Scattered around Ryerson University campus are black, white, and red posters. Most are torn, some are on the ground, and only a few are legible.
If you focus hard enough, you can read the words “Fight for $15 & Fairness.”
Scattered around Ryerson University campus are black, white, and red posters. Most are torn, some are on the ground, and only a few are legible.
If you focus hard enough, you can read the words “Fight for $15 & Fairness.”
“It benefits everyone when women don’t have to hear derogatory jokes about themselves and the uglier parts of their upbringing so casually and callously dropped.”
Sunlight streams into a tiny apartment on Jarvis Street. Small, furry cat toys litter the floor. On a grey loveseat, a chubby, orange cat sleeps. His name is Chandler and he’s a service cat.
“You don’t realize it because it’s very subconscious,” said Melissa Sorokolit, Chandler’s owner. “But animals are very intuitive with how you’re feeling.”