Wednesday, November 13, 2013

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W W W .W E STERNGAZETTE.C A • @UW OGAZETTE

Let it snow This week’s snow dump was fuelled by the great lakes, experts say. >> pg. 3

thegazette Not ready for winter since 1906

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2013

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CANADA’S ONLY DAILY STUDENT NEWSPAPER • FOUNDED 1906

VOLUME 107, ISSUE 37

Western holds first International Week Growing global outreach part of Western’s strategy Jeremiah Rodriguez NEWS EDITOR For the entire week, the walls of the University Community Centre will be draped with banners and flags from all over the globe. With 60 different events taking place all over campus this week, you might find yourself walking into one by accident during Western’s first International Week. Each day until Saturday, from 9 a.m. until dusk, numerous faculties, clubs, businesses and speakers will descend onto nearly every building at Western with a wide array of activities. The inaugural week’s kick off coincides with the University Students’ Council support services’ annual Ethno-cultural Awareness day. The plethora of day-long events range from teaching simple phrases in more than seven languages each hour, to opportunities to learn abroad to international film screenings in the evenings, to workshops and lectures about job hunting internationally. The wide scope may seem daunting but everyone involved seems more than willing to step up to the task. “We’ve never really had a celebration specifically as to what makes us international at all once,” Kris Duncan, communications officer of Western International, said. “Just looking at the map in the UCC atrium — where students can pin up where they’re from or where they’re going — you can see how much of an international community is here at Western.” Each day, special guest speakers will touch topics like Japanese poetry, international identity, peace building and on Thursday Western Heads East will be talking to international students through Skype who are interning in places like Tanzania and Korea. There are currently approximately 1,200 Western

London lacking labour? Richard Raycraft NEWS EDITOR

Haida Liu GAZETTE

CITIZENS OF THE WORLD. Flags hanging over the University Community Centre atrium symbolize the start of Western’s International Week, celebrating and enjoying the diversity on campus.

undergraduates studying abroad. On Friday afternoon at 1:30 p.m., the Don Wright Faculty of Music is inviting students to bask in musical stylings from Russia, Korea, Czech Republic, Finland, China and Cuba during the “Songs of Many Lands.” Planning for International Week started nearly a year ago with organizers wanting to have a focused way to celebrate diversity on campus. “It was a little difficult to get the logistics together, but there are already so many international events going on campus all the time, it was just a matter of coordinating all those different things in one week,” Julie McMullin, vice-provost international, said. On Tuesday night, Western International’s “World’s Challenge Challenge” invited participants to present a solution to an global problem of their choosing to a panel of judges. Groups were judged on ambition

Just looking at the map in the UCC atrium — where students can pin up where they’re from or where they’re going — you can see how much of an international community is here at Western.” — Kris Duncan

communications officer of Western International

along with practicality and feasibility. Solutions included a sustainable Africa through investment in agriculture, reducing plastic consumption in water bottles, sustainable

cooking and micro-financing in developing countries, to name a few. On campus, there are approximately 2,800 international students, with international students comprising 10 per cent of all incoming undergraduates this year. “At Western, one of our priorities is to internationalize our school and one of the ways we can do that is by celebrating the different communities on campus. But we really want to increase all those numbers,” McMullin added. With the first day going off without a hitch, organizers are looking forward to the rest of the week’s events and encourage students to possibly try or do, or listen to something totally new. If you need to know which event you accidentally walked into, or if you’re just looking for a full rundown, visit internationalweek. uwo.ca.

London may have high unemployment, but that is mainly due to a skills mismatch between what workers have to offer and what employers are looking for, according to the London Economic Development Corporation. London’s unemployment rate currently sits at 7.9 per cent, the lowest it has been in four years, though still above the national average of 6.9 per cent. Despite this, Robert Collins of the LEDC admitted that London was facing a labour shortage of the right type of workers. This indicates a skills gap between employer demand and the skills supplied by workers. “There are shortages mainly in the IT sector, some in the advanced manufacturing area, and what I mean by that is that more recently with the low cost of borrowing money and with the productivity challenge that companies have been facing, they’ve been investing in new technology to produce those goods, which then requires an advanced skill level to operate that equipment, so to a certain degree equipment has been replacing people,” he explained. “Then it’s finding the individuals with the right skill sets to support that equipment.” Collins talked about two possible solutions. One involves providing better labour market information to workers and students so the skills shortage can be addressed, and the other emphasizes training workers on the job as well as out of one. “We know that we don’t have as many people being attracted early enough to areas such as computer science,” he said. “We know that’s a demand occupation, we also know that if there were more people graduating with those skill sets, more companies would locate here.” >> see SKILLS pg.3

November 15th is wear purple day. Visit London Abused Women’s Centre at www.lawc.on.ca/shinethelight for more info.


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