CBC NEWS | 'A huge class': McGill graduates 40 students from Indigenous language and literacy program
While the usual number of graduates from McGill's Indigenous Language and Literacy Education program is 20 to 30 students, this year's cohort is 40. Educators say its a sign there's a significant interest in Indigenous languages.
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THE GLOBE AND MAIL | Building bridges in brain research: Naomi Azrieli is ready ‘for the long haul’
Bridges – both crossing and building them – are themes that run through Azrieli’s work, which has earned her this recognition from McGill. Also receiving an honorary doctorate will be hockey legend and politician Ken Dryden, who in recent years has become a health advocate for athletes, speaking out on the impact of brain injuries in sports.
WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM | 3 ways to nurture collaboration between universities and industry
Martha Crago, vice-principal of research and innovation at McGill University, Canada, said: "The social sciences have a dual role to play. There are researchers whose work becomes the basis for innovative products, processes or services. These are not often commercialized due to a lack of familiarity or culture for doing so, but their work on the societal impact of fast-paced technological innovation has become essential in today's world.
THE GLOBE AND MAIL | If you’re a Conservative who opposes carbon pricing, are you really a conservative?
Op-ed by Christopher Ragan, a conservative economist and director of the Max Bell School of Public Policy at McGill University in Montreal.
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MONTREAL GAZETTE | MUHC researchers identify genetic defects that cause molar pregnancies
Now scientists at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre have discovered three genetic mutations that are likely to cause a recurrent type of molar pregnancy. The discovery paves the way for better genetic screening, says the lead researcher of a study just published in the American Journal of Human Genetics.
FINANCIAL TIMES | Delivery dilemma for medical marijuana
For historical reasons, marijuana escaped the typical phases of a clinical study,” says Dr Gabriella Gobbi of the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University. “This is why we have medical cannabis but we don’t know its side effects.” Whether there is interaction with anti-depressants, she adds, “we don’t know.” Read more
MONTREAL GAZETTE | 'Trip of my lifetime' led to $75K Cundill prize for Joseph Conrad book
On Thursday, Jasanoff won the US$75,000 Cundill History Prize administered by McGill University for her book on Conrad, The Dawn Watch. It is believed to be the most valuable prize for historical non-fiction in the world.
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BUSINESS OF FASHION | McGill University Opens Bensadoun School of Retail Management
The new school aims to address shifts in the retail landscape and consumer behaviour, from digital disruption and the rise of e-commerce to the coming of age of the millennial generation.
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MONTREAL GAZETTE | Opinion: Yes, there is something you can do to fight climate change
On the morning of Nov. 7, a coalition of prominent artists and scientists from across Quebec launched the Pact for the Transition. It is a call for all of us who are concerned about the climate crisis to commit to individual climate action. In signing this pact, we are committing to examine our lifestyles and choices, and take steps as best we can to decrease our carbon footprints.
CBC NEWS | Sniffing your way around — our brains are built to navigate by scent
The study by Louisa Dahmani and her colleagues in the Departments of Neuroscience and Psychiatry at McGill University in Montreal, puts a recent theory about the evolution of the sense of smell to the test. The theory proposes that the the sense of smell evolved to aid in navigation. Ancient animals would have evolved a sense of smell to find food, and locate mates and predators, and so smell would have been intimately connected with location and navigation.
THE GLOBE AND MAIL | Opinion: Was Trudeau's 'Grand Bargain' just a little too clever?
A new pipeline and a carbon price to reduce emissions each stand as viable, separate policies that would please distinct groups; by tying them together, they please no one.
Op-ed by Andrew Potter and Christopher Ragan.
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THE GLOBE AND MAIL | Neither introvert nor extrovert? You need a break too
Article by Karl Moore, Associate professor, Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University.
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CTV NEWS | At 110, Westmount's Robert Wiener is Canada's oldest man
Wiener graduated from McGill's dentistry program, first in his class. He went on to teach at McGill for 25 years and helped found the first dentistry clinic at the Jewish General Hospital.
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MONTREAL GAZETTE | Democrats Abroad: Americans in our midst are consumed by U.S. midterms
That would certainly seem to be the case for a group of American students at McGill University. They’re called Democrats Abroad at McGill, and they’ve been reaching out to other American students in the city and helping them to register to vote while here.
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THE GLOBE AND MAIL | Beware of Management Risks in the Workplace
When it comes to management, B is for balderdash. Unfortunately, we embrace too much of it. Let’s start with goals, which are, after all, where everything is supposed to start. We are expected to have goals for our organization as well as personal goals (…)One more bit of balderdash for today: Efficiency should be a manager’s prime goal.