Music Department Recital—February 12

As part of the Debut Atlantic tour, pianist Todd Yaniw will perform at UPEI's Dr. Steel Recital Hall on Tuesday, February 12, at 7:30 pm. Todd is a two-time national winner of the Canadian Music Competition, silver medalist at the Eastman International Piano Competition and was a recipient of the 2010 Sylva Gelber Music Foundation Award. He received his Associate of the Royal Conservatory of Music, Toronto (ARCT) diploma at the age of twelve.

Since his debut with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra when he was thirteen, Todd has frequently performed at festivals and venues including the Banff Centre for Music, Edmonton's Winspear Centre for Music, and the Ottawa International Chamber Music Festival. Todd has performed with the symphony orchestras of Edmonton, Toronto, Kitchener-Waterloo, Windsor, and Guelph. He is preparing for his fourth concerto performance with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra: Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue with conductor Joana Carneiro.

Todd studied at The Glenn Gould School of The Royal Conservatory of Music, Toronto and is currently attending Rice University on a full scholarship in the Master of Music Program, studying with Dr. Jon Kimura Parker.
His program at UPEI will feature works by Bach, Beethoven, Rachmaninov, and Gougeon.
Tickets can be purchased for $15/$10 (students/seniors) by contacting Susan Stensch at music@upei.ca or (902) 566-0507.

Three UPEI students chosen to take part in JACAC Student Forum

Three UPEI students-Megan Hood, Brett Huestis, and Ben MacDonald-were chosen to take part in this year's Japan-Canada Academic Consortium (JACAC) student forum, February 16-24, hosted by York University in Toronto.

The forum provides undergraduate student representatives from member institutions in Japan and Canada with the opportunity to meet and exchange opinions about a common topic of interest to students today. Students are able to interact with peers from a different culture, gain insight into academic interests, and encourage ideas between Canada and Japan. The host institution alternates from Canada to Japan each year.

The theme of this year's forum is 'Current economic dynamics and challenges between Japan and Canada and the implications for the youth of today.' Sub-themes will include international human capital development, the current global economic climate, and economic partnership agreements.

Huestis, a second-year business student and prospective UPEI exchange student, hopes JACAC will help define his economic and social role as a Canadian, and provide him with a better understanding of his own academic and career goals. 'The opportunity to network with like-minded students will provide valuable insight into current economic and social challenges facing Canada and Japan,' said Huestis. 'It will also provide an understanding of human capital development and the global economic climate of today's international world.'

Hood is a fifth-year business student, while MacDonald is a fourth-year arts student studying French and Spanish.

Sherilyn Acorn-Leclair, UPEI's International Partnerships Coordinator, has been working closely with the students to prepare them for JACAC. 'These three students are really focusing on acquiring the Japanese language and learning from their peers from both Canada and Japan,' she said. 'Each one of them has an undeniable passion for Japan-whether it be as a result of them having lived there or planning an exchange or leisure trip to the country-and we couldn't be happier that they were chosen to attend this year's JACAC student forum.'

Close to 30 student representatives will take part in this year's forum. Canadian participants will travel from UPEI, Université Laval, Queen's University, Université de Montreal, the University of British Columbia, the University of Alberta, the University of Waterloo, and York University. Japanese participants will travel from Hokkaido University, Hosei University, J.F. Oberlin University, Josai International University, Kwansei Gakuin University, Kyoto University of Education, Meiji University, Nagoya University, Ritsumeikan University, Sophia University, and Tsuda College.

For more information on the JACAC 2013 student forum, visit http://www.jacac.com/what-we-do/annual-forum/.

UPEI swim team and synchro club celebrate impressive results in the pool

Despite the weather, the 2013 Subway AUS Swimming Championship wrapped up on Sunday, February 10 at the CARI Complex. UPEI swimmers were among the top, breaking both UPEI and personal best records.

UPEI's Zachary Laustsen placed fourth in the 50m butterfly, and fifth in the 100m butterfly. Emma MacKay finished eighth in the 100m freestyle, the women's 400m medley relay team came in fourth, and Genevieve Cormier broke UPEI's 200m backstroke record. Rooske Wagemakers also set UPEI records in all of her events.
The women's swim team finished in fifth place overall, while the men finished in sixth place. Gold medal finishes were awarded to Dalhousie University for both women's and men's teams.
The UPEI synchro team competed at the Canadian University Synchronized Swimming League (CUSSL) this past weekend in London, Ontario and took home silver and bronze medals. Bridget Carter and Katie Carter took home the silver medal in the duet competition, while teammate and coach Ally Merrill and partner Brit Grant took home the bronze. In addition, Grant followed up her duet performance with a silver medal solo performance. The team also took home the bronze medal in the synchro team competition finals. UPEI synchro was awarded the Gerry Dubrule Trophy for the overall university champion, granted to a team with the highest point total in the competition.
UPEI congratulates all swimmers on an outstanding weekend showing.

UPEI joins “Pink Shirt Day” initiative

The UPEI Healthy Campus Committee in conjunction with the Fair Treatment Office invites all students, staff, and faculty, and the broader community to wear pink on Wednesday, February 27, to raise bullying awareness and help make our campus a respectful and safe place to learn and work.

'Pink Shirt Day' was started by two Nova Scotia high school students after a bullying incident occurred in their school when a male student was bullied for wearing a pink shirt on the first day of school. The initiative has since spread to other schools, clubs, workplaces, and has even gone international.

In Canada, anti-bullying is promoted by wearing pink on the last Wednesday of February to symbolize a no tolerance policy on bullying. Last year, 6.4 million people took part in 'Pink Shirt Day.' Learn more about Pink Shirt Day by visiting http://www.pinkshirtday.ca/.

For more information on UPEI's Pink Shirt Day, please contact Peggy Leahey at (902) 566-6498 or mleahey@upei.ca.

Engineering and history students work with Island farming community

First-year engineering students are teaming up with third- and fourth-year history students for the first time on a collaborative project to develop solutions for small mixed farms on PEI. Last month, the students were treated to a lesson in farming where they met with farmers and individuals from the Island farming community to chat about the reality of local farming problems.

UPEI's 'Engineering Design 2: Analysis' course is the first chance engineering students get to work on real social problems. Students work in teams of four to come up with an understanding of a broad problem, then imagine a solution, do detailed design work, and finish off by producing a prototype of something to test and demonstrate.

The engineering students are then matched up with history students who act as consultants to guide the engineering students with lessons on the history of PEI through the lens of farming. The history students provide needful context and potential lessons from the Island's past.

'This project and the linkage between Professor MacDonald's history class with my engineering design class lets the students see a real-life application of understanding our past in order to invent the future for PEI industries,' said Dr. Andrew Trivett, associate professor and chair of UPEI's Department of Engineering.

'I'm particularly concerned that our history students experience their research being applied to real-life simulations,' said Dr. Ed MacDonald, associate professor of history. 'It helps them understand how their skills can be used outside of the classroom and in the future. Working with the engineering students is excellent exposure to the process that Andy describes.'

Students were interested to find out what real farming issues looked like and were eager to chat with individuals from the farming community to ensure they better understood the industry. The students learned that resource scarcity, population growth, and climate change were among some of the core problems. Project topics include-buildings, machinery, and energy sources-each of which have an unfolding history on PEI.

Farming industry guests included Gary Hughes, Hughes Hill Family Farms; Diane and Marty Taylor, Island Taylored Meats; Phil Ferraro, Institute for Bioregional Studies Ltd.; Sally Bernard, Barnyard Organics; and Kevin MacNeill, MacNeill Farms and Tourist Home.

Gwynne Dyer to speak at UPEI

Canadian journalist and author Gwynne Dyer will speak at UPEI on Monday, February 25 as part of his cross-Canada university and college tour. The event will take place in the Duffy Science Centre room 135 at 7:00 pm.

Sponsored by the UPEI Faculty of Arts, Dyer's lecture entitled 'The Triumph of Non-Violence' is about the revolutions of the Arab spring and what they mean for the region and the world, but it also sets them in a broader context. Non-violent revolution is both more common and more successful in the modern world than the old and bloody version, but few people really understand it. This is an attempt to explain how and why it works.

Gwynne Dyer has worked as a freelance journalist, columnist, broadcaster, and lecturer on international affairs for more than 20 years, but he was originally trained as an historian. Born in Newfoundland, he received degrees from Canadian, American, and British universities, finishing with a PhD in Military and Middle Eastern History from the University of London. He served in three navies and held academic appointments at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and Oxford University before launching his twice-weekly column on international affairs, which is published by over 175 papers in some 45 countries.

In the spring of 2012, Gwynne Dyer was made an officer of the Order of Canada. The event is free and all are welcome to attend.

Big weekend at home for the UPEI Panthers

It's a big weekend at home for the UPEI Panthers basketball and hockey teams. Basketball starts off the weekend on Friday, February 15, with games against St. FX at 6:00 pm (W) and 8:00 pm (M). The men's hockey team will take to the ice at 7:30 pm as they host St. FX in game two of their quarterfinal match at 7:30 pm.

From 6-7 pm, all UPEI Panther supporters can mingle in the Molson Saloon, located in the third section of the Chi-Wan Young Sports Centre gymnasium, where a cash bar will be set-up and the first 100 men's hockey ticket holders to show their tickets will receive a free cowboy hat in support of the men's hockey 'cowboys.'

UPEI will take on St. FX again on Saturday night for their last home games with the women's basketball game at 4:00 pm and the men's basketball game at 6:00 pm. The women's hockey team will host SMU at 7:00 pm.

On Sunday, February 17, the women's hockey team will play their last home game against St. FX at 6:00 pm in the MacLauchlan Arena.

Best of luck to all UPEI Panthers-for more information visit gopanthersgo.ca.

For information:
Ronnie Annear
UPEI Athletics & Recreation
(902) 566-0991

UPEI joins global campaign to stop violence against women and girls

On Thursday, February 14, UPEI joined activists around the world for ONE BILLION RISING, the largest day of action in the history of V-Day, the global activist movement to end violence against women and girls. Over 200 people took part in the campus event.

ONE BILLION RISING began as a call to action based on the staggering statistic that 1 in 3 women around the world will be beaten or raped during their lifetime. With the world population at 7 billion, this adds up to more than 1 billion women and girls. Today marked V-Day's 15th anniversary where activists, writers, thinkers, celebrities, and women and men around the world joined together to express their concern, demand change, dance, and rise in defiance of the injustices women suffer, demanding an end at last to violence against women.

The local initiative was spearheaded by UPEI staff member Leo Cheverie and UPEI faculty member Jennifer Taylor, and supported by the UPEI Student Union; UPEI staff, faculty, and student volunteers; and Zumba instructor Anna Lacroix who led and encouraged dancing.

For more information, visit onebillionrising.org

Prince Edward Island Legislative Documents Online

The following was distributed by the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island:

Prince Edward Island Legislative Documents Online (PEILDO) presents the Journals of the Legislative Assembly (1894-present), the official record of the business of the Legislative Assembly. Free and open to all Islanders, this exciting new site provides access to a rich collection of material covering almost 120 years of our political, social and economic development. PEILDO is the result of a partnership between the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island, the Public Archives and Records Office, Prince Edward Island Public Library Service, and Robertson Library, University of Prince Edward Island.
Prince Edward Island Legislative Documents Online consists of over 76,000 pages of keyword-searchable scanned journals (1894-2011), including data-rich appendices (1894-1966) containing detailed reports from departments such as health, education, agriculture and public works. Digitized audio recordings of Legislative Assembly proceedings for the years 1968-1973 are also available for streaming. To provide additional context, biographies (1873-1993) and over 170 photographs of MLAs have been included in peildo.ca.
As Hon. Carolyn Bertram, Speaker of the Legislative Assembly, observes, 'This website is an inclusive resource that brings past members' contributions to everyone's fingertips. It's a fantastic heritage and educational tool for every Islander and Canadian.' The public and MLAs alike can chart the history of their district from the 1890s through to today. Community growth, changes in primary industries, and the expanding importance of local representation, as well as much more, can be discovered through the PEILDO. We predict that anyone visiting this site will soon come to see it as an invaluable and entertaining online resource, free to all. The site, www.peildo.ca, was launched February 14, 2013.
'Researchers, government staff and everyday Islanders have always looked to the Journals of the Legislative Assembly for information on the workings of the Legislature and that method of search takes a great deal of time,' said Minister of Tourism and Culture Robert Henderson. "With a keyword searchable version available online, what once took hours can be done in minutes. Researchers will find this a treasure trove of names, dates and facts. We were delighted to be able to contribute materials from our collection to the project and make them available to a much wider audience.'
Since 2006, the UPEI Robertson Library has committed to an 'open' philosophy in developing home-grown, in-house digital collections and services, working with other PEI culture and heritage institutions through its islandarchives.ca program. The PEI Legislative Documents Online initiative is an excellent demonstration of the partnership potential of islandarchives.ca, since it is based on close cooperation between several Island information repositories. The equipment and expertise of the UPEI Library's digitization lab were shared with staff from the Legislature's Hansard office, who performed the digital scanning of print volumes sourced from partner institutions. This work, and the design of the digital repository for making the scanned content available online, was overseen collaboratively by these four partners, along with the Legislative Library. The system also uses the Islandora system, developed at the UPEI Library and used all over the world to preserve digital content. The UPEI Library is delighted at this successful marriage of Island-based technology, expertise and content, which powerfully demonstrates the value, and the potential, of locally-driven, open source-based digital solutions. 'The Robertson Library is pleased to be a partner in the new PEI Legislative Documents Online project, a resource that will benefit all Islanders regardless of where they live,' says University Librarian Mark Leggott. 'It also sets a standard, not just for the innovative use of technology developed on PEI, but also for the development of strong cross-sectoral partnerships."
The launch of PEILDO took place at 3:00 p.m. on 14 February 2013 at Province House theatre.

Ticket information for AUS Men's Hockey Semi-finals

The UPEI Athletics and Recreation department has released the following ticket information for games 3 and 4 (if necessary) of the AUS Men's Hockey Semi-finals, UPEI versus UNB, being played at MacLauchlan Arena on Monday, February 25th and Tuesday, February 26th, respectively. Both games begin at 7:00 pm.

The first two games of the best 3-of-5 series are being played at the Aitken Centre in Fredericton where the number one seeded UNB Varsity Reds will host the fifth-seeded Panthers.

Season Seat Ticket Holders
2012/2013 UPEI Men's Hockey season ticket holders can purchase tickets for their season seats being held for Games 3 and 4* at the CARI Box Office during following times:

Friday, February 22, 12:00 noon - 5:00 pm
Saturday, February 23, 12:00 noon - 5:00 pm

General Tickets
General tickets go on sale for Games 3 and 4* at the CARI Box Office during the following times:

Sunday, February 24, 12:00 noon - 5:00 pm
Monday, February 25, 12:00 noon - 5:00 pm

All tickets are $15 each.

* For those purchasing tickets for both games, should a Game 4 not be required, the ticket can either be reimbursed or its value credited towards 2013/2014 season seat tickets.