Reaching out into the world Ideas in full bloom
Transcription
Reaching out into the world Ideas in full bloom
westernnews.ca April 2, 2015 / Vol. 51 No. 12 t u o g n i d h l r c a o Re w e h t o t in rn este ds Pag in as Ide om blo ll fu rn ILLUSTRATION BY FRANK NEUFELD PM 41195534 5 W Awar 1 0 2 The nitarian a Hum y // r o t S 5 4-1 1 s e este 5W 201 s The Award n Gree y Stor // Pa ges 9-12 April 2, 2015 / Vol. 51 No. 12 westernnews.ca Western’s newspaper of record since 1972 PM 41195534 2 Western News | April 2, 2015 upload your photos Coming Events APRIL 2-8 # 2 // THURSDAY 5 // SUNDAY MCINTOSH GALLERY EXHIBIT Maurice Strubbs: Primary Forces. Curated by Catherine Elliot Shaw. mcintoshgallery.ca. Runs until May 9. KING’S CAMPUS MINISTRY Easter Sunday. 10:30 a.m. The Chapel at Revera’s Windermere on the Mount. CSD POSTER DAY Audiology and Speech Language Pathology students will be presenting their systematic review of evidence based practice. 9 a.m. Elborn College. WESTERN‘S ANNUAL CLEAN UP Open to all students, staff and faculty. Three clean-up times: 10:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Meeting point, Concrete Beach (sunshine) or Mustang Lounge (rain). Email sustainability@uwo.ca indicating which time slot works best for you. PHYSICS & ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM Tim Robishaw, Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory, National Research Council Canada, Measuring Magnetic Fields Near and Far via the Zeeman Effect. 1:30 p.m. P&B 100. KING’S CAMPUS MINISTRY Mass of the Lord’s Supper. 7:20 p.m. The Chapel at Revera’s Windermere on the Mount. HURON UNIVERSITY COLLEGE Holy Week, Maundy Thursday. 7:30 p.m. St. John’s Chapel, Huron. DON WRIGHT FACULTY OF MUSIC Symphony Orchestra. 8 p.m. Paul Davenport Theatre. 3 // FRIDAY GOOD FRIDAY University offices closed. HURON UNIVERSITY COLLEGE Holy Week, Good Friday. 11 .m. St. John’s Chapel, Huron. KING’S CAMPUS MINISTRY Proclamation of the Passion and Veneration of the Cross. 3 p.m. The Chapel at Revera’s Windermere on the Mount. 4 // SATURDAY HURON UNIVERSITY COLLEGE Holy Week, Easter Vigil. 7:30 p.m. St. John’s Chapel, Huron. KING’S CAMPUS MINISTRY Easter Vigil. 9 p.m. The Chapel at Revera’s Windermere at the Mount. HURON UNIVERSITY COLLEGE Holy Week, Easter Sunday. 11 a.m. St. John’s Chapel, Huron. 6 // MONDAY ARABIC CONVERSATION GROUP 4:30 UC 203. DON WRIGHT FACULTY OF MUSIC Contemporary Ensemble. 8 p.m. Paul Davenport Theatre. 7 // TUESDAY SENIOR ALUMNI PROGRAM Hon Leong, director, Translational Prostate Cancer Research Laboratory, SJHC, LHRI, Departments of Surgery (Division of Urology), Microbiology & Immunology, Western. Cure for Cancer? Redefining society’s definition of cure for cancer patients. Balancing the type of cure with quality of life desired for each patient and change our focus tag with #westernu @westernuniversity to use imaging to guide discoveries. 9:30 a.m. McKellar Room, UCC. ITALIAN CONVERSATION GROUP 2:30 UC 117. LEAVE FOR CHANGE INFORMATION SESSION Full-time Western staff can turn a vacation into an international volunteer experience. Applications due by April 17. 12 p.m. Chu Centre, IGAB. THE DEPARTMENT OF MODERN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES La Tertulia. Anyone wishing to speak Spanish and meet people from different Spanish-speaking countries is welcome. Email tertulia@uwo.ca. 4:30 p.m. UC 205. GERMAN CONVERSATION GROUP 1:30 UC 207. DON WRIGHT FACULTY OF MUSIC Electroacoustic Music: Student Composers. 6 p.m. Paul Davenport Theatre. 8 // WEDNESDAY flickr.com/groups/western/ APPLIED MATHEMATICS COLLOQUIUM Peter Streufert, Department of Economics, Western. Specifying Nodes as Sets of Choices. 2:30 p.m. MC 204. Have an event? Let us know. E-mail: comingevents@uwo.ca FALL/WINTER TERM CLASSES END Study Days, April 9 and 10. Final examination period April 11-30. TOASTMASTER’S CAMPUS COMMUNICATORS 9119.toastmastersclubs.org/. Contact Donna Moore, dmoore@uwo.ca or 85159. 12 p.m. UCC 147B. THE CHINESE PROGRAM AT HURON UNIVERSITY COLLEGE Lunch and conversation. Email hwu1@ huron.uwo.ca. 12:30 p.m. Huron A18. Retirement Planning: ARE YOU ON THE RIGHT PATH? According to a recent Fidelity report, 71% of pre-retirees and retirees who work with an advisor have the retirement they want versus 53% who don’t seek guidance. Contact me to obtain a copy of this exclusive report. I’m here to help. Jeffrey Dallner, CFA, Investment Advisor 519 660-3725 • jeffrey.dallner@cibc.ca www.cibcwg.com/jeffrey-dallner CIBC Wood Gundy is a division of CIBC World Markets Inc., a subsidiary of CIBC and a Member of the Canadian Investor Protection Fund and Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada. If you are currently a CIBC Wood Gundy client, please contact your Investment Advisor. Are you retired or retiring soon? Find out all your options. Taste our fusion of fresh in our bold new setting. Contact Robert (Rob) Michaud, PFP, Financial Planner today. (formerly Gozen on Central) 519-494-5017 Winner - Best of London 2012 London Free Press Dine-In - Take-Out 219 Queens Avenue (at Clarence) - Downtown London - 519-858-9998 robert.michaud@rbc.com Fully mobile and flexible hours to meet your needs. ‘Serving London & area with sound financial planning.’ Royal Mutual Fund Inc. Western News | April 2, 2015 3 On Campus Presidential pay sparks debate across university community BY JASON WINDERS REVELATIONS ABOUT WESTERN President Amit Chakma’s 2014 salary have sparked debate across the university community, including nonconfidence votes being conducted among the institution’s largest bargaining units. In the face of that criticism, however, the Chair of Western’s Board of Governors said Chakma is recognized nationally and internationally as one of the most influential academic leaders in Canada, which is reflected in his salary. CHAKMA “The continued momentum of Western’s drive to become a world-class research university, and to raise Canada’s profile as a leader in international education, has benefited greatly from his guidance since his arrival in 2009, and especially over the last year,” Chirag Shah said. Last week, Western figures showed the university president was paid $924,000 (plus $43,244.88 in taxable benefits) in 2014. That number made him the fourth-highest paid public servant in Ontario, and highest paid university president. Chakma’s number is somewhat deceiving as his annual base salary remained at $440,000. However, Western made a ‘double-payment’ to the president in lieu of a one-year administrative leave included in his first five-year contract, which concluded June 2014. The board re-appointed Chakma to a second five-year term extending to June 30, 2019. That contract also calls for a year administrative leave or payment in lieu of that leave. SHAH Shah sees these terms as necessary for attracting and retaining the right president at the right time for Western. Not all agree with the Board chair’s stance. Outrage over the salary has spanned the gamut – from simple social media snark to an anonymously started online petition of nonconfidence in the president and Board chair that has garnered more than 5,000 signatures in less than a week. “The money is outrageous on its own in this time of austerity,” said Alison Hearn, the University of Western Ontario Faculty Association (UWOFA) president. “But it’s more shameful in the context of the cuts we have been seeing on campus, of rising student debt and tuition, of class sizes increasing, of rising number of contract faculty who have no job security and aren’t paid very well. The money represents something greater. “Everything has been crystallized by this particular issue. The issue has galvanized dissent that was HEARN already there.” On Monday night, nearly 100 members of UWOFA unanimously called for a non-confidence vote among the membership concerning both the president and Board chair. Those results will be announced later today. “I don’t really care if he gives it back or not. He negotiated that deal, but I cannot say ‘good on him.’” Hearn said. “He’s the president of a public institution; he’s not a CEO. That’s tuition money. That’s taxpayer dollars going into his pocket. That would mean his job is equivalent to teaching 130 courses to students in a year. “This signals a larger problem about priorities on campus – not just at Western, but across Canada. Sure, he could give the money back, but I don’t think that solves the problem.” University of Western Ontario Staff Association (UWOSA) membership is also conducting a non-confidence vote among its members, said Karen Foullong, UWOSA president. Both bargaining FOULLONG units said they may present the results of their votes at the next Senate meeting. Any organization can offer a nonconfidence vote, however only a non-confidence vote by the university Senate triggers something beyond symbolic. The next meeting of Senate is scheduled for April 10. Be htened g i l En Be htened g i l En WE D A E R WS E N N STER PLACE AN AD TODAY Call 519.661.2045 or email advertise@uwo.ca 4 Western News | April 2, 2015 Student Life Western News (ISSNO3168654), a publication of Western University’s Department of Communications and Public Affairs, is published every Thursday throughout the school year and operates under a reduced schedule during December, May, June, July and August. Graduate students imagine Canada’s research future An award-winning weekly newspaper and electronic news service, Western News serves as the university’s newspaper of record. The publication traces its roots to The University of Western Ontario Newsletter, a onepage leaflet-style publication which debuted on Sept. 23, 1965. The first issue of the Western News, under founding editor Alan Johnston, was published on Nov. 16, 1972 replacing the UWO Times and Western Times. Today, Western News continues to provide timely news, information and a forum for discussion of postsecondary issues in the campus and broader community. WE STERN NEWS WesternNews.ca Westminster Hall, Suite 360 Western University London, ON N6A 3K7 Telephone 519 661-2045 Fax 519 661-3921 PUBLISHER Helen Connell hconnell@uwo.ca, 519 661-2111 Ext. 85469 EDITOR Jason Winders jwinder2@uwo.ca, 519 661-2111 Ext. 85465 R E P O RT E R / P H O T O G R A P H E R Paul Mayne pmayne@uwo.ca, 519 661-2111 Ext. 85463 R E P O RT E R / P H O T O G R A P H E R Adela Talbot adela.talbot@uwo.ca, 519 661-2111 Ext. 85464 PROD U C TION DESIGNER Frank Neufeld fneufeld@uwo.ca, 519 661-2111 Ext. 89334 A D V E RT I S I N G C O O R D I NAT O R , O N - C A M P U S A D V E RT I S I N G Denise Jones denise@uwo.ca, advertise@uwo.ca 519 661-2111 Ext. 82045 O F F C A M P U S A D V E RT I S I N G Chris Amyot, Campus Ad chris@campusad.ca, 519 434-9990 P O S TA L R E C O V E RY $50 Canada, $65 United States, $85 Other POST OFFICE Please do not forward. Return to Western News, Western University, London, Ontario N6A 3K7 with new address when possible. “Our objective is to report events as objectively as possible, without bias or editorial comment. We hope you will read it and contribute to it.” – L.T. Moore, University Relations and Information director, Nov. 16, 1972 SPECIAL TO WESTERN NEWS Western PhD candidates, from left, Kim Martin, Library and Information Science; Beth Compton, Anthropology; and Adriana Soto, Hispanic Studies, engaged in an online breakout session with their counterparts at the University of Windsor during a Canadian Association of Graduate StudiesSocial Sciences and Humanities Research Council roundtable discussion focused on Imagining Canada’s Future. BY CAROL BEYNON WHAT COULD BE more important in our academic community than engaging our brightest minds in the imagining and decision-making process of designing Canada’s research future? Last Friday, about a dozen graduate students from Western’s Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) disciplines were hosted by the School of Graduate & Postdoctoral Studies, SSHRC and the Canadian Association of Graduate Studies (CAGS) to re-imagine what the future of research could and should look like in Canada. As part of its growth into the future, SSHRC invited all Canadian universities to host graduate student roundtables to address SSHRC’s current plan to ensure research in the social sciences, arts and humanities is relevant to, and builds research capacity in relation to, Canada’s future, longterm societal challenges and opportunities. Fifteen Canadian universities were chosen to participate and asked to respond to one of six key questions. Western partnered with the University of Windsor in a joint roundtable and focussed on the question: How can emerging technologies be leveraged to benefit Canadians, with respect to sustainable, resilient communities; creativity, innovation and prosperity; values, cultures, inclusion and diversity; and governance and institutions? Through the wonders of almost seamless technology, students from Windsor joined Western students around one large virtual table, and then worked collaboratively in four break-out rooms, to respond to the question. Western Anthropology professor Andrew Nelson kicked the morning off and contextualized the meeting with a brief outline of SSHRC’s agenda for this initiative. Then, Western Anthropology PhD student Michael Carter presented a live interactive e-presentation from Ryerson University, where he is the director of industry relations and academic coordinator of their Digital Media Zone, to clarify the term ‘emerging technologies.’ His provocative foreword to the morning provided a history of the development of now obvious technologies from the dawn of history to initial conceptions of computers and artificial intelligence, which actually began in the mid 1800s. His key points drew attention to the necessity of vision, tenacity, creativity, and disruption in moving life forward. During the remainder of the fourhour session, the air was filled with animated and engaged discussion among the participants from varied SSHRC-based disciplines who commented, questioned, argued and challenged each other in joint breakout sessions. They probed the positives and negatives of technology, and wrangled with the issue no matter who, or where, we are, we are always reacting to some form of emergent technology because society finds itself immersed without warning. The students questioned: How can we ensure, as responsible citizens, we become proactive? Is it even possible? How can we ensure technology is available globally? How do we manage the disparity and the complexity? What happens when technology uproots and threatens important life traditions or health or global equity? Is technology weakening our artistic creativity because of ease of accessibility? Whose values? Whose culture? Whose definition of diversity? Who should make the rules around technology? How do we ensure government doesn’t take advantage of us technologically through imposing governance such as in Bill C-31? “Meetings of the minds, such as these, are critical in recognizing and affording graduate students – who are our next generation of researchers – the opportunity to imagine and have a critical voice in creating the future, not just of Canada, but of our world,” said Linda Miller, SGPS vice-provost. On June 1, PhD students Nandita Dutta (Hispanic Studies) and Kim Martin (Library and Information Science), both students in the Cultureplex Lab, will represent Western and Windsor at the SSHRC Congress, to engage in the next step of this action project. Joining them will be their counterparts from across Canada. This was a highly successful meeting that showed there is likely nothing more relevant than having our brightest young minds and researchers of the present/future inform SSHRC in its processes of implementing its forward- thinking agendas for the future. Carol Beynon is the associate viceprovost, School of Graduate & Postdoctoral Studies. Opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of or receive endorsement from Western News or Western University. Western News | April 2, 2015 5 WESTERN NEWS READER SURVEY Western News is a university news service produced including the university homepage, as well as various Results of this survey will be used as part of our by the Editorial Services team in the Department of faculty and department websites. ongoing effort to improve our news service and keep it Communications and Public Affairs for staff, faculty and students of Western University. The service includes both Western News, a print product published 36 times a year and circulated across campus and the city, and westernnews.ca, an online publication with stories used across all websites in the Western family, What is/are your role(s) at Western? 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Overall, what rating would you give Western News? ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor 6 Western News | April 2, 2015 Thinking of Western News, how closely might each of these words describe the paper’s personality? DESCRIBES PERFECTLY DESCRIBES SOMEWHAT DOES NOT DESCRIBE AT ALL Intelligent Opinionated Fun Successful Honest Experienced Creative Neighbourly Helpful Energetic Old-fashioned Trustworthy Would you agree or disagree with the following statements about Western News? STRONGLY AGREE AGREE NEITHER AGREE NOR DISAGREE DISAGREE STRONGLY DISAGREE Reading this paper is time well spent. It often addresses issues or topics I am concerned about on campus. It is important to me that I remember later what I have read in this newspaper. The number of misspelled words and punctuation mistakes bothers me. The stories featured on the front page are usually the ones I most want to read. I often critique this newspaper as I read it. I look at the newspaper as informative. I am gaining something by reading it. The newspaper itself is pretty cool. I trust it to tell the truth. I like the touch and feel of this newspaper while reading it. I know the paper’s layout well and where to find things. I find the text easy to read. It shows me how other people spend their days on campus. I feel a little out of touch when I don’t read this newspaper. It’s mainly for people like me. Other people in my office enjoy this newspaper. The stories include a diversity of people. The newspaper includes a diversity of units, faculties and departments. I like to read this newspaper in print. 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Western News | April 2, 2015 Editor reflects on Life and everything else 7 Read ALL OVER B Y A D E L A TA L B O T DOUGLAS GIBSON WAS an editor at the cusp of his career when he first met Alice Munro, LLD’76, in the fall of 1974. As it turns out, Munro, who had already published three books at the time, was likewise at the cusp of hers. “I was a young editor in publishing in Toronto, so much a young editor I couldn’t afford a car. Through a mutual friend I arranged to have dinner in London with this superstar, Alice GIBSON Munro,” said Gibson, who has been Munro’s editor since that day. “As far as I was concerned, she was just a superbly successful writer, so I thought I was about to have dinner with this superstar, whose career was rising like a comet.” Munro, winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literature, had already received the 1968 Governor General’s Award for her first collection of short stories, Dance of the Happy Shades. At dinner, Gibson expected to “worshipfully sit at the feet ” of Munro. But the meeting didn’t go as planned. “What I found was an Alice in crisis. She told me everyone around her – all writers, book reviewers, publishers and booksellers – everyone in the book business was saying, ‘Alice, you have to stop writing short stories. This short story stuff is never going to work. People aren’t going to take you seriously. You’ve got to write novels.’” Because the advice was so unanimous, Munro took it seriously – so seriously she had stopped writing the stories for which she is known – and was trying to write novels. She couldn’t do it. At dinner, Munro told Gibson she was “blocked” and “unable to write at all.” He urged her to continue with short stories, and told her if she came and published with him, she would never hear a request for a novel. And that changed everything. That was the day Munro decided she was a writer of short stories, Gibson said, alluding to words from the writer herself in Robert Thacker’s biography, Alice Munro: Writing Her Lives. The two have collaborated on more than a dozen collections of short stories since, watching praises, awards and accolades roll in. In retrospect, Gibson said, Munro so obviously made the right decision. Her GET YOUR READ ON ILLUSTRATION BY FRANK NEUFELD talent as a wordsmith in the form can be credited with changing the literary landscape, and specifically, mitigating negative conceptions of short stories. “Tradition goes against the short story in that the novel, from early 19th century onwards, was the big event. It was the form associated with literacy and great writing and the short story was always in that shadow,” Gibson explained. “In Canada, there was a prejudice from publishers and book stores doing orders and that prejudice was hard to shake. But it’s been shaken very successfully in Canada, largely thanks to Alice Munro, and people who would read her and say ‘I never liked short stories, but Alice is really terrific.’” In some sense, Munro, and the huge sales that followed her books, paved the way for other Canadian greats in the form, including Mavis Gallant and Alistair The Book Store at Western is hosting an on-campus book club for Western Reads’ April selection, Dear Life by Alice Munro. Join fellow readers from 12-1 p.m. on Wednesday, April 22, to share your thoughts on this national bestseller. RSVP to Pam Kenward at pmcarthu@ uwo.ca. An evening event follows at 7 p.m. at the Community Gallery, Museum London. Register at alumni.westernu.ca/learn/western-reads/. MacLeod. Canada sells more short stories than the United States and United Kingdom, and sells them better, Gibson noted. “Alice has managed to compress so much life into this short story form, and that’s quite remarkable. Every time I read a new Alice Munro short story, I put it down and look at the ceiling and say, ‘How does she know so much about people, other people, and other people’s lives?’ That’s the key to all this – this superb, sensitive intelligence behind all of her stories,” Gibson added. Over the years, the writer-editor relationship has been “wonderful” between him and Munro, he added. The pair weathered a storm in the early days, one he laughs about to this day. “The worst moment was the very first book, Who Do You Think You Are? The book was already at the printers; Alice wanted to change the entire second half to first person, and add a new story,” Gibson said. It was, quite literally a “stop-thepresses” kind of situation. But he read the new story, and thought, ‘Alice is right.’ The new story was terrific and it changed the texture of the whole book. He could see why she wanted to change the second half. The printer felt the same way. The presses stopped, the book was changed, Munro added in the new material – the title story in the collection, Who Do You Think You Are? It won the 1978 Governor General’s Award. “One thing you have to know is, not only is she universally admired for her short stories, she’s universally admired as a person. When the Nobel Prize came through, it was total jubilation, excitement all around,” Gibson said of Munro. For the Western community reading Munro’s Dear Life, the last installment in this session of Western Reads, Gibson has the following words. “The last three stories are clearly different from any in the book, and any Alice has written, because they’re so clearly personal and autobiographical,” he noted. Allow yourselves to be swept away into the lives within the stories, and to walk away, enriched by the experience, Gibson said. CHRIST THE KING UNIVERSITY PARISH invites you to join us for the Easter Triduum April 2-5, 2015 Mass of the Lord’s Supper Thursday, April 2 at 7:30 PM Proclamation of the Passion & Veneration of the Cross Friday, April 3 at 3 PM Easter Vigil Saturday, April 4 at 9 PM Easter Sunday Sunday, April 5 at 10:30 AM ‘The Chapel’ at Revera’s Windermere on the Mount 1486 Richmond Street London, Ontario The Office of Campus Ministry www.kings.uwo.ca/campus-ministry 519.963.1477 8 Western News | April 2, 2015 T. JOHN BRANTON CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER Your investment portfolios are only one component of your financial plan John is a fourth generation Londoner, Western graduate, active alumni and has provided trusted wealth management services to Western faculty and staff since 1984. For a personal consultation to discuss the benefits of independent financial advice, call 519-204-4647 Research Study eyes power of the metaphor SPECIAL TO WESTERN NEWS Love may have been the only battlefield for 1980s rocker Pat Benatar, but understanding that metaphor may be at the true heart of the human condition, according to Western researchers. B Y A D E L A TA L B O T LOVE IS A battlefield, according to a 1983 hit by Pat Benatar. But there’s much more to it than that. The metaphor at the heart of this song – or any metaphor, for that matter – has the power to elicit empathy. According to a new study by Western Psychology professor Albert Katz and colleague Andrea Bowes, reading metaphors significantly increases one’s ability to interpret the emotional state of another individual, simply by looking at the person’s eyes. In other words, reading, using and interpreting metaphors has the potential to bring us closer to someone else. The paper, Metaphor creates intimacy and temporarily enhances theory of mind, appeared in the March issue of Memory & Cognition. “To understand metaphor, you have to understand the intent of another person, partly because there’s an ambiguity there, and (the person) could mean to say multiple things,” said Katz, who is a cognitive psychologist. “There might be something in the comprehension of the sentence itself, which orients you to try and figure out why would someone say that, or what do they mean when they say that, and that might be what is still active (in the mind) when doing the eye test.” The ‘eye test’ Katz refers to is the measure he used with undergraduate students as part of the study. Katz and Bowes conducted three different experiments, asking students to read sentences and paragraph-long short stories, some of which contained a metaphor, and some of which were expressed entirely in plain language. Immediately after, students were asked to look at an image of a person’s eyes and pick one of four adjectives to indicate the emotion expressed in the eyes. “What we tend to find is, when people read the metaphor, they actually did better on (the eye test), which is ostensibly an unrelated task,” Katz said. Experts refer to one’s ability to understand what another person might be feeling or thinking as ‘Theory of Mind.’ The test used by Katz and Bowes to measure Theory of Mind is called the Reading the Mind in the Eye Test (RMET), in which participants have to correctly identify the emotions or mental state displayed in black-and-white photographs of 36 pairs of eyes. The general public, barring certain cognitive conditions or diagnoses, including forms of autism, can be expected to perform reasonably well on the RMET. But metaphor appears to boost the results, according to Katz and Bowes’ study. “What we found is, students who read the metaphor did better on this task,” Katz said. “We also gave them a sentence and asked them to write a paragraph-sized passage where that sentence would be used as a metaphor or as a sincere statement. When we did that, we found they created, not surprisingly, different types of passages and the types of passages they created had more emotion in them, and had more social interactions in them. “And once again, when they were given the eye test, they did better.” Even if the students were given no context – that is no paragraph, just one metaphorical sentence, like, ‘the moon is a balloon’ – they still performed better on the eye test than the control group that read plain language statements. “In some sense, this wasn’t an accident. We did (the study) because there’s some research that suggests metaphor creates intimacy between people. A study in the 1990s, in the U.S., showed just reading metaphor, people see themselves as more intimate with another character,” Katz added. “There’s some social cognitive network being activated and it’s being activated in multiple ways, including metaphor, because it creates this intimacy between people. Most of the work on metaphor and other types of nonliteral language is interested in how you process it – how you go from surface meaning of a sentence to its underlying meaning? That’s where most research is done, he continued. “There’s a smaller group of literature on why you even use it. And there’s a very small group looking at what metaphor does, how metaphor creates social bonds between people.” While reading literature is often cited for higher levels of empathy, reading metaphors, specifically, is responsible for this boost, Katz explained. Western News | April 2, 2015 GRE EN A WAR DS Ideas in full bloom ideas to reduce – or even eliminate – some This year’s winners of the Western Green Announced Tuesday, the 2015 winners Awards have helped not only the university, include the Hospitality Services Sustain- of today’s most pressing environmental but the entire London community, continue ability Team, Group Nomination category; concerns. In its inaugural year, the competi- to turn over a new leaf when it comes to EnviroWestern, Group Nomination catego- tion aims to generate ideas and initiatives environmental sustainability. ry; and Civil and Environmental Engineer- among Western’s students around the ing professor Jason Gerhard, Individual topic of sustainability, and officially recog- Nomination category. nize the winning ideas. Established in 2008, the Western Green Awards celebrate individuals and/or teams who initiate or support activities with Sustainable thinking on campus took Announced Tuesday, WISE winners positive environmental outcomes, encour- centre stage this year, as winners of the included Soojeong Choe, Undergraduate age participation and involvement, work 2015 Western’s Ideas for Sustainability Category; Tarek Rashwan, Graduate Cat- together with others or demonstrate an en- and the Environment (WISE) competition egory co-winner; and Margaret Liu, Lina vironmentally friendly effort. The purpose brought new insights to old problems. Sherazy and Rei Ahn, Graduate Category of the awards is to help raise awareness of sustainability at Western. Launched last fall, WISE asks students to come up with innovative and high-impact co-winners. 9 Western News | April 2, 2015 DS R A W NA E E GR Hospitality Services Sustainability Team The Western Farmers’ Market is a true celebration of food. Gone are the days where students, faculty and staff had to venture off campus to purchase our region’s finest farm-fresh produce and locally made goods like honey, jams and baked goods. The market became a weekly destination for many of the Western community where healthy foods at a reasonable price could be obtained, friends could re-connect and the local movement could be felt through interaction with the many vendors. The impact of the farmers’ market was, essentially, immeasurable. EnviroWestern Jessica He, coordinator Group Nomination category EnviroWestern has evolved into a force for environmental change on campus. A student-run group within the University Students’ Council, EnviroWestern provides both action and advocacy for environmental issues important to students at Western. PAUL MAYNE // WESTERN NEWS Gordon Robinson, Anne Zok, Janet Smith and Ruth Harland Group Nomination category PAUL MAYNE // WESTERN NEWS 10 Western News | April 2, 2015 Jason Gerhard PAUL MAYNE // WESTERN NEWS Civil and Environmental Engineering professor Individual Nomination category Jason Gerhard, the Canada Research Chair in Geoenvironmental Remediation, has been promoting sustainability and environmental issues since arriving on Western’s campus in 2007. He has fostered environmental awareness and positive outcomes toward sustainability through his teaching, research, committee work and many interdisciplinary activities on campus and in the community. ADELA TALBOT // WESTERN NEWS WIS E AW ARD S Lina Sherazy, Margaret Liu and Rei Ahn Graduate Category co-winners The trio aims to promote a concept of ‘sustainable consumerism’ through encouraging the purchase and exchange of used clothing. Their thought is, the creation of a pop-up campus thrift store, selling fashionable quality clothing, will help mitigate the consumerist society we live in. 11 12 Western News | April 2, 2015 ADELA TALBOT // WESTERN NEWS ADELA TALBOT // WESTERN NEWS DS R A E AW S I W Tarek Rashwan Soojeong Choe Engineering graduate student Tarek Rashwan provided experimental evidence to support the technical efficacy of STARx, a patented and patent pending technology, using smouldering combustion, as a sustainable means for biosolids disposal. The solution has huge financial savings implications for wastewater treatment plants. Medical Sciences student Soojeong Choe aims to save 4 million pounds of paper from entering landfills through his Greenline Program. Inspired by projects like the High Occupancy Vehicle Lane and Disneyland FASTPASS, Greenline redesigns customer lineups to promote the use of tumblers and reusable mugs by dedicating one cash register at every Starbucks, for instance, toward green customers who bring their own mug. Graduate Category co-winner HONORARY DEGREE NOMINATIONS The Senate Honorary Degrees Committee will meet in April to select candidates for honorary degrees to be awarded at Western’s Autumn convocation scheduled in October. To ensure that consideration is given to as many worthy candidates as possible, the Committee invites the submission of nominations from any member of the university community. Nomination forms may be downloaded from the following website: uwo.ca/univsec/senate/convocation/honorary_ degrees.html and submitted electronically to ibirrell@uwo.ca prior to April 22, 2015, for consideration by the Honorary Degrees Committee. Undergraduate Category Western News | April 2, 2015 13 It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s Superstar PAUL MAYNE // WESTERN NEWS Jesus Christ Superstar is headed for a geek-filled comic-con adventure in London’s Musical Theatre Productions (MTP) twist on the famed rock opera. The company is staging the hit 1970s musical, loosely based on the Gospel’s accounts of the last week of Jesus’ life, by casting super heroes in the roles of famed religious figures. MTP, a not-forprofit, community organization, includes numerous Western alumni, staff and students, including thirdyear Arts & Humanities student Trevor Richie, who stars in the role of Jesus/Superman. Jesus Christ Superstar is on stage at the McManus Studio Theatre at the Grand Theatre, April 3-11. Tickets are available at the Grand Theatre Box Office. 14 Western News | April 2, 2015 DS WAR A IAN TAR I N A HUM Reaching out into the world manitarian Award recognizes faculty, staff The committee also singled out a sub- professor Jack Scott has been named the and students, who are engaged in a range mission by Dasha Peregoudova, a Western 2015 Western Humanitarian Award winner of efforts directed toward improving the Law student, for special recognition. She – so honoured for his First Nation Hearing quality of life for individuals and communi- was recognized for her work with The Olive Health program, which addresses hearing ties around the world. Funded by the Of- Branch for Children, an organization that health issues in James Bay First Nations fice of the Vice-President (Research), this helps remote communities in Tanzania. communities, the Award Selection Com- award provides a maximum of $5,000 in A luncheon honouring Scott and mittee announced today. support of humanitarian efforts as chosen Peregoudova, will be held Thursday, April by the recipient. 9. Communication Sciences and Disorders Established in 2010, the Western Hu- JACK SCOTT PAUL MAYNE // WESTERN NEWS Communication Sciences and Disorders, Health Sciences The First Nation Hearing Health program Substantial hearing health issues in James Bay First Nations communities, combined with reduced access to specialized hearing health services, continue to create education and quality-of-life challenges for residents. Enter the First Nation Hearing Health program, led by Communication Sciences and Disorders professor Jake Scott. Scott’s program looks to increase accessibility to health services for these underserved areas, as well as train future audiologists in the skills necessary to implement hearing health outreach programs. This program has highlighted the importance of hearing health issues to teachers, administrators, health-care staff, elders and community members. It has also provided opportunities for, thus far, nine Clinical Audiology graduate students, who have learned methods for implementing outreach programs in underserved communities. “His direct, on-site supervision of our graduate students in audiology with clients from First Nations communities is nothing short of spectacular,” wrote J.B. Orange, a fellow Communication Sciences and Disorders professor. “This program of his, run for over five years in parallel to a similarly newly developed clinical placement for our graduate students in Speech-language Pathology, is a model of success that is well-acknowledged by our dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences, by folks in our central administration and by peerreviewers. “I am very proud of Jack’s distinguished efforts in teaching our students about and showing them the real hearing issues among Canada’s First Nations Communities.” Western News | April 2, 2015 15 HUM ANI TAR IAN AWA RDS DASHA PEREGOUDOVA Juris Doctor candidate (2016), Law The Olive Branch for Children PAUL MAYNE // WESTERN NEWS In 2013, Western Law student Dasha Peregoudova started working with The Olive Branch for Children, an organization that helps remote communities in Tanzania assess their primary needs and establish programs that target the most vulnerable. In June 2013, Peregoudova raised more than $7,500 through a fundraising event, A Branch for Brotherhood, where more than 200 people attended. Last December, she traveled to Mbeya, Tanzania, for two weeks to lead an artistic development and empowerment camp at Olive Branch. While there, she participated in the next phase of the orphanage and school’s development, by providing access to physical activity, music and theatre education for children. “Since first meeting Ms. Peregoudova, we at The Olive Branch for Children have been very impressed by her vision and commitment to developing a positive learning experience for children within our care,” wrote Deborah McCracken-Nangereke, The Olive Branch for Children founder and Tanzanian coordinator. “She is hardworking, dedicated, passionate and compassionate. She believes strongly in using her extensive and admirable skills to ‘be the change’ she wishes to see in the world.” WHO'S TAKING YOU TO THE AIRPORT? Providing a safe, reliable ride to or from Toronto Pearson International Airport & Detroit Metro Airport to London, Sarnia & other centres Book online at www.robertq.com or call 519-673-6804 1-800-265-4948 Airbus 51 44 65 17 07-Fred Negus_Ad_PENSION_v9.indd 1 2015-01-27 3:33 PM 16 Western News | April 2, 2015 PAUL MAYNE // WESTERN NEWS Applied Math PhD candidate Matthew Betti admits he has humanity’s future dessert choices in mind as he uses the power of math to address factors threatening once-healthy honeybee hives. Western News | April 2, 2015 17 Research Calculating a new version of pi(e) BY JENNIFER WAIN “The beauty of math is numbers are just numbers. Our equations look like nonsense to most people, but computer models can crunch a lot of data to find patterns. We really can help people see the forest through the trees.” - Matthew Betti Applied Math PHD candidate MATTHEW BETTI LOVES strawberry-rhubarb pie so much he’s devoted his PhD studies to protecting it. Narrow focus? Maybe. But the Applied Math PhD candidate is thinking about the rest of us, too. A convergence of factors is threatening once-healthy honeybee hives across Canada and, without their pollinating powers, we could see a future with no strawberries or rhubarb. Beyond pie, it’s an important problem to solve: Honeybees are responsible for pollinating a food crop worth more than $13 billion worldwide, every year. “Without bees,” Betti said, “you’d either have fruits that are prohibitively expensive at the supermarket, or nonexistent. Apples, berries and even broccoli will become rare. “Without the bees, there will be no more apple pie.” It’s a problem Betti said is getting worse; it’s a problem Applied Math can solve. Betti has an answer for the mostasked question in any high school math class: “But how are we going to use this in the real world?” Betti turns the real world into a set of equations and identifies patterns. Last summer, he developed a mathematical model using data from field biologists and discovered when something is threatening the colony, forager bees leave the hive at a younger than normal age. In normal conditions, forager bees leave the hive at 14 days old. They do the important work of gathering food to bring back to the hive – and they happen to pollinate crops in the process. But in adverse conditions, an unsustainable cycle ensues: The hive pushes out younger and younger bees in a desperate attempt to get more food to save itself. Most of the young bees don’t make it and, eventually, the whole colony collapses. “It’s like sending a teenager out into the world,” Betti said. “The human may survive, but a 9-day-old bee is not likely to make it.” Betti’s mathematical model has resulted in a valuable warning sign farmers can use now to make decisions in the field: If they see a lot of young bees flying out of the hive, they can act quickly and test for disease, isolate a particular hive or cull healthy bees and transfer them to a new hive. Betti’s work was recently published in the journal PLOS ONE, in collaboration with Applied Math professors Lindi Wahl and Mair Zamir. His next step is designing a more complex mathematical model that could reveal multiple indicators of hive health. “The beauty of math is numbers are just numbers,” he said. “Our equations look like nonsense to most people, but computer models can crunch a lot of data to find patterns. We really can help people see the forest through the trees.” Betti talks about standing at the top of the stairs at 5 p.m. in Toronto’s busy Bloor/Young subway station. Looking down, all of the people appear as one big mass. Looking closer, he sees patterns – people in suits head southbound, people in jeans tend to go westbound. His new work takes a similar view from the top. By grouping bees by age, he can see patterns among bees at 1 day old, 2 days old and onward through their life cycle. This more complex model allows Betti to accurately capture activity. If he can understand hive patterns, he can correlate behavior to threats, whether that’s pesticides or infection. Although pesticides have been in the news lately as the biggest threat to bee health, Betti said current scientific studies point to a combination of factors causing overwintering losses of up to 29 per cent of hives, as reported by Health Canada. “We should also be looking at infections and farming practices,” he said. “The big farms, the ones that require bees most to pollinate their crops, still tend to work in a very industrial manner.” Industrial farms plant acres and acres of a single crop – giving bees access to plentiful food, but only one kind of food – and then take it all away at harvest. The lack of biodiversity and stable food source results in weaker bees. Infections, parasites and pests are other significant factors, Betti said. “There are a million different travel routes for people, fruits, vegetables. Any disease spreads faster these days because of how much people and goods are travelling.” Although farmers directly control pesticides, they can’t simply stop, or infestations will kill the crops we need. Betti notes studies are underway to determine optimal pesticide use for both bee and crop health. It will take a while to see improvements, even if all of these factors are addressed. In the meantime, Betti is confident we can have our pie and eat it, too, if we start using math models to optimize hive health now. “We’re finding warning signs so we can prevent an impact, rather than react to one,” he said. “If we do things right, and do them now, no one will see a change in their everyday lives. “You know we’ve failed if you go to the supermarket and they laugh when you ask for apples.” Western Finance - Year End Deadlines The University’s year end is Thursday, April 30, 2015. All transactions occurring before year end must be dated April 30, 2015 or earlier to be included in the 2014/2015 budget year. It is the responsibility of each department to submit its accounting records before the deadlines listed below. The transactions received before these deadlines will be included in the 2014/2015 budget year. Fusion Sushi, and now featuring fresh Osysters & Izakaya Bar. Visit our newly renovated second level that offers Japanese night life in Downtown London. CASH RECEIPTS TRAVEL EXPENSES/TRAVEL ADVANCES All cheques and cash must be deposited by the central cashier on or before Thursday April 30, 2015 in order to be processed with an April date. All deposits made after April 30 will be May dated. In order to accommodate year end processing, the cashier hours will be extended as follows: April 29 & 30 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 and 12:30 – 3:30 p.m. Travel costs for non-Western employees incurred prior to April 30, 2015 must be submitted no later than Friday, April 24, 2015. Employees must use the on-line travel expense system. On-line expense reports must be approved by the final approver by April 30, 2015 to be included in the 2014/2015 budget year. All outstanding travel advances should be cleared by that date. Hard copies of on-line expense reports with original receipts attached must be forwarded to the Travel desk, SSB 6100 by Monday, May 11, 2015. PETTY CASH Expenses incurred prior to April 30, 2015 must be submitted through the central cashier no later than Friday May 1, 2015 to be processed with an April date. It is strongly encouraged that petty cash claims be submitted prior to April 30 where possible to ensure your claim will be processed in the 2014/2015 budget year. The cashier will be accepting petty cash reimbursements up to and including May 1, 2015. See our 1/2 price coupon in the Western Student Guide. PURCHASING INSTRUCTIONS All April dated invoices for external customers must be finalized and printed by 3:00 p.m. on April 30, 2015. Purchase orders for goods and services received in the 2014/2015 budget year and invoiced before May 1, 2015 must be approved and released in Mustang Market by April 30, 2015 to be processed in the 2014/2015 budget year. Purchase orders for goods and services shipped, received and invoiced after May 1, 2015 will be committed against the 2015/2016 budget year. The last day for submission of the physical inventory sheets is Tuesday, May 5, 2015. INTERDEPARTMENTAL CHARGES 607 Richmond Street Regular and vacation pay for part-time employees and any overtime owed to employees should be paid in April. Financial Services will accrue payroll from April 19 to 25, 2015. ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE INVOICES INVENTORIES (at Central) dine in & take out 519.642.2558 PAYROLL INSTRUCTIONS Interdepartmental charges for goods received or services rendered before April 30, 2015 must be dated April 30, 2015 or prior and journaled no later than Friday, May 1, 2015. Ensure the Accounting Date on the Journal Entry Header Panel is changed to April 30, 2015. Suppliers’ invoices must be in Accounts Payable, apinvoice@uwo.ca or SSB 6100, no later than May 1, 2015. Invoices received after this date will be processed in the 2015/2016 budget year. Western News | April 2, 2015 // ACADEME PhD Lectures Emily Knight, Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Take 2 steps and call me in the morning: Prescribing physical activity through primary care, 9:30 a.m. April 2, EC 1576. Scott Jones, Astronomy, Methods and Results Toward Measuring Magnetic Fields in Star-Forming Regions, 9:30 a.m. April 2, PAB 100. Xuan Liu, Applied Mathematics, Determination of Lie superalgebras of supersymmetries of super differential equations, 1:30 p.m. April 6, MC 204. // CLASSIFIED For Rent Elegant furnished downtown apartment, adult building overlooking Harris Park, 2 bed, 2 bath, A/C, parking, suitable for faculty or staff. Available for long-term starting May 1. Inquire by email to skidmore@uwo.ca. // STUDENT BULLETIN Student Central In-Person Hours 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday; 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday. Follow Student Central on Twitter for updates @westernuReg. sentation online and visit their website for the Learning Help Centre drop-in schedule, sdc.uwo.ca/learning. Writing Support Centre The Writing Support Centre offers many presentations for undergraduate and graduate students, including a dropin centre in Weldon Library (next to Quotes Café) from 2-7 p.m. MondayThursday and 12-3 p.m. Saturdays, and individual appointments. Please call for an appointment at 519-661-3655 or visit their website to register for presentations, sdc.uwo.ca/writing. Undergraduate Sessional Dates April 3: Good Friday. April 5: Easter Sunday. April 8: Fall/Winter Term classes end. April 9–10: Study Days. April 11–30: Final examination period. April 30: Second term ends for all faculties except Dentistry, Education, Law and Medicine. Last day to receive applications for graduation: Spring Convocation. May 1: Last day to withdraw an application for graduation: Spring Convocation. Last day to receive admission applications for summer day courses from students applying for the first time - all supporting documentation must be submitted within seven days of this date. For more information, please visit us on the web at studentservices.uwo.ca and follow us on Twitter @Western_WSS. // CAREERS Apply to Graduate The online application for the Spring 2015 Convocation is open until April 30 through your Student Center. Tickets for the Spring Convocation will be released starting at the end of May. convocation. uwo.ca. A central website displays advertisements for all vacant academic positions. The following positions are among those advertised at uwo.ca/facultyrelations/faculty/academic_positions.html Please review, or contact the faculty, school or department directly. Full-Time Academic Appointments Western Libraries Head, Research and Instructional Services, The D.B. Weldon Library Western Libraries is seeking a dynamic and innovative leader for the position of Head, Research and Instructional Services, The D.B. Weldon Library. Applicants are required to submit a covering letter, a curriculum vitae and the names and contact information for three references in electronic format, by March 27. Quote reference #DBW-HRIS-1503. Faculty of Engineering Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Biomechanics of the Head Seeks applicants for a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair (CRC) in Biomechanics of the Head. Based on qualifications and experience, the successful applicant will receive a probationary or tenured academic appointment at the rank of assistant or associate professor; consideration may also be given to a joint appointment with the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry or the Faculty of Health Sciences. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. Review of applications will begin after May 1. Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Seeks a board-certified veterinary pathologist (DACVP) in the area of experimental pathology, with particular emphasis on rodent pathobiology and comparative pathology of animal models of human disease. We invite applications from outstanding early career investigators to fill a tenure-track position at the level of assistant or associate professor, effective Sept. 1, or as soon as possible thereafter. Applications will be accepted until May 15. April 2015 Exam Schedule The final April exam schedule is available. Visit registrar.uwo.ca/examinations for information. Tax Receipt Information T2202As and T4As T2202As (tuition tax receipts) and T4As (scholarships, awards and bursaries tax receipts) for the 2014 tax year are available through your Student Centre (student.uwo.ca). See registrar.uwo.ca for information on the online tax receipt services. Spring Convocation (June 9-12, 15-17) Graduates and guests, please check convocation.uwo.ca for Convocation details. Tickets for the June Convocation will be available online beginning May 26. Keep studying, and we’ll do your taxes. For free. Learning Skills Services Learning Skills offers both drop-in assistance and a variety of presentations throughout the year. Register for a pre- encouraged to apply; however, Canadian citizens and permanent residents will be given priority. Western is committed to employment equity and welcomes applications from all qualified women and men, including visible minorities, Aboriginal people and persons with disabilities. All positions are subject to budgetary approval. Applicants should have fluent written and oral communication skills in English. All qualified candidates are For information or a personal tour, call 519- 660-8731 or email: gibbonsparkmontessori @hotmail.com Gibbons Park Montessori School • Unique Parkland Location • Toddler and Preschool • Elementary • Daily French Classes • Extended hrs • SUMMER CAMP 519 679-1211 71 Carriage Hill Drive, London (minutes north of campus • free parking) SUCCESS WITH BUYING AND SELLING STARTS WITH TRACEY Tracey White-Lockwood, Sales Representative Direct 226-378-8366 or Office 519-657-2020 Email englishthome@gmail.com 99 Horton Street W, London, ON N6J 4Y6 Welcome to your London Home Web Registration Web Registration for summer evening, distance studies, summer day and intersession is now open through your Student Center (student.uwo.ca). Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Seeking a medical or clinical biochemist for full-time clinical academic appointment. Consideration of applicants will include an assessment of previous performance and qualifications, including those which go beyond the requirements for the position, and experience. Application review will commence on May 1. Applications are sought until the position is filled. www.gibbonsparkmontessori.com 18 We know how hard it is to achieve a professional degree. So if you’re enrolled in a full-time medical or dental program, we’ll be happy to prepare your Canadian personal income tax return for free. To get started, visit GrantThornton.ca/freetaxreturn and complete the application form. One of our professionals will contact you shortly after and guide you through the process. But do it soon— the offer ends April 15, 2015. the convenience of Apartment Living! Blossom Gate offers you varied floorplans in either our existing lowrise and highrise buildings OR one of our newer highrise buildings - rent varies accordingly. lounge, indoor bicycle storage, keyless entry • 2 appliances • Individual heating & cooling system • Coin-less laundry facilities • Free outdoor parking • On-site management office • Direct bus to downtown & Western Campus • On-site variety store • 1/2 block to shopping centre Conditions apply. See website for details. GrantThornton.ca 710 Adelaide Street N., just south of Oxford St. Audit • Tax • Advisory © Grant Thornton LLP. A Canadian Member of Grant Thornton International Ltd 103-625 Kipps Lane (at Adelaide St. N) 519 432-1777 Like us on facebook.com/blossomgate THE SYMBOL OF QUALITY Western News | April 2, 2015 19 Campus Digest Western researchers take lead on violence prevention Barnett led the global study that demonstrated Aspirin could prevent strokes, creating new possibilities for the treatment and prevention of heart disease; BY JASON WINDERS WESTERN RESEARCHERS WILL be at the forefront of preventing, detecting and combating family violence and child abuse as part of a 10-year, $100-million investment by the federal government. PreVAiL – Preventing Violence Across the Lifespan Research Network – will serve as a colead agency on the first funded project, Development of Pan-Canadian Public Health Guidance on Family Violence, which will receive $4.47 million over three years. Working in conjunction with the British Columbia Centre of Excellence for Women’s Health, PreVAiL will develop educational materials to assist health professionals in supporting victims of violence. Funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s Institute for Gender and Health, PreVAiL brings together more than 60 researchers and partners from Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Asia, Europe and Australia to produce and share knowledge that will help children, women and men exposed to child maltreatment and intimate partner violence. “This amount of funding is really unprecedented for this kind of work,” Faculty of Information and Media Studies professor Nadine Wathen said. “It will allow our group to develop evidence-based, practice-oriented guidance for health and social service providers to provide consistent, safe and compassionate care to those experiencing family violence. “Western has been a leader in research and education on family violence, and the health system response to violence against women and children – this new funding speaks to this expertise, and the success of our PreVAiL network.” Wathen serves as co-lead investigator with PreVAiL, along with Harriet MacMillan, a McMaster Psychiatry and Pediatrics professor. The network also includes Western researchers Jen MacGregor, FIMS postdoctoral fellow; Anita Kothari, Health Studies professor; and Marilyn Ford-Gilboe, Nursing professor. On this project, Ford-Gilboe will chair one of the evidence review groups. Kothari will work on implementing and evaluating knowledge mobilization strategies. “A key strength of our approach is the involvement, from the beginning, of more than a dozen key national health and social service provider organizations, including the Canadian Nurses Association, Canadian Medical Association and those representing child welfare, violence against women services, psychologists, dentists and dental hygienists,” Wathen continued. “This will allow us to develop curriculum, protocols and tools that can be tailored for these different service contexts, and evaluated to assess their impact on service delivery and ultimately on women and children’s health.” The funding is part of a 10-year, $100 million investment to prevent, detect and combat family violence and child abuse, Minister of Health Rona Ambrose announced last month. The investment will be administered through the Public Health Agency of Canada ($7 million/year) and Health Canada ($3 million/year). “Family violence has very serious and lasting impacts on the health and mental wellbeing of those who are victimized by it,” said Ambrose. “Our government is committed to ensuring the health and safety of all Canadians and will continue to stand up for victims of violence. It is my hope that, through this investment, we will be able to better support victims of violence and their children, wherever they live, so they may • Treating Diabetes (1921). Frederick Banting, Charles Best, J.J.R. Macleod and J.B. Collip developed insulin to treat diabetes, a life-saving discovery for millions that Banting conceived at Western; and • Understanding the Present (2002). Magaret MacMillan, LLD’12, has demonstrated the past’s influence on current international politics and how history can suggest solutions for today’s issues. All 50 contributions were highlighted at the Ontario and Canada Research Chairs Symposium in Toronto this week. To vote for your favorite ‘game changer,’ visit the full list at yourontarioresearch.ca/ game-changers/. Justice Eileen Gillese, former dean of Western Law, has been named chancellor of Brescia University College, the Board of Trustees announced Monday. Gillese, who follows Joan Francolini to the position, will assume the role at the Western affiliate’s baccalaureate ceremony on June 14. “We are so grateful Justice Gillese has accepted this important ambassadorial role at Brescia,” said Elizabeth Hewitt, Board of Trustees chair. “Throughout her career, she has been, and continues to be, a mentor and a role model for women, whether they are students, lawyers or her own daughters.” SPECIAL TO WESTERN NEWS Minister of Health Rona Ambrose announced a 10-year, $100 million investment last month to prevent, detect and combat family violence and child abuse. heal and rebuild their lives toward a healthier future.” NEWS AND NOTES Western professor Gordon Osinski, crossappointed between Earth Sciences and Physics & Astronomy, has been named the recipient of both the Faculty of Science Florence Bucke Award, as well as the Mineralogical Association of Canada’s Young Scientist Award. King’s University College professor Paul Werstine, a Literature professor and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, has been named the first Hugh Mellon Excellence in Research Award recipient, the King’s Faculty Research Activities Committee announced last week. Werstine has been a model of excellence in research and publication, the committee said, and has radically transformed the field of Shakespeare scholarship. Don Wright Faculty of Music professor Emily Abrams Ansari won the Cambridge University Press Award at the Society for American Music’s annual conference this past month in California. Ansari’s paper, The Virtue of American Power and the Power of American Virtue: Exceptionalist Tropes in Early Cold War Musical Nationalism, received top honours for the best paper presented at the conference by a scholar working outside the United States. Western researchers and alumni are highlighted among 50 “game-changing” innovations at Ontario universities, identified by Research Matters, a collaborative project involving Ontario’s 21 publicly assisted universities. The Western-connected accomplishments include: • Discovering the Power of Grapefruit (1991). Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry professor Dr. David Bailey proved grapefruit can affect the way your body metabolizes drugs, the first discovery that what we eat can affect drug effectiveness; • Defining Wind Engineering (1965). Engineering professor Alan Davenport defined the modern field of wind engineering by developing an equation to measure wind loads, making building structures safer and more economical; • Preventing Strokes (1978). Professor and Robarts Research Institute founder Henry Gillese was appointed to the Ontario Court of Appeal in 2002, after serving as a Superior Court Justice from 1999-2002. Prior to her judicial appointments, she was dean and professor of law with Western’s Faculty of Law, where she taught trusts, pensions, property, administrative law, and legal research and writing (1983-99). She has received a number of teaching awards, including the Edward Pleva Award for Excellence in Teaching and the inaugural National 3M Fellowship for Excellence in Teaching. She holds a bachelor of business administration and commerce from the University of Alberta and undergraduate and graduate law degrees from Oxford University, England, which she attended as a Rhodes Scholar. Born in Edmonton, Alta., she is married to Robert Badun and has four children. Health Information Science graduate students hosted several events during last week’s celebration of Health Information Professionals Week. They held information sessions on Monday and Friday in the lobby of Health Sciences Building, providing information for students on both undergraduate and graduate program in Health Informatics and Health Information Science, as well as describing the roles and functions of health information professionals and Canadians’ privacy rights and responsibilities. A lunchand-learn session with Gail Crook, CEO of the Canadian Health Information Management Association, and Nadine Wathen, director of the FIMS/FHS graduate program in Health Information Science, attended by students from across campus on Wednesday. 20 Western News | April 2, 2015 USC celebrates the best in the classroom ADELA TALBOT // WESTERN NEWS Left to right, French professor Sebastien Ruffo, Chemistry professor Felix Lee, English and Writing Studies professor Larry Garber, French professor Mario Longtin and Chemistry professor Mark Workentin were honoured for their classroom excellence Monday night during the University Students’ Council Awards ceremony. The five were named recipients of the 2014-15 University of Western Ontario Award of Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, an honour co-presented by the USC, The Bank of Nova Scotia and Western’s Alumni Association.