Thursday, January 26, 2012

Test Yourself Challenge

Beginning January 2012, Alison (Crossman) Davidson ('94) will be running ten 10k races in 10 months for a total of 100k in an effort to raise $100k. These funds will be donated to the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation’s CIBC Run for the Cure which is September 30th 2012.

To help, you can buy a t-shirt or maybe two or three. All net profit will be donated to the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation. "You’ll look super hot and smart all while supporting breast cancer research. You’ll also be letting people know that you’re testing yourself and you expect others to do the same!"

Beginning in April you will also be able to donate directly to her once the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation’s website is up and running for the 2012 Run for the Cure. A donation button will be added at that time.

For more information, visit: http://testyourselfchallenge.com/
Or follow Alison's Twitter feed: @ten10kchallenge

GOOD LUCK, Alison!!

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Former Mount Allison Archivist Writes Book

From the open-air ice surfaces of the marsh and the ponds to the excitement of the town's first-ever built wooden rink, to the pure enjoyment of costumed carnivals and school sports events, skating has a fascinating history in the Sackville community.

And that history is brought to life in former Mount Allison Archivist Donna Sullivan's new book, Skating on Steel-Shod Feet: Rinks and Skating in Sackville, New Brunswick.

With dozens of illustrations and photos, as well as countless newspaper accounts and plenty of personal stories from local residents, Sullivan has pulled together detailed descriptions of the rinks and highlights of the many and varied skating activities that took place in those buildings over the years.

Sullivan says the idea for writing the book has been a concept that has been brewing for nearly 30 years, ever since the day she first saw a photograph of the earliest enclosed skating rink in Sackville - as she found out later, the structure was the Tantramar rink which was built in 1876.

In 1998, she wrote a brief sketch on the history of rinks in the area but she was too busy at the time to go much farther with it. But her interest in the subject had certainly been piqued, and others were also becoming more curious about when and how skating had got its start in the area and how it has evolved over the years.

When she retired six years ago, she planned to do just that.

It wasn't until about two years ago when Sullivan says she finally made up her mind to take on the momentous task of finishing the research. Having lived in Sackville most of her life, and having worked as an archivist at the university for nearly 30 years, was definitely an advantage, she admits.

She believes that anyone who has ever been skating - whether it's through hockey, figure skating, or simply playing on the pond - has stories to tell about "what it's like to be on blades, and on the ice; it can be very exciting and thrilling."

Sullivan has dedicated her book to members of both the Sackville Citizens Band and the Sackville Fire Department who, for over a century, have served the citizens of their community, "going well beyond their roles as bandsmen and firemen at the Sackville rinks."

Read full story: History of skating in Sackville brought to life (Sackville Tribune Post)

Monday, January 2, 2012

Helping train Haitian doctors

Moncton native Dr. Henri Lanctin ('76) is helping change lives in Haiti. Henri, a urologist, is part of a group training Haitian doctors in modern surgical techniques, teaching them how to perform surgeries that will make a huge difference in the quality of life for many.

He graduated from Moncton High School in 1972, then did his undergraduate degree at Mount Allison. From there he went on to do a Master's in biochemistry at Memorial University, medical school at Dalhousie University, and an internship in Victoria, B.C. at the Royal Jubilee Hospital. He did his urology training at University of Ottawa, then practised in Kentville, N.S. for four years before moving to the U.S.

He and his wife have been living in Minnesota for the past 13 years, but his mother and one of his sisters still call Moncton home. In the last year, he has started a urology program in Haiti at the Hôpital Biénfaisance de Pignon and has joined Project Haiti as its vice-president.

Instead of simply performing surgeries for those who need them, Henri and his colleagues use cases to teach Haitian doctors new surgical techniques they can use to treat the patients themselves. A first teaching session focused on a condition in women called vesico-vaginal fistulas, a common condition in the developing world that occurs during child birth.

Haitian physicians are very open to working with them. The 2010 earthquake had a huge impact on medical services in Haiti. A number of physicians were killed, others lost their facilities, and the medical school as well as the medical school hospital were destroyed. He says they are planning to rebuild the medical school hospital, but that will take a few years, making the facility in Pignon even more important.

Read full story: Moncton native lends surgical skills to Haiti (Moncton Times & Transcript)