November 10, 2014

Page 1

Vol. CXXXV, No. 10

10 November, 2014

The University of Toronto’s Student Newspaper Since 1880

Give me some

Sugar Some students are turning to “Sugar Daddies” to fund their university tuition

Alyssa Bouranova and Alexander Cohen VARSITY CONTRIBUTORS

“[Bind] me up with rope and physically hit me,” read the message. As a new user of dating website SeekingArrangement, the blunt proposition for bdsm was initially only mildly shocking to Elaine* — until she read the accompanying price tag. Elaine, a U of T student, is a rookie “Sugar Baby” — a young woman looking to cover the costs of tuition by dating men she meets online,

and receiving money in exchange. The request, introduced as a “non-sexual arrangement,” came from a 34-year-old Mississauga man with a net worth higher than that of most of her classmates combined. The site, which describes itself as “the leading Sugar Daddy dating site where over 3.6 million members fuel mutually beneficial relationships on their terms,” was founded in 2006 and now boasts 2.6 million “Sugar Babies” and one million “Sugar Mommas.” The site claims to have eight ‘Sugar Babies’ per

“Sugar Daddy,” and supposedly offers numerous benefits for “Sugar Babies,” including financial stability and mentorship.

SEEKING ALTERNATIVE EMPLOYMENT While 63 per cent of Canadian students rely on income from employment to cover tuition, a select group of young women and men have found that seeking out “Sugar Daddies” is a more attractive option. SeekingArrangement, along with other simi-

lar websites, mirrors conventional dating sites with a “mutually beneficial” twist. Providing what it describes as “relationships on your terms,” it matches young women — many of whom make under $34,000 a year — with older, wealthier men called “Sugar Daddies.” In exchange for dates and other romantic interactions, the women can receive money from their male companions, as well as travel, gifts, accommodation and other accoutrements of privilege.

CONTINUED ON PG 6

INSIDE Comment The cost of foreign education

Features U of T and the Great War, 100 years later

Arts

International students pay more due to low provincial funding PG. 9

Studying in the city

Science In conversation with Cynthia Goh

Sports Women’s golf wins gold

Reflecting on the contributions of U of T soliders

A guide to getting work done in Kensington Market

Techno founder talks science entrepreneurship

Blues finish season in first place at OUA championship

PG. 12

PG. 14

PG. 18

PG. 21


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