<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/items/browse?collection=8&amp;output=omeka-xml&amp;page=42" accessDate="2026-04-17T15:20:03+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>42</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>591</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="1286" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17914">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/f03bf8471efd66445df77f921b69a483.pdf</src>
        <authentication>b5e37b36ad721a860a2cba353ef156fa</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="124935">
                    <text>Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
November 1996, Vol. 13, No. 9
ISSN 0828-5225

NEW BOARD CHAIR
AIMS TO BE OPEN AND APPROACHABLE
"The greatest challenge facing the Board
ofGovernors today is to maintain the integrity of Lakehead University with the
resources allocated," says the newly
elected Chair Maureen Doig. "There
may be some difficult decisions ahead but
I am hopeful they can be made in the
same manner that previous decisions
have been made -- fairly and equitably."
Maureen Doig has been a member of the
Board since 1988 and is the first woman
to hold the position of Chair. She follows in the footsteps of Pat O'Brien who
served as Chair from 1994 to 1996.
Maureen Doig is a former Intensive Care
Nurse and currently manages the business ofher husband's busy medical practice. She is a member of the Board of
Directors of the Children's Aid Society
and is a founding director of Thunder
Bay Children's Services Foundation
where she currently serves as President.

Maureen Doig
Chair
Lakehead University
Board of Governors

As well as being Chair of the Lakehead University Board of Governors,
Maureen Doig chairs the Board's Executive Committee, the Investment
Committee, and is a member of the Task Force on Funding.
She is Chair of the Council of Chairs of Ontario Universities and Chair of
the National Association of University Board Chairs and Secretaries for
which she is organizing an annual meeting that will take place in Thunder
Bay next April. Among those invited to attend will be all University presidents in Canada.

INSIDE
Shared
Resources
Supporting
Research at
Lakehead
... page 6

Lakehead's new Board Chair is fond of Thunder Bay and sees her volunteer work as an intellectual challenge and a way of giving something back
to her community. She is pleased that the new members elected this year to
the Board of Governors seem to complement the strong volunteer commitment already present on this Board.
If there is one message Maureen Doig would like to get out to faculty and
staff, it is that Lakehead University's Board of Governors is open and approachable. Several years ago, in response to the Broadhurst report on
university accountability, the Board was restructured to include more student and staff representation. Having these additional voices around the
table has proved to be very useful, she says, in helping the Board sort
through the different issues facing the University.
--Frances Harding

Board of Governors
Richard Andison
Joe Baratta
Don Barnes*
Allan Becker
Donald Caron
Anthony Chan*
Kelly Collins*
Maureen Doig, Chair
Jackie Dojack"
Trevor Farrell
Corinne Fox
Christine Frank
Paul Gordon
Mayor David Hamilton
Steve Hessian
Lois Hutchinson*
Tom Jones
Glenna Knutson*
Eric Long*
Bill McDermott
Dusty Miller
John O'Brien
Pat O'Brien
John Pierrnan
Robert Rosehart
Michael Richardson*
Douglas Scott
Ken Sundell
* New Members

�AROUND CAMPUS
ZANATTA ALUMNI MEMORIAL GAMES

NEW COMPUTER LAB

The Annual Zanatta Games, sponsored this year by Campbell &amp; Company Insurance
Brokers and Traders General Insurance Company, attracted about 800 fans to the C.J.
Sanders Fieldhouse and raised $1500 towards the newly established Zanatta Memorial
Bursary Trust Fund. Presentations were made to the recipients of the Zanatta Scholarships who were selected for their leadership, athletic talent and academic excellence.
This year the two recipients are Alicia Gunn and Paul Andrews.
Alicia Gunn is a second-year Academic All Canadian. Last year she was OWIAA West
Rookie of the year, and a member of the All Canadian Rookie Team. She is enrolled in
Economics. Paul Andrews has been an Academic All Canadian the past four years while
attending Lakehead. He graduated in 1996 with a Physics/Math degree, and is now
enrolled in the Faculty of Education. The scholarships were presented by Vince Friyia, a
long-time friend of the Zanatta family. Friyia attended Lakehead with John Zanatta and
was CIAU Hockey Player of the Year 1980.

HAPPY RETIREMENT, PAUL

Avenor executives visited the campus
recently to see how Lakehead handles
its internal and external communications. ·
Included was a tour of the new Pentium
computer lab and a tutorial with CTRC's
Carol Otte.

MISSING
Alumni Services is missing a blue and white
Expo-system display unit. If anyone has information about the unit, contact Rob
Zuback at 343-8916.

TOASTMASTERS
Thunder Bay Toastmasters Club begins a
six-week course in communications skills
specifically for Francophones wishing to
gain skill and confidence in public speaking. It is also an opportunity for those fluent in French to network with other
Francophones at the Port Arthur Ukrainian Prosvita Society Hall on Third Avenue
(off Memorial Avenue) at 7:00 p.m. For infonnation call Yves Prevost (Forestry) at
343-8342.

ALUMNI PHONATHON
Citing his record of giving Lakehead's Chief of Security "Just about everything he
asked for," Executive Director, University Services, Grant Walsh presented Paul
Brezanoczy with a new security vehicle at his retirement party. The tiny, battery
powered truck has all the bells and whistles including the University crest

There have been countless minor incidents on campus during Paul Brezanoczy's 17-year
career but nothing too out of the ordinary with the exception of one incident that took
place last month: a student was stabbed as he was walking home at night along the path
that runs behind the Bora Laskin building.
"I've enjoyed the people I work with as well as the students and faculty that I have met,"
says Brezanoczy. "One of the things that frustrates me the most is when people don't
understand that Security is there to enforce the rules and regulations which benefit everyone." He says some people complain that Security is always bothering people for one
reason or another, when in fact they are just doing their job.
Brezanoczy's retirement plans include relocating to the west coast and travelling the
North American continent, particularly the United States, "while I'm still in good health."
"I would like to say good-bye and thanks to all those I've met and worked with here at the
University."
This article first appeared in the October 29, 1996 issue ofthe Argus. It is reprinted here
(with minor editorial changes) courtesy ofthe Argus.
2

The telephone lines are buzzing at the Avila
Centre as the Alumni Association's annual
phonathon gets underway. This year the
Office of Alumni Services is recruiting staff
and faculty volunteers to assist the student
employees in raising$185,000. To date over
$30,000 has been raised, says Manager of
Alumni Services Rob Zuback.

GETTING THE MESSAGE
OUT
Julie Kress captured the attention of a
MuchMusic film crew when they were on
campus in September to film the Kumbaya
Festival for AIDS awareness. They interviewed the second-year Concurrent Education student in the Health Unit about initiatives at Lakehead to promote safe sex and
responsible use ofalcohol. The two-minute
clip was later aired on the music video station. Kress is an active member of
Lakehead's Alcohol Awareness Committee.

Agora, November, 1996

�FACULTY APPROACHED TO
MAKE THEIR
CONTRIBUTION
to Lakehead's $1 million Ontario
Student Opportunity Trust Fund
(OSOTF) Campaign

Dick MacGillivray believes it's important
for faculty to do their part to ensure that
Lakehead's enrolment stays healthy.
That is why he has volunteered to contact
all academic units on campus and apprise
them of the Government of Ontario's program to match dollar for dollar all funds
raised for student financial aid before
March 31, 1997.
To date Lakehead has raised over $660,000
towards its $1 million goal.
The Department of Geography was the first department to create a named endowment for $5,000. Volunteer Dick MacGi/livray (left) is shown with the Chair of the
Department Brian Lorch (centre) and the LU OSOTF campaign Co-chair Fred
Poulter.

MacGillivray says the response from faculty has been encouraging but more participation is required to meet our faculty
goal.
While topnotch students' may be able to finance their education through scholarships,
MacGillivrary says he is worried about the
mid-range students who are capable of handling the academic demands of a university program but may need assistance to finance their education.
"More and more the government is shifting responsibility for the financing of education to the individual," he says. "Without such programs as the OSOTF, there is
a very real tendency that the privileged few
will attend university and the unprivileged
many will not."
MacGillivray says that in a minority of
cases there is a sense in which people feel
they have contributed enough through the

Share Our Northern Vision Campaign.

Chemical engineering professor
Venugopala Rao Puttagunta created a
30th Anniversary Bursary in recognition
of his wife, Krishna.

Geology professor Roger Mitchell and
his wife Val Dennison established a LU
30th Anniversary Bursary in Geology.

"But then we've had to explain that the timing of this campaign is not ours. Effectively
all we're doing is taking advantage of the
opportunity the government has given us.
It's simply too good an opportunity to pass
up." -- FH

For more information about the LU OSOTF
campaign contact Jo-Anne Silverman at
343-8910.
Agora, November, 1996

3

�l d44•h•iad•Mlhii4d¥JM4H---------------------Personalized Approach to Quit Smoking
An innovative program will again be available to the members of
the Lakehead University community and general public. First
preference will be given to the University community members.
The program takes six weeks with a once a week appointment lasting between 30-45 minutes.
It is known that smoking behaviour is a very serious behavioural
and biological addiction. Hence to quit smoking and maintain
smoke-free behaviour is a difficult task, however, it is possible to
break this habit and be smoke-free for the rest ofyour life.

Ifyou are determined to

quit smoking, then this program is for
you. A deposit of $100 will be required. However, $25 will be
refunded at the successful completion of the program, another
$25 will be refunded after three months being smoke-free and the
remaining $50 will be refundedfor being smoke-free for one year.

Robert G. Rosehart
President, Lakehead University

For consultation and appointment contact 346-QUIT (346-7848)
at Lakehead University. For further information contact Paul
Satinder, Department ofPsychology, at 343-8441.

Passings
Congratulations to the School of Nursing
Word has just been received from the College of Nurses ofOntario
that I 00 per cent of our 1996 class (32 graduates) that wrote the
CNA Nurses Registration Examination passed the examination.
Few institutions achieve the I 00 per cent pass rate and a special
congratulations goes to the graduates and the Nursing faculty on
this accomplishment.

Teaching Jobs Available in Korea
The Registrar has details on Teaching Opportunities (ESL) for
recent graduates available in Seoul, South Korea.

Good News from CIDA
An official announcement will be made shortly (or already depending upon the Agora publication date) about an exciting new
project to be supported by CIDA. Particular congratulations go to
John Naysmith and the Faculty offorestry team (JoAnn Crichlow
and Ulf Runesson) involved in the new project and to Anne
Klymenko in the Office of Graduate Studies and Research for all
their hard work in the various proposals. This award is yet another proof of the saying that no matter how tough the competition looks, it is better to compete than not to challenge the mountain.

Take Heart Network
I recently attended a seminar put on by the Thunder Bay District
Health Unit to launch the Take Heart Network. Lakehead University faculty from Nursing and Kinesiology participated. A key
message related to indicators and risk factors in heart disease and
smoking has often been singled out as a significant risk factor. As
you may know, in the past Paul Satinder of the Department of
Psychology has run a successful program aimed at smoking and
below is the notice regarding his next program. Please give it
your every consideration.

This past month has been a tough one in that we have lost several
old friends and supporters ofLakehead University: Betty Coates,
the long-serving Alumni Board Member and past President who
served the Alumni organization in many, many capacities as well
as Ted Christiansen, our long-term labour representation to the
Lakehead University Board of Governors. Special acknowledgements are due for the service they gave to the betterment of
Lakehead University over the years.

Registration 1997
A small group representing various departments involved with
registration has met on two occasions to discuss some of the problems encountered with this past year's registration process. Further work will be focused on the steps to be taken to improve the
experience for our students in the Fall '97 process. John Whitfield
will coordinate this effort along with Pentti Paularinne, the Registrar's Office staff and Student Services. As part of a more timely
process, all course/program changes for the 97/98 Calendar will
have to be passed through Senate by the January 1997 meeting.

Retirees
As you know, Paul Brezanoczy is retiring shortly from the position of Chief of Security at Lakehead University. I recently received a copy ofa letter of thanks t9 Paul written by a student and
I have taken the liberty of extracting a few paragraphs:

"During the passage of the summer months and on up to this
present date, I have been very impressed with all the members of
the Security department. Studying and generally working at the
University many offhours, I have had the necessity ofasking questions, and seeking assistance of the people that make up your
department. In every situation I have found these people to be
courteous, professional and helpful.
...continued on page 5

4

Agora, November, 1996

�Being a student who has spent a number ofyears in industry, I
have found this constructive, positive attitude ofthe security personnel to be very refreshing. All too often, people with power
tend to use it to express their own self worth and not as a tool for
the purpose ofhelping others.

A Tip from CTRC

I believe that this attitude is a reflection ofyour style and I wanted
to say... Thanks!"

□

■1

Thank you, Paul, for all your efforts on behalf of the Lakehead
University community.

Jobs, Jobs, Jobs and a Degree
The debate rages on but consider this interesting twist. Statistics
Canada has, for a long time, shown that your best bet to employment is via a university degree. In spite of this, the folklore continues about college grads and private vocational school graduates
having better employment opportunities.
Recently I was given some interesting data on student loan default
rates. If you were to accept the premise that a low loan default
translates into the probability of employment success, consider
the following data:
For 1993-1994
Average Ont. University Student Default Rate:

11.5%

(Lakehead University was 9. 7% one of the lowest 5 in Ontario)
Average Ont. Community College Student
Default Rate:

21.3%

Private Vocational Schools:

Interesting data!

Board Chair Changes
Elsewhere in this issue you will read
about our incoming Board Chair
Maureen Doig. I would like to acknowledge the hard work. long hours and difficult issues faced by outgoing Pat
O'Brien during his term in the position
of Board Chair. Pat devotes a tremendous amount of personal time to public
service and you will see him return to
the public eye next year as the United
Way Campaign Chair for 1997.

Student Opportunity Trust
Fund
We are well on our way to the $1 million target with about $660,000
pledged to date. Geography has taken a leadership role as a department and I encourage all other academic and administrative
departments to respond to their leadership.

Agora, November, 1996

Disk Space on the Administrative Servers
By Christine Nielsen
Senior Network Analyst
Communications Technology Research Centre

From time to time it is important to remind people to delete unnecessary files from the servers SKY and GALE.
These servers provide applications and services to over 1,000 faculty and staff users and have a combined total disk space of 14
gigabytes. This may sound like a lot of disk space, but it is not
when you consider that the average PC is shipped from the manufacturer with a gigabyte of disk space. This makes it impossible
for the servers to act as backup areas for local hard drives for
1,000 users. Even if the average user only has IO megabytes of
space in their account, IO megabytes times 1000 users equals 10
gigabytes! With the applications, mail, personal windows, and
system files also required to be on the server, this doesn't leave
room for many personal files.
User account space is an important issue. Lately, many people
have complained that they have received error messages when starting E-mail. The cause of these messages turned out to be that
there was no room left in their account to send/receive mail. Deleting old or unnecessary E-mail messages is a good start.
Many people also subscribe to listserves and fill their account with
E-mail. There is no need to be a member of a listserve, since most
listserves have associated newsgroups where you can read the same

postings.
Finally, work files can be copied to the c:drive and/or to floppy
disks to remove them from the server. Just make sure you make
backup copies of any files that you have on your c:drive as you
wouldn't want to lose your work!
The number of administrative accounts has grown from 450 to
over I 000 in the last year and this growth is expected to continue
in the future. This makes disk space a scarce resource. So let's all
chip in and try to keep disk space usage on the servers to a minimum.

5

�RESEARCH NEWS
Lakehead University's

Environmental Lab
SHARED RESOURCES SUPPORTING
RESEARCH AT LAKEHEAD
by Sara Hatherly
In these times of funding cuts to post-secondary institutions,
Lakehead University has found an innovative way to acquire additional funds for research.
Through its Centre for Analytical Services (LUCAS), Lakehead
is providing laboratory services to industry on a contract basis
while using the extra revenue earned by the Centre to support
ongoing student and faculty research.
The Environmental Lab, found on the third floor of the Centennial Building, is one of four laboratories that make up the Centre
for Analytical Services. It specializes in the analysis of aquatic
and forest-based soils, plant tissue, and water. Analytical services
include soils nutrient and physical parameter testing, wetlands
analysis, and forest soils profiling. In fact, some of the most frequently performed tests in the Environmental Lab include testing
for common elements of soils such as nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium, iron, manganese, copper, calcium and magnesium.
Looking after the day to day activities of the Environmental Lab
is Peter Lee, a professor in the Department of Biology. Lee started
the Lab in conjunction with his Wild Rice project. When funding
cutbacks saw the end of that particular project, the activity of Lee's
lab was renewed through an affiliation with the Centre for Analytical Services.
Lakehead's Dean of Graduate Studies and Research Connie Nelson was instrumental in initiating the process of bringing potential academic users together to form the Soils Advisory Committee. The outcome has been the establishment of the Environmental Laboratory.
Says Nelson, "The creation of the Environmental Laboratory has
allowed Peter Lee's expertise to address a variety of unmet needs
in the region for scientific analytic testing. At the same time, the
establishment of this laboratory is providing an essential source of
income to acquire specialized equipment and qualified staff that
Dr. Lee applies to basic research and the training of graduate stUdents. In addition, the acquisition of this new equipment has meant
that Dr. Lee is able to instruct a Limnology course that provides
students with a valuable knowledge base in fresh water lakes."
As well as serving as Academic Supervisor, Peter Lee is Chair of
the Soils Group which provides academic input for the operation
of the lab. The purpose of the multi-disciplinary Soils Group is to
develop more effective ways of producing the tests required for
academic soils programs here at Lakehead. Current members of
the Soils Group represent a variety of academic disciplines including Civil Engineering, Geology, Anthropology, Biology, and
Forestry.

Biology professor Peter Lee uses the Environmental
Lab to conduct research in the area of environmental
assessment and bioremedfation.

At any given time as much as 40 per cent of the Environmental
Lab's work is done for the Centre for Northern Forest Ecosystem
Research. CNFER is not the laboratory's sole contract client, however. Other clients include Sturgeon Organics and Avenor Inc.
Recently Placer Dome signed an agreement with Lakehead to sponsor the work of three graduate students who will help the company
do some environmental assessment work related to the company's
interest in a new mine in Northwestern Ontario. The students will
use the Environmental Lab to conduct water, soil and plant tissue
samples.
"This is a new development," says Peter Lee, "and may lead to
further work in the area of bioremediation." Bioremediation involves the use of plants to contain or correct environmental problems caused by pollution. It is field of study that is of particular
interest to Peter Lee.

For further information about the Environmental Lab contact
Peter Lee at 343-8662.
Sara Hatherly wrote this article for S.P.A.R.K. - Lakehead, a
student writing program sponsored by The Chronicle-Journal.

A number of representatives of the Centre for Northern Forest
Ecosystem Research (CNFER) work with the Soils Group including Len Meyers an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Forestry.
Meyers utilizes the lab for his research into the areas of forest
stripping and cultivation of soils.
6

Agora, November, 1996

�What's New in the Library
THE VIRTUAL LIBRARY
The Chancellor Paterson Library, in partnership with Statistics Canada and Canada Communication Group Publishing, is participating in a pilot project to assess the impact of
replacing print publications with electronic equivalents. Beginning in September and
running for 12 months, a selection of government publications will only be available
through the Internet. The project includes titles such as Consumer Prices and Price
Indexes, Education Quarterly Review, Travel-log, Health Reports, Juristat, Hansard and
Canada Gazette. For more information about the Electronic Publications Pilot, contact
the Government Documents Librarian at 343-8147 or visit the Library's web page.

FIRST SEARCH
On September 30th, the Library began subscribing to a new service called FirstSearch
for a trial period. This Internet accessible service is available to all faculty, staff and
students of Lakehead University and provides access to approximately 50 databases of
information. The majority of these databases offer citations to periodical literature, and
several which were not previously available include:

ABl/lnfonn - indexes 1,000 business and management periodicals
ArtAbstracts - abstracts from 200 international art publications
Dissertation Abstracts - doctoral dissertations
EconLit - corresponds to Journal of Economic Literature Environment - key areas of
environmental sciences
INSPEC - covers physics, electrical engineering, computing
RILM - abstracts of music literature

Those wishing to use FirstSearch must first attend a FirstSearch class offered in the
Library. Please contact the Information Desk at Extension 8302 for dates and times of
scheduled classes.

SEARCHABLE DATABASES THROUGH THE WORLD WIDE
WEB
If you would like to search for articles in health, education, computing, social sciences,
humanities and sciences you should try some of these databases now available through
the World Wide Web. URLs are provided below, however, these sites are also linked to
the Library's web page.
ZDNET (http://home..zdnet.com/) This is the Ziff-Davis Publishing page through which
you can search the contents of many popular computer magazines such as PC Computing, MacWeek and many others. Some full-text articles are available.
UNCOVER (http://www.carl.org/uncover) This database allows you to search the contents of over 15,000 journals and magazines in many subject areas. Searching can be
performed with information from the title, author or journal name. It is also possible to
browse through the tables of contents ofjournal issues.
MEDSCAPE (http://www.medscape.com) Through this page, you can search the
National Library of Medicine's Medline database.
ERIC (http://www.ericir.syr.edu/) This page allows you to search the ERIC database.
The ERIC database contains references to articles in education and education related
journals.

Agora, November, 1996

7

�ld41¥4d9=tUl•ii¥49UiUc---------------------Said Easa (Civil Engineering) has been
elevated to the membership level of
"Fellow" within the Canadian Society for
Civil Engineering (CSCE).

"The distinction of fellow has been
conferred on Easa in recognition of his
excellence in engineering and for services
rendered to his profession and to
Canada," says the certificate of award
given to Easa by President Dan Burns at
the CSCE Annual Conference, held in
Ottawa, June 1995. Easa is Chair of the
CSCE Transportation Division and Chair
of the (first ever) CSCE Transportation
Specialty Conference to be held in
Edmonton, May 29 - June I, 1996.
Easa was a keynote speaker at The AlAzhar Fourth International Engineering
Conference, held in Cairo, December 1619, 1995. The title of this opening
lecture was "Intelligent Transportation
Systems: Past, Present, and Future." At
this conference, the following papers
were presented by Easa and his graduate
students: "New Methodology for Available Sight Distance in Two-Dimensional
Horizontal and Vertical Alignments,"
"Modelling Creep Behaviour of Polymeric Grids," "The Development of InSitu Test Facility of Determination of
Shear Strength of Asphalt Layers,"
"Nonparametric Analysis of Pavement
Reliability," and "Thermal Stress Analysis of Asphalt Overlays." The first two
papers were presented by Y. Hassan (a
PhD student currently working at
Lakehead University) and the other
papers by R. Abdel Nabi, A. Sherif and
Easa, respectively. The papers, coauthored by Abd El Halim of Carleton
University, were also published in the
conference proceedings.
Easa presented a paper entitled "Effect of
Road Geometry on Cracking of Asphalt
Pavements" at the Transportation Congress of the American Society of Civil
Engineers (ASCE), held in San Diego,
October, 1995. Easa chaired The Planning Track of the Congress (seven
technical sessions) and was a member of
the Steering Committee of this international congress. A paper entitled "Design
Considerations of Passing Sight Distance
and Passing Zones" was presented by Y.
Hassan (co-authored by Easa and A.
Abd El Halim) at the International
Symposium on Highway Geometric
Design Practices, held in Boston, September, 1995.

8

Easa wrote two articles entitled "Electric
Vehicles Soon a Reality" and "Underpass
and Bridge Construction without Traffic
Interruption" in the Canadian Civil
Engineering Magazine, CSCE, December
1995, and published the following journal
papers: "Estimating Line-Segment
Reliability Using Monte Carlo Simulation," Journal ofSurveying and Land
Information Systems, Vol. 55, No. 3,
1995, and "Sight Distance on Horizontal
Alignments with Continuous Lateral
Obstructions," Transportation Research
Record 1500, 1995, the latter paper was
authored by Y. Hassan, Easa, and Abd El
Halim.
Fakhri Karray (Electrical Engineering)
co-chaired the First International Conference on Technology Parks and Transfer
of Knowledge, held in Tunis, Tunisia,
July 1996. Many world renowned experts
in the different areas of science and
technology have attended the Conference.
Karray has also been recently appointed
by the IEEE Control Systems Society
Board of Governor to serve on its
Conference Editorial Board. He has been
invited to present a tutorial on Aspects of
Leaming and Identification in Automation Systems during the IEEE International Conference on Industrial Technology, to be held in Shanghai, China,
December I 996.

Karray has been appointed a member of
the organizing committee of the IEEE
International Symposium on Intelligent
Control, to be held in Istanbul, Turkey,
July, 1997, and a member of the International Program Committee of the Second
International Symposium on Intelligent
Automation and Control to be held in
Anchorage, Alaska, in May, 1998.
A chapter co-authored by F. Karray and
C. de Silva entitled "Leaming Systems
and Identification" will appear in 1997 in
the Universal Encyclopedia of Life
Supporting Systems. Karray wrote a
comprehensive review of two well
regarded books written by C. de Silva and
E. Cox in the area of Fuzzy Logic as
applied to industry and business. It will
be published in the IEEE Spectrum
Magazine, the widest read technical
magazine of any professional society. In
addition he has attended and chaired
three technical sessions in the 25th IEEE
SMC and published recently the following journal papers: "Stiffening Control of
a Class of Nonlinear Affine Systems,"
IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and
Electronics, vol. 33, no. 2 (co-authors M.
Glaum and A. Grewal); "Systems Identification by Means of Bilinear lnterpolators," in Journal ofSystems Analysis,
Modeling and Control, in press (co-

A "Friend of NSERC" Certificate was presented by the President of Lakehead Bob
Rosehart to Stephan (Steve) Dudzinski ofthe Kakabeka Falls Game Farm. The nomination was put forth by Murray Lankester of the Biology Department (right) in recognition of Dudzlnskl's support and expertise provided over the past 20 years to
NSERC-funded research on the health of large boreal mammals. If anyone at
Lakehead would like to acknowledge their indebtedness to a private citizen for
support given to their NSERC-funded research program, nominations can be sent
to NSERC in Ottawa by Fax at (613) 943-0742 or E-mail: COMM@NSERC.CA.

Agora, November, 1996

�authors: T. Dwyer and D. Makrakis.);
"Robust Slewing of a Class ofFlexible
Spacecraft Systems," in IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, vol. 40, no.
11 (co-author V. Modi); "Composite
Control Scheme for Joint Tracking and
Active Vibration Suppression of Mobile
Flexible Manipulator Systems," in Acta
Astronautica, vol.36, no.5 (co-authors V.
Modi and H. Mah).
Margaret Johnston (Geography)
presented a paper entitled "Evaluating
the Effectiveness of Visitor Regulation
Strategies for Polar Tourism" at the Polar
Tourism: Environmental Implications
and Management" Conference at the
Scott Polar Research Institute in Cambridge, England, August 19-21, 1996.
Peter Duinker (Forestry) has accepted
an invitation to join the Honorary
Editorial Advisory Board for the Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems
(EOLSS). The EOLSS is a major
international effort to synthesize current
knowledge related to global sustainable
development, water, energy, environment, food and agriculture, and knowledge foundations. It will be published
during 1988 in both paper (about 60
volumes of some 45,000 pages) and CDROM.
Jim McAuliffe (Kinesiology) presented
a paper entitled "Vision and verbal
knowledge of results (KR) as nonredundant sources of information in the
acquisition of a linear positioning
movement" at the Canadian Society for
Psychomotor Leaming and Sport Psychology annual conference held in
Vancouver, British Columbia, October
26-29, 1995.

In addition, McAuliffe collaborated with
Eric Buckolz and Cam O' Donnell of The
University of Western Ontario on three
papers which were presented at the
conference. The papers entitled "Escaping response interference in a choice
reaction time task I: Without post
stimulus involvement," "Escaping
response interference in a choice reaction
time task II: With post stimulus involvement" were presented by Buckolz.
O ' Donnell presented a paper entitled
"Inhibition of return: The effect of post
saccade processing." The work is a
result of a joint research effort between
Buckolz, McAuliffe and O'Donnell.
McAuliffe has been appointed to the
board of directors of the Canadian
Agora, November, 1996

Olympic Association (COA). The
appointment is a result of Dr. McAuliffe's
association with Squash Canada.
In April Douglas Thom (Education) gave
three lectures at the University of the West
Indies (UWI), Bridgetown, Barbados. Two
were on the theme "Leadership in Organizations" for an undergraduate and a
graduate education student group; the
other was a public lecture on "Educational
Leadership with Christian Conscience:
Focus on Understanding, Finance, and the
Future." His visit was sponsored by the
Faculty of Education, UWI and the
Caribbean Society for Educational
Administration. He met Fentey Scott
(Education) who was on sabbatical leave
at UWI working on the UWI/Lakehead
University cooperative venture of course
development and design of a training
program for educational management in
small states in the Eastern Caribbean.
UWI plans to publish Thom's public
lecture.
In August he made a presentation at the
International Conference of the Commonwealth Council for Educational Administration, "Indigenous Perspectives of
Educational Management," in Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia. There he gave the
keynote address "Educational Leadership
Worldwide: The Christian Conscience
Factor" to 450 delegates from around the
world. His son, Wes, accompanied him
and they met several student groups.
Thom's 1996 book Leadership Worldwide: The Christian Conscience Factor,
published by the Hong Kong Council For
Educational Administration, was a basis
for the address which itself is published in
the book Keynote Papers ofthe 8th
International Conference of the Commonwealth Council for Educational Administration (CCEA), Kuala Lumpur, August
1996, available from the publisher Institut Aminuddin Baki (IAB), Ministry
of Education, Malaysia, Sri Layang,
69000 Genting Highlands, Pahang,
Malaysia.
Thom has been invited to speak on his
original TELC and TLCC Models of
Leadership at Harvard University and
several other institutions overseas. He
was one of two CCEA nominees for a
1996 Commonwealth Foundation Fellowship.

m

MIRIAM LAPPALA
International Student Advisor

Enough winter coats were donated this
year for Miriam Lappa/a to distribute one
to just about every new student The coat
drive is one of the many programs and
services offered by Lakehead to help International students adjust to life in Thunder Bay.

Miriam Lappala knows first-hand what it
is like to be an international student at a
Canadian university. Born and raised in
Zaire, she came to Canada after high school
to pursue her undergraduate degree in Sociology at the University of Western Ontario. She says her experience growing up
in Africa has made her sensitive to the complexities involved in cultural adjustment.
The job of the International Student Advisor is to provide ongoing assistance to
Lakehead's 91 international students.
Lappala acts as a liaison, providing counse II ing, assisting with student visas,
healthcare, and maintaining a Host Family
program which links the international student with friends in the community.
Her secondary role involves raising awareness of cultural and global issues. One of
her projects this year is to help to coordinate the annual celebration oflnternational
Days, a week-long celebration scheduled for
January 27- Feb. I, 1997.
Although enrolment by International students this year has declined over last year,
Lappala believes this will change once information is communicated about the decrease in tuition fees for International students. Their fees have declined from
$13,278 to $8,840 per year.
9

�ld@@;A=iUl•iitS=ii~G---------------------DECANAL SEARCH

VISITING HUMANITIES SCHOLARS

Gary Locker's tenn as Dean of Engineering ends on June 30, 1997.
The Search Committee for a Dean of Engineering is requesting
written comments from members of the University community
about the general state of the Faculty of Engineering and its future
development. Comments to the Committee should be submitted
to Beverley Stefureak, Secretary of the Search Committee, UC2009, FAX 807-343-8075, e-mail bev.stefureak@lakeheadu.ca, no
later than Monday, November 18, 1996, 4:00 p.m. All comments
will be treated as confidential to the Committee.

1996-97 marks the third year that humanities scholars working in
conjunction with the Native Philosophy Project are engaged in
research activities at Lakehead University. This year the campus
welcomes four scholars whose work at Lakehead is being funded
by a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. The following information is taken from their resumes.

ATTENTION RESEARCHERS
Lakehead University is a participant in the Data Liberation Initiative (DLI), a pilot project to provide Statistics Canada data files
and databases for teaching and research purposes.
The DLI is a cooperative effort among the Humanities and Social
Sciences Federation of Canada (HSSFC), the Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL), the Canadian Association of
Public Data Users (CAPDU), the Canadian Association of Small
University Libraries (CASUL), Statistics Canada and other government departments. Lakehead University has subscribed to this
consortium-like organization which will purchase data files on a
cost-shared basis from Statistics Canada. The data files to be covered under this initiative consist of a broad range of specialized
survey files currently not available in paper fonnat.
For further infonnation regarding the Data Liberation Initiative,
please contact Linda Mitchell, Government Documents Librarian
(ext. 8147) or Valerie Gibbons, Search Services Librarian (ext.
8129) in The Chancellor Paterson Library. Some of your questions may be answered by checking the DLI FAQ (FrequentlyAsked
Questions) in the World Wide Web (http://www.statcan.ca/Documents/English/Dli/faq.htm). Information regarding the DLI (including a list of files available and those received so far) will also
be available on the Library HomePage in November.

ABORIGINAL PEOPLES' CONFERENCE
More than 110 participants from around the world converged on
Lakehead last month to exchange ideas about indigenous peoples'
education, literature, environment, history, language, politics, art,
identity, health and social issues, land rights, philosophy, and legal and political issues.
They included scholars from as far away as Australia, Great Britain and Taiwan. Also included were some of the scholars who are
visiting Lakehead this year thanks to funding provided by the
Rockefeller Foundation: Jim Cheney, Viola Cordova, and Michael
Pomedli.
Doug West (Political Science), one of the key organizers, said the
purpose of the Conference was "to create a gathering place for
intellectual and spiritual sharing." Overall he was pleased with
the event although he would have liked more Lakehead faculty to
participate. The conference was free to students and West estimates that about 50 students participated throughout the weekend.

Partial funding for the Conference was provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC).
West and his colleagues will be coordinating the publication of
the conference proceedings.
10

Jim Cheney is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin - Waukesha who received in PhD and MA from the University of Wisconsin. Cheney's research interests for the past I0
years have mainly been in the areas of environmental ethics and
ecological feminism. He considers First Nations' philosophies, particularly as they pertain to questions of ethical and epistemological relationships to nature, his primary research area. He can be
contacted by telephoning 346-7898.
Viola Cordova comes to Lakehead after spending the past year as
visiting scholar with the Philosophy Department of Oregon State
University. There her responsibilities included giving courses on
World Views and Environmental Values; Native American Philosophy; and Concepts of the Sacred. Her dissertation for the PhD
in Philosophy she earned from the University of New Mexico was
entitled "The Concept of Monism in Navajo Thought." She can be
contacted by telephone at 346-7899.
Ryan Parr works with the Department of Hematology/Oncology
at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah. Parr has a PhD
in Biological Anthropology from the same institution. His current
research interests include the use of molecular methods to determine population genetics of ancient groups from the New World
and particularly the ancient Near East. He can be reached by calling 343-8632.
Michael M. Pomedli is a Professor of Philosophy at St. Thomas
More College, University of Saskatchewan, who has a PhD from
Duquesne University, Pennsylvania, and a Master of Divinity from
St John's University, Collegeville, Minneapolis. Titles of recent
books he has published are Whole to Part: Tensions in Western
Thinking and Aboriginal Cultures, 1996; Ethnophilosophical and
Ethnolinguistic Perspectives on the Huron Indian Soul, 1991; and
William Kurelek's Huronia Mission Paintings, 1991. His phone
number is 346-7897.

Group Home &amp; Auto Insurance
Plan
for LUfaculty, staff&amp; alumni
Sponsored by

Lakehead University
Alumni Association
"Save money and help the Association at the same time"

Call for a Quote
1-800-327-5580
Agora, November, 1996

�SPECIAL NOT£ ON YOUR BEN£FIT COV£RA6£:
In the October issue of The Agora we told you that the carrier for our Group Life Insurance coverage had been
changed to Sun Life.

Please note that this is life insurance only
- no changes have been made to our medical, dental or vision insurance!!

However, this past summer the Canadian part of The Prudential Company of America was purchased by London Life, and
you will notice a name change on any correspondence you may receive from them. There has been no change in our policy
- all benefits are the same. We will continue to submit claims on the Prudential forms until new forms arrive.

Remember, information will be coming your way soon regarding the new Optional Life Insurance and Voluntary AD&amp;D
Insurance - watch for it!!

We're now on the Internet!!

Benefit Rates:
Employees often ask what the actual premiums are for LU
benefits:
Family
Single
Coverage
Coverage
S60.18/mo
$19.94/mo
Medical Benefits
S59.67/mo
$26.74/mo
Basic Dental Benefits
S 6.04/mo
$ 2.00/mo
Vision Benefits
Supplemental Dental
$20.89/mo
Benefits (if applicable) $ 8.29/mo
Retired Faculty and Senior Employees:
$101.22/mo
Medical Benefits
$50.62/mo
S 60.30/mo
Basic Dental Benefits
$30.14/mo
Long Term Disability Benefits - $0.626 x monthly salary
Group Life Insurance - $0.24 per $ 1,000 of annual salary
times whatever coverage you have (1.5 , 2 or 3 times)
Note: All rates include PST.

Benefits information
can be found on LUCI, as we have told you previously, but it
is now also available through the Lakehead University Home
Page on the Internet!! Just click on Administrative
Departments, then Human Resources, and see what's
available!! Besides benefits information, you'll also find some
collective agreements and holiday schedules. Please let us
know what you think of it - just e-mail us at
Judy. bertrand@lakeheadu.ca.

Be sure to read your pay advice (pay deposit
stub) - It contains important information.

Is This The Aging Process?
Average number of times per day a 5-year-old laughs: 150
A 45-year-old middle manager:

8

Some Frequently Asked Questions about Benefits:
Q What is Lakehead University's coverage for chiropractors?
A Our plan will reimburse up to $8 per visit (to a maximum of$200 per calendar year) for chiropractic treatment, but only
afteryour OHIP maximum has been reached!! Your chiropractor will know when you have reached this limit, and will then
begin charging you the entire cost of the treatment. Once you are being charged this entire cost, you can start submitting your
receipts to Prudential/London Life for reimbursement.
Q Is massage therapy covered under our plan?
A Yes, treatment by a licensed masseuse is covered up to $8 per visit to a maximum of$200 per calendar year,providedyou
have a written referral from your physician.

Quote ofthe Month:

The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never simple.

INHUNfl NJJ1OUI
Agora, November, 1996

Oscar Wilde

Human Resources
Telephone
343-8334
Fax number
346-7701
11

�CALENDAR

~---------------BIOLOGY SEMINAR
-:SERIES
November 11 Monday 3:30 PM
Ken Deacon and Aparna Nirdosh,
Biology: Senate Chambers
"Rain Forest Destruction and its
Consequences."

•
:

November 22 Friday 7:00 PM
El Mollo, Anthropology: Regional
Centre 1001: ''Two possible cases
of lepromatous leprosy from the
Dakleh Oasis in Egypt."

•
-

November 28 Thursday 11:30 AM
Lee Hester, History: CB 3012:
"American Indians, denial and bad
science."

-

-

January 16 Thursday 11 :30 AM
Linda Spooner, Regional Health
Laboratory: UC 0050 "Genetic
counseling."
January 23 Thursday 11 :30 AM
Lada Malek, Biology: UC 0050:
"Plant desiccation tolerance: a dry
topic for biophysics?"
January 30 Thursday 7:00 PM
I. Smith, LUSTR Co-op: Regional
Centre 0005: "LUSTR Co-op and
New Technologies for Production of
Forestry Seedlings."

-

February 6 Thursday 11:30AM
Jake Vander Wal, Ont. Min. Envir.
UC 0050: "How Science is becoming less important in Society."
February 13 Thursday 11:30 AM
lnderjit Nirdosh, Biology: UC 0050:
"Allelopathy in Annual and Perennial weeds."
February 27 Thursday 3:30 PM
Michael McPherson, Highview
Animal Clinic: Regional Centre
1002: TBA topic in veterinary
medicine

March 6 Thursday 11 :30 AM
- Azim Mallik: Biology UC 0050:
"Tree-shrub-mycorrhizal interactions:
implications for retrogressive succession and forest management."

••
•

----•
-.-■

-

•••
--

LUMINA CONCERT SERIES

1996-97
Concerts are held in the Jean McNulty
Recital Hall Music and Visual Arts Centre
12:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted.

November 17
Frederic Lacroix, piano
Ontario Young Artist Competition winner,
sponsored by the Canadian Federation of
Music Teachers' Associations and the
Thunder Bay Branch of the Ontario
Registered Music Teachers' Association
(Note: 2:00 p.m.)
Subscriptions and tickets available from
the Department of Music. For further
information call 343-8787.

FORESTRY SEMINAR
SERIES
November 18

Yves Prevost will speak on the topic
"Peru: A Land of Challenges and Opportunity" on Monday, November 18, 1996
at 4:00 pm in Room: RB 2042.
Slide Presentation. Everyone Welcome.

••
•

--••••
•

--•-

March 12 Wednesday 7:00 PM
Ronald Mahler, M.D. FRCPC:
RC 0005 "Skin cancer."
March 20 Thursday 11 :30 AM
Nicholas Escott and team, Thunder
_ Bay Regional Hospital UC 0050:
- "Pathology as a career choice in the ■
- 1990s."
■

----------■-----■----

12

DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC

CIIA PUBLIC LECTURE
November 21

Daryl Copeland, Director, National
Programs, Canadian Institute of International Affairs, will speak on the topic
"Canada in the Pacific Century" on
Thursday, November 21, 1996 at 8:00 pm
in the Regional Centre Room RC 1001 at
Lakehead University
Everyone Welcome. Admission Free.
The event is co-sponsored by the LU
Department of History and Air Canada.

Deadline for submissions
to the December Agora:
December 2, 1996

CHANCELLOR PATERSON
LIBRARY HOURS
Regular Hours
Monday to Thursday
8:00 a.m. to 11 :30 p.m.
Friday
8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Saturday
10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Sunday
12:00 noon to 9:00 p.m.

Agora
November, 1996

Vol. 13, No. 9

Agora is published by the Information Office of the Department of Student Services and Community Relations. The newsletter is distributed
monthly (except for July and August)
to faculty, staff and friends of
Lakehead University.
Director of Student Services and
Community Relations:
Joy Himmelman
Publications Officer:
Frances Harding
Communications/Special Events
Officer: Denise Bruley
Administrative Assistant:
Betty Hygaard
Photography:
Peter Puna and Staff
Graphics:
Ben Kaminski &amp; Nicole Sutherland
Printing: LU Print Shop
Submissions of interest to the
University community are welcome. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7B 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8999
E-mail:
frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

-..

~---- - - -- - - -- ----=====-- - - - - --=-=-=-=-=-=-=-~--i;~~~
()::!J

C. Trojan
.
Externa l Rela~io n s

o§.

~
~

0

VI
VI

~"'"-g

(")
'"O
_...,

0

88(')

a'

(D

a.

~

H!

~3
(D (D

8(')'8

\.•

Agora, November, 1996

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7137">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.13 No.9</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7138">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7139">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an article on the new Board Chair Maureen Doig, a message from the President, and research updates.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7140">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7141">
                <text>1996-11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Agora</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1197">
        <name>Board Chair</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1183">
        <name>Board of Governors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="538">
        <name>Dr. R. Rosehart</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1198">
        <name>Maureen Doig</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1062">
        <name>President's Perspective</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1285" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17934">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/8de66df98dc3f3c61026732851501496.pdf</src>
        <authentication>caca09ae57e2941cca04884f3e0e03ae</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="124955">
                    <text>Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
May 1996, Vol.. 13, No.5

Convocation
'96
Saturday, May 25, 1996
Thunder Bay Community Auditorium

Lenore Untinen
Doctor ofSocial Work
honoris causa

Lome G. Everett
Doctor of Science
honoris causa

Convocation will have a distinctly northern flavour this year with five out of six
honorary degree recipients having strong
connections with Northwestern Ontario.
They include women's advocate Leni
Untinen, scientist Lome Everett, as well
as three locally-born businessmen who
have gone on to pursue successful careers
in engineering and transportation: Mel
Pervais, Robert Paterson and Ronald
Ristimaki.
Mae Katt, a Lakehead graduate and
former employee, will be awarded the title Fellow of the University, while Joe
Logozzo, a long-time supporter of
Lakehead University, will be presented
with the prestigious Alumni Honour
Award.

Melvin Pervais
Doctor of Engineering
honoris causa

Robert Paterson
Doctor of Laws
honoris causa

Poet and literary critic Louis Dudek will
address the morning Convocation which
begins at 9:00 a.m. Melvin Pervais, an
engineer, entrepreneur and member of
the Fort William Indian Band, will address the afternoon Convocation beginning at 2:30 p.m.

Celebrate
Canadian
Occupational
Health

&amp; Safety Week
June 3-9, 1996.

The number ofdegrees being granted this
year should come close to last year's
record-breaking total of 2,105. Assistant
Registrar Brenda Nelson says she is expecting the University will confer at least
1,903 degrees -- a number which may
climb as high as 1,953 when all the late
additions are tallied.

Ronald Ristimaki
Doctor of Commerce
honoris causa

Louis Dudek
Doctor of Letters
honoris causa

For more information contact the Office
of the Registrar at 343-8269. -- FH

�CONVOCATION'96

Leni Untinen
For the past 20 years Leni Untinen has been
working to advance women's access to
safety, health services, education, training
and employment
Untinen is Co-ordinator for the Northwestern Ontario Women's Decade Council, a
non-partisan advocacy organization dedicated to improving the status of women.
She has served as a Board Member of the
Thunder Bay District Board of Health;
Board Member of Thunder Bay Ventures;
Member of the Thunder Bay Police Employment Equity Committee; Member of
Lakehead University's Women's Studies
Advisory Committee and as an Appointee
to numerous joint provincial government/
community working committees.
She has worked extensively to eliminate
violence against women and children. Her
commitment to the prevention offamily violence includes being past chair and I0-year
Board Member ofCrisis Homes Inc., sponsors of Faye Peterson Transition House;
serving five years at the provincial level as
an Executive Member of the Ontario Association of Interval and Transition Houses;
being staffand board trainer for Transition
Houses and Family Resource Centres
throughout Northern Ontario and Instructor in Family Violence Education at Confederation College. In 1992 Leni Untinen
received the Canada 125 Commemorative
Medal for volunteer service.

Lorne G. Everett
Dr. Lorne G. Everett is Chief Research
Hydrogeologist and Vice-President of
Geraghty &amp; Miller, Inc., a company in California that provides a wide spectrum ofenvironmental consulting and engineering
services, specializing in solving
groundwater contamination problems and
in remedial engineering.
Everett has over 25 years experience in site
characterization and remediation of soils
and ground water. He is a nationally-recognized expert on groundwater and vadoze
zone monitoring techniques and has developed state-of-the-art methods including soil
core monitoring, soil pore-liquid monitoring, matrix potential measurement, neutron
moderation, soil gas monitoring, and soil
moisture measurement.

2

Lorne Everett is a graduate of Lakehead
University (HBSc'68) and recipient of the
prestigious Alumni Honour Award in 1989.
He received his Master's and PhD from the
University of Arizona and in 1995 became
an elected member of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
His many accomplishments include being
co-editor of the World Groundwater Map
developed for UNESCO; editor of a professional journal entitled Remediation
Management; member ofthe U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Terrorist Response Team in Washington, D.C.; and
member of the Science Advisory Panel to
the United States Navy National Test Site
Program.

Louis Dudek
Louis Dudek is a poet, professor, critic and
literary activist. He was born and educated
in Montreal and then went on to McGill
University to earn his B.A. During this
time he wrote for the McGill Daily and his
first published poems began to appear. In
1944 he moved to New York to attend
graduate school at Columbia University and
his doctoral dissertation was published as
Literature and the Press.
In 1952, together with Irving Layton and
Raymond Souster, he established Contact
Press which published the work of important Canadian poets of the fifties and sixties.
In 1954, with Layton and Aileen Collins
(whom he later married), he founded CIV/
n, an avant-garde magazine. In 1956 he
established the McGill Poetry Series,
launching the careers of Leonard Cohen
and Daryl Hine. Then, in 1957, Dudek
founded his own magazine, Delta (195766), which served not only as a vehicle for
his own poetry and ideas, but a means of
showcasing new and upcoming poets.
He has many published poems, including
East ofthe City (1946),Europe (1954), The
Transparent Sea (1956), and En Mexico
(1958). He also has several collections of
poetry published, such as Cross Section:
Poems from 1940 - 1980 ( 1981 ). Dudek is
a noted anthologist and a frequent speaker.
He is a professor emeritus of McGill University and is a Member of the Order of
Canada.

Melvin F. Pervais
Melvin Pervais, a member of the Fort
William Indian Band, is a licensed professional engineer and successful businessman
living in Montana.
At age 15 he left high school to apprentice
as an Instrument Technician with Noranda
Mines Chemical Plant in Ontario. By the
late 1960s he had positioned himself on a
career path in control systems engineering.
In 1976 he founded Cataract, Inc., a specialized company for servicing the start-up
of nuclear power plants and other highly
automated industries. With an initial investment of $10,000, the firm expanded
rapidly into a multi-million dollar company.
After selling Cataract in 1984, Pervais retired at age 45 to the 14,000 acre Chief
Joseph Ranch in Darby, Montana, to operate a horse breeding and cattle operation.
Since September, 1991, he has been president and CEO of Rhodium 2001, a company with a patent on a system which
Pervais believes will be key to the future of
the catalytic converter recycling and PGM
recovery industry world-wide.
Pervais is the recipient of the "Soar Like
an Eagle" award from UNITY, an Indian
youth group in Oklahoma City. The award
was given to him for his "successful utilization of the principals of free enterprise
and a commitment to excellence."

Robert Paterson
Over the years Robert Paterson has been a
strong advocate of Thunder Bay's ability
to be a centre ofcommerce and trade. He is
currently a director of N.M. Paterson &amp;
Sons Limited and Chief Executive Officer
of the company's Marine Division.
From 1983 to 1994, Paterson served on the
Board of Governors of Lakehead University including a term as Chair from 1990
to 1992.
Paterson has a deep respect for knowledge
and education and is described by his colleagues as being enthusiastic, hard-working, honest and fair in his business relations.

Agora, May, 1996

�Robert Paterson is currently President and
Director of Paterson Investments Limited;
Tallwood Holdings Limited. Directorships
include: Goderich Elevators Limited, Canadian Shipowners Association; Lloyds
Register of Shipping -- Canadian Committee, Thunder Bay St. John Ambulance Brigade; Order of St. Lazarus, Thunder Bay
Commandery; and the Senator Norman M.
Paterson Foundation.

Grad '96
Party

Ronald Ristimaki
Ronald Allan Ristimaki was born in Port
Arthur in 1934 and received his education
at St. James Public School and Port Arthur
Collegiate.
He emigrated to Michigan in 1961 to go
into the tourism business. Upon returning
to Canada, he joined Auto Haul away Ltd.,
an automobile transportation company.
In 1981, Ristimaki and John Bruchal purchased the company and in 1986 Ristimaki
became Chairman of the Board and majority shareholder. Under his leadership, Auto
Haulaway Inc. grew to become North
America's fourth largest car transporter
with 960 trucks, trailers and 1800 employees, 22 terminals across Canada handling
in excess of 2 million automobiles annually.
During his years in business, Ristimaki was
a director of the Motor Transport Industrial Relations Board and responsible for
all union negotiations across Canada involving auto transport.
His hobbies are boating and fishing. In 1993
the International Billfish Foundation
awarded him the Top Angler in the Blue
Marlin category.

in the Outpost
Friday, May 24, 1996

Mae V. Katt
FeJlowof
Lakehead University
Mae Katt will be familiar to many staffand
faculty at Lakehead as both an alumna and
a former employee.
She completed two degrees at Lakehead: a
Master's degree in Curriculum Studies from
the Faculty of Education and a HBScN degree from the School of Nursing.
From 1986-1990 she worked as Program
Co-ordinator of the Native Nurses Entry
Program where she was responsible for curriculum development and liaison with First
Nations and organizations.

Students and guests, alumni,
University faculty and staff are
invited to come out and celebrate
the 1996 Grad Class with entertainer
MIKE WOODS

7-8 pm: Complimentary Beefon-a-Bun
8-9 pm: Remarks
9-1 pm: Entertainment
Sponsored by
Thunder Bay Travel Limited
Airlane Hotel
and

Katt is currently Health Director of the
Nishnawbe-aski Nation responsible for the
development of community-based programs, training and political strategies to
address youth suicide crisis in NAN First
Nations.

InterAd International

She is a member of Teme-Augama
Anishnabai (Temagami First Nation) and
from 1994 to 1995, served as Second Chief
of the Tribal Government during which she
was successful in negotiating an Agreement-In-Principle with Ontario over a land
claim settlement.

Joe Logozzo to receive 1996 Alumni Honour Award

~

foe Logozzo, the President and General Manager of Iron Range Bus Lines
Inc., has been chosen by the Lakehead University Alumni Association to
receive their most prestigious award -- the Alumni Honour Award. Over the
years, Logozzo has demontrated outstanding commitment to Lakehead
University and to the City of Thunder Bay. Consistently a strong supporter
of the Alumni Annual Fund, he has made provision for two scholarship
endowments at Lakehead. From 1993 on, he has been the Chair of the
University's Italian Studies Fund-raising Campaign, and has supported the
Kinesiology Department by providing much needed dollars for equipment.
Agora, May, 1996

3

�l,i34•);ilid•folh1iM;i=@1•13b 1111111111---------------------Recommendation Re-Appointment of Dean of Arts and Science
I have received a unanimous recommendation from the Decanal
Review Committee that Dr. Jim Gellert, Dean of Arts and Science, be recommended to the Board of Governors for a second
term as Dean of Arts and Science.

Distinguished Toastmaster at Lakehead University
Dr. Yves Prevost, of the Faculty of Forestry, has just been elected
as Lieutenant Governor of Marketing for Toastmasters International District 6 (NWO and Minnesota). Special congratulations,
and keep up the good work. Dr. Prevost has been a key member
of the team that initiated the development of a Toastmaster Chapter on the Lakehead University campus.

Dr. Whitfield a Vice-Chair!

by Dr. Robert Rosehart
President
Lakehead University

Budget 1996 Report, Volume 1, Issue 8 (Final)
To save the printing budget, this will incorporate the final issue of
Budget '96 Report. On April 29, 1996, the Board of Governors
approved the 1996/97 Operating Budget that was outlined in
Budget '96 Report, Vol. I, Issue 7. This budget, which is really a
three-year budget plan, sees the University return to a balanced
budget position by Year 3 after the final payment of the cost of the
various voluntary exit programs.
The discussion by the Board was extensive and reflected on the
key budget assumptions related to enrolment projections, student
fees, and expenditure management. While it is generally recognized as desirable to have such high fee increases, it was also
acknowledged that Lakehead University was in no better or worse
situation with respect to fees than any of the Ontario universities.
In fact, our fees will continue to be less than most other institutions.
There was a lot of input to this budget process over an extensive
period of time, and I feel that all involved need to be congratulated in that we have maintained our academic programs, not had
to resort to involuntary downsizing, and have presented a model
that preserves our financial integrity.

Lakehead University Faculty Member Wins
Prestigious OCUFA Teaching Award
A special congratulations to Dr. Inderjit Nirdosh of the Department of Chemical Engineering on being selected as one of seven
faculty from the Ontario universities to win an OCUFA Teaching
Award for 1996. Dr. Nirdosh was recently honoured in Toronto at
a special ceremony on Friday, May I 0, 1996.

It's a Small World
I received a donation to the Zimmermann Scholarship Fund in the
mail recently from the President of the University of Waterloo, Dr.
James Downey. It seems that Jim Downey and our Dr.
Zimmermann were graduate students together in England in the
'60s and Downey says he remembers Zimmermann with "affection" and "regard."
4

Over the years, Lakehead University has been an active participant in the Ontario/Baden-Wurttemberg University Student Exchange Program. Recently, Dr. John Whitfield, Vice-President
(Academic), has been selected as the new Vice-Chair of the Ontario Program Committee. John's role will help to continue to
encourage the participation of Lakehead University students in
the BW Program and, as well, to encourage the BW students to
spend an academic year at Lakehead University.

New Wheels
Those of you who visited the Trade Show noticed that the centrepiece of the Lakehead University display was Dr. Tsang's High
Mileage Car from 1993. This was a very popular attraction, and
it generated detailed questions which were hard to answer. Incidentally, a special thank you to all of the Lakehead University
staff who volunteered in our both at the Trade Show. Once again,
it was a great success. Personally, this year, I only visited the
Beatrice Ice Cream Booth twice in support of the Thunder Bay
Regional Hospital.
A new vehicle fabricated by engineering students will be unveiled
to the media in the next few weeks. It is aptly named the "Environmental Vehicle" and will be electrically powered. Watch for
it!

Underground at Lakehead University
Last Monday, I spent the day observing our electrical and mechanical trades' staff during a typical work day. Most of the real
action occurs in the service tunnels and underground rooms that
most ofus are oblivious to.during our working day. The environment in these areas is not always friendly and requires the expert
work of our skilled staff. They work, I observed, in a mixture of
routine and emergency and really reinforce how much campus we
have to care for with such a small complement of skilled staff.
Again, a special thanks to Jack Drewes, Alex Bohler and Fraser
Clarke for their patience in explaining our various air, heating/
cooling, and electrical systems to me and for shepherding me
through the day safely and successfully.

Convocation '96
A special time for special people -- our Convocation '96, and I
would encourage all of you to participate and share in the day of
celebration with the Class of 1996.

Agora, May, 1996

�AROUND CAMPUS

"Leaner not Meaner" Budget
approved by
Board of Governors
by Frances Harding
Lakehead University has cut approximately 10 per cent ofits budget
without layoffs and without cutting any academic programs.
But in doing so, the University will carry $ 1 million deficit that
will be amortized over a three-year period until a balanced budget
is achieved in 1998-99.
"You don't pull $5.37 million out of an institution without some
downsides," said President of Lakehead University Bob Rosehart
at an Open Budget Meeting on Thursday, April 25, 1996. "We've
tried to have as minimal an impact as possible on the classroom."
Various groups on campus have been meeting regularly to plan
the budget since last November when Ontario Minister of Finance
Ernie Eves announced a $400 million cut to post-secondary education.
The final version -- model 18 -- was endorsed by The Task Force
on Funding, which includes the members of the Senate Budget
Committee, as well as the University's Labour Management Committee. It was approved by the Board of Governors on Monday,
April 29, 1996.
The three-year budget is based on the following assumptions:
-- annual enrolment will remain at 5,600 for the three-year period. This figure is down slightly from 5,700 achieved in 199596, and down even further from the all-time high of6,045 in 199495.
-- tuition for undergraduates will increase by 19.7 per cent in 199697, and approximately 2 per cent in each of the following two
years. Graduate student fees have been increasing steadily over
the last three years as Lakehead tries to place these fees on the
same basis as the undergraduate fee structure at Lakehead. They
will increase by 29.4 per cent in 1996-97. Fees for international
students, now deregulated across the province, are being reduced
significantly at Lakehead, as well as most Ontario universities, to
allow us to compete for these students with other jurisdictions.
A significant factor in preparing the new budget was the response
to the Voluntary Exit Program which resulted in 60 people leaving Lakehead University (15 faculty and 45 staff). The cost of the
program -- $4.12 million -- will be spread out over a three-year
period.
The savings achieved from voluntary exits, normal retirements,
postponed retirements, previously-arranged voluntary exits and
previous vacancies combined with savings associated with reductions in part-time positions (including sessionals), meant that
Lakehead did not have to resort to involuntary layoffs.
In fact, 29.5 out of a total of 94 vacated positions will be replaced

Agora, May, 1996

( 13 of which will be new faculty hires), meaning that starting
May 1, 1996, Lakehead University will operate with 64.5 fewer
positions than it had a year ago.
Special effort was made to avoid involuntary layoffs and to preserve academic programs. "One of the downsides of the rejected
option of shutting down some of our smaller programs," said
Rosehart, "is that they also tend to be the ones that relate significantly to our northern mission ... those programs are an important reason as to why there is a university here in Northwestern
Ontario."
In his presentation at the Open Budget Meeting, Vice-President
(Academic) John Whitfield praised the deans and directors who
worked together to rationalize the delivery ofacademic programs.
"It has not been an easy process," said Whitfield. "Not all courses
will be taught, but the integrity of programs will be preserved."
Vice-President (Administration) Fred Poulter, who is retiring this
year, was careful to point out this budget includes no salary increases or decreases. Lakehead has been able to maintain the status quo.
Since the University is losing its Vice.:President (Administration),
some re-structuring will be order, said Whitfield. While details
have yet to be worked out, in future, three administrative directors (Executive Director, University Services; Director ofFinance;
Director of Human Resources) will report to the President and
three academic directors (Registrar; Director of Leaming Systems; and Director of Student and Alumni Services) will report
to the Vice-President (Academic).
One bright spot on the horizon is that applications for first-year
enrolment at Lakehead are up by 2.5 per cent over last year.
It remains to be seen whether increased applications this year will
lead to an actual increase in student registrations. One thing is
for certain: competition for students is bound to increase as tuition dollars become more and more the "bread and butter" of Ontario universities.

What are the characteristics of an
organization that is able to plan and achieve
high-quality outcomes even during tough
times? The two most crucial characteristics
are:
1) a core of well-placed members who are
able to work effectively with others even
under difficult conditions/ and
2) an organizational culture that supports
significant learning and change
-- Ken Brown
Professor of Forestry and
Instructional Development Advisor
5

�RESEARCH NEWS

NSERC and SSHRC Results
Announced for 1996-97
Competitions
by Anne Klymenko
The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
(NSERC) and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research
Council (SSHRC) have announced the results of their 199697 annual research grants competitions.
Total NSERC funding to Lakehead University this year is
down by about 3 per cent, but our success rate increased to
75 per cent this year from 60 per cent last year (national
success rate for 1996-97 is 76 per cent). In total Lakehead
researchers received 41 awards valued at $730,000. Following is a list of recipients at Lakehead who were successful in
NSERC's 1996-97 annual research grants competition:

Department of Biology
Dr. R. Freitag, "History of the North American Cicindelidae,"
$11,100, Renewal (2-4)
Dr. M. W. Lankester, "Parasite and diseases of northern animals," $20,000, New (1-4)
Dr. A. U. Mallik, "Retrogressive succession and biodiversity in
nutrient poor cool-temperature forests after disturbance,"
$10,000, New (1-4)
Dr. D. W. Morris, "Habitat selection across ecological scales,"
$48,300, New (1-1)

Department of Chemical Engineering
Dr. L. J. Garred, "Urea sensor for urea kinetic modelling and
erythropoietin studies," $15,000, Renewal (3-3)
Dr. I. Nirdosh, "Removal of radionuclide and heavy metal
contaminants from low-level radioactive waste," $20,000,
Renewal (3-4)
Dr. V. R. Puttagunta, "Viscosity prediction and radiation
assisted upgrading of heavy oils," $19,600, New (1-4)

Department of Civil Engineering
Dr. S. M. Easa, "Highway geometric design for safety,"
$18,700, Renewal (3-4)
Dr. K. D. Eigenbrod, "Effects of freezing and thawing on the
hydraulic-conductivity of fine grained soils," $11,200, Renewal
(2-4)
Dr. S. A. Mi17.a, "Strength and stiffness of slender composite
steel-concrete beam-columns," $16,700, Renewal (3-4)
Dr. U.S. Panu, "Extension of pattern recognition based methodology for infilling of missing values in streamflow records,"
$17,700, Renewal (3-4)

Department of Electrical Engineering
Dr. F. Karray, "Hierarchical control structure for flexible
manipulators systems," $11,400, Renewal (2-4)
Dr. D. Makrakis, "Transceiver and medium access technology
for multimedia personal/mobile communications," $22,750,
New (1-4)

Dr. R. J. Omeljaniuk, "Neurochemical receptors, actions, and
mechanisms in fish brain: pituitary axis," $20,000, Renewal (34)

Dr. K. Natarajan, "Controller design for some discrete time
periodic systems," $16,000, New (1-3)

Department of Chemistry

Dr. M. Lui, "Finite element analysis of nonlinear shell structures; random vibration analysis of general nonlinear structures," $10,000, Renewal (3-4)

Dr. T. M. Garver, "The structure and reactivity of wood macromolecules," $15,000, New (1-1)
Dr. A. N. Hughes, "Reactions of transition metal-phosphine
systems with hydro-borate and other reducing agents in the
presence of carbon monoxide and isonitriles." With: Dr. D. G.
Holah, $28,000, Renewal (3-5)
Dr. S. D. Kinrade, "Aqueous chemistry of silicon," $22,000,
New (1-2)
Dr. N. A. Weir, "Studies ofphotodegradation of polymers,"
$20,000 Renewal (3-4)

Department of Geology
Dr. G. J. Borradaile, "Rock magnetism," $60,600, Renewal (25)
Dr. P. W. Fralick, "Paleogeographical interpretation of Archean
sedimentary sequences in Northwestern Ontario," $16,500,
Renewal (4-4)
Dr. R. H. Mitchell, "Petrology of kimberlites and alkaline
rocks," $75,000, New ( 1-5)
6

Department of Mechanical Engineering

Dr. H. T. Saliba, "Experimental and theoretical free vibration
analysis of thin plates with various shapes, boundary conditions
and complicating factors," $15,000, Renewal (4-4)
Dr. A. Sedov, "Ultrasonic beam models for NDE applications,"
$6,780, New (1-3)
Dr. B. Singh, "Analytical, numerical and experimental studies
in jet cutting of oil sands," $13,300, Renewal (2-4)

Department of Mathematical Sciences
Dr. M. W. Benson, "Parallel iterative methods," $8,000,
Renewal (4-5)
Dr. S. Di, "Optimality conditions for nonsmooth optimization
problems differentiable at one point and numerical methods,"
$6,000, New (1-4)
Dr. C. T. Hoang, "Algorithmic graph theory with emphasis on
perfect graphs," $13,000, Renewal (2-4)

Agora, May, 1996

�June 3 - 7, 1996.
Canadian Occupational Health &amp; Safety Week at Lakehead Universit

Health &amp; Safety Week Theme:
''Training - Target Zero''
Canadian Occupational Health &amp; Safety Week
[COHSW], an initiative of the Canadian Society of
Safety Engineering, will be celebrated nationally
from June 3rd to 9th, 1996. This year' s theme of
COHSW, "Training - Target Zero ", recognizes
that training in health and safety is crucial if we
want to achieve a goal of zero accidents and deaths
in the workplace.
Last year, Canadian workers lost more than 15 million days from injuries, ten times the number from
strikes and lockouts. On average, there' s an accident every 38 seconds (830,000 in 1995) and two
workers die every day (more than 700 a year). Direct and indirect costs are more than $10 billion.
We can do much better by actively training all of
our staff. Knowing about and practicing health and
safety at work can help to eliminate on-the-job fatalities, reduce pain and suffering, and save dollars
for everyone.
Here, at Lakehead University, we are celebrating
COHSW by providing training opportunities for
employees during the week of June 3rd to 7th,
1996, and by exhibiting University and
community-based health and safety resources in
the Agora on June 4th and 5th.
In addition, we are using COHSW to launch a
number of new safety initiatives and promotions.
This guide will provide you with a schedule of
events planned during the week.
We look forward to meeting with you during the
week, and to establishing a health and safety dialogue which will carry us through the year.
"Working Together to Create a Safe and Healthy
Place for Work &amp; Study"

The Thunder Bay
Community Health &amp;
Safety Project
The Thunder Bay Community Health &amp; Safety
Project is a group of individuals representing government, labour, business, education, health care,
utilities and other organizations.
Jts goal is to raise the health and safety awareness
of the Thunder Bay community, inside and outside
the workplace, by encouraging participation in
Canadian Occupational Health &amp; Safety Week.
We are grateful for the support of the Community
Health &amp; Safety Project in helping us to bring
health and safety training to the community on
June 4th and 5th through "Community Partnerships in Health &amp; Safety".
We are also pleased to host the 3rd Annual Health
&amp; Safety Awards Luncheon on June 5th. Sponsored by the Canadian Society of Safety Engineering, the luncheon is supported by the Thunder Bay
Community Health &amp; Safety Project.

�Page 2

COHSW

Monday, June 3rd, 1996
Safety Incentive Program Launch

COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS IN
HEALTH &amp; SAFETY:
JUNE 4TH &amp; 5TH, 1996

Launch the new Safe and Sound Health

Presentations

Presentations are available at no cost to
participants. Please call 343-8022 to reserve a seat.

&amp; Safety lncetttive Program with the

Joint Health &amp; Safety Committee in the
Faculty Lounge from 4:00 PM to 5:00
PM on Monday, June 3rd, I 996.
Safe and Sound distinguishes itself
from other "statistics-bound" safety incentive programs by· recognizing safe
and healthy behaviours. Awards will be
made in the following categories:
Safety Time -All the Time: Personal
Achievement in Safety. Join with us in
recognizing the first recipient of this
award. The award is presented to individuals who have distinguished themselves through their commitment to
making Lakehead University a safe and
healthy place for work and study.
Fit - 5: Personal Achievement in Fitness. Fit-5 is a five level fitness program which recognizes individuals as
they achieve personal fitness goals.
Participants work their way through the
five levels of Fit-5 by participating in
their choice of fitness activities ... from
gardening, to walking, to swimming and
beyond!

Awards are given for each level of
achievement. Individuals are encouraged to collect all five awards, and to
make fitness a part of their daily routine.
Great Ideas: Innovation in Health &amp;
Safety. What better place than a University to generate great ideas in the
fields of health and safety?

Through the Great Ideas forum, individuals will be encouraged to share their
ideas for making Lakehead a safer and
healthier workplace. We will recognize
the first winner on Monday, June 3rd,
1996.

The following sessions are presented
courtesy of the Thunder Bay Community Health &amp; Safety Projects on both
Tuesday, June 4th and Wednesday, June
5th, 1996.
Three Sessions Each Day in RB-2025:

The following events will be open both
to the University community and to representatives from workplaces in the City
of Thunder Bay and area.

9:00 AM- 10:00 AM
1:30 PM - 2:30 PM
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM

Exhibits and Displays

"Health &amp; Safety Basics for Workers"

9:00 AM to 4:00 PM in the Agora:
Four Sessions Each Day in RB-2024:

Representatives from the Canadian Society of Safety Engineering, the Ministry of Labour, the Transportation
Safety Association, the Municipal
Safety Association, the Workers' Compensation Board, the Thunder Bay Fire
Department, the Resource Centre for
Occupational Health &amp; Safety, Occupational Health Clinics for Ontario Workers, Inc. , the Workers' Health &amp; Safety
Centre, the College, University, and
School Safety Council of Ontario, the
LU Employee Assistance Program, the
LU Joint Health &amp; Safety Committee,
and the LU Emergency First Response
Team will be in the Agora to help with
your health &amp; safety questions.

Health and Safety Video Festival.

9:00 AM-10:00 AM
10:30 AM - 11:30 AM
I :45 PM - 2:45 PM
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM

"Health &amp; Safety Basics for
Supervisors, Employers and Owners"

One Session Each Day in RB-2025:

10:30 AM-11:30 AM

"Young Worker Awareness"

One Session Each Day,
Conference Room C,
Bartley Hall Residence:

2:00 PM - 4:00 PM

9:00 AM to 12:00 noon, and
1:00 PM to 4:00 PM
Room RB-2047:

"Due Diligence for Senior Managers"

Come out and preview potential training
materials for your workplace or classroom.

(This is a video / workbook presentation. Workbooks can be purchased at a
cost of $20.00.)

�Canadian Occupational Health &amp; Safety Week at Lakehead University

Page 3
Tuesday, June 4, 1996

1:30 PM- 2:30 PM
Lower Lecture Theatre

10:00 AM - 11 :00 AM
Room #RB-2026

9:00 AM - 10:30 AM
Room #RB-2026

Bonnie Lindberg,
Canadian Cancer Society

Patricia Hope,
Workers' Compensation Board

Barb Churchill,
Transportation Safety Association

"Sunsense. "

"Office Ergonomics:
Hands-On Solutions"

"Due Diligence I Due Diligence in ·1he
Transportation ofDangerous Goods"

3:00 PM- 4:00 PM
Lower Lecture Theatre

9:00 AM - 10:30 AM
Lower Lecture Theatre

Walter Martin,
Employee Assistance Program

"Change and Stress"
Connie Lake,
Thunder Bay District Health Unit

10:30 AM-11:30 AM
Lower Lecture Theatre
Ina Chomyshyn
Resource Centre for Occupational
Health &amp; Safety

"Workplace Air Contaminants"

"Adult Immunization"

2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
Room #BB-1051

10:30 AM - 11:30 AM
Lower Lecture Theatre

John Petherick,
Occupational Health Clinics
for Ontario Workers

Diana Smith,
Thunder Bay District Health Unit

"Health &amp; Safety Resources
· on the Internet"

12:00 Noon - 1:30 PM
Residence Cafeteria
Canadian Society of
Safety Engineering

"Health &amp; Safety Awards luncheon"
(See Page 4 for details.)

"Hepatitis Bin the Workplace"
Wednesday, June 5, 1996

12:00 Noon - 1 :00 PM
Room #RB-2026

9:00 AM - 9:45 AM
Room #RB-2026

Patricia Hope,
Workers' Compensation Board

John Petherick,
Occupational Health Clinics
for Ontario Workers

"Office Ergonomics:
Hands-On Solutions"

1:30 PM - 2:15 PM
Room #RB-2026

"The Occupational Health Clinics for
Ontario Workers"

9:00 AM - 10: 15 AM
Lower Lecture Theatre

John Petherick,
Occupational Health Clinics for Ontario
Workers.

Brad Fraser,
Workers' Compensation Board

"The Occupational Health Clinics for
Ontario Workers"

"Helpful Hints in Understanding WCB
and Return to Work Programs"

2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
Room #BB-1051
John Petherick,
Occupational Health Clinics
for Ontario Workers

"Health &amp; Safety Resources
on the Internet "

2:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Lower Lecture Theatre
Diana Smith,
Thunder Bay District Health Unit

"Hepatitis Bin the Workplace"

�Page4

COHSW

Health &amp; Safety Awards
Luncheon.
Sponsored by the Canadian
Society ofSafety Engineering.

Date: Wednesday, June 5, 1996.
Location: Residence Cafeteria.
Time: Noon - l :30 PM
This is a community event.
Individua ls &amp; groups will be
recognized in • the following
categories: Lifetime Achievement
Award, Outstanding Individual,.
Community Health &amp; Safety
Award, Outstanding Health &amp;
Safety Committee and Outstanding
Safety Innovation.

$ /0.00 per person
(payable at the door).
Special Courses for
University Employees

"WHMIS Train-the-Trainer"

UPCOMING EVENTS:

June 6th &amp; 7th
9:00 AM - 12:00 Noon, and

Look for the following events coming
up this summer ...

1:00 PM - 4:30 PM

RC-1003
A two day course to train staff as
Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System [WHMIS] trainers.

This is a follow-up to the Thunder Bay
District Health Unit presentations,
"Adult Immunization ", and
"Hepatitis Bin the Workplace".

This course will help supervisors whose
employees work with hazardous
materials to meet their legal obligations
under the Occupational Health &amp; Safety
Act, and WHMIS Regulations.

Immunizations will be coordinated for
University employees through the
Lakehead University Health Services
Department.

The course will also help faculty, technicians, and laboratory instructors
whose students work with hazardous
materials. What are your legal obligations under WHMJS? How can you
demonstrate "due diligence" with respect to programs involving hazardous
materials and students?
Find the answers in this class.

Call 343-8022 to book a class.
Special Events: June 6th &amp; 7th
"Red Cross Standard First Aid
with CPR"

"Blood Pressure Clinic"

Four Courses:
June 4th &amp; 5th, June 6th &amp; 7th,
June 10th &amp; 11th and
June 17th &amp; 18th

June 7th, 1996
9:00 AM to 12:00 Noon, and
1:00 PM to 4:00 PM
Health Services Department

Each course is 16 hours long:
9:00 AM - 12:00 Noon, and
I :00 PM - 5:00 PM

Drop by the Health Services Department to have your blood pressure
checked. No appointment necessary.

Location:
RC-1001: June 4th &amp; 5th,
and June 6th &amp; 7th
Avila Room E: June 10th &amp; 11th,
and June 17th &amp; 18th
A two day standard first aid course with
CPR certification included. This course
is at no-cost to designated first aiders.

"Immunization Clinic"
Health Services Department

"Student Safety in tire Classroom,
Laboratory &amp; Field"

A seminar presented by the Insurers'
Advisory Organization [IAO], and the
Canadian Universities Reciprocal
Insurance Exchange [CURIE].
This course will be of interest to faculty, technicians, instructors, and administrators who have ever asked the
question: "What is my liability/ the
University's liability with respect to
student safety?"
Some practical information in
developing safety policies, programs &amp;
procedures which address student
safety will be offered.

"Tire Lake/read University Employee
Walking Club"
"Hazardous Waste Removal''
June 6th &amp; 7th

Join us in launching the club just for
University employees!

Staff will be available to help you
with inventory &amp; labelling requirements for hazardous wastes. Waste
removal will occur during June for
items declared by June 7th.

Do you enjoy walking already? Do you
need a walking partner? Have you
meant to start a walking program &amp;
just haven't got around to it?

Call 8022 for information.

This is the club for you!

�Mrs. W. Huang, "Numerical algorithms for linear constrained
convex programming problems," $8,400, Renewal (2-4)
Dr. X. Li, "Distributed logic programming language design and
implementation," $5,000, Renewal (2-4)
Dr. T. Miao, "Geometric properties of Bp (G) and the exposed
points of the set of invariant means," $11,200, Renewal (2-4)
Dr. Y. Yao, "Multistrategy information retrieval," $14,300,
Renewal (2-4)
Dr. J. Zhou, "Robust experimental designs for linear models
with correlated errors,"$ I 5,400, New (l-4)
Dr. J. Zhou, "Robust experimental designs for linear models
with correlated errors," $14,364, Equipment (1-1)

Department of Social Work: J.R. Graham (new faculty member)
"Window into a Profession in Crisis: A History of the University
of Toronto School of Social Work, 1914-1970" $59,000 over 3
years (New Grant)

Faculty of Education
Hope Fennell, Co-investigator: Ti King, School of Nursing
"Women in Leadership: Experiences of School Administrators
and Nurse Managers" $19,700, Renewal (3-3)

Making Science
Come Alive
by Yves Prevost

Department of Physics
Dr. M. C. Gallagher, "Scanning tunneling microscopy and
surface physics of metal oxides," $12,000, New (l-1)
Dr. M. H. Hawton, "Photon-matter interactions/physics of
abdsorbed water," $13,000, New (l-4)
Dr. W. J. Keeler, "Optical spectroscopy of semiconductor
heterostructures and heterogeneous materials," $14,500, Renewal (3-4)
Dr. V. V. Paranjape, "Research in solid state physics," $8,000,
New (1-4)
Dr. W. M. Sears, "The electrical properties of the surface-gas
interface of wide band gap semiconductors," $11,000, Renewal
(3-3)

Department of Psychology
Dr. C. A. G. Hayman, "Separating episodic and semantic
contributions to memory performance," $15,000, Renewal (3-3)
SSHRC funding to Lakehead University increased by 44 per
cent, and the number of applications submitted to the Council also increased by 27 per cent Although our success rate
this year (16 per cent) is well below the national average (30
per cent), the results are still promising for SSHRC researchers at Lakehead, given the budget cuts at SSHRC and the
increased competition for limited research dollars nationally.
Following is a list of the 1996-97 successful SSHRC research
grant recipients:

Faculty of Arts and Science
Department of Anthropology: Dr. El Molto "The Bioarchaeology
of Las Palmas Culture of the Cape Region of the Baja California" $93,425 Renewal (2-3)
Department of History: Dr. Bruce Muirhead, "Development of
Canada's Foreign Economic Policy" $17,000 over 2 years (New
Grant)
Department of Geography: Harun Rasid, Co-investigator:
Wolfgang Haider, CNFER "Participatory Rural Appraisal and
Discrete Choice Experiments for Improving Floodplain Management in Bangladesh" $40,000 over 3 years (new grant)
Agora, May, 1996

The Regional Science Fair has come and gone once
again. In early April more than 200 students in grades 5
to OAC presented the best science projects in Lakehead's
C.J. Sanders Fieldhouse.
Topics cover everything from edib_le insects to protecting
computer discs from data scrambling.
This annual event encourages young people to think
about the scientific method and to apply it to a problem
of interest to them. The focus is participation and judges
interact with the students to give them some critical
discussions. Every year many Lakehead University
faculty participate in the judging. The top projects go on
to the next level of competition and the Canada-wide
Science Fair in North Bay.
This year the top projects for Juniors (grades 5&amp; 6) were:
Life-- Sarah Tinkler-Josephi from Kakabeka Falls
"Nature Own"; Physical -- Erin Parker, Kakabeka Falls
"Hook, Line and Sinker"; Engineering -- Sarah
Ferguson, Bishop Gallagher "Fingerprints."
Best Junior overall was Kyle Moore from Sacred Heart
with "The Mind's Eye."
Top Intermediate was Melanie Breukelman with "Photosynthesis and Oil Spills" and the top Senior was Avery
Pennarun and Dave Coombs from St. Patrick's High
School with "Vision Audio."
The best of the Fair was Kyle Moore with 'The Mind's
Eye" who will be going to the Canada-wide Science Fair
along with Erin Parker and the duo of Avery Pennarun
and Dave Coombs. Congratulations to all the participants, students and judges for making science come
alive.
If any faculty or staff members wish to judge next year,
contact me at ext. 8342 and I will get in touch with you
in February 1997.

7

�■ ;JJ1¥id9=Ei~••i•¥i9:jj~(c-l--------------------Chemical Engineering
Dr. I. Nirdosh has published the following papers: "Low-Cost Experiments in
Chemical Engineering" (co-author: Dr.
M.H.I. Baird) in Chemical Engineering
Education, vol. 30(1); and "An Experience
in Problem Base Leaming" and "Some Suggestions for Achieving Better Grades," both
in Canadian Chemical News, vol. 48(3).

English

Jennifer Hunter
CIAU Champion
Lakehead University sent its largest contingent of 13 athletes to the OUANOWlAA
Indoor Track &amp; Field Championships at
York University in March and two of those
athletes progressed to the CIAU Indoor
Track &amp; Field Championship held at the
University of Windsor.
When all was said and done, the Lakehead
University Track and Field team had its first
CIAU champion and All-Canadian in long
jumper, Jennifer Hunter.
Hunter jumped a personal best distance of
5.99 metres in the long jump to win gold
and 12.17 metres for a fourth place finish
in the triple jump. These results seemed to
fit a season filled with hard work and progressive successes for this Thunder Bay
native.
Throughout the season, Hunter was undefeated in her speciality oflongjump which
is quite an impressive feat when you consider she faced top jumpers from the U.S.
Midwest and Canada in a meet schedule
which a lso included competitions in
Minneapolis and Winnipeg.
Hunter will be missed next year as she will
receive her honours degree in Kinesiology
at Convocation in May. Her future plans
include training for and competing in the
Olympic trials to be held in Montreal in
June. --Stu Julius

8

Dr. Jeanette Lynes presented a paper entitled "We're His Fan: Packaging Leonard
Cohen" at the Northeast Modem Language
Association's annual conference held at
McGill University, Montreal, from April
19-21, 1996.

Forestry
Dr. Willard H. Carmean recently had the
following published: "Forest site-quality
estimation using forest ecosystem classification in Northwestern Ontario" in Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 39:
493-508. This same article also was published on pp. 493-508 in the Proceedings
of the "Global to Local Ecological Land
Classification" conference held in Thunder Bay on August 14-17, 1994. The book
containing conference proceedings is: R.A.
Sims, I.G.W. Corns and K. Klinka, 1996,
Global to Local Ecological Land C/assification, Kluwer Academic Publishers,
Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 610 pp.

Education
Dr. John O'Meara and J. Randolph Valentine of the University of Wisconsin-Madison organised a conference entitled
"Algonquian Reference Materials Guidelines Conference" which was held at the
Prince Arthur Hotel March 8-9, 1996.
Sponsored by the Ontario Ministry of Education and Training, the conference brought
together approximately 20 individuals involved in preparing reference grammars
and dictionaries for the Algonquian languages of Ontario: Ojibwe, Cree,
Potawatomi, and Delaware.

In October, 1995, the executive committee
of the Ontario Society for Education
through Art (OSEA) elected Dr. Fiona
Blaikie to be the editor of the Journal of
the Ontario Society for Education through
Art. This is a refereed journal and it is an
official publication of the Canadian Society for Education through Art (CSEA), and

of course the OSEA. This editorial position puts her on the executive committees
of both the OSEA and the CSEA. She
will be travelling to Toronto in late May,
1996, for the next OSEA executive meeting, and shortly thereafter presenting with
Dr. Tom Puk a paper entitled, "A study of
grace as a form of nurturing in teaching"
at the Leameds Conference at Brock University.
Two papers are in press: "Qualitative Assessment of Senior Secondary Studio Art:
Definitions, Problems and Solutions," and
"Art Education in South Africa in the Midst
of Transition: Township and private
Schools." These papers will both be published in the Canadian Review ofArt Education. The first paper originally was prepared for a keynote address at the Nova
Scotia Teachers' Union Conference, The
Summer Institute on Assessment and Accountability in August, 1994.

Sociology
Dr. Gary M. O'Bireck has published the
book, Not a Kid Anymore: Canadian Youth,
Crime, and Subcultures, Toronto, Nelson
Canada, 1996. The edited volume includes
contributions by such well-known sociologists as Robert Prus, L. A. Visano, Daniel
Glenday, R. S. Ratner, Ann Duffy, and W.
Gordon West. O'Bireck's own contributions include " Preppies and Heavies in
Bigtown: Secondary School Experiences,"
and "You Gotta Walk That Walk and Talk
That Talk: Youth Subcultures and Gang
Violence." Fourteen original articles are
contributed by 13 authors with the entire
book edited by O 'Bireck.

Sociology
Dr. Anita Chen has been invited to write a
group entry on Filipinos and her manuscript
has been accepted for inclusion in the major reference work entitled, The Peoples of
Canada: An Encyclopedia for the Country, being prepared by the Multicultural History Society of Ontario and published by
the University of Toronto Press. It will be
a "definitive, comprehensive and eminently
readable guide to the history, heritage,
unique features and common characteristics of all the peoples who presently live
and have ever lived in Canada."

Chen has also completed another major
work. Her latest book, From Sunbelt to
Snowbelt: Filipinos in Canada, has been
Agora, May, 1996

�accepted for publication by the Research
Centre for Canadian Ethnic Studies, University of Calgary. It contains a collection
of her published articles and conference papers on Filipino-Canadians, an ongoing
research project which she has been working on for the past 20 years or more. A
section taken from the Foreward written by
Dr. Wsevolod Isajiw, Director, Robert F.
Hamey Professorship and Program in Ethnic, Immigration and Pluralism Studies and
Professor of Sociology, University of Toronto, highlights her work: " ... The book
thatfollows is a result ofdetailed work over
the years that has attempted to assess the
status of one ofthe most interesting Asian
groups in Canada, the Filipinos. Up to now
there has been no major. systematic sociological work in the English language on
the Filipinos in Canada and Anita Chen s
essays go a long way to fill this gap. Her
work not only throws light on the sociological character of the Filipino community, Chen also wants to see the Filipinos
alongside other Asian communities and in
comparison with the sociological features
of Canadian society as a whole... . "

Civil Engineering
Dr. Said Easa and his graduate students
presented the following papers at the annual conference of the Transportation Research Board (TRB), held in Washington,
D.C., January 7-11, 1996: "Thermal Stress
and Fractural Analysis of Asphalt Overlays" with Shalaby, A. and Abd El Halim,
A. and "Analytical Model for Sight Distance Analysis on 3-D Highway Alignments" with Hassan, Y. and Abd El Halim,
A. Both papers have been accepted for
publication in the TRB Journal.

Business Administration
Assistant Professor Jack Christy (on leave)
has received funding from the Society of
Management Accountants of Canada in
support of his doctoral research. The Canadian Society awards doctoral funding to
select CMAs on the basis of a variety of
academic and professional criteria. "The
Society views this program as a significant
contribution to management education in
Canada," according to Bill Langdon, the
Society's Vice-President. Christy is pursuing his PhD at the Management Centre of
the University of Bradford in England. He
is currently in Canada to conduct his re-

Agora, May, 1996

search field work with CEOs across
Canada. His research concentrates on "strategic aspects of management control systems: the role of values in the control of
business strategy."

Geography
Volume 5 of Progress in Rural Policy and
Planning edited by Dr. Robert Dilley has
been published by Wiley. This is an annual survey of developments in Europe,
North America and Australia. .
The Canadian section includes the regular
Annual Review, compiled by Dilley from
government publications,journals and submissions from correspondents across
Canada. There is also a major article on
the crisis in the East Coast fishery and its
effects on rural Newfoundland.
Dilley has been Canadian editor for all five
volumes of Progress in Rural Policy and
Planning, as well as for its predecessor, the
International Yearbook ofRural Planning.

Music
Dr. Glen Carruthers has been elected to
the national board of directors and vicechair of the Ontario Regional Council of
the Canadian Music Centre. His article
"Percy Grainger and Louise McDowell" has
appeared in The Grainger Society Journal
(XIII/I), pp. 17-31.

Economics
Dr. Witold Jankowski and Dr. B.
Moazzami have published their book entitled Northern Ontario at the Crossroads:
New Challenges and Realities. It is on sale
at the LU Alumni Bookstore for $49.95.

Political Science
Dr. Laure Paquette has agreed to serve as
expert advisor to the Universite du Quebec
a Montreal, one of the largest universities
in Quebec, in its attempt to develop its research potential and programs on Asia and
the Pacific. These initiatives will be built
on the Princeton model of mixed private
and public sector funding and participation.

Paquette's article on "The Republic of China's Strategy in Post-Cold War" has recently
appeared in the March 1996 issue ofIssues
and Studies, Taiwan's leading journal of
political science. Articles published in Issues and Studies are regularly reported in
International Political Science Abstracts,
the most authoritative and prestigious abstracts in the discipline.

Inderjit Nirdosh
receives
OCUFAAward
A professor in Lakehead's Department of
Chemical Engineering is among the seven
chosen from across the province to receive
teaching awards this year from the Ontario
Confederation of University Faculty Associations.
The OCUFA teaching awards annually honour those academics who have shown exceptional teaching skills as supported by
statements from students, colleagues, administration and alumni. Course development, instruction and outreach are all documented in the nomination dossiers.
Receiving the 1995 OCUFA Teaching
awards are: Murray Bryant, Faculty of
Management University of Toronto;
Michael Connelly, Department ofCurriculum, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education; Alan Filewod, Department of
Drama, U of Guelph; Rosemary Fisher,
Faculty of Music, Wilfrid Laurier University; Ron Klingspon, Department of English, Nipissing University; Christine Overall, Department of Philosophy, Queen's
University, and lnderjit Nirdosh, Department of Chemical Engineering, Lakehead
University.
Dr. Nirdosh is the recipient of both the
Lakehead University Distinguished Instructor Award and the Lakehead University Distinguished Researcher Award. He was featured in a profile entitled "Dual Winners"
in the February, 1996, issue of the Agora.

9

�AROUND CAMPUS

WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE LIBRARY
by Gisella Scalese

Try this Website for finding
Journal Articles
UnCover

http://www.carl.org/uncover

Uncover is a multi-disciplinary database and article delivery service containing references to over 4 million journal articles. These
4 million journal articles come from the collections of UnCover
contributor libraries in Colorado, California, Wyoming, Hawaii,
Iowa and Maryland. Approximately 53 per cent of UnCover's
titles are in the area of science, technology and medicine, Social
sciences titles make up 33 per cent, with a significant number of
business-related titles, and 14 per cent of titles are in the humanities. Individuals can search the contents of the Uncover database
to identify journal titles in a subject area. UnCover also provides a
document delivery service, however, individuals may wish to check
the holdings of Lakehead University Library or use the Library's
Interlibrary Loan Service to obtain articles.
UnCover also offers an electronic mail alert service called UnCover
Reveal. An individual can select a list ofjournals for which they
would like to receive tables of contents. When the next issue of
any of those journals is entered into the UnCover system, a copy of
the table ofcontents is sent to the individual's e-mail address. Tables
of contents from up to 50 journals may be received for an annual
fee of$20.
If you would like more information or require assistance in using
the Uncover system, please contact the Information Desk on the
Main Floor of The Chancellor Paterson Library (ext. 8302).

On their way to Gifu
Four students from Lakehead University will spend three months
on a social and cultural exchange in Gifu, Japan. They are Tricia
McClelland (Business Admin.), Lisa Nicol (Bachelor of Education, J/1 French), Kathleen Plumridge (Bachelor of Education,
History), and Meghan Southwell (Bachelor of Arts/Education,
Political Science).
They left on April 30, for Gifu University in Japan, where they
will be staying with host families and attending university studying basic Japanese and learning about the Japanese culture through
lectures, class discussions and field trips. Depending on the availability of some professors, the students will also take Japanese
arts and crafts lessons. As Canadian ambassadors, these students
will be requested on different occasions to make presentations to
introduce general topics on Canada and Thunder Bay. This is the
sixth year that Lakehead University has had students go to Japan
on a three-month social and cultural exchange.

LU
On May 24, twenty-seven students will arrive in Thunder Bay
and
from the Gifu University of Education and Languages to live on
campus for three months to learn about Canadian culture.
RBC
Continuing Education is looking for families to host one or two
Dominion students
for a weekend throughout the summer months in order
that these students can experience how a typical Canadian family
Securities lives. Those interested are invited to contact Susan Burton at
343-8068.
host
Seminar on Planned Giving
Earlier this month, Lakehead University hosted a seminar on Planned Giving
for charitable and not-for-profit agencies in Thunder Bay The seminar, given
by Bill O'Hara ofRBC Dominion Securities and Jim Lackner, Wee President of
RBC Dominion Securities Financial Services (Insurance Subsidiary), focussed
on the many ways that we can benefit from a reduction in income tax while
supporting our favorite charity through bequests, life insurance policies, gift
annuities, and charitable remainder trusts. For more information, contact
Vonnie Cheng at 343-8913.
10

Agora, May, 1996

�!44,,nm@M 1995/96 vacation entitlement must be
taken before June 30, 1996 for most staff. The
vacation year for IUOE, SEIU and USWA employees
is calculated by their anniversary date.

Quote ofthe Month: The trouble with raising children
is that your foot is still on the brake long after they're
behind the steering wheel.

The 1996 Federal Budget: Implications
for the Pension Industry

3. Reduction in Age Limit for RPPs, RRSPs and DPSPs
- Effective January 1, 1997 the age limit of 71 for maturing
RPPs, RRSPs and DPSPs will be reduced to 69.
4. Deduction for RRSP and RRIF Administration Fees
Eliminated
- Administrative fees paid outside the plan are no longer
deductible.
5. Transfer from DB Plan to RRIF
- After 1995, lump sum amounts will be transferable from a
defined benefit RRP to a RRIF after age 72. This was
previously not allowed after age 71.
6. Limiting relief from withholding tax for non-residents
- Currently, non-residents are subject to a 25% withholding·
tax rate on pension income from Canada or they can elect
to file a Canadian tax return and pay tax at the normal rate.
The Budget proposes to limit the extent of tax relief by
basing the ordinary tax rate on world wide income.
7. OAS Benefits will be replaced by new Senior's Benefit
- The budget proposed to replace the Old Age Security
(OAS) and Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIC) by a
single tax-free Seniors Benefit beginning in 200 I that will
be fully indexed. The age credit for people over 65 and the
pension income credit of $1 ,000 will also be eliminated at
that time.
Source: Benefits and Pension Monitor -April 1996

Finance Minister Paul Martin's Federal Budget of March
6, 1996, though generally thought to be uneventful, does
contain some significant implications for pension plans
which are worth noting. The following is a round-up of
the changes.
1. Contribution Limits
- RRSP contributions will be frozen at $ 13,500 through
2004, and are scheduled to increase to $ 14,500 in 2004
and $ 15,500 in 2005, and then will be indexed to the
average wage beginning in 2006.
- Contributions to defined contribution Registered Pension
Plans (RRPs) will be frozen at equivalent levels, increasing to $14,500 in 2003 and $15,500 in 2004, and indexed
from 2005.
- The DPSP dollar limit remains set at one half of the
dollar limit for money purchase pension plans in each
year.
- The defined benefit annual maximum pension limit of
$1 ,722.22 per year of service is frozen until the end of
2004, and will then be indexed from 2005.
2. RRSP Carry Forward Room Increased
- Seven-year limit on the carry-forward of unused RRSP
room accumulated since 1991 has been eliminated, so that
all RRSP room can be carried forward indefinitely.
• /

~

----

--~ I
(

, i_
~

iJ

-;

Going South on your Summer Vacation? Be sure to
pick up a coupon for $4 to $6
savings at Canada's Wonder~and and more at participatmg hotels.

~-~

~

Canada's WonderlandIt's Bigger, Better, Wilder
'n Wetter this year!!

Holiday Schedule 1996:

Monday 20 May 1996
Victoria Day
Monday l July 1996
Canada Day
Monday 5 August 1996
Civic Holiday
Monday 2 September 1996
Labour Day
Monday 14 October 1996 Thanksgiving Day

[I
H
aNfl NA1 0 a I
I

Human Resources
Telephone
343-8334
_Fax
nu_mbe
r -34-6-7701

Agora, May 1996

11

�CALENDAR
Wall of Fame Induction Dinner
June 1, 1996
A dinner will be held on SaturdaY✓
June 1, 1996 at the Victoria Inn.
Tickets are $25 and are available at
the Athletics Office. For
Information call 343-8213.
Seniors Day on Campus
June 14, 1996

Northern Educational Centre for
Aging and Health in conjunction
with the Office of the Registrar is
sponsoring the 5th annual ''Seniors
Day on Campus."
Each year the University honours
its senior students and particularly
its senior graduates by giving them
the opportunity to share their
learning experiences with other
who may be interested in being
students at Lakehead University.
On FridaY✓ June 14, 1996 from 12
noon to 4:30 pm seniors, their
professors, students ofgerontologY✓
and dignitaries from the University
and community will gather in the
Agora. The seniors will have the
chance to hear keynote speakers
and attend mini--lectures and
discussion groups. Lunch and
refreshments will be provided.
"Artist as Educator,
Educator as Artist"
Annual Western Lecture
by Dr. Roger Clark at The
University of Western Ontario
July 5, 1996

Brain Gym Science Club
Summer Science Camps in Plant
Biotechnology
and
Fungal
Biotechnology for students in Grades
6 to 13 during the months ofJuly and
August.
Cost $400/person (additional child
from the family $300). For
information contact Dr. Lada Malek,
344-0230 (home) and 343-8709 (work)

PUBLIC LECTURE
"Forensic Application
of
DNA Technology"

presented by the
Centre of Forensic Science

Tuesday, May 28, 1996
Braun Building, Room 0017
7:30 pm
All welcome
For more information, call 343-8372

12

We still need team-mates! Our
Lakehead team must have 10 -20
members and each member must
raise a minimum of$100 in pledges.
For more information or to sign
yourself aboard contact Denise
Bruley at ext 8372.

Agora
Agora is published by the lnfonnation
Office of the Department of External
Relations. The newsletter is distributed
monthly (except for July and August) to
faculty, staff and friends of lakehead
University.
Director of External Relations: Joy
Hirnmelman
Publications Officer. Frances Harding
Communications/Special Events Officer:
Denise Bruley
Secretary: Betty Hygaard
Photography: Peter Puna and Staff
Graphics: Ben Kaminski
Printing: LU Print Shop

8th Annual
Maintenance Choice
Golf Tournament
June 21, 1996
at2:00pm
Centennial Golf Course
$35 per person
4-person best ball
shot-gun start
return to Faculty Lounge after
golfing for steak supper and awards

The Annual Western Lecture, cosponsored by Lakehead UniversitY✓
Thunder Bay Art Gallery and the
Ontario Society for Education
Major Sponsor: Versa Food Services
through Art (OSEA) will be
presented at the Gallery on July 5th
For further information.contact:
1996 at 5:00 pm. Dr. Clark has
Brian, Don or Wayne at ext. 8920
numerous publications in the field
Deadline: June 17, 1996
ofart education, including a book
on elementary art education from a
Canadian perspective. He is a
prominent figure in the field both in C. Trojan
Ontario and nationally.
Exte rn a l Relatio n s
The Agora will not be published
in July and August.
Deadline for submissions to the
June issue: June 12, 1996

Shelter House
Corporate Relay
June 1-2, 1996

Submissions of interest to the University
community are welcome. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7B 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8999
E-mail: frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

..
__,

0

O:!!
oa
tn
tn

-..
'8'8n

::.::.§

~

0_...,
"O

a'Q..

~3

'80'8

0 CD

m ii!
•

coCD

Agora, May, 1996

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7131">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.13 No.5</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7132">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7133">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an article on convocation '96, a report from the President, and an article on the Canadian Occupational Health &amp; Safety Week at Lakehead University.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7134">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7135">
                <text>1996-05</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1086">
        <name>1996</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Agora</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1196">
        <name>COHSW</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="921">
        <name>Convocation 1996</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="538">
        <name>Dr. R. Rosehart</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1100">
        <name>President's Message</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1284" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17935">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/32722133f77aec3b9d7f1f55ad82bf1e.pdf</src>
        <authentication>ec98aeb74529eddb0680ccf02d6ac615</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="124956">
                    <text>ora

Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
April 1996, Vol. 13, No. 4

A NEWSLETTER FOR LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY STAFF &amp;

. ,,.

-

.

~

~?

- -5A ;~

-~

..........
~ ..
.

..........

~

~

-~

t
,_

---:

FACULTY

~ (
'-'

----- ,~....·

Norma Gibson has received Lakehead'sfirstCommunity RecognitionAwardto acknowledge the outstandingcontribution
she has made to Lakehead University through her work with the LU Community Council.
NORMA GIBSON
RECEIVES

LU

COMMUNITY RECOGNITION AWARD

It Is fitting that the first Community Recognition
Award should be given to Norma Gibson who has
contributed so much to the social life of Lakehead
University.
'With the many summer picnics and Christmas and
Halloween parties she has organized In conjunction
with the LU CommunltyCoundl, Norma hasensured
that children feel good about Lakehead University
and could see where their parents work,· says Joy
Hlmmelman, Director of External Relations and
chair of the selection committee, 'She has made
the campus a real place for families.·

INSIDE

More on the LU
Community
Recognition Award
on Page 7

Gibson Is retiring this June after 26 years as the
University's Switchboard Operator--a job for which
she has affectionately become known as the
voice of Lakehead University. Gibson started fulltime at Lakehead In 1970 after having worked for
20 years as a Bell operator. She immediately
became a member of the Office and Professional

Employees International Union (OPEIU), and two
years later was elected Vice-President, a position
she held up until the end of March.
"Norma and her long-time colleague, Joan Gerow,
have provided the University with decades of
outstanding service to all members of the University
community and the the publicat large,· says Executive
Director, University Services, Grant Walsh. "!twill be
strange to walk by Switchboard and not see (or
hear) Norma Gibson In her rightful spot at the hub
of Internal communications.'
Gibson believes Lakehead's Silver Jubilee was the
most significant event to happen on campus. She
enjoyed watching the different groups on campus
come together to host the many celebrations In
honour of LU's 25th Anniversary.
When asked "What impact doyou feel you have had
on the University?' she says, modestly, "Everybody
Impacts on everyone in some way.· -- 5. Bjorklund

�ON CAMPUS
EMPLOYEE SERVICE RECOGNITION
On April 10, 1996, Lakehead held a reception In the Faculty Lounge to honour those who have served the University for 20
and 30 years, as well as those who are retiring In 1996.

20

YEARS OF SERVICE IN

Mary Boyer
Janice Brown
Anne Deighton
James Gellert
Marilyn Husiak
Sharon Kozak
*Peter Levis
Tracey Marks
Andrew McFall
Robert McNally
Kenneth Mehagan
Randle Nelsen
David Nock

1996

Custodian, Campus Development
Library Clerk, Chancellor Paterson Library
Head, Collections Development, Chan.
Paterson Library
Dean, Faculty of Arts and Science
Acting Purchasing Manager
Secretary, Athletics
Technologist, Faculty of Engineering
Undergraduate Scholarships &amp;Awards Officer,
Student Services
Grounds lead Hand, Campus Development
Receiver/Shipper, Campus Development
Custodian, Campus Development
Professor, Department of Sociology
Professor, Department of Sociology

*Also Retiring in 1996

25

YEARS OF SERVICE IN

1996

Secretary to the Director of Finance
Dale Barnes
Professor, Faculty of Forestry
Robert Day
Accounts Analyst, Finance
Carol Drebit
Associate Professor, Faculty of Forestry
Tom Hazenberg
Professor and Chair, Department of Physics
Warden Keeler
Manfred Kehlenbeck Professor and Chair, Department of Geology
Technician, Faculty of Forestry
Brian Moore
Undergrad. Scholarships &amp;Awards Assistant,
Linda Wood
StudentServices

30

YEARS OF SERVICE IN

*Henry Akervall
*Doug Alexander
Kenneth Allan
Frederick Anderson
Min-sun Chen
Daniel Crozier
Joyce Forbes
Albert Harding
Margaret Hawton
William Melnyk
*Henry North
·v. (Ginnie) Taylor
Leona Wilson

1996

Professor &amp;Director,Outdoor Recreation
Associate Professor, Faculty of Business
Administration
Assistant Professor, Departmentof Psychology
Professor, Department of Economics
Professor, Department of History
Associate Professor, Department of English
Professor, Department of English
Technician, Department of Chemistry
Professor, Department of Physics
Professor, Department of Psychology
Professor, Mechanical Engineering
Library Assistant, Chancellor Paterson Library
Human Resources Officer

*Also Retiring in 1996
RETIREES IN

*Henry Akervall
Doug Alexander

2

1996

Professor &amp; Chair, Outdoor Recreation
Associate Professor, Faculty of Business
Administration

Attendant, Security Services (Left in 1995)
Anne Arnold
Professor, Department of Biology
Paul Barclay
Technician, Faculty of Forestry (CARIS)
*Ralph Birston
Acting Accounts Officer, Dept. of Finance
•Aline Bresele
Chief of Security Services
Paul Brezanoczy
Professor, Department of Sociology
Anita Chen
Assistant Professor, Departmentoflanguages
•Andre Cloutier
Custodian, Campus Development
*Helen Coutts
Custodian, Campus Development
Maria Costanzo
Custodian, Campus Development
*Eileen Curran
Associate Professor, Faculty of Forestry
*Emil David
Professor, Faculty of Forestry
Robert Day
*Evelyn Desruisseaux.Library Clerk, Chancellor Paterson Library
Professor, Department of Biology
*Richard Freitag
Mechanic, Power House
*Nick Gallo
*Norman Galloway Shipper/Receiver Lead Hand, Campus
Development
Switchboard Operator, Office Services
*Joan Gerow
Switchboard Operator, Office Services
Norma Gibson
Secretary to the Director of Campus
*Mary Harris
Development
Associate Professor, Faculty of Forestry
*Tom Hazenberg
Secretary, Department of Geography
*Gwen Henry
Associate Professor, Faculty of Business
*William Honey
Administration
Professor, Department of Chemistry
*Ian Hoodless
Professor, Department of Chemistry
•Alan Hughes
Custodian, Campus Development
*Ruth Legacy
Technologist, Faculty of Engineering
Peter Levis
Research Accounting Officer, Dept. of Finance
*Ralph Mauro
Chief Librarian, Chancellor Paterson Library
*Fred McIntosh
Technician, Department of Chemistry
*Billy Morgan
Professor, Mechanical Engineering
Henry North
Professor, Department of Biology
*George Ozburn
Professor, Mechanical Engineering
*Murray Patterson
Secretary, Department of Chemistry
*Verna Petrovich
Custodian,
Campus Development
*Daniel Piksiades
Vice-President (Administration)
Fred Poulter
Central Control System Operator/Engineer,
Frank Presenger
Campus Development
Professor, Electrical Engineering
Dennis Roddy
Associate Professor, Faculty of Education
*Peter Rutherford
Professor, Kinesiology
Thomas Song
•Jessie Sutherland Co-ordinator, Health Unit
Library Assistant, Chancellor Paterson Library
V. (Ginnie) Taylor
Associate Professor, Outdoor Recreation
*Lisle Thomson
Superintendentof Housekeeping, Campus
*Michael Turek
Development
*Don Watson
Director of Re-Engineering
Maintenance A, Campus Development
*Ron Whistle
Ernst Zimmermann Professor, Department of History
*Early Exiters
Agora, April 1996

�LU

SPORTS INSTITUTE

OPENS AT BIGTHUNDER SPORTS PARK

II

A

BIG HEART AND A BRILLIANT MIND II

Lakehead pays tribute to Ernst Robert Zimmermann
on the occasion of his retirement

What a difference a year can make. In March of last year, 800
international journalists crammed Into a new building at Big
Thunder that was temporarlly being used as a Media Centre for
the 1995 Nordic World Ski Championships.
Today, the building has been refurbished, Doug Clarke has
been hired as General Manager, and Lakehead University
staff, students and faculty are tackling the challenges ofrunning
a first-rate Sports Institute.
The purpose of the Lakehead University Sports Institute Is
to provide a world-class centre focussed on sport science
and medical support for atheletes and coaches in a wide
variety of sports. The Institute. housed in a 12,000 squarefoot building that looks out over the spectacular ski jumps
and cross-country trails at Big Thunder, offers a complete
range of services tailored not only to athletes but to recreational participants and other special populations.
What began as a dream in the mind of Kineslology professor and
Director of the Institute, Moira McPherson, is now a reality. - FH
Watch for more Information on the LUSports Institute In future
Issues ofthe Agora.

Dr. Ernst Zimmermann and
his wife Beverly Leaman
were showered with good

wishes at the fund-raising
dinner held March 23, I 996
to establish an endowment
for an annual award to a
senior student in History.
Since coming to Thunder
Bay In 1967, Professor
Zimmermann has devoted
his considerable talent and
energy
to
many
organizations including the
New Democratic Party, the Thunder Bay Historical Museum
Society, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, and the Thunder Bay Branch ofthe Canadian Institute for International Affairs.
At Lakehead University, Zimmermann has served on scores of
administrative committees and has held a variety of positions
including Chair of the Department of History. Dean of Arts,
President of the Lakehead University Faculty Association, and
member of the Senate and the Board of Governors.
During the evening, many speeches were given by former
students, friends and colleagues. In his opening remarks Professor
Victor Smith of the Department of Hlst01y jokingly suggested
that Zimmermann· s initials-- E.R. -- could just as easily stand for
"extremely rambunctious," "excessively rude," "equally respectful," "energetically restive," and "entirely relentless. "
Referring to his contributions to University governance, President
of Lakehead Bob Rosehart, spoke of Zimmermann as being one
of the 'Team Lakehead" members -- dedicated, challenging, and
always interesting. In their joint presentation, Jim and Judy
Foulds spoke of Zimmermann· s enormous loyalty to friends, his
love ofllfe and people, and his commitment to Ideas and action.
Much was made of Professor Zimmermann's contribution to
Senate over the years and more than one speaker suggested
that Lakehead ought to retire his customary seat in the Senate
Chamber (third chair to the left of the President). It was from this
position that so many have heard hisview, often prefaced by the
now characteristic phrase: "Point of privilege, Mr. Chairman...•
--FH

Dr. Teresa Socha, an Exercise Physiologist at the LU Sports Institute,
puts an attendant through the paces on a state-of-the-art Metabolic
Analysis System at the opening of the LU Sports Institute in March. Dr.
John Whitfield, Vice-President Academic, looks on.

Dr. Zimmermann has made a substantial contribution to the
Zimmermann Fund which now totals $12,347. Ifyou wish to
make a contribution, contact Jo-Anne Silverman, Senior
Development Olncer, (807) 343-8910.

Can't read foreign languages on the Internet In English Windows with a Web browser such as NetScape 2.0 or the Microsoft
Explorer 2.0 for Windows 957 Let Dr. SeimerTsangshowyou how. Tsang has written an article about the way he has configured
his MS Internet Explorer 2.0 to read Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Web pages under Windows 95. If you are interested in
a copy of his article, which also includes tips on other foreign languages, contact him at 343-876 I , or by E-mail
Seimer.Tsang@Lakeheadu.ca.

Agora, April 1996

3

�While not commenting in detail on the report, it is important
to note that the review makes the following conclusion: "we
were satisfied that the li.Jnds alloeated to lakehead University
In total have been used for Aborlglnal Education as approved
by the Ministry. "

Dr: Robert Rosehart
President, Lakehead University
SPECIAL SEMINARS:
OFFICE OF INSTRUCTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
I would like to draw your attention to two special seminars to
be presented by Dr. Ken Brown in Room 2003 of the Regional
Centre from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m:
Tuesday, April 30 - Reasoning, Action and Learning
Tuesday, May 7 - Becoming a Leaming Organization
I encourage you to participate in these seminars. For anyone
Involved In teaching, be It full-time or part-time, graduate
assistant, etc., or interested In learning more about the topics,
I am sure that your participation would be welcome.
Ken Brown, in addition to his role as Professor of Forestry, has
served the University for several years now as Instructional
Development Advisor In the Office of Instructional
Development. Over the years, there have been many leadingedge ~spring" seminars, and t his year's program will continue
the tradition. Please contact Ken Brown at ext. 8114 to
register.

AETS REPORT RECEIVED
As you will recall, on October 31, 1995, the Chair of the Board
of Governors and I requested that the Minister of Education
and Training "conduct a review of Lakehead University's use
of AETS funding over the years in order that the issues raised
are resolved."
The report is constructive and It should form the basis of
working together with the Aboriginal ManagementCommittee
to promote the further development of opportunities for
Aboriginal students at Lakehead University. It is our expectation
that the LUAMC, in concert with Dr. John Whitfield, the VicePresident (Academic), will prepare a response to the report
as requested In Mr. B. James Mackay·s letter of April 9 to the
President and the AMC Co-Chairs, and prepare an action plan
to deal with the substantive recommendations of the report.
It is Important that these actions be taken in a timely manner.

4

In a positive way. the report has produced a challenge to both
the Aboriginal community and Lakehead University to work
together on behalf of our Aboriginal students. The opening
statement in the concluding section states that, "with respect
to the impact ofthe AETS on programs and services at LU, our
review Indicates that the number ofprograms and services
offered at LU have steadily increased since the AETS was
Implemented in 1991. In addition, there has also been a
steadyIncrease in the numberofAboriginalstudents attending
LU particularly in Aborlginal-speclfic programs. "

1996/97 AETS

FUNDING ANNOUNCED

The Minister has just advised Lakehead University that a total
of $466,400 has been awarded to Lakehead University for the
coming year to support seven ongoing projects and two new
projects. One of the new projects Is the sum of $9,900 to the
Indigenous Leaming Program (Designation) and the other for
$20,000 is to support an Aboriginal Forestry Diploma/Degree
Transfer Program. In all, 25 post-secondary Institutions
received a total of $5. 7 million In awards for an average of
$228,000 while one Institution was not funded. The Minister,
John Snobelen, concludes in his announcement letter,
"Lakehead University is to be commended for the Initiative it
is taking with respect to providingprograms and services that
reflect the needs ofAboriginal people. "

1996/1997

UNIVERSITY OPERATING BUDGET

As I write this, hopefully, we are nearing the end of a long and
difficult budget process. A model has now been developed
which will reduce our operating expenditures by $5.37
million per year as dictated by our reduction in government
operating grants. This is a three-year plan which sees a
significant deficit In Year 1, but does yield a balanced budget
with no accumulated deficit by Year 3. More complete details
will be available in Budget Report #7 which you probably will
read before this article is published. Budget Model 18 has been
achieved without full-time employee layoffs and has only
been accomplished by a tremendous amount of Innovation
and hard work by the departmental budget managers and the
various University Committees that have input to the budget
process. With one or two exceptions, all savings have been
Identified, and the new budget should be in place by May I .
1996 subject to approval by the Lakehead University Board
of Governors on April 29, 1996.
I would encourage you to participate In the Open Meeting
scheduled to discuss the Budget on Thursday, April 25,
t 996 at 4:00 p.m. In the Upper Lecture Theatre (UC 20 t t).
. ..continued on page 5

Agora, April 1996

�PRESIDENT' S REPORT
PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT
BIG THUNDER PROPERTY
The LU Management Consulting Service, working with the
Research Office, has prepared a MPreface to a Feaslblllty Study"
for the Big Thunder property that looks at the following four
options for Lakehead University:
1}
2}
3)
4)

Passive land holder
Academic Use only
Academic Use (enhanced}
Commercial

Even assuming that Lakehead University could acquire It on
a straightforward donation basis, all of the above options,
based on the preliminary look, lead to ongoing operating
deficits with Option 3 (enhanced academic} being the least
annual loss of the order of $ t 50,000 per year.
Without some type of external on-going financial support, It
would not seem that Lakehead University Is In much of a
position to become involved. This could change If secure and
on-going external funding were to be available and then we
could re-examine the matter. I understand that there may be
private sector groups now looking at development options
for the site. We will continue to monitor developments
because of our Interest In the Lakehead University Sports
Institute located at Big Thunder.

Rov SAUKKO

MEMORIAL AWARD

Members of the Lakehead Rotary Club of Thunder Bay
demonstrated their commitment to Lakehead In March by
participating In an exciting Mock Interview PIiot Program coordinated by Lakehead University Student Placement and Coop Centre and the Lakehead Rotary Club of Thunder Bay.The
new Program enabled service club members to interview
Lakehead students and to give them feedback on their
performance. Judging from the comments made by the
service dub members who volunteered their time, the
program benefited everyone:
'Good Interview skills lead to good hiring decisions -- good
for both parties,· --Brldn Ross, Sun Life Assur.vice Compdlly
of Cdn.Jda.
1hls Is a valuable service to our youth. We can be very
effective mentors.· -- MMl/yn Ann oouthro ofthe Llkehead
&amp;Mrd of EduCAtlon
'The program gives us a chance to Interact with students and
gain Insight to what happens at the University.· --/Jdn Mac/Giy,
Graham Bacon Welrer Arc.hlrects &amp;. Consulting Engineer.
The Mock Interview Pilot was the final component of a larger
Employment Readiness Program offered by The Student
Placement and Co-operative Education Centre. Comprised of
four sessions: Job Search StrategyTechniques, Effective Resume
Writing, Successful Interview Skills, and Mock Interviews, it was
designed to assist Lakehead students In developing their
practical jobsearchstrategysklllsand to prepare them for the real
world of employment.
Students who participated were pleased with the experience.
"It was very helpful. I feel more confident and self-assured." -Joanne Jones
"This is an excellent program( I highly recommend it for
everyone. " --Lo"alne Sdnzo"
With the continued support of the Lakehead Rotary Club of
Thunder Bay and members of the community, the Lakehead
University Student Placement and Co-op Centre looks forward
to offering this worthwhile program again in the future.
-- Georgina Voulgarls, Placement Officer

An endowmentestablishedin memoryofRoySaukko, long-ffme resident
of Thunder Bay and owner of Diamond Indicator Processing, was
presented for the first time in January, 1996, to Peir Pufahl. Pufahl is a
graduate student in Geology who plans to continue hiseducaffon toward
a PhD degree at the University of British Columbia in September. Roy
Saukko 's daughters, Stacey and Laurie, visited the campus to present
Pufahl with a Brunton Compass -- an essenffal piece of equipment for
exploration geologists. The Roy Saukko Award will be presented each
year to senior students whose interests lie in the field of exploration
geology. Photo(L-R): StaceySaukko, Peir Pufahl, Dr. Manfred Kehlenbeck
of the Department of Geology and Laurie Saukko.
Agora, April 1996

•

.;a
Dan MacKay of Graham Bacon Welter Architects and Consulting
Engineer interviews business student Chrisffne Hughes.

5

�RESEARCH NEWS

Resisting Assimilation
Dr. Ross Malllck on the Cultural Issues Surrounding
Indigenous Empowerment
by Paul Jasen

As self-determination becomes an Increasingly realistic and
attainable prospect for more of the world's Indigenous peoples,
careful attention must be given both to the processes by which
such alms are to be achieved and the guidelines by which
progress will be measured. Economicand political empowerment
are the most obvious goals of any people seeking a greater
voice, but their achievement alone cannot be the sole measure
of successful change. Ensuring that some sense of common
culture Is retained within each Indigenous group Is Imperative
If that community Is to make uniform and meaningful progress.
The Issueofcultural retention is currently being examined by Dr.
Ross Mallick who holds a visiting Fellowship at Lakehead
through the Rockefeller Foundation. Mallick, who received his
PhD In Political Science from Cambridge University, Is using the
Rockefeller Fellowshipas an opportunity to continue a projecton
"International Aboriginal Representation" which was undertaken
for the Native Council of Canada with funding from the
Department ofForelgn Affairs.
The original two-year project was an examination ofthe political
progress of Indigenous peoples around the globe. Fleld
research took the projecttoCommonwealth nations who share
Canada's colonial background, some as far away as India and
Australia. More central to the project however, were studies on
Indigenous peoples who, by way of ethnicity or geography,
might be closer to Canadian Indigenous peoples In their beliefs
and experiences. Here Aboriginal groups In Scandinavia and
throughout the Americas were the focus of study. The project
was designed to aid In government policy-making, on a national
level, by providing an overview of "foreign precedents for
enhanced Aboriginal representation." An analyslsoftheflndlngs
will also flnd its way Into the form of a book, which, with the
Inclusion of this year's work, will go beyond the question of
representation to cover Issues ofculture as well.
"The achievement of greater political participation," Mallick
warns, 'will not resolve the difficulty of cultural retention and
development. In fact It may lead to greater assimilation." What
needs to be done, he says, Is to create a framework for change
that will enable Indigenous culture to adapt In concert with
economic and political changes without leaving anyone behind.
The tendency Is for "progressing" communities to suffer a spilt
between the new participating elite, and a disaffected
"underclass" who, in the continuing absence ofopportunlty and
relevant structure, remain at a disadvantage. Particularly
vulnerable are the community's youth, whose disaffection can
serve as the Impetus for the development of an anti-social
counter-culture. Deprived of opportunity and estranged from
national and community leaders alike, Indigenous youth can
easily fl nd themselves at the wrong encl of progress.

6

How then, does a fully Intact and unasslmilated Indigenous
community adopt for Itself a new role along side the dominant
society? According to Malllck, the process must Involve a reworking of traditional culture, even the Invention of a new one,
as an adaptive measure. The result must be compatible with
urban life, science, technology, etc., yet remain as consistent as
possible with a people's own values.
This may mean replacing local or tribal tradition with a synthesized
"pan-tribal" culturewhich unitesseveral groups undera commonly
acceptable belief system. Although hardly the traditionalist
Ideal. pan-tribalism would provide structure to Indigenous
societies and help their members preserve a sense of cultural
Identity. As a conscious endeavour on the part of Indigenous
peoples, the invention process Is only In Its beginning stages.
With so many conflicting viewpoints on just how this cultural
adaptation should becarried out (Ifatall), the simple achievement
ofsomething that resembles a consensus within each group will
be an accomplishment In Itself. For his part, Mallick will be
contributing a significant body of research and analysis that
should prove to be a useful resource for Canadian Indigenous
communities.
PaulJasen is enrolled In the honours Histo,yprogram at l.ilkehead. He Is one ofseveral studentspartldpating in S.P.A.R.K. - l.ilkehead, a student writing program sponsored by nie
Chronlde-Joumal.

Agora, April 1996

�Data Liberation Initiative

Through The Chancellor Paterson Library, Lakehead University
has become part of a consortium which will have access to a
wide range of statistical data. Over the past two years, the
Social Sciences Federation ofCanada has coordinated the IJdtd
Llberdllon lnld.uwe (DU), a cooperative effort of Statistics
Canada, the Federal Government Depository Services Program
and the academic community. Participating universities and
colleges will purchase data flies on a cost-shared basis from
Statistics Canada. The Data Liberation Initiative Is a five-year
project.
lnduded In the DU are flies such as:

Aboriginal Peoples Survey (1991}
Canada's Alcohol and Other Drugs Survey (1994)
Canadian Travel Survey (1996)
CANSIM Time Series on CD-ROM
Census Area Profile Series on CD-ROM (1986, 1991, 1996)
Census of Canada Public Use Microdata Files (1986, 1991, 1996)
Health and Activity Limitations Survey (1995)
International Travel Survey (since 1990}
Labour Market Activity Survey (1986-1990)
National Longitudinal Survey of Children (1996}
Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics
Youth Smoking Survey (1996)

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE RECIPIENTS OF THE

1995-96
CONTRIBUTION TO TEACHING AWARDS

Dr.J.Zhou,
Mathematical
Sciences

I

Dr. T.Miao,
Mathematical
Sciences

\

Professor D. Mazmanian,
Psychology

Professor S. Sajna-Hebert,
Psychology

Dr. G. O'Bireck,
Sociology

Professor T. Stevens,
Outdoor Recreation,
Parks &amp; Tourism

Statistics Canada intends to make files collected from I 990
to the present avallable In year one (1996). Older flies will
be included subsequently. Upcoming columns In the Agora
will announce flies as they are released. The Library has both
a preliminary llstofflles to be Included In the DU and a current
list of files released to date.
Lakehead University will only acquire data sets that are
required for use at the University. Ifyou would like the Library
to obtain any of the statistical data available through the DU,
a request must be made to the Library. Some time will be
needed to obtain the data and to make It available either In the
Library or through the Communications Technology Resource
Centre. Use of this data is restticted to faculty, researchers, staff
and students of Lakehead University. Anyone using statistical
data obtained through the DU mustsign a Data Use Agreement.
For further information regarding the Data liberation Initiative,
please contact Linda Mitchell (ext. 8 I 47) or Vale tie Gibbons
(ext. 8 I 29) In The Chancellor Paterson Library.
Notice to all Faculty and Sesslonal Lecturers

Due to upgrading of the library's automated system.the
Library will not be able to Input reserves from May 7th to June
10th. Please get your reserves to the library early. CUT OFF
DATE IS MAY 7TH.

LU Community Recognition Aw.ud
The Community Recognition Award is a newly established
award to be presented petiodlcallytoadeservlng Individual
who has played a significant role in the development of
Lakehead University, or who has demonstrated an outstanding commitment and/or contribution to Lakehead
University. Employees are eligible for contributions they
have made above and beyond their job function.
The Award consists of a framed certificate and a Lakehead
University entrance scholarship established in perpetuity in
the award winner's name.

Do you know of a student graduating this year that warrants special attention? We're gathering stories for a
special convocation supplement. Contact Denise Bruley with your ideas at 343-8372,
E-mail: Denise.Bruley@lakeheadu.ca.

Agora, April 1996

7

�OUTDOOR RECREATION,
PARKS AND TOURISM
Dr. Usie Thomson was appointed as
an external thesis examiner by the
University of New England's (N.S.W.,
Australia) PhD Committeeon December
14, 1995. The thesis to be examined Is
entitled "Skydiving: Towards a Theory
ofParticipation" by Mr. Nell Lipscombe
ofCharlesSturt University, Murray Campus, Albury, N.S.W. Australia. The
appointment isan outcome of the International Exchange Agreement between
Lakehead University and Charles Sturt
University at which third-year HBOR
student Miss Neta Taylor presently Is
completing some of her course work.
An Australian student from Charles Sturt
Is taking courses In LU's Faculty of
Education now and, In the Spring,
another Australian student is likely to be
enrolled In the School of Outdoor
Recreation, Parks and Tourism In accordance with the Agreement.
Dr. Tom Potter and Rodney Swatton
presentedGroupDynamics andProblem
SolvingasIt Relates to Emergency First
Responders at the 1996 Emergency
First Response Team Provincial Conference at Lakehead Universityon February
16, 1996. lnaddltion,Potterand Swatton
presented 'Making Experience Count:
More Than One Way to Look at a
Snowball" at the 1996 Association for
Experiential Education Heartland Regional Conference held in March at
Northern Michigan University.
In February 1995, Dr. Dave Twynam
was invited to attend and presentatthe
WinterOtlesConference In Bratsk, Russia.
The presentation was on The Potential
for Ecotourlsm Opportunities in Northern
Areas." In addition to the conference,
Twynam and a number of Canadian
delegates Initiated an exchange
program which resulted In three students
and an educatorvlsltlngThunder Bay In
Septemberof 1995 from the Town ofUst
llimsk, Irkutsk Region, Eastern Siberia.

POLITICAL SCIENCE
Dr. Laure Paquette has received an
Individual research grant from the
Security and Defense Forum of the
Department of National Defense for a

8

PSYCHOLOGY

project called "Canada's Relations with
East Asian Countries." She plans to use the
money to complete the fieldwork and the
documentary research on a monograph
whose working title Is "Reconceptualizing
Regional Security for the 21st Century:
Strategic Behaviour and Strategic Interactions In the Northeast Pacific's 2+4."

PhD candidate Suzanne Barl&lt;er-Collo
and Supervisor Dr. W. T. Melnyk have
recently been invited to present a paper
entitled "M odels of Posttraumatlc Stress
Reactions to Sexual Assault In Females,"
In August. 1996, at the.XXVJInternational
Congress of Psychology In Montreal.

FORESTRY

KINESIOLOGY

During the February study break, Dr. Ken
Brown was the guestofthe Cornell University Participatory Action Research (PAR)
Network In Ithaca, NewYork. Brown's visit
was sponsored by the Cornell PAR Network,
the M arlo Elnaudl Center for International
Studies, and the Ford Foundation. As part
ofhis visit. Brown led a two-hour workshop
thatwasattendedby40facultyandgraduate
students. The workshop demonstrated an
active learning approach that Brown uses
to teach the thinking and action skills
required In participatory action research
groups. These "PAR" groups consist of
stakeholders to a particularsocial / technological situation who undertaketo research
the situation, Identify the problems therein,
and design and Implement their own solutions. During his visit, Brown also metwith
Individual faculty and graduate students In
the fields of Anthropology, Education,
Health and Human Services, Natural Resources, and International Agriculture to
discuss mutual interests In teaching and
research.

Dr. Jim E. McAullffe presented a paper
entitled "Vision and verbal knowledge of
results (KR) as non-redundant sources of
Information In the acquisition of a linear
positioning movement" at the Canadian
Society for Psychomotor Leaming and
Sport Psychology annual conference held
In Vancouver, British Columbia, held
October 26-29, 1995. In addition,
McAullffe collaborated w ith Dr. Eric
Buckolz and Dr. Cam O 'Donnell (The
University of Western Ontario) on three
papers which were presented at the
conference. The papers entitled
"EscapingresponseInterferenceIna choice
reactiontimetaskl: Withoutpoststimulus
Involvement," "Escaping response
Interference In a choice reaction time task
II: With poststimulus Involvement" were
presented by Dr. Buckolz. Dr. O 'Donnell
presented a paper entitled "Inhibition of
return: The effect of post saccade
processing.". The work Is a result ofa Joint
research effort between Dr. Buckolz, Dr.
McAullffe and Dr. O 'Donnell.

The following work has recently been published by the Canadian ForestService Northern Forest Research Centre In Edmonton:

Dr. Jim McAuUffe has been appointed to
the board of directors of the Canadian
Olympic Association (COA). The
appointment Is a result of McAuliffe's
association with Squash Canada.

Brown, Kenneth M . and Stan Navratll.
1995. 'Analysis and Interpretation of the
research microslte trials in Alberta: Effects
ofsllviculturaJ and environmental factors on
the post-plantingperfonnance ofcrop trees
and competing vegetation." In Canadian
Forest Service Report A8029-138. 87 p.

EDUCATION
Dr. John O'Meara presented a paper
entitled "The Ontario approach to Native
language teacher training" at the conference "Teaching Native Languages: What
Works? What Helps?" organised by the
Department of American lndlan Studies,
University of Minnesota In Shakopee,
Minnesota, March 14-16, 1996.

ENGLISH
Dr. Frederick Holmes recently presented
a paper titled "The Representation of
History and the Quest for Identity in
Graham Swift's Ever After" at the University of Louisvllle's Twentieth-Century
Literature Conference. A longer version
of the essay Is forthcoming in the spring
number of the journal ARIEL. His essay
"The Death of the Author as Cultural
Critique In Martin Amis· s London Fields"
is also forthcoming In the spring as a
chapter in Powerless Fictions? Ethics,
Cultural Critldsm, and the Postmodern
Novel.
Ed. Ricardo Miguel-Alfonso.
Amsterdam and Atlanta: Rodopi Editions.
Agora, April 1996

�CIVIL ENGINEERING
Dr. Said Easa,has been elevated to the
membership level of"Fellow " within the
Canadian Society for Civil Engineering
(CSCE). 'The distinction of fellow has
been conferred on Said Easa In recognition ofhis excellenceIn engineeringand
for setvlces rendered to his profession
and to Canada, "says the certificate of
award given to Dr. Easa by President Dan
Bums at the CSCE Annual Conference,
held in Ottawa, June 1995. Dr. Easa Is
Chair of the CSCE Transportation Division
and Chair of the (first ever) CSCE
Transportation Speclalty Conference. to
be held in Edmonton, May 29 - June 1,

1996.
Dr. Easa was a keynote speaker at The
Al-Azhar Fourth International EngineeringConference, held in Cairo, December
16-19, 1995. The title of this opening
lecture was "lntelllgent Transportation
Systems: Past. Present, and Future." At
this conference, the following papers
were presented by Dr. Easa and his
graduate students: "New Methodology
for Avallable Sight Distance in TwoDimensional Horizontal and Vertical
Ailgnments," "Model ling Creep
Behaviour of Polymeric Grids," "The Development of In-Situ Test Facility of Determination ofShear Strength of Asphalt
Layers," "Nonparametric Analysis ofPavement Reliabllity," and "Thermal Stress
Analysis of Asphalt Overlays." The first
two papers were presented byY. Hassan
(aPhD studentcurrentlyworklngatLakehead University) and the other papers by
R. Abdel Nabl, A . Sherif and Dr. Easa,
respectively. The papers, co-authored
by Dr. Abd El Halim ofCarleton University,
were also published In the conference
proceedings.

Dr. Easa presented a paper entitled
"Effect of Road Geometry on Cracking of
Asphalt Pavements" at the Transportation Congress of the American Society of
Civil Engineers (ASCE), held In San Diego,
In October, 1995. Easa chaired The
Planning Track of the Congress (seven
technical sessions) and was a member of
the Steering Committee of this
I ntemationai congress. A paper entitled
"Design Considerations of Passing Sight
Distance and Passing Zones" was
presented byY. Hassan (co-authored by

Agora, April 1996

Dr. Easa and Dr. A. Abd El Halim) at the
International Symposium on HighwayGeometric Design Practices, held In Boston,
September, 1995.
Dr.Easawrotetwoartldesentltled "Electric
Vehicles Soon a Reality" and "Underpass
and Bridge Construction without Traffic
Interruption" In the Canadian Ov/1 Engineering Magazine, CSCE, December
1995, and published the following journal
papers: "Estimating Line-Segment
Reliability Using MonteCarloSlmulatlon,"
Journal ofSurveying and Land Information
Systems, Vol. 55, No. 3, 1995, and "Sight
Distance on Horizontal Allgnments with
Continuous Lateral Obstructions," Transportation Research Record 1500, 1995,
thelatterpaperwasauthoredbyY.Hassan,
Dr. Easa, and Dr. Abd El Halim.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
Dr. Laurie J. Garred recently delivered
two papers at International conferences.
"Urea Rebound Prediction Using A
Continuous Sensor" was presented at the
32nd Congress of the European Dialysis
and Transplantation Association held in
Athens, Greece, In June. In July, Garred
presented a paper entitled "Long Term
Variation In Lean Body Mass Estimated by
Creatinlne Kinetic Modeling" at the 13th
International Congress of Nephrology in
Madrid, Spain.

Two additional papers have been accepted for publication. "Dlalysate-Based
Kinetic Modeling" will appear In Advances In Renal Replacement Therapy.
"Urea Kinetic Modeling - An Overview"
will be published (in German) inK/lnlsche
Nephrologle.

NURSING
Professor Jose de Cangas has recently
published the following referreed artide:

de Cangas, J. P. C. (1995) "Psychiatric
nursing assertive case management: A
comprehensive evaluation of the effectiveness and outcomes of hospital based
treatment versus a nurse directed
asssertlveness case management
program.' In The lntematlonalJournal of
Psychiatric Nursing Research, Vol 1, #3,
72-81

Professor de Cangas has been asked by
the Royal College ofNursing, London, to
serve as a scientific advisorand reviewer
for the international conference: Valuing
Mental Health Nursing: Enhancing sklil
and Preparing for the Future, In Jersey,
Channel Islands, United Klngdom ofGreat
Britain.

GEOGRAPHY

Dr. Margaret Johnston, Department of
Geography/Centre for Northern Studies
and Dr. Brian Lorch, Department of Geography , have recently published an
arctlde in "The Great Lakes Geographer."
The artlde Is titled: "Community dlstlnctlvenessandcompanydosureln anorthem
Ontario mining town." It examines the
reactions and coping strategies of
Manltouwadge residents to thedosureof
the Geco mine.

Music AND V1suAL ARTS
Dr. Arts Carastathls has recently had
three compositions published. Arraysfor
Viola, Euphemism for Euphonium and
Blackbird for A Cappella Choir were
published earlier this year by Conners
Publications, Greenleaf, Wisconsin. The
composltlonArraysalsoappearsas part of
a collection of compositions for viola
published by Conners. Another composition by Carastathis titled Elements of
Chance for Clarinet, Xylophone,
Vibraphone and Plano received two performances In Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on
March 14 and 26 by the LSU New Music
Ensemble. In addition, Carastathls was
recently admitted in the Canadian Music
CentreasallfetlmeAssoclateComposer.

STUDENT CLUB SHOWS
INITIATIVE
The Klnesiology Students' Association,
(KALU) has donated a total of$3,600 to
the School ofKlnesiology this year. In the
fall, $2,CX)() was donated toward the
purchase of additional weight room
equipment, and recently they donated
$ 1,600 for the purchase ofa computer for
the Klneslology computer lab. Funds
were raised by holding dances. The
School of Klneslology Is grateful for the
equipment and pleased with the
professionalcommitmentthatthestudents
have demonstrated.

9

�ON CAMPUS

Donors
Reception

At the March 21st 1996 Donors Reception, Tracy Miller, a first-year student In BSc HBOR. and
Shannon Andersen, a MSc- Klneslology student, thanked donors for their generosity on behalf
of Lakehead' s Undergraduate and Graduate students. Student talents and achievements were
showcased by the LU Volcal Ensemble under the Direction of Maestro Allan Bevan, and by the
exhibits induded in the Faculty of Engineering Display.

Attending the annual donors' reception In March were (1-r)
Senior Development Officer Jo-Anne Silverman with Mrs.
Annette Augustine and Dr. John Augustine. The couple has
created a LU 30th Anniversary Visual Arts Award to provide
support to an In-course second orthlrd-yearstudent registered
full time In the Visual Arts program.

Lawyer Bob Edwards and Is thanked by Dr. Bob Rosehart for
establishing The Edwards and Carfagnlni Award. This endowed
award wlll mean that an annual gift of$500 can now be given to assist
a high standing undergraduate student in any full-time program.

Ms. Kirsten Service (right) Is the first recipient of the James River Marathon Ltd.
Scholarship in Forestry. She met with (1-r) Dr. John Naysmith, former Dean of Forestry,
Mr. Don Finan, Manager. Fibre Procurement, James River Marathon Ltd., and his wife
Mrs. Shirley Finan at the Scholars and Donors Reception. The $1500 award Is given to
a high standing student entering the third year Honours Bachelor ofScience in Forestry
program

10

Dr. W.T. Melnyk of the Department of
Psychology is shown here with Suzanne
Barker-Coilo, the first recipient of the
W.T. Melnyk Doctoral Scholarship in
Psychology. Ms Barker-Callo is doing her
doctorate in Clinical Psychology. The
Melnyk endowment produces an annual
doctoral scholarship of $1,000 to a
deserving student.

Agora, April 1996

�Reminder: Don't forget to notify Human Resources to update
your benefits if you have any change in marital status, beneficiaries, new addition to the fami ly, etc.

Quote ofthe Month: Maturity is the stage oflife when you
don't see eye to eye but can walk arm in arm.
Claude McDonald

What You Do and What It Says
Nonverbal Message

Typical Interpretation

Making direct eye contact. ............................................................ .
Avoiding eye contact. .....................................................................

Friendly, sincere, self-confident, assertive
Cold, evasive, indifferent, insecure, passive, frightened, nervous,
concealment
Disagreeing, shocked, disbelieving
Encouraging, congratulatory, consoling
Bewildered, disbelieving
Contented, understanding, encouraging
Nervous, fearful, anxious
Nervous
Angry, disapproving, disagreeing, defensive, agressive
Disbelieving, surprised
Disagreeing, resentful, angry, disapproving
Nervous, anxious, fearful
Attentive, interested
Bored, relaxed
Anxious, nervous, apprehensive
Restless, bored, nervous, apprehensive
Insecure, passive
Self-confident, assertive

Shaking head......................................:...........................................
Patting on the back.................................................... .................... .
Scratching the head ....................................................................... .
Smiling...........................................................................................
Biting the lip....................................... ............................................
Tapping feet.. ................................................................................. .
Folding arms.................................................................................. .
Raising eyebrows.......................................................................... .
Narrowing eyebrows......................................................................
Wringing hands..............................................................................
Leaning forward ............................................................................ .
Slouching in seat........................................................................... .
Sitting on edge of seat.. ................................................................. .
Shifting in seat......................... ...................................................... .
Hunching over............................................................................... .
Erect posture.................................................................................. .

$$

Benefit Cost

$$

The cost of benefits continues to rise. Here are just a few
reminders to help control these costs:
I. Many prescriptions being used regularly over a long period
of time are issued in 31 day amounts. It may be more convenient and less expensive if you get 2 or 3 months supply at a time.
Ask your doctor whether this makes sense for you!
2. Dispensing Fees: Your prescription is made up of two costs:
the cost of the medicine and the pharmacist's dispensing fee.
Dispensing fees vary by drug store and range from $3.99 to
$10.49. With this range in prices, you can see that careful
shopping on your part will help to control this benefit cost.
3. Our dental plan allows a check-up and cleaning every six
months. With good personal dental care, is this really necessary? Changing to nine-month or twelve-month recalls for
adults could be adequate and would reduce the cost paid by the
dental plan.

Important Phone Numbers:

Just a reminder of important on-campus phone numbers that all
staff should know:
8-911
Emergency (all emergencies - 24 hours)
except:
from Forestry/Biology Building and Health Sciences
North
9-343-8911
from pay phones &amp; private phones on campus
343-8911
Emergency First Response Team (24 hours)
Health Services
Security Business Line (24 hours)
Campus Development Problems

8569
8361

8569
8273

EAP - It's confidential!!
Phone 343-4626

Human Resources
Telephone
343-8334
Fax number
346-7701
Agora, April 1996

11

�CALENDAR

o Publlc Lecture: The public is invited
to a lecture on 'The Myth of the Deficit'
by Linda McQuaig on Thursday. May 2
at 7:30 pm in RB1042 followed by a
reception In the Residence Cafeteria.
The lecture is being jointly sponsored
by the SEU local 268 Seivices Emloyees
Union, LUFA and the Teachers
Federation.
o A Volunteer Appreciation Dinner
co-sponsored by Centra Gas will be
hosted by The Alumni Association on
Thursday, May 2, 19% from 6:00 to
9:00 pm In the Faculty Lounge. Dr.
Bob Rosehart will speak on the topic:
'Back to the Future -- The Critical Role
of Alumni In the new Ontario University
System·. Cash Bar. RSVP: Kristine Carey
343-8155.

PLANNED GIVING SEMINAR
FOR CHARITABLE AND
NOT-FOR-PROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS
sponsored by
RBC Dominion Securities and
Lakehead University

o Dr. Juanne N. aarke of Wllhtd
Laurfer University has been invited to
make a presentation as part of the
Department
of
Sociology's
Methodology Speaker Serles on
Wednesday.May 22, 1996from 11:30
a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Room TBA.
Plan to attend the Alumni
Association·s annual Convocation Eve
Celebration for grads and their families
and friends in the Outpost on Friday,
May 24, 1996 starting at 6:00 pm. A
complimentary Beef-on-a-Bun supper
wlll be served and the recipient of the
1996 Alumni Honour Award will be
announced.
o

o Wall of Fame Induction Dinner. A
dinner will be held on Saturday, June 1,
1996 at the Victoria Inn. lickets are
$25 and are available at the Athetics
Office. For lnfonnatlon call 343-8213.

12

SUMMER HOURS
April 22 - August 30, 1996
Monday - Friday
10:00 am - 4:00 pm

(Kitchen open from 11 :00 a.m. - 3:00 pm}

Wednesday, May 1
5-7:30 p.m. in the Senate Chambers
For information call Vonnie Cheng ext. 8913
CHANCELLOR
PATERSON LIBRARY
Spring Hours

May 1 - June 15
Monday to Thursday
8:00 am to 10:30
Friday
8:00 am to 5:00 pm
Saturday
11 :OO am to 5:00 pm
Sunday
1:00 to 9:00 pm

o Lakehead will be participating In the
annual ChamberofCommerce's Trade
Show at the CLE grounds on May 9, 10
and 11 , 1996. For lnfonnatlon contact
Denise Bruley at 343-8372.
o The Department of Sociology is
hosting a fundralslng dinner in honour
ofDr. Antla Chen on Saturday, May 18
from 6:00 to 10:30 pm In the Faculty
Lounge. Symposium, Dinner, Music.
lickets are $40/person which includes
a charitable tax receiptof$25. Proceeds
wlll go towards the Chen Scholarship
Fund. For infonnatlon call Sociology at
ext. 8477.

THE OUTPOST

1996 Nor'Wester Basketball camp
Registration Deadline: June 28, 1996
1996 Nor'Wester Summer Hockey
camp
Registration Deadline: April 24, 1996
1996 Nor'Wester Girls Summer
Volleyball camp
Registration Deadline: June 28, 1996
For information contact the Athletics
Office at 343-8213
ATTENTION ALL FIELDHOUSE
USERS

StartingMay 1, 1996, faculty and staffwith LU
ID cards may use the cards to gain access to
the Fieldhouse. If a family membership is
required, contact the Athletics Office at
343-8213.

Deadllne for submissions to the
May Agora Is May 10, 1996

Agora
The Agora is published by the
Information Office of the Department of
External Relations. The newsletter is
distributed monthly (except for July and
August) to faculty, staff and friends of
Lakehead University.
Director of External Relations:
Joy Himmelman
Publications Officer: Frances Harding
Communications/Special Events Officer:
Denise Bruley
Secretary: Betty Hygaard
Photography: Peter Puna and Staff
Graphics: Ben Kaminski
Printing: LU Print Shop
Submissions of interest to the University
community are welcome. Send them to:
The Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7BSE1
Telephone: (807) 343-8300
FAX: (807} 343-8999
E-mail: frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

.-.

C. Tr ojan
Ext e r nal Rela tion s

'8 '8()

f"i
~

0.

'8()'8

IL
I __

iii
•

========='==~

_ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ __ _ _ _

Agora, April 1996

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7125">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.13 No.4</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7126">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7127">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an article on Norma Gibson, an announcement for Employee Service Recognition, and a message from the President. </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7128">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7129">
                <text>1996-04</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Agora</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="538">
        <name>Dr. R. Rosehart</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1193">
        <name>Employee Service Recognititon</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1195">
        <name>LU Community Recognition Award</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1194">
        <name>Norma Gibson</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1062">
        <name>President's Perspective</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1283" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17980">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/4cabd0363467b48444ab895324718179.pdf</src>
        <authentication>d61a67d8543765d02f0179846cd21d05</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="125001">
                    <text>S EPTEMBER

1998

~!!-

A NEWSLETTER FOR lAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY STAFF &amp; FACULTY

Dr. John Whitfield appointed
Vice-President, Research &amp;
Development
Dr. John Whitfield has taken on a
new challenge.
Effective September 1, 1998, he
will be responsible for the
planning, management, and
administration of policies and
programs related to research and
development, and will report to
Lakehead University President
Frederick Gilbert.
"The appointment of Dr. Whitfield
to this position is an exciting new
chapter in Lakehead University's
evolvement, " said Gilbert when the
announcement was made on July 21, 1998.
"Dr. Whitfield's proven dedication to Lakehead
University and the city of Thunder Bay as well as
his strong sense of community will strengthen
existing relationships and develop new ones for
mutual benefit."

Inside
Laurie Hill
...2
Dr. Bill Montelpare
...2

Contribution to
Research Awards
...6

Last year Whitfield served as interim president.
From 1991-97 he was Lakehead's vice-president
(academic).
Those reporting to the vice-president (research
and development) include Dr. Connie Nelson,
dean of graduate studies and research (on matters
related to research), Moe Ktytor, director student
placement and cooperative education, Rob
Zuback, coordinator of alumni services, and Laurie
Hill, development officer.
Whitfield sees the "wedding" of research and
development functions on campus as "a step
forward" because it moves Lakehead into the

same configuration that governments appear to
be expecting: finding matching funds (in the
private sector) to support funding from
government sources. He cites the federal
government's Canada Foundation for Innovation
(CFI) initiative, the provincial government's
Ontario Research and Development Challenge
Fund, and other initiatives in the recent provincial
budget as examples of a fundamental change.
Says Whitfield: "It's not the business of going to
companies and asking for handouts. It means
finding out what their needs are, what we can
deliver for them, and how it may be helpful for
both of us to work together."
From a personal point of view, Whitfield is looking
forward to the task. He says he knows Lakehead
University, the university system and the
community as a whole "quite well." And now he is
looking forward to increasing his knowledge and
experience of fund raising and friend raising.
"Clearly the research side of the university has
been, and m~st continue to be, an integral part of
the strategic plan. As well, external relations and
development have to be part of the plan."
-- Frances Harding

Student Orientation
theme honours
Paul Shaffer
photo on page 8

�-.;adl•M#+-t-----------------NeN Staffand Farulty
Laurie Hill
Development Officer
It is fitting that
Laurie Hill should
be raising funds for
the Chancellor
Paterson Library,
since it was her
love of books that
drew her to
Lakehead in the
first place.
Hill is a graduate of Lakehead's Library
Technology diploma program and spent
two years working in the Faculty of
Education Library while taking courses
part-time for a BA.
In 1977 she moved to St. Joseph's
Hospital and has been working in the
health care sector ever since. Most
recently she served as director of
communications for the Thunder Bay
Regional Hospital and before that she
was manager of community relations
and development at McKellar Hospital.
Hill notes the similarities between
hospitals and universities saying that
hoth are faced with the challenge of
continuing to meet their mandates in the
face of diminished resources.
Nevertheless, she is "thrilled" to be
working at Lakehead, especially in the
Development Office. She believes
passionately in the importance of
Lakehead both to the city and the region
and says, "It is important we do what we
can to keep our University healthy."
In addition to co-ordinating the Library's
$300,000 Electronic Access Campaign,
Laurie Hill will be following up on the
$3.2 million Ontario Student Opportunity
Trust Fund (OSOTF) campaign to make
sure that pledges are paid before March
31 , 1999. This is crucial if Lakehead is to
benefi t from the matching funds being
made available by the Government of
Ontario.
Lakehead University, September, 1998 - Page 2

Laurie Hill was born and raised in
Thunder Bay and completed a BA in
English and sociology at York University
in 1975. She is married to Bryan Wyatt,
sports director at CKPR Radio, and they
have an eleven-year-old daughter,
Felicity.
Laurie Hill's office is located in the Avila
Centre and she can be contacted by
telephone at 343-8913 or by e-mail:
laurie.hill@lakeheadu.ca

Dr. Bill Montelpare
Director of Kinesiology
Dr. Bill Montelpare
doesn't beat around
the bush when
asked what he
wants to accomplish
as director of
Lakehead's School
J
of Kinesiology. He
L - - - - - = ' - - -- . . J
says he wants to
make Kinesiology
the most respected program on campus
and the best one in Canada!
Perhaps his confidence comes from
having started his career -- and having
met his future wife -- right here in
Thunder Bay in the late 1970s.
Bill and Nancy Montelpare graduated
from Lakehead University with Honours
Bachelor of Physical Education degrees
in 1980. From there Bill went to the
University of Ottawa for a MSc in
Exercise Physiology and then on to
University of Toronto for a PhD in
Community Health.
For the last 12 years, Bill Montelpare
has been teaching at Brock University
in St. Catharines where he developed an
interdisciplinary program combining
biology, community health and
administration.
The Health Studies program, he laughs,
didn't win him friends in the Registrar's
Office but it was extremely popular with
the students, especially RNs who

wanted to pursue a self-directed, parttime course of study on health-related
topics as they worked toward a BA.
Montelpare sees enormous potential at
Lakehead and is pleased to be coming
in at a time when a new president has
been appointed and, in his words, "the
University is in a state of flux."
He has a high regard for the faculty and
staff in the School of Kinesiology and
sees his job as helping them to reach
their goals while charting a new
direction for the role of Kinesiology in
the health sciences.
"It really feels like we're coming back
home," says Montelpare, "and that is
such a wonderful feeling."
Bill and Nancy Montelpare have two
daughters, Krista, 14, and Erin, 12.
Dr. Bill Montelpare's office is located in
the C.J. Sanders Fieldhouse and he can
be contacted by telephone at 3438481 or by e-mail:
wmontelp@flash.lakeheadu.ca

Coming Up
in the Fall issue of the
Nor'Wester Magazine

A profile on
Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
Margaret Atwood's
Convocation Address to the
Class of '98
Nor'Westers
Home and Away Schedule
1997-98 Alumni Donor List

�-----------------¥WM•■ #¥-1------------------

Staff Appointments
During June, July and August and early
September employment notices were issued
by Human Resources announcing the
following appointments:
Sandra Walters
Senior Technician, Paleo-ONA Laboratory,
Anthropology
Dr. Ryan Parr
Co-Director, Paleo-DNA Laboratory,
Anthropology
Heath Higgins
Software Technician, CTRC
Annette Ratz
Coordinator.Community Health Nursing in
First Nations &amp; Northern Clinical Practice
Program, School of Nursing
Jayson Gard
Women's Volleyball Coach, Athletics
Lori Kapush
Secretary, Languages and Women's Studies
Thomas Pavletic
Instructor, Native Access Program for
Engineering
RenatoPullia
Program Coordinator, Northwestern Ontario
Technology Centre
Jason Eagles

Northwestern Ontario Technology Centre
Lakehead University will contribute three acres of land between the Avila
Centre and Balmoral Street as the location for the new Northwestern
Ontario Technology Centre. In June it was announced that FedNor is
contributing $71,500 to NOTC to help small and medium-sized businesses
embrace technological change through the adoption and use of new and
emerging technologies. For more information contact Ray Rivard 343-8128.

GreatGrads

FutureAlumna

Dr. Mary H. Bluechardt

Marianne Ariganello

A Lakehead
graduate, now
an associate
professor at the
University of
Regina and
program head of
the adapted
area of
concentration in
the Faculty of Physical Activity Studies,
is the first recipient of a newly
established award •· the University of
Regina Alumni Association Award for
Excellence in Public Services. Dr. Mary
H. Bluechardt completed a HBPHE in
1980 and a MSc in 1983 at Lakehead
before completing a PhD at the
University of Toronto. Her husband Cliff
Bluechardt (ForTech'80, HBPE'83,
BEd'84) is also a Lakehead graduate.

The Alumni
Association has
chosen an
outstanding
graduate of St.
Ignatius High
School in Thunder
Bay, to receive the
Alumni Entrance
Award valued at
$5,000. Marianne Ariganello has been
on the honour roll since Grade 9 and
wants to study Chemical Engineering.

Secondary School Liaison Officer,
Registrar's Office
Charles Tallon
Secondary School Liaison Officer,
Registrar's Office
Adina Franceschina
Head Athletic Therapist, Athletics Department
GregShalay
Chief Operating Engineer, Campus
Development Department
Holly Laird
Secondary School Liaison Officer, Registrar's
Office
Juanita Lawson
Coordinator Counselling Services, Student
Services
Timo Miettinen
Supervisor of Networking and Research,
CTRC
Heather Brown
Secondary School Liaison Officer,
Registrar's Office

Last year she was one of four students
who represented Northwestern Ontario
in the Canada-wide Science Fair held in
Regina.
She says she chose Lakehead because
it was highly recommended to her by
those who had attended the University.
Lakehead University, September, 1998-Page 3

�Mike Blower, Student, LUSU Executive
Brent Compeau, Student

From the
President's Desk
by Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert

Ella Uremovich, Unionized Staff
Becky Hurley, Non-unionized Staff
Corinne Fox, Aboriginal Management
Council
Jackie Dojack, Board of Governors
Bill McDermott, Board of Governors
Dr. Jim Gellert, Acting Vice-President
(Academic)

This is the first of what I am sure will be
many articles by me in the Agora
designed to inform the Lakehead
University community.
First of all, let me thank those of you
who have made my welcome to the
University and to Thunder Bay a most
sincere and warm one. The pleasant
attitudes coupled with the warmth and
sincerity have gone a long way to dispel
any potential misgivings about
accepting the Presidency here. There is
much we have to do together, and I get
the sense that it will be possible to bring
about meaningful change.

One of my concerns has been the
condition and appearance of the
campus. While the deferred
maintenance items will require new
outside support, we have made strides,
thanks to the commitment of our
custodial and grounds' staff, to make
the campus more presentable. Clean
buildings and manicured grounds go a
long way to mitigate the impact of the
deterioration of the physical plant. For
those addicted to nicotine, new
cigarette disposal boxes are going up
that should alleviate the butts that litter
the grounds. Please use them! I will be
making every effort to convince Queen's
Park that the Council of Ontario
Universities' concern about deferred
maintenance is particularly acute at

Lakehead University, September, 1998 - Page 4

Lakehead. Hopefully, we will see
movement on that front in the near
future.
Perhaps the most critical initiative of this
academic year will be the Strategic Plan
process and development. It is my
intent to ensure that all will have access
to the process and the effort is focussed
and designed to change the University's
direction to position it effectively for the
future. The Strategic Planning
Committee will have representation from
all sectors. I would like to thank all
those who allowed themselves to be
nominated for the Committee. Those
who did not wind up on the Committee
should have much to contribute
nonetheless, and I ask you to be
involved in the overall planning activity.
Members of the steering body include:
Dr. Fred Gilbert, President (Chair)
Dr. Ken Brown, faculty member, Forestry
and the Forest Environment
Dr. Hope-Arlene Fennell, faculty
member, Education
Dr. Ali Mirza, faculty member,
Engineering
Dr. Bill Montelpare, faculty member, Arts
and Science

Dr. John Whitfield, Vice-President
(Research and Development)
Grant Walsh, Executive Director,
University Services
Dr. Bahram Dadgostar, Dean of
Business Administration (Faculty Dean)
Dr. David Kemp, Acting Dean of Arts
and Science (Faculty Dean)
Dr. Connie Nelson, Dean of Graduate
Studies and Research
Joy Himmelman, Director of Student
Services
Kerrie-Lee Clarke, Director of
Institutional Analysis
Pentti Paularinne, Registrar
David Heald, Alumni Association
member from Thunder Bay
(one seat open for Alumni Association
member from the region)
Beverley Stefureak, Secretary (nonvoting)
These people were selected or
appointed to provide a balance of new
and established perspectives, youth and
experience, as well as gender. It should
be a dynamic group. All steps in this
complex process will be open, and I will
comment on progress in future articles
in the Agora.

Professor Gerry Phillips, faculty
member, Business Administration
Dr. Margaret Johnston, faculty member
selected by LUFA

continued on page 5

�________________ _ _ j _ z - • • - • Z - r -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - From the President's Desk

Lakehead University
Centre for Analytical
Services

continued from page 4
Some changes have been made in
central administration. Dr. John
Whitfield is the new vice-president
(research and development). This
position will strengthen our relationships
with external agencies and help the
University further grow its research as
well as co-ordinate efforts in fund
raising, alumni affairs, and University
promotion. Lakehead must be viewed
as a valued partner with industry,
government, business, and First
Nations' interests. There have been a
few titular changes to reflect position
functions. For example, Kerrie-Lee
Clarke is director of institutional analysis
and will provide data and analytical
input to the decision-making process
and will be particularly important in
making information available for
strategic planning. Joy Himmelman is,
again, solely director of student
services, a full-time responsibility.
Institutional Analysis, International
Activities (Dan Pakulak), and
Communications (Denise Bruley and
Frances Harding) all report directly to
the president. Bev Stefureak will
function as my executive assistant. It is
my hope that these personnel changes
will assist the University in conducting
its business, create a more efficient and
effective working environment and
better co-ordinate key functions to
position and market Lakehead.

I look forward to getting to know you,
the University, the City, and the region
better. It is my expectation that
Lakehead has the ability to become a
global player in higher education without
losing sight of its Northwestern Ontario
roots. Together we must articulate the
vision and mandate of this institution
and position it for long-term success.
The future should be both exciting and
productive. I

Highlights from the
LUCAS Annual General Meeting
held September 3, 1998

The Installation
ofthe President and
Vice-Chancellor
of
Lakehead University
DR. FREDERICK F. GILBERT
will take place on
Saturday, October 31, 1998
at the Thunder Bay Community
Auditorium

Following the Installation
Ceremony, the Chancellor
welcomes all members ofthe
University Community to the
Chancellor's Luncheon to be held
in the Main Cafeteria at
Lakehead University
11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

While revenues for 1997-98 were five per
cent lower than last year, the long-range
forecast shows an increase in gross
revenue, and a steady rise in all the
intrinsic values this unique partnership of
university laboratories and research
teams offers the community. These
include:
- additional funds for the purchase of
research equipment,
- access to up-to-date facilities by
undergraduate and graduate students,
- increased research opportunities for
faculty,
- job creation and training opportunities
for students and graduates,
- an enhanced image of Lakehead
University.
This year, two new members joined
LUCAS: The Resource Centre for
Occupational Health and Safety, directed
by Ina Chomyshyn, and LEVTEK.
LEVTEK is managed by Peter Levis in
association with the Chemical
Engineering Department and offers
specialized pulp testing to regional pulp
and paper operations.
Two bursaries supported by the Aquatic
Toxicology Research Centre (ATRC) and
the Lakehead University Environmental
Lab (LUEL) were created this year and to
date $46,000 has been contributed in
support of student financial aid.
Information about these and other
projects will be covered in future issues of
the Agora. For more information about
LUCAS, visit their website:
www.lakeheadu.ca/-lucas
or contact Allan MacKenzie at 343-8853.

Lakehead University. September, 1998- Page 5

�---------------;M■•■fli+

- ------------- ------

New Awards for Research
The Senate Research Committee announced in April, 1998, the commencement of annual
Contributions to Research Awards recognizing outstanding recent research activity by
Lakehead faculty. Up to three awards of $100 each will be given annually. These awards
recognize research accomplishments in the previous three-year period, in contrast to the
Distinguished Researcher Award that is typically given for accomplishments over long time
spans.
All faculty members, including sessionals, are eligible for nomination except for members of the
Senate Research Committee. Only one person per department or program may be nominated
in a given year. For more information refer to the Research Office website or contact the Office
of Graduate Studies and Research.

1998

Contributions to Research
Awards

Dr. Said Easa
Civil Engineering
Dr. Said Easa is an outstanding researcher and
scholar who, during the last three years, has
published 32 articles in peer-reviewed journals,
contributed to peer-reviewed books, acted as editor
of six books sponsored by national and
international engineering societies, published seven
articles in professional magazines, and presented
11 papers in technical conferences.
Easa has developed a joint graduate program in
transportation engineering at the master's level
between Lakehead University and Carleton University in Ottawa that is currently
under review by the Ontario Council on Graduate Studies (OCGS). In 1993, Easa
established a PhD program in transportation between Lakehead University and
Egypt where Egyptian students (financed by Egypt) come to Lakehead for two
years to conduct their dissertation research, co-supervised by him and an
Egyptian faculty member. One student has already graduated (in 1996), and
another is currently working at Lakehead. During the past three years, Easa
supervised or co-supervised four graduate students at Carleton University and Ain
Shams University in Egypt. He has also supervised a NSERC postdoctoral fellow
who is the first in the history.of Lakehead University to be tenured in the Faculty of
Engineering.

Lakehead University, September. 1998 • Page 6

Editor's note: The infomation presented
in this article is taken from the
recipients' nomination letters.

�--------------~--¥MM•M;A¥.-i-----------------

Dr. Frederick Holmes
English
Rick Holmes is a recognized and
internationally regarded expert on postmodern
British fiction, most notably the work of A.S.
Byatt, John Fowles and Martin Amis. His
considerable work over the past three years
culminates in his most recent publication, The
Historical Imagination: Postmodernism and the
Treatment of the Past in Contemporary British
Fiction. This book published by an important
university press is a significant contribution to
the considerable contemporary scholarship
focussed on the vexed question of the place of
history within current literary culture. Holmes'
work seeks to find valid and useful
methodological frameworks within the shifting
and dissolving conceptual categories of
postmodernism.

Dr. Azim Mallik
Biology
Azim Maffik is one of the most productive members of
the Department of Biology. In the past three years he
has had three refereed book chapters published and
19 articles either published or accepted in refereed
journals. As well, he has delivered eight invited
lectures.
Maffik is very active in the international and national
research community, both as a collaborator in
research and as the organizer of the Second World
Congress on Allelopathy which will be held at
Lakehead in August, 1999. Mallik is an adjunct
professor at the University of Western Ontario and
Memorial University for the purpose of supervising
graduate students at the PhD level. He has reviewed
numerous manuscripts for nine Canadian and
international journals and organizations.

Photos by Peter Puna

Finally, it should be noted that he has supervised four
MSc theses at Lakehead and has attracted two postdoctoral fellows.

Lakehead University, September, 1998- Page 7

�- - -- - -- - - -- - - - , - i W d l • M # i - 1 -- - - - - - - - - - - - --

---

Nor'Westers
Home Games
in October
October 9-10
Girls Pizza Hut High School
Basketball Tournament
Friday: 3 pm Sat: 9 am - 7 :30 pm

October 17
Zanatta Alumni Games
Mens and Womens Basketball

October 17
Lakehead Wrestlers vs U of M Dual

October 30-31

Lakehead hosts Forest Fire Evacuees
It's not unusual for Native communities to find refuge on campus during the forest
fire season. But this year, in light of the city strike, residence staff took on the added
responsibilty of planning recreational activities for approximately 228 people from
Lansdowne House First Nation who spent 11 days at Lakehead University in July.
Some of the activities organized by Lakehead staff included swimming, day care
services, strawberry and sage picking outings, visits to Kakabeka Falls and Mount
McKay, bingos, and movies.
Many organizations were involved including VON, Red Cross, St. John's Ambulance,
the Ministry of Natural Resources, and Indian and Northern Affairs Canada. Versa
Campus Services (now called ARAMARK) was expecially cooperative, delivering
meals to 15 of the elders who were not able to walk to the main cafeteria.

Lakehead Late Show
without
David Letterman
Residence programmer Brent
Evans {left) and LUSU VicePresident of Student Issues Michael
Lyons (right) met with Paul Shaffer
in August when he was inducted
into the Victoriaville Walk of Fame.
Shaffer will visit the University later
this fall for the dedication of a
seminar room on the ground floor of
the William H. Buset Centre for
Music and Visual Arts. The room
will be named in honour of his
mother, Shirley Eleanor Wood
Shaffer.
Lakehead University, September, 1998 - Page 8

Lakehead Volleyball vs Ottawa
8:30 pm

New Book
A new book by Professor Emeritus of
Sociology Anita Beltran Chen entitled
From Sunbelt to Snowbelt: Filipinos in
Canada has been published by the
Research Centre for Canadian Ethnic
Studies, University of Calgary. The book
is a collection of Dr. Chen's published
articles and conference papers about
Filipino Canadians based on her
research for the past 20 years or so.
Despite the fact that the Philippines has
been consistently ranked as one of the
top 10 source countries of immigrants to
Canada since the 1970s, limited attention
has been given to the study of this
particular ethnocultural group. In his
Foreword to the book, Professor
Wsevolod lsajiw of the University of
Toronto writes, "... up to now, there has
been no major, systematic sociological
work in the English language on the
Filipinos in Canada and Anita Chen's
essays go a long way to fill this gap.... "
The book is an important source of
reference to those who are interested in
ethnicity and multiculturalism in Canada,
both within and outside academia.
Copies of the book are available at the
Alumni Bookstore.

�- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1- ¥ W M • M M . i - 1 - - - - -- - - - - -- - -- - - -

International Activities
Department Expansion
Wendy Bons, administrative assistant,
and Alex Pasquali, international student
advisor, have joined Susan Burton,
special project assistant, in the
Department of International Activities.
They report to Dan Pakulak.
Articulation Agreements Signed
During the summer, Lakehead signed ~n
agreement with Mendel University in
Brno, Czech Republic, and with Belgrade
University in Belgrade, Yugoslavia.
According to Prof. Crandall Benson, the
agreements involve the forestry
departments of each institution and will
provide the opportunity for faculty and
students to become involved in faculty
and student exchanges, and in mutually
agreeable academic activities.
Lakehead, through its articulation
agreements with 18 countries, is
connected to about 45 universities around
the world.
Gifu Program
Once again Lakehead hosted a
successful summer program for Japanese
students from Gifu University of
Education and Languages, although
enrolment was down slightly from last
year. This year 28 students were enrolled
in the 13-week program and 15 students
took part in the 4-week program.
Educational Fair
Lakehead will once again take part in
North America's largest educational fair
that has attracted over 22,000 people. It
will be held September 22-23, 1998, in St.
Paul, Minnesota.
Host Families Needed
Are you interested in being matched with
an International student to participate in a
mutually rewarding cultural exchange?
For information contact the International
Student Office at 343-8958.
Staff Welcome Students
Staff members from across the University,
as well as friends of Lakehead in the

community were kept busy during the
Labour Day weekend meeting flights and
buses, bringing in international students
from all over the world. Despite anxieties
caused by the shutdown of Air Canada
and Northwest, students were in great
spirits and positive about their decision to
come to Lakehead. The International
Activities office is happy to welcome them
all and to keep our doors open with help
when needed.

Honours &amp; Awards

Publications
Encyclopedia features work by
Lakehead Engineering Faculty
Dr. V. Rao Puttagunta (Chemical
Engineering) has had four papers from
his research work on Bitumen Viscosity
and Upgrading published in the
prestigious Encyclopedia of Chemical
Processing and Design which is
indispensable to chemical engineers
involved with process development and
plant design everywhere in the world.
The papers were co-authored with Dr.
Birbal Singh (Mechanical Engineering)
and Dr. Adango Miadonye,
Commonwealth Research Fellow.
During the summer Miadonye left
Lakehead to take up a position as
Instructor of Chemical Engineering at
University College of Cape Breton in
Sydney, N.S.

Exhibitions
Duluth Art Exhibition features
Lakehead Faculty
Ann Clarke, Alison Kendall, Roly Martin,
Mark Nisenholt and Mavourneen Trainor
were among the 14 Thunder Bay artists
chosen to exhibit their work at the
University of Minnesota Duluth this
summer. The show was held from June 6
to August 2 at The Tweed Museum of Art,
one of five units of the University's School
of Fine Arts. Other Thunder Bay artists
included in the "1998 Tweed
Contemporary Artists Series" were
Damon Dowbak, Pauline Horricks,
Catherine Kozyra, Fritz Lehmberg, Lucia
Masucci, Joan O'Doherty, Sean Randall,
Raimo Saharinen and Roy Thomas.

Dan Pakulak accepts an honorary
doctorate from Gennadii P. Kutsev,
rector of Tyumen University, Siberia.
Honorary Doctorate
Dan Pakulak, Lakehead's director of
International Activities, received an
honorary degree this summer from
Tyumen State University in western
Siberia. Only three honorary degrees
have ever been given to "foreigners" and
Pakulak is the first North American to
receive one. The honour was given to
Pakulak for his service to the University
which dates back 10 years when
Lakehead first established contact. Since
that time about 10 students from Tyumen
have studied at Lakehead. Pakulak is the
author of a book on Siberian Religion
which was published in Russia.
Civil Engineering Students win
National Award
Two 1998 civil engineering graduates,
Kerri Ruddy and Carl Gibbons, won the
second prize at the national
undergraduate student presentation
competition held at the Annual
Conference of the Canadian Society for
Civil Engineering, in Halifax, June 10-13,
1998. The presentation was based on a
project in the final year of their degree
program supervised by Dr. Said Easa
with assistance from Dr. Vasser Hassan,
a postdoctoral fellow at Lakehead.
The award includes a cash prize and a
certificate, and the abstract of the
students' presentation will be published in
a future issue of the Canadian Civil
Engineer magazine.
Lakehead University, September, 1998- Page 9

�--G•M•M ■+-1------------------

First-class
Students land

NSERC
Summer Jobs
by Kris Ketonen
Thanks to an award program offered by
the Natural Science and Engineering
Research Council of Canada (NSERC),
five outstanding students found jobs
with Lakehead faculty this summer.
They included physics majors Alvin Lau
and Allan MacDairmid, geology major
Mariah Mailman, and the chemistry
department's Andrew Schach and Colin
Vitols.
"I think the NSERC program is great;'
said Schach who along with Lau just
completed his second stint as an
NSERC award recipient. "It gives
students a chance to see what the
research field is all about."
The five students used their awards for
a 12-16 week period this summer while
working with professors who also hold
NSERC research grants.
According to Lakehead's Undergraduate
Scholarship/Awards Officer Tracey
Marks, students interested in the
program usually have to find an
NSERC-funded professor who agrees to
sponsor them. However, in some cases,
it is the professor who will approach a
student and suggest that he or she
apply.

Physics major Alvin Lau was one of five students to receive an NSERC
award this summer. He worked with Dr. Werden Keeler on ultrafast optics
research.
multiphoton excitation laser system,
while Colin Vitols was helping Dr.
Jeffrey Banks of the Department of
Chemistry.

said. "I was going to hold off on
graduate work for financial reasons, but
then I found out that NSERC also offers
graduate scholarships."

"It's a fantastic experience," says Vitols.
"because it allows you to see how
things work in an applied setting."

Schach echoes the sentiment. "The
NSERC experience has been
invaluable and it has changed my
original goal;' he said, adding that he
was interested in becoming a
chiropractor, but now wants to continue
his education to the Master's level.

MacDairmid is also excited about the
program."! wanted to do some work in
this field. I probably wouldn't have got
this particular job without NSERC," he
said.
Marks says the program helps students
to clarify specific areas of interest within
their discipline and often provides an
opportunity for them to work with
graduate students.

Once the application has been
submitted, the students' summer job
prospects are in the hands of a special
Lakehead Senate committee which
assesses the applicant. Students are
usually selected just after Christmas.

The program is open to all students who
have a minimum B standing, although
competition for the five places is stiff
and most students selected have an
overall A average.

This summer Alvin Lau found himself
working with Dr. Werden Keeler of the
Department of Physics developing a

"It's definitely been helpful in making the
decision to do graduate work," Vitols

Lakehead University. September, 1998 - Page 10

Has it worked?

This fall, Alvin Lau is studying medicine
at the University of Toronto.
NSERC also funds a similar program
for employing undergraduate students
where the student is placed in an
industrial setting with a host company.
For a list of approved companies and
more information about the Industrial
Research Awards Program contact
Tracey Marks at 343-8923.

Kris Ketonen is one of several
Lakehead students taking part in a
student writing program sponsored by
The Chronicle-Journal.

�- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 - S W d l • M ; W Z - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

FarultyAppointments
The following appointments were
approved by the Board of Governors
Executive Committee. The
appointments are for three years from
July 1, 1998, to June 30, 2001.

Visit The "New" Chancellor Paterson Library

Dr. A. Gilbert

The renovations to The Chancellor Paterson Library have been completed after four
years of moving books, desks and staff. The Library is in the process of organizing
all collections in their final locations and preparing signage for the Main Floor.
Highlighted below are some of the sources and services you will find on each floor:

Chair of Chemical Engineering

First/Main Floor

Dr. K. Fedderson

Chair of English

Circulation Desk

Dr. S. Mansour

Reference Desk

Chair of Electrical Engineering

Reference Collection

Dr. S. Tsang

Indexes and Abstracts (Print and Electronic)

Chair of Mechanical Engineering

Online Catalogue

Dr. A. Gillies

Current Newspapers

Chair of Civil Engineering

Microforms

Dr. B. Lorch

Interlibrary Loan/Document Delivery Service

Chair of Geography

Statistics Canada and Census Publications

Dr. L. McDougall

Second Floor

Periodicals

Director of Nursing

- back issues are on the main part of the floor

Dr. P. Mah

- the single current issue is in the ucurrent Issues Reading
Room"

Chair of Mathematics and Statistics
Dr. D. West

Third Floor

Books with call numbers from A to L

Chair of Political Science

Fourth Floor

Books with call numbers from M to Z

Professor N. Bonsor

Fifth Floor

Administrative Offices

Chair of Economics

Bibliographic Processing

Dr.T. Dunk

Northern Studies Resource Centre

Chair of Sociology

Ground Floor

Government Publications (CODOC)
Storage Collections

Dr. I. Newhouse
Chair of Kinesiology
Tours for Faculty

Trivia
Question: What did Susan Lister, Bill
Bragnalo, Rita Blais, Sandi Covino, Heather
Williams, Jim Squier, Tony Gillies, Rhonda
Kelly, Rebecca Counts and Leslie Dack have
in common in 1987-89?
Answer: They were the members of the
Board of Directors during Nanabijou
Childcare Centre's first year of operation.
Find out more about their Anniversary
celebration on page 12.

If you would like to arrange for a tour of the Library please contact Gisella Scalese,
Orientation Librarian, at 343-8147 or gscalese@sky.lakeheadu.ca
Library Instruction for Classes

The library can help your students make their way through the masses of
information available and can also help to acquaint your students with important
library resources in their subject area. If you would like to arrange a subjectspecific library instruction session please contact Gisella Scalese, Orientation
Librarian, at extension 8147 or gsca/ese@sky.lakeheadu.ca.
Watch for future announcements
about the Official Opening of the Library

Lakehead University, September, 1998- Page 11

�Calendar of Events
"Literary Modalities of Praise" Conference

Lakehead University
October 2-4, 1998
The Department of English is hosting a conference that will engage a critical inquiry
into the purposes and paradoxes of praise, not only among literary discourse
communities, but also within literary texts and contexts. Constance Rooke of the
University of Guelph will give a keynote address at the banquet on Friday night. On
Saturday and Sunday, papers will by given by faculty from Canadian universities as
well as Cambridge, Cornell, and the University of Minnesota. Lakehead faculty
presenting at the conference include Prof.Susan Tiura, Prof. Joan Dolphin, Dr. Kim
Fedderson, and Dr. Michael Richardson. The event is being sponsored by Lakehead
University, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and
the Valhalla Inn.
For information contact Dr. Alice den Otter, Department of English, at 343-8281 .

1998
15, No. 7

SEPTEMBER

VOL

THUNDER BAY,
ONTARIO, CANADA
ISSN 0828-5225

Agora is published by the
Communications Office and distributed
monthly September through June.
Publications Officer
Frances Harding
Communications/Special Events
Officer:

Happy Birthday Nanabijou

Denise Bruley

October 3, 1998

Administrative Assistant

Nanabijou Childcare Centre has been offering peace of mind to faculty, staff and
students through licensed, quality, affordable childcare right here on the campus for
the past 1O years ... and they want to celebrate!
In honour of its 10th anniversary, the Board of Directors and staff at Nanabijou
Childcare centre have planned a Birthday Party. All alumni of Nanabijou as well as
those who may someday be alumni, are welcome to join us in the Agora on
Saturday, October 3, between 1 and 3 p.m. for an afternoon of refreshments, fun
and birthday cake followed by a tour of Nanabijou Childcare Centre.
As a non-profit organization developed and and administered by parent and
community volunteers, the Centre wishes to extend a heartfelt thank you to
everyone from the Lakehead University and Thunder Bay community who donated
the past 10 years worth of time and talent to make Nanabijou Childcare Centre a
reality.
NEXT SUMMER...

Lakehead University will host the
Second World Congress on Allelopathy:
Critical Analysis and Future Prospects

August 9-13, 1999

Betty Hygaard
Photography
Peter Puna &amp; Staff
Printing:
LU Print Shop

Send us your news.
Deadline for submissions for the next
issue is October 1, 1998.
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, ON
P785E1

For information contact Dr. Azim Mallik at the Department of Biology at 343-8927.

Telephone: (807) 343-8193

Allelopathy refers to any process involving secondary metabolites of plant, fungal
and microbial origin that influence growth and development of other plants and
microbes. Research in allelopathy
includes production, accumulation,
degradation and function of secondary

Fax: (807) 343-8999

metabolites, and their significance in
natural and seminatural ecosystems.
Biological control of undesirable plants
and microbes in agricultural, forestry and
ecological systems is part of the
objectives.
Lakehead University, September, 1998 - Page 12

_, • Tr O J a n
'.J ? v e 1 o Pm 2 n t

E-mail:frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7119">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.15 No.7</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7120">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7121">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an article on Dr. John Whitfield appointed Vice-President, Research &amp; Development, a message from the President, and updates on research.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7122">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7123">
                <text>1998-09</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Agora</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="573">
        <name>Dr. J. Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1121">
        <name>Dr. John Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1093">
        <name>President Frederick Gilbert</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1100">
        <name>President's Message</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1282" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17920">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/ffd50eecdd1a0ed81b9459484899d0ba.pdf</src>
        <authentication>96d3225ad8804ab3bf86a2a6e189d925</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="124941">
                    <text>Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
September 1997, Vol. 14, No. 7
ISSN 0828-5225

Faculty, staff and students gathered to "roast and toast" Or. Bob Rosehart at a farewell party held in August.
More than 300 people attended including (l-r) Shawna Hickey, Grant Walsh, Pentti Paularinne, Dr. Gary Locker,
Dr. Bob Rosehart, Dan Pakulak, Rita Rosehart and Denise Bruley
Photo: Peter Puna

Farewell Dr. Bob!
On a quiet morning in late June, Dr. Robert G.
Rosehart announced he would be stepping down midway through his third term as president. "After 27
years at Lake head," he said, "it was time for a
change." On September I, 1997, he was appointed
president and vice-chancellor of Wilfrid Laurier University, just a IO minute walk from the University of
Waterloo where he completed all of his post-secondary education.
Most people will remember "Dr. Bob" for his friendly,
soft-spoken manner and for crystallizing the vision
of Lakehead as a northern and regional University.
He joined the faculty as an Assistant Professor of
Chemical Engineering fresh out of graduate school
in I 970. In 1977 he was appointed Dean of University Schools and in 1984, at the age of 40, he was
appointed President.

resulting in the development of Lakehead's first PhD
program and a number of other innovative programs.
He also presided over two ambitious fundraising campaigns which raised a total of $32.4 million and allowed the University to add much-needed library,
classroom, research, residence, and recreation facilities.
At a farewell barbecue held on campus in August,
Executive Director of University Services Grant
Walsh entertained more than 300 faculty, staff and
students who joined him in "roasting and toasting"
their president. When the speeches were over,
Rosehart said he had enjoyed "every minute" of his
time at Lakehead."This University is an institution
that has allowed a lot of people a chance to grow,"
he added.

Rosehart said he leaves Lakehead "in fighting trim"
During his time at Lakehead, Rosehart guided the and looks forward to working with the next presiUniversity through academic and strategic planning dent as a "southern ally." •· Frances Harding

�¥@·4&amp;-f---------------------------

Interim President
Appointed
Chair of the Board of Governors Maureen
Doig, announced on July
18, 1997, that Dr. John
Whitfield had agreed to
accept the position of Interim President effective
September I, 1997. "The
Board of Governors has
every confidence in Dr.
Whitfield's leadership and we look forward
to working with him in his new capacity."
Dr. James Gellert and Dr. David Kemp have
agreed to appointments as Acting VicePresident (Academic) and Acting Dean of
Arts and Science respectively, effective
September I. -- Lakehead Media Release
Staff, Faculty, Alumni and Friends of
Lakehead University
~
are invited to attend a

~ Special Evening
in honour of
Dr. Robert and Mrs. Rita Rosehart
October 9, 1997
6 pm
at the Valhalla Inn Ballroom
Tickets $40/person
Tax receiptable donations to the Robert &amp;
Rita Rosehart Bursary are gratefully
received.
RSVP by October 2, 1997
343-8910

2

Jt !Final !%port from 'Dr. $.pse/iart ...
It seems strange to 6e writing tfiis 'Jina£ ~port to tfie
Jtgora from a new aesk.arul, altfwugfi. I can see trees,
tfiere tfoes not seem to 6e a Presituntia£fisliing pond.
Jils I Ii.ave said 6efore, I very mucfi enjoyea work.ing

witfi. al£ of tfie iruiiviauals at Laf(Jfieaa 'University over
tfie past 27 p{us years aru£, altfi.ougfi I am Cook.ing
forwartf to a new cfi.affenge (my aesk.is alreatfy very
messy}, it is witfi a Cot ofemotion tfi.at I Ceave L{U(Jfieaa
'University.
Jls most ofyou k.now, I pfan to stay connectea to tfie
9,./j,rtfi aru£ to 'Ifiuruier 'Bay, aru£ I fwpe tfi.at our patfi.s
wi{{ cross again on many occasions.

If I can ever assist any ofyou in tfie future, pCease tfo
get in toucfi. witfi me arui, ifyou are in tfie 'l(jtcfiener/
'WaterCoo areas, eitfiergive me a cal£ or tfrop 6y. I can
6e reacfietf at tfie fo«owing num6ers:
'Teupfwne at 'Wi£.fru{ Laurier 'University is (519) 884·
19 70, e;r_t. 2250
'fa;cnum6er is (519) 746-2604.
'£-mail atftfress is rrosefi.ar@macfi2.w{u.ca

1lorne teupfwne num6er is (519} 883-0245
I wisfi eacfi. arui every one ofyou, as we{[ as Laf(Jfieaa
'University, a[[ tfie 6est in tfie future.
.. 'Dr. 1?,p6ert (j. 'J?..psefi.art

Quotes from the Roast &amp; Toast

"I have been very proud to be the Chancellor during Dr. Rosehart's term when he has
created and sustained a northern University which is quite unique. Apart from his gift as
an administrator, I think that Bob's real gift is that he is a "people" person and people
respond to him well." -- Chancellor Lois Wilson
"Your very capable leadership has brought us through the many challenges remarkably
in tact.Your obvious commitment and devotion to Lakehead has instilled in all of its
Board members a great sense of pride in being part of this University." -- Maureen Doig,

Chair, Board of Governors
"Bob's style has been very much the "open door" policy and it has been a real asset to our
institution. He has left a great legacy... he set the university in a direction which I believe
is the right direction. We are now firmly established as a strong, vibrant, regional University doing what we should do.... "•• Dr. John Whitfield, Interim President
"Along with the many accomplishments Dr. Bob has made at the helm of Lakehead, one
of the main ones is that he has interwoven Lakehead University into the fabric of both
Thunder Bay and the region... Bob in his quiet, gentlemanly ways was always there to
urge on a group, a student, a community."-- Mayor David Hamilton
Lakehead University, September, 1997

�M W • » &amp; - t -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --

Dean of Engineering
Appointed
Dr. Henri Saliba has been appointed
Lakehead University's
new Dean of the Faculty of
Engineering. The announcement was made
August 22, 1997, by
Maureen Doig, Chair of
Lakehead University's
Board of Governors.
Saliba will be the University's second Dean
of Engineering, following the stepping
down of Dr. Gary Locker after 21 years.
"We are very pleased to welcome Dr. Saliba
to the senior administration team and we
look forward to working with him in his
new capacity," said Doig.
Saliba moved to Canada from Lebanon in
1969. He came to Lakehead University in
1986 to take a position as Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering. In 1993 he was promoted to the
rank of Full Professor, and in 1995 was appointed the Chair of the Department of
Mechanical Engineering.
Saliba holds a BASc, MASc and PhD in
Mechanical Engineering from the University of Ottawa. His research interests include Mechanical Vibrations of Continuous Structures and Design and he has been
widely published in his field. He holds
memberships in the Professional Engineers
of Ontario, the Canadian Society for Mechan ical Engineering (CSME) and
Groupement pour I' Avancement de la
Mecanique lndustrielle (GAMI). He is a
Senior Member of the American Institute
of Aeronautics and Astronautics and is also
a member of a number of other professional
organizations. -- lakehead Media Release

Aquabics
The pool will be offering a lunchtime
aquabics class Tuesdayss and Thursdays,
11 :45 a.m. to 12: 15 p.m. The cost is $20
for IO sessions. Participants must pre-register before September 19, 1997. A minimum of 15 people are needed and the instructor is Anne Parr. Classes begin September 23. To register call 343-8656 or
come to the pool office.

3

Faculty Agreement Reached
On August 15, 1997, the Board of Governors of Lakehead University and the
Lakehead University Faculty Association
(LUFA) announced they had ratified a
three-year collective agreement which includes a 0% scale increase for the first two
years, and a 1.5% increase in the third year
of the contract. Faculty will be entitled to
performance-based in-service increments
and there is an agreement by the Board to
establish a commission with LUFA representation during the final year of the contract to study Lakehead University's relative salary position in comparison to those
at other Ontario universities. -- lakehead
Media Release

Looking for Child Care this Fall?
Lakehead's Nanabijou Childcare Centre
still has full-time and part-time spaces
available for pre-school and school-age
children (busing available from several local schools). Evening care is also available. For information call Sheila Wilhelm
at 343-8369.

Balacko elected to COUSA Executive
At the June conference of the Confederation of Ontario University Staff Associations and Unions (COUSA) Cheryl
Balacko, representing OPEIU Local 96 at
Lakehead, was elected to the position of
executive secretary. COUSA is composed
of 12 employee organizations at Ontario
universities with over 5,000 dues-paying
members.

Inside Canadian Universities
Dr. Randle W. Nelsen (Sociology) has edited a new book entitled Inside Canadian
Universities: Another Day at the Plant
(Kingston: Cedarcreek Publications) in
which he has written two chapters "Marking Time in Computopia" and "Reading,
Writing and Relationships among the Electronic Zealots."
Other contributors include Dr. David A.
Nock (Sociology) and Lakehead alumni
Susan Heald, Stephannie Roy, and Gordon
Bruyere who contributed papers on women's and aboriginal educational experiences.

More choices in Atlantic Canada
In September 1998 the Association of Atlantic Universities (AAU) plans to offer an
open learning service that will enable students to earn a degree by combining existing credits with credits earned from universities in Atlantic Canada. The AAU
plans to offer a bachelor of general studies
as its first degree, and intends to pilot a
new degree program each subsequent year
during its first five years of operation. The
proposal cites the common desire of universities in Atlantic Canada to offer students hig h quality distance education
choices, and to make the transfer of university credits as convenient as possible.-Gazette, Memorial University of Newfound/and, July JO, /997

Marc Renaud appointed President of
SSHRC
Dr. Marc Renaud has been appointed President of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada effective
September 2, 1997.
Renaud is a professor in the Department
of Sociology at the Universite de Montreal.
From 1991 to 1997, he was President of
the Conseil quebecois de la recherche
sociale. He has been Vice-President and
Fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research since 1991, and was Director of the Groupe de recherche sur les
aspects sociaux de las sante et de la
prevention (GRASP) from 1984- I 991. -Media Release

Pictures raise dollars for U of M
A picture book demonstrating the extent
of deterioration to the University of Manitoba's infrastructure (water lines corroding,
walls cracking etc.) prompted government
officials to come up funding for repairs.
As well, they earned the University of
Manitoba third prize in the I 997 Quality
and Productivity Awards given by the Canadian Associaiton of University Business
Officers (CAUBO). -- University Affairs,
August-September, 1997

lakehead Universily, September, /997

�14it•i;&amp;-------------------------- -- 4
Following from the recommendations in
the Poulter Report (see the Report from the
President in the June, 1997, issue of the
Agora), there has been some restructuring
effective August 18, 1997:

An
Update
from the
Interim
President

Gwen Wojda was appointed Director of
Part-Time Studies. This will include \he
former Continuing Education and Distance
Education units. As well, Wojda will lead
the revitalization of our part-time programming and, in doing so, will work closely
with the Faculties. Also, Gwen Wojda will
Chair the Senate Committee on Continuing Education.

Dr. John WhiJfield

Welcome
Welcome to new and returning students and
to all members of the University community. The 1997 fall term is off to an excellent start. Registration went smoothly, orientation and welcoming activities were
enjoyed by many, and classes are well
underway. Thanks to all who were involved in organizing and delivering these
activities. A special note of appreciation
to the hard work by the Registrar's Office,
Student Services and LUSU.

Farewell to Dr. and Mrs. Rosehart

Associate Dean of Arts and Science for this
period.
Athletics has been separated, administratively, from the School of Kinesiology. The
Co-ordinator of Athletics, Stu Julius, now
reports to the Director of Student Services
and Community Relations, Joy
Himmelman. This change reflects the recommendation of the School of Kinesiology
and the Athletics Advisory Committee.
The two units, of course, will continue to
work out of the same space and to co-operate on matters of mutual interest.

Dan Pakulak has assumed the role of Director of International Activities. This new
office will bring a focus to our international
activities including international student
recruitment. Pakulak has assumed responsibility for international exchanges. As
well, he will work closely with Anne
Klymenko who continues to provide support for international research efforts, particularly through CIDA and other granting agencies.
Both Wojda and Pakulak will report to the
Vice-President (Academic).

Presidential Scholars
Congratulations to Lakehead University's
1997/98 Presidential Scholars. Both of the
winners of this prestigious scholarship are
women, and both are from Thunder Bay.

Typically, Bob Rosehart was at his desk
until late in the afternoon even on his final
day of work at Lakehead. His energy and
enthusiasm will be missed. Our best wishes
to Bob and Rita on their move 10 Waterloo
and to Bob during his Presidency at Wilfrid
Laurier University. There was a full house
for the University farewell party for the
Roseharts. Grant Walsh did a masterful job
of entertaining as Master of Ceremonies.
Thanks to all the participants, there was an
appropriate balance of roasting and toasting. Everyone is invited to a community
event honouring Bob and Rita on October
9. See the notice on page 2 of this issue.

Restructuring
During the period of my Interim Presidency, Dr. Jim Gellert will be Acting VicePresident (Academic). Dr. David Kemp
will continue as Acting Dean of Arts and
Science, and Dr. Werden Keeler as Acting

Registration went smoothly, orientation and
welcoming activities were enjoyed by many, and
classes are well underway.
IAkehead University, September, /997

�C M • h &amp; -&gt; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The scholarship is valued at $10,000 and
is based on academic performance, community service, leadership, and interests.
Winners are chosen following an interview.

This year's winners are: Christine Chezick,
a graduate of Westgate Collegiate &amp; Vocational Institute. She is enrolled in Engineering Technology (Chemical), and she
plans to be a Chemical Engineer. In addition to a strong academic background in
science and mathematics, Christine's background includes arts and drama. At
Westgate, she played in the senior concert
band, was captain of the dance team . and
participated in the production of several
musicals. As well, she was involved in
athletics, has done volunteer work, and held
a part-time job.
Ashley Gillson is enrolled in honours B.Sc.
in Biology and Chemistry. The Port Arthur
Collegiate Institute (PACI) grad intends to
pursue medicine as a career. While at
PACI, she was chosen to attend the Model
United Nations and was an active member
of Ontario Students Against Impaired Driving, the Math. Club, Yearbook and Environmental Club. Ashley was the principal
flute player in the PAC] and Hillcrest Senior Concert Bands and sang in the Thunder Bay Symphony Chorus. She worked
part-time and was e ngaged in volunteer
activities.

ees by the Faculty of Business, co-operative education placements, support for international student exchange programs,
Avenor employee wellness programs, as
well as continuing research and development. Lakehead welcomes this partnership
with one of our community's major corporate citizens.

5

"You've Made the Right Choice"

Professor Ron Ianni
Dr. Ron Ianni, recently retired President
of the University of Windsor, died on September 6, 1997 after a lengthy illness. Dr.
Ianni was a respected leader and spokesperson for the Ontario university system
and served as Chair of the Council of Ontario Universities. Condolences have been
sent, on behalf of the University, to Mrs.
Ianni and the University of Windsor community.
President's

Katherine Shedden of the Registrar's Office (right) chats with parents David and
Linda Perry about life in Thunder Bay The
Perrys are from Waterloo, Ontario. Their
daughter Anne, sitting between them, is a
first-year Kinesiology student at Lakehead.

Barbecue

It is a pleasure to welcome Christine and
Ashley to Lakehead University.
Canada Foundation for Innovation
"The Canada Foundation for Innovation
(CFI) is an independent corporation established by the Government of Canada to
strengthen Canadian capability for research." This is a quote from the recent
circular from CFI in which proposed programs are described. There is a call for
feedback on these proposals. Details are
available from the office of the Dean of
Graduate Studies and Research, Dr. Connie
Nelson.
Avenor
Avenor (Thunder Bay) and Lakehead University have signed a Partnership Statement. The initial phase of the partnership
will be to develop a relationship in a variety of areas which include leadership development programs for Avenor employ-

What would Registration Week be without a hamburger served up by a
Celebrity Chef during the annual President's Barbecue? Registrar Pentti
Paularinne and Co-ordinator of Counselling Services Ian Cull do the
honours.
IAkehead University, September, /997

�►@•#&amp;---------------------------- 6

Cross Canada Shannon Tour hits Home

The Best Student Chapter
in Canada
The Lakehead University Student Chapter
of the Canadian Society for Civil Engineering (CSCE) won the CSCE President's
Award for Best Student Chapter in Canada
for 1996-97. The award was announced at
the CSCE Annual Conference in
Sherbrooke on May 29, 1997. The executive committee of the CSCE student chapter for 1996-97 are: Nancy Wojciechowski,
president; Sean Mooney, vice president;
Jim Chisholm, activities co-ordinator; Mike
McLean, treasurer; and Jarron Childs, secretary.
"This is the third time the CSCE student
chapter at Lakehead won this award since
the award was established 15 years ago,"
says Dr. Said Easa, chair of the Department
of Civil Engineering.

Dave Shannon has raised more than $400,000 to supporl educational, entrepreneurial
and research initiatives for the disabled since his cross Canada tour began last April. The
Lakehead University graduate expects to arrive in Victoria. B. C. by the end of October.

29th Algonq uian Conference

Help with Publishing

The 29th Algonquian Conference will be
held at Lakehead University Oc tober 2426, 1997. Papers will be given on topics
pertaining to Algonquian peoples, including Ojibwe, Cree, Micmac, Blackfoot,
Delaware, and other Algonquian groups in
Canada and the United States.

Dr. Michael MacLean, a professor of gerontology at McMaster University and adjunct professor to the Department of Social Work at Lakehead, held three workshops on campus last June on the topic of
publishing in academic journals.

The Conference traditionally deals with art,
archaeology, ethnology, history, linguistics,
music, literature, philosophy, political studies, religion, and other areas.
The proceedings of the Conference are published by the University of Manitoba.
Registration fees before October I, 1997
are $40 Canadian ($35 US) for non-students, $25 ($20 US) for students; after October I they are $45 ($40 US) for non-students, $30 ($25 US) for students.
A preliminary schedule is now available.
For further information contac t John
O'Meara (Education) at 343-8054; electronic mail: john.omeara@lakeheadu.ca;
World Wide Web
s ite:
http://
www . Iak eheadu . ca/-A I gCon f97.
john.omeara@lakeheadu.ca

Currently he is working with IO faculty
members, IO graduate students and 12 community researchers and will be back on
campus during the week of November 3
for another workshop and individual meetings with people who want them.
MacLean has experience as an author, section editor of the Canadian Journal on
Aging, and editorial board member of the
Canadian Social Work Review.
The workshops were organized with the
support of the Office of Graduate Studies
and Research and NECAH.
Michael Maclean can be reached by
e-mail:
michael.maclean@sympatico.ca

"The CSCE executive committee and
CSCE Faculty Advisor Dr. Claude Johnson
are to be commended for their dedication
and hard work."

Richard Rebneris, a Lakehead civil engineering graduate, won the first prize in
the CSCE 1996 Hydrotechnical Division
Undergraduate Student Report Competition
for his degree project report entitled, "Rainwater Harvesting for Residential Irrigation." The degree project was supervised
by Dr. Urned Panu.
Zulfikar Abdul Karim, also a Lakehead
civil engineering graduate, won the second
prize in the CSCE 1996 Transportation
Division Undergraduate Student Report
Competition for his degree project entitled,
"Filling Vertical Alignment to Road Profile Data." The degree project was supervised by Dr. Said Easa.
Both Richard and Zulfikar will receive a
Certificate of Merit as well as a one-year
free membership in CSCE. The abstracts
of their reports will be published in an
upcoming issue of the Canadian Civil Engineer magazine.

I.Aicehead University, September, 1997

�MW•h&amp;-f---------------------------,n Memoriam

Dr. K. J. Charles

7

Profile

Dr. Koipillai J. Charles, professor, chainnan and first appointee to the new Department
of Economics at Lakehead University, Ontario, passed away in Madras, India, on June 6,

1997.
Charles had been appointed in 1966 by Dr. Gordon Rothney, first Dean of Arts and
Science at Lakehead University. At the time of his death Dr. Charles had retired and was
professor emeritus of economics actively associated with a research institute in his hometown of Madras, India. For over three decades Dr. Charles taught hundreds of students.
He recei ved his MA from the prestigious Presidency College, Madras and his PhD from
McGill University while on a scholarship in Canada. He later taught at McGill and at the
University of Manitoba before joining Lakehead and building up the new Department of
Economics. He specialized in development economics but his intellectual curiosity took
his research beyond his specialization into political economy. He was the author of several books and research papers including Total Development: Essays Toward and Integration of Marxian and Gandhian Perspectives and The Myth of Inflation.
Charles was a prolific essayist and although initially a Keynesian adopted other modes
of thinking and writing about Marx, Gandhi and socialist humanism. Like others of his
generation of Canadian economists he was a strong advocate of Canadian nationalism
and a critic of American global hegemony. A strong voice for public conscience he was
a defender of minorities especially Aboriginal people and drew attention to problems of
racism infonning his scholarship with an intellectual vigour that was as logical as it was
incisive. He worked with the United Nations in New York, organized a CIDA funded
program for middle level administrators from Third World countries, and hosted a large
number of distinguished economists at Lakehead while upholding the highest standards
of scholarship.The death of K.J. Charles removes an eminent economist from the Canadian, Indian and international scene.
Charles was predeceased by his wife Anna Charles and is survived by his daughters Gita
and Consuela and sons Ashoke and Mohon.

-- Dr. Pradip Sarbadhikari, Chair; Department of Political Science

Public Lecture
Thunder Bay Branch, CIIA

INDONESIA TODAY
Speaker: David Harries, Senior
Fellow, Center for Strategic and
International Studies, Jakarta,
Indonesia

Date: Tuesday, Sept. 30, 1997
Time: 8 pm
Place: Senate Chambers, Room
1001
Everyone Welcome
(Admission Free)

Co-sponsored by the
Lakehead University
Department of History

Honorary Degrees
A Call for Candidates
The Senate Committee on Honorary Degrees invites all members of the University community to submit the names of
suitable candidates for honorary degrees to
be awarded at the spring Convocation in
May of 1998.
It would be helpful if as much infonnation
as possible could be provided about each
candidate proposed. All suggestions will
be carefully considered by the Committee
which will then make its recommendations
to Senate.
Please send your proposals, as soon as possible, to the attention of Dr Walter Epp,
Chair, Senate Committee on Honorary
Degrees, c/o Faculty of Education

Dr. Mark Gallagher
Assistant Professor
Department of Physics
CB 4031 (ext. 8226)
History: Started working at Lakehead
University in August, 1995, having spent
two years working in the Environmental
Molecular Sciences Laboratory of a U.S.
Government Research Lab in Washington State called the Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory (PNNL).
Education: Completed his undergraduate degree in Physics at the University
of Calgary and a PhD at the University
of Alberta in 1990. Completed a Postdoc at Pennsylvania State University before taking a position to work in the field
of Environmental Remediation alongside
3,000 other scientists at PNNL.
Teaching and Research Interests: Recipient of the only NSERC Equipment
grant to be awarded to Lakehead in
1997-98 ($46,988 to purchase the control system for a scanning tunneling microscope) as well as a $25,000 NSERC
grant to study "Heteroepitaxy of ultrathin
films of metals and metal oxides."
Why he chose Lakehead: 'You get the
best of both worlds... lt is a small department, but since everyone is focussed in
one area of Physics (condensed matter
and optical physics) you get to work in a
good atmosphere. There is lots of potential."
Roots: Born in England, moved to Medicine Hat, Alberta, at age 10 and developed an interest in Physics by way of
high school Chemistry. Has enjoyed lifelong interest in soccer which he plays
year 'round in Thunder Bay. Happy to
be back in Canada with his wife Moira
and daughters, Laura, 8, and Sheila, 4.

!Akehead Vni~ersity, September, 1997

�l t i i • U § -1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 8

Women's Wartime Work
For the past two years, Professor Pam
Wakewich (Women's Studies/Sociology),
Dr. Helen Smith (Women's Studies/History) and Dr. Jeanette Lynes (English) have
been collaborating on an interdisciplinary
research project. They are examining women's wartime work and identities within the
broader framework of theoretical questions
concerning women, work and social change
currently being debated in women's history and feminist historiography.
A central component of their research is
the collection of original oral histories of
women who worked at Canadian Car and
Foundry Co. Limited (CanCar), Fort
William -- an important site of aircraft
manufacture during World War II.
In the fall of 1996, a brief article about the
project in The Chronicle-Journal generated an overwhelming response from local
residents who had been employed themselves, or who knew of women who had
been employed at CanCar during the war
years. By the fall of 1998 the researchers
hope to have collected between 50 and 60
original oral history interviews with the
CanCar women.
The following exerpt, detailing some of the
researchers' early findings, is from a paper accepted for publication in a forthcoming book and accompanying CD ROM entitled A Century Stronger -- Womens History in Canada edited by Dr. Sharon Cook,
University of Ottawa, and Kate O'Rourke
Provincial Archives of Ontario:

"Of particular interest in the prelimi11ary
analysis of the first group of i11terviews
completed are the early work histories of
many of the CanCar women which challenge the common sense presumption that
the women who worked in war production
were primarily housewives prior to the war,
and that war industry work itself was experienced as "non-traditional," or distinctly different from their prewar work.
For the many women who migrated from
prairie fanns to the Fort William p/a111, as
well as local rural women, work with machinery in the plant was not dissimilar in
terms of physical demand and skill to the
farm work they had grown up with. For
1vomen employed as domestic workers prior

Women's parlicipation in aircraft
production at Forl William 's CanCar
plant began in 1938 with the hiring of a
small group of women to sew fabric
wings and tails for aircraft (photo,right).
Over the next five years, women
moved into almost all stages of plant
production until, by 1944, they numbered 2, 707 out of a total of 6, 760
employees.

to the war, the work ar CanCar was described as preferable because of its higher
pay, clearer job expectations and more
employee autonomy, and the camaraderie
with other workers. While a few of the
women expressed relief at returning to a
more domestic role after the plants closure, many others indicated that they would
have preferred to remain in a similar type
of employment at the plant if the opportunity had been available to them. "
-- "Womens Wartime Work and Identities:
A Case Study of Women Workers at Canadian Car and Foundry Co. Limited, Fort
William, Ontario, 1938-1945"
This in-depth, interdisciplinary research
project has been funded by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
(SSHRC) Aid to Small Universities Grant

through the Lakehead University Centre for
Feminist Research. Two papers on this
project were presented this summer: one
by Helen Smith to the Canadian Historical
Association Conference and The Learned
Societies Meeting, Memorial University in
St. John's, Newfoundland, and another by
Jeanette Lynes at the "Voices of the North/
Visions of the North" Conference at the
University of Nipissing in North Bay, Ontario. An article derived from these conference papers is forthcoming in the Thunder Bay Historical Museum Journal Papers
and Records.
Photo Credits: The large photo above
dates from 1943-44 and is from the
collection of Mrs. Betty Strasko. The
smaller one is from the collection of
Mrs. Isabelle Spicer (nee Baird).
Lakehead University, September, /997

�9
Web Development Office
Lakehead's Web Development Office can
help you generate high quality and creative web pages in keeping with Lakehead
policies and graphics standards. For information contact Lakehead's Web Administrator Carol Otte at ext. 8408.

Visiting the UK?

Centre for
Feminist Research
The Centre for Feminist Research at
Lakehead University seeks to consolidate,
promote, and expand research from a feminist perspective. The objectives of the Centre are:
-- to promote and facilitate, within an interdisciplinary context, the various feminist
research initiatives which are being undertaken by scholars within the Lakehead University community;
-- to work toward securing long-term funding for activities associated with feminist
initiatives at Lakehead University;
-- to lend long-term structure and continuity to feminist research at Lakehead University;
--to provide students from all disciplines
with the opportunity to incorporate feminist perspectives into their research;
-- to provide a venue for research presentations and dialogue among feminist scholars across disciplines;
Membership in the Centre is open to anyone interested in feminist research. The activities of the Centre are organized by a
Coordinating Committee selected by the
Centre's members.
For information contact Dr. Helen Smith,
Women Studies Co-ordinator, Department
of History 343-8581.

Alumni Support
During the summer, the President of the
Alumni Association Jim Kalyta presented
Lakehead University with a cheque for
$7,500, It is the first installment toward its
three-year pledge of $45,000 to create a
LU-OSOTF bursary.

If you are visiting Britain or spending a
sabbatical there the Academic Relations
Unit of the Canadian High Commission in
London would like to hear from you. The
Academic Relations Unit promotes teaching, research and publication about Canada
in the United Kingdom, and academic linkages with the UK. Contact Michael Hellyer,
Canadian High Commission, I Grosvenor
Square, London, WIX 0AB
Telephone: 011 44 171 258 6691
Fax: 011 44 171 258 6474

or E-mail:
michael.hellyer@ldn02.x400.gc.ca

Help with Public Speaking
Thunder Bay Toastmasters has produced
two 30-minute videos in collaboration with
Shaw Cable which give tips on organizing
and delivering a presentation and running
an effective business meeting. They will
air on Shaw Cable 7 to coincide with the
first Toastmasters International District 6
conference October 17-18, 1997, at the
Valhalla Inn in Thunder Bay.
For more information contact Dr. Yves
Prevost in the Faculty of Forestry. Prevost
has been elected Lieutenant Governor of
Education and Training for Toastmasters
International of District 6 which includes
over 4,500 Toastmasters from Minnesota
and Northwestern Ontario.

Partnership with Avenor
Avenor (Thunder Bay) and Lakehead have
entered into an agreement that will see the
two organizations renew and strengthen
their corporate-to-corporate partnership.
The initial phase of the partnership will be
to develop a relationship in a variety of
areas which will include Avenor employee
leadership development, co-operative education participation, cultivation of international student exchange programs, research
and development enhancement and Avenor
employee wellness programs.

Technology Centre
Gains Momentum
Lakehead University is doing what it can
to ensure that small businesses get a foothold in Thunder Bay. The University, in
partnership with the private sector, City of
Thunder Bay and Confederation College,
plans to establish the Northwestern Ontario
Technology Centre -- a facility designed
to provide a setting for business to create
and expand new employment.
Project Manager Ray Rivard explains the
concept in a preliminary business plan:
"Technology Centres are effective and efficient mechanisms for the transfer of technology from the research labs to the private sector, and ultimately the marketplace.
Such centres play a vital role in the development, commercialization, and growth of
new ventures resulting in job creation and
general economic development." His goal
is to present a full business plan to Thunder Bay's City Council in October with the
hope that a decision on the Centre's location will be made by spring.
Embedded in the plan is the idea of having
a number of "anchor tenants." These might
include the Industrial Research Assistance
Program (!RAP), Development Thunder
Bay's Sma.11 Business Self Help Office, and
Lakehead University's Technology Transfer Office all of which currently offer services to entrepreneurs. Other savings would
be achieved by having tenants pool administrative facilities and services such as
board rooms, reception areas, computers
and fax machines.
Initial funding for the planning of the Technology Centre was provided by-Human Resources Development Canada. The Board
of Directors currently comprised of Sharon
Hacio (Chair), Dr. John Whitfield, Roy
Murray, George Fleming, Ken Bruley,
Marvin Detweiler and Frank Pullia will be
increased to include two representatives
from the region and three from the local
business community.
For further information contact Ray Rivard
at 343-8887 or visit him at his office in the
Student Placement &amp; Co-operative Education Centre on the second floor of the University Centre.

IAkehead University, September, /997

�Alex Pasquali
International Student Advisor

A well-travelled Lakehead graduate who
is fluent in four languages has taken on the
job of advising our international students
this year. His name is Alex Pasquali and
you can find him in a new office beside
the LUSU office (in what used to be the
Gender Issues Centre).

Scouting Out Lakehead
You can be sure that when 12,000 scouts visited Thunder Bay to altend the 9th Scouts
Canada Jamboree July 12-20, 1997, Lakehead University had its recruitment materials at
the ready! In fact, Lakehead had a strong presence on the CJ'97 site at Boulevard Lake
thanks to the many staff and faculty from Forestry, Geology, Biology, Geography, Engineering, Languages, Computer Science and Outdoor Recreation, Parks &amp; Tourism who
volunteered to staff the University's display and activity area. Scouts who correctly answered a few skill-testing questions such as "What city is Lakehead University in?" and
"Name three areas of study that Lakehead University offers" earned a Lakehead University crest and the opportunity to enter their name into a daily draw for prizes.
Registrar Pentti Paularinne has been a long-time volunteer with Scouts Canada. He is the
regional commissioner for Northwestern Ontario region, Scouts Canada, and served on
the CJ'97 special events committee.

Life is Simple:
Eat, Sleep, Play Golf.
Eighteen teams turned out to play a lively
"best ball" tournament at the annual Maintenance Choice Golf Tournament in June.
After dinner, organizers handed out a variety of prizes including the Maintenance
Choice Trophey which went to the team
with the lowest score: Al Law, Norm Galloway, Rob Nahachewski and Judy Bates.
The department is grateful to all those who
donated prizes, the volunteers who organized the event, and the Print Shop for their
continued support. Proceeds from the tournament were directed to the Lakehead
University Maintenance Choice Bursary
Fund.

Pasquali has travelled to 61 countries since
visiting Italy as a child. Most recently he
spent a year supply teaching in London.
But he 's also taught in Korea and Costa
Rica.
His passion for travel is connected to his
love of languages and "new ways of thinking." His many experiences abroad, he says,
will help him to empathize with the international students at Lakehead who may be
unfamiliar with Canadian ways.

Banks
Support
Graduate
Busaries
The Royal Bank and CIBC,
ongoing Lakehead University supporters, established
significant endowments
through the Ontario Student
Trust Fund program which
will result in a payout of
$4800 in annual graduate student bursaries. These bursaries will first be awarded in
January, 1999. (1-r) Marv Detweiler, Manager, Northwestern Business Centre, Royal
Bank; Len Scramstad, Area Manager, Royal Bank; Dr. Bob Rosehart; Denise Blair, Account Manager, CIBC; Cameron Nicholson, Manager, CIBC.
Lakehead Unfrersity, September, /997

�lti·h&amp;-r--------------------------Library News
September news including tours, renovations, hours of operation, new electronic
sources, placing materials on reserve, etc.
is contained in a news letter edited by
Gisella Scalese.
Lakehead University Library News is also
available on the Library's web page http:/
/www.lakeheadu.ca/-librwww/home.htm1
(click on Library Hours/News).
Staff News
During the spring and summer months, employment notices were issued by the Human Resource Department announcing the
appointments of the following:
Michael K. Mcisaac, Counsellor, Native
Support Services; Karen Chan, Nurse,
Health Services Unit; Kevin G. Maggrah,
Technologist, Civil/Mechanical Engineering; Pat Kanary, Residence Facilties Supervisor, Residence and Conference Services; Elsie Stoney, Research Assistant,
Faculty of Education; Deneen Dutchak,
Shelver, Library; Marsha Porter, Library
Technician/Secretary; Alex Pasquali, International Student Advisor; and Sandi
Covino, Coordinator, Health Services.

In Memoriam
Lakehead University extends condolences
to the family and friends of two women
who passed away at the end of August. Both
were employed in Campus Development:
Alma Giovanna Petricig passed away on
August 18, 1997. Petricig had been employed in Campus Development for I 2
years. She is survived by her husband Luigi,
a daughter and a son. If friends desire, donations may be made to the Alma Petricig
Memorial Bursary, c/o Lakehead University Development Office.
Beverley Ann Rayner passed away at her
residence on August 28, 1997. Rayner had
been employed in Campus Development
part-time for four years and full-time since
August, 1996. She is survived by her son
Kenny and her mother Beverley Ann
Rayner.

11

Kim Trimble awarded NRC's
Women in Engineering and Science Award
by Linda Wood, Financial Aid Office
A first-year electrical engineering student, has been
awarded the 1997 National Research Council's
Women in Engineering and Science Award.

Kim Trimble entered Lakehead University in the
summer of 1995, having completed the Native Access Program in Engineering. It is her ambition to
work in the information and communication industry.
The National Research Council's (NRC) Women
in Engineering and Science Program was established
over five years ago. This unique program is designed to encourage greater participation of women
in the under-represented fields of engineering, science and mathematics. NRC's research portfolio includes expertise in disciplines as diverse as
biotechnology, manufacturing, information technology and telecommunications.
This year, NRC screened over 100 candidate nominations. Universities across Canada
were able to nominate three candidates for this prestigious award. Trimble is one of 26
nationally recognized candidates!
Submissions included information on the student's fields of study, public exposure, job
training, leadership skills, communication skills, two letters of reference as well as a
letter from the student explaining why they wish to be considered for the NRC Women in
Engineering and Science Program.
During the next three summers, Trimble will become a part-time NRC employee, working with researchers in NRC laboratories. Throughout the tenure of the Women in Engineering and Science Program, Trimble will be partnered with an NRC scientist or engineer who will act as her mentor, providing the guidance and direction necessary for her
to define and reach her goals.
Trimble says she is elated with her 'good news' and is somewhat overwhelmed with all
the opportunities NRC's Women in Engineering and Science Award has opened for her
in achieving her academic, research and career goals. Trimble is looking forward to
sharing her success with her family and friends. This summer, she was working with
Suncor Energy Oil Sands Company in Fort McMurray, Alberta.
NOTE: Last year, Neety Panu, who was registered in her first year Honours Bachelor of
Science in Biology, was also successful in receiving the NRC's Women in Engineering
and Science Award. Panu spent the summer working in an NRC laboratory in Ottawa.

John Zanatta Alumni
Games
October 18, 1997
Information - 343-8213

uikehead UnfrusiJy, September, 1997

�+@•i;&amp;-

12

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
ON SUICIDE PREVENTION

Mark your calendar for the following

OSOTF DRESS DOWN
DAYS

October 29-November 1, 1997
Lakehead University is one of four organizations hosting the 8th annual conference
of The Canadian Association for Suicide
Prevention at the Valhalla Inn from October 29 to November 1, 1997.

Share Your Views
The Agora welcomes letters to the
editor. Writers must include their
full name with signature, department and/or address. Send your
letters to the Information Office,
Lakehead University, 955 Oliver
Rd., Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5El or
by E-mail to:
fharding@lakeheadu.ca

The goals of the conference are:
-to increase awareness of the problem of
suicide within northern and rural communities and among professional and community groups,

Do you have information you would
like to see published in the Agora?
Listed below are the editor's copy
deadlines:

-and to increase suicide prevention skills.

October '97 Issue:
copy deadline:October 7, 1997

A variety of presentations, activities and
opportunities for interaction and discussion
will take place over the four days. As well
as keynote speakers, there will be a presentation of the one-woman play "Path with
no Moccasins" written and performed by
actor Shirley Cheechoo, and a "Blues for
Life" Banquet featuring one of Canada's
premier Blues bands -- the Downchild
Blues Band.

November '97 Issue
copy deadline:November 4,
1997
December '97 Issue
copy deadline:December 2,
1997
January '98 Issue
copy deadline:January 5, 1998

For information contact Ian Cull, Counselling and Career Centre, at ext. 8934. A
registration form is available through the
Association 's web s ite -- http://
www3.sympatico.ca/masecard/index.html

February '98 Issue
copy deadline:February 2, 1998
March '98 Issue
copy deadline:March 2, 1998

Monday to Thursday
8 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Friday
8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Saturday
1O a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday
12 noon to 9 p.m.

EDUCATION LIBRARY
Monday to Thursday
8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Friday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday
Closed

May '98 Issue
copy deadline:May 4,1998
June'981ssue
copy deadline:June 1, 1998

L

Vol. 14, No. 7

Agora is published by the Information Office of the Department of Student Services and Community Relations. The newsletter is distributed
monthly (except for July and August)
to faculty, staff and friends of
Lakehead University.
Director of Student Services and
Community Relations:
Joy Himmelman
Publications Officer:
Frances Harding
Communications/Special Events
Officer: Denise Bruley
Administrative Assistant:
Betty Hygaard
Photography:
Peter Puna and Staff
Graphics:
Ben Kaminski &amp; Nicole Sutherland
Printing: LU Print Shop
Submissions of interest to the
University community are welcome. Send them to:

April '98 Issue
copy deadline: April 6, 1998

CHANCELLOR PATERSON
LIBRARY HOURS

Agora
September 1997

Share Your News

-lo increase knowledge as lo the contributing factors towards suicidal behaviours
and problems with bereavement for individuals, families and communities,

September 12, 1997
October 10, 1997
December 12, 1997
January 9, 1998
March 13, 1998
April 10, 1998
May 8, 1998

_J

Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
·Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7B 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8999
E-mail:
frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

C. Trojan

Community Relations

IAlcthead Uni~usily, September, / 997

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7113">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.14 No.7</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7114">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7115">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an article on President Dr. Robert G. Rosehart's retirement, an update from the President, and updates on research.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7116">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7117">
                <text>1997-09</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Agora</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="573">
        <name>Dr. J. Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1121">
        <name>Dr. John Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="538">
        <name>Dr. R. Rosehart</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1100">
        <name>President's Message</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1281" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17987">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/0b57b521d9d06bc5486cf82d333e2f99.pdf</src>
        <authentication>6def5602398f99e310694d4c1e653ed1</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="125008">
                    <text>OCTOBER

1998

ANEWSLETTER FOR LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY STAFF &amp; FACULTY

Lakehead in Partnership with
Thunder Bay Regional Hospital
in the Thunder Bay region
and enhance the
University's academic
interests in the health
sciences area."

Inside
Dr. Gillian Siddall
...2
Greg Shalay
... 2
Dr. Michael Stones
... 3
A Writing Life
...6

"Basically, we've set up a
mechanism for the transfer
of land," said Gilbert.
"What we retain is an
interest in joint venture
opportunities that might
occur on that parcel of
land, where the two parties
would share equally in the
opportunities.
It is
LAKEIIEAD UNIVERSITY
something that is mutually
""""
beneficial ... and I'm
looking forward to future
Lakehead University and Thunder Bay Regional
developments that will link the Regional Hospital
Hospital have come to an understanding that will
,with Lakehead in a very productive way."
lead to a partnership agreement involving the
Ron Saddington, president and CEO of Thunder
transfer of 60 acres of land for the purpose of
Bay Regional Hospital, thanked Lakehead for its
building and operating a new acute care hospital.
generosity, noting that the parcel of land is valued
The land would be transferred to the Regional
Hospital under the terms of a partnership
agreement that would see Lakehead University
retain an interest in commercial development
opportunities that may occur as a result of the
hospital's presence.
"What we will be able to accomplish is exciting;'
said Lakehead University President Fred Gilbert at
a joint news conference held on September 30,
1998.

"Both parties are pleased that this understanding
has been reached as it will benefit health services

at approximat~ly $3 million.
The understanding, he says, gives Thunder Bay
Regional Hospital room to develop a "hospital
campus" and the potential of developing a unique
set of relationships with the Northern Ontario
Medical Program (NOMP), Family Medicine
North, Health Sciences North as well as
Lakehead University and Confederation College.
The partnership agreement must be approved by
the Lakehead University Board of Governors and
will be on the agenda for its next meeting.
-- Frances Harding

�New Staffand Farulty
Dr. Gillian Siddall
Department of English

It didn't take long for
Or. Gillian Siddall to
get involved with the
arts community in
Thunder Bay.
As Lakehead's newlyhired specialist in
Canadian literature,
she was happy to
oblige when asked to introduce author
Carol Shields at a University fundraising dinner in September. Both
women share an interest in the writings
of Susanna Moodie.
Born and raised in Dundas, Ont., Siddall
completed a PhD at the University of
Western Ontario in 1995. For the last
seven years she has been teaching at
the University of Guelph where she
completed a bachelor of arts and a
master's degree.
Siddall feels good about her move north
and is settling in nicely to Thunder Bay.
Her course load includes a first-year
writing course, a third-year course on
Canadian poetry and a half course at
the graduate level on Canadian pioneer
literature. In addition, she will be
teaching two modules of a graduate
course entitled Research, Theory, and
Professional Skills.
One of her goals this year is to publish a
book based on her dissertation about
Canadian pioneer literature. Another is
to conduct research on the history of the
Canadian Pacific Hotels and the
connection between that corporate
entity and the shaping of national
identity in Canada.
Along the way, she might even have
time to pursue her interest in jazz
singing. Gillian Siddall was co-founder
of the highly successful Guelph Jazz
Festival, now celebrating its fifth year.

Lakehead University, October. 1998. Page 2

Gillian Siddall's office is located in the
Ryan Building, Room 3038, and she can
be contacted by telephone at 343-8440
or by e-mail:
gil/ian. siddalf@lakeheadu.ca

Lost Grads
from the Class of '65
Anton Henry Brink
Kenneth Cleary

Greg Shalay

Brent Phillips Coates

Chief Operating Engineer

Hussein Said David
Ronald K. Eger
Gordon Harle

As Lakehead's chief
operating engineer,
Greg Shalay has 14
staff reporting to him
and is responsible for
the Power House
which controls the
University's heating,
cooling and electrical
distribution systems.
Born and raised in Thunder Bay, Shalay
is a first class stationary engineer who
has spent most of his working life
looking after steam plants. Prior to
signing on with Lakehead University in
July, he spent about 20 years working at
the Abitibi mill in Thunder Bay.
Shalay's wife Nancy is a part-time
student at Lakehead majoring in
psychology and they have two
daughters, both of whom are interested
in travelling. The eldest daughter Andrea
is enrolled at The University of Western
Ontario but is spending a year studying
in England at the International Studies
Centre at Herstmonceux Castle. The
youngest, Tonya, has an exchange
student from Germany staying with her
now and is planning to spend the winter
term in Karst, Germany.
The Shalays live on a farm in
Kaministiquia where they look after 23
head of beef cattle,
Greg Shalay is also secretary to the
Board of Directors of the Kakabeka
Credit Union.
Greg Shalay's office is in Room 2001 B
in the Power House and you can contact
him by telephone at 343-8404.

Hazel Hebden
John Hillier
Peter Rooney Hindle
Walter Mathew lsotalo
Osmo Kankkunen
Wallis James Lancaster
John Ahlan Lindstrom
Graham L. Longmire
Dennis Mazurkewich
Penny S. McAuley (Grace)
Mark G. Morrison

Kenneth P. Mucha
David William Mutch
Robert G. Newstead
Ronald Edward Perry
Gordon Matt Petersen
Joyce Ray
Robert Eugene Ruault
Maurice W. Salavador
John M Shoup
Barnett Smith
Chari E. Spicer
Edward Michael Swiatlowski
Donald R. Walduck

Next May, Lakehead will celebrate its 35th
Convocation. In recognition of this
occasion the Nor'Wester Magazine is
planning a feature article that will report
on all 73 members of the University's first
graduating class. Unfortunately, we have
lost contact with 30 members of the class
whose names are listed above.

If you know the postal address, fax,
telephone number, or e-mail address of
anyone on this list, please contact:
Frances Harding
telephone: 343-8193
fax: 343-8075 e-mail:
frances.hardlng@lakeheadu.ca

�Dr. Michael Stones
Professor of Psychology
and
Director of NECAH
Serendipity played a part in attracting
one of Canada's foremost gerontologists
to Lakehead University this fall.
When Dr. Michael Stones' resume
arrived by fax in the Psychology
department without a covering letter, the
faculty just assumed he was applying· for
a job. Little did they know the Waterloobased professor was simply trying to
send his CV to the Sociology
department to comply with the
requirements of being one of their
external examiners!
But the more Michael Stones thought
about it, the more he liked the idea of moving to Lakehead University to teach in the
Department of Psychology and to direct the activities of the Northern Educational
Centre for Aging and Health (NECAH).
Born and raised near Nottingham in England, Stones completed a PhD in
Psychology at the University of Sheffield. From 1974 to 1994 he taught at Memorial
University in Newfoundland where he was co-founder of the Gerontology Centre. In
1994 he moved to the University of Waterloo to work with the Department of Health
Studies and Gerontology.
Michael Stones sees potential for an expanded gerontology program at Lakehead
that would "fill the void" in Ontario and attract undergraduate and graduate students
from across the country. He thinks NECAH should be receiving more recognition for
its teaching activities and is planning to work with others to formulate a five-year
plan.
He has already submitted two proposals for funding and is excited about getting a
successful aging assessment program on the Internet.
Issues surrounding quality of life, aging and happiness have always fascinated
Stones, and while he enjoys basic and applied research, you can tell he gets a lot
of satisfaction out of helping people.
An example is a recent book he coauthored with his wife Lee entitled Sex May be
Wasted on the Young. Drawn on more than 100 interviews with people between 40
and 85 years old, the book takes a candid look at the challenges of mid-life and
later life sexuality and explains "sexual ageism."
Stones has worked as a clinical psychologist in England and has taught at
universities in England and Canada. He is senior scientist at the University Institute
of Social Gerontology of Quebec in Montreal, and has contributed to more than 100
publications and numerous presentations on gerontology.
Dr. Michael Stones has an office at Health Sciences North, telephone 343-2127,
and in the Olga Merz School of Nursing Building, telephone 343-8994. You can
reach him by e -mail: mstones@sky.lakeheadu.ca

Campus Development Update
by Grant Walsh, Executive Director,
University Services

During the past summer, Campus
Development undertook a number of
improvements and repairs to our
facilities which may be of interest to the
University community.
Major Capital Works

Chancellor Paterson Library
The final phase of renovations to the
Library saw the completion of the main
floor and the reorganization of various
services and collections. This speciallyfunded project has enabled us to
modernize and upgrade library facilities,
as well as to address serious problems
of air quality and accessibility. If you
haven't yet done so, you are
encouraged to have a look at the new
first floor as it is quite impressive.
Kinesiology Project
Kinesiology renovations at the C. J .
Sanders Fieldhouse involved the
creation of a new lab space with the
installation of an upper floor within the
auxiliary gym. The new lab facilities will
accommodate adapted learning and
motor learning studies, as well as multiuse purposes. The lower area now
constitutes a renovated weight room/
fitness facility. This project also involved
improvements in accessibility to the
building, change room repairs and air
quality upgrades.
Other Repair and Renewal Projects
We also completed a number of smaller
projects around campus, including
elevator safety upgrades, structural
repairs to the lake side patio and rigging
repairs to the theatre in the Bora Laskin
Building.
This fall, we will complete repairs to the
president's balcony as the deteriorated
brickwork has become a safety concern .
In addition, an upgraded fish counter
system will be installed in Lake Tamblyn
in early November.
Lakehead University, October. 1998-Page 3

�- 4 · • · • · i -t---- -- - - - - - -- - - -- - -

From the
President's Desk
by Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert

As can be seen in another article in this
issue of the Agora, Lakehead University
and the Thunder Bay Regional Hospital
have reached agreement on the terms
of reference for the transferral of 60
acres of land to the hospital. The
agreement is designed to maintain the
University's interest in any
developments on the site which go
beyond the hospital and its accepted
ancillary activities. I am pleased that we
have been able to complete this
important agreement as it will have
many mutual benefits for the hospital,
Lakehead University, Thunder Bay and
Northwestern Ontario.
Coincident with the start of the strategic
planning process were data on
Lakehead's 1998-99 enrolment figures.
The "shortfall" of some 200 students
from the budget model used for this
fiscal year means a decline in revenue
from projections of about $700,000.
Needless to say, this will impact our
ability to reduce the deficit and eliminate
the debt burden caused by the early
retirement program. In order to deal
with the situation, I have, after
consultation with the Administrative
Executive Committee, initiated a
position hold and review procedure.
Unlike a freeze, the hold and review
procedure will allow positions to be filled
based on a prioritized needs analysis. It
will be contingent on deans and
directors to make the case to fill
vacancies, and I will expect the viceLakehead University, October. 1998 - Page 4

president (academic) and the
administrative directors, in consultation
with their units, to be responsible for the
prioritization process. While the
Strategic Plan should establish criteria
for position review, circumstances do
not allow us to wait for that outcome.
Indeed, it should not be expected that
business of the University will halt
pending completion of the Plan. We
must continue to progress and make
decisions in the best interests of
Lakehead.
The budget preparation for the 19992000 fiscal year will require the
development of 95% budget scenarios
for each budget unit. Although it could
be useful, we cannot countenance a
zero-base budget exercise at this time.
Instead, consecutive budget cycles
utilizing such an approach allow
incremental decisions that can
accumulate over time to provide for
significant reallocation. Units will have to
make critical decisions on how to meet
a 5% reduction but will have the
opportunity to make the case for
enhancement beyond the 95% base by
providing 98%, 100% and 103% budget
scenarios. This process will provide a
mechanism for reallocation to fund
critical areas of the institution. The
Senate Budget Committee will provide
important recommendations related to
university priorities and should have the
preliminary output from the strategic
planning process to help in providing
criteria for assessment.

Assessment (accountability) is also a
subject I want to address in this issue of
the Agora. Staff will have noticed that
performance is being reviewed this fall. It
is my expectation that performance
reviews will occur annually and in such a
way as to not only evaluate performance
but also to provide a mechanism for
discussion of performance and
expectations as well as, where necessary,
constructive assistance to enhance
performance. Therefore, faculty and
administrators will be expected to
undertake serious annual reporting and
review procedures. Just as I expect my
performance to be assessed annually, I
expect others' to be as well. If we are to
develop a sound, responsible merit-based
system of recognition for performance, it
is important that these reviews be
substantive and meaningful. If we are
accountable as individuals, it goes a long
way to making the University overall
accountable.
My Installation (Inaug uration) as
Lakehead's fifth president will occur at the
end of the month. Of course, all members
of the University community are invited,
but if you are unable to attend, and would
like to read my address, it will be reported
in this space in the November issue. I
would welcome your response and
feedback to what I have to say or your
perceptions of my administration as its
direction becomes apparent. Either send
me a memorandum or e-mail me with your
thoughts or ideas, and I will respond
directly or in future articles of the Agora.
Finally, my congratulations to the student
volunteers who participated in the
Shinerama Campaign. Over 200 of you
collected $7,139 for Cystic Fibrosis
research and treatment and showed the
broader commitment of the University to
respond to community needs. My sincere
thanks for your excellent efforts.
■
Dr. Gilbert's e-mail address:
fred.gilbert @lakeheadu.ca

�-----------------.z•••■,■z-f------------------

Honorary Degrees
A Call for Candidates
The Senate Committee on Honorary
Degrees invites all members of the
University community to submit the
names of suitable candidates for
honorary degrees to be awarded at the
spring Convocation in May of 1999. It
would be helpful if as much information as
possible could be provided about each
candidate proposed. All suggestions will
be carefully considered by the Committee
which will then make its recommendations to Senate. Please send your
proposals, as soon as possible, to the
attention of Dr. David Twynam, Chair,
Senate Committee on Honorary Degrees,
c/o Outdoor Recreation, Parks and
Tourism.

Bursaries/or Metis Students
The Melis Nation of Ontario has donated
$100,000 to Lakehead University to
create an endowment that will fund
bursaries for full-time Metis students. The
money will be matched by the Ontario
government under the Ontario Student
Opportunity Trust Fund (OSOTF). This
year $6,000 is slated for distribution and
next year $12,000 will be given out. For
more information contact the Financial
Aid Office.

New Farulty and Staff
During September and early October
employment notices were issued by Human
Resources announcing the following
appointments:
Diane Dixon

Administrative Assistant, Faculty of Forestry
and the Forest Environment
Peter Smith

Technologist, School of Outdoor Recreation,
Parks &amp; Tourism
Gary McDonald

Caretaker, Campus Development Department

"Wear a Smile for UNICEF"
by Ellen Liman, Thunder Bay UNICEF Coordinator

If you're looking for UNICEF volunteers in Thunder Bay, Lakehead University is a great
place to start. With the energetic support of students and faculty, Thunder Bay UNICEF
has launched a yearly community event called "Wear a Smile for UNICEF." UNICEF
isn't asking people to fund raise, wear a "peal-and-stick" label, or "dress down." Instead
it's challenging every citizen in Thunder Bay to put one loonie in a UNICEF box. People
will know by the smile on friends' faces that they're helping UNICEF help children.
Dr. Frederick Gilbert has kindly agreed to be honorary co-chair of the October
UNICEF campaign. His suggestion to ask Mayor Ken Boschoff to join him as cochair was an inspired one, and will make for an even stronger city event that may
establish a closer link between the city and University.
For the second year University students in residence will hold a "penny war" for
UNICEF. This challenge between residences to raise the most pennies is a popular
event, and last year raised $640 for UNICEF. Students "went the extra mile," even
rolling and counting mounds of coins, a gesture much appreciated by local UNICEF
penny rollers! Residence programmer Brent Evans says students hope to exceed
last year's total.
Mike Lyons, vice-president of student issues at LUSU, has another unusual
UNICEFfundraiser planned. For a $10 ticket Lakehead students will be able to join
a GRUB crawl to local restaurants to sample finger foods. A bus will take
participants on this eartery tour, and large size UNICEF "People boxes" will be worn
by more adventurous riders!
Third-year kinesiology students from basketball coach Lou Pero's sports
administration class will plan and run a UNICEF Play Day for Thunder Bay Children,
to be held October 17 at Hillcrest Park. The Lakehead students will be leading
children in "shirtball" games, using balls made from rolled up shirts. Pray for
sunshine!
UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund, has worked for over 50 years to
improve the lives of the world's children. The only UN agency devoted solely to
children, UNICEF is entirely dependent on voluntary donations.
UNICEF is focusing this year on the problem of child labour. To learn more about the
work of UNICEF, please consider two publications -- The State of the World's
Children, and The Progress of Nations, which were recently donated by Thunder
Bay UNICEF to the Chancellor Paterson Library.
Lakehead University, October, 1998 -Page 5

�- - -- - - - - -- - - - - - , - ; • • • - • ; -r - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - Library Renovations Long Overdue
In the early 1990s, it was recognized that The
Chancellor Paterson Library building was in
dire need of repairs and upgrading in order to
meet current safety standards.
In addressing these safety issues, it became
apparent that other concerns such as asbestos
removal, and mechanical and electrical
upgrading would also have to be addressed.
In 1993, after much lobbying efforts by the
Library and the University administration,
Lakehead University received a jobsOntario
capital grant from the Ontario Ministry of
Colleges and Universities totalling $1.3 million.

Visit
The "New" Chancellor
Paterson Library
by Gisella Scalese

This funding was for the removal of asbestos
and renovation to the ground, fourth and fifth
floors.
In 1996, the Ontario Ministry of Education and
Training provided $2.8 million to fund the
completion of the asbestos removal and
renovation.
The upgrades to the building allowed for the
Library to analyse its usage of space and more
effectively reallocate its collections and
services.

The reference desk has been relocated to a more
central position on the main floor. Since the move,
staff have noticed an increase io the number of
questions being asked by Library users.

Changes to the main entrance include improved
stairs and ramps. The new doors allow for
improved accessibility to the building.

�------------------,--ZMM•■#Z------------------The circulation desk has been
redesigned to provide faster and
more efficient service.

_l

P-"" ---~- - - -- - ; ; ; : :

- ---

--.,,.,..-

"/

Stand alone workstations are available to
accomodate the various non-networked
electronic resources held by the Library.

Through the Library's new ERL server, students can
access periodical indexes and abstracts on many
different topics. Searching is made easier with more
efficient computers and user-friendly search software.

New books and current issues of newspapers
are now located on the main floor along with
large tables to accomodate their use.

Lakehead University,October, 1998- Page 7

�The Serials Crunch
The Ongoing Struggle to Maintain our Library Collection
by Anne Deighton, Chief Librarian
A flat-lined acquisitions budget and the
vanishing purchasing power of an
anemic Canadian dollar is creating a
crisis for The Chancellor Paterson
Library. The most critical victim of this
struggle is our current subscriptions.

The following are the cold hard facts of
our current reality:
•• The annual books and periodicals
budget has not seen an increase in five
years;

Political Science Student Wins International Letter Writing
Competititon
Tami Saj is $1000 richer thanks to a
suggestion by Learning Assistance
Centre Coordinator Geraldine White.
During the summer, White suggested
that the second-year student enter the
Garaventa AccessABILITY
international letter writing competition,
designed to help promote better
understanding of the many challenges
students with mobility-related
disabilities must face and overcome.
Saj placed third in the post secondary
category and for her efforts earned a
$1 ,000 (U.S.) scholarship.
Saj has lived with a disability all her life. Born with spina bifida, she began
using a wheelchair at 16. Now 24, Saj wrote that she does not make her
disability an issue in anything she does. "I believe this helps people feel
free to relate to me on a person to person basis ... it is a more open
approach to disability issues."
•..1 have discovered that I, myself, am the key to my successes and failures
in life, not my disability ... it is simply the only life I've got, for better or
worse, so I might as well make the most of it....
"This essay is not just words - I have lived according to this philosophy
all my life. It has helped me in many areas of life. It has made me a
stronger, happier, successful person. I represented Canada twice at the
Paralympics in swimming (for which I am now in the Northwestern Ontario
Sports Hall of Fame), I am currently a university student looking to
become a constitutional lawyer, I am very active in my volunteer
commitments, and I am politically involved. And I am looking forward to a
happy, healthy and successful future!"
This fall, Saj transfered to the University of Victoria where she plans to
study law after finishing an undergraduate degree.
Congratulations Tami!
Lakehead University, October. 1998 • Page 8

-- The annual price increase of journal
subscriptions has been in double digits
for the past 10 years;
-- Roughly 80% of our journal
purchases are billed in U.S. dollars;
•• Since 1989 we have cancelled
approximately 900 journal titles;
-- In May of 1998 the serials vendors
were projecting an 8% increase in
journal costs for the 1999 subscription
year;
•• By September the projected price
increase had escalated to a staggering
17.5% (due largely to the fall of the
Canadian dollar);
•• The Library is in the unfortunate
position of having to identify more
journal titles to discontinue.

Do not despair. There are other
options. The Library is actively
exploring options other than our current
ownership approach to providing
journal articles.
We are investigating several document
delivery alternatives.
Document delivery will provide quick
access to journal articles from journals
we have had to cancel as well as from
journals we have never subscribed to in
the past. This approach marks a shift
in the collection development practice
from the "just in case" purchase of
published journal titles to the "just in
time" buying of specific articles.
Document delivery coupled with a table
of contents service should help in
meeting the Library's responsibility to
be an information provider to its faculty
and students. It is hoped that a
document delivery provider and the
necessary funding will be in place by
the end of the year. Stay tuned for
further details.

�-------------------¥¥«•-•4 - - L - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - History Professor
Awarded
"Canada
in the
World"
Grant
Dr. Ron Harpelle
.
has received a grant under a joint initiative
of the International Development
Research Centre (IDRC) and the Social
Sciences and Humanities Research
Council of Canada (SSH RC) established
in June, 1998.

no regional account which fully
appreciates the scope and significance of
the West Indian diaspora in Middle
America.
As a social historian, Harpelle is
interested in the way communities
adapted and how individuals "navigated"
their way in the environments of larger,
often hostile Hispanic communities. He
explores the ways in which culture,
language and skin colour figured
prominently in the West Indian immigrant's
processes of adaptation and integration.
Harpelle has written several papers and
articles on his research and has a
manuscript which is being considered by
McGill-Queen's University Press.

The Canada in the World Grants are
designed to support young Canadian
researchers study emerging issues that
will determine the future of relations
between Canada and the nations of Asia
and Latin America.

With the assistance of a SSHRC grant
received in March, 1998, he will publish a
monograph entitled The West Indian
Experience in Central America. In the
future he hopes to examine the
experiences of West Indian Immigrants in
Canada.

The award, which could be as high as
$27,000 over a three-year period, will
enable Harpelle to continue his research
on Central American West Indian
communities in Belize , Guatemala,
Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and
Panama.

The "Canada in the World" Grants
program recognizes the challenge
Canada faces in a globalized world and
the increasing degree to which domestic
social and economic policies are shaped
by international forces.

He'll also be creating a website in order
to help establish a network of contacts
among researchers interested in this
subject.
Harpelle's work focuses on the migration
of English-speaking West Indians along
the Atlantic coast of Middle America
between 1850 and 1950 when
approximately 500,000 British West
Indians went to Middle America and
Panama in search of jobs and economic
security.
During the course of this long migration,
the English-speaking West Indian
immigrants established vibrant AfroHispanic communities along the Atlantic
coast of Middle America. Although studies
have been conducted primarily on
Panama and Costa Rica, there is as yet,

The program is aimed at "new" scholars
and post-doctoral fellows supported by
SSHRC.
"The evolving world is no longer divided
into 'North' and 'South'," said IDRC
President Maureen O'Neil. "The problems
that affect the South touch us as well, and
we need to develop a better
understanding of all the factors impacting
on Canada's relations with Asian and
Latin American countries. Canada can
anticipate future directions only if we
nurture and consolidate Canadian
research capacity in this area."
For more information visit the SSHRC
website: www.sshrc.ca
This article was prepared with the help of Tim
Mignau// who worked with the Office of
Communications in a student writing program
sponsored by The Chronicle-Journal.

Planning a Trip to Cuba?
Two universities in Cuba, which have an
agreement with Lakehead University,
would appreciate papers and
presentations by Lakehead University
faculty.
If you are planning to take advantage of
the weekly direct flights running between
Thunder Bay and Cuba starting
December 17, and would like to make
contact with faculty and students at the
Universidad de Matanzas and the
lnstituto Superior Pedagogico, contact Dr.
Ron Harpelle at 343-8691.

Photography Workshop with
Freeman Patterson
Thunder Bay's Circles of Confusion
Photography Club is offering a
photographic and visual design workshop
with the world-renowned photographer
Freeman Patterson on Sunday, November
22, 1998 from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the
Upper Lecture Theatre. Lunch &amp; coffee
included. Tickets are $45 in advance and
$50 at the door and can be purchased at
Primary Foto Source, telephone 3457041.
Canadian Institute for
International Affairs

Public Lecture

\
Dr. Laure Paquette

Assistant Professor of Political
Science, Lakehead University,
will speak on
Nato Expansion in Central Europe

Monday, October 19, 1998
8p.m.
Senate Chambers, Room UC- 1001
Everyone Welcome. Admission Free
Lakehead University, October, 1998-Page 9

�A Writing Life
Dinner and Conversation with Carol Shields
by Jolene Davis, MA'98
A worthy cause was at the heart of a
successful fundraiser hosted by the
Lakehead University Women's Studies
Program in September. According to Dr.
Helen Smith, who organized the event,
the money raised from this event will go
toward undergraduate scholarships in
Women's Studies and library acquisitions
of books and journals.
Approximately 240 people attended the
evening to hear Canadian author Carol
Shields. Who better to encourage female
students to pursue public voices than the
Chancellor of the University of Winnipeg
and the award-winning author of
numerous novels, plays and short
stories?
Shields is also the recipient of several
honorary doctorates while her awards
include the Canadian Authors'
Association Award for fiction, the Marion
Engel Award, the Governor General's
Award for fiction, and the 1995 Pulitzer
Prize for fiction.
Or. Gilbert, president of Lakehed
University, officially welcomed Carol
Shields on behalf of the University and
Thunder Bay communities. Then Dr.
Gillian Siddall of the Department of
English introduced Carol Shields as an
author whose work has made a "powerful
contribution to developing the female
literary
tradition
in
Canada,
... [i lluminating] the experiences of
Canadian women that are often left in the
blank spaces of our history and our
national identity." With a specific interest
in the female literary tradition, Shields
believes fiction is an "act of redemption"
and she is personally interested in
"writing away the invisibility of female
lives."
Shields spoke of women's writing,
women readers, and her experience as
an author. She shared her observation
Lakehead University, October, 1998 - Page 10

Carol Shields is flanked by two professors at the centre of the Women's
Studies program at Lakehead -- Professor Pam Wakewich, the past
coordinator (right) and Dr. Helen Smith, the current coordinator.
that female authors differ from male
authors in two main areas of writing: they
are much more likely to use a personal
tone in their writing and they frequently
choose the interactions between people
as their subject matter. She feels that
women writers naturally write about the
sorts of things that women readers wish
to hear -- the daily lives of "ordinary
people," especially other women. Women
authors connect with women through
writing of the "texture of their lives."
As an author, Shields is interested in the
current state of Canadian literature. She
describes the field as "never healthier."
As for women's writing, she feels that it is
especially popular just now because it
gives readers a "fresh outlook" and is
"more aware of itself ... less in danger of
its substance falling off the edge." Of her
own work, Shields believes that "human

beings are mysterious and complicated"
and her duty as a writer is "not to solve
their problems" but to add to the sum of
human understanding about our
complicated search through life.
"A Writing Life -- Dinner and
Conversation with Carol Shields" was
sponsored by Women's Studies, the
Dean of Arts and Science, and the
Valhalla Inn. Special thanks go to
Women's Studies graduate students,
Lakehead University Alumni Bookstore,
the Northern Women's Bookstore ,
Mavourneen Trainor-Bruzzese (Visual
Arts), Laurie Hill and Cathy Trojan
(Development Office), Denise Bruley
(Communications), Lori Kapush
(Secretarial), Peter Puna, Gail Zanette
and Lily Ciddio (Graphics), LU Print
Shop, and Danny Johnson on piano.

�Scholarship
Dr. Seimer Tsang (Mechanical
Engineering) presented a paper entiled
"Thermal Management of the Electric
Ford F-100 Truck" at the Biennial
Conference of the Canadian Society of
Mechanical Engineering, CSME Forum
1998, in the Thermal Systems and
Applications II Session on Friday, May 22,
1998, at Ryerson Polytechnic University,
Toronto.

Last November, Professor Joan
Dolphin (English) presented a paper in
Paris on Michael Ondaatje entitled "The
Use and Abuse of Myth in Michael
Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion." The
Conference was organized by the
Institute du Monde Anglophone of the
Sorbonne and sponsored by the French
Centre d'Etudes Canadiennes. The
theme of the conference was the work of
Canadian author Michael Ondaatje, and
participants came from France, England,
Germany, Italy and North America.

Three Lakehead faculty gave
presentations at the Crossroads in
Cultural Studies Conference in Tampere,
Finland, June 28-July 1, 1998. Dr. Doug
Rabb (Philosophy) presented a paper
together with Professor Dennis
McPherson, (Indigenous Learning),
entitled "Native Philosophy: Western or
Indigenous Construct?" and Dr. Patricia
Vervoort (Visual Arts) presented a paper
entitled "Aesthetic Warriors: The Battle for
Identity."
Dr. Raija Warkentin (Anthropology)
organized a session entitled "Immigrants
from Eastern Europe in the Western
Countries" and presented her paper
"Russian Immigrant Women In Finland."
In their coverage of the conference, the
Finnish National radio chose her project
to be the subject of a discussion which
was broadcasted nationwide in the
"Suomi Tanaan" (Finland Today) morning
program.

Dr. Terry L. Hill (Sociology), coordinator
of the undergraduate minor program in
Gerontology, NECAH, presented a
workshop entitled "Training Support Group
Leaders and Community Development" at
the 8th Annual conference of
Bereavement Ontario Network, Geneva
Park Conference Centre, Orillia, Ontario,
October 7-9, 1998. Hill is the founder and
current facilitator of the Panic and Anxiety
Support Group in Thunder Bay, and
continues to offer seminars and
consultations in the areas of grief,
bereavement, community development,
and the sociology of the body.

Dr. Medhat Rahim (Education) presented
a session entitled "Some Cultural
Contributions of Babylonian Mathematics
and Social Sciences to the Civilization of
Humankind" at the International
Conference on Mathematics Education,
History of Mathematics and Cultural
History of Mathematics Informatics, in
Beijing, China, April 26-30, 1998.

The educational management and
leadership publications of Dr. Douglas
Thom (Education) are now being
distributed in over a dozen countries. In
1997 to 1998 information about his TELC
and TLCC leadership models was
disseminated to East African universities.
This information included the "Thom
Theorem" and four corollaries based on
his book Leadership Worldwide: The
Christian Conscience Factor (Hong Kong
Council for Educational Administration,
1996), as well as Thom's Christian
Leadership Resolution.
Throughout his 25-year career in
education, Douglas Thom has served at
the University of Saskatchewan and the
University of Hong Kong and has
supervised many graduate dissertations.

Visit the Lakehead University website
for more information on faculty
research
www.lakeheadu.ca

The
Northern Social Work
Collection

Three books sponsored by the
Lakehead University Centre for
Northern Studies in collaboration with
the Department of Social Work are
being used in course curricula at
Lakehead and in other programs at
universities across Canada.
The series is unique in offering topics
relevant to Northern social work and
has provided an opportunity for
Lakehead faculty, students and
community social workers to write and
to co-author chapters representing
social work practice in the north.
The three books are Northern Social
Work Practice edited by Keith Brownlee
and Roger Delaney; Issues in Northern
Social Work edited by Roger Delaney,
Keith Brownlee and M. Kim Zapf, and
Strategies for Northern Social Work
edited by Keith Brownlee, Roger
Delaney and John A.Graham.
Forthcoming volumes will include
Northern Social Work Practice with the
Elderly and Northen Social Work
Practice with Northern and Rural
Communities and Organizations.
Lakehead University, October, 1998-Page 11

�Calendar of Events
Department of Music

Lumina Concert Series 1998-99
Concerts are held in the Jean McNulty Recital Hall in the William H. Buset Centre for
Music and Visual Arts at 12:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. Subscriptions and tickets
are available from the Department of Music. Complimentary parking.
For information call 343-8787

1998
VoL. 15, No. 8

O CTOBER

T HUNOER B AY,
ONTARIO, C ANADA
ISSN 0828·5225

October 20

John Goulart, Guitar
November 8

Agora is published by the
Communications Office and distributed
monthly September through June.

Joseph Tang, Piano
(Ontario Young Artist Competition Winner)

Publications Officer

Frances Harding

Note: 2 p.m.
November 24

Communications/Special Events
Officer:

Krystyna Tucka, Piano

Denise Bruley

(Eckhardt-Gramatte National Music Competition Winner)

Photography

Peter Puna &amp; Staff
Printing:

Nor'Westers' Home Games

LU Print Shop

October 17

Zanatta Alumni Games
Women's Basketball: 6:30 p. m.
Men's Basketball: 8:30 p.m.
Women's Volleyball: 4 :30 p.m.October 30-31

Women's Volleyball
Lakehead vs Ottawa at 8:30 pm

Send us your news.

October 30-November 1

Deadline for submissions for the next
issue is November 1, 1998.

Saxon Super Eight Women's Basketball

Editor, Agora

Friday &amp; Sat: Noon, 2 p.m. , 4 p.m., 6 p.m.

Lakehead University

Sunday: 9 a.m., 11 a.m., 1 p.m., 3 p.m.

955 Oliver Road

November 6-7

Thunder Bay, ON

Pizza Hut Tourney

P7B5E1

Men's Basketball: Friday 4 p.m. &amp; 8 p.m. and Saturday 2 p.m. &amp; 8 p.m.

Telephone: (807) 343-8193

Women's Basketball: Saturday at 6 p.m.

Fax: (807) 343-8999
E-mail:frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

Help Beat Lung Disease
Give Generously to the
Christmas Seal Campaign
Because ...
When You Can't Breathe,
Nothing Else Matters.
Lakehead University, October, 1998 - Page 12

C.

Tr o j a n

;;e velopme nt

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7107">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.15 No.8</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7108">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7109">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an article on Lakehead partnering with Thunder Bay Regional Hospital, a message from the President, and an update on the Chancellor Paterson Library.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7110">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7111">
                <text>1998-10</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Agora</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1157">
        <name>Chancellor Paterson Library</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1092">
        <name>Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1093">
        <name>President Frederick Gilbert</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1100">
        <name>President's Message</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1192">
        <name>Thunder Bay Regional Hospital</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1280" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17928">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/edb8b110329d8eef4a95a44ce297e146.pdf</src>
        <authentication>8f7aea7b4b59bf3201fd55f9edb1d9f8</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="124949">
                    <text>r

Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
October 1997, Vol. 14, No. 8
ISSN 0828-5225

LUSU president Mike Blower (top left), Tammy Ball (right), Dale Hill (bottom left) and Mel Mackey joined more
than 100 students in this year's Shinerama Campaign which raised over $5,300 to fight Cystic Fibrosis.
Photo: Peter Puna

A Banner Year for LUCAS
If you measure success by
counting the increase in
teaching and research opportunities, you would have to
conclude that 1996-97 was a
very good year for Lakehead
University Centre for Analytical Services (LUCAS).

This is especi~lly true for the Aquatic Toxicology
Research Centre (ATRC) and the Environmental
Laboratory where tighter government regulations are
increasing the demand for environmental testing.
MacKenzie reported that in 1996-97, LUCAS's gross
revenues topped $400,000 which is an increase of
85% over the previous year.

The financial statements look When you consider that all of this revenue goes toward upgrading research equipment, hiring technipretty good too.
cians, and creating new opportunities for faculty and
At their Annual Meeting on students, you get a better appreciation of LUCAS's
October 6, 1997, Director entrepreneurial spirit. To receive your copy of the
Allan MacKenzie announced that LUCAS's activ- Annual Report contact Allan MacKenzie at 343ity has increased across the board.
8853.

LUCAS

�+m•»&amp;-r---------------------------- 2

Welcome New Members
to the Board of Governors

Bill Bartley
recommended by
Alumni Association

BOARD
OF
GOVERNORS

Bill Bartley is the Past
President of the
Lakehead University
Alumni Association
and is currently managing his own public
relations business.

Dr. K.C. Yang
recommended
through election by
the Senate to
complete Prof.
Glenna Knutson's
term

Dr. K.C. Yang is a Professor of Forestry and
has been a faculty
member since 1975.
He has been active in formulating linkages
between Lakehead and universities in
China, and developing ties with our twin city
in Taiwan.

Interim President

Dr. John Whitfield
Members Elected by the Board

Richard Andison
Don Barnes
Bill Bartley
Alan Becker
Don Caron
Maureen Doig, Chair
Jackie Dojack
Shawn Forbes
Corinne Fox
Paul Gordon, 2nd Vice Chair
Steve Hessian, 1st Vice Chair
Dr. Lois Hutchison
Tom Jones
Bruce LaBelle
Bill McDermott
Dusty Miller
John O'Brien
Pat O'Brien, Past Chair
Seppo Paivalainen
Amy-Leah Potter
Dr. Michael Richardson
Lana Rizzuto
Dr. Keith Roy
Doug Scott
Dr. K.C. Yang
Member Appointed by the City

Mayor David Hamilton
Members Appointed by the
Lieutenant Governor in Council

Ruth Baxter
Christine Frank
Trevor Farrell

Lana Rizzuto
recommended
through election by
the unionized staff at
Lakehead University

Bruce LaBelle
nominated from the
community

Bruce LaBelle is Manager of McDerrnid-St.
Lawrence Securities
Lid. Previously he was
Chief Financial Officer
with First Marathon
Securities. He has
also held the position
of Manager with the Toronto-Dominion
Bank.
Seppo Paivalainen
nominated from the
community to finish
the term of Eric Long

Seppo Paivalainen is
a member of the legal
profession in Thunder
Bay and is active in
the local Finnish community.

Dr. Keith Roy
recommended
through election by
the Senate

Dr. Keith Roy has
been a Professor of
Mathematics and Statistics since 1969.
He is Chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics in the School of Mathematical Sciences and served on the Board
of Governors in the late '70s.

Lana Rizzuto is secretary in the School of
Mathematical Sciences. She is a member of OPEIU and has
been an employee of
Lakehead University for 14 years.

Shawn Forbes
recommended by
LUSU

Photo
not
available

Shawn Forbes is in
the second year of a
BSc program in Biology at Lakehead.

Amy-Leah Potter
recommended by
LUSU

Amy-Leah Potter is in
fourth year of the Honours Bachelor of
Commerce program
in Lakehead's Faculty
of Business Administration. During the
summers she has
worked with the Finance Department of
General Motors.

1.Akehead University, October, 1997

�3
Mr. Robert J. Giroux, President, Association of Universities and Colleges of
Canada

A Message from
Maureen Doig
to
Lakehead University Faculty,
Students, Staff, and Alumni,
and to the
regional community of
Thunder Bay and
Northwestern Ontario

As you are aware, Dr. Bob Rosehart's
resignation has required that the Board
of Governors establish a Presidential
Search Committee. This Committee
has been formed and has begun meeting regularly.
During the early phase of the Search,
it is important that the Committee gain
a clear understanding of what the University and regional community perceive as necessary qualifications, experience, and personal qualities in the
next President. The Search Committee is interested in hearing the views
and opinions of all members of the
Univers ity community and of the
greater regional community. If you
would like to share your ideas with the
Committee, please write to me in care
of the Board Secretariat, UC-2009,
Lakehead University, Thunder Bay,
P7B SEI
Fax: 807-343-8075,
E-mail: bdsensec@lakeheadu.ca.
The Search Committee plans to spend
the next several months, or as long as
it takes, to find the best possible Preside nt for Lakehead University. We
hope that you will assist in this endeavour by keeping in touch with us
throughout the Search and offering
your views and suggestions.
Thank you.

~1-j
Chair,
Presidential Search Committee
Chair, Board of Governors

Appointments made to Canada Foundation for Innovation
Chair of the Canada Foundation for Innovation Dr. John Evans has announced the
appointment of two senior executives of
the corporation: Dr. Keith Brimacombe,
president and CEO, and Dr. Denis Gagnon,
senior vice president.

The Foundations' 15 members include:
Dr. Jim Friesen, Chair, Banting and Best
Department of Medical Research, University of Toronto;
Dr. Art Hanson, President, International
Institute for Sustainable Development;
Dr. Monique Lefebvre, President,
Quebecor Multimedia;
Dr. Julia Levy, President and CEO, Chief
Scientific Officer, QLT Photo Therapeutics Inc.;
Mrs. Judith Maxwell, President, Canadian
Policy Research Network;
Mrs. Edythe A. Parkinson-Marcoux,
Former President, CS Resources Limited;
Mr. Guy Saint-Pierre, Chairman of the
Board, SNC-Lavalin Group Incorporated;
Dr. Matt Spence, President, Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research;
Dr. Ron Steer, Professor, Department of
Chemistry, University of Saskatchewan;
Dr. Martha Piper, President and ViceChancellor, University of British Columbia;
Dr. Peter J. Nicholson, Executive VicePresident, Corporate Strategy, BCE Inc.;
Dr. Angus Bruneau, Chairman of the
Board, Fortis Inc.;
Dr. Gilles Cloutier, Consultant, former
Rector, Universite de Montreal;
Ms. Dorothy Lamont, Chief Executive
Officer, Canadian Cancer Society and National Cancer Institute of Canada;

The Foundation's members, whose roles
are similar to the shareholders of a corporation, are responsible for approving the
organization's financial controls, audited
statements, and annual report. Their first
task will be to elect eight of the Foundation's 15 directors. Dr. John Evans also
seives as a director. Six other directors will
be appointed by the Government of Canada
at a later date.
The Canada Foundation for Innovation is
an independent, not-for-profit corporation
established in May, 1997, with funds from
the federal government. Its mandate is to
invest in infrastructure for research and
development in Canadian universities, colleges, hospitals and other not-for-profit research institutions. The Foundation's initial capital of $800 million is to be
committeed over the next five years on research infrastructure projects. The Foundation's investments will be made in partnership with the private and the voluntary
sectors as well as governments.
Website -- www.innovation.ca
Media Release, September 17, 1997

Zanatta Alumni
Games
Saturday, October 18, 1997
at the C.J. Sanders Fieldhouse

Women's Volleyball
3:30 p.m.

Men's Wrestling
5:30 p.m.

Women's Basketball
6:30 p.m.

Men's Basketball
8:30 p.m.
Join us for a social after the
games.
Lakehead University, October, 1997

�l,td·#&amp;---------------------------- 4
cmAAward
Lakehead University is one of six universities in Canada to be successful in the latest CIDA Tier I competition. Lakehead,
together with its partners, has been awarded
$2.53 million to undertake a five-year international forestry project in Ghana. The
goal is to enhance the capacity of institutions, organizations and communities in
northern Ghana to contribute to a resolution of environmental problems and to the
improvement of the social and economic
conditions. This will serve as a model for
similar work in rural areas throughout
Ghana and West Africa.

An
Update
from the
Interim
President

Congratulations to Dr. John Naysmith, the
project Director, and Mrs. Anne KJymenko,
Research Officer, who have been working
on the application for nearly two years.

Dr. John Whitfield

Quo Vadis?
A planning process is underway to set
Lakehead's course into the next millennium. Led by Dr. Jim Gellert and the Senate Academic Committee, the result will
be a broadly-based strategic plan for the
University. It's timely and necessary as
we move beyond the forced downsizing and
budget reductions, continue with student
recruitment and enrolment management,
and make strategic decisions covering programming, both academic and support.
It is anticipated that the plan development
will take about I 8 months. There will be
opportunities for community-wide input
from both within the University and externally.

I.I
at Lakehead, students currently pay
nearly 50% of the cost of their education.
Is it fair, reasonable or desirable for them
to pay more in a provincially assisted university?

Toronto Iron
"Toronto Iron" is out of this world and Dr.
Steve Kissin, Chair of Geology, is excited.
Kissin, an expert in identifying meteorites,
just confirmed "Toronto Iron" as one. The
wife of the man who picked it up, nobody
knows where, gave it to a friend who gave
it to the University of Toronto for identification. It was forwarded to Kissin to determine its origin. The "Toronto Iron" is
just one of several meteorites "authenticated" by Kissin.

Tuition Fees
"Canada needs to continue shifting university costs onto those who are the system's
chief beneficiaries: the students" argues a
Globe and Mail editorial (Let tuition rise,
October I, 1997). This is wrong, in my
view, for at least two reasons:

II
post-secondary education is vital to
the economic and social well-being of our
province. There must be a fair share of the
cost borne by the public;

Capital Project

Versa Strike
As you are aware by the pickets at the main
entrances to the University, the strike between SEIU and Versa Campus Services
continues. We are urging the two parties
to resolve their differences. However, until this occurs, we request that all faculty,
staff and students use caution when entering or exiting the University premises. In
this way, any unfortunate situations can be
avoided.

Dr. Burnley Stevens
A former member of the Board of Governors of Lakehead University, Dr. Burnley
W. Stevens, died on September 12, 1997.
The University extends its condolences to
Mrs. Stevens and their family.

The C. J. Sanders Building will receive an
$889,000 face-lift through the Canada/Ontario Infrastructure Works Program. The
renovations to the Kinesiology facility are
jointly supported by the federal and provincial governments and the University.
Renovations which will begin in May when
classes are finished will create teaching and
research space as well as provide barrierfree access.

Lakehead University, October, 1997

�MW·» &amp; - ~--------------------------

5

Some Enchanted Evening
A Benefit for Lakehead University Music Scholarships
Thursday, December 4, 1997
Valhalla Inn Ballroom
Entertainment including The Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra with
violinist Maria Cooper performing Max Bruch's Violin Concerto
Symposium 6:30 p.m.
Dinner 7:00 p.m.
Concert and Dancing to Follow
Tickets Available at Thunder Bay Travel, Lakehead University Music
Department and Changes.
For information contact Samantha Wrenshall at 577-6575.

WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE LIBRARY...
THERE IS STILL TIME TO BOOK A
LIBRARY INSTRUCTION SESSION
FOR YOUR CLASS!
The Reference and Information Services
Department offers library orientation and
instruction at any time during the year.
These sessions can be tailored to meet
the research needs of your class at any
level. Call ext. 8147 or e-mail
gscalese@sky.lakeheadu.ca

FOOD AND DRINK IN THE LIBRARY
At the beginning of the Fall term The
Chancellor Paterson Library launched a
campaign to publicize and enforce the
Library's regulations relating to food and
drink. Food and drink are not permitted
in the library and all library staff are
taking part in regular patrols to enforce
the regulations. To date, students have
been very cooperative in this campaign.

SEARCHING FOR RESERVES AND
EXAMINATIONS
With the recent upgrade to our Online
Catalogue system, searching for reserves
and examinations is now possible using a
course code, course number and/or
instructor name. Course codes are posted
beside each Online Catalogue terminal

and are available by pressing HELP (Fl I
on your keyboard). Please note your
subject code from this list. If you
require further assistance in searching
for reserves or examinations please call
the Information Desk at ext. 8302.

WEB SITES OF INTEREST
Canada Yellow Pages. com
http://canadayellowpages.com/
A great tool for searching businesses in
Canada. Also provides searches of other
Canadian information.
Search, Stalk and Surveil the Net with
Spyking
http://www.thecodex.com/search.html
This is an overwhelming collection of
search tools from all over the Internet.
Includes such search tools as
metacrawlers; language translators;
virtual reference sites . ...
Canadian University Home Pages
http://www.uwinnipeg.ca/-kingsley/cdnuniv.html
A one-stop list for quick access lo
Canadian University home pages.

IAkehead UniversiJy, October, 1997

�i,W•U§-1---------------------------- 8

Barriers and Challenges
to becoming
Physically Active
by Tony Bauer
Associate Professor
of Kinesiology
The economic health
benefits of an active
lifestyle are becoming more apparent
and acceptable to the
Canadian population.
Adjustment to an active lifestyle however,
proves to be a challenging process. The
transition from a sedentary lifestyle to low
or even moderate levels of physical activity often requires considerable readjustment. Trends in physical activity levels
for Canadians demonstrate positive increases over the last 10 to I 5 years. Nine
out of ten Canadians however do not follow the desirable minimum levels of activity (30 minutes of activity every other
day). Major barriers include lack of time,
energy and motivation and depend on individual circumstances such as employment and family obligations. Additional
minor and moderate barriers tend to be
more social and environmental. The challenge during the next decade will be to
move Canadians from sedentary levels to
at least a moderate level of activity.
Currently the most popular physical activities include walking, gardening and home
exercise at all age levels. The most attractive leisure time activities for adults and
children include watching television, reading, music, hobbies and visiting friends.
Our challenge is to convince parents and
their children to incorporate more physical activity into their day to day leisure time
activities. Simple strategies might combine
television, music and socializing with some
form of moderate or more demanding exercise. Music and the social medium provides the stimulation and motivation for a
more pleasurable and rewarding activity
experience. Partnership with video media
and computer games are potential ap-

proaches toward influencing children and
youth through popular leisure pursuits. The
inc reased popularity and convenience of
home exercise has promoted a boom industry and provides the advantages of family oriented activity. Parents are able to
provide role model behaviour for the children who can join in the activity at home.
To gain the health benefits, more consideration has to be directed toward low activity population groups including low income groups, people with young children,
middle aged men and women and women
over 65 years of age. These groups experience greater challenges and barriers to an
active lifestyle and require support programs to assist the process.

In order to maintain the increased levels
of physical activity and gain the economic
health benefits the research and educational
process is and will be the driving force for
the future. In Ontario, alarming threats to
high school physical education curriculums
higlrlight the need to demonstrate the health
and economic benefits of raising the activity levels of young Canadians.
-- Canadian Fitness and Lifestyle Research
Institute.

The Agora welcomes submissions
from faculty, staff, students and
alumni on topics of interest to the
University community.
For information contact
the Editor al 343-8193.
IAkehead University, October, 1997

�Mfil·h&amp;------------------------------

WUSC International
Seminar in
Vietnam and
Botswana

The Antigonish Movement
Moses Coady and Adult Education Today
Dr. Anne Alexander is celebrating the publicati on of her first book entitled The
Antigonish Movement: Moses Coady and
Adult Education Today. (Toronto:
Thompson Educational Publishing, 1997)

by Dr. Yves Prevost

Reviewers recommend the book as a text
for courses in education, history, sociology,
Canadian studies. social issues, community development and co-operatives. It is
also recognized by the reviewers as a book
to be "read with enjoyment by the lay person." St. Francis Xavier University, in
Antigonish, honoured Alexander this summer by inviting her to lead a workshop with
the faculty and to be the guest speaker at
a public forum. At the forum, with about
100 people in attendance, Alexander addressed the topic "Lessons from the Past
for the New Millennium."

For six weeks in May and June 1998, you
could be advising a group of 10 highly motivated Canadian students on international
development projects in Vietnam or
Bostwana.
This year a new format for the World University of Canada international seminar will
provide opportunities to work in two countries. Vietnam will be the host of one Faculty Advisor and IO students while Botswana will host two Faculty Advisors and
20 students.
In 1996 I had the pleasure of participating
in the seminar held in Peru, where we
worked in Puno on the shores of Lake
Titicaca. Projects that the students undertook covered, water quality of Lake
Titicaca, cost of water, legal reform, traditional medicine versus western medicine,
child labour, tourism and reproductive decisions for rural women.
The students lived with local families, were
paired off with Peruvian student counterparts in their research areas, were affiliated
with the University, and conducted library
research, interviews, and lead discussions
to meet their study objectives. As an advisor, I assisted the group in planning their
research and helped them discover new approaches to getting the information they
desired.
Anyone interested in serving
as one of the three
Faculty Advisors
orone of the
30 students selected from
across Canada should contact
Yves Prevost by telephone at
343-8342 or by E-mail:
yves.prevost@lakeheadu.ca
Applications should be
submitted to Prevost by
October 24 1997

9

"The A11tigonish Movement.flourished over
50 years ago but it continues to fascinate
and challenge Canadians today. In 1930s,
as now, many people believed that the problems and injustices of life resulted from
forces beyond their control. Moses Coady
could 1w1 have disagreed more. With missionary zeal he implored people to cha11ge
themselves a11d their society. liberatio11, he
insisted, could be achieved through adult
education. Do we today have the confidence to make such a claim? The
A11tigo11ish Moveme11t is a symbol of a11
activist heritage in adult education. /11 this
book, Anne Alexander examines background to this importallf movement, its activities and the individuals involved, in order to show its cominuing relevance to
practitioners of adult education today."

Alexander came to Lakehead University to
work as an assistant professor in the Faculty of Arts and Science during 1993-94
after having taught in universities in Alberta,
Ontario and Saskatchewan. She also
worked in those provinces in governmental and non-governmental organizations
and on projects in St. Kitts, Guyana, Trinidad, Kenya and the NWT. Alexander holds
a PhD from the University of Alberta, a
master's degree from the University of Toronto, and undergraduate degrees from
Queen's University.
Recently Alexander has been working with
the Northern Health Human Resources Research Unit (NHHRRU) and her colleague
Dr. Tony Thompson on a study dealing with
the recruitment and retention of health care
professionals in rural and under serviced
regions. Thompson is a former associate
professor with Lakehead's Department of
Psychology and is now at Charles Sturt
University in Australia.

-- Thompson Educational Publishing, Inc.
You are cordially invited to meet
Anne Alexander at her

BOOK LAUNCH
October 21, 1997
at 7:00 p.m.
at
Sweet Thursday Bookshop
in their new location at the
McIntyre Centre
1186 Memorial Avenue
Refreshments will be setVed.

Anne Alexander (left) conducted a faculty
workshop about The Antigonish Movement
at St.Francis Xavier University in August.
Lakehead University, October, 1997

�LUMINA
Concert Series
1997- 98

-----

Let the Calls Begin

The-·~
Po■t,-demlsm Trutment of the Pa■t In
Cont--,v-~

Unless otherwise noted, all concerts are held on campus in the
Jean McNulty Recital Hall of the
William H. Buset Centre for
Music and Visual Arts at 12:30 p.m.
September 30
Diana McIntosh, piano, multimedia
October 14
Monica Whicher, soprano
Frances Pappas, mezzo-soprano
Heather Morrison*, piano
8:00 p.m., St. Paul's United Church
October 28
Wayne Nickoli*, trombone
Joy Fahrenbruck*, piano
November 9
Christine Vanderkooy, piano
(Ontario Young Artist Competition
winner, sponsored by the Canadian
Federation of Music Teachers'
Associations and the Thunder Bay
Branch of the Ontario Registered
Music Teachers' Association).
NOTE: 2:00 p.m.
November 18
Jasper Wood, violin
(Eckhardt-Gramatte National Music
Competition Winner);
David Riley, piano
January 13
Les Voix Humanes
Susie Nappier and Margaret Little,
viola da gamba duo
January 28
Piano Six: Andre Laplante, piano
(8:00 pm, St. Paul's United Church)
February 10
Jerry Scholl, Andre Dufour*,
percussion
February 24
Music of our time (local musicians)
March 10
Lynn Harting-Ware, classical guitar

.... ,,&lt;1fJ ..............

,

Dr. Frederick Holmes (English) has published the Historical Imagination:
Postmodemism and the Treatment of the
Past in Contemporary British Fiction, English Literary Studies Monograph Series 73,
Victoria: English Literary Studies, 1997.

The book is a study of novels by eight British writers that focus attention on the fabricated character both of their own depictions of past events and, more broadly, of
all attempts to represent experience in language. As a result, they sensitize readers
to the status of history as a discourse constructed by people for particular political
and psychological ends rather than as an
objective record of the truth about the past.
The Historical Imagination analyzes the
treatment in these novels of a variety of
issues which emerge from this basic recognition.
Professor Mark Nisenholt (Visual Arts)
designed the book's cover.

Starting this month Marilyn Rudecki, a third
year Education student, will be helping to
coordinate the work of 30 part-time student
callers working on the Alumni Annual Fund
phonathon. The goal this year is to raise
$200,000 for Lakehead University. If you
would like to help out as a volunteer, contact Rob Zuback at 343-8916.

Representatives of psychology licensing
boards throughout the U.S. and Canada
chose a Lakehead University professor as
their organization's new president-elect.
Dr. William T. Melnyk (Psychology), who
served three years on the Association's
Board of Directors as secretary-treasurer
(1994-97), was elected by acclamation in
a vote at the Association of State and Provincial Psychology Boards (ASPPB)'s Annual Meeting of Delegates on September
19, 1997.

For further information call 343-8787.
Sponsored by the Lakehead University Music Association
• Indicates Lakehead University
Music faculty member

Melnyk has served 12 years on the Board
of Examiners in Psychology of Ontario. He
is a professor of psychology at Lakehead
and maintains a private practice. He received his doctorate in clinical psychology
from Queen's University.
Lakehead University, October, 1997

�11

Profile

Mcisaac is very positive about Lakehead
University and, although relatjvely new to
the campus, he has a number of ideas about
ways to strengthen this sense of community.
One is to have an Aboriginal student centre with an acadermc advisor, a cultural
coordinator, and perhaps a full or part-time
researcher. Another is to have a meaningful role for Aboriginal alumni in recruiting high school students from the Reserves. Alumni could also be helping to
raise money for student scholarships.
Mcisaac would like to see more Native
students attending Lakehead University in
the future and more Native students aspiring to become members of the faculty.

Michael K. Mcisaac
Counsellor
Native Support Services
Mike Mcisaac is well suited to his new job
at Lakehead University. He has a strong
background in clinical psychology and a
desire to integrate traditional Native values into his day-to-day work as a therapist.
Mcisaac came to Thunder Bay last July
from the University of Manitoba where he
had been working as a Cultural Support
Therapist.
Originally from Mattawa, Ontario, he spent
16 years in business before completing an
honours degree in Psychology at Nipissing
University in North Bay.
To date he has worked at the North Bay
Psychiatric Hospital, the Stony Mountain
Penitentiary in Winnipeg, and as a Therapist and a Drug and Alcohol Worker on Native reserves in Ontario.
According to Mcisaac, the most common
difficulty Native students have on a university campus is feeling that they belong.

"It used to be that a Grade IO education
was all that was needed for senior positions in Aboriginal organizations. Now
these organizations are looking for people with university and postgraduate degrees to work as accountants, lawyers, engineers, and social workers... Lakehead is
in a prime position to be a national leader
in providing education to Aboriginal people."

Native Support
Services
is located in the lower level of the
Student Centre RC0002
Telephone: 343-8084

Native Support Services assists
Native students with their
academic and personal concerns, providing a link between
the student services available .
within the University and the
communiJy.
Social and cultural support is
offered through periodic feasts,
Pow-Wows and an Eider's
program.
The counsellor for Native
students, Michael Mcisaac,
provides individual counselling
and spiritual and cultural
support.

Mclsaac hopes that Native Support Services will develop a greater presence on
campus. He doesn't want the department
to become marginalized and is encouraging everyone who is interested to drop by.
Some faculty have already invited him to
take part in their programming and
Mcisaac is encouraged by this trend. "I
would hope that staff and faculty here
would use me as a resource," he says.
Currently Mcisaac is workfog on a Master's degree in Psychology with the University of Manitoba.
Eventually he hopes to be accepted into
Lakehead University's PhD program in
Clinical Psychology and to one day join
the faculty.
-- Frances Harding

Sherry Cook and Michael Mcisaac encourage everyone interested in Native Support
Services to drop by the office.

"I want Aboriginal students to feel comfortable being an Aboriginal person -- not
just in any classroom or office on campus,
but in any part of the city," he says. "I want
them to feel comfortable being who they
are and to take ownership of their experience."
IAkehead University, October, 1997

�+@•01-~------------------------,~---------7
I

I

HEALTH SCIENCES
NORTH
The Northern Outreach Program at
Health Sciences North is offering many
exciting fall programs throughout northern Ontario. Three forthcoming sessions at Health Sciences North are:
Friday, October 24, 1997
Taking Control of Your Career and Your
Future with Gayle Donner and Mary
Wheeler, career consultants. This workshop would be of interest lo nurses and
nursing students, looking to develop new
career paths.
Friday, November 7, 1997
The Regulated Health Professions Act:
Fostering Evolution, Collaboration and
Quality with Paula Mae Ponesse, nurse
consultant. For health care leaders looking at re-engineering, team building,
quality improvement and professional
development initiatives, this session will
explore how to use the RHPA proactively
in guiding participation in these processes.

This beeswax sculpture mounted on a birch
tree near the path to the Bora Laskin Building is the work of a second-year Visual Arts
student Gail Giuliani. She completed the
piece for an assignment requiring the use
natural materials.

Tuesday, November 11, 1997
ACLS - Advanced Cardiac Life Support.
This course is both a certification and a
recertification course. Participants must
have worked recently in areas where cardiac life support is practiced.

Women's Basketball

Saxon Super 8
Tournament

For further information on any of the
courses, or to register, please call
Heather Gray, Coordinator at 343-2141.

Come out and see the finest University
Women's Basketball teams in the
country play at Lakehead University
on
October 25, 26, and 27, 1997

L ___________ _J
j_

CHANCELLOR PATERSON
LIBRARY HOURS

I"'

Monday to Thursday
8 a.m. to 11 :30 p.m.
Friday
8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday
12 noon to 9 p.m.

l

I
The Agora is published on the 15th
of every month.
We encourage you to send in your
news. Deadline for the November
issue is November 4, 1997.

12

Mark your calendar for the following

OSOTF DRESS DOWN
DAYS
December 12, 1997
January 9, 1998
March 13, 1998
April 10, 1998
May 8, 1998

Agora
October 1997

Vol.14, No. 8

Agora is published by the Information Office of the Department of Student Services and Community Relations. The newsletter is distributed
monthly (except for July and August)
to facu lty, staff and friends of
Lakehead University.
Director of Student Services and
Community Relations:
Joy Himmelman
Publications Officer:
Frances Harding
Communications/Special Events
Officer: Denise Bruley
Administrative Assistant:
Betty Hygaard
Photography:
Peter Puna and Staff
Graphics:
Ben Kaminski &amp; Nicole Sutherland
Printing: LU Print Shop
Submissions of interest to the
University community are welcome. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
9.55 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7B 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8999
E-mail:
frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

EDUCATION LIBRARY
Monday to Thursday
8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Friday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday
Closed

c.

Tro~ a n
Comm un 1ty Relatio n s

I

Lakehead University, October, 1997

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7101">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.14 No.8</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7102">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7103">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an article announcing new Board of Governors members, an update from the President, and an article on barriers and challenges to becoming physically active.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7104">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7105">
                <text>1997-10</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Agora</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1183">
        <name>Board of Governors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="945">
        <name>Dr.  John Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="573">
        <name>Dr. J. Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1100">
        <name>President's Message</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1279" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17982">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/a5db2a6ab32f007a0998f516a04309c1.pdf</src>
        <authentication>dec8b5b981c711850f4432b310f16bbf</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="125003">
                    <text>NOVEMBER

1998

A NEWSLETTER FOR lAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY STAFF &amp; FACULTY

Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert Installed as
President and Vice-Chancellor
by Frances Harding, Publications Officer

Lakehead University has done well for over three
decades, said Fisher, and much of the credit
must go to the faculty and to the leaders
including Dr. Melvin W. Bartley, Dr. Harold S.
Braun, Dr. William G. Tamblyn, Dr. Robert G.
Rosehart, and now Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert.
"I don't think any other endeavour in my life span
will have done more to diversify and enrich living
for the people who live here and, I think, for the
province and for the country as a whole.
"As one here only for the beginning of Lakehead
University, I salute those who did it and those
who carry on. Thank you Robert Rosehart.
Excelsior Fred Gilbert!"
Having donned the blue and white regalia of the presidential office, Sharing the stage with Dr. Gilbert and Dr. Fisher were a
Dr. Frederick Franklin Gilbert shakes hands with the Chancellor of number of honoured guests including Dr. Richard
Lakehead University, The Very Rev. The Honourable Dr. Lois Wilson. Charles Lyons, a Native elder who gave the Invocation

Inside

Those who witnessed the Investiture of
Lakehead's fifth president on October 31, 1998,
also heard from one of the University's earliest
advocates - Dr. Douglas M. Fisher.

...6

In his Installation Address, Fisher spoke of how
his career in federal politics began when he joined
with others in the early 1950s to push Lakehead
Technical Institute toward full university status.

A Place for
Praise

"Political action is worthwhile," said the former MP
who was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws
from Lakehead University in 1987.

Budget Process
1999-2000

...8
Rubin
"Hurricane"
Carter
... 10

"Always remember that Northern Ontario is still a
'zone of transit.' A space between places. And the
people who live in the zone need a persistent
program so that they [metropolitan centres] will
know the utility and the wonder of a competent
university here."

in Ojibway and in English, and Peter Collins, chief of the
Fort William First Nations, who welcomed the president
"to our traditional lands.•
Other platform guests included friends and colleagues
from other universities and colleges in Canada, the
United States and Britain -- many of whom brought
official greetings to Dr. Gilbert on behalf of their
respective institutions.
As well, some of Lakehead's best students were
acknowledged during the ceremony including the
recipient of the Alumni Association Award, Marianne
Ariganello; the Presidential Scholarship, Laura Nelson
and Christopher Bosman; the In Course Graduate
Scholarship, Brian Whitfield; and the In Course
Undergraduate Scholarship, Annabella Zawada.
When the ceremony was over, Lakehead staff, faculty,
students, alumni and friends were invited to join the
president at a luncheon in the main cafeteria. The night
before, friends and colleagues had "roasted and
toasted" the new president at a dinner hosted by the
chancellor.

�Installation
Address
by Or. Frederick F. Gilbert

Madame Chancellor, Board Members,
Elder Dr. Richard Lyons, Chief Peter
Collins, Dr. Douglas Fisher,
Representatives of Municipal, Provincial
and Federal Governments, Members of
the Judiciary, Honorary Degree Holders,
Fellows of Lakehead University. staff,
faculty. students, alumni, colleagues and
friends:

in costume. Halloween is primarily an
event for young people (as UNICEF
understands) and as much of my
emphasis is on young adults, it does seem
appropriate timing for such a discussion. I
will leave it to you to decide if there is a
"Trick or Trear message inherent in what I
say.

To be truthful, this is a day that I never
envisioned as I progressed through my
I believe that a meaningful education is
academic career. I never aspired to, nor
the
best bulwark we can provide today's or
coveted, the position of president of a
tomorrow's
generations with, especially in
university. To understand why I wound up
times
of
societal
change and it appears
here it might be useful to explore a little of
that society will be in transition for the
my background. I was the first in my
foreseeable
future. How do I define a
family to pursue a higher education
"meaningful
education"? I have been
although I had coµsins (particularly three
asked
many
times what I thought a
in Michigan) who took it for granted that
university
should
be and to a large extent
they would go on to "State." I went to
my
responses
are
tempered by the
university at a time when access was not
experiences
I
have
had as a student and
yet a political issue and like the students
as an educator. As I share some of these
of today only did so by incurring a debt
burden. Indeed, if I had not been awarded experiences, you should begin to
understand my definition.
an NRC Postgraduate Scholarship, I
Although
I had many memorable high
would have ended my education with my
school experiences there is one in
Masters as I could not afford to continue
to accumulate debt. Thus, the importance
particular that I can't forget. Unlike the
of student aid to assure access to and
grades in many of my other subjects, I
continuation in higher education is not lost was carrying an "A" into the Grade XIII
on me. Neither is the lack of family
Ontario provincial exam in English
support nor understanding of the
composition. I chose to write the essay
importance of a university education in
part of the exam on the Canadian Cultural
situations where the student is the first in
Mosaic. I did so by arguing that a mosaic
was inappropriate as a mechanism for
the family to go on to university.
creating a national culture because the
It should not be surprising therefore that
much of what I will say today will relate to
students, their exposure to university and
their expectations of higher education. I
am aware that I am using the occasion of
Halloween to do so. Although I am not
following a colleague's suggestion to wear
a mask, I am, as you can see, definitely

fabric of a mosaic was liable to fracture
along the joins. Canada offered the
classical example of the strengths and
weaknesses of the mosaic in the FrenchEnglish dichotomy. I further argued in
favour of the American idea of the
Cultural Melting Pot. It was apparent that
my world view must have varied
considerably from the marker's as my final
grade dropped to a "C", coincidentally an
outcome that could not be challenged.
This was my first but not last exposure to
a doctrine that does not allow the
questioning of "accepted wisdom." In
university, I asked why it was necessary
to memorize details on taxonomic
classification that could easily be
accessed from reference material. Why
did we have to accept one person's
interpretation of Shakespeare's or Plato's
writings when both were dead and my
interpretation could be as good as that of
a so-called expert? These were not good
questions for a student to ask! And the
faculty always had the last word with the
power of the grading process. Conform or
suffer the consequences. The message
was -- don't be original, don't challenge
the faculty or the reference material -and thus the only real learning process
left was to determine what needed to be
memorized for regurgitation. While the
latter has been justified as good discipline
for the mind and in some circumstances
is requisite and useful, with languages
being an example, it is hardly the stuff to
engage and develop a process of inquiry.
Mind you, there were notable exceptions
to this general educational doctrine:
1. An Acadia statistics professor who was
a brilliant theoretician but who used
examples from Rudyard Kipling. He
believed it was more important to use the
tools of statistics correctly than to
memorize formulae and thus gave take
home exams. As a result, I found myself

Many of the most exciting aspects of higher
education today are happening at the
boundaries of the old disciplines
Lakehead University- November, 1998
2

�-z■••• ►•z-i-----------------learning and understanding calculus
which I never did when I took it originally;
2. A University of Toronto geology
professor who taught the then heretical
idea of tectonic plates before it became
accepted theory and allowed the class to
debate the old and new theories. In so
doing, he provided insight into why the
major theorems in science take so long to
change;
3. Another Acadia professor who drew
beautiful freehand drawings on the
blackboard with coloured chalk to explain
the form and function principles of
comparative anatomy and who colourfully
illustrated verbally reproductive anatomy
with personal examples that were truly
memorable. But this was secondary to his
exams which always contained a bonus
question that tested your ability to take
the concepts and facts of the course and
equate them to an area otherwise
uncovered by the course material. These
and a handful of others were the sole
contributors in my educational experience
to a student-centred learning environment
and they did so without much
technological assistance, yet in the
process certainly stimulated the mind.
Over the past 30 years, my career has
taken me to positions across the U.S.
border three times. In addition, I have had
many experiences that have allowed me
to catch glimpses of life and education in
Europe, Africa, Central and South
America as well as Australasia. Having
dealt with the administrations and cultures
of five fundamentally different yet similar
universities and hopefully having learned
valuable lessons along the way, I am
perhaps egotistical or naive enough to
think that I may have some idea of what
works and what doesn't in the realm of
higher education, and that I might have
some insight into what would allow a
university like Lakehead to succeed in a
time of fundamental change in the
system.
Our basic commodities within a university
are still the students, staff, administration
and faculty, but without the students we
have no raison d'etre. Although the

Wouldn't it be exciting ifLakehead were to
become the model for how all universities
should operate
demographics of the student body have
changed, and will continue to change
dramatically with more adult and senior
learners participating, students fresh from
high school or transfers from colleges still
represent the primary segments and have
for the past three decades. But if we
scan those past 30 years and fast forward
to 1998 and our current technologically
enhanced classrooms and to students
who seemingly are hard-wired to the
Internet, whose attention spans are
measured in sound bites and where
video, CD-ROMS, and action, action,
action are the norm - what should be
their educational expectations?
If we put such students into a classroom
with a lecture format that is basically a
talking head following a textbook, should
we expect them to turn on to education?
The classroom now, unlike 30 years ago,
is a place where we can interface
technology with a faculty member to
create a learning environment that can,
and should, be student-, rather than
teacher-centred. But whether it is or not,
as in my own university days, depends on
the will of the faculty member doing the
teaching. So basic questions are: Do we
as educators, or do the accrediting
agencies that drive the academic
programming in so many professional
areas and who we know are notoriously
slow to respond to change, really
understand how students learn most
effectively or what they need to know to
be successful once they leave the
university? Shouldn't we be avoiding
rigidity of thought and instead
encouraging the exploration of ideas and
using technology to complement and
demonstrate that there are different
pathways to solutions? The Acadia
experiment with computer teaching has
shown that students, for example in
physics labs working with their personal

Lakehead University- November, 1998
3

computers, actually learn more than in
traditional labs with a set format because
they create the pathways to solutions
themselves often through the reinforcing
process of trial and error. That is an old
lesson -- that we can learn from our
mistakes, that information is networked
and that, like a spider web, there are
many "correcr paths to the spider. I
suspect such an analogy conjures up
more than one interpretation!!
Furthermore, the opportunity to share
ideas in small peer groups is the
fundamental learning basis we have used
for science laboratories, seminars and
take home exams. Such smaller groups of
students facilitate learning, so shouldn't
we be ensuring such opportunities as part
of the introduction to a university
education and making certain that all
incoming students are so exposed in at
least some courses in their first year of
study? Without providing such
opportunities, we disenfranchise collective
discussion which is the real world modus
operandi. Students in residence, and that
is one of Lakehead's fundamental
strengths, usually create their own groups
to discuss their education and more
worldly issues. Although not in residence
at the time, I remember clearly just such a
discussion in a campus restaurant during
my U of T days where we Honours
Biology students (all 12 of us) concluded
that the evolutionary big brain experiment
should be considered a failure. I might
add that time has not changed my opinion
that the conclusion was probably correct.
Web-based courses provide a similar
experience for students who form
discussion groups (chat rooms) with, or
without, faculty involvement.
Real life experience either indirect through
the anecdotal accounts of the faculty's
activities outside the classroom and
indeed the university's walls, or direct

�-------------------i-iM■••fW* - - 1 -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Installation Address

continued from page 3
learning, and internships as examples, are
essential elements to prepare the student
for life after university. Faculty gain such
experience by reach ing beyond the
university in their service, research and
scholarly activities to link with the private
and public sectors, as well as society in
general. Built in is an attitude that a primary
function of the university is to serve people
and thus applied research is as valuable as
basic research. The operational concept of
the university as a socioeconomic engine
and a fertile ground for new or different ideas
provides the connection to society and its
needs. To adequately generate this potential
requires active research and supporting
graduate programs and a willingness to
engage in partnerships with entities outside
the university.
There are many other defining qualities that
I believe Lakehead should have.
Commitments to multiculturalism, diversity
and globalism that are expressed in
international, aboriginal and gender
understandings and sensitivities in the
classroom and beyond are essential. These
should be diffused across the curriculum in
much the same way as writing. Where
better than this university to embrace
sustainability as the key operating paradigm
when it is becoming obvious that so many
of the extant operating paradigms are
unsustainable. The warning signs of global
warming, declining biodiversity, increasing
chemical contamination of the environment,
contamination and depletion of critical
aquifers, population densities that facilitate
the development and transfer of new or
modified diseases and a world economy
built on unlimited growth are examples and
testament to the lack of sustainability. As
an institution, we need to encourage
thinking that is outside the current
paradigms. We must change what we are
and how we do things and in the process
influence external change to a greater
degree.
It is important to recognize that Lakehead
can not be all things to all people. We must
exploit our strengths in our academic

Most of what I have described can be
achieved by changes in attitude and a
willingness to do things differently
programming and focus our efforts. We
should become renowned as a mediumsized excellent university showing forward
thinking and providing a superior education.
We should partner with other colleges and
universities to articulate and share
programs. We should help Thunder Bay and
the region reach its potential by cooperative
activities, including being an honest broker
in multiparty decision-making processes.
And a defining characteristic of the
university would be the student-centred
nature of the learning experience and
Lakehead's ability to adapt to and capitalize
on change.
Many of the most exciting aspects of higher
education today are happening at the
boundaries of the old disciplines. In these
areas of overlap, interdisciplinary and
multidisciplinary initiatives are occurring.
Such approaches need to be encouraged.
A university is the place to break down
boundaries, not to create them. We have
the opportunity at Lakehead to capitalize
on the strategic planning process now
underway, to expand and change our
boundaries of thought and action, and by
so doing, position ourselves in a way that is
attractive, exciting and embracing of the
future information age. We should do so in
a manner that is accountable to our
students, society and ourselves. The public
who support us with tax dollars and the
students who do the same with their tuition
fees must be comfortable with the premise
that their money is being spent to provide
an education that is not simply a pathway
to a job, but instead is preparation for a life
that will be demanding. We all need to
recognize that the jobs that the graduates
find themselves in may not even exist yet.
Thus we have to prepare them to cope with
conditions that will change at a dizzying
pace. If we equip them with an enhanced
tool of their own, an agile, inquiring and

Lakehead University - November, 1998
4

sophisticated mind combined with a toolkit
of appropriate current knowledge, they will
not only adjust to that change but also will
become the agents of change for the
betterment of society.
Although we require capital funds to
maintain and improve our facilities, most of
what I have described can be achieved by
changes in attitude and a willingness to do
things differently. If the people of Lakehead
embrace such a change environment,
funding will follow because we will be more
attractive to students and the province will
recognize that Lakehead is worthy of
additional investment. Lakehead could
represent what all universities should be.
We control our destiny and as we move into
the new millennium wouldn't it be exciting if
Lakehead were to become the model for
how all universities should operate.
All these thoughts could be expanded on
with greater detail and there are many
others I would like to share with you but the
time I have this morning is too limited.
Suffice it to say that it is my hope that as
Lakehead's president I can help it build on
its past and become a place where those
who are touched by it in the future will
recognize its special qualities as an
innovator in education, an important source
of research and scholarship, a responsive
public asset to deal with the issues of the
region, and a global presence in its ability
to influence and foster change.
Thank you for the opportunity to serve as
president of Lakehead, a university with
great potential, at such a critical juncture
in its development. Together, I believe we
can accomplish exciting and meaningful
outcomes for the university, its students
and the various publics it serves.
Meegwetch.

�-----------------.z•••••z. . .
Forestry Class of '73
Celebrate 25-year Reunion
Lakehead's first graduates to receive a degree in Forestry were back at Lakehead in

"Godspeed"
Dr. John Whitfield
Dr. John Whitfield,
vice-president
research &amp;
development,
experienced a mild
heart attack on
October 21, 1998. He
was treated in hospital
and is now resting
comfortably at home
awaiting further tests.
It is too early to say
when John Whitfield
will be well enough to
return to work, but the
president of Lakehead
hopes it will be soon.
"John is a vital part of
our community," says
Dr. Fred Gilbert, "and
I'm sure I speak for
everyone on campus
in wishing him
'Godspeed' in his
recovery."
While Dr. John
Whitfield is
recuperating, units
reporting to him are
being asked to carry
on as usual. Secretary
Janice Pellizzari is in
regular contact with
the Whitfield
household and can be
contacted at extension
8201 for more
information.

October to celebrate a 25-year reunion. While on campus they presented a cheque
for $5,000 to the president of Lakehead University and the president of the Alumni
Association. These funds will be matched by the Ontario Student Opportunity Trust
Fund (OSOTF) and will form the ba~is of an annual award to a third or fourth-year
forestry student in memory of Gary McKellar (BScF '73).

Photo (l-r): John Friday, president of the Lakehead University Alumni Association, Dr.
Fred Gilbert, president ofLakehead University. and Dr. David Euler, dean of the Faculty
of Forestry and the Forest Environment, share the spotlight with four members of the
Class of '73 -- Bill Murphy, Ray Rivard, Geoff Pattyson, and Royden Potvin.

J

Campus Clean Up

Guest Lecturer

Despite the cold, wet weather a dozen
hearty volunteers came out for Campus
Clean Up Day on October 16, 1998.
Congratulations to: Katie Havens, Kris
Odette, Jose Moran, Lynn Plouffe, Shane
Dunn, Eddie Donato, Collin Meijerink,
Danielle Sperling, Holly Walsh, Susan
Pankuch, Val Hicks, and Allison Green.

Dr. John Spears, secretary general of the
World Commission on Forests and
Sustainable Development, gave a special
lecture on "Global Trends and Challenges
to the Forest Sector" on Friday, October 9,
1998. The lecture was one of a number of
activities held on campus to celebrate the
25-year reunion of the Forestry Class of
'73.

If you missed Campus Clean Up Day
remember to use the garbage cans and
keep our campus beautiful.

Montreal Memorial Service

Stay tuned for the next Campus Clean Up
Day in April.

Friday, December 4, 1998

-- Norma Jean Newbold, Residence Life
Coordinator

Lakehead University Agora

Lakehead University- November, 1998
5

12:15p.m.
Students, Staff and Faculty are Welcome

�- - -- - -- - - -- - -- ; « - • • • + - - f -- - -- - -- -- - - -

Budget Process

1999-2000
The budget process this year will incorporate various
alternatives which will be used to assist in determining the
future direction of the University. Scenarios involving 95%,
98%, I 00% and I 03% of the current years' base allocations
will be used in arriving at the overall budget plan.

The president's message in the October issue of the
AGORA outlined the general approach including the
potential benefits to be derived by the University.

The schedule on the following page outlines the various steps
of this process and affords the departments the opportunity to
present a vision of the financial implications of the various
alternatives which they have developed. These presentations,
coupled with the intensive involvement of the Senate Budget
Committee, the Financial Planning Committee and the
Administrative Executive Committee, should provide the
basis for making financial decisions that enhance operational
flexibility, reflect strategic directions and are consistent with
the Boa rd of Governors' intention to retire the University's
current deficit by 2001.

Lakehead University - November, 1998
6

�-.sitii•■.wz.-1----------------LAKEHEAD UNNERSITY

SCHEDULE FOR DEVELOPMENT OF 1999/00 OPERATING BUDGET
AND 1999/02 OPERATIONAL PLAN

I

Month

Date

Action

1998

Odobef

Friday 30th

Finalize Recommended Guidelines

November

Thursday 12th

Board Financial Planning Committee - Receive and Consider Report on Funding and Recommend
Guidelines

Friday 13th

Information to Deans and Directors for Preparing Budget Submissions - Academic
Information to Senate Budget Committee on Guidelines and Budget Process

Friday 20th

Information to Deans and Directors for preparing budget submissions - Administrative

Thursday 3rd

Board of Govemors - Receive Report from Financial Planning Committee and Approve Guidelines

Tuesday 15th

Faculty Leaves Approved by President

Monday 4th

Budget Submissions Due From Deans and Direciors for Review by Senate Budget Committee
and the Adminstrative ExeCU1ive Committee

TBA

Govemment Announcement of Global Funding For Ontario Universities

Monday 4th to
Friday 29th

Hearings conducted by Senate Budget Committee with Deans and Direciors as required to
review budget submissions

Monday 1st

Final Date for Leave Changes

Friday 6th

Senate Budget Committee recommendations to President

Tuesday 23rd

Senate Meeting - Senate Budget Committee Report on Establishment

Friday 26th

Administrative ExeCU1ive Committee completes review of budgets

March

Friday 26th

Finalize Enrolment Projections , Revenue Estimates and Budget Modelling Alternatives

April

Monday 5th

Board Financial Planning Committee - Finalize Recommendations re Budget. Operational
Plan Establishment and Tuition Rates

Thursday 15th

Board of Governors' Meeting - Approve Budget, Operational Plan. Establishment and
Tuition Rates

Monday 27th

Senate Meeting - Receive 1999/00 Budget, 1999/02 Operational Plan and Establishment

Thursday 30th

Confirm 1999/00 Detailed Budget Allocations To Budget Centres

December

1999

January

.

February

.

Subsequent Schedule Dependent On -

a) actual announcement date - assumed to be in January
b) extent and significance of details announced

Lakehead University- November, 1998

7

�-------------------.;a■•■ •;-1-----------------

A Place for Praise
Department of English hosts a three-day international conference
on "Literary Modalities of Praise"
by Jolene Davis, MA'98

Keynote speaker, Dr. Constance Rooke, posed a challenge to those who attended an
English conference at Lakehead University from October 2 - 4, 1998. She suggested
that in this highly theoretical age, academics should make room for more literary
appreciation and praise. As a writer, editor, critic, and the vice-president of academics
at the University of Guelph, Rooke questioned whether academics have forgotten how
to praise solely for the beauty in writing or for the joy we can get from a text. While
she did not discount the merits of literary theory, she felt that praise has "gone out of
fashion" and "something of value has been lost or dimmed in the way that many of us
speak and write about literature today."
While literary scholarship still tends toward exposing the praiseworthy or blameworthy
elements in a text and its context, it is becoming increasingly self reflexive, leading
researchers to query the rhetorical motives and social values implicit in such
exposition. Speakers to the conference, both graduate students and scholars, came
from Great Britain, the United States, and several parts of Canada to discuss these
ideas. As very little has been published about literary praise, this conference offered a
fresh international forum.
Three papers were given by lakehead University faculty. Susan Tiura gave
"Epiphanies of Fire: Praise and Dionysus" which examined praise from the point of
view of epiphany as an organizing principle of modern poetry and imaginative prose.
Joan Dolphin's "A Contemporary in Praise of Shakespeare: Kate Grenville's Lillian's
Story" discussed the rhetorical device of praise in terms of a means to finding a
subjective voice. Dr. Kim Fedderson and Dr. Michael Richardson presented "Praising
and Burying the Bard: Epideictic Dilemmas in Recent Cinematic Adaptations of
Shakespeare." This paper examined the ways in which various contemporary
filmmakers adapting Shakespeare respond to the burden imposed on them by the
tradition of performance and scholarship which precedes them and of which they will
become a part. Examples of praise came from the ancient to the modern, from
mythology to the screen.
The conference was well attended by faculty, students, and guests. Approximately 60
people came out to hear papers and participate in the discussions held between
papers. Travel costs were partly offset by SSHRCC funding and local participants took
in out-of-town guests. The Valhalla Inn assisted ~ith accommodation for the keynote
speaker. The final speaker of the conference left the educators with an especially
important message. Dr. Erika Scheurer gave a paper titled "Notes Toward a Theory of
Constructive Praise." As educators we must learn how to use praise effectively in
order not to discourage students with constant fault finding. Her feelings were that,
with praise, we can show we care -- especially when we support our praise with proof.

"Ever newly begin the
praise you cannot
accomplish."
-- Rainer Maria Rilke

Conference organizer Dr. Alice den Otter says that the purpose of the gathering was
to "engage a critical inquiry into the purposes and paradoxes of praise, not only
among literary discourse communities, but also within and about literary texts." Some
general ideas that surfaced over the duration of the conference are: praise and blame
are often relative to expectations, praise is not necessarily soft or sentimental, praise
can be used to reinforce a hierarchy, one can be damned with praise, and attention is
a natural form of praise. There are hopes to publish as many of the papers as
possible in an edited, peer-reviewed format.

Lakehead University- November, 1998
8

�Casual Attire...

([1IJD

byBevStefu,eak,Executive
Assistant to the President

_Jj

t;\

i

Lakehead is stepping up its Dress
Down Day program in order to raise
$10,000 for student financial aid.
Here's what we're doing ...
During the Ontario Student Opportunity
Trust Fund (OSOTF) campaign we
seized upon an opportunity for the
faculty and staff to work together
toward funding assistance for needy
students, now and in perpetuity.
The first Friday of each month was set
aside as a Dress Down Day, with a
donation of $2 per person going toward
the funding of a faculty/staff bursary.
We have five months left in the
campaign. In order to reach our goal of
$5,000 (to be doubled by the Province
of Ontario for a total endowment of
$10,000), efforts need to be stepped
up.

~~ So a Student can Asp1·re

~

The president has agreed to target the
first and third Friday of each month for
the "Casual Attire, So a Student can
Aspire" endeavour.

Note: A one-time donation of $20 will
cover the remaining Dress Down
Days to March 31, 1999, and you will
be issued an income tax receipt

That means for a donation of $4 a
month, and the opportunity to come to
work in more relaxed attire twice a
month, faculty and staff collectively can
send a caring message to current and
prospective students of Lakehead
University.

The new Dress Down Days are as
follows:

This is a small commitment toward an
objective that could make the significant
difference in a student's university life.
Please think about it and make the
extra effort to participate to the best of
your ability.

November 20, 1998
December 4 and 18, 1998
January 8 and 22, 1999
February 5 and 19, 1999
March 5 and 19, 1999
To make your contribution contact your
departmental secretary, Marie Ferguson
at Switchboard or Patti Merriman in
UC2009, extension 8207.

Shirley Shaffer Remembered
by a Seminar Room Named in her Honour
Paul Shaffer credits his mother for inspiring him to pursue a career in music. It was she who "forced" him to take piano lessons •
as a child and encouraged him to explore his interest in rock, jazz, and rhythm and blues as a teenager in Thunder Bay.
Paul Shaffer was back on October 17, 1998, to
dedicate a seminar room in the William H. Buset
Centre for Music and Visual Arts in honour of his
mother -- Shirley Eleanor Wood Shaffer. He has
also created a bursary in her name.
Attending the dedication were Shaffer's father
Bernard and about 45 family friends including jazz
trumpeter Lew Soloff (a member of the former rock
group Blood, Sweat and Tears) who joined Paul
in playing some of Mrs. Shaffer's favourite tunes.
Shaffer said that naming a room on campus was
appropriate given that his parents encouraged him
to pursue postsecondary studies at the University
of Toronto before making a career in music. Paul
Shaffer now lives in New York City and appears
on the CBS television program "Late Show with
David Letterman," where he is musical director.

Lakehead University- November, 1998
9

�-----------------;•■•••!-~---------------

Bound for Antarctica

Have Lunch With

Rubin "Hurricane" Carter

Twelve Lakehead students will be
embarking on a two-week undergraduate
educational field trip to the Antarctic as
part of a fourth-year special topic
geography course. The students will be
travelling with Dr. Margaret Johnston
aboard a research/passenger vessel. En
route they will be learning and leading
discussions and seminars on Antarctic
issues such as the impacts of polar
tourism, human exploration history, polar
geological development, environmental
issues, and Antarctica's unique wildlife.

Rubin "Hurricane" Carter spent almost 20 years in prison for a crime he did not commit,
before being freed on a writ of habeas corpus. Carter has thus become a living symbol
for the necessity of preserving the "Great Writ." He testified May 20, 1993, before the
House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights.

The students have organized a variety of
fund-raising events to help offset the cost
of travelling (amounting to $6,350 per
student). LUSU has provided the entire
group with $1900 and the Department of
Geography has contributed $400.

Carter, who was immortalized in the Bob Dylan song, "Hurricane," became a civil rights
cause celebrity in the mid 1970s. A number one middleweight boxing contender, about
to fight for the world championship, he and a teenager John Artis, were arrested in
1966 for the murder of three whites in a New Jersey bar. The prosecution sought the .
death penalty in a trial the following year. They were convicted and sentenced to triple
life, narrowly escaping the electric chair.

For more information contact Paula Ashby
at 345-6562 or Tom Wilkinson at 6235652.

Mr. Carter, an articulate and charismatic speaker, lectures frequently at bar associations,
universities, high schools and libraries in the United States and Canada, on such diverse
issues as literacy and education, wrongful convictions, and the death penalty.

New Faculty and Staff

Following the luncheon on November 27, Carter will be giving a talk in the C.J. Sanders
Fieldhouse starting at 3:30 p.m. Tickets are $4 for students and $5 for the public.

During October al')d early November,
employment notices were issued by Human
Resources announcing the following
appointments:
Alanna Mciver

Administrative Assistant, NAPE
Jason Rybak
Security Communications Officer, Security
Valerie Koblun
Financial Analyst, LUCAS (Instrument Lab)
JenniferWillianen

Analysis &amp; Communications Assistant
Ewa Gulbinowicz

Systems Technician, Library and CTRC
SariTuhkasaari

Mail Clerk, Residence
Dean Carlson

Full Time Caretaker, Campus Development
(Housekeeping)
As well ...
Robbie Buffington has been transferred to
the Departments of Chemistry and Northern
Studies and Jennifer Howie has been
transferred to the Departments of Music and
Visual Arts.

Friday, November 27, 1998
at the Victoria Inn, Thunder Bay
11 :30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Tickets are $30 and can be purchased at the
C.J. Sanders Fieldhouse and the Victoria Inn

Funding Opportunity

In Memoriam

Research

Cliff McIntosh

into Renewable Resources

Cliff McIntosh -- visionary, futurist and
strategic thinker -- passed away on
November 1, 1998, after a long battle with
cancer. He was 69.

In accordance with the 1993 Sahtu
Dene and Matis Comprehensive Land
Claim Agreement, the Sahtu Renewable
Resources Board (SRRB) has funds
available to support research associated
with management of renewable
resources in the Shatu Settlement Area
in the Northwest Territories. Applications
must be received by December 1, 1998.
The SRRB is primarily concerned with
management of wildlife, fisheries,
forestry and other renewable resources
of value to claimants and non-claimants
in the Sahtu Settlement Area. For
information contact the Office of
Graduate Studies and Research at ext. •
8283.

Lakehead University- November, 1998
10

McIntosh was instrumental in the
formation of Quetico Centre which
evolved into a unique organization
designed to help people understand and
cope with change. A regular public
speaker and author, he sought to help
people shape change and turn problems
into opportunities. He worked extensively
in the public and private sectors including
health care, government, industry, social
service and education.
In 1987, Cliff McIntosh received an
honorary degree from Lakehead
University. He was also named a Fellow of
O.1.S.E. and was the recipient of the
Order of Canada.

�-¥WM•■ •z-t----------------

Five CFI Projects Funded
Lakehead has been successful in a
national competition for funding under
the Canada Foundation for Innovation's
(CFI) Research Development Fund.
Five projects were funded including:
-- Renewal of Lakehead University's
Scanning Electron Microscope Facilities
(Dr. Roger Mitchell);
-- Coherence in Semiconductor
Nanostructures/Long Haul Fibre Optic
Communications (Dr. Marc Dignam);
-- Atomic Resolution Surface Facility
(Dr. Mark Gallagher);
-- Renewal of Lakehead University's
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)
Facility (Dr. Stephen Kinrade);
-- Numerical and Experimental Studies
of Industrial and Environmental Flows
with Phase Change (Dr. Greg Naterer).
Lakehead's five projects were among
24 awards totalling $5.7 million given
out under the Research Development
Fund category of CFI. A total of 46
proposals were reviewed.

Appointments
Dr. Livio Di Matteo (Economics) has
been elected to a term as vicepresident, external communications, for
the Humanities and Social Sciences
Federation of Canada. The vicepresident, external communications, is
responsible for public affairs and a
communication strategy to promote a
better understanding of the vital role of
the humanities and social sciences.

Honours
Four MNR staff working on campus at
Lakehead University were recently
honoured in Buffalo, New York, at the
Fifth Annual Conference of The Wildlife
Society. They received the Society's
Wildlife Publication Award in the

"Outstanding Article Category" for a
report which was published in the
Journal of Wildlife Management on the
effects of timber management and
natural disturbances on moose habitat.
The Wildlife Society is an international,
non-profit organization of resource
management professionals with a focus
on wildlife science and management.
Dr. Rob Rempel, research scientist at
the Centre for Northern Forest
Ecosystem Research (CNFER) and
principal author of the article, was
honoured along with Dr. Art Rodgers,
also a research scientist at the Centre,
Phil Elkie, forest landscape specialist
with Northwest Science and Technology,
and Mike Gluck, planning analyst at the
Northwest Regional Office. Their article
was recognized for illustrating the
importance of evaluating the effects of
resource management policies at the
landscape level. Both Elkie and Gluck
are recent graduates of Lakehead
University.

Dr. Yves
Chantal
Dr. Yves Chantal is
a SSHRC-funded
post-doctoral fellow
working with Dr.
Brian O'Connor in
the Department of
Psychology this

Lakehead is pleased to welcome a
professor from Gifu
Shotoku Gakuen
University who is
spending his
sabbatical here as
a visiting professor.
Tamafumi (Ken)
Kaneyama arrived
on April 28, 1998,
and will be on
campus until March, 1999.
Professor Kaneyama's field of expertise
is mathematics and he teaches math
and computer programming at Gifu
University.
He is currently conducting research at
Lakehead in the field of algebraic
geometry. He is a native son of Gifu
and is married. His personal areas of
interest include performing the
traditional Japanese Tea Ceremony, Go
(the black and white board game similar
to, but more complicated than,
Checkers), and Shogia (a Japanese
version of Chess).
Ken Kaneyama is eager to share his
knowledge of Japan with the University
community and he can be contacted
through the Department of International
Activities at 343-8134.

\

{,

academic year. He
did graduate work at the University of
Quebec at Montreal and at the University
of Moncion, followed by a stay at the
University of Rochester before coming to
Lakehead this September. His research
has focused on motivational factors
involved in gambling, volunteerism, and
health-protective behaviour. In his free
time, Chantal enjoys working as a
professional magician. You can see him
perform some tricks at the following
website: http:\\www.geocities.com/
Area51 /Orion/7399/

Lakehead University - November, 1998
11

Ken Kaneyama

Certification
The Canadian Council on Animal Care
confirmed on July 31 , 1998 that the
animal care and use program at
Lakehead University is in accord with
the guidelines and polices of Good
Animal Practice as established by the
CCAC.
The next assessment is scheduled for
2000. Dr. Philip Fralick (Geology) is the
chair of Lakehead's Animal Care
Committee.

�Calendar of Events
Lakehead University
Fellow Award
Lakehead University is currently accepting
nominations for the prestigious Lakehead
University Fellow Award which is
conferred each year at the May
Convocation.
The award has been reserved for truly
deserving persons and need not be
awarded every year. In the past.
recipients have come from all walks of life
with the commonality that all have been
outstanding citizens in their community
who have contributed significantly to their
community and/or to the region.
Nominations should be submitted by
January 6, 1998, (on the required form
accompanied by supporting
documentation) to the Secretary of the
Board, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay,
Ontario, P7B 5E1 . For nomination forms
or further information, please call Mrs. B.
Stefureak at (807) 343-8614, FAX (807)
343-8075, or e-mail
bev.stefureak@lakeheadu.ca.

1999-2000 Northern
Scientific Training Program
Grants (N.S.T.P.)
The federal government makes grants
available every year for research on
northern topics to graduate and senior
undergraduate students who are
Canadian citizens or permanent residents
of Canada.
The size of the grants last year was from
$500 to $5,000, and they were given to
students across Canada in virtually all the
physical and social sciences. They are
meant to be research grants,
SUPPLEMENTAL to other money
provided by the student or by the
student's faculty advisor.
It is important to note that the research
funded by N.S.T.P. grants must be carried
out in the North as defined as the region
north of the discontinuous permafrost
zone. and includes Southern Yukon in the
west; that section of Labrador south to

and including Happy Valley and Hamilton
Inlet in the east; and, seven Arctic
countries (Finland, Greenland [Denmark],
Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden, and
the U.S.).

NOVEMBER 1998
VoL. 15, No. 9
THUNDER BAY,
ONTARIO, CANADA

Each applicant must have a faculty
advisor and application must be made by
the advisor, and submitted to the
Northern and Regional Studies
Committee by Wednesday, November 25,
1998. If you would like a set of
application forms or further information,
please contact Robbie Buffington at the
Department of Chemistry at ext. 8458.

ISSN 0828-5225

Agora is published by the
Communications Office and distributed
monthly September through June.

Publications Officer
Frances Harding

Communications/Special Events
Officer

Lakehead University Night

Denise Bruley

at the Fort William Gardens
Saturday, November 14, 1998 at 7:30 p.m

Analysis and Communications
Assistant

sponsored by B. T. C. M. Holdings Ltd.

Jennifer Willianen

Come out and see the Thunder Bay Thunder
Cats vs Quad City Mallards. Your $10 ticket
includes free access to post-game party at The
Outpost. Vouchers available at Switchboard,
Alumni Bookstore, LUSU and Alumni Services.
For more information call 343-8155

Photography
Peter Puna &amp; Staff

Printing:
LU Print Shop

Department of Music

Lumina Concert Series
1998-99
Concerts are held in the Jean McNulty Recital
Hall in the William H. Buset Centre for Music
and Visual Arts at 12:30 p.m. unless
otherwise noted. Subscriptions and tickets are
available from the Department of Music.
Complimentary parking. For information call

Send us your news.
Deadline for submissions for the next
issue is December 1, 1998.

Editor, Agora
Lakehead University

343·8787

955 Oliver Road

November24

Thunder Bay, ON

Krystyna Tucka, Piano

P7B5E1

(Eckhardt•Gramatte National Music
Competition Winner)

Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8999
E-mail:frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

CO

TroJ n

Dev~l .

~ Mlumni Affa_ r s

Lakehead University- November, 1998
12

�MAIL~POSTE
C.,nllla Pou Cot~•Uo• / Socitt6 uucUtMt cit• poit.u
Posi,ot 1)1,d

Pon p,yl

Blk

Nbre

241721999
Thunder Bay, Ontario

Lakehead University Parents' Newsletter
Fall 1998

When You're Studying Hard and
Not Succeeding ...
by Geraldine White
Coordinator, Learning Assistance Centre

Cohsider the student who is frustrated because she studies a
lot but doesn't do well. Instead of studying longer, this student
may need to learn a better method for studying successfully.
That's where the Learning Assistance Centre can help.
We provide academic support for all Lakehead students as
well as services for students with disabilities. Our service falls
into three broad categories:
Study Skills

Most students don't come to university with good study skills.
Some develop their own methods or learn from friends and
others have not yet developed these academic skills at all. At
the Learning Assistance Centre, we offer a workshop in which
the five basic skills of note-taking, time management, reading,
studying, and writing tests and exams are covered. This
session is offered at various times to accommodate students'
schedules.

Students who want to make the best use of Lakehead's
expanded fitness centre are encouraged to sign up for an
instructional session with Dwayne Fuchs, Lakehead's strength
and conditioning coach. The newly renovated facility -- called
the Wolves' Den -- is open Monday to Friday from 6 a.m. until
10:30 p.m. and on weekends from 8 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.

Professional and Peer Tutors
Upper-year students are hired as peer tutors to assist students
with course content in such varying subjects as philosophy,
engineering, biology and art history. Professional tutors in English
and mathematics are available to meet with students as needed
(either one-on-one or in a group). All students are entitled to five
free hours of tutoring in each academic year. Students requiring
more than five hours can make arrangements with the tutor to
continue with the tutoring sessions.

Important Dates
Fall term exams:

Dec. 8-19

University is closed:

Dec. 24-Jan. 3

Classes begin for winter term courses:

Jan.4

Final date for registration

Assistance with Writing Essays

and course additions (winter term):

Workshops are presented regularly on researching and writing
essays and on formatting and documenting papers. In
addition, assistance is available with writing individual essays.

academic penalty:

All students can learn how to be more successful by drawing
on the resources offered at the Learning Assistance Centre.
For more information call (807) 343-8047.

Jan.13

Final date for course withdrawal without
fall/winter full courses.................. .

Feb.8

winter half courses .................. ... ..

March 1

Midyear study week
(except for Education):

Feb. 15-19

�Tips for Parents

Profile

from the Financial Aid Office
by Phyllis Bosnick
Financial Aid Administrator (OSAP)

Your son or daughter has been at
Lakehead University for about two months
now. Do you know what his or her
financial picture is like? Have you
checked with him or her recently to see if
everything is OK?
If you haven't, here are a few
suggestions:
-- Check on their money situation. Do they
have enough to live on and pay the
monthly bills?
-- If they are worried about their financial
situation, suggest to them that they
prepare a budget.
-- Tell them to visit the Lakehead
University Financial Aid Office and talk to
a financial advisor. We can avail students
of possible financial and job opportunities.
-- If they are in financial need, suggest
that they apply for a bursary The deadline
for applications is November 13, 1998. If
they have already received a bursary this
year, they may still be eligible provided
they demonstrate real financial need.
-- It's not too late to apply for funds
through OSAP (Ontario Student
Assistance Program). The deadline is in
January, 1999. If they apply for OSAP via
the Internet there is no charge. If they
apply using a booklet application, they
must pay $10 to the Ministry of Finance.
-- If they have already received OSAP
funds and have any questions or
concerns, tell them to come and see us.
Many students talk amongst themselves
and become distressed when they learn
that someone else, in what they believe is
a similar situation, may have received
more money than they did. We can
explain their assessment. There may
have been a change in the information
that was presented on the application
which will make a change in the amount
of money (OSAP) to which they are
entitled.
For information call (807) 343-8206.
l..akehead University Parents' New..letter Fal 1998

Juanita Lawson: Student Counsellor
Juanita Lawson is familiar with the pressures of University life. Four years ago she
completed her master's degree in social work at Lakehead while working part-time
as a social worker at Thunder Bay's W.W. Creighton Youth Services.
Now, in her capacity as Lakehead University's coordinator/counsellor, her goal is to
increase the visibility of Lakehead's Career and Counselling Centre and to make
the services it provides "more accessible and student-friendly."
One of the ways she plans to do this is to
link the work of her office more closely
with those programs and services being
offered elsewhere on campus such as in
Health Services and in Residence.
Lawson was born and raised in
Cookstown, near Barrie, Ontario, and
completed an undergraduate degree in
sociology and criminology at Carleton
University in Ottawa.
After finishing university, she packed her
bags and spent a year working her way
around Australia before settling down in
Thunder Bay.
Prior to signing on with Lakehead in
September, Juanita Lawson spent
several years working as a social worker/
case manager with the Lakehead
Regional Family Centre.

We're Here to Help
Lakelzead University's
Counselling &amp; Career Centre
The Counselling &amp; Career Centre is located in UC1002 and is open Monday to
Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Telephone 34_3-8018. During the winter term the
Centre will be open on Tuesday evenings. The Centre offers a variety of programs
to all Lakehead students including:
-- Personal Counselling
-- Career Counselling
-- Career Interest Inventory
-- Chaplaincy Services
-- University &amp; College Calendars
-- Workshops &amp; Seminars
-- Resource Library
-- Resume Critiquing Service

�The Parents' Fund
by Rob Zuback, Manager, Alumni Services

The Parents' Fund is an annual appeal to parents of Lakehead University students
to support a number of important initiatives on campus.
Most recently, the parents have been asked to support the purchase of new library
books through the Buy-A-Book Campaign, student financial aid, and this year,
Electronic Access for The Chancellor Paterson Library.

1997-98 Parents' Fund
Goal: $20,000
Raised: $22,845
Average gift: $52.88
Largest gift received from a parent: $250
Amount raised since inception in 1993-94: $211,439

1998-99 Parents' Fund
Target: $25,000
In support of Electronic Access Campaign for
The Chancellor Paterson
Library

Making a Payment on a Previous Pledge?
Time is running out for the opportunity to have your pledge to the Ontario Student
Opportunity Trust Fund (OSOTF) campaign matched by the Government of Ontario.
Payments on OSOTF pledges must be received before March 31, 1999.
Please don't miss this tremendous opportunity to double your gift to Lakehead
University.
For more information contact:
Rob Zuback, Manager, Alumni Services
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Rd.

Thunder Bay, Ontario P7B 5E1
(807) 343-8916

E-mail: rob.zuback@lakeheadu.ca

Shop by Phone, Fax, or E-Mail
Now you can order a variety of gift items including T-shirts,
mugs, sweatshirts and jackets from "The Intersection," home of
Lakehead University clothing and gifts. Check out The
Intersection's two-page colour advertisement in the fall, 1998,
issue of Lakehead's Nor'Wester Magazine. A complimentary
copy of the Nor'Wester is being sent to you during the first week
of November.

Show That You Care
Send your Child a $20
"Good Luck" Christmas Care
Gift Pack
In the next few weeks, your son or
daughter will be writing midterm exams
and starting to prepare for Christmas
exams. For many this can be a very
stressful and trying time of year, especially
when the encouragement and support of
parents seem so far away.

To combat the blues, and alleviate those
exam anxieties, the Alumni Association of
Lakehead University and the Lakehead
University Residence Council are offering
you the "Good Luck" Christmas Care Gift
Pack for a cost of $20 plus tax.
The "Good Luck" Christmas Care Gift
Pack contains a healthy assortment of
fruit (apples, oranges, bananas), power
snacks (chocolate bars, chips, candy and
gum) and beverages (pop, coffee, hot
chocolate) to provide energy for those late
nights of studying.
This year we are including a special addon gift -- a Lakehead University Thermo
Mug at a cost of $5.

To place your order, complete the form
that has been sent to you by the Office of
Alumni Services or, if you don't have the
form, call the Office of Alumni Services at
(807) 343-8155 or toll-free at 1-800-8388076.
Christmas Care Gift Packs will be
delivered both on and off campus on the
weekend of December 5th.
Deadline for orders:
Friday, November 27, 1998

Proceeds from the sale of the kits will be
used to enhance campus life and to
provide bursaries for needy students.
You will have an opportunity to purchase a
similar care package before study week in
February, and again before final exams in
April.

For more information contact the Office of
Alumni Services at (807) 343-8155.

Lakehead Universty Parents' Newsletter Fall 1998

�Special Offer from
World of Vacations
Visit Thunder Bay and Lakehead University between
November 1, 1998 and December 21, 1998 from

$328*

c,-

~i~

Missing
Something?
by Linda Moffatt
Fire and Safety Officer

$378- $50 (Coupon)= $328
·per person, based on double occupancy
With: World of Vacations (Formerly Canadian Holidays)

Package includes ...

Round-trip Airfare from
Toronto or Winnipeg
and 2 Nights Hotel Accommodation
For second term prices (January 1999 to April 1999), contact your
travel agent and ask for a World of Vacations package to Thunder
Bay. Don't forget to use your coupon!
This Coupon is valid with this offer or for any flights offered by World of Vacations
destined to Thunder Bay and booked with a hotel or car rental in Thunder Bay.
Minimum 1 night hotel or 1 day car rental is required in Thunder Bay.

Discover why Lakehead is the University of choice for so many
students! Experience the highlights ofthe city-- arts, sports,
professional theatre, great restaurants, entertainment, history and
hospitality.

---------------------%&lt;--Attention
Parents, Students, Alumni , Staff, Faculty and Friends of
Lakehead University
Present this

$50 Discount Coupon
to your travel agent and save
$50 per person (single); $100 per couple (double) on Adult pricing;
or $25 per child when sharing with 2 Adults.
Coupon must be presented at the time of making reservations and must
accompany your deposit or final payment for your booking.
Note: Coupon is valid from November 1, 1998 to December 21, 1999.
Lakehead University Parents' Nev.sletter Fan 1998

Everything imaginable has found its way
to Campus Security at one time or
another.
We have things that lift and separate {how
one can misplace a hydraulic jack is
beyond us), things that ring, beep, and
even meow.
Cell phones, pagers and the family cat
have turned up here. We have enough
keys to unlock every car in the Intercity
parking lot during their Christmas
shopping days and every house at least
in the Port Arthur area.
Didn't graduate this year? Well your thesis
could be sitting here with us. We are your
one stop shop. We are the Campus
Security Lost &amp; Found.
Our motto is,"Things you cherish and hold
so dear are things that more than likely
have turned up here."
If you have lost something, check for it at
Campus Security (UC 1014), the friendly
place to ask. Campus Security will hold
unclaimed articles for a year after which
time they will be sold at a campus yard
sale usually held in September.
All proceeds from this sale will be given
to an annual bursary fund to be awarded
to a student who has demonstrated an
interest in and contributes to Campus
Security.
Campus Security: (807) 343-8569
Emergency: (807) 343-8911

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7095">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.15 No.9</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7096">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7097">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an article on Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert being installed as President and Vice-Chancellor, an article on the forestry class of '73 reunion, and Lakehead Parents' Newsletter.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7098">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7099">
                <text>1998-11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Agora</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>Forestry</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1191">
        <name>Forestry Class of '73 Reunion</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1093">
        <name>President Frederick Gilbert</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1100">
        <name>President's Message</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1278" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17897">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/f062c9319d69be3d39922be00e0c92a0.pdf</src>
        <authentication>5adedb8aafd1e653e6ed7fa1f59fe1d5</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="124918">
                    <text>ra

Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
November 1997, Vol. 14, No. 9
ISSN 0828-5225

Lakehead Awarded $2.53 Million to Lead
Environmental Conservation Program
in Ghana
"When you look at the record it is clear that Lakehead
University is becoming an established international
player on the world forestry scene," says Dr. John
Naysmith, program directoroftwo new CIDA-funded
programs in Asia and Africa.
The Ghana-Canada IN CONCERT (Initiatives for
Conservation in Northern Communities: Entrepreneurship, Resources, Training) Program is the second successful CIDA-funded competition for
Lakehead University in the past year. Last fall
Lakehead's Asia proposal the "Nepal Resource Conservation and Community Outreach" Project was approved. This latest accomplishment marks
Lakehead's fourth international forestry program to
be funded by CIDA in the past six years.
"International projects such as these enrich
Lakehead's forestry program, bring new substance
to both graduate and undergraduate courses and create new opportunities for our students and faculty,"
says Naysmith.

Kumasl

The latest program was announced last month by The
Honourable Diane Marleau, Minister for International
Cooperation and Minister responsible for La
Francophonie. At a media conference held on campus, Marleau announced that Lakehead University personnel from the private sector will undertake the
INSIDE had been awarded $2.53 million by the Canadian In- implementation of a variety of projects within those
Parents of first-year ternational Development Agency to lead a forest con- areas.
students play an servation program in Ghana, West Africa.
important role in
Lakehead as the lead university will have as its parthelping their children Participants in "Ghana-Canada IN CONCERT' will ners in the Program the Kwame Nkrumah Univeradjust to campus implement an integrated resource conservation prosity of Science and Technology, the University of
life. gram in the savanna woodlands of northwestern
Ghana, Ghana's Ministry of Lands and Forestry, and
Ghana. The principal feature of the five-year prothe University of Guelph.
For your information
we've included a gram is human resources development focused on
copy of the three main themes: forest conservation, environmen- Lakehead's proposal was among six recommended
Lakehead University tal management and small-scale business training at for approval by an independent selection committee
Parents' Newsletter the community level. Over the five years of the Pro- after a Canada-wide competition in which 18 uniin this issue. gram, four or five Canadian faculty plus three or four versities submitted program proposals.

�+tit•l;§-1----------------------------- 2
nance, receiving/shipping and electrical areas. Also, IUOE, Local 865, reached a
settlement. This Local represents mechanics and operating engineers. These agreements have been ratified by both parties.
They are for the period July l, I 996 to June
30, 1998 and include across-the-board increases and pension improvements.

An
Update
from the
Interim
President

Versa Strike Ends

Dr. John Whit.field
Meeting with the Finance Minister

Maclean's

Although talk is cheap, it is sometimes
encouraging. Paul Martin, Liberal finance
minister, met with the Council of Ontario
Universities (COU) October 24, 1997. This
first-ever meeting of a finance minister with
the COU Council is an indication of the
rising federal awareness of university issues. That is encouraging. Also, recently,
federal initiatives such as the Canadian
Foundation for Innovation and the, as yet
undefined, Millennium Scholarship Fund
are welcomed. More needs to be done.

The 7th annual Maclean' s universities'
rankings is out. Lakehead was ranked 15th
out of 23 in the Primarily Undergraduate
Institution category. This positions
Lakehead well amongst comparable institutions such as Brock (14th), Laurentian
(17th) and Ryerson (19th). We continue to
believe, however, that our greatest measure of success is the success of our students,
graduates and faculty.

COU pressed the minister about several
concerns: student assistance and student
debt load; accountability; support for research and, in particular, the federal granting councils; and internationalization. Dr.
Bruce Muirhead, academic colleague to
COU and SSHRC Board member, was
among those urging support for the granting councils. While receptive to COU's
importuning, Martin cautioned that the
deficit is not yet beaten, but that he is anticipating a "fiscal dividend" for Canadians within 18 months. Universities and
their students must receive a share of this
dividend.
The finance minister came, spoke supportingly, and left having made no firm promises. I was encouraged but money would
have been nice.

Indicators of the excellence of Lakehead' s
people and programming include:
--Kim Trimble, electrical engineering student, winning a 1997 NRC Women in Engineering and Science Award;
--LU Forum, a primarily political science
student organization, has won the Best in
Competition category in Model United
Nations competition;
--Lakehead's professors have won more
3M Teaching Fellowships than all, except
two, Ontario universities;
--Lakehead was one of six Canadian universities to win a major Tier I CIDA grant.
The list goes on. Lakehead is justifiably
proud of these achievements.
SEIU and IUOE Settle
On October 20, 1997, a settlement was
reached with SEIU, Local 268, which represents housekeeping, grounds, mainte-

After five weeks on the picket line, the
Versa employees represented by the Service Employees' International Union, signed
a four-year agreement and returned to work
Friday, October 31, 1997. It is very regrettable that five persons were hurt on the
picket line October 24, and that one of our
employees, Shawn Bishop, remains in hospital with serious injuries to his legs. We
wish him a speedy recovery. With this dispute now resolved, we welcome back all
Versa employees and thank members of the
University community for their patience
and understanding in coping with the disruption and inconvenience that this strike
caused.
Information Day in Toronto
Lakehead is hosting an Information Day
in Toronto at the Delta Chelsea Inn, 33
Gerrard St.W., Saturday, November 29,
1997. The day begins at 9 a.m. with a general information session followed by sessions on financial aid, scholarship and bursary programs, and OSAP. Next are individual information sessions for the following programs: business, education, forestry,
outdoor recreation, parks &amp; tourism, arts
and science, and engineering.

WWW.LAKEHEADU.CA
Lak~head's "new and improved" Web site
is up and running and I would encourage
all of you who haven't yet visited the site
to take a look. The evolution of our Web
site is an ongoing process and more work
needs to be done, but at this stage I would
like to congratulate Chair of the Web Committee Dr. Jim Gellert and all the hardworking members who have brought us this
far. Keep up the good work!
Comments? Suggestions?
If you have any comments or suggestions
of topics you would like to see covered in
this column, please pick up the phone and
call me at 343-8132 or send me a note by
E-mail: john.whitfield@lakeheadu.ca
lAkeheaa UniversiJy, November, 1997

�et«•2;&amp;-----------------------------

3

Other Lakehead University
International Research and
Development Projects
Ghana Environmental Management
and Adult Literacy Development
Project

Partners: Confederation College, Univer•
sity of Science and Technology (Ghana)
and the University of Ghana
Funding Agency: CIDA
Amount: $983,959 over 5 years
CIDA-Lakehead Graduate Forestry
Scholarships in Ghana

Partners: University of Science and
Technology (Ghana) and the University of
Ghana
Funding Agency CIDA
Amount: $1 million over 5 years
Nepal Conservation and Community
Outreach Project

The Ghana-Canada IN CONCERT Program (left to right): Anne Klymenko, Lakehead
University; Dr. Terisa Turner. University of Guelph; Dr. James Quashi-Sam, University of
Science and Technology, Ghana; Dr. John Naysmith, Lakehead University; Dr. Jacob
Owusu, University of Science and Technology, Ghana Kusi Nkrumah, University of Ghana;
Dr. U/f Runesson, Lakehead University.

Partners: University of Guelph and
Tribhuvan University, Nepal
Funding Agency: Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC)/
CIDA • Tier II
Amount: $746,288 over 5 years.

WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE LIBRARY
Aboriginal Peoples Resources in the
Library
For each of the l ast two years, the Aboriginal Management Council has generously
donated the sum of $ I 0,000 to the Library
for the purchase of library resources relating to Aboriginal peoples.
The Library has worked together with the
selection commillee established by the
Aboriginal Management Council to identify and order material utilizing this funding. The majority of the material has been
catalogued for the main collection in the
Chancellor Paterson Library, however
where appropriate, some material has been
placed in the Reference Collection, the
Education Library or in the Northern Studies Resource Centre. In addition to books,
other formats such as CD-ROMs,
microforms and videos have also been acquired.

The Library is extremely grateful to the
Aboriginal Management Council for its
contribution to enhancing the Library's collection of resources relating to Aboriginal
peoples. As a result of this generous donation, Lakehead University may have one
of the best library collections of material
in Ontario on Aboriginal peoples.

([Il
1996 Census Publication soon to be
Available
Selected data tables for a number of variables will be available at the Statistics
Canada's Census 1996 web site (hllp://
w ww. s tatcan .ca/engl i sh/cen sus96/
nation.him). The release date for each
variable is listed below:
November 4, 1997
Immigration and Citizenship

December 2, 1997
Mother Tongue, Home Language, Official
and Non-official languages
January 13, 1998
Aboriginal
February 17, 1998
Ethnic Origin, Visible Minorities
March 17, 1998
Labour Activities, Occupation and
Industry, Household Activities, Place of
Work, Mode of Transportation
April 14, 1998
Education, Mobility and Migration
May 12, 1998
Sources of Income, Family and Household Income
June 9, 1998
Families (Part 2: Social and Economic
Data) Occupied Private Dwellings Household and Housing Costs
lAkehead Unfrersily, November /997

�4

Confronting Suicide
Together
Reflections on the 8th National Conference of the Canadian Association for Suicide
Prevention held in Thunder Bay from October 29 to November 1. 1997

by Josh Slatkoff
In her play, "Path with No Moccasins,"
acclaimed actress, writer, and director
Shirley Cheechoo describes the struggles
she encounte red as a Native child and
woman. Her experiences shed light on
many of the difficult conditions facing today's Native youth living in reserves. These
include low living standards and levels of
education, high poverty and unemployment, and the breakdown of traditional
cultural supports.
These are some of the conditions which
account for levels of suicide among Aboriginal people that are two to three times
the national average. As 38 percent of Aboriginal people will enter the highest suicide risk age group over the next 15 years,
the need for prompt fonnulation of prevention and intervention strategies is great.
In response to these alarming trends, the
Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention (CASP) hosted its eighth annual conference at the Valhalla Inn in Thunder Bay
from October 29 to November I. While
the conference is held in a different Canadian location each year, Thunder Bay was
an apt setting for this year's gathering as
the city is "in the back yard of one of the
worst (suicide) epidemics" in Canada, explains David Masecar, conference chair.
Attended by 340 national and international
delegates, including I 00 First Nations people, the confere nce sought to increase
knowledge and awareness of the problem
of suicide in northern and rural communities among professional and community
groups. Organizers of the conference
hoped to address issues around contributing factors, prevention, and bereavement
through the exchange of information between local, national, and international researchers, service providers, and survivors
of suicide.

Supporting the conference were many local businesses as well as members of the
Northern Ontario Community Partnership,
including
Lakehead
U nivers ity.
Lakehead's involvement is especially significant as the University " has an important role in linking communities in the
North and providing post-secondary educational services," says Masecar.
One of the difficulties in addressing suicides in Northern communities is that epidemiological research about community
factors is_lacking, explains Dr. Bruce
Minore, co-director of Lakehead University's Northern Health Human Resources
Research Unit (NHHRRU) and panel presenter at the conference. Community efforts have varied considerably, yet the relative effectiveness of those efforts remains
undocumented.
Despite these gaps in knowledge, communities are continuing efforts to implement
grass roots approaches to suicide prevention and intervention, with government
support. Founder of Lakehead University's Native Nurses Entry Program and regional director of the Ontario Region, Indian Health Services, Medical Services
Branch of Health Canada, Mae Katt, has
been instrumental in helping communities
plan their own "primary health care."
"Government policy reflects community-

based solutions because it trusts that communities understand the approaches that are
going to work," says Katt.
Complementing community approaches to
dealing with s uicide, are frameworks
grounded solidly in theory. Empirical evidence suggests that cognitive variables
such as hopelessness, poor self-esteem, and
poor problem solving skills play a mediating role between depression and suicide,
says Dave Davies, master's graduate student in clinical psychology at Lakehead
University. Such findings "may serve to
increase the sensitivity and specificity of
current suicide risk assessment batteries."
During my own studies in clinical psychology, there has often been an emphasis
placed on the role of professional intervention in dealing with suicide, at the expense
of disregarding community efforts. Joyce
Begg, a local mental health counsellor in
the Native community of Kingfisher, has
helped me to reconsider the validity of that
approach. "We are on our own two feet
seeking answers to our problems."
Josh Slatkoffis enrolled in Lakehead's master's program in clinical psychology.
He is one of several students participating
in a student writing program sponsored by
The Chronicle-Journal.

Lakehead University, through the Counselling and Career Centre, played a significant role in hosting the conference
which increased the University's profile
locally, nationally and internationally.
Other hosts included Nishnawbe-Aski
Nation, Algoma Child &amp; Youth Services,
Lakehead Regional Family Centre, Nodin
Counselling (Sioux Lookout), Wawatay,
and Confederation College.

"Government policy reflects communitybased solutions because it trusts that
communities understand the approaches
that are going to work."
-- Mae Katt
IAkehead Univusity, November, 1997

�M A IL~POSTE
Carud, POii Corpor1t!Ofl I Soclttt Cll'lldlti\1141 dts pcmts

Posi.ge pa,d

Pon p,y;

Blk

Nbre

241721999
Thunder Bay, Ontario

~~ .....-·

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY p ARENTS' NEWSLETTER
Fall 1997

Campus of the Year
Innovative Programming earns Lakehead University an
award from a national education group
Parents who are concerned their children may be drinking too much
can rest assured they are not alone. There are many students who are
also concerned and who are promoting the "Drink Responsibly"
message. Julie Kress is one.
Several years ago a young frie nd of hers was hit by a drunk driver.
Since then she's devoted a lot of her time to working with the
Lakehead Uni versity S.U.D.S. committee (Students Unified for
Drinking Sensibly).

Mission Accomplished!
Shawna Hickey and Julie Kress knew Lakehead University had an excellent alcohol awareness program and that
with a lit1le extra effort they could capture the /996-97
"Campus of the Year Award" Jron1 BACCHUS Canada.
Shawna is LUSU vice president ofstudem issues and Julie
is Lakehead's residence p,vgrammer.

Need Some Holiday Gift Ideas?
If your child requires a nutritious snack between classes,
consider purchasing a Gift Certificate for a SCANPLUS
Declining Balance Card from Versa Campus Services
in any pre-set amount you choose (i.e. $25, $50 or $75).
As a bonus, Versa will add an additional 5% in free money
to every dollar you purchase. Phone (807) 343-8142 for
details.
For the best in Lakehead clothing (sweatshirts, t-shirts,
etc) or a handy gift certificate contact the Intersection
at (807) 343-896 1. Ifyour child is looking for computers,
printers, software, computer games and accessories, contact Campus Tech at (807) 343-8770. Lakchead students
receive a substantial discount on all major software titles
when purchasing from Campus Tech.

The S.U.D.S. commitee is made up of student and staff representatives fro m the Lakehead University Student Union (LUSU), residence, and health services. Another key player on the committee is
the manager of the student pub (The Outpost) who has e ncouraged
the growth of the Designated Friend program. The program works
this way: students who have decided not to drink for the evening in
order to look out for their friends, are welcome to enjoy free soft
drinks and coffee.
Alcohol Awareness Week, held every fall on campus, is one of the
S.U.D.S. committee's main events. Last year, their "Cab It or Crash
It" display attracted the attention of the local newspaper, while another display -- "Tuition in Beer" -- has been copied by other campuses in Canada. By the way, just how many cases of beer does it
take to pay for one year's tuition? The answer is 119!
Important Dates

Fall term exams:
University is Closed:
Classes begin for winter term courses:
Final date for registration
and course additions (winter term):

December 3-15
Dec. 24 to Jan. 4
January 5
January 14

Final date for course withdrawal without
academic penalty:
fall/winter full courses........... .
winter half courses............. ..

February 9
March 2

Mid-year study week
(except for Education):
Winter term exams:

February 16-20
April 8-24

�Parents Ask Us ...
When will my son or daughter be home
for the holidays?
Thinking about travel plans for the holidays? Exams take place from December 3
to December 15, 1997. Find out from your
child the date of his or her last exam and
book accordingly. Classes resume on January 5, 1998.

What type of banking facilities arc available on campus?
There is no full-service bank on campus.
However, Lakehead does have ATM machines on campus for CIBC, Royal Bank,
and Scotiabank.

How cold does it get in Thunder Bay?

cational programs and activities. Students at Lakehead are encouraged to re- ,
member that their health is a critical factor in their academic, personal, and so- ii*'
cial success.

t'

I

How can I tell if my child is eligible
~
for scholarships, bursaries, or awards?
Scholarships are based on academic perfor mance. All full-time students who
have at least an 80% overall average i n
their studies at L akehead are automatically awarded and in-course scholarship
for the following year.

I

We have a great

deal to offer you!
Discover why Lakehead is the University
of choice for so many students! Experience
the highlights of the city - arts, sports,
professional theatre, great restaurants and
entertainment, history and hospitality.

:i

;$

k
~\

t

%

t

In addition, there are many program-spe- /
cific scholarships that students may appl y for. •

ii

f

Visit Thunder Bay and Lakehead
University for as low as $299.
Packages include ...
• round-trip airfare from Toronto or
Winnipeg on Canadian Airline
International

$:;

The daytime winter temperature can range
from around - IO C in December to sometimes -25 C in January and February (our
coldest months). Nevertheless, many students can be seen wearing shorts all winter
long!

Bursaries are based on need. Students ill

Where arc students from?

Additional funds are available for those f
students who miss the bursary deadline !~
and find themselves in extenuating financial circumstances in the second term.
However, students are encouraged to sub- y,~~
mit their application by the November t
14 deadline.

II

Package #2

f

November 1 to December 15, 1997
and January 1Oto April 30, 1998
$309

Awards are based on satisfactory aca- ;;

Package #3

demic progress and criteria specific to a
subject and/or program (e.g. Music
Award, Energy Science Award). Students

December 16, 1997 to January 9, 1998
$409

According to our 1996-97 statistics:
12.3% of our students are from the City of
Thunder Bay;
34.5% are from Northwestern Ontario;
46.8% are from other areas of Ontario;
4.9% are from other provinces and
1.5% are from other par ts of the world.

~

who are in need of financial assistance
should fill out an appl ication form which
includes a budget, and submit it by November I 4, 1997. Students will receive [
t
their bursary money in late January.
~~

~

(Check with your travel agent for a
car rental option and special rates on
connecting flights)

t

Package # 1

f

~

f

I
f:

What type of health services are available on campus?

::a~~~~lly chosen or recommended for

Lakehead University Health Centre is open
to students five days a week. Both female
and male doctors offer clinics daily from
September to April and twice weekly during the summer months.

Most scholarships, bursaries and awards tJ
are listed in the University calendar.
However, students should check with the ill
financial aid office for new listings.
r,

The staff are available to provide comprehensive health care and all records are confidential. Health education programs promoting healthy lifestyles and wellness are
targeted at raising student awareness about
health issues.
The health educator along with the student
wellness committee develop ongoing edu-

f

How can I help my son or daughter
get through exams?

• 2 nights accommodation at your
choice of 5 hotels

September 4 to October 31, 1997
S299

All prices are per person and based on
double occupancy. Taxes extra.
To ~ook your Thunder Bay Getaway call
your travel agent.
(Based on availability; special conditions
may apply.)

t:
For more information about adventure
vacations call Tourism Thunder Bay.

Be interested in what exams your son or •·•·
daughter is preparing for. Pick up the
phone and give him or her a call or send ,
a message by E-mail. Care packages are
always received with pleasure. If your
son or daughter lives at home, be patient
and supportive during this stressful time.

f

1-800-667-8386.
LAKE H E A D t UN I VE R SI TY
~

Canaclia1n Holidays·

Thuncler'f&amp;y
hi1
s«p,rlor

N&lt;1111r,

�3
Ontario Teachers' Strike
Director of Lakehead's Nanabijou
Childcare Centre, Sheila Wilhelm reports
that in light of the province-wide teachers
strike, the Nanabijou Childcare Centre extended its "After-School" program to accommodate parents who needed to find a
place for their children during the day.
The program was geared towards students
between the ages of 6 and 12 and Whilhelm
says there are still places available should
parents need them.
As for the regular daytime program, .it is
"business as usual." There are still places
available for children aged 6 and under. For
more information call 343-8369.

Thunder Bay to host 1998 World
Junior Curling Championships
March 21-29, 1998
If you're a curling fan, Thunder Bay is the
place to be this March when 10 Junior
Men's and 10 Junior Women's teams from
across Scandinavia, Europe, U.S.A.,
Canada and the Pacific Rim vie for the
coveted title of "World's Best".
Event passes are $75 which covers a ll
games -- 18 Round Robin and 6 Playoff
draws (including possible tie breakers) at
the new Thunder Bay Tournament Centre.
For ticket information call (807) 628-1998.

"We were very pleased with the tolerance
and understanding exhibited by Lakehead
students throughout the duration of the
strike," said Manager of Residence and
Conference Services David Hare.

Find a Job on the
Internet
Now there is an Internet tool that is helping employers around the world connect
with Lakehead graduates.

Disruption in Food Services
Parents will be glad to know that a strike
by employees of Versa Campus Services
(the University's caterer) has ended after
32 days. During the labour dispute, regular food service was provided in the residence cafeteria and modified food service
was provided in the main cafeteria.

We're Wired!
During the summer Lakehead extended its
local area network to the Bartley, Prettie
and Avila residences. Now students can use
the Internet and watch cable TV in the comfort of their own rooms. More networking
will be done in the Townhouses next summer.

Lakchead University to host
CIAU Women's Basketball
Championships
March 13-15, 1998
If you love basketball, come to Thunder
Bay in March to see the best University
Womens' teams compete for the Canadian
title.
For tickets and information call the C.J.
Sanders Fieldhouse at (807) 343-8213.

It's called the National Graduate Register
(NGR)
Once a graduate's resume is on the data
base, employers with Internet access have
only to per form an electronic search to
come up with a list of potential candidates.
Employers without Internet access can ask
the staff at the Lakehead University Placement Centre to do the search for them.
To find out how the NGR can help you,
contact Moe Ktytor at (807) 343-8264.

Profile
Karen Chan says the change from working in the Emergency Department at Thunder Bay Regional Hospital (McKellar) to working as a nurse/health educator at Lakehead University has been a
positive one.
She especially likes interacting with students. "I enjoy helping
young adults make healthy choices," she says.
Chan is a graduate of Confederation College and Lakehead University. She completed her nursing degree in 1993.
In her role as a nurse/health educator, she is responsible for organizing health promotion programs such as the Health Fair, Alcohol
Awareness Week, and a number of other programs including the
breast self examination seminar that was staged recently in the
Gender Issues Centre.

Nurse/Health Educator Kare11 Chan is a graduate of Lakehead.

Chan says that the students' concerns relate to diet and nutrition,
birth control, sexually transmitted diseases, and the usual coughs,
colds and earaches that many students experience. For information call (807) 343-8361 .

�4

Want to Get
Involved?
Moms and Dads of Lakehead students play an important part in
their children s success at University.
That is why we're trying to reach
out and give you more opportunities to get involved through ...
-- Parent orientation sessions in
August and September
-- Fund-raising projects of specific
interest to your family
-- Membership on our parents committee
Congratulations to this year 's Presidential Scholars who have each received a scholarship of $ I 0,000 for their outstanding academic performance, community service and
leadership. Pictured above with Lakehead's Interim President Dr. John Whitfield are
Christine Chczick (rig ht), a g raduate of Westgate Collegiate &amp; Vocational Institute who
is enrolled in the engineering technology program (Chemical), and Ashley Gillson (left),
a Port Arthur Collegiate Institute graduate enrolled in the honours bachelor of science
program in biology and chemistry.

A Presidential Search is
Underway

Quick Facts About
Lakehead University

Lakehead Unive rsity is in the process of
searching for a new president to replace
Dr. Robert G. Rosehart who left Thunder
Bay in September to become president and
vice-chancellor of Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario.

-- Lakehead University evolved from the
Lakehead Technical Institute which was
established in 1946.

-- Lakehead's motto is "Ad augusta per
angusta" whic h means "Achieveme nt
through Effort."

Maureen Doig, chair of the Board of Governors and chair of the preside ntial search
committee, invites e veryone who wishes
to make a suggestion or contribute his or
her ideas on the presidential search to contac t:

Lakehead's colours are Royal Blue and
Gold. The Varsity team mascot is The
Thunderwolf and can often be seen cheering on the fans at Lakehead University's
main gym which is nicknamed
"Thunderdome."

The Board Secretariat, UC-2009

-- For the current academic year, Lakehead
has a total of 5,489 full-time s tudents
(5,272 full -time undergraduate and 217
full-time graduate students).

Thunder Bay, Ontario P78 5El
Fax: (807) 343-8075
E-mail: bdsensec@lakeheadu.ca

-- Parents' newsletter which is published three times a year and mailed
to approximately 3500 parents
across Canada
Are there issues and concerns that
we should know about?
If so, please take a moment now to
let us know.

-- Lakehead University received its charter in 1965 and the first deg rees in arts and
science were granted in May, I 965.

Since September, Dr. John Whitfield, formerly Lakehead's vice-president (acade mic), has been serving as interim president.

Lakehead University

-- Volunteer time with parent and/
or studelll projects

-- Lakehead has many graduate programs
at the master's level but only one PhD program -- in clinical psychology.

Clip and send to:
Norma Smith
Parents Program Committee
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Rd
Thunder Bar, ON PlB 5£1
Tel: (807) 343-8522
Fax: (807) 343-8075
EMail:
norma.smith@/akeheadu.ca

�IW•i;&amp;-~--------------------------VISUAL ARTS LECTURE
SERIES

Snobelen Tours Old-Growth
Forest

The Department of Visual Arts has secured
funding from the Canada Council to run a
Lecture Series featuring a number of artists. The lectures will be held in the William
H. Buset Centre for Music and Visual Arts
and are open to the public.

Last month, Dr. Willard H. Carmean, professor emeritus of forestry, accompanied
the newly appointed Minister of Natural
Resources John Snobelen on a tour of the
old-growth forest in the Greenwood Lake
Reserve.

November 21, 1997
Nancy Paterson, Toronto
electronic media/installation
TBA (January 1998)
Anne Meredith Barry, Newfoundland
printmaking
March 5 &amp; 6, 1998
Lyndal Osborne, Edmonton
prinUinstallation

For information call Robbie Buffington at
343-8787

LUMINA
CONCERT SERIES
The Department of Music is offering the following performances as part of the 199798 concert series.
Unless otherwise noted, all concerts are
held on campus in the Jean McNulty Recital Hall of the William H. Buset Centre
for Music and Visual Arts at 12:30 p.m.
November 18
Jasper Wood, violin
(Eckhardt-Gramatte National Music
Competition Winner);
David Riley, piano
January 13
Les Voix Humanes
Susie Nappier and Margaret Little,
viola da gamba duo
January 28
Piano Six: Andre Laplante, piano
8:00 pm, St. Paul's United Church

Subscriptions and tickets available from the
Department of Music.
Complimentary Parking.
For further information call 343-8787
Sponsored by the Lakehead University
Music Association

Carmean recently gave a paper on the oldgrowth reserve at an international conference on the Development of Forestry and
Wood Science Technology held in Belgrade
Yugoslavia.
The Greenwood Lake Advisory Committee has been awarded a $ 12,584 grant from
the Northern Ontario Heritage Fund Corporation (NOHFC). This grant will be used
for ecotourism developments at Greenwood
Lake including trail development, trail and
road signs, information plaques, and for an
illustrated color brochure describing the
Greenwood Lake Reserve.

Native Philosophy Project
Receives Funding
The Lakehead University Native Philosophy Project has received $250,000 (U.S.)
to extend the Rockefeller Foundation Humanities Fellowship Program for another
three years. Deadline for applications is
January 15, 1998 (similarly in 1999 and
2000) for residencies beginning in September of that year.
The Lakehead University Native Philosophy Project is an international, cross-cultural interdisciplinary research program
committed to further understanding of the
manner in which the world is viewed by
the Aboriginal peoples of the Americas.
For information contact Dr. Connie Nelson, dean of graduate studies and research
at (807) 343-8793.

Emergency First Response wins
Web site Award
http://flash. lakeheadu.ca/~lu _efrt/
home.html
Lakehead's Emergency First Response
Team has been given an award of excellence by the Paramedic Times for the Canadian content of its Web site. Lakehead's
Team Director Aris Scott says that since
the Web site was launched in November,
1996, Lakehead has received many inquiries from other universities and agencies.

9

Tune in to the CBC
(Clean Beautiful Campus)
Clean Beautiful Campus is a campaign at
Lakehead to encourage EVERYONE to
help keep our campus clean and beautiful.
We do have one of the most beautiful campuses in Canada but its going to take effort
and cooperation to keep it that way.
The Clean Beautiful Campus campaign is
an effort to encourage all individuals, clubs,
and associations to take responsibility for
not just maintaining the condition of our
campus, but enhancing it. For individuals, this means putting your garbage (lunch
bags, disposable cups, cigarette butts) in
the containers provided. Clubs and organizations may choose to be more proactive
by planning events and activities that are
ultimately going to improve the aesthetics
and health environment of our campus.
Recycling issues are also of interest to the
Committee.
There is a representative group who meet
regularly to promote CBC and all that this
entails - recycling, cleaning, art work on
campus, grounds, and green space. If you
are interested in participating on the Committee, please contact the LUSU Office
(343-8259) or Student Services and Community Relations (343-8522).
Please take PRIDE - do whatever you can
to promote our Clean Beautiful Campus.

Conference and Call for Proposals
STLHE'98 at Mount Allison University
Faculty and staff are invited to participate
in the 18th Annual Conference of the Society for Teaching and Leaming in Higher
Education to be held at Mount Allison University, Sackville, N.B. June 24-27, 1998.
The theme for the conference is "The Voices
of Leaming: Student and Teacher."
Organizers welcome panels, short demonstrations ofspecific teaching tips, workshops
and other interactive sessions on all topics
relating to the communitcation between
teachers and students in higher education.
For more information visit their Web site at
http://www. mta. ca/stlhe98/
' IAkehead Universil}; November 1997

�i,@•i;&amp;-1---------------------------

Colleague FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
About Lakehead's Administrative Information System

In June 1996, Lakehead University
purchased an integrated administrative software package from Datatel
Inc. known as Colleague.
Colleague will replace existing
student, finance and payroll information systems and also support the
information needs of human resources and fundraising.
The decision to purchase new
administrative software systems
followed an extensive review of the
University' s current and future
information needs by Re-engineering
focus teams.
A major project to implement
Colleague is well underway and is
being done in co-operation with
Laurentian and Trent universities
which have purchased the same
software. For Student implementation tasks, the University of Guelph is
also part of the consortium.
Once fully operational, the integrated Colleague system will eliminate data duplication, provide
enhanced services and see Lakehead
University effic iently and effectively
through the " Year 2000" and beyond.

'

If you have questions or concerns
regarding the implementation please
contact any of the following people:
Rita Blais
ext. 8526
Finance

Judith Mackie
ext. 8536
Data Standards/
Shared Codes;
Technical

Marilyn Husiak
ext.8455
Purchasing

Brenda Nelson
ext. 8615
Student

Much work has been done over the past year by four teams.
Listed below are the major accomplishments of each and
the challenges that lie ahead.

~
FINANCE
Major Accomplishments:
Formal Training, Testing,
Implementation and Live
Operation of General Ledger,
Purchasing and Accounts
Payable modules
Delivery of online requisition
and receiving training

Next Challenge:
Implement user reporting,
Budget Management and
Fixed Assets modules

--

DATA STANDARDS
AND SHARED CODES
Major Accomplishments:
Formal Training, Testing, and
Implementation of shared
database components to
support Finance system
Establish required shared
codes, addressing standards,
vendor entry standards

Next Challenge:
Implement shared database
components to support
Student system

■----

•

•

TECHNICAL

STUDENT

Major Accomplishments:

Major Accomplishments:

Implementation and operation
of multiple Colleague environments for testing and Live
Operations

Completed formal training for
Admissions, Curriculum
Management, Academic
Records, Registration and
Degree Audit

Establish appropriate security
at operating system, database
and Colleague application
levels for Finance system

Next Challenge:
Implement live e nvironment
with appropriate security and
provide technical support for
the Student system

Analysis of current processes
Development of specifications
for Ontario University Application Centre interface

Next Challenge:
Implement Admissions and
Communication Management
modules

Lakehead University, November, 1997

�lta:•1;6-1-----------------------------

11

Q. How do I get trained for

Q. What hardware and soft-

Colleague Financials?
First you should ask yourself if you
need to be trained at this time.

ware do I need to access the
Datatel/Colleague system?

Q. As a Requisitioner, what
steps must I tllke to have my
requisition approved?

A. HARDWARE: A minimum 386

A. Once you have entered all necessary

Training to date has been in the area of
electronic requisitioning. Anyone who
requires purchase orders should receive
Datatel/Colleague Electronic Requisition
Training.

based PC (running Windows), or a
MACintosh is required. A network
connect is also needed. For more
information contact Geoff Hill ext.
8400.

information on the REQM (requisition
maintenance) screen:

Those with signing authority should also
be trained, i.e. all deans, chairs, directors
and department heads. As well, resea_rchers who have signing authority for
research projects should be trained.

SOFTWARE: Terminal emulation
software provides terminal login access
to the Datatel host machine, which is
called "trillium," and also sets up the
function keys for use by the database
software.

A.

Subsequent to training, you will be
expected to send your requisitions to
Purchasing electronically.
Training is scheduled through the
Finance Department. Please contact
either Rita Blais at ext. 8526 or Margot
Ross at ext. 8730.
Requisition training sessions are available for both PC and MAC users and are
usually conducted on Friday mornings
from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
When available, training sessions in
other areas of the Colleague system will
be announced.

FOR PC's the terminal emulation
software is called wlntegrate and is
available to those who have accounts on
the Novell servers SKY, GALE and
FOBA
FOR MACintosh the terminal emulation
software is called NCSA telnet and is
available to those who have accounts on
the Novell server MIST

If you have been scheduled for training,
or have been provided with a Colleague
account, contact Pat Cholin ext. 8574
for instructions on accessing wlntegrate
or NCSA telnet.

* go to the "approvals field 17" and
detail to the APRV screen

* go to the "next approvals field 2" and:
* enter the "approver login id", or
* search for the appropriate "approver
login id" using the ... lookup feature

* finish to return to REQM
* note: on REQM screen, "approvals field
17" remains blank

* go to " requisition done field 26" and
enter "Y"
* finish
The requisition is forwarded electronically to the (next) approver.

Do you have a question for
Colleague FAQs? If so, contact
Judith Mackie, Re-engineering, at
ext. 8536.

"You've got to look at learning
Colleague as an adventure and
know that you can always phone
us for help. "
Ask Marilyn Husiak what she thinks of Colleague and you'll
get an honest answer.
"I like it," she says. "Once you get the hang of it, it's actually
quite convenient. It saves time and reduces paperwork."

-~

--~-=~~

Husiak has been working with the system since last December.
While she admits there is a learning curve involved, she appreciates and enjoys certain things about the system -- like having all the current data on a vendor stored in one data base. She
also likes the quick look up features on the status of requisitions and purchase orders. And she likes being able to see the effect on
budgets.
"There's a lot more to purchasing than just placing an order," says Husiak. "And everyone who has gone through the Colleague
Requisitioning Training now has a much better understanding of what is involved in the entire cycle of ordering. The cycle does not
begin until you start it with a requisition and it does not end for you until the goods or services have been accepted and paid."
Lakehead University, November 1997

�+m•n&amp;-r--------------------------MONTREAL MEMORIAL
SERVICE
Friday, December 5, 1997
12:15 p.m.
LU Agora
Students, Staff and Faculty are Welcome

CHILDREN'S CHRISTMAS
PARTY
Lakehead University Community CounciJ
will be having a Children's Christmas Party
on Sunday, December I4, I 997 from I to
4 pm in the Faculty Lounge.

USED CLOTHING AND TOY
DRIVE
Lakehead Residence students are organizing another drive lo collect warm winter
clothing and Children's Toys. To make
your contribution, contact Norma Jean
Newbold at ext. 8622

CHRISTMAS PARADE
Lakehead Residence students are participating in the annual O.P.P. Christmas Parade. On Saturday, November 22 and will
be collecting non perishable food items for
distribution to local foodbanks.

PUBLIC LECTURE

Mark your calendar for the following

Zoocheck Canada and Northwestern
Ontario AnimaJ Habitat present

OSOTF DRESS DOWN
DAYS
•

Mr. Ian Redmond

for a lecture entitled
"GorriJJas in the Mist"
Saturday, December 6, 1997
Lakehead University Centre Theatre
8 p.m.

"Ian Redmond was a longtime colleague
of Dr. Dian Fossey, and a leading character in her book Gorillas in the Mist.
Dian Fossey, who ventured around the
world to live in the jungles of Africa between two volcanoes, forever changed
the gorillas' lives and obtained landmark
scientific data through her close interactions, respect for, and friendship with
them.
Fossey was murdered in her bed, on a
mountain at the Karisoke Research
camp, which she founded.

SOME ENCHANTED
EVENING

Redmond is a Director and Trustee ofthe
Digit Fundfor gorilla research and conservation, and as well, has an impressive list of titles and credits."

A Benefit for Lakehead University Music
Scholarships
Thursday, December 4, 1997
Valhalla Inn Ballroom

-- Susan Lundgren, President, NOAH,
Northwestern Ontario Animal Habitat,
Thunder Bay, Ontario.

Entertainment including the Thunder Bay
Symphony Orchestra with violinist Maria
Cooper performing Max Bruch's Violin
Concerto. Symposium 6:30 p.m. and Dinner at 7:00 p.m. Concert and Dancing to
follow. Tickets are $65 and available at
Thunder Bay Travel, Lakehead Music Department and Changes. For information
contact Samantha Wrenshall at 577-6575.

CHANCELLOR PATERSON
LIBRARY HOURS

12

Tickets are $10 and available at the LU
Bookstore, or at Ticket Express (Fort
William Gardens and the Community
Auditorium or by calling 684-4444).

The Agora is published on the 15th
of every month.
We encourage you to send in your
news. Deadline for the December
issue is December 2, 1997.

December 12, 1997
January 9, 1998
March 13, 1998
April 10, 1998
May 8, 1998

Agora
November 1997

Vol. 14, No. 9

Agora is published by the Information Office of the Department of Student Services and Community Relations. The newsletter is distributed
monthly (except for July and August)
to faculty, staff and friends of
Lakehead University.
Director of Student Services and
Community Relations:
Joy Himmelman
Publications Officer:
Frances Harding
Communications/Special Events
Officer: Denise Bruley
Administrative Assistant:
Betty Hygaard
Photography:
Peter Puna and Staff
Graphics:
Ben Kaminski &amp; Nicole Sutherland
Printing: LU Print Shop
Submissions of interest to the
University community are welcome. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
·Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7B 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8999
E-mail:
trances. harding@lakeheadu.ca

Extended Hours from Nov. 14, 1997
until December 12, 1997
Monday to Thursday
8 a.m. to 11 :30 p.m.
Friday
8 a .m. to 10 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday
12 noon to 11:30 p.m

C. Tro~an
Community Re l ation s

Lakehead Unfrersity, November, 1997

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7089">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.14 No.9</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7090">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7091">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an update from the President, an article on the 8th National Conference of the Canadian Assocation for Suicide Prevention, and updates from around campus.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7092">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7093">
                <text>1997-11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Agora</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="573">
        <name>Dr. J. Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1121">
        <name>Dr. John Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1100">
        <name>President's Message</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1277" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="17936">
        <src>https://digitalcollections.lakeheadu.ca/files/original/c450862a312841e145dc4642fb453705.pdf</src>
        <authentication>7698f35b57884010ac92f74cf6289e36</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="124957">
                    <text>Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
May 1998, Vol. 15, No. 5
ISSN 0828-5225·

Board of Governors
appoints
Dr. Frederick Gilbert
as President
1972 to 1981. Dr. Gilbert joined Washington State
University as Director, Wildlife Biology, in 1981.
During his tenure there, he served as Chair of the
Faculty Senate between 1986 and 1988 and as Interim Chair, Natural Resource Sciences, between
1988 and 1991. In 1991 Dr. Gilbert became the
Founding Dean of the Faculty ofNatural Resources
and Environmental Studies at the University of
Northern British Columbia where he served until
1997. Since that time he has been Vice-Provost of
Colorado State University.

INSIDE
Lakehead's
NSERC awards
for 1998-99 have
increased by 8.3
per cent.
Details on page 6

Throughout his career Dr. Gilbert has been involved
in research in such areas as ecological factors in
modifying population density; behaviour and physiology of wildlife species, environmental impact assessment procedures for wildlife species; bioenergetic
relationships in natural and perturbed ecosystems;
and
forest management practices in relation to wildOn Thursday, May 7, 1998, Lakehead University's
life populations.
Board of Governors announced the appointment of
Dr. Frederick Gilbert as President and He has supervised a number of Masters and Ph.D.
Vice-Chancellor of Lakehead University. He is ex- students and authored a number of refereed publicapected to begin work in August, 1998. Dr. Gilbert tions and books in his area of expertise. In addition,
succeeds Dr. Robert G. Rosehart, who left Lakehead Dr. Gilbert has· served on Boards of professional orlast September to become President and Vice-Chan- ganizations in both Canada and the United States,
and has chaired university committees at the Unicellor of Wtlfrid Laurier University.
versity of Maine, the University of Guelph, the Uni"We are pleased to welcome Dr. Gilbert to the versity of Northern British Columbia, Washington
Lakehead University team," said Mrs. Maureen Doig, State University and Colorado State University.
Chair ofLakehead's Board of Governors. "His experience and outstanding credentials have given the Dr. Gilbert is a Canadian citizen and holds a B.Sc.
Board every confidence that this is an individual who (Hons) degree from Acadia University, and a M.Sc.
can lead Lakehead successfully into the next millen- and Ph.D. in Zoology from the University ofGuelph.
nium."
Dr. Gilbert brings to the position an impressive record
ofachievement. He began his career as Assistant Professor, Forest Resources, at the University of Maine.
He taught Zoology at the University of Guelph from

Convocation '98
Details on Page 2

�l'tW•UG-1-----------------------------------

Convocation '98
Lakehead to bestow Four Honorary Degrees at its
34th Convocation on Saturday, May 30, 1998

Lakehead University will celebrate a milestone this year when
Suzanne Barker-Collo, Lakehead's first PhD, accepts her diploma.
Sharing the stage with her this year will be four distinguished
individuals receiving honorary degrees: writer Margaret Atwood,
civil engineer James MacGregor, Ontario Ombudsman Roberta
Jamieson, and lawyer (and Lakehead graduate) T. Sher Singh.
Margaret Atwood
Doctor of Letters
Honoris Causa

T. Sher Singh
Doctor of Commerce
Honoris Causa

(A.M.)

(A.M.)

Florence Johnston, a former member of the Board of Governors,
and The Honourable Mr. Justice John McCartney, a judge of the
Ontario Court of Justice (General Division) will each be awarded
the title offellow ofLakehead University. John Valley, a graduate
of the Faculty of Business, will be presented with the Alumni Honour Award.
Margaret Atwood will address the morning Convocation which
begins at 9:00 a.m. and Roberta Jamieson will address the afternoon Convocation starting at 2:30 p.m. For more information about
Convocation contact the Office of the Registrar at 343-8269.

Roberta Jamieson
Doctor of Laws
Honoris Causa
(P.M.)

2

James MacGregor
Doctor of Engineering
Honoris Causa
(P.M.)

John McCartney
Fellow of Lakehead University

Florence Johnston
Fellow of Lakehead University

(A.M.)

(P.M.)

Agora, May 1998

�l l t t i t • h § -r-----------------------------Margaret Atwood
Margaret Atwood was born in 1939 in Ottawa and grew up in northern Ontario and
Quebec, and Toronto. She received her undergraduate degree from Victoria College
at the University of Toronto and her master's degree from Radcliffe College.

Sikhism, Race Relations and Human Rights
&amp; Civil Liberties. He also lectures on these
topics from coast to coast.

Roberta Jamieson
Roberta Jamieson was appointed to a IOyear term as Ombudsman ofOntario in October 1989. As Ombudsman, her mandate
is to investigate and resolve complaints
about provincial government organizations,
ministries, boards, agencies, commissions
and tribunals.

Throughout her 30 years of writing,
Margaret Atwood has received numerous
awards and several honorary degrees. She
is the author of more than 25 volumes of
poetry, fiction, and nonfiction and is perhaps best known for her novels, which include The Edible Woman (1970), The
Handmaid's Tale (1983), The Robber Bride
(1994), and most recently, Alias Grace
(I 996). She has an uncanny knack for writing books that anticipate the popular preoccupations of her public.

Jamieson grew up on the Six Nations of
the Grand River Reserve near Brantford,
Ontario. In 1976, she earned the distinction of becoming the first woman in Canada
from a First Nation to obtain a law degree
when she graduated from the University of
Western Ontario Law School.

Acclaimed for her talent for portraying both
personal and worldly problems of universal concern, Atwood's work has been published in more than 25 languages, including Japanese, Turkish, Finnish, Korean, Icelandic and Estonian.

Jamieson has worked as a policy advisor
and later a senior mediator for the Indian
Commission of Ontario. In 1985 she was
appointed Commissioner of the Indian
Commission of Ontario and held this office until mid-1989.

T. Sher Singh

Jamieson has long been active in the promotion of non-adversarial methods for conflict resolution. She has spoken widely on
the subject and participated in related initiatives of the Canadian Bar Association.
Her work in this area was recognized in
1991 when she was named the Goodman
Fellow at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law. In March 1998 she was honoured as a recipient of a National Aboriginal Achievement Award.

T. Sher Singh, 48, is a graduate ofLakehead
University and a litigation lawyer who practices from his office in Guelph, Ontario.
Sher Singh hit the national headlines in
1990 as the man who challenged Prime
Minister Brian Mulroney in court by opposing the "stacking" of the Senate, as well
as the appointment of Nova Scotia's Premier John Buchanan as Senator at a time
when the latter was under investigation by
the RCMP for fraud and conflict of interest.

James MacGregor .
James MacGregor is a Professor Emeritus
of Civil Engineering with the University
of Alberta and the author of over I00 refereed or Invited Technical Papers concerning his areas of research: safety, shear
strength of concrete and concrete columns.

But we also periodically hear of his involvement in other spheres. During 1990-93, he
served on the Ontario Police Commission
which oversees policy and standards of the
120 municipal Police Forces in Ontario. A
year before his appointment, he was a member of the Ontario Task Force on Policing
&amp; Race Relations whose report led to sweeping changes in policing in Ontario as well
as in the rest of Canada.

Currently his is a principal with MKM
Engineering Consultants, Edmonton.
Among his recent assignments was deriving site-specific safety factors for the PEI
Bridge.

He is a frequent TV and radio commentator on the CBC and other networks and has,
from time to time, appeared as a regular
panelist on a number of shows. He is the
author of articles on various issues ranging
from Law &amp; Justice, Policing, the Constitution and Canadian Unity, to Religion,

MacGregor is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, and a recipient of the University of Alberta's Gordin J. Kaplin Research Prize. He has served as the principal investigator in Concrete Canada, Network of Centres of Excellence. He has
served as a member of the Board of Direc-

Agora, May, 1998

tors of the American Concrete Institute and
in 1992-93 served as president.

John F. McCartney
The Honourable Mr. Justice John F. (Jack)
McCartney has been a part of many Convocations having served on the Board of
Governors for 13 years (as Chair from 1982
to I 984).
Born and raised in Thunder Bay, he
founded the law firm ofMcCartney &amp; Judge
with partner Ross Judge in 1969 and from
I 969-76 practised civil and criminal litigation including prosecutions for both the
Attorney General of Ontario and the Federal Minister of Justice.
From 1978 to 1996 he served as area director of Legal Aid for the District of Thunder
Bay and in I996 was appointed Judge of
the Ontario Court ofJustice (General Division).
Justice McCartney's community and professional activities have included serving
as president of the Children's Aid Society
for the district of Thunder Bay, president
of the Fort William Riding Liberal Asso- •
ciation, president of the Ontario Legal Aid
Area Directors' Association and president
of the Thunder Bay Law Association.

Florence Johnston
Florence Johnston has contributed to her
community of Thunder Bay by working as
a volunteer with many organizations including Lakehead University where she
served as a member of the Board ofGovernors from 1987 to 1993. Her outstanding
contributions are reflected in the number
of awards she has received including the
President's Award from the Thunder Bay
Community Auditorium; Canada 125
Medal; Paul Harris Fellow, Rotary Club of
Port Arthur; and Citizen of Exceptional
Achievement, City of Thunder Bay.
Florence Johnston was the Seat Endowment
Chair for the Thunder Bay Community Auditorium and served as a member and as
president of the Auditorium's Board of Directors. She has been active with the General Hospital of Port Arthur serving as
Chair of its Fundraising Committee and a
member of the PAGH Foundation.
Other groups with which Johnston has
taken a leading role are the Port ArthurNipigon Riding P.C. Association, the Jell)(
Canada Summer Games, and the Northwestern Ontario Ladies Curling Association.
3

�f,@•#§-r-------------------------- 4

An
Update
from the
President
Dr. John Whitfield

1998 Ontario Budget
The 1998 Ontario Budget was presented
by the Minister of Finance on May 5. Suggested by many as the Harris government's
last budget before going to the polls, it focused on the continuing themes of controlling spending and delivering tax cuts:
There were, however, several measures of
interest, generally positive, for Ontario's
universities. These included:
- A $150 million Access to Opportuni•
ties Program to double the number of
graduates from Ontario universities over 3
years in computer science and high-demand engineering programs. There will
be a requirement that industry "match startup costs" for this program.
-- A commitment of $135 million over the
next three years to match the Canada Foundation for Innovation's initial awards to
Ontario's universities and research institutes.
-- An additional $29 million in annual
grants, phased in over three years, will recognize inequitable funding to certain universities that have increased students' access to post-secondary education, and enhanced their job opportunities. The Minister of Education and Training will be announcing details of this initiative. Seventyfive million, $25 million of which must be
raised in the private sector, will be provided
for new graduate scholarships in science
and technology over the next 10 years.
-- A $75 million program over 10 years,
again in partnership with the private sector, will fund research excellence awards
to support promising researchers.

- A new student assistance program is being designed to consolidate the federal Millennium Fund and both federal and provincial student loan programs. This 10year, $9 billion program entails no new
funding and is a restructuring of previously
announced or ongoing programs.
In addition, there were other items like harmonizing Ontario's tax credits with those
announced in the federal budget, which will
help full and part-time students. Although
Ontario's base funding on a per capita basis for its universities remains 10th among
the provinces, it's my view that some of
the universities' concerns have been recognized and, from that perspective, the
budget contains good news.

Fee Deregulation
On December 15, 1997, the Minister of
Finance announced a framework for postsecondary tuition policy which included the
deregulation of graduate fees and those for
certain professional programs. The Ministry of Education and Training provided
details of this on May 6, 1998. In addition
to the previously announced maximum average tuition increase of 10 per cent for programs with regulated fees, MET has announced:
-- Universities may introduce additional
cost recovery for:
i)

graduate programs;

ii)
undergraduate professional programs in Business/Commerce (second-entry programs only), Dentistry, Law, Medicine, Optometry, Pharmacy and Veterinary
Medicine; and

iii)
undergraduate engineering and/or
computer science, following the approval
I.Akehead Univenity, May, 1998

by the Minister of Education and Training
of a plan from the university to double the
number of entry-level spaces in computer
science and/or high demand fields of engineering by September 2000, with the expectation of doubling total enrolment in
these programs by 2003-04.
-- Fees for visa students were previously
deregulated.
-- 30 per cent of the annual increase in tuition fee revenues will continue to be set
aside for needs-based bursaries.

Contribution to Teaching Awards
Dr. Jim Gellert, Acting Vice-President
(Academic) has announced that Professor
Pat Warywoda, English; Dr. Brian Lorch,
Geography; Dr. Raul Ruiperez, Sociology;
Dr. K. C. Yang, Forestry; Dr. Randle Nelson, Sociology; and Professor Alain
Nabarra, Languages, will receive this
year's Contribution to Teaching Awards.
Congratulations to each of the recipients.

Partings
Congratulations to Dr. Glen Carruthers who
will be the next Dean of the School of Music at Brandon University.
Ian Cull assumes the role of Dean of Students at St. Francis Xavier University effective June I, 1998.
Effective June 26, Jo-Anne Silverman will
depart for Victoria, British Columbia where
she will be Director of Advancement and
Admissions at Glenlyon-Norfolk School.
Our best wishes go with each of you, and
thanks for your contributions and commitment to Lakehead.
C.O.U. President
Dr."Ian Clark has been appointed President
of the Council of Ontario Universities effective July 1, 1998. Most of his career
was in the federal public service where he
became Deputy Minister of Consumer and
Corporate Affairs, then Secretary of the
Treasury Board and, finally, Comptroller
General Canada. Subsequently, he was
Executive Director of the International
Monetary Fund and, currently, is in the
public sector consulting for KPMG.
We welcome Dr. Clark to his new post and
look forward to getting acquainted with
him and introducing him to Lakehead.

�5

Dr. Glen Carruthers
named Dean of the School of
Music at Brandon University
effective July 1, 1998

w•

•

:-LINECAREER SEARCH CENTRE
for

ALL STUDENTS AND ALUMNI
\1'0' SOR l:D Tl I ROL GI I
\ C'ORl'ORSfl'. P \R1 '- ERSIIII' 01·:

~ W.Q!l

1,J lUJllt

'§ ...,""
~

(I-r) Gary Speer (Cargill), Steve Wier, Jey Paramathan, Don Smirl (Cargill), Kari Ylijoki,
and Wanda Young (HRDC) took part in the unveiling of Lakehead's new On-line Career
Search Centre in April. The on-line software application was developed by Lakehead
business management systems students including Steve, Jey and Kari.
Cargill Limited of Winnipeg, HRDC, Thunder Bay, and Lakehead University are
pleased to announce the opening oftwo On-line Career Search Centres on campus:
one in the Alumni Services building and the other at the Student Placement &amp; Cooperative Education Centre. Fifteen thousand dollars worth of new computer equipment has been donated by Cargill for use by students and alumni of Lakehead Uni•
versity. Additional contributions of $12,000 by the University and $25,000 by Human Resource Development Canada (Thunder Bay) bring the total investment up to
$52,000. An on-line software application, developed by business management systems students, will provide the on-line career search capabilities.

CAMPUS NOTES
MBA Program

Laurentian University, in cooperation with Lakehead University's Faculty of Business
Administration, plans to offer the complete MBA program over the next four years by
video conference to Thunder Bay starting in September 1998. An information session is
planned for Wednesday, May 20, 1998, at 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Contact North, 1139
Alloy Street, Thunder Bay. For more information call Department of Part-time Studies
at 346-7730 or Ruby Gervais, Laurentian University at (705) 675-4819.
Farewell Ian

Ian Cull, Lakehead's Coordinator, Counselling and Careers Centre, will be leaving
Lakehead to take a new position as Dean of Students at St. Francis Xavier University in
Antigonish, Nova Scotia, on June 1, 1998. "Ian has contributed to the success and wellbeing of many Lakehead students and was instrumental in developing the University's
EAP program and our Anti-Racism policy," says Director of Student Services and Community Relations Joy Himmelman. "His support to students and the University will be
greatly missed. " Ian Cull has been with Lakehead for nine years.
Welcome Andrew

Andrew Hacquoil was hired in May to work as the Manager, Research &amp; International
Development Services in the Office of Graduate Studies &amp; Research. He is replacing
Anne Klymenko who is on maternity leave. Hacquoil has a Master's degree in history
from Lakehead.

Next month Lakehead will say farewell to
the founder of the Lakehead University Department of Music who is widely regarded
as a builder, an accomplished administrator and fund-raiser.
Dr. Glen Carruthers was hired 10 years ago
to be Lakehead University's first Chair and
full-time faculty member in the Department
of Music. He joined Lakehead at a time when
the Department of Fine Arts was being divided into two separate entities: the Department of Music and the Department of Visual
Arts. Over the years, Carruthers has been
part of the Department moving to Cornwall
School and then back to the main campus
when the brand new William H. Buset Centre for Music and Visual Arts opened in
1992.
Carruthers' accomplishments and abilities
have been praised by many including former
president Dr. Robert Rosehart who said,
''When Glen arrived on the scene, the music program was virtually non-existent Today, it is a viable program and one that can •
demonstrate close ties to the community.
Much of this credit belongs to Glen."
Looking back on what he and his colleagues
have accomplished, Carruthers says,
"We've done much to raise the standard of
music education within the community. The
Department has steadily grown in terms of
its national profile, the quality of our incoming students and, more importantly, in the
quality of our outgoing students."
Carruthers received his BMus. from
Brandon in 1977, his MA in Canadian Studies from Carleton University in 1981, and
his PhD. in musicology from the University
of Victoria in 1986. He has served on Boards
of Directors of numerous arts groups and
cultural organizations at a local, regional
and national level, including the Thunder
Bay Symphony Orchestra and the Canadian Music Centre. As an active researcher,
Carruthers' publications span more than a
decade, and include a book entitled "A Celebration of Canada's Arts 1930-1970" and
more than 30 other abstracts, reviews, papers and presentations.
You're invited to a reception for

Dr. Glen Carruthers
at 3 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge
Thursday, June 4, 1998
Refreshments will be served/Cash Bar

Lakehead Univenily, May, 1998

�IW•»Z-1-------------------------------

NSERC Awards for

1998-1999

Dr. I. Nirdosh, "Solid-liquid mass transfer applications,"
$20,700, New (1-5)
Dr. V. R. Puttagunta, "Viscosity prediction and radiation
assisted upgrading of heavy oils," $19,600, Renewal (3-4)
Faculty of Engineering - Civil

The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council recently
announced the results of their annual research grant competition.

Dr. S. M. Easa, "3-d highway geometric design consistency,"
$25,000, New (1-4)

Most importantly, total NSERC funding to Lakehead University
continued to show an increase. During the 1997/98 research grants
competition, $768,768 worth ofawards were received by researchers at Lakehead University. During 1998/99, the total was $832,544.
This represents an expansion of $63,776, or 8.3 per cent.

Dr. K. D. Eigenbrod, "Effects of freezing and thawing on the
hydraulic-conductivity of fine grained soils," $11 ,200, Renewal
(4-4)

At present, there are 42 NSERC holders at Lakehead. This figure
represents 44 per cent of the total NSERC eligible faculty on campus. This year witnessed the awarding of three new awards to new
faculty at Lakehead University. Dr. Qing-Lai Dang of the Faculty
of Forestry received an operating and equipment grant and Dr.
Greg Naterer of the Department of Mechanical Engineering received an equipment grant.
The following is a list of all NSERC recipients at Lakehead University who were successful in the 1998-99 research grants and
equipment grants competition.

Dr. S. A. Mirza, "Strength and stiffness of slender composite
steel-concrete beam-columns, $16,900, New (1-4)
Faculty of Engineering - Electrical
Dr. K. Natarajan, "Controller design for some discrete time
periodic systems," $16,000, Renewal (3-3)
Faculty of Engineering - Mechanical
Dr. M. Liu, "Transformation matrices for finite element analysis
of plates and shells with structural discontinuities," $11,892,
New(l-4)

Department of Biology

Dr. G. F. Naterer, "Experimental facility for surface glaze icing
in a turbulent flow environment," $21,99 I, New (1-1)

Dr. R. Freitag, "History of the North American Cicindelidae,"
$11,100, Renewal (4-4)

Dr. G. F. Naterer, "Binary constituent solid-liquid phase transition in materials processing," $14,000, Renewal (2-5)

Dr. M. W. Lankester, "Parasite and diseases of northern animals," $20,000, Renewal (3-4)

Dr. H. T. Saliba, "Theoretical and experimental stability and
vibration analysis of plates and structures," $ I 6,000, Renewal
(2-5)

Dr. A. U. Mallik, "Retrogressive succession and biodiversity in
nutrient poor cool-temperature forests after disturbance,"
$10,000, Renewal (3-4)

Dr. A. Sedov, "Ultrasonic beam models for NOE applications,"
$6,780, Renewal (3-3)

Dr. D. W. Morris, "The evolution and importance of habitat
selection," $41,000, Renewal (2-5)

Dr. B. Singh, "Analytical, numerical and experimental studies
in jet cutting of oil sands," $13,300, Renewal (4-4)

Department of Chemistry

Faculty of Forestry

Dr. A. N. Hughes, "Reactions of transition metal-phosphine
systems with hydro-borate and other reducing agents in the
presence of carbon monoxide and isonitriles," $28,000, Renewal
0~)
•

Dr. Q. L. Dang, "Interacting effects of soil conditions on
ecophysiological traits and their responses to changing
aboveground environment in boreal tree," $29,500, New (1-4)

Dr. S. D. Kinrade, "Aqueous chemistry of silicon," $33,000,
Renewal (l-4)
Dr. N. A. Weir, "Studies of photochemistry and
photodegradation of polymers," $20,000, New (l-3)
Department of Computer Science
Dr. X. Li, "An abstract machine for high performance logic
programming," $14,000, Renewal (2-5)
Faculty of Engineering - Chemical
Dr. L. J. Garred, "Mathematical modelling studies in renal
failure patients," $15,500, Renewal (2-5)
Dr. A. Gilbert, "Optimizing control of kraft mill processes,"
$19,000, New (1-4)

6

Dr. Q. L. Dang, "Gas exchange system," $38,631, New (1-1)
Dr. W. H. Parker, "Development of a GIS methodology to
determine breeding zones for second generation tree programs,"
$17,000, New(l-4)
Department of Geology
Dr. G. J. Borradaile, "Rock magnetism," $60,600, Renewal (45)
Dr. P. W. Fralick, "Paleogeographic reconstruction of
Mesoarchean terrains in western superior province," $15,200,
Renewal (2-5)
Dr. R. H. Mitchell, "Petrology of kimberlites and alkaline
rocks," $75,000, Renewal (3-6)

Agora, May 1998

�+@•j;§-i-------------------------------School of Mathematical Sciences

Dr. M. W. Benson, "Parallel iterative methods," $8,000, Renewal (6-6)

I

Dr. C. T. Hoang, "Algorithmic graph theory with emphasis on
perfect graphs," $13,000, Renewal (4-4)
Dr. W. Huang, "Numerical algorithms for linear constrained
convex programming problems," Renewal (4-4)

Colleague FAQS

Dr. T. Miao, "Geometric properties ofBp (G) and the exposed
points of the set of invariant means," $11,200, Renewal (4-4)

Frequently Asked Questions
About Lakehead's Administrative Information System

Dr. Y. Yao, "Multistrategy information retrieval," $14,300,
Renewal (4-4)

Detailed GL Account Reporting

Department of Physics

How can I access detailed line by line information for my GL
account(s) using the Colleague Financials system?

Dr. M. M. Dignam, "Coherence in semiconductor
Nanostructures/Erbium-Doped fiber amplifiers and lasers,"
$23,000, Renewal (2-5)
Dr. M. C. Gallagher, "Heteroepitaxy of ultrathin films of metals
and metal oxides," $25,000, Renewal (2-5)
Dr. M. H. Hawton, "Photon-matter interactions/physics of
adsorbed water," $ I 3,000, Renewal (3-4)
Dr. W. J. Keeler, "Optical investigations of semiconductors and
bio-samples," $9,500, New (1-2)
Dr. V. V. Paranjape, "Research in solid state physics," $8,000,
Renewal (3-4)
Dr. W. M. Sears, "The electrical properties of the surface-gas
interface of wide band gap semiconductors," $11,600, Renewal
(2-5)

You can view your account transaction details using the standard
reports that are provided by Colleague. These reports will allow
you to get detailed information similar to your month end printouts. You can access transaction information on a department
level or on specific expense type, for those accounts which you are
authorized to access.
You require an active login username and password. Access Colleague Financials via Wlntegrate (for PC users) or NCSA Telnet
(for Mac users).
There are no formal training sessions planned. A user guide has
been prepared for those who would like to use this detailed ac- •
count reporting feature. Please contact either Margot Ross (ext.
8730) or Rita Blais (ext. 8526).

Receiving Goods and Services

Department of Psychology

How do I accept or receive against Purchase Orders in Colleague?

Dr. C. A. G. Hayman, "Episodic memory as a source of cognitive binding," $18,000, Renewal (2-5)

Select: 1. PU (Purchasing) 2. GSR (Goods and Services Receiving) 3. PORC (Purchase Order Receiving)

SSHRC Awards for

Lookup the PO using one of the following techniques: (i) Enter
the PO number (ii) Enter the vendor name (iii) Enter the initiator's name (;IN name) (iv) Enter the PO date (;DA EQ YY/MM/
DD)

1998-1999
Lakehead University is pleased to announce that the following
faculty members were recently awarded grants from the Social
Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
Dr. Ron Harpelle of the Department of History received a research
grant for his research into the history of the West Indian Experience in Middle America (from 1850 to I 950). The total value of
the grant is $26,000 over three years.
Also receiving an award was Dr. Joseph Stewart of the Department of Anthropology. Dr. Stewart is 1st Co-investigator of a
project known as "Pre-AD 1200 Agricultural Developments in West
Central Chihuahua." The Principal Investigator of the project is
Dr. Jane Kelly of the University of Calgary.
Two other Lakehead faculty members had their proposals recommended, but were not supported due to a lack of funds. They
were: Dr. Fiona Blaikie of the Faculty of Education and Dr. Livia
Di Matteo of the Department of Economics.
Agora, May, 1998

To receive on the Purchase Order, the following fields are required:
I. Date Received - defaults to today's date, can be changed, enter
in year/month/day format.
2. Packing Slip No - free form text
3. Arrived Via - enter •...' to bring up valid table entries
4. List of items - displays a list ofall the items associated with this
PO: To accept a particular line item (for goods or services), detail
(F2) at the corresponding description (POOM screen displays) and
input specific receiving information (quantity,condition,receiving
comments,etc.) Update (F9) to return to PORC screen
5. Received by - filled in by the system based on login id
6. Accept all items - enter a Y in this field to receive all the items
associated with the PO. Note: normally use either field 4 (for partial orders) or field 6 but not both.
... continued on page 8

7

�IW•l;&amp;Colleague FAQS continued from page 7

GOLF TOURNAMENTS

Colleague Access

Maintenance Choice - June 19

Can I access Colleague Financials from
any computer?

Lakehead's annual Maintenance Choice
Golf Tournament will be held at Centennial Golf Course on June 19 starting at l :30
p.m. with a steak supper served in the Faculty Lounge at 6 p.m. Tickets are $35/person and cheques should be made payable
to "Brian Baraskewich" or "Wayne
Hainrich". Please register before June 15.
For information call 343-8208.

Once you have been set up to login to Colleague, you can generally access the system from any "same type" computer. That
is, if you have been set up as a PC user,
then you can login from any PC with
Wlntegrate installed. Wlntegrate is a software package which provides both graphical and character -based access. As a Mac
user, you can login to Colleague from any
Mac computer with NCSA telnet capability, but character -based only.
Each Colleague user has a "devices" record
attached to their login id, which specifies
the access method. If you have changed
your computer type, for example from Mac
to PC, contact Judith Mackie (ext. 8536)
or Maria Grady (ext. 8290).

Coming Up in the Fall issues ofthe Agora:
More information on the Student System
and Human Resources.

NoR'WESTER
WALL OF FAME
DINNER
Lakehead is holding its third annual
Nor'Wester Wall of Fame Induction Dinner and Silent Auction on June 6, 1998 at
the Victoria Inn. Tickets are $30 and are
now available at the Department of Athletics.
The 1998 Inductees are Nick Cipriano, athlete (wrestling); Kathy Harrison, athlete
(basketball); and the 1973-74 wrestling
team comprised offrank Abdou, Cheyenne
Ashukian, Andy Connell, Harry Curtis, Cal
Eyjolfson, Elvin Martin, Terry Paice, Don
Roy, Brian Sentance and Robert Yoisten
coached by Gord Garvie, assisted by Ron
Lappage.
For information call 343-8213. Nominations for the 1999 Inductions are open until November 30, 1998. Forms and criteria
are available by contacting the Athletic office at 343-8213.

8

Booster Club - June 21
Lakehead's Booster Club is holding its annual Golf Tournament at Centennial Golf
Course on Sunday, June 21 starting at 2
p.m. (shotgun start). Tickets are $30/person which includes green fees and a meal
at Centennial. Participants may register individually or by team. Each team must have
five people including two females. To Register call Sharon Kozak at 343-8213. (Payment may be made at the Course on the
day of the event.)

Alumni Association/Atikokan - June 20
The Alumni Association is hosting a Golf
Tournament in Atikokan on June 20. For
information call 343-8 I 55.

Alumni Associationffhunder Bay August 21
The Alumni Association's Annual Golf
event sponsored by Financial Concept
Group will be held at Centennial Golf
Course on Friday, August 21 with a shotgun start at l p.m. Tickets are $45/person,
$180/team which includes a BBQ dinner
in the Faculty Lounge. For information call
343-8155.

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
AGM AND DINNER
The Alumni Association's Annual General
Meeting and Volunteer Dinner will be held
Thursday, June 11 in the Faculty Lounge.
For information call Kristine Carey 3438155.

NANABIJOU CHILDCARE
CENTRE
Nanabijou Childcare Centre is once again
providing a special summer program for
school age children called "Daydreams and
Dragonflies." Information about fees can
be obtained by contacting Director Sheila
Wilhelm at 343-8369.

Agora
May 1998

Vol. 15, No. 5

Agora is published by the Information Office of the Department of Student Services and Community Relations. The newsletter is distributed
monthly (except for July and August)
to faculty, staff and friends of
Lakehead University.
Director of Student Services and
Community Relations:
Joy Himmelman
Publications Officer.
Frances Harding
Communications/Special Events
Officer. Denise Bruley
Administrative Assistant:
Betty Hygaard
Photography:
Peter Puna and Staff
Graphics:
Ben Kaminski &amp; Nicole Sutherland
Printing: LU Print Shop
Submissions of interest to the
University community are welcome. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario
P78 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8999
E-mail:
frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

C. Tro ja n

Commun i ty Relati on s

Agora, May 1998

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5777">
                  <text>Lakehead University Alumni Collection</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5778">
                  <text>Material kept by the Lakehead University Alumni Association, or donated by Alumni to the Association. </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7083">
                <text>Agora Magazine Vol.15 No.5</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7084">
                <text>Universities</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7085">
                <text>This issue of the Agora contains an announcement that the Board of Governors appointed Dr. Frederick Gilbert as President, an article on convocation '98, and an update from the President. </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7086">
                <text>Lakehead University</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7087">
                <text>1998-05</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1151">
        <name>Agora Magazine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="915">
        <name>Alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1055">
        <name>Alumni Association</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1071">
        <name>Alumni Association of Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1183">
        <name>Board of Governors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="923">
        <name>Convocation 1998</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1092">
        <name>Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="573">
        <name>Dr. J. Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1121">
        <name>Dr. John Whitfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>Lakehead</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>Lakehead University</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1093">
        <name>President Frederick Gilbert</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1100">
        <name>President's Message</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
