The Queen's Journal, Issue 39

Page 1

Postscript short Fiction contest See Pages 9 - 11

T h u r s d ay , M a r c h 2 8 , 2 0 1 3 — I s s u e 3 9

the journal Queen’s University — Since 1873

Going for a dip

Inside

Activism

Fighting cancer at Queen’s

Dialogue

Students aim to ban tanning, tobacco sales on campus

Bringing back true political discourse. Page 6

Arts

B y S tyna Tao Staff Writer

An interview with musician Gianna Lauren. Page 12

Sports

The Polar Bear Dip, organized by Queen’s Free the Children, brought students to the freezing cold lake on Sunday to raise money for the Good Times Diner.

Photo by alex choi

Plagiarism

Student files copyright suit Women’s soccer honoured at Colour Awards. Page 16

Postscript

A trip to the sky for a bird’s eye view. Page 20

PhD candidate claims his work was copied by fellow reseacher B y H olly Tousignant News Editor A Queen’s PhD candidate has filed a lawsuit against another researcher for copyright infringement. Veldon Coburn, a political studies student, alleges that a document he stumbled upon last summer on the Aboriginal Healing Foundation website was plagiarized from a report he’d written seven years earlier. Coburn claims he’d worked on the project for over 100 hours on his own time during his contract with the O.I. Native Leasing Services.

Something sweet

Photo by alex choi

Anna Olson, celebrity chef and Queen’s alumn, came to campus on Saturday to share her story of success. See page 2 for full story.

The research was to lay the foundation for a collaborative proposal Coburn was hoping to work on with fellow academic Kevin Barlow. Although the suit was filed last

fall, Coburn only recently decided to go public with it. Coburn claims he had been approached by Barlow to work on the proposal See Over on page 4

Student life

AMS to address housing grievances New centre will consolidate resources B y S hannon H ill Staff Writer

ArtSci ’14, said. The new Centre will absorb the MAC’s housing-related services like A proposal to establish a new the Student Property Assessment Housing Grievance Centre and Dwelling Education (SPADE), volunteer-run service passed unanimously at last week’s a AMS Assembly. which provides free home The Centre will offer inspections for students, and peer-based support and referral the holiday and summer services for housing-related house check program. concerns. Although it won’t be able “It’s a centralization of those to provide legal advice, the Centre resources and a confidential place will give referrals to Queen’s for student to talk about their Legal Aid. grievances regarding their housing,” AMS Municipal Affairs Sherman said. Commissioner Troy Sherman said The Centre will be operated he thinks there is a definite need for by an advisory board that will the service at Queen’s. include Sherman’s successor, the “My inbox is currently student leader for the project and receiving a lot of these complaints a representative from the property and grievances,” Sherman, standards division of the City

Seven Queen’s students are leading the charge to remove tobacco sales and tanning beds from campus. They’re under the direction of the Campaign to Control Cancer (C2CC), a nationwide movement to educate and create dialogue around healthy living and community. Tobacco is currently sold in Ye Olde Tuck Shoppe in the lower JDUC and a tanning bed can also be found on the same level at Signatures Hair and Tanning Salon. In late 2012, C2CC created a two-year project for five participating universities, including Queen’s, to establish their own Campus Action Teams to make changes to their communities. The project is funded by the Ontario Trillium Foundation, which provides grants for charitable organizations. Currently, the Queen’s team is in talks with the C2CC to devise a concrete plan for campus. “We’re looking to align the University’s message with the services that they provide,” said Stephanie Ferguson, Nurs ’13, a core member of Queen’s Campus Action Team. The team of students stress that having tobacco sales and tanning beds on campus contradicts Queen’s mission to create a healthy environment for students. “We decided on these two issues because they both involve Type 1 carcinogens, which are known to cause cancer,” said Stefanie Lys, See Tanning on page 4

of Kingston. Although the Town-Gown relations office already exists to foster better relationships between the University and the City of Kingston, the new Centre will differ in that it will focus specifically on student housing issues. Sherman said he feels the See Centre on page 4


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