Visual Arts graduates Krissy Darch and Diane Bond (pictured here with one of her art pieces) were the 2004 co-winners of the Suzanne Rivard-LeMoyne Prize awarded annually to a graduating student in visual arts.
Metropolitan Area Network allows information to flow from site to site around Ottawa, at speeds ranging from 100 megabytes per second to more than a gigabyte per second.
A $750,000 donation from RBC Financial Group, Canada's largest financial institution, will help create a new professorship focussing on commercialization of science- and technology-based innovation at the School of Management.
As part of the celebrations of the Civil Law Section's 50th anniversary, an impressive group of judges, politicians, business people and alumni were present for a special event in their honour.
The work of this international research partnership could have far-reaching implications in the fight against some of the most debilitating and deadly diseases.
The Centre for Research on Community Services is currently engaged in an ambitious pilot project, known as Communities That Care (CTC), in three Ontario communities.
Six University of Ottawa researchers in fields as diverse as multimedia, obesity, HIV and molecular biology have received $1.3 million in funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation.
This international initiative involves university researchers from Acadie, Belgium, Burundi, Louisiana, Morocco, Réunion, Québec and Switzerland. The database is now open for public consultation.
The 2006 EMBA graduating class met His Excellency Mr. Shumin Lu, the Chinese Ambassador to Canada as part of their preparations for their international consulting engagement in Shanghai
University of Ottawa graduate student Karine Lortie is the 2004 National Volunteer Award winner from the National Let’s Talk Science (LTS) Partnership Program.
Total new funds awarded to faculty researchers by the granting councils rose from $1.6 million in 2003 to almost $3 million this year, an increase of more than 80 per cent.
For the first time in its history, the Faculty of Social Sciences has received over $1 million in new standard research grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
For the first time since being created in 1999, the Institute of Women’s Studies (IWS) applied for funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) and was granted the entire amount requested, more than $385,000.