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Western News

Month: October 2014

25 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall

25 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall

In August 1961, the Berlin Wall was erected, thereby dividing overnight a city, families and dueling ideologies for the next 28 years. On Nov. 9, 1989, the world watched as jubilant crowds gathered on both sides of that Wall to celebrate the opening of …

Class action needed to ease postsecondary path

Class action needed to ease postsecondary path

Wolfgang Lehmann was the first in his family to attend university. Struggling through his first year, he dropped out, needing to fight his way back – eventually becoming an academic in his roundabout way. Once in academia, this son of working-class parents – his...

Fazilat engineering a future for women in her field

Fazilat engineering a future for women in her field

Saher Fazilat wants you to walk the proverbial mile – in her heavy work boots. A civil engineer working hands-on in construction, she occupies the kind of post few women have seen. And she’ll be the first to tell you – her career, spanning more than a decade and a...

Observer sees opportunity for Western in new council

Observer sees opportunity for Western in new council

The results of Monday’s municipal election are good news on all fronts for London, according to Western Political Science professor Andrew Sancton, who specializes in municipal politics. They are also great for Western. While former councillor Matt Brown will switch...

Harou, Nicholas named Athletes of the Week

Harou, Nicholas named Athletes of the Week

Football player Yannick Harou and rugby player Breanne Nicholas have been named the Western Mustangs Athletes of the Week for the period ending on Oct. 26. Harou, a third-year King’s College student from Gatineau, Que., helped the Mustangs secure third place in the...

Urquhart: Unplug, unschedule, enjoy

Urquhart: Unplug, unschedule, enjoy

Graduates must take the time to explore the world unchained from modern technologies, Jane Urquhart, one of Canada’s best loved authors, said at the Friday afternoon session of Western’s 304th Convocation. Urquhart spoke to graduates from the faculties of Arts &...

D’Aquino: Door to opportunity is as wide as it gets

D’Aquino: Door to opportunity is as wide as it gets

Despite its challenges, our world is one of unparalleled promise and opportunity, Thomas D’Aquino, lawyer, entrepreneur and educator, told graduates at the Friday morning session of Western’s 304th Convocation. D’Aquino spoke to graduates from the Faculty of Health...

Abella: Don’t let recent events muddy tolerant waters

Abella: Don’t let recent events muddy tolerant waters

Canada needs today’s graduates, their ideas and their contributions, to protect the country’s cultural mosaic, Irving Abella, eminent historian and president of the Academy of the Arts and Humanities of the Royal Society of Canada, told graduates at the Thursday...

Winders: Research-based fact being drowned out by panic and politics

Winders: Research-based fact being drowned out by panic and politics

Let’s talk about futility. A seed of an idea, a nugget of suspected truth, in a researcher’s mind somehow manages to navigate the narrow birth canal of funding agencies, university priorities and general bureaucracies, only to necessitate hundreds upon hundreds of...

United Way campaign looks to double up particiaption

United Way campaign looks to double up particiaption

Western launched its 2014 campuswide fundraising campaign for United Way of London and Middlesex, dubbed Project 100%, with hopes of doubling the number of community members who take part in this year’s efforts. As part of the launch festivities Tuesday, Western...

President outlines a year dedicated to translation

President outlines a year dedicated to translation

Western President Amit Chakma stressed this coming year is about translating aspirations into actionable items during his annual presidential priorities address, presented last week to university Senate. “This year, my overarching priority is to ensure appropriate...

Golden innovation shines light on solar possibilities

Golden innovation shines light on solar possibilities

Giovanni Fanchini knows a ‘golden’ discovery when he finds one. And this may just lead to a more sustainable future. The Physics and Astronomy professor’s research centres on the construction small molecules – each one created from 144 atoms of gold. (For scale,...

Class action needed to ease postsecondary path

Class action needed to ease postsecondary path

Wolfgang Lehmann was the first in his family to attend university. Struggling through his first year, he dropped out, needing to fight his way back – eventually becoming an academic in his roundabout way. Once in academia, this son of working-class parents – his...

Fazilat engineering a future for women in her field

Fazilat engineering a future for women in her field

Saher Fazilat wants you to walk the proverbial mile – in her heavy work boots. A civil engineer working hands-on in construction, she occupies the kind of post few women have seen. And she’ll be the first to tell you – her career, spanning more than a decade and a...

Observer sees opportunity for Western in new council

Observer sees opportunity for Western in new council

The results of Monday’s municipal election are good news on all fronts for London, according to Western Political Science professor Andrew Sancton, who specializes in municipal politics. They are also great for Western. While former councillor Matt Brown will switch...

Harou, Nicholas named Athletes of the Week

Harou, Nicholas named Athletes of the Week

Football player Yannick Harou and rugby player Breanne Nicholas have been named the Western Mustangs Athletes of the Week for the period ending on Oct. 26. Harou, a third-year King’s College student from Gatineau, Que., helped the Mustangs secure third place in the...

Urquhart: Unplug, unschedule, enjoy

Urquhart: Unplug, unschedule, enjoy

Graduates must take the time to explore the world unchained from modern technologies, Jane Urquhart, one of Canada’s best loved authors, said at the Friday afternoon session of Western’s 304th Convocation. Urquhart spoke to graduates from the faculties of Arts &...

D’Aquino: Door to opportunity is as wide as it gets

D’Aquino: Door to opportunity is as wide as it gets

Despite its challenges, our world is one of unparalleled promise and opportunity, Thomas D’Aquino, lawyer, entrepreneur and educator, told graduates at the Friday morning session of Western’s 304th Convocation. D’Aquino spoke to graduates from the Faculty of Health...

Abella: Don’t let recent events muddy tolerant waters

Abella: Don’t let recent events muddy tolerant waters

Canada needs today’s graduates, their ideas and their contributions, to protect the country’s cultural mosaic, Irving Abella, eminent historian and president of the Academy of the Arts and Humanities of the Royal Society of Canada, told graduates at the Thursday...

Winders: Research-based fact being drowned out by panic and politics

Winders: Research-based fact being drowned out by panic and politics

Let’s talk about futility. A seed of an idea, a nugget of suspected truth, in a researcher’s mind somehow manages to navigate the narrow birth canal of funding agencies, university priorities and general bureaucracies, only to necessitate hundreds upon hundreds of...

United Way campaign looks to double up particiaption

United Way campaign looks to double up particiaption

Western launched its 2014 campuswide fundraising campaign for United Way of London and Middlesex, dubbed Project 100%, with hopes of doubling the number of community members who take part in this year’s efforts. As part of the launch festivities Tuesday, Western...

President outlines a year dedicated to translation

President outlines a year dedicated to translation

Western President Amit Chakma stressed this coming year is about translating aspirations into actionable items during his annual presidential priorities address, presented last week to university Senate. “This year, my overarching priority is to ensure appropriate...

Golden innovation shines light on solar possibilities

Golden innovation shines light on solar possibilities

Giovanni Fanchini knows a ‘golden’ discovery when he finds one. And this may just lead to a more sustainable future. The Physics and Astronomy professor’s research centres on the construction small molecules – each one created from 144 atoms of gold. (For scale,...