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KING’S AND WRITERS | UP NORTH BUT NOT LEFT OUT IN THE COLD Traditions at King’ s WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE? THE UNIVERSITY OF KING’S COLLEGE ALUMNI MAGAZINE | SUMMER 2005 TIDINGS TIDINGS
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Page 1: Tidings Summer 2005

KING’S AND WRITERS | UP NORTH BUT NOT LEFT OUT IN THE COLD

Traditions at King’sWHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE?

THE UNIVERS ITY OF K ING ’S COLLEGE ALUMNI MAGAZIN E | SUMMER 2005

TIDINGSTIDINGS

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TIDINGSSummer 2005

EDITOR

Katie Rock (BAH ’99)

EDITORIAL COMMITTEE

Sherri Aikenhead (BJH ’85)Tim Currie (BJ ’92)

Kyle Shaw (BSc ’91, BJ ’92)Kara Holm

DESIGN

Morgan RogersKate Sinclair

www.coandco.ca

POSTAL ADDRESS

Tidingsc/o Alumni Association

University of King’s College6350 Coburg Road

Halifax, NS B3H 2A1(902) 422-1271

KING’S WEBSITES

www.ukings.ns.ca and www.ukcalumni.com

EMAIL

[email protected]

* * * *Stories in this issue of Tidings were written by recent alumni

of the School of Journalism.

Tidings is produced on behalf of the University of King’s College

Alumni Association.

We welcome and encourage your feedback on each issue. Letters to the

Editor should be signed and typed. We reserve the right

to edit all submissions.

The views expressed in Tidings are those of the individual contributors

or sources.

Mailed under Publications Mail Sales Agreement # 40062749

T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S

Letter from President, Alumni Association 2

Letter from Director, Development, Alumni & Public Relations 3

Events and Activities 4

Alumni Survey

Let us know how we’re doing! 5

Alumni Profile: Ilenka Jelowicki

From the King’s Theatrical Society to Mad Dog Casting,

this entrepreneurial alumna has the spirit 7

FYP Texts Column

Egypt’s Sweet Hereafter 8

Writers at King’s Some great writer’s have come out of this community—is it any wonder? 9

Books I’m Reading

This issue: Dr. Angus Johnston 10

Congratulations!

Alumni accomplishments 11

Cover Story: Traditions at King’s A foundation of this University, long ago and today 12

Honorary Degree Recipients 16

Alumni Profile: Shauntay Grant She really is All the Best 17

Encaenia 2005 19

Journalism School Graduates in the Northwest Territories Booming in the North 20

AlumNotes/In Memoriam 22

THIS ISSUE’S COVER:

President’s Dinner, 1985

Can you identify the people on the cover? If so, please email us at [email protected]

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LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT

Dear Fellow Alumni and Friends of King’s: I am pleased to be addressing you in what will become the first of twice yearly messages from the Alumni Association President. We’re launching a new chapter in the history of our Alumni Association and we hope you’ll join with us as we re-energize our community—an important part of that is the way in which we communicate with one another.

You’ve probably noticed that Tidings has a new face. The magazine has been re-designed to reflect the sense of tradition and thoughtful scholarship that defines the University and its alumni community.

Like King’s, the Alumni Association is a proud organization with a long history. As many of you will know, we are members of the oldest alumni association in Canada. Whether you are a recent graduate or a long-standing member of the Alumni Association, I hope you will enjoy this issue of Tidings which features a story on King’s and its traditions.

I believe King’s longevity can be credited in part to its willingness to adapt and evolve. Through all the changes there has been a sense of tradition and continuity. These traditions were passed—and sometimes adapted—from one class of King’s students to the next and have been instrumental in forming a common identity for the members of our Alumni Association. The membership and size of the Alumni Association has changed dramatically in the last 20 years. When I became President of the Alumni Association in 2004 I knew it was going to be a challenge. How do we connect someone who graduated in 2005 in a class of 223 with a person who graduated in 1965 when the entire student body was not this large? Speaking with members of the Alumni Executive and other alumni I have come to appreciate how our many traditions bring us together and forge a collective bond. Our task in the coming years is to help transform the Alumni Association to reflect the modern reality of its population while retaining the core values that are uniquely King’s. I hope you will join me and the members of the Executive and Chapter Leaders as we take on this challenge. The Association really only exists if its members are engaged and active. It is our hope that by updating alumni favourites like Tidings, introducing new streams of communication and organizing more events both on campus and in the broader community, King’s alumni will come together in greater numbers. We can support each other in our interests and careers. We can support King’s by becoming its best advocates and leaders. Let us know how you would like to be engaged by completing the survey in this publication or on our website, www.ukcalumni.com. Thank you in advance for your continued interest in King’s! Deo Legi Regi Gregi!

Doug Hadley (BA ’92)

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LETTER FROM THE DIRECTOR

Hello Friends of King’s!

It has been a very busy spring for our office and the pace has not changed with the arrival of summer. Paula Johnson came back from Maternity Leave in March and we hired a new Alumni Officer, Katie Rock (BAH ’99), who started in May. With a full time team of three, we’re working harder than ever to improve communications with our alumni and friends, and offer more opportunities for members of our community to engage with one another and King’s.

Our office’s mission is to help people maintain their involvement with King’s after graduation and to support the interests of other members of

the King’s community. This involvement is very important for several reasons:

• Engagement from our alumni helps maintain a sense of continuity and tradition appropriate to English Canada’s oldest Chartered University.

• Participation among our core communities makes our efforts to engage other parties more credible.

• The people closest to King’s are its best ambassadors. Building recognition for King’s outside our core communities provides our graduates and alumni with better opportunities, whether it’s job placements or graduate school admissions or a letter of introduction to a new city in Canada or abroad.

We’re very appreciative of the leadership and support of the Alumni Association Executive and our Chapter Leaders. They have been instrumental in helping us set goals for the Association and its members.

So now it’s over to you! How would you like to be engaged with King’s and the Alumni Association? What events and activities would be of interest? How can you help King’s maintain its position as Canada’s liberal arts leader and Atlantic Canada’s top School of Journalism? Alumni and friends have an important role to play in the future success of King’s but you need to let us know how to make that a positive, worthwhile experience for you.

To that end, we’re publishing a survey in this issue of Tidings and on our website, www.ukcalumni.com. We hope to hear from many of you by the end of August. The King’s experience is special because of the people. Everyone who becomes a part of our community has self-selected in some way. Help us understand how to keep you interested and active.

King’s is the best undergraduate university in Canada, of that we have no doubt, but we cannot rest on our laurels. A strong alumni body will support the interests of the College in the broader community, which in turn supports individual alumni. We look forward to your continued participation and engagement.

I hope to hear from many of you soon. Your ideas and insights are always welcome.

Kara Holm

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Get involved with your Alumni Association!

EVENTS AND ACTIVITIES

CAMPUS EVENTS

• September 24, 2005—Joseph Howe Symposium.

• October 26, 2005—Massey Lecture, presenter Stephen Lewis, held at the Rebecca Cohn Auditorium, Dalhousie University, hosted by the University of King’s College.

IMPORTANT ALUMNI DATES

• January 23, 2006—Deadline for Honorary Degree submissions.

• January 26, 2006—Convocation meets at 5:30p.m. in the Boardroom.

COMING SOON

• September 2005—King’s Alumni and the Atlantic Film Festival in Halifax.

• September 2005—New Brunswick Alum-ni Event in Fredericton.

• Fall events in Montréal and Toronto.• Alumni Christmas Party in the Lodge,

and Chapter Christmas parties.

The University of King’s College Alumni Association

invites you to itsAnnual Golf Tournament

Thursday, August 18, 2005

Ken-Wo Golf and Country Club, Wolfville

A fun event for golfers of all levels with great prizes and food. Plus an exciting opportu-nity to get together with King’s alumni. Your ticket includes: 18 holes of golf, dinner, a raffle, prizes, and more!

ITINERARY11:30a.m: Registration1:00p.m: Shotgun Start6:00p.m: Dinner

Funds raised support the Alumni Journal-ism Scholarship and other activities of the Alumni Association. Tickets are also available for din- ner only. For more information, or to register, please contact [email protected] or toll-free (800) 565-0311.

President Barker is looking for an extra-special Christmas card for 2005—a greet-ing that will appropriately represent King’s to the rest of Canada. The illustrious King’s Christmas card list includes alumni, university presidents, generous supporters of the College, public officials and more. Our Christmas card is an opportunity to reach a wide audience with a strong im-pression of King’s. Have a fantastic Christmas Card design idea? Please submit a proof, no later than September 2, 2005, to:

Development, Alumni & Public Relations OfficeUniversity of King’s CollegeThe Link6350 Coburg RoadHalifax, NS B3H 2A1Or by email to [email protected]

For more information please contact Katie Rock at (902) 422-1271, ext. 136 or toll-free in Canada at (800) 565-0311. The selected entry wins a gift certificate for two to a fantastic restaurant!

More Events…

CHRISTMAS IN AUGUST?

Stay up to date using our website: www.ukcalumni.com

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ALUMNI SURVEY QUESTIONS

The University and the Alumni Association are working to serve you better. Please complete the short survey below to help us understand how to most effectively

engage you with King’s.

1. Have you attended a King’s alumni event? YES/NO

If yes, how recently? (Select one) ®Within the last year ®1 – 5 years ®More than 5 years

2. How often would you like to have the opportunity to get together with your fellow alumni?

3. Rank the following concepts on a scale of 1 to 5 where 5 is very likely to participate and 1 is not likely to participate:

Mentorship program 1 2 3 4 5 Lectures by King’s faculty or other scholars 1 2 3 4 5 Online FYP Book Club 1 2 3 4 5 Pub nights 1 2 3 4 5 Wine tours 1 2 3 4 5 Theatre nights 1 2 3 4 5 Special access to concerts/festivals 1 2 3 4 5 Travel getaways 1 2 3 4 5

4. We are always looking for ways to improve and expand upon our alumni gatherings. Do you have any suggestions for us?

5. Would you be willing to pay a small fee to attend a King’s alumni event? YES/NO

6. Our planned future communication schedule is as follows:

1. Tidings—twice/year, 2. President’s Newsletter—twice/year, 3. Email bulletins—monthly or more frequently Are you satisfied with this amount and level of contact? YES/NO

Do you have any suggestions as to how can we communicate with you better?

7. Do you have any other comments you would like to share with us? We’d always like to hear from you!

Thank you for your time!

Please return completed surveys to: Development, Alumni & Public Relations, 6350 Coburg Road, Halifax, NS B3H 2A1or go to www.ukcalumni.com to complete the survey online.

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he’s not spending countless hours in The Pit anymore. In fact, ∑ue-bec native Ilenka Jelowicki (BA

’96) has come a long way since her days with the King’s Theatrical Society (KTS). She is currently the owner of Mad Dog Casting, a company in London, England. Her job is about as far away from The Pit as you can get too, casting actors to be extras and leads in commercials and major films, including Shakespeare in Love and the recently released summer blockbuster, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Mad Dog Casting is an impressive organization. They have 2,500 people regis-tered as extras and last year they managed to have 18,000 “man days” on set. Ilenka has been preparing to begin casting extras for the upcoming film, The DaVinci Code. The company has also recently started to cast principals in commercials and films, including one third of all the main parts in Stephen Woolly’s film, Stoned, about the Rolling Stones, due to be released this summer. “The work we do is quite diverse but constantly changing so it keeps us on our toes,” says Ilenka. But how did she get to London from King’s and the KTS? “The idea of going to class with 300 people didn’t really interest me,” explains Ilenka about her choice to go to King’s, “the fact that it was small was really attractive to me.” Ilenka came to King’s in 1992 looking for a small school that was far from ∑ue-bec and different from what many of her friends were doing—going to schools in Ontario. Hearing about the Foundation Year Programme from her friend Nick

Scheib (BAH ’95), who started at King’s the year before her, Ilenka decided that it would be the perfect fit.

While at King’s Ilenka did an advanced major in Theatre Studies and threw her-self into the KTS. “I was in a play every term and really spent hours in The Pit. I adored it,” says Ilenka. She also served as vice president of the Society in her third year and secretary in her last. Except for the musicals, Ilenka was involved with every major production during her four years at King’s.

Theatre wasn’t her only passion during her years at King’s though. The daugh-ter of a business owner and an engineer, Ilenka always had an entrepreneurial spirit too. Her first go at running her own business was at 12 when she opened a pet sitting business in her parent’s basement in order to save enough money to visit her godparents in Florida. That same spirit was what helped her start her own gift basket business while studying at King’s. “I had some odd jobs while at King’s—horrible things like making muffins at 5:00 every morning” she says, “So in my last year I decided enough was enough and set up a gift basket company.” She contacted out-of-province parents by mailing flyers to them, offering baskets of cookies or fruit and birthday cakes for their children who were slogging away at their degrees in Halifax. The idea was a success and one Easter she had as many as 27 orders. She may have driven her flat-mates crazy by baking 400 cookies at a time or buying all the fruit from local grocery stores, but, says

Ilenka, “It was an invaluable lesson—if you worked hard enough you could do it for yourself rather than for someone else.” And that she certainly did. Hoping to turn her love of the theatre that had developed at King’s into a career, Ilenka moved to England after graduation with the hopes of becoming an actress. “I thought London was perfect for me. Big, loud, glamorous, exciting and a bit dangerous! I also loved being so close to the theatre.” She did become involved with a small troupe and worked on a production for a fringe theatre in South London. “It was fun but I quickly realized how hard it was to try and find an agent in London, let alone a paying job!” In order to make ends meet, Ilenka took on some work as a temp and a friend introduced her to the world of working with extras. She managed to find work as an extra on productions of Tomorrow Never Dies and The Saint. If you look closely, you can see her as an American army sergeant passing Val Kilmer in the hallway in The Saint. After six months with the agency, they offered her a job. They knew her degree background and thought she might be in-terested. Ilenka grabbed the chance and started working there immediately, ini-tially as a part-time employee, but within a week she had taken over managing To-

morrow Never Dies. “I worked there for two years and my most amazing moment was casting all of the extras for Shake-

speare in Love,” she says,(continued on 24)

ALUMNI PROFILE

Ilenka Jelowicki:Casting for Success in London

by Lesley-Anne Noseworthy (BJ ’02)

“It was an invaluable lesson—if you worked

hard enough you could do it for yourself rather

than for someone else.”

“THE IDEA OF GOING TO

CLASS WITH 300 PEOPLE

DIDN’T REALLY INTEREST ME.”

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omeone has suggested that human culture is really little more than an attempt to come to terms with

the fact that human life has an end. The 31 dynasties of ancient Egypt have demon-strated the profound stability that can be achieved in a society which appears to have poured all its energies into the “hereafter”. The Egypt we know began when Menes united the Upper and Lower Kingdoms around the year 3,000—which is also roughly contemporaneous with the invention of writ-ing in both Egypt and Mesopotamia. The staggering longevity of Pharaonic civilization can claim to have been the most stable and successful in the whole history of our world, since it maintained itself for a staggering three millennia. The titanic physical remnants are essentially mausolea, viz. the great pyramids and the Valley of the Kings, but the massive Egyptian written legacy is more ambigu-ous. The hieroglyphics had to be deciphered (by way of the Rosetta stone discovered by Napoleon’s troops in 1799); this meant the voices of ancient Egypt remained silent for a full two millennia until the code could be broken. Many of these writings are now well known, e.g., the Book of the Dead and the Pyramid texts, but the most remarkable is the one designated as “a dispute concern-ing suicide” or “a dialogue between a man and his ba (or soul)”. This poem from the beginning of the second millennium BC is not so very far removed from The Epic of

Gilgamesh, either in composition or subject matter. The Egyptians had a complex anthropol-ogy. The human person consisted of six fun-damental components: the heart, the body, the name, the shadow, the ba and the ka (one’s double or twin, the ka is mostly as-sociated with the ability to reproduce). But the ba is what fundamentally concerns us here: the easy translation “soul” does not capture the complex distinctions that the Egyptians wanted to make. Remember, it is the human heart that is weighed after death in the presence of the ibis-headed Thoth, and this weighing reveals the integrity of a human life, whether that life was lived out

in justice or in depravity. All six components of Egyptian anthro-pology had to be held together synthetically, if the individual was to make his way to the West, to the land of the setting sun; even the shadow plays its part. Famously, Dracula has no shadow, since he is neither properly living nor dead. The human ba was represented as a bird (often with a human head) perching on or near the mummified corpse. The afterlife depended upon the successful reunification of all elements of the former personality, so that the ba could never stray too far from the corpse which originally allowed it to be embodied. In the so-called dispute concerning sui-cide, the dialogue between the individual and his ba, there is the usual element of despair, but only because the afterlife is so attractive and appealing. This man is weary

of everyday life and wishes to hasten his journey to the land of the setting sun, in order that much more quickly to take up his allotted place in the presence of the everlasting gods. But the man’s soul, his ba, urges caution;

bear in mind, the ba says, that your name might disappear from the face of the earth, that life can still be full of pleasures, and that death itself is no pretty sight: have you thought about those rotting corpses on the banks of the Nile? A triumphant journey to the West requires all the elements to make the voyage together: your embalmed corpse, your heart, your name… And then, don’t forget that death is really “heartbreak”; think always of those left behind: your wife and children. But, now the man appears to gain the upper hand; he explains that death is really to be understood like coming up for air, or like recovering from a prolonged illness; death is like sitting on your porch enjoying a summer breeze, death is like “a clearing sky” after inclement weather, and finally death is like traversing a well-trodden path; death can only be compared to a homecoming

after many years of wandering, or the joy of release after long years incarcerated in a dungeon. The ba (soul) seems now to be left speechless in the face of these similes, which for me remain unsurpassed in the whole history of our literature. ∂

Egypt’s Sweet Hereafterby Tom Curran, Ph.D., Senior Fellow, Foundation Year Programme

FYP TEXTS COLUMN

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hile the class readings may have been endless and the essays hard to endure at times, many King’s students have traded places, by putting their names

on reading lists everywhere. Over the years King’s has seen its graduates flourish. They have become writers in all sorts of genres, including fiction, non-fiction, poetry and screenplays. For Laura Penny (BAH ’96)—currently a Senior Fellow at King’s and a Tutor in the Foundation Year Programme (FYP)—writing certainly did not end after graduation. Her work has appeared in the Globe and Mail, the Na-

tional Post, Saturday Night, and Toronto Life. She has recently published her first book, Your

Call is Important to us: The Truth About Bullshit (McClelland & Stewart, 2005). Look for a feature on Laura in the next issue of Tidings. She originally enrolled at King’s as a Journalism student but found that the phi-losophy aspect of the Foundation Year Pro-gramme is really what grabbed her attention. “I loved how the FYP programme began to connect everything together. The Journalism School was good, but I realized I didn’t want to be a journalist. I wanted to be a writer. I think there is a difference between the two: journalists have to interview people and leave their homes in search of stories…writers can sit at home in pyjamas poring over other books. I liked the latter much better.” Dr. Angus Johnston, Director of the Foun-dation Year Programme, says it takes a certain kind of individual to take on the FYP way of learning. “There is quite a tension here with early thought phenomena. Students come to King’s who already want to write directly and we have to tell them to put those ideas on hold and listen first to the voices of Homer and Plato. Listening to these voices will then give them a sense to stimulate their own voices.” Zach Wells (BAH ’99) found this way of teaching beneficial for his writing. Wells’ most recent book, Unsettled (Insomniac Press, 2004), is a collection of poems centred on his time spent in Nunavut from 1996 to 2003. “I’m a firm believer that any poet is adrift on the wine-dark sea without a good foundation in the classics, so the steady dose of Homer, Sophocles, Virgil, Dante, Shakespeare, Eliot et

al. provided by FYP is a tremendous starting point for anyone interested in pursuing the art form.” Wells now enjoys writing about his life experiences. To help pay his way through King’s, Wells spent his summers loading aircraft in Iqaluit, and he returned there after gradua-

tion. It was there that his writing became more focused on the “nitty gritty details of lived ex-perience”. After he published his book, Wells left the North and no longer writes about it. His writing now centres around animals and his home province of PEI, both of which he says are just old obsessions. With all students, reading is an integral part of learning. At King’s College, students explore the readings of Plato, Homer, Descartes, Dante and Darwin. Smaller classrooms and a close-knit atmosphere allow students to discuss and debate all angles of these authors. “In my view, good writing derives from and feeds on good reading,” says Dr. Ian G. Stewart, a Senior Fellow in the Foundation Year Programme and History of Science and Technology. “As far as I know, this has always been the view of the best authors. King’s students are fortunate in their first year to read some of the most important and greatest texts ever written, and to develop a habit of thought that is open to worlds, authors, ideas and language different from theirs, and to gain confidence in their own thinking and language thereby.” Dr. Johnston, who has traveled to many high schools to promote FYP, knows that there are various ways to instill writing skills in students. Some schools encourage the students’ ability to begin conceptually and work from their own ideas while other schools require students to grasp early works and teachings before working independently. “I think King’s falls into the latter. We recruit people who want to listen and then explore. If a student writes his/her first FYP essay with their own fiery ideas on war, and hasn’t listened to

Homer’s ideas on war, they will soon realize they need to change that attitude to succeed,” says Johnston. “It’s not for everyone and sometimes I kick myself when I see a student who comes to King’s with writing awards and then decides the process isn’t for them and they aren’t succeeding.” (continued next page)

WRITERS AT KING’S

The Foundation for a Great Careerby Clare O’Hara (BJ ’05)

ABOVE Laura Penny (BAH ’96) found inspiration in the phi-losophy aspect of the King’s Foundation Year Programme.

BELOW Zach Wells (BAH ’99) feels that the Foundation Year Programme’s focus on the classics has informed his work as a poet.

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WRITERS AT KINGS (Cont’d from page 9) The list of programmes offered at King’s College depicts a central theme on campus. History of Science and Technology, Early Modern Studies, Contemporary Studies and Journalism all require writing skills.

“Students feed off each other in the classroom,” says Dr. Johnston. “I taught a course on Time for the History of Science one year and found how fascinating the writing background was. I had some students who were writing about the physics of time and then others who wrote about the meter of time in Shakespearean Sonnets.” The University’s success in producing published writers may be a result of a number of factors. Some are convinced that it is the extensive study of classical works throughout their stay at King’s while others attest that the students who come to King’s are already creatively intrigued and eager to write. Whatever the rationale, one undisputed fact remains: King’s College, the small community lodged inside the ∑uad, holds and produces a tremendous amount of talent. ∂

Some King’s Writers of Note

STEPHEN MARCHE (BAH ’97) wrote Raymond and Hannah (Doubleday Canada, 2005)

STEPHANIE NOLEN (BJH ’93) wrote Promised the Moon (Penguin Canada, 2003)

LAURA PENNY (BAH ’96) wrote Your Call is Important to Us: The Truth About

Bullshit (McClelland & Stewart, 2005). Watch for an upcoming feature on Laura Penny in the Winter

2005/2006 issue of Tidings!

MIRIAM TOEWS (BJH ’91) latest novel is A Complicated Kindness (Vintage

Canada, 2005), winner of the Governor General’s Medal for Fiction. Please see the Winter 2004/2005

issue of Tidings for a feature on Miriam Toews

ZACH WELLS (BAH ’99) wrote Unsettled (Insomniac Press, 2004)

Tell us about your favourite King’s writers at [email protected].

BOOKS I’M READING

Dr. Angus Johnston, Director, Foundation Year Programme

A new feature for Tidings!Each issue we will focus on a different

distinguished faculty member or alum-

nus/alumna, and find out what they’re

reading! In this issue, we spoke to Dr.

Angus Johnston, Director, Foundation

Year Programme:

P.D. James, The Murder Room

“If you work in a small college, murder and

intrigue are simply a part of life.”

* * * *Laura Penny, Your Call is Important to

Us: The Truth About Bullshit

“I saw this mad woman on American

television and just had to get the book.”

* * * *Lewis Lockwood, Beethoven,

His Life and Music

“In a letter in 1812 Beethoven says that

art is limitless and he is just realizing

how far he is from his goals. That such

a one can say this after creating so much

has already affected my reading

of everything.”

STUDENTS COME TO KING’S WHO ALREADY

WANT TO WRITE DIRECTLY AND WE HAVE

TO TELL THEM TO PUT THOSE IDEAS ON HOLD

AND LISTEN FIRST TO THE VOICES

OF HOMER AND PLATO.

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The University of King’s College and the Alumni Association would like to express

its sincere congratulations to the following alumni:

AWARD WINNERS

Mark Brennan (’85) has been appoint-ed to the position of President, CEO and Member of the Board of Directors of Largo Resources Ltd. Mr. Brennan was a founding member of the management team of Desert Sun Mining Corp. and was instrumental in the development of Admiral Bay Resources. Mr. Brennan is currently the Chairman of Admiral Bay Resources Inc. and is also a founding partner of Linear Capital Corp. Mr. Brennan has been an active partici-pant in the financial community in North America and Europe for over 15 years. He has extensive experience in the areas of institutional sales, trading, corporate finance, corporate advisory and marketing services. Previously, Mr. Brennan had acted as a director and a business development consultant to a number of private and pub-licly-traded companies and held institu-tional sales positions at First Marathon UK Ltd. and Richardson Greenshields.

Roselle Green (’65) has been inducted as an honorary fellow by the Canadian Public Relations Society’s College of Fellows. The award is in recognition of

exceptional professional capability, pro-fessional experience, contributions to the advancement of the profession and signifi-cant leadership in public relations.

Lisa Merrithew (BA ’95) has been promoted to Managing Director, Public Relations, The Bristol Group (New Bruns-wick).

Stephanie Nolen (BJH ’93) received a National Newspaper Award presented by the Canadian Newspaper Association. Stephanie won in the international report-ing category for her stories about Rwanda 10 years after the country was ripped apart by genocidal warfare.

Jennifer Paterson (BJ ’05) was awarded the Student Science Award 2005 by the Nova Scotia Institute of Science. Jennifer wrote an article on the activities of sci-entists in the area of drug discovery. The judges were impressed with how Jennifer conveyed the personalities of the investiga-tors, and produced a readable story with strong local interest.

King’s alumni were well represented at the 2004 Atlantic Journalism Awards. Award win-ners are: Patricia Brooks (BJH ’97); Eva

Hoare (BJ ’84); Jeffrey Simpson (BJ ’96); Sally Pitt (BJH ’84); Chris Lambie (BJ

’92); Stephanie Porter (BJH ’97); John

DeMont (BJ ’81); Monty Mosher (BJ ’84); Chantelle Jones (BJ ’03); and Derek Hill

(BJ ’05).

Megan Wennberg (BJ ’04), was awarded the 2005 Dalton Camp Award presented by Friends of Canadian Broadcasting. Megan’s winning essay chronicles the rise and fall of an independent Saint John newspaper which was bought in October 2004 by Brunswick News, part of a media empire which owns every English-language daily newspaper in New Brunswick.

We Wish You All The Best!

Did we miss you? Make sure you let us know of your achievements. Write [email protected] with your personal and professional ac-complishments. Or add an AlumnNote at www.ukcalumni.com. ∂

Congratulations!

The College is undertaking a planning exercise to provide direction to the Of-fice of Development, Alumni & Public Relations. Through this activity we will:• Articulate the vision of the University

and goals for the future;• Explore how we can communicate

this to internal and external commu-nities;

• Identify ways to engage people with King’s.

President William Barker feels this is an important activity for the College. “When I arrived it was clear to me that there is a strong sense of purpose at King’s.

Through this Advancement Planning process we do not expect to reinvent the College, rather we hope to articulate the best vision of King’s and mobilize people around that vision.” A committee with representation from Faculty, Administration, Staff, Stu-dents and Alumni is now working on the plan. It has identified key discussion ar-eas which can be found on our website at www.ukings.ns.ca/kings_3643.html. Alumni in particular have a spe-cial interest in this process. If you have ideas you would like to sub-mit for consideration please write to [email protected]. ∂

ADVANCEMENT PLANNING AT KING’S

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University President Dr. William Barker

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Traditions at King’s

s a graduate of King’s you have many memories of your days as an undergraduate—many related to the Univer-

sity’s traditions. Over the years, the College’s tradi-tions have done more than make undergraduates feel like they are in a unique place to learn, they’ve become an essential way the College presents itself to future students and the broader community. So where do these traditions come from? Most of them evolved out of the residential collegiate life that characterized Oxford, upon which King’s was modeled. Professors lived amongst the students, and dons were members of the Faculty. The close proximity between faculty and students had a profound impact on the culture of King’s. Formal meal is an example of how this living arrangement impacted everyday life (see page 14 for details). The historic relationship with the Anglican Church was es-sential to this model and shaped many traditions at King’s. The Baccalaureate Service, for example, has continued in part because of the University’s continued connection to the Anglican Church. Other traditions, like Matriculation, are invented in the style of older activities for the sake of new needs and have become part of the College’s mythology. Dr. Wayne Hankey (BAH

’65) was involved with the creation of Matriculation in the early 1980s. “Matriculation was cobbled together from traditions borrowed from other universities. It was designed to bridge the gap between day students and residential students and really teach people about the traditions at King’s,” says Dr. Hankey. Still other traditions are invented by the students but have been strongly influenced by the culture of King’s. These tradi-tions include Bay Parties, the Three-Legged Race, snowball and water fights, practical jokes, active student societies (including The Haliburton Society and the King’s Theatrical Society) and more. While not part of the “formal” culture of King’s, they root undergraduates in a larger history of rituals and shared experiences.

Our alumni have a strong attachment to the traditions that shaped their experience at King’s. David Jones (BA ’68) is a passionate alumnus who has maintained a strong connection to the school since his graduation. “The King’s graduation is an

MOST OF THESE TRADITIONS EVOLVED OUT

OF THE RESIDENTIAL COLLEGIATE LIFE THAT

CHARACTERIZED OXFORD.

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C O V E R S T O R Y

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Traditions at King’s

important tradition—I would say a critical institution that must be maintained. Bay parties are a close second. I am a firm advocate of Formal Meal—and I don’t mean once a month. Also, I think the wearing of gowns to chapel, President’s Lodge and other similar events is important. We used to wear our gowns—on our own volition—to Dal classes from time to time,” Mr. Jones says. Mary Barker (BA ’67), the first female President of the King’s Students Union, also has warm memories of her time at King’s which explains her continued involvement in the life of the College. “There are so many traditions that I remember from my time at King’s—wearing gowns, daily chapel services, Sunday tea in The Lodge, sherry in The Lodge after chapel and before formal meal, curfew sign-ins in Alex Hall, panty raids, Day students partnering with those of us in residence, special tutoring from fellow Kingsmen, impromptu debates run by the ∑uintilian Society in The Haliburton Room, theatre productions, Fall and Spring Formal Balls, Bay parties, ice sculptures during Winter Carnival, weekly sock hops in the gym.” While many traditions at King’s spark positive memories for alumni, there are other, sometimes not-so-pleasant tradi-tions that have been discarded in order to be more sensitive to

present-day concerns. Bill Bryant (BA ’67), former President of the King’s Stu-dents Union, says that one dropped tradition comes to mind for him: Initiation. “Initiation was a nasty week of sometimes sadistic, often mindless hazing and indoctrination that immersed freshmen in King’s history and quickly introduced them to their classmates,” he says. “To its credit, initiation did help to break down class barriers. Unfortunately, initiation also led to excesses when individual upper classmen took it upon themselves to abuse and scare the more innocent of the freshmen. In my sophomore year I ran it with an emphasis on humour with strictly enforced limits on hazing.” This approach can be seen in the present-day approach to Orientation. More recent alumni also feel a strong connection to the traditions. Colin Burn (BAH ’05) and last year’s President of the King’s Students Union, thinks traditions at King’s are very important to the school’s character. “You know, students and alums of King’s always talk about the traditions. And unlike most places where the chatter verges on dogma, it is really true. King’s has some phenomenal traditions,” he says. (continued next page)

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The Evolution of An Ideaby Gregory Hughes (BJ ’05)

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TRADITIONS (Cont’d from page 13) “I think if you ask just about anyone, they’d have to say that their favourite traditions were the Bay Parties. Another one of my favourite traditions is Frivols at College Christmas. There was just something special about students reading their favourite Christmas stories together. I’m a sucker for Christmas so that is a tradition that will stick with me for awhile.” But some alumni think King’s traditions are more than just about forging historic links to the school. “It’s about self-de-termination,” says Mr. Bryant. The traditions are what makes King’s unique, and keep it (and its students) from becoming anonymous. With the importance of traditions at King’s, alumni have strong opinions about what role they should play in the future of the university. Alumni are sad to learn that Formal Meal has changed, or that Bay Parties have been phased out. According to Dr. Hankey, “The question is not whether the traditions can or should evolve. They have evolved. The question is really how effectively the changes find a balance between the original vision of the University and the modern reality.” This can be seen in the development of some academic pro-grammes. The Foundation Year Programme (FYP), for example,

neatly fits into the residential learning model where the intellec-tual and social are intrinsically linked. Since the 1990s the dons and deans are no longer faculty members. While the structure of FYP with its tutorials encourages students to maintain close and familiar ties to the faculty, some have noted a change in the experience. Another significant shift has been the growth of the student body. Most residential spots are used by first year students so there is no longer the “mentoring” provided by upper-year students who live off campus. The predominance of freshman in residence has created a new phenomenon with about 250 people sharing a common living and academic experience. This is a significant factor shaping residence and social life at King’s now. As King’s and the world in which it operates changes so too does its traditions. The class of 2005 will have memories distinct from those of alumni from the class of 1965. Still, the class of 2005’s remembrance of King’s will be flavoured by the experiences of those who went before them and the richness of the traditions they inherited. The challenge for the administra-tion, the alumni community and students is to maintain interest in the ideas behind the traditions that differentiate King’s from other undergraduate institutions. ∂

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hat’s now known as “formal meal” harkens back to what used to be the everyday dining

experience for students at King’s. Into the 1960s when meals moved from the Ward-room to Prince Hall, gowns were required for three meals per day. The evening meal was the most structured with a fixed time and began and ended with Latin grace. Many alumni can still recite the Latin graces to this day. At the start of the meal the faculty and their wives entered along with the male students. The men processed in order of their class. With everyone standing the female students would come in. People were served in order, women and faculty first, then the men in order of the class. Women sat separately from men at one big table, over which the Dean of Women presided. Women moved over the course of the year so everyone would have a chance to sit next to the Dean of Women. This

was an opportunity for the Dean to have some personal contact with the girls and help with their manners. The men were organized by class and therefore sat with the same people for four or more years. The first significant change was the shift to cafeteria-style meals for breakfast and lunch during the mid-1960s. The din-ner service remained the same. By the 1970s interest in the traditional struc-ture waned and “Formal Meal” became a weekly event in which the University President became more involved. Previ-ously, the President would eat in the Lodge as it had a kitchen. After moving to weekly occurrences, Formal Meal was tied to the Chapel. After High Mass, people took sherry and then went to Formal Meal. In the 1980s there was a secularist movement to separate formal meal from Chapel. At that time, it was decided that the Wings and the Bays would determine the menu and format of

the meal. This continued from the 1980s into the early part of this decade. The tone of Formal Meal was also in-fluenced by the fact that few faculty were participating. In the 1990s, Faculty were no longer offered dinner in Prince Hall and since most Faculty no longer lived on campus their presence at Formal Meal virtually ended. In 2002 Formal Meal was cancelled due to a perceived lack of interest and focus. Formal meal was restarted in Sep-tember 2003 by President Barker at the request of many students. Formal meal is now held once a month. The festivities start in the Senior Common Room with sherry and move to Prince Hall. A new tradition has begun, as a guest speaker addresses diners. The students embrace this new tradition, so unlike of the original event. It’s an important connection to the past that has shaped the character of this institution. ∂

Everyone has a favourite tradition that

defined their King’s experience. Go to www.ukcalumni.com and tell us which

tradition is your favourite:

Formal MealMatriculationBaccalaureate ServiceGraduation/EncaeniaBay Parties

Three Legged RaceMid-night water fightsSock HopsYAS BallSnowball fights in the ∑uad

OrientationThree-legged raceCollege Christmas

S U R V E Y: What’s Your Favourite King’s Tradition?

A BRIEF HISTORY OF FORMAL MEAL

presenters of the

and great jazz all year 'round including:• weekly Jazz at Stayner's Wharf, every Thursday, 9pm

• a dynamic fall/winter concert program

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Be the first to know about all that's hip in Halifax with our weekly Jazz in Halifax e-newsletter. Subscribe to [email protected].

pianist David Braid SextetWednesday • September 21 • 8pmThe Music Room6181 Lady Hammond Road

don't miss a beat! www.jazzeast.comtickets & info: 492-2225

1st fall show!

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HONORARY DEGREES

On May 2, 2005 King’s welcomed Katie Rock as our new Alumni Officer. Origi-nally from Toronto, Katie graduated from Dalhousie University in 1999 with a double honours major in Sociology and Social Anthropology. Although she graduated from Dal, Katie considers herself a King’s Alumna because of her involvement with this community while she was a student. Katie lived in Cochran Bay 1995/1996 and was involved with the King’s Theatrical Society from 1995 – 1999. Earlier this spring, the College con-ducted an exhaustive search for an alumni officer. The committee was chaired by Kara Holm, Director of Development, Alumni & Public Relations, and was comprised of four alumni (two of whom were also faculty members) and one student. The committee considered ap-plications from over 65 people, many of

whom were alumni. Alumni Association President, Doug

Hadley (BA ’92), who was on the commit-tee, is very pleased with the selection of Katie. “It was a strong pool of candidates but Katie’s experience in the development sector combined with her ties to King’s made her the ideal choice. We’re also very pleased that King’s has taken this step.” After graduation Katie moved back to Toronto. She had been working in de-velopment at the Ontario Science Cen-tre. In 2002, Katie went to The Hospital for Sick Children Foundation, where she specialized in prospect identification and research. Katie is thrilled about her move back to Halifax and the University of King’s College. Get in touch with Katie: [email protected] or call (902) 422-1271, ext. 136. ∂

KING’S WELCOMES NEW ALUMNI OFFICER

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he University of King’s College presented honorary degrees to four remarkable citizens at its Encaenia (convocation) Ceremonies this May. Recipients include

a volunteer whose single-minded dedication to jazz has developed the culture sector in the Atlantic region, a sci-ence journalist known for his ability to make complex issues accessible and relevant, a compassionate and forward-thinking educator and church leader, and a King’s alumnus who has

enriched campus life for over three decades. Current Presi-dent William Barker is thrilled that King’s is able to recognize the achievements of these accomplished individuals. “King’s is committed to providing an education that encourages students to become active citizens. These people are leaders and set the standard for that ideal.” Honorary degrees were awarded at Encaenia at All Saints’ Anglican Cathedral on May 19, 2005. ∂

Honorary Degree Recipients Susan M. Hunter (DCL ’05), Jay Ingram (DCL ’05), The Right Honorable Reverend Dr. Susan Moxley (DD ’05) and Honorary Fellow Stuart McPhee (BA ’69).

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t’s late afternoon on a Wednesday, but 25-year-old Shauntay Grant (BJ

’03), a native of Nova Scotia, still isn’t 100 per cent sure what she’ll be doing Thursday. “There is no typical day, every day is different,” she says. That’s not because she’s looking for work or padding around the globe seeking adventure. It’s because she might spend some time working on her poetry, or pre-paring music for her choir to perform, or maybe doing some work for her hosting gig at CBC Radio Two’s All the Best. “It just makes life really colourful and interesting,” says the King’s 2003 journal-ism grad about her long list of jobs and activities. “Right now it feels like a good place to be at.” Where she is could also mean Thurs-day will find her mulling over ideas for the children’s book she’s working on or search-ing out illustrators to bring her words to life. Then again, a small corner of her mind could also be thinking up new ways to en-courage school children to discover their inner poet when the school year kicks off again and she starts conducting classroom workshops. Oh, and there’s always stories due for the handful of publications she pens articles for.

“I look at it and it feels like a lot, but I can honestly say everything I’m doing I enjoy doing so it doesn’t feel like work,” Grant says. “As long as I can still get my enjoyment out of it, it’s fine, I’m okay.” It doesn’t sound like Grant’s ever been a couch potato. Throughout grade school she played three instruments—piano, cello

and flute—sang in numerous choirs, played basketball and ran track and field. Her energy seems to have climbed over the years. After graduating from Dalhousie with a Bachelor of Music, she did a documentary for CBC Radio and fell in love with the world of mics, radio scripts and hosting duties. “From that I was like ’Yeah, I really wanted to do this and I want to learn more about radio,’” she says. “And it kind of made it easier going into King’s because I knew that’s sort of what I wanted to focus on. “The skills I learned in the radio work-shop [at the school] really helped me out, just the basic do’s and don’ts of the forms. It was very helpful because it gave me a good grounding for what I do now.” She has high praise for the instruc-tors who saw her through her year of journalism training (especially for Kim Kierans) and for a university-linked men-torship program that teamed her up with professionals at CBC. After earning her journalism degree she motored ahead, never losing sight of her other passions. All Grant’s loves have since become intertwined. Her loyalty to music dances a lovely duet with her CBC job. “It’s a music program,” she says of All the Best. “The great thing about it is I get to work and the first thing I do is listen to music. I listen to the stuff we’re going to be playing on our shows. I look forward to that, going and hearing these new sounds...and taking that in and I feel like an artist doing it.” Naturally her flare for notes and tempo powers her work as the Nova Scotia Mass Choir’s artistic director (she also writes her own music) and her upcoming stint on a Vision Television special that challenges Canadian choir directors to put together a gospel choir in a week.

“I have all different interests, but they kind of meet,” she says. It seems though, that the poet inside Grant is another key link between all her activities. She’s a founding member of the Word Iz Bond Spoken Word Artists’ Col-lective and a talented spoken word poet herself, who often performs her work with backing musicians. Grant also puts on workshops for students to encourage them to find their voice and even teams up with teachers to help them figure out ways to bring poetry alive within the confines of recess bells and attendance sheets. “The message I try to get across to kids were the two most important mes-sages that I learned, that one, I can write the way that I speak and two, that my life is a legitimate story,” Grant explains. For her, it’s an important lesson to teach, since learning it and expressing it has changed the course of her life. It was, after all, her piece for CBC’s Out Front about her love of poetry that pushed her into journalism school, ze-roed her interest in on radio and got the ball rolling on what is now an impressive career. “For most of grade school I thought poetry had to be about nature and it had to rhyme,” Grant explains. “The piece that I did was kind of talking about how I get out of that and learn a lesson that I can write the way that I speak and that can stand for something, (continued on 24)

ALUMNI PROFILE

Shauntay Grant:Word Iz Bond

by Stephanie McGrath (BJH ’99)

“I can honestly say everything I’m doing I

enjoy doing so it doesn’t feel like work”

“I CAN WRITE THE WAY THAT I

SPEAK AND THAT CAN STAND

FOR SOMETHING.”

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ENCAENIA

n May 19, 2005, as proud parents and friends looked on, 223 students graduated from the University of King’s College during Encaenia (convocation). The

largest graduating class in King’s College history processed in their gowns—led by a piper—from The ∑uad to All Saints’ Cathedral on Tower Road where the ceremony began. During the ceremony, peppered with hymns, degrees were conferred and King’s students won departmental medals in: Contemporary Studies; Early Modern Studies; History of Science and Technology; English; International Development Studies; Linguistics; Sociology; Social Anthropology; and Theatre. University President Dr. William Barker is very pleased. “This graduating class is exceptional. We’re extremely impressed that 55% of our students are graduating with honours or dis-tinction. King’s encourages strong academic performance right from the students’ first experiences in the Foundation Year Programme through our high professor-to-student ratio and focus on discussion.” Senator Michael Meighen, the University’s Chancellor, delivered the Convocation Address which called upon new graduates to become active citizens in their communities. A very humorous and inspiring Valedictory Address was given by Michael Fleury (BJH ’05). “The future is very bright for these graduates. I have spoken with many of them and they’re off on some very interesting adventures,” said President Barker. “I’m pleased that due to the size of King’s I’ve been able to meet so many of the graduates.” We welcome our newest alumni! ∂

Congratulations to the Class of 2005!

Brian Adeba

Razielle Aigen

Alexander Anderson

Holly Andruchuk

Lindsay Appotive

Elizabeth Archibald

Monique Armstrong

Dennis Ashe

Stacey Ashley

Sabine Audette-Hall

Arielle Baltman-Cord

Sabrina Bandali

Michael Barnable

Ashley Barnes

Jennifer Bawden

Elizabeth Baxter

Emily Beaton

Christopher Bell

Mark Bertils

Andrew Bieler

Frances Black

Thomas Blackmore

John Blanchard

Joshua Bleser

Stacey Blidner

Stephanie Bonic

Gregory Bowley

Sarah Bradford

Jon Paul Brooker

Shelley Brown

James Bryson

David Burke

Colin Burn

Ross Burns

Elizabeth Butcher

Isabel Byczko

Kerry Campbell

Samantha Cavanagh

Joseph Cescon

Jocelyn Chan

Ann Clifford

Mitchell Cochran

Matthew Cochrane

Mary Coll-Black

Lisanne Comeau

Mandy Cook

David Coolen

Andrea Cooper

Ainslie Cowley

Susan Cruess

Katherine Cudmore

Heather Davidson

Meredith Davis

Michael de la Mothe

Louise de Mestral Bezanson

Meribeth Deen

Sarah Dickson

Kathryn Dingle

Anna Lise Domanski

Colin Donegani

Alexander Dumaresq

Moya Dumville

Karen Edwards

Megan Ewing

Erik Fagley

Talia Fanning

Martha Farquhar-

McDonnell

Olivia Faulds

Douglas Feaver

Matthew Fegan

Craig Ferguson

David Finch

Stephanie Finkleman

Michael Fleury

Zachary Florence

Victoria Foley

Peter Frenken

John Gaudi

Simon George

Sebastian Gil-Riano

Austen Gilliland

Robin Gillingham

Elizabeth Glinz

Michael Gorman

Ross Gower

Brooke Gray

Ian Gray

Jillian Green

Joanna Grossman

Naomi Guscott

Christopher Harbord

Adam Hardiman

Robin Harnden

Joseph Henley

David Henry

Wendy Hepburn

Joseph Herschorn

Jenny Higgins

Derek Hill

Shannon Hines

Jacob Hitchcock

Emily Hobbs

Jennifer Hoegg

Nicola Hoffman

Eva Holland

Kristen Howe

Marc Hudon

Gregory Hughes

Jeremy Hull

Anthony Incardona

Courtney Irwin

Matthew Irwin

Michael Jackman

Melissa Jennings

Nicholas Johnson

David Johnstone

Sarah Jones

Lauren Josselyn

Elspeth Kaiser-Derrick

James Keller

Paula Khoury

Emily Kimber

Katherine King

Shauna King

Nathan Klaehn

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ENCAENIA

Carsten Knox

Timothy Kunz

Matthew Kutcher

Courtenay Kyle

Stuart Lally

Margaret Langpap

Emily Lannan

Steven Lappano

Michelle LaRose

Michael Lawton

Jonathan Lear

Julia Lederer

Pamela Lee

Sara Loftson

Donald Logan

Karen MacAlpine

Brent MacDonald

Sarah MacKinnon

Gregory MacVicar

Andrea Markey

Stephane Massinon

Craig Mazin

Anne-Marie McElroy

Heather McLeod

Ryan McRae

Jillian McTiernan

Samuelle Mednick

Susan Mohammad

Megan Moriarty

Robert Murdoch

Aaron Murnaghan

Bradley Murray

Nina Musanovic

Ariel Nasr

Kelsey Nearing

Duncan Neish

Hadar Nestel

Katharine O’Brian

Clare O’Hara

Anya Oberdorf

Heather Ogilvie

Julia Oland

Marco Oved

David Pal

Shane Patenaude

Jennifer Paterson

Stuart Pattillo

Joshua Pennell

Genevieve Perreault

Emma Plaskacz

Holly Platz

Hayley Poole

Kristine Power

Wanda Praamsma

Lisa Rae

Amanda Rafuse

Susan Read

Helen Reddy

James Reid

Adrienne Richard

Karen Richardson

Paul Richardson

Jonathan Riley

Sarah Riley

Jonathan Robart

Katharine Robertson

Sarah Robicheau

Jonathan Robson

Katherine Roger

David Rosenblatt

Gillian Roy

Pascale Salah

Tor Sandberg

Laura Sanschagrin

Nicholas Saunders

Heather Sawers

Nicholas Scott

Wayne Scott

Maya Shapiro

Emily Sharpe

Chris Shepherd

Alysha Shore

Naomi Silver

Erica Simmonds

Laurel Siteman

Edison Skinner

Johanna Skoreyko

Adam Smith

Brenda Solman

Rachel Solomon

Tanya St-Pierre

Erin Standing

Melissa Steele

Isaac Stein

Johanna Stein

Rachel Stephenson

Jennifer Stewart

Sarah Stewart

Trevor Stewart

Julie Stinson

Andra Striowski

Eva Tache-Green

Allyson Teed

Chelsea Thorne

Fiona Tingley

Nicholas Townley

Dawn Tracey

Myka Tucker-

Abramson

Jason Turnbull

Wesley Walsh

Colin Webster

Adam Wehrmann

Alison Wells

Noemi Westergard

Anna Whitmore

Adam Wiendels

Melissa Winslow

Benjamin Witte

Avery Wolaniuk

Stuart Woods

Nathaniel Woolaver

Samuel Worthington

Jeffrey Wright

Matthew Wright

Alize Zorlutuna

OPPOSITE PAGE, TOP: Left to right: Stuart McPhee (BA ’69), Jay Ingram (DCL ’05), Susan Hunter ( DCL ’05), The Honourable Michael Mei-ghen, The Right Reverend Frederick Hiltz, University President Dr. William Barker, The Right Reverend Dr. Susan Moxley (DD ’05). OPPO-

SITE PAGE, BOTTOM: 2005 class photo. THIS PAGE, CLOCKWISE: Waiting to graduate; Left to right: Samuelle Mednick (BJH ’05), Stephanie Finkleman (BA ’05), Frances Black (BAH ’05); The Honourable Michael Meighen, Q.C., Chancellor, University of King’s College.

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ost graduates can relate to that feeling of anticipa-tion that starts growing in the pit of your stomach when graduation draws near. It’s a mixture of toxic

fear and rushing excitement. For Jasmine Budak (BJ ’02), however, there were other feelings there as well. “We were all pretty disheartened after graduation. You want to work at the big newspapers and be published,” says Budak. This leaves new graduates with two options, says Budak, either they go to small rural communities and write for local papers or they go to a place like Yellowknife and do what they’ve always dreamed of doing. Budak gets to write for a magazine full time. This is virtually unheard of in most cities down South for journalists her age. Budak has been living in Yellowknife since graduation,

JOURNALISM GRADUATES:

Up North But Not Feeling Left Out in the Coldby Kristine Power (BJ ’05)

when she felt it was the right time to pack her bags and make a career move. “There’s a real neat vibe,” says Budak when describing the city. For co-worker and fellow graduate Michael Ganley (BJ

’02) the adventure is only just beginning. He and Budak are two of many University of King’s College Journalism School graduates currently working in the Northwest Territories. In May, Ganley and his wife packed their three children and all their belongings and headed out on the highway to Yellowknife. Ganley was freelancing in Halifax when he got the call from fellow King’s graduate Jake Kennedy (BJH ’02) who is the Editorial Director of Up Here Publishing, a company which publishes three different magazines about Canada’s North. Three of the six editorial staff are University of King’s College Journalism School graduates. For fellow classmate Ganley, the move was as easy as a phone call. “I basically just phoned him up one day and said, ’Hey, Mike, do you wanna live in Yellowknife?” Kennedy says. Kennedy was banking on Ganley’s sense of adventure and he wasn’t disappointed. After a little research and a family chat,

it was decided. Ganley would take the Nordic plunge. The selling point for all these young graduates is obvious. The Northwest Territories is currently experiencing an economic boom. Oil, gas and diamonds are now invigorating an economy that has seen booms like this come and go. Yellowknife began attracting thrill seekers in the early 1930’s. Explorers came North for gold then. These days they come for the mining, pipelines and dia-monds. According to Statistics Canada, the gross domestic product of the Northwest Territories has increased by more than 50 per cent between 2000 and 2004. Thirty-six per cent of the population in Yellowknife is between the ages of 25 – 44. The Northwest Territories has made Canada the third largest producer of rough diamonds in the world. This makes it a city full of young professionals from all kinds of backgrounds who are interested in bypassing the usual drudgery of working their way up the ladder. “If I was in the South there is no way I would be an edito-rial director at 27 years old. I would probably be fighting it out for a casual spot in a newspaper right now,” says Kennedy. It is not only the availability of jobs up North that is a draw for young journalists; it is the possibilities of delving into dif-ferent subject matter that is attractive. “There isn’t such a wide range of media (continued on 24)

“IN THE SOUTH THERE IS NO WAY I WOULD BE

AN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR AT 27 YEARS OLD.”

ABOVE, LEFT TO RIGHT: Jacob Kennedy, BJH ’02, Jasmine Budak, BJ ’02, Michael Ganley, BJ ’02.

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Location Name

New Brunswick Kathryn Collet (BSc ’87)—[email protected]

Ottawa Wayne MacKinnon (BA ’69)—[email protected]

Montreal Matthew Aronson (BAH ’01)—[email protected]

Toronto We are looking for a Chapter Leader in this city.

Are you interested? Please contact Katie Rock

in the Alumni Office!

Winnipeg George MacLean (BAH ’90)—[email protected]

Edmonton Jack Wenaus (BSc ’70)—[email protected]

Calgary We are looking for a Chapter Leader in this city.

Are you interested? Please contact Katie Rock

in the Alumni Office!

Vancouver Trevor Greene (BJH ’88)—[email protected]

Barbara Stegemann (BA ’91)—[email protected]

Europe Chris MacNeil (BA ’94)—[email protected]

UNIVERSITY OF KING’S COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 2005—2006

Chapter Leaders

Executive Position Name Term

President Doug Hadley (BA ’92) 2004 – 2006

Vice-President Steve Wilson (BA ’87) 2004 – 2006

Treasurer Andy Hare (BA ’70) 2004 – 2006

Secretary Harry Thurlow (BA ’95) 2005 – 2007

Past-President Tim Rissesco(BA ’93) 2004 – 2006

Member at Large Lara Morrison (BAH ’95) 2005 – 2007

Member at Large Elizabeth Ryan (BA ’69) 2005 – 2007

Member at Large Kyle Shaw (BSc ’91, BJ ’92) 2005 – 2007

Member at Large Des Writer (BJ ’02) 2004 – 2006

Member at Large Sherri Aikenhead (BJH ’85) 2004 – 2006

Member at Large David Jones (BA ’68) 2005 – 2007

Board of Gov. John Stone (BAH ’65) 2005 – 2007

Board of Gov. Daniel de Munnik (BScH ’02) 2004 – 2006

Board of Gov. Daniel Logan (BAH ’88) 2005 – 2007

University President (Ex-Officio) William Barker

Alumni & Public Relations Officer (Ex-Officio) Kara Holm

Alumni Officer (Ex-Officio) Katie Rock (BAH ’99)

Student Union President (Ex-Officio) Will English

BECOME A KING’S ALUMNI AMBASSADOR

Do you know a student who is looking for or could benefit from an educa-tional experience that is different from all the others?Do you know a student who:• Wants an intellectual challenge?• Wants to understand the “big ideas” that

have played such a significant role in the

development of our culture?• Wants to be an active participant who is

fully engaged in their learning?• Enjoys a small, personal environment with

close contact and interaction with faculty and other students?

You can help King’s maintain its place as a top undergraduate university by becoming

an Alumni Ambassador. After all, who better understands what King’s has to offer than its Alumni? If you know a student who could benefit from the King’s experience, please get in touch with us! Call Katie Rock at (902) 422-1271 or write [email protected] for more informa-tion on this exciting new initiative today.

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who worked on that project. For instance there were two other Canadians who re-ceived the award for working on the same Study.

Dr. Angela Joynes (BA ’83) achieved Fellowship in the College of Physicians of Canada. The award was presented at the Ricoh Coliseum, Toronto, Canada, on November 27, 2004. Dr. Joynes is in private practice in Columbia, Tennessee.

Steve Warburton (BJ ’85) has started a new company in Halifax inspired by the idea that business communication should be as simple as possible, and no simpler. Warburton Communications Inc. is a public relations and marketing planning company, also offering seminars and work-shops like Business Grammar, Dealing with the Media and Branding. The company’s email is [email protected].

THE ’90S

Angela-Jo Arseneau (92-94; BA ’02) and Corey Griffin are pleased to announce their engagement. AJ works at Innovatia and Corey is a P.Eng. at ADI in Frederic-ton, NB. Fellow alumni can contact An-gela-Jo (AJ) at [email protected].

Kelly Bourque (BA ’93) and John Tsipt-

sis (BA ’93) are pleased to announce the birth of Drew Callaghan, born July 28, 2004. Big brother Owen is 2 1⁄₂. Fellow alumni can contact Kelly at [email protected].

Crystal (Levy) Bueno (BJH ’96) gradu-ated with a Masters of Science in Strategic Communications from Columbia Universi-ty in May. Crystal works at The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) in New York City as a Director of Corporate Communications. Fellow alumni can con-tact Crystal at [email protected].

Gordon Cameron (BA ’99, BJ ’00) is now the Communications Coordinator for the Ontario Community Newspapers Association.

Kelly Foss (BJH ’98) is the communi-cations and policy research analyst for the Minister Responsible for the Status of Women with the Government of New-foundland and Labrador. She and her hus-band Jody have one son, Riley, and are expecting another child in November.

David Jones (BA ’92) has recently accept-ed the post of Customer Research Manager for the Royal Bank of Scotland. David is

ALUMNOTES

THE ’60S

John A. (Ian) MacKenzie (’60), retired Archdeacon of the Anglican Diocese of Caledonia, received an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from the Vancouver School of Theology on May 9, 2005.

THE ’70S

The Reveverend G. Richmond Bridge, Ph.D., D.D., former Diocesan University Chaplain and Priest in Charge of King’s College Chapel (from 1977 to 1998), has been granted the degree of Doctor of Divinity, honoris causa, by Nashotah House, the Episcopal Church’s traditional Anglo-Catholic seminary, located in Wis-consin. Father Bridge serves as Rector of Saint Paul’s Church, New Smyrna Beach, Florida, a position he has held since leav-ing King’s in 1998.

THE ’80S

Kathryn (Galey) Collet (BSc ’87) and Roger Collet are pleased to announce the birth of their son Mathieu Owen on March 6, 2004, a little brother for Elise. They live near Fredericton, NB, where both Kathryn and Roger are employed by the Depart-ment of Natural Resources.

Michael W. Dunn (BA ’88) is a Ph.D. candidate in Special Education at Indiana University. He graduated this May; this August he will begin his first academic position at Washington State University-Vancouver as a professor in the Master’s Special Education Certificate Degree Program.

Mark Hazen (BScH ’85), Defence R&D Canada, received The Technical Coop-eration Program Achievement Award, presented by the Subcommittee on Non-Atomic Military Research and Develop-ment (NAMRAD) for contributions to TTCP Collaboration in Network Centric Maritime Warfare Study for the Maritime Systems Group. The Award was presented on March 9 in Ottawa. TTCP is a group that includes Canada, USA, UK, Austra-lia and New Zealand and the award in-cludes people from each of those countries

LEFT TO RIGHT: The Three Graces: Valerie Pike, BA ’73, Kathleen Soares, BA ’74, Patricia Lewis, ’72 at the Alumni Annual Dinner, May 14.

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ALUMNOTES/IN MEMORIAM

currently residing in Edinburgh and can be reached at [email protected].

Mary LeBlanc (BA ’94) married Fear-gus Breakspear on June 26, 2004 at King’s College Chapel. Allison Davis (BA ’93) performed the ceremony which was at-tended by Paula Dyke (BJH ’94), Jenni-

fer Adams (BA ’95), Lia Daborn (BAH

’94) and Reaghan Fawcett (BAH ’94). Mary has just moved ashore after working on cruise ships for the past eight years. Feargus is working in the Netherlands while waiting for his Canadian work visa. They have a house in Halifax and are the proud parents of two dogs and two cats. Fellow alumni can contact Mary at [email protected].

Sarah (Leefe) (BAH ’94) and Vincent Ackerman are pleased to announce the birth of their daughter Sabrina Brooke 7.54 lbs at Swedish Medical Center, Den-ver, Colorado on March 30, 2005. Proud grandparents are John Leefe (BA ’66) and Nancy Leefe (BA ’65).

Ken Lima-Coelho (BJ ’96) and his wife Tara are pleased to announce the birth of their first child Adam Grayson Lima-Coelho. He was born on March 8, 2005. Ken is a television producer for CBC Newsworld in Calgary.

Gregory MacIsaac (BAH ’92) took his MA/Ph.D. in Philosophy from the Uni-versity of Notre Dame, IN, after gradu-ating in Classics from King’s. Since 1998 Gregory has been Assistant Professor of Humanities, at the College of the Hu-manities, Carleton University, Ottawa. See www.carleton.ca/~gmacisaa.

David Patrick (BAH ’98) and Amanda Sheffield were married August 21, 2004 at Glen Abbey Golf Club in Oakville, Ontario. Fellow King’s alumni in attendance were Amy Cole (BA ’98), Margaret Evans

(BA ’98) and Fred Bruun (BA ’98). Dave and Amanda are residing at their home in Oakville.

Andrew Pedersen (BJH ’93) and Mary Rogal-Black were married July 2, 2005 at Oceanstone Inns & Cottages in Indian Harbour, Nova Scotia. Andrew and Mary currently live in Halifax with their dog Cocoa.

Barb Shaw (BJH ’96) is now a certified recreational therapist working with seniors that have dementia and in her free time she runs a community newspaper. She can be reached at [email protected].

Susan Walsh Whistler (BAH ’95, Don,

3rd Floor Alexandra Hall, ’96 – ’97) and her husband James Whistler are happy to announce the birth of their daughter, Lily Margaret, on May 1, 2005. Fellow alumni can contact Susan at [email protected].

Ian Wissler (BAH ’95) and Christina Dernier were married on October 9th, 2004. Standing with Ian were fellow alum-ni Walter Hannam (BAH ’94), Mark

Fleming (BAH ’94), and Peter Taylor

(BAH ’94), all of whom are also from the class of 1994. Ian was appointed in July 2003 as Rector of the Parish of Mahone Bay, in the Diocese of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.

THE ’00S

Matt Aronson (BAH ’01) is currently enrolled in the Integrated BCL/LLB pro-gram at McGill Law in Montreal.

Fiona Isaacson (BJ ’03) received two honourable mentions for best news story and best feature photo at the 2004 On-tario Community Newspaper Association Awards in February for work she did when she was at the twice-weekly Napanee Bea-ver. For best news story Fiona found out

that a new treasurer (from London ON) being hired by the town of Deseronto (just west of Napanee, ON) had a history of sexual harassment allegations and the town council had no idea. The feature photo was a picture of a kid fishing on the Napanee River.

Stephanie Mitchell (BJH ’00) gradu-ated from the University of Victoria’s Faculty of Law in June 2005. She plans to use her law degree to do legal journal-ism for CBC Radio in Vancouver. Fellow alumni can contact Stephanie at [email protected].

Jennifer Vardy (BJH ’02) is engaged to marry Matthew Little in September 2006. She has been working at the New Glasgow Evening News for two years now. Fellow alumni can contact Jennifer at [email protected].

Did we miss you? Please add your Alum-Note by writing to [email protected] or do it yourself on our website!

IN MEMORIAM

James Morrison passed away on March 30, 2005 in the New Halifax Infirmary, ∑EII Health Sciences Centre.

The Very Reverend John Austin Mun-

roe (BA ’52 DD ’80) passed away on July 3, 2005 in QEII Health Sciences Centre.

Kim Elizabeth (Henneberry) Prince

(BA ’75) passed away on March 11, 2005 in Credit Valley Hospital, Mississauga, Ontario.

Reverend A. Raymond Smith (BA ’30) passed away on February 5, 2005.

Elizabeth Wainwright (BA ’34) passed away on June 14, 2005 in Melville Heights, Halifax. ∂

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ILENKA JELOWICKI cont’d from 7

“and more exciting was seeing my name in the credits, albeit next to ‘many thanks to Fruit of the Loom’, at the end of the credits.” Understandably working for someone else wasn’t enough for Ilenka, and after two years with the agency, she decided it was time to move on to something else. “I really felt I had found a career that I slotted into—I loved the film industry,” she says. But she wanted the op-portunity to cast principles in film or work on the production side of the films. She did have the opportunity to work on the production of films directly, but found that the process was too orderly and not what she was looking for in her work. In 1999, Ilenka had a chance meeting with Sumie Macalpine-Downie, a lawyer at the time, and decided that they were both looking for something different. During a meeting at a pub, Sumie asked Ilenka if she was interested in starting a casting agency with her. “It was so surreal,” says Ilenka, “I had met her once at a party and here she was asking me to go 50/50 in opening a casting agency. I took 24 hours and thought, ok I’m 25, what can really go wrong, I have nothing to lose, let’s go for it.” Sumie kept her job as a solicitor and the two women rented a small, grungy office in Camden in north London—maxed out their credit cards, bought a camera and some com-puters, and Mad Dog Casting opened for busi-ness in November of 1999. Their first employee was Ilenka’s sister Lara Jelowicki (BA ’00), also a King’s graduate, who worked with them for a year. Hard work and ambition kept them busy and they were able to move to Soho after two years, which was the place to be in if you were in the media. They quickly outgrew that office too and moved to a converted piano factory just north of London. Their successful busi-ness has allowed them to recently expand once again to an office in Bath, covering the west country of England, which brings them to a staff of nine, with possible expansions planned for the future. These days are certainly different for her than those spent under the Chapel. Ilenka’s success in the entertainment in-dustry can certainly be attributed to her years at King’s, particularly her involvement with the KTS. “Being a member of the KTS was a huge influence,” says Ilenka. “During my third and fourth years, I think we did something in the region of 20 plays. It was run as a business and I always thought the casting side was interesting as well.” While her casting experiences were mainly as the person who auditions for a role, Ilenka says, “I did learn quickly who was good

or bad and what makes a good actor.” Who knows what glamorous movies Ilenka will be working on in the years ahead. Keep watching… ∂

SHAUNTAY GRANT cont’d from 17

that I can write about the things that I know about and that’s equally important.” Grant agrees to send along a sample of her own poetry, after a promise that no punc-tuation will be touched, formats disrupted or lower cases capitalized. It too underlines her feeling that her own unique path is the one worth traveling and the discovery of her true self powers her life:

I spokeyet I did not recognize the speakerseemingly versed unfamiliar idealsonly to satisfymy teacher taught me how to writein formsbut I am not the seeker of formsI am the bearer of fruitand word/bond truthmahogany treerooted deeplyin the voice of experiencea voice I had to learn to trustwhen out of mire and dustrose a sleeping child whose fortitudehad been newly renewedshe/me now rejecting foreign schisms and ismsversed thoughts in vernacularismsreleasinga voice born out of necessitywas suppressed to please centuries ofage old methodical prosebutshe who composesexposesthe innermost corners of her realand so slowlyshe/I begin to revealthe sacred beauties of my mothertonguin word in the guise of shepourin libation in the form offreeverse

Grant’s future will play out in free verse too. She’s unsure where she sees herself in five or 10 years, most likely because the road is currently littered with enticing options. She’s unlikely, though, to stall or withdraw from the pursuits that make every day fresh and different. The journalist/musician/poet/educator/writer is also willing to hand out a little guide map for those journalism grads who dream of following her example.

“Go after what you want, find out what your interests are and go after it, make yourself visible,” she says. Why not? It’s certainly worked in her case. ∂

UP NORTH cont’d from 20

across the North, but at the same time there is a lot happening so there is a real opportunity to explore issues that people aren’t [explor-ing],” says Kennedy. Budak says in the North you can be a young journalist and still get to cover some-thing like a prime minister’s visit. In the South this would likely not happen because those as-signments are for seasoned journalists only. And there are important issues occur-ring in the North right now which the rest of Canada should know about. Ganley believes his journalism is an important witness to the rapid industrial growth in the Northwest Ter-ritories. “The issues that interest me most per-sonally are the aboriginal issues and how na-tive people of the North have benefited from these developments,” Ganley says. “I mean, it’s been terrible in the past. They haven’t [benefited].” There is work to be done in the North and there are opportunities for people willing to make the trek. King’s Journalism School gradu-ates are definitely leading the way. There is quite a community of graduates living in the North. It is a snowball effect—literally. One graduate gets another a job. And they are quick to point out the misconceptions about living up North and sing its praises. “There is certain romanticism about liv-ing up north that affects pretty much every Canadian,” says Kennedy. “A lot of people have an interest in working in Yellowknife right away but after they start looking into it, after a couple of weeks of thinking about it, that interest really starts dying down.” Budack agrees. “[People believe] the North is not an exciting place. There is no sex appeal. That is until people get here,” she says. It is definitely not for the faint of heart. “The ones that end up in Yellowknife are the ones with a sense of adventure,” says Ken-nedy. Ganley took a chance and he is not disap-pointed. He acknowledges the isolation, but he believes it adds to the community spirit, and the journalism opportunities that are now open to him make it all worthwhile. He says it’s about as “culturally unique and different as you can get without leaving Canada.” And for a young journalist that is fodder for great stories. ∂

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