Print page web address: https://news.csu.edu.au/latest-news/archive

Back to web page (non print view)

Archive

Viewing page 449 of 515: Previous | 447 448 449 450 451 | Next

Walkley Award for CSU graduate

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003
A CSU theatre/media graduate has won a prestigious Walkley Young Journalist of the Year Award for her online reporting of the recovery of the Grantham community in south-east Queensland following the devastating floods that swept through the town in January 2011.

Question Australia's role in global food security: CSU expert

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003
A CSU professor has cautioned that accepting without question what he has described as "some pervasive beliefs about rural Australia related to farming and land management" could lead to poor planning of Australia’s agricultural future.

$1.2 million in funding for CSU research projects

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003
Research projects that work towards securing sustainable futures for Charles Sturt University’s regions form the bulk of projects that have received $1.2 million in funding from the Australian Research Council.

CSU kayaker to compete at London Olympics

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003
A first-year paramedic student at CSU has put her books aside temporarily as her training intensifies for the K4 500 metre kayaking event at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.

CSU confers honorary doctorate on Korean church leader

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003
CSU conferred an honorary doctorate on Reverend Dr Cho Seong Gi, the head of the Presbyterian Church of Korea, when he visited Adelaide on Monday 16 July.

US strength and conditioning award for CSU

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003
A collaborative program operated by the CSU School of Human Movement Studies and the Western Region Academy of Sport in Bathurst for strength and conditioning interns has again received a prestigious award from the United States.

Paradise Rediscovered - myth and history re-examined

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003

A new book by a CSU academic argues that Europe's first farmers were ruled by an elite aristocracy who passed themselves off as 'gods', and may have commanded secret knowledge that included ambrosia which extended their life spans.

Why Australia's top spy spoke publicly

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003
A CSU intelligence studies academic says there were many motivating factors for the Director General of the Australian Security and Intelligence Service to speak publicly last week for the first time since the organisation was established 60 years ago.

Paramedics still the most trusted profession

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003
Paramedics have been awarded the eighth consecutive Readers Digest Australia's Most Trusted Profession Award for 2012, and a CSU student was one of three paramedics to receive the award on behalf of the profession at a ceremony in Sydney on Thursday 26 July.

Bathurst research will change medical care worldwide

Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003
Researchers from CSU have contributed to research that has the potential to radically change the way septic shock (septicaemia, also known as 'blood poisoning') can be treated around the world and save millions of lives and millions of health care dollars annually.

Viewing page 449 of 515: Previous | 447 448 449 450 451 | Next

Back to web page (non print view)