Ryan Donally and Vincent GeorgieMBA student Ryan Donally and business professor Vincent Georgie will be heading to the Oscar ceremonies this weekend to learn more about how the film industry markets itself.

Hockey pro turned business student heading to Oscars

He hung up his skates to come back to school for a business degree and now he’s off to Hollywood to soak up the atmosphere of the Academy Awards.

Ryan Donally, a former captain of the Windsor Spitfires who was drafted by the Calgary Flames in 2003 and spent about five years playing in both the American and East Coast hockey leagues, will accompany fellow student Michael Ruffolo and their business professor Vincent Georgie on a fact-finding mission at the 86th annual Oscars ceremony weekend.

“I’m just going to be a sponge and try to absorb as much as I possibly can while I’m there,” said Donally, who earned a BComm degree last year and is currently working on an MBA. “This is really a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and I can’t tell you how grateful I am for it.”

Dr. Georgie, whose expertise includes the marketing of the film industry and is also the executive director of the Windsor International Film Festival, says attending the Oscars helps his research and teaching, but also helps his efforts to promote the festival and boost the area’s cultural capacity. Rather than celebrity gazing, much of his time will be spent with industry marketing experts, learning more about the tricks of the trade.

“It informs so much of my analysis of what I do back here,” said Georgie. “It brings all sorts of attention to our festival because we pool all of our collective expertise together. My association to WIFF, to the university and to the film industry is beneficial all around. It’s an ultimate win-win-win.”

Georgie and his students will attend several Oscar events including one for the animated feature nominees, one for makeup and hair nominees, and another for the musical nominees, where U2 will perform a song from the soundtrack for a film about Nelson Mandela.

Donally said he’s considering a career in sports or entertainment marketing and although he’s unsure of exactly what he wants to do after graduation, he’s certain an MBA and the experience of having attended the Oscars will serve him well in the future.

“There are all these transferable skills that you learn,” he said. “Whether you’re a hockey coach or a business coach, a captain on the ice or a captain in the boardroom, I think those skills translate to anything. Those are the skills I’ve developed through my life and I’m really honing them through the MBA program.”

Donally and Georgie will both appear today on Research Matters, a weekly talk show that focuses on the work of University of Windsor researchers and airs every Thursday at 4:30 p.m. on CJAM 99.1 FM.

Georgie will do radio reports from the Oscars as well as a blog for The Windsor Star, and all three will be tweeting from the event. You can follow them on Twitter at @VincentGeorgie, @RyanDonally, and @ruffolom.

Alex UllmanOntario University Athletics awarded Lancer distance runner Alex Ullman the Hec Phillips Trophy as its outstanding male performer in track and field.

Lancer named province’s top track and field athlete

Ontario University Athletics named Lancer distance runner Alex Ullman its outstanding male performer in track and field after the second-year distance runner helped lead Windsor to the provincial team title.

Ullman, a liberal arts and professional studies major, won gold medals in the 600m and 1000m events at last weekend’s OUA championship meet, anchored the men’s 4x400m relay team to another gold medal in a record time of 3:17.24, and earned silver as part of the 4x800m relay squad.

As winner of the Hec Phillips Trophy, Ullman will become the OUA nominee for Canadian Interuniversity Sport male track athlete of the year, announced at the national meet in Edmonton, March 6 to 8.

Lancer head coach Dennis Fairall received the Bob Vigars award for OUA men’s coach of the year in track and field, the eighth time he has received the honour.

Read more about the major award winners in OUA track and field on the league’s website.

Staffer wins free tickets to watch national women’s basketball quarter-final

Stephanie Parent, an audio-visual technician in the Centre for Teaching and Learning, won Tuesday’s DailyNews quiz contest and the prize of a pair of tickets to see the Lancer women’s basketball team begin its title defence during the quarter-finals of the Bronze Baby tournament, March 14 at the St. Denis Centre.

Parent’s entry was selected at random from all those which correctly identified Miah-Marie Langlois as the second-highest scorer in Saturday’s 83-64 win over McMaster, Cheyanne Roger as the second-leading rebounder, and Caitlyn Longmuir as the top three-point shooter.

To purchase tickets to the 2014 CIS Women’s Basketball Championships, please visit the Windsor Lancers website at www.goLancers.ca.

Speed ReadingAn event Saturday in the Leddy Library combines elements of speed dating and reference requests.

Library to host “speed reading” event

An event in the Leddy Library on Saturday afternoon will combine elements of speed dating and reference requests to send every participant home with a collaboratively created, personalized reading list.

A collaboration between the library and the creative collective Broken City Lab, “Speed Reading” is aimed at book lovers, says information literacy librarian Heidi Jacobs.

“Participants will sit across from a stranger and talk about their reading interests,” she says. “You’ll both have four minutes to come up with a book suggestion for the other person based on your own personal reading history and at the end of the time, rotate to the next person and do it all over again.”

The excitement starts at 1 p.m. March 1 behind the Williams Café, Leddy Library.

Jacobs says attendees can also stay behind afterwards to browse the library’s collection and check out some of its titles.

Conference to seek path to growth of Canadian auto sector

While light vehicle sales are hitting record highs in Canada, assembly in the country declined last year. What can be done to reverse this decline?

A conference hosted by the Odette School of Business’s Office of Automotive and Vehicle Research will explore the theme “At the Crossroads: Can Canada Find the Path to Automotive Growth?” on Friday, March 7.

Canada was once the fourth largest assembler of vehicles in the world, today it is 10th. Mexico now exports more than three times the auto parts to the U.S. as does Canada and is poised to pass Canada as the leading exporter of finished vehicles to the U.S.

Hear about the future of the Canadian automotive industry from leading automotive experts, including:

The conference runs 7:30 a.m. to noon at the Caboto Club, 2175 Parent Avenue. Find a full program and online registration on the conference website.

Monica MalyMonica Maly of McMaster University will discuss “A Role for Biomechanics in Knee Osteoarthritis” in a free public lecture Friday, February 28.

Lecture to explore role of biomechanics in physiotherapy

Monica Maly, an associate professor of rehabilitation sciences at McMaster University, will deliver a free public lecture entitled “A Role for Biomechanics in Knee Osteoarthritis” at noon Friday in room 145, Human Kinetics Building.

Dr. Maly is a physiotherapist. Her main area of interest is developing exercise guidelines for people with arthritis.

Her lecture is part of the Faculty of Human Kinetics Distinguished Speaker Series.