March 12, 2014

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Early classes reviewed News, page 3

The tie that binds Wilfrid Laurier University since 1926 Volume 54, Issue 24

thecord.ca

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

THE

PARTY’S

OVER Binge drinking poses many long term risks more severe than just a pesky hangover Features, page 10

Tragedy takes centre stage CHELSEA DOBRINDT CORD ARTS

In recent years, a dialogue regarding mental health has been slowly growing but there is always room for more discussion. University of Waterloo’s (UW) drama department is blowing the topic wide open with their performance based on how a young woman with mental health issues was treated in 2007 by the Grand Valley Institution for Women in Kitchener, Ontario. The performance, entitled From Solitary to Solidarity: Unraveling the Ligatures of Ashley Smith, follows the life of Ashley Smith and how government institutions treated her during her incarceration. The play also focuses on the challenges that she had to face and relates to how mental health is treated in university settings. For those unfamiliar with the 2007 tragedy, Ashley Smith was a 19-year-old young woman who died at The Grand Valley Institution for Women. Dealing with depression and urges to self-harm from early childhood continuing up until her suicide, her case was mainly written off by the state and she was denied the help she needed to fully cope with the challenges she faced. Placed in solitary confinement in almost every correctional facility she was transferred to, Smith lived in isolation for almost four years. The law requiring mandatory review of prisoners kept in isolation for more than two months was not Arts, page 12

LENA YANG GRAPHICS EDITOR

Bouncing back from a scare Laurier curler recaps her recovery from two blood clots that almost caused a stroke SHELBY BLACKLEY SPORTS EDITOR

Kerilynn Mathers didn’t think anything serious was happening to her. Last year during the 2013 Ontario University Athletics (OUA) curling championship, the women’s curling vice fell ill like the rest of her team. At the time only a second-year kinesiology major, Mathers experienced what she thought was the flu, but fought through it. The week after the OUA championship in February 2013, however, her health took a turn for the worse. “I left OUAs and went through reading week and things weren’t normal,” Mathers explained. “I saw a bunch of doctors and they came up with all of these things that were going on, but everything just didn’t seem to be lining up..” The doctors diagnosed her with a migraine. Mathers played in a mixed zones bonspiel for a junior team during reading week and found

herself in and out of the emergency room. Despite countless visits to the hospital, the doctors never changed her diagnosis. “So after about a week of that, [the doctors] finally decided they were going to do some more tests and see if there’s anything going on, because my parents said, ‘we’re not leaving until we get answers. She hasn’t had a migraine for a week.’” To rule out all possibilities, the doctors at Grand River Hospital in Kitchener decided to do more tests. And what Mathers found out would change her life. “They came back saying, ‘you actually have two blood clots in your brain, and you’re at risk for a possible stroke,” she recalled. Mathers avoided having a serious stroke, which could have resulted in paralysis or even death, by just 24 hours. “If you look back and think Sports, page 19

Inside Prepping for St. Paddy’s Staff writer Scott Glaysher offers up some St. Paddy’s themed games and drinks Life, page 12

Going for Ward two Three community members announce their intent to run for the university district’s ward Local, page 7

End of a gold rush Mobile applications may no longer be an easy source of revenue for amateur developers National, page 8 HEATHER DAIVDSON PHOTOGRAPHY MANAGER


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March 12, 2014 by The Cord - Issuu