Vote Compass attracts professor
MPP hopefuls face off
UTM scours the grad school fair
JEROME JOHNSON
LORILEE EMSHEY
Peter Loewen, an assistant professor of political science at UTM, has been working as the director of analytics on the provincial elections for Vote Compass Canada. The CBC’s Vote Compass—the brainchild of Clifton van der Linden, a U of T graduate student and PhD candidate—is a tool for individuals wanting to find the party that best suits their own set of values. Van der Linden approached Loewen to get involved in the project that has attracted over a million followers during the 2011 federal election. “I think many people are looking for a way to start a conversation about politics, but perhaps lack a common language to do so,” said Loewen. “Vote Compass helps with this, and I think that explains a lot of its popularity.” The panel of academics behind the questionnaire tried to analyze how left- or right-wing the population really is, based on how much an individual’s social attitudes and ideology correspond with a particular political party or candidate.
tions posed by executive members of UTMSU. Considering that the student debt in Ontario averages at $37,000 per student, candidates were asked to explain their plans to relieve students of the heavy financial burden awaiting them after graduation.
UTM students lined up in the RAWC to get into the annual Graduate and Professional Schools Fair held by the UTM Career Centre last Wednesday. The fair included 103 graduate schools from all over Canada, the United States, the UK, Australia, and the Caribbean. This year the fair was organized by area and divided into business, health care, law, education, graduate programs, and graduate diploma sections. Approximately 50% of programs belonged to the sciences, 30% to the arts, and 20% to commerce. This breakdown reflects the composition of UTM’s student body and the feedback from previous fairs. Every year, approximately 200 feedback forms are collected by the Career Centre and evaluated to aid in structuring the next year’s fair. Claire Westgate of the Career Centre had been organizing the fair since April and hoped the fair would “expose students to all the opportunities and help them understand the process [of graduate school application]”.
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EDWARD CAI/THE MEDIUM
The candidates appealled to the student audience, focussing on education. STEFANIE MAROTTA NEWS EDITOR The four MPP candidates for the Mississauga-Erindale constituency attended a debate at UTM on Tuesday. Students and residents filed into the Instructional Centre’s largest lecture hall to watch the candidates
defend their platforms. The UTMSU invited Harinder Dakhar of the Liberal party, David Brown of the Progressive Conservative party, Michelle Bilek of the New Democratic Party, and Otto Casanova of the Green Party to debate matters of policy, focussing on post-secondary education. After the first half-hour of opening remarks, the candidates fielded ques-
Subsomnia: A pub night without Danny Fernandez AHMAD AL-HENDI UTM’s CFRE radio station and the Electronic Music Appreciation Club hosted their second annual Subsomnia Pub at the Blind Duck on Thursday night. With the music throbbing and the lights flashing, over 150 students flooded the dance floor. One of the first was Dave Nijjar, whose freestyling inspired several other students to follow. “This is my type of music. I don’t even need to put any effort into my dancing; I just let the beat take over my body. It’s a great feeling to let something bigger take you over,” said Nijjar. With DJs like Unique Freak, Starlab, No1da, Christian Kuruvilla, and Dan Milk spinning the latest mixes in house, electro, and dubstep music, the tracks were anything but mainstream. “We have our music tailored to a certain crowd. We’re not here to play the Top 40 you hear on the ra-
dio,” No1da’s Andrew Griffith said. Crisp white sheets of paper and a few boxes of crayons lined the glass partition at the pub. “We wanted a new interactive medium for students to freely express themselves,” said Ryan Weir, the station manager at CFRE. “The sheets are for people to leave a piece of their mind.” Students wrote messages such as “The music tonight is such a refreshing change”, “Good music, great friends, let’s dance!”, and “The DJs are awesome.” Several others created images to better represent their mood. Weir hopes to display a few of the sheets along the glass walls of the CFRE station. “The music tonight is great and it has brought out such a unique crowd,” said Francesca Saraco, a fourth-year student, commenting on the distinctive sound offered at Subsomnia 2.0. Pub continued on page 2
It’s a celebration Hindu Student Council celebrates Hawan. Medium News, Page 3
Provincial Funding How we actually pay for university and why we should remember it. Medium Opinion, Page 4
Art House Hart House presents the Barnicke gallery. Medium A&E, Page 5
MCAT much? Is the fabled test really as important as it seems? Medium Features, Page 8
Baseball is over But not really. We take a look back at the season that was. Medium Sports, Page 10 EDWARD CAI/THE MEDIUM
Cowboys know how to groove.