
Trojans point guard Alicia Tan, 21, poses for a portrait in the Campus Centre gym in Calgary on Thursday, Oct. 13, 2016. Tan has been playing basketball since the age of six, and joined a club to play competitively when she was eight. Many people in her family play basketball, including her sister who also plays for the Trojans. Tan recieved the Rookie of the Year award from Mount Royal University in 2014, and Trojans Most Valuable Player in 2015. She has also helped her team achieve All-Star Rookie Team of the West for Canadian Interuniversity Sport in 2014, and All-Star Team for Alberta Colleges Athletic Conference in 2015. Tan is in her second year of Business Administration
at Sait, and is majoring in Human Resources.

People gather in front of Calgary Municipal Building during a vigil following Quebec City’s deadly shooting in Calgary on Monday, Jan. 30, 2017. The terrorist attack on Sunday night in a Quebec City mosque left six men dead and eight injured. The vigil turned into a protest as speakers and attendees focused on the recent ban on muslims from newly elect President of the United States of America Donald Trump, condemning the ban and connecting it to the terrorist attack in the Quebec City mosque. (Photo by Pier Moreno Silvestri/The Press)

Todd Oberg aka Justine Tyme at Twisted Element in Calgary on Friday, March 25, 2016. (Photo by Pier Moreno Silvestri/SAIT Polytechnic)

Audrey Weasel Traveller poses for a portrait in the Chinook Lodge Aboriginal Centre in Calgary on Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2017. She works as an Education Officer for Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada making sure funding from the federal government is going to the right places. She is also a cultural advisor at the Chinook Lodge Aboriginal Centre at SAIT. She meets with students and advises architecture students on incorporating cultural aspect into housing projects. (Photo by Pier Moreno Silvestri/The Press)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau participates in a town hall Q&A in the Jack Simpson Gym at the University of Calgary on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2017. His entrance was met with cheering and booing from the approximate 1300 people in attendance, and one persistent heckler who yelled out his comments throughout the Q&A. Prime Minister Trudeau answered questions that ranged from the issues in the middle east to homelessness, Canadian values, the Oil Sands and feminism. (Photo by Pier Moreno Silvestri/The Press)

Michaela Bridgemohan, 23, in her studio office at ACAD in Calgary on Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2016. Bridgemohan is an artist on her senior year at ACAD. She plans to use her degree to design comics and video games. (Photo by Pier Moreno Silvestri/The Press)

Estelle Levasseur, 2, tastes her maple taffy during the Maple Festival Des Sucres at Heritage Park in Calgary on Saturday, March 4, 2017. The Association canadienne-français de l’Alberta produced festival hosts its 15th anniversary, and celebrates French Canadian, First Nations and Metis cultures. The event featured folkloric music and dance, traditional Sugar Shack meals, a Sugar Market, games, workshops, circus and magic shows. (Photo by Pier Moreno Silvestri/The Press)

Adrian Temple, 9, is hypnotized by a Carpet Python at the the Reptile Expo in Calgary on Saturday, Oct. 1, 2016. The Alberta Reptile and Amphibian Society (TARAS) was formed in 1984, and sponsors the Reptile Expo in Calgary twice a year. TARAS’ goal is to promote the conservation of amphibians, and to educate the public. This year the event was held in Cedarbrae Community Centre. (Photo by Pier Moreno Silvestri/The Press)

Stampede Showband at the SAIT 100 Birthday Celebrations in Calgary on Sunday, Oct. 16, 2016. SAIT was founded in 1916, two years after the First World War had begun. In that first year SAIT had 11 students and seven staff, now around 50.000 students go through SAIT’s doors each year. The 100 year celebration was decorated with bouncy castles, face painting, live music, cake, and a fireworks show.

Second year Baking and Pastry Arts student Katelyn Gallup, 21, poses for a portrait during Day in the Life at SAIT in Calgary on Thursday, Feb. 16, 2017. Gallup decided to take this program when she was in high school, one day she realized her two favourite things were cars and cooking. The Day in the Life project takes place once a year at SAIT, at which time photojournalism students take photos of all the different schools on and off campus to show what a common day looks like for a SAIT student. (Photo by Pier Moreno Silvestri/The Press)

Amanda Edwards stays in character at the Zombie walk in Calgary on Saturday, Oct. 15, 2016. The Zombie walk is a yearly event in Calgary where zombie enthusiasts gather to bring their dreams to “life”, and to raise funds. Half of the proceeds go to local food banks, and the other half to organize the event. The walk kicked off in Olympic plaza, and concluded in Millennium park.