TMU students apathetic about voting in municipal elections
By Gabriela Silva PonteMany Toronto Metropolitan Uni versity (TMU) students eligible to vote say they don’t feel inclined to participate in the upcoming munici pal elections.
Despite election day fast approach ing on Oct. 24, many students are still unaware of the candidates in their ridings and unsure who to vote for.
While second-year computer en gineering student Audrey Chen said she plans on voting, she found it dif ficult to find many of the candidates’ platforms in her research.
“I tried to find what a lot of the can didates are running for and I couldn’t even find a lot of their platforms. It was really disappointing,” said Chen.
Other students said they don’t re late to the candidates.
“No one is really going to get the job done. Everyone has a good and bad, but the bad outweighs the good,” said third-year sociology stu dent Ozzy Ibhawoh.
Several students also said they think the university or students’ union should have done more to ad vertise the election.
“I feel like the students’ union should at least try to condense [elec tion information] or make it easier for us to understand who we’re vot ing for,” said Chen.
Psychology student Sarine Nelson said she was blindsided by the news of upcoming elections, which she found out about through her family.
“I didn’t even know the elections were coming up until my sister told me,” said Nelson.
John Beebe, founder of the Dem ocratic Engagement Exchange, an initiative under TMU’s Faculty of Arts aimed at improving participa tion in democracy, agrees that TMU could be doing more.
“There are easy things we can be doing. We can be just putting up signage around campus. The Stu dent Learning Centre can become a hub for democratic engagement and electoral engagement around elec tions,” he said.
The Toronto Metropolitan Stu dents’ Union (TMSU) said in a statement to The Eyeopener that they were unable to coordinate any outreach without a vice-president education. The position, which has been vacant since the summer, was recently filled at the October Board of Directors meeting.
The TMSU said in their state ment that since the VP education position has been filled, they “will be doing outreach this week [and] Monday to encourage students to vote, let students know the impor tance of voting and what is at stake.”
Despite the lack of awareness about the elections, many students have problems with the city they wish to see resolved.
Most students said faster, accessi ble and less crowded transit services are needed.
“I find myself waiting a lot for the
bus even though I live in a pretty populated area,” said second-year accounting and finance student Justin Murcado.
Politics professor Ronald Vogel said many people don’t know cer tain issues fall under the munici pal government’s responsibility, such as transit, public housing and infrastructure, hence the lack of voter turnout.
“In general, I would say that a lot of citizens don’t view municipal gov ernance policy issues as that impor tant,” he said.
Books, Art, Music Collective (BAM) is a youth-led group that works to improve community en gagement. They recently launched a campaign called “Your Vote is Your Voice.”
Jenna Robar, BAM’s Indigenous programs coordinator, said more people are affected by politics than they actually are aware of.
“Every part of your daily life, from healthcare, to safety, to housing, to education, to the cost of textbooks, is political,” said Robar.
BAM’s programs management and operations advisor, Kataryna Patsak said the reason many stu dents don’t vote is that they feel the political system is the problem.
Patsak said.
But Vogel points to unfulfilled ambitious agendas, a lack of trust in politicians, media coverage, large ridings and more as culprits for the potentially low voter turnout.
“Politicians and the political sys tem in many ways are failing citizens and I think there’s a certain cynicism and lack of trust,” he said. “I can’t say I think they’re necessarily wrong.”
Vogel is already expecting most voters to be apathetic during this municipal election. “I would be sur prised if we even reach the 40 per cent turnout,” he said. Vogel added those that do vote are more likely to be “affluent.”
that power, especially when we may not have affluence or privileges in other ways or have other sources of power, we’re giving up this source of power that our democracy gives us,” said Beebe.
Robar suggests going to vote with friends and making plans afterwards, so that students can make it a fun event. “There’s this tendency of habit formation and if they’ve never done it before, it does look intimidating. And it does take time to reinforce.”
For more information on voting, visit the City of Toronto’s website.
Read more at theeyeopener.com.
Candidates running to represent Toronto Centre this municipal election
By Hadiqah KhalilMunicipal elections are right around the corner and this year, there are nine candidates on the ballot vying to be the next City Councillor for Ward 13, Toronto Centre—Toronto Met ropolitan University’s (TMU) riding.
The Eyeopener dug into the candi date’s profiles so you don’t have to.
Of the nine potential councillors, six had their platforms readily avail able online or responded to The Eye’s request for comment.
The Eye does not endorse any can didate or their opinion.
Miguel Avila
Miguel Avila, an Indigenous activ ist, said in an interview with The Eye that his platform supports building social housing projects, raising min imum wage to $25 an hour, improv ing traffic and road safety issues and taxing large corporations.
According to his website, if elect ed, Avila will continue advocating for “social and environmental jus tice, with an emphasis on housing, food security, police accountability and animal rights issues.”
Colin Johnson
Colin Johnson believes Toronto City Council would greatly benefit from his lived experience, according to his website.
He said that he too “has experienced homelessness” and plans to create safe and livable homes for the city.
Johnson said he plans on doing this by modernizing shelter systems, advocating with the province to bring back rent controls and mak ing sure that housing developers construct high-rise homes that can accommodate families.
Chris Moise
Chris Moise, a longtime resident of Ward 13, has been a public school trustee for the last six years as well as vice-chair of the Toronto District School Board. He was also a small business owner, a healthcare worker and police officer.
“A big part of [my platform] is around housing, quite frankly,” Moi se said in an interview with The Eye.
His website states that he will be advocating for expanding housing opportunities for students, improv ing public safety and security and
JES MASON/THE EYEOPENERbuilding on safe public spaces.
Caroline Murphy
Caroline Murphy said in an inter view with The Eye that she is pas sionate about prioritizing commu nity safety, the environment and supporting local businesses.
“The main reason I am running is because it is time to effect good, solid change,” she said.
Murphy said she believes in put ting the environment first by vital izing green spaces and building sus tainable infrastructures. “When we look around today and we see gar bage bins overflowing, people living in parks, the roads in despair, people worrying about rent versus the food on the table—that is not Toronto.”
Over the last three decades, Nicki Ward said she has long been an ad vocate for the environment, LG BTQ+ community and disability, human rights and community issues. Her platform has three main goals: safety and accessibility, housing and mental health services.
“Number one is safety and acces sibility. Being able to go to school as well as mechanical safety,” said Ward. “Because we have a lot of construction downtown…getting from Point A to Point B has been a real challenge.”
Ryan Lester
In an email to The Eyeopener, Ryan Lester, a former City Councillor candidate, said he will not be seek ing the position this year for per sonal reasons, adding that he will be endorsing candidate Nicki Ward for Ward 13 councillor.
Election day is on Oct. 24. Stu dents can visit the City of Toronto’s website regarding candidate and voting information.
Story continues at theeyeopener.com.
Nicki Ward
“The political system in many ways are failing citizens”ELEMENT5 DIGITAL VIA UNSPLASH
TMU harvest party celebrates Black and Indigenous food programs
By Nalyn TindallToronto Metropolitan University’s (TMU) newest rooftop farm held a harvest party to commemorate the work being done to increase Black food sovereignty and the sharing of Indigenous teachings.
The party, held on Oct. 6, was dedicated to the Indigenous Food ways Program and Black Food Sov ereignty Initiative. It also celebrated the launch of the new urban farm on the Daphne Cockwell Centre for Health Sciences (DCC) rooftop which was completed in 2021.
According to TMU’s website, the Indigenous Foodways Program and Black Food Sovereignty Initiative aim to engage with Black and Indigenous students at TMU and the broader community. Through education and programming, the cultivation and sharing of culturally significant foods is encouraged.
Sharene Shafie, the research co ordinator with the urban farm, said the Black Food Sovereignty Initia tive and the Indigenous Foodways program have bloomed within the first growing season.
“We’re so excited to welcome the community into this space for the first time in this capacity. It’s very exciting for us, we’ve never had this many people welcomed into this be fore,” she said.
The last harvest party took place in 2017 at TMU’s original rooftop farm located on the George Vari Engineering & Computing Centre according to Shafie. This year’s cel ebration brought together students, staff and community members to celebrate the new farm and boun tiful harvest. The event featured a seed-exchange, raffle, the opportu nity to explore the farm and dishes from produce grown on site.
Jamaican-spiced pumpkin soup and beef patties were served along side a three sisters stew of corn, beans and squash, with homemade bannock. Cedar and sorel iced teas were also served.
Shafie said the farm provides many benefits a regular green roof would not. The roof has greater planting depth, supports more biodiversity and manages more storm water. She said the space allows the community to gather while producing food and connects people with their food sys tem, nature and each other.
With the support of the univer sity, the produce from the farm is donated, sold to students at a re duced price and sold at markets, said Shafie. “We’re always trying to serve our community, first and foremost,” she added.
She highlighted the importance of serving marginalized communi ties. “Being able to serve the com munities that are most often af fected by food scarcity, being able to serve our marginalized commu nities, it’s very important.”
EMILY (JAYE) HUYNH/TMUAccording to TMU’s website, the Black Food Sovereignty Initiative aims to challenge systemic racism within food production and urban agricultural systems. Programs ca tered to Black students at the TMU run initiative, including the Har vest Collective and Learning Circle, which focus on these values.
Nicole Austin, Black-led pro grams coordinator, said the four key pillars of these programs are: “food literacy, food and social justice, en vironmental stewardship and com munity healing.”
She also talked about the Learning Circle program, which invites the TMU community to come explore the farm and take part in workshops like experiential learning modules, where community members can participate in food production, pro cessing and storage.
As part of the Learning Circle program, the farm features a variety of African crops, planted in a circle to welcome visitors to walk within the crops. “It’s just about celebrating our foods of the African diaspora,” said Austin.
She said through Black-led, Blackmandated and Black-serving initia tives, “we [the Black Food Sover eignty Initiative] can be a conduit for knowledge mobilization and inspire the Black community, Black youth, Black students, to actually see that they can create a healthier community and food systems that reflect them.”
The DCC rooftop is also home to the Indigenous Foodways program, which promotes Indigenous wisdom and traditional agricultural practices through knowledge exchange and community engagement.
“The Indigenous Foodways pro gram is the first of its kind atop a
university purpose built green roof top farm…there are other green roofs, there are other Indigenous gardens, but this truly is the first of its kind,” said Samantha Williams, Indigenous-led programs coordi nator. The DCC urban farm fea tures a variety of Indigenous crops including a traditional three sisters mound, as well as a medicine gar den. “My vision is that this rooftop will be the main attraction of the university,” said Williams.
The program showcases the pos sibilities of cultural significance and connection in an urban setting and also focuses on cultural significance connected historically to the land, Williams explained.
There are multiple ways students can get involved with the urban farm—from hosting volunteer ses sions, to workshops and weekly
field walks. There is also a summer apprenticeship program available through Career Boost.
While the farm is still new, Wil liams said it will continue to grow for years to come.
“We want the program to contin ue growing, we want to offer more workshops, we want to host more events, we want a lot more educa tional, cultural, educational aspects to the program.”
Municpal elections matter and so does your vote
By Abeer KhanHave you ever been stuck waiting 45 minutes outside in the cold for a bus that is supposed to run every five minutes? Have you encoun tered steep, head-shaking potholes or walked past an overflowing public garbage can? Or have you tried to use a bathroom or drinking fountain in a public park only to find out it was locked or out of service? These are all issues that the municipal govern ment is responsible for managing. And in the last eight years or so, they have not been managed well.
If you walk outside, there is litter everywhere. People don’t have access to basic services like a washroom in a park that should be open to them and to other members of the public. There is an alarming housing cri sis pushing the poor, the young and people of colour out of the city. Every day, Toronto is becoming more and more unlivable.
This can all change (fingers crossed and in small steps) this coming week on Oct. 24, when Toronto heads to the polls for the municipal election— one that will be crucial for our city. In this week’s editorial, my aim is to give you, Toronto Metropolitan Univer sity (TMU) students, the run-down of the elections, where you can vote and why it is important that you do.
Toronto Election TD;LR
This year’s election includes many candidates, including incumbent mayor John Tory, who is seeking a third term in office. On Monday, five candidates, including Tory, Gil Penalosa, Sarah Climenhaga, Chloe Brown and Stephen Pun wasi participated in an election debate. Here is a look at of some of their platforms:
According to Tory’s website, he plans to continue moving ahead with LRT lines across the city, including the ailing Eglinton Crosstown LRT, which has been under construction since 2011. He also has plans to sup port small businesses and keep prop erty taxes below inflation, despite the need for more revenue in a city with a growing population that is still
Here is everything you need to know before casting your vote on Oct. 24
JES MASON/THE EYEOPENERhas often been observed that young people are less likely to vote than old er people. Why do you think this is?”
One frequent answer was that youth don’t believe the government represents them or cares about their needs and issues. While this is a fair criticism, participating in elections and engaging with the candidates running, who actually do align with your beliefs and views, can fix this issue. Another answer the survey frequently got was that youth feel politics does not affect them.
For every TMU student reading this, I can confidently say this is untrue. If you took the subway to day or had to dodge the horrid con struction on College Street in order to get to class, politics has already affected you.
The question now is: will you let politics affect you in a positive or negative way?
feeling the impacts of the ongoing pandemic. Tory also has a five-point plan to build homes faster in the city, per his platform.
ing for anyone who wants to pro vide housing for others to do so “quickly and easily,” according to her platform.
your vote actually does count.
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One of Tory’s more prominent challengers is Gil Penalosa, who moved to Toronto 23 years ago. He says over the last eight years, the city has become less equitable, sus tainable and lost its sense of unity, according to his website. Penalosa says Toronto needs a “bold leader” and has plans to make the city more sustainable and invest in housing and neighborhoods.
Another candidate is Sarah Cli menhaga, a lifelong Toronto resi dent who has been a part of grass roots organizations related to city “greenspaces, children, transit im provement and pedestrian safety,” according to her website. Her vi sion for the city includes making public spaces “life-enhancing and welcoming,” creating a businessfriendly environment and allow
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Chloe Brown is also running for Toronto’s mayoral position. Brown is a policy analyst who has worked across all sectors to “connect govern ments, employers and service pro viders to create solutions for public services and opportunities,” accord ing to her website. She has three “big ideas” for restoring democracy: restoring democracy to public board leadership with direct community investments in the workforce; foster ing ecosystems for personal develop ment, environmental sustainability and work-life balance and creating stable and simplified tax rates, ac cording to her platform.
For the full information on each mayoral candidate, visit their web site where their personal bios and platforms are all publicly accessible for you to read.
Why should you vote?
Voting is a privilege that we are all lucky to be afforded in this country and despite what you may think,
We are heading into this election on the back of a provincial contest that saw the lowest voter turnout in history, with only 43.5 per cent of eligible voters in Ontario casting bal lots, according to preliminary Elec tions Ontario results.
Our news story this week spoke to many TMU students who said they didn’t know about the elec tion or did not feel engaged enough to vote. But being apathetic to mu nicipal elections allows for the same candidates and people to continue running this city like they have been for the past eight years, leaving little room for improvement.
If you want to see real change in the community, read up on candidate platforms, have conversations with fellow citizens about the city’s prob lems and find a candidate that fits your vision of Toronto because this is your Toronto.
This upcoming election is not one any of us should sleep on be cause what happens in our city impacts every one of us, whether we know it or not. From taking transit to walking on the sidewalk, municipal decisions are responsible for how long commutes are or how bumpy our roads are. Every part of our everyday lives can be impacted by municipal decisions.
As young people, it is our respon sibility to vote to better our city, de spite low youth voter turnout. Elec tions Canada surveyed youth aged 25 and under and posed the question: “It
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Where to vote
There will be a polling station on cam pus at the Student Campus Centre.
Polls will be open on Oct. 24, from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. In order to vote, you need one piece of identification that shows your name and a qualifying Toronto address. For more informa tion on where to vote based on your riding or for further inquiries, you can visit the ‘How to Vote’ page on the City of Toronto’s website.
We hope to see everyone eager and ready to vote next week. Re member, your voice matters and your vote will count!
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It is our responsibility to vote to better our city
Will you let politics affect you in a positive or negative way?
Student beauty businesses equip owners with transferable workplace skills
By Kendra SeguinAt 10 years old, Anna Hoang remem bers routinely seeing a black screen with a white cursive logo that said “cutepolish,” before the start of the step-by-step nail art tutorials she’d follow on YouTube.
Back then in 2012, she used house hold items, from toothpicks to mask ing tape, to create polka-dot patterns and chevron prints on her fingernails.
This was Hoang’s first nail phase. By age 12, her interest in nail art grew so much that her mom had to put a limit on how often she paint ed her nails.
Hoang, now a third-year RTA media production student at Toron to Metropolitan University (TMU), remembers her mom saying, “You’re allowed once a week. If your colour changes, I’m taking it off and confis cating your nail polish.”
She eventually fell out of her nail phase for a few years, before revisiting it again during the pan demic—now with a new intensity. Looking for a way to stop her habit of skin picking around her nails and fingers, Hoang turned back to nail care. Like an influx of others who took to DIY manicures during lockdown, she relied on YouTube for lessons and inspiration.
Equipped with a freshly-pur chased nail extension kit from Ama zon and basic knowledge from her
nail stint years ago, Hoang started practicing the techniques that would eventually lead to her current job as a Toronto nail technician.
After two years of doing gel nails and nail art at her kitchen table on only herself and her closest friends, Hoang’s family-friend invited her to work out of She Flirts, a beau ty salon on Toronto’s King Street West in January 2022.
She works there as a commis sioned nail technician, continuing to provide her signature services, with control over her schedule. The salon provides space and shared materials for the nail tech and splits her profit.
Hoang says things picked up when she started working at She Flirts. She had real studio space, underwent technique and training courses and
gained new clientele within the year. Doing nails became her primary source of income by May.
“I think the beauty industry can be viewed as a little girly, stupid thing,” says Tavares. “Some people can treat it as a hobby, but it’s a ca reer and a job and a business and lots of those things translate to other careers.”
Tactile hand skills, interper sonal skills and business basics are some of the transferrable skills Tavares pinpointed.
She says independent beauty artists gain an additional set of skills from building their business. These include marketing, social media content creation, photogra phy, website building and manag ing finances.
Instead of seeing these profes sions as “just doing hair” or “just do ing nails,” Tavares recognized the amount of work put into successfully running a beauty business. “I wish more people saw that,” she says.
“There’s a certain level of comfort that you have with these people,” says Tavares. “There’s a relation ship like no other when it comes to beauty services.”
Juliana Lo, a fifth-year creative in dustries student who runs her own lash business, agrees with Tavares.
Having experimented with make up since middle school, Lo’s career in beauty started three years ago.
It was her second year at TMU and she was balancing school with a parttime job at a grocery store. Lo had recently met her own lash tech and came across an Instagram post about lash training.
One day, after a particularly ex hausting shift, Lo decided to try something new. “I had always been interested in beauty, so I decided to take the course,” she said.
Hoang’s time in the nail industry has offered her more than just a way to pay rent. She says it has helped with her degree, networking and career possibilities. “I don’t think it’s the industry [itself],” says Hoang. “I think it’s the connections you make in the industry.”
Tatiana Tavares, a beauty art ist, studio owner and instructor at Blanche Macdonald Centre in Van couver, says all skills learned in the beauty industry are transferable.
The ability to make strong con nections is a particularly signifi cant skill for those working in the beauty industry. Tavares says there is a unique type of relationshipbuilding that comes from working on beauty clients.
Following a full day of training, including seven “super intense” hours of applying a full set of lashes to her first model, Lo learned the basics. She says it took her about six months of practice to really perfect her work.
Now as an established lash tech, Lo has recently moved out of her home studio and into a new space downstairs at Evolve Hair Studio on Fort York Boulevard in Toron to. She says she now has plenty of experience connecting with clients.
Read the full story at theeyeopener.com.
Ted Rogers Indigenous in Business is reclaiming their rightful space in the industry
Another source of inspiration for Anthony was a four-month research project he conducted with Michael Mihalicz, an Indigenous advisor at TRSM and an assistant professor of entrepreneurship and strategy.
and almost 10,000 Indigenous en trepreneurs entered the labour market from 2003 to 2011. The Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business (CCAB) estimates 36 per cent of Indigenous businesses cre ate further employment.
of Finance,” as well as keynote speakers for the “Reconciliation and Entrepreneurship” talk and ex periential workshops.
By Uhanthaen RavijolanWhen Cody Anthony, a third-year marketing management student at Toronto Metropolitan University (TMU) of Dene descent went look ing for an Indigenous business stu dent group on campus last Septem ber, he was surprised to find that such a club didn’t exist.
“Institutions like McGill, Uni versity of British Columbia, Uni versity of Manitoba and Alberta had student spaces for Indigenous folks in commerce or business,” said Anthony. But the Ted Rogers School of Management (TRSM)— one of the largest business schools in Canada—did not have such a
group.
Two months later, Anthony founded the Ted Rogers Indig enous in Business (TRIB) student group. The group aims at building an inclusive space for Indigenous business students and entrepre neurs while advocating for larger Indigenous representation in lead ership roles.
A 2017 survey by the Canadian Board Diversity Council, an or ganization focused on advancing diversity among Canada’s boards, found that Indigenous profession als comprised only 1.1 per cent of executives on the Financial Post 500 list, a list of the largest Cana dian companies by revenue, com
They found a strong tradition of entrepreneurship among Indigi enous peoples, dating back to precolonial trade and exchange routes that contributed to the modern day economy. Prior to contact with European settlers, Indigenous peo ples had robust trade economies, exchanging goods such as obsid ian all throughout ancient North America, Anthony said.
River Christie-White, a secondyear professional music student at TMU and member of the Oneida Nation of the Thames, was one of many attendees at TRIB’s Recon ciliation in Business conference at the Ted Rogers School of Manage ment last month.
“We were able to meet every one—from other Indigenous en trepreneurs to corporations and businesses—that were there to see what was going on in the Indig enous entrepreneurial space,” said Christie-White.
Chantal Wong, the President of the Ted Rogers Students’ Society and fourth-year business management student, feels the group is doing im portant work for reconciliation.
“I think it’s important, especially in a business format, that equitydeserving groups are represented,” she said.
“This is part of an effort to right the story,” said Mihalicz. “People have the impression that trade as an economy was brought with Europe ans and given to Indigenous com munities, which couldn’t be further from the truth. All of that existed throughout the Americas for thou sands and thousands of years.”
According to the 2011 census, more than 37,000 Indigenous peo ple were self-employed that year
The full-day event featured panel discussions that touched on vari ous business and Indigenous-related topics. Subjects of discussion in cluded “Indigenous in Tech,” “In digenous Worldviews in the Class room” and “Indigenous Attainment
In the future, Anthony plans on expanding TRIB beyond TRSM by creating a space for Indigenous en trepreneurs to network and share knowledge and resources, regardless of if they’re a business major or not.
“The embodiment of Indigenous entrepreneurship across Turtle Is land doesn’t only exist in business schools,” said Anthony. “These ef forts are often passed down genera tions and give our people the chance to express themselves in a way of trade and exchange.”
“This is part of an effort to right the story”COURTESY OF ANNA HOANG AND SOPHIE HAFNER
“Indigenous entrepreneurship across Turtle Island doesn’t only exist in business schools”COURTESY OF TED ROGERS INDIGENOUS IN BUSINESS GROUP
“I think it’s the connections you make in the industry”
“It’s a career and a job and a business and lots of those things translate to other careers”
“It’s important, in a business format, that equity-deserving groups are represented”
Bold primed to ‘move the needle forward’ in the OUA
By Mikayla GuarasciThe Toronto Metropolitan Univer sity (TMU) Bold women’s hockey team is ready to start a new chapter in their history. The team heads into the season under a new name, with a new logo and with a locker room full of fresh faces.
Head coach Lisa Haley, who has been the bench boss of the program since its inception in 2011, is excited about this new chapter, with high ex pectations for her team this season.
“We’ve been knocking on the door for a couple of years now,” said Haley. “My expectations for our group this year is to always move the needle forward.”
“We do have a lot of first-year players on our team, but we also have some great talented returning vets,” she added. “I think our goal ev ery year is to try to get to nationals.”
finalist, the Nipissing Lakers.
TMU finished this year’s six preseason games with a 3-3 record. This includes their homecoming loss against Concordia and most recent ly, a 2-1 win over Carleton Univer sity on Oct. 13.
They’re looking ahead to a full OUA season, without any pandemic interruptions for the first time since the 2019-20 season.
Replacing Seeley is a trio, made up by second-year Jayden Lawson and first-years Lauren Griffin and Alexia Stratos.
“We’ve got some young goalten ding, but it’s been promising,” said Haley. “We’ve seen all three of them in game action now and are pretty en couraged with their level of readiness to be playing in the OUA.”
The team ended the shortened 2021-22 campaign with a 6-8 record, finishing the regular season in third place in the Ontario University Ath letics (OUA) East Division. Their quest for the McCaw Cup was shortlived, with a first-round playoff exit at the hands of the eventual nationals
A major change for the Bold will be in net. The team said goodbye to fifth-year goaltender Rachel Seeley, who started all 15 games last season.
The 2021-22 team MVP holds the record for most career appearances, wins and saves by a goaltender in program history.
Haley noted that the team will need to find new ways to score after the graduation of star player Lauren Nicholson. She is the program’s alltime leading goal scorer with 44 ca reer goals, so other players will need to step in to fill the loss.
The team has a mix of experi enced veterans and rookies, with
nine new players joining the Bold. This group of recruits includes fifthyear Dani Fox, who comes from the University of Connecticut Huskies, part of the National Collegiate Ath letics Association. The Unionville, Ont. native scored 10 goals and added 14 assists for 24 points in 37 games with the Huskies last season. She comes to the Bold with over 130 games played at the university level and will spend one final year with TMU while completing her master’s of business administration.
“Anybody that’s already got three or four years of experience at this level is so valuable. She brings great character to our group and a high level of maturity and intelligence,”
said Haley. Bold forward Britni Yammine also has high hopes for the TMU squad heading into her rookie season.
“I think we have a pretty strong group,” said Yammine. “We’re a well-rounded hockey team, I ex pect us to go to championships— that’s obviously the end goal—and possibly nationals.”
The team will rely on vets such as team captain Madison Lalonde, Ol ivia Giardetti and Brooklyn Gemmill to lead the way on and off the ice.
“It’s nice to have leaders to show you the way and to pave the path for you,” said Yammine. “They’ve been a super big help and I know they’ll continue to do so as we move on in the season.”
The team will kick off the regular season on Oct. 20 against the Wilfrid Laurier University Golden Hawks in Waterloo, Ont. They’ll return home for a rematch of last year’s playoffs on Oct. 22 against the Nipissing Lakers in their home opener.
“It’s a new chapter in our lega cy,” said Haley. “We’re just excited to rep the TMU Bold, all that can bring and write some new history moments under that brand.”
MATTHEW LIN/THE EYEOPENERSports. However, TMU finished the pre-season 2-4. Bold head coach Johnny Duco said while they wish the results were different in some of those games, he’s still quite happy with his team’s performance against the likes of the Concordia Stingers, the University of New Brunswick Reds (UNB) and the University of Toronto Varsity Blues (U of T).
“Nothing was handed to those guys. Now…sure, they’re premier players in the league, but when they came in, they were battling to be in the lineup,” said Duco. “They were on the third or fourth line and they worked their way up the lineup.”
Duco said there were other for wards in supporting roles last year who are capable of stepping up this season. One of those players is second-year Kevin Gursoy, who re corded three points in his first seven U Sports games last year.
“I think Kevin’s got the ability to be one of the best goal scorers in the league this year,” Duco said.
“It was a bit of a roller coaster,” said Edmonds. “I was kind of trying to figure out the pro hockey world.”
Once Edmonds, who saved 33 out of 34 shots in a pre-season game against the University of New Brunswick Reds on Sept. 30, decided he wanted to go the U Sports route, Duco was one of the first coaches to reach out to him. He said Edmonds was high on TMU’s recruiting list.
By Jacob StollerThe Toronto Metropolitan Univer sity (TMU) men’s hockey team has its sights set on returning to the U Sports national championship tour nament with the 2022-23 season already underway.
Fifteen returnees from last year's team—which finished fourth in the nation—are still on the roster, meaning the majority of the Bold’s
players know what it’s like to get a taste of championship action. Now, they’re ready to take a full bite.
“I think the sky’s the limit with this team,” said second-year de fenceman Ryan Wells. “We have a bunch of young, hungry guys who work hard everyday and I don’t see why we can’t get back to the nation al tournament again.”
The Bold opened the season ranked 10th in the country by U
“In terms of our process and the way we competed, I thought we had a much better start in some of the things we tangibly talked about im proving,” said Duco.
Second-year forwards Kyle Bollers—who already has five goals in two games—and Chris Playfair, are primed to lead the charge up front. Bollers, crowned Male Ath lete of the Year by TMU last year, led the Bold in scoring with 25 points in 15 regular season games.
Playfair finished fourth in team scoring, tallying 11 points in 14 regular season games.
But it’s their goaltending that could really be the Bold’s strength in the 2022-23 season.
With promising rookies Kai Edmonds and Ryan Dugas at the helm, in addition to fifth-year goalie Garrett Forrest, the Bold have an incredible amount of depth at the game’s most important position.
Duco has been impressed by Ed monds. The 22-year-old goalie spent the first half of last season bouncing around the minor leagues, totalling eight starts between the Southern Professional Hockey League and the East Coast Hockey League.
“You see it every day in preseason and in practice,” said Duco. “Obviously we saw it in the UNB game. UNB’s coaches after were making some comments like, ‘Wow the goalies are really good.’ We’re not surprised, we know he’s that good.”
TMU is already off to a 2-0 start af ter defeating the York University Li ons 3-1 on Oct. 14 and a 6-1 win over U of T one day later.
The Bold host their cross-town rivals again on Thursday at the Mat tamy Athletic Centre. Puck-drop for the home opener is set for 6 p.m.
“We’ve been knocking on the door for a couple of years now”
“It’s nice to have leaders to show you the way and pave the path for you”
TMU men’s hockey team hungry for another taste of nationals after last season
“We have a bunch of young, hungry guys who work hard everyday”
“We’re not surprised, we know he’s that good”
ALEK ZIVKOVIC/THE EYEOPENER
Bold women’s basketball’s pre-season comes to a close with annual tournament
By Matthew DavisonThe Toronto Metropolitan Univer sity (TMU) Bold women’s basketball team will face its final pre-season test when they host the Darcel Wright Memorial Classic tournament, which begins this Friday, Oct. 21.
The team will take on the Univer sity of Victoria Vikes in the opening game at the Mattamy Athletic Centre at 12 p.m. Rounding out the strong field is Cape Breton University, Western University, the University of Windsor, the University of Sas katchewan, the University of British Columbia and McMaster University.
The Bold haven’t eased their way into gameplay, given their pre-sea son schedule was full of demanding opponents, including the University of Regina Cougars and the Acadia Axewomen, who are the reigning Atlantic University Sport champion. But head coach Carly Clarke said that was by design.
where we need to get better.”
The annual showcase honouring the late member of the TMU Athlet ics Hall of Fame hasn’t been held in its traditional tournament format since 2019 as a result of the pandemic.
A year ago, the smaller-scale event saw the Bold go 2-0, defeating West ern and the Saskatchewan Huskies, who were the defending national champions at the time. The Bold en ter this year’s tournament as the team to beat, though the roster has under gone many changes.
like last year and we want to achieve it again,” said Farwell. “We’re sig nificantly younger than we were last year…it’s definitely a very different look but I don’t necessarily think that’s a bad thing.”
Farwell’s teammate and fellow starter from last season, Stefanija Mrvaljevic, is also looking to bring that championship experience to this group—this year as a member of the coaching staff. Clarke said the former forward is built to be a coach due to her high basketball IQ.
“We’ve given ourselves a really challenging pre-season schedule and that’s on purpose,” said Clarke. “We’re trying to measure ourselves against the best to see where we are and
The team’s only returning starter, Rachel Farwell, expects to take on a larger leadership role on this year’s team and is excited by what the young group has to offer.
“We got a taste of what success feels
“She was a coach on the floor for us when she was a player,” said Clarke. “She brings a great understanding of what’s going on there and an ability to connect with the players because she’s been out there with a bunch of them.”
The Bold are just 1-4 to start the pre-season campaign—a stark con trast from their undefeated season last year. Clarke said it’s important to remember how rare it is for a team to win every game and that it will take time for this group to reach its full potential.
“Every single one of our players is in a new role this year,” said Clarke. “Some of them have played hardly at all but we have lots of talented players and we’re going to get bet ter and better.”
A player poised to take on a more prominent role on the team this sea son is Jayme Foreman—who was behind veteran players in the rota tion last year and battled COVID-19 during the latter part of the season.
The second-year guard said the new group can’t just copy the same for mula as last year, but sees great op portunity ahead.
“We’re ready to show everyone that even though we’re a different team, we’re still good. And we’re still here to play,” said Foreman.
Another key player who was piv otal to the team’s success last year, es pecially in the playoffs with her tena cious style of play, was Eve Uwayesu. The fifth-year forward stressed the importance of dedication and com mitment to achieving desired results.
“We have a lot of people that ex perienced last year. We know what it takes,” said Uwayesu. “But we also know that it’s a grind of showing up to practice day in and day out and making sure that we grow every day.”
That sentiment of “getting bet ter every day” has long been coach Clarke’s motto, but this year that slo gan rings especially true.
different look but I don’t think that’s a bad thing”
“The room for growth that we have with this team is really, really exciting,” said Clarke. “I’m not wor ried about the results in October, we’re looking for results in February and March.”
Darcel Wright Memorial Classic: Everything you need to know before Friday’s games
By Gavin Axelrod & Jack MacCool points per game last season.If you were ever looking for a reason to skip class, there’s no better excuse than the Darcel Wright Memorial Classic taking place at the Mattamy Athletic Centre (MAC) from Oct. 21 to Oct. 23.
The annual women’s basketball tournament will see eight teams from nearly every U Sports confer ence gather at Toronto Metropoli tan University (TMU) for exhibi tion play.
Here’s everything you need to know ahead of Friday’s action.
TMU vs. University of Victoria, 12 p.m.
Toronto Metropolitan University’s first matchup of the Darcel Wright Memorial Classic pits them against the University of Victoria Vikes. The Bold enter the matchup with a 1-4 pre-season record in five games played. Victoria is winless in pre-season action with two losses coming at the hands of the Calgary Dinos.
The Vikes’ top two scorers from last season, Tana Pankratz and Ashlyn Day, are both returning to the program for their third and fifth years respectively. The two guards combined for just over 35
Cape Breton vs. Western, 2 p.m. The Cape Breton University Capers roll into Toronto with a 4-2 pre-sea son record. The Atlantic University Sport (AUS) conference member fin ished last season with an 8-7 record. However, they made a run to the AUS championship game, losing 7165 to Acadia University.
Second-year guard Kiyara Let low is a Capers player to watch this weekend. The hometown star aver aged 22.7 points and 15.7 rebounds per game last season.
Letlow’s scoring touch ranked sec ond in the country and her rebound ing totals were the best in U Sports.
The Torontonian was named U Sports Rookie of the Year and earned second-team All-Canadian honours.
Western comes into Friday’s clash with Cape Breton after clinching a 13-3 record last season, falling to the Brock University Badgers 77-58 in the Ontario University Athletics (OUA) West Final.
Their third-year guard Ariane Saumure was named OUA West Defensive Player of the Year last season, making for a key matchup with Letlow.
Saskatchewan vs. Windsor, 4 p.m.
The Saskatchewan Huskies could be the favourites to win this year’s event.
Saskatchewan won the Canada West conference for the fifth time in the last six seasons this past March. The Huskies looked primed to de fend their 2021 U Sports national championship, until they were upset by host Queen’s in the quarter-final at the national tournament last year.
The Huskies player to watch this weekend is Carly Ahlstrom. She dropped 28 points against the Uni versity of Regina on Oct. 9, and was also named a Canada West SecondTeam All-Star during the 2021-22 campaign.
The Windsor Lancers also have an extensive national championship history themselves. Windsor won five national titles in a row, from the 2010-11 season to the 2014-15 sea son. However, the team went 9-13 and lost to the University of Guelph Gryphons in round one of the OUA playoffs last year.
Reigning OUA all-rookie team member Mariame Dehkissia is a player to watch for the Lancers after a tremendous debut season.
University of British Columbia vs. McMaster University, 6 p.m. Friday’s final game will see the Uni versity of British Columbia (UBC)
Firebirds take on the McMaster Uni versity Marauders. UBC finished last season with a 6-12 record in Canada West and has had its moments in this year’s pre-season, beating the Cal gary Dinos in their first game, before dropping their next two to the Me morial University of Newfoundland and the University of Calgary.
McMaster enters the event off the back of a 9-6 record in the OUA West Division last year. In exhibition action this season, the Marauders de
JES MASON/THE EYEOPENERfeated the Laval Rouge et Or 66-58 at the end of September. Fifth-year guard Sarah Gates scored 25 points for McMaster in the game and will look to build off her U Sports AllCanadian Second-Team honours.
McMaster will provide an excellent measuring stick for UBC to see where the squad is at as they enter the regular season. The Thunderbirds also have their top scorer returning from last season as Hailey Counsell enters her fourth year with the program.
“We’re trying to measure ourselves against the best to see where we are”
World-renowned Indigenous dance troupe performs at TMU
By Maryam AzzamIndigenous Enterprise, an Indige nous dance troupe from across Turtle Island, made their debut in the coun try at Toronto Metropolitan Univer sity (TMU), with their performance entitled Indigenous Liberation as part of the lineup for the eighth annual Fall For Dance North Festival.
Indigenous Enterprise is an Arizona-based intertribal dance troupe led and founded by Kenneth Shirley, a Diné Men’s Fancy War dancer, in 2015.
The performances, which took place at The Theatre at The Creative School on Oct. 7 and 8 explored an array of traditional dances and their origin stories through movement and filmmaking. Projected anima tions describing the histories of each dance set the stage for the incoming performer. The screen lit up with vibrant visuals to complement the dancers’ captivating performances and stunning regalia, while ensuring each dancer got their due spotlight.
Through movement and story telling, the group seeks to educate the public on indigeneity while si multaneously preserving and pass ing on traditional practices; an act of resistance against colonialism under systems that have historically aimed to suppress Indigenous people.
Indigenous Liberation began with a narrator providing context for the
dances to come.
“Song and dance are universal and are a common thread that everyone connects to,” said the narrator. “Yet at one time our cultural dances and traditions and even our languages were stripped away from us and outlawed, taking away the very core of who we are as a people.”
One by one, the eight dancers took to the stage. The dancers’ fur rowed brows and deep concentra tion transformed into expressions of joy and release as the audience cheered them on—matching the troupe’s energy.
During the 60-minute perfor mance, Indigenous Enterprise show
cased traditional dances from all across Turtle Island.
Colourful animations situated the Grass Dance’s history as origi nating from the Omaha people in the Northern Great Plains. Then came the Chicken Dance with Blackfoot roots. Next, the screen lit up for Women’s Fancy Dance, which has many origins and cannot be traced to a single location. Men’s Fancy War Dance originating from the Ponca Tribe in Nebraska fol lowed. Then, Ojibwa Jingle Dress Dancing and a Taos Pueblo Hoop Dance closed out the first portion of the show.
ence following the performances. He introduced the performers to the crowd and even facilitated a Hoop Dance-off between dancers Jorge Gonzales and Nanabah Keediniihii.
The show concluded with the lights dimmed and the spotlight il luminating all eight dancers as they returned to the stage. The music cued once more and each dancer be gan to perform a different dance style simultaneously. The troupe moved to the rhythm of the beating drum in the background. Light bounced off the metallic ribbons adorning Keedi niihii’s dress, creating an almost disco ball effect in the theatre.
As the performance came to an end, the music crescendoed, the dancers froze and the lights dimmed to black one final time.
while creating a space to pass on and share traditional knowledge.
With the university changing its name only recently in April, Gipp said performing in this space was “an opportunity to inform and educate.”
The Eyeopener contacted the univer sity for comment—given the history of the university—on what it means for them to now host events honour ing Indigenous histories and cultures. The university responded in an email statement saying they “have been on the journey [to Truth and Reconcili ation] for several years now” and that “the university has continued to make progress in addressing the recom mendations of the reports.”
When asked what the next steps are after representation, the univer sity forwarded The Eye two Toronto Met Today articles, one from Oct. 7 “for an update on the implementa tion of Standing Strong Task Force recommendations” and another from early March on “the latest update from the Truth and Reconciliation Working Group.”
Gipp said having the opportunity to transform and write new his tories in places where trauma and harm once festered is part of the beauty of the troupe’s work.
Each dance began with the lights dimmed to make way for the anima tion presenting the dance’s origin story, as told by ancestral oral his tories. Following each video, the lights came on and a troupe member performed the accompanying dance.
Audience members were en thralled by the troupe’s stage pres ence and the care and beauty in volved in the production.
Shirley then came back on stage to engage directly with the audi
Indigenous Liberation depicts stories of resilience, healing and resistance all while being a catalyst for it as well.
Freddy Gipp, an enrolled member of the Apache Tribe of Oklahoma and a dancer with Indigenous En terprise, said this performance has been a way for the troupe to show case the resiliency of Indigenous people from all over Turtle Island,
“It’s only more fitting that we are able to go to these venues, these areas that were once used as a means of de struction [and create],” Gipp said in an interview with The Eye Since its inception, the group has produced numerous shows domes tically and internationally, including sold-out shows at the Sydney Opera House and Scotiabank Arena. The troupe has also collaborated with major artists such as The Black Eyed Peas and gained global recognition with interviews both in Vogue and the New York Times
Indigenous Liberation concluded with a sense of pride for the cul tures and traditions that have been persevered despite colonial forces and interference.“When they took our ceremonies away, our religious traditions and ways and customs, we had to adapt,” said Gipp. “And so this performance, it’s to showcase that we’re still here.”
As the troupe performed their final dance all together, feelings of unification and tenacity filled the theatre space. When the last dance ended, the audience erupted in ap plause and gave Indigenous Enter prise a standing ovation.
The Fall For Dance North Fes tival ended on Oct. 8 and Indig enous Enterprise concluded their world tour of Indigenous Liberation on Oct. 14, travelling to cities like Paris and London.
“This performance, it’s to showcase that we’re still here”
The troupe moved to the rhythm of the beating drum in the background
The dancers’ furrowed brows and deep concentration transformed into expressions of joy and releasePHOTO: DANNY UPSHAW PHOTO: DANNY UPSHAW
Jazz Dance, Featuring You
By Jack WannanInformal, interactive and inclusive. Those three words perfectly encap sulate the jazz dance performances that took over Toronto Metropoli tan University’s (TMU) campus ear lier this month.
From Sept. 29 to Oct. 1, The The atre at The Creative School hosted a double-billing of up-tempo jazz dance performances accompanied by two unique bands. The first performance was from Holla Jazz, followed by Decidedly Jazz Dance works’ presentation. The music from the first show was composed by Sabine Ndalamba, with the sec ond being lead by Rubim de Toledo.
The show gave audience members the chance to cheer, clap, howl and even become performers themselves.
The performance was a part of the Fall For Dance North festival, which returned for its eighth sea son this year from mid-September to early October.
The show’s goal, according to the festival’s website, was to provide a jazz dance experience that allowed the audience to “lose themselves.”
given before the show.
The performance was not just dancing; it included storytelling that presented a behind-the-scenes look into the performance through the eyes of the chorus girls. The show started and closed with silent skits, featuring the performers in a backstage setting. They applied makeup, looked in the mirror, shook off pre-event jitters and pre pared to perform.
By showing the audience what it’s like behind the curtain, the perfor mance was a dramatic and unique twist on a typical dance show.
A double-billing of jazz dance shows on campus encouraged the audience to get up from their seats and be part of the performance
The first of two performances that took place during the evening was Margarita, featuring an allwoman cast. The show followed five chorus girls attempting to make it in show business.
Natasha Powell, the director of Holla Jazz, said her inspiration for the title was quite straightforward— the idea came to her while ordering a margarita at a bar, per a presentation
In another surprising twist, the show also let its dancers showcase their musical talents. Performer Car oline Fraser sang near the start of the show and Madelyn Miyashita later closed things out with a solo perfor mance, sitting atop a changing room mirror and desk set while playing the french horn.
The show succeeded in providing an engaging and exciting perfor mance for the crowd quite early on through the electric atmosphere the dancers had created. Performers’ solo dance breaks elicited claps, cheers and shouts from the audience.
While the massive campus the atre wasn’t fully packed, there was a solid turnout for the final night of the presentation. Those who at tended were enthralled by the first performance, constantly searching for the right time to interject audi bly with a gasp or a cheer to show their enthusiasm.
Family of Jazz, a performance that was choreographed by Kimberley
ly Jazz Danceworks, was the second act of the night. The show aimed to provide a mix of different jazz styles, including traditional, afrobeats and blues, merging them into one big family that could be celebrated.
The performers glided across the stage during energetic num bers with joy, swinging their arms in the air and linking up with each other for certain parts of songs. The cast of nine split into much smaller numbers frequently throughout the performance, allowing for duos to shine in the spotlight.
Cassandra Bowerman, who grad uated from TMU’s dance program in 2016 and is currently a member of Decidedly Jazz, hoped that attendees could take their own personal expe riences away from the show.
“I want them to feel something.
negative, positive, elation, hopeful ly,” she said in an interview with The Eyeopener. She added that the pre sentation personally made her feel “joyous, sensual [and] celebratory.”
played in the background. The mo ment allowed anyone—no matter their age or dance experience—to participate in the show.
“It just really keeps that sense of community alive,” said Bowerman, who joined the audience on stage after the show. “Being on stage with the dancers and the musicians, you feel it. It’s so tangible.”
The weekend of shows was spe cial for Bowerman specifically, re turning to the TMU campus not as a student but instead as a performer for Decidedly Jazz Danceworks.
“[I have] a lot of memories associ ated with my time at TMU when I was in school. I think it will be an emotional experience and hopefully, very positive,” she said.
The performance didn’t end after the curtains closed following the second show.
Instead, the crowd was then in vited to come on stage and perform alongside the dancers while a live band directed by Rubim de Toledo
Dozens of attendees flocked to the stage to take part in this section of the show with little hesitancy. They immediately began to dance in whichever way the music took them.
Maybe the hours of dancing and jazz music that they heard earlier in the evening was what motivated them to participate so enthusiastically.
From start to finish, the evening of jazz dance was an experience ca tered to the audience. There was no separation between the attendees and the act of dancing, or the artist and the viewers. Through move ment and enthusiastic participa tion, both sides were connected. It was truly a jazz dance for everyone and anyone.
The scenes were a dramatic peek behind the curtain of what it is like to be a performer
“Being on stage with the dancers and the musicians, you feel it”
Performers’ solo dance breaks elicited claps, cheers and shouts from the audienceHolla Jazz dancers performing ‘Margarita’ during the Fall For Dance North Festival, tak ing place at The Theatre at The Creative School. (KENDRA EPIK/FALL FOR DANCE NORTH) Holla Jazz dancers gather on the stage during a performance of ‘Margarita’. (KENDRA EPIK/FALL FOR DANCE NORTH) Dancers from Decidedly Jazz Danceworks performing a mix of different jazz styles in ‘Family of Jazz’, at the Fall For Dance North By Asha Swann
Sept. 30 marked the end of a 12-year run for Social Justice Week at Toronto Metropolitan Uni versity (TMU).
This year, the Week ran from Sept. 26 to 30 and was led by Kikéola Roach, the Unifor National Chair in Social Justice and Democracy at the school. The agenda included events surrounding social activism, racism, solidarity journalism and more.
Since 2011, Social Justice Week has sought to highlight relevant social is sues around campus. Roach has been the chair for the last six years, over seeing the direction that each Social Justice Week has taken since 2017.
The theme of this year’s week was “Reclaim, Repair,” according to the university’s website.
Some events included Reclaim ing Black History in Toronto, Why Social Justice is Newsworthy and an installation at TMU’s Paul H. Cock er Gallery on Sept. 29.
Roach said while she’s been the chair, planning the week was al ways collaborative. “It’s been criti cal for us to consult with all of the people who are part of the plan ning committee, which includes people from various different de partments,” she said.
It wasn’t just TMU faculty mem bers deciding the course of events during Social Justice Week—students across different programs collaborat ed together to create multiple events
on each day of the week.
Nicole Gabriele, a fourth-year ar chitecture student and a member of the first-ever equity, diversity and in clusion (EDI) task force within the ar chitectural science program, said that students will want to continue social justice events in the future because of the week’s success this year.
“I know we’re gonna continue to do this within our department,” Gabriele said, adding that she hopes other de partments feel inspired to have their own version of Social Justice Week.
The EDI task force at the archi tectural science program helped design and plan the People, Power & the Park exhibition, which oc curred on the evening of Sept. 29, as part of Social Justice Week. The exhibit had installations showing Allan Gardens as a social justice hub for the past 125 years.
cial justice surrounds the TMU com munity as the week came to a close.
“A lot of people don’t know its rich history of having protests,” she said. Thousands gathered at Allan Gar dens in 1965 in protest of Canada’s neo-Nazi groups. Throughout the 70s and 80s, LGBTQ rights groups would organize at the gardens to fight anti-gay legislation in Toronto. In recent years, anti-poverty activists have used Allan Gardens to challenge evictions in the city.
For Michel Dumont, the Indig enous artist in residence at Imagine the Park, a collaboration between Allan Gardens and TMU’s Office of Social Innovation, the main goal when it comes to issues of social justice is awareness. “Visibility is important at all costs,” he said.
have to always beg for support; beg for space, time, energy, resources and so on from the university.”
Roach said the exhibition shows that social justice is about connecting people to real-world experiences. “It’s always been about trying to bridge this gap between the people here on the campus and people in the com munity,” Roach said.
Gabriele, who said this was the first time the EDI task force helped curate a Social Justice Week exhibit, said having a focus on Allan Gardens was a perfect way to teach students that so
Roach said she hopes what peo ple take away from Social Justice Week is that students have the power to take charge. “Change doesn’t just happen automatically,” she said. “It always requires making demands, mobilizing, organizing and push ing for it.”
After two difficult years online during the pandemic and a lack of support from the community, Roach said the planning committee for So cial Justice Week wasn’t initially sure they wanted this year’s event to run. After careful consideration, they de cided this would be the final one.
“It’s now a time for reflection,” she said. “It’s a time for us to think about whether it’s reasonable for us to
The Eyeopener reached out to the university for comment on this year’s Social Justice Week being the final one and the school’s role in the deci sion for it to come to an end. Despite reaching out multiple times for com ment from the school, The Eye was forwarded back to Roach for more information on Oct. 4. After a final attempt at getting comment on Oct. 7, The Eye was once again told on Oct. 14 that there was not yet any comment.
Roach explained that she doesn’t want the initial goal of social justice week to be lost. She remains hope ful that students in future years will continue advocating for change throughout the university.
“Although Social Justice Week
might go away, it doesn’t mean that the dialogue stops,” she said. “It just might look different, depending on who shows up and what they do.”
By Samreen MaqsoodMuslim students at Toronto Metro politan University (TMU) say they want to see more multi-faith rooms around campus to pray.
Currently, students have access to the multi-faith prayer room on the third floor of the Student Campus Centre (SCC).
However, many Muslim students say having a single prayer room on campus isn’t ideal, especially when their classes may be far from the SCC, like in the Ted Rogers School of Management (TRSM) building.
“It would be nice to have a prayer room available somewhere nearby the TRSM because our building is so off-campus,” said Iram Cheema, a fourth-year business technology management student at TMU.
“If I’m being honest, I don’t even know exactly where [the prayer room] is,” she added. “I feel like it’s very hidden, at least for us busi ness students.”
Yousuf Ahmed, a fifth-year mar keting student, agreed with Cheema, saying that having different multifaith rooms on campus would be more convenient for students of
multiple religions.
Abdullah Patel, the vice presi dent of marketing at the Muslim Students Association (MSA) and a fourth-year marketing student, said the multi-faith room is one of the most “heavily-utilized resources” that students have on campus.
Before he knew about the multifaith room, Patel said he used to pray in various halls and alleyways before learning there was a prayer room available on campus.
“As soon as I found out there was a prayer room, it really made my life
During the pandemic, the multifaith room was closed due to CO VID-19 restrictions, hindering stu dents’ abilities to observe their prayers in a safe and clean space. Patel said the room’s closure had created a problem for students who lived in residence at the time.
“Students would have to resort to using an empty hallway or stair well, somewhere that isn’t as clean or private,” he said.
After returning to in-person class es in March 2022, Ahmed Taasif, a third-year computer engineering stu
The lack of space for a multi-faith room has been an issue at TMU for a while. Previously, there was a second multi-faith room located at 111 Ger rard Street on campus.
Roach described feeling that this was “a full circle moment” as the week ended and students came up to her, wanting to “continue these conversations.”
“This is what Social Justice Week is all about,” Roach said. “It’s trying to train our lens on moving beyond the kind of static sort of language that we hear often about equity, di versity, inclusion, to actually hear ing the voices of the people who are so often left out of the narrative.”
However, that space is currently being redeveloped for academic use, according to TMU’s website. The website states that construction will begin in 2022 and “could serve as the new home of the Lincoln Alexander School of Law.”
In 2016, The Eyeopener reported that there was a need for more than two spaces. Six years later, the school is back to one space. When asked about the second space on Ger rard Street, the university said in an emailed statement that they were “aware of a multi-faith room available on the third floor of Oakham House.”
Last school year, there were 36,465 full-time undergraduate students at TMU, according to the school’s web site. McMaster University’s website shows that the school has comparable
enrolment, with 31,533 undergradu ate students as of 2021 but has six spaces available for “religious, secular and spiritual practices on campus.”
As of the fall 2022 semester, the MSA is holding in-person Friday prayers now that COVID-19 restric tions have lifted. According to Patel, the Friday prayers may be held at dif ferent locations around campus, de pending on availability and spacing. He also said the MSA has reached out to different offices on campus to se cure one location for the year.
Cheema suggested there should be a prayer room in the Sheldon & Tracy Levy Student Learning Centre, saying it can be difficult to locate the SCC when time is limited between classes. She added that she had attended Friday prayers “a few times,” but said that students shouldn’t feel like they have to stop practicing because of a busy class schedule.
“It’s important to have somewhere available where you can go and ob serve your faith, especially with a university that has students com ing from all different religions,” said Cheema. “It’s really important to al low students to continue to practice that all while being in school.”
“Visibility is important at all costs”
“It would be nice to have a prayer room available nearby the TRSM”
“Change doesn’t just happen automatically”JES MASON/THE EYEOPENER PEYTON KEELER-COX/THE EYEOPENER By Rochelle Raveendran
Students in “Introduction to Creative Writing” breathed a comfortably deep sigh of relief last Monday, after learn ing that their classmate who has been convulsing with unmasked coughs like a cat retching up a hair ball during an exorcism, only has the flu.
Second-year English student Tim othy Riley was the target of silent, seething fury from his peers for let ting his saliva spray unencumbered as he expelled multiple violent bursts of air from his lungs.
He punctuated each cough by wiping his mouth with the back of his hand, wiping it on his desk and occasionally, wiping the desk with his mouth.
“Relaaaaaaax guys, it’s just the flu!” said Riley during the 10 minute lec ture break. “You think this is bad? You should’ve seen what I was hacking up last night. Vomit! And you don’t wanna know what was coming out the other end…”
He then leaned forward to moistly whisper into the ear of Jenny Smith, a third-year communications stu dent, the unwanted answer: “Watery diarrhea. Though it’s not a common symptom of influenza, some people are still affected.”
Smith said her disgust dissolved
into relief upon hearing Riley’s health disclosure. For the duration of the class, flecks of spittle had intermit tently flown from Riley’s mouth onto the back of her neck.
“At first, I thought the tingling sen sation was my nervous system finally giving up on me,” Smith recalled. “But hey, as long as it’s not COVID-19, I don’t have a problem absorbing a stranger’s fluids through my pores.”
Riley disclosed to The Eyeopener that he always wears a mask while walking outdoors around campus, because “viral strains [can] ride the autumn breeze into your nasal passag es.” In the eerily still, unventilated air
of a Kerr Hall classroom, he argued, microbes have nowhere to go and just die.
Using this ironclad logic, he ripped off his mask as soon as he sat down and began drizzling fellow students with his salivary rain.
“I don’t study creative writing to be restricted,” Riley added. “I wanna be free to express myself and extend that right to my droplets.”
Second-year business student John Diplo said he took no issue with Ri ley’s unmasked hacking. He felt it added an immersive effect while the class analysed 19th century novelist Thomas Hardy’s poem “During Wind
and Rain.”
“It was like seeing a 4DX movie at Cineplex, minus the surcharge,” said Diplo excitedly. “Though I did pay $600 for this course, so I guess it was inclusive?”
Similarly, instructor Nicholas Purell was indifferent to both the in cident and—more broadly speaking— any interpersonal relationships in his classroom.
“I’m just here to cash cheques and benefit off of the free Microsoft 365 subscription to finish my novel,” he explained.
When Purell lectures, he presses his back against the white plaster wall,
standing as far away from his students as physically possible. Not because of the pandemic, though—he just can’t stand them.
“When I look at these kids, all I see are future customers after I include my novel as mandatory reading for my Advanced Creative Writing class next semester,” he said.
Only one student was unsatisfied with Riley’s behaviour: fourth-year philosophy student Sophie Marbles. She believes being sequestered in doors for two-plus years has caused people to forget basic etiquette.
Thanks to her hyper-awareness of how others perceive her, Marbles said she lives her life with the aim of inconveniencing as few people as possible.
“The world would be a better place if more people over-thought every minuscule decision they ever made,” she said.
As Riley recuperates from his ill ness, he plans to drink extra fluids by lugging a three-litre thermos of tur meric and ginger tea with him to the rest of his classes. He will continue not wearing a mask and has no sympathy for dissenting voices. “Before the pan demic, no one wore masks if they had the flu,” Riley said.
“Why should we act differently now just cause we know better?”
Ask the expert: What are those pigeons thinking about?
By Zarmminaa RehmanYou have all seen pigeons roaming around our beloved Toronto Met ropolitan University (TMU) cam pus, but have you ever stopped and wondered what goes on in their feathery little noggins? Without a doubt, these foul fowls seem to have been through a lot. Why do they al ways look like they’ve just returned from a brawl behind the Gould Street dumpsters?
As innocent as they might look, they always seem to be up in your business, obstructing your every path to classes, never flying higher than two metres off the ground and occupying the Sheldon and Tracy Levy Student Centre (SLC) concrete stairs. But is there a reason for their suddenly scheduled crew meetings in the school’s most crowded areas?
We shouldn’t analyze animals without the proper credentials—that would be wrong. Luckily, Maxine Kingfisher, a professor at Avian Uni versity who has a PhD in Ornithol ogy (the specification of Zoology that focuses on birds) is willing to help us get to the bottom of whatever these pigeons seem to be cooking up.
Kingfisher decided that the best way to understand the feathery sub
jects is to immerse ourselves into their way of life and then break down their true intentions using previous research studies.
geons can be found in.
“Just looking doesn’t give you the full story of these magnificent crea tures,” claimed Kingfisher. “Just from their build, you [can] see they have a growing craving and drive for justice.”
with multiple spots or patches of white on them, you know the ones that seem like they would be main characters? Well, behind those eyes are no thoughts or completely useless ones,“ said Kingfisher.
Kingfisher says findings support the idea that the only real pigeons we should worry about are the betas.
Over a three-week period, King fisher and some students took turns sleeping, sitting and eating with the pigeons. They recorded their find ings and then gathered together last week to dissect and summarize their discoveries.
Like body language analysts, King fisher and others picked apart the various poses and positions the pi
Given the vast number of pi geons available to study, it was easier to group them into catego ries to better predict their thoughts, said Kingfisher.
Not all of the pigeons are the same, they fall into four categories: there are type-one alpha trait-exhibiting pigeons, type-two beta inclined pi geons, type-three really dull pigeons and then there are the perpetually confused ones—type-four pigeons— that are so inept, we leave them be.
“Type-four pigeons are those ones
Similar to type-four pigeons, typethree pigeons lack quite a lot.
“These guys are harmless as far as I’m concerned because they share a collective seven to nine brain cells.”
It was no surprise that Kingfisher deduced from her findings that there is evidence of dubious planning go ing on behind the scenes. The ongo ing suspicion amongst the research ers is that despite the alphas being more towering and sturdy, there might be a Trojan Horse-type situa tion afoot, in which the short betas are the real ringleaders.
“Alphas are only thinking about getting fed and being tough. While they have some kind of brawn, be tas surpass them in terms of bril liance, savviness and of course, skill. They can fly two and a half metres in the air.”
She added that many people don’t know that betas are actually few and far between. They are also “built different” and give off an “easy-tocatch” vibe because of their robust build and a lustrous, dual-gray toned feather composition, Kingfisher ex plained. They have very distinct mul berry purple ombres around their necks and are referred to—affection ately—as “pretty bois,” she added.
The TMU Campus Bird Society (CBS) has been discussing the like lihood of an alliance of pigeons and other campus critters, like rats.
Changes on campus, such as habitat-friendly potholes being filled and pristine resting spots like the sought-after SLC steps being taken over by students, had very distressing impacts on the pigeons. This time, the betas are stepping up and preparing—the only question now is, for what?
“They’re either all really dull or they are planning something substantial”PEYTON KEELER-COX/THE EYEOPENER
“They share a collective seven to nine brain cells”PEYTON KEELER-COX/THE EYEOPENER