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M ANITOBAN THE OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA STUDENTS’ NEWSPAPER the VOL 101 · NO 43 · NOVEMBER 19, 2014 · WWW.THEMANITOBAN.COM A ruckus in the caucus New minister of education takes the reigns Page 3 Bracing for budget cuts University of Manitoba departments on notice Page 4 How the West was won Bisons advance to national semi-final Page 20

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Page 1: 19 November 2014

MANITOBANTHE OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA STUDENTS’ NEWSPAPER

the

Vo l 1 0 1 · N o 4 3 · N oV e m b e r 1 9 , 2 0 1 4 · w w w.t h e m a N i to ba N .co m

A ruckus in the caucusNew minister of education takes the reigns

Page 3

Bracing for budget cutsUniversity of Manitoba departments on notice

Page 4

How the West was wonBisons advance to national semi-final

Page 20

Page 2: 19 November 2014

Index VOL. 101 NO. 43November 19, 20142

A “volunteer staff” member is defined as a person who has had three volunteer articles, photographs, or pieces of art of reasonable length and/or substance published in three different issues of the current publishing year of the Manitoban. Any individual who qualifies must be voted in by a majority vote at a Manitoban staff meeting. Elected representatives and non-students may be excluded from holding votes as volunteer staff members in accordance with the Manitoban Consti-tution.The Manitoban is the official student newspaper of the University of Manitoba. It is published monthly during the summer and each week of regular classes during the academic year by the Manitoban Newspa-per Publications Corporation.The Manitoban is an independent and democratic student organiza-tion, open to participation from all students. It exists to serve its readers as students and citizens.The newspaper’s primary mandate is to report fairly and objectively on issues and events of importance and interest to the students of the University of Manitoba, to provide an open forum for the free expres-sion and exchange of opinions and ideas, and to stimulate meaningful debate on issues that affect or would otherwise be of interest to the student body and/or society in general. The Manitoban serves as a training ground for students interested in any aspect of journalism.Students and other interested parties are invited to contribute to any section of the newspaper. Please contact the appropriate editor for sub-mission guidelines. The Manitoban reserves the right to edit all submis-sions and will not publish any material deemed by its editorial board to be discriminatory, racist, sexist, homophobic or libellous. Opinions ex-pressed in letters and articles are solely those of the authors. Editorials in the Manitoban are signed and represent the opinions of the writer(s), not necessarily those of the Manitoban staff, Editorial Board, or the publisher.All contents are ©2014 and may not be reprinted without the express written permission of the Editor-in-Chief.Yearly subscriptions to the Manitoban are available for $40.

Volunteer Contributors

M A N I T O B A N1 0 5 U N IVE RS IT Y C E NTR EU N IVE RS IT Y O F MA N ITO BAW I N N I P E G , M BR 3 T 2 N 2

General InquIrIes & advertIsInGPhone: (204) 474.6535Fax: (204) 474.7651Email: [email protected] MedIaCampus Plus Media ServicesPhone: 1.780.421.1000Email: [email protected] Publications Mail Product Sales Agreement #589160

DesignDesign eDitor Bradly [email protected] / 474.6775

graphics eDitor Bram [email protected] / 474.6775

photo eDitor Carolyne [email protected] / 474.6775

Design associate Scott [email protected]

graphics associate Evan [email protected]

reportersnews Philma Scheepersnews Ethan Cabelscience Jeremiah Yarmiearts & culture Ian T.D. Thomsonarts & culture vacantsports David Gradassistant copy eDitor Kristy Hourd

eDitor-in-chief [email protected] / 474.8293

Business manager Angela [email protected] / 474.6535

aDvertising coorDinator Sara [email protected] / 474.6535

eDitorialsenior news eDitor Dana Hatherly [email protected] / 474.6770

news eDitor Craig [email protected]/ 474.6770

comment eDitor Tom [email protected] / 474.6529

managing eDitor Fraser [email protected] / 474.6520

science & technology eDitor Chantelle [email protected]/ 474.6529

arts & culture eDitor Lauren [email protected] / 474.6529

sports eDitor Mike [email protected] / 474.6529

copy eDitor Carlyn [email protected]/ 474.6520

Design Editor: Bradly WohlgemuthContact: [email protected] / 474.6775

Graphics Editor: Bram KeastContact: [email protected] / 474.6775

Photo Editor: Carolyne Kroeker Contact: [email protected] / 474.6775

Designpage 18

page 11

page 10

page 16

The jump from juniorKienan LaFrance and Alex Vitt Rifle stories

Correction This photo from our Nov. 12 issue was provided by Jordan Dumba

A brief history of RosettaA look at the comet probe's 20-year journey

Responding to Poloz Students need to stand up for their rights, not work for free

Chew on this Restaraunt owners open up new 'storestaurant' next door

SportS

Science

comment

ArtS & culture

David Arenas OroprezaPaul BellAhmad ByagowiCaroline NormanWill GibsonJosh Labossiere

Mariana MunozDaniel MontaninoMichelle SaromoHeather PollockBrooks ReynoldsSteve Gullick

Page 3: 19 November 2014

3 NewsSenior News Editor: Dana HatherlyNews Editor: Craig AdolpheContact: [email protected] / 474.6770

Selinger, former ministers raise a ruckus in the caucusNew minister of education and advanced learning has full plate, proposed University of Manitoba budget cuts to chew on

PHilmA ScHeePerS, staff

Manitoba’s New Democratic Party (NDP) caucus under-

went several major alterations this month, including a change in the minister of education and advanced learning, predicated by the resigna-tion of five senior ministers from cabinet. On Nov. 3, changes to the provincial cabinet were made, which saw some ministers shuffled and some Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) promoted to fill the gaps that the five left behind.

The five ministers who stepped down are: Fort Rouge MLA and former minister of finance, Jennifer Howard; Dauphin MLA and former minister of municipal government, Stan Struthers; Seine River MLA and former minister for jobs and the economy, Theresa Oswald; Minto MLA and former minister of justice, Andrew Swan; and Southdale MLA and former minister of health, Erin Selby.

The former ministers resigned after their public calls on Premier Greg Selinger to resign were ignored. Citing concerns about Selinger’s lead-ership as the cause of their resignation, the former ministers were accusing him of prioritizing the objectives of ministers who support his agenda.

On the day of the resignations, Selinger released a statement refer-ring to conversations he had with the five outgoing cabinet ministers. He told them that if the ministers refused to work as part of Selinger’s team, then they should resign.

The new ministers appointed to cabinet included: Selkirk MLA, Greg Dewar, as minister of finance; St. James MLA, Deanne Crothers, as minister of healthy living and seniors; Brandon East MLA, Drew Caldwell, as minister of municipal government;

and Burrows MLA, Melanie Wight, as minister of children and youth opportunities.

Several other ministers had their roles alternated or enhanced such as: Kirkfield Park MLA, Sharon Blady, was appointed to minister of health; Point Douglas MLA, Kevin Chief, was made minister of jobs and the economy; Fort Richmond MLA, Kerri Irvin-Ross, was appointed to minister of housing and community development and minister respon-sible for persons with disabilities; and Kewatinook MLA, Eric Robinson, was made minister responsible for Manitoba Hydro.

James Allum, MLA for Fort Garry-Riverview and former minister of education and advanced learning, has taken over as minister of justice and attorney general. Peter Bjornson, MLA for Gimli, was instated as the new minister of education and advanced learning.

Since 2003, Bjornson has held a place in Manitoba’s caucus, being first appointed as the minister of educa-tion, citizenship and youth, then as minister of entrepreneurship, train-ing and trade in 2009. Before his most recent advancement, Bjornson was the minister of housing and commu-nity development.

Before entering politics, Bjornson spent 13 years as a teacher in Gimli and served as president of the Evergreen Teachers Association executive in 1996.

“I’m cautiously optimistic given the fact that Minister Bjornson has held the education portfolio back when it was K-12,” said Peyton Veitch, vice-president advocate for the University of Winnipeg Students’ Association.

Veitch said that he also finds it encouraging that Minister Bjornson

held the housing portfolio, which means he could be well attuned to some of the social needs of students such as access to affordable housing.

Mitchell van Ineveld, deputy chairperson for the Canadian Federation of Students-Manitoba (CFS-MB), is currently leading the CFS Education for All campaign. Van Ineveld told the Manitoban that the CFS-MB is currently working on a request for Bjornson to do a meet and greet on all four university cam-puses in Manitoba.

“One of the things that my col-leagues and I appreciated about his predecessor, James Allum, was that he really did have an open-door policy when it came to his attitude toward students. We found that it was always quite easy to get a meeting with him and for him to listen to us, so I think that’s really the starting point for Minister Bjornson,” said Veitch.

In light of recently proposed bud-get cuts at the University of Manitoba, the new minister already has a lot on his plate. The proposed budget cuts for the 2015-2016 academic year has been met by questioning from students and faculty members, with a public assembly to be held on Nov. 26 in order to seek information about—as well as resist—the impending cuts.

As one of his first acts as the new minister of education and advanced learning, Bjornson held talks with the U of M on its capital needs as part of the university’s Front and Centre campaign, which aims to collect $500 million in donations and government grants. Bjornson, however, did not confirm whether the provincial gov-ernment has signed off on any grants so far.

According to the CFS-MB web-

site, the Manitoba NDP govern-ment had “promised a five per cent annual core funding increase during the most recent election.” However, that number is proposed to be cut in half to 2.5 per cent, which is a large part of the reason for the university-wide cuts.

The consequences of underfund-ing are already being felt, according to Veitch, as greater reliance has been formed on user fees and tuition fees. The result is “forcing students to increasingly pay for the cost of their education as opposed to society col-lectively investing in education.”

Canadian Federation of Students-Manitoba passed a motion on Nov. 6 to renounce the proposed budget cuts. The federation resolved “to call on the provincial government to increase post-secondary education funding in the upcoming provincial budget.”

The changeover in ministry has van Ineveld worried that the efforts of the Education for All campaign

may be overlooked.“Despite the change in ministry,

we don’t want them to forget that we do have a significant number of students pushing for lower tuition costs. We want the department of education to know that there is a lot of pressure still to reduce barriers to an education,” said van Ineveld.

In terms of recommendations for Minister Bjornson, Veitch said that it is important to include students in the consultation process in a substan-tive way.

“I think one of the things that students have been calling for—for years—is continued, steady, stable funding increases for post-secondary institutions,” said Veitch.

“As always, we are prepared to work with anyone and everyone. We will be meeting with Minister Bjornson soon to see how best we can preserve the interests of students here at the University of Manitoba," said UMSU president Al Turnbull.

Page 4: 19 November 2014

News Senior News Editor: Dana Hatherly News Editor: Craig Adolphe Contact: [email protected] / 474.67704

Budget cuts coming to U of MFaculties preparing for 3 or 4% cut, university could face $10.5 million shortfall

etHAn cABel, staff

The University of Manitoba administration has instructed

faculties and other non-academic units to prepare for four per cent bud-get cuts for each of the next two years.

According to U of M president David Barnard, the proposed cuts are contingent on how much the provincial government increases its annual operating grant for Manitoba universities.

The provincial government increased the annual operating grant for all universities in the province by 2.5 per cent in their March budget for 2014-2015, surprising post-secondary institutions that were preparing for an increase of zero.

As a result, the U of M is draft-ing its 2015-2016 budget in anticipa-tion of either a 2.5 per cent increase or an increase of zero. All units are being asked to prepare and make rec-ommendations for a three per cent budget cut if the operating grant increases at the same rate as 2014, or four per cent if the operating grant remains stagnant.

All units are also being asked to prepare for average budget cuts of four per cent for the 2016-2017 aca-demic year.

“Those will not be easy adjustments for anyone, I think everybody is doing good work with the resources they’ve got,” Barnard told the Manitoban.

“The question really is: what would you do to make a difference if you had to make a difference?”

According to Barnard, the cuts may be necessary given that the U of M faces a budget shortfall of $10.5 million even if the operating grant increases by 2.5 per cent this year. The grant makes up 56 per cent of the U of M’s operating budget.

“This university is funded on a per student basis on average below what the average university that looks like

us is funded at,” Barnard said, adding that the aggregate amount of tuition fees coupled with the provincial gov-ernment’s annual operating grant is too low to sustain current university expenditures.

“It’s low in large measure because of tuition fees being much lower than they are in the country [ . . . ] if they moved up to be comparable to fees at other universities it would mean a substantial increase in revenues for the university.”

According to Barnard, the University of Saskatchewan (U of S) is an example of an institution that receives more in tuition fees than the U of M but still remains affordable compared to the national average. If the U of M received the same tuition fees on a program-by-program basis as the U of S, it would have access to over $40 million in additional revenue annually, Barnard said.

Following a decrease in tuition fees in 1999 and 2000 and a decade of tuition freezes in Manitoba, the provincial government allowed uni-versities to raise tuition by up to 4.5 per cent in 2009 and up to five per cent in 2010.

In 2011, the provincial government capped tuition fees at the rate of infla-tion, where they have remained since. The province initially promised to raise the operating grant for universi-ties by five per cent a year for three years after 2011 to account for low tuition, but the government reneged in the final year. In the 2013 budget, the government increased the operat-ing grant by only 2.5 per cent, increas-ing it by the same rate again this year.

Students and faculty respond

Students and faculty members are questioning whether the cuts are fully justified and whether the level

of transparency in the university’s budget process is sufficient.

“In general, students aren’t con-sulted in any way when it comes to where budgets are going [ . . . ] right now that’s non-existent,” said Kaitlyn Gibson, a fourth-year global political economy student at the U of M.

“Our tuition rises every year. How is that being allocated and is our administration working in the most efficient way?”

Gibson continued, “We need to be talking to them and there needs to be an understanding of what the issues are and they should know that students are concerned and that they do want to be part of this.”

Along with several other students and faculty members, Gibson has organized a public assembly to be held on Nov. 26. The assembly will act as a means of organizing resis-tance to the impending cuts while also seeking more information about the budget process.

Robert Chernomas, a U of M economics professor critical of the proposed cuts, is slated to speak at the assembly.

Chernomas argues that the uni-versity’s claims of a funding crunch are misleading. He claims that the U of M is spending millions in admin-istrative costs, including through communications and marketing, that should be allocated to faculty and other academic areas.

“They are making choices that may not be consistent with the interest of students, professors, and staff at the University of Manitoba and so what we want to be able to do is make those decisions transparent,” he said, conceding that the U of M did experience a decrease in its expected operating grant.

“They are still playing with an awful lot of money that they are using

for other purposes that could make it possible not to have cuts to faculty and instead continue funding stu-dents, graduate students, libraries so we don’t have fewer courses or larger class sizes.”

The Canadian Federation of Students-Manitoba (CFS-MB) passed a motion at their Nov. 6 pro-vincial executive meeting that repudi-ated the proposed budget cuts at the U of M. The motion also vowed that the CFS-MB will lobby the provin-cial government to increase funding for post-secondary education in next year’s budget.

Zach Fleisher, CFS-MB chair-person, is particularly critical of the university’s early budget process, known as the strategic resource allo-cation process.

“The university budget isn’t trans-parent and it isn’t accessible and it’s unclear how these decisions are made,” Fleisher said.

“To my understanding, students aren’t bringing these concerns up and if their elected student representatives are privy to this and have a say on this, they aren’t making it known.”

Al Turnbull, UMSU president, has known that the U of M was pre-paring for cuts over the last year and a half.

Turnbull sits on the senate stra-tegic planning committee and is a member of the university’s board of governors. He argues that the U of M is faced with difficult choices given the funding outlook from the pro-vincial government and that UMSU is committed to lobbying the gov-ernment for more stable funding in anticipation of the 2015 provincial election.

“This is in many ways a dark time for the university, where they can’t make any moves to raise tuition and they haven’t been given the amount

that has been promised them from the province,” Turnbull said, adding that the U of M was making long-term projections on the basis of larger and more steady funding increases from the provincial government.

“When there’s no money you can’t make any perfect decisions [ . . . ] I’m in all the meetings and I have a fairly good understanding of the situation right now that the university is in and it isn’t good and it hasn’t been good for a year and a half.”

Laura Rempel, president of the U of M Graduate Students U of M Graduate Students Association Association, is concerned that the proposed cuts may have an impact on graduate programs. She sits on the university’s board of governors and has been aware of potential cuts since May.

“I think it would be difficult to maintain a high quality of education in this current climate of austerity measures,” she said, adding that more information is needed on the poten-tial impact of the cuts.

“There is money around but I think it is a matter of prioritization and how the money will be distributed [ . . . ] I think that there will be some strategic prioritization of [graduate] programs in the next little while.”

University of Manitoba Faculty Association vice-president Mark Hudson responded to the Manitoban’s email queries about the cuts.

“In arts, which is my own faculty, it’s impossible to imagine how cuts of this magnitude won’t impact seriously on our programs, course offerings and class sizes. With just a 1.5 per cent cut last year, departments across arts were already forced to chop a very significant number of courses,” Hudson said.

Page 5: 19 November 2014

NewsVOL. 101 NO. 43November 19, 2014 5

Trick or Eat is a treatCampus event raises awareness about food security

crAig AdolPHe, staff

The national Trick or Eat cam-paign held an event at the

University of Manitoba’s Fort Garry campus on Oct. 30 and 31, hosted by Student Life’s Praxis group in partnership with Residence Life’s Thrive team.

The annual campaign, which is overseen by the Canadian charitable group Meal Exchange and imple-mented by a variety of local commu-nity groups across Canada, aims to collect food items for those experienc-ing food insecurity. The campaign is also directed at shifting the focus of discussion about food insecurity to the systemic nature of hunger.

The Praxis program brings stu-dents together to tackle social justice problems in the public sphere.

“Members learn about and discuss social justice issues that affect our community on the local, national, and international level. These dis-cussions provide a framework for stu-dents to volunteer or create projects that address social justice issues (like Trick or Eat, or Gowns for Grads),” according to the Praxis program’s profile on the U of M’s website.

Linda Lam, the Praxis program assistant, helped co-ordinate the event at which U of M students collected food items for Winnipeg Harvest and learned about food security issues.

Health Canada defines household food insecurity as “the inability to acquire or consume an adequate or sufficient quantity of food in socially acceptable ways, or the uncertainty that one will be able to do so.”

In 2011, 1.6 million Canadian households—just over 12 per cent—experienced food insecurity, accord-ing to a report produced by PROOF and supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. These households represented 3.9 million individuals, 1.1 million of which were children. These figures are up from 2008, when 3.5 million Canadians experienced similar conditions.

Food insecurity is most prevalent in Nunavut, where over 36.4 per cent of households experienced a lack of access to healthy food in 2011. No province or territory is immune. The province with the lowest levels of food insecurity was Newfoundland and Labrador where it was mea-sured at 10.6 per cent. That same year, Manitoba was at the median of Canada’s 13 provinces and territo-ries with 12.4 per cent of households experiencing food insecurity.

On Oct. 30 a representative from Winnipeg Harvest came to the Fort Garry campus to make a presenta-tion to students in the Praxis pro-gram about food insecurity in the city. On Halloween, the following night, 45 students split into groups and went out to collect non-perish-able food items in the Fort Richmond neighbourhood.

Lam told the Manitoban that the students collected a total of 278-kg of food – 802 items.

While they collected food items, student-participants asked commu-nity members, “Hunger is on the rise in Canada, what can Canadians do to end it?”

People’s responses were tweeted with the hopes of sparking discussion on the topic of access to healthy food.

Chaeyoung Kim, an exchange

student from Korea in the faculty of arts who took part in the Trick or Eat event, said it would take collective action to end hunger in Canada.

“Communities should work out the problem together. People should be aware of the issue first.”

For Kim, the event also served as an introduction to Halloween as a cultural phenomenon.

“It was my first time being involved in Halloween events! Back in Korea, we don’t have Halloween,” said Kim.

“I really enjoyed [this] event.”

Despite the fun of the cultural exchange, Kim recognized the importance of the food security ele-ment of the Trick or Eat event.

“Food is one of the most important requisites in our lives. Sharing our food itself can’t be a long-term solu-tion, but we need immediate measures, too. It gives people in hunger hope and it is the starting point for helping them overcome poverty,” said Kim.

Falilat Mobolaji Ibrahim, a gradu-ate student from Nigeria studying law at the U of M, also attended the event and shared a personal connection to the issue of hunger.

“My passion for access to food stemmed from childhood. I had a hard time while growing up and I know what lack of food can do to a child; it can be the source of all kinds

of wrong decisions. Access to food and shelter are just too important to be left unattended to.

“I must say that [ . . . ] we need a long-term solution; skills acquisition for people or communities that have a high rate of food insecurity, provision of employment, and maybe increase in minimum wage.”

When asked if he felt proud

about how much food was col-lected, Ibrahim said, “I cannot say I am proud. I think the pride goes to Winnipeg Harvest who thought of the initiative [and] the kind people who went to their kitchen and stores and gave food to people they may never know. I was just honoured for a chance to contribute.”

“I know what lack of food can do to a child [ . . . ] Access to food and shelter are just too important to be left unattended to” – Falilat Mobolaji Ibrahim, graduate student

“It was my first time being involved in Halloween events! Back in Korea, we don’t have Halloween” – Chaeyoung Kim, Korean exchange student

Photo by DaviD arenas oroPreza

Page 6: 19 November 2014

News Senior News Editor: Dana Hatherly News Editor: Craig Adolphe Contact: [email protected] / 474.67706

dent, said Hudson.“They’ve both made huge contri-

butions to UMFA. It’s a real sign of vibrancy that we had three people running for the position. I think we’re seeing a re-emergent interest in the association’s governance, and a recog-nition that we all need to chip in if we want to have a strong organization.”

Hudson said he would like to see increased discussion between students, faculty, and student and sessional academic workers—repre-sented by CUPE 3909—over issues that impact them all.

“One of the things I’d like to do is to build those relationships – get us into a more sustained conversation about how the university runs, spends money, [and] makes decisions.”

He also placed a priority on reach-ing out to new and junior faculty members.

“There are plenty of ways that members can participate in run-ning the association, and I think we have some work to do to make newer faculty aware of this – and maybe to remind some of the more senior people as well. [The University of Manitoba Faculty Association] bar-gains our collective agreement, and we defend our members against vio-lations of that agreement, but we do that better the more our members feel that this really is their union.”

University of Manitoba Faculty Association elects new vice-presidentMark Hudson hopes for increased discussion between students, faculty

crAig AdolPHe, staff

The University of Manitoba Faculty Association (UMFA) has

elected a new vice-president after an opening was created for the position in May.

Three candidates were nomin-ated for the position: Mark Hudson, assistant professor in the department of sociology and co-ordinator for the global political economy program; Caterina Reitano, senior Spanish instructor from the French, Spanish and Italian department; and Kevin Scott, senior instructor from the department of biological sciences.

Ballots were delivered to UMFA members by mail and counted after the voting period closed on Oct. 29. Mark Hudson was declared the winner.

Hudson and Reitano had both previously served as representatives on UMFA’s board of representatives for sociology and French/Spanish/

Italian/German/Slavic studies, respectively. Hudson also served as member-at-large on the executive council. Reitano will retain her seat on the board of representatives.

Tom Booth, professor in the department of biological sciences, served as executive-secretary last year and won the vice-president position in an uncontested election last win-ter. However, at the May meeting of UMFA’s board of representatives, Booth declined the seat.

University of Manitoba Faculty Association president Thomas Kucera told the Manitoban that Booth’s deci-sion was made in hopes of creating room for new people to get involved with UMFA’s executive council.

Booth previously served as presi-dent of UMFA. Since declining the vice-president position, he has been elected president of the Canadian Association of University Teachers

Defence Fund.Hudson said that he ran for the

vice-president position because he believed UMFA had been critical in preserving the quality of faculty’s work life and fighting for academic freedom on campus.

“My father—then a professor in the faculty of social work—walked on the UMFA strike lines in 1995. His commitment to the principles of academic freedom that UMFA was defending then—and that it’s still fighting for now—was part of what inspired me to get more involved.

“Also, having worked at non-unionized [institutions in the United States] where faculty work has been devalued; where administrations have unilaterally increased faculty work-loads and set salaries; and where they have pushed for a model of top-down institutional governance, I know how important and effective faculty asso-

ciations are in defending work life quality and safeguarding university as a place of free inquiry and learning.”

Either of the other candidates would have made a great vice-presi-

“I think we’re seeing a re-emergent interest in the association’s governance, and a recognition that we all need to chip in if we want to have a strong organization” – Mark Hudson, UMFA vice-president

“I know how important and effective faculty associations are in defending work life quality and safeguarding university as a place of free inquiry and learning” – Mark Hudson

Photo by Dana hatherly, staff

Page 7: 19 November 2014

7 EditorialEditor-In-Chief: vacantContact: [email protected] / 474.6770

Questioning corporatized campusesConcerns about influences on higher education, research

dAnA HAtHerly, staff

The corporatization of higher education and the corporate

prioritization of research questions are serious concerns challenging the intellectual integrity of the academy and public research institutions.

Since the 1980s, the corporatiza-tion of universities has become an increasingly significant concept, with the wider, deeper impacts of privati-zation on both local and global scales. Cambridge Dictionaries Online defines the term “corporatize” as “to change a government organization into a privately owned company.” The corporate structure and influence on state-owned, public institutions like universities has obvious implications.

According to Robert Chernomas, University of Manitoba professor of economics, the core issue is the allo-cation of funds; influenced by and the determining factor of who con-trols the research and who does not. With the presence of various corpo-rate entities at universities, are there legitimate grounds for concern about the corporatization of higher educa-tion and the corporate prioritization of research questions?

Questioning the priorities of the current Conservative government, Jamie Brownlee—U of M master of arts graduate and author of Ruling Canada: Corporate Cohesion and Democracy—suggested that there are legitimate reasons for concern. In his presentations, about the commodifi-cation of education, offered at the U of M in 2013 and the University of Winnipeg in 2014, Brownlee asserted that underfunding for public univer-sities leads to austerity measures and leaves public research institutions dependent on corporate funding, leading them to support corporate mandates.

Brownlee proposed that the three major problems facing universities were: austerity measures to save in expenditures due to tax reductions; prioritizing short-term economic research; and performance evalua-tions which are problematic for long-term research.

Universities are the primary locations for basic research to take place and for scientific knowledge to develop. The dynamics of power sys-tems driving corporatization (com-plex relations between corporations, governments, and public institutions) in determining funding requirements have set the stage for implicit influ-ences on research questions, guiding scientific development of knowledge within public research institutions.

To what extent is the production of scientific knowledge based on the prioritization of corporate interests? What are the impacts of this priori-tization on learning, education, and research in the academic setting?

Within institutions of higher learning, various existing perspec-tives about discovering, representing, and stating the truth—demonstrated by the plethora of faculties, depart-ments, and contradictions within and across fields of study—inform

research and reform educational implications.

The prioritization of research interests and direction of research has major implications on both students’ opportunities and the formulation of research questions. Certain research questions—under guidance in the form of grants and funding incen-tives—and evidence may be used to fulfill capital interests over public concerns.

Is the university setting an appro-priate place for addressing public questions and concerns?

The production of scientific knowl-edge—which provides evidence for informing debates about govern-ment and industry development projects—is becoming increasingly limited due to the growing corporate prioritization of research questions and perspectives. The debate about the shifting theoretical and practical implications of the academic truth in post-secondary institutions sets the stage for significant public inquiry.

For instance, there is a growing desire among the student and civic population for opposing power struc-tures to mount resistance against the existing social, political, economi-cal, and ecological circumstances. Dominant approaches to develop-ment tend to prioritize corporate mat-ters—perhaps motivated by the need to secure funding—at the expense of marginalizing public questions and concerns.

Will reigning scientific theories and practices of development induced by post-secondary research institu-tions succeed in dismantling domi-nant power structures and addressing daily living conditions and distresses? Academics have expressed concerns that the current approaches at the core of research institutions are insuf-ficient. The dominant approach may be inadequate in determining the relevancy of measured variables and explaining or interpreting certain processes affecting living conditions.

In the context of research and development in the university setting, it is vital to consider the likelihood of under-representing scientific knowl-edge such as in the natural sciences and humanities. With quantifiable results indicating mechanisms of funding, there are inherent prob-lems with the proposed use of metric assessments for evaluating studies that are qualitative in nature.

Metric assessments will vali-date certain data gathered through research and fieldwork, subsequently prioritizing and directing the sig-nificance of some research questions over others.

In the past, fundamental ques-tions driving scientific inquiry have lacked solid grounds for determining the basis for what the scientific truth should be and how to obtain knowl-edge about it. It is necessary to under-stand these fundamental assumptions by developing methods of reasoning for discerning truth.

How do universities determine

whether particular research questions or guiding theories fit their research mandate? How does academia dis-cern truth?

Some notions about scientific truth assert that it should be deter-mined by the evidence used to sup-port it. This doctrine states that all valid or truthful scientific knowl-edge must originate in experience and observation. The source of our scientific knowledge and our basis for evaluation of scientific claims is determined by the type of evidence that we use to prove it and our means of interpreting data.

Theory limits our scientific understanding of the world in the way that it dictates and influences our perception and determination of research questions. In the above the-ory, science is not based on complete knowledge of all the facts. Rather, the construction of scientific knowledge is based on dominating worldviews that guide analysis and determining factors based on analysis.

The dominant basis for accepting or rejecting claims in higher educa-tional and research settings shapes how scientific theory in the classroom leads to the selection of certain top-ics for research and approaches to finding evidence and solutions. The process may lead to the imposition of research questions through empha-sizing problems or variables which are quantitatively defined or monetarily addressed.

Some academics would argue that it is impossible to include all vari-ables or collect all data. There are simply too many variables and too much data. Selective evidence and observations are used. The outcome is biased interpretation.

Furthermore, as much as research-ers strive to be objective, they will inevitably choose to focus on par-ticular elements and factors that are worth noticing and writing about, at

the risk of excluding other crucial indicators that may seem insignifi-cant at the time and under their par-ticular lens of study.

Objective observation is impos-sible. Each observer maintains their own worldview, social standing, political perspectives, economic sta-tus, and scientific biases varied within and across disciplines.

Consider the impartialities—or lack thereof—for selecting problems for investigation, advancing tentative solutions, and testing said solutions. Objectivity may depend on whether researchers’ definition of science is based on the dominant framework characterized by the progressive accu-mulation of data and knowledge; or refinement and repeated revolutions in which previous systems of knowl-edge are overturned and alternatives are produced.

Some theorists argue that sci-entific research is organized by paradigms. Does this extrapolate to universities? Members of specific sci-entific communities share the same training or the same goals. These members refer to the same literature and are trained to pose research ques-tions; study different facets linked to their particular lens; and propose spe-cific ways of understanding systems of knowledge.

Political and economic bases shared within paradigms particularly condition how researchers approach data collection and perceive evidence at hand. Our political and economic exposures fundamentally narrow our viewpoints and prioritize cer-tain research questions and perspec-tives. This trend allegedly produces students who are inherently taught to uphold certain beliefs in order to ensure that alternative paradigms within the institution will have dif-ficulty competing.

The result is that students either subscribe to dominant approaches

or face challenges common to minor-ity groups engaging in any alterna-tive perspectives. Since alternative perspectives may not be financially supported by the university, fund-ing issues could be major concerns

– particularly if these approaches come into conf lict with conven-tional approaches enshrined by major sources of funding.

On the other hand, resurgences of alternative perspectives—along-side critiques of previously dominant systems of knowledge—will lead to scientific revolution. The overthrow of scientific paradigms provides grounds for critically understanding the world and lived conditions.

By criticizing power relations and disempowering classifications involved in the production of scien-tific knowledge, disadvantaged peo-ple may become active components of research rather than objects of study. For this to happen, universities need to develop frameworks for working with people in their communities to promote their active roles in seek-ing objective ways for understanding the environment, humanity, and our social, political, and economic cir-cumstances based on lived conditions.

This requires the collective aca-demic will to develop a framework for academic freedom which permits and encourages basic research, as well as critical thinking and alternative per-spectives. It requires direct analysis of the institutional dismantling of the academic setting for undergoing basic research as well as challenging the accepted truths undermining public research priorities and concerns in the humanities and physical sciences. It requires serious inquiry regarding threats to academic freedom on cam-pus and the impacts on undergradu-ate students, graduate students, and faculty members in learning, research, and teaching environments.

graPhic by bram Keast, staff

Page 8: 19 November 2014

8CommentComment Editor: Tom IngramContact: [email protected] / 474.6529

Letters to the editor

re: UMSU political neutralityWhile there are many qualms that

I would raise with Ethan Cabel’s recent article around the perceived political neutrality of student unions, I would first ask him to consider both recent and not so recent historical trends. For years, student unions have found injustice on their cam-puses and instead of standing idly by have pushed for alternatives. For example, while Cabel praises UMSU for “supporting policies to mitigate sexual harassment,” he fails to rec-ognize that this is the culmination of a decades-long battle for equality not only on our campuses, but in our societies. Campus groups have long been at the forefront of those battles.

Similarly, Cabel praises pro-grams such as the U-Pass. Again, as someone who emerged as an early champion of the program and who guided it through City Hall, I can point to a dominant car culture in an era of potentially catastrophic climate change as my main motivation for putting forward this effort. While the end result may seem like a min-ute exertion of political capital, the motivations behind the program are much grander. As students, we need to push to create the world that we will inhabit post-graduation – full time or part time alike. Complacency and sitting idly by while poverty, cli-mate change, and gender inequality continue to occur is simply not an option and working on these issues in a democratic framework is the best way to move forward.

As famed American president John F. Kennedy once said: “The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, in times of great moral crisis, maintain their neutrality.” Students unions have a duty to shift the paradigm and fight for what is right especially in our modern era. Instead of neglecting the process, I’d invite those who share Ethan’s views to get involved and bring their per-spectives to the table; we’d welcome their presence. 

Zack Fleisher, chair of the Canadian Federation of Students-Manitoba

The facade of neutralityIn an article in the Nov. 12 issue

of the Manitoban, “UMSU Gets it Right With Political Neutrality,” Ethan Cabel asserts that political action has a limited place within the mandate of today’s student unions.

Singling out the “radical” University of Winnipeg Students’ Association, where we are executive members, he suggests that our student activism is out of touch with the needs of our membership.

We beg to differ. Were we to pur-sue Cabel’s “neutral” path to student unionism, the result would be devoid of meaning and direction. Instead of passively accepting inequalities and injustices, we choose a different path.

As tuition fees continue to rise, outstripping inflation, it’s clear that more and more students are having a tougher time paying for their educa-tion. It now takes twice as long for a student working a minimum wage job to pay for one year of tuition as it did in 1972. Average student debt in Canada stands at $27,000, while the total federal student debt has bal-looned to over $15 billion and con-tinues to grow.

As Cabel points out, this has consequences on the livelihoods of university students, who are forced to work longer hours, for low wages, all while balancing an education with severe implications for their future should they fail. As the pressures mount, students are increasingly put in precarious and unjust positions in their pursuit of higher education.

Students’ unions are witnessing the impact of this. Too many students don’t know where their next meal will

be coming from. This year, we have seen the percentage of University of Winnipeg Students’ Association Food Bank users who are students increase to 25 per cent. Demand for our new Student Support Program—offering emergency food, housing, and transportation—continues to grow.

A high debt load and a lack of per-sonal stability isn’t just a burden for the student. Debt makes graduates less likely to start a family or take on entrepreneurial risk. Insecurity stifles creation and muzzles the opportunity afforded to those who access higher education.

This is troubling, as universities are fundamentally agents of change. As institutions, they provide oppor-tunities for research, debate, dis-agreement, and ultimately progress. Our responsibility is to build a bet-ter world on behalf of our members: to break down the barriers between the rich and poor, the privileged and the oppressed, the haves and the have-nots.

If our union fails to challenge an economic system that forces students to attend class on an empty stomach amidst a sea of food waste and con-spicuous consumption; that ignores the intersectionality of economic privilege with patriarchy, sexism, ableism, homophobia, and trans-phobia; then we must be judged to have failed.

Cabel is correct that there are “no easy answers to some of the problems post-secondary institutions must con-front.” Rather than shying away from the challenge, student unions have a responsibility to embrace it.

We must not simply acquiesce to the pressures of the present. We must defy, innovate, and strive to address our shortcomings with a fierce belief in the art of collective action.

We are proud to partner with groups like the Winnipeg Peoples’ Social Forum, trade unions, and indigenous movements that share our values and vision of a fairer soci-ety. The same neoliberal doctrine that undermines workers’ rights and slashes environmental protections also starves our post-secondary insti-tutions of funding and forces students to graduate with crippling debt loads.

Cabel labels the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS) as

“notorious for harbouring a left-wing or social democratic ideology.” Perhaps he’s forgotten the gains made

by working people in Canada; public healthcare, a national pension plan, old age security, and employment insurance are available to him because of the victories won by progressives.

We’re proud to build on this legacy through our membership in the CFS. We’ve been able to secure gains that not only work towards larger social goals, but better the lives of our mem-bers immediately. Ask one of the over 350,000 students that are now able to access $695 million in federal student grants; ask any international student who can now rely on the same health coverage all Manitobans benefit from. Far from the irrelevance that Cabel characterizes it as, the CFS is a gen-uine force for policy changes that directly benefit students and society as a whole.

The late American historian Howard Zinn famously said that “you can’t be neutral on a moving train.” In the face of a post-secondary system that is increasingly inaccessible, the persistence of racism, homophobia, and misogyny on our campuses and a labour market where the only jobs for young people seem to be part-time or precarious, “neutrality” means a forfeiture of responsibility.

“Neutrality” is the facade behind which the unimaginative, unambi-tious defenders of the status quo hide. While we all have different life expe-riences and identities, students share a desire to be treated equitably inside and outside the classroom. If receiv-ing flak from pundits is the price we pay for seeking this goal, we’re glad to pay it.

Rorie Mcleod Arnould, president of the University of Winnipeg Students’ Association, and Peyton Veitch, vice-president advocate of the University of Winnipeg Students’ Association

re: Manitoban coversThe front page used to grab my

attention with its eye-catching, colourful, and original design. It now lacks these qualities, and seems to remain constant as the weeks go by. The new three-row layout does no justice to the images it portrays, and the weeks just blend together. It’s difficult to identify the actual images and text that make up the front page without getting extremely close to the paper itself. It used to be that the front page could be seen from a mile away, and always grabbed my attention, especially since you started

using colour.I would always take notice of

the Manitoban; it would be like a bea-con in my life. Being an undergradu-ate, then graduate student here for the past eight years, I’m starting to feel as though my life is not changing and that I’ve been doing the same thing over and over again, always working on some project or some assignment that’s due yesterday. The days blend together; the weeks, months, years all combine into one hazy blur that is university life. There was one beacon in this haze that always made me stop, made me think about why I was still here – the Manitoban.

When your front page was as eye-catching as it was, I stopped, picked it up, leafed through it if only for a moment. I carried that newspaper the rest of the week, read the articles when I could no longer focus on my work. It was nice, but all good things must come to an end, I guess. The paper seems to always have the same front page, that format with its tiny images and drab colour scheme that make it difficult to distinguish one week from the next. Why take notice of something I’ve picked up and thor-oughly digested before? I’m not say-ing you should change the front page format to what it used to be; instead I just want you to know the impact it had on me. It is something I will always remember about the university, a fond memory of a time that seemed to slip though my fingers. This new front page reminds me of life, noth-ing can remain constant, everything changes for the better or worse. I will eventually graduate for the third time, and move on with my life. I will turn the front page that is my life, only this time, I’ll be writing the stories.

Sincerely,Cale Bergmann

There was one beacon in this haze that always made me stop, made me think about why I was still here – the Manitoban

In the face of a post-secondary system that is increasingly inaccessible, the persistence of racism, homophobia, and misogyny on our campuses and a labour market where the only jobs for young people seem to be part-time or precarious, “neutrality” means a forfeiture of responsibility

Although the "Letters to the editor" section is intended to be a public forum and therefore to represent

as many diverse opinions as possible, personal attacks or libellous statements will not be published.

Letters will be routinely edited for spelling, grammar, length, clarity, and when appropriate, content.

Page 9: 19 November 2014

CommentVOL. 101 NO. 43November 19, 2014 9

Attendance policies harmfulIt’s none of your business whether or not I go to class

tom ingrAm, staff

In my first year at the University of Manitoba, I encountered some-

thing I had never imagined before. On arriving at my first English class and receiving a syllabus, I discovered that there was an attendance compo-nent to the course’s evaluation, to be enforced by calling the roll on three random days throughout the term. In other words, if you did not religiously attend class, your grade could take a hit.

The official policy of the University of Manitoba is that all students are expected to attend all classes. Enforcement of this policy is at the discretion of course instructors. An instructor may choose to take atten-dance at every class and incorporate it into the grade; they may choose not to take attendance at all; or they may do any of a number of things between these two extremes.The attendance taking seemed strange to me then, and nearly four years later it still does. Along with most of the people in that class, I was old enough to vote, join the army, drink, and own firearms. And yet we apparently had to be man-aged like a gaggle of five-year-olds.

Calling the roll is legally required of public school teachers in Manitoba, and students of school age are required to attend classes. This makes sense. The purpose of a public school system in a modern industrialized nation is to set a lower bound on education.

We as a society have collectively decided that there are certain things everyone should know and be able to do, and part of the function of public schools is to pro-vide this instruction. This is why, unlike in the vast majority of past civilizations, you can reasonably expect that any-one you meet in Canada is literate. This system only works if students are on average and for the most part required to attend every class.

Another consideration that gets less important as children progress through the school system is that, as minors, they need someone to look

after them. Recording and enforcing attendance ensures that students are being cared for by the teachers who are responsible for them. It is note-worthy that in high school, where students begin to assume some of the responsibilities of adulthood

(and some are in fact adults), the practice of taking attendance tends to fall off.

The university is a different kind of place. While pub-lic school teachers are responsible for their students, the academy has no equivalent duties toward its students,

most of whom are adults. Professors are not teachers and deans are not principals. A course instructor stands in a peculiar relationship to his or her students that is almost totally devoid of authority. This is why a university education can be so intellectually freeing: you get mentorship without tutelage.

And while public schools are meant to enforce a minimum of edu-cation—and are therefore compulsory for all school-aged children—a uni-versity is meant to provide something additional beyond the bare minimum. There is no legal impetus for everyone in Canada to get a university educa-tion, and this is the way it should be.

People learn in different ways. Some people think of learning as a social activity that requires some-one explaining things in a way that appeals to them. For them, rigorous attendance at lectures might be nec-essary to their education.

For me, learning is a solitary activity that characteristically takes place alone in a library when I’m sup-posed to be doing something else. I’ve always thought that if you frequently hear things in lectures that are new to you, you’re not reading enough books. Missing a lecture is not a big deal for me, and it is a major inconve-nience when I am compelled to attend classes that are not useful.

As adults, university students should be expected to take responsi-bility for their learning. This means

that if you need to attend class, you should do so without coercion. If you can do all the coursework with-out showing up, more power to you. You’re responsible for the course material either way, but how you deal with it is your own lookout.

There are exceptions to this, of course. Labs obviously require atten-dance, though there is no reason to incorporate that into the grade since attendance is a prerequisite for the rest of the evaluation. For rehearsals in music or drama, it’s necessary for everyone to attend every rehearsal, and the entire group suffers if anyone is missing.

But for a lecture-style class, there is no reason to ever evaluate people based on attendance or lack thereof. Whether I show up to classes is none of the university’s business, as long as I do high-quality coursework in an honest manner. Taking attendance in a university classroom is insulting to students and counterproductive to the goals of higher education.

If you can do all the coursework without showing up, more power to you

Page 10: 19 November 2014

Comment Comment Editor: Tom IngramContact: [email protected] / 474.652910

Responding to PolozStudents don’t need to work for free; they need to stand up for labour rights

PAul Bell

Last week Stephen Poloz, gover-nor of the Bank of Canada, said to

a House of Commons committee that out-of-work students should work for free to bolster their CVs. His remarks have since been condemned in the media, and for good reason.

Calling on unemployed young people to work for free is an abysmal response to what is a growing trend in Canada. It devalues who we are, what we contribute to the economy, and the experience we have. As a group we need to oppose the idea that we are easily taken advantage of, and this starts with connecting us with our identity as labourers.

Amidst the systematic culling of labour unions and activists over the past 35+ years it seems our ability to understand our identity as labourers has been constrained. How often do we think of ourselves as selling our labour as a product to a company?

Regardless of whether you work as a researcher, business analyst, nurse, or mechanic this is what we do when we work for a wage. We sell labour. We can’t go into a store and take something off the shelf without buying it. Why then should we be expected to offer our labour for free?

I find myself wanting to say that Poloz’s statements are naive and show no understanding of how working for free hurts students, but I have a hard time believing that this is the case. Someone in his position has to understand the economics of free labour and that it stands to benefit corporate Canada far more than the students who donate their labour in the hopes the experience might get them a job later on down the road.

What we really need are mecha-nisms and policies that end the barriers to finding employment, mechanisms such as apprenticeships,

work co-ops, paid internships, and junior positions that offer experience and training. As a recent grad I have seen very little along these lines, and it’s made it incredibly difficult to find work. The last thing I need right now is a corporation thinking they can use me as a free means of generating profit.

The cost of labour can greatly affect the profitability of a company, and high unemployment allows for lower wages to be offered to labourers. Confronting low pay by employers is enough of an obstacle in our lives: we don’t need the abhorrent expectation that we are going to work for free.

By getting students to work for free under the guise of earning expe-rience, companies are decreasing their costs while continuing to produce profits. This is exploitation. If Poloz does not realize this—or worse, if he thinks this is good—then his leader-ship of the Bank of Canada needs to be seriously brought into question.

So how do we tell Stephen Poloz that calling on us to exploit ourselves is unacceptable? While he has been scrutinized and chastised by the media for his comments, we cannot let that be our only response. If there has ever been a time for a resurgence of the labour movement this is it, and it needs to be driven by young people.

If you are a student and out of work, don’t accept Poloz’s bleak advice. Instead, take time to learn about what it means to be a labourer, and develop this identity. Connect with those around you who are in the same circumstances of unem-ployment or underemployment, and start discussing ways to overcome it. Stephen Poloz is wrong. Students don’t need to start working for free; they need to start standing up for their rights as labourers.

graPhic by bram Keast, staff

Page 11: 19 November 2014

11 Science & technologyScience & Technology Editor: Chantelle DuboisContact: [email protected] / 474.6529

A mission 20 years in the makingEuropean Space Agency first conceived idea of landing on a comet in 1993

cHAntelle duBoiS, staff

On Nov. 12, 2014 the European Space Agency (ESA) accom-

plished a very important first: they landed a probe on a comet. While it is common knowledge that the mis-sion has been one of the most complex tasks attempted by mankind, what may not be so widely known is that Rosetta is a mission over 20 years in the making.

The Rosetta mission was first proposed to ESA’s Science Program Committee in 1993. The mission would serve as part of the Horizon 2000 program, a science program operated by the space agency from 1985 to 2000. Other missions that have been part of this program include the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory to study the Sun, the Cluster satellite mission which used four satellites to monitor solar wind and the Earth’s magnetosphere, and XMM-Newton, which is an on-Earth observatory to study soft X-rays which are produced by form-ing stars and galaxy clusters.

The Rosetta probe was named in honour of the Rosetta stone, the ancient Egyptian tablet famous for its inscriptions in hieroglyphics and Greek. The lander of the probe

was named Philae, after the Philae obelisk in Egypt. Both the Rosetta stone and the Philae obelisk helped Egyptologists translate hieroglyph-ics to give insight into the ancient way of life. European Space Agency scientists hope that studying a comet will give us insight into the origins of the universe.

It took 10 years from the proposal acceptance to completion before the

probe was ready for launch. The origi-nal launch date was for January 2003 but a failed Ariane rocket launch the month before pushed the date back. Finally, on March 2, 2004 the probe was launched into Earth’s orbit.

The time it took for Rosetta to reach comet 67P was nearly equal to the time it took to build the spacecraft.

For a year, the probe followed Earth’s orbit around the Sun before

looping around the Earth for a gravity-assisted swing towards Mars. This grav-ity assist took place on March 4, 2005.

In February 2007 Rosetta reached Mars, and another gravity assist was performed to slingshot it back towards Earth, coming back to the planet’s orbit in November of the same year. This gravity assist helped the probe pass the orbit of Mars.

In November 2009, Rosetta would

make its last flyby of Earth, finally on its way towards Comet 67P.

In May 2011, the space probe went into hibernation mode, waking up 3 years later in January 2014.

Months later, in August 2014, Rosetta finally rendezvoused with comet 67P, and after over two months would land the Philae probe onto its surface.

Perhaps showing its age, the Rosetta probe uses two RTX2010 processors – a 16-bit, 8MHz proces-sor. The 80c3x microcontroller is also used, which operates with 256 bytes of RAM. To compare, the Snapdragon 801 quad-core processor used in the Samsung S5 smartphone is a 32-bit chip and has a speed of up to 2.5 GHz/core. The S5 also has 2GB of RAM. For perspective, 2.5GHz is 2,500 MHz and 2GB is 2 billion bytes.

The Rosetta mission accomplished something amazing: sending a space probe to land on a moving comet for the first time in human history. Equally impressive is the amount of planning that went into this mission, and the amount of time it took to reach its final destination.

Medicinal and hallucinogenic plantsCourse profile: BIOL 3290

JeremiAH yArmie, staff

The course “Medicinal and Hallucinogenic Plants” is

described as “a botanical and histori-cal survey of medicinal, hallucino-genic and poisonous plants used in various cultures.” BIOL 3290 catches the eye of many science students at the University of Manitoba because of its unique subject matter.

The course is organized and taught by department of biological sciences professor Norm Kenkel. The course was first offered in 2006 in the for-mer department of botany. Kenkel began painstaking work to develop the course in 2003, at the encourage-ment of his wife.

The material covered in the course was consolidated by Kenkel at the time of its fruition.

“I decided to endeavour to pull it all together, and it was a lot of work, but [the course] has proven to be, as I anticipated, exceedingly popular,” said Kenkel.

“It was impossible to find a text. I read hundreds and hundreds of articles, and acquired quite a large library in order to put these notes together. Nobody has compiled this information before in the way that I have, which is rather surprising,” said Kenkel.

“I had a lot of fun with it,” he added.“What the course tries to do is give

some historical context to the utiliza-tion of plants medicinally, primarily, but also in terms of their psychoactive properties [ . . . ] the use of psychoac-tive plants actually has a very interest-ing cultural component to it, which I really emphasize in the course,” said Kenkel.

“Most people tend to think of [psychoactive plants] purely as entertainment.”

The course looks at the anthropo-logical influence of these particular plants. “There is a commonality there; it’s interesting. Different cultures and societies use [psychoactive sub-stances] for exactly the same purposes

– to divine illness, to communicate with the gods or the ancestors or the future [ . . . ] And one can see why

– you’re entering into a completely dif-ferent mind space,” said Kenkel.

The course extends its gaze across the world and far back in time.

“The whole issue of why hallucino-gens are frowned upon by Western society is a really interesting ques-tion [ . . . ] I believe, personally, it has, probably, a historical legacy to some extent. Certainly, another fac-tor that was hugely contributing was the 1960s cultural revolution,” said Kenkel.

We endeavour to understand things better through science. The

knowledge shared in the course about these plants allows us to bet-ter respect them.  

The use of plants is particularly pertinent to medicine. “The main reason I did it was because of the lack of recognition by most people that plants still remain exceedingly important as medicines. That’s not fully appreciated,” said Kenkel. 

“The search for cancer drugs is really fascinating [ . . . ] The fact is that some of the most important recent cancer drugs are derived from plants,” said Kenkel.

An example of such a cancer drug is the chemotherapeutic drug pacli-taxel, also known by the trade name Taxol. Taxol is derived from bark of the pacific yew tree.

Medicinal and Hallucinogenic Plants was recently featured in Huffington Post Canada list of the coolest classes offered at Canadian post-secondary institutions.

Medicinal and Hallucinogenic Plants does not have any prereq-uisite courses. Enrolment in the course requires at least 30 credit hours or special consent from the department of biological sciences.

graPhic by scott forD, staff

graPhic by evan tremblay, staff

The Rosetta mission took over 10 years before it finally landed on a comet

Page 12: 19 November 2014

Science & Technology Science & Technology Editor: Chantelle DuboisContact: [email protected] / 474.652912

Biomedical engineering is the process of applying engineer-

ing concepts to problems in medi-cine and biology. It is an emerging industry in Canada, as fields of study begin to overlap and evolve into their own industries.

A student group on campus strives to connect U of M students to this industry by providing oppor-tunities to attend tours in local laboratories, attend biomedical focused events, and meet profes-sionals in the field.

Olivia Essex, a mechanical engineering student completing her final year of her undergrad program, is the president of the University of Manitoba’s Biomedical Engineering Society (UMBMES). She founded the group after finding that her program lacked a strong focus in biomedical engineering. She wanted to find opportunities to get involved in the field. Her solu-tion was to start a student group. In 2012, she founded UMBMES.

“You can approach [biomedical engineering] from an electrical, computer, biosystems, and mechan-ical engineering background. You can also be from the biology, physics, or chemistry department. Those in medicine are also involved.

The field is very interdisciplinary. Although I would say that prob-ably 95 per cent of our members are engineers, the group is definitely willing to grow,” said Essex.

University of Manitoba’s Biomedical Engineering Society is free to join, and so far the group has approximately 100 members.

One of the ways that UMBMES reaches out to students is through their annual outreach event. The event provides both an industry and research perspective, while also being engaging and informative. During this event, members of the student group give presentations to the first-year students explaining what biomedical engineering is and the different aspects of it. This is followed by an industry tour of a facility in Manitoba, and then pre-sentations by professors from the U of M who are currently doing their research in the biomedical field. The event also includes a hands-on biomedical tutorial and design challenge.

The University of Manitoba’s Biomedical Engineering Society recently took 16 students on a tour to Monteris Medical. At the facility, students were able to learn about and see firsthand the MRI-guided,

laser-based neurosurgical devices Monteris has developed to treat brain tumours.

This year is the first time the stu-dent group has taken on a project. This project was commissioned by the Rehab Centre for Children and consists of redesigning the mecha-nism commonly used for articula-tion in ankle foot orthoses (AFO).

Essex explained that the AFO is a brace which prevents plantar flex-ion of a patient’s foot, for individu-als who experience foot drop. Foot drop is a condition where a person is unable to lift the front part of their foot while walking. The AFO limits plantar flexion while allow-ing dorsiflexion so that the patient is able to walk without tripping over or dragging their feet.

Students in UMBMES are working on this project voluntarily during their free time.

Essex hopes that the student group can enable students from all disciplines to become interested in and get involved with the exciting, fast-growing biomedical field.

For more information on UMBMES, visit umbmes.com or email [email protected]

Spotlighting the Uof M Biomedical Engineering SocietyEmerging interdisciplinary student group spreads the word about the field

cHAntelle duBoiS, staff

Science media roundup: YouTubeProfiling vlogs and channels that make science accessible

JeremiAH yArmie, staff

Since its creation in 2005, YouTube has been a staple enter-

tainment website. Through their streaming services, one can find videos on anything from cats to the latest sports highlights.

YouTube can also be an excellent educational tool. Sal Khan’s website, Khan Academy, gained momentum through the accessibility of YouTube. With over 19 million members, Khan Academy’s success is an example of YouTube’s capacity for being an educational resource.

There are many YouTube channe l s ded icated to communicating science in fun and quirky ways.

MinutePhysics is a YouTube channel created by Henry Reich. The channel addresses physics concepts with videos that are about a minute in length. The videos employ the use of “time-lapsed drawings,” typically of stick figures, depicting interesting physics concepts. The videos are illustrated by Reich himself. The most popular MinutePhysics video, which has over nine million views, addresses the collision between an immovable object and an unstoppable force. Other topics covered in a minute or so include quantum tunnelling, cosmic inflation, and why there is no such thing as pink light. Reich’s second channel, MinuteEarth, addresses the science of our planet in the same short manner.

AsapSCIENCE is a Canadian channel created by Mitchell Moffit and Gregory Brown. Equipped with a white board and a charming voiceover, their channel focuses on addressing science topics in a quick and snappy manner, much like MinutePhysics. Some of the topics that the channel has addressed include what would happen if we stopped sleeping, and the science of orgasms. The channel has collaborated with Bill Nye on a video about humanity’s ability to stop an impending asteroid collision, and with the CBC on a series about how Olympian bodies have changed since 1924, which aired during the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

Sa l ly Le Page is a interdisciplinary biosciences doctoral student at the University of Oxford. Le Page’s YouTube channel, Shed Science, covers many quirky and interesting biology topics. Her video “Without Evolution” depicts Le Page trying to, unsuccessfully, explain many biological concepts without referencing evolution

by natural selection. “Without Evolution” won Le Page a British national short film competition run by the Guardian.

Veritasium is a science video blog created by Derek Muller, who has a PhD in physics education research. His thesis showed that individuals were more likely to learn a difficult physics concept after viewing others fail at it first. The results of Muller’s PhD research are reflected in his channel. Many Veritasium videos involve addressing scientific topics by first presenting related popular misconceptions. The concepts covered in the channel are as broad as they are interesting. Muller travels the world and provides demonstrations to add context to topics about our universe, which range from the world’s roundest object to the northern lights.

Myles Power is a chemist and skeptic from England whose channel, powerm1985, is partially dedicated to the destruction of pseudoscience. Power's videos have targeted movements that he believes employ pseudoscience, including AIDS denialism, the 9/11 truth movement, and anti-vaccination beliefs. Power has enjoys his work, too. In his videos, he has demonstrated the fun science can be, notably by playing with ferrof luid, a magnetized liquid. Power also tackles interesting scientific phenomenon, recording his own reactions to explain the science of hot peppers and wasabi.

Finally, the University of Manitoba’s own YouTube channel is worth mentioning. The Ask An Expert video series addresses a variety of topics, including scientific ones, with the help of U of M researchers and academics. Some scientific topics include a discussion on the importance of flu shots with physician Dr. John Embil, and an explanation on why we treat icy roads with salt by chemistry professor Philip Hultin.

By exploring what science communication channels YouTube has to offer, you can learn a little bit about our universe in many different ways. At the very least, you can procrastinate a bit more educationally!

Photo by ahmaD byagowi

Olivia Essex (second left) and co-founder Cameron MacGregor (first right) help students build a DIY pulse oximeter during UMBMES’ annual outreach event.

Page 13: 19 November 2014

13 DiversionsGraphics Editor: Bram KeastContact: [email protected] / 474.6775

illustration by carolyne KroeKer

Page 14: 19 November 2014
Page 15: 19 November 2014

15 Arts & CultureArts & Culture Editor: Lauren SiddallContact: [email protected] / 474.6529

Arkells ‘Come To Light’ With Latest AlbumHamilton rockers Arkells slated to play Winnipeg during Canadian tour

dAniel montAnino

Coming off of the summer release of their newest album, High

Noon, Hamilton band Arkells is set to stop in Winnipeg during their 12 city Canadian tour.

Featuring 11 songs, including singles “Come to Light” and “Never Thought That This Would Happen,” High Noon is comprised of pieces that are upbeat, energetic, and catchy – and is bound to have listeners press-ing repeat.

The album boasts a roster of songs that are dexterous and differ in sound, which not only keeps things fresh during each listen, but also shows the versatility of the musicians.

The piano-driven “Hey Kids!” is reminiscent of 70s rock-and-roll style music, whereas “11:11” employs a more modern sound.

Then there are songs like “Dirty Blonde,” featuring a progressive sound through the combination of 80s synth pop and present-day rock – blending old and new styles together to create a melodious track.

As a whole, it is easy for the listener to see just how musically inspired the album is. High Noon is an amalgama-tion of past, present, and future styles of music all tightly compiled together.

High Noon displays its multi-dimensionality from its first notes forward. The opening track, “Fake

Money,” juxtaposes Max Kerman’s raspy and powerful vocals with a folk-inspired instrumental sound.

Packed with infectious lyrics, a spirited rhythm, and lively piano riffs, High Noon will attract new listeners for the Arkells while encouraging current supporters to revisit past projects.

Over the years they have been together, the Arkells have been rec-ognized for their talent, decorated with two Juno award wins. Their first Juno award came in 2010 for “New Group Of The Year.” In 2012, they won again at the Junos, this time for

“Group Of The Year.”

A Canadian project from its incep-tion, High Noon was written by the band in their hometown of Hamilton, Ontario. This winter, tour will bring the Arkells back to Winnipeg for the first time since July 19, 2014, when they performed at the MTS Super-Spike volleyball tournament.

The Arkells’ upcoming Winnipeg

date will be a must-see show for fans of high velocity music accompanied by lyrics that demand to be sung. For listeners of energetic and melodic music, High Noon is definitely an album worth checking out.

The Arkells will be in town per-forming at the Garrick Centre (330

Garry Street) Feb. 28, 2015. Tickets are on sale now and are available in store at Music Trader, located at 97 Osborne Street, as well as online at www.unionevents.com. $1 from each ticket sold will be donated to Partners in Health, an organization working to battle the Ebola epidemic in West Africa.

The album boasts a roster of songs that are dexterous and differing in sound, which not only keeps things fresh during each listen, but also shows the versatility of the musicians

Photo by brooKs reynolDs

Musical rewiring: Cold SpecksSoul singer-songwriter experiments with sophomore album, Neuroplasticity

iAn t.d. tHomSon, staff

Hailing from Toronto, Al Spx—better known as Cold Specks—

expands the possibilities of what a singer-songwriter can be. Coinciding with the release of her second album, Neuroplasticity, on Aug. 26 of this year, Spx and her five-piece band will be performing her soulful music at the Park Theatre on Nov. 30.

Cold Speck’s debut album, I Predict a Graceful Expulsion (2012), quickly put Spx and her R&B-inspired indie rock music on the map. Singles such as “Blank Maps” and “Holland,” which primarily focus on Spx’s soulful voice, soon caught the attention of music critics across Canada, earning her a spot on the 2012 Polaris Music Prize short-list.

With extensive North American and European touring spanning the two years since the debut’s release, Cold Specks gained an international audience.

For Cold Speck’s sophomore album, she found solitude in a cot-tage in Wick, England. After time off between a North American and European tour, Spx found it difficult to get the song-writing sparks flying.

“I’d been staying in London at the time and wanted some space to write songs. I was finding this impossible

in London,” explained Spx to the Manitoban.

“It was my friend [British pro-ducer] Rob Ellis who suggested his friend’s cottage in Wick.”

For three months, off and on during England’s winter, the singer-songwriter found herself heading to the cottage to work on songs for her sophomore album.

“The time I was there was entirely devoted to creating. I’d wake up and make breakfast. I’d then hop on the old piano or pick up my guitar and make things happen,” said Spx.

Sophomore albums have a repu-tation for making or breaking the continued success of a popular art-ist. While a band such as Vampire Weekend may rise to the occasion (see 2011’s Contra), other acts such as Best Coast may crack under the pressure and release an album that fails to capture the imagination in the way its predecessor did.

This has lead artists to feel pres-sured when constructing the ever-important second album. Cold Specks rose to the occasion with ease.

“I think that’s only natural. I don’t think there’s any harm in a little pres-sure,” said Spx to the Manitoban.

“I can only make the best music I

can and hope the rest works itself out.”The result is Neuroplasticity: ten

tracks that fuse R&B, indie rock, and soul. Although Spx’s voice remains at the forefront of the music, one is immediately made aware of the album’s experimental instrumentation.

Tracks such as “Absisto” exem-plify the continuation of Cold Specks’ music. Featuring a distorted piano riff and a wall of delayed electric guitars, the ear is immediately drawn in by an eerie synth line that would feel at home on an Air or Queens of the Stone Age record.

Cold Specks made a clear state-ment when “Absisto” was released as Neuroplasticity’s first single. With a new sound, Spx wanted an album title that communicated the change in her musical style.

“I had realized that the record sounded quite different than the first [record] and so I wanted a title that would reflect change. I felt as though a creative rewiring process had taken place,” said Spx.

“Neuroplasticity is the process by which the brain rewires itself. I thought it was a fitting title. It implies an aesthetic change.”

The Winnipeg Folk Festival pres-ents Cold Specks on Nov. 30 at the Park Theatre (698 Osborne Street.) Tickets are $20 and are avail-able through Ticketmaster or the Winnipeg Folk Festival Music Store.

Photo by steve gullicK

Page 16: 19 November 2014

Arts & Culture Arts & Culture Editor: Lauren SiddallContact: [email protected] / 474.652916

Sitting down with the StrumbellasThe Strumbellas talk touring, their latest album, and upcoming ventures

lAuren SiddAll, staff

Toronto-based band, the Strumbellas, have seen massive

success this past year. Between their Juno win for “Folk and Traditional Album of the Year,” their Sirius Indie Award for “Folk/Roots Album of the Year,” and being long-listed for the Polaris prize, this band is dominating the music scene.

Although their latest album,

We Still Move on Dance Floors, has received the best feedback, lead vocalist Simon Ward says either of their albums could have received such a decorated response.

“Some of the songs on this record were actually written before the first EP (The Strumbellas, 2009) even came out. So it’s kind of weird because I don’t see that we’ve progressed really,

in terms of the songs we write,” Ward said to the Manitoban.

“I think you could take songs from the last record and interchange it with the other record and you wouldn’t even miss a beat.”

The major difference with their new album is the larger produc-tion and the new producer, Ryan Hadlock, brought in to pilot the project. Hadlock—producer of the Lumineers’ eponymous, chart top-ping album — brought a bigger, fuller sound to the six-piece band.

We Still Move on Dance Floors ranges from the rocking and rollicking

“Did I Die” or “Home Sweet Home,” to the quieter, more intimate “The Fire”

– the latter favourited by Ward.“I think my favourite song—I don’t

know if it’s a favourite song—but my favourite thing is to play a slow song in a sit-down theatre vibe. That’s my favourite musical experience overtop the fast stuff. Don’t get me wrong, I love playing to people who are danc-ing and shouting along, but I love to play a slow, intimate song.”

During their performance of “The Fire” at the Park Theatre, the Strumbellas illustrated their wide musical scope – opting to play the number acoustically and unplugged to showcase the strong lyrical and vocal abilities of Ward.

Paired with the intimacy of the Park Theatre—though it would have been brilliant in any venue—the bal-lad showcases the versatility fuelling the Strumbellas success, both in stu-dio and on tour this year.

Despite their extremely lucra-tive year on the road, including performances and workshops at the Winnipeg Folk Festival, Ward looks forward to their upcoming break and returning to his favoured endeavour

– writing.“Over the break, I’m going to try

and write and get this next record ready to go so we can record it and release it as soon as possible. That’s all that’s on my mind right now – mak-ing the best record we can possibly

make.”Though his song-writing process

may be unorthodox—citing song-writing locations such as in the bath-room, brushing his teeth, or watching Naked Gun in the tour van for the millionth time—writing is where Ward’s true passion lies; he is always looking forward to the next song he will write.

“What excites me is having a new melody to make a new song; that’s what excites me the most. The other songs were written and they were recorded and they’re on a record. But for me, the excitement is having something new come up and being able to work on something that you hope is better,” said Ward, grinning from ear to ear.

“I think for me, my favourite thing is writing music. I like being by myself, in my room, writing music. That’s my number one favourite thing to do in the world, next to being with my family.”

Comfort food for thoughtChew restaurant owners open up the Store Next Door

micHelle SAromo, volunteer staff

Even before popular restaurant Chew opened on Waterloo

Street in the River Heights neigh-bourhood in 2013, owners Kristen Chemerika-Lew and Kyle Lew had always wanted a store right beside their restaurant.

“We called it a ‘storestaurant,’” Chemerika-Lew said while kneading dough at their new bakery/espresso bar/food/cookware shop located right beside Chew. “We didn’t think it was going to happen. We rented the place next door, we opened [Chew . . . ] and then the hair salon moved out. So we figured, why not?”

In place of that hair salon stands The Store Next Door. The new store opened on Oct. 27, and while busi-ness is still pretty quiet on this side, it won’t be long before it becomes a bus-tling neighbourhood meeting place. It has a casual, cozy atmosphere that gives off the feeling of being at a friend’s place (albeit a distinctly epicurean friend’s place). A wooden

communal table, soft lighting, and open shelves of foods make the inti-mate space feel warm and inviting.

Chemerika-Lew describes The Store Next Door as being “a little more accessible for families and people just wanting a quick bite, a cup of coffee, [or] somewhere quiet to sit where you might not feel as comfortable doing that in a sit-down restaurant [like Chew] in the middle of the morning.”

You can also expect to see a lot more of the classic comfort food favourites at the Store.

“Our prepared foods are a com-bination of either the things we did for catering clients that aren’t on our regular menu, or the things we did for ourselves and our family and our friends that all said, ‘This is really good, you should make it in your res-taurant!’ Except we don’t really have the restaurant that sells the chicken shepherd’s pie,” Chemerika-Lew laughed. “So it’s nice to do things

that are a little more comfortable and casual and a little more reflective of who Kyle and I are.”

The couple have a global set of culinary influences.

“Kyle’s dad’s family is Chinese, my dad’s family is Jewish. We’re classi-cally trained French chefs, as is our full-time pastry chef, Jamie,” said Chemerika-Lew.

On that particular visit, she told the Manitoban that they were sell-ing bialys—her Jewish grandfather’s favourite pastry—for the first time at the bakery: “It’s like a cousin to the bagel, except instead of having a hole in the centre, the centre is actually filled with good stuff, so things like poppy seeds and caramelized onion and cream cheese.”

Their most popular bakery item? So far, it is the savoury brie and chives scones, a hearty upgrade from the typical run-of-the-mill cheese scone. They are—as Chemerika-Lew puts it— “a surprise sleeper hit.”

Although there aren’t very many regular items at the shop yet, accord-ing to Chemerika-Lew, “We’re hop-ing to find our niche as a comfy neighbourhood bakery.”

In the heart of the neighbour-hood, right beside their already well-received bistro, no doubt they’ll soon find it.

The Store Next Door is located at 532 Waterloo Street, beside Chew.

Photo by heather PollocK

Photo by michelle saromo,

Page 17: 19 November 2014

Arts & CultureVOL. 101 NO. 43November 19, 2014 17

The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and DisappearedSuccessful Swedish film makes its way to Cinematheque

iAn t.d. tHomSon, staff

“If you want to kill me, you better hurry, because I’m a hundred years old” – Allan Karlsson.

Best-selling Swedish novel The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared tells the tale of centenarian Allan Karlsson and his wild travels outside his retirement home. With a Swedish film adaptation of the same name, The 100-Year-Old Man will be screened at Winnipeg’s Cinematheque later this month.

Written by journalist Jonas Jonasson, the story has subsequently been published in 38 countries in several different languages. As his debut novel, The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared has sold over six million copies worldwide.

“It is always difficult to adapt a book to film, but I could not resist The 100-Year-Old Man when I got the chance,” said director Felix Herngren, in a press release.

“It is a delightfully twisted story with rich characters, and situational comedy at its best.”

Uninterested in his upcoming birthday celebration, the 100-year-old Allan Karlsson—as the long-winded title suggests—escapes through the window of his retirement home. After stumbling upon a briefcase full of drug money, the old man finds him-self on the run from an angry drug

lord and a slew of criminals.The story also explores the greater

historical context of the centenar-ian’s life. As a man involved with the development of explosives through the 20th century, Karlsson found himself in comedic situations with important historic figures, such as Joseph Stalin, Winston Churchill, and Harry Truman. Karlsson was present for some large historical events, such as the testing of the atomic bomb. In this way, The 100-Year-Old Man is reminiscent of 1994 Academy Award Winner Forrest Gump.

“Allan Karlsson is doing what many of us westerners should do. Do not worry about the future, use your gut instinct and do not fret over yesterday’s troubles,” explained Herngren.

The 100-Year-Old Man was released in Sweden on Christmas of 2013. The adventure-comedy has subsequently set record numbers in its homeland. Ranked number one in the box office for 2013, The 100-Year-Old Man is on track to overtake The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo as the top-grossing film of all time in Sweden.

The Scandinavian film has yet to mobilize a similar audience in North America – despite its universal sub-ject matter. The demographics of Sweden—25 per cent of their popu-lation fall over the age of 60, placing the country 8th in the world—may account for the film’s popularity. In

comparison, Canada and the United States did not make it into the top 23 in this category.

James Borja, host of “Ultrasonic Film,” one of Canada’s longest run-ning community radio film shows (live every Thursday at 10 p.m. on UMFM 101.5), hypothesizes a differ-ence in business models between the continents to account for the differ-ences in attendance of the film.

“This is certainly going to be a generalization, because of course a lot of big budget Hollywood films do very well in Europe [ . . . But] I think European audiences embrace a lot of different types of films. And I think we do [too], but I think we’re faced with a corporate business model that perhaps Europeans filmmakers are not so controlled by,” explained Borja to the Manitoban.

With a reputation for international eclecticism, the Cinematheque is the only theatre in Winnipeg currently planning to screen the Swedish success.

“The Cinematheque strives to bring in international and indepen-dent films of a high artistic calibre which do not play here otherwise. We chose this film based on its artistic merit and critical acclaim,” Cinematheque program director Dave Barber told the Manitoban.

“Large venues such as Silver City are set up to cater to Hollywood and whatever will make the most amount

of money,” said Barber.“We are screening films for the love

of cinema. We get it.”

The 100-Year Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared will be playing at Cinematheque (100 Arthur Street) on

Nov. 23, 28, 29, 30, and Dec. 4. For more information on shows and show times at the Cinematheque, visit win-nipegfilmgroup.com/cinematheque

Photos ProviDeD by mongrel meDia

Page 18: 19 November 2014

18SportsSports Editor: Mike StillContact: [email protected] / 474.6529

Playing junior football can serve as a springboard towards a uni-

versity career for a number of play-ers, and with running back Kienan LaFrance and receiver Alex Vitt, that has been exactly the case.

Vitt’s path started in community football with the Greendell Falcons, and then the St. Vital Mustangs. With the Mustangs, Vitt won two Midget Football League of Manitoba championships, includ-ing being named MVP in the 2008 final.

After finishing off his midget football eligibility in the 2008 sea-son, Vitt opted to attend both a CIS and Canadian Junior Football League football camp, with the University of Manitoba Bisons and Winnipeg Rifles, respectively. Ultimately, Vitt chose the Rifles.

“Coming out of high school, I was small, and I wasn’t very fast, so I wouldn’t have been anything on the Bisons,” Vitt said. “I took the Rifles, because I just wanted to play and develop there.”

LaFrance’s football journey started relatively late. He didn’t strap on the pads for the first time until age 15, with the St. James Rods. After a year of playing community ball, he moved onto Sturgeon Heights High School, where he won a Winnipeg High School Football League champi-

onship in his senior season in 2008. LaFrance’s abilities as a ball car-

rier led to interest from universities such as Alberta and Simon Fraser. However, LaFrance ultimately chose to take the junior football route as well.

“[Playing with Sturgeon Heights] was my second year of real competitive football, where I’m applying to get better, and play to be the best,” LaFrance said. “I felt like [CIS football] kind of wasn’t a good fit, to go and compete against guys who had been playing for 10 years.”

While with the Rifles—Vitt from 2009-11 and LaFrance from 2009-10—both players earned CJFL All Canadian honours (LaFrance in 2010, Vitt in 2011), and

made names for themselves locally. Vitt was on top of the Prairie Football Conference in receiving yards during his final season, while LaFrance led the Rifles in rushing during both of his two years with the team.

After impressing in junior, the two local products were recruited to the U of M, where they are now in their fourth year of eligibility, and have put up big numbers in 2014.

LaFrance played in all eight regular season games, finishing second in the Canada West con-ference in rushing yards, with 785, while Vitt played in seven of eight games, logging 489 receiving yards, good for eighth in the conference and second on the team.

“I think that in terms of goals, you need to set mini goals in order to get to those major ones. I figured that [junior football] was the best stepping stone in order to prepare myself for [the CIS],” LaFrance said.

Both players made an intelli-gent decision to hone their skills in junior football, instead of moving directly to CIS football, and their patience and hard work has paid off. With one year of eligibility remain-ing for each, the best is likely yet to come for LaFrance and Vitt.

Developing into stars Junior football’s impact on Kienan LaFrance and Alex Vitt

mike Still, staff

Dunking and dominatingMen sweep Brandon, first in Canada West to score 100 in a game

mike Still, staff

Men’s basketball The University of Manitoba

men’s basketball team continued their hot start to the 2014-15 sea-son, grabbing a pair of wins over the weekend against the Brandon Bobcats. Manitoba led early and often in both games, taking it to the winless Bobcats. AJ Basi led the team in points in both games, recording 25 on Friday and 19 on Saturday.

Friday’s game was the closer of the two. The Bisons took a 24-12 lead into the second quarter, but Brandon was able to fight back, using their speed to get a number of good looks. The Bobcats outscored Manitoba 27-15 in the second frame, and the two teams went into the half tied up at 39.

The second half was a differ-ent story entirely, as the Bisons out-scored Brandon 54-39 over the final two quar-ters, securing the 93-78 win. Basi scored four three-pointers in the second half, and credited his open looks to the play of the team’s power forwards, specifically Wyatt Anders, who was aggressive in the paint all game long.

“It was for sure a product of what Wyatt [Anders] was doing down low,” Basi said. “Him get-ting a couple of easy buckets opened

up everything for all of the other guards.”

Saturday’s rematch was never close. Manitoba led by 10 after the first quarter, and then erupted for 34 points in the second quarter to pull away. Five different players scored in double figures for Manitoba, and Anders was a phenom on the boards, picking up a double-double, with 14 rebounds and 10 points in the 102-67 shellacking.

Women’s basketball The women didn’t fare as well

against the Bobcats, falling 71-47 on Friday, and 66-56 on Saturday.

Vanessa DeVries was the lead-ing scorer for Manitoba in the opening matchup, with 12 points, while Robyn Eyer put up a team-high 11 points the fol-lowing night.

When asked what the team needs to do to improve going forward, head coach Michele

Hynes said they need to display more “effort and passion.”

Both basketball teams will now travel to take on the Calgary Dinos, on Friday, Nov. 21, and Saturday, Nov. 22. Women’s action will be at 7 p.m. and 6 p.m., respectively, while the men will duel at 9 p.m., and 8 p.m.

Manitoba led by 10 after the first quarter, and then erupted for 34 points in the second quarter to pull away

“I think that in terms of goals, you need to set mini goals in order to get to those major ones” – Kienan LaFrance, running back, Manitoba Bisons

Photos ProviDeD by bison sPorts

Photo by shawn coates

Page 19: 19 November 2014

SportsVOL. 101 NO. 43November 19, 2014 19

Bison BriefsHockey and volleyball

dAvid grAd, staff

Men’s hockeyThe men’s hockey team took on

the Calgary Dinos at home. Entering the matchup, the Dinos were sitting in second place in the Canada West, three spots ahead of the Bisons.

Manitoba played an excellent game defensively in a 4-1 victory Friday night. Manitoba kept the Dinos to 20 shots and limited threat-ening scoring chances. Deven Dubyk stood tall in net yet again, and the Bisons received contributions on the score sheet from Reid Gow, Aaron Lewadniuk, Justin Augert, and Jesse Paradis.

Coach Mike Sirant noted that his team had a strong team defensive game and played smart positionally.

When asked about how much time his team has to celebrate a big 4-1 win against Calgary, Sirant was quick to answer, “30 minutes. Very little time to enjoy this, it’s back to business to prepare for tomorrow.”

The Bisons were unable to carry the momentum from Friday night into Saturday’s game, losing 3-0 to the Dinos, despite managing 25 shots on net.

The Bisons will now head to UBC to take on the Thunderbirds on Nov. 22 and 23.

Women’s hockeyThe women’s hockey team wasn’t

able to find success on the road

against the Dinos this weekend, losing Friday and Saturday night’s matchups 3-2 and 3-1, respectively. Charity Price notched her second and third goals of the season on Friday night. The Bisons were in tough against a Calgary squad that has one of Canada’s top female players internationally, Hayley Wickenheiser.

Wickenheiser had two assists on Friday night and a goal and assist on Saturday night. Standout first-year Alanna Sharman scored the lone goal on Saturday against the Dinos.

Men’s volleyballThe men’s volleyball team was in

tough against a strong Brandon squad on the road this weekend. Brandon beat the Bisons Friday night in three straight sets (22-25, 13-25, 22-25). Devren Dear and Kenny Rooney led the Bison offence on Friday with 11 and nine kills, respectively. Libero Alex Strachan picked up 11 digs in the effort. The Bisons came out with a stronger effort on Saturday night in a tight five-set loss (26-28, 25-19, 23-25, 25-16, 8-15).

Luke Herr picked up a staggering 54 assists in Saturday nights effort, and Dear led the offence with 19 kills. Adam DeJonckheere had 16 kills, Rooney picked up 11 kills, and Strachan led the defensive effort with 17 digs.

Women’s volleyballContinuing their tough first half

stretch, the Bisons, looking to get above .500 before Christmas, split the weekend against the Bobcats. Manitoba got off to a hot start on Friday night, beating the Bobcats in three straight sets (25-16, 25-23, 25-19).

Rachel Cockrell continues to light up her opponents, picking up 26 kills on the night. Brittany Habing had 41 assists, and the defence was led by Caleigh Dobie and first-year Kalena Schulz, with 17 and 15 digs, respectively.

The Bobcats responded on Saturday night, taking the match 1-3 (20-25, 25-21, 14-25, 25-27). Cockrell and Schulz led the offence with 17 and 10 kills, while Habing collected 31 assists and 14 digs. Dobie finished her weekend strong with 16 digs.

Captains Cockrell and Habing are still topping the leader boards in the Canada West. Cockrell leads the conference with the most kills, while Habing has the second most assists. Also of note are Dobie, with the fourth best digs per set, and Schulz, with the third highest service aces per set.

Both volleyball teams return home this weekend, taking on Thompson Rivers on Nov. 21 and 22.

Treading in the right directionThe story of fourth-year Bison swimmer Dillon Perron

mike Still, staff

Dillon Perron is no stranger to the pool. The native of Lac

du Bonnet started swimming when he was six years old, and moved to Winnipeg in grade nine in order to train with the Manta Swim Club at Pan Am Pool. He stayed with Manta until he graduated from high school, moving onto the Bisons from there.

The training schedule for Perron during high school was fairly intense. He would go to the pool every eve-ning after class for three hours, and participated in morning sessions four times a week.

While he was able to balance school and training fairly well in high school, his first year of university was a larger adjustment.

“My first year at the university was very tough,” Perron said. “It was sort of a new adjustment for me to actually have school with that regime, and that first year didn’t work out the best for me.”

Perron ended up taking a full year off from school, which resulted in a loss of two years of eligibility, as players needed to have 18 credit hours from the previous year to continue

competing at meets, which Perron didn’t have.

Despite losing his eligibility for an extended period of time, Perron continued to hone his craft at the university.

“During that time I was just swim-ming with the club at the univer-sity,” Perron said. “Nothing majorly changed for me, except that I couldn’t swim at university meets.”

The winter of 2012 was Perron’s last

semester as an ineligible swimmer, and once he returned to the university circuit in the fall of that year, records began to drop.

Perron started off by placing first in the 50- (28.05 seconds), and 100-metre breaststroke (1:01.32 seconds) at the 2012 Canada Cup, held in November of that year – a score that shattered both the Bisons’ and pro-vincial records. He also qualified for the CIS swimming championships that season.

Perron credited his attendance

at the 2012 Olympic trials, held in March in Montreal, as one of the big factors that changed his mindset once he returned to competition in the fall.

“That sort of opened me up to a whole new world of swimming,” Perron said of the event.

“I’d already been swimming for 15 or 16 years at that point, but I’d never really been to a meet quite as emotional as that. As focused as I was with the sport at that time, it was even more so after that.”

Perron has kept his drive going

ever since. He’s had a number of nota-ble performances, including placing third in the 100-metre breaststroke at the 2014 CIS championships. His bronze medal was the first hardware for a Bison at the national competi-tion since 2006.

Perron plans to continue swim-ming after his university career ends next season, with the ultimate goal of making a national team. Considering the adversity that he has already bat-tled through, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see him continue to surge forward.

The winter of 2012 was Perron’s last semester as an ineligible swimmer, and once he returned to the university circuit in the fall of that year, records began to drop

Photo ProviDeD by bison sPorts

Page 20: 19 November 2014

Sports VOL. 101 NO. 43November 19, 201420

The best in the Canada West Bison football upsets Calgary, wins first Hardy Cup title since 2007

mike Still, staff

The Hardy Cup has made its way back to the province of

Manitoba. On Saturday afternoon, the University of Manitoba Bison football team dethroned the Calgary Dinos at the top of the Canada West conference, winning 27-15 at McMahon Stadium. The Hardy Cup win was the Bisons’ first since 2007, when they went on to win the Vanier Cup.

The victory was also Manitoba’s first-ever post-season win on the road against Calgary, who had won six straight conference titles heading into the weekend matchup.

The turnover battle made the dif-ference in this one, as Calgary con-ceded 10, compared to none from Manitoba. The Bisons’ secondary had arguably their best performance of the year, holding Canada West MVP Andrew Buckley to 224 yards passing, along with four interceptions – the same number of picks Buckley threw over the entirety of the regular season.

Summary Things got off to a shaky start for

Manitoba, as Calgary running back Mercer Timmis shot through the line for an 81-yard rushing touchdown on the first play from scrimmage.

Despite going down early, Manitoba stayed composed, tying things up on the shoulders of their defence. Jonathan Jones jumped a route in the flats, taking it back 20 yards to the house to tie the game up, less than five minutes in.

The Bisons grabbed the momen-tum after the pick six. They took their first lead of the game with 7:47 left in the first quarter. Kienan LaFrance found a hole, made a few defenders miss, and rumbled 40 yards to the endzone, capping off a three-play, 75-yard drive.

Both offences stalled until a missed Manitoba field goal less than two minutes into the second gave Calgary some life.

The Dinos retook the ball after a failed 37-yard attempt from Ryan Jones, and capitalized with a five-play, 90-yard drive of their own. Rashaun Simonise hauled in a pass on a slant route, and utilized his breakaway speed to tie the game up at 14, on a 42-yard reception.

The game would remain tied for less than four minutes, as Manitoba secured the lead for good, on a 17-yard Jones field goal. The three points came off of the sec-ond forced turnover by the Bisons, as Colton Farago stripped Dino returner Michael Klukas, and Brett MacFarlane recovered the ball on the Calgary 10-yard line.

The fumble recovery by MacFarlane marked the first of four consecutive drives where the Dinos turned the ball over. Backup QB Eric Dzwilewski failed on a third down conversion, two straight intercep-tions, thrown by Buckley, followed

– the first to Tyler Fong, and the sec-ond to Cam Teschuk, who stole the ball from the outstretched hands of Simonise.

The Fong interception resulted

in a touchdown for the Bisons, as QB Jordan Yantz found Zach Regert from seven yards out on the ensuing drive, to take a 10-point lead heading into the break.

The second half produced a total of just four points, with a single from the Dinos, and a field goal from Manitoba to round out the scoring.

Manitoba’s defence shut down the highest scoring team in the nation in the final two quarters, forcing five more turnovers, including two failed third down conversions, a fumble recovery by Evan Foster, and interceptions from halfbacks Jayden McKoy and Jordan Linnen.

Calgary also lost Buckley to a hamstring injury midway through the third quarter. Dzwilewski entered the game in relief, produc-ing 105 yards, no touchdowns, and

one interception. Yantz did an effective job manag-

ing the game for the Bisons. He fin-ished with 263 yards, one touchdown, and no interceptions.

LaFrance was the biggest play-maker offensively for Manitoba, put-ting in a workhorse effort. He carried the ball 30 times for 155 yards and a touchdown.

The Winnipeg product was pleased with the way the team has come together all season to get to this point.

“There’s not a group of guys I’d rather be sharing this victory with. Everyone had put in so much work to get where we’re at, and it’s finally paying off,” LaFrance said.

“It’s definitely the best experience I’ve had in this program and is truly the most amazing feeling.”

On the defensive side of the ball, DJ Lalama led the way, with eight total tackles. Lauren Kroeker and Foster put in strong efforts from the end positions, both recording four tackles, with Kroeker adding a sack. After him romping 81 yards for a score on the first play, the Manitoba defensive held Timmis to just 52 yards rushing for the remainder of the game.

Uteck BowlThe Bisons will now head to the

CIS National Semi-Finals in the Uteck Bowl to take on the second-ranked Université de Montréal Carabins on the road. Game time is Saturday Nov. 22, at 11:30 a.m. CT. This will be the first time the two teams have ever squared off.

Manitoba’s defence shut down the highest scoring team in the nation in the final two quarters, forcing five more turnovers

Photos by DaviD moll