The Queen's Journal, Volume 144, Issue 23

Page 1

Vol. 144, Issue 23

F r i day , M a r c h 3 , 2 0 1 7

since

1873

the

journal

Queen’s University

Senate approves Fall Term Break for 2018-19 academic year

Changes to Orientation Week will allow for a two-day break in Week Seven Blake Canning Assistant News Editor As the recommendation from the Fall Term Break Task Force was announced at the Feb. 28 Senate meeting, a murmur passed through the crowd of attendees. The Task Force announced that their recommendation was, “a two-day fall term break on the Thursday and Friday of the seventh week of classes, to be implemented for the 2018-19 academic year, if practicable.” This recommendation comes after the AMS lobbied for the alternate option, which would’ve pushed Orientation Week back a full week to allow for a four-day break, as 52.8 per cent of the student body voted for it on the AMS winter referendum. The results of the university -wide survey of students on their preferred course of action ended roughly in a three-way split between all options. When asked

to rank what was most important to them, 34.2 per cent of students said a Fall Term Break, 33.6 per cent chose a pre-exam study period, and 30.1 per cent claimed that Orientation Week activities were their top priority. Implementing the new two-day Fall Term Break will require some re-working of the existing Orientation Week in place at Queen’s, since incoming first year students will now move in on the Saturday before Labour Day. First year students will have residence orientation on move-in day, followed by faculty-specific orientation spanning from Sunday to Wednesday, and two days of classes on Thursday and Friday. Residence orientation will resume for the Saturday and Sunday after Labour Day weekend, and a regular class schedule will begin Monday. These changes to Orientation Week will allow for a two-day break

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Queen’s receives $5 million donation for interdisciplinary water research The Beaty Water Research Centre to open in 2018 Sarina Grewal Contributor

On Feb 24, the University received a $5 million donation from Ross J. Beaty, which will give way to the creation of the Beaty Water Research Centre, to be located in the new Queen’s Innovation and Wellness Centre. Ross J. Beaty, a veteran with See First on page 4 40 years of experience in the

renewable energy industry, currently serves as Chairman of Pan American Silver Corp and as an advisory board member on the Nature Trust of British Columbia. He is also the father of two Queen’s graduates. The initiative will have a permanent spot in the Wellness Centre, where a group of Queen’s professors and graduate students in civil and chemical engineering will conduct water research. According to Principal Woolf’s statement at the announcement, these individuals will, “come together and take the lead in

sustaining one of our most precious resources.” The centre will feature state -of-the-art laboratories where faculty and students will engage with genetics experts, chemists, microbiologists, and public health researchers. Connecting upwards of 50 faculty members and students, the initiative strives to further freshwater research in the “governance, sustainability, and protection of water resources,” according a press release shared by the University on Feb 24. “I had a good feeling about See Beaty’s on page 4

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

Features

Sports

Lifestyle

page 5

page 10

page 14

When the party ends: a look at campus drinking culture

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Women’s basketball hosts the OUA final four

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Student profile: Finding her voice in blogging


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