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                    <text>October 2000

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

THUNDERSTRUCK
Student Orientation 2000

Lakehead students got a warm welcome in
September from 17 Residence Assistants (RAs)
whose job it is to assist students living on campus.
Before Orientation Week begins, the RAs take part
in a 6-day training period where they engage in
team-building exercises and discuss issues
relevant to 18- to 24-year-olds. Topics include
stress, depression, eating disorders, substance
abuse, racism, homophobia, special needs,
mediation, and conflict resolution.
This year's team of RAs is made up of Steph
Statham, Mandi Hardy, Jamie Vance, Corrie
Debenham, Glendon Tremblay, Kelly Gosnell, Lisa
Lahey, Monica Deyasi, Steph Thingstad, Jamie
Stevenson, Kim Dykstra, Sarah Stevenson, Rena
Last, Aisling McGilly, Pam Parkinson, Becky
Hardie, and Les Praisley.
~

The photos featured on this page were taken by the
RAs using disposable cameras generously provided
by Black's Photography, Thunder Bay. More student
photos of Orientation Week will be on display during
Lakehead's Open House on Saturday, October 14.

Inside: Meet the N-ew Faculty

Lakehead
UNIVERSITY

�Lakehead

2

UN IVERSITY

From the President's Desk
by Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
Students, faculty and staff -- welcome all to Fall Semester 2000! Special thanks to all
the people whose efforts made the parents' and students' orientation so successful.
As Thunder Bay's unusual summer rapidly moves toward fall, classes are underway,
and the busy pace of the University is evident to all. Our enrolment appears to have met
the budget target which means that we have more new students this year than last, but
flow-through of the smaller entry classes of the past few years means yet another overall
decline in student numbers. This year's registration was centred in the academic units
and the change in the Agora was noticeable, and the comments from students were
generally quite favourable. With the advent of Web-based registration for the next preregistration period, Lakehead will have progressed considerably in easing the burden
on students building their class schedules.
Advanced Technology and Academic Centre

Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
President

The architect has been selected, the building program completed, and site services
provided for the Advanced Technology and Academic Centre. Construction will begin
next summer for occupancy by January, 2003. A sign with the architect's rendering of
the building will be erected on the site within a few weeks. The work on the main
campus walkway has been completed, and the last element to be dealt with, hopefully
next summer, will be fixing the steps into the Agora entrance. The modifications to the
cafeterias and Dan's Diner have been made, and there is now a Tim Horton's in the
Agora.
Northern Medical School
Progress has been substantial in moving forward the idea of a northern rurally-focused
medical school. Support for the project is solid across northern Ontario. The presentation
to the Expert Panel of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care went well, and the
sound rationale for such a development and the exciting nature of the model for delivery
of medical education seem to have been understood and appreciated. We will continue
to work closely with Laurentian University and supporters across the north and elsewhere
in order to help assure a positive outcome.
LUFA Negotiations
At the time of writing this article, the Lakehead University Faculty Association (LUFA)
and the Administration were continuing what have been very productive negotiations
for a new contract. We had yet to resolve the compensation package, but the University
has been doing everything possible to provide a fair, equitable and affordable offer to
assist faculty in improving their competitive position. I hope that when details are made
available, faculty will agree. Both negotiating parties are to be commended on the hard
work and accomplishments to date.
Geoff Weller
This past summer, a friend and colleague of mine and of Lakehead University passed
away. Geoff Weller served this University well as a faculty member, dean and academic
vice-president. As the founding president of the University of Northern British Columbia,
Geoff put in place an institution that reflected his vision of the north and of post-secondary
education at an institution located in the north. At his memorial service at UNBC, it was
apparent that Geoff had touched many people with his warmth, humour, teaching and
research. The sense of loss was real and personal. Lakehead was well represented by
former President Bob Rosehart, and former Dean of Science, Alan Hughes.

AGORA - October 2000

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U N I V ERSITY

WELCOME TO LAKEHEAD
In this issue of the Agora, we profile the Faculty Appointees for 2000/2001 who are new to Lakehead University.
As well, we are pleased to recognize and celebrate the following Faculty Appointees for 2000/2001 who have been teaching on
campus in previous years and whose names and faces are already familiar to many people in the University community:

Professor Patrick Brady, Lecturer, Faculty of Education
Dr. John Colton, Assistant Professor, Outdoor Recreation, Parks and Tourism
Dr. Brent Cuthbertson, Assistant Professor, Outdoor Recreation, Parks and Tourism
Professor-Janet Dyment, Lecturer, Outdoor Recreation, Parks and Tourism
Professor J. McMichael, Assistant Professor, Social Work
Dr. Ryan Parr, Associate Professor, Anthropology
Professor Karen Poole, Lecturer, Nursing
Professor David Tranter, Assistant Professor, Social Work

Faculty ofArts and Science
DR. JANICE HUGHES, Assistant Professor, Department of Biology/Faculty of Forestry
and the Forest Environment

Areas of expertise:
•

Birds

•

Forest and desert ecology

•

Evolution

•

Molecular genetics

•

Functional morphology

•
•
•
•

Systematics and taxonomy
Paleornithology
Biogeography
Biodiversity and conservation

For three years Janice Hughes was a research associate with the Royal Ontario Museum's
Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Biology. At Lakehead, she plans to see her first book
to press and to establish a field research site in Northwestern Ontario.

Office: CB-4052 • Phone: 343-8280 • E-mail:jhughes@mist.lakeheadu.ca

DR. KAM TIN LEUNG, Assistant Professor, Department of Biology

Areas of expertise:

"

•
•

Environmental microbiology

•

Molecular microbial ecology

Microbial biotechnology

•

Microbial biodiversity

•
•
•

Bacterial physiology

•

Bacterial genetics

Bioremediation

•
•

Genetic typing of microorganisms

Reporter gene systems

Biofilms

Prior to coming to Lakehead, Kam Leung was a post-doctoral fellow at Agriculture and AgriFood Canada in London, Ontario. He was a senior research scientist at TM Bioscience in
Toronto and a post-doctoral research assocate at the University of Guelph. His priorities for the
coming year include establishing a molecular microbiology research program.

Office: CB-4009 • Phone: 343-8265 • E-maif:ktleung@gale.lakeheadu.ca

AGORA - October 2000

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U N IV E R SI T Y

Facuity ofArts and Science
DR. LIPING LIU
Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics and Statistics
Areas of Expertise:

•
•
•
•

Finite element method

*

Large transformers and rotary machines

Numerical analysis
Nonlinear partial differential equations
Heat conduction problems

•
•
•
•
•

Second order optimality conditions
Nonsmooth nonlinear programming
Nonsmooth multiobjective programming
Optimization
Operations research

From August 1999 to May 2000, Liping Liu was an assistant professor at the University of New
Brunswick (Saint John) and in 1998/99 she was a visiting post-doctoral member at the Fields
Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences. Her priorities for the coming year relate to
super convergence of heat conduction problems and radiation heat transfer problems in 30.
Office: RB-2001 * Phone: 343-8427 * E-mail: lipingli@lakeheadu.ca

DR. DAN McQUILLAN
Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics and Statistics
Areas of expertise:
•

Algebra

•

Galois theory

•

Galois cohomology

•

Quadratic form theory

•

Graph theory

For 1O months during 1999/2000, Dan McQuillan was a post-doctoral fellow at the
Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley, California. During 1998/99, he was a
post-doctorate and an instructor at The University of Western Ontario. His priorities for the
coming year include completing major research projects already in progress.
Office: RB-2015 * Phone: 343-8228 * E-mail: mcqdan@sky.lakeheadu.ca

DR. YIN CHEN
Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics and Statistics
Areas of Expertise:
•

Complex Analysis
Functional Analysis

•

Operator Theory

•

Analytical Multifunctions

•
•

Interpolation spaces
Banach Algebra

Yin Chen comes to Lakehead after serving as an assistant professor and lecturer at Hohai
University in Nankin, China.
Offfice: RB-3018 • Phone: 343-8608 • E-mail: ychen@sky.lakeheadu.ca

AGORA - October 2000

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U NI VERS I TY

Faculty ofArts and Science
DR. RUIZHONG WEI
Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science

Areas of Expertise:
Communication security

Combinatorics

•
•

•

Traceability codes

•

Secret sharing

•

Combinatorial designs

•

Cryptography

•

Coding theory

From 1995 to 1998, Ruizhong Wei was a research assistant at the University of Nebraska Lincoln and from 1998 to 2000 he was doing a post-doctorate at the University of Waterloo.
Office: RB-2021 * Phone: 343-8227 * E-mail: wei@ccc.cs.lakeheadu.ca

PROFESSOR VERONICA GVENTSADZE
Lecturer, Department of Philosophy

Areas of Expertise:
*

17th century natural philosophy

*

Hellenistic philosophy
Philosophy of Religion

*

Comparative literature

From January to August 2000, Veronica Gventsadze was a sessional instructor teaching history
and English at the University of Windsor. During the fall of 1998, she was an intern at the
University of Chicago.
Office: RB-3005 * Phone: 343-8347 * E-mai/:vgventsa@sky.lakeheadu.ca

DR. BRADLEY WILSON
Assistant Professor, Department of Geography

Areas of Expertise:
•

Remote sensing &amp; GIS applications in forestry, wildlife management, and resource
management

•

Alternate energy technologies

•

Image processing and data integration techniques

Bradley Wilson comes to Lakehead from the University of Regina where he was an assistant
professor (geography). As well, he has worked as a remote sensing/GIS specialist for lntera
Information Technologies of Calgary. Wilson expects to be making an announcement shortly on
the results of a study involving the use of remote sensing in monitoring the spread of Dutch
Elm Disease in Saskatchewan.
Office: RC-20068 • Phone: 343-8746 • E-Mail: brad.wilson@lakeheadu.ca

AGORA - October 2000

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6

UNI VERSI T Y

Faculty ofBusiness Administration
DR. ISAAM DAWOOD

Assistant Professor
Areas of Expertise:

•
•
•
•
*

Information systems
Systems analysis and design
Optimization
Statistics for business
Computer applications in business

Prior to coming to Lakehead, lsaam Dawood served as an assistant professor at the University
of Lincolnshire and Humberside in the United Arab Emirates. Between 1991 and 1998, he was
an assistant professor at Yarmouk University in Jordan. His priorities for the coming year
include teaching, research and consultations.

Office: RB-1013 • Phone: 343-8635 • E-mail: /saam.Dawood@lakeheadu.ca

PROFESSOR LIFENG GENG

Assistant Professor
Areas of Expertise:
Strategic management

Conjoint analysis

International business

Structural equation modelling

International trade

Consumer behaviour

From 1994 to 1999, Lifeng Geng was a teaching assistant at the University of Alberta. In 1999,
at the same institution, he held an International Trade Policy Fellowship. Here at Lakehead, he is
planning to establish a research project in the area of international business and a research
project in the area of consumer behaviour.

Office: RB-1031

Phone: 343-8533

E-Mail: lgeng@mercury.lakeheadu.ca

Dr. HOUDAD JAVIDNIA

Lecturer
Areas of Expertise:

•

Microcomputer (PC) hardware and troubleshooting
Web design

•
•
•

Microsoft windows networking

*

Microsoft office application development

Computer networks
Visual Basic programming

Office: RB-1036 • Phone: 343-8763 • houdad.javidnia@lakeheadu.ca

AGORA - October 2000

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UNIVE R S ITY

Faculty of Business Administration
DR. DAVID SMITH
Assistant Professor

Areas of Expertise:
•

Strategic Marketing

•

International marketing and exporting

David Smith comes to Lakehead after working as an adjunct lecturer at Seattle Pacific
University, an adjunct professor at the University of Washington, and most recently as dean of
the School of Business at Henry Cogswell College in Seattle, Washington. Over the next year;
he plans to launch a home page, a major publication and attend a regional marketing
conference.
Office: RB-1037 • Phone: 343-8422 • E-mail: david.smith@lakeheadu.ca

DR. CHRISTOPHER WRIGHT
Associate Professor

Areas of expertise:
Management accounting

•

Internal auditing

Accounting theory

•

Tax theory

•
•

Accounting history

•

Fisheries management

Economic development

•

Social role of accounting

•

Aquaculture

•

Job creation

•
~

.

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For five years, Chris Wright was on faculty at the University of Northern British Columbia. He
has taught at Simon Fraser University and has worked as an Internal Auditor with MacMillian
Bloedel Ltd. His goals for the coming year include preparing a new course, completing journal
articles and finishing a text on Aquaculture.
Office: RB-1015 • Phone: 343-8080 • E-mail:chris.wright@lakeheadu.ca

•

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New Faculty Meet the Media

The Office of Communications hosted a reception for new faculty on Friday, September 29 featuring a panel of media
personalities sharing how they "Survive and Thrive in Thunder Bay." The following members of the media were invited to
take part in the panel: Norm Phillippsen, editor of the Chronicle-Journal, Cathy Alex, CBC Radio reporter; Rene Boyer,
Shaw Cable station manager, and Cal Young, Thunder Bay Television producer/director.
If you have a story about Lakehead University of interest to the media, contact Nancy Angus, coordinator, communications
and public affairs, at 343-8372.
AGORA - October 2000

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8

U N IV ER SITY

Faculty ofEducation
DR. PHILIP ALLINGHAM
Assistant Professor

Areas of expertise:

f 111'8/ ~
,

.

J

•

Holistic marking scales

• Victorian illustrated serial fiction

•

Illustrations of Hardy's novels

• Shakespearean tragedy

•

Names of Dickens' characters

• Poetry of Thomas Hardy

•

Mark Twain in Vancouver, Victoria, Winnipeg

• Provincial examinations (BC)

•

Shakespeare in the secondary schools

• Dramatic adaptations of Charles
Dickens' fiction

/

7"

Most recently, Philip Allingham spent two years as a teacher and head of the English
Department at Golden Secondary school in British Columbia. He has been a sessional lecturer
at the University of British Columbia (English and Language Education) and has worked for the
Ministry of Education in British Columbia. This year he will develop lessons, resources,
strategies, and a collection of articles for ED-4280 (Curriculum and Instruction in English for
Intermediate and Secondary Divisions).
Office: BL-2020 • Phone: 343-8897 • E-mail: philip.allingham@lakeheadu.ca

DR. MICHAEL BOWEN
Assistant Professor

Areas of Expertise:
•

Science Education

Michael Bowen spent the past year at Trent University on a SSHRC Post-Doctoral Fellowship.
Before that he was a research assistant at the University of Victoria where he completed his
PhD on the topic of Science Education ·- Ethnographic studies of ecologists. Bowen has
planned, conducted, analysed and published many research projects in education, sociology
and biology. As well, he has designed curriculum for elementary and high school classes and for
adult learners (university and college).
Office: BL-1026 • Phone: 343-8695 • E-mail: gmbowen@compuserve.com

PROFESSOR ALEXANDERA LAWSON
Assistant Professor

Areas of Expertise:
•

Elementary math education K to 8

•

EQAO (Provincial Assessment)

Alexandera Lawson has taught math education at OISE, University of Toronto.
Office: BL-1029 • Phone: 343-8720 • E-mail: afexandera.Jawson@lakeheadu.ca

AGORA - October 2000

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U N I V E R S ITY

Faculty ofEngineering
DR. JAVAD ALIREZAIE

Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering

Areas of Expertise:

•

Neural computing

•
•
•

•

Myoelectric signal processing

•

•

Image processing

•

Image segmentation &amp; compression

Medical signal processing
Neural networks
Computer vision

Pattern recognition

Javad Alirezaie is an adjunct professor at the University of Waterloo and has been a faculty
member at Wilfrid Laurier University. He is looking forward to working with the Northwestern
Ontario Regional Cancer Centre and is interested in diagnostic technology of cancer and
tumours in the brain.

Office: CB-4057 • Phone: 343-8560 • E-mail: javad.alirezaie@lakeheadu.ca
DR. SAi VANAPALLI

Assistant Professor, Department of Civil Engineering

Areas of Expertise:
•

•
•

Unsaturated soil mechanics

•

Compated soils

•

Waste management using soil liners &amp; soil covers

Pavement design
Geosynthelics

Sai Vanapalli has worked as a research associate at the Royal Military College and as a
research engineer at the University of Saskatchewan. At Lakehead, he plans to extend his
research in unsaturated soils and forestry and to collaborate with forestry companies.

Office: CB-4037 • Phone: 343-8412 • E-mail: sai.vanapafli@lakeheadu.ca
http:J/www.lakeheadu.cal~engwwwlcivil/index.html

Lakehead's Guide to the Experts is a
source book of information on faculty
expertise and research published by
the Office of Communications and the
Office of Research and Graduate
Studies. It is available on the Lakehead
University Website
(www.lakeheadu.ca) and is distributed
to local, regional and national media.
Look for this publication on the
Lakehead University Website under
"News and Events".

AGORA - October 2000

�Lakehead

10

U NI VER SI T Y

Faculty o[Engineering
DR. MOHSEN FERCHICHI

Assistant Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering

Areas of Expertise:
*

Turbulent flows

*

Experimental fluid mechanics

*

Thermo-hydraulics

Prior to coming to Lakehead, Mohsen Ferchici was a research associate and a part-time
professor at the University of Ottawa. His goal this year is to develop the courses he is teaching
and to continue his research.
Office: CB-4063 • Phone: 343-8571 • E-mail: mohsen.ferchici@lakeheadu.ca
DR. SULTAN SIDDIQUI

Assistant Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering

Areas of expertise:
Finite elements

Multi-body dynamics

•
•

Controls

•

Software development in CIC++ Math Lab

•

Nonlinear dynamics

•
•

Robotics

After graduating from Lakehead, Sultan Siddiqui (BEng'92) went on to complete his Master's
and PhD degrees at the University of Waterloo and to work as a research associate at the
National Research Council's Institute for Aerospace Research. His research goal this year is to
develop a controller for vibration suppression systems characterized by nonlinear interaction
between lumped and distributed parameter elements. This type of controller, he says, will have
many terrestrial and spaced-based applications.
Office: CB-4072 • Phone: 343-8794 • E-mail:sultan.siddiqui@lakeheadu.ca

CHAIR IN FINNISH STUDIES
Dr. Tatu Leinonen

Areas of Expertise:
*

Machine Design

*

Wood production machines

*

Mechanisms

•

CAD

*

Mechatronics

Tatu Leinonen is the second holder of the Chair in Finnish Studies at Lakehead
University. He is working in conjunction with the Department of Mechanical
Engineering and is teaching a course in mechanical engineering at Lakehead this fall.
During his six-month stay at Lakehead, he will be a guest lecturer in other academic
departments at the University and he will be interacting with the community on matters
related to Finland.
Leinonen is a professor of machine design at the University of Oulu, Finland, and in
1991 he was a visiting professor at Lakehead University. His research interests focus
on machine design, mechanisms, computer-aided design (CAD) and peat technology.
Office: CB-4061 • Phone: 343-8795 • E-Mail: tleinone@lakeheadu.ca

AGORA - October 2000

�Lakehead

11

U N IV ERSI T Y

Forestry and the Forest Environment
PROFESSOR PEGGY SMITH
Lecturer, Aboriginal Forestry

Areas of expertise:

Co-management

•
•
•

Forest management planning

Public participation

*

Forest certification

•

Aboriginal forestry

•
•

Community forestry

•

Forest policy &amp; legislation
Northern development

Peggy Smith (HBScF'91) is a graduate of Lakehead who was the senior advisor for the
National Aboriginal Forestry Association from 1994 to 2000 and a consultant for KBM Forestry
from 1991 to 1994. Her goal this year is to develop curriculum for a course/program in
Aboriginal Forestry. She also wants to finish her PhD on the topic of finding common ground for
sustainable forest management in Northwestern Ontario among Aboriginal peoples, the forest
industry. government, and environmental non-governmental organizations.
Office: BB-1011F • Phone: 343-8672 • E-mail: peggy.smlth@utoronto.ca

DR. JIAN WANG
Assistant Professor

Areas of expertise:

I

•

Mixed wood stand dynamics

•

Silviculture

•

Sustainable forestry

•

Competition between species

•

Forest light environment

Jian Wang worked as a research scientist for five years with the Ministry of Forests in British
Columbia before coming to Lakehead. This year he will teach a new course in silviculture, set up
the lab, and apply for an NSERC research grant.
Office: BB-1005E • Phone: 343-8451 • E-mail: jian.wang@lakeheadu.ca

Ii.

Chancellor Paterson Library
MICHAEL HOHNER, Internet Librarian

Areas of Expertise:

I.N •

l
~
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Internet

•

Office automation

World Wide Web

•
•

Meta data

•

Bibliometric analysis

•

Text retrieval algorithms

•

Information architecture

•

Human Computer Interaction (HCI) •

•

Digital Libraries

•

Information security

Michael Hohner comes to the Lakehead from Science Systems &amp; Applications Inc. at NASA's
Goddard Spaceflight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Before that, he was a graduate teaching
assistant at The University of Western Ontario and a systems librarian at the National Library of
Canada. Hohner plans to take a leading role in the development and implementation of Web•
related library systems and information products at Lakehead. The integration of the new library
catalogue and the upgrade of peripheral support systems are priorities for the coming year.
Office: Ll-5003B • Phone: 343-8251 • E-mail: mhohner@mercury.lakeheadu.ca
AGORA - October 2000

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UNI V E RSI TY

LUM/NA CONCERT
SERIES
Tuesday, October 3

12:30 pm
Ron Greidanus, piano
William H. Buset Centre for Music and
Visual Arts

Sunday, October 15

2pm
Sarah Beth Hanson, flute with string
ensemble, and Dinos Constantinides,
conductor
Trinity United Church

DISCOVER LAKEHEAD

Lakehead In Your
Backyard!
Lakehead is hosting an Open House
featuring a variety of activities on
Saturday, October 14
Join us for tours and demonstrations on
campus -- indoors and outdoors -- and
be sure to catch all the fun under the big
tent at the
John Zanatta Memorial Alumni
Games
at the C.J. Sanders Fieldhouse
presented by The Alumni Assocation
and Lakehead University Athletics

The Gala -- A formal wine and cheese
reception on the floor of the basketball
court to unveil the new bleachers and
the new Thunderwolves logo.
The Main Event -- A large tent beside
the fieldhouse will serve as the centre of
activity.

Cash Bar. Cash Food. Prizes. Games.
Music by Lakehead students.
The men's and women's basketball
games begin in the evening. In between,
there will be a 20-minute basketball
blowout game featuring the "Presidential
All Stars" VS "The Media."

BACK TO THE '60s
MILLENNIUM REUNION
A reunion is being planned for the
weekend of November 3-4 to coincide
with the installation of Dr. Lorne Everett
(HBSc'68) as Chancellor of Lakehead
University. The weekend's activities
begin with a wine and cheese party on
Friday evening and continue on
Saturday with the installation ceremony
at 2 pm in the Bora Laskin Theatre
(followed by a reception) and a Men's
Basketball Game Pizza Hut Tournament
at 6:30 pm in the Fieldhouse. Later that
night, there will be a Back to the '60s
Social and Dance at the Outpost
featuring the music of 21 Gun Fun and
Friends.
For tickets and information contact the
Office of Alumni Services at 343-8155.
CALL FOR NOMINATIONS FOR
HONORARY DEGREES
The Senate Committee on Honorary
Degrees invites all members of the
University community to submit
nominations for honorary degrees.
Please provide as complete information
as possible about the person being
nominated plus a brief rationale for the
nomination. All nominations will be
considered by the Committee, which will
then make its recommendations to the
Senate.
Send the nominations to Mrs. L. Phillips,
Secretary. Senate Committee on
Honorary Degrees, clo President's Office.
Note that the nominations must be
received on or before October 13, 2000
to be placed on the agenda for the
October meeting of the Committee.

CD Trcbjan
Devel . &amp; Alumni Affairs

AGORA - October 2000

Lakehead
UNIVERSITY
October 2000 Vol. 17, No. 7
THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO, CANADA
ISSN 0828-5225

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications and distributed
monthly September through June. We
welcome news and other submissions
from our readers. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8075
E-mail:franees.harding@lakeheadu.ca

Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to
Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P7B 5E1
Publications Mail
Agreement Number 1497073

Photography: Peter Puna
Printing: Lakehead Print Shop

Deadline for submissions for
the next issue is
October 12, 2000.

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                    <text>November 2000

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

Centre of
Excellence
Awarded $3.5
Million

Fall Convocation
and
Installation of
Dr. Lorne G. Everett
as Chancellor

Lakehead to be the lead institution in a
national Centre ofExcellence for Children
and Adolescents with Special Needs
Health Minister Allan Rock announced in early
October that five Centres of Excellence for
Children's Well-Being are to receive funding from
the Government of Canada.

Lakehead will hold a Fall Convocation on
Saturday, November 4, 2000, at 2 p.m.
in the Bora Laskin Auditorium

at which time Dr. Lorne G. Everett will be
installed as Lakehead's sixth chancellor.
The degree of Doctor of Letters, honoris
causa, will be conferred upon
Jane Urquhart

who will give the Convocation Address.
Following the ceremonies, the chancellor
welcomes all members of the University
community to the Chancellor's Reception
to be held in the Agora, University Centre.
Graduate and undergraduate degrees and
diplomas will be conferred in Arts and
Science, Business, Education, Engineering
and Forestry.

One of them is Lakehead's Centre of Excellence for
Children and Adolescents with Special Needs,
which has been awarded $3.5 million over five
years. It will focus on the best ways to diagnose and
treat children and adolescents in small, rural and
remote communities who require care and services
beyond those normally required for healthy
development. This includes children and
adolescents with extraordinary gifts and talents,
developmental disabilities (e.g. autism), and
problems due to cultural, linguistic and economic
factors.
"Children with special needs in rural and northern
Canada are underserved and their interests are
underrepresented in public policy," says Dr. Julia
O'Sullivan, dean of the Faculty of Education and
one of the Centre's national directors. "Because of
this, the families often face a terrible choice -between keeping their children at home or sending
them far away to access professional care."

Details on page 3.

continued on page 5

Lakehead
UN IVE RSlfY

�_

Lakehead

2

U NI V E RSI TY

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

As noted elsewhere in the Agora,
Lakehead University will be holding a
rare fall Convocation to coincide with
the Installation of our new chancellor,
Or. Lorne Everett. Jane Urquhart will
receive an honorary degree and about
40 graduates of the University will
receive their degrees. Considering that
the weekend coincides with a major
Alumni Reunion (all graduates of the
60s), the Pizza Hut Invitational
Basketball Tournament and a women's
volleyball match against the University
of Ottawa, it will be a busy and exciting
time.
The Board of Governors and the
Lakehead University Faculty
Association have ratified a new threeyear Collective Agreement. I am
pleased that we have been able to
achieve this important consensus
through a very constructive collective
bargaining process. I would like to
acknowledge the dedicated work of
both the LUFA Team (Professor Jerry
Phillips, Dr. Margaret Johnston, Dr.
Birbal Singh, Dr. Robert Dilley, Ian Dew
and Dr. Peter Seyffert) and the

Administration Team (Dr. Mary Louise
Hill, Dr. Julia O'Sullivan, Dr. David Kemp
and Bill Bragnalo) over the period June·
September that fostered the goodwill and
understandings that led to the
agreement. We must now work diligently
to grow student enrolment at Lakehead
and secure our fair share of provincial
funding. As the Ministry of Training,
Colleges and Universities reviews the
funding formula for universities, we hope
our long-standing issue of unfunded
BIUs finally will be resolved.
The report from the Peter George Expert
Panel to the Minister of Health and LongTerm Care is expected in November.
There are rumours that a compromise
solution may be offered to Northern
Ontario that does not include a northern
medical school (NORMS). We will
continue to impress upon government
and the Expert Panel that partial
solutions are unacceptable. NORMS is
the only way to address the longstanding issue of undersupply of
northern physicians and the delivery of
modern health care to the rural and
remote communities of the north.
Solutions tendered in the south have not
met northern needs in the past and are
equally unlikely to do so in the future.
NORMS is a sound and logical northern
solution to a northern problem. We have
the capacity, the resolve and the plan to
educate medical students in northern
Ontario and should be given the
opportunity to do so. Anything else is a
continuation of the colonialist attitude
toward northern problems displayed by
southern institutions. The federal
government has demonstrated its
support for the concept of NORMS with
a $254,000 FedNor grant to assist with
the proposal development. We have a
committee with a majority of Aboriginal
members looking at the Aboriginal
involvement in the governance structure
of NORMS and are developing the

AGORA - November 2000

academic and administrative structures
for the medical school. I remain
optimistic that the provincial government
will embrace the value and
appropriateness of NORMS and that the
recommendation from the Expert Panel
will be positive.
If you haven't been over to the C. J.
Sanders Fieldhouse for a while, go over
and take a look at the refinished floor
complete with the Thunderwolves logo
and the new seating for athletic events.
A fund-raising seat sale campaign has
been quite successful and has helped to
finance the improvements. It appears
that conditions will allow Lakehead to
field a hockey team next fall for the first
time since the early 1980s. There is
considerable interest in Thunder Bay for
a varsity hockey team and the Fort
William Gardens should resound with
exuberant Lakehead students and
community members cheering on the
Thunderwolves.
Finally, it appears that enrolment will
meet or exceed our budget target. Firsttime enrolment is up and with a new
Enrolment Management team under the
direction of Vice-Provost (Student
Affairs) Dr. Kimberly Barrett gearing up,
this positive trend should pick up
momentum next year.

A Message from Mrs. Geoff Weller
My sincere thanks to the many people
at Lakehead who sent letters and
flowers to Geoff and our family. We
were very touched by the letters he
received during his illness and our sons
and I were comforted by the cards and
letters that came later.

A memorial service in memory of Geoff
Weller was held on September 9 at the
University of Northern British Columbia.
Thank you again for your support in our
sorrow. We both missed Lakehead and
our many friends there.
-- Jean Weller

�Lakehead

3

UNIVERS I T Y

Lorne G. Everett

Jane Urquhart

to be installed as Chancellor

to receive Honorary Degree

Dr. Lorne G. Everett is a world renowned scientist and the first
graduate of Lakehead University to be appointed chancellor.
Everett graduated from Lakehead University in 1968 with an
honours bachelor of science degree
in biology and went on to complete
his master of science and PhD
{hydrology) degrees from the
University of Arizona. In 1989, he
received the Lakehead University
Alumni Honour Award and, in 1996,
he received the degree of Doctor of
Science {honoris causa) from
Lakehead University.
Dr. Lorne Everett is the chief scientist
and senior vice-president at The IT
Group in Santa Barbara, California,
and director of the Vadose Zone Monitoring Laboratory at the
University of California {Santa Barbara).
Everett is an expert on groundwater and vadose zone
monitoring techniques and has conducted turn key monitoring
programs at many solid waste landfills, hazardous waste
disposal sites, and underground storage tank leak sites. He has
developed numerous patented approaches for use in
monitoring applications and has published more than 150
technical papers. His book, Groundwater Monitoring, was
endorsed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as
establishing "the state-of-the-art used by industry today'' and is
recommended by the World Health Organization for all
developing countries. He is currently scientific advisor to the
U.S. Navy National Test Site Program, which is demonstrating
clean-up technologies.
In 1995, Dr. Lorne Everett was elected to the Russian Academy
of Natural Sciences and, in 1999, received the Kapitsa Gold
Medal which is the highest award given by the Russian
Academy for original contributions to science. This year, he was
appointed to the Permanent Pollution Panel by the 70,000member World Federation of Scientists and spoke at the
opening session of the World Federation meetings on
Planetary Emergencies.
Dr. Lorne Everett and his wife Jennifer were both raised in
Thunder Bay and currently live in Santa Barbara, California.

Jane Urquhart was born in the small northern Ontario mining
community of Little Long Lac (near Geraldton) and spent her
later childhood and adolescence in Toronto.
She has published three books of
poetry (I'm Walking in the Garden of
His Imaginary Palace, False
Shuffles, and The Little Flowers of
Madame de Montespan), four novels
(The Whirlpool, Changing Heaven,
Away, and The Underpainter), and a
collection of short fiction (Storm
Glass) as well as numerous articles
and reviews.
Jane Urquhart's books have been
published in many countries,
including Holland, France, Germany,
Britain, Scandinavia, Australia, and the USA, and have been
translated into several languages. In 1992, her novel The
Whirlpool was the first Canadian book to win France's
prestigious Prix du Meilleur Livre Etranger {Best Foreign Book
Award). Her third novel, Away, remained on The Globe and
Mails National Best-seller list for 132 weeks (the longest of
any Canadian book), and won the 1994 Trillium Award. In
1994, Urquhart also received the Marian Engel Award for an
outstanding body of prose written by a Canadian woman. In
1996, she was named to France's Order of Arts and Letters as
a Chevalier, and Away was short-listed for the International
IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, the world's largest literary prize
for a single work of fiction. In 1997, Urquhart was asked to
serve on the jury for this award.
Jane Urquhart has been writer-in-residence at the University of
Ottawa and at Memorial University of Newfoundland and,
during the winter and spring of 1997, she held the Presidential
Writer-in-Residence Fellowship at the University of Toronto.
She has also given readings and lectures in Canada, Britain,
Europe, the USA and Australia.
Jane Urquhart's novels have recently been reprinted in
beautiful new trade paperback editions, including her bestselling, highly acclaimed fourth novel, The Underpainter, which
won the 1997 Governor-General's Award.

Dr. Lorne G. Everett to Speak at Engineering and Technology Conference
Details on page 8

AGORA - November 2000

�Lakehead

4

UNIV E RSITY

Research News

Intellectual Property and Technology Transfer Seminar

Dr. Laurie Garred of the Department of Chemical Engineering
and Dr. Gary Genosko of the Department of Sociology have
been awarded Contribution to Research Awards for the year
2000. All faculty members, including sessionals, are eligible
for nomination. For more information about the Awards, visit
the Lakehead website: http://www.lakeheadu.ca/
-researchwww/senatelcontrib.html or contact the Office of
Graduate Studies and Research at 343-8283.
Editor's Note: The following information is adapted from the
recipient's nomination letters.

Dr. Laurie Garred
Dr. Laurie Garred has successfully applied
chemical engineering principles to kidney
dialysis, and his research has given unique
tools to assist physicians in treatment of
dialysis patients. These include
mathematical models or computer
algorithms which more accurately assess
individual patient metabolic rates and the progress of dialysis
treatments. His research has developed a number of
diagnostic tests and he has collaborated with researchers in
France and Italy in the development of instrumentation to
measure the rate and extent of urea removal. The goal of these
research efforts are the optimization of each individual's
dialysis treatments to minimize patient discomfort and achieve
improved patient well-being. Particularly noteworthy are the
state-of-the-art chapters he contributed to a new reference
text, Critical Care Nephrology, published by the Kluwer
Academic Publishers, and the growing number of invited
lectures given worldwide.

Approximately 40 people attended a day-long seminar on
campus on October 17 to discuss a variety of issues including
patents, academic freedom, and business incubation.
"It is crucial that everyone involved in research and
development have a basic working knowledge of intellectual
property issues and protection in order to fully guard their
rights," says Technology Transfer Officer Barb Eccles.
"The participation of so many University faculty and external
industry members, in events such as this, is very promising for
the University's innovation management program and the
region in general.•
For more information, contact Barb Eccles by phone at 3438184 or by e-mail: barb.eccles@lakeheadu.ca
Superior Science
Superior Science Program Directors Sarah Bandoni and
Karen Kleihauer say their summer science, engineering and
technology program reached over 7,000 children in
Northwestern Ontario. They are grateful to everyone who
contributed to the program's success and look forward to
offering the program again next summer.

Lakehead Recognizes Outstanding
Scholars

Dr. Gary Genosko
In the last three years, Dr. Gary Genosko
has built on an outstanding record of
research and publication. Since 1998 he
has published three authored books, three
book chapters, two refereed journal
articles, 1O encyclopaedia entries, and 18
pieces of cultural criticism. In addition he
has two major edited books in press at this moment. Not only
is the sheer volume of his work enormously impressive, it has
appeared in some of the most renowned international venues
for social theory and cultural studies. Publishing houses such
as Routledge and Sage are the world leaders in these areas
and the fact that they selected Gary to edit and introduce
collections of writings by three of the major social theorists of
the twentieth-century is ample demonstration of his reputation.
These works will be the standard references for years to come.

The Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation Excellence
Awards, valued at $4000, were presented to six students this
year. Photo (l-r): Jennifer Bond, Anali Dadgostar, Danielle Yanni,
Vice-Provost (Student Affairs) Dr. Kimberly Barrett, Kezia Picard,
Anu Panu and Paloma Ellard.
The Scholarships are awarded to full-time students entering
Lakehead University who, upon graduation from high school,
have achieved a minimum average of 90% in 6 OACs or
equivalent. Along with academic achievement, the award
recipients have demonstrated activities involving leadership,
citizenship and community service.
Lakehead University Presidential Scholarships were presented
this year to Anali Dadgostar, a graduate of Port Arthur Collegiate,
and Nathan Jowett, a graduate of Hammarskjold High School.
The Presidential Scholarships are national entrance awards and
are valued at $5,000 a year.

AGORA - November 2000

�Lakehead

5

UN I VERS ITY

Centre of Excellence continued from page 1

Discovering
the Four Corners of Lakehead

The research that will be done at Lakehead's Centre of
Excellence will enhance the capacity of communities in the
area of special needs. "We will be designing models that are
culturally and linguistically appropriate for early identification
and intervention in the areas of special needs," says Dr. Julia
O'Sullivan, "And we will explore the role of technology in
enhancing the well-being of children with special needs in
rural and northern Canada.
"Our overall goal is to help ensure that children will be able to
combine the riches of life in rural and northern communities
with the very best services available in this country. We will
achieve this goal and when we have, we will teach the rest of
the world what we have learned."

More than 70 prospective students and their parents, some
from as far away as Sioux Lookout, Trenton and Barrie,
ventured out on a rainy Saturday afternoon on October 14 to
learn more about Lakehead University. From 1 to 5 p.m., the
public was invited to "Discover/Rediscover Lakehead" during
an Open House coordinated by Lakehead's Office of
Admissions and Recruitment.
For many people, the day began with a guided tour of the
campus followed by visits to departments, classrooms and
labs. Visitors could choose from among 21 destinations
including the Software Engineering Workstation Lab on the
ground floor of the Centennial Building and the Department of
Social Work on the third floor of the Regional Centre.
This year's Open House coincided with the annual John
Zanatta Memorial Alumni Games. Coordinator Monique Wyllie
is evaluating this year's effort and making plans for next year.

The Canadian Institute of International Affairs (CIIA),
Thunder Bay Branch, cordially invites you to attend a
Public Lecture

Dr. Mark Howe, Lakehead's dean of graduate studies and
research is also a national director. He says the Centre
represents "a true partnership" between government,
businesses, schools, universities, and community groups.
Partners include the Nishnawbe Aski Nation, Northern Ontario
Education Leaders, Confederation College, the provincial and
territorial governments of British Columbia, Ontario, Nova
Scotia, Newfoundland and Nunavut, and universities including
UNBC, Mount St. Vincent University and Memorial University
of Newfoundland.
"Lakehead is honoured to be the lead institution and grateful
for the opportunity to serve the needs of children with special
needs in rural Canada," says Howe.
Many Lakehead faculty and staff members were involved in
developing the proposal including Dr. Alan Bowd of the Faculty
of Education, Dr. Bruce Minore and Professor Emeritus of
Nursing Marg Boone of the Centre for Rural Northern and
Health Research (CRaNHR), Dr. Doug West (Political
Science), Nancy Luck~i (Chair, Board of Directors, Nanabijou
Childcare Centre), Dr. Josephine Tan (Psychology), Judy Ball
(Health Sciences North), and Anne Klymenko (Graduate
Studies and Research).
At the time of the announcement, Lakehead University
President Dr. Fred Gilbert commended the fine work of the
faculty and staff involved. He added that the new initiative is in
keeping with Lakehead's mission of reaching out to rural and
remote communities and is consistent with Lakehead's current
initiative with Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, to
establish a Northern Ontario rural medical school.

-- Frances Harding

"Environmental Issues in the 21st Century"

by Elizabeth Dowdeswell
Former Head, United Nations Environmental Program
Monday, November 6, 2000 at 8 p.m.

Senate Chambers, UC-1001
Co-sponsored by the Department of History

OUR APOLOGIES

In the last issue of the Agora, Houdad Javidnia, a lecturer in
the Faculty of Business Administration, was incorrectly
identified as Dr. Houdad Javidnia.

AGORA - November 2000

�Lakehead

6

UNIVERSITY

Staff Appointments
During the summer months and early fall, employment notices
were issued by Human Resources announcing the following
appointments:

Library Acquires New Information
System
by Gisella Scalese
Orientation/Continuing Education Librarian

Lee Anderson -- Coach, Women's Volleyball, Athletics
Nancy Angus -- Coordinator, Communications and Public Affairs
Marianne Cavrak-Johansen -- Shelver, Chancellor Paterson
Library
Brian Cox -- Facilities Supervisor, Residence and Conference
Services
Jeremy Cull -- Security Communications Officer
Carine Gallagher -- Clinical Coordinator, Deptartment of Nursing
JoAnne Henderson -- Technician, Department of Biology
Uta Hickin -- Secretary, Department of Mathematics and
Statistics, Department of Computer Science, Women's Studies
Kim Johnson -- Secondary School Liaison Officer, Office of
Admissions and Recruitment
Patrick Larin -- Accountant, Finance
Joan Lee -- Greenhouse Manager, Faculty of Forestry and the
Forest Environment.
Tracy McFayden -- Student Placement and Co-op Officer/Shad
Valley Development Assistant, Student Placement Office
Kathryn McGuire -- Secretary, Aboriginal Initiatives/Native
Support Services
Joseph Muller -- GIS Specialist, Department of Anthropology
Kim Tobin, Director of Development, University Advancement
Rodney Swatton -- Technologist, Department of Outdoor
Recreation, Parks and ourism

Lakehead University Library has signed a contract with
Endeavor Information Systems to purchase its Voyager
information management system. This purchase will allow the
Library to continue to provide its high level of service and to
expand its potential of developing electronic and digital library
initiatives. We are excited by the enhanced services that we
will be able to offer the library user, including a new web-based
online catalogue.
This decision was the result of an extensive investigation
involving staff at all levels as well as the University users. The
Library will be acquiring and in~talling the necessary hardware
and software with an implementation target date of summer
2001 .
The Voyager system is an integrated information management
system designed specifically for academic and research
libraries. Voyager's smart design incorporates a multitude of
features including multi-tiered client-server architecture,
graphical user interfaces, access to images and electronic full
text, and is fully compliant with library standards.
Endeavor Information Systems has over 650 academic
customers worldwide with a strong North American presence
including five university libraries in Ontario. Since Voyager is
marketed exclusively to academic libraries, all development
efforts are directed toward the present and future needs of
learning, teaching and research in the academic environment.
For further information, contact:

Wera Schmerer -- Visiting Researcher, Department of
Anthropology (Paleo-DNA Lab)

Anne Deighton, Chief Librarian

Robert Stewart -- Laboratory Instructor (Technician), Department
of Geography

Tel: 343-8205

E-mail: adeighto@sky.lakeheadu.ca

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS
OFFICE OF ACADEMIC ADVISING

Lakehead University Distinguished Instructor Award

Lakehead has created a new office to further assist students in
their academic endeavours. The Office of Academic Advising will
provide many academic planning services formally offered by the
Office of Admissions and Recruitment. Kathryn Kimpton Beckford
(Co-ordinator of Academic Advising) and Brigitte Macinnes
(Academic Advisor) are now assisting students with academic
needs such as course selection, graduation requirements, and
transcript audits. Watch for their drop-in times, evening hours and
group advising sessions.
They can be reached at 343-8047, or drop by the office in SC-0003
(Learning Assistance Centre).

The Distinguished Instructor Award is Lakehead University's
highest award for excellence in teaching. This award, worth
$1500, is given annually to a Lakehead University teacher who
has made a distinguished contribution to teaching. All faculty
members (full-time and sessional) who are NOT current members
of the Senate Committee on Teaching &amp; Learning are eligible.
Nominations should be submitted by November 6, 2000, and a
teaching dossier must be submitted by December 4 , 2000. For
more information, contact Patti Merriman at 343-8207.

AGORA - November 2000

�Lakehead

7

U NIVERSI TY

Lakehead University Board of Governors
Lakehead University is
pleased to announce the
appointment of Paul
Gordon as Chair of the
Board of Governors

Lakehead University welcomes the following new appointees to the
Board of Governors:

Luigi Aloia

Luigi Aloia is serving on the Board as a representative
of LUSU. He is in fourth year of the honours bachelor of
arts (political science) program and hopes to go into a
master's program in his discipline next year.

Pamela Anderson

•

Paul Gordon

Pamela Anderson is vice president human resource
advisor with the Royal Bank Financial Group and a
member of the Conference Board of Canada Business
Education Forum on Science Mathematics and
Technology.

Chair
Board of Governors
Paul Gordon is a lawyer who
has been practising civil and
criminal litigation in Thunder
Bay since 1972. He has
served on the Board of
Governors since 1991 during
which time he chaired a
number of committees
including the Financial
Planning Committee.

Cheryl Balacko

Cheryl Balacko is a longtime staff member in the
Bookstore, who was a member of the Board of
Governors from 1994-1996. She serves on the Board
as a representative of the unionized staff.

Don Campbell

Don Campbell is vice president and resident manager
of Bowater Pulp and Paper Canada lnc.'s Thunder Bay
Mill Operations. He is a professional engineer and a
member of the Pulp and Paper Technical Association of
Canada (PAPTAC).

Board Meetings
Jim Kalyta

Board of Governors'
Meetings are held in the
Senate Chambers at 4 p.m.
and are open to the public.

Schedule

Jim Kalyta is a graduate of Lakehead , the owner of
Kalax Computer Systems, and former president of The
Alumni Association of Lakehead University. He is
serving on the Board as a representative of the Alumni
Association.

November 16, 2000
February 15, 2001
April 19, 2001
June 21, 2001
September 20, 2001
For more information contact
Bev Stefureak 343-8614

Dr. Norm LaVoie

Dr. Norm LaVoie has been a professor of kinesiology
since 1972 and is serving on the Board of Governors
as a representative of Senate. LaVoie is the former
director of the School of Physical Education &amp; Athletics,
now the School of Kinesiology.

AGORA - November 2000

�Lakehead

8

UN I V E R~ITY

NORTHERN STUDIES
2000/01
Speaker Series
Thursday, November 16
Anita Middleton
Minneapolis, Minnesota
"The Survivors: The North
American Finns in Stalin's
Russia"
7:30 p.m. RB-3026

Monday, November 27
Dr. Tuula Heinonen
Faculty of Social Work,
University of Manitoba
"Sisu and Home: Experiences
of Finnish Immigrants to
Manitoba"
7:30 p.m. Senate Chambers

Thursday, November 23
Dr. Greg Halseth
Department of Geography,
University of Northern British
Columbia
"A Social Geography of Conflict
and Contention over Labour
Flexibility in Northern
Resource Towns: Examples
from Employment Disputes in
Northern British Columbia"
7:30 p.m. RC-2003

LUM/NA CONCERT
SERIES

Back to the '60s Millennium Reunion
A reunion is being planned for the weekend of
November 3-4 to coincide with the installation of Dr.
Lorne Everett as chancellor of Lakehead University.
The weekend's activities begin with a wine and
cheese party on Friday evening and continue on
Saturday with the installation ceremony at 2 pm in
the Bora Laskin Theatre (followed by a reception)
and a women's volleyball match against the
University of Ottawa and the Pizza Hut Invitational
Basketball Tournament in the Fieldhouse. Later that
night, there will be a Back to the '60s Social and
Dance at the Outpost featuring the music of 21 Gun
Fun and Friends. For tickets and information contact
the Office of Alumni Services at 343-8155.

Chancellor to Speak at Engineering and
Technology Conference
Dr. Lorne G. Everett will be speaking on the topic of
Hazardous Waste and Groundwater Monitoring at
the 39th Engineering and Technology Conference at
1 :30 p.m. on Friday, November 3, 2000, at the
Valhalla Inn.
The morning session begins at 9 a.m. with a
presentation by Dr. Tony Gillies on the success
stories of the Lakehead University Steel Bridge
Team Design.

November 2000 Vol. 17, No. 8
THUNDER BAYI ONTARIO, CANADA
ISSN 0828·5225

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications and distributed
monthly September through June. We
welcome news and other submissions
from our readers. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, ON P7B SE1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8075
E-mail:frances.harding@ lakeheadu.ca
Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to

Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P7B 5E1
Publications Mail

343-8684.

Agreement Number 1497073

Are You lnte~ested in a Career in Occupational
Therapy or Physiotherapy?

Photography: Peter Puna

Information sessions on McMaster University's
Professional Masters in Occupational Therapy will
be held on

Printing: Lakehead Print Shop

Tuesday, November 7

Deadline for submissions for
the next issue is

5 to 7 p.m. in HS-1002

November 13, 2000.

11 :30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in HS-1014-16

Tuesday, November 7
Elissa Lee, violin and Jeanie
Chung, piano

UNIVERSITY

For more information contact Karen Toneguzzi at

Thursday, November 16

Both concerts will be held at
the Jean McNulty Recital
Hall, Lakehead University,
starting at 12:30 p.m.

Lakehead

CD Trojan
Devel. &amp; Alumni Affairs

Tuesday, November 21
Colleen Gibson, oboe
Joy Fahrenbruck, piano

AGORA - November 2000

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                    <text>December 2000

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

Swing music by The Roy Coran Big Band attracted a crowd of people, both young and old. The noon-hour
concert was given as part of a new course on the history of jazz offered by the Department of Music.

Susan A. Soldan
Appointed Vice-President
(Administration and Finance)
Lakehead's newly-appointed vice-president (administration and finance) is a
graduate of Lakehead who has been working for the Thunder Bay Catholic
District School Board for the past 1O years.
As superintendent of business &amp; corporate services, Susan A. Soldan is
responsible for administrative services (including budgeting, human
resources, computer services, and legal matters) for a school system with an
annual operating budget of $56 million. One of her greatest accomplishments
was the construction of the new $10 million St. Martin School in Westfort -- a
building which now houses the School Board's offices and where she met
face-to-face with David Johnson, then minister of education, to discuss
funding issues.
One of her first tasks at Lakehead University, upon taking up her duties on
December 4, will be the 2001/02 budget: "A budget is just a way of talking
about your priorities," she says. "It's translating your vision -- where you are
going -- into a numerical language."

Lakehead
U N I VE R S I TY

continued on page 3

�Lakehead

2

UNIVERSITY

From the President's Desk
The Maclean's 10th annual ranking of
Universities has placed Lakehead at the
bottom of the "Primarily Undergraduate"
category. What should be our reaction
when we all know that Lakehead
provides a quality education to its
students? Disbelief, chagrin, frustration,
anger and disappointment are all
acceptable under the circumstances.
Consider the following:

by
Or. Frederick F. Gilbert
President

Within its category, Lakehead improved
in nine areas, stayed the same in seven,
and slipped in only four. It placed second
in the percentage of operating budget
devoted to scholarships and bursaries;
third in the percentage of library budget
devoted to library acquisitions; third in
the number of full-time faculty winning
national awards; and fifth in the
proportion of students who graduate.
The two indicators in which Lakehead
University ranked poorly this year were
"Reputation" and "Classes."

-- Lakehead ranks third overall in the
country in the "Value-Added" indicator
(which takes into account entering
averages, national awards won by
students, and graduation rate);
-· Lakehead ranks fifth in its category in
"Graduation Rate" and 20th overall in
Canada;
-- Two years after graduation, 95.8% of
our 1997 graduates are employed.
If this does not speak to the quality of
student experiences at Lakehead, what
does?
Outcome indicators such as "Value
Added," "Graduation Rate" and
"Employment Rate" clearly illustrate that
Lakehead University is, at worst,
somewhere in the middle of its peers.
In fact, if you were to simply calculate
Lakehead's standing independent of the
arbitrary weightings assigned by the
Maclean's editors, you would find that
Lakehead ranks midway in the
"Primarily Undergraduate" category not 21st!

In the case of "Reputation," it is
important to note that Maclean's
canvassed the opinion of 7,087
individuals across the country and
received a total response rate of just
13.1 % with by far the largest percentage
of responses coming from other
universities. In spite of this, Maclean's
chooses to accord this category a
weighting of 15% in the overall tally!
In the case of "Classes," it must be
noted that the overall average class size
at Lakehead is 35 and that 61% of the
classes are in the 1- 25 size.
What the Maclean's indicators don't
speak to is the fact that Lakehead
graduates perform exceedingly well in
graduate and professional schools, in
cooperative placements, and in the work
force.
Our alums are fiercely loyal to the
Uniyersity and proud of the education
they have received at Lakehead.
continued on page 3

"'There is no reason to bow our heads or
question our worth or direction. They simply
have it wrong. We must not let the perception
created by Maclean 1s become reality."
-- Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert

AGORA - December 2000

�_

Lakehead

3

UNIV ER SITY

Our students, in areas like business
administration and engineering,
consistently outperform students from
much larger Canadian and American
universities in academic competitions
such as the Intercollegiate Business
Competition and the Steel Bridge
Building Competition.
When you consider all of these things, it
is hard to imagine that any measurement
of success, quality or value would rank
Lakehead at the bottom of the list. The
Macleans's annual ranking of universities
is biased in that it really only measures a
few factors that can be correlated directly
with quality of education.
I would say this whether we ranked first
or fast.
The retort might be "then why
participate?" A very good question, and
it would seem that the best approach
would be to simply withdraw from the
process. However, as with anything that
needs improvement, it is better to work to
achieve the objective than be outside
and thus have little influence on change.
Ann Dowsett Johnston, Maclean's
contributing editor and architect of the
process, needs to be convinced that the
weightings are very subjective and are
not defensible on an empirical or
theoretical basis. It is the Maclean's
world-view of what is important and what
is not, and it does not correspond with
the values that Lakehead holds.
Lakehead University has a different
mission than most of the other
universities in its current Maclean's
category. In fact, it is a University that
shares little in common with Acadia,
Mount Allison, St. Francis Xavier and
Trent, the top four institutions in the
"Primarily Undergraduate" category.
These universities (and many others in
the category) are all small, liberal arts
schools with few professional programs.
Many are in Quebec and the Maritimes
and have been around for 100 years or
more and, thus, are well established in
their role and have alumni stretching over
several generations.

Lakehead University is in transition to
the "Comprehensive" category.

Susan Soldan continued from page 1

Lakehead is the only Canadian
university between Sudbury and
Winnipeg and serves as the primary
access for a university education for
most of Northwestern Ontario. This
geographic position and regional role
require broad programming including
graduate degrees to meet the needs of
both students and faculty. With an
increasing interaction in the economy of
the region as a result of research and
development and strategic partnerships
with industry, business and
governments, Lakehead University is a
critical component of the socioeconomic
"engine" of the area.

Susan Soldan was born and raised in
Thunder Bay and has deep roots in the
Ukrainian community. She graduated
with an honours bachelor of commerce
degree in 1981 and received her
Chartered Accountant designation in
1984.

So we are last in a questionable
analysis of the worth of any university.
The reason students, faculty, and
administration alike all react so strongly
to this is that we all know the fallacy of
that ranking. No matter what Maclean's
prints, we are good and we're getting
better. There is no reason to bow our
heads or question our worth or direction.
They simply have it wrong. We must not
let the perception created by Maclean's
become reality. We will continue to reach
out, explain ourselves, show our
strengths, have pride in who we are. We
will continue to celebrate our students,
faculty and alumni and their successes
plus show the world that we are the best
Maclean's 21st place university it will
ever see.

LUCC Family Holiday Party
Sunday, December 10, 2000
1-4 p.m.Main Cafeteria
This year's party features a sing-a-long
with Rodney Brown, Santa's visit, games,
and crafts. For information contact Patti
Merriman at ext. 8207.

AGORA - December 2000

Before joining the Thunder Bay Catholic
District School Board in 1990, Soldan
spent a year working for the City of
Thunder Bay as manager of budgets &amp;
planning. Prior to that, she spent three
years as manager of the Northern
Ontario Internal Audit Section with the
Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources.
Although Soldan has chosen a career in
accounting and finance, she has always
enjoyed music and dance and is a keen
supporter of the arts. She is currently
president of the Thunder Bay
Community Auditorium Board and, up
until a few years ago (when her work
load became too heavy), she was a
member of the Lakehead Choral Group.
Soldan says that in many ways her job
at Lakehead University will be similar to
the kind of work she is doing with the
School Board, although, "It is a different
type of organization with different
challenges -- one that is not as heavily
regulated by legislation.
"Most of the issues at Lakehead seem to
be enrolment driven," she says. "The
way to get more money is to increase
enrolment. The plant needs a lot of
sprucing up and that's another way of
attracting enrolment.
"We need to provide the kinds of
services the students require and
provide the services that staff require.
As opposed to focusing on cost-cutting, I
would hope to increase revenues by
making Lakehead a more attractive
place for students."
-- Frances Harding

�Lakehead

4

UNIVERSITY

Northern Rural Medical School
In a series of articles published in the Thunder Bay Post, Dr. Fred Gilbert detailed the vision behind the
proposed Northern Rural Medical School (NORMS). This article summarizes the main points about the
proposal and addresses some of the questions that may be on the minds of Lakehead University
faculty and staff. The original articles are published on the Lakehead University Web site:
http://www.lakeheadu.ca/-eventswww/norms.htm

McKendry Report

The Ontario Government appointed Robert McKendry, MD, to
study Ontario's shortage of family doctors and specialists in
the province. Dr. McKendry recommended that the Ontario
Government establish a new medical school in the North that
would specialize in training medical students for practice in the
under-serviced regions.

What is the current status of the proposed Northern Rural
Medical School?
The expert panel examining the recommendations of the
McKendry Report for the Government of Ontario is expected
to make a decision by the end of November. If positive, a
decision could be linked to the release of the Ontario budget
in the new year.

Partnership between Lakehead and Laurentian

Lakehead University immediately formed a partnership with
Laurentian University in Sudbury to develop a proposal to
establish the Northern Rural Medical School (NORMS). Since
then, both institutions have worked cooperatively with
physicians groups, business leaders, Aboriginal organizations
and the community-at-large to develop a proposal that would
reflect the needs of the North and satisfy the concerns of the
expert panel examining the recommendations of the
McKendry Report for the Ontario Government.
Basic Training Integrated with Clinical Training

NORMS will provide medical students with a high quality
medical education. The 55 medical students admitted each
year will be divided into small groups of 6 to 8 members that
will focus on a series of 8 to 1O week modules taken over their
4 years of study. During each module, the group will work cooperatively to solve a series of clinical problems under the
leadership of a local physician with a special knowledge of the
particular field. Using laptop computers and the Internet,
NORMS medical groups will be able to run tutorials anywhere
there is telephone access.
Training in "Real" Practical Settings

The pre-clerkship training (Years 1 and 2) would see students
learning and living in communities such as Fort Frances,
Dryden, Kenora, Sioux Lookout, Marathon, and Nipigon as
well as having clinical experience in rural, remote and
Aboriginal communities. The clerkship years (Years 3 and 4)
would see rotations in the major specialties and would
continue the model of exposure to both large and small
population centres of the region.

What is the likelihood of this proposal receiving the
necessary funding?
There are strong indications both in the medical community
and in provincial and federal government circles that the
creation of a Northern Rural Medical School is "an idea whose
time has come." The momentum is growing. Experts agree
this is the best long-term solution to addressing the chronic
shortage of doctors and medical specialists willing to practice
in the North. Similar ventures have proven successful in
Scandinavia, Australia and elsewhere.

If the expert panel recommends that a Northern Rural
Medical School be created at Lakehead and Laurentian,
what will happen next?
Work has already begun to be ready for a positive decision. A
committee made up of representatives of the three primary First
Nations Organizations across the north, along with Lakehead
University and Laurentian University, has been struck to begin
to work out how First Nations and Aboriginal peoples will be
involved in the governance of the Medical School.
As soon as the Northern Rural Medical School has been
endorsed by the expert panel, efforts will be heightened to
convince the Ontario and Canadian Governments to either
approve or to provide funding for the school. At the same time,
work will continue to put in place the elements of the governance
structure, not only to involve the First Nations, but to ensure that
the existing governance structures of the two universities are
adhered to.
It is possible that the first students could be enrolled as early
as fall, 2002. Therefore, academic decisions would be made
following the hiring of a dean.
... continued on page 5

AGORA - December 2000

�_

Lakehead

5

U N I VfRSlTY

Northern Rural Medical School continued from page 4
How will we benefit from having a Northern Rural Medical School based on
our campus?
- Opportunity for undergraduate and graduate students to study medicine locally;
- Increased research opportunities in the health sciences;
- Increased national and international stature and profile for Lakehead
University as an institution at the forefront of medical education in the 21st
century;
- Increased likelihood of attracting medical specialists to practice in the region;
- Better health care for ourselves and our families;
- Possible economic development in the health sciences sector.

What can we do to ensure that this vision becomes a reality!!
Write to the following elected representatives and send copies of your letter to your
local MPs, MPPs

Premier Mike Harris
Office of the Premier

Alumna presented with OMA
Community Service Award

Legislative Building
Queen's Park

Barb Linkewich (HBScN'91) has
received a Community Service Award
from the Ontario Medical Association
this year.

Toronto, Ontario M?A 1A1

Elizabeth Witmer
Minister of Health and Long-Term Care (Ontario)
Hepburn Block, 1oth Floor
80 Grosvenor St.
Toronto, Ontario M?A 2C4

Allan Rock, MP
Minister of Health (Canada)
16th Floor Brooke Claxton Building
Tunney's Pasture
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0K9

Congratulations to Coach Lee Anderson and the
Thunderwolves women's volleyball team for
winning their opening three games at home!
Photo: Brent Campbell

'
. ;,

~

•-:!

.

.
--- -

The Thunderwolves Home and Away Schedule is
on our Web site:
www.lakeheadu.ca/-eventswww/oncamp.html

AGORA - December 2000

The awards are given annually to nonphysicians in recognition of significant
contributions to the health and public
welfare of the people of the local
community.
Linkewich is a Registered Nurse who
has devoted much of her energy to
promoting breast feeding. In recent
years, she has been a leader in the field
of palliative care and works closely with
NECAH on palliative care education.
In 1993, when the Long-Term Care
Division of the Ontario Ministry of Health
established the regional palliative care
initiatives, Linkewich took up the new
challenge of implementing the concept
of a regional pain and symptom
management team (PSMT). Her
community-based philosophy, teambuilding approach, collaboration skills,
and unbounded energy and enthusiasm
have resulted in Thunder Bay's PSMT
being a model throughout the province.

�Lakehead

6

UNIVERSIT Y

Gloria Baratta (BAIBEd'86) and Liz
Dougall (BA '65) share a joke with Joe
Baratta (BA '70/BEd'75/MEd'B0)

Bill Boyce (BA'72) and Alice Saborin look through back
issues of the Lakehead yearbook

Back to the '60s

Millennium Reunion
More than 150 graduates, some from as far away as British Columbia and
Pennsylvania, came back to campus November 3-4 to share memories of their early
years.
The weekend included a wine and cheese reception on Friday night, the Fall
Convocation and Installation of the Chancellor, campus tours, volleyball and
basketball games, and a "Back to the '60s" social and dance in the Outpost hosted
by the Alumni Association.
The Reunion was organized by a committee of volunteers including Shirley
Boneca, Doug Burn, Gayle Carlson, Keith Fawcett, Moe Ktytor, Dave Parsons,
George Paddington, Pentti Paularinne, Roy Piovesana, Mark Piovesana and Moe
Siemieniuk.
(l-r) Class of '66 graduates
Edgar Waller, Don Cliff, John
Bueton and Gary Hammet
completed the Engineering
Technology program at
Lakehead before moving on
to careers in industry.
Everyone except for John
Bueton (who worked for
Avenor) found employment
with General Motors in
Oshawa

AGORA -- December 2000

Geraldine White (BSc'66, HBSc'69,
MSc'71) dances with Don Ayre, the
former secretary to Lakehead University
who retired in 1985

A toast to "Noah and the Aardvarks, "the
infamous singing group: (l-r) Ferg
Penner, Dave Vibert, Lorne Everett and
Cliff Huber. Absent: Bob Hensrud of
Kenora, Bonnie Brydges of Nova Scotia
and Joe St. Amand (now deceased),
former registrar of Confederation College

�Lakehead

7

UN I V E R SI TY

Fall Convocation
and Installation of the Chancellor
"I am proud to be associated with such a vibrant,
multi-dimensional university."
--Jane Urquhart
"It's a great honour and a
great privilege to receive a
doctor of letters, honoris
causa, from Lakehead
University -- a university that
is situated within striking
distance of the place of my
own origins -- Little Longlac
near Geraldton.

Chair of the Board of Governors Paul Gordon congratulates Dr.
Lorne Everett upon being installed as Lakehead's chancellor on
Saturday, November 4, 2000.
In his Installation address, Everett said how proud he is to be
chancellor and then listed some of the ways he hopes to increase
the visibility of Lakehead University through his work with
organizations such as UNESCO, the World Federation of
Scientists, and the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences.
Everett is an expert in groundwater monitoring and chief scientist
and senior vice-president of The IT Group in Santa Barbara,
California. In November, he received the Medal of Excellence
from the U.S. Navy because of his participation as a charter
member of the Navy National Hydrocarbon Test Site, Science
Advisory Board, and the Navy National Environmental Technology
Testing Site, Science Advisory Board.

Bachelor of arts graduate Josephine Sheshamush celebrates
with her husband George and their daughter Tiffany (far right)
along with Anna Robinson and daughter Cory. Sheshamush is
from Great Whale River, Quebec, and is planning to study law

In her address to the
graduating class, author
Jane Urquhart described her
memories of the bush
planes coming and going on
the lake in front of the log
house where she lived, the
headframe of the mine
where her father worked and
the clear, bright winter days.
All of this, she said, was
surprisingly easy for her to
retrieve when she wrote her
last novel The Underpainter,
much of which is set on the
Sibley Peninsula.

Though I lived in this part of
Ontario for only the first five
or six years of my life, the
landscape and atmosphere of
the North have had an
enormous effect on my inner
life and have remained in my
memory in an astonishing
vivid way."

(l-r) Tammy McKinnon, Alison Nielsen-Jones and Joan Hardy

AGORA - December 2000

�Lakehead

8

UNIVERSI T Y

Campus Notes

Third in Canada in Accountability Disclosure Study

Best in Canada
The Investment Funds Institute of Canada (IFIC) has
determined that a paper written by a Lakehead University
business administration student is the best
overall in Canada.
Alan Rambaldini, a fourth-year student
majoring in finance, wrote a paper entitled,
What are the Pros and Cons of
Performance Based Management Fees and
How Should They be Structured for a WinWin Environment? during the winter term of
2000. Professor Ken Hartviksen
encouraged Rambaldini to enter the paper into the IFIC's 5th
Annual Student Essay Awards Program. It was judged to be
the Central Region winner and Grand Prize Winner.
Rambaldini received a cash prize of $2,000 and copies of his
paper were distributed to over 800 IFIC members attending
the national conference in Toronto. What did Alan do with his
winnings? Invested them, of course!

Professors Honoured with Riddell Award
Dr. Pamela Wakewich (Sociology/Women's Studies) and Dr.
Helen Smith (History) and have been awarded the Riddell
Award by The Ontario
Historical Society for
the best article
published in 1999 on
Ontario's history. The
professors received the
award for the article
Beauty and the
Helldivers:
Representing Women's
Work and Identities in a
Warp/ant Newspaper

published in Labour/Le
Travail, 44 (Fall 1999).
According to the Society, "The authors of this article
significantly further our understanding of women's history in
Ontario by providing a thorough analysis of how women's
identity was constructed in a specialized newspaper at a very
specific moment in time. In the process the authors display a
sound understanding of local conditions and draw very useful
parallels between women's increased importance in the
wartime economy and in a local wartime manufacturing plant
in particular ... "

Results of a study conducted by three professors at Wilfrid
Laurier University to examine "the availability, accessibility,
and understandability" of university records and financial
statements in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand show that
Lakehead ranks third in Canada.
This year, Queen's ranked first in Canada with a score of 54.3
followed by the University of Manitoba at 38.1 and Lakehead
University and Lethbridge University tied for third place at 36.6.
According to Director of Institutional Analysis/Government
Relations Kerrie-Lee Clarke, much of Lakehead's information
is on the Web site including the Annual Report, the
Institutional Statistics Book, the Strategic Plan, and the
University's accounting policies.

Going the Distance
Heavyweight wrestler Justin BeauParlant, a third-year student
in arts, earned a silver medal in freestyle wrestling at the
World University Games held in Tokyo in November. He says
the highlight of the tournament came when he "pinned" the
current world champion from Iran during his third match.
BeauParlant, his coach Francis Clayton, and the rest of the
team say they are looking forward to March 3-4 when
Lakehead University will host the CIAU Wrestling
Championships. " If we don't come away with the banner this
year," says BeauParlant, "it will be a disappointing season."
CIAU currently ranks the Lakehead men's wrestling team as
the best in Canada.

lakehead receives kudos for its Information Technology
Lakehead earned high praise for the Information Technology
component of its Shad Valley program this year says Program
Director and Business Administration Professor Ken Hartviksen.
At the Shad Valley wind-up banquet held in September in Toronto,
Minister of Energy, Science and Technology Jim Wilson, praised
Lakehead publicly for its initiative.
"This year we set up a lab in the Residence that was available
24 hours a day," says Hartviksen. "We also had enormous support
from other departments across campus especially Kinesiology,
Anthropology and Chemistry."
Dr. Chistine Gottardo and others in the Department of Chemistry
worked with the Shad Valley students to develop a prototype to
detect the presence of date rape drugs in drinks. This particular
student project placed fifth overall in Canada in the national Shad
Valley competition under the category "Prototype."
(More about Shad Valley on page 11 ).

AGORA - December 2000

�Lakehead

9

UNIVfRSITY

Kim Tobin brings a wealth of experience in university
advancement to her position as director of development. Prior
to taking up her duties on September 1, she was a senior
development officer at the University of Toronto where she was
successful in raising over $500,000 for student aid, capital
projects and equipment. She has also held the position of
cultural affairs coordinator at the University of Toronto at
Scarborough and was volunteer coordinator for Harbourfront
Centre and the Toronto Film Festival.
Tobin was born and raised in Thunder Bay and holds an
honours bachelor of arts degree in arts management and art
history from the University ofToronto.
In addition to addressing some of the policy issues at
Lakehead, Tobin has been spending time getting to know the
faculty, staff and volunteers. She invites you to drop by her
office, AC123, or to telephone her at 343-8747.

Kim Tobin
Appointed
Director of Development

-- Frances Harding

Staff Appointments

Kim Tobin is clear about what she wants to accomplish at
Lakehead. She sees her role as creating a solid framework for
development including well-established policies to guide fundraising activities.
"There has been a lot of fund-raising activity at Lakehead,"
she says, referring to the recent OSOTF and Share Our
Northern Vision fund-raising campaigns. "We need to
formalize some of those relationships and policies so that we
can really enhance our development program."

Employment notices were issued by Human Resources
announcing the following appointments:
Kathryn Hauck -- Security Communications Officer
Helen Wassegijig - Coordinator, Native Language Instructors'
Program, Faculty of Education

Lakehead University Spirit Fridays

Tobin has a number of priorities listed on the white board in
her Avila Centre office. One is to establish a policy for setting
institutional fund-raising priorities. Another is to determine how
the Office of Development at Lakehead University should be
funded.
Fund-raising for the Advanced Technology and Academic
Centre is important and Tobin has been working with Dr. John
Whitfield, vice-president (research and development), the
Advancement Committee of the Board of Governors, and the
Lakehead University Foundation to reach a target of $13.4
million.
Supporting all of this activity is the donor database which is
the backbone of development activities. Lakehead's current
donor database, she says, is "antiquated" and so one of her
priorities will be to oversee the implementation of the new
Datatel/Benefactor system.
There are, as well, many other institutional policies that relate
to fund-raising which Kim Tobin hopes to review, revise and
implement in conjunction with other groups within the
Lakehead University community.

Fourth-year Outdoor Recreation, Parks &amp; Tourism student Eric
Church gives the "thumbs up" to the idea of holding Sprit
Fridays. Staff, faculty and students are invited to show their
school spirit every Friday by wearing Lakehead University
colours: blue and gold.

AGORA - December 2000

�Lakehead

10

U NI V E R SI TY

Health, Happiness and Aging
A Profile of Gerontologist Dr. Michael Stones
by Stacey L. Hare
The idea that "you're only as old as you feel" rings true for Dr.
Michael Stones, a gerontologist and professor of psychology at
Lakehead who is fascinated by the relationship between aging,
health and happiness.
Aside from his teaching duties at Lakehead and his work as
director of the Northern Educational Centre on Aging and
Health (NECAH), Stones is engaged in several research
projects including the f-1ealthy Aging Program, a health
informatics project known as RAI-HIP, and research on elder
abuse issues.
Healthy Aging Program

The Healthy Aging Program is grounded on the belief that
prevention is key to good health and well-being throughout the
course of life. As co-director of the program, Stones has
embraced the involvement of numerous individuals and
community partners in Central and Eastern Canada. Local
affiliates include several Lakehead faculty members from
various disciplines, Lakehead Psychiatric Hospital, Thunder
Bay District Health Unit, District Health Council, Lakehead
Social Planning Council, Thunder Bay Council on Positive
Aging, and the Thunder Bay 55+ Centre. As well, NECAH is
the recipient of a generous contribution from Manulife
Financial - $250,000 over five years - in support of the
Healthy Aging Program.
The program will provide our aging population with tools for
health assessment, intervention, and follow-up. Because
accessibility remains a vital component of this program, one of
particular significance for rural communities, it will use a Webbased system of delivery. With online assessment materials
currently in development, the Healthy Aging Program began in
earnest inThunder Bay this fall.

Resident Assessment Instrument Health Informatics
Project

Stones is also directing the Thunder Bay stream of the
Resident Assessment Instrument Health Informatics Project
(RAI-HIP), along with coordinator Leah Clyburn, a PhD
student. The Health Transition Fund of Health Canada has
allocated roughly $1.7 million for the project, to be shared by
two university lead organizations, one of which is Lakehead.
A main feature of RAI-HIP is the collection of data for the
purpose of assessing and improving the delivery of health
care in our community. If implemented, this project would
provide a more effective use of a patient's health-related
information. In turn, the patient would receive improved quality
of care in a consistent manner even as they move from one
type of health care facility to another.
Elder Abuse

Dr. Michael Stones is actively exploring elder abuse issues. He
is specifically interested in the sources of difference in abuse
thresholds between younger people, community elderly, and
institutionalized elderly. According to Stones, younger people
tend to have lower abuse thresholds than do the elderly,
especially those within institutions. He intends to raise
awareness of elder abuse _so as to shrink abuse thresholds in
the elderly and improve their quality of life.
By transforming his research into an educational tool, he plans
to create empowerment packages using positive language,
rather than the negative "language of abuse." It is his hope
that restructuring the presentation of serious information in
this way will help to circumvent any feelings of cynicism or
disbelief, and keep the information approachable for those
who need it.

Stacey L. Hare is one of several students participating in
SPARK -- Lakehead, a student writing program sponsored by
The Chronicle-Journal

They call themselves the "RAI-HIPsters"
(l-r): Leah Clyburn, Joanna Aegard, Dr.
Michael Stones, Mary-Louise Crompton,
Lee Stones and Karen Kipper

AGORA - December 2000

�Lakehead

11

UNIVERSITY

A Life-Changing Experience
Lakehead's Shad Valley program is one of the best in Canada
By Emily Sangster, Shad Participant

Shad Valley, now in its second year at Lakehead, is a summer
program for youth aged 16 to 19 which focuses on exploring
science, technology and entrepreneurship.
The 50 participating students began a detailed application
process in November 1999, and were ultimately selected to
participate because of their high academic achievement,
initiative, creativity, and leadership qualities.
With the help of Professor Ken Hartviksen, the students and 10
staff experienced a dynamic, exciting program including
lectures, workshops and field trips.
Through program participation, students had the opportunity to
meet and share ideas with like-minded youth from across
Canada and Scotland. Activities included a tour of the
Bombardier plant; an overnight camping trip at Sleeping Giant
Provincial Park; workshops on kinesiology and DNA; a
cardboard boat-building competition; and lectures on topics
such as earthquake engineering, protein detection, and the
mathematics of music.
A major group project was the Royal Bank Shad Cup
entrepreneurship contest, which involved Shad students from
all 1O participating campuses in Canada and Scotland.
Students worked in groups to brainstorm, design, construct,
and market a product in keeping with this year's theme: crime
prevention. Ideas included a chemical indicator for the date
rape drug, a Global Positioning System for lost children, and a

steel door frame to prevent home invasion. Each group of
students was required to prepare a full business plan and
promotional video, on which they were judged at the end of the
program. The winning team from Lakehead proceeded to the
national Shad finals held in Toronto in September where they
placed fifth overall in the category called "Prototype."
The program wound up on July 27 with an Open Day in the
Agora showcasing the many projects and activities the Shad
students completed during their time in Thunder Bay. This
event was followed with a banquet and variety show presented
by the students to further showcase their talent and to thank
those who contributed to this year's successful Shad Valley
program at Lakehead.
In August, many of the students completed a work term
associated with topics covered at Shad. These work
placements varied from Web design firms to industrial
manufacturers and medical clinics, and gave students yet
another opportunity to develop their communication and
leadership skills.
During its 20-year history, Shad Valley has proven itself to be a
powerful educational and personal experience. Participating
students see Shad as a base to build a network of contacts for
future business endeavours, as well as a society of lifelong
friends. Many Shads have gone on to create their own
businesses or head large corporations. Eleven have become
Rhodes Scholars.

AGORA - December 2000

�Lakehead

12

UNI VERSI TY

WEB WATCHING
The WWW offers a number of excellent sites for finding quick information. Here is a
sample of sites from the bookmarks of the Reference Librarians at The Chancellor
Paterson Library:

Lakehead
UNIVERSITY

The Universal Currency Converter
http://www.xe. netlucc/
This currency conversion site allows for converting from and to some 100 currencies.
A link to a "Full" Universal Currency Converter provides currency information on over
180 currencies in over 250 geographical locations.

December 2000 Vol. 17, No. 9
THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO, CANADA
ISSN 0828-5225

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications and distributed
monthly September through June. We
welcome news and other submissions
from our readers. Send them to:

Canadian Universities
http://www.uwaterloo.ca/canulindex.html

Canadian University Home Pages
http://www. uwinnipeg. cal-kingsley/cdn-univ.html

Editor, Agora

Both sites provide direct links to Canadian University web pages.

Development Thunder Bay Factbook

Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road

http://devtbay.city.thunder-bay.on.ca/factbooklfactbook.htm

Thunder Bay, ON P78 5E1

An excellent source of local demographic information.

Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8075

Canada 411

E-mail:frances.harding@ lakeheadu.ca

http://canada411.sympatico. cal
Use Canada411 to find any listed residential or business telephone number across
Canada. And last but not least. ..
Click on the "Key Reference Links" button from the Library's Web Page. From this
link you'll be connected to a number of great sites for answering quick questions and
connecting to common sites.
-- Gisella Scalese, Orientation/Continuing Education Librarian

Call for Nominations - Fellow of the University
The Board of Governors invites individuals to submit nominations for the Fellow of
Lakehead University. The deadline is January 17, 2001.
The award recognizes persons who have contributed to the growth, development,
welfare and well-being of Northwestern Ontario and/or of Lakehead University. A
candidate should have: 1) contributed substantially to education and/or to the growth
and development of Lakehead University; and/or 2) given service to the community of
Thunder Bay or Northwestern Ontario through active participation in service clubs,
community organizations, business and professional groups or charitable
organizations. It is intended that such service should be above and beyond the
demand of a career, and should be of the nature where no pecuniary reward is
expected. Contact Bev Stefureak, ext. 8614 for a nomination form (e-mail:
bev.stefureak@lakeheadu.ca).

Events on Campus

CD Trojan
Devel. &amp; Alumni Affairs

www.lakeheadu.ca/-eventswww/
news.html

AGORA - December 2000

Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to
Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P78 5E1
Publications Mail
Agreement Number 1497073
Photography: Peter Puna
Printing: Lakehead Print Shop

Deadline for submissions for
the next issue is
December 13, 2000.

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                    <text>January 2001

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

Dr. Lada Malek is
spearheading an
innovative program to
involve high school
students in Lakehead's
Applied Bio-Molecular
Science program.

&gt;
.._

He is shown here
working with two of the
programs mentors: Derek
Demianiuk (right) and
Renee Praymak (centre),
both fourth-year ABMS
students.

l

I

J\t,( ·· ·; ~

The curriculum focuses
on biotechnological,
forensic, health-based
and diagnostic
applications of biomolecular research.

,---------

Applied Bio-molecular Science
Students enrolled in this interdisciplinary program are gaining skills to work in
bio-molecular research
by Usree Bhattacharya

Lakehead's Applied Bio-molecular Science program,
instituted in 1998, will witness the graduation of its
first batch of students in 2001.
The program is interdisciplinary in nature, with the
departments of Biology, Chemistry, Kinesiology and
Anthropology uniting to form a cohesive curriculum.
Lakehead students enrolled in the program are
educated on, and equipped with practical skills for,
the applications of bio-molecular research in varied
fields including chemistry, biology, kinesiology and
anthropology.

The successful commingling of various departments
to form a unique single curriculum allows students to
keep their options open for future specialization, and
covers a broader knowledge base than individual
programs.
The students also benefit from the thriving partnership
with the Northwestern Ontario Regional Cancer
Centre, and the newly conc eived high school
mentorship program being spearheaded by Dr. Lada
Malek, a professor in the Department of Biology.

Lakehead
U NIVERSI T Y

continued on page 7

�Lakehead

2

U NIV E R S ITY

From the President's Desk
We move into 2001 with optimism that finally we might see our unfunded student situation
rectified. The Government is reviewing the funding formula and it is our hope that after
a decade of severe underfunding, Lakehead will receive its fair share of provincial support.
If it happens it could not come at a better time as our budget situation requires substantial
movement toward support for all our students. If the University is to realize its full
potential it must be funded fairly.
As was announced last month, Mrs. Bev Stefureak has accepted a position at the
University ofToronto and will leave Lakehead early in February. Bev will be missed by
many here but her talent and work ethic will serve the University of Toronto well. Having
had her assistance for my tenure at Lakehead, I fully expect that the University of Toronto
will be more than satisfied with Bev's abilities and performance. I am certain we all wish
her well in her move "down east."

by
Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
President

Dr. Bill Montelpare has been appointed acting dean of graduate
studies. He will provide the leadership for the advancement of
graduate education at Lakehead and allow Dr. Mark Howe, who
becomes dean of research, to concentrate his energy on
research activities and the Centre of Excellence for Children
and Adolescents with Special Needs for which he serves as a
national director with Dr. Julia O'Sullivan, dean of education.
The latter responsibility commands 20 per cent of each of the
national directors' time as part of the University's contribution.
Later this month we will announce a new partnership for the
Dr. Bill Montelpare
University that will see, as part of the agreement, a major
upgrade in campus telephony that will place Lakehead at the
forefront of communications technology. This partnership will have important implications
for the Advanced Technology and Academic Centre as well as research and academic
programming. In fact, 2001 should see a series of announcements that will impact the
future of the University, the city and the region in a very positive way.
ATAC has become a $44 million project and the contract on the foundation will be let
this spring with construction to commence this summer. Fund-raising efforts are now
under way to raise the $19 million in cash and equipment to allow completion of the
project.
I hope everyone had an enjoyable holiday break and I wish all a very successful and
productive New Year.

LUMINA Concert Series
Music in Common

Peter Shackleton, clarinet, Derek Conrod, horn, Heather Morrison, piano
Tuesday. January 16 at 8 p.m. at the Thunder Bay Art Gallery
Plano Six

Bernadene Blaha
Tuesday. January 26 at 8 p.m. at St. Paul's United Church
Robert SIiverman, piano

Thursday, February 15 at 8 p.m. at Jean McNulty Recital Hall, Lakehead University

AGORA - January 2001

�Lakehead

3

U N I V E RS I TY

New Initiatives to Improve
Communications
EVENTS AT LAKEHEAD
A New Weekly Electronic Bulletin

Farewell Reception
for Bev Stefureak .
Bev Stefureak is leaving Lakehead
University on February 2 to take up a
new position as assistant secretary of
the Governing Council of the University
of Toronto.
She has served Lakehead well for the
past 17 years as executive assistant to
the president and secretary to the Board
of Governors, and formerly as secretary
of Senate.

In response to a request from the Board of Governors' Student Liaison Committee
to improve campus-wide communications with students, the Office of
Communications and the Lakehead University Student Union are jointly involved in
an important new initiative.
Together, they are producing Events at Lakehead, a weekly electronic bulletin,
delivered on Friday evenings, listing events and activities happening on campus
from the following Monday to Sunday.
Events at Lakehead is distributed to all students via the new Web-based student email system. It also goes to all staff, faculty and media outlets. Notices of events
must be received by the Office of Communications no later than 4:30 p.m. on
Thursday to be included in the next weekly e-bulletin. They are to be sent to:

Jennifer Willianen
Office of Communications

Please join us for a farewell reception on

E-mail: communications@lakeheadu.ca
Fax: 343-8075

February 1, 2001
at4p.m.
in the Faculty Lounge

COMMUNICATIONS BULLETIN
An Electronic Bulletin for Urgent and Important News
In light of the creation of Events at Lakehead, there have been changes to the
Communications Bulletin, which, for the pa_st year or so, was an electronic bulletin
listing campus news and events that had been going out daily to all faculty and staff.
The Communications Bulletin will still be delivered to all staff and faculty -- although
not necessarily on a daily basis. It will revert back to what it was originally intended
for: as a means for Lakehead University to notify staff and faculty immediately about
important (and at times urgent) developments on campus.

LAKEHEAD LINES
A Weekly Column Highlighting Lakehead Events in The Chronicle Journal

Joe Muller (right) acquaints Dr. Walter
Epp with the use of a Global Positioning
System as a tool for research and
navigation. The demonstration was part
of a brown bag lunch seminar series
given in December by Dr. Bradley
Wilson (Geography).

In early January, the Office of Communications began publishing Lakehead Lines, a
weekly column in The Chronicle-Journal featuring events taking place on and off
campus. The column is written by Jennifer Willianen, analysis and communications
assistant.
We hope that these new initiatives will result in greater awareness of Lakehead
University activities and greater attendance at Lakehead University events. If you
have any questions, concerns, comments or suggestions, contact Nancy Angus,
communications &amp; public affairs coordinator, at 343-8372.

AGORA - January 2001

�Lakehead

4

UN I VERSITY

ENGLISH 1100: Major British Writers
with
Dr. Bill Heath
A Glimpse Into the Classroom of one of L akehead University's
Distinguished Instructors
by Dr. Philip Alingham, Faculty of Education

Recipients of Lakehead University's Distinguished Instructor
Award were Invited to participate in the New Faculty Orientation
Sessions held at the beginning of September. This initial
participation is evolving into a mentorship/peer review process
in which new faculty members are visiting classrooms of
Distinguished Instructors. Enjoy this glimpse of Bill's
classroom. It is almost as good as being there.
- Dr. Walter Epp, Instructional Development Advisor

The students began arriving as soon as the previous lecturer
had left, at about 10:25 a.m., on Wednesday, November 15.
Having e-mailed Professor Heath the night before that I would
like to sit in on this class, I ensconced myself in the last row,
the position of the anonymous: I was surrounded by young
men.
Up at the front of the class, where the activists were sitting,
the class began crisply, as Professor Heath delivered a kernel
lecture, interspersed with questions to check for
understanding and ensure student involvement, on the
rediscovery of the works of John Donne by T. S. Eliot and the
New Critics in the 1920s after three centuries of obscurity.
Hands shot up from among those at the front and in the
middle rows whenever he called for response or input. I was
impressed by Bill Heath's knowledge of his students' names,
and how he called upon individual students by name to define
such terms as "denotative" and "connotative."
Although, he explained, New Criticism's attitude that matters
of historical and biographical background should be "off the
table" is now passe, the New Critics have contributed the
concept of "close reading" of text.
Bill began to build consensus about the nature of love poetry.
Students volunteered answers to his question, "What are your
expectations of a 'love' poem?"
On the board he graphed the discussion as it progressed. One
student anticipated his intention to review "How Do I Love
Thee, Let Me Count The Ways," which Bill then asked the
students to look at in their big texts.

r

~

.....

Dr. Bill Heath received a Distinguished Instructor Award in
1992

He read the poem in its entirety, following up with commentary
about the nature of love poetry, then contrasting Donne's "The
Sun Rising" by Donne with the Elizabeth Barrett Browning
sonnet.
Even to an outsider unacquainted with the course, the class
was an interesting, even an exciting place to be because Bill
worked so hard at involving and engaging the students in
academic discourse.
Immediately I noticed that Bill does not like to break a text up:
he reads it right through without a pause or a comment.
The opening mood of Donne's poem, students variously
volunteered, is "cranky," "irritable," and "irritated" -- Bill was not
satisfied with an approximate, colloquial answer, but drove
students to make their responses more formal and precise.

AGORA - January 2001

continued on page 5

�_

Lakehead

5

UNIVERSITY

English 1100 with Bill Heath continued from page 4
He made the class see the motivation behind the mood and
dramatic context by examining the implications of the word
"busy'' as the persona applies it to the rising sun. These
connotations he drew out of the students: "intrusive," "a

Afterwards, he and I had a brief discussion about the class. I
applauded his determination to make the students more aware
of language, to make them careful readers. It was a highly
stimulating class, and one that I would urge colleagues to
attend.

Books by Lakehead Faculty

busybody."
Connotatively, Bill argued, the sun is characterized as "a busy,
old fool" because it cannot appreciate the experience of the
lovers.
One student saw the term "unruly'' as ironic, a point which Bill
developed into a coherent interpretation: the sun's rising and
setting usually make us think of the sun's movements as
regular rather than erratic. Another student noted that the
persona is not directly addressing his beloved, as in the EBB
sonnet, but is chastising the sun for interrupting them. Thus,
Bill revealed that the initial situation in Donne's poem , in
contrast to EBB's sonnet, is highly dramatic, that a complete
scene may be inferred from the persona's lines addressed to
the sun.
"Lovers' seasons" are governed by the motions of the sun (by
implication, by time, by aging), but "Must things be this way?"
the persona seems to ask.
Bill introduced the term "diurnal;' but did not automatically
assume that this was a part of his first-year students'
vocabularies. He defined and applied it to the sun's motions,
then showed how "saucy, pedantic wretch" intensified the
insulting tone: impudent, disrespectful.
Students seemed momentarily stunned by Bill's question as to
why Donne has applied the term "pedantic" to the sun, so he
backed up, using the term as a pejorative that could even be
applied to the professorate in general and even to himself (he
enacted a pedantic pose): the self-denigration in creating a
little humour eased the discomfort of students as he urged
them to look up words with which they are unfamiliar because
such an activity is integral to completing assigned readings. "I
expect to see more hands tomorrow."
He carried the class when gaps in understanding became
apparent, but did not relent when he wanted students to
define words, give their associations, or explicate lines.
He had an impressive delivery, never referring to notes as he
annotated passages with pertinent scientific (e. g., "eclipse"),
grammatical (e.g., inverted word order), and historical
information to demonstrate the freshness of Donne's diction
and his innovative handling of the form of the love poem.
Finally, I was impressed by the fact that Bill Heath did not feel
compelled to cover the entire poem in 45 minutes, that he
realized students needed to be guided through the language,
particularly the metaphors, if they were to be led to an
understanding of Donne's style.

Department of Sociology
Routledge has published a book edited by Dr. Gary
Genosko entitled Deleuze and Guattari: Critical
Assessments in Three Volumes as part of a series of
reference texts on the leading philosophers of the 2oth
century. Gilles Deleuze (1925-95) was a French
philosopher who collaborated with psychoanalyst Felix
Guattari on three explosive and radical books of
philosophy.
Genosko is a specialist in cultural sociology and
contemporary sociological theory. In 1999, he published
another book with Routledge entitled McLuhan and
Baudrillard: The Masters of Implosion.
Genosko is editor of The Semiotic Review of Books. He is
currently working on a book about Jean Baudrillard who
came to be known as "the French McLuhan." It is entitled
Uncollected Baudrillard.
School of Kinesiology
Oxford University Press has published a book edited by
Dr. Jane Crossman entitled Coping with Sports Injuries:
Psychological Strategies for Rehabilitation. The book
brings together leading researchers from sports science
and medicine to discuss and explain the ways in which
the athlete is psychologically affected by injury. It then
provides effective and proven methods for helping the
athlete through this difficult period.
Department of History
Dr. Bruce Muirhead has received the Joseph and Faye
Tanenbaum Award for Canadian Jewish History for his
book, Against the Odds: The Public Life and Times of
Louis Rasminsky. He was presented with the award at a
ceremony in Toronto in June 2000.

Public Lecture
Dr. Charles Menzies, Department of Anthropology &amp;
Sociology, University of British Columbia, will give a
lecture on Friday, February 2 at 2 p.m. in FB-2002 (Centre
for Northern Forest Ecosystem Research) on the topic:
Making Indians and Catching Fish: Industrial Resource
Extraction, Race and Colonialism on the Northwest
Coast.

AGORA - January 2001

�Lakehead

6

U NIV ERSIT Y

Research News
Community of Science: Making the Search for Funding Opportunities and
Research Experts Easy
The Community of Science (COS) offers researchers in all disciplines around the
world a unique comprehensive online database featuring sources of grants and
contracts available to fund research, collaborative activities, curriculum development,
conferences, fellowships, travel, artistic endeavours, graduate scholarships,
postdoctoral fellowships, and equipment.
The database is updated daily and can easily be searched by sponsor, deadline,
eligibility, grant type, discipline and country.
The expertise database utilizes the profiles provided by researchers in a variety of
ways including promotion of research capabilities, identifying peer reviewers for
articles and proposals, and identifying prospective collaborators. This is an excellent
opportunity for faculty to profile their basic or applied research activities and provides
comprehensive, detailed information about the background, skills, and
accomplishments of each faculty member.
You may try these various online databases by referring to the following Web site:
http://www.lakeheadu.ca/-researchwww/funding/science.html. Contact Lynn Wilson
at 343-8283 if you have any questions about COS. Please note that the next issue of
Research Funding Opportunities Bulletin will be e-mailed to all faculty in January
2001.

New Partnership with Environment Canada
Environment Canada and Lakehead University are working cooperatively to advance
knowledge in atmospheric science, environmental prediction
and environmental issues.
In September, a new Memorandum of Understanding was
signed which formally recognizes the partnership which was
established last spring.
Under the agreement, Dr. Fred Hopper, Environment
Canada's environmental science officer in Ontario Region's
Thunder Bay Regional Weather Centre, will work as an
adjunct professor and teach a second-year course in
meteorology.
,._ t

Joint research efforts will focus on improving meteorological
products, facilitating the exchange of meteorological
expertise between other environmental scientists, and studying environmental issues
particularly relevant to Northern Ontario.

Mapping Research on Women and Health in Northern Ontario
Dr. Pamela Wakewich (Sociology/Women's Studies) has been awarded a grant from
the National Network on Environments and Women's Health to identify, collect and
review academic and community research on women and health in Northern Ontario.
The project will map the current state of published and unpublished research through
the development of a working paper. The project will also work to enhance
communication and networking among researchers interested in northern women's
health through a community workshop.
AGORA - January 2001

Anne Deighton
appointed
University Librarian

Anne Deighton has been appointed
university librarian for a five-year term
commencing January 2, 2001. She has
served Lakehead well as chief fibrarian
over the past three years and wiff
continue to provide the leadership
needed to move the Chancellor
Paterson Library forward in an
increasingly electronic age.
In 1970, Deighton completed a Bachelor
of Library Science at the University of
Toronto (the professional working
degree at the time). She joined
Lakehead University as the acquisitions
librarian in 1976 and, since then, has
held a number of different positions
including interim chief librarian {19961997) and chief fibrarian (1997-2000).
Recent accomplishments include the
negotiation of a contract to purchase the
Voyager information management
system - an integrated information
management system designed
specificafly for academic and research
libraries.
Her priorities for the coming year are to
convert more of the University's
resources to electronic format and to
provide access to licensed materials
both on an off-campus. This wiff greatly
improve access to resources for
Lakehead's Distance Education
students.
The Library wifl also continue to develop
and update content for its instruction
sessions for students and faculty.
"Information literacy," she says, "is a key
service provided by the library."

�Lakehead

7

UNIVf R SlTY

Applied Bio-molecular Science continued from page 1
The Applied Bio-molecular Science (ABMS) program is
bolstered by the calibre of its primary instructors including Dr.
John Th'ng, a career scientist with the Northwestern Ontario
Regional Cancer Centre, and a number of Lakehead
University faculty including Dr. El Molto and Dr. Ryan Parr of
the Department of Anthropology; Dr. Kam Leung of the
Department of Biology; Dr. Christine Gottardo of the
Department of Chemistry; and Dr. Bill Montelpare and Dr.
Robert Thayer of the School of Kinesiology.
Malek sums up the advantages of the program as follows: "The
students in the program are not limited in their thinking that
there is only one discipline for them; they can explore all these
exciting areas as well as get a good grounding in biomolecular science."
The novel interdisciplinary characteristic of the program
enhances the research resources for the students, as the
combined resources of four departments are at their disposal.
"The students are allowed to pick and choose: the program is
relatively flexible," says Malek, "and they have various options
within the confines of the program."
Students in the program are exposed to both the technical and
ethical aspects of the field. The DNA lab is comprehensively
outfitted for students and faculty to undertake the analysis of
proteins and DNA, for example.
A fourth-year course, taught by Malek, covers biotechnology
from an ethical as well as technical perspective. This is
engineered to make students "think about the implications of
what they are doing."
The program accent is on biotechnological, forensic, healthbased and diagnostic applications of bio-molecular research.
Graduating students will be eligible for employment as
laboratory technicians in an academic or industrial setting, or
they can pursue a master's degree in any one of many
disciplines.

partnership between the involved departments and the
Northwestern Ontario Regional Cancer Centre" and further
"efficiency in the sharing and pooling of resources." As the
program develops, he says, its good reputation and credibility
will likely result in a greater intake of students.
As the students will attest, Lakehead's Applied Bio-molecular
Science program is comprehensive, career-oriented and an
excellent entrance into the dynamic field of molecular biology
and biotechnology.

Usree Bhattacharya is a graduate of Delhi University who is
currently taking her master's degree in English at Lakehead
University. She is one of several students participating in
SPARK •· LAKEHEAD a student writing program sponsored by
The Chronicle-Journal.

Staff and Faculty Appointments
Employment notices were issued by Human Resources
announcing the following appointments:
Dr. Michael Quinn -- Assistant Professor, School of Outdoor
Recreation, Parks and Tourism
Kathryn Hauck -- Security Communications Officer
Helen Wassegijig •• Coordinator, Native Language Instructors'
Program, Faculty of Education
James Davis •· Security Communications Officer
Julie Wright - Library Assistant, Faculty of Education Library
As well, Kristine Carey has transferred from the Office ofAlumni
Services to the Departments of Geology and Physics; Karen
Farrier has transferred to the Faculty of Education as
administrative assistant; and Sandra Blackburn has transferred
to the School of Kinesiology as administrative assistant.

The innovative high school mentorship program is directed to
"train senior bio-molecular science students with management
skills" and acquaint high school students with this exciting
program, says Malek. The project entails senior bio-molecular
science students "mentoring" high school students in a specific
project, by using "the high school students' technical abilities to
a degree, but also giving them enough leeway so they can
contribute their own ideas, and this is beneficial to everybody."
The Northwestern Ontario Regional Cancer Centre has a
symbiotic relationship with the program. It is a potential
funding partner for the program and the partnership is based
on reciprocal resource pooling. The future of the program,
Malek says, would revolve around the "consolidation of the

AGORA - January 2001

ARAMARK
Appoints New Staff
ARAMARK Canada Ltd.
announced in December that
Graham Marchbank (left) is
Lakehead's new food service
director. He replaces Adam
Rhode who has accepted a new
position with the company. Reg
Guerin (right) is the assistant
food service director. He joined
the company in November.

�_

Lakehead

8

U NIVE R SI TY

"Fox Run" and "Eagle's Eye"

Thunder Bay Branch, CIIA

Lakehead

invites you to attend a
Public Lecture
by

UNIVERSITY

Dr. Paul Buteux, Director, Centre for
Defence and Security Studies, University
of Manitoba
"The European Security and Defence
Policy: Implications for Canada"
Tuesday, January 16
8p.m.
Senate Chambers (UC-1001)

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications and distributed
monthly September through June. We
welcome news and other submissions
from our readers. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1
Telephone: {807) 343-8193
Fax: {807) 343-8075

Thomas Kirkbride, Ben Bartlett, Alex
Dunn and Stephane Audet completed
the project last fall as part of a class
assignment in Forest Soils. "We wanted
to create a project that can be seen and
appreciated for years to come," they
said.

The students are grateful to everyone
who contributed to the project especially
David Hare, manager of residence and
conference services, Dr. Leni Meyer, Dr.
K.C. Yang and Brian Moore from the
Faculty of Forestry and the Forest
Environment, Leonard Roy from The
City of Thunder Bay, Sheldon
Reproduction Centre, and Lakehead
University's Department of Physical
Plant.

ISSN 0828-5225

Lakehead University

Thanks to the initiative of four Forestry
students, Lakehead University has two
new nature trails which showcase the
natural beauty of its campus.

The Nature Trail runs along the McIntyre
River on the north and south sides. It
includes eight information stations and a
large sign which can be seen from the
parking lot of the C.J. Sanders
Fieldhouse.

January 2001 Vol. 18, No. 1
THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO, CANADA

E-mail:frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

.:.:
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Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to
Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P7B 5E1
Publications Mail
Agreement Number 1497073

Photography: Peter Puna

Grant Goltz, a Minnesota-based
archaeologist, soils expert and potter,
conducted a weekend workshop in
October to demonstrate the pottery
techniques he believes were used by
Aboriginal peoples in this region from
600 to 1200 A.O.
He donated three large pots to the
Thunder Bay Potters' Guild collection
which are currently on display in the
Lakehead University Ceramics Studio.

DEVELOPMENT OFFICE
20 COPIES
Events on Campus
www.lakeheadu.ca/-eventswww/
news.html

AGORA - January 2001

Printing: Lakehead Print Shop

Deadline for submissions for
the next issue is
February 1, 2001

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                    <text>February 2001

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

Lakehead University
to graduate
its first class in

Software
Engineering
Technology
by Usree Bhattacharya

Lakehead University is poised at an exciting point
as the first students from its two-year diploma
program in Software Engineering Technology will
graduate in May 2001.
The program has trained and honed the skills of
students in the field since its establishment in the
fall of 1999. It is fast becoming a good educational
option for students from within and outside the
region.
The thrust of the program is on the applied
physical aspects and effects of programming on
engineering systems.

Wayne Koski is a software engineering student enrolled
in the final year of the diploma program. He is shown
here working with Dr. Sultan Siddiqui, a Lakehead
graduate who joined the Faculty of Engineering last
summer.

Dr. Natarajan, a professor of electrical engineering
at Lakehead and one of the instructors, says that
the program involves day-to-day activities of
programming, maintenance, installation,
diagnosis, troubleshooting and interacting with the
hardware and the software in a computer
environment. "Realizing that software design has
critical consequences on engineering systems is
an important theme of the program," he adds.
continued on page 5

Lakehead is the only institution in Canada that offers a unique combination of
Engineering Technology diploma programs followed by two-year post-diploma degree
programs that lead to the Bachelor of Engineering degree in chemical, civil, electrical,
mechanical or software engineering

Lakehead
UN IV E RSI TY

�Lakehead

2

UNIVERSITY

From the President's Desk

by
Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
President

Senate passed a restructuring motion that
will divide the Faculty of Arts and Science
into three new Faculties. This action will be
before the Board of Governors for their
confirmation at their next meeting. While
this represents a compromise response to
the restructuring issue and, therefore, does
not fully meet anyone's expectations
including my own, it nonetheless should be
viewed as a positive step forward. The
University will have a number of small
Faculties, and although the administrative
bureaucracy created may be hard to justify
because one of the purposes of
restructuring was to reduce administrative
structure, the new structure will facilitate the
interaction of academic units and equalize
the balance of power in Deans' Council. I
have hope that new alignments will help us
move toward more inter- and multidisciplinary programs. The small Faculties
must reach out to each other if we are to
successfully meet the rapidly changing
demands of students and society. Our high
school application rate continues to decline
defying the overall increase in these
applicants but we have seen increases in
the 105 category (transfer and mature
students) in recent years. Some of the high
school situation can be attributed to the
Maclean's ranking but some also represents
a slowness to embrace exciting, innovative
and creative academic programming that
would appeal to the interests of today's
students. Our progress is real but painfully
slow at a time when other institutions are
rapidly embracing new configurations,
alliances and programs. The burgeoning
demand for a Health Sciences Degree and
the movement of universities like McMaster
to meet that demand is but one example.
Our most attractive programs tend to be
those where we have established a niche
reputation be it Outdoor Recreation, Parks
and Tourism, Concurrent Education, or
fledgling programs like Bio-molecular
Science. We have good solid programs to
provide the basis for new offerings that

AGORA - February 2001

combine internal and external strengths.
The new PhD in Education provides
such an example but there exist many
such opportunities to link and build new
Lakehead program strengths with other
universities and colleges to form
collaborative new degree programs.
Again, the southern Ontario universities
have shown leadership in this area and
a number of successful collaborative
programs are underway.
The new Advanced Technology and
Academic Centre will give us incredible
potential to build capacity in interactive
distance learning. This should be an
effective two-way communications
process with Lakehead University
courses being delivered off campus
electronically and incoming courses
supporting efforts like the virtual
components of the proposed Medical
School. The potential to tie the
University into a productive learning
environment that will extend well beyond
our physical campus in Thunder Bay is
indeed tremendous.
The time for transition and to establish a
competitive position is short. The
people and most of the tools are in place
or will be shortly. All that is required is a
collective will to make things happen at
a more rapid pace. Perhaps now that
the academic restructuring issue is
behind us, it will be possible to focus on
more critical issues that will impact the
future of our University such as the
outstanding Graduate and
Undergraduate Education objectives in
the Strategic Plan. We must be
prepared to respond as we move into an
era when fiscal resources may be more
compatible with our actual contribution
to the Ontario system and give us the
capacity to support new, fundamentally
needed initiatives. I am optimistic that
we can meet this challenge and that the
funding so desperately needed will soon
be available.

�Lakehead

3

UNIVERSI TY

An Update on Lakehead s Hockey Program
1

High Flying Promotion
A profile on Dr. El Molto and his research
comparing ancient peoples in Egypt,
Mexico and China, was featured in the
January issue of Singapore Airlines' inflight magazine, SilverKris.
Author Elle Andra-Warner writes: "Mollo 's
greatest personal achievement is his role
in the creation and development of
Lakehead University's Paleo-DNA (ancient
DNA) laboratory. A world-class state-ofthe art advanced facility. it is one of only
five in existence to offer fee-for-seNice to
researchers worldwide."
The article describes Mollo as being "one
of the foremost experts in the world in the
field of paleo-population studies• and
goes on to highlight his achievements
since joining the faculty at Lakehead in
1975.
The magazine is seen by about 1 million
passengers who fly Singapore Airlines
each month.

~

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OSAP Default Rate

.0
0

Graduates from Lakehead do a good job
of paying off their OSAP loans. Statistics
issued by the Ministry of Training,
Colleges and Universities show the default
rate on loans issued by the Ontario
Student Assistance Program (OSAP) for
Lakehead University graduates was 7.9%
for the year 2000. The rate for the
university system was 7 .1 % while the rate
for the overall post-secondary system
(including universities, colleges and
private institutions) was 15.7%. The
Ministry's plan is to reduce the oveall
default rate in the post-secondary system
to 10% by the year 2003.

a:

0
0

.c

a..

------Director of Athletics Tom Warden reported to Senate on January 26 that Lakehead
had secured the necessary financing to launch a men's hockey program in the fall
of 2001. It is being funded entirely by private investors and will be run by an elected
Board of Directors which will include a student representative, a faculty
representative, and the director of athletics. If successful, Lakehead will use the
same model to launch a women's program at a future date.
"Although the hockey program will be run like a small business," says Warden, "the
Board will be operating within a framework that fully respects the academic
regulations governing student athletes at Lakehead."
The team will play against other university men's teams in the Ontario University
Athletics (OUA) league and home games will be played in the Fort William Gardens.
Warden is anticipating there will be about 14 games per year and up to six exhibition
games which might include matches involving American teams. He is looking into
providing a shuttle bus seNice between the University and the Gardens.
The majority of the players will be recruited from Northwestern Ontario, although
Lakehead also will be recruiting nationally and internationally - Frances Harding
CJ,4//~lf.fli

111' 1 ,
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2001 CIA U Wrestling Championship
March 1-3, 2001
f!I.' For information and tickets call Athletics at 343-8213
AGORA - February 2001

Superior Science
Lakehead's Superior Science program
has been accepted as the 28th full
member of Actua -- a national
organization dedicated to helping young
Canadians develop skills, attitudes and
character to succeed in school, work and
life.Goals for 2001 include increasing the
number of children involved in the summer
camps to 336 from 302, hiring more staff,
and expanding the travelling workshops to
schools in Northwestern Ontario.

�2

MILESTONES COMPLETED

Forthcoming FeaturC?S:
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from our curr&lt;?nt syst&lt;Zm is s&lt;?nt to
End&lt;?avor to b&lt;? analyz&lt;Zd and
conv&lt;?rt&lt;?d to the n&lt;Zw syst&lt;Zm.

•
•

•
•
•

point and click dC?5ign and pull-down
m1Znus
IZnhanc&lt;?d keyword and Bool&lt;?an
searching
1Zasy downloading and &lt;?-mailing
of rncords
links to full t1Zxt &lt;Zlectronic Journal and
oth&lt;Zr rnsourc1Zs
ability to click on links within
catalogue rncords
smooth inf1Zrfarn to s1Zarching a
s&lt;?lection of oth&lt;Zr library catalogu&lt;?S

Patrons will ba abl&lt;? to:
•
•
•

acc&lt;?SS thlZir library rncords Cch1Zckouts, rncall. lnt&lt;Zrlibrary loans, &lt;?tcJ
rnnC?W and rncall it&lt;Zms
link to el1Zctronic r&lt;ZS&lt;ZrvlZS

Most of th&lt;?s&lt;? f&lt;?atur&lt;?S will bl! availabilZ with th&lt;?
launch of the n&lt;Zw syst&lt;?m on Junf! JO, 2001
and oth&lt;Zrs will be phas&lt;?d in aft&lt;Zr this datf!.

Joan S&lt;!&lt;!lcry

WHAT BENEFITS DOES THE NEW
SYSTEM OFFER?
Voyager is a mod&lt;Zrn system that will
providlZ th&lt;? Library with grnaf&lt;Zr fllZxibility
than is currnntly possibllZ. Many of th&lt;?
s&lt;?rvic1Zs offlZr&lt;Zd by th&lt;? Library CthlZ onllnlZ
cataloguf! or opac, circulation, th&lt;?
W1Zbsit&lt;?, &lt;?tcJ hav&lt;Z thlZ ability to b&lt;?com&lt;Z
onf! s1Zaml&lt;?SS lnt&lt;?rfac&lt;? acc&lt;?ssibllZ through
a graphical browsf!r such as N&lt;Ztscap&lt;? or
Microsoft ExplorlZr. Th&lt;? W&lt;?b catalogue
will mak&lt;Z it possible? to off1Zr a slngllZ point
of acc&lt;?SS to both th&lt;? Library's holdings
and to multim&lt;?dia &lt;Zl&lt;?ctronic information
sourc&lt;?S wher&lt;ZV&lt;Zr they may be.

�VOYAGER LIBRARIES
Htm! is a s&lt;!l&lt;!ct&lt;!d list of librarl&lt;!S that ara
curr&lt;!ntly using End&lt;!avor's Voyag&lt;!r
lnt&lt;!grat&lt;!d Library Systt?m.

NEWS FLASH
From End(!svor corporst&lt;Z ntZWS
(January 12, 200D:

" .. . Ende?avor Information Syste?ms
announce?d today that the? Unive?rsify of
Cambridge?, Cambridge?, England, has
purchase?d the? Voyage?r lnt&lt;!grate?d library
manage?me?nt syste?m for its 97 unive?rsity and
colle?ge? librarle?s. The? Unive?rsity of Cambridge?
Librarie?s will &lt;!mploy Voyage?r to managtZ ov&lt;!r 7
million holdings. "

Library of Congrass
http://catalog.loc.gov/
Univt?rsify of Connt?cticut
http://www.lib.uconn.tZdu
Must?um of Modt?rn Art
http://library.moma.org

,

3

--

-

Univt?rsify of PurdutZ
http://www.lib.purdutZ.C?du/

INUKSHUK SERVER TO
POINT THE WAY

Auburn Univt?rsity
http://aubitZcat.auburn.&lt;!du/

Tht! nt?w library st?rvt!r, a Sun EntC?rpristZ
420R, was st?t up in DC?cC?mbtZr 2000.
lnukshuk, a symbol of the? north and a way of
communicating information and guiding pt!oplt!
to a dt?Stination, was sC?IC?ctC?d as tht! hostnamtZ
for tht! ntZW st?rvt!r.

TRELLIS (Univ. of Watt!rloo/ Univ.
of Gu&lt;!lph/Wllfrad Laurit?r)
http://tral lis I. tug-librari&lt;!S.on .ca/
Que?t!n's Unive?rsity (click on Library
CatalogutZ QCATI
http://llbrary.qutZtZnsu.ca/
National Library of MC?dicine?
http://www.nlm.nlh.gov/locatorplus/
Polyte?chnlc Unive?rsity
http://di bnt?r. poly.C?du/
Unive?rsity of Victoria
http://voyagC?r.library.uvic.ca/
Unive?rsity of PC?nnsylvania
http://www.franklin.library.upC?nn.C?du/

Tht!rt! Is quite? a bit of prornssing powt?r
packe?d into tht! nt?w rack-optlmizt?d Sun
st?rve?r. lnukshuk can btZ considC?rC?d the?
sC?cond fastC?st sC?rvC?r on campus and can make!
1.8 billion calculations pC?r s&lt;?cond with its four
450-MHz UltraSPARC-11™ cC?ntral proct?Ssing
units. Along with 4GB of mC?mory. th&lt;? sC?rv&lt;?r
curr&lt;!ntly boasts 180GB of total hard disk drive?
capacity with morn room for &lt;?Xpansion. Sun
tt?chnology, which includ&lt;?s 40 MB/s Ultra
SCSI disks and Ultra SCSI PCI cards. will
provide? maximum throughput in thtZ systC?m and
the? spC?C?d ntZ&lt;?dC?d for a modC?rn library syste?m.
To mlnimiz&lt;? downtime?, rndundancy has btZC?n
built into tht! st?rvt?r. Tht! hard disk drivczs havtZ
bt?t!n mirrored using a rndundant array of
inC?xptZnslve (or ind&lt;!pC?nd&lt;!nt) disks (RAID)
configuration. If ontZ disk should fail.
information can b&lt;! constructed from tht!
r&lt;?maining disks and tht! s&lt;?rver will conrinutZ to
be fully functional while? the? failC?d disk is being
replarnd. RC?dundant power suppliC?s within

�4
the? se?rve?r also minimize? lnte?rnal syste?m
failure?s and its location in the? machine?
room of the? 13raun Building me?ans that the?
se?rve?r will be? conne?cte?d to an
uninlC?rruptC!d powe?r supply CUPS) that
was installe?d during this past summe?r to
provide? the? machine? room with morn than
two hours of powe?r in case? of C!Xte?rnal
outage?s. SC?ve?ral othe?r rndundant
componants will also minimize?
unne?ce?Ssary downtime? and make? the?
se?rve?r fully available? 24x7.
lnukshuk runs Solaris 8 , the? late?st UNIX
ope?rating syste?m from Sun. A corn suite?
of application softwar&lt;Z include?S Yoyage?r ™
library syste?m software? from Ende?avor,
Oracle? TM rnlatlonal database? managC!mC!nt
systC!m software? and Apache!™ WC!b-sC!rvC!r
software?. This software? will provide! the!
library with an &lt;Zff&lt;ZctivC! manage?me?nt tool
while! C!nabling the! campus community to
take? advantage? of a WC?b-base?d inte?rface?
and sczve?ral f&lt;Zaturns that are? not available?
with the? old library syste?m.
With this spe?ctacular combination of
hardwarn and softwar&lt;Z, lnukshuk will be?
the? corne?rstone? to the? nC!W library syste?m
and will be? able? to point to the? colle?ction of
print re?source?s within the? library as W&lt;ZII as
the? virtual world of information re?source?S.

Michael Hohner

Communication T &lt;Zam
Gisella Scalese - Chair
Prototyping, lntczrfaclng &amp; Conversion
Ian DC?w - Chair
T czchnlcal T czam
Michael Hohne?r - Chair
Training Coordination Team
Gise?lla Scale?se - Chair
Acquisitions/Serials T czam
Louise Wuorine?n - Chair
Cataloguing T earn
Ian DC?W - Chair
Circulation Team
Frank Sebe?Sta - Chair
M.I.S Team CManagemcmt Information
Systczm)
Frank SC?be?sta - Chair
Public Acc2SS Team
Shirley 13one?ca - Chair

LaAehead University Library Voyager News is
publishe!d by Lake!he!ad Unive?rslty Library. We!
we?lcome? comments from our r&lt;Zade?rs. S&lt;?nd
the?m to:

ENDEAVOR IMPLEMENTATION
TEAMS
The! impl&lt;!me?ntation of the? ne?w library
syste?m lnvolve?s carnful planning and
te?sting. Following is a list of commlttC!C!S,
te?ams and groups that have? be?C?n forme?d
to facilitate! this prOCC!SS.

Gisella ScalC?sC!
The Chancellor Paterson Library
955 Olive?r Road
Thunde?r Bay, Ontario Canada
P713 5EI
Tel&lt;Zphona: (807) 343-8147

Managczmcznt lmplemcmtatlon Team
Ian DC!W - Chair/Project ManagC!r

Fax: (807) 343-5001
E-mail: voyag&lt;Zr@lakC?hC?adu.ca

�_

Lakehead

5

UN IV ERS I T Y

Software Engineering continued from page 1
Diploma graduates will be eligible to apply to Lakehead's twoyear post-diploma Bachelor of Engineering degree program in
Software Engineering. This program is more in-depth, and the
emphasis is on an all-round grounding in the engineering
sciences and mathematics with the development of expertise in
the field of software engineering.

Lakehead Team a Finalist
in this year's
Inter-Collegiate Business Comp etition

The core program places equal stress on the hardware and
software aspects of computer systems and software design. The
issue of liability •· or the accountability on the part of computer
professionals to the effects of their software •• is embedded into
the program structure. Students need to understand that their
work has consequences and repercussions for which they are
responsible.
''Traditionally," says Dr. Natarajan, "computer science has
addressed the science of software design but has not broadly
attended to the issue of liability. This is a classic problem that the
program addresses. It is the use of the word 'engineering' in
'software engineering' which infuses a sense of liability and
accountability into the program." The program emphasizes the
applied aspects and the consequential liabilities to be taken into
account in designing software.
Lakehead University is the only institution in Canada that offers a
unique combination of an Engineering Technology diploma
program followed by a two-year post-diploma degree program
that leads to a Bachelor of Engineering degree in chemical, civil,
electrical, mechanical or software engineering.
Dr. Sedov, a professor of mechanical engineering at Lakehead
and coordinator of the software engineering program, says that
"an attractive practical feature of these programs is the diploma
which, after only two years of study at university, can give
graduates a career opportunity in engineering technology."
Dr. Natarajan concurs: "Students who do not wish to continue
their studies are immediately marketable after the diploma." There
is a wealth of career opportunities for diploma graduates who can
seek employment in the diverse fields of maintenance of
computer systems, installation of software/hardware, elementary
programming, data entry, database management, and computeraided engineering.
It is unarguable that market trends heavily favour professionals in
the field of Information Technology and graduates of the program
will be well equipped to deal with the demands of industry.
For the first time this spring, engineering degree students will
also be afforded the opportunity of enrolling in a co-op option.
This new program will allow qualified students to undergo an
internship for up to 20 months at major companies like IBM
Canada and Nortel. The co-op option degree program is
designed to provide students with in-depth educational grounding
as well as valuable work experience.

ICBC Faculty advisor Dr. Calin Valsan joins his winning team
(l-r): Melanie Prowse, Ryan Davis, Melanie Loukusa, Arianne
St. Jacques, Andrea Tarsitano, and Jeff Dubois.
Lakehead Business Administration students ranked among the
top six teams at this year's Inter-Collegiate Business
Competition (ICBC) organized by Queen's University.
Six students qualified for the final round of the Finance,
Business Ethics, and Debating events: Melanie Loukusa and
Ryan Davis took the "silver," ending second only to the
University of Manitoba in the Finance event; Andrea Tarsitano
and Melanie Prowse took the "bronze" in the business Ethics
event, coming in third after McGill University and University of
Calgary; Jeff Dubois and Arianne St. Jacques came in fourth in
the debating event after Memorial University, Queen's, and at a
razor thin distance from the University of Calgary. Their biggest
achievement was the fiery contest of wits with Queen's
debating team, whose Thunder Bay students had the time of
their life competing against our Thunder Bay students.
Overall, our Lakehead business team ranked among the top
six business teams, which explicitly puts our undergraduate
business program at Lakehead among the best in Canada, on
equal footing with Queen's, University of Calgary, and McGill
University.

Usree Bhattacharya is one of several students participating in
SPARK - LAKEHEAO, a student writing program sponsored by
The Chronicle-Journal.

AGORA - February 2001

•• Dr. Calin Valsan
Faculty of Business Administration

�Lakehead

6

UNI VERS IT Y

Opinion

The Maclean's Ranking
One Lakehead Graduate Speaks Out
In this letter to the managing editor of
Maclean's, Erik Knutsen comments on
the education he received at Lakehead
University and questions the criteria
Macfean's uses to rank universities.
Knutsen graduated in 1996 with an
Honours Bachelor of Arts degree. He
went on to study law at Osgoode Hall
Law Schoof and Harvard Law Schoof
and is now teaching legal writing,
research, and advocacy at Florida State
University College of Law in Tafahassee.
Some of the most important components
in the decision to attend a Canadian
undergraduate institution are the
personal, subjective criteria which guide a
prospective undergraduate student in
choosing a university which will have a
unique and personal impact on the
student, propelling him or her to succeed.
These criteria include such things as
opportunities for close faculty contact,
location of the university, and a feeling
that one is more than just a student
number at an overly large institution. I
believe that, while the current Maclean's
categorical ranking does attempt to hint at
some of these criteria, it misses the mark
in accounting for these important factors
which can really only be discovered by
digging beneath the numerical scores to
see what really does happen at a
Canadian university. I recognize that these
factors are not easily quantifiable, unlike
many of the apparently objective factors
currently used by Maclean's such as the
number of library holdings per student or
the number of grants awarded to a
professor.
Indeed, as the ranking stands, I am
troubled by the fact that Maclean's does
not at least acknowledge more subjective
criteria and flag them as vital
considerations for those who are reading
your magazine as an instrumental source
of information in making the decision to
pursue an undergraduate education at a

"In choosing to complete an undergraduate education in Canada, " says Erik Knutsen, "it
may not matter where one goes, as Jong as one receives an academic experience which
is enriching, challenging and deeply personal. "
Canadian institution. Perhaps Maclean's
may wish to consider working other
subjective criteria and personal accounts
from students into its ranking in order to
flesh out many of the currently statistical
rankings with more experiential reports of
how each separate categorical ranking
actually plays out at each university. I
understand that this addition may appear
to be less objective but its apparent lack of
objectivity may be outweighed by its utility
in grounding the numerical rankings in
palpable affirmations from students and
faculty currently at each institution.
Most specifically, I was compelled to write
because my Alma Mater, Lakehead
University, appears to be ranked last in the
"Primarily Undergraduate "category. By
many of your objective criteria measures,
Lakehead does not fare well. Where
Lakehead University is special and
inimitably important to me and to other
alumni is in its ability to provide me with a
highly personal and intimate academic

AGORA-February 2001

experience in a unique northern setting.
Rankings aside, I respectfully suggest that
what also matters to a soon-to-be
undergraduate are the following important
subjective factors:
• opportunities for uniquely personal
contact with an open, attentive faculty;
• treatment as a unique individual,
not merely as a student number who
paid his or her tuition fees;
• vicinity to home, family, loved ones,
familiar surroundings;
• provincial location {should one leave
one's home province and pay out-ofprovince tuition fees?);
• urban setting (downtown Toronto or more
remote northern Ontario);
Perhaps a prospective student would be
far more likely to choose an
undergraduate institution based on one of
the above factors than on how much
money the university spends per student

... continued on page 7

�_

Lakehead

7

U N IV E RSITY

Mac/ean's continued from page 6
or what percentage of average class sizes
the university offers.
For example, one cannot forget that many
Canadian universities, Lakehead
University prime among them, fulfil a
specific regional need for post-secondary
education. Your country-wide reputation
survey, which counts for a large proportion
of the university 's final ranking score, may
therefore account for some of the low
ranking of a university like Lakehead _
which serves the community of northern
Ontario. One may counter that your
measurements of, say, class size, are an
indication of the undergraduate
experience. Smaller classes supposedly
breed greater intimacy with faculty. But
that class size measurement is a
university-wide measure and does not
include whether or not the professor is
ever there for office hours, whether the
professor knows you by name, whether
the professor cares if you are struggling,
or whether the professor will know you
well enough to write that required
reference letter for graduate school
admission.
Why Lakehead University was so integral
to my academic experience is because I
am continually reminded of the individual,
truly personal attention and
encouragement I received during my four
years there. I attended many upper year
classes, mostly in English literature, where
there were 30 students or more and still
the professor knew every one of us. I do
not mean just knew our names. I mean
met with us in his or her office, had coffee
with us, organized parties at his or her
home, went with us to movies about works
we were studying, and said hello to us in
the local shopping malls. They cared.
They challenged us on an individual level,
devoid of pretentiousness, and treated us
almost as fellow academic colleagues.
Our views counted. Our views were
remembered. We were made to feel we
could talk with these people on an even
playing field and that made us retain this
uniquely personal academic discourse
throughout our undergraduate educations.

I do not know how one would objectively
measure that. Class size is not the tell-tale
measurement. Certainly reputation figures
did not spell that out. Indeed, in your
rankings, this special phenomenon at
Lakehead University did not show through
at all.
Although my own experiences after
graduation from Lakehead University may
be uniquely individual in nature, my briefly
mentioning them may help to demonstrate
that, depending upon one 's educational
needs and goals, it might not matter
wheth_er or not one attends university
number one or university number
twenty-one. Indeed, perhaps university
number twenty-one might well be the
better choice, depending upon the
circumstances. Please note that I mention
my own experiences not to tell my story
but only to flesh out how subjective criteria
may be quite important in choosing an
undergraduate institution which sets
proper academic foundations from which
to explore one's goals after graduation.
It is the heartfelt and personal
encouragement I received at Lakehead
University that I feel was so integral in
propelling me to earn two law degrees and
seek a law faculty appointment. Lakehead
University instilled in me both the
necessary skills to seek academic
challenges and the confidence to strive for
academic challenges. I earned my first law
degree at Osgoode Hall Law School after
graduation from Lakehead University in
1996 with an Honours Bachelor of Arts in
English. Three years later, I earned a
Masters of Law at Harvard Law School. I
was fortunate to receive a number of
offers of admission to study for my
master's, including offers from Oxford
University, the London School of
Economics, and New York University
School of Law. After graduating from
Harvard last year, I sought out a law
school faculty position and am currently
teaching legal writing, research, and
advocacy at Florida State University
College of Law in Tallahassee, Florida.

To the best of my knowledge, having an
undergraduate education from Lakehead
University was never a stumbling block in

AGORA - February 2001

any admissions process or academic
appointment competitions at any
Canadian, American, or British university.
No one said otherwise to me. I think this is
something that students struggling to
choose an undergraduate institution would
like to know. In choosing to complete an
undergraduate education in Canada, it
may not matter where one goes, as long
as one receives an academic experience
which is enriching, challenging, and
deeply personal. Depending upon one's
educational goals, Lakehead University
has incredible potential for generating that
experience, more so perhaps because of
its small size and more remote location.
The Canadian university scene is vastly
different then that of the United States, a
country that appears to put a great deal of
faith in popular magazine university
rankings to assist in categorizing the
literally hundreds of American universities
which differ widely in standards and
experiences they offer potential students.
In Canada, we are blessed with a largely
publicly funded and accountable university
system. Perhaps one may be splitting
hairs by comparing the likes of most
Canadian universities at the
undergraduate level, and this is something
that your readers may wish to know. The
differences in final scores of the
universities is really only a difference of
slight degree on a very small continuum.
I hope you will consider my suggestion to
attempt to get behind the numerical
rankings with some personal experiential
reports which account for the subjective
criteria many potential Canadian
undergraduates consider as important.
In closing, one may think that this is
simply a letter from a Lakehead University
alumnus who is shocked and troubled by
the very low ranking of his Alma Mater. On
the contrary, it is a Lakehead University
alumnus who is shocked and troubled by
the fact that, through the use of only
quantifiably objective criteria not bolstered
with experiential reports, Maclean's ranks
last his Alma Mater that he has always,
and still does, consider to be number one.

•• Erik S. Knutsen, HBA, LLB, LLM

�_

Lakehead

8

U NI V ERSI TY

BOARD OF GOVERNORS

Women's Studies Program

Call for Nominations/Applications

Brown Bag Lecture Series

Lakehead is seeking interested and
qualified individuals to serve on its Board
of Governors for as early as September
2001. Terms are for three years and
Governors are expected to participate
both at the full Board level and at the level
of standing committees. The latter can
require participation at working meetings
on a monthly basis, in addition to the
minimum six meetings a year of the full
Board.
Persons wishing to be considered for an
appointment to the Lakehead University
Board of Governors should submit a brief
curriculum vitae, a statement of why they
believe they would be effective governors,
and the names and contact numbers of
two character references, to the Board of
Governors' Nominating Committee c/o
Secretary of the Board, Lakehead
University, 955 Oliver Rd., Thunder Bay,
Ontario, P7B 5E1; by fax to {807) 3438075, or by e-mail to
bdsensec@lakeheadu.ca
The Nominating Committee will be
reviewing applications and nominations in
early spring. Candidates to be considered
will be contacted for personal interviews at
a mutually satisfactory time.

ALUMNI 1Sh ANNUAL CURLING
FUNDSPIEL
Friday, March 23, 2001
Port Arthur Curling Club
$40 per individual/ $160 per team
Chinese Food Buffet
To register please phone 343-8155

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY
COUNCIL {LUCC) Children's March
Break Blitz

Friday, February 16, 2001
11 :30 a.m. -12:30 p.m. RB-1047
Dr. Richard Berg, Department of
Philosophy -- "The American Women's
Movement in 1960s Cultural Context."
Friday, March 2, 2001
11 :30 a.m. -12:30 p.m. RB-1047
Dr. Lori Chambers, Women's Studies
Program -- "Psychologists Construct
Unwed Motherhood"
Friday, March 23, 2001
11:30a.m.-12:30p.m. RB-1047
Dr. Patricia Jasen, Department of History,
"Malignant Histories: Psychosomatic
Medicine and the Female Cancer Patient
in the Post-War Era."

Spaghetti Bridges and Paper Airplanes:
Lakehead Celebrates National
Engineering Week
March 3-11
Grade 7 and 8 students in Thunder Bay
are being invited to take part in four
competitions on March 8th and 9th in
celebration of National Engineering Week.
The competitions will be designed and run
by student chapters of the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers; the
Canadian Society for Chemical
Engineering, the Canadian Society for
Civil Engineering, and the Canadian
Society for Mechanical Engineering.
Overall coordination will be handled by
the Engineering Student Society.
For more information, contact Dr. Seimer
Tsang (Mechanical Engineering) at 3438761.

Date: March 12-16, 2001
Ages: 5-12

Cost: $12/day

Location: Senate Chambers (UC-1001)
Drop Off: 8 a.m. to 9 a.m.
Pick-Up: 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Crafts/Winter excursions/Laboratory tours

AGORA - February 2001

Lakehead
UNIVERSITY
February 2001 Vol. 18, No.2
THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO, CANADA
ISSN 0828-5225

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications and distributed
monthly September through June. We
welcome news and other submissions
from our readers. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8075
E-mail:frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca
Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to
Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P7B 5E1
Publications Mail
Agreement Number 1497073
Photography: Peter Puna
Printing: l akehead Print Shop

Deadline for submissions for
the next issue is
March 1, 2001

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                    <text>May 2001

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

~
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Two to Receive
Honorary Degrees
at Convocation
Saturday, May 26th
by Frances Harding
A Pulitzer prize-winning author and a renowned wildlife
biologist will receive Honorary Degrees from Lakehead
University on Saturday, May 26 at the Community Auditorium.

Carol Shields

Dr. Jack Thomas

Carol Shields, the author of The Stone Diaries and other
novels, will receive an Honorary Doctor of Letters degree
during the morning Convocation ceremony which begins at
9:00 a.m. Her address to the graduating class will be delivered
by her daughter Catherine Shields.
Dr. Jack Thomas, former chief of the U.S. Forest Service,
wildlife biologist, and author based at the University of
Montana, will receive an Honorary Doctor of Science degree
during the afternoon ceremony beginning at 2:30 p.m.
Two community leaders will have the title 'Fellow of Lakehead
University' conferred upon them. During the morning, the title
will be awarded to Dr. Jim Colquhoun, a physician and teacher
who taught in the Northern Ontario Medical Program up until
1990 and served on the Lakehead University Board of
Governors for 14 years, including two years as chair.

Dr. Jim Colquhoun

TonySeuret

(

During the afternoon, the same title will be awarded to Tony
Seuret, vice-president and general manager of Thunder Bay
Television and a former professor of Business Administration
at Lakehead University, who served on the Board of
Governors for 16 years, including two years as chair.
The Alumni Honour Award will be given to Peter Prior
(Bus.Dip.'70), managing director and vice-president, national
operations, of BMO Nesbitt Burns. Peter Prior is a member of
the Lakehead University Foundation, actively raising funds for
the construction of the Advanced Technology and Academic
Centre.

For more information contact the Office of the Registrar.
Peter Prior

Lakehead
UN I VE R SITY

�Lakehead

2

UNIV ERS ITY

From the President's Desk
Much has happened since my last
message in the Agora. The Nortel
Networks/Bell Canada agreement was
finally announced and the IP telephony
component is being installed. The
provincial government has committed to
a northern medical school and the
NORMS Liaison Council has been
preparing a process proposal for
implementation. The Lakehead
representatives on the Council, John
Whitfield, John Augustine, Blair
Schoales and Jim Kraemer, are to be
commended along with their colleagues
in Sudbury for their efforts. Bill
Mccready, chair of NOMP, has rejoined
the Council. Bill was a member of the
George Expert Panel and could not
participate on Council during that
appointment because of the conflict of
interest involved.
The provincial budget contained
significant news for the post-secondary
education sector. The government has
committed to full cost funding for growth
in the universities and colleges through
2003/04. It has made additional funds
available for facilities renewal and
increased the northern grant by 10 per
cent. However, our primary issue of
unfunded students has not been
resolved and unless it is in next year's
budget, with the balanced budget
requirement Lakehead University will be
unable to meet its current obligations.
While I will continue to make the case for
our University, we must be prepared to
deal with the consequences of current
policy decisions. It is true that growth at
Lakehead will be funded and so
recruitment and retention become even
more critical elements of self
determination. We will continue to
position the University for revenue
generation resulting from joint venture
and development opportunities. The

bottom line is that we must find ways not
only to balance the budget but also to
pay down the accumulated debt. Until
the Ministry of Finance acknowledges
the inequities that exist within the
university system and addresses them, it
will constrain Lakehead's ability to foster
economic development in the region
through its academic activities.
To summarize: in 2001/02, Lakehead
University's budget is achievable;
planning for the 2002/03 budget must
acknowledge both the balanced budget
requirement and possible continued lack
of support for our unfunded BIU's; and
there will be every effort made to
convince government of Lakehead's
special circumstances. I remain
optimistic that the case can be made.
The Ministry of Training, Colleges and
Universities fully appreciates our
situation and tried very hard to convince
Finance as well as Management Board
to fund the unfunded BIU's. The
message of the unfairness of the current
funding policy must be persistent and
clear. Every one of us has to impress
this on government whenever there is an
opportunity.
Annual events that have recently taken
place reinforced the importance of the
people of Lakehead University and the
long-term commitments they have made
to the institution. Both the Service
Awards' Reception and the QuarterCentury Club Dinner are testament to
the strong attachment that individuals
have with the University. It is always a
pleasure to recognize such long-term
dedication.
Another Convocation is almost upon us
and, although a joyous occasion, this
year will mark John Whitfield's last
Convocation as a member of the
administration. John will be
appropriately honoured at a special

AGORA - May 2001

by
Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
President

retirement party on Friday, May 25, but
I want to thank him for his fine service to
this University and for the wisdom and
understanding he has brought to the
Administrative Executive Committee and
his most recent role as vice-president
(research and development). John is a
dedicated, principled and kind person
whose counsel will be missed at AEC.
I thank him for all that he has done for
Lakehead University and for the
assistance that he has provided me
these past three years.
A ground-breaking ceremony for the
Advanced Technology and Academic
Centre will take place next month. This
will s1gnal the start of construction and a
fundamental change in traffic circulation
on campus. As we move to implement
the recommendations of a study on
vehicular and pedestrian traffic,
Lakehead should become a safer and
more pedestrian-friendly environment.
So, while we continue to face fiscal
challenges, the University is moving
ahead on many fronts. We expect many
more positive events in the months
ahead.

�Lakehead

3

U N I V ERSI T Y

Prostate Cancer Research
The Prostate Cancer Research
Foundation of Canada has awarded funds
to a group of scientists at the Northwestern
Ontario Regional Cancer Centre and
Lakehead University. The aim of the project
is to study damages to a subset of genes
in cells of the prostate as a potential early
detection method.

Achieving Convergence
Emerging Technologies

I

Dr. Bob Thayer (Kinesiology) is part of a
research team that includes Dr. Sunil
Gulavita (Radiation Oncologist), Dr. John
Th'ng (Research Scientist), and Dr.
Mamdouh Abdel-Malak (Urologist).

I

\

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Employment Rates Better Than
Average
The results of the recent University
Graduate Employment Rate Survey show
that Lakehead University's 1998 graduates
have performed better than the provincial
average of university graduates in terms
of employment. Lakehead placed second
in the province in the six-month
employment rate for 1998 graduates.
The survey measures the employment
rate of students employed or looking for
work six months after graduation and two
years after graduation. It focuses on the
employment rate of students employed or
looking for work, as opposed to students
who are continuing their education or are
out of the work force for personal reasons.
At six months, 95.9 per cent of Lakehead
graduates were employed versus 94.6 per
cent for the system overall. At two years,
97.3 per cent of Lakehead graduates were
employed. The provincial average for the
two-year mark was 97.2 per cent.

LUSU President Re-elected
Jeremy Salter will serve another year as
LUSU president. Joining him on the
executive for 2001-02 is Dan Mackie, vice
president finance and Jen Keystone, vice
president student issues. Eric McGoey will
serve as editor of The Argus.

"Lakehead University is the first learning institution in North America to adopt
IP telephony on such a vast scale."
- Terry Mosey, President, Bell Canada (Ontario)

On March 20, 2001 , Lakehead University announced an innovative partnership with
Nortel Networks and Bell Canada that will see the campus become the site of the
largest installation of voice-over Internet protocol (VoIP) telephony in North America
and an important regional training centre.
The new system builds on Lakehead's existing communications infrastructure, migrating
it to an IP-based infrastructure. The new, converged network, including 2,100 IP phones,
totally integrates Lakehead's voice and data information into one common network.
Users will be able to effectively collaborate on research, work together on projects and
talk on the telephone through their computers (software-based PC phone); regardless
of whether they're in a laboratory, an office or a dormitory.
What does this agreement do for Lakehead?
As a partner with Bell and Nortel, Lakehead will be an integral player in the on-going
research, training, development and marketing associated with Internet protocol
communications technology. As a result, Lakehead University will be at the forefront of
communications technology providing its students, faculty and staff with a distinct
advantage over those at other institutions.

AGORA - May 2001

�Lakehead

4

UNIVERSITY

The African Millennium Box Project
The Little Donation that Grew and Grew
by Nancy Angus, Co-ordinator, Communications and Public Affairs

Dr. Douglas Thom, a professor in the Faculty of Education, will
remember the year 2000. He applied his leadership ideas to a
research and development project of shipping educational and
medical goods to schools and hospitals in Ghana, West Africa,
and Uganda, East Africa. His "little" project started as a box of
books to donate to schools in Uganda. Thom's personal
venture to mark the Year 2000 grew from a one box donation
to boxes weighing in at a total of 30 tons. His African
Millennium Box project sent 1O tons of books, computer
equipment, and medical supplies to Tamale, Ghana, and saw
20 tons of the same plus hospital equipment successfully
arrive in Kampala, Uganda. People and organizations locally,
provincially, nationally and worldwide assisted with the effort
which before it was over, involved all of land, air and sea travel
via three routes.
The origin of the project was in 1996 when Thom, whose
teaching areas of expertise include educational administration,
leadership, and finance, spoke at a conference in Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia. At the conference, a colleague from
Uganda asked him if he might be able to help the Ugandan
schools. They kept in touch over the years and in November,
1999, Thom put a box outside his Lakehead University office
inviting students and faculty to drop off donations of books.
"Around that same time, I read a feature article in Newsweek.
It was called The Plague Years and reading about the
devastation of AIDS and wars on the African people,
especially the children, had a profound impact on me," said
Thom. "I knew that I could collect books and more. To my
surprise, people started calling me. School boards had used
computers, hospitals were replacing some of their aging
equipment, and many organizations wanted to make sure
supplies, equipment, and books found a new life somewhere
else. I had also learned that the donated material had to be in
working order for Africa so we spent considerable time
ensuring the computers and the hospital equipment were
operable."
Getting the donations was one thing but transporting them
proved to be a tale of adventure with risk, serendipity, and
some anxious moments. Initially, goods were flown by Air
Canada on a route from Thunder Bay to Washington, DC, and
then by Ethiopian Airlines across the Atlantic to Uganda.
Then, transport companies donated their services to truck
goods from Thunder Bay to Toronto. Once in Toronto, goods
were prepared for travel on two other routes. Air Canada flew

Many people on campus helped Dr. Doug Thom (right) with
his Millennium Project including (l-r): Stan Nemec,
manager of printing and mail services; Frank Sebesta,
supervisor, administrative services/circulation, Chancellor
Paterson Library; Dawn O/dford, a graduate student in the
Faculty of Education; and Roland Morais, security

the Ghanaian donation to Heathrow Airport, UK, where it was
taken across the English Channel to the Netherlands and
loaded onto a container ship and transported down the west
coast of Africa to Ghana. Other goods were loaded on a
container ship at the Toronto dockyards and transported up
the St. Lawrence River over to the Mediterranean and down
the east coast of Africa to Uganda.
There were potential roadblocks: getting through customs;
airline strikes; airport ston:!ge fees; goods never getting to the
children they were intended for; corruption along the route;
and international intrigue. Some interesting characters were
involved - example, Sintaro. "At one point, part of the
project was put into the hands of Sintaro, a Ghanaian based in
Australia who routinely works with airport and container ship
officials. Sintaro and I kept up an e-mail correspondence. It
was challenging for me not to be able to oversee the whole
operation -- I had to rely on Sintaro and his crew, " said Dr.
Thom, "but once the goods made it to Ghana and his role was
completed, this person exited as mysteriously as he had
entered the scene."

AGORA - May 2001

continued on page 5

�_

Lakehead

5

U N IV ERSITY

Box Project continued from page 4

Doug Thom learned a great deal
throughout the year 2000. He learned
patience and the feeling of frustration
that you can never do enough to help
others. But he believes that people can
make a difference. His team's example
of perseverance and staying focused on
the goal are qualities that we all can all
learn from in this new year, a new
century and a new millennium.

Editor's Note:

Dr. Doug Thom has recently been asked
to become involved in a project similar
to his African one with respect to
helping poor schools in China. To
discuss the matter further this month, he
is travelling to London, England, where
the Dr. Douglas John Thom Collection of
Scholarly Works is housed.
Many people contributed to The African
Millennium Box Project including:
Thunder Bay Catholic District School Board,
universities, publishers, hospitals and
community health units, City of Thunder Bay,
Air Canada, Ethiopian Airlines,
Courtesy Freight Systems, Erb Transport
Limited, the Wing Group, Bowater, Dagbon
Network, the Sisters of St. Joseph, the
Friends of Makerere, the Uganda Council for
Educational Administration,
Latif Abdul-Rahman, Jim Arnot, Professor
Emeritus David Bates, Justin and Paul
BeauParlant, David Belrose, John
Bonofiglio, Mary Boyer, Aldina DaRosa,
Andrew Douglas, John Gourley,
Dr. Jim Haines, Craig Hardy, Becky Hurley,
John Hutton, Tania Killian, Dr. Daniel
Klassen, Elsie Klassen, Dr. Zeng Lin, Roland
Morais, Stan Nemec, Dawn Oldford, Dr. Julia
O'Sullivan, Dr. Medhat Rahim,
Dr. Fenley Scott, Frank Sebesta, Joan
Seeley, Dr. Teresa Socha, Eydie Stewart,
Professor Linda Strey, Dr. Bob Sweet, Susan
Thom, Wes Thom,
Or. Marta Vargas, Professor Dolores Wawia,
Sheila Wilson, and members of senior
administration of Lakehead University.

Research
Lakehead is pleased to announce the
nomination of the three Canada Research
Chairs.

NSERC Tier II Canada Research Chair
Nominee: Dr. Heidi Schraft

The Canada Research Chairs (CRC)
Program was established by the
Government of Canada to foster worldclass centres of research excellence in the
global, knowledge-based economy.

Dr. Schraff received her Dr. med. vet. at
the University of Zurich in 1991. She is
currently an assistant professor at the
University of Guelph in the Department of
Food Science. Her work in molecular food
biology involves molecular microbiology
work aimed at sustaining and improving
the safety of our food supply. Her research
activities are concentrated primarily in
three areas: a) biofilm formation by
foodborne microorganisms, b) coldadaptation of Bacillus cereus and other
foodborne pathogens and c) molecular
techniques for detection, typing and
ecological studies of bacteria.

Lakehead's nominees will be assessed by
a College of Reviewers in Ottawa. If
accepted, they will be named Canada
Research Chairs and Lakehead University
will be granted funds to support their
research programs.
NSERC Tier I Canada Research Chair
Nominee: Dr. Ellie E. Prepas

Dr. Prepas received her PhD from the
University of Toronto in 1980 and is
presently a professor (Limnology) at the
University of Alberta in the Department of
Biological Sciences. Prepas' research
focus is sustainable water management
where she brings over 20 years of
experience on the Boreal Plain. One of her
goals is to extend this research to the
Boreal Shield and landscapes to the south
in Ontario and Quebec.
NSERC Tier II Canada Research Chair
Nominee: Dr. Lionel Catalan

Dr. Catalan received his PhD in Chemical
Engineering from the University of
Waterlo o in 1993. Before joining
Lakehead University as an assistant
professor in November 1999, he acquired
five-and-a-half years ofextensive industrial
and research experience as a project
leader and a scientist with the Noranda
Technology Centre in Point-Claire,
Quebec. Dr. Catalan's expertise and
research interests focus on waste
management related to the mining,
metallurgical, and petroleum industries
and the subsequent environmental
impacts created by such industries.

AGORA -- May 2001

Letters
I want lo congratulate Erik Knutson on his
article in the February issue concerning the
Maclean's rankings.
I am a graduate of three universities, the
University of British Columbia, the University
of Toronto, and the University of London
(England). I taught part-time in the graduate
schools of UBC and McGill University and
was a full-time faculty member at the
University of Saskatchewan and Lakehead
University and was also a Fellow at the
University of Minnesota in the USA. I can
say unequivocally that the Lakehead MA is
equal to that of any university I was
associated with and that goes for the
undergrad program too.

-- Hugh McLeod, Prof. Emeritus of
Psychology
To all friends and colleagues, I want to
express my sincere gratitude for the special
part each of you played in saying Auf
Wiedersehn. Thank you to everyone who
took the time to offer warm good wishes.

-- Bev Stefureak, Assistant Secretary,
Governing Council, U ofT

�Lakehead

6

U NI VERSI TY

From Canaries to
Black-billed Cuckoos
A Profile of Biologist Dr. Janice Hughes
by Carrie Gibbons
How do you raise
your child to be a
biologist?
Although Dr.
, Janice Hughes
acknowledges that
there were many
influences that
directed her
interests to the field of biology, one of
the first was her father. "My father was
always very much into science. He
never told me bedtime stories; he used
to teach me about continental drift and
about Charles Darwin." Obviously
these unconventional childhood tales
had an impact, for in September 2000
she joined the faculty at Lakehead
University and now works as an
assistant professor in the Department
of Biology and in the Faculty of Forestry
and the Forest Environment.
Hughes studied image arts at Ryerson
Polytechnic in Toronto and was self
employed as an architectural and
industrial photographer when her
husband gave her a pet Canary. The little
bird changed her life. "I found this Canary
so interesting that it dawned on me that
maybe I should go back to school." After
taking her first university course, Hughes
knew she wanted an academic career and
finished her undergraduate honours
degree in ecology and environmental
biology at the University of Toronto in twoand-a-half years. "I skipped my master's
degree and applied directly to the PhD
program at the University of Toronto."
Where do birds come into all of this?
Besides the infamous Canary, her interest
was
encouraged
during
her
undergraduate years and later at the

,..,
THE

ROM

flHD GUIOt TO

bird

graduate level where her advisor, Dr. J.C.
Barlow, was the curator of birds at the
Royal Ontario Museum. Hughes
completed her doctoral dissertation on the
evolution of brood parasitism in New World
Cuckoos. (Brood parasitism is the
fascinating process whereby an adult
Cuckoo lays its egg in the nest of another
bird. When the egg hatches, the Cuckoo
offspring kills the host chicks and is
subsequently raised by the host parent.)
Dr. Hughes continued on at the Royal
Ontario Museum as an NSERC
Postdoctoral Fellow and Research
Associate where, along with field work in
Canada and the United States, she did
research in the molecular systematics
laboratory. One of her many projects was
on the phylogenetic classification of the

AGORA •• May 2001

Hoatzin which "was considered one of the
most vexing problems in avian systematics
for 200 years." The Hoatzin had been
deemed most closely related to the
Cuckoos, but Hughes was not convinced
of this position. She examined numerous
bird species, very long DNA sequences
(5,487 nucleotide base pairs) from both
mitochondrial and nuclear genomes, and
appropriate models of molecular evolution
determined empirically using computer
software created for this purpose. She
concluded that this rather strange South
American bird should not be classified
among the Cuckoos or Galliformes (fowllike birds). It was instead most similar to
the Turacos, a bird family from subSaharan Africa.
Janice Hughes is the author of the Royal
Ontario Museum's Guide to the Birds of
Ontario published by McClelland and
Stewart. She says researching and writing
about more than 350 birds was one of the
best parts of this project: "We're lucky in
Ontario because we're centrally located
in the continent and because of the Great
Lakes there is a huge diversity of birds
here, far more that you would otherwise
think'.'
In terms of the future direction for her own
research at Lakehead, Hughes would like
to start a long-term study of the Blackbilled Cuckoo found in this region.
'Whal a lot of people don't know is that
there are Cuckoos up here. We really don't
know much about it. There are a couple
of little papers where someone has
observed three or four nests, but nobody
has devoted their life to it."
The location of Lakehead University will
certainly give Janice Hughes the
opportunity to do just that. "Being able to
have a field population five miles down the
road is such a good opportunity. One of
the best things that Lakehead has to offer
is outside the window -- my Black-bills are
out there; the forest is out there."
Carrie Gibbons is one of many students
taking part in SPARK, a student writing
program at Lakehead funded by The
Chronicle-Journal

�Lakehead

7

U NIVERSI TY

Dr. Reino Pulkki
Appointed
Dean of the
Faculty of Forestry and the Forest Environment

Congratulations
The following professors will be
awarded the title Professor Emeritus/
Professor Emerita at Convocation:
Prof. Frederick Anderson

Professor Emeritus of Economics
Prof. Harry Elmslie

After a nation-wide search, Lakehead
University has selected Dr. Reino Pulkki
to be dean of the Faculty of Forestry and
the Forest Environment.

Professor Emeritus of Business
Administration
Dr. Minoru Hasegawa

Professor Emeritus of Computer
Science

Reino Pulkki is a graduate of Lakehead
University (BScF'78) who continued his
education at the University of Helsinki
(MScF'80, LicScF'82, DrScFor '85) in
Finland.

Prof. Lillian Hoffman

Professor Emerita of Nursing
Dr. Claude Johnson

A member of the Lakehead faculty since
1987, Pulkki has a distinguished record
of service to the University and to the
forestry industry.

Professor Emeritus of Civil Engineering
Dr. Brian Phillips

Professor Emeritus of Geography

He is currently chair of the Canadian
Woodlands Forum, Central Branch, a
member of the Advisory Committee of
the Central Woodlands Magazine, a
member of the editorial board of the
International Journal of Forest
Engineering, and a member of the Board
of Examiners of the Ontario Professional Foresters Association.

\

His awards include the Logging and Sawmilling Journal Award for the best English
paper delivered at a Canadian Pulp &amp; Paper Association Woodlands Section Branch
Meeting (1997), the W.A.E. Peplar Award for the best paper of the current year on
improving the utilization of wood (1989), and the Canadian Institute of Forestry Gold
Medal (1978). He has also been named as an honourary foreign member of the
Finnish Society of Forest Science, and recently was appointed a visiting professor in
forest science (forest engineering) at the University of Stellenbosch, in South Africa.
Pulkki sees a number of challenges and opportunities ahead. In a recent
presentation at the annual meeting of the Northwestern Ontario Section of the
Canadian Institute of Forestry, he spoke about the need to improve public
awareness of how sustainable forest management is practised now and how it must
be practised in the future.
Pulkki would like to see Lakehead make better use of innovative and effective
methods for developing student skills and to further develop partnerships to help in
the delivery of programs.
"Graduate training in forestry is critical to develop the research potential of the
country. To be able to have our full impact we must develop a PhD program in
forestry," he says.
Pulkki succeeds Dr. David Euler who retired from Lakehead University in December.

AGORA -- May 2001

Dr. Douglas Rabb

Professor Emeritus of Philosophy
Dr. Paul Satinder

Professor Emeritus of Psychology
Dr. Edson Setliff

Professor Emeritus of Forestry
Dr. Neil Weir

Professor Emeritus of Chemistry
Dr. John Whitfield

Professor Emeritus of Mathematical
Sciences

Leaders of the Pack

For the second consecutive year,
Lakehead awarded its highest honour
to the same two students athletes.
Runner Ria Dienning picked up the
title of Female Athlete of the Year,
while runner and wrestler Aaron
Coutts was awarded the title Male
Athlete of the Year.
Both varsity athletes are Academic All
Canadians -- that is. they maintained
an average of 80 per cent while taking
part in varsity sports.
This year, Lakehead University had 14
Academic All Canadians.

�Lakehead

8

U NIVER SI TY

Lakehead
UNIVERSITY
May 2001 Vol. 18, No.4
THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO, CANADA
ISSN 0828·5225

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications and distributed
monthly September through June. We
welcome news and other submissions
from our readers. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8075
E-mail:frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

Farewell Dinner for Dr. John Whitfield
Lakehead University will bid farewell to its vice-president (research
and development) at a Farewell Dinner in the Faculty Lounge on
Friday, May 25, 2001. Whitfield, who joined Lakehead in 1965 as an
assistant professor in the Department of Mathematics, is retiring on
June 30.

Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to
Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P78 5E1

At the Employee Service Recognition Reception held on April 17,
Lakehead President Dr. Fred Gilbert made the following remarks:

Publications Mail
Agreement Number 1497073

"John Whitfield's career has been a long and distinguished one. He
was promoted to the rank of associate professor in 1970 and full
professor in 1982. He served as dean of the Faculty of Arts &amp;
Science from 1986 to 1990 when he became acting vice-president (academic) until
1991. He accepted the position of vice-president (academic) on a full-time basis in
1991, and held that office until his appointment as acting president for the period 19971998. John then accepted the new and challenging position of vice-president (research
and development) where he has worked diligently promoting Lakehead University within

Photography: Peter Puna

the corporate sector.
"Over the years John has been involved in many community activities and has served
on numerous professional boards and committees, the most recent and widely
recognized being that of co-chair of the
NORMS Liaison Committee promoting the
development of a medical school in the
north. John's tireless dedication to such
efforts are a testament to his commitment,
not only to Lakehead, but to the .
community as a whole.... We wish John all
the best for a long, happy and healthy
retirement."
For Tickets to the Farewell Dinner
contact Linda Phillips (807) 343-8200.

AGORA -- May 2001

Printing: Lakehead Print Shop

Deadline for submissions for
the next issue is
June 1, 2001

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                    <text>June 2001

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

Convocation Messages
Speak of Optimism and Change
by Frances Harding

Two Honorary Degree recipients shared their wisdom
with about 775 members of the graduating class who
attended Convocation on Saturday, May 26.
In the morning, author Carol Shields (represented by
her daughter Catherine) spoke about the importance
of finding work that you love because work "places us
inside the wheel of human experience."
"You will form lifelong attachments, you will travel,
perhaps have children of your own, but your future
will, in very large part, be your work. Your task will be
to bring creativity or excellence -- or both -- to work
which may at first not open to those twin assaults.
Another task will be to contribute to making the
workplace more equitable, more humane, more
graceful, more rewarding for everyone -- in short, a
happy, productive environment. The day of the bossy
boss is over. The work hierarchy is being challenged
and reconstructed. The old way was too hard on
everyone."
In the afternoon, teacher and wildlife biologist Jack
Ward Thomas, spoke about his optimism in our ability
to resolve the most important challenge -- "living well
on our Spaceship Earth and passing on our legacy
from generation to generation intact."
"We have the experience, knowledge, technology, and
skilled people to make headway in heading off,
mitigating, and repairing environmental problems. It
comes down to focus, will, understanding, setting
priorities, and caring....
"In 40 years or so, one of today's graduates, weighty in
years and achievement, may address another
graduating class. The speaker will acknowledge
achievements made in the husbandry of the Good Earth
since the century's turn. She will marvel at new
understandings and knowledge and note expansion in
the human mind and spirit and the extension of ethics
to include the land itself."

The award for outstanding citizenship given to a
student who has contributed most to the welfare of
the University
went to Michael
Poulin -- a strong
advocate for the
Aboriginal
community and
students.
During his
undergraduate
years, Poulin
worked full-time
as the HIV/AIDS
Coordinator of the
Ontario Native
Women's
Association, and
was appointed
their
representative on the Lakehead University
Aboriginal Management Council (AMC). In
addition, he served as AMC's representative to
Senate, president of the Lakehead Social Planning
Council, chair of the Aboriginal lnteragency
Council, and Cultural Coordinator of the Lakehead
University Native Students Association.
In recent years, Poulin was instrumental in forming
a partnership between Aboriginal students and
LUSU to establish an Aboriginal Commissioner
within LUSU, and approving a proposal to establish
an Aboriginal Cultural Awareness Centre..
Poulin graduated with an Honours Bachelor of Arts
(Political Science). He is shown holding the Poulin
Award which was named in memory of the late
Robert Poulin (no relation to Michael) in 1951.

Lakehead
U N I VERS I TY

�Lakehead

2

UNIV E RS IT Y

From the President's Desk

by
Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
President

Convocation, despite the gloomy
weather, was another wonderful day.
The glowing faces of the graduates and
their friends and family certainly more
than compensated for the climatic
conditions. Both speeches by the
Honorary Degree recipients, Carol
Shields and Jack Ward Thomas, were
challenging and upbeat. Certainly both
from the different perspectives of the
arts and the sciences, showed the value
of the individual in helping to bring
about positive change whether in the
work environment or the planetary
environment. It was especially
gratifying to see Jim Colquhoun and
Tony Seuret receive Fellow of the
University recognition. There are so
many people from Thunder Bay and
beyond who have volunteered their time
and effort to the University as well as
their community. All are appreciated
and it is important to recognize their
contributions at the time of Convocation.
The success of our alumni/ae was
represented in the Alumni Honour
Award given to Peter Prior. All in all, a
special day with special people involved.
Our new graduates will do well if they
emulate any of the awardees in their
own personal careers.
As can be seen elsewhere in this edition
of the Agora, Lakehead University
continues to receive awards for the
actions of its faculty, staff and students.
In addition to those mentioned in these
articles is the success of our civil
engineering students in the steel bridge
contest at Clemson University where, as
the only Canadian team, they placed
leh in a field with 42 U.S. universities.
Having won the mid-west competition
three years straight, our students and
faculty in Civil Engineering clearly
demonstrate their excellence. Also,
Lakehead received an award from

AGORA - June 2001

Ontario Library Resources-North for the
pioneering efforts of LU-Net in
connecting Northwestern Ontario to the
Internet by making LU-Net available in
community libraries. Two publications by
the University won 2nd and 3rd place
awards in the annual report and fundraising categories respectively of the
Canadian Council for the Advancement
of Education. Our Business
Administration students ranked in the
top six teams in Canada in this year's
Intercollegiate Business Competition at
Queen's University. These are but a few
examples showing that Lakehead
competes successfully with the best in
North America and makes contributions
to its region that have significant impact
on people.
We can be justifiably proud of our
University especially considering that all
this is accomplished with funding per
student well below the provincial
average. This inequity has been a
constraint on us all but despite the
unfairness of the funding situation,
Lakehead has demonstrated an
extraordinary ability to excel under
difficult circumstances. Once we are
able to complete on an equal footing
from a funding perspective, our impact
will be further enhanced.
Well done and congratulations to all who
haye made Lakehead University
recognized for the quality of its efforts.
There is a lot more to come!

Mark Your Calendars
18th Annual
Alumni Association Open
Strathcona Golf Course
Friday, August 24, 2001
To register, call
Alumni Relations 343-8155

�Lakehead

3

U N I VERS I TY

Honours, Awards
&amp; Appointments
Water Resources Engineering
Students Bring Honours to Lakehead
University

Amin Eishorbagy, who has completed a
doctoral thesis entitled "Group-based
Estimation of Missing Hydrological Data"
under the supervision of Lakehead
University Professor of Civil Engineering
U. S. Panu and Professor Simonovic of
The University of Western Ontario, has
been awarded the prestigious NSERC
Fellowship for two years (valued at
$70,000). Eishorbagy will conduct his
post-doctoral research investigations in
water resources engineering at the
University of Kentucky, Lexington
Campus.
In a nationwide competition conducted by
the Canadian Society of Civil
Engineering, the undergraduate project
supervised by Professor Panu and
entitled "Corrosion Study of the Thunder
Bay Drinking Water Supplies" by
Christopher Martin (BEng 2000) has won
the first place in the Environmental
Engineering Division. The award will be
presented at the upcoming CSCE Annual
Conference in June.

2001 Alumni Entrance Award

The Alumni Association is pleased to
announce that Raymond Salee has been
awarded the 2001 Alumni Entrance
Award. Salee is a graduate of Sir Winston
Churchill Collegiate and Vocational
Institute where he has been the school
champion for the Canadian Mathematics
Competition for the last two years. He was
also the first student in Northern Ontario
to be one of the top three in the CA
Challenge 2000 OAC Accounting Contest.
Salee plans to study biology at Lakehead
in preparation for medical school.

Lori Chambers receives Prentice
Award

Dr. Lori Chambers, an assistant professor
of women's studies, is the recipient of the
Alison Prentice Award for 2000, granted
by the Ontario Historical Society. She
receives this award for the best book on
Ontario history in recognition of her book
Married Women and Property Law in
Victorian Ontario, published in 1997 by the
University of Toronto.
Employer Support Award

The Canadian Forces Liaison Council
awarded Lakehead University a national
Employer Support Award (Special Award
for Support to Operation ABACUS) to
recognize the University as an employer
who has been particularly supportive of its
employees' reservist military service. Dr.
Fred Gilbert received the award at a
national ceremony on Parliament Hill on
June 2 from the Minister of National
Defence and the Chief of the Defence
Staff. Captain Robert Omeljaniuk of 736th
(Thunder Bay) Communication Squadron,
who made the nomination, attended the
ceremony and formal military dinner in
Ottawa with Dr. Gilbert. Omeljaniuk is an
Associate Professor in the Department of
Biology at Lakehead University. The award
recognizes Lakehead University Senate's
passing of a formal motion in November
1999 granting all Reserve Force students
"approval for absence from classes
without academic penalty in support of
Operation ABACUS." This action affected
70 Lakehead University student
Reservists in the Thunder Bay Garrison
(38th Brigade). The motion ensured all
Lakehead University faculty would make
alternate arrangements for student
examinations and assignments in
recognition of particular time constraints
imposed by their participation in Operation
ABACUS.

AGORA - June 2001

Meloche Monnex Fellowship in Alumni
Affairs

Lakehead has secured a Meloche
Monnex Fellowship in Alumni Affairs to
hire a graduate, Gord McLean (BA2000),
on a one-year contract to assist the
University in increasing the number of its
alumni chapters. McLean is now working
on an alumni survey and planning a
strategy for alumni chapter development
that will strengthen Lakehead's
fundraising and friend-raising endeavors.
McLean is shown above (right) with Chris
Daniel, vice-president of Meloche
Monnex.
Gary Locker elected to the Canadian
Engineering Accreditation Board

Dr. J. Gary Locker, professor emeritus of
civil engineering and executive director of
the Native Access Program for
Engineering, has been elected as a
member-at-large of the Canadian
Engineering Accreditation Board of the
Canadian Council of Professional
Engineers (CEAB). The CEAB is
responsible for the accreditation of
Canadian undergraduate engineering
programs. Locker has been vice-chair of
accreditation visits to the University of
Waterloo, Queen's University, Ryerson
University, the University of Manitoba
and the University of Saskatchewan. He
has been the program visitor for Civil
Engineering at Concordia University and
the University of Costa Rica. While he
was chair, National Council of Deans of
Engineering and Applied Science, he
helped design a new accreditation unit
system for curriculum content.

�Lakehead

4

UNIVE R SITY

English Prof Brings
Out the Best in His
Students
by Twyla Carolan
Kristen Poluyko, a master's student in English, seems to have
lost the ability to explain why Dr. Rick Holmes is such a good
instructor. Not just good, but
good enough to be the recipient
of Lakehead University's
Distinguished Instructor Award
for 2000.

1

In a very short amount of time
though, she recovers well and
says, "He's approachable. He's not
intimidating at all, and he just elicits
from his students this desire to do
well; you want to impress this man.
If he's going to do that much for
you, you want to make sure that
your work comes across as
extraordinary."

As for Rick Holmes, he says that
just getting nominated by his
students was the real award -- the real honour.
Holmes received his BA from the University of Winnipeg, his MA
from the University of Manitoba, and his PhD from Queen's
University. He began as a teaching assistant at the University of
Manitoba, and has been teaching for many years since learning
his trade at Queen's University, the University of Manitoba, the
University of Winnipeg, the University of Calgary, and Lakehead
University, where he's been since 1987.
Holmes' area of expertise is Twentieth-century British literature,
with special emphasis on contemporary fiction and narrative
theory. He has a secondary interest in Victorian literature. Holmes'
most frequently taught courses are Major British Writers, The
Victorian Period, and British Literature 1900-1930 and 1930present.

Holmes believes that professors have three main
responsibilities: teaching, research, and administrative service,
with teaching and research being the most important. He often
teaches what he is researching and writing papers about, and,
over the years, has noticed a connection between the two.
Holmes finds the dynamic interaction between the material he
presents and the students' reception and reaction to the
information to be very fruitful. He says, "I get ideas from my
students. There's a reciprocity there. It's very symbiotic."
When working with students, Holmes believes that listening to
them and trying to get them involved is a key motivator in the
classroom. He's interested in where they are in their lives, what
their problems are, and what their futures look like. He is
enthusiastic and open with ideas, and believes it is critical to
involve the students in the learning process, rather than just
standing at the front of the classroom lecturing. Holmes has
great respect for his students, and reciprocally, they admire
and respect him as well.
Twyla Carolan is one of several students taking part in SPARK,
a student writing program at Lakehead funded by The
Chronicle-Journal

Top-Notch
Chemical and
Civil Engineering
Students
The Lakehead University Student Chapter of the
Canadian Society for Chemical Engineering (CSChE) is
the 2001 winner of the Student Chapters' Merit Award.
The Lakehead Student Chapter is the smallest chapter
of its kind in Canada, yet the group has won five
national awards in the last six years. They won Merit
Awards in 1995, 1996, 2000 and now in 2001 and
received an honourable mention in 1997 and 1998.
Lakehead's civil engineering students have consistently
placed among the top-ranking teams in the Steel Bridge
Competition sponsored by the American Society of Civil
Engineering/American Institute of Steel Construction.
For the past three years, Lakehead's team has placed
first in the mid-west region competition.

Over the years, Holmes' teaching methods have evolved. He says,
"I've probably become more focused on making students their
own teachers in the sense of really making them responsible for
what happens in the classroom. " He accomplishes this by
This year Lakehead's team was the only Canadian team
organizing the students into small structured groups, giving each
to compete in the national competition at Clemson
group a specific task, and then letting the group take control of
University in South Carolina, where it placed 16'h overall
the learning experience. He says, "It's amazing how they take
competing against 42 other teams.
ownership of what they are doing and really become responsible
for it."
AGORA - June 2001

�LAl"EHEAD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY

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1. lssucz J June 18, 2001

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�J

WHAT'S IN A NAME?
You havcr probably scrcrn or hcrard rhcrscr rcrrms
uscrd many rimcrs ovcrr rhcr past fcrw months. Hcrrcr
arcr crxplanations of rhcrir mcranings:
lnt(!graf(!d Library Syst(!m (/LSJ: lnrcrgrarcrd
Library Sysrcrm rcrfcrrs ro any library sysrcrm that
handlcrs all major library functions including
Cataloguing, Acquisitions, Circulation and an
Onlincr Caralogucr. VOYAGER is an inrcrgratcrd
library systcrm.
Boolean S(!archlng: This is a powcrrful scrarching
tcrchniqucr that has nor prcrviously bcrcrn availablcr in
thcr Library's Onlincr Catalogucr. With thcr ncrw
library VOYAGER systcrm you will bcr ablcr to
scrarch for multiplcr words and combine?: thcrscr
words with "and" "or" "not". 13oolcran scrarching
is availablcr on most lntcrrncrt scrarch crngincrs Ccr.g.
Alta Vista).
Citation S(!rver: This is anorhcrr part of thcr ncrw
library sysrcrm thar will bcr implcrmcrnrcrd at
Lakcrhcrad Univcrrsity Library in 2002.
With
Citation Scrrvcrr. thcr Library will bcr ablcr to
inrcrgratcr crlcrctronic indcrxcrs and abstracts with thcr
Library's catalogucr. This will allow you to scrarch
multiplcr databascrs with oncr scrarch scrcren.
Ciration S&lt;trv&lt;tr, together with VOYAGER, is a
vcrry powcrrful tool for providing access to
information in elcrctronic format.

\
\
\

/mag(! S(!rv(!r: This is yet another part of the new
library system that will ba lmplamanted following
th&lt;? implementation of Citation S&lt;?Vcrr. Image
Server is a documcrnt management system that
will work with VOYAGER and Citation Scrrvcrr to
providcr access to any typcr of digitally formarrcrd
matcrrial. With the click of a mouscr you will bcr
able to jump from the description of any item to
rhcr digitized item ilscrlf.

LIBRARY AUTOMATION
INITIATIVES
(Exc&lt;?rptad from th&lt;? May 14. 2001 issue of
Lalwh(!ad Univ&lt;trsity Library VOYAGER

NEWS1
Although th&lt;? immadiat&lt;? focus of thasa (curr~ t
library automation) afforts is rha impl&lt;?m&lt;?ntatioi
of rhcr basic VOYAGERsoftwarcr. it is important
ro rnmembcrr that this is only th&lt;? first st&lt;?p. Th&lt;?r&lt;?
are many picrccrs to thcr sysrcrm. including a
Citation Serv&lt;?r modulcr rhat will intcrgratcr acc&lt;?Ss
to &lt;?l&lt;?ctronic ind&lt;?xcrs and abstracts. Evcrnrually
thcr system will interface with th(?: province-wide
documcrnt d&lt;?-livery and interlibrary loan system
(Fretwcrll-Downing's VD)() and th&lt;? alacrronic
materials provided by thcr Canadian National Sire
Licansing Project (CNSLP).

IMPROVED EFFECTIVENESS
AND EFFICIENCY
Implementation of the Voyagar software will allow
the Library to provide accass to &lt;Zlactronic
matcrrials to all mambars of rha univ&lt;Zrsity
community authorized to rcrccriva tham. regard lass
of their location. This will include dimer acc&lt;Zss to
a wide rang&lt;? of res&lt;?arch support materials previously unavailable. such as electronic
journals. specialized databasas. and othar
resources.

�4
For mat&lt;?rials nor own&lt;?d or imm&lt;Zdiat&lt;Zly
acC&lt;?ssibl&lt;!, rhey will b&lt;? abl&lt;! ro ord&lt;?r th&lt;! r&lt;?quirnd
docum&lt;?nls
through
th&lt;?
docum&lt;Znr
d&lt;?liv&lt;Zry/int&lt;Zrlibrary loan syst&lt;?m. VDX Nirtual
Docum&lt;?nt &lt;?Xchang&lt;?) sofrwarn will crnat&lt;? a dimer
link b&lt;?tw&lt;?&lt;?n s&lt;?arch and rnqu&lt;?st activiti&lt;?s. This
~ will &lt;?nabl&lt;? th&lt;? authoriz&lt;?d us&lt;?r to inifiat&lt;? an ILL
{ rnqu&lt;?st from a display&lt;?d rnsult s&lt;?t, with
bibliographic d&lt;?tails automatically &lt;?nt&lt;?rnd into an
ILL form.
Th&lt;! Library also plans to d&lt;?v&lt;?lop int&lt;?rfac&lt;?s
b&lt;?tw&lt;?&lt;?n th&lt;? Library and oth&lt;Zr syst&lt;?ms on campus
Ci.&lt;?. th&lt;? R&lt;Zgistration and Financial syst&lt;?ms) in
ord&lt;?r to op&lt;Zrar&lt;Z &lt;?ffici&lt;?ntly.

NEWS
FLASH
DES PLAINES, ILLINOIS,Jun&lt;?
15, 2001:
End&lt;?avor Information Syst&lt;?ms and rh&lt;? Yal&lt;?
Univ&lt;?rsity Library CYU L) announc&lt;?d today th&lt;?
s&lt;?l&lt;?ction of th&lt;! Voyag&lt;? int&lt;Zgrat&lt;?d library
manag&lt;?m&lt;?nt syst&lt;?m for th&lt;! Yal&lt;? librari&lt;?s. With
compl&lt;!t&lt;? impl&lt;Zm&lt;?ntation sch&lt;?dul&lt;?d for July
2002, th&lt;? Voyag&lt;?r s&lt;?l&lt;?ction aff&lt;?cls ov&lt;?r 600 staff
and 10.5 million volum&lt;?s across th&lt;! N&lt;!w Hav&lt;?n,
CT campus.

Ian D&lt;Zw
Proj&lt;Zct Manag&lt;Zr
H&lt;Zad, Syst&lt;Zms and Bibliographic Proc&lt;Zssing
Joan S&lt;Z&lt;Zl&lt;ZY
lnt&lt;Zrlibrary Loan/Docum&lt;Znt D&lt;Zliv&lt;Zry/Coll&lt;Zctions
Librarian

Laxeh&lt;Zad University Library Voyag&lt;Zr N&lt;Zws is
publish&lt;!d by Lak&lt;!h&lt;?ad Univ&lt;?rsity Library. W&lt;?
w&lt;?lcom&lt;? comm&lt;?nts from our rnad&lt;?rs. S&lt;?nd
th&lt;Zm ro:

FOR MORE VOYAGER
INFORMATION
G'OTOTHE

Gis&lt;?lla Scal&lt;?s&lt;?
Th&lt;! ChanC&lt;?llor Pat&lt;?rson Library
955 Oliv&lt;?r Road
Thund&lt;?r Bay, Ontario Canada
P7B 5E1

PROJECT WEB SITE
T &lt;!l&lt;!phon&lt;Z: (807) 343-8147

http://www.lakehczadu.ca/~llbrwww/
systems/voyager.html

Fax: (807) 343-8007
E - mail: voyag&lt;?r@lak&lt;?h&lt;?adu.ca

�Lakehead

5

UNIVERSITY

NSERC Awards for 2001-2002
The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
(NSERC) recently announced the results of their annual
research and equipment grants competition.

Department of Geology

For the year 2001-2002, the total value of grants awarded
was $922,858 for both research and equipment grants.
The success rate for new research grants, as opposed to
ongoing installments, was 65% compared with 48% for
last year. At present, there are 38 NSERC holders at
Lakehead. This represents 38% o( the total eligible faculty

R.H. Mitchell, "Petrology of Kimberlites and Alkaline Rocks;'
$86,625, research grant (6/6).

G.J. Borradaile, "Rock Magnetism and Deformation," $62,300,
research grant (2/4).

Department of Mathematical Sciences
A.J. Dean, "Derivations of Inductive Limit C*-algebras,"
$8,000, research grant (1/4).
W. Huang, "Job Scheduling Problems in Modern

at Lakehead.
The following is a list of all NSERC recipients at Lakehead
University who were successful in the 2001-2002 research
and equipment grants competition. They are grouped
according to the new academic structure that goes into
effect on July 1, 2001.

Office of Research
M.L. Howe, "Development of Retention and Reasoning,"
$39,000, research grant (year 2 of 4 (2/4)).
FACULTY OF SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Department of Biology

Manufacturing Systems and Management Science," $9,702,
research grant (3/4).
D. Li, "Asymptotic Behaviour in Stochastic Modelling,"
$15,000, research grant (2/4).
L. Liu, "Reliability in the Finite Element Method for Non-Linear
Problems," $9,500, research grant (2/4).
L. Liu, "Reliability in the Finite Element Method for Non-Linear
Problems," $16,000, equipment grant.
T. Miao, "Amenability of Locally Compact Groups and
Geometric Properties of Ap (G)," $13,650, research grant (3/
4).
Department of Physics

S.J. Hecnar, "Species Richness and Spatial Dynamics in
Amphibians," $15,750, research grant (3/4).
M.W. Lankester, "Impact of Parasites and Disease on Northern
Animals," $26,188, research grant (2/4).
A.U. Mallik, "Induction and Release of Retrogressive
Succession After Fire in Kalmia-Black Spruce Communities;·
$19,000, research grant (2/4).
D.W. Morris, "Habitat Selection, Patch Choice, and Spatial
Dynamics of Small Mammals in Changing Environments,"
$51,000, research grant (1/5).
Department of Chemistry
C. Gottardo, "The Photochemistry of Compounds Which
Contain Heteroatoms," $30,000, research grant (3/3).
S.D. Kinrade, "Aqueous Chemistry of Silicon;• $38,115,
research grant (4/4).
Department of Computer Science
X. Li, "A Multithreaded Logic Virtual Machine for Intelligent
Mobile Agents," $17,000, research grant (1/4).
X. Li, "A Multithreaded Logic Virtual Machine for Intelligent
Mobile Agents," $22,960, equipment grant.
A. Wei, "Combinatorial Methods in Threshold Crytography:
Protocols, Structures and Optimizations," $14,000, research
grant (1/4).

M.C. Gallagher, "Atomic Structure of Ultrathin Films," $30,000,
research grant (1/4).
M.C. Gallagher, "Sputter Ion Gun for Sample Cleaning,"
$13,734, equipment grant.
M.H. Hawton, "Photo-Matter Interactions," $15,000, research
grant (2/4).
W.J. Keeler, "Ultrafast Ti:Sapphire Laser Applications,"
$16,300, research grant (2/4).
V.V. Paranjape, "Research in Solid State Physics," $12,000,
research grant (1/3).

FACULTY OF ENGINEERING
Department of Chemical Engineering
L.J.J. Catalan, "Studies in Stabilisation/Solidification of
Industrial Waste," $19,000, research grant (2/4).
L.J. Garred, "Modelling Studies of Solute and Fluid Transport
in Kidney Dialysis," $21,500, research grant (1/4).
A. Gilbert, "Optimizing Control of Kraft Mill Processes,"
$21,945, research grant (4/4).
I. Nirdosh, "Solid-Liquid Mass Transfer Applications," $23,909,
research grant (4/5).
... continued on page 6

AGORA - June 2001

�Lakehead

6

U NI VER SI TY

NSERC Awards continued from page 5
Department of Civil Engineering
D.K. Eigenbrod, "Shaft Resistance of Piles in Sand During
Loading in Tension and Compression," $14,700, research
grant (3/4).
S.A. Mirza, "Strength and Stiffness of Slender Composite
Steel-Concrete Beam-Columns," $19,520, research grant (4/
4).
U.S. Panu, "Development of Group Based Hydrologic Data
Infilling Procedures," $14,000, research grant (2/4).
S.K. Vanapalli, "Design of Flexible Pavements Using the Soil
Mechanisms for Unsaturated Soils;' $18,000, research grant
(1/4).
Department of Electrical Engineering
S.M.J. Alirezaie, "Three-dimensional Visualization and
Segmentation of Multispectral Medical Images," $15,000,
research grant (1/4).
K. Natarajan, "Model Reference Adaptive Control in the
Frequency Domain;' $23,310, research grant (3/4).
A.T. Tayebi, "Iterative Learning Control for Uncertain Systems,"
$21 ,405, research grant (1/4)
Department of Mechanical Engineering
K. Liu, "Identification and Control of Linear Time-Varying
Systems," $17,000, research grant (1/4).

SSHRC 2001-2002
Competition Results
Lakehead University is pleased to announce its
successful applicants in this year's Social Sciences and
Humanities Research Council competition. The number of
successful research grants applicants represents an
increase over the previous year's results. This year's
success rate was 22%, whereas the previous competition
saw a success rate of 12%.
G.A. Genosko, Department of Sociology (new scholar
category) , 'The Role of Journals (Defunct) and Splinter
Groups (Disbanded) in the Institutionalization of Critical and
Postmodern Theory in Canada," $71 ,000 over three years,
including a research time stipend worth $12,150.
J.P. Jasen, Department of History (regular scholar category),
"Women and Cancer: Historical Perspectives on the Concept
of Risk," $50,900 over three years.
H.E. Smith, Department of History/Women's Studies
(regular scholar category) and P. Wakewich, Sociology/
Women's Studies "Cultural Representations and Women's
Narrative of Wartime Work and Lives,"$52,850 over three
years.

M. Liu, 'Transformation Matrices for Finite Element Analysis of
Plates and Shells With Structural Discontinuities," $13,737,
research grant (4/4).

In addition to the new awards, the following are Lakehead
University's continuing SSHRC awards:

A. Sedov, "Modeling the Ultrasonic Inspection of Complex
Components," $10,300, research grant (2/3).

L. Di Matteo, Department of Economics, "Late 191h and Early
20th Century Wealth and Economic Development in Ontario,"
third year of three-year grant (3/3), total grant value: $48,506.

S.A.Q. Siddiqui, "Vibration Suppression in Systems
Characterized by Interaction Between Lumped and Distributed
Parameter Elements," $17,000, research grant (1/4)

FACULTY OF FORESTRY AND THE FOREST
ENVIRONMENT
Q.L. Dang, "Interacting Effects of Soil Conditions on
Ecophysiological Traits and Their Responses to Changing
Aboveground Environment in Boreal Tree Species," $34,073,
research grant (4/4).
W.H. Parker, "Development of a GIS Methodology to
Determine Breeding Zones for Second Generation Tree
Programs;• $19,635, research grant (4/4).
J.R. Wang, "Relationship Between Hydraulic Conductivity and
Photosynthesis of Paper Birch," $18,000, research grant (1/4).

T. Dufresne, Department of Philosophy, "An Introduction to
Critical Freud Studies," 2/3, total grant value: $65, 170
(including research time stipend).
B. O'Connor, Department of Psychology, "Interpersonal
Rigidity, Hostility and Corpplementarity: Associations with
Psychopathology, Relationship Quality and Attachment
History," 3/3, total grant value: $36,850.

Thunder Bay Regional Arts Council
Business &amp; Education Awards
Congratulations to Dr. Fiona Blaikie (Faculty of Education)
and Janet Clark, former curator of the Thunder Bay Art
Gallery, for receiving an award at the annual Mayor's Arts
Luncheon honouring Business and Education. The two
women developed a special kit of resource materials for the
teaching of art in local elementary schools which
incorporated color reproductions of art by 16 regional artists.

AGORA •• June 2001

�Lakehead

7

UNIVERSITY

Allen Bibby
Endows
Memorial
Bursary
and gives a gift of art to
Lakehead University.
by Jennifer Willianen
Development Researcher and Writer

It has been over 70 years since artist
Joan Bibby (nee Keefer) left
Northwestern Ontario; yet her legacy
lives on in the region thanks to the
thoughtfulness and generosity of her
husband.
In loving memory of his wife, Allen Bibby
of Vermont, recently donated her
painting - The Red Coral Bean - to
Lakehead University and endowed a
memorial bursary in her name. Joan,
who was born in Port Arthur in 1919, is
the granddaughter of Francis (Frank)
Keefer after whom the local Keefer
Terminal is named.
The Red Coral Bean is an exquisite
watercolour painting featuring a Florida
wildflower sprouting pods of scarlet
beans. It is prominently displayed in the
reference section of The Chancellor
Paterson Library.
Also in her honour, Allen Bibby donated
stock holdings to Lakehead worth over
$15,000. The gift, in combination with
matched funds from the Ontario Student
Opportunity Trust Fund, endowed in
perpetuity the Joan Keefer Bibby
Memorial Bursary. Annually, two
students from the Department of Visual
Arts will each be awarded a bursary
valued at $1000 on the basis of financial
need and academic standing.
Allen Bibby's motivation in creating the

Development Officer Laurie Hill adjusts the watercolor painting by the late
Joan Bibby now on display on the ground floor of the Chancellor Paterson
Library. Bibby's husband Allen recently endowed a bursary that will benefit
students in Visual Arts

endowment is twofold. First, he is
celebrating Joan's talent and love of art.
And vitally important, he is fulfilling a
desire to afford young art students an
opportunity to revel in their creativity. He
sincerely hopes the bursaries will "urge
students to do their best, to enjoy their
own work and to be receptive to the
possibility that others may also find
pleasure in it."
Joan is described by her husband as
having been "innately modest'' to the
point where she was reluctant to take
due credit for her work. Her artistic
talent, which she discovered after the
age of 50, is said to beautifully reflect
her varied interests as a gardener,
outdoor adventurer, world traveller, and
photographer.

AGORA -- June 2001

In a letter addressed to all future
recipients of the Joan Keefer Bibby
Memorial Bursary, Allen conveys the
depth of his wife's artistic imagination by
quoting one of Joan's fellow artists who
said, "This gentle woman leapt joyfully
into the combat between abstract forms
and the demands of the thing seen. Her
work doesn't just reflect the pleasure of
a moment lived, but like a strong
storage battery, it contains energy within
it, a life of idea and impulse that will
continue through time."
It is a quintessential fit that Joan Bibby's
artistic legacy will "continue through
time" at the University of her birthplace
and in a department where the lives of
ideas and impulses flourish much like
her work.

�Lakehead

8

U N IVERS I TY

Lakehead
UNIVERSITY
June 2001 Vol. 18, No.5
THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO, CANADA
ISSN D828•5225

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications and distributed
monthly September through June. We
welcome news and other submissions
from our readers. Send them to:

Meet the staff and faculty at Lakehead's new Paleo-DNA Laboratory: (back row) Dr.
Ryan Parr, Curtis Hildebrandt and Dr. El Motto (front row): Renee Praymak, Jen
Maki, Amy Junnila, Arlene Lahti, Dr. Wera Schmerer

Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1

Paleo-DNA Laboratory moves to New
State-of-the-Art Facility
"There is a revolution taking place in science, and DNA is at the centre of it," says Dr.
Keith McKenney. The forensic scientist from George Mason University was speaking at
a reception held on June 8th to celebrate the opening of the new Paleo-DNA Laboratory
located on the third floor of the Northwestern Ontario Technology Centre. The new lab
places Lakehead "among the leaders" in DNA research.
''This is the genesis," says Dr. El Molto who, along with Dr. Ryan Parr, is co-director of
the Lab. "Ours is the best facility in Canada primarily dedicated to the extraction,
amplification and analysis of ancient DNA."
Since its founding in 1996, Lakehead's Paleo-DNA Lab has combined state-of-the-art
equipment and staff with special skills in handling ancient DNA. In fact, the opening of
the new Paleo-DNA Lab coincided with the conclusion of a two-and-a-half week
internship for 20 qualified advanced undergraduate or master's level students interested
in working in the growing field of DNA research. This is the third year Lakehead has
offered such a course which all five of the Lab's full-time analysts have completed.
Lakehead's Paleo-ONA Lab has developed special expertise in extracting and recovering
DNA from bone samples. The primary research project is a world-class study arising
from a large collection of skeletal remains from the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt. The Lab is
also involved in studies of the ancient Nubian peoples of Kerma and the ancient Chinese
of Anyang. Another project that has recently attracted international attention has been
a project to identify some of the "last of the
lost" from the Titanic disaster at the request
of surviving family members.
Lakehead's new Paleo-DNA Laboratory is
funded primarily by the Northern Ontario
Heritage Fund Corporation, the Canada
Foundation for Innovation, the Ontario
Research and Development Challenge
Fund, the Ontario Innovation Trust, and
Lakehead University.

AGORA - June 2001

Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8075
E-mail:frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca
Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to
Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P7B 5E1
Publications Mail
Agreement Number 1497073
Photography: Peter Puna
Printing: Lakehead Print Shop

The Agora is not published in
July or August.
Oeadline for submissions for the
next issue is
Sepember 1, 2001

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                    <text>September/October 2001

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

Advanced Technology and
Academic Centre (ATAC)
Under Construction

0)

-~&lt;ii
-0

C:
Q)

a:

When it opens in January 2003, Lakehead's new Advanced Technology and Academic
Centre will provide approximately 1,400 new student spaces in time to meet the
demands of the "double cohort". The construction has affected the traffic flow on
campus. Details on page 6.

Tim Buell
appointed
Vice President
(Research and
Development)
by Nancy Angus
Dr. Tim Buell brings extensive
experience in new technologies for
learning to his new position as
Lakehead University's vicepresident (research and
development).
He comes to Thunder Bay from the
University of Calgary, where he
held academic appointments in the
Faculty of Communication and
Culture, the Faculty of Continuing
Education, and the Faculty of
Education.

A Revised Campus Map is Posted on the Lakehead Web Site

http://www.lakeheadu.ca/images/misc/campmap.pdf

Lakehead
U NIVERSITY

There, he managed U of C's
programs in professional
development and curriculum
innovation, and was senior
research associate in the University
of Calgary Learning Commons.
continued on page 3

�Lakehead

2

UNIVER Slf Y

From the President's Desk
Another academic year is underway,
and it will be an important one for the
future of our University. Hopefully,
government can be convinced that the
inequity of funding to Lakehead must be
rectified before our next budget year.
Our cause is just, rational and based on
the premise that the base funding for all
students in Ontario should be equal.
Having suffered the consequences of
this funding aberration for a decade,
seeing it corrected would instantly
translate into a fiscally feasible future for
the university.
by
Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
President

Evident to all is the construction
underway on the Advanced Technology
and Academic Centre (ATAC) and the
disruption of traffic patterns as
addressed elsewhere in the Agora. The
$44-million ATAC project will change the
campus in many ways. The first
evidence of this is the deployment of the
Nortel Networks IP telephones. When
complete in January 2003, ATAC will
offer state-of-the-art electronic capacity
in classroom and distributed learning. It
will become the new focus on campus
for academic teaching and learning.
Furthermore, the temporary traffic
difficulties will be replaced later in 2003
with a pedestrian friendly circulation
pattern that will open a new two-way
entrance off Oliver Road.

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS FOR HONO RARY DEG REES

The Senate Committee on Honorary Degrees invites all members of the Lakehead
University community to submit nominations for honorary degrees to be awarded
at the Convocation in May 2002.
Please provide as complete information as possible about the person being
nominated plus a brief rationale for the nomination. All nominations will be
considered by the Committee, which will then make its recommendations to the
Senate.
Send-the nominations to Dr. Jane Crossman, Chair, Senate Committee on
Honorary Degrees, c/o The School of Kinesiology. Please note that the
nominations must be received on or before September 21 , 2001 to be placed on
the agenda for the September meeting of the Committee.

While this time of year is filled with
enthusiasm and the energy of students,
the past summer brought a number of
significant losses to the Lakehead
"family". Board of Governors' member
Joe Baratta, Doreen Hessian, the wife of
our past Board Chair, Steve Hessian,
and retired faculty member Gordon
McLeod, all passed away. They were
true friends of the university and will be
missed by all who knew them.

Linda Phillips, Secretary to the President
A final note is necessary to
acknowledge that an era comes to an
end at Lakehead this month. Linda
Phillips is taking an early retirement, and
the 40 plus years she has dedicated to
the University and its predecessor,
Lakehead College of Arts, Science and
Technology as well as to the University's
five presidents will be an enduring
testament to a personal commitment to
this institution. By Linda's own request,
there will be no farewell ceremony, but I
want to express my appreciation and, I
am certain, the University's for her
dedication to, and love of, Lakehead
University. I will miss her knowledge,
her understanding, and her efficiency.
Linda -- I wish you well in retirement.

AGORA •· September/ October 2001

�Lakehead

3

UN I VERSITY

Tim Buell continued from page 1
Bue/l's work in the Learning Commons has
focused on professional development for
faculty in reaching and research, and in the
development and implementation of research
programs in educational technology. with
particular emphasis on broadband network
applications.
Tim Buell received his Bachelor of Music at
the University of Toronto and continued his
graduate studies at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. and the University of
Toronto, where he completed a Masters of.
Music in 1981. In 1986 he received a PhD in
Theory and Composition at the University of
Pittsburgh
"With a diverse background in research, fund
development and the arts, Or. Buell will be an
asset to Lakehead University and the City of
Thunder Bay." says Or. Fred Gilbert.
As a member of the senior administrative
planning team that created the University of
Calgary's Learning Commons-a facility
similar in many ways to ATAC-Buell will take
a leading role in the advancement activities
for Lakehead's new Advanced Technology
and Academic Centre (ATAC). Or. Buell will
have key responsibilities to advance the
interests of the University in the public and
private sectors and to develop the faculty
research that will continue to ensure
Lakehead provides its students with a quality
learning environment.

Campus News
Repairs address Mould Problem

During a routine check of air quality in
the University Residences last spring,
the Resource Centre for Occupational
Health and Safety identified potential
mould problems in two areas •• on the
first floor of the Prettie Residence and
the Nanabijou Child Care Centre.
As a result, children and staff using the
Centre were immediately moved to the
cafeteria of the Avila Centre while the
University initiated further inspections to
determine the scope of the problem and
the subsequent plan for remediation.
Renovations and repairs were
conducted by Lakehead's Physical Plant
and a local engineering firm.

"The work was done thoroughly and the
Nanabijou Child Care Centre moved
back to its original location one week
ahead of schedule," said Susan Soldan,
vice-president (administration and
finance).
Lakehead continues to monitor all areas
and respond to health care issues that
could be related to potential mould
sources. "Like all universities in
Canada," says Soldan, "Lakehead is
focusing on finding adequate funds to
address bigger maintenance issues."
The Nanabijou Childcare Centre has
been in operation on campus for more
than 1O years, providing day care
service for up to 67 children each year.

Coming Soon to a Workstation Near You

"I am delighted to be joining the Lakehead
community," says Tim Buell. "Lakehead
University is poised to embark on a period of
sustained growth and the implementation of
new and exciting academic programs and
research initiatives. I look forward to being a
part of this and helping Lakehead build on its
national reputation of teaching and learning
excellence."
Buell has received research grants from, and
has served on peer review committees for
most of the national research grant
organizations in Canada, including the Social
Sciences and Humanities Research Council,
the Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council, Office of Learning
Technologies. CANA/RE, Humanities and
Social Sciences Federation of Canada, the
National Centres of Excellence program and
the Canada Council.
Dr. Tim Buell replaces Or. John Whitfield who
retired in June after a 36-year career at
Lakehead.

This summer, CTRC staff (l-r: Frank Christen, Fred Plank and Andrew Brigham)
began installing new IP telephones on campus that will enable users to
communicate using software-based PC phones.
The converged network totally integrates Lakehead's voice and data information
into one common network. To date, new phones have been installed in all of
the Residences as well as in parts of the University Centre Building. When the
installation is complete, Lakehead will be the site of the largest installation of
voice-over Internet protocol (IP) telephony in North America.

AGORA - September/October 2001

�Lakehead

4

U NIVER $1 T V

Ellie Prepas graduated with a Bachelor's degree in
Mathematics in 1971 from the University of Waterloo, a
Master's in Environmental Studies in 1974 from York University
and a PhD in Zoology (limnology) in 1980 from the University
of Toronto.
Ellie Prepas' expertise on the Western Boreal Forest (Boreal
Plain) will be built upon and linked with a new project to be
developed in the Lake Superior watershed on the Boreal
Shield. Working with the University community, the private
sector and government, Prepas will work to develop strong
linkages between surface water quality, bioindicators, and
spatially-based landscape management models.

The Canada Research Chairs Program, a prestigious $900million program, was announced by the Government of
Canada in the 2000 Budget to support the establishment of
2,000 Canada Research Chairs in Canadian universities by
2005. The key objective of the Canada Research Chairs
Program is to enable Canadian universities, together with their
affiliated research institutes, to achieve the highest levels of
research excellence and to become world-class research
centres in the global, knowledge-based economy.

Ellie Prepas
named
Canada Research Chair In Sustainable
Water Management and the Boreal Forest

Dr. Ellie Prepas is the first Canada Research Chair to be
appointed at Lakehead. Three other candidates have been
nominated for Canada Research Chairs at Lakehead
University: Dr. Lionel Cata/in, Dr. Heidi Schraff and Dr. Gary
Genosko.

Dr. Ellie Prepas, an internationally respected scientist with 20
years of experience in watershed surface water interactions,
landscape models and policy development, has been awarded
the Canada Research Chair in Sustainable Water
Management and the Boreal Forest at Lakehead University.

Contribution to
Rese arch Awards
-

Prepas is an expert on cyanobacterial toxins, one of the
biggest concerns in fresh water lake quality. Cyanobacteria are
recognized as problem "algae" in water and along with
imparting bad tastes and odours to water, they also produce
toxic chemicals called cyanotoxins.
As the Canada Research Chair in Sustainable Water
Management and the Boreal Forest, she will focus on the
collection and organization of an appropriate data base on
fresh water in the Boreal Forest and the development of tools
to link those data with current modelling efforts for sustainable
landscape or watershed management.

Ronald N. Harpe/le

Congratulations to Dr. Ronald N.
Harpelle and Dr. J.D. Stewart who
are the recipients of the 2001
Lakehead University Contribution
to Research Awards.
Harpelle is an Associate Professor
o_f History whose research is
focused on the West Indian
community in Costa Rica (see
Faculty Books on page 11 ).
Stewart is a Professor of
Anthropology with an interest in
archaeology in northwest Mexico
and the American southwest.
Much of his recent research has
been done in collaboration with
his colleagues in the Departments
of Geology and Chemistry.

"Water is one of northern Ontario's most precious resources,"
says Dr. Prepas. "This Chair will provide the opportunity lo
train students who will contribute to a much needed vision of
sustainable water management in forested regions."
J.D. Stewart
AGORA -- September/October 2001

�Lakehead

5

UN I VERSITY

Three Acting Deans
Appointed
Three acting deans have been appointed in keeping with the
new academic structure that went into effect on July 1, 2001.
Lakehead now consists of seven faculties:
Business Administration

Dean: Dr. Bahram Dadgostar
Education

Dean: Dr. Julia O'Sullivan

Dr. Ian J. Newhouse
Ian Newhouse received his master's degree in science (exercise
physiology) from the University of Alberta in 1983 and completed an
interdisciplinary doctorate in physical education, medicine nutrition and
zoology at the University of British Columbia in 1987. In 1988, Newhouse
began his career at Lakehead as an assistant professor in the School
of Physical Education.
He is now an associate professor in the School of Kinesiology and an
adjunct professor in the collaborative master's specialization in
gerontology. Newhouse is currently the acting director of the School of
Kinesiology, a position he held in 1998, and he has also served as chair
of the School of Kinesiology (1998-2001 ). Throughout his career at
Lakehead, he has supervised to completion 10 master's theses with
his research focus being mineral metabolism and exercise.
He was also instrumental in the creation of the Lakehead University
varsity running programs and served as coach. During his years as a
competitive athlete, Newhouse was an international competitor in the
400-metre hurdles, 400-metre and 800-metre and an athlete for the
Canadian National Track and Field Team (1979-1984). As a member of
the Canadian National Track and Field Team, he was selected to compete
in both the 1980 and 1984 Olympic Games.

Engineering

Dean: Dr. Henri Saliba
Forestry and the Forest Environment

Dean: Dr. Reino Pulkki
Professional Schools

Acting Dean: Dr. Ian Newhouse

Dr. Kim Feddersen

Science and Environmental Studies

Kim Feddersen completed his doctorate in 1985 at York University,
majoring in Renaissance and Reformation literature. Feddersen has
written a number of articles on the history of rhetoric, rhetorical theory,
Shakespeare and film, and in 1994, published a book with Professor
David Parsons entitled A Case for Writing: A Business Writing Casebook.
He is currently working with Dr. Mike Richardson on a book exploring
recent cinematic adaptations of Shakespearean plays.

Acting Dean: Dr. Alastair Macdonald
Social Sciences and Humanities

Acting Dean: Dr. Kim Feddersen

In 1998, he received Lakehead University's Distinguished Instructor
Award and was a keynote speaker at last year's National Academic
Roundtable. He has performed numerous administrative duties during
his career at Lakehead, including serving as chair of the Senate
Organization Committee ( 1999-present), a member of the Strategic Plan
Monitoring Committee (1999-present), a member of the Council of
Ontario Universities· Secondary School Curriculum Validation Panel
(1999-2000), a member of the Undergraduate Studies Task Force of
the Strategic Planning Group (1998-1999), a member of the VicePresidential Search Committee ( 1998-1999), and chair of the
Department of English (1998-present).

Dr. Ian Newhouse

Acting Dean
Professional Schools

Dr. Kim Feddersen

Dr. Alastair D. Macdonald

Acting Dean

Alastair Macdonald received his doctorate from McGill University in 1972
and began his career at Lakehead in 1969 as a lecturer in the Department
of Biology. He became an assistant professor in 1971, an associate
professor in 1976 and a full professor in 1985.

Social Sciences and Humanities

From-1971 to 1991, Macdonald received a total of $250,000 in research
fun ding from Natural Science and Engineering Research Council
(NSERC) Operating Grants, an NSERC Forestry Development Grant,
and a Senate Research Committee General Grant. During his career,
he has written numerous refereed publications, including book chapters
and publications in professional journals on topics related to reproductive
and vegetative development in trees and shrubs.

Dr. Alastair Macdonald

Acting Dean •
Science and Environmental
Studies

Alastair Macdonald has served as chair of the Department of Biology
(1981 -1987 and 1996-present). assistant to the dean of Arts and Science
(1990-1993), and acting dean of Arts and Science. He served on the
Lakehead University Faculty Association executive for many years and
was the Association's first chief grievance officer.

AGORA -- September/October 2001

�Lakehead

6

UNIVE RS IT Y

ATAC
Advanced Technology and Academic
Centre under Construction

Lakehead
UNIVERSITY

Agora Ent1
Lakehead Unive1

a)

~
0
C

::;

When it opens in January 2003, Lakehead's new Advanced
Technology and Academic Centre (ATAC) will be the
University's "nerve centre:' It will centralize the information
technology and distance education functions and provide
approximately 1 ,400 new student spaces in time to meet the
demands of the "double cohort'' when two classes of Ontario
high school students converge and enter the university

Access Road

To New Hospital

Fieldhous

En

-0

lJ

A

NORTH

system.
Funded by the Government of Ontario's SuperBuild Growth
Fund, other corporate sponsors, and private and personal
donations, ATAC positions Lakehead to better meet the
demands of a knowledge-based economy. It will strengthen
Lakehead's role as a catalyst for economic, social and cultural
development in Northwestern Ontario and reinforce
Lakehead's reputation as an accessible institution.

Traffic Flow on Campus
Traffic access has changed in order to deal with ATAC
construction and to begin to implement the Lakehead University
Traffic Study conducted by Cook Engineering.
• The Main Parking Kiosk will be moved from the entrance on
Oliver Road to the entrance on Balmoral Street (Lakehead
University Drive South). Note: Parking after 6 p.m. on campus
is now free;

• Agora Circle entrance (Lakehead University Drive North) is now
for passenger drop-offs, pick-ups, and City Transit bus stops.
There is short-term metred parking as well as parking for barrierfree access;

• Traffic flow on Sanders Drive around the C.J.Sanders
Fieldhouse is now one way;
• Signage is posted on Oliver Road directing the public to enter
from Balmoral Street. Note: this is the only entrance to the
general parking lots, residences (Prettie, Bartley,
Townhouses), Nanabijou Child Care Centre, CNFER, Aramark
deliveries and University Centre loading zone;
• Speed bumps have been refurbished near Preltie Residence;
• A one-way exit from Lot 8 around the Music and Visual Arts
Building has been established

AGORA -- September/October 2001

�Lakehead

7

UNI V ER SITY

1 Sanders Fieldhouse
2 Centennial Building
3 University Centre (Agora)
4 Student Centre
5 Regional Cent re
6 Centre For Northern Forest
Ecosystem Research
7 Chancellor Paterson Library
8 Braun Building
9 School of Nursing Building
10 Ryan Building
11 Advanced Technology and
Academic Centre (ATAC)

Main
Entrance
Lakehead
University
Drive South
12
13
14
15
16

10th Avenue

P Parking
PG General Parking
.- Main Traffic Access
-= Walking Path
• Roadway Access

Power Ho use
Music and Visual Arts Centre
Bora Laskin Building
Health Sciences North
Northwestern O ntario
Techno logy Centre (NOTC)
17 Avila Centre/ Residence
18 Prettie Residence
19 Bartley Residence
20 Townhouses
21 Centre of Excellence for
Children &amp; Adolescents
with Special Needs

/~

/

•

...._,

...)

.'

- .ui

---

ATAC Facts
Total Budget:
$44 million
Size:
approximately 9, 117
square metres
Completion Date:
January 1, 2003
Project Managers:
The RPA Group
Project Architects:
IKOY Architects/
KGS Group
Occupants to Include:
Electrical Engineering
and Computer Science
Part-time and Distance
Education
Communications
Technology Resource
Centre (CTRC)
GIS Labs
Multi-media production/
teaching services and
other facilities to serve
the technological needs
of other programs

Caution
For safety and security
reasons, non-authorized
personnel are forbidden to
enter the ATAC Construction
Zone. For information contact
Security at 343-8569

AGORA --September/October 2001

�Lakehead

8

U N I V_ER S I T Y

News From the Library
NEW LIBRARY WEB PAGE ADDRESS
http://library.lakeheadu.ca

Give Voyageur a Try

Shad Valley at Lakehead
2001
Expanding Minds, Creating Opportunities and
Having Fun at Lakehead
"Programs like Shad are one of the best marketing mediums available.
The brightest teenage students from all over are coming to Lakehead
;1 and experiencing the high quality facilities and educators found in the
' ~~ Lakehead community. Many students arrive with an apprehensive
t
attitude at Lakehead; they have read Maclean's magazine and are
•
wondering what they will find. When these students depart, they take
\
with them a completely changed attitude. After returning home, many
• ·.'- ·
of the participants speak to their high schools about the Shad at
Lakehead experience. It is almost hard to imagine the implication of 50 students
returning to 50 different schools, each student telling hundreds of others just how great

ti

Lakehead University really is."
-- Alicia Coughlin, Shad Valley Program Assistant, Lakehead University

Shad Valley, now in its third year at Lakehead, is a summer program for youth aged 16
to 19 which focuses on exploring science, technology and entrepreneurship. This
year, 50 students took part in the program along with four Lakehead faculty and 10
staff.
Each year, Shad International selects a topic as the focal point of the competition. This
year's topic was helping people with disabilities. Teams of approximately seven students
are formed and these teams are required to design a new product, build a prototype,
write a business plan, and then present their ideas to a panel of judges. Each campus
selects an overall winner to compete in the The Royal Bank Entrepreneurship Cup

VOYAGER is the library's new webbased Online Catalogue. VOYAGER
features many improved searching
techniques including point and click
design, pull-down menus, Boolean
searching, ranked keyword searching,
easy downloading and e-mailing of
records and links to full text electronic
journal and other resources. VOYAGER
is easily accessible from your home or
office computer by clicking on the Online
Catalogue button from the Library's
Home Page (library.lakeheadu.ca)

Library Proxy Service - Access to
Journals, Indexes/Abstracts from any
Location
With this new service, students, staff
and faculty can access a number of
electronic journals, indexes, abstracts
and full-text documents previously
available from on campus locations only.
With a mail.lakeheadu.ca account
authorized users can access the library's
electronic resources from any Internetconnected computer.
... continued on page 12

national competition.
Lakehead's representation at this year's national competition came from the "Revolutions
Solutions" team," says Alicia Coughlin, Shad Valley Program Assistant. "Their product
was the Rollmote, a remote control (TV channel changer) for use by those who do not
possess fine motor skills. Wires were attached to each of the contact points underneath
the shell -- two to the roller, and two to a piece of metal soldered to the case. When
someone moves the roller, the wires on the roller make contact with the wires attached
to the metal, causing the TV channel to change."
E-mail .to Dr. Ken Hartviksen, Shad Valley at Lakehead Program Director
"I just wanted to thank you for the amazing time I had at Shad this July. Like many of
the Shads, I am suffering from the effects of withdrawal. I miss the jam-packed schedules
we had, the laughter and above all, the people. I will always have good memories of
the program and you are one of the people I have to thank." -- Erin Seto, Shad Participant

Shads Give Back to the
Community
During the month of July, the Shad
Valley participants raised over $ 1,000
through various entrepreneurial projects.
They shared these funds with Lakehead
University's Learning Assistance Centre
and the Northern Heart Retreat, a
charitable organization dedicated to
health education for people with heart
disease.

AGORA - September/ October 2001

�Lakehead

9

UNIV ER S ITY

Research May Hold the Key to the Early
Detection of Prostate Cancer
by Carrie Gibbons

Prostate cancer is the most frequently
occurring cancer in men and as many as
20,000 cases are diagnosed in Canada
each year. One in eight Canadian males
will develop the disease and one in three
will die of it.
Dr. Robert Thayer, an associate
professor in the School of Kinesiology, is
engaged in research that is designed to
change these sobering statistics and, in
doing so, benefit millions of men across
Canada and around the world.
Thayer is leading a team of skilled
researchers and physicians from the
Northwestern Ontario Regional Cancer
Centre including Dr. John Th'ng, Dr.
Sunil Gulavita and Dr. M. Abdel-Malak.
Their work is directed toward finding
biomarkers that will lead to the early
recognition and diagnosis of prostate
cancer.
In February 2001 the team was awarded
a $50,000 per year renewable research
grant from the Prostate Cancer
Research Foundation of Canada.
Bob Thayer's research focuses on
mitochondrial DNA -- the battery and
powerhouse of the human cell.
He hopes that by studying normal and
cancerous prostate cells, changes to the
mitochondrial DNA will reveal "errors" or
"mistakes" that should be very specific
to prostate cancer.
This research could facilitate the
development of an early detection
system which, most importantly, will be
non-invasive.
"Using current methods, by the time you
normally detect prostate cancer, the
tumour is already metastasized."
Thayer holds a doctorate in biochemistry
and has done work in the field for the

Dr. Bob Thayer (at the microscope) and Dr. John Th'ng (left), a researcher with the
Northwestern Ontario Regional Cancer Centre (NWORCC), are studying changes
to mitochondrial DNA which may indicate the presence of prostate cancer. With
them is Dr. Dhali Dahliwal, NWORCC's executive director, and Dr. Fred Gilbert,
president of Lakehead University.

past several years, including exploring
heat-shock proteins and aging. He is
working closely with Dr. Ryan Parr
(Anthropology), Dr. Gabriel Dakubo,
(Ottawa Regional Cancer Centre) and
Dr. John Th'ng.
According to Thayer, many prominent
research teams from universities across
Canada have received grants from the
Prostate Research Foundation of
Canada.

"This type of research would not be
happening at Lakehead without the
existence of the cancer research lab.
"Our collaboration with the Northwestern
Ontario Regional Cancer Centre offers
tremendous opportunities for students,
faculty and researchers to participate in
culling-edge research. It also reinforces
the work that is being done through
Lakehead's Applied Bio-molecular
Science program."

He credits the unique relationship that
Lakehead University has forged with the
Northwestern Ontario Regional Cancer
Centre as having played a large part in
the team's success to date.

SPARK
AGORA -- September/October 2001

Carrie Gibbons is one of
several Lakehead students
taking part in SPARK-- a
student writing program
sponsored by The
Chronicle-Journal

�Lakehead

10

U N I VERS I TY

Welcome
New Faculty &amp; Staff

Dr. Wa Gao -- Assistant Professor, Civil Engineering
Dr. Norman McIntyre -- Associate Professor, Outdoor
Recreation, Parks and Tourism
Dr. Ellie Prepas -- Professor, Forestry/Biology
Dr. EI-Ocla -- Lecturer, Computer Science

STAFF

Dr. Hubert de Guise -- Assistant Professor, Physics

Blain Boyd -- A/V Tech Assistant, CTRC

Dr. MacKinnon -- Assistant Professor, Chemistry

Trish Nagorski -- Development Officer - Annual Giving, Office

of Development

Professor Adam Van Tuyl - Assistant Professor,
Mathematical Sciences

Mignon Dunning -- Graduate and International Admissions
Officer, Admissions and Recruitment

Professor Tim O'Connell -- Assistant Professor, School of
Outdoor Recreation, Parks and Tourism

Lori Piccolo -- Secretary/Receptionist, Health and
Counselling

Dr. Uddin -- Assistant Professor, Electrical Engineering
Kevin Ride -- Lecturer, Faculty of Forestry

Daniel Klein -- Programmer/Analyst, Systems Management

Dr. Bedard -- Assistant Professor, Psychology

Kevin Green -- Security Communications Officer

Dr. Tim Buell -- Vice President (Research &amp; Development)

Sonja Habjan -- Palliative Care Education Coordinator,
NECAH

Lodovico (Vicco) Rocco -- Lecturer, Faculty of Business

Patricia Jordan -- Community and Professional Development
Coordinator, Health Sciences North
Debbie Leach -- Technician, Chemistry
Bonnie Knott -- Administrative Coordinator, CECASN

Dr. Peter Hollings -- Assistant Professor, Geology
Professor Aldoaijy -- Assistant Professor, Faculty ofBusiness
Administration
Dr. Amornrat Apinunmahakul -- Assistant Professor,
Economics

Marla Tomlinson -- Writer/Researcher, Communications
Neil Soloway -- Shift Engineering, Powerhouse
FACULTY
Professor Pat Sevean -- Associate Professor, School of
Nursing

Fossils, Fossils Everywhere

Dr. Anthony Lariviere -- Assistant Professor, Department of
Philosophy
Professor Danny Leung -- Assistant Professor, Department
of Economics
Dr. Michael Yuan -- Associate Professor, School of Outdoor
Recreation, Parks &amp; Tourism
Dr. Sonja Grover -- Associate Professor, Faculty of Education
Dr. Ziaping Liu -- Associate Professor, Department of
Electrical Engineering
Dr. Jama Ouenniche -- Assistant Professor, Business
Administration
Dr. Constance L. Russell -- Assistant Professor, Faculty of
Education

Some of the oldest plant fossils on earth are visible in rock
outcroppings that appear in downtown Thunder Bay.

Professor Karen Maddox -- Assistant Professor, School of
Nursing·

In July, a film crew from the Japanese Public Broadcast
Network including researcher Masayoshi Funaki (left)
interviewed Geology Professor Stephen Kissin. The crew
was filming a a documentary on pre-Cambrian life forms
in the Gunflint Formation -- a formation that lies under
Thunder Bay and extends into the United States.

Dr. Christoph Gnieser -- Assistant Professor, School of
Outdoor Recreation, Parks and Tourism
Professor Nasser Noroozi -- Assistant Professor, Computer
Science

AGORA -- September/October 2001

�Lakehead

11

UNIVE R S IT Y

Faculty Books

In Memoriam
Joseph Baratta

Dr. Ronald N. Harpelle
(History) has recently
published a book with
McGill-Queen's University
Press entitled, The West
Indians of Costa Rica:
Race, Class, and the
Integration of an Ethnic
Minority. The soft cover
edition will be published
by Ian Randle Publishing
of Kingston, Jamaica in
the new year.
According to Harpelle its
release in paperback in
the Caribbean is important because the book will be affordable
to the people for whom the research is most relevant. "Being
able to return something as valuable as the history of a
community to its owners is the greatest reward for a Historian."
The West Indians of Costa Rica is being described by scholars
as "a major contribution." James Handy, of the University of
Saskatchewan, says that the book is the most complete
investigation available to date. "Harpelle considerably furthers
our understanding of the history of the West Indian Community
in Costa Rica," he says. The Jamaicans, Barbadians, and
other West Indians who migrated to Costa Rica at the turn of
the 20th century found themselves in a country that prides
itself on its Spanish and "white settler" origins. Harpelle
examines the ways in which people of African descent reacted
to key issues of community and cultural survival from 1900 to
1950. The author focuses on Caribbean migrants and their
adaptation to life in a Hispanic society, particularly in Limon,
where cultures and economies often clashed. Dealing with
such issues as Garveyism, Afro-Christian religious beliefs, and
class divisions with the West Indian community, The West
Indians of Costa Rica sheds light on a community that has
been ignored by most historians and on events that define the
parameters of the modern Afro-Costa Rican identity, revealing
the complexity of a community in transition.

Superior Science Web Site
http://supersci.lakeheadu.ca/
Check out the new Superior Science web pages on the Lakehead
University web site. They were designed by 16-year-old Jessica
Otte who functioned as the program's "technical guru" this year.
Jessica is the daughter of Carol Otte, Lakehead's supervisor of
microcomputer services. She completed most of the work as a
volunteer during the winter months.

Joseph Baratta, a member of the
Board of Governors and a former
president of the Alumni Association,
passed away on August 1o, 2001.
He was 63.
Baratta held a master's degree in
education and devoted 38 years of
his life to the teaching profession as
a teacher and a principal with the
Lakehead District Catholic School
Board.
He was a staunch supporter of the Alumni Association.
In a profile published in the University's magazine
(Nor'Wester) in 1992, he was quoted as saying, "Many people
don't appreciate how important Lakehead is to the region,
especially the many local teachers who were able to further
their education without leaving their jobs and families .... I was
first asked to be a volunteer marshal! (for Convocation). When
later I was asked to serve on the Board of Directors, I said
yes; it was my way of giving something back to a university
which had given me so much."

Additional NSERC Award for 2001-2002
Shortly after the publication of the June 2001 issue of the
Agora listing Lakehead University's most recent NSERC
awards, another Lakehead faculty member was awarded an
NSERC equipment grant. Dr. S.M.J. Alirezaie of the
Department of Electrical Engineering was awarded an
equipment grant for $18,000 for a "Computer Vision and
Image Processing Laboratory."

Interim Manager of Security Services
Linda Moffatt has been appointed interim manager of security
services. She replaces Donna McGrath who resigned in July
to accept a position as a professor in the Police Foundations/
Law and Security Administration program at Confederation
College.
Over the course of her five years at Lakehead, Donna
McGrath was instrumental in the development of security
services on campus, and added a professional leadership
dimension to the role of campus security.
Linda Moffatt has been working in Lakehead's Security
Services since 1990.

AGORA -- September/October 2001

�_

Lakehead

12

UNIVERSITY

New Staffin the Office of
Communications
The Office of Communications is
pleased to annouce that Marla
Tomlinson has been hired to work as a
part-time Writer/Researcher. She
replaces Genevieve Knauff who left the
University in July to work in the forest
industry.
Tomlinson has been working as a
journalist in Thunder Bay since 2000,
most recently as a multimedia editor
with The Post and Thunder Bay
Television. Her duties at Lakehead
include compiling the weekly e-bulletin
(Events @ Lakehead) and the daily
Communications Bulletin.

Classical Kathak Dance
Concert

Lakehead
UN I VERSITY

Come and see this explosive North
Indian dance performance by
internationally renowned artists

Sept./Oct. 2001 Vol. 18, No.6

October 24, 2001

T HUNDER BAY, ONTARIO, CANADA

7 p.m. Bora Laskin Auditorium
Tickets are on sale at the Bookstore

Hockey Tickets on Sale

ISSN 0828·5225

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications. We welcome
news and other submissions from our
readers. Send them to:
Editor, Agora

October 12th is the day Lakehead's new
hockey team will play its first home
game against the University of Quebec
Trois-Rivieres. The action begins at 7:30
p.m. at the Fort William Gardens.

Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1
Telephone: (807) 343-8193
Fax: (807) 343-8075

Game Tickets

More News From the
Library

$9 - Adults, $6 - Seniors, and $3 Students and Children
Season's Tickets

Canadian National Site Licensing
Project (CNSLP)

As a result of the Library's participation
in this national project, Lakehead
University has access to hundreds of
new journal titles and other databases.
All of these items are available via the
Library's web page and can be
accessed from locations outside the
Library through the Library Proxy
Service.
ISi Web of Science

This new CNSLP resource provides web
access to the Institute of Scientific
Information's citation databases:
Science Citation Index, Social Science
Citation Index and Arts and Humanities
Citation Index. The ISi citation indexes
offer access to cited references and
footnotes contained in articles. This is a
unique navigational tool to help you find
related and current research on a
subject. Attend a Web of Science
training session:

Adult: $129; Seniors $89; Students and
Children, $49. For more information
contact Athletics at 343-8213

E-mail:frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca
Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to
Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P7B 5E1

Events @ Lakehead
Publications Mail

Events@ Lakehead is a weekly ebulletin distributed once a week to
members of the Lakehead University
community. If you have an event that you
would like to publicize to students,
faculty and staff, send it to the Office of
Communications at

events@lakeheadu.ca
Be sure to include date, time, location,
ticket prices and any other relevant
details.

Agreement Number 1497073
Photography: Peter Puna
Printing: Lakehead Print Shop

Deadline for submissions for the
next issue is

For more information contact Marla
Tomlinson at 343-8177

Friday September 28, 2001
9:30 a.m. to 11 :00 a.m.
Friday September 28, 2001
11:15 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.
Register by e-mail at
gisella.scalese@lakeheadu.ca
or call 343-8147

AGORA -- September/October 2001

November 1, 2001

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                    <text>November/December 2001

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

2001/02

Enrolment
Figures
by Frances Harding, Coordinator, Publications

While the figures aren't final - and won't be until
the official report is completed and submitted to the
Ministry of Training, Collleges and Universities Lakehead now has a clear picture of how many
students enrolled for the 2001/02 academic year.
Preliminary numbers as of November 1st show the
total count to be 6, 195 full-time and part-time
students. "Coincidentally it's the same number as
last year, but the mix has changed," says Kerrie-Lee
Clarke, Lakehead's director of institutional analysis
and government relations.
This year Lakehead has 4,91 O full-time students
(compared to 4,952 last year) and 1,285 part-time
students (compared to 1,243 last year).
One concern is that Lakehead has experienced a
drop of approximately 200 students in its first-year
intake. Clarke attributes this to the fact that several
universities in southern Ontario substantially
increased their intake of first-year students this
September. "This has had a detrimental effect on
Lakehead because approximately half of our
students come from outside Northwestern Ontario
especially from in and around the Greater Toronto
Area (GTA)," she says.
In reviewing overall enrolment figures for 2001/02,
Clarke points to both short-term and long-term
trends, noting that enrolment in the Social Sciences
and Humanities was down by 11 %. That's a
decrease of 11 O students and a considerable
decrease of 461 students (34. 1%) over five years.
continued on page 11

No. I for Value Added
Mac/ean's 2001 university rankings issue is out
and Lakehead University placed 13'h out of 21
universities in the Primarily Undergraduate
category and number one in Canada for valueadded.
Maclean's magazine has indicated that the
University offers an enriched environment for
the undergrad and gets top marks for going the
distance with their students.
l'alue-added measures the entering average of
students and two measures of student
achievement: the proportion who graduate and
the number of students receiving national
awards.
Maclean's magazine has prepared an annual
ranking of the undergraduate experience at
Canadian universities since 1990.

It ranks Canadian universities into one of three
peer groups - Medical/Ooctoral,
Comprehensive, and Primarily Undergraduate.
Lakehead University is evaluated in the
Primarily Undergraduate category based on
factors within six broad categories including
student body, classes, faculty, finances, library
and reputation.
Lakehead University improved in 12 categories,
stayed the same in four categories and placed
overall in the 13'• position.
-- Nancy Angus, Coordinator, Communications and
Public Affairs

Lakehead
U NI VE R S I TY

�Lakehead

2

UNIVERSITY

From the President's Desk
that has suffered our level of
underfunding and hence inequity over
the past decade. With full funding for
our students over that period, Lakehead
would have had an additional $63 million
to prevent the accumulation of deficit
budgets and our current outstanding
debt of almost $5 million. We would not
have had to eliminate most elective
classes, deferred dealing with the
physical infrastructure, and operated on
comparatively one of the leanest faculty,
staff and administration complements in
the system.
by
Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
President

Perhaps the best news in the Mac/ean's
universities issue this year is Lakehead's
first place status in the value-added
category. This clearly places us as the
top university in Canada in terms of
successfully supporting and graduating
students. We also know from the
province's key performance indicators
that our graduates do as well or better
than those from the other Ontario
universities in the job market. In
addition, we have personal testimonials
and strong anecdotal information that
demonstrate that our students are better
prepared for graduate studies. All this
has been accomplished in a severelyunderfunded environment, but it is
unlikely to be sustained without
recognition by the province that we can
no longer accommodate cutbacks and
maintain the quality of education that
has been the trademark of Lakehead.
There is no other university in Ontario

I believe we have made significant
progress at Lakehead in recent years,
but the trajectory can be reversed easily
without equitable funding. While we
continue to pursue a four-year campus
of the Northern Medical School for
Lakehead, there is little question that our
number one priority is to obtain
equitable funding for our students.
Consider that our students are funded
this year at 77% of the provincial
average and to balance our budget next
year will require a 5% cut in expenses.
The government has used the argument
that institutions like Lakehead and
Nipissing chose to grow their student
numbers, so why should they be
reimbursed for students already in the
system. It was a requirement of the
current funding system that a university
grow above its funded corridor before it
could ask for a ceiling or corridor
adjustment. Now that the government
has decided to fully fund new growth in
the system and appears reluctant to
deal with past growth, it means we are
truly caught in a dilemma. There is no
way we can reduce student numbers
because by removing unfunded
students, our enrolment would decline
and we would not be eligible for the

growth funding. The inequity that results
means that a student in Biology or a
student in English (different BIU
weights) at Lakehead generates less
grant value than similar students at most
other Ontario universities. This is a fair
funding issue not dissimilar to the
rationale that prompted the Fair Funding
Grants that were implemented in 1998
to correct the earlier historic funding
inequities. We will continue to press this
issue with government despite the tight
provincial budgetary situation as it is
critical to our institutional welfare and
ability to meet the demands that exist
now and will come as a result of the
double cohort.
The construction of the Advanced
Technology and Academic Centre
remains on schedule. Cranes are on
site and the superstructure should start
to become noticeable. Most universities
are dealing with similar fund-raising
challenges on their SuperBuild projects.
The economic recession and the intense
competition for private sector dollars
means that many universities will have
to seek bridge funding to close the gap
between costs and dollars raised. We
will be no exception.
Finally, I must admit it is gratifying to see
the Maclean's ranking more in line with
the value of this institution. The
methodology used does not adequately
measure quality despite the magazine's
claims, but our progress in their input
measures at least is more consistent
with the positive attributes of Lakehead
that are more accurately reflected by
outcomes factors. We should all be
proud that our university is first in
Canada in just such a measure - the
value added performance.

AGORA - November/December 2001

�Lakehead

3

UN I VfRSITY

Welcome New Board
Members
Lakehead University Is pleased to announce the new members of the Board of
Governors for 2001/2002:
Shawn Cooper
Enrolled in the one-year Bachelor of
Education program at Lakehead University,
Cooper is studying with the goal of teachi!lg
biology and chemistry. After graduating with
an Honours Specialized Bachelor of Science
Degree in Biomedical Science at the
University of Guelph (where he was the
recipient of the President's Scholarship),
Cooper was employed as the spokesperson
for the Central Student Association (Student
Union president) while serving on the
University of Guelph Board of Governors.

George Davies
George Davies is the president of Acres
Management Consulting, a professional
services firm based in southern Ontario.
Focusing on electricity restructuring,
telecommunications planning and assisting
investors in the purchase and sale of utility
assets, Davies has held a variety of senior
management positions in both the public and
private sectors. Most recently, he was
president and CEO of Hagler Bailly Canada
and senior vice-president of PHB Hagler
Bailly (U.S.), an international management
and economic consulting firm responsible for
advising the Ontario government on
electricity restructuring. Davies has held
deputy minister positions for the Government
of Ontario, first with Energy and
subsequently with Transportation and was a
member of the board of directors of Ontario
Hydro and Suncor, and chair of the Board of
the Ontario Energy Corporation. He is an
economist with an undergraduate degree
from the University of Toronto and an MA in
Economic Development from the University
of Sussex (UK).

Ron Dysievick
Ron Dysievick is the general manager with
Bombardier Inc. in Thunder Bay. A graduate
of Westgate Collegiate and Ryerson
Polytechnic, Dysievick has taken a variety of
courses at Lakehead through Part-time
Studies and Distance Education. In 1971, he
began his career with Can Car Thunder Bay
as a foreman and technician and when he
left in 1988, he held the position of director of
manufacturing. After a nine-year stay in

Kingston as the general manager of CCKW
UTDC Inc., Dysievick returned to his home
town to become general manager of
Bombardier Inc.

Dr. Tom Dunk

A Lakehead University faculty member,
Thomas Dunk has been appointed as a
representative of Senate on the Board of
Governors. Dunk is an associate professor
and chair of the Department of Sociology. His
research interests include working class
history and culture, vocationalism and
training, and the social influences on
environmental controversies. Dunk is the
author of various publications including It's a
Working Man's Town: Male Working Class
Culture in Northwestern Ontario. He
received his BA from the University of
Alberta and his MA and PhD in anthropology
from McGill University.

Greg Seiveright

in Political Science ( 1970) from Lakehead. After
working at Lakehead University from 1970 to
1973, Wallace returned to university and
completed a master's degree in Business
Administration at the University of Western
Ontario. He is a past Board member of the
Canadian International Grains Institute and the
Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra.

...

Paul A. Gordon of Rossport, Ontario was reelected for a second term as the chair of the
Lakehead University Board of Governors. A
member of the Board of Governors since 1991,
Gordon was raised and educated in Thunder
Bay. He graduated from Queen's University
Law School and was called to the Bar of the
Province of Ontario with Honours in 1972. He
has practiced law in Thunder Bay and currently
is the sole practitioner with Paul A. Gordon Law
Office in Rossport. He is a founding member
and past director of the Ontario Trial Lawyers
Association and is currently on contract with
the Ministry of the Attorney General as parttime crown attorney and the Ministry of Natural
Resources as agent and prosecutor in the
district.

Jean Morrisson
Book Signing

Greg Seiveright is enrolled in the Bachelor of
Education program. A graduate of
Lakehead, Seiveright received an Honours
Bachelor of Outdoor Recreation and
Bachelor of Arts in History. He was vicepresident of Student Issues with the
Lakehead University Student Union (LUSU)
in 1999-2000 and was awarded the Poulin
Award that year. Seiveright has been a
house president, president of the Residence
Council, a residence assistant, a member of
Senate, First Response and the Foot Patrol,
and active with the Outdoor Recreation
Students' Society.

Dennis Wallace
Dennis Wallace is president of the Atlantic
Canada Opportunities Agency in Moncton,
New Brunswick. Prior to his current position,
Wallace was associate deputy minister of
Indian Affairs and Northern Development in the
Government of Canada and assistant deputy
minister, Veterans Services, Department of
Veterans Affairs. Wallace has substantial
knowledge of regional development, having
served as assistant deputy minister, Western
Economic Diversification Canada during the
years 1988 to 1992. He holds a Business
Diploma (1969) and a Bachelor of Arts degree

AGORA - November/December 2001

Jean Morrison was on campus last
month signing copies of her new
book Superior Rendezvous-Place :
Fort William in the Canadian Fur
Trade. Morrison is one of the first
graduates of Lakehead's masters
program in history and for 15 years
served as historian at Old Fort
William. With her is Dr. Willard
Carmean, Professor Emeritus of
Forestry.

�Lakehead _ _ __ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ __ __ _ __

4

UNIV f RSI T Y

WHAT'S HAPPENING @ THE LIBRARY. ..

Check out "ERes,,
Electronic Reserves/Exams now Available
through the Library Web Page
(http://library.lakeheadu.ca
Click on Electronic Reserves)
It is now possible for faculty to have non-copyrighted material
placed on "Electronic Reserve" through The Chancellor
Paterson Library's Circulation Desk. Through this new
service, a faculty course page is created and material is
electronically added to the course page. All non-copyrighted
materials that are submitted will be scanned and placed on a
course page as a PDF document. Upon faculty request a
course page can be password protected. Access to ERes is
possible from on campus as well as off campus through the
Library Proxy Service.

Access to the Profiles is available through Industry Canada's
Strategis, Canada's Business Information Site at http://
strategis.ic.gc.ca/cgi- bin/sc mangb/contact/sbp/sbp.cgi
For more information or to arrange a demonstration, contact
Linda Mitchell, Government Documents Librarian at extension
8072 or e-mail linda.mitchell@lakeheadu.ca
Don't forget to check the Library's web page at http://
library.lakeheadu.ca for many new and exciting resources!
-- Gisella Scalese, Orientation/Continuing Education

Weyerhaeuser Donates
$100,000

The Library has also scanned approximately 1,200 past
examinations and placed these examinations in ERes. These
can be searched by department only.
The Library cannot place copyrighted materials such as
journal articles and chapters from books on ERes. These will
continue to be available as hardcopy reserves at the Library's
Circulation Desk. To submit materials to be placed on
electronic reserve the Circulation Desk requires one copy of
all material in hardcopy format and, if possible, also in
electronic format (floppy disc or as an e-mail attachment). For
more information contact the Circulation Desk at extension
8225 or e-mail frank.sebesta@lakeheadu.ca

Small Business Profiles Now Available on the Internet
and on CD-ROM
It is now possible to access Statistics Canada's newest edition
of Small Business Profiles (including 1993, 1995 and 1997)
on the Internet and on CD-ROM in The Chancellor Paterson
Library. This is an excellent resource designed to provide
information for the development of business plans and to help
new and established firms determine their standing within
industry averages.
The Small Business Profiles provide detailed financial and
employment data on small businesses by industry for Canada,
the provinces and territories. The Profiles includes data on
gross operating revenue, selected expenses, net profit/loss,
employment, balance sheet items and financial ratios from
unincorporated and incorporated businesses operating in
Canada.

(l-r} Moe Ktytor, Henri Saliba, Gary Locker, Richard
Lyons, Fred Gilbert, Norm Bush
Weyerhaeuser Company Limited demonstrated their
support for the Native Access Program for Engineering
at Lakehead University with a special donation to the
program.
At a ceremony on November 9 involving students, staff
and faculty, Norm Bush, VP of Weyerhaeuser Ontario
Operations, presented a cheque for $100,000 to NAPE
Founder and Executive Director Dr. Gary Locker and
Dean of Engineering Dr. Henri Saliba.
NAPE, a unique partnership between the corporate
sector, the Aboriginal community and Lakehead
University, has resulted in a sustained enrolment of over
40 Aboriginal men and women studying technology and
engineering in the Faculty of Engineering.

AGORA - November/December 2001

-- Nancy Angus

�Lakehead

5

UN IV ER S I T Y

Award-winning Civil Engineering Students

The People's Potato

I

Lakehead students Jason Lane, Tara Law and Kimberly
Station were selected first prize winners in the 2001 Canadian
Geotechnical Society Undergraduate Report Competitions for
their paper entitled Determination of the shear strength of an
unsaturated clay tiff using conventional direct shear testing
equipment, while John Lobbezoo was selected second prize
winner in the Society's 2001 Undergraduate Thesis
Competition for his paper entitled A simplified function for
estimating the coeffiecient of permeability of unsaturated soils.
All of the students received cash prizes, a year's membership
with the Canadian Geotechnical Society and free registration
at the Canadian Geotechnical Conference held in Calgary in
September. Both projects were supervised by Or. Sai
Vanapalli, an assistant professor of civil engineering.
Executive Assistant to the President
Bev Bicknell has accepted the position of executive assistant
to the president effective October 1, 2001. Bicknell has been
with the University since 1989 as a project assistant in Parttime Studies &amp; Distance Education (1989-90) and as a human
resources officer (1990-2001 ).
Midnight Housekeeping Foreman
Physical Plant has announced that Jim Squier is the new
midnight housekeeping foreman. This change will facilitate
improv~ments to the cleaning standards, provide training and
improve the safe work practices of Housekeeping operations.
Squier may be reached by telephone at 343-8968, e-mail
Jim.Squier@lakeheadu.ca

A new LUSU initiative to provide hot lunches once a
week to students in need was featured on CBC
Radio's Ontario Today in October. Host Dave
Stephens interviewed LUSU President Jeremy
Salter about the pilot program. According to Salter,
about 22 students each week have been accessing
the vegan meals - potato, rice and vegetable dishes
prepared by volunteers in The Outpost.
"If times get rough," Salter said, "we want students
to know we are here for them."
The next day, Stephens read an e-mail message
from Evelina Pan, president of the Thunder Bay and
District Labour Council, who wrote in to say, "ft is so
reassuring to know there are caring,
compassionate, conscientious and articulate young
people like Jeremy in leadership positions, raising
people's consciousness while meeting their basic
needs."
The meals are served in UC-0017 between 11 :30
a.m. and 1:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. -- F. Harding

Norma Jean Newbold Volunteer Spirit Bursary
The Norma Jean Newbold Volunteer Spirit Bursary, named
after Newbold who was a member of the Residence Life team
for 11 years and is now living in Lindsay, Ontario, was
launched this fall during the 10th Annual Volunteer Fair. The
bursary was established by the Residence Council and will be
awarded annually to a Lakehead student in financial need who
demonstrates, through his or her volunteer example,
involvement and leadership in the University and the Thunder
Bay community.
Residence Programmer Billi Jo Cox can be contacted at 3467947 for more information.
In Support of our American Friends
Facilities Supervisor Bill Keeler says the Department of
Athletics has donated $508.50 to the Twin Towers Orphans
Fund, a registered charity to assist children who lost parents in
the collapse of the World Trade Centre. The gift represents
50% of the admissions to the Men's and Women's Basketball
games held on campus November 2 and 3 against teams from
Gogebic Community College in Ironwood, Michigan.

AGORA -- November/December 2001

�Lakehead

6

UNIVERSITY

Viewpoint

Since 9/11:
The Imposition of Transparency
by Dr. Gary Genosko, Assistant Professor, Sociology

Canada's response to the global trauma produced by the
events of 9/11 is currently taking the form of legislation as the
Liberal government hurries Bill C-36 through committee to the
House. Bill C-36, or the proposed "Anti-Terrorism Act," is
essentially a complex set of amendments of many existing
acts - the Criminal Code, Official Secrets Act, Evidence Act,
Charities Registration Act, Proceeds of Crime Act, National
Defense Act, and 11 others. The overall intent of the Act is to
render transparent individuals and groups in Canada. The
larger context of this Act is the maturation, undoubtedly
accelerated by the events of 9/11 , of the information society
into a society of surveillance.
Although the flash points of the amendment of the Criminal
Code providing for preventative arrest for 72 hours and the
imposition of supervisory conditions on suspects, as well as
the government's refusal of a sunset clause have garnered
most political and media attention, I want to investigate three
further dimensions of the Act under what I call the imposition
of transparency that is characteristic of our society of
surveillance. Transparency not only renders individuals and
groups visible, opening them to inspection and minute scrutiny,
but negatively evaluates what is obscure, unfamiliar, and
unpredictable.
What are the implications for Canadian society of this
imposition of transparency, this rooting out of all that is hidden
and potentially dangerous? A major figure of 2oth century
sociological theory, Georg Simmel, once remarked in the
course of his study of the sociological significance of secrecy
that "although the secret has no immediate connection with
evil, evil has an immediate connection with secrecy." In times
of terror the need for greater transparency taints all secrecy
with evil, and secrecy then becomes the sole prerogative of
government.
The idea of imposing transparency has many dimensions. The
first is philosophical. Bill C-36 asks us to know ourselves and
others in a new way in relation to the struggle against
terrorism. What is at stake is not a utopia of the pure selfunderstanding of reason, but a call for accountability and
assumption of responsibility that entails the removal of all
vague and opaque obstacles, that one has nothing to hide, no

secrets, about one's relationship with terrorist activities or
organizations. And if we are not prepared to undertake this
self-interrogation and disclosure, the government has given
itself the right to look into these matters for us. The Solicitor
General will compile a controversial list of terrorist entities.
While the list will be subject to review after two years, it allows
for freezing the money, property, and other assets, arrest of
those facilitating terrorist activities, even alleged to have
committed a terrorism offense, on the list. All Canadians are
requested under the Act to disclose to the RCMP and/or CSIS
any information they possess about property transactions
engaged in by anyone on the list. In this work we are all
security agents working in concert for the government of
Canada. This is a chilling "list" in the tradition of McCarthyism.
The second dimension allows the government of Canada to
exercise a self-assigned monopoly over secrecy by overriding
the Access to Information and Privacy Acts. In the AntiTerrorism Act the Minister of Justice may at any time
personally issue a certificate that prohibits the disclosure of
information for the purpose of protecting international
relations, national defense or security. Similarly, under the
terms of the Act, the Minister of Revenue may revoke the
registration of any charity if intelligence reports suggest that it
is directly or indirectly tied to terrorist activities. All privacy
protection legislation covering public and private sectors that
functions on the basis of enabling individuals to access
information has exceptions if the information sought impinges
upon police investigations. Here, the Ministers and the Solicitor
General may personally intervene in the application process
and deny the release of information on security grounds.
In his response to this provision, Canada's Privacy
Commissioner, George Radwanski, pointed out that the
Privacy Act would be effectively disabled and the
Commissioner's work neutralized to the extent that he could
not ask for the decision to be reviewed. Additionally, the AntiTerrorism Act runs together the individual's right to information
and the administrative right to access governmental
information, which is normally suspended in times of war, but
is treated as if Canada were in a permanent state of war. This
is where the need for a "sunset clause" becomes acute.

AGORA - November/December 2001

�Lakehead

7

U NI VERSITY

communications and national security interests, against
terrorist attacks. Privacy can be protected only if it is violated;
the very idea of privacy is relativized.
Indeed, amendments to the Criminal Code provide for new
and improved investigative tools, especially electronic means
such as wire taps and e-mail intercepts in a way that respects
the privacy of Canadians. Likewise, in the same spirit, changes
to the Evidence Act would protect against the disclosure of
information that might jeopardize intelligence operations by the
introduction of a new trial procedure, while allegedly
guaranteeing fairness and openness in the courts.
The third dimension is embedded in the domain of
dataveillance (computerized surveillance) gathering. The
Proceeds of Crime (money laundering) Act authorizes the
Financial Transactions and Reports and Analysis Centre to
monitor and investigate suspicious financial transactions on
the grounds that they constitute security threats, and under the
Criminal Code, DNA sample warrants may be issued for those
convicted of terrorist offences and the samples stored in the
DNA DataBank. Here we have two classic examples of
surveillance and function creep. The former entails that the
monitoring of financial transactions involving suspicious sums
and entities will eventually become business as usual. The
latter w~II come to be used for other purposes once it is
augmented by other markers such as ethnicity, gender,
intelligence, psychiatric assessment, and other characteristics
pertinent to the construction of abstract profiles and the
persecution of those who match them.

Gary Genosko

Transparency not only
renders individuals and
groups visible, opening them
to inspection and minute
scrutiny, but negatively
evaluates what is obscure,
unfamiliar, and
unpredictable

The only explicit recognition of the secondary effects of the
extraordinary security and surveillance measures in the Act is
an increase in the severity of sentences for hate crimes, with a
focus on prosecuting those who use telecommunications and
Internet media, through amendments to the Canada Human
Rights Act and Criminal Code.

We need to listen carefully to the "double speak" of
contradictory claims in the Act. It flags the "sophisticated and
trans-border nature" of terrorism and thus permits the
Communications Security Establishment (CSE) to acquire and
use information from the global information infrastructure for
the purpose of providing foreign intelligence. This is
undertaken by intercepting private communications, while
gathering foreign intelligence abroad, in order to protect the
privacy of individual Canadians and institutions, especially

The question of whether the imposition of transparency
creates a spin-off endemic form of terror equal in the long term
to the external threat is the most important question raised by
the Act. By imposing a generalized need for invasive
inspection, the Act makes neither neutral nor benign demands
on Canadians. The need for secrecy beyond government
prerogative has been redefined as a sign of inscrutability, and
is therefore highly suspicious.
The authors of our Anti-Terrorism Act take pains to reflect the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and acknowledge and
protect disruptions caused by lawful advocacy, protest or work
stoppages. Still, many questions persist about who may be
frozen in the floodlights. By imposing transparency, privacy
has, in short, like the personal, become intensely political.

.,..,.

AGORA - November/December 2001

�Lakehead

8

UN IVER SI T Y

New Faculty Profiles
The first of a series of articles introducing Lakehead's newest faculty members
by Marla Tomlinson, Writer and Researcher, Office of Communications

Dr. Sonja Grover

Dr. Michel Bedard

Associate Professor, Education

Assistant Professor, Psychology

Courses:

Courses:

Educational Psych~logy

Statistical Methods
for Behavioural
Research; Social
Development Across
the Life Span

Background:

PhD from the University of Toronto/
OISE in Applied Psychology
(Educational Psychology)
Why Lakehead? "I was impressed with
the National Centre of Excellence for
Children with Special Needs
headquartered at Lakehead University
and the possibility of working with the
Centre. I was also impressed with the
Faculty of Education at Lakehead and
the excellent research opportunities and
supportive environment the Faculty of
Education and Lakehead University
overall has to offer."
Teaching/Research Goals: "My
research program deals with
psychological and legal issues
respecting children's rights. I'm busy
writing a book on the impact of the
Charter on children's rights in Canada.
I'm also hoping to receive some external
funding for empirical research
concerning mediation counselling in the
schools with students considered major
behavior problems at
school. The
counselling will
include the students,
their families as well
as school officials.
As far as teaching is
concerned, my goal
is to inspire my
students not only to
be competent
teachers, but also more compassionate
teachers who can advocate effectively
for their students."

Background:

Two degrees in
Psychology, a BA
from Concordia and
a MSC from
McMaster; a PhD in Health Studies and
Gerontology from University of Waterloo
Why Lakehead? "I came to Lakehead
University because there was a good
balance here between academic and
research opportunities and quality of life.
This is important as I'm raising two
children here and I want them to have a
good life."
Teaching/Research Goals: "For
teaching, I want my students to learn
more and develop critical thinking. For
research, I work with older adults and
ways to maximize quality later in life."

Professor Pat Sevean
Assistant Professor, Nursing
Courses:

Lifespan Wellness
Assessment; Care of
the Ill Client
Background:
Graduated from the
Lakehead Regional
School of Nursing;
Received BScN from
Lakehead University;
MA in Nursing from the College of Saint
Scholastica in Minnesota; MEd from

Lakehead University; Doctoral
Candidate at the Ontario Institute for
Studies in Education (OISE) at the
University of Toronto
Why Lakehead? "I taught previously in
the Confederation College nursing
program prior to becoming the director
of patient care at the Northwestern
Ontario Regional Cancer Centre. I always
wanted to return to "my fi rst love"
teaching, and at Lakehead the nursing
program is very progressive with distance
and Web-based education, and the
possibility of a masters program being
developed."
Teaching/Research Goals: "My
research interests include Oncology
(Cancer Care), Primary Health Care,
Evidence-based Health Care, as well as
evaluative methods to determine the
efficacy and cost-effectiveness of
teaching programs."

Dr. Anthony Lariviere
Assistant Professor, Philosophy
Courses:
Introduction to
Philosophical
Thought;
Environmental
Ethics; The Origins
of Modern Thought
Social and Political
Philosophy

r
---

Background: BA
from The University of Western Ontario ;
MA from McGill ; PhD from Western
Why Lakehead? "Lakehead offered the
best opportunities:•
Research/ Teaching Goals: "Currently,
I'm working on a book on the development
of the scientific method in the 17th century.
For teaching , I want to turn out wellrounded liberal arts students."

AGORA - November/December 2001

�Lakehead

9

U NI V ERS I TY

Professor Danny Leung
Assistant Professor, Economics

Courses: Money and Banking;
Macroeconomics; Microeconomics II;
Econometrics II; International Trade
Background: MA in Economics from the
University of
Saskatchewan;

PhD in Economics
from The University
of Western Ontario
(expected Dec.
2001}
Why Lakehead? "I
chose to come to
Lakehead because it
offered both the
resources necessary for quality research
and a friendly work environment where
relationships between colleagues and
students are much closer. The city of
Thunder Bay also appealed to me
because it has similar small city qualities
to my home town."
Teaching/Research Goals: "In the short
term, I plan to pursue research related
to my PhD thesis. More specifically, I
plan to investigate the impact of the rise
in self-employment on the innovation
process in Canada and the United
States:•

Dr. Peter Hollings
Assistant Professor, Geology

Courses: Environmental Geology
Background: Undergraduate at
University of London, England; PhD at
University of
Saskatchewan;
Background
specializing in
Igneous petrology;
NSERC
Postdoctoral
Fellowship at the
Centre for Ore
Deposit Research,

Hobart, Australia, working on the origins
of the world's largest copper porphyry
deposits in Chile.
Why Lakehead? ''The proximity to the
Canadian Shield offers an excellent
opportunity to conduct research on the
origins of the Archean terranes. In
addition, my wife and I like the lifestyle
available in Thunder Bay. The opportunity
for my wife to work with colleagues in the
Department of Anthropology was also a
positive factor."
Teaching/Research Goals: "My principal
research goals are to continue applying
geochemical techniques to the
investigation of mineral deposit genesis
both in South America and Canada. I hope
to further develop the environmental
geology program here at Lakehead while
continuing to provide instruction in the core
areas of geology."

Dr. Connie Russell
Assistant Professor, Education

Courses: Outdoor Education Critical
Pedagogy
Background: BA (Psychology and
Animal Behaviour} and MES
(Environmental Studies} from York
University; PhD (Education} from OISE.
Why Lakehead? "I came to Lakehead
because of the emphasis on and
support for outdoor
education here. For
example, outdoor
education is
identified in the
Faculty of
Education's
Strategic Plan. As
well, there are many
kindred spirits in the
School of Outdoor
Recreation, Parks and Tourism so there
are opportunities for interdisciplinary
collaboration here. "

AGORA - November/December 2001

Teaching/Research Goals: "I came to
academia looking for ways that
environmental justice and social justice
can be achieved together. This desire
certainly informs both the content and
pedagogical approach in my courses as
well as my research in such areas as
interdisciplinary programs in secondary
schools, academic/community
collaboration, critical environmental
education, ecofeminism, human/animal
relations, and the study of the
educational potential and pitfalls of
ecotourist ventures such as whalewatching."

Dr. Tim O'Connell
Assistant Professor,
Outdoor Recreation, Parks &amp; Tourism
Courses: Outdoor
Skills and Theory
I; Programming
and Evaluation
Group Dynamics
in Outdoor
Recreation, Parks
&amp; Tourism
Background:
PhD at New York
University; Masters
at University of Minnesota; Bachelors
degree at the State University of New
York College at Cortland
Why Lakehead? "I found that the
School of Outdoor Recreation, Parks
and Tourism was excellent. The
students, faculty and staff at Lakehead
are extremely impressive and the
surroundings are astonishing."
Teaching/Research Goals: "My main
goal is to help students make a link
between theory and practice. I want the
students that I teach lo succeed and my
goal is to help them achieve their own
goals. In research, my interests are the
social-psychology of outdoor recreation,
and outdoor skills and leadership
development."

�Lakehead

10

UN IV E RS ITY

Welcome
New Faculty &amp; Staff
FACULTY
Dr. Carney D. Matheson •· Assistant Professor, Department of
AnthropologyEconomics; Dr. Graham Passmore •• Assistant
Professor, Faculty of Education; Dr. JoAnne Zamparo •·
Associate Professor, Department of Social Work
Correction: In the last issue the Agora, Dr. EI-Ocla, an
Assistant Professof in Computer Science, was incorrectly
listed as a Lecturer.

STAFF
Steven Sarazin •· Assistant Tree Improvement Specialist,
Faculty of Forestry (OTIB)
Susan Burton •· International Student Coordinator,
International Activities
Renee Praymak •• Ancient DNA Technician
Carol Bold •• Coordinator of Community and Professional
Development, Health Sciences North
Frank Fabiano •· Manager of RezNet, CTRC
Pat Lucas •· Administrative Assistant, CTRC/University
Services
Chris Coker •· DNA Database Manager, Anthropology (PaleoDNA Lab)
John Guerard •· Business Development Officer, Office of
Research
Hanusia Tkaczyk •• Senior Counsellor, Health &amp; Counselling
Robbin McGillivray •· Manager of Security

Marion Muldoon

Marion Muldoon, a former employee of Lakehead University
who worked as a Health and Safety Coordinator in Human
Resources before retiring in 1991 , passed away on November
2, 2001, following a brief illness. "Marion was a friendly,
sincere person who went out of her way to make people feel
welcome and special," says Director of Human Resources Bill
Bragnalo. "She was also very dedicated to making the
workplace a safer place to be."
During the 13 years she spent at Lakehead, Muldoon was
instrumental in establishing the Resource Centre for
Occupational Health and Safety. According to the Resource
Centre's current director, Ina Chomyshyn, she was a "pioneer"
in the whole field of occupational health and safety as well as
a friend and a mentor for OHS professionals in Northwestern
Ontario.

Style Guidelines for the Web
Guidelines for the development of "official" Lakehead
University Web pages have been prepared by Multi Media
Production Specialist Subby Szterszky working in conjunction
with the Office of Communications. The Guidelines will be
presented at the first of three seminars on Web page design
and development scheduled for November 29, 2001, and then
posted on the Lakehead Web site under "Communications/
Graphic Standards." The seminars are targeted for staff and
faculty who wish to ensure their department's Web site is kept
up-to-date. To register for the seminar, contact Norma Smith at
343-8522.

Residence Phones
Representatives from Nortel Networks and Bell Canada met with
members of Residence Council on November 12 to discuss the
problems students have been experiencing with the new phone
system that was installed over the summer.

Sal Carchidi -· Security Communications Officer
Elaine Bell •• Research Assistant, Psychology
Steve Fratpietro •· DNA Technician, Anthropology
Department (Paleo-ONA Lab)

In Memoriam

The session was moderated by Grant Walsh, Lakehead's
executive director of universi ty services, and included
presentations by Bob Angell, director of Lakehead's
Communications Technology Resource Centre, and Tom Hibbs,
Corporate Accounts Manager with Nortel Networks.

Tish LaVoie, former president ofthe Lakehead University Booster
Club and a founding committee member of the CIAU Women's
Basketball Championships held in Thunder Bay in 1995, 1997,
1998, and 1999, passed away on October 15, 2001. Tish was
married to Dr. Norm LaVoie, a professor of kinesiology. She
volunteered countless hours in support of Athletics and will be
remembered for her quick wit and warm heart.

During the meeting, the students were told the Bell/Lakehead/
Nortel partnership is committed to getting the phone system
working properly by the end of December 2001. In recognition of
the inconvenience caused by the phone system this fall, all
students living in residence will receive a telephone calling card
valued at $20 as well as a refund on their fall telecommunications
charges. Bell Canada and Nortel Networks will be back on
campus in January for a follow-up meeting with the students.

Karen Ramsdale •• Secretary to the President

Tish LaVoie

AGORA - November/December 2001

�_

Lakehead

11

UN IV ERS ITY

Enrolment continued from page 1
Science and Environmental Studies, Education, Social Work
and Nursing were the bright spots. In Science and
Environmental Studies, enrolment was up by 11.3% but down
by 13% since 1997. In Education, enrolment was up by 10.5%
mainly because of the increased support by the Ministry of
Training, Colleges and Universities to cope with increased
demand for teachers projected for the next few years.
Nursing was up by 41 %, reversing a long-standing decline that
was mainly due to government policies in health care. Social
Work was up by 13.8%, but is still down by 16.7% from five
years ago.
All other sectors showed decreases: Business Administration
down 8.8%; Engineering down 3.2%; Forestry down 22.5%;
Kinesiology down 18.5%; Outdoor Recreation, Parks and
Tourism down 14.5%.

THANK YOU

FACULTY and STAFF
Lakehead University thanks all Faculty and Staff who
have generously donated to the Philanthropy Fund.
Your philanthropic support has in many ways benefited
Lakehead University and our surrounding community.
The 2001-2002 Campaign is now underway!
Please show your support by making a donation today.
Donating is easy ...
Simply fill out your pledge form and send it back to
the Office of Development by November 22, 2001 in
order to qualify for a 2001 tax credit.

What can be done?
"We know from our surveys of first-year students that a major
factor in a student's decision to go to university is to prepare
for a specific career or to get a good job," says Kerrie-Lee
Clarke. "We have to help students make the connection with
Lakehead and to promote our successes."

For more information on how to make a donation
please contact the Office of Development at 343-891 0.

P.S. Make a donation and receive a special token of
appreciation hand delivered to you!

Vice-Provost (Student Affairs) Dr. Kimberly Barrett agrees and
adds, "Lakehead graduates perform better than the provincial
average in terms of employment. Students, staff and faculty
must continue to make the case that Lakehead is an excellent
institution with an impressive array of academic programs and
that our graduates do very well."
Barrett points out that Lakehead University is working toward
adopting a more integrated approach to marketing. A new
committee chaired by Dr. Kim Fedderson with representation
from units across campus is currently looking at ways for
Lakehead to be more strategic in its approach to student and
faculty recruitment, development, alumni and community
relations.

:' United Way of Thunder Bot ~ ~
i·

.. ,

1L·i ,~,-J t, ;_\ "'·'-

____:,:.._..::----

/ n¥o--•

Additional Information Online:
Lakehead University's Institutional Statistics Book
http://www.lakeheadu.ca/-analysis/statsbookOO.pdf

Lakehead University Ranking Increases Dramatically in
Annual Maclean's Survey
http://www.lakeheadu.ca/-eventswww/macleans2001.html

Lakehead University Fourth in National Accountability
Survey
http://www.lakeheadu.ca/-eventswww/releases/
accountability.html

President Fred Gilbert and Philanthropy Fund
representative Vic Smith present a cheque to Thunder
Bay United Way Campaign President, John Sims, and
Northern Representative of United Ways of Ontario,
Colin Bruce.
This is the final payment for the pledge of $9,556.50
donated by faculty and staff for community organizations
through the 2000 Philanthropy Fund.
The 2001 Philanthropy Fund is currently underway.

AGORA - November/December 2001

�_

Lakehead

12

UNIVE R SITY

SPORTS WALL OF
FAME
Call for Nominations
In June of 1996 the Lakehead University
Sports Wall of Fame was established. It
was started to honour those that have
made outstanding contributions to
Lakehead University Athletics. Each
induction year there is the possibility of
two athletes, one builder and one team
that can be inducted in the Wall.

2001-2002
LUMINA CONCERT SERIES

All concerts are held at 12:30 p.m. in the
Jean McNulty Recital Hall, William H.
Buset Centre for Music and Visual Arts

Nov./Dec. 2001 Vol. 18, No.7
November 27

ISSN 0828-5225

Dylan Benson, percussion
January 29

Ben Perrier, trombone; Joy Fahrenbruck,
piano

Editor, Agora

Brandon University Trio

March 19

Kim Erickson, voice

Athlete - a University graduate who has
achieved outstanding success as a
competitor representing Lakehead
University. Athlete nominees will not be
considered until five years after
graduation.

Healther Morrison. piano

For more information or a nomination
form contact:
Darlene Yakimoski (807) 343-8230

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications. We welcome
news and other submissions from our
readers. Send them to:

February 12

The criteria are as follows:

Team - a team which has achieved a
high level of excellence in a given year
may be considered eligible. Team
nominees will not be considered until 10
years after the year of achievement.

UNIVERSITY

THUNDER B AY, ONTARIO, CANADA

The next dinner is scheduled for the fall
of 2002 and the committee is looking for
nominations for consideration for
induction into the Wall. If you feel that
there is an individual or team that
should be inducted please send your
nominations to the Sports Wall of Fame
Committee.

Builder - may be either active or
inactive at the time of their nomination;
should have served Lakehead University
as an executive or member of a
support group, a coach, official,
manager or administrator in their
capacity for a period of at least four
years (does not have to be consecutive)

Lakehead

Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road

Gillaume Tardif, violin; Mark Rudoff, cello

Thunder Bay, ON P78 5E1

Judy Kehler Seibert, piano

Telephone: (807) 343-8193

March 4

Fax: (807) 343-8075

Vancouver Chamber Choir

E-mail:f ranees.harding@lakeheadu.ca

St. Paul's United Church, 8 p.m.
Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to
Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P78 5E1
Publications Mail
Agreement Number 40062450
Photography: Peter Puna
Printing: Lakehead Print Shop

15th Annual LUCC Family Holiday
Party
Sunday, December 16, 2001

1-4 p.m.
Main Cafeteria

Deadline for submissions for the
next issue is

Please register before Nov. 23 by
contacting Patti Merriman 343-8614

CD Trojan
Devel . &amp; Alumni Affairs

E-mail:
darlene.yakimoski@lakeheadu.ca
Nominations close January 31, 2002

AGORA - November/December 2001

January 1, 2002

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                    <text>January - February 2002

A Newsletter for Faculty and Staff

Lakehead awarded two Canada
Research Chairs
by Frances Harding
Lakehead University has received major
new research funding for two Canada
Research Chairs in food safety and in
environmental protection.
Dr. Lionel Catalan has been named a
Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in
Industrial Waste Management and Site
Remediation. His research with the
mining and pulp and paper industries
will lead to the development of safe and
economical waste treatment and
storage methods.
Dr. Heidi Schraft has been named a
Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in
Molecular Food Microbiology. Her
interdisciplinary research will improve
our basic understanding of the
mechanisms involved in persistence or
growth of pathogens in food and food
production environments.
The Canada Research Chairs Program,
announced in the Government of
Canada's 2000 Budget, will see the
establishment of 2,000 Canada
Research Chairs in universities across
the country by 2005. The key objective
of the Program is to enable Canadian
universities, together with their affiliated
research institutes and hospitals, to
achieve the highest levels of research
excellence, and to become world-class
research centres in the global,
knowledge-based economy.
"Research excellence is an essential
part of Lakehead's mission:• says Dr.
Tim Buell, Lakehead's vice-president

Dr. Lionel Catalan (Chemical Engineering)
and pr. Heidi Schraff (Biology)
(research and development). "These Chairs reflect our
commitment to gathering knowledge that is useful in the social,
technological, economic and cultural development of this area,
as well as having applications nationally and globally. Both
scientists are engaged in work that has a great deal of practical
relevance:· (For more detail, visit the Agora online at http://
www.lakeheadu.ca/-publications/agora/)
Lakehead currently holds a total of three Canada Research
Chairs. Last June, the University announced that Dr. Ellie
Prepas had been named a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in
Sustainable Water Management and the Boreal Forest.

Lakehead
U N I VERS I TY

�AGORA January/February 2002 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

2

From the President's Desk
Often we get tied up in the daily routine
of business and don't take the time to
acknowledge that in the larger picture
lots of good things have happened. I
had a chance this month to reflect on
the bigger picture at Lakehead at the
Board of Governors' Retreat and thought
I should share some of the presentation
with the broader University community.

by
Dr. Frederick F. Gilbert
President

Sure we continue to have fiscal
challenges and student numbers are still
below where we would like to be, but
Lakehead has made some important
advances in the past three years.
Incoming student averages continue to
climb as a result of the Senate decision
to raise the minimum admissions
average to 70 percent. We have
succeeded in recruiting some excellent
faculty and the research funding
attracted to the University by all the
faculty with the assistance of the Office
of Research has increased and in 2000
moved us to 34t11 place in Canada.
These and other factors helped move
Lakehead to its highest ranking ever in
Maclean's primarily undergraduate
category, which while of somewhat
dubious value as a true measure of
quality, nonetheless is important in
decision-making by prospective
students. We can take considerable
pride in being Canada's top-ranked
value-added university for the first time
this year.
There are other signs of our progress
visible on campus. The Advanced
Technology and Academic Centre is
taking shape on target, both for
completion in January 2003, and on
budget. We have significant
partnerships in place with IBM, Sun
Microsystems, SGI, Nortel Networks
and Bell Canada that have helped us
radically upgrade the technological

Lakehead
IJNIVf ll: SlfY

environment and become a leader in the
deployment of IP telephony in North
America. The new Paleo-DNA Lab is
operating in the NOTC building and we
have an effective partnership with the
Northwestern Ontario Technology
Centre to advance business
development in the high-tech area within
the region. The first company built from
the intellectual property of Lakehead's
faculty, Genesis Genomics, is in
operation and has a potentially brilliant
future in biotechnology by providing
diagnostic tools for various forms of
cancer and other diseases. The
Thunder Bay Regional Hospital (TBRH)
under construction on land donated by
the University will be a major catalyst in
advancing health sciences at the
University. Our joint venture
arrangement with TBRH will see the
University share in the proceeds from
such developments as an
accommodation centre, a medical
professional building, and potentially a
co-generation project. An agreement
with the Riverview Terrace developers
positions the University's 30 acres
between TBRH and Riverview Terrace
South as prime residential development
land. Many opportunities for commercial
development to the financial advantage
of t~e university will arise after the
hospital is open.
The relationship between the two postsecondary institutions in Thunder Bay is
good and is improving. Confederation
College's President Pat Lang and I have
been cooperating to ensure that our
institutions and the contributions they
make to the local economy are
recognized. As well we have seen a
strengthening of the academic
relationships in areas like Social Work,
Nursing, Political Science, Engineering
and Forestry.

�_3_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ AGORA January/February 2002
Students now can register on line
instead of in line. They have ready
access to computer facilities and the
Internet, thanks in part to the
technology fee they approved and over
which they have considerable say in
authorizing spending. Payments can be
made by credit card, students in
residence have the option of "super
singles," the ice is regularly cleared of
snow on Lake Tamblyn for recreational
use, and perhaps most importantly, the
services provided to students in all
areas have improved.
The Library has truly entered the digital
age with a new management system
and access to data bases linked to the
developing Canadian Universities Virtual
Library. Students, faculty and staff now
have a real ability to get better
information even though the "on-theshelf" material may be reduced.
The Ryan Building is brighter and the
hallways and classrooms have been
refurbished. The Braun Building
washrooms and windows have been
improved, the PC lab has been
completely redone and a new GIS lab
has been constructed. The C.J.
Sanders Fieldhouse has new seating
and the floor has been refinished for the
first time since it was installed. The
campus is cleaner and the grounds are
attractive. The walkway improvements
between the Centennial Building and
the Chancellor Paterson Library has
made this area a favourite haunt on
those warm sunny days that now occur
in the winter as well as other times of
the year. The Canada Foundation for
Innovation and Ontario Innovation Trust
monies have improved the research
infrastructure tremendously and our
Canada Research Chairs applicants
have been approved.
Lakehead has reconnected with the city
and region. The Certificate in Business
Leadership program offered by Business
Administration has been well received.
Thunder Bay businessmen have formed

a corporation that has brought varsity
hockey back to the city and the
Thunderwolves' sports events connect
campus and community in a special
way. It is becoming more apparent to all
that Thunder Bay's future is inextricably
linked to Lakehead University and the
more we are able to seize opportunities
for connecting our futures in areas like
broadband access, entrepreneurship
and community development, the better
off we all will be.
Following the expectations articulated in
the 1999-2004 Strategic Plan, the
University's relationships with Aboriginal
interests have been strengthened. We
have a functioning protocol with the
Nishnawbe Aski Nation that ensures
effective communication between our
organizations. Treaty 3, the Metis
Nation of Ontario, and individual Band
Councils have supported our efforts to
establish a northern medical school.
The Aboriginal Sports Circle has made
Lakehead University their national
partner for the national high
performance hockey camp and the past
two summers have seen young hockey
players, male and female, from across
Canada participate in a training program
in Thunder Bay.
Lakehead has embraced a new
Chancellor, one of its own graduates,
Lorne Everett. We have had some
wonderful honorary degree recipients
including Buffy Sainte-Marie, Jane
Urquhart, and Douglas Cardinal, and
have recognized local citizens like Vic
Prokopchuk, Preston Cook, Tony Seuret
and Jim Colquhoun as Fellows in recent
years.
We have had successful accreditation
visitations in Forestry and Education.
Our students continue to outperform
those from other universities in Business
and Engineering competitions.
Lakehead now has the capacity to
advance the University and to raise
funds effectively because of the
centralized Office of Development.

Lakehead
U N IVt l St'J't'

Lakehead and its people
accomplished a great deal in the last
three years. I fully expect the
University to maintain its positive
trajectory and continue to cope with
the challenges it faces

Administrative restructuring has helped
energize our research enterprises and
student support with a modest addition
of 1.5 FTE in senior administration. The
positions are the V.P. Research and
Development (+1.0 FTE) and the
currently-unfilled Associate V.P.
Research (+0.5 FTE). In essence, the
current situation means there is only 0.5
FTE more senior administration here by
my actions at this time. Most of the
refocusing has been accomplished with
restructuring of positions and
responsibilities rather than the creation
of new positions.
The University is more accountable.
Budget information is freely available
and the Communications Bulletin and
AEC reports ensure everyone has
information on what is occurring in the
University. The award-winning Annual
Reports (an initiative made possible by
the support of sponsors for the first three
issues) and the improved Web site have
allowed Lakehead to make the highest
percentage increase for any Canadian
university in accountability over the past
three years in the Wilfrid Laurier's
business faculty's analysis of university
accountability and we have placed in the
top five since 1999!
I could go on (and I did at the Board
Retreat). The message is clear:
Lakehead and its people accomplished
a great deal in the last three years. I
fully expect the University to maintain its
positive trajectory and continue to cope
with the challenges it faces. As we start
another new year, I thank all of you who
have contributed to the Lakehead
success story and wish everyone the
best for a productive 2002.

�4

AGORA January/February 2002 _ _ _ __ __ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __

Extending Our Reach
Lakehead's new Advanced Technology and Academic Centre - with its 15 "smart" classrooms - will assist the
University in providing innovative programs that support teaching and learning
by Kim Costa

Students living in Marathon and Terrace Bay connect by video-conference with their classmates in Thunder Bay. They are taking
a Certificate in Business Leadership program developed by the Faculty of Business Administration. Approximately 40 have
graduated since the program began in 1998 and another 40 or so are currently enrolled

S

ince 1998, the Faculty of Business
Administration has been offering a
part-time Certificate in Business
Leadership program to senior staff with
local companies such as Bowater,
Bombardier and Thunder Bay
Telephone.
This year, thanks to video-conferencing
technology, Lakehead has been able to
extend its reach to include participants
based in Terrace Bay and Marathon,
Ontario. These students tune in to the
Friday morning classes from the comfort
of learning sites located in their own
communities. It saves them hours of
commuting time. And many, like Brad

"It's remarkable," says Ross. "It feels
just the same as being there in person.
The teacher is up at the front of the
class, you can see and hear the other
participants, they can see and hear you,
and you can really focus on what is
being taught."

indeed, all of the programs offered
through the Faculty, can be enhanced
by technological resources. He
considers the new Advanced
Technology and Academic Centre, with
its "smart'' classrooms, production
studios, and video-conferencing
facilities, to be essential to Lakehead's
long-term growth and development.

Dr. Bahram Dadgostar, the dean of the
Faculty of Business Administration, is
currently negotiating with several
companies in Canada to deliver a similar
type of custom-designed program. He
believes the future of Lakehead's
Business Leadership program, and

"We've moved out of the pen-andpaper paradigm and into an electronic
paradigm," says Dadgostar. "Students
and faculty now expect a technologically
sophisticated learning environment and
we must be able to deliver it if we are to
keep pace and compete successfully."

Ross of Marathon, believe it is an
effective way to learn.

Lakehead
UNIVflSI TY

�5
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ AGORA January/February 2002

When it opens in January 2003, the
Advanced Technology and Academic
Centre will contain 15 smart classrooms
that will be wired to integrate computer,
multimedia, and network technologies.
These facilities will, among other things,
allow experts to be electronically linked
to on-campus classes.
The classrooms will host a range of
technologies including: video/data
projectors, sound systems, videoconferencing, laptop connections, laser
disc players, VCRs, and video copy
cameras. The technology will be
supported with both Internet Protocol
(IP) and Integrated Services Digital
Network (ISDN) high-speed telephone
dial-up systems which will allow for the
fact that although most users are
moving toward IP connections, many
sites still rely on dial-up technology.
There will be three levels of technology
available for use in the smart
classrooms. The first is a self-contained
classroom where all the equipment
supports instruction in the classroom
itself. The second level allows the same
class to be shared over distances with
remote sites. Both audio and video are
shared through the use of video
cameras and microphones so that there
is real-time, two-way interaction. In
addition, data is shared using voice-over
Internet protocol {IP) telephony. The
third level involves Web casting, that is,
the class being delivered over the Web.
***
Dr. Fiona Blaikie, associate professor
and acting chair of graduate studies and
research in the Faculty of Education,
recently used Lakehead's video
conferencing connections to give a
lecture to a class in Iceland. Linked to
Dr. Gudrun Helgadottir of the University
of Iceland, Blaikie lectured on the
subject of criterion referenced
assessment through a live videoconferencing hook-up. (It is a topic, she

"Students and faculty now expect a technologically sophisticated learning
environment and we must be able to deliver it if we are to keep pace and
compete successfully." - Dr. Bahram Dadgostar

says, that involves delineating
expectations for learning and then
deriving learning criteria for assessing
expectations.)
Blaikie believes that video-conferencing
is a great way to cover distances and a
very cost-effective way of bringing in
specialists in a particular field into a
classroom. 'The hook-up had clear video
and good audio;' she says. 'The
transmission was instantaneous and
there was very good interaction between
myself and the students in Iceland."

Angell, director of the communications
technology resource centre. Gwen
Wojda, director of part-time studies and
distance education, agrees and notes
that the new facility will provide muchneeded technological resources to
support classes both on- and offcampus.

...

According to Dr. Tim Buell, Lakehead's
vice-president of research and
development, this will only strengthen
the University's role as a leader and a
catalyst for economic development in
the region and beyond.

"ATAC has provided Lakehead with the
opportunity to review and upgrade areas
of campus bringing all areas to ttie
newest level of technology, " says Bob

Kim Costa is a Lakehead student
employed by the Office of Development
under the Ontario Work Study Program

Lakehead
U N 1 Vfl!$1 T Y

�6

AGORA January/February 2002 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

ATAC Campaign Progress Report
By Dr. Tim Buell, Vice-President (Research and Development)

Welcome to the first in a series of
regular updates on the progress of our
ATAC campaign. When I took up my new
role as vice-president (research and
development) last September, perhaps
the most exciting and challenging task I
took on was to bring help bring the ATAC
vision to completion. ATAC is perhaps
the most significant single infrastructure
project ever undertaken by Lakehead
University, and it has enormous potential
for the increase in excellence in both
teaching and research at Lakehead.
Such an ambitious project cannot be
realized by just one person-we at
Lakehead are extremely lucky to have in
place a team of professionals in our
Development Office to manage the
campaign. An important goal of
Lakehead's Strategic Plan was the
creation of a strong, efficient and
centralized Development Office. This
goal has now been achieved. Our
Development Office team is led by
Director of Development Kirn Tobin; and
our staff includes: Laurie Hill,
development officer •· major gifts; Debra
McKever, development assistant; Trish
Nagorski, development·· annual giving;
Cathy Trojan, financial assistant; Jennifer
Willianen, development researcher and
writer; and Kelly Nyman, development
systems specialist.
But even the largest and most
experienced development and
advancement offices cannot manage a
successful campaign without the
dedication of our volunteers and
associates, who take Lakehead's vision
of excellence out into the community
and corporate world. Their task is to
engage them with Lakehead and to
foster an understanding of the
importance of supporting our University.

These volunteers include all members
of the Lakehead University Board of
Governors, as well as the Lakehead
University Foundation.
In addition, our ATAC campaign is led
by a special group of volunteers drawn
from the Lakehead University
Foundation and the Board of Governors
Advancement Committee. Together with
President Fred Gilbert, these special
volunteers make up the ATAC Cabinet,
and include, from the Lakehead
University Foundation: Syd Halter
(chair), John Richardson (vice chair),
Pat Meredith, Robert Paterson, Peter
Prior, Mark Piovesana, Ruth Kajander,
and John Valley. Members from the
Advancement Committee of the Board
of Governors include: Don Caron,
(chair), Bill Bartley, Neil McLeod,
Russell York, George Davies, Doug
Robson, Tom Jones, and Bill
McCracken.
I am pleased to report that our ATAC
Cabinet members have so far
personally contributed a combined
giving total to the ATAC Campaign of
$105,300. These leadership gifts affirm
the Cabinet's commitment to the ATAC
project and the Lakehead University
vision of teaching and learning
excellence.
To help organize the mammoth task of
prospecting for and soliciting possible
donors for ATAC, we have divided up
our fundraising efforts into specific
teams, each of which will target a
specific fundraising sector. Our ATAC
Cabinet volunteers are currently divided
into several of these teams each with a
specific thematic area: including a
Financial Industries Team, Foundations
Team, Local Team, Resource Industry
Team, Associations Team and the
Information Technology Team.

Lakehead
UNIVE" S I T Y

Even the largest and most
experienced development
and advancement offices
cannot manage a successful
campaign without the
dedication of our volunteers
and associates, who take
Lakehead's vision of
excellence out into the
community and corporate
world
The ATAC Cabinet has been working
closely with the Office of Development
and senior administration to gather
financial support for ATAC. In addition,
Bob Angell, director of the
communications technology resource
centre (CTRC) and Moe Ktytor, director
of corporate relations. have been
enlisted to assist with the Information
Technology and Resource sectors.
Recently, we have also engaged the
services of Ketchum Canada Inc., who
will be providing on-site campaign
counsel as our ATAC campaign enters
this major public phase.
To date, in addition to major in-kind
contributions from Bell and Nortel, over
$1 million in cash has been committed
from organizations both locally and in
Southern Ontario. The groundwork
necessary for a campaign of this size
has been laid and the next several
months should prove to be very fruitful
in_terms of major donor renewal and
acquisition.
As I mentioned, this is the first in a
series of regular ATAC campaign
updates. In each issue of the Agora until
the close of the Campaign, an ATAC
Cabinet member will report on the
status of fundraising for ATAC. In the
meantime, as our ATAC Campaign
develops an increased public presence,
I encourage you to help us celebrate
with and join our donors in their
commitment to Lakehead University.

�7
- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - AGORA January/February 2002

Donor Impact

Meet Lakehead's
Development Team

Since the University's inception, donors
have impacted the lives of Lakehead
University students by generously
supporting capital projects,
scholarships, bursaries and awards, and
specific departments and programs. In
fact, over the past decade, 33, 773
donors have contributed a combined
total of $24,497,706 to Lakehead
University. These donors are
categorized as follows:

---

Corporations

46.5%

Associations

22.5%

Individuals

21.4%

Foundations

9.6%

Building a
Philanthropic
Campus Culture
Thanks to the generosity of Lakehead
University faculty and staff, the 2001
Philanthropy Fund topped the previous
year's total funds raised by 45 percent.
The average gift to the Philanthropy
Fund was $469.
In addition, donations to this fund, which
raises money for Lakehead University
and/or other not-for-profit organizations
in the community, totalled $22,982,
surpassing the original target of
$18,000.
Approximately half of the funds raised
were designated to Lakehead University
for a variety of projects and programs.

(Back I-r) Laurie Hill, Debra McKever, Kim Tobin, Jennifer
Willianen, Cathy Trojan, Trish Nagorski (Front I-r) Dr. Tim Buell
and Kelly Nyman
The following briefly outlines the responsibilities of the Office of
Development staff members:

Kim Tobin, Director of Development, 343-8747
Donor Relations; Foundation and Advancement Committee Liaison; Staff
Management

Laurie Hill, Development Officer - Major Gifts, 343-8913
Donor-funded Scholarships, Bursaries and Awards; Planned Giving; Donor
Events

Debra McKever, Development Assistant, 343-8300
Administrative Support; Advancement Committee and ATAC Cabinet
Secretary; Stewardship Support

Trish Nagorski, Development Officer - Annual Giving, 343-891 o
Philanthropy Fund; Parents' Campaign; Annual Giving Program

Kelly Nyman, Development Systems Specialist, 343-8421
Benefactor (Datatel Module) Transition; Web-site Design; Data Extraction and
Manipulation

Cathy Trojan, Financial Assistant, 343-8194
Donations Processing; Finance Liaison; Database Maintenance

Jennifer Willianen, Development Researcher and Writer, 343-8899
Prospect Research; Proposal Writing; Communications Liaison

Lakehead
UN IVE RS I TY

�a

AGORA January/February 2002 _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _

Coaches' Corner
In this issue of the Agora we asked Maureen
Stapleton-Hay, coach of Lakehead's Cross Country
Running and Track and Field teams (and this year's
recipient of the Thunder Bay 3M Female Coach of
the Year Award), to report on the fall season and to
share her outlook on the team's future. Watch for
more reports from other Lakehead coaches in future
issues of the Agora:
"The Thunderwolves had a
solid Cross Country running
season in 2001, placing well
in many competitive races.
On the women's side, the
team finished in the top half
of the field at the University of
Minnesota - Duluth Lester
Park Invitational. The highlight
of the season was the Roy
Griak Invitational, that
showcased the largest and most competitive field in the
history of this race. Over 600 women from NCAA Division
I - Ill schools competed. Lakehead finished an impressive
26th out of 43 teams with Jaclyn Hutton earning an All
Star as she completed the course in 8th position.
"On the men's side, the highlight event was the Lester
Park Invitational in Duluth, where they placed in the top 5
against some tough Division II schools. At the competitive
Roy Griak Invitational, the men finished 28th out of 42
teams. Clayton Parent consistently lead the team with top
half finishes. Although in a rebuilding year; the men's team
finished in the top ten at OUAs.
"The indoor track season officially began on January 12
with the Thunderwolves competing at the University of
Minnesota's Northwest open. The season will highlight
competitions at Bemidji State, and the University of
Manitoba. You can also see the Thunderwolves in action
at the Confederation College Fitness bubble on February
9 at 10:00 am.

Roadmapplng the Future

Dr. Paul Satinder Retires

Chancellor Lorne Everett has
been appointed a member of
the U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE) executive committee on
the Long-Term Stewardship,
Science &amp; Technology
Roadmap Program. The
executive committee has been
established to articulate a set
of national science and
technology goals to assist the
United States in the $212billion DOE clean-up
program. The executive
committee oversees the LTS
interests of the USA's
Department of Energy and
their national laboratories, the
US Department of Defense,
the US Environmental
Protection Agency, and
various universities, states and
industries.

A retirement party was held in
December 2001 for Dr. Paul
Satinder, a professor of
psychology, who joined the
faculty in 1968.

The Roadmap, to be released
in draft in May 2002, will
provide the context for making
LTS R&amp;D investment decisions
for still contaminated sites
nationwide. Once finalized and
implemented, the Roadmap
will guide national research
priorities that will benefit
contaminated DOE sites as
well as hazardous and solid
waste disposal sites across
the USA. For more information
visit the Web site at

Satinder will be remembered
for inspiring his students, for
the research he did as a biopsychologist, and for
developing new courses
pertaining to his field of
interest: behaviour and drugs.
While Satinder is giving up his
teaching duties, he says he
will continue his research as
well as certain administrative
duties at Lakehead.
Throughout the years,
Satinder has been an ardent
supporter of the Lakehead
University Faculty Association
(LUFA) serving as the
organization's vice-president,
president and past-president
from 1984 to 1989.
He is a founding member of
LUFA and is currently a
member of the Executive
Board of LUFA, chair of the
Benefits and Pension
Committees of LUFA, and
chair of the Pension Board for
the Pension Plan for
Professional Staff of Lakehead
University.

http:://lts.inel.gov/st-roadmap

Special Notice

AWARD TO STAFF FOR
OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE
AND/OR CONTRIBUTION

"I'm looking forward to strong performances by both the
men's and women's team and predict a seven to eight
member OVA team to represent Lakehead.
Lakehead's running philosophy in track has always been
represented by a quality team versus quantity, which has
translated into bringing home medals for the last two
years.

See www.lakeheadu.ca/-lusec/award-staff.htm
Reminder:
Nominations are to be submitted by March 1, 2002

It is our intention to continue this tradition in the 2002
season."

Lakehead
UNIVE"SITV

�9
- - - - --

- - - - - - -- - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - AGORA January/February 2002

Lessons in
Corporate Strategy
by Samuel Barnes
Dr. Lifeng Geng's business class learned a
lesson in the reality of running a major
company this year by participating in a
game which pitted groups of students
against one another in a race for profit.
"This whole activity is a simulated strategy
game," says Geng. Most business
students do not have any real work
experience, he says, and the theory
learned in class is very hard to apply to
the real world. "By integrating this game into the class, the
students can relate those concepts and theories into a real-fife
situation."
The game consists of 1O student teams, in business to
manufacture, market and distribute running shoes. The
companies have distinct names, logo's symbols in the stock
exchange, and possess all the functions -- marketing,
production, finance, and accounting •· of an actual business.
Each team must choose a location for their business, and
devise a strategy based on their position, both alone and in
relation to other companies. Over a virtual period of 10 years,
each company must make decisions to help them stay on top,
taking into consideration changing factors such as fluctuations
in the price of raw materials.
"They have lots of fun with the game," says Geng. "Some
students even claim that they got addicted to it." T he game
was initiated just this year, but similar strategy activities are
commonplace in almost every top business school in the

The Winning Team: John-David Dowdell, Meghan McDougall,
and Cheryl Berst
country. This year was seen as an experiment to see what
works, what doesn't work, and where the game needs
improvement.
So what does it take to win the game? Geng attributes much
of the success to strong cooperation between team members.
This year's winning team --The Eagles -- say it was their
strategy of starting slow and careful, followed by directed
focus based on observation. "ff our competitor had a niche,"
said John-David Dowdell, "and we saw the opportunity to go
into another niche, we did that. Our biggest change was
going from being a broad company with a lot of shoes, and a
lot of models, to having very few models but a really good
product. I think that was the turning point:'

Library launches VOYAGER
Ten months of intensive planning, training and system preparation by all members of
the Library's staff culminated in the successful launch of Voyager on November 26th.
"The implementation marks an important step in our ability to collect, maintain and
make accessible the growing number of resources such as electronic indexes and
abstracts, electronic journal, and e-books," said University Librarian Anne Deighton.
Voyager makes it possible to offer a single point of access to both the Library's holdings
and to multimedia electronic information sources wherever they may be. ft provides a
user-friendly interface with buttons, pull-down menus and "point and click" facility. Try it
out for yourself at http://fibrary.fakeheadu.ca
Dr. Elizabeth Hollis-Berry of the Department of English and University Librarian Anne Deighton explore the features of Voyager,
Lakehead's new online catalogue and library management system

Lakehead
UN IVflSITY

�10

AGORA January/February 2002 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

New Faculty Profiles
The second in a series of articles introducing Lakehead's newest faculty members
by Marla Tomlinson

Dr. Craig MacKinnon
Assistant Professor, Chemistry

Heidelberg, Germany; MA from Portland
State University, Portland, Oregon; PhD
from the University of Calgary

Why Lakehead? "Lakehead's Outdoor

Courses:

Recreation, Parks and Tourism program
is unique in Canada in terms of offering
a truly integrative focus on leisure and
tourism issues in protected areas. Only
a couple of other university programs in
North America offer a matching breadth
of student experience and faculty
interests."

Analytical
Chemistry II;
Inorganic
Chemistry

Background:
BSc (honours) in
Chemistry at
Dalhousie
University;

Teaching/Research Goals: "As a

PhD from the University of Guelph, Postdoctoral work at the University of
Calgary.

Why Lakehead? "I like working in
smaller groups so I can give each
student my attention. Lakehead also
provides excellent research equipment
to work with which makes it a great
atmosphere to work in."

Teaching/Research Goals: "My goals
for teaching are to make it interesting for
the students. Chemistry is ubiquitous in
society, and I hope students learn
something relevant and useful about
technology and societal issues."

teacher I hope to impress on students
the importance of critical thinking and
balanced reasoning. My research goals
are to continue my interests in
recreation ecology - studying the
ecological consequences of outdoor
recreation on natural environments."

Associate Professor, Outdoor
Recreation, Parks and Tourism

Students Helping Students
Courses:
Introduction to
Parks and
Protected Areas;
Tourism Economics

Background: BS in

Assistant Professor, Outdoor
Recreation Parks and Tourism

Forestry with
emphasis in
Recreation
Resource
Management from the University of
Montana; MS in Recreation Resource
Management from Southern Illinois
University; PhD in Leisure Behaviour
with emphasis on tourism from
University of Illinois

Background: BSc
from the University of

Teaching/Research Goals: "For
teaching, I want to unlock the
tremendous potential of my students by
focusing on the triad of student
centeredness, presenting enlightened
subject matter, and using effective
teaching tools. For research, I want to
continue examining issues related to
regional tourism planning, visitor
behaviour methodologies, and
estimating tourism economic impacts.
am also involved in starting up a tourism
research centre and a graduate
program."

Dr. Michael Yuan

Dr. Christoph Gnieser

Courses: Recreation
Ecology; Wilderness
Issues; Forest
Recreation
Management;
Nature-based
Tourism

recreational opportunities. We also
wanted to live in an area that was very
diverse and in a rural setting. Personally,
I wanted to be involved in a strong
tourism and recreation program that
would support my research interests."

Why Lakehead? "My family was
looking for a location that was very
outdoor-oriented with a lot of

Lakehead
UNJV(t S l tY

"The Lakehead University Student Union
executive would like to thank Interlink and
Sir John A. MacDonald School tor their
contributions to our Food Bank during the
holiday season.
"Recognizing that University students are
having more difficulties in the postsecondary system with higher fees and
such, a member of Interlink suggested
that this year; at their annual Christmas
Party. they make a donation to the
Lakehead University Student Union Food
Bank.
"Interlink-Thunder Bay is a project that
began in 1991 to bring together older
adults {50+) and school children (grade
5s) to sing in a choir."
-- Jen Keystone,
LUSU VP Student Issues

�11
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ AGORA January/February 2002

Marks
Management
System for

system displays statistics on each
component, including the number of
students, class average, median and
standard deviation.
"I really think it would be helpful for
faculty to see the system in action and
the Office of the Registrar is prepared to
go to them;• Nelson says. Departments
or individual instructors who would like a
demonstration should contact Brenda
Nelson at 8675.

Faculty
by Marla Tomlinson

The new Web-based Marks Management
System is now available for all professors
to use. The system is designed to assist
faculty, as well as the Registrar's Office,
by making the recording of marks easier
for both parties, says Brenda Nelson,
assistant registrar.

the grading scheme. The system
calculates the final grades dynamically
so student progress is evident at a
glance, Nelson says. The class lists are
also up-to-date with the Registrar's
Office, so professors are able to see
which students are active in the class.

Launched in December, the new Webbased system was developed by Tim
Macinnes from Systems Management to
integrate with Datatel Colleague. It offers
faculty easy access to their class lists
and grades in a secure environment.
Faculty are able to record student marks
as the year progresses online, and when
the final grades are ready, they can be
submitted to the Registrar's Office via
this system, without having to do any
manual changes.

Karen Poole, assistant professor with
the School of Nursing, says she finds
the system to be an improvement on her
past methods of recording grades.

'We want professors to be able to keep
their marking systems online and send
them to the Registrar with just the click of
the mouse," Brenda Nelson says. "We
wanted this new system to be very
accessible to faculty. As it is Web-based,
most faculty can access it easily. It's also
easy to use and can be tailored to the
faculty's needs as requested. We've
already had some suggestions and we
changed the system as needed. We're
open to any recommendations for the
Marks Management System."
Instructors may set up a customized
grading scheme for each of their courses
for various components including tests,
essays and exams. They are able to
establish a weight for each component of

"I found the Marks Management System
easy to use and I'm sure I saved time in
calculating my marks," Poole says. "It
didn't take a lot of time to get used to,
and I found it easier than using a
spreadsheet. It eliminated the need to
re-record my marks for the Registrar's
Office. I also like having the current
class lists on my screen. I've already
recommended using the system to other
faculty."

Vacancies/or the Board of
Governors
Lakehead is seeking interested and
qualified individuals to serve on its
Board of Governors for as early as
September 2002. Terms are for three
years and Governors are expected
to participate both at the full Board
level and at the level of standing
committees. The latter can require
participation at working meetings on
a monthly basis, in addition to the
minimum six meetings a year of the
full Board.
Persons wishing to be considered
for an appointment should submit a
completed nomination form• which
should include a brief curriculum
vitae, a statement of why they
believe they would be effective
governors, and the names and
contact numbers of two character
references, to:

Dr. Ken Brown, with the Faculty of
Forestry and the Forest Environment,
agrees that the Marks Management
System is an easier way to record his
class grades. "I prefer to enter my marks
using this system. I enter the numbers
directly into the computer, submit the
marks and it's gone to the Registrar. It's
simple and fast."

'Nomination forms are available at
www.lakeheadu.ca/-luseclboard.htm

The system includes a grade override
feature for incomplete, deferred and
aegrotat marks. Grades and grading
scheme can be changed at any time up
to the point of submission to the Office
of the Registrar, Nelson says. The

The Nominating Committee will be
reviewing applications and
nominations in early spring.
Candidates to be considered will be
contacted for personal interviews at
a mutually satisfactory time.

Lakehead
U N I VE ~ SI T Y

Board of Governors' Nominating
Committee
c/o Secretary of the Board
Lakehead University
by fax to 807-343-8075, or by email to: bdsensec@lakeheadu.ca

�12
AGORA January/February 2002 - - - -- - -- - - - - -- -- - - - - - -- - - - - -- - -- -

FACULTY NEWS
Dr. Christine Gottardo (Chemistry) has
been appointed to the new NSERC
Representatives Committee. The
purpose of the Committee is to improve
communications between NSERC and
both the research community and the
local community. Gottardo will work
together with the Research Office and
the Communications Office to promote
research on campus and within the
community. If you have any questions
regarding this new committee contact
Dr. Gottardo at 8466 or
christine.gottardo@lakeheadu.ca

In November, Dr. Todd Dufresne
(Philosophy) delivered invited public
lectures at three universities in
Southwestern Ontario: Queen's,
Carleton, and The University of Western
Ontario. The title of his talk was
"Erichsen's Fatal Thrust: Railway Spine,
The Law; and the Necessary Limits of
Interpretation."
Also in November, Dr. Gary Genosko
(Sociology) gave a lecture entitled Felix
Guattari: Toward a Transdisciplinary
Metamethodology at The Humanities
Centre, Harvard University.
As well, he was guest curator of an
exhibit at the Thunder Bay Art Gallery
(December 5, 2001 to January 20, 2002)
entitled The Raven Wall -- First Nations,
Natural History, Commercial Ephemera.

In December, 2001, Dr. Philip
Allingham (Education) worked with
Professor George Landow, the founder
of the Victorian Web project, in the
University Scholars Programme at the
National University of Singapore in the
capacity of Senior Fellow. Allingham is
a contributing editor to the VictorianWeb,
a world-renowned Web site dedicated to
literature, history and culture in the age
of Victoria located at
http://www.victorianweb.org/
On January 16 in Thunder Bay, he was
moderator of a panel discussion entitled
Mars and Venus in the Classroom: A
Lakehead University Faculty of
Education Regional Forum.

WELCOME
New Faculty &amp; Staff

January/February

January 7

March /April

March 4

May/June

May6

Sept/Oct.

Sept. 9

November/December

Nov.4

ISSN 0828-5225

The Agora is published by the Office
of Communications. We welcome
news and other submissions from our
readers. Send them to:
Editor, Agora
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1
Fax: (807) 346-7770
E-mail:frances.harding@lakeheadu.ca

Canadian Postmaster:
Send address changes to
Office of Communications
Lakehead University
955 Oliver Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada
P7B 5E1
Publications Mail

Dr. Jinan Fiaidhi -- Assistant

Photography: Peter Puna

Professor, Computer Science

Printing: Lakehead Print Shop

Agreement Number 40062450

Dr. Sabah Mohammed -- Associate
Professor, Computer Science
Dr. Timo Tikka -- Assistant Professor,
Civil Engineering
Dr. Normand Perreault -- Assistant
Professor, Political Science

2002
Deadline

Jan/Feb 2002 Vol. 19, No.1
THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO, CANADA

Dr. Carlos Christoffersen -- Assistant
Professor, Electrical Engineering

Publication Schedule
Issue

UNIVERSITY

Telephone: (807) 343-8193

Dr Janice Hughes (Biology/Forestry
and the Forest Environment) will be
profiled in Audubon Magazine. The
article is expected to appear in the
spring of 2002.

Shelley Barnett -- Human Resources
Officer

AGORA

Lakehead

Lakehead
UNI VE R S I TY

Deadline for submissions for the
next issue is
March 4, 2002

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