缅北强奸

Aerospace major and Bikechain volunteer Adrian Esser is one of the students working on creative ways to support and celebrate the Games (all photos courtesy Hart House)

缅北强奸 students celebrate Toronto 2015 Pan Am/Parapan Am Games

In only a few months, Toronto will come alive with the . Meet two students who hope to leave a mark, not just on the Pan Am Games themselves, but also on the lives of some of the people who will soon join us in our city.

Adrian Esser

When he鈥檚 not hard at work studying aerospace, Esser volunteers for , a not-for-profit cycling organization based out of St. George campus. His idea for the Pan Ams was born in a surprising place 鈥 a bar in Little Italy.

鈥淚鈥檓 not a huge sport fan, but this one time during the FIFA World Cup, I went [there] with some friends and I watched the match and the energy was just amazing.鈥

Knowing that international visitors and students won鈥檛 be able to navigate the city as easily as a Toronto native such as himself, Esser realized he鈥檇 like to bring this experience to them, especially to those who won鈥檛 necessarily buy tickets but still wish to enjoy an event on TV.

The end result? A project to have a Bikechain pop-up stand at the CIE so that volunteers can provide DIY repair service to members of the international community.

More to the point, these volunteers will also help visitors learn about ways to experience the Pan Am Games. And in a clever twist of a common Bikechain practice, they will hand out colour-coded name tags to differentiate attendees based on sports they want to follow at the Games.

鈥淭he [names tags] will act as a conversation starter,鈥 says Esser. 鈥淲e can also foreseeably email people who choose to go on mailing lists about sports events that match what they wrote on the name tag. That way, they could then go with other people to watch a cycling event at a bar.鈥

Esser and his project were awarded $500, which he says has been allocated to food, promotion, parts, and more.

Eleni Vlahiotis

A University of Toronto OISE teacher candidate, with a B. Ed. and a B. Phys. Ed., Vlahiotis is passionate about education.

Vlahiotis is also an Equity Initiatives Student Leader for , an organization through which she ran an event called She Talks on February 24. It鈥檚 for this event that the Pan Am/Parapan Am Student Initiative Fund awarded Vlahiotis $1,300. 

鈥淚t was actually my second time doing this event,鈥 says Vlahiotis 鈥淚t was created last year and it was very successful, so of course I wanted to bring it back.鈥

A multi-partner initiative hosted by the Faculty of Kinesiology and Physical Education as part of the Ignite program, She Talks addressed sexuality issues and other topics related to women and gender leading up to the Games.

鈥淪pecifically, She Talks was born because of the poor representation of women in sports in general and high performance sports in particular,鈥 says Vlahiotis, who used to play fast-pitch softball.

鈥淭he funds covered the entire event, so I鈥檓 very grateful. And even if I hadn鈥檛 received the money, the application process made me lay out my objectives and plan everything more carefully, so it was very helpful for me.鈥

(.)

The University of Toronto 2015 Pan Am/Parapan Am Student Initiative Fund is a one-time fund for student groups planning events and activities that relate to, or celebrate, the 2015 Pan Am/Parapan Am Games. This fund is a tri-campus partnership between standing student initiative funds at the University of Toronto. (.)

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