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MBP St.Paddy’s Day Pub Night 2010!

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.

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Jorge Cham, the author of Piled higher and Deeper (PhD) comics, is coming to speak!

Jorge Cham, the author of Piled higher and Deeper (PhD) comics, is coming to speak!

His comics are hilarious and continually reflect grad school life – if you haven’t read them, then you’ve been missing out: phdcomics.com.

And I’ve heard he gives a great talk as well, so get your ticket to check it out!

He’ll be here on Monday March 8 at 3pm  (at MacLeod auditorium, Med Science Building)

Tickets are limited so get them in advance – bring your $10 to either Megan in mars (4-601H) or Vanessa in PMH (10-126), or bring it to seminar and get your ticket there.

He’s also going to be available during the day, so if you’re interested in showing him around the lab/hospital, and maybe getting to be IN one of his comics, then email the organizers: phdcomics.toronto@gmail.com.

Thanks all!

Megan

The Sweet Escape

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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.

You Had To Be There To Believe It: MBP OPEN HOUSE

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Although I am not sure what the attendance expectations were, Saturday’s Medical Biophysics Open House must be considered an all around success.  Hundreds of undergraduate students descended onto Princess Margaret Hospital, on a cold winter morning (-15C, FYI!), to attend the annual Medical Biophysics Open House and learn more about our program.

Students from all the major universities in Ontario attended the event, all eager to meet faculty, talk to students and tour the laboratory facilities. In attendance, there were students with a variety of backgrounds:  from molecular and cell biology, physiology, biochemistry, chemistry to physics, engineering, mathematics and beyond. The morning started with the majority of the undergrads sifting through the different posters and talking to the many graduate students and supervisors available at hand.

While 80% of the posters were located in the main hall, there were a few posters relegated in a moderately conspicuous room representing the physics stream, specifically Sunnybrook hospital projects . And that’s where I was. Honestly, I would have preferred to be in the middle of the action and high student traffic area, but I made the most of it. But despite the less than perfect strategic position, I was able to talk with many students that courageously ventured in the dungeon room.

There you would have seen me gesturing and waving my hands, while explaining the wonders of cardiac MRI, the amazing things we are doing in the Wright group and in the MBP program in general. I was able to interact with undergrad students looking for summer positions, recent grads looking for Masters or PhD positions, and everyone seemed extremely receptive and impressed (by the way it’s extremely easy to wow a second year student!)

But the most endearing aspect of this whole experience, was looking into those inquiring eyes and seeing myself from a few years ago. I remember being at a crossroad of my life trying to decide whether to stick with my ‘right-out-of-school’ engineering job or apply to grad school. Not really knowing which school to select or what lab to apply to.  Just like that younger Samuel, many students today were driven by an inner passion for more learning and consciously steered towards grad school.  But like an explorer faced with the decision of taking the right or the left trail, personal passion sometimes leads you to the unknown, which is filled with anxiety.  Hopefully, today I was able to decrease some of that anxiety and paint a brighter picture of graduate school, a little less daunting and present to those students the great aspects of our interdisciplinary program.

Overall, it was an extremely great experience. I could go on and talk about the socially-awkward-feet-staring-probably-disconnected-from-the-real-life students, or about the food, or the keynote address by Peter Burns, but I’ll let the pictures do the rest of the yapping….(and no, the above-mentioned students are not included in these pictures….)

(By the way I took the pictures with iPhone using the pretty cool panoramic app “Pano”, some of the stitching is not perfect but whatever… enjoy)

[caption id="attachment_776" align="aligncenter" width="500" caption="main hall"]main hall[/caption] [caption id="attachment_777" align="aligncenter" width="500" caption=""the Sunnybrook room""]"the Sunnybrook room"[/caption] [caption id="attachment_778" align="aligncenter" width="500" caption="Dr. Burns"]Dr. Burns[/caption]

more pictures below…..

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MBP New Year Pub Night Wednesday January 13

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Title: MBP New Year Pub Night
Location: Molly Bloom’s @ 191 College Street
Description: Title: MBP New Year Pub Night
Where: Molly Bloom’s @ 191 College Street
When: Wednesday January 13, 2010, 5:30 to 9:30pm
Tickets: $5 – includes drink and appetizers.
Purchase from Vanessa DiPalma (PMH) – vdipalma@gmail.com

Start Time: 17:30
Date: 2010-01-13
End Time: 21:30

MBP goes bowling January 20!

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Title: MBP goes bowling at Newtonbrook Bowlerama
Location: 5799 Yonge Street North York, ON M2M 3V3
Description: Wednesday January 20, 2010
8 to 10pm

Newtonbrook Bowlerama (Take Yonge subway line north to Finch station, walk 5 min north to Newtonbrook plaza). For map click here.

$10 for MBP ($13 non-MBP) + shoe rentals ($3)
Free Drinks and Snacks – while supplies last

Buy tickets from:
PMH: Alison Aiken Alison.aiken@utoronto.ca
MaRS: Shawn Stapleton s.stapleton@utoronto.ca
SB: Arvin Arani arani@sri.utoronto.ca

Start Time: 20:00
Date: 2010-01-20
End Time: 22:00

MBP is in the 2010 Winter Olympics

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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!

THE ANNUAL MEDICAL BIOPHYSICS HOLIDAY WINE & CHEESE

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Title: THE ANNUAL MEDICAL BIOPHYSICS HOLIDAY WINE & CHEESE
Location: PMH 7th floor atrium
Description: Ring in the holiday season at the annual MBP Holiday Wine and Cheese!

Time: Wednesday, December 16, 5 – 10 PM
Place: PMH 7th floor atrium

Students, postdocs, and faculty are welcome to partake of free food, drinks, and raffle prizes.
Start Time: 17:00
Date: 2009-12-16
End Time: 22:00

SEE BELOW FOR MORE INFO

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MBP Girl’s Night - We put the

(by Sarah Cuddy)

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Our MBP May Kay Girl’s Night was a huge success.  The event was held last week in honour of the Week to Prevent Violence Against Women.  About a dozen beautiful ladies came out, ate delectable brownies, drank delicious hot chocolate, and pampered their skin in every way.

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Our fearless instructor Shirley Hung taught us to cleanse, exfoliate, moisturize, and protect our skin.  Something I didn’t know before this event: you can exfoliate your hands! And they feel amazingly soft after! …….. (more below)

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