The Concordian - January 12th, 2016

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ALSO IN THIS ISSUE Queen of crime: Christie in MTL p. 7 OPINIONS Women’s hockey is on the rise p. 12 Good tunes coming in 2016 p. 10 Strippers. Male strippers. p. 16 New year, new you? p. 6 LIFE ARTS MUSIC SPORTS Concordia University’s weekly, independent student newspaper theconcordian.com VOLUME 33, ISSUE 15 | TUESDAY, JAN. 12, 2016 /theconcordian @theconcordian theconcordian the concordian Feature p. 9 An open hand and an open heart: Formerly homeless man finds his way

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Transcript of The Concordian - January 12th, 2016

Page 1: The Concordian - January 12th, 2016

A L S O I N T H I S I S S U E

Queen of crime:Christie in MTL p. 7

OPINIONSWomen’s hockeyis on the rise p. 12

Good tunescoming in 2016 p. 10

Strippers. Malestrippers. p. 16

New year, new you? p. 6

LIFE ARTS MUSIC SPORTS

Concordia University’s weekly, independent student newspaper theconcordian.comVOLUME 33, ISSUE 15 | TUESDAY, JAN. 12, 2016 /theconcordian @theconcordian theconcordian

theconcordian Feature p. 9

An open hand and an open heart:

Formerly homeless man finds his way

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CITY

A man in his 70s has died while waiting to see a doctor at St. Mary’s Hospital, accord-ing to the Montreal Gazette. The man was denied vascu-lar surgery after having com-plained about abdominal pain. When the man lost conscious-ness, a surgeon was called and discovered he had a ruptured aortic aneurysm and was sent to the MUHC in an ambulance instead, but died on his way there. This comes after the St. Mary’s Hospital administration decided to put a stop to emer-gency vascular surgery due to budget cuts, according to the Montreal Gazette. The hospital has since received a flurry of criticism from the community.

A local legal aid clinic has sent Uber a formal request asking they reimburse Mon-treal clients for the abnor-mally high fees they were charged on New Year’s Eve. This comes after a woman was allegedly charged over $80 for a trip that usually costs her around $10 with an official Montreal taxi, ac-cording to the CBC. On the night of Dec. 31 2015, Uber rates surged to around 2.2 times their regular fare in Montreal due to high de-mand according to the CBC.

Man dies after being denied surgery

Sunday night’s high winds led to a series of damages to buildings and infrastructures across the city, according to Global News. Part of a wall collapsed on the 18th floor of an apartment building locat-ed in Shaughnessy Village. A similar situation occurred near the corner of Ontario Street and Papineau Avenue when the second-storey wall of a building also fell. Along with the physical damages to buildings, tens of thousands of homes were left without power across Quebec.

High winds cause severe damages in Montreal

NEWS EDITORGREGORY [email protected]

@theconcordianNEWS

Legal clinic requests Uber refunds from NYE

JESSICA ROMERACopy editor

We take home photo of the year and feature story of the year awardsThe Concordian wins national awardsC A M P U S

The Concordian took home two awards at the 12th annual John H. McDonald Awards this Sat-urday evening, including one third consecutive photo of the year award.

Former photo editor And-rej Ivanov and copy editor and former editor-in-chief Nathalie Laflamme received their awards at the JHM Gala in Toronto during the 78th annual Canadian Univer-sity Press Nash conference. The awards celebrate the best jour-nalism from student publications across Canada.

Ivanov’s photo, “student pro-test turns violent,” won the pho-to of the year award. The im-age was first published online at The Concordian on April 3, 2015. This is Ivanov’s second consec-utive photo of the year award: at the 77th annual JMH Awards, his photo “missing, murdered, mourned” also took the top prize. At the 2013 awards cere-mony, former photography ed-itor Keith Race won the same award for his photo “anti-police brutality march.”

The feature article of the year award was awarded to Laflamme for her story “helping student veterans succeed and survived,” published in issue 26 of The Con-cordian on April 14, 2015. Her arti-cle told the story of the Concordia

GREGORY TODARO News editor @GCTodaro

Shepard: Bacon’s departure is “bittersweet”Concordia provost off to Queen’sC A M P U S

Concordia University’s pro-vost and vice-president of ac-ademic affairs will be leaving for Queen’s University later this semester.

In an announcement re-leased on Friday, Concordia president Alan Shepard revealed that provost Benoit-Antoine Ba-con would be taking up his cur-rent role at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario.

“He’s worked alongside col-leagues to leverage opportu-nities to enhance Concordia’s

reputation as a next-generation university,” said Shepard in his statement. “He’s renewed our academic leadership team and strengthened relationships with our full and part-time facul-ty associations. And he has fos-tered an environment that sup-ports our students, academic leaders and faculty.”

Bacon, a Concordia alumnus, was appointed to the role by the Board of Governors effective July 1, 2013, for a five-year term. The circumstances of his departure have not been announced.

Shepard said that the process of finding a replacement will be-gin shortly, but he did not say how long the process could take.

GREGORY TODARO News editor @GCTodaro

Provost and VP Academic Benoit-Antoine Bacon. Photo by Andrej Ivanov.

Veterans Association which, at the time, was the only veteran asso-ciations existing on Canadian uni-versity campuses.

Fellow Concordia student pa-

per The Link also took home the award for best website (for newspapers with resources over $150,000) and received six other nominations.

TOP: Nathalie Laflamme and Andrej Ivanov taking a selfie.BOTTOM: A view of Toronto from the hotel.

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Canada is stepping up to be a leader in an international effort aimed at ridding the world of the key materials needed for nuclear weapons. The creation of a Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty has been in talks with the United Nations since 1957 according to the Montreal Gazette. The upcoming Nuclear Security Summit and North Korea’s recent claim to have conducted a test of a hydrogen bomb have given the discussions a second wind. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is also expected to attend U.S. President Barack Obama’s Nuclear Security Summit in late March.

Canadian oil prices are down by another 15 per cent this month, causing a wide-spreading slump in the national economy according to Global. Nick Exarhos, an economist at CIBC, told Global that “the hit from crude isn’t limited to the oil patch anymore.” Effects are beginning to spill over into other industries creating dire expectations for national growth this year. The Bank of Canada announced the intent for businesses to hire new employees is at its lowest level since the 2009 recession.

Oil prices hurting other Canadian industries

SARAH ARMIENTOContributor

NATION

A Canadian man who had been captured by the Taliban was released on Monday. Colin Rutherford, a 26-year-old from Toronto, was first reported missing in Afghanistan in 2010, according to CTV. In 2011 the Taliban released a video of Rutherford whom they captured, accusing him of being a spy. While the details of his release have not been made public, it is reported the Qatar government had a hand in the Canadian’s release.

Canadian man released by Taliban after four years

Canada to spearhead anti-nuke effort

Create a new certificate program

Students, faculty and members of the community at large are invited for the first time to cre-ate a new graduate certificate program available to Concordia students. The Concordia project under the name of CHNGR wel-comes anyone to put forward new ideas for a new program through the community-devel-oped initiative.

CHNGR is a project funded by RECODE, a program of the J.W. McConnell Family Foundation which provides the opportuni-ty for students to gain entrepre-neurship skills. RECODE provides students with the knowledge to solve social problems to seek progress in our community and the world. Universities are able to apply for financing from RE-CODE, who picked 18 institu-tions including Concordia since the program’s establishment in 2014. Concordia announced the $500,000 award in November 2014.

The contest asks groups to submit an idea for a 15-cred-it graduate certificate that will prepare students to be social-ly-aware entrepreneurs and social innovators. This program could fuse with new and cur-rent courses to provide students with co-operative education. Mauricio Buschinelli, a Concor-dia ambassador for CHNGR, said there’s a possibility Concordia’s Institute for Co-operative Edu-cation could be involved in find-

C A M P U S

Curriculum Challenge allows public to design new socially innovative program

looks like in a curricular grid and in an experiential compo-nent [then] how we can merge them.”

“The nature of what we are trying to accomplish is to create something new that is based on what the community wants and what potential graduates would want,” Buschinelli said. “So it’s being built out of experience of the people who are in the field of social innovation and social entrepreneurship and the peo-ple who will be potentially taking this course.”

“I think that this is a unique opportunity to design a cer-tificate program and because Concordia is on board it feels as though this is actually going to happen,” said CHNG project co-ordinator Nicolas Nadeau. “It’s called a compete to collabo-rate challenge and people sub-mit their ideas, but the idea is that community will be brought back together with the first pick of ideas and then it will be re-discussed. It’s a collabora-tive process.”

Ideas for the curriculum challenge should be submitted by Jan. 15, but organizers say it’s not a hard deadline. From the proposed ideas, the final product will be admitted in Fall of 2016 with the plan of offering this certificate program to students in Fall of 2017.

To find out more information and to submit your idea to the curriculum challenge, visit online at www.chngr.ca/en/curriculum-challenge/.

SAVANNA CRAIGSta� writer

“Concordia has a lot of potential when it comes to the long-term social economy support through academics.

— Ben Prunty,CHNGR ambassador

ing work for students in a new program.

Those wanting to get in-volved the curriculum challenge must submit their ideas in a two to three page statement in which they address the purpose of their certificate program, the content offered in the curriculum and how the education will be con-ducted.

“I think that it’s a really hot topic nowadays, a lot of univer-sities are moving towards this model of experiential learning and learning the skills that you need to [produce] social impact,” said Buschinelli.

The six winning ideas will be announced by Feb.1. Each idea

will be joined by a mentor to fur-ther develop ideas and will re-ceive a $2,000 grant to aid in the development of each plan.

“Concordia has a lot of po-tential when it comes to the long-term social economy sup-port through academics,” said CHNGR ambassador Ben Prunty. “A graduate certificate is a great move towards achieving that potential.”

Concordia mentors are avail-able to help groups during the development process. The rep-

resentative mentors at Concor-dia University include Margue-rite Mendell of the School for Community and Public Affairs and Deborah Dysart-Gale of the Centre for Engineering in Soci-ety. In the final stage, the Chal-lenge Committee will address these ideas and choose one to be formed into a certificate program available to students at Concor-dia. This idea will receive $3,000 in additional funding and be avail-able for enrollment in Fall of 2017.

“The competition aspect of this is through the ideas and it’s not the team that will be ap-proved or not to the next stage, it is the idea,” Buschinelli said. “Teams can dissolve and reform

to continue moving the idea for-ward.”

When Buschinelli was asked about the idea his group pre-pared for the challenge, he said, “[my group] first did a lot of brainstorming around what did we want to include in this grad-uate certificate … what were the types of skills and themes we want these graduate students to cover and what are the kind of experiences we would like to offer them. We [then] start-ed narrowing down what [this]

Concordia is letting the community decide the focus of a new diploma program. Photo by Andrej Ivanov.

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LIFE EDITORCRISTINA [email protected]

@theconcordianLIFE

With a recent renaissance of sorts in cocktail culture, making simple drinks has evolved into creating complex con-coctions combining a plethora of fla-vours. Newly emerging cocktail bars are changing the game by adding their unique twist on an age-old tradition.

With this resurgence, many cock-

ANDREJ IVANOVContributor

Mix, shake, sip: an English pub with a twist

tail bars have opened around Montreal. Some are well known while others have yet to be discovered.

With its traditional exterior, it’s easy to miss Pub Bishop & Bagg or dismiss it as just another English pub. But this neigh-bourhood bar, located in the Mile End on the corner of St-Viateur Street Ouest and Clark Street, offers much more than meets the eye.

The pub was created as a continuation of the very popular Burgundy Lion in Little

Burgundy. Bartender Sean-Michael Mc-Caffrey said the pub was opened with the intention of having a smaller scale, more traditional cocktail bar in a completely dif-ferent neighbourhood.

In came its three bartenders: McCaffrey, Drahos Chytry, and Sabrina Mailhot. Com-bining their years of diverse experience and their knowledge in cocktails and service, the three were able to create a diversified, easily accessible seasonal menu of high-end cocktails ranging between $10-$13.

The bar stocks 90 different kinds of gin, 15 types of amaro and 15 types of ver-mouth, making the possibilities for varia-tions and tastes practically endless.

McCaffrey was eager to recommend some cocktails, which both beginner cock-tail drinkers and seasoned veterans can enjoy. Newcomers should stick to the clas-sics, but keep it diverse.

“Try a bitter cocktail and sweet cocktail,” said McCaffrey, listing the bitter Negroni, made with gin, Campari and sweet red ver-mouth and the sweet bramble, a classic English cocktail with blackberry liqueur, gin, lime juice and sugar as examples.

“Then try an old fashioned or a man-hattan. Stick to the classics to gain knowledge about where cocktails come from,” he said.

The little secret specialties of the bar will vary between bartenders. Each bartend-

B A R S

er has their specialty drinks, said McCaf-frey. Chytry’s specialty was also his claim to fame: a pisco sour. The cocktail is tradition-ally South American and mixes pisco, egg white, lemon juice and sugar.

When asked what his favorite drink to make is, McCaffrey answered without the slightest hesitation: “Daiquiris. They are simple and there is a variety to them.”

From its humble beginning as a tra-ditional English pub, Bishop & Bagg has since grown and incorporated themed nights into their repertoire.

McCaffrey said the most popular event is their Sunday night pub quiz, allowing people to compete in teams of six through two rounds of a variety of pop culture and general knowledge questions. The prize is $50 off the winning team’s bar tab.

For a less traditional experience, the bar holds a cocktail competition every Tuesday. The idea is simple: bartenders from different bars need to create a twist on a drink that is announced the same day. The crowd judges—whoever gets more orders wins. McCaffrey said that there is a three-month waiting list of weekly bar-tenders who want to participate.

Pub Bishop & Bagg is located at 52 St-Viateur St. and is open from 10 a.m. to 3 a.m. on weekends and 11:30  a.m. to 3 a.m. on weekdays.

As a generation of students that are known for constantly looking at some sort of screen, be it a cellphone or laptop, it’s only natural that we’re curious about what’s to come in the technological world. Whether it’s a new iPhone or an inno-vative gadget that facilitates our lives in some way, we’re all up on it. So what new gadgets will be coming our way this year?

The annual event of the Consum-er Electronics Show (CES) was held last week in Las Vegas and many visited from all around the world to experience and appreciate new technological releases. According to Wired, the most impressive products presented at CES included Bang & Olufsen’s BeoLab 90 speakers, Tech-nics SL-1200 turntable, Kodak’s Super 8 camera, LG Signature OLED G6, Samsung Notebook 9, and smart glasses by Carl Zeiss. One particular technological ad-vancement continuing to take the world by storm is wireless technology.

MINA MAZUMDERSta� writer

Cutting the cord: going wireless in 2016IHS, global market, industry and tech-

nical expertise provider, reported that wireless power would rake in $1.7 billion in revenue in 2015, and it’s said to grow to $17.9 billion in 2024.

“Wireless power is about more than just getting rid of wires. It’s about help-ing all kinds of associated technologies transition from impractical to realistic. It’s about not having to put your devices in a specific place for a specific amount of time, or having to worry about whether your devices are charged,” Evan Acker-man, a senior robotics writer wrote in his article Why Wireless Power Is the Most Exciting Thing at CES 2016. He said that simple household gadgets will eventual-ly become wireless in the future, includ-ing lights, surround sound speakers, and security cameras. “Wireless power would let you put these kinds of things wherever you wanted, and move them around free-ly,” wrote Ackerman.

Cellphones are constantly being im-proved, too. ”Cellphones, even though [the technology] is not something new, are al-ways expanding and always developing and possibly going to be replacing laptops, but computers will still be used for long-term assignments and programs,” said Dr. Nancy Acemian, a senior lecturer in com-

puter science and software engineering at Concordia.

“Cellphones are getting smarter and people are relying on those things a lot more. We are paying our parking meters through our cellphones, as well as doing our banking through our cellphones. I still think that cellphones are going to evolve

T E C H

into more being more than just a phone and more of a computer,” said Acemian.

According to The Wall Street Journal, other products that are growing in popu-larity are T.V.s and other household elec-tronics that are voice-operated—with only a simple word or two, your product is at your command.

Discover the creativity and art of cocktail making in the cozy atmosphere of Pub Bishop & Bagg

The pub has over 90 di�erent kinds of gin, 15 types of amaro and 15 types of vermouth. Photo by Andrej Ivanov.

Wireless power is expected to continuously grow during the year

think that cellphones are going to evolve at your command.

Graphic by Charlotte Bracho.

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The Pointe-à-Callière Museum is hosting Investigating Agatha Christie until April 17Discover the details of a beloved writer’s lifeE X H I B I T

ARTSARTS EDITORSELIJAH BUKREEV and LYDIA [email protected]

@theconcordian

PAULINE NESBITTSta� writer

Agatha Christie’s first visit to Montreal happened in 1922 as part of a world tour she did with her first husband,

Archibald Christie, and now she is back in town. Get to know her at the Pointe-à-Callière Museum where visitors can dis-cover the many unknown aspects of her life that informed her literary process.

The Investigating Agatha Christie exhibit opened in Montreal in early December and marks the 125th anniversary of her birth. Christie is the British author and creator of sleuth characters such as Hercule Poirot and Jane Marple. Many of her 66 mysteries, six novels, 150 short stories, 18 plays and two memoirs inspired films and television series. Christie has a way of mixing banal, everyday life events with mystery and in-trigue by way of relatable characters who happen to be skilled detectives.

Although Christie died in 1976, the exhibit is designed for visitors to expe-rience the tour in her company, almost as if she was holding the visitor by the hand. To create this experience, curator Élisabeth Monast Moreau had to listen to over 15 hours of recordings Chris-tie made during her later years while

working on her autobiography. Moreau described this process as similar to spending that time with Christie, which is made precious by the fact that Chris-tie was known to be quite reserved and rarely gave interviews. Moreau de-scribed her as a very down to earth, yet practical, a woman who felt that she had to contribute something to the world. Even Christie’s own voice can be heard throughout the exhibit using stra-tegically placed headphones.

In a May 2012 interview with The Guardian, Christie’s grandson, Matthew Prichard, described her as a “fiercely pri-vate” recluse—very little about her private life had been available to the public until now. The Investigating Agatha Christie ex-hibit reveals Christie’s love for travel and her willingness to embrace the different cultures she encountered, but most impor-tantly it reveals her deep passion for ar-cheology and the key role she played in the discovery and preservation of ancient arti-facts found in Mesopotamia, even though she was not an archeologist.

The exhibit is meant to encourage Christie readers’ further appreciation of her work by revealing literary inspira-tions and to encourage those who haven’t picked up her work to do so, said Moreau. “For years, the museum wanted to pres-

ent an exhibition that mixed Christie’s work with archeology, because … this part of her life experience is not known as [well as] her novels,” said Moreau.

In fact, Christie spent close to 30 years on her husband’s archeological digs in Iraq and Syria, where she worked as an active member of his team.

Moreau shared that the 320 items on display are the result of a collaborative ef-fort between the British Museum, the Met-ropolitan Museum of Art, the Royal Ontario Museum, John Mallowan, Christie’s neph-ew, and Prichard. Objects displayed in-clude first editions of Christie’s books, let-ters and postcards she sent from Canada

and a model of the Orient Express she took to Mesopotamia, and later made famous through her work.

The second floor of the exhibit offers a focus on Christie’s activities while on archeological digs and contains many priceless artifacts on loan from the col-laborating museums. Of note are the head of a deity that was excavated by Mallowan in 1938, Christie’s camer-as and her 1937 Remington typewrit-er, items of clothing that belonged to Christie and Mallowan, a relief of Ne-fertiti and Akhnaton and a headdress and necklace made of gold and lapis lazuli. There are also photographs, tak-en by Christie, of ancient sites and trea-sures that modern audiences can no longer enjoy as they have recently been destroyed by Daesh.

Exhibit goers can listen to Christie’s voice describe everything from prepara-tions for her ventures into dig sites to her explaining the process of developing pho-tographs in the sweltering heat. Although it appears that Christie was kept busy while at the dig sites, she was most prolific as a writer during these years, according to Moreau. But Christie was known to have fun too; through the headphones, she de-scribes a workman’s foot race she orga-nized to mark the end of the dig season at Tell Arpachiyah, in Syria, in 1933.

Moreau said that working with Prichard on this exhibition was “like a dream, be-cause … [he wants people] to get to know his grandmother and her work.” She added that he attended the exhibit’s opening and said that he was left speechless.

Before visiting the exhibit myself, I re-read a few of her short stories to get a re-minder of her literary style, rather than drawing from the movie and T.V. adap-tations of her work that so readily come to mind. Visiting the Investigating Agatha Christie exhibit truly enhanced my appre-ciation for her work.

The exhibit continues at the Pointe-à-Callière Museum in the Montreal Museum of Archeology and History Complex until April 17. Student tickets are $13. Every day at 1:30 p.m., the museum o�ers guided tours in English free of charge.

Take a day o� and immerse yourself in the inspirations, passions and reality of Agatha Christie’s life.

Christie was involved in archeological digs and some claim she was the most prolific as a writer during those years of her life.

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F I L M

Resolve to take more trips to the movie theatre in the new year—you don’t want to miss any of theseA first look at the must-see movies of 2016

ALEXANDRA COLATOSTIContributor

While 2016 is shaping up to be a year of exceptional sequels, with follow-ups to 2012’s Al-

ice in Wonderland, Snow White and the Huntsman and just about every superhe-ro movie that has come out in the last five years, there are also tons of non-sequen-tial films coming out this year that shouldn’t be overlooked. Here is a list of some of the most anticipated films coming out in 2016.

JanuaryAfter a two-year hiatus, Natalie Port-

man returns to the screen in the Western drama Jane Got a Gun, in which she plays a woman who asks her ex-lover (Joel Ed-gerton) to help save her outlaw husband from a gang out to kill him. You can see Jane Got a Gun in theatres on Jan. 26.

Anesthesia is an ensemble drama that details the aftermath of a violent attack against a Columbia University profes-sor. Starring Glenn Close, Sam Waterson, Tim Blake Nelson and Kristen Stewart in a small but pivotal role, Anesthesia will be out in theatres and on demand Jan. 8.

FebruaryThe Coen brothers are already gain-

ing buzz with their latest, Hail, Caesar! The star-studded comedy, which includes George Clooney, Tilda Swinton, Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum, to name a few, sees the filmmaking duo’s satirical take on the golden age of Hollywood. Out in theatres Feb. 5, this one is a must-see.

MarchFans of art-house director Terrence

Malick have been waiting for his latest film, Knight of Cups, to come out since it

wrapped production back in 2012. This year, we’ll finally see Christian Bale and a bevy of other well-known actors star in the experimental, nonlinear drama, out March 4.

Jeff Nichols, the filmmaker behind art-house phenomenons Mud and Take Shel-ter, is reteaming with Michael Shannon for Midnight Special, a story of a father forced to go on the road after he discov-ers that his son possesses supernatural powers. With a solid supporting cast that includes Kirsten Dunst, Adam Driver and the young Jaeden Lieberher (St. Vincent), Midnight Special looks like a suspenseful ride. See it in select theatres on March 18.

AprilAfter the well-deserved success of

Boyhood, Richard Linklater has turned to sports for his next project, Everybody Wants Some. Described as a spiritual se-quel to his 1993 cult film, Dazed and Con-fused, Everybody Wants Some is set in the 1980s and follows the lives of college freshmen who are also baseball players. Fans of the director’s former projects can expect the same humour and authenticity in this one, out April 15.

MayMoney Monster could end up being a

prominent player in the top films of 2016, an assumption based on its cast (Julia Roberts, George Clooney, Jack O’Connell), its director (Jodie Foster) and its plot. The film follows a man named Kyle (O’Con-nell) who loses all of his family’s money on a bad tip, so he holds T.V. personali-ty and Wall Street money guru Lee Gates (Clooney) hostage on air, threatening to kill Lee if he doesn’t get the stock up be-fore time’s up. This thriller, out May 13 is all but certain to keep audiences on the edge of their seats.

JulyDamien Chazelle’s Whiplash received

tons of critical acclaim during awards season last year, and now he’s cast Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone, who share the screen for the third time, in his upcoming project, La La Land. The musical drama sees Gosling as a jazz pianist who falls for an aspiring actress (Stone) in Los Angeles. It hits theatres everywhere on July 15.

If dramas and musicals aren’t your thing, you’ll want to check out the all-fe-male Ghostbusters reboot, also out on July 15. Starring Melissa McCarthy and Satur-day Night Live favourites Kristen Wiig and Kate McKinnon, as well as cameos from the original Ghostbusters Bill Murray and Dan Aykroyd, this comedy is setting up to be more than just a remake.

AugustJonah Hill teams up with Miles Teller

in the upcoming buddy dramedy, Arms and the Dudes, which is out on Aug. 19. The film follows the true story of David Pacouz and Efraim Diveroli, who won a $300-million contract from the Pentagon to arm America’s allies in Afghanistan.

OctoberPaula Hawkins’ debut novel Girl on

the Train did exceedingly well last year,

and its film adaptation is set to get a warm welcome when it comes out on Oct. 7. Emily Blunt stars as a distressed alcohol-ic who gets entangled in a couple’s mur-der mystery after witnessing something shocking while riding the train.

NovemberHarry Potter fans will be excit-

ed about this one. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them acts as J.K. Rowl-ing’s screenwriting debut and takes place in the same magical universe, only 70 years earlier. Oscar-winner Eddie Redmayne stars as Newt Scamander, fu-ture author of the Beasts textbook which later ends up at Hogwarts. The first in a planned trilogy, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them will be out in the-atres on Nov. 17.

December Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt are

next to take on space drama in the up-coming film Passengers, out on Dec. 21. The pair will play sleeping passengerstransported on a traveling spacecraft to a distant colonized planet in another galaxy. Due to a mid-flight malfunction, one pas-senger (Pratt) is awakened too soon and decides to wake up another one (Law-rence) to avoid spending the next 100 years on his own.

George Clooney stars in Hail, Caesar! as a Kirk Douglas-like 50s superstar who gets kidnapped by a mysterious group that calls itself The Future.

In Midnight Special, Jaeden Lieberher shares the screen with Adam Driver.

Photo by Matt D’Amours.

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Home is where the heart isB A N N E R

When you walk into your one-room apart-ment and take a seat in front of your small television, can you say that, at 51 years old, this is all you need—a single bed with warm sheets, a kitchen with a stove and a few dishes, a tiny closet space for storage?

Is this your slightly chubby cat lying here peacefully on the blanket? By the way, I couldn’t help but notice that you’re miss-ing some fingers when you pulled your right hand out of your pocket to stroke her head.

To be honest this cat was with me the whole 14 years I was living on the street. Right up to the night this happened to my hand last year. Fell asleep under a bridge in minus 40 degree weather. When you’re drunk you don’t feel how dangerously cold it is. At some point in the night, the right hand slipped out of its glove, and got badly frostbitten.

You told me that at the hospital they tried to restore circulation to the fingers, but it was too late—they had to amputate. I would expect someone who had most of his fingers on one hand removed would feel a sense of loss, but you tell me you gained from the experience. Remember when you said, “losing my fingers was a wake-up call ... It made me put the past behind me, and look ahead to the future?”

You see, Matt, the trouble started in 2000, when family issues forced me to move

out of my home. This happens to lots of peo-ple in the street. We try living with different family members, but often we find them not to be much of a long-term fit. Eventually, I stocked my backpack with supplies and spent my first night living on the street. And when you end up on the street, your heart weakens. There’s no love there—you’re com-pletely demolished and no longer part of so-ciety.

The shock of ending up on the street must take its toll, struggling to find stability.

I tried setting up a tent at Place Émi-lie-Gamelin, but was eventually forced to take it down by police. Viger Park is even less welcoming; city officials routinely call on firefighters to hose you down.

I fell into a depression around that time. I didn’t have anyone and I didn’t know where to go. I drank more, and eventually, I got hooked on crack to cope.

After several years, I learned how to sur-vive on the street. I reached out to Le sac à dos, an organization set up to assist Mon-treal’s homeless. There, you can set up a

mailbox where you can have social benefit cheques sent. There are plenty of shelters where you can get a warm meal, too: La maison du père, Old Brewery Mission and Acceuil Bonneau, among others.

You say you can eat six times a day if you know where to go?

Yeah, but unfortunately, a lot of people don’t know about these places—and even worse, some people know, but are too shy to reach out for help. I know this first-hand.

At first, I resorted to eating out of gar-bage cans because I was too ashamed to go to a shelter. After a while on the street, I be-came closed off, and the shame is accompa-nied by fear and paranoia.

‘Cause when you sleep on the street, you’re always checking your things. You’re worried about being beaten or stabbed by someone trying to rob you. I only ever had a toonie on me—I buried all of my money in the park to be safe.

Living like this takes its toll. Over the 14 years I spent on the street, I attempted sui-cide three times.

Formerly homeless, Frank Sthilaire recounts his 14-year journey on the streets of Montreal

The stories in this series are products of the Inclu-sive Journalism Project, a research initiative that seeks to develop a new way of reporting about poverty and homeless-ness. Whereas conven-tional articles speak about the poor and the homeless and address readers outside those communities, the stories produced by this project are written as dialogues, or conversations, with their subjects, and are in-tended to speak to their communities.

MATT D’AMOURSwith FRANK STHILAIRE

But you’ve persevered, and you told me that one day you met someone who changed your life. A social worker from Acceuil Bon-neau named Tommy, who told you that with some effort, paperwork and perseverance, you could pull yourself out of the street and into a government-subsidized apartment. This place.

Tommy gave me the papers and showed me all the places I needed to bring them. He was willing to help me, but I had to be will-ing and ready to help myself.

It took several years, but eventually, I found out that there was this one-room apartment available here near Berri Square. Not long after, I spent the night sleeping un-der a bridge in the dead of winter, and my hand slipped out of its glove.

I would have hesitated to make the change if my hand was still normal. But the doctors who amputated my fingers asked if I had a place to stay to keep warm—the whole situation woke me up. Now, after a year, I am settled into this new life, spending free time volunteering with organizations like SOS Itinérant, and handing out sandwich-es to people living on the streets that I have come to know so well.

If you live the life I once lived, you should know that there’s a way out. I did it, and I be-lieve with all my heart that you can too.

If I go out into the street and reach out to people, maybe they’ ll think, ‘I know that he went through the same thing—I can make it out too.’ They just need a helping hand, and it’s my pleasure.

“When you’re drunk you don’t feel how dangerously cold it is. At some point in the night, the right hand slipped out of its glove, and got badly frostbitten.”

Photo by Matt D’Amours.

Page 10: The Concordian - January 12th, 2016
Page 11: The Concordian - January 12th, 2016

11theconcordianTUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 2016

A beginner’s guide to stoner rock & metalYou don’t need a medicinal prescription to enjoy these thick, crushing tunes

Whether a casual smoker, a daily toker or a straight-edge lifer, almost everyone can agree on one thing; stoner culture is pretty damn toxic. From the excessive commoditization of Bob Marley flags and wear to the almost childlike opposition of the status quo and its rules, it’s all fairly insufferable.

Well, almost. Though the subject mat-ter may not appeal to all, stoner rock and

stoner metal were undeniably instrumen-tal to the development of many popular genres, namely heavy metal and rock as we know them today. With genre pio-neers Sleep stopping by Montreal’s Telus Theatre on Jan. 24, there’s no better time to look back at its origins.

While the genre’s foundations are in early traditional doom metal, stoner met-al’s roots stem from a very specific sce-nario: a few years before the seminal Master of Reality, Black Sabbath guitar-ist Tony Iommi had the tips of two fingers severed in a factory incident. Not ready to give up his other gig as a musician, Iom-mi downtuned his guitar from E standard to C# in order to relieve string tension and put less strain on his injuries.

To say the results were astound-ing may sound crass, yet songs such as “Children of the Grave” became essen-tial in establishing the downtuned, bass-heavy tones associated with stoner rock and metal. Starting in the late ‘80s, tons of bands, many hailing from the Californian heat, emerged pushing forth a chunkier, slower and more intensely psychedelic riff on Sabbath’s winning formula.

Of these bands was none other than Sleep; though originally a quartet, Sleep quickly reformatted to the winning three-piece behemoth that thrived on their three studio albums. While Sleep’s Holy Moun-tain—the band’s second full-length al-bum—pushed the Sabbath formula into heavier, foggier territory, their follow-up was a Herculean accomplishment and a landmark album in its own right. Entitled Dopesmoker, the album consists of a sol-itary 63 minute-long recording, glacial in pace and elephantine in scale, all en-gulfed in thick billowing smoke. Made up of only a handful of riffs yet played at a snail’s pace and laden in atmosphere and marijuana-laced imagery, Sleep take the formula to its illogical extreme, delivering something of a masterstroke. This is ston-er metal in its most literal and extreme form.

Of course, not all stoner metal is as unwieldy and ambitious as Dopesmok-er. Take England’s Electric Wizard for in-stance: marrying the stoned, crushing riffs of Sleep with ferocious guitars down-tuned to an absolutely guttural A# stan-dard (among other tunings) and themes of religion, fantasy and the leaf, Jus Oborn’s brainchild is as mammoth-sized as it is

straightforward. Come My Fanatics open-er “Return Trip” is a stunning example of efficiency over acrobatic fretboard excess, its buzzing guitars sounding like an atom bomb, while Dopethrone staple “Funer-alopolis” is an instantly iconic, doom-in-fused spin on the classic Sabbath formula. Reliable and consistent, you just can’t go wrong with Electric Wizard.

Not all stoner metal is as deeply in-debted to Black Sabbath as these two however. Take genre-benders Boris for example; based in Japan, this powerhouse trio has a veritable laundry-list of releas-es spanning virtually every genre you can think of (yes, even J-Pop). Though the quality and consistency of their output is somewhat debatable, a surefire entry point to it is their 2005 release Pink. Com-bining the noisy sonic theatrics of Bore-doms with the aggressiveness of hard-core punk and the crunch of sludge metal, Pink is Boris distilled down to its pur-est form. Whether hammering out some head-bobbing stoner rock on “Woman on the Screen” or embracing wall upon wall of buzzing, ear-shattering feedback on the exhaustive finale “Just Abandoned Myself,” Boris are as fun and innocent as they are artful and boundary-pushing.

Though stoner metal often isn’t com-plete without a handful of oblique refer-ences to the plant that spawned it, one shouldn’t mistake it for the culture it’s un-fortunately attached to. As with almost all forms of music, lyrics are but a facet of the entire package. Don’t let the fumes dissuade you; inside lies an onslaught of tasty riffs, colossal percussion and some endearingly corny lyrics.

R E C O M M E N D A T I O N S

SAMUEL PROVOST-WALKERMusic editor

Bands we want in 2016C O N C E R T S

Montreal becomes a desert in January and February because the tired tires on a band’s tour van can’t trudge through the mounds of snow. They’re right to stay away—Montreal is less inviting when the cold is biting. Here are bands we can only dream of coming to our city-size freezer and whose songs will keep you warm—but not literally.

HeatersCrank up Heaters to warm your winter. This Michigan trio lays down a thick lay-er of grainy psychedelia that’ll coat you with warmth like a cozy coat. Contrast-ing clean 1960s rock and roll riffs with crunchy vocals you won’t understand a word of, Heaters aren’t afraid to turn beach music into something grittier. Their 7-inch Mean Green, released in April 2015, is available for sale on Bandcamp for US$7.50 if you’re willing to lower your hydro bill and live off the heat you’ll make from dancing. “No Fuss” off the al-

bum is a jangly mid-tempo song that’s as dreamy as it is grimy.

Tijuana PanthersIt’s been said that if you put cocaine on your rider in Tijuana, the venue delivers. Tijuana Panthers’ music is euphoric in a similar way. This Long Beach, CA, trio channels the energy from barreling Long Beach waves and serves up a garage rock sound sick with nostalgia. Their lat-est album, POSTER, sounds like Brit pop set out to lay in the California sun only to shrivel in the sand and soak in a pool. POSTER travels back to bygone eras of danceable garage pop. Book a ticket to the warmer coast with a listen to “Board-walk,” and strap in for some California romanticism.

Elvis DepressedlyEven though Elvis Depressedly hit up Montreal in October of last year opening for The Front Brothers, this king of sulky lo-fi pop deserves to be the main at-traction. A song like “New Alhambra,” off the 2015 album of the same name, is the perfect soundtrack to a day spent inside avoiding a storm. Working with wobbly melodic guitar and often employing bro-ken equipment, frontman Mat Cothran sings languidly about being depressed

and feeling a lot of things, or feeling nothing at all. Let Elvis Depressedly’s simple yet poignant lyrics lull you into your warm winter coma.

WeenIn a statement announcing their Colora-do reunion shows, this infamously weird duo said that the shows are “going to be fucking mind-blowing.” A mix of strange pitch modulation and effects, some of

MIA PEARSONSta writer

With winter in full e�ect, these hot bands may be our only saviours

the oddest most unnecessarily descrip-tive lyrics, and rock and roll melodies that resemble the end result of Pink Floyd stuffed into a meat grinder, seeing Ween perform is like spotting the rar-est bird in the Amazon. The oddities and combined musical prowess that sprout-ed their cultish fan base will keep your ears busy for days while you try to deci-pher exactly what the hell is happening on their albums.

With their high-energy garage rock, Tijuana Panthers are sure to keep you warm through the harsh winter.

Graphic by Samuel Provost-Walker.

Page 12: The Concordian - January 12th, 2016

12 theconcordian TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 2016

“When you step on the ice, there’s always that awe mo-ment, whether you want

to admit it or not,” Stingers interim head coach Julie Chu told NHL.com. “Some of us who’ve had a chance to experience it a few more times—and maybe worked on the mental confirmation of that moment—are able to shift out of that a little bit quicker and back to the focus of it.”

Chu was talking about The Montreal Canadiennes of the Canadian Women’s Hockey League (CWHL) facing off against the Boston Pride of the National Women’s Hockey League (NWHL) in a New Year’s Eve showdown at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. The outdoor game was the first ever for women’s hockey. The NHL officially announced that the game between the Pride and Les Canadiennes would take place ahead of the 2016 Winter Classic between the Montreal Canadiens and the Boston Bruins on New Year’s Day.

“This is really just about two teams wanting to expose the women’s game to the fans and to the world,” said CWHL commissioner Brenda Andress, according to Sportsnet.

A Statistics Canada report published in 2013 revealed that in 2010, 23 per cent of men participated in hockey regularly, compared to only about four per cent of women. Participating in the Winter Classic and its festivities was therefore a step in growing the women’s game in Canada and around the world. But how else have Les Canadiennes been trying to get some recognition for the women’s game?

In March of 2015, Les Canadiennes entered a partnership with the Montreal Canadiens, in the hopes of attracting more young girls to play hockey. Les Canadiennes will be participating in Habs events like the Canadiens annual blood drive, and various hockey camps. The Habs will also be helping the women’s team in promotions and with selling their merchandise. Chu said that being associated with the Canadiens is crucial and is definitely a step in the right direction in getting women’s hockey more recognition in this country.

“I think it’s huge in the sense that the Montreal Canadiens have a vast network to be able to use their resources to get out into the community and that’s the piece that we were missing,” Chu said. “We tried our best to get out there but we have limited resources and I think that’s going to be huge when we get a chance to be in the visible eye. More girls are going to be able to see us as their role models and have the opportunities to ask their

families or their parents, ‘Can I play hockey?’ and hopefully get interested in the sport. When it’s present and in visible sight, it makes it easier to grow the sport that we love so much.”

Chu also said that it is important for women’s hockey players to get out into the communities they play in and inspire younger girls to engage in athletics.

One of Chu’s role models growing up was Cammi Granato, who was vital in the growth of women’s hockey in the United States. Granato, like Chu, began playing hockey on all-boys teams. She helped the first ever U.S. national team win a silver medal at the 1990 World Championships. After playing for Providence College, Granato earned a Master’s degree at Concordia while playing for the Stingers. She then captained the U.S. at the 1998 Olympics, beating Canada in the gold medal game, and was named the American flag bearer at the closing ceremonies. In 2010, Granato was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

“I got a chance to look up to [Granato], who was a huge figure in women’s hockey on the U.S. side,” Chu said. “[She’s] so awesome and so humble. When I got a chance to play with her, I recognized what an incredible person she was, besides being an incredible hockey player.”

Chu resembles her biggest role model in many ways. Like Granato, the Fairfield, CT native is a decorated Olympian. Besides her silver medal from Sochi, Chu also won a silver medal at the Olympics in 2002 and 2010 as well as a bronze medal in the 2006 Olympics. She captained the U.S. team to a gold medal in the 2013 World

Growing the game for the next generation

SPORTSSPORTS EDITORALEXANDER [email protected]

@theconcordian

W O M E N ’ S H O C K E Y

Championships and was also the U.S. flag bearer at the closing ceremonies at the 2014 Winter Games.

Still, despite Chu’s impressive resumé, despite Granato’s influence and despite the NHL partnering with Les Canadiennes and the Pride to play an outdoor game in front of thousands of people, there is no perfect solution to growing women’s sports around the world. This is an issue, mainly because of the mentality that hockey is considered a man’s game, Chu said. She added that a change in mentality among fans, players and parents alike is necessary to grow women’s hockey, or any female sport. In Chu’s experience growing up as a female hockey player, she said that in many cases, it was the parents who would be negative towards the idea of having a girl on the team.

“[The parents] were the ones that had the little comments about ‘girls shouldn’t be playing hockey’ or ‘good luck that you have a girl on your team, she’s probably not very good,’” Chu said. “Unfortunately, it is often the parents that shape the mentality of their children. The kids half the time were just like, ‘Let’s play.’”

Chu also believes that many hockey fans don’t follow women’s hockey because they think it isn’t physical enough. But Chu said they are wrong.

“I’ve had people come up to me after some games when we played Canada at the Olympics and they say: ‘Are you sure there’s no checking in your game?’” Chu said. “I think there’s always a perception that non-checking hockey means there is no contact. But there’s plenty of physical contact within our game, it’s just in a more controlled manner, as we go into

the boards, we can’t necessarily do the big full-out body checks. But there is plenty of body contact. We still have to play a physical game.”

In the end, however, Les Canadiennes are doing everything they can to make their games easily accessible to families; they play on the weekend, and their tickets are only $15 per person. They have increased their attendance league-wide from 2,000 in 2008 to 12,000 at the end of last season, according to thehockeynews.com. Though Chu said the CWHL is a long way from the million dollar contracts of the NHL, she is confident the league is headed in the right direction. For example, she said the CWHL’s operating budget has grown from about $200,000 in 2008 to $1.5 million this season. Today, CWHL teams have entered partnerships with NHL clubs in their respective cities. Though the CWHL players don’t get paid yet, the league plans to begin paying their players as of the 2017-18 season.

“There are [always] some risks in paying players, and not being able to sustain it,” Chu said. “But I think [the league] is trying to do their diligence to make sure that as we’re continuing to progress, that we don’t throw [paying players] out for a year and then have to retract it. Obviously, that might always happen, but what the league has been doing is tremendous and the growth that we’ve seen year-to-year has been there and we’re just going to continue to push forward.”

It may be a slow ascent for the CWHL and women’s hockey, but the sport is a growing one nonetheless. With the help of Chu and her Les Canadiennes teammates, it seems young girls can look forward to playing more organized hockey in the future.

Stingers women’s hockey head coach Julie Chu talks winter classic and how to popularize the sport

SAMANTHA MILETOContributor

Julie Chu is currently interim head coach of the Stingers women’s hockey team and has played in the Olympics.Photo by Marie-Pierre Savard.

Page 13: The Concordian - January 12th, 2016

13theconcordianTUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 2016

Stingers lose out against Laval

The Concordia Stingers hosted the La-val Rouge et Or on Jan. 7. These were the first games of the second half of the RSEQ regular season and the first home-and- home of the year. Both Stingers teams lost, with the women losing 66-60 and the men losing 68-60.

The women’s basketball team started the game off well with great three-point shooting. The team got two three-pointers by forward Richelle Gregoire and shooting guard Marie-Ève Martin to give the Sting-ers a 17-8 lead midway through the first quarter. The Stingers lead dwindled late in the quarter as the Rouge et Or went on a 7-0 run, which brought the Stingers lead down to two points.

The second quarter saw the two teams trading baskets between one another. The Stingers took a 28-19 lead halfway through the quarter after another three- pointer by Martin. Later on in the quarter, the Rouge et Or cut the Stingers lead to 30-29 at halftime.

In the third quarter, the Rouge et Or took their first lead of the game with three minutes left in the quarter thanks to guard Claudia Emond. Emond hit back-to-back threes to give the Rouge et Or a 41-38 lead.

The fourth quarter saw the Sting-ers commit quite a few turnovers at key times in the quarter. The Rouge et Or ended up winning the game because of excellent three-point shooting from Geneviève Derome and guard Raphaëlle Côté. The Stingers did tie the game at 54 on a three-pointer by Martin, however Derome came back with a three-pointer of her own which was the turning point in the game.

According to Stingers coach Teni-cha Gittens turnovers and bad shooting from the free throw line were key to the Stingers loss.

“They got six points off second-chance points and another seven off of when we went 7-13 from the free-throw line. We gave up 13 points where we shouldn’t have,” said Gittens.

On the Men’s side, the Stingers led 19-13 after the first quarter because of clutch three-point shooting from forward Jaleel Webb who scored six of his seven points in the first quarter.

The Stingers opened up the second quarter with an 8-0 run led by forward Jean Daniel Mathieu who scored four of his six points on the run to increase their lead. The Rouge et Or made a comeback to make the game interesting as forward Thibaud Dezutter took control of the game scoring 11 of his 18 points during the quar-ter. The Stingers led 33-29 at halftime.

The Rouge et Or started the third quarter with a bang as guard Karl De-mers-Bélanger hit a three-pointer which led to a 7-0 run and the lead. The Stingers shooters went cold for the first four min-utes of the quarter up until forward Ken Beaulieu got a basket. The Stingers re-bounded and made it a one point game, 43-42 after point guard Ricardo Monge got a three-pointer. The Rouge et Or went on a 6-0 run to regain their lead. The quarter ended with the Stingers trailing, 52-47.

The fourth quarter started with a Rouge et Or three-pointer by Dezut-ter and a 9-0 run. The Stingers end-ed up scoring nine unanswered points to make it a one-point game halfway

ALEXANDER COLESports editor

HOCKEY

M E N ’S

Stingers vs. UOIT (LOSS 5-2)

The team took to the ice on Jan. 8 to face the University of Ontario In-stitute of Technology at home. The Stingers lost the game by a score of 5-2. UOIT came into the game with a record of 10-5-1, while the Stingers came in with a record of 7-8-3. UOIT forward Loren Ulett scored a hat trick in the game while teammates Cam-eron Yuill and Ben Blasko each had a goal. Concordia forwards Philippe Hudon and Domenic Beauchemin were the two goal scorers for the Stingers. UOIT goaltender Brendan O’Neill made 32 saves in his team’s victory. The Stingers next game is an away game against Queen’s Univer-sity on Jan. 15. The game is crucial if the team is looking for a playoff run.

W O M E N ’S

Stingers @ McGill (LOSS 5-2)

The team took to the ice in an away game against their rivals, the McGill Martlets, on Jan. 8. The game looked promising for the Stingers as the team was coming into the game fresh off of their championship win at the There-sa Humes women’s hockey tourna-ment. However, the team was not able to carry that momentum into their games against the Martlets as they lost by a score of 5-2. Stingers goal-tender Briar Bache was pulled after allowing four goals on 15 shots. Kath-erine Purchase, who came in as relief for Bache, stopped all 19 shots that she faced. McGill’s fifth goal was an empty netter. Stingers received goal scoring from forwards Claudia Dubois and Devon Thompson in the game.

Stingers vs. Ottawa (LOSS 5-4(s/o))

On Jan. 10, the Stingers hosted the University of Ottawa Gee Gees who came into the game one point out of first place in the RSEQ division. The Stingers came up short in the match with a shootout loss. The score was 5-4. Ottawa’s goal-scoring was led by forward Roxannne Rioux who had two goals in the game. Marimee Godbout-Parent and Carol-Ann Up-shall rounded out the scoring for the Gee Gees. Goal scorers for the Sting-ers included Ann-Julie Deschenes who had two, Devon thompson who had one, and Tracy-Ann Lavigne who also had one. Stingers goaltender Katherine Purchase made 26 saves in the loss. The loss brought the Stingers record to 3-8-1 which keeps them in fourth place in the RSEQ division. The Stingers next game will be against the Carabins from the Université de Mon-tréal on Jan. 15.

B A S K E T B A L L

Concordia fails to win in home-and-home against the Rouge et Or

STINGERSWEEKEND RESULTS

CASEY DULSONSta� writer

through the quarter. In the last five min-utes of the game, the Stingers were not able to score a single point.

After the game, Stingers coach Rast-ko Popovic said his team lacked in terms of offensive rebounds and precise free- throw shooting. For Popovic, those were the reasons why the team failed to put up the win.

The following night on Jan. 8, the Stingers played Laval in Quebec City. The women’s team got blown out by a score of 57-31. The Stingers had a shooting per-centage of 16.1 per cent and only made 10 field goals. The Stingers leading scor-er was forward Marilyse Roy-Viau who had 11 points. On the other side, the men’s team lost 71-62. The team lacked three-point shooting as they only made four out of 25 tries. Stingers forward Ken Beaulieu had 17 points in the loss.

The women’s team is now 1-5 on the year and the men’s team is 2-3 on the year. Next week, the Stingers basketball teams will participate in a home and home with the UQÀM Citadins.

Stingers guard Jaleel Webb goes up for a basket against the Rouge et Or. Photo by Marie-Pierre Savard.

Stingers forward Marilyse Roy-Viau looks for an open player in the Laval zone. Photo by Brianna Thicke.

Page 14: The Concordian - January 12th, 2016

14 theconcordian TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 2016

Page 15: The Concordian - January 12th, 2016

15theconcordianTUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 2016

The Montreal Canadiens forward has been a bright spot for the team this season

Brendan Gallagher uplifts the struggling Habs

SARAH KOSSITSSta� writer

C O L U M N

While flipping between two hockey games on a Tuesday night, I came across a stoppage in play during a Habs game. The play had stopped because Habs for-ward Brendan Gallagher dislodged the opponents’ net and he was now inside the net, scrambling to get up.

I mean, where else would he be? He has a league-wide reputation for bug-ging goalies and getting under their skin. There’s even a popular t-shirt for sale at hockey stores that has a picture of a goal crease on it and it says “Gally’s office.”

Gallagher is the type of player you love to have on your team and hate to play against. Although he occasionally crosses the line of goaltender interfer-ence, he usually plays a game that irri-tates other goaltenders in a legal fashion. He brings them out of their game and of-ten deflects his teammates’ shots just by being in front of the net.

It’s no surprise that he was given an “A” at the start of the season, as he plays every game with a passion, intensity and a level of skill seen in so few players in today’s NHL. He brings energy to his team

simply by playing his game. With Gallagher in the lineup this year,

the team was virtually unstoppable as they posted a record of 17-4-2.

When Gallagher blocked a slap-shot in November and needed surgery on two of his fingers, the team lost the player who arguably contributes to most of their success.

Without Gallagher, the Habs went 5-11-1.

In his first game back from injury, on Jan. 1 against the Bruins, he had a goal and an assist in the team’s 5-1 victory.

Gallagher spoke of his success as a hockey player and why his presence lifts the team in a post-winter classic inter-view which was later uploaded to the Canadiens website. “We all had so much fun,” he said with a massive smile on his face.

After all, that’s what makes Gallagh-er such a good hockey player. He always has a smile on his face.

The Habs score? Gallagher’s smil-ing. Gallagher is getting shoved behind the net? He’s smiling. The other team is chirping him with some not-so-nice words? That’s when his smile is the big-gest. Nothing bothers him. He would rather hurt the other team with goals than with words, and that’s what sets him apart from other players.

His passion for the game and the fun he has playing it is infectious. When he’s

in the lineup, the team tends to play bet-ter. They have more energy, and overall, they play better hockey.

That’s because when Gallagher smiles on the ice, he’s not smiling alone. His teammates, his coach and his fans all smile with him. They thrive off of the fun that he has, and they start having more

fun themselves. It’s important for profes-sional athletes to be able to take a step back from the game and recognize that, yes, although it is their career and they need to do well, they can have fun do-ing it, too. Gallagher does that, and that’s why players like him are so important to a hockey team.

S T I N G E R S

The top eight Stingers moments of 2015Looking back at the best games and memories from the last season of Concordia sports

CASEY DULSONSta� writer

The 2015 season was a fantastic year for Concordia’s teams and its athletes.

Several of the teams picked up huge wins over big opponents, while a few athletes picked up impressive accolades. Among the award-winning athletes were Stingers quarterback Trenton Miller and women’s rugby centre Frédérique Rajotte who both won RSEQ MVP honours in their respective sports.

Without further ado, here are the top eight moments from the 2015 season.

8. Stingers quarterback Trenton Miller wins the RSEQ MVP. Miller led the RSEQ in passes as he threw for 20 touchdowns and passed for 2384 yards this season. He became the first Stingers player to get the MVP honors since former quarterback Scott Syvret won it in 2005.

7. Frédérique Rajotte, third-year center on the women’s rugby team, wins the RSEQ MVP. She had 12 tries in seven games. Rajotte continued the trend of Stingers women’s rugby players winning the award. Last season, it was third-year center Alex Tessier who won MVP honours.

6. The women’s hockey team defeated the Université de Montréal Carabins 1-0. The Carabins were ranked

No. 1 in the CIS top 10 poll at the time. This was also the first victory for interim head coach Julie Chu.

5. The men’s basketball team won the Concordia Classic tournament for the first time since 2010. The team defeated the UPEI Panthers 82-70 on Oct. 10 to clinch the championship. The tournament championship was important because it gave the team momentum during the first half of the season as they finished with a record of 9-4.

4. The women’s basketball team had the rare opportunity to host the defending CIS champions Windsor Lancers in a preseason tilt at home on Oct. 16. The Stingers pulled the upset by beating the Lancers 70-63. They scored 40 points in the first half, which played a huge role in the win. The Stingers last win against the Lancers was on Dec. 29 of 2012.

3. This season, the women’s rugby team advanced to the CIS nationals for the first time since 2012. The team only had two losses in the regular season, both of which were against the University of Ottawa Gee-Gees, including one in the RSEQ championship game. The Rugby team ended up finishing fourth at the CIS national championship after they lost to the Gee-Gees in the bronze medal game.

2. The Stingers men’s hockey team

hosted the Windsor Lancers on the weekend of Oct. 16 and 17. The Stingers had not beaten the Lancers since November of 2006. The Stingers lost the first game with a score of 6-5. The following day, the Stingers finally beat the Lancers 6-5 in a thrilling shootout.

1. The Stingers football team went to the Percival Molson Memorial Stadium to play the McGill Redmen on Oct. 24. The winner of the game would get the last remaining spot in the RSEQ playoffs. The Stingers were in full control of the game and had a huge lead for the

majority of the match. The Redmen ended up taking a 41-40 lead with two minutes left. Stingers quarterback Trenton Miller led the Stingers offense down the field for 70 yards. This led to Stingers kicker Keegan Treloar kicking a 30-yard field goal to win the game. While the Stingers lost the first game of the playoffs, this game will never be forgotten.

Graphic by Charlotte Bracho.

Graphic by C

harlotte Bracho.

Brendan Gallagher uplifts the struggling Habs

The winner of the game would get the last remaining spot in the RSEQ playoffs. The Stingers were in full control of the game and had a huge lead for the

Graphic by Charlotte Bracho.

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19theconcordianTUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 2016

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ETCTweets of the week

This week we tragically lost an idol who tremendously influenced pop culture. The following tweets demonstrate his impact upon his peers as the world mourns the loss of David Bowie.

@DavidBowieReal January 10 2016 - David Bowie did peacefully today surrounded by his family after a courageous 18 month battle ..

@Kendrick Lamar What a honor, what a soul. David Bowie, Spirit of Gold. RIP.

@KanyeWest David Bowie was one of my most important inspirations, so fearless, so creative, he gave us magic for a lifetime.

@Flo_tweet David Bowie was a huge influence on me throughout my life. The original star-man returned to the stars...

@TheRyanAdamsYou made being yourself look so cool. The universe is only as bright as what you showed us.

Truly grateful

RIP Bowie

@AdamLambertI love how Bowie challenged people’s perception of gender stereotypes and what an Outsider truly was. He was SO ahead of his time.

The Concordian’s editorial teamWe tell your stories since 1983.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEFMICHELLE [email protected]

PRODUCTION MANAGERPIERRE A. [email protected]

NEWS EDITORGREGORY [email protected]

LIFE EDITORCRISTINA [email protected]

ARTS EDITORSLYDIA ANDERSONELIJAH [email protected]

MUSIC EDITORSAMUEL [email protected]

SPORTS EDITORALEXANDER [email protected]

OPINIONS EDITORDAVID [email protected]

PHOTO [email protected]

PHOTO ASSISTANT OPEN

ONLINE EDITORDORI [email protected]

GRAPHICS [email protected]

COPY EDITORSNATHALIE LAFLAMMEJESSICA ROMERAWALID [email protected]

PRODUCTION ASSISTANTSOPEN

CONTRIBUTORSLaura Marchand, Savanna Craig, Mina Mazumber, Fiona Maynard, Ocean DeRouchie, Pauline Nesbitt, Alexandra Colatosti, Matt D’Amours, Calvin Cashen, Mia Pearson, Casey Dulson, Sarah Kossits, Samantha Miletto, Marina Di Rocco, Alexis Baxter-Kent, Marco Saveriano

cthe

Concordia University’s weekly, independent student newspaperVOLUME 33 | ISSUE 15 | TUESDAY, JAN. 12, 2016

Cover photo by Matt D’Amours.

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BOARD OF DIRECTORSNATHALIE LAFLAMMEJACOB SEREBINRUBEN BASTIENMILOS [email protected]

Instagram feature of the week: @MoonothingMoonassi Daehyun Kim is a Seoul-based artist who specializes in black-and-white illustrations. His drawings evoke a sense of raw emotion and really encapsulate the human condition.

Page 20: The Concordian - January 12th, 2016

Graphics editor

The Concordian

hiringis

Photo editor

NEWS

News assistant

InDesign

Production assistants

WWW

Online crew

w Know how to win at using InDesign, Illustrator and Photoshop. If you know Quark that is cute but useless.

w A creative eye is ideal, and having your own style to incorporate into our own would be rad too.

w Be awesome, get literal cookies, win at life.

w Attend weekly story meetings. w Decide what stories need to be told, and help us cover them.

w Interview people. w Wear a trenchcoat. w Copyedit articles.

w Work with editors to create graphics for weekly articles.

w Can operate: InDesign, Illustrator and Photoshop. Creativity, resourcefulness and being a generally cool cat are assets.

w Tell stories in ways writers can’t. Show people’s pain, strife, victory, joy and hardship.

w Photograph people, protests, sports, events, and more. Must have your own camera, and have photography experience.

w Know how to film and edit video? w Can you make podcasts? w Have ideas about how to make multimedia stories? w Want to break the internet with your new and creative ways of currating news?

w Come talk to us. This is a new position so we want to work with you and your awesome new ideas.