“Are limits on religious expression becoming a trend in Canada?” is the subject of a panel discussion Wednesday.
“Are limits on religious expression becoming a trend in Canada?” is the subject of a panel discussion Wednesday.
A town hall meeting Tuesday will discuss Canada’s next steps in sponsorship and family reunification of Syrian refugees.
Winter Orientation, January 4 in the Odette Building, will introduce entering students to the University of Windsor.
An event marking local observance of World Refugee Day will feature a panel discussion along with the premiere of a Windsor-produced film documenting the experiences of young refugees.
The film, entitled Through Their Eyes: Stories of Refugee Youth, brings to the forefront the often-overlooked experiences of young refugees living in our community, says panelist Erwin Selimos, a doctoral student of sociology.
UWindsor student Lina Chaker received the Youth Changing Lives Award from the United Way.
Radiation therapy is widely used for cancer treatment; and all radiation treatments aim to maximize tumour cell kill while limiting healthy tissue radiation exposure.
In a free public lecture Wednesday, entitled “Up Close and Personal: Radiation Treatments for Cancer,” Rowan Thomson of Carleton University will focus on the physics of “up close” radiation treatments for cancer and research aimed at personalizing them.
Dr. Thomson is an assistant professor in Carleton’s Department of Physics, She received Ontario's Polanyi Prize in Physics in 2011.