There鈥檚 a Kingston corporation that employs 800 people, has an annual budget in the neighbourhood of $16 million, and gets a new CEO every year.
Queen鈥檚 Alma Mater Society (AMS), the oldest student association in Canada, is unique among student governments in its almost complete reliance on undergrads to run its affairs, including in the role of president, who is elected annually.
Given that the society has been around since 1858, it adds up to one heckuva lot of former AMS presidents (152 at last count), many of them still knocking about in post-Queen鈥檚 pursuits: the president and CEO of CARE Canada, for example, or the retired hospital chaplain. And let鈥檚 not forget the beekeeper who fronts a popular Japanese pop band.
Early last year, Stewart Goodings (Arts鈥62) and Jane Matthews Glenn (Arts鈥63, Law鈥66) 鈥 back-to-back AMS presidents in 1961鈥62 and 1962鈥63 鈥 began to wonder about all the presidents who preceded and succeeded them. They wondered if they, like themselves, had been significantly impacted by their experience.
鈥淲hen I thought back to my time at Queen鈥檚, everything started there,鈥 recalls Mr. Goodings.
Through much of the 鈥90s, Mr. Goodings served on the university鈥檚 board of trustees, and met with each of the AMS presidents during those years. 鈥淓very one of them was impressive 鈥 committed, exciting, dynamic 鈥 and it was a great thrill to think that these young people were kind of like I was, except better.鈥
Mr. Goodings and Prof. Glenn began tracking down former AMS execs willing to share their experiences in student government. Sixteen other presidents agreed to respond to a survey about their tenures. The earliest is Prof. Iain Gow (Arts鈥55, MA鈥58), elected president in 1954, and the latest is Jennifer Li (Artsci鈥17) who served during the 2017鈥18 academic year.
Respondents were asked about their challenges, accomplishments, and relations with the university鈥檚 administration during their terms. They were additionally asked whether the experience affected their lives after Queen鈥檚.
What Mr. Goodings and Prof. Glenn discovered was a lot of similar experiences and a lot more that had changed with the tenor of the times. If you look at yearbooks from the early 鈥50s, Prof. Iain Gow notes in his response, 鈥渙ne sees that it was almost entirely a white class of graduates each year, mostly men, but with some excellent women students and leaders.鈥
In 1951, says Prof. Gow, Queen鈥檚 鈥渨as more like a village than anything else: there were no fraternities or sororities, no alcohol to be had on the campus, and no men鈥檚 residence.鈥 Enrolment was just over 2,000, and the AMS Council met once a month. These days, the AMS serves almost 18,000 students; runs pubs, a coffee house, and the Tricolour Outlet, and funds entire student-led offices to deal with everything from academic and municipal affairs to social justice and human rights.
In the early 鈥60s, says Mr. Goodings, being president 鈥渨as hectic and interesting and memorable, but nowadays it means leading a medium-sized business, with scores of employees, significant programs, and extensive involvement with the administration on a range of student issues.鈥
Some of those issues haven鈥檛 changed much through the years. Relations between the student body and the larger Kingston community 鈥 town and gown issues 鈥 have had remarkably similar flashpoints, the survey shows.
In September 1953, writes Prof. Gow, a 鈥渇reshman riot鈥 prompted the AMS to adopt a policy of assessing damages from such melees to the organizing body (in this case the arts and engineering faculties), rather than the student body as a whole. In the 1959鈥60 academic year, Bruce Alexander remembers accompanying longtime university chaplain Marshall Laverty to the police station to negotiate the release of a freshman who had 鈥渃ommandeered an OPP cruiser and driven it around town before abandoning it in a field beside Morris Hall, with its siren and emergency lights on.鈥
During Stewart Goodings鈥 tenure (1961鈥62), the AMS had to negotiate with CN Rail after students damaged railway cars taking them to a Gaels鈥-Varsity Blues football game in Toronto. Rev. John Lougheed (AMS president 1984鈥85) says he had to negotiate with the vice-principal, mayor, and chief of police after a record-setting street party attracted more than 1,000 raucous students, some of whom might have faced eviction without the AMS鈥檚 intervention.
When Prof. Jane Matthews Glenn became president in 1962, she was only the fourth woman to hold the post, according to Mr. Goodings鈥 research. The first was Dorothy Wardle, chosen in 1941, two years into the Second World War. There have been just 12 more women presidents since Prof. Glenn鈥檚 tenure.
Prof. Glenn credits her time in student government with broadening her horizons. It led to her participation in a summer seminar in Pakistan sponsored by World University Service of Canada. The opportunity required participants to return to their university in the year following the seminar. Prof. Glenn enrolled in the Faculty of Law, thinking she would stay for a year and then find work as a legal secretary. Turns out she liked the law. Called to the bar in B.C., she earned a doctorate from the Universit茅 de Strasbourg and spent her career teaching law at McGill University.
Though women had played senior roles in the AMS by the time of Prof. Glenn鈥檚 tenure, there were still gender-based divisions on campus. The first liberalization of gender divisions at campus residences, for instance, didn鈥檛 come until the 1969鈥70 presidency of Ross McGregor (Arts鈥70). The looser rules meant longer visiting hours and eventually open visitation at segregated residences, McGregor writes.
In the late 鈥80s, women鈥檚 issues on campus took on a darker colour. Prof. Emily Moore (Sci鈥92) was an 鈥渆nthusiastic student organizer鈥 with the Queen鈥檚 Engineering Society in the fall of 1989, when a group of male students responded to an AMS 鈥淣o Means No鈥 campaign with misogynist slogans plastered on residence windows. Weeks later, the Montreal Massacre happened.
鈥淚 literally became a feminist on Dec. 14, 1989,鈥 recalls Prof. Moore. 鈥淲hen I was approached to run for [AMS] president that spring, my newfound feminism got me to make the commitment.鈥
Debate over response to the 鈥淣o Means No鈥 incident dominated the campaign, she recalls. During her term, the AMS was forced to defend its non-academic discipline system from a lawyer hired by the parents of the offending students.
Prof. Moore notes that in her year, the AMS made a conscious effort to hire students of colour in its senior salaried positions. A few years later, in the 1994鈥95 academic year, Queen鈥檚 students elected their first minority woman as AMS president: Taslim Pirmohamed Tagore (Artsci鈥95). Her experience suggests the campus still had a ways to go in accepting diversity.
鈥淚鈥 experienced a lot of pushback, racism, misogyny, and challenge to my leadership (in big and small ways) simply because I didn鈥檛 fit the AMS presidential mould,鈥 Ms. Tagore writes in her survey response. 鈥淎s you may know, Queen鈥檚 was a culture of assimilation. We all joined in to sing the Oil Thigh, to attend football games, homecoming. [There were] purple engineers, and a school culture that was very white and European,鈥 she recalls.
鈥淪o much of what really mattered and defined me had to go 鈥榰nderground鈥 at Queen鈥檚 so that I could behave as the majority white student population did,鈥 Ms. Tagore recalls.
Similar doubts about the university鈥檚 diversity almost convinced the AMS鈥檚 first Black president, Gregory Frankson (Artsci鈥97, Ed鈥99), not to run for the 1996鈥97 term. He had been asked to run on a ticket with Annette Paul (Artsci鈥98, MPA鈥16) as VP of University Affairs, 鈥渂ut I didn鈥檛 think it made much sense for two people of colour to run for AMS executive on the same ticket. I feared that 1990s-era Queen鈥檚 wasn鈥檛 ready to vote for it.鈥 History proved him wrong.
Mr. Frankson also chaired the Robert Sutherland Task Force, which recommended the commemoration of Canada鈥檚 (and Queen鈥檚) first Black university graduate. Sutherland matriculated in the early 1850s, practised law, and left his entire estate to his alma mater, the largest bequest Queen鈥檚 had ever received. 鈥淚t led to two of the proudest days of my life,鈥 writes Mr. Frankson, 鈥渢he official unveiling of the Robert Sutherland Room in the JDUC in 1998, and the ceremony to rededicate the Policy Studies Building as Robert Sutherland Hall in October 2009.鈥
Despite such advances, racism was still an issue for the AMS鈥檚 2010鈥11 president, Safiah Chowdhury (Artsci鈥11). As a visibly Muslim student, she had felt the sting of prejudice and decided to run, in part, because of it. 鈥淢y year in the AMS was the most difficult year of my life thus far,鈥 she recalls.
鈥淚 was personally targeted weekly, from letters to the editor attacking my intellect to anonymous violent and misogynistic text messages to my cellphone. As a 21-year-old, it was a lot to deal with.鈥
Ms. Chowdhury says her interaction with Queen鈥檚 administration was much more civil. 鈥淲e worked well together in transferring power from the administration to the student government for the Student Life Centre,鈥 she writes. 鈥淚 also found them to be more amenable to anti-racism and equity measures.鈥
In general, the respondents reported cordial and even genial relations with the administration. Hugh Christie (Artsci鈥78, Law鈥81), AMS president for 1977鈥78, recalls regular poker games with the VP of Finance. Tyler Turnbull (Artsci鈥06) writes of becoming close with Board of Trustees chair John Rae during his 2004鈥05 term and being influenced by Mr. Rae to enter into what has become a very successful career in advertising.
Maynard Plant (Artsci鈥98) remembers starting his 1997鈥98 term as part of a group that occupied the principal鈥檚 office to protest tuition increases. 鈥淏ut in time,鈥 he writes, 鈥渨e developed a great working partnership.鈥
Mr. Chuck Edwards (Arts鈥65, MSc鈥69), however, recalls a different experience during his abbreviated AMS term in 1968. 鈥淚 found the administration鈥檚 attitude to the AMS paternalistic,鈥 he writes. 鈥淭his was the late 1960s when the world was changing rapidly and the Queen鈥檚 administration was resistant to any change.鈥
Mr. Edwards was the first AMS president in Queen鈥檚 modern history to be directly elected by the student body. Previously, the president had been chosen by AMS representatives from each faculty. The change was opposed by Mr. Edwards鈥 AMS predecessor, George Carson (MD鈥68), who felt direct election would favour candidates from the larger faculties.
Mr. Edwards, however, writes that 鈥渃hoosing the AMS president in a secret conclave鈥 was an example of how 鈥渢he AMS was disconnected from the student body.鈥
According to Queen鈥檚 historian Duncan McDowall (Queen鈥檚 University, 1691鈥2004: Testing Tradition), Mr. Edwards and his running mate, Jan Lichty, reflected the emergence of student radicalism on campuses in the late 鈥60s. They participated in a 鈥渢ent-in鈥 on the lawn of the principal鈥檚 home to protest a crisis in student housing and pushed the AMS to support striking workers in the Kingston community and provide buses to out-of-town Vietnam war protests. Mr. Edwards鈥 agenda got pushback from other members of the AMS.
鈥淐ut off from the capacity to pursue the changes I thought necessary and had promised in my presidential campaign, I resigned,鈥 Mr. Edwards writes. This led to a second election and the shortened presidency of David Pakrul (BSc鈥69).
The following year, Ross McGregor pursued a less provocative course towards some of the same goals Mr. Edwards championed, including a student-owned residence, the first student pub, and the formal incorporation of the AMS.
Mr. McGregor writes that in this turbulent period from 1968 to 1970 鈥淸Queen鈥檚] moved from an in loco parentis environment where the administration managed or influenced almost everything, including students and student [government],鈥 to 鈥渁n era of much stronger student engagement and self-determination.鈥
Barbara Grantham (BAH鈥83) recalls her time as being 鈥渕uch tougher than I expected: to run and have responsibilities for a large student society, a corporation that employed full- and part-time staff, etc.鈥
Christine Fisher (BSc鈥05), president during the 2003鈥04 year, says the job鈥檚 notoriety made it even harder. 鈥淚 was at the centre of a lot of public attention and had to face the negative scrutiny,鈥 writes Ms. Fisher. 鈥淭he pressure and stress were hard for 21-year-old me 鈥 frankly, I think the job would be hard for the current 39-year-old me!鈥
Jennifer Li, president for the 2017鈥18 academic year, notes a sad facelessness that accompanies the office. 鈥淚t meant people forgot that when they make critical Facebook statuses and comments, there was a human behind the screen reading it all and taking the hits.鈥
Despite this, the experience was invaluable, Ms. Li writes, a sentiment echoed by many other respondents. 鈥淢y year as AMS president laid a strong foundation for skills that I use every day at work 鈥 leadership, written and oral communication, strategic planning, stakeholder management, community organization, and project management.鈥
鈥淚t sounds crazy to say this,鈥 Ms. Li writes, 鈥渂ut being AMS president was a once-in-a-lifetime experience that I do not take for granted. It shaped a big part of who I am and what I chose to do after Queen鈥檚.鈥