the
Queen’s University
journal
Vol. 144, Issue 7
F r i day , S e p t e m b e r 3 0 , 2 0 1 6
NAM Queen’s receives $3.7 million in contract funding for cancer research signed after a month long delay September saw AMS with no authority in new non-academic misconduct system
since
1873
Saying goodbye to their second home
Richardson Stadium timekeepers let go after fifty-plus years Sean Sutherland Staff Writer
Victoria Gibson News Editor For 118 years, Queen’s has given disciplinary and judicial power of its students, to their peers, through the country’s sole peer-led non-academic disciplinary system. For the past year, the University’s Intake Office has limited the student government’s power by overseeing all cases brought to PHOTO BY MAUREEN O’REILLY their judicial system. A brightly coloured tumor shown during the Richardson Laboratory tour on September 29th. The non-academic misconduct (NAM) system has been under review for the past year and in its The funding was provided by the Ontario place was an interim protocol that Institute for Cancer Research (OICR), and expired on Sept. 1, leaving the AMS was allotted to the Queen’s Department of with absolutely no authority in the Pathology and Molecular Medicine. system for a month as they waited According to the University’s press release, to sign an Agency Agreement the OMPRN will “[increase] the participation formalizing their authority. of Ontario cancer pathologists in research, “I haven’t seen it, no one has enhancing collaboration across the province.” seen it,” Judicial Affairs Manager At the unveiling of the project, held in the Ryan Pistorius told The Journal Maureen O’Reilly atrium of the Queen’s School of Medicine on Sept. 29. “As I understand it, Assistant News Editor Building, Dean of Health Sciences Richard it’s currently still being drafted. Reznick spoke to how every cancer patient As far as I know, the only people In a pair of black-gloved hands, on a stark is unique, and it’s the job of a pathologist who have seen it are the AMS white slide, a tumour stands in technicolor. It’s to identify the unique characteristics of executive and a few select members one of what’s now set to be many at Queen’s, each tumour. of the administration.” with Thursday’s $3.7 million announcement. “Pathology helps to create personalized When asked by The Journal if it On the morning of Sept. 29, the University medicine, which will lead to better treatment should have been signed already, announced the multi-million dollar funding and more cures,” Reznick said. Pistorius paused before answering. for the Ontario Molecular Pathology “We now have at our disposal hundreds “Yes. If I’m being very blunt. The Research Network (OMPRN), which will be of new cancer drugs that could be effective interim protocol and the policies based on campus. in treating a patient’s cancer,” LeBrun added. that we had in place expired at the Queen’s researcher Dr. David LeBrun, According to him, there are hundreds of drugs end of the summer. As of Sept. 1, principal investigator in the Cancer Biology that can be used to best combat an individual’s AMS [non-academic disciplinary and Genetics division of the Queen’s Cancer cancer, and it’s a judgement call for the See Agreement on page 5 Research Institute, will be leading the network. See Tour on page 4
Ontario Molecular Pathology Research Network to be based at Queen’s
Leonard Coyle was paid 25 cents the first time he worked as a timekeeper for a Queen’s football game. That game was in 1947 and from then on he was a consistent presence at Richardson Stadium, serving as timekeeper for 69 seasons. That all changed earlier this year. Coyle was let go by Queen’s Athletics and Recreation before the current season, alongside fellow timekeepers G.M “Bubs” Van Hooser and Wayne Burns. This decision has taken away the opportunity for Coyle to work at a third installment of Richardson Stadium, having begun his work back when the football field stood on main campus. Now 80, Coyle started out as an 11-year old flipping numbers on the old stadium’s manual scoreboard. 69 years later he remembers what he could buy with his pay from those games. “Do you know what 25 cents bought me at the Jock Harty? It bought me a coke and a hot dog,” he said. “When you’re an 11-year old kid 25 cents is a lot of money back in ’47.” When the stadium gained an electric scoreboard eight years later, Coyle — an electrician by trade — was pegged for the position of official timekeeper. But now, Coyle is no longer manning the clock, part of Athletics and Recreation’s decision to switch to members of the Kingston
See Clock on page 15
INSIDE THIS ISSUE Sports
Discovered on YouTube, newly recruited Gael stars as team kicker page 13
Features
Arts
Lifestyle
Postscript
page 8
page 9
page 16
page 19
A history of the first Indigenous Canadian physician
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