Campus Notices
Career Services will be hosting a Community Connector Volunteer Fair on
Wednesday, February 6 from 11 am-2 pm in the breezeway of the W.A.
Murphy Student Centre. The organizations attending include:
Heart and Stroke Foundation
CNIB
Cat Action Team
Special Olympics
United Way of PEI
AIDS PEI
Canadian Cancer Society
For more information, email maxmaclean@upei.ca
See you there!
Join us tonight (Tuesday) at 7 at The Pourhouse (above the Old Triangle)
for a discussion about the science and ethics of implantable
defibrillators.
Dr. Robert Gilmour, vice-president of research, leads the discussion.
For more information, see: http://research.upei.ca/ResearchonTapGilmour
Dave Atkinson
Research Communications Officer
620-5117
Wednesday, February 6 at 7pm
Main Building Faculty Lounge, UPEI
We have two speakers for the evening: Dr. Lisa Chilton and Genevieve MacDonald will give us complementary visions of nineteenth-century Canadian health care. All are welcome, and the descriptions of the talks are below. For more information, contact Shannon Murray at smurray@upei.ca or 566-0404.
__________
"Sex Scandals, Sectarianism, and Skulduggery on the Ward: Hospital Life in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Quebec City"
Lisa Chilton
In the middle of the nineteenth century, the Quebec Marine and Emigrant Hospital was considered one of the most desirable medical institutions for doctors' affiliation in the British Empire. Aspiring doctors from across North America fought to gain poorly paid and voluntary positions at the the Marine and Emigrant Hospital, because it provided unique opportunities for medical/surgical practice and observation, and because it boasted the educational leadership of some of the continent's most innovative and skilled practitioners. But, the Marine and Emigrant Hospital was not known solely for its impressive staff and (sometimes) impressive medical record. It was a poorly managed, inadequately funded institution, situated within a socially volatile colonial context. Relationships among the hospital's medical staff and members of the larger community of Quebec's doctors were often tense and at times openly antagonistic, with the result that between the mid-1840s and the mid-1850s the hospital became the focus of a series of very public scandals, involving malpractice suits, large-scale graft, coerced death-bed conversions, and sexually explicit slander and counter-slander details of which were recorded in hundreds of pages of witness statements, commissioners' reports, privately published open letters and memoirs, and newspaper accounts. In this paper, I offer a brief tour of the Marine and Emigrant Hospital and the social world its inhabitants constructed within it, as seen through the various documents they left behind.
“Shun Not the Struggle: Cecily Jane Georgiana Fane Pope, 1862-1938"
Genevieve MacDonald
Prince Edward Islander Georgiana Pope is deserving of continued recognition for her significant contributions to the practice of nursing, which include her founding of military nursing in Canada, her establishment of a school of nursing in Washington, and her pioneering (along with Mary Rogers) of the practice of what is now called “affiliation” for student nurses. Born in 1862, Georgiana Pope was the first nurse in Canada to receive the Royal Red Cross, awarded for “special devotion and competency in ... nursing duties.” Matron Georgiana Fane Pope devoted her life to the service of others. Of her 34 years as a graduate nurse, she devoted 13 to civilian nursing and the other 21 years to military nursing. While a civilian nurse, she was a leader both in the supervision of nurses in hospital and in the teaching and direction of nursing students. She was responsible for achieving military rank and pay for nurses in Canada, which became the first country in the world to grant rank to women.
The Department of Pathology & Microbiology at the Atlantic Veterinary College invites you to attend two seminars given by Dr. Gabriele Rieder from Paris-Lodron-University of Salzburg, Austria on February 14 and 15, 2013.
Dr. Rieder is a candidate for a faculty position in bacteriology and is presenting her teaching seminar entitled “Bacterial Morphology: Structure and Function" at 10:30 am in AVC Lecture Theatre B on Thursday, February 14.
Her research seminar is scheduled for Friday, February 15 at 10:30 am in AVC Lecture Theatre B and is entitled ” Helicobacter pylori - Foe or Friend?"
Everyone is welcome!
Rita Saunders, Administrative Assistant
Pathology & Microbiology
566-0857
The Department of Pathology & Microbiology at the Atlantic Veterinary College invites you to attend two seminars given by Dr. Gabriele Rieder from Paris-Lodron-University of Salzburg, Austria on February 14 and 15, 2013.
Dr. Rieder is a candidate for a faculty position in bacteriology and is presenting her teaching seminar entitled “Bacterial Morphology: Structure and Function" at 10:30 am in AVC Lecture Theatre B on Thursday, February 14.
Her research seminar is scheduled for Friday, February 15 at 10:30 am in AVC Lecture Theatre B and is entitled ” Helicobacter pylori - Foe or Friend?"
Everyone is welcome!
Rita Saunders, Administrative Assistant
Pathology & Microbiology
566-0857
Career Services will be hosting a Community Connector Volunteer Fair on
Wednesday, February 6 from 11 am-2 pm in the breezeway of the W.A.
Murphy Student Centre. The organizations attending include:
Heart and Stroke Foundation
CNIB
Cat Action Team
Special Olympics
United Way of PEI
AIDS PEI
Canadian Cancer Society
For more information, email maxmaclean@upei.ca
See you there!
Join us tonight (Tuesday) at 7 at The Pourhouse (above the Old Triangle)
for a discussion about the science and ethics of implantable
defibrillators.
Dr. Robert Gilmour, vice-president of research, leads the discussion.
For more information, see: http://research.upei.ca/ResearchonTapGilmour
Dave Atkinson
Research Communications Officer
620-5117
Wednesday, February 6 at 7pm
Main Building Faculty Lounge, UPEI
We have two speakers for the evening: Dr. Lisa Chilton and Genevieve MacDonald will give us complementary visions of nineteenth-century Canadian health care. All are welcome, and the descriptions of the talks are below. For more information, contact Shannon Murray at smurray@upei.ca or 566-0404.
__________
"Sex Scandals, Sectarianism, and Skulduggery on the Ward: Hospital Life in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Quebec City"
Lisa Chilton
In the middle of the nineteenth century, the Quebec Marine and Emigrant Hospital was considered one of the most desirable medical institutions for doctors' affiliation in the British Empire. Aspiring doctors from across North America fought to gain poorly paid and voluntary positions at the the Marine and Emigrant Hospital, because it provided unique opportunities for medical/surgical practice and observation, and because it boasted the educational leadership of some of the continent's most innovative and skilled practitioners. But, the Marine and Emigrant Hospital was not known solely for its impressive staff and (sometimes) impressive medical record. It was a poorly managed, inadequately funded institution, situated within a socially volatile colonial context. Relationships among the hospital's medical staff and members of the larger community of Quebec's doctors were often tense and at times openly antagonistic, with the result that between the mid-1840s and the mid-1850s the hospital became the focus of a series of very public scandals, involving malpractice suits, large-scale graft, coerced death-bed conversions, and sexually explicit slander and counter-slander details of which were recorded in hundreds of pages of witness statements, commissioners' reports, privately published open letters and memoirs, and newspaper accounts. In this paper, I offer a brief tour of the Marine and Emigrant Hospital and the social world its inhabitants constructed within it, as seen through the various documents they left behind.
“Shun Not the Struggle: Cecily Jane Georgiana Fane Pope, 1862-1938"
Genevieve MacDonald
Prince Edward Islander Georgiana Pope is deserving of continued recognition for her significant contributions to the practice of nursing, which include her founding of military nursing in Canada, her establishment of a school of nursing in Washington, and her pioneering (along with Mary Rogers) of the practice of what is now called “affiliation” for student nurses. Born in 1862, Georgiana Pope was the first nurse in Canada to receive the Royal Red Cross, awarded for “special devotion and competency in ... nursing duties.” Matron Georgiana Fane Pope devoted her life to the service of others. Of her 34 years as a graduate nurse, she devoted 13 to civilian nursing and the other 21 years to military nursing. While a civilian nurse, she was a leader both in the supervision of nurses in hospital and in the teaching and direction of nursing students. She was responsible for achieving military rank and pay for nurses in Canada, which became the first country in the world to grant rank to women.
UPEI will be celebrating its twelfth annual International Development Week
next week, February 4-8. Check out the event listings below for events on
Monday, February 4:
International Relations Office Open House
10:00 am-12:00 pm
Robertson Library, room 225
Stop by the International Relations Office (IRO) to meet our staff, and
learn about the services we offer to students, staff, and faculty. Light
refreshments will be provided.
Opening of Photo Contest
Monday, February 4
Location: PIT, Robertson Library
Submit your inspiring international photographs to the Dr. Tim Goddard
International Photography contest. UPEI staff, students, and faculty are
encouraged to submit photos that represent advancing international
development and collaboration. For more information visit:
http://www.upei.ca/iro/dr-tim-goddard-international-photography-award or
contact Digafie Debalke at ddebalke@upei.ca.
Visit upei.ca/idw for a full event listing.
A transition date of Monday, February 4 has been set for phasing out the Canadian penny after which the Royal Canadian Mint will no longer distribute pennies. On this date, businesses will be encouraged to begin rounding cash transactions. Please note that the cent will remain Canada's smallest unit for pricing goods and services and that the phasing out of the penny will have no impact whatsoever on payments made by cheque or electronic transactions.
1. The penny is not suddenly going to disappear. Pennies can still be received and given as change if they are in the cash drawer. However, with a gradual withdrawal from circulation, price rounding on cash transactions will ultimately be required.
2. Point-of-sale systems and cash registers do not need to be updated. Given that all non-cash payments will not be rounded, no system changes will be required.
3. Rounding of cash payments. When pennies are not available, cash transactions should be rounded to the nearest five-cent increment in a fair and transparent manner. Rounding should only be used on the final bill of sale after all taxes are applied. If the final bill ends in a 1, 2, 6 or 7, it should be rounded down; when the final bill ends in a 3, 4, 8 or 9, it should be rounded up. This is a manual calculation done by the person accepting payment.
4. Reconciling small differences. If you have rounded a cash transaction during the day, your cash reconciliation will most likely be out of balance although the discrepancy is expected to be small. This will be handled with an adjusting entry in the same way you would currently manage a small cash outage. In this case, however, you are to use new class code 777 - Penny Rounding.
If you have any questions, please contact me at 566-0590 or Deidre Smith at 566-0470.
For further information, please go to http://www.budget.gc.ca/2012/themes/theme2-eng.html
Allan Hughes
Director, Financial Services
UPEI Music Faculty Annual Gala Concert Dr. Steel Recital Hall.
Saturday, February 2, 7:30 pm
Dr. Steel Recital Hall, UPEI
http://news.upei.ca/media/2013/01/30/music-faculty-gala-february-2
Susan Karel Stensch
Administrative Assistant & Audition Coordinator
Music Department
902-566-0507
The next Biosafety Training Session will be held:
Thursday, February 14
1:00 to 4:00 pm*
The McCain Foundation Learning Commons, AVC 286B
Topics to be covered include biosecurity plan training as well as basic
biosafety principles and how they are applied at the University of Prince
Edward Island.
If you wish to attend, you must pre-register by contacting:
Janet Crowther, Research Services
jcrowther@upei.ca
628-4308
before February 8, 2013
The next one will be Friday, February 8.
Susan Karel Stensch
Administrative Assistant & Audition Coordinator
Music Department
566-0507
UPEI Music Faculty Annual Gala Concert Dr. Steel Recital Hall.
Saturday, February 2, 7:30 pm
Dr. Steel Recital Hall, UPEI
http://news.upei.ca/media/2013/01/30/music-faculty-gala-february-2
Susan Karel Stensch
Administrative Assistant & Audition Coordinator
Music Department
902-566-0507
The next Biosafety Training Session will be held:
Thursday, February 14
1:00 to 4:00 pm*
The McCain Foundation Learning Commons, AVC 286B
Topics to be covered include biosecurity plan training as well as basic
biosafety principles and how they are applied at the University of Prince
Edward Island.
If you wish to attend, you must pre-register by contacting:
Janet Crowther, Research Services
jcrowther@upei.ca
628-4308
before February 8, 2013
The next one will be Friday, February 8.
Susan Karel Stensch
Administrative Assistant & Audition Coordinator
Music Department
566-0507
UPEI will be celebrating its twelfth annual International Development Week
next week, February 4-8. Check out the event listings below for events on
Monday, February 4:
International Relations Office Open House
10:00 am-12:00 pm
Robertson Library, room 225
Stop by the International Relations Office (IRO) to meet our staff, and
learn about the services we offer to students, staff, and faculty. Light
refreshments will be provided.
Opening of Photo Contest
Monday, February 4
Location: PIT, Robertson Library
Submit your inspiring international photographs to the Dr. Tim Goddard
International Photography contest. UPEI staff, students, and faculty are
encouraged to submit photos that represent advancing international
development and collaboration. For more information visit:
http://www.upei.ca/iro/dr-tim-goddard-international-photography-award or
contact Digafie Debalke at ddebalke@upei.ca.
Visit upei.ca/idw for a full event listing.
A transition date of Monday, February 4 has been set for phasing out the Canadian penny after which the Royal Canadian Mint will no longer distribute pennies. On this date, businesses will be encouraged to begin rounding cash transactions. Please note that the cent will remain Canada's smallest unit for pricing goods and services and that the phasing out of the penny will have no impact whatsoever on payments made by cheque or electronic transactions.
1. The penny is not suddenly going to disappear. Pennies can still be received and given as change if they are in the cash drawer. However, with a gradual withdrawal from circulation, price rounding on cash transactions will ultimately be required.
2. Point-of-sale systems and cash registers do not need to be updated. Given that all non-cash payments will not be rounded, no system changes will be required.
3. Rounding of cash payments. When pennies are not available, cash transactions should be rounded to the nearest five-cent increment in a fair and transparent manner. Rounding should only be used on the final bill of sale after all taxes are applied. If the final bill ends in a 1, 2, 6 or 7, it should be rounded down; when the final bill ends in a 3, 4, 8 or 9, it should be rounded up. This is a manual calculation done by the person accepting payment.
4. Reconciling small differences. If you have rounded a cash transaction during the day, your cash reconciliation will most likely be out of balance although the discrepancy is expected to be small. This will be handled with an adjusting entry in the same way you would currently manage a small cash outage. In this case, however, you are to use new class code 777 - Penny Rounding.
If you have any questions, please contact me at 566-0590 or Deidre Smith at 566-0470.
For further information, please go to http://www.budget.gc.ca/2012/themes/theme2-eng.html
Allan Hughes
Director, Financial Services
UPEI will be celebrating its twelfth annual International Development Week
next week, February 4-8. Check out the event listings below for events on
Monday, February 4:
International Relations Office Open House
10:00 am-12:00 pm
Robertson Library, room 225
Stop by the International Relations Office (IRO) to meet our staff, and
learn about the services we offer to students, staff, and faculty. Light
refreshments will be provided.
Opening of Photo Contest
Monday, February 4
Location: PIT, Robertson Library
Submit your inspiring international photographs to the Dr. Tim Goddard
International Photography contest. UPEI staff, students, and faculty are
encouraged to submit photos that represent advancing international
development and collaboration. For more information visit:
http://www.upei.ca/iro/dr-tim-goddard-international-photography-award or
contact Digafie Debalke at ddebalke@upei.ca.
Visit upei.ca/idw for a full event listing.
A transition date of Monday, February 4 has been set for phasing out the Canadian penny after which the Royal Canadian Mint will no longer distribute pennies. On this date, businesses will be encouraged to begin rounding cash transactions. Please note that the cent will remain Canada's smallest unit for pricing goods and services and that the phasing out of the penny will have no impact whatsoever on payments made by cheque or electronic transactions.
1. The penny is not suddenly going to disappear. Pennies can still be received and given as change if they are in the cash drawer. However, with a gradual withdrawal from circulation, price rounding on cash transactions will ultimately be required.
2. Point-of-sale systems and cash registers do not need to be updated. Given that all non-cash payments will not be rounded, no system changes will be required.
3. Rounding of cash payments. When pennies are not available, cash transactions should be rounded to the nearest five-cent increment in a fair and transparent manner. Rounding should only be used on the final bill of sale after all taxes are applied. If the final bill ends in a 1, 2, 6 or 7, it should be rounded down; when the final bill ends in a 3, 4, 8 or 9, it should be rounded up. This is a manual calculation done by the person accepting payment.
4. Reconciling small differences. If you have rounded a cash transaction during the day, your cash reconciliation will most likely be out of balance although the discrepancy is expected to be small. This will be handled with an adjusting entry in the same way you would currently manage a small cash outage. In this case, however, you are to use new class code 777 - Penny Rounding.
If you have any questions, please contact me at 566-0590 or Deidre Smith at 566-0470.
For further information, please go to http://www.budget.gc.ca/2012/themes/theme2-eng.html
Allan Hughes
Director, Financial Services