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CSU Business and Community reception
LOCAL NEWS  1 Jan 2003

CSU Business and Community reception

Over 100 Bathurst business and community identities have indicated they will attend the first Charles Sturt University (CSU) Business and Community reception to be held on Monday 5 June at 5pm. The function will highlight the integral role CSU has in the community, particularly with the business and education sectors. The reception will build closer links between the Bathurst community and the University and promote an understanding of CSU’s regional and community strategies. The Bathurst reception is the first in a series to be held across all CSU campuses in the coming months.

Charles Sturt UniversitySociety and Community

Wangarang Industries Expanding Skills
LOCAL NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Wangarang Industries Expanding Skills

Staff and employees from Wangerang Industries in Orange will receive training at Charles Sturt University (CSU) today giving them a new range of work skills for the local viticulture industry. CSU Vineyard Manager, Peter Cannon, viticulture lecturer Peter Hedberg and horticulture lecturer John Eiseman have combined their knowledge to instruct employees in the specialist skills of vine pruning, spur pruning, safety and equipment handling and care. Wangerang Industries provide the region’s mentally and physically disabled with a chance to work. Wangerang Industries CEO, Marc Bonney is excited by the prospect of offering his employees skills in horticulture.

Charles Sturt University

Post Traumatic Stress: A Soldier’s Perspective
LOCAL NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Post Traumatic Stress: A Soldier’s Perspective

The good news is that Australian soldiers currently in East Timor probably won’t suffer Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) upon their return home. The bad news is that the Iraq War veterans probably will, according to Sergeant Grant Coultman-Smith, a lecturer with Charles Sturt University (CSU). He should know - as a combat veteran, Sergeant Coultman-Smith has suffered from PTSD for over 36 years. He is a Vietnam veteran, worked in post-incident relief after Cyclone Tracy in Darwin and is now an Emergency Response Coordinator with Victoria Police. He is also a CSU Masters graduate in emergency management, a casual lecturer with the University’s School of Public Health and a qualified hostage negotiator. According to Sergeant Coultman-Smith, Vietnam veterans particularly suffer from PTSD because, in addition to the horrors and trauma they experienced, they faced a hostile Australian community and were not debriefed when they came home.

Charles Sturt UniversitySociety and Community

Is Intelligent Design intelligent?
LOCAL NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Is Intelligent Design intelligent?

Is there such a thing as a balanced assessment of the “Intelligent Design -Creation Science” controversy? Professor David Goldney from Charles Sturt University (CSU) believes so. The well-known scientist and environmental consultant, who has lived and worked in the Bathurst community since 1972, is a committed Christian and an Adjunct Professor at CSU. Professor Goldney estimates almost half the world’s scientists are Christian on some level, but still accept the theory of evolution, including himself. “While I’m a Christian, I’m committed to Darwinian evolution and I think the ‘Intelligent Design’ argument is way off track. There’s a continuum of people, from ‘flat earthers’ to creation scientists, with the view that evolution leads only to atheism and proves there is no God. Somewhere in there might be some middle ground.” Three public lectures are planned for June, where Professor Goldney will “go through the range of creation stories that a Christian might look at and still remain an honest scientist with integrity and accept faith”.

Society and Community

One smart cookie
LOCAL NEWS  1 Jan 2003

One smart cookie

Charles Sturt University (CSU) Honours student, James Bekkema, has won an Apple University Consortium Scholarship and will now attend The Apple Worldwide Developers Conference to be held in San Francisco in August. Sue Moffatt, Head of CSU’s School of Information Technology, describes James as “one smart cookie”, saying the highly sought-after scholarship was won in a competitive national competition between 36 Australian universities. She says James is "an exceptional student who has done much of the Mac development work on his own initiative". The conference includes presentations, dinners, a tour of the US Apple Campus and a keynote speech by Steve Jobs, CEO of Apple. “I’m really looking forward to ‘Student Sunday’. I’m currently an Honours student, and this could well be my last year of University, so I'll be asking Apple computer representatives what they are looking for in a university student,” said Mr Bekkema.

Charles Sturt University

Breaking down trade barriers
LOCAL NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Breaking down trade barriers

An organisation aimed at lifting the profile of women in the Australian construction industry has honoured the work of a Charles Sturt University (CSU) distance education student with a national award. Fiona Shewring, who is studying for a Graduate Diploma of Vocational Education and Training (VET) at CSU, received an award from the National Association for Women in Construction. During the Association’s annual awards night at Sydney’s Town Hall at the end of May, Ms Shewring was presented the Acoustic Logic Consultancy Award. The annual event was attended by women managers, architects, developers and solicitors involved with the construction sector. The CSU student is employed by the Illawarra Institute of TAFE in Wollongong and during the past four years, has taught more than 100 women painting and decorating skills as part of TAFE NSW’s early pathways program known as Outreach. “The award for Fiona is a credit to her vocational training and work in breaking down the barriers within the trades sector for women,” said VET course coordinator Roslin Brennan-Kemmis.

Charles Sturt UniversityTeaching and EducationSociety and Community

Donate blood at CSU in Bathurst
LOCAL NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Donate blood at CSU in Bathurst

The Red Cross blood donation mobile service will be at Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Bathurst next week from Monday 3 to Thursday 6 June. The unit will be located outside the CSU gymnasium (CD Blake Auditorium, building E1). The acting Head of Campus, Associate professor PK Basu urged CSU staff and students to donate blood if they can. “One in three people will need blood in their lifetime, yet only one in 30 Australians donate blood each year,” he said. “The demand for blood and blood products is expected to double in the next decade, and more donors are needed. I encourage staff and students to make the time to donate blood here next week, or whenever they are able.” To make an appointment to donate please call the Red Cross on 13 14 95 or visit donateblood.com.au.

Charles Sturt UniversityHealthSociety and Community

CSU’s Excel-lent world champion
LOCAL NEWS  1 Jan 2003

CSU’s Excel-lent world champion

"I thought it would be useful to have some industry qualifications,” says Tristam Horn, an Accelerated Teacher Training Program student, of his decision to gain certification in Microsoft® Office. Coming first in Australia in his Excel examination saw the Charles Sturt University (CSU) student win a trip to Orlando, Florida in the USA, where he was then crowned World Champion for Microsoft® Excel. “I learnt a lot that I didn’t know Excel could do. It gave me a better understanding of what it is capable of as far as recording students marks, scaling, grading and graphing, both for my benefit and also for the students to see where they are in the class and in the year. It is an easy way to see how students are going in different areas of their study, and I can see where I need to improve my teaching and hopefully deliver a bit better the next time."

Charles Sturt University

Still just a load of hot air?
LOCAL NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Still just a load of hot air?

Carbon emissions trading is a great idea waiting to happen, according to Charles Sturt University’s environment economist Mark Morrison. Dr Morrison says he agrees with Prime Minister John Howard, who said at the APEC summit late last week that any carbon trading system would have to be global to suceed. “The global effort is going to be ineffective unless everyone is going to involved,” said Dr Morrison. “Very few countries are meeting their commitments under the Kyoto Protocol. Australia is going to be one of the most severely affected countries. The ability of agricultural land in Australia to produce the way it has historically is very unlikely, if you believe the global warming forecasts and I do.”

Society and Community

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