The Queen's Journal, Issue 8

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candidate profiles page 3

T u e s d ay , S e p t e m b e r 2 3 , 2 0 11 — I s s u e 8

j the ournal Queen’s University — Since 1873

Morning glory

Solar Energy

Energy building Group designs sustainable house on campus B y C atherine O wsik Assistant News Editor

Eric Farquharson, ArtSci ’13, trains on the Cataraqui River at 5:30 a.m. on Wednesday morning. For full story on a morning with the Queen’s rowing team, see page 13.

Photo by Justin Chin

Health

Commission to survey mental health B y K atherine Fernandez -B lance News Editor

health was particularly front of mind already and it had occurred to me, fairly late in the year, that we really didn’t understand Principal Daniel Woolf announced [it] fully.” Woolf said the commission the launch of a new commission this week to assess the state of won’t run on an operational level, as there are other administrative mental health at Queen’s. “The commission is intended groups, like the Mental Health to do a very high-level scan of Working Group that concentrate the issues of mental health on on the day-to-day functions of campus, certain pressures students mental health resources at Queen’s. The working group was created are feeling, how our services are in 2007. The group organizes responding,” Woolf said. The commission has already programs and services like Mental met twice, mainly to discuss Health First Aid sessions and logistical elements of how it will mental health training in residences. “This is more a high-level view,” work. Its creation stemmed from “a rather difficult year” on campus Woolf said of the new commission. The aim of the commission is last year Queen’s had last year. Seven students died last year. to provide a forum to talk about “The issue of student mental issues of mental health, Woolf

Inside The Darker Side Out on of Spongebob the Water Dialogue examines television shows’ effect on preschool children. Page 9

Sports Editor Gilbert Coyle spends a morning with the rowing team. Page 13

Students On Gore and beats Stage Andrew W.K. talks about Matt and Kim and his tattoo.

Postscript explores why Karaoke attracts so many students in Kingston.

Page 10 Page 16

said, adding that the information collected will be useful to other post-secondary campuses as well. Woolf chose five members to sit on the commission, selecting faculty members, administrators and one professional student. The commission will present a report to Woolf in April. After the presentation it will disband. Chair of the Commission, Dr. David Walker said the commission’s only expense will be the room where the meetings take place. “At the moment, we haven’t identified any costs that are direct other than the in-built costs of the people involved,” said Walker, a professor in emergency medicine, family medicine and policy studies. “I don’t see this as being a costly exercise but when we make our recommendations … there will obviously have to be a cost for those things.” The commission hasn’t been designed to provide support to individual students, Walker said. “During this process we’re going to ensure that people who need help that bump into us have avenues open to them,” he said. Walker said his hope is for the commission is to reduce the stigma surrounding mental health on campus. “The hypothesis is the better informed we are, the less stigma … is attached,” he said. Student involvement will be important, Walker said, adding that the commission will encourage students to come into their

weekly Wednesday meetings. The commission hasn’t yet decided how many of these meetings will be open to the public. “I want to hear from people first,” he said. “We’ll have a very active website. We’re communicating by a variety of means.” The website will launch in the next few weeks. Walker said recommendations for initiatives won’t occur right away. “I would stress that in the early weeks we will be in listening and learning mode,” he said. Associate Vice-Principal and Dean of Student Affairs Ann Tierney sits on the commission. She said it will reach out to the AMS, the Society of Graduate and Professional Students (SGPS) and Health, Counseling and Disability Services to ensure broad consultation. “We [also] want to speak to people like residence dons and academic advisors,” she said. The commission will have the capacity to recommend the need for more mental health resources on campus as they see fit. “We’ve been asked to make recommendations — we are well awaresomeoftherecommendations will be how to find funding,” Tierney said. — With files from Terra-Ann Arnone and Jessica Fishbein

An innovative new laboratory on campus will test the applications of renewable energy sources in housing. The goal is to design a practical net-zero house — meaning that will generate as much energy as it consumes. The Queen’s Solar Education Centre (QSEC) is a 640 square-foot house designed by the Queen’s Solar Design Team (QSDT) to test applied alternative energy and green innovations in homes. It was installed on campus at the corner of Union and Division Streets on Sept. 15. The team began designing solar vehicles in 1988 and has since shifted focus to designing affordable, net-zero homes. It consists of eight undergraduate managers with sub-teams of five to 20 students and graduate advisors. Karl Kadwell, project manager for QSDT, said the on campus house won’t be net-zero as it’s primarily a learning tool for QSDT and Engineering students. “Everyone on the team will use QSEC as a laboratory. We also invited professors to use the home for education in classes,” Kadwell, Sci ’13, said, adding that it’s mostly Engineering professors who will use the facility. The house will be open to the public after its grand opening on Oct. 15. In the one open-concept room there will be displays of sustainable products and the mechanisms to track energy generation. It will only be open by appointment due to safety concerns regarding machinery and research, Kadwell said. The house’s energy generation and consumption will change as the team tests different simulations. “We will be changing factors such as thermal mass, shading, windows and [heating, ventilation and air conditioning] to see how the building performs under different conditions,” Kadwell said. QSEC uses sustainable innovations that can be applied See Project on page 7


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