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Clan get swept in Alaska

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SFU men’s basketball fail to pick up second conference win

By Bryan Scott

The Simon Fraser men’s basketball team were in action last week for their second last game of the season. They were in last place heading in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference heading into their game against the University of Alaska Fairbanks Nanooks.

These two teams battled it out for the entire game. There were a total of 10 lead changes (five for each team), and the game was tied six times.

After the Nanooks went out to a four-point lead, the Clan’s Anto Olah, and Matt Raivio hit consecutive three-pointers to give SFU a 6–4 lead.

Over the next 10 minutes of the half, both teams sunk some great shots and found themselves tied at 24 with 5:29 to play. SFU was great in the paint in the first half, getting 14 points to the Nanooks’ eight. Ibrahim Appiah hit two clutch free throws with one second on the clock to give the Clan a one-point, 36–35 lead at halftime.

It was the Nanooks who came out firing to start the second half, regaining the lead just 19 seconds in. They maintained the lead for the next seven minutes, matching SFU bucket for bucket. SFU tied the game at 46 with just over 12 minutes remaining in the game.

SFU went on an 11–4 run after that to take the lead, 57–50, with seven minutes left. Unfortunately, the Clan could not keep the lead, and earn their second conference win of the season.

UAF finished the game outscoring SFU 13–4 to finish the half, and pulled out a comeback, 63–61 victory.

Despite the loss, SFU had some shining moments. They went perfect from the free throw line, and nailed half of their shots from behind the arc.

Olah and Appiah both registered double-doubles for the Clan. Olah had 13 points and 11 rebounds, and Appiah logged 10 points and 10 rebounds in the losing effort.

SFU finished off their regular season last Saturday against the first-place Western Washington Vikings.

Broncos can’t buck Clan

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SFU lacrosse wins big on home field over Boise State

By Bryan Scott
Photos by Vaikunthe Banerjee

The Boise State Broncos headed north of the border last week to play the Simon Fraser lacrosse team on Terry Fox Field. The Clan were looking to avenge their first loss ever to Boise State, which happened last season in a 15–14 overtime thriller.

Head coach Brent Hoskins wasn’t letting his team forget about last year. “We always try and keep our focus looking forward, but I know that there were a couple opponents from last season that our returners had circled on their schedules this year to try and earn some redemption,” he said.

The game had a relatively slow start. Both teams looked to hold possession and take quality shots on net. It was Clan midfielder Alex Bohl that got the ball rolling for SFU when he took a pass from Eric Ransom and fired it home.

After the Broncos tied the game at one, Sam Clare buried a hockey-like goal, shoveling the ball off the ground into the net. Shortly after that, Ward Spencer made it 3–1 SFU with a great play from behind the net.

Boise added another goal before the end of the quarter that cut the lead back to one. That is as close as the Broncos got for the rest of the game.

It was the usual suspects of Clare, Andrew Branting, and Spencer who scored the goals in the second quarter as SFU’s stingy defense led by Mark Hilker, Ryley Wanzer and goaltender Kyle Middleton shut down any attempts the Broncos threw their way. The Clan enjoyed a 6–2 lead at halftime.

In the second half, SFU’s superior skill was evident. They pumped in eight more goals, and only allowed four against to win the game 14–6. Long-stick midfielder Wanzer scored an impressive goal while shorthanded to solidify the win for the Clan late in the fourth quarter.

Clare continued his scoring ways, leading the team with four goals and adding an assist. Freshmen Bohl and Branting were essential in the win, providing five goals and three assists between them.

Long-stick midfielder Wanzer scored an impressive goal while shorthanded to solidify the win for the Clan.
Middleton made his five saves in his second win in as many starts for SFU. SFU outshot Boise State 60–19, and scooped up 35 loose balls to tame the Broncos.

The game was chippy, and the yellow flag was thrown at will by the men in stripes. Both teams combined for 25 minutes in penalties, and the Clan scored five times while up a man.

They move to 4–1 on the season, but a difficult stretch lies ahead. All of their next six games are against ranked opponents, including the number one-ranked Colorado State on March 9, 2013.

Residential School Awareness Week at SFU

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By Rachel Braeuer and Ljudmila Petrovic
Photo by Rachel Braeuer

Feb. 27 marked the end of Residential School Education Week at SFU, which consisted of a three-part speaker series featuring Commissioner for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Marie Wilson; SFU’s Chair of the First Nations Studies Department, Dr. Eldon Yellowhorn; and Dr. John Milloy, professor of Canadian and Indigenous History at Trent University. All events were free and open to the public, hosted at the Convocation Mall theatre and the Wosk Centre for Dialogue downtown.
Each event began with the acknowledgment of territory and a song played on a traditional flute played by Dr. Vicki Kelly, an associate professor at SFU. The song both mourned and honoured the survivors and their healing journeys.
Residential schools operated in Canada for 150 years and saw approximately 150,000 First Nations, Inuit and Metis children removed from their homes and forced into attendance. It is estimated that 80,000 of these attendees are still alive today.
“[The] events are aimed at raising society’s general appreciation of what went on in residential schools, why they continue to impact Aboriginal people and what could be done to help mitigate that impact,” said William Lindsay, the director of the Office for Aboriginal Peoples (OAP) at SFU.
In 2008, 12 years after the last residential school closed its doors, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) was established with the goal of learning the truth of what happened in the schools and inform all Canadians of this. The TRC made use of documents from the schools themselves, and testimonies from those who survived the residential school experience — whether they attended the schools first-hand or simply felt the lasting impacts left on Indigenous communities.
Speakers elucidated unique aspects of the impact of residential schools and the effectiveness and shortcomings of the TRC. One of the talks concluded with a panel of residential school and intergenerational abuse survivors who offered stories of their experiences, healing journeys and collective community efforts to repair the traditional social infrastructures the institutions of colonialism broke down.
Frank Wallace, one of the panel members and a representative of the Indian Residential Schools Survivors Society (IRSSS) talked about his recovery from addiction that stemmed from being abused sexually and physically in a residential school.
“We’re here trying to get our lives in order, so that we can carry on out of the dark days of our past, to move on, to help others, to start learning how to leave all of that stuff in the past . . . it’s not easy,” he managed to say with a cracking voice. “But I’m here.”
Adeline Brown, a Haida elder, spoke of feeling lonely and isolated from her family while she attended a residential school in Edmonton. Dr. Milloy stated that many children were sent to residential schools by families experiencing institutionalized poverty. In the process, they forgot their language and culture, and were thus unprepared for reintegration in their traditional communities when finished school. They often felt a conflict between their Aboriginal culture and the culture they had been taught.
These common experiences have travelled down as intergenerational trauma — most often presenting themselves as family abuse, substance problems and Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD). But bearing witness to these traumas in first-person accounts is not an attempt by a community to dwell, but rather to move forward.
“This is not [a place] where we’re going to have to remain. My story is just that: a story,” said Angela White, IRSSS workshop coordinator, whose parents attended residential school. “We’re not letting that story define who we are to this day.”
And yet Milloy stated that “we are further away from reconciliation than we have ever been in this country.” He pointed to Bill C-45 as the “persistence of hypocrisy, a distance between the rhetoric of care and the reality of policy.” Milloy noted that although Canada’s residential school apology addressed and apologized for horrors past, it did not acknowledge its results, look into the future, nor outline principles for a national healing process. “It’s been a progress into the past,” he surmised.
The global context of the history of Canada’s treatment of its first peoples was a component of many of the speeches, but came to a head during one question period. Attendee Michael Marker, an associate professor at UBC, spoke to the differences between the US’s residential schooling system and Canada’s. “The sexual abuse is on this side of the border, and not on the other,” he insisted, shaking in anger. “There can be no reconciliation, only restitution.”
Nevertheless, Lindsay remains optimistic about. “I think the will is there to learn about residential schools by teachers and young ones, and it’s going to be part of that healing process . . . hope sessions like the ones we’ve had over this past week can be a road to healing in this process.”

SFU professor receives Influential Women in Business Award

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By Munatsi Mavhima
Photos by Mark Burnham

Dr. Blaize Horner Reich, a Simon Fraser University professor, has won the Influential Women in Business Award for 2013 presented by Business in Vancouver. According to Business in Vancouver’s website, honourees are chosen based on their influence in the business community at large, as well as on their dedication “to mentor other women in business and contribute their expertise on corporate and not for profit boards.”
“It’s an honour. The other winners are well-respected leaders in the corporate world, with companies and organizations,” Dr. Reich told The Peak. “It’s nice to get recognition for my work in different in different capacities, all coming together in this award.”
Her passion lies in Information Technology (IT), as evidenced by the various positions she holds, including the RBC professor of technology and innovation, associate dean of the Segal Graduate School of Business, and as a board member of the CIO Association of Canada, and the Information and Communications Technology Sector Council.
Additionally, Dr. Reich is a mentor to students and professionals, overseeing the Executive MBA program, the Management and Technology MBA program, and undergraduate courses. “I was an IT professional before coming to SFU. I spent seven years at BC Hydro as a Data Administrator and also ran a consultancy firm, so I’ve worked with businesses and IT for years,” Dr. Reich explained.
According to her colleagues, Dr. Reich has become an integral part of the Beedie Business School. Dr. Daniel Shapiro, professor at the Dean and Lohn Foundation, said, “At SFU, she has been an important part of our evolution into a modern and successful business school.”
Dr. Reich commented on the challenges of being a woman in the business world, stating, “I’ve been the only woman in the room for a long time, and it can be difficult because you approach things slightly differently. But, fortunately I work in an industry where your work is clearly and easily evaluated, so if it’s up to standard, you do get the merit you deserve.”
At SFU, Dr. Reich works to mentor female students and entrepreneurs entering the business field. When asked to provide any advice for students, she said, “I’d say do what you’re passionate about. Follow your passion, not because it’s easy, but because if your heart is in it you’ll be willing to put in the hours of hard work it takes to succeed.”
Good things do come with hard work, and according to Dr. Reich you must “be proactive about your education. These days employers are looking at more than just your performance in the classroom. Plus, you are paying so much for your education; you might as well make the best of every opportunity.”
Dr. Reich joined the SFU community in 1991 following the completion of her PhD at the University of British Columbia. “I chose SFU because it’s innovative and I saw the chance to build a new program,” Dr. Reich explained.

SFU loses a heartbreaker

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Clan men’s hockey team loses to first-place Selkirk in a shootout

By Andrew Jow

On Saturday evening, the first-placed Selkirk College made the trip to Bill Copeland Arena to face off against second-place Simon Fraser University. With only two games left before the playoffs, the Clan looked to turn their fortunes around and make a statement against the best team in the BCIHL.

The shorthanded Clan got a big boost with the return of the team’s leading scorer Ben Van Lare, as well as key defensemen Taylor Swaffield and Bruin Mcdonald.

Despite being the top two scoring teams in the league, goals were surprisingly hard to come by through the first two periods. Goaltenders Stephen Wolf for Selkrik and Graham Gordon for SFU were solid, but neither team had any spectacular scoring chances.

SFU had its opportunities to take the lead on the power play throughout the two periods, but were unable to capitalize.

The Clan set up with four forwards and one defenseman, with the defenseman taking a high position in the middle of the blue line, and the forwards rotating down low, from the top of the circle to below the goal line.

The lack of net presence hurt the Clan power play, as they went 0–5 in the contest, making the special team 0 for 11 in the past two games.

Selkirk’s Justin Sotkowy broke the deadlock 14 minutes into the third off a lucky bounce. Sotkowy’s point shot hit SFU defenseman Mike Ball’s stick and ricocheted into the top corner. After the goal, the back and forth game continued.

Both teams continued to skate up and down the ice, trading rushes as well as scoring chances. SFU relied too much on their speed, as they constantly skated the puck out wide and settled for low percentage shots.

As it turned out, SFU’s tying goal was a result of a good forecheck by Tony Oak, who rustled the puck out of the corner and found Trevor Milner in the slot who slid it passed Selkirk’s Wolf.

With 11 seconds to go, controversy arose when the Clan’s Joey Pavone thought he muscled the puck home, but referee Duncan Brow disagreed. The result was both teams entering overtime tied 1–1.

The extra frame solved nothing, as Gordon was stout in net, turning away Selkirk’s Connor McLaughlin in close twice for the best chance of overtime. For the third consecutive week, the Clan had to go to a shootout to end the stalemate.

Selkirk’s good fortunes carried over into the skills contest because Thomas Hardy’s winner barely squeaked through Gordon’s five-hole. Selkirk walked away from Bill Copeland with the 2–1 victory and a sweep of the season series.

For the third straight game, SFU lost a tough one. With the playoffs fast approaching, this is the worst possible time to be in a slump. But with one more game remaining, SFU has an opportunity to turn this skid around and gain momentum for a long playoff run.

Can I get a side of gentrifries with that?

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Restaurants aren’t the cause of gentrification, they’re a symptom

By Rachel Braeuer
Photos by Jonathan Dry

Gentrification talk is hard. On one side, the people getting put down are more often than not small business owners. It’s hard for me to want to tell them to take a hike when a Cara-owned big box could just as easily have gone up where their restaurant now resides. It’s not my intention to argue that DTES residents should let their communities go gentle into that good night; I think they should rage against the dying of the light. But protesting small businesses is hardly the way to go about this.

Gentrification is not limited to the DTES. When looking for an apartment in the Mount Pleasant area two years ago, one of the ads on Craigslist explicitly said “NEWLY GENTRIFIED MAIN STREET AREA. CLOSE TO AMENITIES!” It wasn’t that long ago that a person could find a relatively affordable place to live in the Mount Pleasant area and enjoy the sense of community there, too. Luckily for the area, there seem to have been enough people with enough pull (aka people with BFAs) to maintain some of that, but the Tim Hortons at the corner of Main and Broadway serve as a kind of flagship to the area’s eventual gentrification.

But what about Surrey? Yes, I know, Surrey is gross. Surrey is poor. Surrey is full of people wearing Affliction shirts and pyjama bottoms in public (if Walmart can be considered public). Does that absolve everyone from caring about the gentrification going on there?

The coldness (and I contend this goes beyond apathy) shown towards the homeless and poor in Surrey is appalling. A woman was found beaten beyond recognition in December. Two weeks ago she succumbed to the injuries she sustained in her attack. This happened just three blocks away from SFU’s Surrey campus. Where were the protests and candlelight vigils for Janice Shore?

Admittedly, Shore lived a “high risk lifestyle” which apparently excuses her life ending like a scene from a Tarantino movie. Regardless, she was still a member of the community in which SFU decided to locate one of its satellite campuses, turning notorious “Whalley Ring Road” into “University Drive” which soon became populated with condos that investors scooped up on the cheap and are now renting out at $800 — more than their mortgage payments — for a cut-and-paste bachelor. There have been, however, no swank new restaurants opening up.

SFU can fairly escape blame for Surrey Central’s gentrification, despite knowingly moving into the heart of Whalley’s ghetto. Mayor Dianne Watts’ gentrification-centred political platform is slowly becoming reality. The people of Surrey have elected Watts by a landslide twice now, and she has been transparent about her intentions (albeit phrased as “revitalization,” but tomayto tomahto).

However, in the DTES there is really no justification. Keeping a W on top of a building that houses space for the arts doesn’t make up for altering the fabric of a community, thereby bringing in the kind of people who would pay $20.00+ per plate at the insensitively named Pidgin, located walking distance from their new faux-loft condo built behind the heritage-building facade that covers the first three floors.

Couture restaurants don’t just pop up in the poorest postal code in Canada for shits and giggles; they follow the sound of jangling change in yuppies’ chinos. While endeavours like Save-On-Meats’s meal token program are at best patronizing kindness and at worst an offensive affront to harm reduction, they’re still an attempt by small businesses to give back to the community they reside in, however misguided they may be. This is more than can be said for the big names that seem to have moved into the DTES without a visit from the GTFO wagon that smaller names have experienced.

The who and the why are interconnected when it comes to questions of gentrification, and while many elements are at play, unless activists are addressing the key backers instead of the peons on the front lines, not much is going to change.

New wedding dress visually reveals bride’s emotions

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By Leah Bjornson
Photo by Leah Bjornson

SFU SIAT students Emily Ip and Wynnie Chung are pushing the limits of wearable technology with their innovative wedding dress design, which uses LED lights and pulsating fabric flowers to reveal a bride’s emotions.
The project is called Wo.Defy, and was originally an honours research project developed between Jan. and Aug. 2012, although the dress took just one month to create. Ip and Chung, who are both interested in combining wearables with technology, wanted to create a piece that portrayed the wearer’s emotional presence through poetic visuals.
“There is no way to hide anything,” Chung said. “While you can attempt to manipulate your breath for a time, in the end you have no control. What is displayed on the dress must be natural.”
The garment works in two ways. First, when a bride inhales deeply, her ribcage expands against a sensor on the inside of the dress. This sensor is connected to numerous LED lights, which are placed throughout the gown. The lights flicker and light up progressively, depending on the amplitude of the inhalation. This pattern represents the respiratory and cardiovascular systems in the body. The second way the dress works is through a series of silk flowers that contract and dilate depending on the intensity of motion through the dress as the bride moves.
The name Wo.Defy is derived from “wo,” the Chinese word for “I,” to be expressed as I Defy. This name represents the inspiration for the gown, which comes from a group of 20th century Chinese women known as the Self-Combing Sisters. In a culture where women had little independence, the Self-Combing Sisters were a suffragette movement that rejected the traditional practice of arranged marriages. Instead, these women became self-sufficient by working in silk factories.
As an alternative to marriage, the sisters would go through a self-combing ceremony, which can be likened to becoming a nun. During the ceremony, the women would comb their hair into a long braid, wear a silk gown, and effectively wed themselves. Because silk was both expensive and rare, such a ceremony proved that these women were self-sufficient.
This inspiration is represented in the Wo.Defy design by the interwoven braids as well as the choice of the colour white. In Chinese culture, brides are supposed to wear red on their wedding day. “Emily and I are both Chinese-Canadians, and we are challenged to find a balance between those cultures,” said Chung. “By creating the dress in white, we are defying certain traditional standards ourselves.”
The technology also challenges others to question how we can take traditional garments and artifacts and look at them in new perspective. Ip and Chung hope that their technology, in addition to promoting ideas of sustainability, might be used in the future to facilitate communication. This project has the potential to help children with autism and other communication problems, who often struggle to connect with others.
“We hope that this technology might be used to allow them to display their emotional state,” says Ip. “Spoken communication does not need to be the only option. There are things you can’t really experience through words, but with this technology you can convey ‘that feeling’ to other people.”
When asked their plans for the future, Chung replied, “We are both very passionate about wearables, and are going to work towards graduate degrees in that sector. By working together, we have become more sophisticated in our work, and I definitely see us collaborating again.”
Ip and Chung recently returned from the TEI’13, the Tangible, Embedded and Embodied Interaction Conference in Barcelona, Spain, where they presented as one of several selected projects. The two will continue to share the Wo.Defy project and hope to further explore the relationship between human emotion, historical customs, gender and storytelling through the use of technology.

Clan prepares for NCAA Nationals in three sports

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SFU aims for success on the mat, in the pool, and on the track

By Jade Richardson
Photos by Mark Burnham

In December of 2012 the Clan men’s soccer team made history as the first International school to compete for a National Collegiate Athletic Association title. They would make the final four, ultimately falling short of the championship game, but solidifying themselves as a powerhouse within the association.

Now, SFU is preparing to send their next round of national contenders to Birmingham, Alabama, where men’s wrestling, women’s swimming and women’s indoor track and field athletes compete simultaneously in an NCAA championships weekend.

This will be another historic weekend for Simon Fraser as the five runners and six swimmers will represent the first women from an International institution to compete in an NCAA championship, much like the soccer team before them.

All of the Clan teams have an excellent chance of performing well in Alabama, as SFU boasts some top seeds for each sport.

In the pool, swimmers Carmen Nam, Jordyn Konrad, Mariya Chekanovych, Kristine Lawson, Alexandria Schofield and Nicole Cossey will be representing the Clan in 15 individual events and two relays.

Freshman standout Chekonovych boasts the top ranking in both the 100-yard and 200-yard breaststroke events, while Nam is ranked eighth in the 400-yard I’m and ninth in the 200-yard butterfly.

As a team the Clan also hold the second fastest time in the 400-yard medley relay heading into the championships, and as of Feb. 18, the team is ranked 10th nationally.

The women’s track and field team is expected to succeed at their championships as well, as the five-woman team of Helen Crofts, Michaela Kane, Sarah Sawatzky, Lindsey Butterworth and Chantel Desch prepares to make the trek to Alabama to represent Canada and Simon Fraser.

Crofts has posted the fastest seed time in the 800-metres, and has led the field since her very first race of the season, while teammates Butterworth, Kane, and Sawatzky are ranked ninth, 10th, and 11th in that same event. Crofts is a two-time NAIA champion in the 800-metres from 2010 and 2011, and will be looking for her first national title in the NCAA.

“I have been looking forward to racing in an NCAA championship ever since the transition process first began,” explained Crofts. “Now we are here, and although it won’t be easy, I feel like it is absolutely possible for our team to come out with a win in the 800-metres and the distance medley relay.”
The Clan hold the second-fastest time in the aforementioned DMR, trailing only the University of Mary as they head into the competition, and the women are hoping to make a race of it as they take on the national leaders head-to-head.

Men’s wrestling will be sending their smallest and largest two athletes to their championships as 125-pound Skylor Davis and 285-pound Sunny Dhinsa prepare for their first NCAA wrestling competition.

Dhinsa placed second at the West regional qualifiers, while Davis placed fourth, punching their tickets to Birmingham. His defeat in the finals marked Dhinsa’s only loss in his 20-match season, so he will be looking for redemption against his first competitor in the national tournament. Davis boasts an impressive 20–4 record this season.

A win in any event would mark the first NCAA victory by an athlete from an international institution, a fact not lost on the 13 SFU athletes heading to Alabama.

“Coming into any event ranked first puts pressure on you knowing that everyone is out to beat you,” continued Crofts. “But the possibility of having an opportunity to give SFU their first NCAA national champion just adds to the excitement!”
The three championships run from March 6–9, and results will be available at athletics.sfu.ca at the end of each day.

Reducing salt could save lives: study

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By Christina Charania
Photo by Vaikunthe Banerjee

A study organized by researchers at Simon Fraser University, Harvard Medical School, and the University of California San Francisco quantifies the benefit of a reduced sodium diet. The research found that America-wide sodium cuts could prevent a significant portion of the population from dying prematurely.
“We had been invited by the US Center for Disease Control to examine one model that they could use to draft policies related to sodium intake and the risks of cardiovascular diseases,” said SFU health sciences professor and co-author Michel Joffres. “Reducing this diet component that is not major or difficult to change could have a monumental effect on our healthcare systems.”
Published in Hypertension in February 2013, the group’s research looked at two approaches to implementing a lower sodium lifestyle — the first method suddenly reduced the average American’s sodium consumption of 3,600 mg/day to the 1,500 mg/day necessary for bodily function. The second lowered total ingestion by four or five per cent each year for a decade to reach an eventual 2,200 mg/day.
The researchers used three models to evaluate these reductions: one assessed the direct impact of decreased sodium on the prevalence of cardiovascular disease, while the other two — including Joffres’ model — examined the effect of reduced sodium on blood pressure.
“We know that when we decrease blood pressure, we’re going to decrease cardiovascular disease,” explained Joffres. “The number one risk factor for mortality in the world is hypertension, and reducing sodium is a very easy way [to lessen this risk].”
Each model was analyzed at a different university and put a value on the number of American lives that can be saved — or, as Joffres explains, “postponed” through sodium reduction — and each reached the same conclusion. With a gradual reduction in the United States, the models show that 280,000 to 500,000 deaths can be prevented after 10 years, or nearly a million years of life saved. An immediate sodium cut would save an even larger amount of lives: nearly 1.2 million in the same time span.
When Joffres applied these models to the Canadians, he discovered that 26,000 lives could be saved through the same sodium diminishment in the U.S. study.
“26,000 isn’t a small number, and people don’t talk about it because [sodium-related] deaths aren’t immediate,” said Joffres. “If you put 26,000 people in a plane and they’re killed, or a bomb hits a village and it’s gone, those things would make people worry. Sodium is slow and kills slowly, but surely.”
The most feasible way to achieve these reductions is removing processed foods from the diet, as these products contain roughly 80 per cent of consumed sodium. Decreasing fast foods, frozen products, breads, and canned commodities by half would produce the cut that Joffres’ study simulates in small, annual reductions.
“Of course, people need to adjust their sodium consumption alongside weight loss and diets with higher potassium, vegetables, and fruits [for an optimal effect on lifespan],” he noted.
This is easier said than done: once individuals have adjusted to salty diet, foods taste bad when sodium is removed from their meals. Noticeable change in health demographics will require a concerted effort from North American citizens, the government, and food manufacturers. Currently, the government does not hold manufacturers accountable and opts to provide them with non-mandatory guides on reducing sodium in the foods they make.
“These diets need to change in younger people,” Joffres concludes. “If younger people become used to lower sodium intake, their blood pressure will remain lower and blood pressure won’t increase with age. They won’t have the accumulation of damage to their arteries since young adulthood. People don’t realize that, and that’s a dilemma.”

Check your privilege

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Actions done and words spoken with good intentions can still perpetuate discrimination

By Joseph Leivdal

This is a response to the column published Feb. 25 titled “Godwin’s law, meet Onderwater’s law”. Eric Onderwater, from one white guy to another: you need to check your privilege. I’m going to try to walk you through this real slow.

I’d like to introduce you to a concept called “intention” and the difference between intention and practice. The facts are, Eric, that Aboriginal peoples in Canada have been subjected to systemic discrimination and violence at the hands of our colonial government, and this by no means ended with the shutting down of residential schools. We can see this systemic violence in action today with the Highway of Tears, the Missing Women Commission and the undermining of Aboriginal rights by the Harper government in its greedy grab for resources, to state only a few of many examples.

If I say that the government has no responsibility to Aboriginal communities, while my so called “intentions” may not be explicitly racist, these colonial ideologies put into practice are racist. The government, and we as citizens, have a responsibility to root out and combat this systemic discrimination, and taking away Aboriginal “hand-outs” as you call them would be a form of colonialism and violence against Aboriginal peoples — so yes Eric, that would be racist, and while the people acting out this violence and discrimination may truly be appalled at being called racist, their lack of awareness of how their words and actions affect others becomes a subtle form of racism.

Also, “Idle No More” is about Aboriginal rights and autonomy, and to oppose “Idle No More” is to oppose a fight against the ongoing colonization and violence perpetrated against Aboriginal peoples. I’m not saying that people need to attend every rally to somehow avoid being racist, but just because I’m not throwing around racist slurs does not mean my “intent,” put into practice, is not, ultimately, racist. Do you get that now?

By comparing someone who is calling out racism to someone who inappropriately compares an issue with the rise of Hitler, you are in fact using the very same “cheap rhetorical” tool that you claim to critique. Please do your homework before making a rhetorical analysis.

You and I are both white males living in a Western patriarchy, and because of that we have a responsibility to try to understand the world from different perspectives, which is what the author of the article published on Feb. 17 has done an exceptionally good job of doing. I am not saying that I am a perfect ally; that is something that I have to work on constantly. But I am inviting you, and all others who were fortunate enough to be born into a position of privilege, to take a closer look at your position in society and to take a closer look at the positions of others as well.