THROUGH QJ’S LENS:
Coming home to Queen’s page 4
the
Queen’s University
journal
Vol. 144, Issue 10
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
F r i day , O c t o b e r 2 1 , 2 0 1 6
postdocs at Queen’s
92%
voted in favour of strike
Postdocs vote overwhelmingly in favour of strike
How are KGH and Queen’s adapting to doctor assisted death? page 5
Student leaders condemn video for infringements on consent
25%
Arts
Victoria Gibson News Editor
increase in minimum salaries requested by PSAC during first year of changes
Art and engineering meet in installation unveiling at Beamish-Munro page 9
story on page 3
Victoria Gibson and Adam Laskaris Journal Staff This article originally appeared online on October 18, 2016.
Sports
Ultimate Frisbee teams bring home national championships page 10
While the seats in Richardson Stadium are brand new, Queen’s dominant play in front of the 8,000 tri-coloured spectators at Saturday’s game ensured they weren’t put to much use. The 55-5 Homecoming blowout against the Windsor Lancers put the Gaels in the OUA’s final playoff spot with just one week left in the regular season. With the Homecoming excitement and an emotional tribute honouring former head coach Doug Hargreaves who passed away earlier this summer, the Gaels came out energized, earning their first touchdown within six minutes of the opening kick-off. The touchdown came at the hands of running-back Jonah Pataki, rushing 67 yards on the
Gaels’ opening drive, ending it with the 12 yard score. Much to the delight of the decked-out crowd, Pataki would earn his second touchdown of the game at the end of the first quarter, following an interception and return from defensive-back Wesley Mann. “Even though you’re running and running and running, you don’t really feel tired when you’re
push back with their first points of the game on a 37-yard field goal. However, the Gaels defense held off most of the Lancers’ attempts through the rest of the afternoon, holding one of the OUA’s top running-backs Terrence Crawford to a mere 58 yards on the day. Right before half-time, Pataki came back with his third touchdown of the day, giving his team a hefty 33-3. Pataki ended the day with 139 of his team’s 342 total rushing yards — compared to 78 rushing yard total. Heading into halftime with a 33-3 lead, Sheahan stressed proper game management over the final 30 minutes to secure the win. “I challenged them to keep the foot on the accelerator,” he said, “When you reduce your effort level in a contact sport like football, you have injuries. They get hit or somebody else gets hurt. This wasn’t personal, it was about the Queen’s Golden Gaels football team and getting ready for the weeks
Football team shines on HOCO Gaels blow out Windsor 55-5
Lifestyle
It’s 2016: Trudeau’s first year in office page 14
Postscript
An American in a foreign country page 15 Online:
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moving the ball,” Pataki said after the game. Fifteen minutes in, the Gaels were holding a 19-0 lead. As the second quarter picked up, Gaels’ Nate Hobbs and Peter Hannon connected for a touchdown from 15 yards out. However, the Gaels’ clear-cut lead was compromised by a fumble on a punt return mid-way through the quarter, leaving the Lancers to
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Women videotaped speak out about ‘Drunk Times’ HOCO video
200
Features
since
See Pataki on page 12
The Sunday after Homecoming, a video surfaced on YouTube and various Queen’s Facebook groups entitled “Drunk Times with College Students: Queen’s Homecoming”, featuring a male in his twenties interviewing intoxicated students, particularly women. Questions included “do you have sex on the first date?” and “can I touch your boobs?” The video also shows clips of the interviewer pointing his microphone to a women’s breasts and another male putting his face in a women’s breasts. The video lasted roughly 48 hours online before being privatized, only to be re-publicized days later. The video was uploaded under a YouTube channel called AroraTV. On AroraTV’s Instagram, a still shot of the video was accompanied by a caption saying “video’s public again — if you can’t handle it go watch cat videos”. For two of the girls interviewed in the video, their response was of disappointment. “On HOCO, like most people I was pretty blackout,” one of the girls wrote to The Journal. She requested that her identity remain anonymous, saying she experienced discomfort and shame. “I didn’t remember being in the video at all.” Though she found the editing of the video amusing, she said that many women were upset by the way it sexualized females on campus. Her own segment at the end of the video made her uncomfortable. See If on page 3