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Having past the halfway point of the season, the battle for an National Hockey League playoff position begins in earnest. Only the Detroit Red Wings can rest easy, having a secure position 24 points ahead of their closest rivals, the Columbus Blue Jackets. Where as the Central Division of the Western Conference has a sure leader, the rest of the league is locked in a fight for each and every point- none more so than the Northwest Division, where a single loss will result in a drastic fall in the standings.
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January 23, 2008 | Leave a Comment
After visiting the AIDS summit meeting at the end of November 2007, Alex Kirstiuk, Student Life outreach and evangelism coordinator, and Ashley Crozier, former president of the International Social Justice Club (ISJC), were compelled to act on this growing epidemic that affects millions of people globally by forming a group on campus focused specifically on outreach and awareness about AIDS.
Kirstiuk and Crozier came away from the meeting with a broader perspective of the AIDS epidemic in Africa, South East Asia, and Russia. Crozier said she realized that it is important to “do something to educate ourselves.” She also saw how necessary it is for the church to be involved in this epidemic in order to provide what she calls a “wider spread of arms.”
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January 23, 2008 | Leave a Comment
Any student of Professor Ruth Anaya knows her passion for world culture. This is evident in her course material, her overseas study sessions and her cross-cultural experiences. Now she’s taking her work to the highest level of global cultural research as the sole Canadian among a team of researchers representing 62 countries in the GLOBE Project (Global Leadership and Organizational Behavioral Effectiveness).
Between November 1-3, 2007, Anaya attended the International Leadership Conference in Vancouver, B.C. There, she began a series of meetings with Mansour Javidan, Director of the GLOBE Project. These meetings landed Anaya as part of a full research project under his direction, which will focus solely on the civil leadership sector of Kenya, namely in the fields of health and education.
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January 23, 2008 | 1 Comment
MH: As an athlete, who had the biggest influence on you growing up?
Jonathan: My dad. He put in endless hours to teach me the basics of my two sports, hockey and baseball.
MH: If you could have chosen any other sport to pursue and play at the university level, what would it have been?
Jonathan: I did have a scholarship for baseball in Chicago, but that fell through. If I had to pick another sport it would probably be golf.
MH: Who are the biggest fair-weather fans of any professional sports team?