Posted on Oct. 31: McMaster bugs out on Discovery

Strange things happen at the Auchmar estate on Hamilton's mountain brow. For one thing, mayflies bite people and age them a lot faster than humanly possible. McMaster's Marvin Gunderman can be held partly accountable for the creepy things that take place at the 150-year-old Gothic-style estate. After all, it's this entomologist that put the insects there in the first place. The technical co-ordinator, curator of entomology and insect taxonomist in McMaster's Department of Biology, supplied the set of Discovery Channel's new program Strange Days at Blake Holsey High with the mayflies that were digitized for use in episode 5. In this episode, a student catches a mayfly, known for its short lifespan, and when the bug bites him, his genetic code is altered and he ages rapidly. "A special crew took digital images of the insects spread on a Petrie plate and they manipulated those images to make a prototype creature," Gunderman explains. "What they wanted to get across was that aging and life spans are both relative." The show will air Nov. 23 on Discovery Kids on NBC Saturday mornings. The half-hour action series is filmed on location in Hamilton at the Auchmar estate, once a monastery. The show is set at a boarding school called Blake Holsey High, nicknamed Black Hole High because of the bizarre occurrences that take place there. The episode probably won't spook Gunderman. "As a kid I loved insects," he says. "I always had spider collections and all of my science projects in high school were on insects."

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Posted on Oct. 30: CPEC hosting Continuing Your Education Fair today

Eight out of every 10 students that visit a career counselor in the Career Planning and Employment Centre (CPEC) are looking to further their education beyond McMaster, according to CPEC stats. That's one reason Heather Hines, CPEC events and marketing co-ordinator, feels today's Continuing Your Education Fair is so valuable. "The Continuing Your Education Fair offers students the chance to speak with admissions and liaison personnel about the programs they have to offer," says Hines. "A great number of McMaster students are interested in further studies after their first degree, so the fair brings some of the possibilities right to their doorstep." More than 50 schools will participate in the fair on Wednesday, Oct. 30 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the atrium of the McMaster University Student Centre, including a school from the United Kingdom. For a list of the participating organizations visit http://careers.mcmaster.ca/cont_ed_fair_2002/students.htm CPEC's newest publication Staying in school a little longer... The Ultimate Ontario Guide to Continuing Your Education, is also being launched today. "The book is a comprehensive resource detailing more than 300 programs in Ontario that students can enroll in upon completion of a degree," says Hines. The book will be for sale at the fair and is available to students for $3.

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