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McMASTER UNIVERSITY'S STUDENT NEWSPAPER / THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2012
The Silhouette
YOUR VOICE ON CAMPUS
Est. 1930
VOLUME 82, NO. 21
Boris family donates $30 million Farzeen Foda
Senior News Editor
On Feb. 6, McMaster University welcomed a $30-million gift on behalf of the Marta and Owen Boris Foundation in support of stem cell research and better access to specialty health care. Owen Boris was the founder of Mountain Cablevision, one of the few cable suppliers to the Hamilton Mountain area. With a firm belief in the betterment of the healthcare system, The Boris Family took it upon themselves to fuel some of
the change that could revolutionize healthcare in Hamilton, shedding new light on healthcare standards across Canada. The potential of stem cell research, a burgeoning area of biological science, was of considerable interest to Boris, and upon discussions with McMaster University, was confident that an investment in McMaster’s reputable Stem Cell Research Institute could bring healthcare one step closer to the change in healthcare he envisioned. $24 million of the donation will go toward the establishment of
the Boris Family Centre in Human Stem Cell Therapies, in conjunction with McMaster’s Stem Cell and Cancer Research Institute. The new centre will strive to translate the breakthrough research of the Stem Cell and Cancer Research Institute into improved patient outcomes for debilitating diseases such as “leukemia and Parkinson’s disease, to name but a few,” said Jackie Work, daughter of Owen and Marta Boris. Work, along with her brother Les Boris, announced the gift to an awestruck assembly of prominent
members of the McMaster community. The remaining six million dollars of the generous gift will support a “One Stop Shop specialty clinic,” to be located on the fourth floor of the McMaster University Medical Centre, comparable to the Mayo Clinic in the United States, noted Work. The clinic “will bring together, in one place, a wide range of medical and healthcare professionals, reducing or eliminating wait times for specialty appointments and tests such as MRI’s and provide coordin-
ated and managed care for patients with complex medical issues,” she said. Some of the funds will also support the establishment of two senior chairs. One in blood stem cells and the other in neural stem cells, as well as fellowships and technician positions. Access to specialist attention is heavily hindered by long wait times, often prolonging life-saving treatment, an experience to which the Boris Family can certainly attest, • PLEASE SEE GIFT, A3
Post-Election
SIOBHAN STEWART WINS 2012 MSU PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
Ready for leadership
TYLER HAYWARD / SENIOR PHOTO EDITOR
In a close final round, Siobhan Stewart won the 2012 MSU presidential election, beating David Campbell by 47 votes. Now, Stewart is taking steps to ensure her mandate is defined by the needs of the student body who put her in the driver’s seat. FOR FULL COVERAGE, PLEASE SEE A4
3M Teaching Fellowship
McMaster professors nationally recognized
THIS WEEK IN... ANDY ANDY CRITIQUES LANA DEL RAY’S DEBUT ALBUM ‘BORN TO DIE’
Award recipients stand out in candidate pool of 33,000 Dina Fanara
Assistant News Editor
Two of McMaster’s very own faculty members were named 3M National Teaching Fellows on Feb. 9, the highest honour in education at the university level in Canada. Dr. Marshall Beier and Dr. Susan Vajoczki were named recipients of the honour, which is awarded to only ten professors each year. Since 1986, 268 instructors have been chosen to receive this fellowship for their want to improve the quality of education for university students. Students and colleagues nominate potential candidates, with over 33,000 eligible candidates this year. “In my mind this award is the penultimate accomplishment in university teaching and learning and recognition in teaching and learning in Canada…all of that work with students over the years. There was real value and recognition of that activity,” said Vajoczki. “The most meaningful thing
I get out of my teaching is talking to students about things that work for them and talking to them a year or two after a course and they talk about how important something was,” she added. Dr. Vajoczki was a faculty member of the department of Geology and Earth Science for over ten years at McMaster, and led several trips with upper year undergraduates to Costa Rica for a field course on river erosion several years ago. She has also held the position of director of the Department of Experiential Education and is currently the director of the Centre for Leadership and Learning. With a background in large class and inquiry teaching, Vajoczki found a way to solve the question ‘How do you do field work with 300 students?’ With her first year earth science students, Vajoczki incorporated a field trip for each student at some point in the first month of class, allowing all to have practical • PLEASE SEE WINNERS, A4
SEE D8
OPINIONS 21ST CENTURY LOVE IS BEING BOILED DOWN TO AN INSCRUTABLE SCIENCE SEE A7
SPORTS MCMASTER SIGNS FIVE-YEAR DEAL WITH NIKE AND SCORES JORDAN BRAND IN THE PROCESS SEE S3
The Sil
Ballot appeal not sought after result Brian Decker Executive Editor
The McMaster Students Union Elections Committee did not receive any formal complaints about the 2012 presidential election, according to Chief Returning Officer Steven Thompson. “We make a technical complaint system available so anyone can say if they think there’s anything wrong with the system. We didn’t get any official complaints this year,” said Thompson. Complaints, which can be lodged within 48 hours of the election results, can be sent to request a recount or dispute the election’s results. The absence of complaints comes despite candidate Alex Ramirez’s claim that the vote was “manipulated,” and that it was “literally impossible” that he received only the 704 first-place votes he tallied. Ramirez posted the claim as a blog entry on his campaign website and Facebook page. Ramirez finished fifth in the election and was eliminated in the first round of voting. “Far too many things happened during the campaign to have only generated 704 first place votes, and to have come in dead last,” said Ramirez on his blog, proceeding to list a number of circumstances during the campaign period that he believed indicated more students sending their votes his way. Aside from anecdotes and some figures – the 5,200 pamphlets his team circulated and the 2,700 web page visits to his site on the two voting days – Ramirez did not list any evidence to explain how the vote would have been manipulated. The 2012 vote was run by the website SimplyVoting.com, which Thompson said has no access other than the accumulation and automatic calculation of votes. A voting receipt that allows students to double check their ballot is also available on the site. Students can log in, check their ballot receipt and download a spreadsheet of the election results. One possible source of contention over the vote’s result may have come from the timing of the vote’s switch to online-only. The system was changed from paper balloting to online on Jan. 20, one day after the all-candidates meeting and the announcement of the eligible candidates. Additionally, Thompson said, candidates were notified of the possible switch to exclusively online voting at and prior to the all-candidates meeting, at which time the switch was contingent upon receiving permission from the Registrar’s office. “It was unfortunate we had to do it sort of last-minute, but it was a choice between that and not going online when we had the ability to,” said Thompson This year’s MSU presidential election saw a 33.4 per cent voter turnout – the highest since 1998 – and an all-time gross record with a total of 6,703 student votes.