EDITORIAL
Tuesday, October 21, 2014 Volume No. 34 Issue No. 8
Fall 2014 General Assembly endorsements pg. 5
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HOCKEY P. 19
Beating the midterm blues McGill Mental Health Services implements initiatives to ease exam stress DEVONA LEAN Contributor
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(Lauren Benson-Armer / McGill Tribune)
Split sours homecoming weekend for Redmen hockey T
NICK JASINSKI Contributor
he McGill Redmen (2-2-0) faced two Ontario teams on consecutive nights this past weekend and split the games, handily defeating the Nipissing Lakers in a dominant 8-1 performance Friday night and falling to the Laurentian Voyageurs 5-2 Saturday night.
The hosts out-shot, out-played and outskated the Lakers, but couldn’t find the same spark against the Voyageurs. First-year Assistant David Coach Urquhart remained positive about the team’s overall performance over the weekend. “It’s just a matter of consistency, not ability,” Urquhart said. “It’s about bringing that performance we showed
on Friday to every game.” The Redmen came out shooting against the Lakers, converting three out of six power play opportunities, with seven different players finding the net. Defensively, McGill came out strong as well, killing five out of six power plays—even managing to score a shorthanded goal during one of them. Redmen winger David Rose opened
the scoring less than three minutes into the first period. Star centre Cedric McNicoll added a goal and two assists for a total of three points. Overall, the Redmen out-shot the Lakers 16-4 in the period.
Continued on pg. 19
alling leaves and changing colours illustrate the transition into autumn. They also mark the beginning of midterm season. Stress levels in McGill students tend to skyrocket during this time. In order to combat this, McGill Mental Health Services (MMHS) has implemented a number of initiatives to aid students in coping with stress. Located on the fifth floor of the Brown Student Services Building, the comfy chairs and large windows of the clinic create a feeling of openness and acceptance. This is the ideology that MMHS maintains. This is significantly beneficial for students, especially during this busy, stressful time of the year. Emily Yung, the Mental Health Education Coordinator, highlighted the hike in student traffic at the clinic during exam periods. “We’ve seen a sharp increase in walk-ins, in particular during midterms and finals,” Yung said. “This got as high as 100 emergency student walk-ins in one week during finals in 2013.”
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Faculty of Management to move Players’ Theatre: Oh, What A Lovely War into McGill Bookstore T
CECE ZHANG News Editor
he McGill Bookstore will be repurposed to house the expansion of the Desautels Faculty of Management in Winter 2016, in a move to address the faculty’s space deficit, confirmed Vice President Michael Di Grappa at this weekend’s homecoming. The future location of the bookstore has yet to be decided. “There is going to be a series of studies we will have to undertake to look at the book-
store’s needs in the short term [...] the service that we provide to students and members of the community and finding better ways to meet the different needs of those people,” Di Grappa said. Apart from a physical location, the university will also aim towards a larger online presence for its campus bookstore, looking at other university bookstores in North America for reference. “There [are] different ways of offering merchandise, different ways of having an online business, trying to deliver text-
books to students,” Di Grappa said. “There are different things that have been done in other institutions, so we’ll be looking at that in the next little while [....] We’ll [also] be looking at our other ancillary services that we provide, like printing [and] parking [….] So the idea [is] of creating a hub where people from the community could go to one location to address all those needs, whether it’s a physical location, or […] an online presence.”
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ANNA ST. CLAIR Contributor
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t’s commonly said that “comedy is tragedy plus time,” and few shows can capture that saying in as much of a literal sense as Oh, What a Lovely War! does. Originally created in 1963—well after the dust had settled on the horrors of both world wars—the production was intended to be an ironic critique of war itself and what it stands for, using the First World War as a backdrop. One hundred years later, Players’
Theatre brings the musical to its stage, and under the direction of Connor Spencer, deftly captures the comedic aspects without letting the seriousness get lost in the laughs. The show is not a typical musical—one with plots and characters, romances and twists— instead, it’s styled after a Pierrot Show, far more of a circus or variety show than a musical. These Pierrot Shows were popular in the seaside towns of pre-war England.
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