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Queen’s
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the journal since
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F R I D AY, O c t o b e r 1 5 , 2 0 1 0
Debate heats up
School of rock
Mayoral candidates discuss local issues at Grant Hall debate By Labiba Haque Assistant News Editor
Last Thursday, the AMS hosted an on-campus mayoral debate for the upcoming municipal election. Of the six candidates, Barrie Chalmers, Kevin Lavalley, John Last, Mark Gerretsen and Rob Matheson attended. Candidate Nathan Wilson was unavailable. The debate was put together by the Municipal Affairs Commission (MAC) of the AMS. Each candidate introduced himself and his campaign and then the floor was opened for a question and answer period. There were approximately 120 people present at the debate and most were local citizens. Principal Daniel Woolf, most members of the AMS Council and various other student leaders were also present. The candidates focused on issues relevant to Queen’s students such as student housing and transportation. Last is one of three young candidates forming the Run This Town campaign. “I think being young gives me a different perspective about what the issues in Kingston are. I think being a young person, makes me more future-minded,” he said during the debate. Because of his age, Last said he’s especially in touch with student issues. “There are too many students and not enough student housing right now. The reality is that students will have to move downtown,” he said, adding that this will mean students will have to make a slightly longer commute to campus. “We’ll need good bike and bus routes,” Last said. “Most of these ideas do exist and the plans to
photo by Justin Tang
Last Wednesday at 1 p.m., Adam Holroyd joined many other students on the corner of Union St. and University Ave. for an impromtu jam session.
Pro-life controversy strikes at Carleton Queen’s Alive president arrested at pro-life campaign with four others for trespassing By Clare Clancy News Editor
President of Queen’s Alive Zuza Kurzawa was one of five students arrested by Ottawa police at Carleton University while participating in a pro-life campaign last week. The four other students arrested were from Carleton. According to Kurzawa, ArtSci ’13, she was released after 45 minutes and received $65 fines for two counts of trespassing amounting to a total of $130. She Please see Differing on page 4 said the four Carleton students received the same treatment. The trespassing charges were laid under the Trespass to Volume 138, Issue 13 Property Act when the students www.queensjournal.ca failed to leave property when News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 A&E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 asked and tried to go ahead with a prohibited event. Features . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 The morning of Oct. 4 was Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Postscript . . . . . . . . . . 16 helping to prepare for a Genocide Op-Ed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Awareness Project (GAP) exhibition
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on Carleton’s campus which involves putting up visual displays and barricades. The controversial GAP project involves graphic displays which compare aborted fetuses to victims of genocides, such as Jews during the Holocaust. The Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform (CCBR) provides pro-life clubs at universities with billboards depicting images of aborted fetuses and genocide victims. According to Kurzawa, Carleton Lifeline, a pro-life student group, had booked an area in the outdoor quad of Carleton’s Tory Building months before the event. “It’s a central area people can walk past. Carleton Lifeline applied for this area five months ago. In the last couple of weeks, university officials said it was off,” she said, adding that the Carleton University administration suggested the event take place in Porter Hall.
“Nobody goes there. No one knows where it is,” Kurzawa said. “I understand our message is unpopular but our right to speak should not be limited.” Kurzawa said prior to the arrival of the police, she was engaging students in conversation about abortion. “I was just standing there talking to people and I had a great discussion,” she said, adding that she understands why people find the images disturbing. “It’s hard to look at.” Kurzawa said about nine police officers arrived at the exhibition and told the group to leave at about 9:30 a.m. “They said ‘If you’re going to go, you have to go around the campus and turn the signs inward.’ They didn’t want anyone seeing the images,” she said. Kurzawa said there were about 20 students participating
in the event when police arrived and arrested her and four others. Carleton campus safety officers had stopped the group of students when carrying their signs before contacting the Ottawa police. According to Jason MacDonald, director of Carleton’s department of university communications, the group was offered a table in the University Centre atrium to direct people to their display in Porter Hall. “They indicated that they wouldn’t respect the fact that we told them they didn’t have permission to set up in the quad,” MacDonald told the Charlatan, Carelton’s campus newspaper. Kurzawa said she’s fighting the fines with the help of a pro-bono lawyer that Carleton Lifeline was put in touch with by the National Campus Life Network. The GAP has never been shown Please see It’s on page 5