YORK (AP) — When her husband turns on the television to hear news about the upcoming presidential election, that’s often a signal for Lori Johnson Malveaux to leave the room.

It can get to be too much. Often, she’ll go to a TV in another room to watch a movie on the Hallmark Channel or BET. She craves something comforting and entertaining. And in that, she has company.

While about half of Americans say they are following political news “extremely” or “very” closely, about 6 in 10 say they need to limit how much information they consume about the government and politics to avoid feeling overloaded or fatigued, according to a new survey from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and USAFacts.

Make no mistake: Malveaux plans to vote. She always does. “I just get to the point where I don’t want to hear the rhetoric,” she said.

The 54-year-old Democrat said she’s most bothered when she hears people on the news telling her that something she saw with her own eyes — like the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol — didn’t really happen.

“I feel like I’m being gaslit. That’s the way to put it,” she said.

Sometimes it feels like ‘a bombardment’

Caleb Pack, 23, a Republican from Ardmore, Oklahoma, who works in IT, tries to keep informed through the news feeds on his phone, which is stocked with a variety of sources, including CNN, Fox News, The Wall Street Journal and The Associated Press.

Yet sometimes, Pack says, it seems like a bombardment.

“It’s good to know what’s going on, but both sides are pulling a little bit extreme,” he said. “It just feels like it’s a conversation piece everywhere, and it’s hard to escape it.”

Media fatigue isn’t a new phenomenon. A Pew Research Center survey conducted in late 2019 found roughly two in three Americans felt worn out by the amount of news there is, about the same as in a poll taken in early 2018. During the 2016 presidential campaign, about 6 in 10 people felt overloaded by campaign news.

But it can be particularly acute with news related to politics. The AP-NORC/USAFacts poll found that half of Americans feel a need to limit their consumption of information related to crime or overseas conflicts, while only about 4 in 10 are limiting news about the economy and jobs.

It’s easy to understand, with television outlets like CNN, Fox News Channel and MSNBC full of political talk and a wide array of political news online, sometimes complicated by disinformation.

“There’s a glut of information,” said Richard Coffin, director of research and advocacy for USAFacts, “and people are having a hard time figuring out what is true or not.”

Women are more likely to feel they need to limit media

In the AP-NORC poll, about 6 in 10 men said they follow news about elections and politics at least “very” closely, compared to about half of women. For all types of news, not just politics, women are more likely than men to report the need to limit their media consumption, the survey found.

White adults are also more likely than Black or Hispanic adults to say they need to limit media consumption on politics, the poll found.

Kaleb Aravzo, 19, a Democrat, gets a baseline of news by listening to National Public Radio in the morning at home in Logan, Utah. Too much politics, particularly when he’s on social media sites like TikTok and Instagram, can trigger anxiety and depression.

“If it pops up on my page when I’m on social media,” he said, “I’ll just scroll past it.”

___

Sanders reported from Washington. David Bauder writes about media for the AP. Follow him at http://x.com/dbauder.

The AP poll of 1,019 adults was conducted July 29-August 8, 2024, using a sample drawn from NORC’s probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 4.0 percentage points.

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