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insidetoronto.com
Eighteen months after first reported in The Mirror, an aerospace campus is coming to Downsview Park. Centennial College will receive up to $26 million from the provincial government to relocate its aviation programs to the former de Havilland aircraft manufacturing centre at the park, the college announced Tuesday. “The investment is seen as the first step towards creating an aerospace training and research hub for the development of new technologies in Ontario,” Centennial said in a statement. The de Havilland plant will be renovated to accommodate new classrooms, workshops and hangars and will house an innovation and research working group consisting of industry leaders and academic officials from York University, the University of Toronto and Ryerson University.
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Read more on this story online at http://bit.ly/16N0jPV
Bloorview pioneering pediatric concussion research LISA QUEEN lqueen@insidetoronto.com With Jordan Glyn-Williams and Samuel Turcotte, two 13-year-old players with the North York Knights hockey team looking on, Holland
Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital announced Tuesday, it is launching the Concussion Research Centre. It will be one of the world’s first to solely research the effects of concussions on children and youth.
President Sheila Jarvis called the announcement “an important day in the life of young people who play sports...We are focused here at Holland Bloorview at pioneering new ways to help young people with disabilities achieve their goals
and participate fully in life.” While the dangers of concussions have been in the spotlight recently, most of the attention has focused on adults. But children and youth are significantly more vulnerable to the brain injury because their
brains and bodies are still growing, said Dr. Michelle Keightley, senior clinician scientist at the Bloorview Research Institute. Ten to 15 per cent of players in Ontario minor hockey leagues suffer concussions >>>RESEARCH, page 9
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