London Community Players is presenting “The Shadow Box,” an award-winning meditation on death and life under palliative care. Directed by Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry’s Dr. Barry Tepperman, the production is in collaboration with Hospice of …
Month: February 2009
Video finds wide audience
A Western-produced video providing a compelling examination of
discrimination and exclusion in Canada’s post-secondary
education system – and the toll it takes on students, faculty and
staff – is finding a home at universities across Canada.
TRIBUTE An occasional feature recognizing excellence on campus
IABC gets ABC Western Communications Officer (Schulich School of
Medicine & Dentistry) Kris Dundas has earned the International
Association of Business Communicators (IABC) Accredited Business
Communicator (ABC) designation, a process measuring the strategic
abilities and technical skills of a communicator.
The ‘big idea’ that changed everything
With a worm’s tail, an elephant’s trunk and eyes that
stick out on stems, the Tully Monster is an unusual-looking
organism.
Book Review – ‘Disease of affluence’ a Western plague
In what the New York Times hailed as the “Grand Prix of
Epidemiology”, T. Colin Campbell, PhD and his son Thomas M.
Campbell II share the startling findings of the most comprehensive
study of nutrition ever conducted, The China Study.
Looking Back From the Western News archives — February 3, 1977
Mummenschanz, the Swiss mime-mask theatre company, was scheduled to
perform at Western during the week of Feb. 14, 1977.
‘Grown-up’ talks key to relationship
The recent inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th American
president sent shockwaves of joy and hope around the world.
University Digest News from Canadian campuses
Energy efficiency pays
Now, for the amazing story of Aminata Diallo
Some people seem to have a gift for reading the right books at the
right time.
The Canadian Landscape
Benumbed by the cold
Geography professor partners with local Aboriginal Health Access Centre
In the late ’80s the Ojibways of Pic River First Nation couldn’t
drink the water that surrounded their community after chemicals
from a mine in the Hemlo Gold Camp contaminated their drinking
water supply.
Spots still available for Staff and Leaders’ Conference
Registration has been high for the Western Staff and Leaders’
Conference Feb. 17-20; however some sessions still have openings.
All-Campus Job Expo Thursday
Students and alumni looking for full-time, summer or part-time
employment are encouraged to check out the All-Campus Job Expo held
Thursday, Feb. 5 at the Western Student Recreation Centre.
Video finds wide audience
A Western-produced video providing a compelling examination of
discrimination and exclusion in Canada’s post-secondary
education system – and the toll it takes on students, faculty and
staff – is finding a home at universities across Canada.
TRIBUTE An occasional feature recognizing excellence on campus
IABC gets ABC Western Communications Officer (Schulich School of
Medicine & Dentistry) Kris Dundas has earned the International
Association of Business Communicators (IABC) Accredited Business
Communicator (ABC) designation, a process measuring the strategic
abilities and technical skills of a communicator.
The ‘big idea’ that changed everything
With a worm’s tail, an elephant’s trunk and eyes that
stick out on stems, the Tully Monster is an unusual-looking
organism.
Book Review – ‘Disease of affluence’ a Western plague
In what the New York Times hailed as the “Grand Prix of
Epidemiology”, T. Colin Campbell, PhD and his son Thomas M.
Campbell II share the startling findings of the most comprehensive
study of nutrition ever conducted, The China Study.
Looking Back From the Western News archives — February 3, 1977
Mummenschanz, the Swiss mime-mask theatre company, was scheduled to
perform at Western during the week of Feb. 14, 1977.
‘Grown-up’ talks key to relationship
The recent inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th American
president sent shockwaves of joy and hope around the world.
University Digest News from Canadian campuses
Energy efficiency pays
Now, for the amazing story of Aminata Diallo
Some people seem to have a gift for reading the right books at the
right time.
The Canadian Landscape
Benumbed by the cold
Geography professor partners with local Aboriginal Health Access Centre
In the late ’80s the Ojibways of Pic River First Nation couldn’t
drink the water that surrounded their community after chemicals
from a mine in the Hemlo Gold Camp contaminated their drinking
water supply.
Spots still available for Staff and Leaders’ Conference
Registration has been high for the Western Staff and Leaders’
Conference Feb. 17-20; however some sessions still have openings.
All-Campus Job Expo Thursday
Students and alumni looking for full-time, summer or part-time
employment are encouraged to check out the All-Campus Job Expo held
Thursday, Feb. 5 at the Western Student Recreation Centre.