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Too Little To Be Born

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JIHEE (MARIE) PARK
<Staff Writer>
November 17th was World Prematurity Awareness Day. It may have been a singular date to give a moment to think about one of the leading causes of neonatal mortality and increased risk of a multitude of neurological, cardiovascular, and other conditions.

Alternative Ways to “Learn” the Law: Trial Advocacy

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RICARDO GOLEC
<Website Editor>
I really like procrastinating. A lot. In fact, I’m doing it right now. In order to feel less bad about it, I’ve endeavoured this year to try to rationalize my procrastination by way of increasingly hare-brained schemes to “learn” by not learning. Obviously I’ve had varying degrees of success.

Pigskin Projections

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ANDREW CYR
<Sports Editor>
As the temperatures drop and the days get shorter, many people’s thoughts shift to the splendor of fall foliage, changes in their wardrobe, and the inevitable approach of winter (and exams).  For me, however, the cold, crisp, autumn air means just one thing.  It’s football season. 

Québec Student Leader to Appeal Contempt of Court Verdict

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ERIN HUDSON
<CUP Québec Bureau Chief>
MONTREAL (CUP) — On Nov. 2, Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, former spokesperson for the Coalition large de l’Association pour une Solidarité Syndicale Étudiante (CLASSÉ), announced his decision to appeal the guilty verdict handed down the day before by Judge Denis Jacques. 

War Horse: A Rousing Gallop from Book to Stage

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TRAVIS WEAGANT
<Co-Editor-in-Chief> 
Children often find war difficult to understand, so we explain it to them by simplifying it into a “good vs. evil” narrative where two camps hate each other so much they want to kill each other.  You can imagine then, how much more difficult it is to explain the more complicated aspects of armed conflict

Days to Remember

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TRAVIS WEAGANT
<Co-Editor-in-Chief>
Thomas, a friend of mine, once told me a story about his grandmother and Remembrance Day.  Remembrance Day was first observed in the inter-war period in Great Britain.  November 11th, Armistice Day, seemed a fitting day to commemorate the vast human tragedy of the Great War

Canada’s Immigration Policy: A Kaleidoscope?

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CECIL ROTENBERG
<Contributor>
Canada’s immigration policy and legislation changes are taking place so fast that some people jokingly say that Immigration Minister Jason Kenney suffers from Attention Deficit Disorder. Even immigration professionals are confounded by the speed at which the immigration system is being overhauled.

How’re You Gonna Call?

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JIHEE (MARIE) PARK
<Staff Writer>
Apart from the other news stories and the week of gloomy weather Sandy has presented us, her sweep across the continent has presented us with a unique question. In New York, residents whose power and cell phone reception went down had to rely on public pay phones

Creating a “Law Students Society of Ontario”

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LEEANNE FOOTMAN
<Contributor>
On October 19, six representatives of your Legal and Literary Society and Student Caucus attended a two-day conference at Queen’s University, put on by the Queen’s Law Student Society.  The conference invited representatives of student government from all six of Ontario’s law schools with a goal of creating a draft constitution

What Does the American Election Mean for Canada?

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With the American election resolved and the President re-elected, the question now becomes what to expect in a second Obama term, and what its implications are for Canada. To be sure, the President retained his position decisively in the Electoral College, but won much more narrowly in the popular vote.

Halloween Movie Guide: SPOOKTACULAR!

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MAX PATERSON
<Arts & Culture Editor>
It’s that time of year again, the time we dust off those “sexy” [fill in anything here] costumes, call up all of our ‘non-law’ friends, and go out for one last big night before the realities of assignments, papers and pre-exam note compiling begins.

The Unreasonable Man Hates Hallowe’en

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TRAVIS WEAGANT
<Co-Editor-in-Chief>
I am a Hallowe’en Grinch.  I don’t know when it happened, but I suspect it was when I stopped getting a bag full of free candy every year.  With the material profitability of the day eliminated, I could see no other way to derive a net benefit from dressing strangely. 

JCR Opens Again … Finally

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NADIA GUO
<News Editor>
The JCR bar opened again tonight much to the delight of the overworked and sleep-deprived everywhere in Osgoode. “Another great reason to procrastinate” was the general consensus of people I spoke to, and don’t we all need those from time to time to retain our precarious sanities.

Corporate Governance Beyond Borders

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MICHAEL CAPITANO
<Contributor>
On October 3, 2012, the Osgoode Society for Corporate Governance (OSCG) held its inaugural event, “Corporate Governance Beyond Borders”, a panel discussion on corporate governance in emerging markets with two internationally-renowned experts on corporate governance:

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