Random Pics

20080216-1196_large 20080216-1158_large 20080216-257_large 20080216-1115_large 20080216-1382_large 20051203-179_large

Poll Of The Month:

Other than Crosby's goal in OT, what was your most memorable moment in this winter olympics?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Categories

Top 10 moments of the Vancouver 2010 Olympics

As some of you may know, I’m a huge Olympic nut. Couple that to the fact that I call Vancouver, BC home has been a recipe for an unmitigated disaster for my productivity. I’d like to take this moment and reflect on all my favourite Olympic moments of Vancouver 2010. I’ve embedded YouTube clips where available. Most of these are off memory alone, so please let me know if I get any of the facts horridly wrong and I’ll fix them ASAP!

Also, apologies for not having the videos Embedded but CTV has decided, in their infinite wisdom, to prevent embedding of videos!! Make sure to open the links in a new window so you can come back to the post….

Continue reading …

Team Canada Wins Gold!!!

Congratulations Team Canada…what a way to end the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics.

Continue reading …

MBP Goes To Blue Mountain

(by Michelle Ladouceur-Wodzak)

Last Friday students and staff from the departments of MBP, Immunology, and Biochemistry hit the slopes Skiing and Snowboarding at Blue Mountain.  Our bus ride was filled with Starbucks coffee, Timbits and a Back to the Future movie marathon. The runs and weather were perfect. Many attempted snowboarding for the first time while others showed off their skills. What made the day even better was finishing it off with a good old beaver tail and hot chocolate at the top of the mountain. (Immunology had free beer, but perhaps that could change for MBP next year. J ) Overall, it was an exciting day and by the end we were all exhausted. The bus was filled with sleeping students and life was good and stress-free for a little while.

Continue reading …

Come Cheer On Canada (uptown)

Let The Games Begin!

Has Olympic fever gotten you yet? If you are following the Olympic coverage, there is much talk of the noticeable lack of winter in Vancouver (at least on Cypress Mountain), much secrecy and speculation as to who will light the Olympic cauldron (Wayne Gretzky vs Betty Fox, Terry Fox’s mother) during the Opening Ceremonies and whether or not Canada will be able to win gold medals on home soil (which we have not previously done). With the Games officially commencing in day and a half (Opening ceremonies take place Friday night, 6pm) you may be at a loss as to what to watch and who to follow. Here’s a brief primer – by no means complete – on some of our athletes going for gold in Vancouver:

Continue reading …

The Sweet Escape

sweet_escape

Pretty much everyone in our society gets some time off work or school throughout the year. Graduate students though fall into an interesting category for whom vacation time is not well defined. Some of us regularly work on the weekends, some come in at 6 am, some leave after 12 am and some work for years without taking time off. So, the point of my first blog is to remind you guys to take vacation and to enjoy your life!

Even though, I really believe in the necessity of going on vacation, my plan for 2009 was not to take any time off. Did it work? Well, I did great in the sprig and most of the summer, but by the end of the summer my research stopped progressing, experiments stopped working and I was exhausted. So, using the excuse that my birthday present (a wet suit for diving) was collecting dust in the closet and that I really needed to test it out, I decided to go on vacation.

Despite the hurricane season (it was already a middle of September) I had a blast in Cuba. The scuba diving was excellent, the weather was great and no thinking about my research for the entire week (that’s a mandatory rule for a real vacation). The vacation brought the end to my misfortune and the first experiment that I did when I was back in the lab worked beautifully!

Now I know that once in a while I really need to take a week off and do something fun to help me keep going with my research. I realize that for some ous it may be hard and nearly impossible to leave the lab for the entire week, but everyone can probably find a day or two that they can spent having fun. Our MBP executive team organizes great events that may help you escape from the lab: Ski trip is coming up soon, MBP Olympics and BBQ is taking place in the summer, and Geneva park retreat is happening every fall.

MBP is in the 2010 Winter Olympics

Picture 1

With the Winter Olympics a few weeks away there is an escalating anticipation and excitement in the air (Oh yes the holidays are approaching too).
This year, more than ever, Medical Biophysics is a full participant in the olympic festivities: our very own Melissa Hill will be a torch carrier.
Melissa is a PhD candidate in Yaffe’s group at Sunnybrook Hospital in the physics stream and she will honor the department by carrying the torch this Sunday for a whole 300 meters.

Wikipedia tells us that the torch is “Commemorating the theft of fire from the Greek god Zeus by Prometheus, its origins lie in ancient Greece, where a fire was kept burning throughout the celebration of the ancient Olympics”. Although, we do not promote theft, we definitely like flames and what they represent and we wish Melissa a successful torch relay. Melissa has also agreed to write a post on MBPGSU.ca to talk about her experience.

You can follow her here: http://www.ctvolympics.ca/torch/follow-torch/index.html Sunday December 20th at 9:30am

Make us proud!