Nipissing’s Award Winners Speaker Series gets political on October 29, at 7 p.m. in the Harris Learning Library with Dr. David Tabachnick discussing How Big is that Crucifix?: The Charter of Quebec Values as an Attack on Multiculturalism.
The next generation of anthropologists who change the way humans see themselves and their cultures could be walking the halls of Nipissing University next year, with the launch of a new Anthropology degree program. Students interested in this new four-year major can apply this fall.
Congratulations to Dr. Robin Gendron, associate professor of History, on the publication of a new book, Aluminum Ore: The Political Economy of the Global Bauxite Industry (UBC Press) he co-edited.
Dr. Logan Hoehn, assistant professor in the department of Computer Science and Mathematics at Nipissing University, has won the inaugural Mary Ellen Rudin Young Researcher Award. The award was presented to Dr. Hoehn during the opening ceremonies of the International Conference on Topology and Geometry, at Shimane University, Matsue City, Japan, last week.