Mayor of Charlottetown visits UPEI

His Worship Clifford Lee, Mayor of Charlottetown, recently visited the University of Prince Edward Island campus. President Abd-El-Aziz greeted the Mayor at his office where they discussed areas of possible collaboration. The visit included a tour of the School of Sustainable Design Engineering building, currently under construction, which will be completed in September 2016.

First elected to Charlottetown City Council in November of 1987, Mayor Lee has served consecutive terms to date. He was appointed Deputy Mayor in 2000. He was elected as the 45th Mayor of Charlottetown in November of 2003, and re-elected as Mayor in the 2006, 2010 and 2014 municipal elections.
 

UPEI community saddened by death of esteemed faculty member

The University of Prince Edward Island community was saddened by the sudden death of Dr. Barry Bartmann on Friday, August 21. Dr. Bartmann had been a Professor of Political Science at UPEI since 1987.

“Our University has lost a great professor and colleague,” said President Alaa Abd-El-Aziz. “On behalf of the entire UPEI community, I pass on my most sincere sympathies to Dr. Bartmann’s sister Sheila, his extended family, friends, and colleagues—especially those in the departments of Political Science and Island Studies.”

His colleagues from the Political Science and Island Studies departments have prepared the following tribute:

As all those who knew Barry Bartmann will agree, he was an exceptional human being, a professor in the old mode, who cared about learning and teaching. He would have turned 74 in September.

Barry was an undergraduate at Waterloo Lutheran (now Wilfred Laurier) University and obtained his MA and PhD in political science at the University of Western Ontario and the London School of Economics. Barry’s areas of expertise included the International Relations of Small States, International Relations (Foreign Policy Analysis, International Organizations, Integration Studies) and Comparative Politics (Small States, Britain and Western Europe, Middle East Studies).

Of very few academics can it be said that they almost single-handedly created a new field in their discipline, but it was true of Barry. After he arrived at UPEI in 1987, he was instrumental in developing Island Studies, the examination of small island jurisdictions such as Barbados, the Faroes, Iceland, Mauritius, and many others. His passion for Island Studies came through in his work; his international scholarship was highly regarded. He provided specialist advice to various North Atlantic jurisdictions, including Constitutional Committees and Governments of the Åland Islands, the Faroes, and Iceland.

Barry was the academic driver to the internationalization of island studies at UPEI, starting with the spectacularly successful “Islands Living” Conference (1992), then the North Atlantic Islands Programme—now the North Atlantic Forum, which is meeting in Summerside in September this year; he helped organize the Island Studies minor at UPEI (1999), and the Master of Arts in Island Studies (2003).

Barry was a recognized authority on sub-national island jurisdictions and the international relations of small (or micro) states, those very small countries usually overlooked and ignored by most scholars in comparative politics and international relations, and he published articles on places such as Andorra, Liechtenstein, and San Marino. As well, Barry analyzed the role of non-recognized states—among many, Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, Somaliland, Transnistria, and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus—in the international community, and co-edited the book De Facto States: The Quest for Sovereignty. He helped organize, and he delivered papers, at many international conferences on these fields.

Unlike many in the social sciences, Barry was also an excellent writer, and his articles were a joy to read. UPEI, and the wider academic community, has indeed lost an erudite scholar—as well as a wonderful cook!
It should also be noted that Barry was a dedicated and outstanding teacher. His many students always held him in very high regard and enjoyed immensely his vast knowledge of the subject matter he taught—and it was a very wide range, indeed. Our students loved him and they will miss him.

The flags on campus have been lowered to half-mast in honour of Dr. Bartmann and will remain so until after the funeral service on Friday, August 28. Funeral arrangements have been entrusted to Maclean’s Funeral Home: www.macleanfh.com

A memorial for Dr. Bartmann will be held on campus from 4-5 pm, Friday, August 28 in the Faculty Lounge of SDU Main Building.

UPEI Panther training camps for fall sports get underway

The UPEI Panthers will be holding training camps for its fall sports beginning this week. The campus will come alive with student-athletes competing for roster spots. The first training sessions for each sport are as follows:

Tuesday, August 25
3:30–5:30 pm, Field Hockey at UPEI Turf Field

Thursday, August 27
4:00–6:00 pm, Women’s Rugby at UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place

Friday, August 28
9:30–11:00 am, Women’s Soccer at UPEI Turf Field
11:00 am–12:30 pm, Men’s Soccer at Turf Field

Please note that anyone interested in trying out must complete Student-Athlete Registration requirements. For more information, contact Ron Annear at 902-566-0991 or annear@upei.ca.

The first “at home” exhibition play will be the Mulligan Cup next weekend, August 28–30, when the UPEI Men’s and Women’s soccer teams take to the pitch.

Season tickets are now on sale, for more information call Panther Central at (902) 566-0368 or visit gopanthersgo.ca.

About UPEI Athletics and Recreation

  • Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
  • Proud member of the AUS and CIS
  • Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place
  • Home of Panther Sports Medicine
  • Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas

UPEI Swimming lands major sprinting recruit

University of Prince Edward Island Swimming Coach Bill Calhoun is excited to announce Allen Boshnyak is joining the Panthers this fall.

The 21-year-old International student from Israel will make an immediate impact in the AUS. His times from last season would have seen him ranked second in the 50-metre backstroke and butterfly and would have qualified Boshnyak for the CIS Championship.

“With the appropriate development, Allen has the potential to not only make finals at CIS (Top 8) but potentially win the 50 m backstroke,” said Coach Calhoun. “His underwater kicking talent is by far the best in the AUS and possibly in the CIS. The team is extremely excited to have Allen joining the team in September and we look forward to seeing what he is capable of achieving for the swimming team and UPEI Athletics.”

Boshnyak said on a recent visit to campus, “I look forward to swimming for UPEI, it’s a great school and a great opportunity.”

Boshnyak will be entering the Bachelor of Arts program.

About UPEI Athletics and Recreation
• Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
• Proud member of the AUS and CIS
• Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place
• Home of Panther Sports Medicine
• Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas


 

UPEI leads 3-year study on impacts of pesticide run-off on lobster

The University of Prince Edward Island is taking the lead on a team of researchers examining the potential impact of agricultural pesticide run-off on lobsters in the Northumberland Strait. The three-year study is funded by a Strategic Partnership Grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and brings together partners from UPEI, the PEI Fishermen’s Association (PEIFA), and Homarus Inc.—a non-profit organization managed by the Maritime Fishermen’s Union.
 

 
“The lobster populations in the Northumberland Strait have been collapsed for quite a number of years, and no amount of fisheries measures seem to have improved that,” said Dr. Michael van den Heuvel, UPEI’s Canada Research Chair in Watershed Ecological Integrity and principal investigator of this project. “The conclusion is that there are other influencing factors that are not coming from the strait itself. They’re, in fact, coming from the surrounding land.” 
 
Dr. van den Heuvel explains that estuaries and coastal zones are under environmental pressure due to urban development, agriculture, and climate change. In the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence, this is of special concern.
 
“The uniqueness of that area is mainly because of the proximity to shore on both sides,” said Craig Avery, president of the PEIFA. “You have a lot more contaminants, a lot more run-off, and you have them coming from both sides. The strait is right there, and there’s nowhere else for it to go.” 
 
Foremost among those contaminants are pesticides that are highly toxic to invertebrates, especially crustaceans such as lobster.
 
“We are interested in any effect that could potentially be an explanation. It could be temperature. It could be pesticides. It could be acidification. We are studying all of those aspects,” said Dr. Dounia Daoud, a research scientist with Homarus Inc. “I am proud that the fishermen are taking care of their resource. I think it’s important. They are at the origin of our involvement of this project. It’s original and new that fishermen are taking care of the future.”
 
This project brings together faculty and student researchers from diverse fields at UPEI, including Dr. Spencer Greenwood, professor of biomedical sciences at the Atlantic Veterinary College and director of the Lobster Science Centre; Dr. Brian Wagner, professor of chemistry; and, Dr. Michael van den Heuvel, professor of biology.
 
Dr. van den Heuvel indicates the project will seek to answer the question of whether or not pesticides are having an influence on organisms in the Northumberland Strait. The project will also establish new long-term monitoring methods to improve our understanding of how the environment changes in response to activity on land.
 

UPEI Field Hockey announces Sarah Sear to join Panthers this fall

University of Prince Edward Island Field Hockey coach Sheila Bell is excited to announce Sarah Sear from Charlottetown will join the Panthers this fall.

The Colonel Gray field hockey graduate is a quick forward with an ability to score. Sear participated at the U-18 Nationals in Vancouver and U-16’s in Brampton in 2013, U-18 Nationals in Calgary in 2014, and the U-18 Nationals held earlier this month, August 5–8, in Surrey, BC. Sear was selected to the Junior Development Target in 2013 and has attended a number of Field Hockey Canada identification camps for junior players.

Sear was a member of Colonel Gray High School’s provincial-winning cross country and track and field teams during all three of her years of high school while also playing provincial hockey and soccer. At the Colonel Gray graduation, Sear received the Colin F. Macdonald Scholarship for a first-year UPEI Panther Field Hockey student-athlete.

Coach Bell is looking forward to Sarah making an impact on the UPEI forward line.

Sear has been accepted into the Bachelor of Science program at UPEI.

About UPEI Athletics and Recreation

  • Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
  • Proud member of the AUS and CIS
  • Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place
  • Home of Panther Sports Medicine
  • Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas
     

Mulligan Cup and Soccer Festival set for September 4–6

UPEI Athletics and Recreation is excited to announce the 2015 Mulligan Cup Invitational and Soccer Festival schedule and invites the community to come out and enjoy ‘the beautiful game’, September 4–6, at the UPEI Turf Field.

This is the fourth annual Mulligan Cup, an invitational tournament that provides an excellent opportunity for coaches to make final roster decisions.

In honour of Vince Mulligan, the ageless varsity UPEI soccer and hockey coach throughout the 80s and 90s, the tournament has proved to be a great way to kick off the season and showcase the UPEI Men’s and Women’s Soccer teams to their supporters.

“I really look forward to this time of year when we get a chance to look at the new athletes in camp,” said Mulligan. “You always go in to a new year with great expectations, and you can see it in the athletes' eyes and in their actions on the field. That's what makes this tournament so great to watch.”

Again this year there is a soccer festival on Saturday as part of the Mulligan Cup. The Festival includes soccer stations and activities such as penalty kicks, soccer tennis, small-sided games, music, and much more. Fans are encouraged to bring cleats and cheer to support our Men's and Women's Panther soccer teams.

Teams competing in the tournament this year are the Université de Moncton Blue Eagles (UdeM), Mount Allison Mounties (MtA), Holland College Hurricanes (HC), and the UPEI Panthers. Admission for Friday and Sunday’s games is $6/day, while Saturday is admission by donation for both the Festival and games.  Season ticket holders will be admitted free for Friday and Sunday games.

The AUS league openers for UPEI will take place on September 12 in St. John’s, Nfld., when the Men's and Women’s teams take on Memorial University.

2015 Mulligan Cup Schedule

Friday, September 4
6:00 pm (W) HC vs. UPEI
8:00 pm (M) HC vs. UPEI

Saturday, September 5
11:00 am – 12:30 pm Soccer Festival (admission by donation, includes Panther games)
1:00 pm (W) MtA vs. UPEI
3:00 pm (M) MtA vs. UPEI

Sunday, September 6
10:00 am (W) UdeM vs. HC
12:00 pm (M) UdeM vs. HC
2:00 pm (W) UdeM vs.UPEI
4:00 pm (M) UdeM vs UPEI

About UPEI Athletics and Recreation

  • Nine varsity sports and six club team programs
  • Proud member of the AUS and CIS
  • Athletic facilities include: Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre, UPEI Alumni Canada Games Place
  • Home of Panther Sports Medicine
  • Other facilities available to students and the community at large include: fitness centre, squash and racquetball courts, competition and leisure pool with hot tub, and two ice arenas

 

Congratulations, Dr. Gordon MacDonald!

The Association of Atlantic Universities announced the recipients of the AAU’s annual regional awards for excellence in teaching and educational leadership today during a presentation ceremony at the University of Prince Edward Island. And, for the second year in a row, a UPEI professor is a recipient.

Dr. Gordon MacDonald received the 2015 AAU Distinguished Teaching Award recognizing outstanding teaching over a number of years. Only three award winners are chosen each year from the 16 universities represented by the AAU.

“I congratulate Dr. MacDonald on receiving this prestigious award,” said President and Vice-Chancellor Alaa Abd-El-Aziz. “Gordon is dedicated to UPEI, having served on the Senate and Board of Governors, but most importantly, he is dedicated to his students. It is wonderful that his passion and talent for teaching has been recognized in this way.”

Dr. MacDonald, a Professor of Mathematics and Statistics, has research interests in operator theory and linear algebra, working to better understand collections of matrices or operators, specifically their properties and structure. He was instrumental in developing the proposal for a new school of applied mathematics at UPEI. The program is currently being considered by the Maritime Provinces Higher Education Council.

The AAU (www.atlanticuniversities.ca) represents the 16 universities in Atlantic Canada and serves as an advocate for the important role Atlantic universities play in preparing future leaders of our communities, in path-breaking research and innovation and in contributing to the economic prosperity and quality of life of the Atlantic region. Read the AAU news release.

 


 

Chris Benjamin, author of Indian School Road, to read at UPEI

Chris Benjamin is a well-known fiction and features writer. His latest book, Indian School Road: Legacies of the Shubenacadie Indian Residential School, won the 2013 Dave Greber Freelance Book Award.
 
On Friday, September 18, Chris Benjamin will be sharing his new book on campus at UPEI during a brown bag lunch to be held in the Main Faculty Lounge from 12:00-1:00 pm. Everyone is welcome to attend.
 
The event takes place soon after the publication of the Summary Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.  In an interview with the CBC’s Peter Mansbridge on June 1, Justice Murray Sinclair stated, “Education is the key to reconciliation.”  It is in this spirit that the UPEI community and members of the public are gathering together with Chris Benjamin to discuss Legacies of the Shubenacadie Indian Residential School.
 
The Faculty of Education and the UPEI Aboriginal Students' Association are organizing the event.
 

Winter’s Tales Author Reading Series presents Anna Marie Sewell

Leading off this season’s Winter’s Tales Author Reading Series is First Nations poet Anna Marie Sewell. Born in Fredericton of Mi’kmaq, Anishnabe, and Polish heritage, she and her family moved when she was six to Alberta’s Peace River Country. Fast forward a few decades, and Anna Marie, now a popular poet, story-teller, songwriter, playwright, creative writing teacher, and literacy and cultural activist, was appointed in 2011 as Edmonton’s Poet Laureate.
 
Anna Marie will share her poems and stories at Confederation Centre Art Gallery on Thursday, September 24, 7:30 pm. Her performance is sponsored by the UPEI Faculty of Arts, with the collaboration of the Art Gallery, and support from the Canada Council for the Arts.
 
Since 1996 she has been instructing—mostly poetry—for Youthwrite, a community writing program for kids, and is currently running the Blue Pencil Café for tweens and teens, working and “talking with them about their writing and their dreams.” She is also an instructor for The Learning Centre Literacy Association.
 
Sewell is a founding member of Edmonton’s Stroll of Poets Society, which promotes poetry through performances and festivals. She co-coordinated the Honour Songs project for Edmonton’s Cultural Capital year and has a recurring gig as the “Bike-nik Poet” at the city’s Bikeology Festival. 
 
Her 2009 book of poetry Fifth World Drum won critical acclaim. Author Jorge Antonia Vallejos wrote, “The ‘fifth world’ is one imagined by the mixed race (Mi’kmaq and Slavic) poet....Recounting her experiences with identity, her search for culture and spirituality...Sewell is not afraid to write about reality....Fifth World Drum is a song, lesson, journalism, historical text and life journal all in one.”
 
Edmonton’s mayor in 2011, Stephen Mandel, said that “Sewell brings to the role [Poet Laureate] a profound ability to blend wisdom and playfulness into poetry that is both beautiful.”
 
She will bring this playful wisdom to Confederation Centre in September.