Keeping cool Staying Warm
THE VARSITY
Vol. CXXXIII, No. 13
University of Toronto’s Student Newspaper Since 1880
14 January, 2013
“Men’s issues” groups test limit of free speech on campus Simon Bredin NEWS EDITOR
information was lost. This includes direct notification to those for whom we have current contact information,” Finley said in a statement released Friday. For those whose contact information is not up to date, a phone number has been set up by the department to address concerns. Jaroslava Avila graduated from U of T in 2011, and received federal loans in 2005 and 2006. She says she is still unsure if she has been personally affected by the breach. “This is just one more thing for students to worry about on top of paying thousands of dollars in students loans,” said Avila.
Senior administrators at the University of Toronto and the University of Toronto Students’ Union (utsu) continue to debate the acceptable limits of free speech on campus in the aftermath of a lecture delivered in late November by Dr. Warren Farrell. The lecture was marked by a sizable protest and heavy police presence, during which a group of protestors blocked the entrance to the lecture hall where Farrell was scheduled to speak. “We have at the University of Toronto a wide range of contentious events, in which views are expressed that are offensive to some,” said Provost Cheryl Misak in a December 11 statement. “Our primary aim with respect to these events is to ensure that freedom of speech is protected, including the freedom to protest, as long as the law is respected.” In a dueling statement released in the days following Farrell’s lecture, the utsu condemned the event. “Despite complaints to the University administration, and requests from students to maintain our campus as a safe space free from oppression and discrimination, Dr. Farrell was given a space and forum to spread his misogynistic, hateful theories at U of T,” read the union’s release. Farrell was invited to speak on campus by a group called Men’s Issues Awareness at the University of Toronto (miaut). The group is listed as a registered student club with ULife. Its mission is described as “consciousness-raising, public education and efforts to change public policy” in relation to “men’s issues,” and the group pledges “positive activism to advance a healthier society” and “the highest level of co-operative dialogue with other campus and community organizations engaged in activities of similar aims and goals.” Calls to the contact number listed on miaut’s ULife profile were routed to the voicemail inbox of the Canadian Association
CONTINUED PG 3
CONTINUED PG 4
The Newman Centre has provoked critisicm with “Courage,” a controversial same-sex support group. READ MORE PG 3
Feds lose data for hundreds of thousands of students RCMP, privacy commissioner investigating theft of external hard drive containing financial and personal info James Maiangowi & Zane Schwartz ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITORS
An external hard drive containing the personal and financial information of 583,000 Canada Student Loan borrowers went missing from a Human Resources and Skills Development Canada (hrsdc) office last year, the department announced Friday. The portable hard drive contains the names, dates of birth, addresses, social insurance numbers (sin), and student loan balances of students who were recipients of the loan program from 2000 to 2006 in 10 provinces and territories, including Ontario.
No banking or medical records were compromised. However, records of 250 employees of the department were also on the hard drive. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Office of the Privacy Commissioner are both investigating the matter. Diane Finley, Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development, called the loss “unacceptable and avoidable,” and said new security policies would be put in place to ensure the safety of Canadians’ personal information. Finley also promised that the department would make efforts to inform those affected by the privacy breach. “The department will be making every effort to contact the individuals whose