the journal Vol. 144, Issue 20
Queen’s University
F r i day , F e b r ua ry 3 , 2 0 1 7
since
1873
JBP elected page 3
PHOTO BY JULIA BALAKRISHNAN
Brian MacKay (left), Jenn Li (middle) and Palmer Lockridge (right) celebrate their AMS election victory on Tuesday night with cigars.
Gaels fall to Paladins at 31st Carr-Harris Cup
Principal Woolf speaks out on US travel ban, welcoming affected academics to Queen’s
‘World’s oldest hockey rivalry’ ends on a sour note for the Gaels Sarah O’Flahery Assistant Sports Editor
When rivalry games are played, it brings out the best in both teams. Often, deep historical ties and bad blood boils over, with anything possible over the course of 60 minutes. Leading up to the game, Queen’s was a for sure favourite. Currently, Queen’s is ranked seventh in Canada, while RMC has only managed five wins on the year. But when the final whistle had blown, RMC pulled off the improbable, beating the heavily favoured Gaels 3-2. The 31st annual Carr-Harris Challenge Cup took place at the K-Rock centre Thursday night, celebrating the 131-year-long rivalry between the Queen’s Gaels and the RMC Paladins men’s hockey teams. The arena was packed with over 3,000 fans — half the stands were a sea of vibrant tricolour, and the other half a little harder to see in camouflage. Local kids screamed in
Features
PHOTO BY AMANADA NORRIS
delight as the puck dropped and the opposing bands traded riffs from popular songs. The first period began with fierce competition between the two teams. The gameplay was fast paced and both teams had smooth passing, quick turnovers and big hits. Particularly big hits at centre ice had fans roaring, as tensions were high without a goal halfway into the first. The Paladins would strike first blood with a goal from Seamus McGuire at 13:17. The remainder of the period saw the Gaels have multiple comeback attempts, but shots were consistently too wide. While the Gaels See Too on page 10
Woolf plans to welcome students on short-term basis to provide a ‘safe haven’ at Queen’s Blake Canning Assistant News Editor
After Principal Daniel Woolf released a statement to the student body on Monday, regarding the University’s reaction to American President Donald Trump’s executive order to ban travel from seven Muslim-majority countries, Woolf talked about possible next steps with The Journal. Starting off, Woolf reiterated his stance on the events transpiring both in the United States and in Sainte-Foy, Quebec last week, where six people
were murdered at a local mosque. “Canada is not immune from racial and ethnic discrimination,” he said. “We have remarkably little impact on what another country chooses to do. What we can do is stand up for what we think is morally correct and speak out where we see human rights or discrimination taking place, and that is what a number of us have felt over the last few days.” When discussing the details of how
INSIDE THIS ISSUE Editorials
Opinions
Arts
JOURNAL FILE PHOTO
See Universities on page 4
Lifestyle
How does Queen’s pro-life club fit on campus?
Woolf’s strong statement needs backing action
Explore differences on exchange before judging
Rachel Manson: Queen’s drama’s chameleon
Oscar column: La La Land falls flat where Fences flies
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