Thursday, April 23, 2015


Science celebrates its alumni award winners

by Sharon McFarlane.

Distinguished alumni winners pose with the Dean of Science.

Professor Terry McMahon, Dave Wilkin, Vikas Gupta, and John van Leeuwen.

The Faculty of Science honoured three outstanding alumni last Wednesday evening as they presented the Young Alumni Award and Distinguished Alumni Awards for 2014 at the Gladstone Hotel in Toronto. 

“The vision, leadership, entrepreneurial spirit and sheer drive of these three remarkable individuals is beyond impressive,” says McMahon, “Our alumni make amazing things happen in this world.”

Social entrepreneur and founder of Ten Thousand Coffees, Dave Wilkin, BSc ’11, received the 2014 Young Alumni Award. Seen as a thought-leader on millennials, innovation and entrepreneurship, Wilkin has already earned numerous speaking opportunities with CEO’s, governments and television.

Beaming with enthusiasm at the podium, Wilkin promised to “apply the opportunities my science degree has given me and take it to my peers at Ten Thousand Coffees... We’re going to keep this momentum going and achieve great things.”   

Vikas Gupta, BSc ’91 is one of two recipients of the 2014 Distinguished Alumni Award and describes himself as a seasoned executive with entrepreneurial DNA. Gupta is currently the CEO of Big Blue Bubble, the largest independent mobile gaming company in Canada. He is also ventures well beyond his own industry as advisor, mentor, investor and sits on many boards of start- up and not for profit organizations.  Gupta also serves as advisor on the Ontario Premier’s digital media roundtable.

"My University of Waterloo years were formidable, influential, and among the most transformative of my life," said Gupta. “It is during my academic journey that I learned the importance of curiosity and came to recognize that embracing uncertainty was the key to unlocking opportunity, a characteristic that has become the fabric of my career.”

John van Leeuwen, BSc ’81, also received the 2014 Distinguished Alumni Award for the Faculty of Science. Van Leeuwen, who was named Entrepreneur of the Year in 2011 by Price Waterhouse and received the 2012 Entrepreneur of the Year in Clean Technology from Ernst & Young is the co-founder, director and past CEO of EcoSynthetix. His company leverages renewable technology to commercialize a broad spectrum of bio-based products.  Crediting his experiences at Waterloo for his most personal and professional connections, van Leeuwen admitted the choice to come to Waterloo was an easy one.

“I had a full scholarship elsewhere, but what tipped the scale for me was the co-op program. Why wouldn’t I take advantage of that? It was a no brainer,” said van Leeuwen.

Highlights from Professor McMahon’s speech included Waterloo’s enhanced international reputation, the surge in entrepreneurial activity among students including the creation of Velocity Science and the growth of the Faculty since he was first appointed as Dean in 2007.

Breaking ground on new Hagey Hall addition

by Wendy Philpott.

Attendees gather in the Arts courtyard for the groundbreaking ceremony.

It was an wildly unpredictable day of snow, rain, and sunshine, but that didn’t stop the Faculty of Arts from holding a successful groundbreaking ceremony for the new student space to be built over the courtyard of Hagey Hall.

Dylan Ball (president of Arts Student Union) and Hannah Beckett (Arts Endowment Fund board member) with Dean Doug Peers.During a precipitation-free spell on Tuesday, Dean of Arts Doug Peers spoke to a gathered crowd of students, faculty, staff, and project architects and planners about this long-awaited construction project to create new and better study/social space for students. Following the dean, students Dylan Ball, president of Arts Students Union, and then Hannah Beckett of the Arts Endowment Fund board of directors, spoke about the importance of creating this hub for Arts students to gather and work (Dylan Ball and Hannah Beckett are pictured above with Dean Doug Peers at the groundbreaking).

With the actual ground breaking (or concrete jackhammering) planned to start next month, the multi-level atrium will add approximately 9,000 square feet of study and project rooms on the upper levels and a commons area on the ground floor, with coffee and food services. The grand opening will be in summer 2016.

"In order to provide Waterloo students with the most fulfilling university experience, they should have an enriching campus life to accompany the excellent education they receive," said Feridun Hamdullahpur, president and vice-chancellor in a media advisory announcing the ground breaking. "There are a number of projects in the works that will have a positive effect on the Waterloo student experience. This one directly answers the call for more study and social space for arts students, who have played a key role in its planning and design.”

Voting for staff seat on Board of Governors begins tomorrow

Voting begins tomorrow as full-time staff members elect a representative to the Board of Governors. Candidates are:

  • Tom Dean, Department of Chemical Engineering;
  • Brendan Lowther, Federation of Students; 
  • Trenny McGinnis, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering;
  • Jeremy Steffler, Co-operative Education & Career Action; and
  • Glen Weppler, Housing & Residences.

The voting period for regular full-time staff is from Friday, April 24 to Thursday April 30 by electronic ballot. This group will receive an e-mail prompt to vote electronically tomorrow morning. The voting period for union full-time staff is Friday, April 24 to Thursday, May 7 by paper ballot; ballots will be mailed to full-time union staff members.

Thursday's notes

Engineering 3 will be without domestic hot and cold water today until about 12:00 p.m. as a ball valve is replaced.

Beginning Monday, April 27, Plant Operations will be performing landscape renovations at the south main entrance door to the Mathematics & Computer BuildingAccess to the building will be interrupted at times, but signs will be in place to redirect the pedestrian traffic.

Also beginning Monday, the servers for Mailservices, the undergraduate student email system will be physically relocated. This process will take place from 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. during a 4-day maintenance window from April 27 to April 30, taking place between the end of exams and the start of classes to help minimize impact to users. Between 20 and 40 per cent of mailboxes will be impacted each day, and during the maintenance window, affected clients will not be able to access their Mailservices account during that time. It is expected that no email will be lost, and instead will queue up while the servers are relocated. Anyone with questions or concerns is invited to contact the IST Service Desk by emailing helpdesk@uwaterloo.ca or by calling extension 44357.

Link of the day

International Astronomy Week

When and where

The 'S' Word: A Workshop, Lunch and Discussion for Faculty Members and Graduate Students in Arts, Thursday, April 23, 12:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m., EV3 4412.

JM Drama presents “Neil Simon’s The Odd Couple,” Thursday, April 23 to Saturday, April 25, 7:30 p.m., The Registry Theatre, 122 Frederick St., Kitchener. All proceeds from opening night will go to Notre Dame Chapel, part of SJU’s Campus Renewal 2015 project.

Chemistry Department Seminar Series featuring Professor Ernesto Marceca, School of Science, University of Buenos Aires, “Electric deflection of clusters of H-bonding molecules. Polarity as a means to study: charge transfer reactions (electron and proton) and hydrophobic effect”, Friday, April 24, 2:30 p.m., MC 4040.  

Drama and Speech Communication Presents "She Haunts This Place," Friday, April 24, 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m., Saturday, April 25, 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m., Sunday, April 26, 7:00 p.m., Button Factory, UpTown Waterloo.

A Church in Dialogue: Pope Francis and the summons to ecumenical, inter-faith and cultural conversations, Friday, April 24, 7:30 p.m., Siegfried Hall, St. Jerome's University.

Examination period ends, Saturday, April 25.

Deadline to become "Fees Arranged", Monday, April 27.

Unofficial grades begin to appear in Quest, Monday, April 27.

WatRISQ Seminar by Professor Xinfu Chen, University of Pittsburgh, “Characterization of Optimal Strategy for Multi-Asset Investment and Consumption with Transaction Costs,” Monday, April 27, 4:00 p.m., DC 1304. 

Annual Teaching and Learning ConferenceOpportunities and New Directions, Thursday, April 30, Hagey Hall.

Water Institute Research Symposium 2015, Thursday, April 30, 8:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m., DC 1350. 

Water Institute RBC Distinguished Lecture featuring Dr. Sunita Narain, Director General, Centre for Environment and Science, New Delhi, India, “Challenges for Water Security in the Poor’s World”. Thursday, April 30, 4:00 p.m. M3 1006.

Quantum Frontiers Distinguished Lecture featuring Sajeev John, Thursday, April 30, 4:00 p.m., QNC 0101.

Quantum: Music At the Frontiers of Science, Sunday, May 3, 2:00 p.m., The National Arts Centre, Ottawa.

Spring Orientation Week 2015, Sunday, May 3 to Friday, May 8.

The DaCapo Chamber Choir, conducted by Leonard Enns, Professor Emeritus at Conrad Grebel University College, presents “In the Beginning”, Saturday, May 9 at 8:00 p.m. and Sunday, May 10 at 3:00 p.m., with special guests Jennifer Enns Modolo, mezzo-soprano, and Lorin Shalanko, pianist. 

Waterloo Unlimited Grade 10 Program, Theme of "Change," Sunday, May 10 to Thursday, May 14.

Teaching Excellence Celebration, Tuesday, May 12, 3:00 p.m., University Club.

TransCanada Corporate Employment Information Session, Tuesday, May 12, 5:00 p.m., TransCanada Live-Link Facility, Engineering 5, Room 3102. Refreshments provided.

Department of English Language and Literature presents “Mediated Bodies,” Wednesday, May 13, 4:00 p.m., HH 373. Details.

The Similarities between Maori and Chinese Cultures and Deeper Meaning of Maori Tattoo & Marae, Wednesday, May 13, 6:00 p.m., Renison University College, REN 1303. 

David Sprott Distinguished Lecture featuring William H. Woodall, Professor of Statistics, Virginia Tech, “Monitoring and improving surgical quality,” Thursday, May 14, 4:00 p.m., DC 1302.

Victoria Day holiday, Monday, May 18, most University buildings closed.

Cultivating Learning Cultures (CTE744), Wednesday, May 20, 9:15 a.m., DC 1302. 

Undergraduate School on Experimental Quantum Information Processing (USEQIP), Monday, May 25 to Friday, June 5.

Standing and official grades available in Quest, Friday, May 22.

Spring 2015 Convocation, Tuesday, June 9 to Saturday, June 13.

Public lecture by Dr. Krysta Svore, Microsoft Research, "Quantum Computing: Transforming the Digital Age," Tuesday, June 9, 7:00 p.m., QNC 0101.

PhD Oral Defences

Electrical & Computer Engineering. Graeme Williams, "Factors Affecting Charge Collection in Organic Solar Cells and their Associate Deterioration with Time." Supervisor, Hany Aziz. On deposit in the Engineering graduate office, PHY 3003. Oral defence Monday, April 27, 1:30 p.m., EIT 3142.

Combinatorics & Optimization. Benson Joeris, "Connectivity, tree-decompositions and unavoidable-minors." Supervisor, Jim Geelen. On display in the Mathematics graduate office, MC 5204. Oral defence Monday, April 27, 2:00 p.m., MC 6486.

School of Public Health and Health Systems. Jennifer McWhirter, "Visual and Text Coverage of Skin Cancer and Recreational Tanning in Popular North American Magazines from 2000 to 2012." Supervisor, Laurie Hoffman-Goetz. On display in the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, BMH 3110. Oral defence Thursday, April 30, 9:00 a.m., BMH 3119.

Systems Design Engineering. Mohamed Bendame, "Springless Electromagnetic Vibration Energy Harvesters." Supervisor, Eihab Abdel-Rahman. On deposit in the Engineering graduate office, PHY 3003. Oral defence Thursday, April 30, 10:00 a.m., E5 3006.