The Queen's Journal

Student newspaper in Ontario, Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Queen's Journal is the main student-run newspaper at Queen's University at Kingston in Kingston, Ontario. The paper was founded in 1873 and has been continually publishing ever since.[1][2][3] It is as old as The Harvard Crimson, the oldest continuously published student newspaper in the United States.[4] The Journal is published twice a week, usually on Tuesdays and Fridays. The 2025-26 Editors in Chief are Sarah Adams and Meghrig Milkon.[5][6] The publication is an editorially autonomous paper, guaranteed by the Alma Mater Society of Queen's University and its constitution and by-laws.[7][8]

TypeBi-weekly student newspaper
FormatCompact
Editor-in-chiefMeghrig Milkon and Sarah Adams
Quick facts Type, Format ...
The Queen's Journal
TypeBi-weekly student newspaper
FormatCompact
PublisherAlma Mater Society of Queen's University
Editor-in-chiefMeghrig Milkon and Sarah Adams
Founded1873
Headquarters190 University Ave., Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Circulation3,000
Websitewww.queensjournal.ca Edit this at Wikidata
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The paper maintains a friendly rivalry with the campus' humour paper Golden Words. This is best exemplified by the annual publication, by Golden Words, of a fake edition of The Journal containing outlandish stories, published roughly around April Fool’s Day — although the exact date varies and the special edition is not marked in any way.

Journal alumni can often be found working for many of North America's major newspapers and media outlets. Notable names include Adam Shortt; former Ottawa mayor Charlotte Whitton; former Toronto Star editor-in-chief Giles Gherson; former Ottawa Citizen editor-in-chief Scott Anderson; former editor-in-chief of The Globe and Mail, John Stackhouse; former Toronto Star managing editor Jane Davenport; author, academic, and former Toronto Star columnist James Laxer; novelist Robertson Davies; award-winning science journalist Terry Collins;[9] Al Jazeera's Ali Velshi; Toronto Star reporters Kristin Rushowy and Victoria Gibson; former ABC News correspondent Jeffrey Kofman; and Jeffrey Simpson, author and former political columnist for The Globe and Mail.

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