Newest Headlines

Newest Headlines

  • February 3, 2010 | Campus Life
    Olympic athletes are on a constant quest to achieve higher, faster, stronger results. University of Lethbridge alumnus Tim Takahashi (BA '94) helps to make sure they do so fairly. Takahashi, a U of L kinesiology...
  • February 3, 2010 | Research
    For the cast of Hair, staying in character does not end when the curtain falls. Since November, this ensemble of 27 actors has lived and breathed this band of colourful hippies and the characters they portray. Hair...
  • February 3, 2010 | Alumni, Campus Life
    Pronghorns Alumnus Spencer Holt has taken his competitive instincts into the world of small business
  • February 3, 2010 | Alumni
    A challenging economy has not affected the generosity of the individuals and organizations that supported the University of Lethbridge in 2009. "Last year, close to 1,500 individuals and organizations partnered with...
  • February 3, 2010 | Campus Life
    Tony Scherman was born in Toronto in 1950, and received a master's degree from the Royal College of Art in London, England, in 1974. He is recognized as one of Canada's consummate artists working in the encaustic medium...
  • February 3, 2010 | Campus Life
    A provocative story of love, sex and a serial killer in 1990s Edmonton caps off the TheatreXtra season. Unidentified Human Remains and the True Nature of Love by Canadian playwright Brad Fraser runs in the David Spinks...
  • February 3, 2010 | Pronghorn Teams
    The holidays remained a time for celebration, thanks, at least in part, to Operation Red Nose (ORN), a national program run in conjunction with the University of Lethbridge that ensures partygoers and their vehicles get...
  • February 3, 2010 | Students
    The University of Lethbridge closed its H1N1 Illness Registry Wednesday, Feb. 3. The unique online system was created to record illnesses related to H1N1 Influenza as it progressed across campus this past fall. With...
  • February 3, 2010 | Students
    One dimensional, black and white photographs represent much of the aboriginal history we know. While serving adequately as depictions of an era, they hardly tell a story or set a scene. Linda Many Guns of the University...
  • February 3, 2010 | Campus Life
    Peak Oil is the point in time when the rate of oil production reaches its highest level and begins an immutable reduction. There is wide speculation surrounding whether this event has already happened or how far into...

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