November 17, 2023

Page 1

NOVEMBER 17, 2023 VOLUME 117 ISSUE 5

since 1906

PURPLE REIGN: Western captures third straight Yates Cup RYAN GOODISON SENIOR SPORTS EDITOR MANAN JOSHI SPORTS EDITOR

T

he Mustangs football team won their third straight Yates Cup, defeating the Golden Hawks 29–14 at Western Alumni Stadium. The Nov. 11 win makes it Western University’s first Yates Cup “three-peat” since 1988-1990. “It’s pretty special what everyone’s done so far this year,” said Mustangs fifth-year centre Alex Berwick. “Everyone had to come out and write their own history tonight and I’m pretty proud of the whole team.” En route to their 35th Ontario University Athletics championship, Western was able to stand tall against an impressive Wilfrid Laurier University Golden Hawks offence, shutting them out in the second half. “The kids executed the game plan, they stepped up, it was the best game they’ve played all season,” said Mustangs defensive coordinator Paul Gleason. “We were up against the league MVP at quarterback and our kids did a great job. I’m so proud of them.” The Mustangs did well to shut down Laurier’s star fourth-year wide receiver Ethan Jordan and Larry Hayor Trophy winning quarterback Taylor Elgersma. The Mustangs intercepted Elgersma twice and kept him to just 242 yards and one touchdown. In

SOPHIE BOUQUILLON GAZETTE Defensive Coordinator Paul Gleason with the Mustangs defence following their Yates Cup victory, Nov. 11, 2023.

CONTINUED ON P11

‘Cash cows’: Why international student tuition is so high ESTELLA REN EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

O

ne morning in November 2021, Asma Muhammad, then a second-year psychology student at Western University, woke up to a devastating text message that her father, who had worked in Qatar for 17 years, lost his job. As Muhammad tried to process the news, she couldn’t help but worry about her family members, Pakistani expats living on residence permits in Qatar. Unemployment meant they would lose their status and the income to support Muhammad and her two older sisters, who were also studying in Canada and paying sky-high international tuition. From across the world, Muhammad’s family remained resilient, rebuilding their life in Pakistan, running a business and selling land they had owned for years to fund their daughters’ education. As Muhammad begins her fourth year this fall, her tuition is $37,712, six times the $6,050 tuition paid by domestic students. She has never under-

stood the disparity in what Canadians and non-Canadians need to pay to get an education. “We add value to these institutions. We give you diversity, we bring our own sets of talents … it shouldn’t have as many obstacles and barriers as it does, but it does because they look at international students like cash cows, they will increase the tuition,” says Muhammad. While international tuition has long been much higher than domestic, the gap has widened dramatically in recent years. In 2002, a first-year international student studying Arts and Humanities at Western paid $9,300 in tuition and a domestic student paid $4,000. Twenty-one years later, international students in the same program paid $42,233 while domestic tuition was up to $6,050. Western told the Gazette, international students contributed about 32.5 per cent of student tuition fees and 12 per cent of total revenue in 2022 — while 9.5 per cent of Western undergraduate enrolment is international.

Drawing on nearly two decades of Western tuition history, operating and budget documents and interviews with students and experts, this is the story of how Western has increasingly relied on international tuition, while at the same time experts say Ontario has been “underfunding” its universities.

I

n 2020, when COVID-19 was sweeping the world and Western moved all courses online, Muhammad spent the fall semester of her first year studying remotely in Qatar. Distance learning didn’t lower tuition fees paid by international students — which are not JENNY ZHANG GAZETTE

CONTINUED ON P6

OPINION

NEWS

‘Maltreatment’: Federal minister speaks on Western women’s hockey

Opinion: The arts will thrive in spite of AI

P4

P10

SPORTS

CULTURE

Western has your parents’ new favourite sport: Pickleball

From L.A. to London: Denis Jiron’s musical journey P8

P11


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
November 17, 2023 by Western Gazette - Issuu