UPEI/AVC Awarded New Canada Research Chair in Sustainable Aquaculture

The Honourable Gary Goodyear, Canada's Minister of State for Science and Technology, recently announced a new Canada Research Chair at the University of Prince Edward Island's Atlantic Veterinary College (AVC). Dr. Sophie St-Hilaire joins UPEI as the Canada Research Chair in Integrated Health Research for Sustainable Aquaculture.

Dr. St-Hilaire moves her research to the AVC from Idaho State University. Her research has taken her across the world, having studied aquaculture in Chile, Europe, and both coasts of North America.

'As an epidemiologist, I work on many different problems,' said Dr. St-Hilaire. 'The breadth of my research projects enables me to collaborate with many different types of researchers, from microbiologists to agricultural engineers. The ultimate goal of my research is to improve aquaculture systems and make them more economically and environmentally sustainable.'

'Dr. St-Hilaire's wealth of international expertise complements AVC's already world-renowned aquatics program,' said Dr. Don Reynolds, dean of the Atlantic Veterinary College. 'She also exemplifies the high quality of education at AVC, having graduated from our doctor of veterinary medicine degree in 1994. It is gratifying to see our graduates returning to AVC to share their knowledge with their colleagues and the researchers of the future.'

'Dr. St-Hilaire builds on an already stellar team of epidemiology researchers at UPEI,' said Dr. Katherine Schultz, UPEI's vice-president of research. 'Her unique expertise examines the short- and long-term costs of an intensive aquaculture system, with a careful eye on environmental sustainability.'

The Canada Research Chair in Integrated Health Research for Sustainable Aquaculture is funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC).

'The Canada Research Chairs Program helps to position Canadian post-secondary institutions as world-class research centres,' said Suzanne Fortier, president of NSERC and a member of the Canada Research Chairs steering committee. 'With this funding support, researchers are finding solutions to today's social, health and economic issues and are training the next generation of innovative scientists and scholars.'

'I'm excited to be back at the Atlantic Veterinary College,' said Dr. St-Hilaire. 'This is where I received my DVM. I'm now working on projects alongside professors who were my teachers. That is really gratifying."

UPEI is home to seven Canada Research Chairs and the prestigious Canada Excellence Research Chair in Aquatic Epidemiology.

Read more about Dr. Sophie St-Hilaire.

For Information:
Dave Atkinson
Research Communications
University of Prince Edward Island
(902)620-5117, datkinson@upei.ca

UPEI radiography students win top prizes

Six students from UPEI's bachelor of applied science in radiography (BScR) program were awarded the top and second- place prizes in a recent Canadian Association of Medical Radiation Technologists (CAMRT) video and photo contest.

Marla MacAusland, Krista Betts (MacDonald), Sue Donahoe, Lisa Norton, Holly Manning and Rob DeWolfe entered CAMRT's ‘Very Image of Care' contest, submitting both a video and photo. Their entry, 'We NOD because we care,' demonstrated the daily tasks of an MRT and the importance of their role within the healthcare team.

Their video portion, the grand prize winner, promoted the main goals of MRTs including radiation safety, the NOD approach, and patient care. Their photo, which earned second place, illustrated MRT equipment which they incorporated into the CAMRT logo. All contest entries were judged by a jury and then voted upon by visitors to the CAMRT website.

Before the students learned of the contest results, they tried not to get their hopes up. The team was impressed when their photo received second place, and they were even more thrilled to find out they had also won the grand prize for their video. 'We are so grateful for all the votes from our friends and families, and the QEH staff who voted and got their loved ones to vote, too,' said MacAusland. 'It was definitely all of those email votes that helped us win!'

The team wanted to show their friends and family what their future career is all about and how it differs from other healthcare professions. The team was able to use their clinical work experience to create a successful contest entry.

The team was presented with a grand total of $4,000 ($3,000 for the video and $1,000 for the photo) which they spent this week on airline tickets to Toronto to attend the CAMRT conference in June.

The ‘Very Image of Care' contest was open to all MRTs in Canada, as well as students in CMA-accredited programs in Canada.

Check out the team's winning video and photo.

New VP position to focus on students

The University of Prince Edward Island announced the creation of a new position today: Vice-President Student Affairs. This role enhances relationships between the departments and areas that serve and support students, ensuring that a dedicated voice supporting positive student experience operates directly within the senior management team.

Dr. Wendy Carroll, currently Associate Professor in the School of Business and Faculty Director of the MBA program, has agreed to accept the position of Vice-President Student Affairs on an interim basis, commencing immediately, while a formal search process gets underway.

Students see the new role as a positive move and in keeping with the structure of most other Canadian universities. UPEI Student Union President Rob Livingstone said, 'It is very encouraging to see UPEI create this position-it clearly shows that senior administration understands that a quality experience for students contributes to the successful operation of the University. This is something we have been hoping for a long time now and we are glad to see it implemented.'

Reporting to the President and working collaboratively with the Vice-Presidents and Deans, this new Vice-President will lead a portfolio encompassing: the Registrar's Office, Athletics and Recreation, Student Services, and the Webster Centre for Teaching and Learning. Strategic planning in relation to improving the overall quality of the student experience throughout the entire student life cycle i.e. recruitment, retention through to graduation and beyond, will be the immediate priority.

The Office of the Vice-President Student Affairs will be located in Student Services in the W.A. Murphy Student Centre.

UPEI business students are at it again

Five business students recently took part in the Inter-Collegiate Business Competition (I.C.B.C.) hosted at Queen's University, in Kingston, Ontario. UPEI brought an ethics team and a business policy team to compete in Canada's premier undergraduate business case competition.

The ethics team, consisting of Duncan Sturz and Kathleen Van Ekris, were awarded second place, while the business policy team, consisting of Alana McKie, Becky Arnold, and Janell MacDonald, were finalists. The competition's preliminary round brought together 165 submissions from 38 universities across Canada and around the world in eight divisions including: accounting, business policy, debate, ethics, finance, HR, marketing, and management information systems.

Sturz enjoyed preparing for and competing in the competition, 'It's been an excellent learning, networking, and team-building experience,' he said. 'And although the UPEI School of Business is small relative to most universities who attended the competition, I can confidently say I felt no disadvantage representing our ambitious Island university.'Sturz' teammate Van Ekris agreed, 'It was a lot of hard work but it was nice to be able to show that such a small school can still perform on a national scale.'

This was UPEI's first year applying to the competition and the case team was delighted to have two preliminary round submissions selected to compete in the competition's final round. Alan Duncan, dean of UPEI's School of Business was thrilled to learn of the students' success. 'Their motivation and dedication highlights the benefits of hard work.' Professor Duncan also believes the win reflects UPEI's ability to successfully compete against other universities, regardless of their size. He added, 'These results, coming from this environment, continue to illustrate the unique benefits that UPEI provides. These students make all of UPEI proud of the experiences we share.'

More information on the I.C.B.C. competition

UPEI Faculty supervisor: Edward Gamble, Assistant Professor, UPEI School of Business

UPEI advisors: Kyle Smith and Ashley Adams

Finalist teams in ethics: Concordia University, Dalhousie University, Okanagan College, Saint Mary's University, University of Calgary, and UPEI

Finalist teams in business policy: Concordia University, Okanagan College, Queensland University of Technology (Australia), University of British Columbia, UPEI, and the University of Regina

For more information: http://icbconline.ca/

Canada-Wide Science Fair 2012 hosts community launch, January 19

The Canada-Wide Science Fair is coming to Prince Edward Island this year for the first time ever! UPEI will host CWSF 2012 from May 13 to 18.

The Host Committee is planning a Community Launch for the fair with an opportunity to sign up as a volunteer. Information about the CWSF and volunteer roles will be presented, as well as fun activities. This will take place from 4-6 pm on Thursday, January 19, at the Atlantic Veterinary College McCain Foundation Learning Commons.

The first national CWSF competition with 45 student winners representing 12 regions was held in 1962. Since then, this national competition has grown to more than 100 regional science fairs across Canada. Needless to say, the 2012 CWSF is a tremendous opportunity for the winning students who represent these regions and who will be competing for the national awards organized by Youth Science Canada and the local host, UPEI, in partnership with government and local businesses. It is also a unique opportunity for volunteers to assist with the delivery of this event.
Volunteers will be needed in many capacities from judging to hospitality, communications, food services, administration, school tours, exhibit set up, decorating, public viewing and more. It is estimated that some 200 to 300 volunteers will be needed in the various capacities.
If you are interested in becoming a volunteer, please contact John Burka at burka@upei.ca. If you are particularly interested in becoming a judge, please contact the Chief Judge, Barry Linkletter blinkletter@upei.ca. Francophone judges (and volunteers) are particularly needed.

UPEI’s Diversity Week: Celebrate, Educate, Motivate

UPEI will be celebrating its fourth annual Diversity Week, January 23-27, with all events open to the public. The 2012 theme will be 'Celebrate, Educate, Motivate' with an aim to celebrate the rich diversity at UPEI, further educate and motivate the public about diversity, and personal promotion of inclusion.

Ruth Freeman, Diversity Office Coordinator, is looking forward to the annual event. 'This is the fourth year that we have held UPEI Diversity Week, and it has become a popular campus tradition,' she said. 'All of the events are open to the public, so it's a great opportunity for the broader community to share and contribute.'
Some of this year's Diversity Week events include a diversity film fest; an international pavilion and marketplace which will feature cultural displays, craft sales, international dip tastings etc.; an adaptive technology and interactive educational display; trivia; a Muslim/Christian dialogue on peace; an art show; a graffiti wall; and identity talks.
The full schedule of events is posted on upei.ca/do. For further information, please contact Ruth Freeman at rfreeman@upei.ca or (902) 628-4332.

Second annual UPEI men’s soccer dinner and roast

The UPEI men's soccer team is pleased to present its second annual dinner and roast on Friday, March 2. Bruce Norton will be the featured guest/‘roastee.'

The event is hosted by the UPEI Friends of Men's Soccer, a group representing alumni, members of the soccer community, and PEI soccer supporters.

Bruce Norton has been involved in sport at UPEI, the Prince Edward Island School Athletic Association (PEISAA), and many community and club teams. Norton's time at UPEI was spent as both an athlete and a coach. He played football with the Panthers from 1973-1976, and soccer from 1975-1976. He was also a member of the curling team for a couple of seasons. In 1990 and again from 1994-99, Norton was head coach of the men's soccer team and, in 1996, was named AUS Coach of the Year. In 1998, Norton led the men's team to an AUS championship, and then returned to UPEI to assist Head Coach Lewis Page in 2003.
This fall, when Page was away coaching at the Pan Am Games, Norton stepped in as the bench boss for seven regular season games, losing just one game; and for his efforts, he was named co-AUS Coach of the Year alongside Page. Norton has also coached at both the high school and junior high levels for over 30 years. He currently teaches at Birchwood Intermediate School.
Page is looking forward to the event, 'The Bruce Norton Roast is the second of (what we hope will be) many fundraising initiatives that will help us build the foundation of a team that can win an AUS championship as a host this fall, and a national championship when we host the CIS matches in 2014.'
The event, emceed by Lorne Acorn, will include a lineup of ‘roasters' that will entertain the crowd throughout the evening. The event will also feature a silent auction to help raise funds for the UPEI men's soccer team. All funds raised from the evening will be used to support current and future Panthers through athletic awards.
Join us at the Rodd Charlottetown (75 Kent Street): reception begins at 6:15 pm, dinner is at 7:00. Tickets are $100 each and can be purchased at the Soccer Stop, PEI Soccer Association, or by contacting UPEI Athletics and Recreation (902) 566-0991.
For Information:
Lynn Boudreau
UPEI Athletics & Recreation
Communications & Events
T: (902) 566-0991 lboudreau@upei.ca

Keeping a careful eye on the Northumberland Strait

Dr. Michael van den Heuvel, UPEI's Canada Research Chair in Watershed Ecological Integrity, has been awarded funding by the Canadian Water Network (CWN) and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) to construct a long-term monitoring program in the watersheds in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence, including the Northumberland Strait.

Dr. van den Heuvel will lead a team of researchers across five universities and government departments to develop a program that measures how land-use affects the overall health of the species and estuaries within the Southern Gulf.

'We'll focus on two key sources of stress related to land-use: nutrients and sediments' said Dr. van den Heuvel. 'And we'll determine how to best monitor how these things affect the fish, invertebrates and vegetation in the waters of the southern gulf.'

Dr. van den Heuvel's team--made up of researchers at the Universities of New Brunswick and Québec, as well as DFO and Agriculture Canada--has three years in which to establish the science behind this monitoring program. As they work, he says they must bear in mind several important factors.

'We're creating a monitoring program that will continue once our initial three-year project is finished,' he said. 'We have to consider who is going to take on this monitoring work, how much it's going to cost, and who will bear that cost. So we have to balance our need to have stable, long-term data with practical issues to ensure that the monitoring framework is sustainable.'

The project proposal, titled 'Towards a regional monitoring framework for cumulative impacts assessment in the Northumberland Strait: Linking land-use stressor loads and nearshore biological integrity,' was one of just four selected nationally by the CWN and a consortium of stakeholders within the region, with money also being contributed by DFO.

'Dr. van den Heuvel's work will collect data that will be available to anyone concerned with the health of life in the Northumberland Strait,' said Dr. Katherine Schultz, UPEI's Vice-President of Research. 'Once we understand how what we do on land impacts life in the water, researchers such as Dr. van den Heuvel can address any issues they uncover.'

CWN's $2.1 million investment in projects such as this one, allows university research groups to create environmental frameworks to support cumulative effects assessments in watersheds. This focus creates standardizing approaches nationally to monitor watersheds where multiple uses and activities affect conditions.

For Information:
Dave Atkinson
Research Communications Officer
University of Prince Edward Island
(902) 620-5117

UPEI Wind Symphony to perform encore performance

The UPEI Wind Symphony, under the direction of Dr. Karem J. Simon, will feature an encore performance of 'The Lord of the Rings' on Sunday, February 5 at 3:00 pm in the Homburg Theatre at the Confederation Centre of the Arts. As UPEI's Dr. Steel Recital Hall was filled to capacity for the December 1 concert, this additional performance will hopefully satisfy the demand of those unable to take in the initial recital. Moreover, the opportunity to hear the Wind Symphony in the Homburg Theatre, an excellent concert hall, will make for an enhanced experience for audience members.

Dutch composer Johan de Meij's Symphony No. 1 'The Lord of the Rings' is based on the trilogy of that name by J.R.R. Tolkien. This book has fascinated many millions of readers since its publication in 1955. The symphony consists of five separate movements, each illustrating a personage or an important episode from the book. The movements include Gandalf (The Wizard), Lothlórien (The Elvenwood), Gollum (Sméagol), Journey in the Dark, and Hobbits. The symphony was written in the period between March 1984 and December 1987 and has garnered many awards.

This special performance in the Homburg Theatre is done collaboratively with the PEI Intermediate Honours Band. Since 1992, a select group of school band students has met for an intensive weekend of rehearsals under the direction of an acclaimed conductor to advance and enrich their music making. This year's Honours Band consists of 130 instrumentalists, under the direction of Maestro Rowan Fitzgerald.

Comprised mostly of UPEI music majors, the Wind Symphony has been critically acclaimed for its performance standard and innovative programming. During the past 13 years, the Wind Symphony has produced an annual compact disc featuring selected repertoire from each year's performances. Its 2010 compact disc, 'Cathedrals,' received the Music PEI Award for best classical recording. In the spring of 2011, 'Freebirds,' was released to much praise. Each year, the Wind Symphony tours selected areas of the region to provide its membership with additional performance experiences and share its music with a wider audience. During the fall semester, performances of 'The Lord of the Rings' in Nova Scotia and PEI were met with enthusiastic response from audiences.

The public is cordially invited to attend this additional performance. Tickets for 'The Lord of the Rings' ($10 adults, $5 students) may be purchased at the Confederation Centre Box Office.

For information
Dr. Karem Simon
Professor, Department of Music
University of Prince Edward Island
(902) 566-0702

It’s official—UPEI men's hockey game part of Scotiabank Hockey Day in Canada

The UPEI men's hockey team will play their final season game at Credit Union Place in Summerside, as part of Scotiabank Hockey Day in Canada. The Panthers will face the St. Thomas Tommies on February 11 at 2 pm.

UPEI Director of Athletics and Recreation Ron Annear arranged for a venue change after approaching Atlantic University Sport, and his counterpart at St. Thomas University.'The local organizing committee approached us to be a part of the programming for Scotiabank Hockey Day in Canada events, and it was too great an opportunity to pass up. It allows us to bring Panther hockey to Summerside, engage our alumni in Prince County, as well as be a part of a national celebration of Canada's favourite past-time.'

This marks the first time in the 12-year history of the CBC event that it will be held in PEI. Hosting of the event is a local partnership between the province of PEI, cities of Charlottetown and Summerside, and Hockey PEI. A volunteer committee is coordinating events that begin February 8. The week will culminate in a day-long hockey celebration on February 11 that will feature Ron MacLean and Don Cherry, CBC Hockey Night in Canada personalities, broadcasting the Panther match-up, a PEI Rocket game, as well as a Summerside Western Capitals game, live from the country's smallest province.

All UPEI season ticket holders will be admitted to the UPEI game, sponsored by Cavendish Farms, upon presentation of their pass.

UPEI will be sending two buses to the game in Summerside. A bus sponsored by Student Services will be available for UPEI students. Students can reserve a seat and a game ticket at the Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre front desk. There are an additional 45 free student tickets available which also must be claimed at the front desk. UPEI will also be providing complimentary transportation for season ticket holders and the general public. To confirm a seat on this bus, please email heartz@upei.ca on or before Tuesday, February 7.

Tickets are available at Eastlink Arena in Summerside (902) 432-1234 or online at www.tickets.summerside.ca.

For Information:
Lynn Boudreau
UPEI Athletics & Recreation
Communications & Events
T: (902) 566-0991