Scholarship name: John Evans Engineering Entrance Award Sponsored by: Canadian Engineering Memorial Foundation (CEMF) Deadline: March 17, 2023, 11:59 pm ET Potential payout: $5000 Eligibility restriction: Each applicant must self-identify as a woman, possess Canadian Citizenship or Permanent Residency Status, and be a high-school graduate, entering into an accredited Canadian Engineering program. What’s required: A… Read more »
AthaU Facebook Group DegreeWorks drops. A student expresses concern about disappearing course credits on the DegreeWorks table; responses suggest the program has been glitchy lately but it’s possible to have corrections made (if the credits don’t reappear on their own.) Discord Missing the memo. A question about the new Brightspace platform prompts a thread that… Read more »
Like Arctic Cariboo shifting en masse from the Northwest Territories to their Alaskan calving grounds, universities, from a bird’s eye view, can seem to be merely training paddocks for herds of sheeple. Critics’ stereotypical assumptions are that pupils, shorn of individual thoughts, emerge trained in a series of right answers and proper methods. Willing and… Read more »
In case you weren’t already aware, AUSU’s by-election is currently in motion. Right now, candidates are coming forward to be placed on the ballot and run for AUSU. What does being an AUSU councillor mean? What does it get you? There’s an article currently in the works to help answer those questions, but among the… Read more »
The Voice Magazine recently had a chance to chat with Kaleigh (she/her), from Calgary, Alberta, a Bachelor of Arts student, majoring in Sociology and a minoring in Anthropology Kaleigh hopes “to become a social worker and [is] thinking about transferring into the social work program at UofC after two years.” She continued, “I want to… Read more »
I recently made a trip to Mexico to visit Tulum, Playa del Carmen and surrounding areas. It was my first time in Mexico so all was fresh and memorable. This trip was my first true trip after the COVID-19 pandemic. Finally, I was able to enjoy local street foods the way I did pre-COVID. Luckily,… Read more »
One year later, I ponder the bizarreness surrounding the Freedom Convoy. By “bizarre” I am not referring to the Freedom Convoy protest itself—by comparison that was the most normal element. Bizarreness describes the conditions that prompted the protest, and the way seemingly normal people were led to believe things and exhibit behaviour that—outside the duress… Read more »
True love is not what you see on TV. It’s not critical. It’s not unkind. It doesn’t have expectations. It’s never jealous. Real love is purely selfless and unconditional. I’ve experienced what the Western perspective of self-oriented love creates in a relationship. And I’ve experienced, on the other hand, what selfless, unconditional love produces. I… Read more »
From my early beginnings as a young introvert, the public library has always been a bit of a refuge. Years later, not much has changed, albeit with an additional affinity for endless hours spent scouring second-hand bookstores to add to my ever-growing “to-read” pile. From one bookworm to another, this column will be underscoring and… Read more »
I have been spending some time now, soaking up the incomparable charms of the Alfama district of Lisbon—the venerable, magnetic soul of this city: labyrinthine streets, with delightful surprises around every corner, music and golden light pouring out of doorways onto ancient cobblestoned alleyways. Last night, I was at a series of fado bars. For… Read more »