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Marie Doduck’s memoir launches a week before International Holocaust Remembrance Day

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This is a photo of the front cover of Marie Doduck’s memoir. The cover is blue and has a faint photo of Marie Doduck’s siblings as children.
PHOTO: Aditi Dwivedi / The Peak

By: Aditi Dwivedi, News Writer

The Azrieli Foundation’s Holocaust Memoirs Program in collaboration with the Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre, organized a book launch of Marie (Mariette) Doduck’s memoir A Childhood Unspoken. The book launch was held on January 22 at the Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver.

Doduck was born in 1935 to a Jewish family in Brussels, Belgium. Doduck is a child survivor of the Holocaust. After the German invasions of Poland and subsequently Belgium during World War II, Doduck was separated from her mother and seven siblings. She lived in hiding with a foster family until she was reunited with four of her surviving siblings in 1945. She was one of 1,123 orphaned Jewish children who were brought to Canada through the War Orphans Project, started by the Canadian Jewish Congress in 1947. Well known in the community for her leadership and activism, Doduck is actively involved in Holocaust education and is also the co-founder of the Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre

A Childhood Unspoken is a record of her survival in the Holocaust, and the aftermath of being separated from her family and home. Doduck believes “survival is a coat you never take off.” 

Lauren Faulkner Rossi, assistant professor from the department of history at SFU, approached Doduck to co-write her story. She said it allowed her to revisit the painful memories of her past and share her story with the world. She also received support from the Holocaust Survivor Memoirs Program, which was launched in 2005 by the Azrieli Foundation to collect, preserve, and share the memoirs and diaries written by survivors of the Holocaust who came to Canada.

In her introduction to A Childhood Unspoken, Rossi wrote, “The act of preserving an eyewitness story like Mariette’s is important for many reasons: it becomes part of and builds on the historical record. It makes available that perspective to current and future readers.” She noted Doduck’s account of her life is not only part of the history surrounding the Holocaust and World War II, but also a significant piece of local history. Like countless survivors who came to Canada, Doduck had to “fight against Holocaust denial, antisemitism, and racial intolerance, which are still active threats around the world, including Canada.”

During the book launch, Doduck shared the process of writing her story with Rossi. She said it was “a very painful trip,” as she recalled not only her difficult transition from Europe to Canada but also the separation of her identity from her childhood self: “I was an old woman trapped in a twelve-year-old body.” To write the memoir, she had to put aside her life as Marie Doduck to revisit her childhood as young Mariette. “This Marie Doduck is who I created to fit-in in Vancouver, because we weren’t accepted. We were from outer space, we didn’t speak the language.” 

The book launch was followed by a book signing event and was attended by an overwhelming audience, exceeding the seating capacity of the venue. Many members of the close-knit Jewish community of Vancouver attended the event; one audience member, whose mother was also a child survivor, spoke to The Peak about why it was important for her to attend the event. “Someone has to carry on these memories [ . . . ] It was important to me to be there, support her, and also support the community, and support my mom.”

A Childhood Unspoken is available for sale at Massy Books. Find out more about other memoirs published under the Holocaust Survivor Memoirs Program on their website.

A Strathcona gallery guide

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Cedar Sage and Sweetgrass Indigenous Art exhibition at Massy Arts Society Gallery showing various portraits and paintings on display.
PHOTO: Poonam Sharma / The Peak

By: Petra Chase, Arts & Culture Editor

Massy Arts Society Gallery
Where: 23 E Pender St, Vancouver
Hours: Saturday–Sunday, 12:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m.

Located in Chinatown, Massy Arts Society is a “community hub dedicated to supporting the practices of Indigenous and over-excluded artists.” They currently have their Cedar Sage and Sweetgrass Indigenous Art Show display in their front window. The exhibit features striking portraits, paintings, and carvings from 13 artists from the BC-based artist collective. In addition, enter the gallery for free (masks mandatory) to see “Chinatown Looks,” a disposable camera photography exhibit in which Chinese seniors and youth take part in documenting their experiences of Chinatown. Organized by the Yarrow Intergenerational Society for Justice, an organization supporting youth and low-income immigrant seniors, the photography will make you want to explore Chinatown’s historic sites and shops with a new appreciation. Both exhibitions are on until March 16.

Audain Gallery
Where: 149 W Hastings St, Vancouver
Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 12:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m.

Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, SFU’s School for the Contemporary Arts downtown campus currently has an art installation titled Please Meet the Geese Who Have Lived Here Forever.” The elaborate sculptures and set consists of objects found in thrift stores, alleyways, and backyards. Based on the artist’s recent film of the same name, which is about “a family of wild geese who seek refuge along the foreshore of Burrard Inlet (səl̓ilw̓ət).” Meant to emphasize the consequences of the climate crisis, the installation is described as having an “intentional awkwardness,” which symbolizes the artist’s “irreverence toward conventional ‘high art’ value systems and her repudiation of settler culture’s rapacious overconsumption.” Just a couple blocks from Harbour Centre, this is an inspiring after-class activity. This exhibit is free and open until March 13.

The Chinatown Storytelling Centre
Where: 168 E Pender St, Vancouver
When: Friday–Monday, 11:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.

Learn about Chinese Canadian history and Chinese Canadian contributions in Vancouver at this new permanent exhibit. With an emphasis on sharing stories through “storytelling, unique artifacts, recordings, and photos,” this is the perfect way to discover Chinatown through a new lens. They also have a theatre in the exhibit where they screen “archival films, in-house productions, and short films by community partners.” After your visit, I recommend stopping by scenic Dr. Sun Yat Sen Chinese Classical Garden, which is just a few minutes walking distance. Tickets range from $10–$12.50 and can be purchased on their website.

Happy Seollal!

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ILLUSTRATION: Jill Baccay / The Peak

By: Gem Yelin Lee, Copy Editor

It’s January 21, and I come home to my mother on her eighth consecutive hour in the kitchen, preparing ingredients and cooking time-consuming dishes. The apartment is cold from windows being left open to air out the cooking smells, and the burners are hot from a tireless onslaught of 전 (jeon) being made in heaping batches. My father is somewhere simultaneously helping tidy the apartment and obsessively rummaging through old bins, looking for Korean folk games. This is a scene that only happens once a year: during 설날 or Seollal, the Korean celebration of Lunar New Year.

Lunar New Year is a momentous cultural holiday celebrated by several Asian countries; each country has their own name for it and unique traditions, too. The date changes every year as it follows the lunar or lunisolar calendar, and the twelve zodiac animals are cycled through. This year, the day landed on January 22, and we celebrated the beginning of the Year of the Rabbit: a year of peace and good fortune

In South Korea, Lunar New Year is called Seollal (better phonetically spelled as seol-nal) a national holiday lasting four days. It is “one of the most important traditional holidays of the year,” where many businesses close up shop to join others in returning to their hometowns for a family-oriented celebration. Dressed in traditional clothes, 한복 (hanbok), you honour your late ancestors with 차례 (charye), deep bow to your elders with 세배 (sebae), and play traditional games like 윳놀이 (yut-nori) to bond with your family. The whole event is packaged in a bucketload of delicious, traditional foods and drinks which take at least a full day and many helping hands to prepare. 

It had been almost a decade since my family had properly and intentionally celebrated Seollal with its traditions. Throughout my childhood, we would celebrate from morning till 3:00 a.m. the next day by inviting our family friends over to our home. It would be the most fun any of us had since the previous year we met, and the year before that. However, as we moved more times than I could count on my hands, and endured poverty, health crises, and isolation, somewhere along the way we let each Seollal pass by with just the simple holiday greeting. “새해 복 많이 받으세요 (Sehaebok-manibadusaeyeo),” I would say to my parents while dashing out the door for work or school, “May you receive many blessings/lots of luck this year.” 

This year, I proposed we celebrate Seollal again. I used the excuse of wanting to invite my partner and share this cultural experience with them, but even more than that, I wanted to experience the joyous, family-oriented holiday again. Even though we all live together in a two-bedroom apartment, we hardly see each other or spend meaningful time together as a family. But this year, we all marked it on our calendars and made sure we were free — it was a smashing success. Here are some of the traditional elements that make celebrating Seollal so special:

차례 (Charye)

Charye is “a memorial service for one’s ancestors,” where a ritual table is set with special dishes, ancestral tablets, and incense. Your family members would gather at your family shrine or one of your relative’s homes and all take part in the set-up of the ritual table. You then deep bow to your ancestors, who are believed to be present at the time the ritual table is complete, and then eat the food you prepared with your family members. The service is held predominantly on Seollal and Chuseok (Korean Thanksgiving), but resembles a more common practice called Gijesa: “the annual memorial service held on the date of an ancestor’s death.” Nowadays, Gijesa is usually prepared for a person you were close to who has passed away and not necessarily just your ancestors, but for very close friends and partners, too. Charye is more of a general memorial service to your late ancestors, rather than a specific individual. Both traditions are ways to honour and show gratitude to your late ancestors. My family hasn’t taken part in charye as we aren’t in Korea with our extended family, but we did hold Gijesa for my grandfather for several years. My father once explained to me that the foods laid out are offered to the ancestor to eat, and therefore blessed with their love and presence when we finish our greetings and eat the food ourselves. This importance placed on sharing a meal with loved ones, or showing we care by making sure our loved ones are fed, is an ideology that is carried in modern, everyday Korean society.

세배 (Sebae)

Sebae is to honour your ancestors who are alive! Sebae is the name of the specific traditional bow you give to your family members who are generationally older than you. I have fond memories of putting on my hanbok as a child and frolicking through the countryside between my elder relatives’ homes. You would be invited inside, and there you would perform the bow and tell them the Seollal greeting. In response, your elders respond with the same greeting or something more specific, like “May you be healthy and happy this year,” or “May your career kickstart this year,” or the dreaded: “May you get married this year.” They also are likely to give you an envelope of money, 세뱃돈 (sebaetdon), in return to symbolize their well wishes for your luck and prosperity

Traditional foods 

According to the traditional system, Seollal meant it was everybody’s birthday, and the moment you turn a year older would be marked by eating 떡국 (tteokguk) on this day: a rice cake soup symbolizing purity. Thanks to a new law, Koreans will be reverting to their international age starting June 2023, making their documented age bump down one or two years. We, of course, had tteokguk, and tend to have it multiple times a year as it is one of my dad’s favourite foods and is simple to make. 

My mom spent most of the food preparation time making various kinds of 전 (jeon), which are basically various sliced vegetables, meats, and seafood dipped in flour and egg, and then fried in a pan. I’ve seen Koreans use this method to make jeon out of basically any ingredient to a comical extent, and it’s a delicious way to make sure those sad root vegetables sitting in your fridge get consumed. Some jeon are prepared slightly differently and these are shaped like round flat pancakes, filled with kimchi, green onion, or seafood. My mom made eggplant jeon, zucchini jeon, wanjajeon, and daegujeon. The latter two are more time consuming to make as wanjajeon needs to be individually handshaped into little circular disks first, and daegujeon requires proper fish preparation methods. As my mom cooked, she reminisced over memories of making these foods in a much grander extent, growing up in the ’80s. All the women in the family gathered to make everything, including the dumpling wrappers and sikke, from scratch, while the men of the family secured the meats and seafood and entertained the children. She said celebrating Seollal again lifted these wandering memories to the surface. Jeon goes super well with a Korean rice-based liquor called makgeolli or a non-alcoholic sweet rice beverage called Shike.

One of the main activities we partook in on Seollal was to make mandu (Korean dumplings) together, as more hands make lighter work. Each mandu is individually assembled by hand, placed in a steamer in batches, and consumed, frozen, or panfried. We made over a hundred mandu this year to circulate around to our friends’ homes — I find the shaping of the mandu a tedious but therapeutic experience. I was dismayed to find my partner making beautiful mandu right away, whereas mine looked like garbage no matter how many times I was taught. 

There are many other traditional foods that can be prepared and eaten on Seollal like japchae (glass noodle stir fry), sweet tteok (sweet ricecakes), or various fruits including asian pears, but these are the main big three our household focused on this year.

Traditional games

At various points throughout the day, we sat down and played 화투 Hwatu and 윳놀이 (Yut-Nori). One aspect of Seollal I really love is that these games can keep you entertained for hours, and are activities that help you disconnect from screens and connect with your family members. Hwatu, also referred to as Godori, Go-Stop, or in translation: “War of the Flowers,” is a card game based on the Japanese Hanafuda. The game was brought to Korea during the Japanese occupation during the 1900s. Although there is painful colonial history associated with that time and with Japan, this game is still a widely popular game in Korea. Perhaps too widely popular, as it is often a game associated with gambling. The game is too complicated to explain here but basically it’s like the poker of go-fish, and is almost guaranteed to bring out your competitiveness. 

Yut-Nori is a traditional Korean folk game that is much more accessible and playful than Hwatu. Whereas Hwatu is mainly played by adults with its complicated rules, yut-nori can be played and enjoyed by everyone! It involves tossing four, marked, wooden game sticks instead of dice to see how many moves you get to make on the board. You are split up in two teams, and the goal is to get all your pieces across the board faster than your opponent. If Hwatu is the poker of go-fish, Yut-Nori is like the games chess and Sorry! combined. My father always said Yut-Nori is the “game representative of life,” because depending on strokes of luck, you can turn the game in your favour. If you’re unlucky enough, you can also get completely fucked by your opponent in one turn when you were on the brink of winning. When playing Yut-Nori, you can’t help but laugh, especially when these huge shifts happen, and my father always said that applies to life too. When things go horribly wrong, let’s just laugh, because you never know when the tides will turn just as dramatically in your favour. 

Happy Seollal, and may you receive many blessings this year! 새해 복 많이 받으세요!

The SFSS Council protests gender-based violence in post-secondary education

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This photo is of the SFU stadium at the Burnaby Campus. The stadium is empty but it is a sunny day.
PHOTO: Krystal Chan / The Peak

By: Aditi Dwivedi, News Writer

Content warning: This article contains mentions of sexual and gender-based violence.

On January 25, The Peak attended the Simon Fraser Student Society’s (SFSS) bi-weekly Council meeting. The highlights from the meeting include SFSS unanimously agreeing to sign the Alliance of BC Students’ (ABCS) open letter and discussing budgetary requirements for the 2023 Science Undergraduate Society Winter Formal.

Alliance of BC Students’ Open Letter: Urgent Call for Action against sexualized and gender-based violence

The vice-president of external and community affairs, Eshana Baran, proposed a motion for the Council to sign on to an open letter shared by the Alliance of BC Students (ABCS). ABCS is a student-led coalition of five post-secondary student associations from across BC, which advocates for a “barrier free post-secondary system.” Representing over 80,000 students, their work and efforts are aimed towards advocating for the BC students’ rights, interests, and the promotion of accessible post-secondary education.

According to Baran, “For years, students have been advocating for funding for sexualized violence prevention offices and support for survivors.” She encouraged the Council to join the ABCS in calling on the government to take action against the growing sexualized and gender based violence in post-secondary education institutions.

According to ABCS, one in five women will “experience sexual assault during their time at post-secondary.” Their campaign is working to update provincial legislation as there are little requirements for what a university must include in their sexual assault and misconduct policies. “The Alliance of BC Students believes that there are minimum standards that every institution should be required to adhere to.”

When acting president, Abhishek Parmar, introduced the motion, it was passed unanimously by Council. Executive director of ABCS, Joshua Millard, who was invited to the meeting, said, “We appreciate your full support on this.”

Science Undergraduate Society’s Winter Formal 2023

The president of the Science Undergraduate Society, Jessie Shen, and the vice-president internal, Ananga Bajgai, gave a presentation on their annual Winter Formal. The presentation included an event overview and outlined safety and accessibility measures such as designated drivers, wheelchair ramps, on-site security, dietary accommodations, emergency transportation, and lowered ticket prices for students. They were seeking approval for a budget of $10,000.

The Science Undergraduate Society aims to support students in the faculty of science by providing networking opportunities through social events. According to Shen, the Winter Formal is a “time for science students to not wear lab coats, and enjoy their time and meet new people.” The event also allows science students from different disciplines to connect with one another and establish a sense of community, she added. 

The Science Undergraduate Society received unanimous approval for the proposed budget of $10,000 from Council. The budget included aforementioned costs of safety and accessibility measures, in addition to venue, food, and staff.

SFU Burnaby fog’s top tips

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The SFU fog, with a handsome Squidward-face doodled on top
PHOTO: Gudrun Wai-Gunnarson, illustration by Kelly Chia / The Peak

By: Saije Rusimovici, Staff Writer

A misty winter fog drifts through the winding roads that lead to the top of Burnaby Mountain, collecting at the bus loop. Without warning, a frosty breeze blows a collection of dried up leaves across the Cornerstone sidewalk. The aroma of freshly brewed coffee snakes through the door as someone makes their way out of Starbucks, hot coffee in hand. 

Your eyes follow them as they bring the coffee to their lips. They wear big, nearly opaque sunglasses even though it hasn’t been sunny in weeks. You try to meet their gaze, but it’s impossible. As they walk by you, they offer a thin lipped smile, tucking a spiral bound notebook into their oversized tote bag. For reasons you can’t explain, all you want to do is read their mysterious journal. 

Sensing your gaze, the wispy figure drops the journal on your tiny table and whisks away. Literally. So let’s see what they have to say:

1. Purchase a thrifted trench coat

Let’s be honest — we all wanted an Alison DiLaurentis style redcoat during our Pretty Little Liars phase in early 2013. For on-campus purposes, and to fit the more modern, dark academic look, pair either a vintage Burberry, camel coloured coat with a sharp long sleeve button up, subtle pearl earrings, and a pressed, pleated pant. Look like you’ve jumped off the pages of The Secret History and onto SFU campus. It’s okay to give the east coast scholar vibe even though we’re much closer to California than New England. For all anyone knows, you’re visiting from Cambridge. Keep them guessing.

2. Carry around a thick, slightly worn paperbackthe vaguer the title, the better

Find a tree to read under, in true Rory Gilmore fashion. Honestly, any inconspicuous location works as long as people can see you. There’s no point in hiding between the stacks in the library. Maybe the outdoor seating at West Mall Starbucks. Or, on the upper floor of the dining hall, dressed too nice and out of place in comparison to the other kids wearing Pillow Slides and pyjama pants. Appear both smart and secretive at the same time. Top picks include Bunny, Dead Poets Society — but make sure it doesn’t have the movie as its cover — or Wuthering Heights.

3. Give a pseudonym at Starbucks

Maybe you feel like being a Claire today. Or an Esmeralda. A Gerard? Make up a personality to go with them, and their beverages. Claire is quiet and polite. Always asks for her drink extra hot, usually a variation on a tall, nonfat, vanilla latte. Esmeralda always gets the latest drink with a cake pop (the flavour depends on the day), offering a little attitude to the barista. Gerard refuses anything but an americano with room, despite never adding any cream to it. Makes you wonder what he pours in there as he makes his way to 18th century lit. 

4. Be one with the fog 

Take a stroll through campus enjoying the hazy mist settling over the pond on your way to the AQ. Take your time — it never hurts to be fashionably late to class (you’re ahead of the reading list anyways). 

5. Sit near the back, but raise your hand the most

Your art history professor isn’t sure who is speaking, but your voice carries clear across the lecture hall. Keep comments concise, yet thought-provoking, answers vague, yet intriguing, and counterarguments bold, yet civil. Respond to prompts with an incontrovertible “wherever the wind blows,” keeping a neutral expression. People may look over at you and think: who even talks like that? That’s the point. 

Let’s Do Breakfast brings free meals to elementary students

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Table of eggs, sausage, and hashbrowns
PHOTO: Gudrun Wai-Gunnarsson / The Peak

By: Hannah Kazemi, Staff Writer

Editor’s Note: The article was updated to reflect there are 70 breakfast programs in Surrey, following an update from Mehra. Originally the article mistakenly noted there were only 27.

A group of SFU students started a program with the goal of providing elementary school students with a healthy breakfast each morning. The program is called Let’s Do Breakfast, and  serves breakfast to students at Strawberry Hill Elementary in Surrey each day between 7:30 a.m.8:30 a.m.

The Peak sat down for an interview with Ritu Mehra, one of the co-founders of Let’s Do Breakfast, to learn more about the program. Mehra started this program alongside fellow SFU students Harbir Dhaliwal and Muskan Jammu. Let’s Do Breakfast became operational on February 1, 2023, but the idea began in 2021. However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the founders postponed the launch of their program. “We didn’t have much of an option. We just had to see it through and keep in contact with the Surrey School District,” Mehra said. 

During the last two years, the founders prepared to launch their program. “We got to volunteer at an elementary school which had a breakfast program so we could get to learn about the breakfast program, learn about the food groups, and learn about what kind of breakfast we should give to children and what’s essential for them.”

After two years of working with the district, the Let’s Do Breakfast team was given their own school and funding from the Surrey School District to operate within.

Mehra described the way her and her co-founders’ upbringings inspired the program. All three of them came from immigrant families and “growing up in elementary school, we saw there wasn’t that much food provided to people who, you know, forgot their breakfast or forgot food, just didn’t have enough money to get breakfast, or didn’t have enough money for food in general.” In their volunteer experience, Mehra said they could “see the different attitudes” between students who had access to a healthy breakfast each day versus those who did not. 

Mehra also noted there is a shortage of breakfast programs in Surrey, with 70 breakfast programs out of 101 elementary schools in the district. Let’s Do Breakfast aims to bridge that gap. “We’re going to be starting our breakfast program [at] Strawberry Hill Elementary [ . . . ] then slowly we want to expand and go to other elementary schools,” said Mehra.

“Breakfast provides us with lots of nutrients and energy to help kick start our day. It is the most important meal of the day — and I can’t stress this enough — because you do break a fast,” said Mehra. “When we’re sleeping we are sleeping for about eight to nine hours [ . . . ] Your body has rested but now it needs nutrients and needs energy to wake up and get started with the day.” 

Let’s Do Breakfast aims to spread the message that breakfast is important and is an essential part of both a child and an adult’s day. In Mehra’s experience coming from an immigrant family, she understands that in “some cultures, breakfast is not really seen as an important meal.” She hopes to change attitudes on the importance of breakfast. 

“We wanted to create this program to give back and also give breakfast to kids so they can start off their day right, start out their day with energy and positivity [ . . . ] They want to learn. They [just need to] have the energy to learn and be good learners.”

When asked about the future of the program, Mehra described their hopes to roll out a stamp program and pamphlet, similar to that of the Summer Reading Club in Surrey Libraries. “Every single time the student [ . . . ] comes to the breakfast program in the morning, they get stamped,” said Mehra. “Within that pamphlet they have breakfast ideas, little ways where they can implement breakfast into their life, and also why breakfast is important.”

Let’s Do Breakfast is currently looking for volunteers to help support the program. Mehra said, “We’re looking for leaders at SFU that want to make that positive impact and want to create change in their community.” All volunteers will have to complete a Criminal Record Check before working with vulnerable individuals.

To learn more about Let’s Do Breakfast and to submit an application, please email [email protected] with your resume.

Uneducated Opinion

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A photo of a student shrugging.
PHOTO: Afsaneh Keivanshekouh / The Peak

By: Hannah Kazemi, Staff Writer, SMRT

  1. What is the difference between Plato and Socrates’ definitions of utopia?

As two of the most famous philosophers, Plato and Socrates actually focus on the material world. Plato’s utopia is one in which all plates aren’t actually plates. Plato means “plate,” but he’s known to favour bowl-shaped plates because they’re extremely versatile and more fun to eat out of. Socrates’ utopia is one where all socks match all the time and washing machines never eat them. If you ask me, this is actually a dystopia because matching socks are boring. What if I want my socks to be funky and mismatched?? What then, Socrates?!

2. Explain what a homunculus is in three sentences or less.

A homunculus is a really big cloud that starts to rain right as you walk out the door in shorts for the first time in May. Homun = massive or huge and Culus = cloud because, like, cumulus or whatever? This cloud absolutely dominates the sky and laughs in BDE when other clouds try to compete.

3. In what scenario could a heuristic be considered admissible but not consistent in an A* search?

One where my dog makes the laws: 1+1 equals window, and movie theatres stop charging $8 for popcorn.

4. What are contemporary problems in Roman architecture?

Most people don’t actually know that most historical Roman architecture was made out of stickers and straws. The Romans would stick stickers on groupings of straws to form posts, then stick more stickers on more straws to make walls and roofs. This was how they held the whole thing together. The Colosseum is all straws. That’s why there are so many fountains in Rome; they’re all made of straws so the water just flows through them super easily. 

They would use scratch ‘n’ sniff stickers in the bathroom so that you could scratch one to cover up the smell, and they would put a dog sticker on top of the window sticker so that it looked like there was a guard dog living there. Though creative and beautiful, the biggest flaw of this sticker-straw method is that the stickers lose their stickiness really fast due to the intense summer heat, leading to collapsed houses. Those, of course, had to be rebuilt with more straws and stickers.

5. In court, what does it mean to establish actus reus and mens rea?

Actus reus refers to when you’re a kid in a play at school and the teacher gives you the role of “sun.” Mens rea is when you sneeze every time you’re in the presence of a man because you’re allergic to the audacity they store deep in their cores. You can only establish actus reus and mens rea at the same time if you’re watching your cousin’s kindergarten spring production, and if there are cringy dads in the audience.

Glow Motive rises from the waters with a debut single

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Anjelica Solomon and Oceaan Pendharkar in white blouses look up with opaque, shimmering water and a pink lily pad in the background.
PHOTO: Divya Nanray

By: Alex Masse, Peak Associate

Vancouver-based duo Glow Motive is, like the ocean they draw inspiration from, in a constant ebb and flow. The pair consists of two brown, queer musicians: Oceaan Pendharkar and Anjalica Solomon. Neither are new faces in the local arts scene — Pendharkar has experience as a solo musical artist and Solomon has spent years in Vancouver’s poetry scene. What brought them together was a series of serendipities and shared experiences. They met at a conference through a mutual friend, and from there, sprang into working together.

“It was just so exciting to meet someone that shared similar experiences to me,” Solomon said. “It kind of provides an easy container for us to love each other and support each others’ dreams.”

The pandemic was also a major factor. They wrote their first songs together over email threads. “I was just so bored in the house,” Solomon laughed. “And I think, also, boredom creates space to dream [ . . . ] A lot of people’s experiences with it during the pandemic resulted in songs, plays, and films.” 

And when the time came to go from emails to live entertainment, Glow Motive adapted accordingly. “There have been a series of transitions for sure,” Pendharkar said. “Like, learning to collaborate with each other in different ways. I feel like we’ve already had so many stages, and we’re only releasing our first song now.” 

According to Solomon, the summer of 2022 was when things started to gain momentum. They had the opportunity to perform in front of audiences, including at the Music Talks festival in Maple Ridge.

Because of the band’s collaborative nature, both Solomon and Pendharkar regularly check in with each other and keep conscious of their limits.  “I feel like the transition is ongoing, both within the world and in our band,” Pendharkar said. “As a polyamorous person, one thing I bring to my relationships is the idea it’s a constantly evolving thing, rather than a series of steps you go through.”

But one thing’s constant: the creative chemistry. “The first time we wrote a song together, in person, Oceaan brought their guitar, and I showed up with a pen and paper, and we wrote a song in one hour,” Solomon recalls. “I’ve consistently felt that us, as creative collaborators, [we’re] really aligned. I think it has something to do with our values, and stuff like that being aligned, too.” 

And that alignment is witnessed best in “Show Me You’re Here,” the band’s debut single, which was pre-released on February 3 on their Bandcamp. The dreamy pop track carries themes of grief, ancestors, and self-discovery. The ethereal harmonies and backing vocals are laid over a downtempo, percussive beat, resulting in a distinct, aquatic sound.

As a debut, the track made sense — it was the first song written for the band, when the two were in similar states of mind, each grieving the death of a grandparent.

“We had lost and were losing,” Pendharkar said. “The feelings in this song were something that we could connect on, because it was an experience we were both feeling, and we’re trying to share understanding about it.” 

“The pandemic happening shortly on the heels of my grandfather’s death, I was in this deep grief,” Solomon said. “It felt like the world was closing into this kind of cocoon. When we started collaborating, I think I was slowly coming out of that, or still in that.”

Solomon also cited the duo’s various Scorpio placements for the emotional depth to their work. And true to their water sign influence, the aquatic theming persists throughout the track; lyrically and sonically, it brings to mind images of the ocean and other bodies of water. “The initial image of the song was, for me, returning to the ocean,” Solomon said. “Letting the ocean hold my grief, and not having to hold it myself.” 

“That’s where it started,” Pendharkar agreed. “When I think of water and grief, I think of cleansing, and the water’s also the depth [ . . . ] The ocean is something you can go to, to hold your feelings.” 

“Show Me You’re Here” will have a prerelease on Bandcamp come February 3, followed by a wide release on February 10, and a music video on February 24. Follow Glow Motive on Instagram at @glow.motive.

Metro Vancouver calls for student representatives in a youth and education advisory panel

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This is a photo of a group of young people collaborating in an office. They have laptops in front of them but they are looking at a TV at the front of the room.
PHOTO: Jason Goodman / Unsplash

By: Aditi Dwivedi, News Writer

Metro Vancouver opened applications for a Youth and Education Advisory Panel on January 10. The aim of the panel is to involve youth and educators in the planning and infrastructure projects taken by Metro Vancouver to build an inclusive future for people living in the region. 

It is, according to George Harvie, chair of Metro Vancouver’s Board of Directors, “committed to engaging audiences who may be impacted by or have an interest in our projects, policies, and plans.” In an interview with The Peak, Amanda McCuiag, director of communications at Metro Vancouver discussed the needs that led to the development of a Youth and Education Advisory Panel and what they hope to achieve.

McCuiag noted the plans and projects of Metro Vancouver, such as the liquid waste management plan and reducing sewer overflows, are about “the livability of the region.” What led to the idea of setting up a Youth Education and Advisory Panel was the “long-term and forward-looking” work needed to create a sustainable, clean, and functional environment. She added how “different teams in the organisation wanted to hear from young people” and how there was a sense of curiosity about what the younger generations felt about the different issues being tackled by Metro Vancouver. 

The panel will have five representatives each from the high school group ages 13–18, the post-secondary group ages 18–25, and people working in K–12 education. The panel will function based on the information they receive on topics related to the development of Metro Vancouver’s plans. They will be encouraged to “pose questions, engage in discussion, and provide comments” on regional issues. Topics will range from managing wastewater, reducing solid waste, water conservation, taking action on climate change, plans for regional parks, and the delivery of K–12 programming, according to the press release.

McCuiag believes “the sense of feeling heard is a really important part of engagement,” and the reason why the youth feels ignored or unheard is because “change takes a long time and so it can feel like there is no momentum.” Which is why, she stated, Metro Vancouver is committed to telling youth their opinions are being taken into consideration. 

According to McCuiag, Metro Vancouver is encouraging people from marginalized communities to participate. She acknowledged there are “equity seeking individuals who would like to participate but can’t because of other barriers,” like technological barriers or difficulty gaining access to resources. She noted they will work on how to “remove those barriers on a case by case basis.”

The Youth and Education Advisory Panel is accepting applications for representatives. The deadline for the application is February 3. Find out more about the application form and process on the Metro Vancouver website.

WGOG: SFU doesn’t provide a list of vacant/occupied rooms on campus

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empty chairs in a classroom
PHOTO: Duo Nguyen / Unsplash

By: Ben McNallye, SFU Student

Picture this: you need a quiet space for a quick Zoom meeting on campus. You fly through the AQ, WMC, or wherever, looking for an empty classroom. You find one! Go, you. But moments after you log into the Zoom meeting, a line starts to form outside the door. Students waiting to use the room for their 12:30 p.m. class are looking in, wondering who the strange person gesticulating wildly into their computer is. 

Well, nine times out of 10, they’re a fellow student in need. And what they’re in need of is a goddamn, up-to-date, semesterly list of available campus rooms at any given time. But SFU, in all its finite wisdom, doesn’t offer anything like that. 

Sure, you can book a room in the Library at the Burnaby Campus, but that’s not what we’re talking about here. We’re talking about a critical offering for students needing to spend 1520 minutes of their day on a Zoom call for an interview or a pitch meeting, or to just have a moment to themselves without the fear of some first-year tepidly peeking their head in and asking, “is this the tutorial for Archeology 203?” No, it’s not. Come back in 10, you little shit. 

And lest we chalk this up to some entitled student throwing a fit over an impossible-to-provide service, it’s important (and shameful) to note that UBC with a student population and campus size that dwarfs SFU provides such a service! And if those thunderbird-humping, gondola-lacking, vanilla-AF egoists can figure it out, then surely we can too

Let’s not let SFU off the hook. Count up your classes, and show your work to the student population. At long last, one of the Lower Mainland’s most engaged universities needs to match the technology of a bathroom door handle and show folks whether rooms are vacant or occupied.