The Legend December 2012

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D E C E M B E R 2 012

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V O L U M E 12

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ISSUE FOUR

Research advocacy finds champion in Hill Kovalchuk looks at link between night shift and breast cancer

Jaeger works to ease burden on students through SOS

Schultz examines how music is put together

Meet Myrtle, the U of L’s youngest student The U of L Legend is published monthly during the academic year by the communications unit within University Advancement. Submissions, comments and story ideas are always welcome. The Legend reserves the right to refuse any submitted advertisement. The Legend can be found online at issuu.com/ulethbridge. A DV E R T I S I N G For ad rates or other information, contact: legend@uleth.ca CREDITS Editor: Trevor Kenney Designer: Angelsea Saby CO N T R I B U TO R S: Anne Baxter, Amanda Berg, Bob Cooney, Jane Edmundson, Abby Groenenboom, Erica Lind, Jesse Malinsky, Jana McFarland, Suzanne McIntosh, Kali McKay, Heather Mirau, Leslie Ohene-Adjei, Stacy Seguin, Emma Thompson, Katherine Wasiak, Lori Weber, Jamie Woodford and Lizhu Wu

University of Lethbridge 4401 University Drive, Lethbridge, AB T1K 3M4 www.ulethbridge.ca

David Hill’s long relationship with the University of Lethbridge and southern Alberta as a whole helps ease the learning curve for the new director of centres and institutes and research advocacy.

BY TREVOR KENNEY

A

s much as David Hill describes his return to Lethbridge as a homecoming, he is quick to recognize that what he thought he knew about the University of Lethbridge only scratched the surface. “I always thought I was pretty familiar with what was happening at the University, and I have been pleasantly surprised by both the depth and breadth of the intellect, experience and opportunity that exists,” says Hill, the new director of centres and institutes and research advocacy. Since assuming his post Sept. 1, Hill has seen the introduction of the ninth research centre/institute on campus (Institute for Child and Youth Studies), the declaration by RE$EARCH Infosource that the U of L is Canada’s Research University of the Year (2012 Undergraduate category) and the highest ever ranking from Maclean’s magazine. “This really is a career opportunity,” says Hill. “From my personal perspective, this allows me to make a difference, to use all the skills I’ve developed over my career and to do it in a way that will add value to the research and the teaching that’s happening here.” Born in Eastern Canada, Hill spent much of his youth in Europe before eventually settling in the Lethbridge area. He married his wife Betty, a Picture Butte native, in 1974, and they spent the early days of their marriage in towns such as Taber, Vauxhall and Brooks, all the while raising five children. Professionally, Hill became well known both provincially and nationally as a key advocate for water research, water use policies and irrigation management. In the

six years prior to coming to the U of L, Hill was the executive director of Water Resources for Alberta Innovates-Energy and Environment Solutions, based in Edmonton. The key contacts he has established over the years will serve him well in his new capacity at the U of L. “I think what I bring to this is the ability to take some of the research findings and outcomes happening in the various centres and institutes and get them into communities of interest that would not normally have contact with the researchers,” says Hill. And it’s not just about water, although Hill is cognizant of the long history he was with the University’s water researchers. “There is so much that is happening within all the centres and I’ve found, particularly when I’m visiting labs and talking with students, that the level of commitment and excitement is so high, I’m going to have a difficult time deciding where to invest my time,” he says. Hill is a big proponent of the centres and institutes approach the U of L has taken in establishing areas of expertise. By investing strategically in people and infrastructure, the University has been able to focus on its core strengths while invigorating interdisciplinary research. “They have, in many respects, been a means of bringing researchers with common interests together to share their talents and expertise in ways that weren’t formerly done,” he says. “We all need to challenge ourselves somewhat about what we know and where we know it from. We’re living in a world now that is talking an awful lot about collaboration, but it really does spawn ideas through that dialogue and interac-

tion that individuals on their own would likely not come to. That’s one of the key advantages of these centres and institutes, to discover new ideas together.” This discovery benefits all, not the least of which are U of L students. “At the end of the day, universities still educate and that student experience, in an area where there is such a rich exchange of ideas, I think is really valuable.”

G E T T H E FA C T S • Hill loves going to bat for

a ‘smaller’ university like the U of L, saying, “We have a very unique ability to involve undergraduates and graduates in key research interests that are pressing needs for society. That’s the part around research advocacy that I’m going to find really enjoyable and interesting.”

• Hill’s son, Justin (BSc ’08), is the GIS co-ordinator for Palliser Regional Municipal Services Ltd.

• His daughter, Jennifer, works

with Alberta Innovates Technology Futures in the Alberta Genetically Engineered Machines program, and she is now running the Imagine Cup competition, while another daughter, Jocelyn, works in the U of L Daycare

• Hill loves to cook to relieve

stress, citing all kinds of chili as a favourite dish to prepare


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