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t.e 3 /t/l&lt;L/5

[2JW88K

a publication of the Lakehead
University information office

VOLUME 6
NUMBER 14
DECEMBER 13, 1973

Five Companies
Provide Awards
Five companies have recently provided
generous financial awards to the Lakehead University Physical and I lealth Education and \thletics Departments. The
awards which will aid deserving students
and assist in the further dt-velopment of
Physical and Health Education and Athletics programmes, were provided by Shell
Canada, Labbatt's Breweries of Canada,
Lever Brothers of Canada, The Canadian
Salt Company, and The Creal Atlantic
and Pacific Company.
Two of the awards were formally presented al the beginning of the Nor'Westers basketball game on Friday, December
7th.
Dr. Jim Widdop, Chairman of the
Departments of Physical and I lealth Education and l\thletics, acted as Master of
Ceremonies for the presentations. :\'Ir.
Gordon Kyle, District Hepresentative for
Labatt's Breweries, presented a 1,000 dol-

Dat:id Shannon, Dean Kerr, Cordon Kyle and Grant Thompson
lar award on behalf of his company. l\1r.
David Shannon, Shell District Manager
presented a chequt- for l,000 dollars which
will be used to set up two 2,000 dollar
student-athletic awards this year. The
Shell Company will continue 1his award
for two more years for a total of 12,000
dollars. These awards will be given an-

nually lo any Ll I student who maintains
a good sc-holastic record and has exhibitl'(I proven ability or potential in a nationally rl'Cognized sport.
Mr. Cranl Thompson, Vice-President
(Finance), and Mr. John .. c:rr, Dean of
Students, accepted the awards on behalf
of the university.

�Pat. Zurkan _is a laboratory technician in Geology Lab CB0026E, She prepares
sed,ment-Ological samples for ana~ysis by Dr. John Mothersill and economic mineral samples for Dr. Jim Franklin. A lab, by any other name is "home" (for eight
or so hours a day). Su, Pat has turned CB0026E inl-0 a warm and friendly place:
a scient{ic/human inteiface.
•
Midnight mist shrouds a lonely castle.
Deep within its walls, two men, barely
discernable in the meagre light of aflickering candle, hunch over a grimy bench
th1't is littered with diabolical paraphenalia. Lightning flas~es, briefly illuminating
these strange, darkness-craving creatures.
One looks up, startled. It's body, clothed
haphazardly in greasy rags, is oddly, horribly misshapen. It's face is a contorted
mask of-scar tissue and fear.
"Igor:", barks the thing's evil-seeming companion: a tall , skeletal man, clad
in a long, once-white coat. l\1adness fills
his eyes • the single, terrif)'ing, sign of
life in his curiously dead countenance.
Again, lightning crashes • its deadly
tendrils ripping through a turret window
to strike, with unholy power, the huge
apparatus that looms in a far corner of
the dungeon-like room . The electrical
charge courses through the infernal machine. Generators growl into life. Giant chemical-filled tubes pulsate with an eerie glow.
And, on a table at the base ofthr machine,
a monster stirs.
And that, courtesy of American International Pictures and Odeon Theatres

Profile: Geology Lab
CB0026E
Saturday ·Matinee• llorrorific· • Film
• Festival, was my introduction • as an
impressionable ll year old • to the world
of science, scientists and laboratories. Of
course, being an intelligent, perc~ptive
youth, I did not long believe in this celluloid version of science. In fact, my transition from gullible youth to world weary
sophisticate occurred in a singe) day: the
day I became a HIGH SCHOOL
STL IDENT.
It was in that rarified atmosphere of
higher learning and swaggering pseudoadulthood • during the l950's • that I
was made aware of the " true" nature of
scientists and their work environment.
Sc110ol books, guidance film s and magazines showed me the true fare of science:
extremely clean-cut young men and women
with dedication and unimpeachable faith
in the future • a future they would moldwritten on every handsome countenance.
I low proud they looked in their snowwhite lab coats. How their importance was
magnified . . . intensified by the stainless
steel and polished glass that were pro•
fligate in their sterile laboratories. These
supermen and women manipulated ul.tra
complicated equipment with the casual
aplomb of a child throwing a baseball.
Obviously, they held the secrets of the universe at their ( exquisitely molded) fingertips.
llegone Peter Cushing, Boris Karloff,
Lon Chaney and the rest. For, as the
mists of night are dispelled by the morning
sun, I have seen truth and I know its
fare.
Maybe .. ... .
My high school sophistication did not
stand the test of time• or reality. The real
world forced itself into the cracks that had
appeared in the veneer of my sophistication

Dr. Mothersill recently returned from a
sabbatical year in Africa where he carried
out analyses of Lakes Vicl-Oria and Chad.
This year, as it has in the past, his research work will focus on Lake Superior.
and tore it away. I learned. I changed.
Yet, because I had little contact with
people or things scientific, my S0's image
of sr;~,tists and laboratories remained,
inviolute. U ntil I came to LU. Until I
met Dr. John Mothersill. Until he took
me to the geology lab • tucked deep in
the heart of the Centennial Building • and
introduced me to Pat Zurkan.
The photos that surround this article show • not the real, truefaceof science,
for there is no such thing • but one facet
of the multi-faced scientific community.
·\nd , community means people. And, by
God, scientists, and those who work with
them, are PEOPLE. To be sure, they are
dedicated • in an off-hand sort of way.
But they are not celluloid villains who pro·
duce zombies, or zombie-like supermen
who create miracles with the flick of a test
tube. They arepeoplelikeDr..lohnMothersill and Pat Zurkan who bring a little
piece of themselves and their personalities
to their work: work that is often tedious,
seldom miraculous but always necessary.

by O'Dwy er

�Physical Fitn e ss Test Pro!ect Gets LIP Grant
Among the Thunder Bay Local Initiatives Projects recently announced by Hobert
Andras ( Oecember 1th) was a grant of
8,977 dollars to develop a Physical Fitness
Testing Programme. lJ r. Norm Lavoie, an
\ssistant Professor in the Lakehead university Department of Physical I lealth and
Education will head up the fitness project.
The programme, according to Ur.
Lavoie, will be open to members of the
community: "The testing facilities are set
up and ready to go. We will be letting
the people of Thunder 13ay know, very
shortly, how they can take advantage of
the fitness tests."
Three additional staff members-with a
background in Physical 1 lealth education-

will be hired and traineci
project.

, assist in the

People who take the tests will be given
a run-down on the degree of their physical
fitness and, for those who fai"r poorly in the
tests, a programme that will increase their
fitness.
The over-all test results will be compared with the results of similar tests being
done across Canada. "We will then," said
Dr. Lavoie, "have a good reading on the
degree of physical fitness enjoyed by most
Canadians. lf, as we fear, Canadians are
not physically fit, we hope the results will
encourage people to increase their level of
activity."

Film Animation Workshop
Saturday, November 24, the students in
the School of Library Technology were
introduced to the art and techniques offilm
animation. Mr. Ian McCutcheon, Representative of -the Natinal Film Board of
Canada, conducted a one-day workshop
during which he not only demonstrated
how 8mm films may be made usingsingleframe exposures but also described a filmmaking experiment which had been conducted with children at the Scarborough
Public Library. The results of this experiment were a number of imaginative and
entertaining films.
Following a brief session of instructions, the students proceeded to create four
8mm films themselves using both cut-out

and Plasticene figures. A fifth film was made
without the use of a camera through the
drawing of abstract designs on bleached
16mm film.
Enthusiasm was so great that future
filming projects are now being considered
by the School of Library Technology. It is
hoped that the skills learned may be used
by the future technicians inprovidingmore
varied and more effective library service
particularly among children.
The School is very grateful to both Mr.
McCutcheon and' Mr. D. McLean, the
Thunder Bay Representative of the National Film Board for allowing us to participate in a most rewarding and enjoyable
learning experience.

Library Technology Sodety
Executive of the Library Technolooy
0
Student Society for 197.3-74:
President
- !\Jr. Joseph Winlerburn
Vice-President
- Ms Cathy \1ellerup
Secretary
- Vis. Kathy O'neill
Treasurer
- \Is Donna Yorke

Counsellor
- '\Is Wende I lunt
The Student Society have an office
that is housed by the School of Library
Technology's Facilities ( L-5011) on the
fifth floor of the l lniversity Library 13uilding.

Bruley Speaks at Seminar
A seminar and workshop on the 13asic
Technology of the Pulp and Paper Industry
and its Waste Reduction Practices was
sponsored by The Water Pollution Control
Directorate, Environment Protection Service, Environment Canada and held at the
Pulp and Paper Research InstituteofCanada, Pointe Claire, Quebec during November 1 l, 15 and 16, 1973. The purpose of
the seminar was to familiarize Environment Protection Service personnel with the
many phases of pulp and paper technology
to examine the sources and composition of

mill effluents and to examine the latest
technology of waste reduction practices. It
was looked upon as a major contribution
toward improving understanding and communication between the regulatory bodies
and the industry. A. .I. Bruley, Associate
Professor in Chemical Engineering along
with an Industrial Consultant, Mr. S. Shastri of Toronto were the principal lecturers
for the first two days. The third day highlighted a lively panel discussion with management representatives from industry and
tour of PPRIC.

Study of
Athletic
Programmes
A study of athletic programs in Canadian universities and colleges and how they
fit into the broader picture of Canadian
contemporary sport will be jointly sponsored by the Association of l niversities
and Colleges of Canada ( Al CC) and the
Canadian Intercollegiate Athletic l' nion
(CIAU). The study is being financed by the
Department of National I lealth and Welfare and is endorsed by Sport Canada.
The study will examine the role of
universities and colleges in contemporary
sport. [twill determine the scope of current
university athletic programs, both intramural and extramural, and examine their
strengths and weaknesses. The philosophy
of university administrators with regard to
their athletic programs will be examined
as will be the inter-relationship of these
programs with physical education and
other academic programs.
While the programs conducted under
the auspices of the CIAU and its member
organizations will be of direct interest, the
study will also examine how these programs relate to those conducted by amateur sport governing bodies at the provincial, national, and international levels.
With Canada hosting the 1976 Olympic
C ames, timely consideration will be given
in this study to the part the universities
play in upgrading standards of excellence
and how their facilities and their athletes
relate to the international scene.
Chief investigator in the study is A. W.
Matthews, dean emeritus of the faculty of
pharmacy, The University of British Columbia. Assistant investigators have yet to
be appointed.
The study will be advised by a steering
committee with wide representation across
Canada. Dr. L. 11. Cragg, president of
Mount Allison University, New Brunswick,
will act as chairman of the committee.
In the first phase of the study, submissions will be invited from AUCC member
universities and colleges; officials of sport
governing bodies; provincial, regional and
national athletic associations; and others.
At a later stage, many university and college campuses will be visited by the investigators. The mailing addressforthestudy
is AUCC-CIAL 1 Study of Athletic Programs
Research Division, AUCC,
1:51 Slater Street, Ottawa,
Ontario KIP ;"j'Jl
It is expected that the study will be
available .I uly .'H, l 971.

�1973-7 4
Undergraduate Scholarships, Bursaries and Awards
Allied Chemical Canada Ltd. Scholarship
Daniel E. Kleemola
Alumni Association Scholarship
Jo Ann Kalyniuk
Judith Anne Kalyniuk
Martin Hellsten
Markku Murtonen
.T.P. Bickell Foundation Scholarship
Larry George Kainulainen
Canadian Studies Scholarship
Elizabeth Ann Secor
Chemical Institute of Canada
Lakehead Universtiy Scholan!hip
.lo Ann Kalyniuk
Ci~y of Thunder Bay Scholarship
Anna D'Arienzo
Murray Flemming Engineering Scholarship
Robert.Tames Mclean
Dr. Crawford C. McCullough Memorial
Scholarship
Felisa Tan

Construction Association of Thunder Bay
Scholarship
Alick Hing Kong Cheng
Peter McKeller Spence MemorialScholarship

Jo Ann Kalyniuk
Tim Ryan Memorial Scholarship
Mary Liljestrom

Bachelor of Physical and Health F.ducation Scholarship
Grant Lavallee

UNDERGRADUATE BURSARIES AND
AWARDS

Professional Engineers' Wives Association
Bursar,·
James Crichton

Abitibi Paper Company- Bursary

Thunder
Bursary

Bruce Staus

C.J. Sanders Scholarship - Continuation
Carol Anne Forbes

Chamber of Commerce

Torben Drewes

Association of Natural Resources Bursary
Thomas.Tames Nash
Atkinson Charitable Foundation Bursary
Lorraine Belliveau
Gary Bloomfield
Judith Patricia Brown
Roxana Chow
Carson Herrick
Gregory Holm
Judith Ann Kalyniuk
Delia Laforet
Roger McCurdy
Alan Moorhead

LB.M Thomas]. Watson Memorial Bursary
Gary Bloomfield
JagatJanin
Michael Karpowich
Daphne McKellar
Gwen Pantoulias
Alan .T. Rittman
Henry Seeliger
Walter Wiekowski
Charlotte Zulianello

lnterprovincial Pipeline Company Bursary
Donald Carson
B!'rnard Chapman
William Fauconnier
David Goss
Gary Gusta
Jo Ann Kalyniuk
Ernest Kreutz
Ruth Liljestrom
John Lung
Dave Parsons
Diane Precosky
Lake Superior Chapter /ODE Bursary

Headway Corporation Ltd. Scholarship
John R. Mott

Bay

Linda Grice

The Paterson Bursaries
Jagat.Tain
Clyde McGuire
Terence Milkie
Lorna Nelson

Princess Beatrice Chapter /ODE Bursary
Roxana Chow

Thunder Bay Foundation Bursaries
John Gilhooly
Bernard Jeudy-Hugo
Jerald Paquette

Jessie Mackey Memorial Award
Dianna Bartholomew
Lois Pronger
Iris Jean Richards Memorial Award
(Economics)
Patrick Liu
Iris Jean Richards Memorial Award
(English)
Marilyn Grudinski

National Council ofJewish Women Award
Patricia Ann Young

�Fleming Scholarship Presented
Robert.I. McLean of Thunder Baywas
recently awarded the .I. l\1urray Fleming
Engineering Scholarship which is presented
annually, on the recommendation of the
School of Engineering, to a final year
student in the Engineering Degree Programme who shows a hig~ degree of aca-.
demic excellence. Presentation of the 5700
scholarship that bears his name was made
by l\1r. .I. l\lurray Fleming who is Chairman of the Board for the C. D. 1lowe

Company and a long-limr mrmber and
past chairman of the l.akrhrad l nivrrsity
Board of Covernors. On hand lo wilness
lhe awarding of lhe scholarship wrrr I )r.
George h.. Firming, Chairman of lht• I h'partmenl of Engineering, and I )t'an of
Students, John h:rn. l\lr. \kl.ea1i inlrnds
to pursue a career in Induslry aflrr gradual ion. '\ccording to Dr. Firming, he is
"an rxcellenl student who should do wrll in
his chosen profrssion ".

Norman S. Grace Entrance Scholarships
Dr. Norman S. Crace, while he was
a visiting professor at l.akehead l ' niversity, donated funds lo the Faculty of
Science. An entrance scholarship is awardded on the recommendation of the Department of Chemistry to a first year student
of high academic standing who registers

as a (hemistry l\la_jor.
The Scholarships and llursarit•s Commiler i~ pleased lo announ&lt;·l' llwl l\lr.
Barr)' \\ ' a~ 1w h.obryn has bl'l'n awarrl1'&lt;I
the \:onnan S. Cract' Seholarship for lhl'
197:3-71. academic· 1•ar.

Fellowship and Scholarships
The Sir John A. MacDonald Graduate
Fellowship in Canadian History
The Province of Ontario will again
be offering the Sir John A. MacDonald
Graduate Fellowship in Canadian History
for the 1974-75 academic year. With this
fellowship the government wishes to pay
tribute to the contribution of a great
Canadian to the history of this country
and to stimulate graduate study in this
field. One fellowship of thevalueof $1000
is tenable for two years, making the maximum value of each award the sum of $8,

000.
Please contact the Dean of Students
Office regardingtheconditionsoftheaward
and the application procedure. Applications must be submitted by January 15,
1974.

International Nickel Company Participating
Scholarships
The Internation Nickel Company of
Canada, Limited provide~ annually a
number of undergraduate scholarships tenable at Canadian Universities for selected
studies in engineering and the. physical
sciences. Known as the International Nickel
Company Participating Scholarships,

these awards are available annually and
are tenable at Canadian universities for
students who will enter the penultimate
year of a baccalaureate programmr in
science or engineering in one of the following courses: Chemistry, geology (including geophysics and gt'&lt;&gt;-chemislry ),
and chemical, civil, electrical, gt'&lt;&gt;logirnl
mechanical, metallurgical, and mining engineering. Applications are especially solicited from students in a foui• or five year
course of undergraduate studies in geology
physical chemistry, mining and extractive
metallurgy.
'\wards are made on a year-lo-year
basis, and tmay be considered for renewal
for one additional year.
Each award provides for:
( a) tuition and fees for the rec1p1enl
plus a grant of $300 for mis&lt;·ellanmus
expenses, and
(b) an aid-to-education supplement of
$500 to that department or division of
the faculty in which thestudentis enrolled.
Applications and brochures for the
International Nickel Company Participating Scholarships are av ail able in the I)ean
of Students Office. The deadline date for
applications is January 31st, l 971.

Commerce Student Receives Scholarship
The School of Business Administration
is pleased to announce that the I leadway
Corporation Limited Scholarship has been
awarded to l\1r. John !\Iott. I\Ir. !\Iott is
a student in the 4th year of the I lonours
Bachelor of Commerce program.
The award was made for ouL5tanding

academic and extra curricular activities.
l\lr. \loll has been active in l 1niversity
Government and has served as Direcior
of Finance tor the '\Ima Mater Society.
In addition, ~1r. ~loll is involved in a
small business venture in Thunder Bay.

Cooperation Between
Colleges and Universities
For the past eight months, the Joint
Commillee on Cooperation Between l/nivt•rsities and Colleges of Applied Arts
and Tedrnolog-y has.been at work collecting
information on, cooperativt' arrangements
IH'lwt'en colleges and universities and diseussing areas inwhieh eooperativeventures
l'Ould hr rslablishrd or expanded. ,\t its
Oe1ob1•r nwrting, CO l I rrceivrd an interim
rrporl from lht• .loinl Commiller oullining
tlw Vt'ry exlensivt• cooprralion now under
way. Tlw reporl suggt'Slrd thal gt'lleral
pallerns of l'Ollarboralion should not be
imposrd. I nslt•ad, eolleges and universities
in rrasonablt•gt'&lt;&gt;graphic proximity should
dt•vl'lop arrangenwnl-; among themselves.
To this end, the n•porl urgrd that regional
eonferrncrs b1• held lo diseuss eooprrative
und1•rtakings.
Over thr next s1•veral months, thr.loinl
Commill1•1• will study olht'r issurs of con&lt;·rrn to univrrsities and eoll1•ges. Thesewill
includ1• transferability of en'(lits and the
suecess of lransft•r studenls, admission
datt'S, joint appoinlmt•nts of faculty, ~d thr
aims of, and diffen•ne1-s lielween, tle.p;ree
and diploma programmt-s.

McCullough Appointed
Assistant Deputy
Minister
Thr I lonourable .I ack l\1cNit•, 1\1 ii4isler
of Colleges and ll niversities rL'&lt;'ently announced the appointment of .I. Douglas
\lcCullough as Assistant Deputy M inisl1·r
with responsibility for cultural affairs.
Mr. McCullough has be1•n supervising
llw work of the Cultural Affairs Division
of the Ministry since February, 1973. Ile
joined the Departmentofl lniversity Affairs
in 19(11 as Director of ArchitL'Ctural Servic1-s and subsequently serv1'&lt;1 thereorganiz1'&lt;1 Ministry as Din'Clor of the Capital
Support Branch.
As Assistant Deputy Minister for Cultural Affairs, Mr. McCullough will be working closely with the provincial cultural and
L-&lt;lucational"agencies reporting through the
M inist~r of C~lleges and lJ niversities.
Those include the Ontario Arts Council,
the Ontario lferitage Foundation, the Ontario Science Centre and the Ontario Educational Communications Authority. In
addition, he will be the Ministry's liaison
with the Royal Ontario Museum, the Art
Callery of Ontario, the McMichael Canadian Collection and the Royal Botanical
Gardens, which receive funds from the
provincial government.
The Cultural Affairs '11vision of the
l\1inistry also includes the Historical and
'Vluseums Branch and the Provincial Library Service.

�W88KIU

even~s

Thundt&gt;r Bay Symphony Orchestra
presents their Christmas Concert al theSelkirk I ligh School Auditorium on Saturday,
December lS, 8:30 p.m. and Sunday,
Decemb1·r 1(1, al :too p.m.

Christmas Party
If yo11'v1• h(•1•11 pulling it off - you'n•
lucky - ha·ause there are still a few Lit·kets
available for l.l 1's Seventh Annual Christmas Party. But they'rl' g-oing fast. So, gt•l
your order in now.
Contact:
Ct·rda Lasl'r
.ll'an I IPlliwl'II
I )avt· I )el\no&lt;'k Brian Phillips
Donna llardy
John Bydt•r
!'rice: ~(1 .00 p1·r pt•rson
When•: Hoyal Canadian Legion, Ortona
Bra11d1, 1700 I )pas1· Stn·Pt, Thundt•r Bav F, Ont.

mee~ings

New Travel Subsidies for Northern Pupils
A new program of subsidies designed
lo assist grade 7 and 8 students of Northern
Ontario schools visit the provincial capital
has bee11 announced by the Ministry.
Thi' program, called O nlario Young
Travellers, will makeilconsiderablyeasier
for studt•nls localro long distances from
Toronto lo sp&lt;'nd at least two days in the
&lt;'it~ and lo benefit from the unique educational and &lt;'ultural facilities that arc availahlt&gt; thl're.
( :!asst'" of grade 7 and 8 in schools
located north of a line running from Mattawa through Callander and along the
Fre11ch Biver will qualify for subsidies in
tlw first year of the project.
The subsidies in the Young Travelles
prog-ntm art&gt; based on the estimated bus
transportation costs from the school lo
Toronto, and tlw g-reater the distance Lo be

Summer Employment
'\tomic Energy of Canada Ltd. ( Pinawa, \'lanitoba) Whiteshell i\Juclear Station. l)padline for applications is January
3 I, 1971-.
l)pfense Besearch Board. Deadline for
applications is I )ecember 15, 1973. Both

,-

travelled, the greater the subsidy.
Schools located more than 600 miles
from -the city will receive extra funds to
compensate for a second day of travelling
time each way.
'\s an example, a class of 32 pupils
from Thunder Bay, accompanied by the
teacher and two other adult chaperones,
would receive a subsidy of about $1,800
from the 1,700 mile round trip.
Thr subsidies are not intended lo pay
for the entire cost of the trip. As with students from Southern Ontario who visit the
provincial capital, classes will be expected
lo raise their own funds lo payforaccomodation, meals and admissions.
The program is a pilot projecttowhich
the l\1inistry has allocated up lo $100,000
for the ., sent school year.
of the above organizations are interested
in I lonours Science and Engineering student'l ( all majors) in at least their Tli'ird
Year. Applications and job descriptions are
available al the Student Placement Office.
Interested persons should apply AS SOON

AS POSSIBLE"!

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VOLUME 6
NUMBER 13
NOVEMBER 22, 1973

a publication of the Lakehead
University information office

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Lakehead's second annual Fall Convocation was held in the Agora on Saturday,
November 17th. President Booth acted on
behalf of the Chancellor, the Honourable
Mr. Justice Bora Laskin, who was unable
to attend the ceremony. In turn, Dean Angus, filling the role normally assigned to
the President, acted as the presentor of
candidates. 246 graduates nceiveddegrees
and diplomas during the ce1emony.
Dr. Walter Alvah Samuel ',mith, the Convocation Speaker, was introduced by Department of Psychology Professor Dr.
James F . Ev ans. As a student at the U niversity of Alberta, Dr. Evans had studied
under Dr. Smith and had formed a friendship with him. Consequently, he was able
to infuse his introductory remarks with
anecdotes that provided a "personal" context from which to view the speaker.
Dr. Smith opened his talk with a mild disclaimer as to the validity of speechmaking.
He called it "this ineffectual form of communication" as compared to" ... themost
authentic approach to personal communi-

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cation . . .. the example of your daily activity and interaction". With tongue firmly
in cheek, Dr. Smith blamed his lack of
strength of character for his inability to
stop " .... this pontifical exhortation".
He then called on his audience of graduates to engage with him in a " . . . kind
of instant nostalgia about the experiences
whose successful completion we celebrate
here this afternoon." This nostalgia trip
became a spring-board for Dr. Smith to
explore facets of university structure and
life that he disliked ("the awesome intolerance . . . and arrogance") or enjoyed
("those delightfully impractical and totally endless debates .... ")
He used his personal love/hate feelings for
universities as a background from which

to draw out the good and bad points of the
present structure of universities. He called
for a move away from the lock-step approach to higher education and for a need
to rethink the historical antecedants and
contemporary assumptions that cause universities to package knowledge in particular disciplinary ways.
He went on to say that, the university,
while moving away from elitist modes,
must not try to be all things to all people.
Rather, a b_asis for restructuring should
be worked out that combines both order
and a social grouping "in which what
Maslow would call the good person can
come into being and develop ( and) in
which, through the authenticity of daily
lives, a valid sense of community can emerge".
The ceremony was heavily attended by
friends and relatives of the graduates. A
reception was held in the Great Hall immediately following the Convocation exercise.

�0.1.S.E. Appointment
The Honourable Thomas L Wells, Minister of Education for the Province of Ontario has appointed Dr. James T. Angus,
Dean of the Faculty of Education at Lakehead University to serve as a member of
the Board of C overnors of the Ontario
I nsititue for Studies in Education. Dr.
Angus joins the Board of Governors as
a representative of the teacher-training institutions of Ontario for a period of three
years.
At an OctobermeetingoftheLakehead University Board of Governors, Dr. Angus'
appointment as Dean of the Family of
Education was renewed for an additional
five year term - from July 1, 1971 to .lune
30, l979.

Dean Angus

Historical Geographers
Meet
The Fall Merling of theOnlariol lislorical
Ceographers was held at Trent l lniversity,
Peterborough, on Saturday lO Novembe~.
Aboul t.o people attended. The first speaker
was 1\1 r. H.S. l&gt;ill{'.y of the Lakehead Ceography Department, who gave an invited
paper on "Some Problem Areas in the
Teaehing of I listorical Ceograph~·". This
paper eonsidered a number of diffieulties
faeed by historical geographt•rs in designing and presenting their l'ourses; sul'h as
the degree of temporal, spatial and topieal limitation desirable at different levels,
the integration of pralil'al and field work
and the introduetion of philosophical eoneepts. A strong plea was mad!' for gn•ater
emphasis, in historical geograph~· l'ourses,
on the critical analysis of data sourl'es and
on theoretical model-building, including
use of the computer and field-ploller. The
paper provoked a remarkably lively discussion for early on a Saturday morning
and it was suggested !hat some of the
points raised might be considered in grealer depth at laters meetings of this g-roup.

I le was initially appointed to the position
in l969 when Lakehead Teachers' College was integrated with the University to
form the nucleus of the Education Faculty.
l I nder Dean Angus' direction, the Lakehead Faculty of Education pioneered the
first four-year concurrentteachereducation
programme in Ontario, was the first Faculty to offer a full range of elementary and
sceondary teacher eertification programmes both concurrently and consecutively
and until certifieation regulations caused
it to be discontinued, was the only teacher
education institution in Ontario to offer a
two-year diploma programme for elementary teachers after Grade X 111. A Master of Education Programme specializing
in curriculum and administration has reeentJy received favourable appraisal by the
Ontario Committee on Graduate Studies
and will be initiated in thesummerofl974.
/\ grant of $32,850., awarded by the Don-

ner Canadian Foundation in October wi
assist the Lakehead Faculty ofEducaionl
plan a teacher education programme an
cur r i e u I um resource centre for India
schools in Northwestern Ontario._
Dean Angus received his elementary ec
ucation in Muskoka and his secondar
education at Parkdale Collegiate lnsti
ute, Toronto. He attended the Universit
of Toronto and graduated with a B)
degree in 1949. After one year in th
business world, Dr. Angus decided to b1
come a teacher. He recieved his teache
training at the former Hamilton Norm1
School. He taught four years in the Harr
ilton Public School system and for tw
years in the newly established Feden
Day School at Coppermine, Northwei
Territories from 1952 to 1954. He wa
appointed Principal of the Bolton Pul
lie School in 1957 and Principal of th
Eastwood Public School, Granthar
Township in 1958. [n 1959, he accepte
the position of Teachers' College Maste
at the North Bay Teachers' College. H
served in North Bay for seven years dm
ing which time he was given leave of al
sence to teach in the Singapore TeachE
Training College under the auspices c
the Columbo Plan. Dean Angus resigned
his position at North Bay in 1966 to pm
sue doctoral studies at the University of A:
berta. He graduated in 1968 with a Ph.D
in Educational Administration and fron
1968 to 1969 was Associate Professor c
Education and Director of Graduate Stud
ies, Faculty of Education University of
New Brunswick, Fredericton. In July
1969, he accepted his present positior

Donner Grant to Faculty of Education
The F acuity of Education at Lakehead
l lniversity has been awarded a grant of
$32,850. by the Donner Canadian Foundation to assist the Faculty in developing
a teacher education programme and curriculum development centre for Indian
schools in Northwestern Ontaro. The
grant was awarded in response to a proprosal submitted by Dr. James T. Angus,
Dean of the Famlty of Education to the

Foundation in May of this year. The Do,
ner Canadian Foundation is a prival
Foundation which makes grants for a vai
iety of projects including those designed t
assist the Native People of Canada.
Part of the grant will be used to appoint ,
planning specialist who will have the rE
sponsibility of p)anning the programme i1
consultation with Indian people and othe,
interested groups.

Education Utilization
The federal l\linistry of Science and Technology and Statistics Canada are launching a $1.5 million survey this fall to
determine how university graduates are
using their education.
About one-third of the country's estimated 500,000 university graduates will reeeive a detailed six-page, LO question survey in the mail.
According to A.S. Bandzierz, a science
adviser with the l\linistry, the question-

naire will attempt to determine the ed1
carional background of each gradual
surveyed and his or her current emplo)
ment status.
The survey intends to determine how man
university graduates take up jobs in thei
speciality and how many do not.
Raw data from the survey will be mad
available to universities and industry i
the spring for those who wish tomakethei
own analysis. The final Ministry report i
scheduled for the fall of 1974.

�STUDENT PLACEMENT
Part-Time Employment - The Student
Placement Office is accepting applications
from any students interested in working at
the Post Office over the Christmas Break
(i.e. starting December 10). You must be
available to work full-time on shifts. The
pay is $1.90 to $2.15 per hour. Absolute
deadline for applications is December 1st.
Summer Employment
Bell Canada - is accepting applications
from first year students for operator positions in Barrie, Orillia, Owen Sound. Submit applications as soon as possible.
Atomic Energy of Canada Limited - is accepting applications from Honours Science
( all majors) and Engineering interested in
summer and/ or permanent employment.
Summer positions are availabletostudents
with a graduating year no later than 1975;
the deadline is December 14th.
Permanent Employment
Blue Bell Canada Limited (manufacturers
of Wrangler Jeans, Big Ben, Maverick
Western Wear) - is accepting applications
from students graduating in the following fields: Industrial Engineering, Liberal
Arts, Accounting, Finance, lndustiral Management and Marketing. Interested students
please submit a resume to the Student
Placement Office by November 30th.
Students interested in employment opportunities with Ontario Hydro please read
recruiting material available in the Student
Placement Office and submit a resume indicating the job area(s) in which you are
interested to the Student Placement Office
by November 30th.

Human Rights Meeting
Members of the Ontario Human Rights
Commission will be holding a meeting at
8:00 p.m. on Wednesday, November 28th
in the Faculty Lounge. The purpose of the
meeting is to provide information on the
rights of individuals as set forth in legislation and to outline the services offered
by the Ontario Human Rights Commission. The Assistant Director of the Human
Rights Commission, Mr. George Brown
and Officers from the Thunder Bay office
of the Commission will be on hand to answer questions. All interested students and
faculty members are invited to attend.
Coffee and sandwiches will be served.

Research Note Published
A research note by Dr. J. David Martin, of the Department of Sociology, entitled "Pejorative Factors in the Suspicion
of Deception", was recently published in
the Journal of Social Psychology, 1973,
Volume 91. This note follows Dr. Martin's
study, "Suspicion and the Experimental
Confederate: a study in the role and credibility", which was published in Sociometry, 1970, Volume 33.

Christian Insights Continues
The series of free public lectures and panel
discussions entitled "Christian Insights in
a Confused World" continues on Tuesday,
November 27th at 8:30 p.m. in the lower
Lecture Theatre. The guest speaker will
be Reverend Tim Ryan who will discuss
"The Christian Contribution to Man's
Search for Liberation."
Born in Windsor. Ontario. Tim Ryan
received a B.A. in Philosophy at the University of Western Ontario and studied
theology at St.AugustinesSeminary in Toronto. In 1%3 he travelled to Brazil as a
pastoral assistant to the Catholic Church
in Amazonia. After three years there, he
continued his post-graduate studies in theology programme at Lyon in France and at
Muenster in Germany. He then returned
lo Brazil where he worked in the Leader-

ship Training Programmes for Catholic
church leaders, and concluded his final
year there as professor at the Regional
Pastoral Institute for Northern Brazil. He
is now a professor in the field of Social
Ethics at the Toronto School of Theology.
In his lecture, "The Christian Contribution to Man's Search for Liberation", Mr.
Ryan will reflect upon the meaning of the
various movements of Liberation, not only
in terms of the claims that their demands
make upon us, but also in terms of the
human existence that they draw attention
lo, and the dynamics of human history
that they assume. He will also discuss
the implications of Liberation parameters
for Christian consciousness in ourday and
in our culture.
Further lecture in this series will be offered
after Christmas.

Co-operative Library Use
The Ontario Council of Libraries has slightly revised the agreement on the co-operative
use of libraries by faculty, graduate students and staff members from provincially
assisted Ontario universities. Privileges
will be extended to all member libraries:

Librarian ( or delegate).
3. Within the provisions of the Interlibrary
Loan Code, loans of material from the
library visited may be initiated at that
library during its Interlibrary Loan Office hours. Such loans will be handled
through Interlibrary Loan procedures
and records. Approvedloanswillbe-sent
by regular means of Inter-university
transport to the home library.

1. Upon presentation of a valid University Identification Card which clearly
indicates the holder's status and the validity date, and collateral identification,
a faculty member, graduate student or These arrangements are in addition lo the
staff member is entitled to reference ser- reciprocal use of the collections made
vice and photocopying service on the through normal Interlibrary channels.
basis as personnel of the host university. If the visiting faculty member, The hours and regulations of member ligraduate student or staff member does braries are outlined in a handbook prenot have a valid University Identifi- pared by the Office of Library Co-ordincation Card, he will be required to ob- ation. Copies of the handbook are availtain an "Inter-University LibraryCard" able for consultation in all member library.
from the Chief Librarian ( or delegate) Inter-University Library Cards, for those
of his own university.
without valid University Identification
2. Other privileges such as access to closed Cards, will be available from the Referstacks or assigned carrels, should be ence Department in the Lakehead Unibe applied for in person to the host Chief versity Library.

Pottery: Lecture and Course
You are invited to attend a public lecture
on Early American and .Japanese Pottery
from a craftman-potter's point of view
given by Jasper Bond and Terry Anderson teaching assistants to Professor Glenn
Nelson, University of Minnesota.
Some pottery from the speaker's private
collections and from the Tweed Collection will be on display, supplemented by
slides and a short film on a modern .I apanese pollery village.
PLACE: The Lower Lecture Theatre, Lakehead University.
TIME: Friday, November 30, 1973.
THE COURSE will continue at the University pottery house on Saturday, November 31st at 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday, December 1, 1973 from 9 a.m. to

9 p.m. It will emphasize unusual decoration techniques, and throwing techniques
such as throwing off a hump and combined
hand-building and throwing. Some early
American and Japanese pottery will be provided for discussion.
Registration at Parks and Recreation
department, City Hall Annex, 141 South
May Street, commences 9 a.m., Wednesday
November 21, 1973. FEE: $15.00. Due
lo limited enrollment, each person can
only enroll for himself and one other person.
For more information, phone 345-2121,
Ext. 689 or 623-2711, Ext. 348.
This course is given with help from the
Ontario Arts Council and is organized
by the Aesthetics Society Incorporated.

�W88KI~
Friday
November 23

Saturday
November 21

even~s

Homecoming - pre-game
warm-up 7 p.m. and
Dance 9 p.m. with the
.I arvis Street Review

Volleyball - Northland
College, 6:30 p.m. Fieldhouse.
Basketball - Northland
College, 8:30 p.m., Fieldhouse.
Homecoming - Dance in
Main Cafeteria, 9 p.m.
Volleyball College, 6:00
house
Basketball College, 8:30
house

Northland
p.m. FieldNorthland
p.m. Field-

Thunder Bay Symphony
Orchestra presentation at
Selkirk High Auditorium
at8:30 p.m.
Sunday
November 25

Thunder Bay Symphony
Selkirk High auditorium
at 3:00 p.m.
Movies - "Straw Dogs"
ll.C.T., 6:30 and 9:00
p.m.

Thursday
November 29

Novemberfest in Main
Cafeteria, 1:30 p.m.

Friday

High School Basketball
- 6:30 p.m., Fieldhouse
Hockey,
LI niversity of
Wisconsin (Superior) 8 p.
m., Port Arthur Arena
Library Technology films
"~oppycock", "Sad
Clowns", "Skiing in Ontario" and "Skiing in the
Swiss Mountains" will be
shown at l p.m. in Room
L-5022

November 30

Saturday
December l

Dance - Main Cafeteria,
9:00 p.m.
\ olleyball - all day Tourney
Hockey - l lniversity of
Wisconsin (Superior) 8
p.m.
Movie - l l.C.T. "The Public Eye", 6:30 p.m.

Sunday
December 2

Movie - "The Public Eye"
U.C.T., 6:30 p.m.

mee~ings

Christmas Cheer Fund
Approximately 1,000 Christmas hampers
were delivered to needy families last year
through the Thunder Bay Community Service Christmas Cheer Fund. The fund is
administered by a Citizen's committee and
has the support of virtually all social agencies, churches and other groups interested
in an activity of this nature.
The actual work involved in assembling,
packing and delivering these hampers is
performed by volunteers and requires the
efforts of several hundred people. The 50
vehicles used for delivery are furnished
by local firms. The firemen of Thunder
Bay are, this year profiding a substantial
sum of money for the purchase of new toys

that will bring j-oy to girls and boys who
might otherwise have an 'empty' Christmas.
Overwhelming support such as this, as
well as from schools and churches where
canned goods are collected, and from business firms, organizations, service clubs,
unions and interested citizens is vital to
the success of the Christmas Cheer effort.
In order to continue this worthwhile project, an appeal for funds is being made.
Contributions can be mailed to Box 1973,
Christmas Cheer Fund, Thunder Bay; the
newspaper office, 177 Arthur Street, or the
Bank of Nova Scotia, Victoria and May
Streets.

Correction
Since the last issue of LU WEEK appeared
on campus, we have been hearing rumours
to the effect that the Information Office is
caught in a time-warp. We wish to state
catagorically that this, to the best of our
recollection, at this point in time, is not the
case. It is true that in our last issue Dr.
Charles was identified as being Chairman
of the Department of Economics which of
course, is not factual - nor has it been since
July 1972 when Dr. Jecchinis became

Economics Department Chairman.
We also had Dr. Charles toiling mightily
to maintain a Graduate Diploma programme for foreign students - that programme ceased to exist in June of 1972.
Time-warp: no. Mistake: yes. We wish to
apologize to Dr. Jecchinis and Dr. Charles
for turning the clock back and for any embarrassment our blunder may have caused
them.

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DEC

f

VOLUME 6
NUMBER 12
NOVEMBER 8, 1973

a publication of the Lakehead
University information office

CONVOCATION

Convocation ceremonies will commence B.Sc. and Hons. B.Sc. -one inch gold
at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, November 17th
border
in the Agora. Approximately 245 grad- M.Sc.
-two inch gold
uates will receive degrees and diplomas
border
during the ceremony: Faculty of Edu- B.Sc. Nursing -one inch red
cation -17; University Schools - 35; Faeborder
ulty of Science - 25, including 5 Honours B. Commerce
lone inch drab
graduates and 6 Masters of Science; Faeborder
ulty of Arts - 168, including 19 Honours B. Education
-one inch light
graduates and 8 Masters of Arts.
blue border
The Convocation Speaker will be Dr. Sam B.Sc. Forestry
-one inch forest
Smith, Professor and Dean of the Faegreen border
ulty of Arts at Somon Fraser University, British Columbia. Dr. Smith, who
received his Doctorate from Penn State
and an Honourary Degree from Nagoya
Grakuin University (Hawaii) is a past
president of the Un'versity f Lethb 'dge
0
1
Alberta
n
'
•
The Chancellor's Reception for gradualing students, parents, friends and faculty
will take place in the Great Hall immediately followingthe'..::onvocationceremony.

Hoods will be donned in the Assembling
and Robing Area and will be worn
throughout the ceremony.
.
.

Identification Cards

Bachelor of Science in NursiIJg
Bachelor of Science
Honours Bachelor of Science
Master of Science
Bachelor of Arts
Honours Bachelor of Arts
Master of Arts

Order of Processions
At 2:00 p.m. the student procession, led off
by the Marshall, Dr. T.B. Miller, followed
by Mr. S.R. MacGillivray, will proceed
from the Assembly areadownthelonghallway leading to the Registrar's Office, down
th estairsintoth e Agora,anddowntheaisle
on the right hand side, taking their places
in the seats. Graduands are requested to
remain standing.

The graduand will also pick up a card
which will have his full name and rhe
number showing his position in the lineup,
assuming that all of the graduands are
present. The student on mounting the platform will present the card to the Dean, who
will read the candidate's name to the audiCONVOCATION INSTRUCTIONS
ence.
Gowns and hoods may be returned to the
Degree and Diploma Graduands
Office of the Secretary in accordance with
If you cannot attend the Graduation ex- the following schedule:
ercises, please notify the Office of the Sec- Saturday, November 17 - immediately
retary of the University immediately. The following the ceremony (to5 p.m.)
printed program and seating arrangements Monday, November 19 - 9:30 a.m. - 12
have to be made with full knowledge of noon; 2:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
those who will be present. Your co-oper- Tuesday, November 20 - 9:30 a.m. - 12
ation is essential.
noon; 2:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Corwocation

Gowns and Hoods

At the close of the Convocation Ceremonies
the Platform party will move off the platform, down the stairway on their left hand
side of the platform ( the opposite stairway
from making their entrance). All will stand
when the Platform party, led by the Marshall, bearing the Mace,commencetomove
out. They will be followed by the Board of I
Governors, the Senators, and the Faculty
down the aisle to the back oftheAgora and
thence to the Faculty Lounge or the Great
Hall. The graduates are requested tobring
their parents and friends to the Chancellor's
Reception in the Great Hall.

Gowns and Hoods may be picked up
from room UC-2001 of the University
on Saturday, November 17th, 1973, 10:00
a.m. lo 1:00 p.m.
A. Diploma Graduands - Including
Education
All Candidates - gowns only

Student Assembling and Robing Area.-

1:15 p.m.
The Diploma and Degree graduands will
assemble in the hallway on the main floor
of the Centennial building overlooking the
garden area. Please note that all gowns
whould be signed out between 10:00 a.m.
and 1 :00 p.m. in order that all participants
may recieve any necessary final instrucNOTE: Education Diploma candidates tions.
who have completed a Lakehead UniUniversity degree should request the ap- The Diploma in Education students should
be first in line, just behind the entrance
propriate hood.
c!s10rs facing the elevator, followed by the:
B. Degree Graduands
Bachelor of Education
Diploma in Engineering Technology
All Candidates - gowns and hoods
Diploma in Forest Technology
Hood Border Colours are as follows: Certificate in Envrionmental Forest TechB.A. and Hons. B.A.
-one inch white nology
Diploma in Library Technology
border
Bachelor of Science in Forestry
MA.
-two inch white
Bachelor of Commerce
border

When the President and the Chancellor have
taken their places on the platform "O
Canada" will be played (Please sing),
followed by the opening of Convocation
by the Chancellor, after which all will be
seated. (Follow the programme).
The graduand will approach the staris on
their left hand sidP, will present theiridentification card to their Dean of Faculty, will
be presented to the Chancellor after which
they will proceed across the platform, receive a "diploma cover" from the Registrar, continue down the stairs and resume
their seats.

Recessional

Please do not forget that your robes are
to be returned to Room UC-2001 in accordance with the schedule outlined on the
loan of academic dress form.

THE CHANCELLOKS RECEPTION WIU
BE HEW IN THE GREAT HAU AFTER
THE CONVOCATION CEREMONY

�Philosophy Club Speaker
Dr. Koilpillai J. C:,arles, Professor and
Chairman of the LU Department of Economics, will be giving a public lecture on
Thursday, November 15th, at 8:30 p. m.
in Room 1021, Main Building. Dr.
Charles will speak on: "The Mystery of
Time - An [ndian Philosophical Inlerpre!~· :ion".
Dr. Charles, who has an M. A. from the
University of Madras,! ndia, and a Ph.D.
from McGill, came to Canada in 1956 as
a World University Service Scholar. He
was made a Bronfman Fellow in 1958
and has been a faculty member atMcCill
and the University of Manitoba, where
he taught graduate honours courses in
economic development. I le has also
taught at Sir George Williams University
and has been Professor and I lead of the
Department of F..conomics at American
College, University of Madras. Ile has
prepared submissions for the Committee
on Manitoba's Economic Future and for
the Royal Commission on Taxation and,
journals, he is the author of a numbt&gt;r
of books including, The Myth of Inflation.
In 1968, he completed a sociu-economie
survey of h:enora, with a grant from the
Ontario Government. That same year,
Dr. Charles received a fixed term appoint-

ment with the United Nations as an Economic and Social Affairs. He assisted the
UN Centre for Development Planning,
Projections and Po!:.:ies in their work involving formulation of policy objectives
for developing countries.
During the summer of 1971, at the invitation of the Canadian International Development Agency of theFederalGovernment, he prepared a study on "The World
F..conomy in the Seventies".
As Chairman of the Economics Department he was responsible for setting up a
Craduate Diploma programme in economic development lo foreign students,
sponsored by the Canadian International
Development Agency of the Federal Government. This programme, which he now
directs, was set up in 1970, and has
attracted students from Asia and Affrica.
Last year, on sabattical leave from LU, he
directed a LIN empirical survey in India
on the "Distribution and Utilization of
Public Services in Tamil Nadu". And,
•somewhere, Dr. Charles also found time
to write a book entitled The Power of
Negative Thinking and Other Parables
from India, which has been published by
Orient Longman and is available at the
Ll I Bookstore.

TELEVISION AND PHILOSOPHY
A panel discussion on "Scepticism or
Faith'!"" that was held recently at LU, will
be shown on Cable Channel 7 on Friday,
November 9th at 8:30 p. m. I )iseussion
participants include: The Rev. Fr. Ceorge
Bourguignon, Chancellor, Roman Catholice Diocese of Thunder Bay: MissChristine Kouhi, third year Lll I lonours Philosophy and 11 istory student: and The
Rev. h:enneth !\1 offitt, !\1 inister, First ll nited Church of Furl William. Terence M.
Penelhum, special visiting guest, is a Professor Philosophy and Religious Studies

at Calgary University, an author on the
philosophy of religion, and Chairman of
the Canada Council Advisory Panel. The
moderator: Dr. William Morris, Chairman and Professor, LU Department of
Philosophy.
A lecture by Professor Penelhum on the
same topic, "Scepticism or Faith?" will
be shown on Cable Channel 7 in theweek
beginning Monday, November 12th.
Check your Thunder Bay Guide listings
for the correct day and time.

CHRISTMAS FUN AND FROLIC
Believe it or not, Christmas is just
around the corner, and that means
it's time to start thinking about Lakehead University's Seventh Annual
Christmas Party.
Friday, December2lstistheday. Mark
it on your calendar now!
Where'!" Royal Canadian Legion, Ortona Branch, 1700 Dease Street,
Thunder Bay ( F)
Price'? $6.00 per person
Time'? Happy (Half) Hour from 7
lo 7:30 p.m.

Food '!" Ethnic Smorgasbord served at
7:30 p.m.
Music"? Soft sounds by Roy Coran
Guests'? Yes, guests are wlecome.
Tickets will be available on the 3rd
of I )ecember from members of the
Committee and a few other members
of Staff.
Committee Members are:
Gerda Laser, Chairman Jean llelliwell
Dave Deh:nock
Brian Phillips
Donna Hardy
.John Ryder

CHRISTIAN
INSIGHTS IN A
CONFUSED WORLD
A series of free public lectures and panel
discussions, sponsored by LU and the
Thunder Bay Council by Clergy, will be
offered during the winter. Entitled 'Christian [nsights In A Confused World',
this iecture series will be a continuation of
the successful courses 'Christianity and
Crisis' and 'The Debate about God and
Man' which have attracted large audiences over the past few years. University
faculty members and local clergymen will
act as resource people for the subsequent
discussion and participation stimulated
by the lecturers.
The first speaker will be Gregory Baum
who will speak on 'Dreams, Illusion and
Faith' on Thursday, November 15th at
8:30 p. m. in the University Centre Theatre.
Gregory Baum is already well known in
Thunder Bay. He has pioneered thought
in the contemporary issues of ecumenism
and .Jewish-Christian relationships; and
he has recently gained recoghllion for his
work in the social sciences and their relationship to theology. He is a member
of the Department of Religious Studies,
St. Michael's College, the University of
Toronto and the Toronto School of Theology. Recently, he spent two years at the
New School for Social Research in New
York, and since that time his teaching and
sociological reflection have been strongly
influenced by the dialog.ie with the social
sciences.
The second speaker in this series will be
Tim Ryan who will discuss 'The Christian Contribution to Man's Search for
Liberation' on Tuesday, November 27th
in the lower Lecture Theatre.
Further lectures in the series will be offered after Christmas when arrangements
have been finalized.

Bibliography
on Women
Three copies of An Annotated Selected
Bibliography of Bibliographies on W omen by Dr. Margrit Eichler, Department
of Sociology, University of Waterloo,
have been presented to the LU Library by
the AUCC Committee on the Status of
Women.
Copies of the bibliography are available
for sale ($1.00 per copy, prepaid from
The Publications Office, Association of
LI niversities and Colleges of Canada, 151
Slater Street, Ottawa, KIP 5Nl

�YORK/TORONTO SEMINAR
....... to develop a Bill of Rights and Responsibilities for Ontario Universities
The LU lriformation Office recently r~
ceiven the following article from the University of Toronto News Bureau. Includen
with the article was this note: " Our office
was askoo ... , to send you the enclosoo
iriformation about the York/TorontoSeminar on the respoT1Sibilities of universities
in the hope that you might find roomfor a
report in your ccmpus publication that is
distributoo ,o academic staff
. . . publication at a'o/ time would be appropriate, as attendance is by invitation,
the Seminar will extend overacoT1Siderable
period of time, and the sessioTIS are closoo
to others, including the press. The purpose
of publishing the announcement is simply
to make the project known to all members
of the academic community in Ontario."
A group of 19 professors from York
University and the University of Toronto,
with a small number of representatives
of the wider community, recently began
a series of discussions the object of which
is a restatement for this decade of the
responsibilities of the universities and
the conditions necessary to their assumption of these responsibilities.
Called the York/Toronto Seminar, the
project is an outgrowth of conversations
that took place between members of the
Higher Education Group of the University of Toronto and a comparable group
of York University over the academic
year 1972-73. It is being supported by a
grant from the Richard Ivey Foundation
of London, Ontario.
Invited participants include Mr. Justice
J.D. Arnup, the Supreme Court of Ontario; Walter L. Gordon, Chancellor,
York University, former Minister of Finance, Government of Canada; Christine
Newman, Associate Editor, Maclean's
Magazine, and John P. Robarts, Chancellor, University of Western Ontario,
former Premier of Ontario.
The purpose of this project is to develop
a statement of the responsibilities and
essential requirements of universities -- it
might be described as a Bill of Rights
and Responsibilities of universities -with particular reference to those in
Ontario.
It is widely recognized that in society
certain conditions must prevail if citizens
are to be free men or if there is to be
a free press. Similarly there must be
recognition of the circumstances which
must prevail if a university is to fulfil
its role as a center of free inquiry and
learning.
There is a very great and growing danger
that the universities in Ontario will lose
that part of their heritage which makes
it possible for them to perform those
functions which as universities they were
created to carry out.
The prol)km relates to a changing social
situation in which there is continual pub-

lie criticism of the universities, increasing governmental control of these institutions, and growing uncertainty within the
university of its precise obligations.
Few would deny the justification of some
of the criticisms or of the need for some
government regulation of our universities.
Yet it is clear that if continued and intensified these criticisms and controls
could lead to restrictions that would
hinder, if not prohibit, the traditional
work of the university: teaching and
research.
The central core of the university has
always been a devotion to intellectual
excellence. At its best the university
brought together in a corporate life great
minds (both faculty and students) and
provided them with unusual freedom
and protection to interact and to explore
new ideas. The university was not merely
to preserve the cumulative knowledge of
the past but to discover and create riew
knowledge. In this free environment a
thin stream of excellence was cultivated
and fed into the social system. "Without
the (constant) renewal of excellence",
Sir Eric Ashby wrote recently, "a nation
can drop to mediocrity in a generation."
The university has, of course, other
obligations but without this central core,
it loses its fundamental purpose.
In Ontario, at the present time, this
devotion to scholarship and to excellence
is being seriously challenged. The _Co~mission on Post-Secondary Education m
Ontario, in its recent report The Learning Society, ; hows small regard for this
tradition. The university, the report
seems to imply cannot expect public
support for esoteric studies or eccentric
scholars. Further, the government's financial interest keeps expanding each year
to various phases of the universiiy's
operations, including academic and research programs. Government bureaucrats, often of junior rank, make decisions
that profoundly affect the life of our
universities. Many members of the public
are more aware of university problems
than of university purposes.
In this situation it seems important to
state clearly and precisely the responsibilities of universities in modern society
and the requirements which must be satisfied, the "rights" which universities mu~t
have, if they are to fulfil these responsibilities. This is not to deny the need for
change nor to reject the desirability of
new programs -- indeed it is to state the
new responsi'-- ::ities universities must assume. But it must be said now -- before
it is too late -- that if the university is
forced to move in certain directions or
to give up certain freedoms, it can no
longer be considered a university. Such
a statement is needed for universities
throughout the Western world. One dealing specifically with Ontario universities
will be general validity.
To reiterate: just as certain conditions
must exist if we are to have a free press
so must certain other conditions exist if

we are to have a free university.
To determine and define these conditions
is the purpose of this project: to define
a Bill of Rights and Responsibilities for
Ontario universities.
This, of course, is an extremely complex
and difficult task. It has not been done
before -- in Ontario or in any other
jurisdiction. But the attempts must be
made. If it succeeds a historic document
will result.
The project is to be carried out by the
Higher Educati0 1 Group of University
of Toronto and a comparable group at
York University. This is agroupofsenior
professors from both universities who
have been meeting over the past year to
discuss common problems and joint programs of study in higher education. The
members of the group are:
Dr. Robert S. Harris,ProfessorofHigher
Education and University Historian, University of Toronto.
Mr. Bertrand L. Hansen, Associate Professor of Higher Education, University
of Toronto, and Director of Research,
Council of Ontario Universities.
Dr. John B. Macdonald, Professor of
Higher Education, University of Toronto,
and Executive Director, Council of Ontario Universities (former president of
University of British Columbia), (CoChairman of the Seminar).
Dr. Murray G. Ross, University Professor, York University (former president
of York University), (Co-Chairman of the
Seminar).
Dr. Edward F. Sheffield, Professor of
Higher Education and Chairman of the
Higher Education Group, University of
Toronto.
Dr. Richard Storr, Professor of History,
York University.
Dr. D. McCormack Smyth, Professor of
Social Science, York University (former
Dean of Atkinson College, York University).
Dr. Malcolm G. Taylor, Professor of
Administrative Studies, York University
(former president of the University of
Calgary and of the University of Victoria).
In order to finance the seminar the
Richard Ivey Foundation of London,
Ontario, has provided a grant of$10,000.
The plan is to organize a seminar of 25
persons who will meet at approximately
fortnightly intervals during the winter of
1973/74, 10 professors from each of th_e
University of Toronto and York University, S or 6 persons knowledgea~l.e
about the problems of high education
but who are not academics -- from the
fields of government, business, the arts,
the courts, the health professions and the
press. In addition, one. g':1est from e~ch
of the United States, Bntam and Contmental Europe will be invited to speak to
and participate in sessions ea~ly in the
series. All regular members will be expected to carry on exploration of. the
topic between sessions and the meetmgs
themselves must be intensive work
sessions.

�BUSINESS PROFESSOR
WRITES AND SPEAKS
An article written by Bernard A. Hodson,
Associate Professor of Computer Systems, was published in the October issue
of the Canadian IQformation Processing
Society Magazine. Entitled "A Basic Approach to Systems Analysis", the article
was a precis of Mr. Hodson's book Modern Data Processing for Management
recently published by MacMillan of
Canada.
"The Future is Here Now! was the title
of a speech given by Mr. Hodson to members of the Fort William Rotary Club at
their October 24th meeting. The October
26th issue of The F ortarian had this to
say about Mr. Hodson's address: "Listeners received the impression that they
were in on a glimpse at the future and of
the person who would have a very significant part in moulding it, particularly
in the field of computer applications. Mr.
Hodson has developed a computer product that will be making a substantial
impact on the computer industry."

YOU NEVER
CAN TELL·····
Mr. L. S. Lamba is taking his English
348 - Kenora - class to a production of
George Bernard Shaw's 'You Never Can
Tell' in Winnipeg on Saturday, November 10th.

ENROLMENT PICTURE
On October 24, the Minister of Colleges
~nd Universities announced that prelimmary reports from universities indicate a
possible increase in December 1 full-time
enrolment of about 3%. Compared to last
year's undergraduate total of 121,212
this year's may be 124,940 or within 1%
of the number projected. First year enrolment may reach 37,312, almost 5%
more than in 1972-73, despite a decrease
in Grade 13 enrolment for the past two
years. Many enrolment reporting officers
have indicated a shift in undergraduate
enrolments toward professional and career-oriented programs. Enrolments in
commerce and finance and engineering
are up at several universities. Many stopouts who took time out between high
school and university have resumed their
studies with career-oriented goals which
are reflected in their choice of programs.
Full-time graduate enrolment may reach
13,305 compared to 13,128 in 1972-73.
The enrolment picture for part-time students is far from clear with some universities reporting increases and others decreases or a steady state. However, some
increase is expected when the final counts
are submitted early in November.

STUDENT PLACEMENT INFORMATION
Bank of Montreal - Representatives will
be here to provide information sessions
to anyone interested in banking careers
on Friday, November 9th in the Alma
Mater Council Chamber, Room UC2015. Deadline for applications will be
November 13th, first interviews for all
that apply will be Novt1· ier 23rd, and
final interviews December 7th.
I.B.M - Interviewing Degree students in
Engineering, Science and Commerce on
November 15th and 16th for Data Processing Marketing Representatives and
Data Processing Systems Engineering
Representatives.
197 4- - Career-Oriented Summer Employment - Government of Canada Students intending to return to their
studies in 1974-75 in all disciplines are
invited to apply. Deadline for applications will be January 10, 1974. Canadian citizens have statutory preference.
National Research Council Summer
Employment - Applications submitted
by November 21st to the Student Placement Office from first class honours
students in Science and Engineering Degree programs.
Stelco - Will be interviewing Commerce
Degree, Engineering Degree and Engineering Technology students in late
November.
Canadian
Conservation
Institute
(Branch of National Museums of Canada) is recruiting graduates for training as professional conservators in the
fields of fine arts, ethnology, archaeology, history and archives conservation.
Requirements are Honours B.A. in Art
History, Studio Art, or Archaeology;
or Honours B.Sc. with a strong minor
in one of these areas. Further information is available attheS.P.O.Deadline for receipt of applications is December 1st.
areas not included above. The applications forthedefinitejob areas listed will
be pre-screened in Toronto and the students that the Ontario Public Service
is interested in will be interviewed on
January 21st. Copies of the O.P .S.
Ontario Civil Service - Will be accepting applications through theS.P.O. from
November 5th until Wednesday, December 5th. Definite vacancies areas include: Administrative Trainees, Biolo-

gists, Community Planners, Foresters,
Human Rights Officers, Land Use Planners, Welfare Field Workers, Civil Engi~ee~s. As ~ell, an inventory of apphcahons will be set u_p for other job
"Guide to Careers" are available at
theS.P.O.
Royal_ Bank - Will be interviewing Economics, Commerce, Graduate Business
Diploma, Business Administration students genuinely interested in banking
careers on December 5,6, and 7th.
Public Service Canada - Has openings
for Programmers. This would be of interest to any graduating students with
significant computer experience: applications should be submitted as soon as
possible.
Summer Employment Prince Albert Pulpwood Limited will be
here to interview 1st year Forestry Degree students on November 20. Contact Bob Armstrong to arrange for an
interview time.
MacMillan Bloedel will be interviewing
3rd year Forestry Degree students on
November 21st. Deadline for applications is November 12th.
The Employment Opportunities Handbook - Canada 1973-74 is available to
be picked up on the tables outside the
Student Placement Office. Students are
urged to read through this booklet and
to choose organizations in which they
are sincerely interested, and to which
they wish to have a resume submitted.
Discuss your preferences with the
Student Placement Office. In the office
further recruitment material is available
for many of the organizations listed in
the Handbook.
Organizations not coming to our campus to interview at this time, will accept resumes from interested students
and will likely be encouraged to come
to campus if the response is great enough.
NOTE: All informationaboutrecruiting
schedules, part-time jobs, summer and permanent employment is on the bulletin board
outside the Student Placement
Office. .All studei.ts are urged
to register .vith Student Placement now and to keep checking the bulletin board for information.

EXHIBITION
from the Art Gallery of Ontario
"NIAGARA FALLS"
Niagara Falls as seen by artists from the mid-nineteenth century on: a colourful collection of lithographs, engravings, etchings and aquatints.
Lakehead University - 9th to 19th• November
The Confederation College - 21st to 29th November
"Restricted Saturday, 17th to invited Convocation guests only.
This exhibition is a co-operative venture of The Art Gallery of Ontario The Aesthetics Society, the University, the College, and the Ontario Arts Council. '

�CONSORTUM NEWS
Video College?
The Duluth office of the National TelePrompter Corporation ( cable television)
has offered to help the Lake Superior
Association of Colleges and Universities
develop a co-operative network for' cablecast' teaching to serve all Consortium institutions. In brief, a faculty member from
one institution would tape Jectures in his
specialty which would then by duplicated,
sent to area affiliates, and played simultaneously as the core lecture in a regular academic course for all Association students.The programme offers some
exciting possibilities for sharing resources
and overcoming the disadvantages of
geographical separation.
Faculty Directory
The Association will soon begin compilation of a directory of faculty according to special research or teaching interests to assist those with similar concerns
in getting together. The Consortium is also
looking into the possibility of a directory
of course offering, by discipline, for all
six Association insitutions.
Linguistics
Professor Edith Hols, UMD Department
of English, would liketohearfromfaculty
with an interest in linguistics. Professor
Hols is currently developing a minor in
comparative linguistics at UMD.
Adio-Visual Catalogue
C. M. Milbrath, Department of Secondary
Education at UJ\1D, is heading an Association committee to study the possibilities of developing a computerized index
catalogue for all non-print material held
by the Association. This would represent
a great advance over the common practice of cataloging by accession number,
dates or media mode.

PUBLIC INVITED
TO 'MAN AND HIS
ENVIRONMENT'
CONFERENCE
Politicians, environmentalists, scientists,
and social scientists from 20 countries are
coming to Canada next May.
They will be attending - 500 strong - the
second international conference on "Man
and His Environment". Scheduled for
May 19 - 22 in Banff, the conference will
focus on a number of themes.
According to Conference Chairman, Dr.
M. F. Mohtadi, of the University of Calgary chemical engineeringdepartmfnt, topics include natural resources; limits to
growth; population, production, and pollution; man in the technological world;
social, economic, moral issues; and looking ahead
Participation in the conference is open to
anyone interested in the preservation of
the natural environment.

by Geraldine Service

FALL 1973 MEETING WITH THE
COMMITTEE ON UNIVERSITIES AFFAIRS

Lakehead LI niversity 's annual meeting with
the Committee on University Affairs was
held in the Senate Chamber~ on Tuesday
October 16th. The Committee meets each
year with the provincially assisted universities visiting the campuses on an annual rotating basis. Each year some universities meet the Committee on another
university's campus. The Committee had
last visited Lakehead in the fall of 1970.
At our meeting on the 16th, we formally
presented our Fall 1973 Brief to the Committee. The Brief contained items of special
interest to the Llniversity as well as answers to the specific questions previously
sent to us by the Committee. Through the
Briefs submitted by the universities and
through the meetings, the Committee on
University Affairs attempts to obtain, as
stated by the Chairman, Dr. Reva Gerstein, "such substantive arguments and
documentation which will strengthen the
case for an adequate global financial figure
for the entire system."
The Committee, which is an advisory body
to the C overnment, recommends on such
items as the Basic Income l I nit Value,

any extra-formula grants universities
sh~uld receive and on requests for approval
of new academic programmes. We previously requested the approval of, for example, our Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of
Social Work programme and our Honours
Bachelor of Science in l\1edical Laboratory
Sciences programme. Both of these were
approved and were introduced this year.
We did not submit requests in this year's
Brief for approval of any new programmes.
At our meeting,Ahe topics which espedally
interested members of the Committee were
the extensive co-operation between Confederation College and the l lniversity; mobility of students particularly from technology programmes to degree programmes; our deferred credit system; reactions of universities to changing student
preferences; and research support for faculty members in Departments which do not
have the research support of graduate students.
Following the Meeting, the Committee
_joined representatives of the University
at an informal luncheon and later Dr.
Booth took the members on a tour of our
campus.

GRADUATE
SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMME
Last issue LU Week reported the implementation of a new OntarioGraduateScholarship Programme which will provide
$3 million to assist one thousand of outstanding academic ability topursuegraduate studies at Ontario universities. Each
of Ontario's 15 provincially assisted universities will nominate ten students for
these scholarships and the chosen scholars will take graduate studies at the university which nominates them.
LU Dean of Students, .I ohn !\err, has
circulated material pertaining to the C raduate Scholarship Programme to the
Chairman of those departments which
offer graduate studies. Dean Kerr has
also sent letters about the programme
to all full and part-time honours students. lie asks that all students intending
to apply to the programme check with
his office so that application errors can

be avoided. The deadline for applications
is December 1st.
The committee that will review the applications and choose the final ten candidates
consists of: The Dean of Arts, the Dean
of Science, the Registrar, and the Chairman of the Graduate Studies Committee.
The committee will be chaired by the
Dean of Students and Mrs. Bobby Hannah, Assistant to the Dean of Students,
will act as secretary.
The scholarships will provide$800 a term
plus graduate tuition and related fees for
either two or three consecutive terms. The
maximum award undertheprogrammeis
approximately $3,500.
Applicants for scholarships must have a
very high level of academic achievement
with first class standing in their major
subject areas.

ENGINEERING CHAIRMAN PRESENTS PAPER
Dr. George K. Fleming, Chairman of the
School of Engineering was invited to present a paper to the Symposium on Computers in Science and Industry organized
by the members of the Sheridan Park re-

search community. The title of Dr.
Fleming's paper was "Minimising Energy Costs in Manufacturing Processes".
The sumposium was held at Sheridan
Park, October 23, 24.

�For ~\rary Use ~

W88KI~
Friday
November9

Saturday
November 10

Thursday
November 15

Friday
November 16
Saturday
November 17

Sunday
November 18

even~s

-Engineering Nite Club
"Grease Ball Boogie" 9
p.m.
-Cambrian Players Production "Playboy" 8:30
p.m.
-Northwestern
Ontario
Wrestling Clinic, 2:00
p.m.
-Intrasquad Tournament,
8:00 p.m.
-Cambrian Players Production "Playboy", 8:30
p.m.
-Volleyball Third Annual
International Tourney,
all day
-Northwestern
Ontario
Wrestling Clinic
-Forestry
Nite Club
"Grease Ball Boogie", 9
p.m.
-Public lecture - Dr. K.J.
Charles, MB-1021, 8:30
p.m.
-Public Lecture - Dr. K..J.
Charles, MB-1021, 8:30
p.m. "The Mystery of
Time - An Indian Philosophical Interpretation"
-Wrestling, Royal Military
College, 6:30 p.m.
-Hockey - St. Scholastica,
8:00 p.m.
-Fall Convocation-Agora
2:00 p.m.
-Lakehead Fall Wrestling
Tournament, 11:00 a.m.
-Hockey - St. Scholasitca
8:00 p.m.
-Chamber Music Concert,
Faculty of Education Auditorium, 8:00 p.m.
-Movie "Omegaman", U
CT, 6:30 and 9:00 p.m.

mee~ings
Friday
November 16

Board ofGovernorsMeeting intheSenateChamber
at4 p.m.

COU RESPOSE TO REPORT OF THE
COMMISSION ON POST-SECONDARY
EDUCATION IN ONTARIO
The work of the Commission on PostSecondary Education has occupied a good
deal of the attention of the Council of Ontario Universities in the period of over
four years since the Commission was ~tablished in April of 1969. The Councils
brief to the Commission, prepared by the
Committee on Research and Planning, was
presented early in 1971, and subsequently
published in book form by McClelland and
Stewart under the title Towards 2000. Reactions to the Commission's Draft Report
from the Council and various COU committees and affiliates were published in
May, 1972 under the title Responses. When
the final report of the Commission was
published at the end of 1972, COU again
asked its Committee on Research and Plan-

ning to assist with the preparation of the
COU response, and at the September, 1973,
meeting, the Council approved its response
to the report. This latest document undertakes a selective rather than comprehensive
treatment of the report, since opinions on
most of the matters in the reportwhichconcern the universities had already been expressed in the earlier documents.
The latest document isolates a few subjects believed to be of particular i nportance: the place occupied by high standards
of quality in the Commission's priorities;
the structure of the system; the financing
of the system, especially the proposal relating to research financing; student aid;
and the place of examinations in licensing
for professional practice.

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[!] W88K

a publication of the Lakehead
University information office

VOLUME 6
NUMBER 11
OCTOBER 25, 1973

REPORT:
Si_xth Congres International des
Sciences de l'Education
By Dr. J.D. Wilson
Department of History
The sixth congress of the International
Association for the Advancement of Educational Research was held in Paris from
September 3-7 at the University of Paris
(Dauphine), the former NATO building.
Eight hundred delegates from fifty-eight
countries were in attendance. Conferences
of this association are held every four
years; previous ones were convened in Warsaw, Cambridge, Oslo and Florence. In
many ways the association represents a
European version of the American Education Research Association, except that it
does not meet annually. There also seemed
to be some difference of opinion among
conference organizers at this meeting as to
whether the association should serve as a
learned society or as a pressure group
promoting the interests of public education,
in this case in France, this year's host
country.
The conference was officially opened
by Mme. SuzannePloux,Secretary of State,
representing the Minister of Education. It
was clear from remarks made at that time
that the French conference organizers were
seeking every opportunity to use the presence of so many foreign scholars, assembled in Paris to discuss various aspects
of education, as a lever against the French
ministry of education. Over half the delegates came from France, and so, although
international in scope, the conference was
clearly dominated both in language used
and viewpoint by the French. Two days
before the conference opened, an article
in Le Figaro underlined the political pressure of the organizers when it spoke of
the "lack of interest" of the authorities and
of French public opinion in the science of
education, which it described as "a embryonic but growing discipline" in France.
This state of affairs sharply contrasted, the
article continued, with the well developed
state of the educational sciences abroad,
"especially in North America, Great Britain and the countries of Eastern Europe."
This assessment was certainly borne
out by my own experience at the conference. The French in particular were show-

ing great excitement about the need for

"education totale", "education permanente", "educating the whole child",
employing different sorts of modern media
in the classroom, self-learning, and especially exploring "the discipline of education in a scientific way": all of this as
if these ideas were brand .new. Anyone
familiar with the study of education in
North America over the past ten or twenty
years had a very distinct impression of
deja vu. In my own commission (History
of Education, only one of twelve commissions ranging from curriculum studies to
communication arts to comparative education), the concern with tired-out topics
was equally apparent. What passed for educational history was really largely the
history of educational thought mixed with
a little institutional history. Diderot, Rousseau, La Chalotais, Comenius-suchnames
were the order of the day. Our own panel
(Dahlie, U.B.C., Jaenen, Ottawa, and myself) on minority education in Canada
touched on issues quite removed from the
bulk of the papers in the commission, although, be it said at the same time, our
papers were well received. The motives behind the introduction of universal schooling and its subsequent effects, changing concepts of childhood, education as a vehicle
of social control, and such topics which
hold current interest for North American
educational historians, were completely foreign to this meeting. For their part the East
European scholars seemed most intent of
trying to convince us "Westerners" that
Marx held the secret to all problems facing
educators today. In fact one of the Czech
scholars in my commission was not in the
least nonplussed when stating that in Czechoslovakia "we teach our students to
question everything and then to act on the
basis of the conclusion they come to."
His memory of August, 1968, was indeed
short!
One can see, I think, how little of academic value I gained from the conference.
I would question the value of sending
Canadians - at least in my discipline _-

to such conferences where the level of research and topics of interest seem to be one,
or tw odecades behind North America. Education as a discipline is clearly much more
a weak sister in Europe than here - and1
that is saying something! The only plenary,
session speaker of any merit, or interest
for that matter, was from the United States.
- Dr. William M Birenbaum, President of
Staten Island Community College of City
University of New York. At the outset
of his address he swept aside as meaningless in today's world all the rhetoric about•
education encased in fine "scientific" jargon - precisely the sort of claptrap we1
were getting every day from the French
and East European delegates. He then went.
on to relate in cold, hard terms the real problems facing educators today and offered:
some hard choices in the age of mass education. Unfortunately there was little evidence to me that his hard-hitting speech had
made the impact it should have.
On the brighter side, there is some
merit, I suppose, in the individual contacts one makes with educators and scholars from Latin Amerca, Europe, Asia,
and Africa. I had memorable discussions
with individuals from Zaire, Poland, Bulgaria, Finland, South Africa, Brazil, Iran,
Yugoslavia and France. There is also some
merit in showing the flag. Finland, for example, was well represented with somefifty
delegates, while there was only one person
from Sweden. This disparitywasnotedand
mentioned to. me by sev9"al aelegates.
The proceedings of the History of Education commission, including the three Canadian papers, are being collected by Professor Vial of the University of Caen, and
are to be published in due course. Resumes of all the papers in each of the twelve
commissions were published prior to the
conference under the title L' Apport des

Sciences F ondamentales aux Sciences de
L'&amp;lucationjThe Contribution of Fundamental Sciences to &amp;lucational Sciences
(336 pp.), and may be obtained from
Cercle de la Llbrairie, 117 Boulevard SaintGermain, 75006 Paris, France.

�Consortium
News
The first meeting of the Lake Superior
Association of Colleges and Universities
Coordinating Council was held on October
4, in Duluth. The membership:
Lakehead University l\lr. Bryan l\tason
College ofSt.
Sister .loan Braun,
Scholastica
/\tr. I larold I lultberg
Dr. Edwin BlackMount Senario
burn, Dr. lloward
College
Recksfort
Northland College Dr. Edward Stevens
Dr. Charles Twining
University of Min- Dr. Robert I teller
Dr. David Vose
nesota, Duluth
Dr. Albert Dickas
LI niveristy of
Wisconsin, Superior Dr. John Haugland
Chairman ex ~lficio Dr. Donald E. Fouts,
Executive Director
The council will be Working to coordinate programme development among
the member campuses of the Association
and to act as liaison with the Office of
the Executive Director.

The coordinating Council will soon be
setting up study committees to look at
cooperative programme possibilities for
the coming year. It is anitcipated that
cross-registration, summer school, enviromental studies, Native American studies,
and continuing education will be subjects
for early discussion.

.I oint Graduate Programmes
The University of Wisconsin System
Central Administration recently recommended regional groupings of certain Wisconsin institutions for the purpose of interinstitutional planning of graduate programmes. The University of WisconsinSuperior is to develop programme
planning and review through the Lake
Superior Association of Colleges and Universities. The Board of Trustees of the Association, in a meeting held on October
2, hailed the opportunity for regional and
cooperative graduate programme development.
At the University of Wisconsin-Superior

the l'W System Central Administration has
recommended the phasing out of eight graduate programmes - 15 existing programmes are being retained. Those being
phased out include Master of Science in
Teaching programmes in Sociology,
French, German, Economics, Political
Science, Chemistry, Geology and Geography. According to Dr. Karl W. Mayer,
chancellor at UWS, it is assumed that graduate capabilities in the phased out programmes will be taken into account during the process of regional planning
through the Lake Superior consortium.
Student Affairs
"Student Affairs - A Regional Approach" is the title of a conference to be
held on the campus of the UW-Superior on
November 15. Co-sponsored by the Association and UW-Superior, t!H' conference
is intended for professionals and administrators and will feature a workshop format
dealing with the various student affairs
areas.

Graduate
Scholarship Programme
A new Ontario Graduate Scholarship
Programme was recently announced by the
Minister of Colleges and Universities,.lack
McNie. In 1974-75 the $3 million programme will assist one thousand students
of outstanding academic ability to pursue
graduate studies at Ontario universities.
The scholarships will provide $800
a term plus graduate tuition and related
fees for either two or three consecutive
terms. Students must apply by December
l, 1973 to be considered for scholarships
commencing in May or September, 1974
or January, 1975.
Ten students will nominated for scholarships by each of Ontario's 15 provincially assisted universities. Thesescholarswill
take graduate studies at the university
which nominates them.
The other 850 scholars will be nominated by a seven-member selection board

appointed by the Minister of Colleges and
l I niversities and made up of senior faculty
members from Ontario universities.
The scholars selected by the board will be
able to pursue their graduate studies at any
of the provincially supported universities
in Ontario and will be able to transfer
from one Ontario university to another during the tenure of their award.
The new program replaces the Ontario
Graduate Fellowship Program and is different from the fellowship program in several significant ways.
Applicants for scholarships must have
a very high level of academic achievement
with first class standing in their major subject areas. Previously, second class standing was the minimum qualification.
Under the new programme, scholarships may be awarded for graduate studies
in all disciplines excepttheology.Graduate

studies in medicine, dentistry, education,
home economics, social work, journalism
and public and business administration
were excluded under the previous fellowship programme.
The maximum award under the fellowship programme was $2,250 for three
terms. Under the Ontario Graduate
Scholarship Program the maximum award
for three terms is approximately $3,500.
Allowance for part-time teaching or research assistantships is also more generous
under the new programme.
The Ontario Graduate Scholarship
Program is intended primarily for Canadian citizens. Preference will be given to
Ontario residents.
The new programme has been developed in consultation with the Council of Ontario Universities and the Committee on
University Affairs.

�The Canadian Theatre Review, a new
quarterly journal devoted to analyzing
theatre activities in Canada, will begin publication this coming January.
The magazine will be published by
York University through its Faculty of
Fine Arts and will be edited by a member
of the York Theatre Department, Don
Rubin.
Each issue will be at least 100 pages
in length and will include major essays
relating to Canadian theatre as it exists
today, historical documentation relating
to the Canadian theatre as it existed in
the past and regional essays by leading

York to Publish
Theatre Review
members of the theatrical community. Each
issue will also include a previously unpublished, full-length Canadian script,
( early issues will include scripts by Geroge
Ryga, John Herbert and Michael CooK),
theatrical° reference material and reviews
of important new books relating to theatre.
Members. of the CTR editorial advisory
board include Newfoundland playwright
Michael Cook, Ontario designer Maurice
Strike, Ontario and former Quebec director
Marion Andre, playwright-professor Mavor Moore of York University, Calgary
critic James Portman, Professor TomPeacocke of the University of Alberta, Prof-

essor Ann Saddlemyer of the University
of Toronto, actor Powys Thomas of Stratford, director Albert Millaire of Montreal,
Professor Lionel Lawrence of Dalhousie
University in Halifax, Vancouver critic
Peter Hay, Professor John Brockington of
the University of British Columbia and
Dean Green of York.
Initial printing of CTR will be 2,000
per issue with single copies being sold
through newstancis at $1.50 per copy.
One and two year subscription rates will
also be available for $4.50 annually or
$8.00 for two years.

STUDENT PLACEMENT

The following companies have expressed an interest in the graduating students and are accepting applications through
our office. Recruitment literature is available upon request.
COMPANY
STUDENTS
DEADLINE FOR
INTERVIEW DATE
APPLICATIONS
Texaco Canada Ltd.
November 28th and 29th
November 9th
Civil Engineering Technologists and
Business Administration, Commerce,
Art students looking for marketing
careers
Clarkson and Gordon
Commerce and Graduate Business
Nov. 12th and 13th
Diploma students who are planning
on becoming Chartered Accountants
Contact Bob Armstrong Nov. 19th, 20th. 21st
MacMillan Bloedel Ltd.
Forestry Students
Open to graduating students
Canadian Imperial Bank
Nov. 21st
interested in management trainee
of Commerce
programs
Engineering Technology students
INCO
Nov. 27th
Canadian Laboratory
Science, Business or Arts students
November 14th
Nov. 28th
who would like a marketing
Supplies Ltd.
management career
Ministry of Transportation
Engineering Degree students
Nov. 29th
and Communications
( Civil oriented)
Open to any graduate genuinely
Simpsons-Sears
Dec. 3rd
interested in a retail management
career
Forestry students
Ministry of Natural
December 5th
Jan. 7th and 8th/74
Resources
Zellers
Open to any graduate interested
Jan. 16th/74
in retail management
Thefollowingcompanieshaveindicatedaninterestinrecieving resumes from graduating students. Copies of resumes can
be sent through the Student Placement Office. Recruiting information is also available.
1. BLUE BELL CANADA LTD. - Manufacturers of "Wrangler" products
2. MARINE OFFICE- APPLETON AND COX LTD. - Marine insurance
3. IMPERIAL OIL
4. VARIOUS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT FIRMS
5. GENERAL MOTORS OF CANADA
SUMMEBEMPLOYMENT
MINISTRY OF NATURAL RESOURCES, DIVISION OF MINES
Accepting applications from Geology students ( all years). Deadline for applications is November 15th; interviews on
November 22nd.
PARKS CANADA (DEPT. OF INDIAN AND NORTHERN AFFAIRS)
Accepting applications for Park Naturalists and Historical Park Guides for Ontario region National Parks. Deadline
for applicati.ons is November 15th, TheParkNaturalistpositions would be of interest to Forestry, Biology, Geology,
Natural Science, Geography students, and the Historical Park Guide positions would be applicable to History, Anthropology, Archaeology, Political Science students.
BELL CANADA
Accepting applications from students in Engineering, Business, Commerce, Mathematics, Economics who will be
graduating in 1975. The deadline is October 26th to submit resumes (this has been extended from October 19th).

�In the Wake
of the Voyageurs
Local Group Launches French Television Project
French television comes to Thunder
Bay this winter. Students and teachers
of French at all levels and the few thousand people of the region who speak French
at home will be able to watch and contribute to their own programme.
Dans le Sillon des V &lt;ry"ageurs will be
screened on Channel 7 cable television on
Tuesday evenings at 8:30 p.m., commencing October 30. It will be re-boradcast
at other times during the week, as listed
in the TV Guide.
This is a community project designed
to fill a local need. Concerned at the lack
of CBC or commercial television coverage
at the Lakehead in Canada's "other" official language, two university professors,
Alain Nabarra and David Lewis,
approached the federal and provincial
governments and local interestgroupswith
a plan for six month's broadcasting, using
the community television channel provided
by Maclean-Hunter Limited. They were encouraged in their efforts by grants from
both governments and the French-Canadian Club of Thunder Bay.
"This is not a university project", says
Professor Lewis, "although we were gratified at the practical help and the encouragement we received from the university.

•

It is an open communi~y venture, an opportunity for group projects by schools
and students of French. We want the
schools and French-Canadian groups to
come forward with their proposals. This
must be a busy programme showing the
life of the community, not a studio sit-in."

of help by persons willing to become project directors. Our aim is to produce enough
material for a lively magazine programme
every week, although we shall alternate
these shows with a film series at first. We
already have programmes planned on cultural life in Quebec, on Europe and Africa,
on the attitudes to biculturalism of Thunder
Bay citizens and even on points of grammar. Teachers are planning cooking demonstrations in French specially for elementary students. There's no shortage of
ideas; it's practical help we want now to
make this project really take off."

Members of the organizing team are no
newcomers to community projects. Alain
Nabarra has been running a radio programme in French for three years. David
Lewis is a former president of Thunder
Bay Symphony and serves on the modern language committee ofLakehead Board
of Education. The team is completed by
Mrs. Elinor Barr, who has long experience
with the Symphony women's committee
and its TV Bingo fund-raising, and Ronald
Bourret of the French-Canadian Club, who
this year completes his degree in French
and Sociology. In addit=on to generous
help from Maclean-Hunter, the group has
offers of technical assistance from Monitor North, a local Initiatives Programme
camera team; and Bob Angel, instructor
in television arts at Hammarskjold High
School.

Mr. Nabarra will shortly be going to
Montreal to make contacts for the programme and plan four shows with Dr.
Reginald Hamel, the well-known author
and broadcaster on life and letters in
French Canada.
Raymond Blanchette, federal aduu,
istrator of cultural affairs, welcomes this
initiative. "Both the CBC and the federal government are following the project
closely. There's never been anything quite
like it before among the projects we have
sponorsed. This pilot is of interest to cultural minority groups across the nation.
It's a national first for Thunder Bay."

"Our most urgent need at present",
says Alain Nabarra, "is to obtain offers

HELP THE UNITED WAY

Donald E. Ayre, Secretary of the
University and United Way chairman
for Thunder Bay, is concerned. He's
concerned for all l'1e people who need
help and hope to get it from funds

provided by the United Way campaign.
He's concerned that many of these
people who need help won't get it because time is running out and the
United Way might not reach its ob-

jective.
You should be concerned, too. So,
get up off your good intentions and
support the United Way.

NO. OF
DONORS

TOTAL
GIFT

1972-73

139

$7480.70

$5390.49

$1701.35

$ 388.00

1973-74

81

$5782.40

$3362.99

$1240.37

$ll79.04

UNITED SALVATION OTHER
APPEAL
ARMY

BE CONCERNED

•

�Allied Chemical
Scholarship Presented

Published
Orient Lnng111an has just •mght out
a book !:&gt;y Dr. K..J. Charles, P1 ,fessor of
the Department of Economics, entitled "The
Power of Negative Thinking and Other
Parables from Jndia". Based on a series
of talks given by him in New York, the
book attempts to show the extent to which
the values and traditions of lndia'sancient
culture have a surprising relevance to the
issues and problems of our contemporary
world. He does this through parables, mostly drawn from the rich store-house of
Hindu mythology and folk-lore, though
there are some parables here which are from
the author's own imagination.
One of the recurrent themes of the book
is that the negative is integrally related to
the positive; emotions like fear and courage
happiness and sorrow, love and hate, far
from being dichotomous are relatd to each
other in a dialectical way. The recognition
accorded to the negative in Indian culture,
in the author's view, is one of its commendable features. Hence .'.H title, The
Power of Negative Thinking.
In this book he expresses the concern
of the economist for man's happiness and
his moral and spiritual development.
The book is available in the University
Bookstore.

John Kerr,
Dean of Students,
Dan Kleemola
and Ed Burk.
Dan Kleemola, a fourth year LU Chemistry student, recently recieved a 750dollar
Scholarship from the Allied Chemical Company. The presentation of the Scholarship
and a sterling silver plaque to commemorate the award was made by Mr. Ed
Burk, manager of the local Allied Chemical
Plant.
The Allied Scholarship is presented

yearly to an Honours Science student who
possesses a record of high scholastic achievement and who shows 11:reat promise in his
or her chosen field. Thecandidateis nominated by the Dean of Science.
Dan, who has anaverageofbetterthan
80 per cent, intends to continue his studies
at the post graduate level.

Ms. Elwert to
Library Meet

Business
Admin. Note
Associate Professor of Computer
Systems, Bernard A. Hodson, recently
completed, at the behest of the Science
Council of Canada, a review of"Strategies
of Development for the Canadian Computer Industry", Science Council of Canada
Report No. 21. Mr. Hodson, to whom the
Vice-President of IBM Canada has publically referred as one of three Canadians
with vision and the ability to get things
done that others in the computer industry
felt were impossible, took a critical but
constructive stance in his review.
Mr. Hodson and A.G. Gardiner - consulting economist and part-time lecturer
in ecomonics in the LU Department of
Economics - recently co-authored an article entitled "Can Hardware Logic Solve
Software Waste?" for the October 20th
issue of the Financial Post. In the article,
Hodson and Gardiner critically examine
the philosphy of special-purpose computer
programming and make a strong case for
a move to general-purpose programming.

Ms. Charlotte Elwer!, Lab Assistant
and Demonstrator,SchoolofLibraryTechnology, will be attending a meeting for
Library Technicians which will be held in
Toronto, Saturday, October 27 at the
Humber College of Applied Arts and Tech-

nology,Rexdale, Ontario. 1\1&lt;;. Elwertand a
Steering Committee of Technicians are
organizing this meeting to discuss the possibility of drawingupaProgramforaConference for Technicians to be held in the
Spring, 1974.

Library Technici9ns
Plan Workshop
At a recent meeting of the Lakehead
Library Technicians Association, plans
were discussed to sponsor a workshop
on audio-visual methods and video taping instuction.
Proposed dates for this event are Nov.
16-17 at theSchoolofLibraryTechnology,
Lakehead University. Announcements will
be sent to members and to library workers
in Thunder Bay. The workshop is open
to library technician graduates, teacher
librarians, and to other library personnel.

Instruction group co-ordinators for the
Saturday session will be Harry Huskins
Library Technician, Schreiber High
School, Charlotte Elwer!, Lab Assistant,
School of Library Technology and Bonnie
Morre l\1cKay Library Technician, Lakehead Psychiatric Hospital Library. Guest
speakers for the Friday night session and
for the Saturday afternoon session and
problem clinic will be announced shortly.
For futher information please call Mrs.
D. Krupa at 577-1212 or Charlotte Elwert at 345-2121, Ext. 317.

�W88KI~

even~s

Friday
October 26

Oktoberfest, German Band,
9:00 p.m., Main Cafeteria

Friday
Nov.2

Dance - "Baroque Plantation Boys", 9:00 p.m., Main
Cafeteria

mee~ings
Cambrian Players
Present "Playboy"

Wednesday
Nov. 7

The Cambrian Players kick off their
73-74 season with the Irish Comedy "Playboy of the Western World". Directed by
French Club Novemberfest, Ken Allan and starring Peter Raffo, Jean4:30 p.m., Main Cafeteria, ette Johnson, Gerald Mosa and Val MotherCambrian Players Final sill, with support from Tom Miller, Martin
Dress Rehearsal, Student Greenwood, David Lewis and Kelly Adams, the play will run from Wednesday,
Night

Thursday
Nov.8

Cambrian Players presents
"Playboy", 8:30p.m., UCT

Friday
Nov.9

Cambrian Players presents
"Playboy", 8:30p.m., UCT

Saturday
Nov. 10

Cambrian Players presents
"Playboy", 8:30p.m., UCT

Elected
Faculty Reps
The recently elected F acuity Representatives to Senate are: Dr. Ernest R. Zimmermann - 3 years, Dr. John Mothersill 3 years, Dr. Ian Hoodless - 3 years, Dr.
Clement Kent - 2 years. Runner-up: Dennis Roddy.

Senate Rep
Donald E. Orr has been elected as Senate Representative to the Board of Governors for a three_year term.

Faculty
And Staff
Appointments
Mr. M Akhtar, MA., Lecturer, Department of Sociology.
Mr. Gary Heathcote B.S. MA., Lecturer,
Department of Anthropology.
Dr. Mary B. Black, Visiting Full Professor, Department of Anthropology.
Mr. Micheal P. ~Leod B.A., Technical
Assistant, Department of Anthropology.

November 7th to Saturday the 10th in the
Lakehead University Centre Theatre. Curtain time for all performances is 8:30 p.m.
and the ticket price is $2.50. The night of
the final dress rehearsal, Tuesday, Novemeber 6th, is open to students at the special
price of $1.00.

Christian
Living Experiences

Science Council
Member To
Speak At LU

Christian Living &amp;periencesfor Faculty of
Education Students - Avila Centre, 1:30
p.m. on Wednesday, October 31, 1973
and Wednesday, November 7, 1973.
For Practise Teaching weeks from Oct.
29/73 to November 9/73.

Mr. Andrew H. Wilson, a member of
the Science Council of Canada w1H be giving a public lecture on Thursday, November 6th at 7 ;30 p.m. in the Upper Lecture
Theatre. The topic of Mr. Wilson's lecture
will be: Science Policy - The Impossible
Dream?

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~KU5

c...t,

[!JW88K

VOLUME 6
NUMBER 10
OCTOBER l l , 1973

a publication of the Lakehead
University information office

.-·
COPERNICUS
COMES -TO
LU

...

'1('i

..

1996

r

1

Five hundred years ago, a brilliant Polish astronomer changed
the order of the universe -and gave birth to modern astronomy.
UnitlNicolausCopernicuspublishcd his detailed study "CONCERNING THE REVOLUTIONS OF THE HEAVENLY
SPEHERE" ( DE REVOLUTIONBUS ORBIUMCOELESTIUM) man generally believed the earth to be the centre
of the universe. So pervasive was this belief that Copernicus, fearing ridicule, kept his radical manuscript hidden for
36 years. He was on his deathbed when he received a copy
of the publication and died without knowing he had acheived
lasting fame; without knowing he would be lionized as the
Father of Modern Astronomy.
This year marks the fifth centennial of Copernicus' birth and to commemorate the man
and his great achievements, the Copernicus
Observance Commillee of Thunder Bay
and the Canadian Polish Congress will
present a painting of Copernicus to I,akehead l I niversity on October 12th.
The painting was executed by the noted,

Toronto-based Polish artist, EugeneChrucicki. /\ number of works by the lalmtL-d
!\Ir. Chrucicki hang intheOUawamuseum.
The presentation ceremony will be held in
the l 'niversity ( :entre Theatre, beginning al
8:00 p.m. Among those whowillconlribute
to the programme are: Mr. W.T. h:wasniewski of the Canadian Polish Congress,

HEADWAY PROVIDES
SCHOLARSHIP
AND BURSARY

THEY NEED YOUR HELP
THEY NEED IT BADLY
THEY NEED IT NOW!

•

The 1973 United Way campaign commenced on Monday, September 17, with a
kick-off luncheon at the Nor-Shor Motor Hotel. This year the objective for the community is $380,000. Donald E. Ayre, Secretary of the University, is campaign
chairman for all of Thunder Bay and is once again looking for support from the
faculty and staff of the University. He recently pointed out in a TV interview, that if
20,000 of those employed in the area gavejusl $20.00 each, the campaign would
go over the objective. Mr. Ayre is looking for greater participation from the University Community, as well as the total community. The previous giving at the University is as follows :
Average
Total
No. of
Salvation
United
Gift
Donors
Gift
Appeal
Army
Other
1970-71
84
$4223.60
$50.28
$ 828.54
$3027.06
$368.00
1971-72

159

$7365.25

$46.32

1972-73
139
$7480.70
Please give your help.

$53.81

$5473.30

$1532.95

$359.00

$5390.49

$1701.35

$388.00

HELP THE UNITED WAY

l&gt;r. A.I&gt; . Booth, l&gt;r. .I. Criffith of Lakehead l lniversity and Mr. T. h:aipio. The
Polish Mellenium Choir and the Thunder
Bay Symphony On·heslra will perform
during the programme. All faculty, staff
and students are invited lo join the general
public in allendance.

The School of Business Administration al
Lakehead University has been awarded
a continuing Scholarship and Bursary
through the generosity of Headway Corporation Limited of Thunder Bay.
A Scholarship ($250.00), andsilvermedal
will be awarded lo a student entering the
final year of the 11 on ours Bachelor of
Commerce programme, who has achieved a first class standing in his third
year, and has demonstrated leadership
qualities in both course work and extracurricular activities.
A Bursary ($250.00) will be awarded on
the basis of financial need and scholastic ability to a student entering the third
or fourth year of the Honours Bachelor
. of Commerce programme.

�PRESIDENT BOOTH ANNO UNCES "HO NOURARY PRO FESSORS"
Lakehcad University PresidentA.D.Booth
recently announced the appointment off our
"11 onorary Profo, ,urs ". Appointments in
th.is newly -created category are made to
•persons who have made distinguished contributions to the university, the community
and society and are given on the recommendation of the I )epartment and Faculty
concerned. Thm;p appointt'(I:
,\lr. Claude Carton
11 onorary Professor Of Biology
\Ir. Carton eanH' to Thunder Bay in 192B.
I It• was a teacher at tlw { :urrent Biver
Sehool until J9:3(i, when lw was made
Principal then•, and rl'mainl'd in thatcapaeity, with thl' exception of a five year stint
in the Armed Servit·t•, until his retirement
in 19()(i. It is indieativt• of \Ir. Carton's
pl'rsonal ability that, at his rl'lin•mt•nt,
lht• sehool was n•nan11'&lt;l thd :Iaudd ;arton
Sd1ool.
llringing his own collt'&lt;·lion of spt'l'inwns
lo tlw l niVl'rsity - a eollt'&lt;·lionwhid1 IJl'gan
in l'J:3:J - \lr. Carton aeeepte&lt;I thedrnllt•ngt•
of t•stablishing a I h•rliarium for Ll , whieh
is _aptl7 nanll'd tlw '( :Iaudt• ( ;arton I lnbanum.
Tlw l'Olll'l'lion, built from voluntary and eoopl'ralivt• trading with otlwr l niversitit-s
and inll•n•slt'&lt;I hod it•s, l'Xl'l't'&lt;ls son11&lt;30,000
spt'&lt;•inwns.
\Lr. Carton has providt'&lt;I invaluablt•eounsdling to Biology and Forl'stry studl'nls
who seek his advice and assistalll'l', and has
aidt'&lt;I in thl' organization of fil'ld trips,
lmst'&lt;I on his exll'nsi\ 1• know lt'&lt;lgt• of the
Thund1•r Bay an•a.
l&gt;r.M.W. Bartl1·y
I lonorury Profrssor of { ;t•olog)
I) r. Bartlt•y 's association with posl-st'&lt;'o111la1') t'&lt;lueation in thl' Lakl'lll'ad grn-s hm:k lo
l'Jl:l wl11•11 lw was imoht'&lt;I in the first

eommittee to investigall' the frasibilil) of
forming an institute of teehnology. I le was
the founding Prineipal of l.akt-head Technieal Institute, Board member forthcl.akehead College of -\rts and Seienel', and
founding Chairman ol the Board of Covt•rnors of l.akehead l niversity in I 9(&gt;,&gt;.
I )r. Bartlt•y ohtaim'&lt;I his ll.Se. from the
l niversity of \lanitoha in 191:3, his M.Sc.
in 19:-3., and his Ph.I&gt;. at tlw l niHrsil)
of Toronto in 191-0 when• he also k'&lt;·lurt'(I
in gt•ology.
From 191-0 to 1917, lw was l'lllplo)t'&lt;I
as produetion nu11mg1·r al thl' Stt•ep Hock
Iron Mines. In 19.,2, I )r. llartlt•y left
the l.akdwad Tt'&lt;·h nieal Institull• to Sl'l up
his o\\ n eonsulting firm "ht•n• Ill' eontinlll'S as pn•sident of M.W. llartl1•y and \ssoeiatt•s, I.td.
In tlw fall ol 1972, I )r. Bartle\ n·tunml
lo tlw dassroom at I.akdwad ( niversit),
d1·lt•rn1i1wd to promoll' n•spt'&lt;'l for tlwpractintl applieations of gl'ologirnl tlwor~ in
tlw minds of future gt•ologists.
Mr. \I. Suan-z I lonont1) Professor
in thl' \ lusic I &gt;1•parlnll'nl
Mr. Manuel Suan-z "as install1•d, mrlier
this \t'ar, as l&gt;ircl'lor of ,\lusie at l.akelwad° l nin•rsity in responst• to a Senate
dt'l·ision to l'xpand l-redit offerings in instrunwntal music as wdl as theory and
musie history. Mr. Suarez was attral'll'&lt;I to
tlw Thunder Ila) area primarily b) tlw
challt•nge of pioneering programmes in musie t'&lt;lueation and performanee. For the
past }l'ar, he has been \lusic Director for
the I,akl'lwad S) mph on) ( )rd11-stra.
He was born in 1\1 exico in 1943, and studied
at tlw \l'w School of \lusic and Curtis
Institutt• in Philadelphia betw 1'1'11 19.')(il 1J(i0. 11 I' thl'n won full tuition seholar-

ships at both the Julliard School of \lusic
and. ( :ooper l nion in architecture but
chose instead to enroll in the \loscow State.
Tchaikowsky Conservator) of\lusicwhere
lw studied under the world's finest instruetors until 196'1,. I le was awarded postgraduate scholarships by the(; overnmcnts
of Mexico and the Soviet l 'nion and now
holds the equivalent of Master of .\lusic
Educatbn and Performance.Just last year,
he rt'l·eived the equivalent of a I )octorate
in Performance from the Education Secretariat of Mexico. I le has implemented
music programmes for the Mexican Government, performed, eonducted and taught
at three Mexican l niversitics, held the
post of \ssociate Concert \laster to the
\ational Symphony of \lexico and organized and developed a number of professional music groups and an association
of \ lexico's top musicians. Mr. Suarez and
his brother, a pianist, are recognized as
official soloists for the Mexican Foreign
llt-lalions .\linistry.
Mr. L. Vidlak
I lonorary Professor of Forestry
Mr. Leo \ idlak was born and raised m
{ :Zt'l'hoslovakia. \fter attending high
sehool in his native country, Mr. \ idlak
pursut'll his education at the ( ;erman Forest .-\cadem) and, after graduation, he
spent four years in training as an assistant
to a Forstmeister before returning to his
own country as a forest engineer. In 1929
lw bcl'ame a Forstmcister, the ) oungest
fon•stcr in ( :zechoslovakia ever to be appointl'&lt;I to this important position. I le
later served as first vice-president of the
( :zl'l'hoslov akian F orcsters \ssociation
and as an Examiner at the State Examinations for the Besponsible Forest Managers. I le was named as an Extraordinary

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY
PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT SERVICE PROGRAMME
( :ourst•

l,ocation

l)ate

Time

Archery
Fencing
First Aid
Judo
h.arnte
h:ung Fu
Squash
Women's Fitness
Yoga
Volleyball
(Women's)

Faculty of Ed.
Aux. Cym
C.J.C. Classroom
( :ombatives Bm.
Faeulty of Ed.
.-\ux. Cym
Fieldhouse
.-\ux. Cym
Aux. Cym
Fieldhouse

Saturday
Saturday
Saturday
Tuesday
Thursday
Tuesday
l\londay
Wed.
l\londay
l\londay

L0-12:00 p.m. October 20
12-2:00 p.m. Ol'tober 20
9-L:00 p.m.
October 20
B-10:00 p.m. October 16
9-11 :00 p.m. October lJ
9-11:00 p.m. October 16
7-10:00 p.m. ( )ctobcr l.')
9-ll;00 p.m. Octobl'r 17
9-11:00 p.m. October 15
B:-i5-ll :00p.m. October l.')

Special Notes:

Starting Date

Instructor

.I. llachiquchi

1973-7 4 SCHEDULE
Public
Fee

Sl2.00
C. Sequin
Sl2.00
St. John's Staff
Sl2.00
I\L h:awasaki
Sl5.00
Sl.').00
W. Sandburg
Chiu Fu I.au
$15.00
B. Penner and B. France Sl2.00
$1.').00
Lynn Simmer
$ 12.00
H. Shattncr
$12.00
R. Benson

Student Term
Fee
$ 2.00
$ 2.00
$12.00
S J.00
$ 5.00
S 5.00
$ 2.00
$ 5.00
$ 2.00

---------

First Aid - Course designed to suit the needs of nurses ( Public section available).
Volleyball - Includes instructions - participants to be placed on teams for league play.
Badminton - Postponed until after Christmas ( Faeulty and .-\lumni, Wednesday 9:00 to 11:00)
\\T\TEH TEH\11&gt; ·\ TES T.IL\.

FOR FllHTIIER INFOHl\1'\TION CALLI 1O\VABD B. I.OCh:11.-\RT,SEH\ ICE PROCRA\I COORDI :\ATOR
YI' 3i5-212l, ~:\'I'. 6.')0.

l

1 and 2
l
land 2
1 and 2
land 2
l
land 2
l
1 and 2

�Member of the Czed10lsovakian \eadenn
of \gTieulture, Fon•stry section, and wa·s
well known in European forestry circles
as a Forstmeister of the highest eompetenee.
\fter the second w odd wa1·, \ b·. \ idlak
was awarded two medals and a eitalion
by the Czechoslovakian l\tiniskr of l)t•fence for his efforts as a member of the
underground during tilt' oceupation ) l'ttrs.
In 19 rn the Communists seized eontrnl

of the Czt-cholson1kian Covernnwnt. l\lr.
\ idlak, an opponent of Communism, esn1ped to Germany after ln1rning from a
friend that ht&gt; was lo bt&gt; arrested. In 1930
ht&gt; eanw to Canada, working first as a
labourt&gt;r in a private nurs1•ry in southern
( )ntario befort' joining the Abitibi Company in 19.&gt; I.
I lis work at till' \bitibi \\ o!Xllands Laboratory at Haith, from l 932 lo l 9().1., has
had a significant inl1uence on the dP\·d-

IDEAS WANTED
[n May, Maclean's l\lagazine began a
column titled "Ideas". The purpose of the
column is to keep Canadians informed of
new developments in medicine and science,
and to comment on trends or current controversies in the arts or the social sciences.
Columns already published or completed
have dealt with research on drugs, a new
theory and approach to psychoanalysis,
a recent statistical study of elites and pressure groups in Canada and a literary controversy.
Maclean's expects, and rightly so, that the
success of their column will depend heavily
on a regular flow of information from across the country - and universities should
be one of their main sources of material.
Consequently, Maclean's has enjoined the
LU Information Office to provide that
magazine with information about research
being done here, about books or other
works in progress, and about personalities
and their achievements.
Requests, like this one from Maclean's, are
an almost daily occurrence at the LU Info
Office. So let us know what you're up to and we"ll pass the information along.

GUTENBERG
GALAXY
For a nickel a page, Xerox will search
out a book in any part of the world, obtain permission to microfilm it, make a
microfilm for its own vault, and reproduce it on demand. ( At 5¢ a page a typical book would cost $10-20). "We base
much of our business on the idea that if
one library wants a book, then undoubtedly other libraries will be interested in
it," says Xerox Liniversity Mocrofilms'
product manager Robert !\fathews. The
company's Ann Arbor, !\lich. archives now
holds 400,000 monographs suitable for
xerography and 65,000 modern out-ofprint books already prepared to be xeroxed and adds 5,000 titles a year. The collection includes the first book printed in
England and the first printed in North
America. Ar some libraries with big collections of out-of-print booksXUl\fsagreements to pay publishers royalties on books
still in copyright but of print. Combined
with a fastlong-distancctransmitter-printer
it would make a formidable new
technology.

Reprintcrl from Executive, September 1973

opmenl of silv icultural practices in Ontario.
.\ b-. \ idlak retired from \bitibi in 1961
and promptly began lt•aching at Lakclwad l niversity. I le has pioneered and
brought lo perfection · a professional level
eourse in I )pndrolog~, whieh he has taught
to the Forest Qcgree and Forest Technology students. For tlw past yn1r, lw has
earrit'Cl a courst• load amounting lo four
hours of leetures and 12 hours of laboralor~ spssions pt•r week.

DEPARTMENTS OF POLITICAL
STUDIES AND ECONOMICS
COLLABORATE OVER PUBLICATION
l)r, Stephen S. l\aplan (first author) and
Mr. :\orman C. Bonsor (se&lt;.·ond author)
of the Ocpartments of Political Studies and
Economics respt-ctively, have had a paper
accepted for publication by the journal

Intt•r-:\merican Et·onomic Affairs. Titled
"l)id l 'nitt'Cl States :\id Heally lldp Brazilian Dt•velopmPnt'! The Pt•rspt'1.·tive of a
Quartt•r-Ct&gt;nlury," their artide will appear
in the winlt•r issu1• of this journal.

BIO LOGY-ENGINEERING RESEARCH
Dr. C. Ozburn of the Biology Department
and Dr. H.C. Rosehart of the School of
Engineering presented papers at tilt' Air
and Stream lmprovemcntConfercnceofthe
Canadian Pulp and Paper Association in
St. Andrews, New Brunswick on September
10-U, 1973. Dr. ()zburn presented a paper
entitled ";\ Short Term Bio Assay Proceedurc" co-authored by J. Kraft and Mrs.
I.. Sompi.
Dr. Hosehart presented a paper t•ntitled
"The Origins of Toxieity in Sulfitt• Pulp-

ing" t·o-authon'tl hy I lr. ( )zburn and Miss
IL Mettinen of tin• ( :lwmistry I &gt;t•partmt•nt.
The work prest•nted at the above nwt•ting
was well received by both the gowrnmcnt
and industrial people pn-st·nt and is an example of tht• appliL'Cl interdisl'iplinary rcst•arch bPing earri1-d OIJI at Lakehead l lnivt•rsity. Funding for the above projL-cls
was supplied by a grant from the Presidrnt's NBC fund and also a grant from
Environment ( :anada.

TRIMBELL TO ASSIST McNIE
Premier William Dav is recently announced
the appointment of I )ennis It Timbrell
26, MPP for Toronto Don Mills, as parliamentary assistant lo the Minister of Colleges and l •niversitics, the 11 onourable
Jack McNie.

Elected to the Ontario legislature in 1971,
Mr. Timbrell has served on a number of
standing committees, including private
bills, procedural affairs and public accounts, and he was a member of the Select
Committee on the Ontario Municipal
Board.

DISTINGUISHED CANADIAN
PHILOSOPHER TO SPEAK AT LU
Professor Terence l'enelhum M.A. B. Phil., one c:i Canada's most distinguished philosophers, a member
of the Canada Council and former Dean of Arts and Philosophy Chairman at the University of Alberta
will be giving three free public lectures at Lakehead llniversity on October 17th.
10:30 p.m.
Main Building
Room 1021

"WHO AM I'!"
What are the essential features of personal identity'? Memory'? Bodily similarity'? Bodily
continuity'? Similarity of Personality'? Continuity of aims'? Are you the same person you
were five years ago'? If not, then who were you)' If so, how do you know'?

12:30 p.m.
University Centre
Room 2014
Bring Sandwiches
Free Coffee

"AN AFTER LIFE"
A philosophical exploration of the possibility of life after death.

8:30

"SCEPTICISM OR FAITH"
Ryan Building
Room 1042
Is faith believing without oragainsttheevidence't Can the believer really evade the charge
of the sceptic that he is irrational in his belief)' Has he any right to call the sceptic irrational'! If he has no conclusive way of confirming his faith then why hold it'? If he has
conclusive proof, by reason or experience, is it faith any longer'!

Professor Penelhum was a lecturer and tour leader of the World University Service International Seminar
in Greece and Germany in 1957. Hehasserved with distinction on a number of important bodies: President, Canadian Philosophical Association, 1968-69; Representative on the Council for Philosophical
Studies of the American Philosophical Association; and co-editor of The Canadian Journal of Philosophy. He is the author of three books, Survival and Disembodied Existence, Religion and Rationality,
and Problems of Religious Know ledge.A fourth book,David Hume, is in preparation. He has also written
numerous journal articles and edited two anthologies.

�W88KI~
Friday
October 12

Saturday
October 13
Sunday
October l!J.

Tuesday
Ol'lolll'r

I&lt;,

Wl'drwsday
Ol'lolll'r 17

Sunday
( )l'lolwr 21

even~s

- Nicolaus Copernicus
Night, ll.C.T., 8:00 p.m.
- Dance, Main Cafeteria,
9 p.m. "Sweat City"
- Movie, l '.C.T., "Sometimes a ( ;real .'\otion".
- i\lovie, l .C.T., "Soml'·
limes a Crl'al Notion".
Violin and Piano Recital
featuring Manuel and
.I orge Suarez at 8 p.m.
Faculty of Education Auditorium. Works by: Beethoven, Faure, Franck.
- \lovit•s, l .C.T., 7 p.m.
"Tlw Bank Dick" and
"I lorsl' FPallwrs".
- \ isiting Philosopher,
l'roft•ssor Tl'rl'nt'l' Pl'ndhu111, IO::m a.Ill. MBI021, 12::30 l C-2011,
B::30 p.111. IW-WJ.2.
- ( :hamlll'r !\ lusil' ( :on&lt;·Prl, Fal'uhy of Edul'alion
Auditorium.

FILM PROGRAMME
Thl' sl'hool of Library Technology will
be sponsoring its Film Showing Programme again this year. Thl' first day of
showing will he Friday, November 23,
and showings will be held each Friday
thereafter during each ll'rm. Posters announcing tlw films lo be viewed will he
displayl'd on campus and announct•menls
will appear in the Argus and Lakehl'ad
l 1niwrsity Wt•l'k. Thcfilmswillheprojected
in the School of lihra.ry Tcdrnology Lah,
Room L-5022. Conw and join us for a visual experience!

ATHLETIC
ACTIVITY NIGHT
Each Wt'llrwsda) t•vening, in lhl' C..I. Sandt•rs Fiddhoust', llwn• will Ill' a fal'Uh),
staff and alumni alhlrlil' m·livil~ night.
To lw digihle for parlil'ipalion ) ou musl
havl' a gym or pool mt•mbrrship. Tlwsr
are availahlt• in tlw t'&lt;tuipnwnl room al
tlw Fieldhoust•.
\II participants must furnish llwir own gym
wt•ar, squash halls and ral'kt•ts. Other
t'q uipnwnt such as,.olley balls, basketballs,
an• free of chargl' for members.
The pool is available from B:00 p.m. lo
9:00 p.m. (you musl havt• a pool memhl'rship). The main Cymnasium may ht• ust-d
from 9:00 p.m. lo 11:00 p.m. for sports
such as badminton, volleyball, basketball,
etc. The Squash Courts, Running and .logging Arca, Weight Training Room and
Saunas will he available lo you on most
Wednesdays.

mee~ings

LU RECEIVES CANADA COUNCIL GRANT
Cranls worth $370,200 to 16 organizations for musical activities were announl'ed in Ottawa on Friday, October l2th
h) tlw Canada Council.
Listed among tlw six organizations whieh
will receivP grants for musicians-in-rcsidl'nce is Lakehcad l niversity. The uniwrsily will receive ~8,000 for I\ lanucl
Suarez, violinist, and Douglas I )ahlgren,
pianist.
\Ir. Suarez, who was installed earlier this
)'Car as Director of \lusic al Lakehead
l 1niHrsil)' and was recently appointl-d
"I lonorary Professor" al the university,

is an accomplished violinist of international
fame.
i\lr. Dah,gren was horn in the l\laritimcs
and graduated from the Acadia l i niversity School of l\lusic with a degree in Performance (piano).
I le has studied in
Toronto with the late Alberto Guerrero
and has since continued his studies in New
York with I.eon h:ushnPr_and l\lilton h:aye .
One of the founders of the Lakehead Symphony Orchestra, !\Ir. Dahlgren is well
known in Thunder Bay as a teacher, an
accompanist and as a soloist. I le is Concertmaster of the Chamber 1\lusic Series.

FACULTY AND STAFF APPOINTMENTS
\ Lr. \Ian Sparkes, l.t'l'turer in Sol'iolog)'
f Jpparlnwnt.
\Lr. Peter l\lcCormick, Lecturer in Political Studies I )eparlment
I Jr. S.A. '.\:aim pally, \ isiting Professor
of \lathematical Sciences.
:\ Lr. Stephen I\ lartin, I.t'Clurcr in (; eography
I )epartmcnl.
l&gt;r. D. Dollimore, \ isiting l~ofessor of
( :hem is tr)'.
\Lr. F.11. \k·lntosh, Assistant Professor of
I.ihrary Tl-chnology.

\ Lr. Bruce I landford, Lecturer in Business
\dministration Department.
\liss J.T. Stupendick, Technical Assistant
in F orcstry Department.
.\Ir. S.T.B. Losee, Special Lecturer in Forestry Department.
Dr. R.C. Harris, Associate Professor in the
Faculty of Education.
\I.rs. Geraldine Service, Institutional Research Officer and Assistant to the President.

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f1!Twe·e l(

a publication of the Lakehead
University i.nformation off ice

VOLUME 6
NUMBER 8
SEPTEMBER 27, 1973

British MP To Speak At LU

Dr. Eldon To Join
Energy Board
Dr. A.D. Booth, President of Lakehead University,
recently announced the resignation of Dr. W.D.
R. Eldon, Vice-President/Academic) and professor
of Economics. Dr. Eldon has been named a member of the Ontario Energy Board in Toronto. His
duties will commence October 1, 1973.
Dr. Eldon was named to the then newly-created
position of Academic Vice-President in May 1971
and took up the duties of his office in September
of that year. His position carried with it the responsibility for providing academic leadership
and for co-ordinating academic activities, policies
and plans as determined by Senate. Dr. Eldon
served with distinction on a number of university
and university related committees including
Chairmanship of: The Athletic Advisory Board,
The United Nations University Committee, The
Academic Plan Committee, and The Lake Superior
Association of Colleges and Universities
Steering Committee. As well, Dr. Eldon served
as a member of a number of Senate Committees.
Dr. Eldon received his B.A. at the University of
Western Ontario, taking the gold medal in Honours History. He received his M.A. and Ph.D. in
Economics from Harvard University. He is the
author of a number of publications and has prepared studies for the Economic Council of Canada.
Dr. Eldon has served as a consultanttoa number
of Royal Commissions and was an Associate in
the consulting firm of Kates, Peat, Marwich and
Company. Prior to his joining Lakehead University, Dr. Eldon was Associate Dean of Arts and
Science and Acting Chairman of the Department
of Economics and of the Department of French
Studies at Trent University. He is a Fellow of the
Royal Economics Society, and a member of the
Canadian Economics Association, American Economic Association and the Information Industry Association.
b
.
.
.
He and his family have een active in various
Thunder Bay clubs and associations and were
active members of St. John's Anglican Church.
The Eldons will take up residence in Oakville,
Ontario.
We wish Dr. Eldon well in his new position.

Dr. Engholm, Chairman of the Political Studies
Department, informs L.U. Week that the University
will be visited on Friday, September 28 by Mr.
Cecil Parkinson, MP for the British Constituency
of West Enfield. Mr. Parkinson is Parliamentary
Private Secretary to the Honourable Mr. Michael
Heseltine, Minister for Aerospace in the Department of Trade and Industry.
During his visit Mr. Parkinson will deliver a talk
on "Canada, Britain and the EEC" at 3:30 p.m.
in RB-1022 (Ryan Building) on Friday, September
28. The Chair will be taken br the President, Dr.
A.D. Booth. All faculty, staf and students are
cordially invited.
Mr. Cecil Parkinson has been a member of the
House of Commons since November 1970. He
became Parliamentary Private Secretary to Mr.
Michael Heseltine after the latter had been appointed Minister for Aerospace in the Department of Trade and Industry in April 1972. He is
a chartered accountant by profession.
Born on 1 September 1931, he was educated at
the Royal Lancaster Grammar School and Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he read English and Law, graduated BA in 1955 and took his
MA in 1961.
He is a partner in the firm of chartered accountants, West, Wake Price and Co. which now comprises five companies. He is also a director of
several companies specializing in financial and
taxation advisory work. He has travelled widely
on the Continent of Europe, in the United States
and in the Caribbean on business.

LU Flier Races to Strong Finish
Back in the days when flying was a risky, seat-ofthe-pants adventure, the men who flew were
often called (among other things) "intrepid".
That term is seldom used today as flying has
progressed to the point of mechanical boredom.
But here, at LU, there lurks at least one "intrepid" flier. His name is Guy Davis - a computer centre staff member.
Guy piloted a fabric-covered CHAMPION CITABRIA to a seventh place finish in the recent Great
Burlington Centennial Seaplane Race. The GBCS
Race - the first race of its kind held in Canada contained three "legs": Burlington to Kenora,
Kenora to Ottawa and Ottawa to Burlington. Guy,
who has a commercial license and instructor
rating, logged 25 airborne hoursduringthethr_ee
day event - including a gruelling 14 hour stint

�on the first leg - and garnered the Minaki Lodge
(Kenora) Tivphy as first leg winner.
The single engine, two-seater CHAMPION CITABRIA - originally built in 1935 and now owned
by the Thunder Bay Flying Club - has no instruments except a compass. Consequently, Guy
sight-flew the course to his seventh place finish
(out of 48 entrants) and picked up a 1,000 dollar
cheque for his efforts - not quite enough to cover
expenses but then, "intrepid" fliers like Guy
Davis don't do it for the money.

Finnish Lecturer Arrives
Miss Maija Kainulainen, a Helsinki University
graduate student, has joined LU's Language Department. She will lecture at the newly instituted
Finnish language and culture courses being offered here. LU - in direct response to a request
from the community - is the first Canadian University to include Finnish courses in its programme.
The request for courses of this nature came as a
result of the work of Mrs. T. Kohara, who has
implemented Finnish programmes at Hillcrest and
Hammarskjold high schools, and Mr. E. Peterson,
Chairman of the Finnish School Committee. At
present there are 93 students studying Finnish
as a second language in Thunder Bay. The LU
courses will allow these students, as well as other
members of the community, to continue their
studies. The local Finnish population of approximately l 0,000 is the largest in Canada.
Negotiations were undertake'n with the Finnish
government who have provided Miss Kainulainen
as a lecturer for the course.

New Liason Officer
Mrs. Susan De Haas was installed, in early August, as LU's Liaison Officer. She, along with other
members of the University Information Programme, is currently travelling to high schools across
the province where she explains LU and area to
interested students and guidance staff. Mrs. De
Haas received her B.A. in French from the University of Guelph and her Honours in French
and English from Lakehead University. As well,
she has completed her Masters (English) to thesis
here.

Students Shine
For Cystic Fibrosis
LU nurses and foresters got together and staged
a Shinerama last Friday, September 21st to raise
money for Cystic Fibrosis. They, along with other
LU students, brushed and polished their way to
$4,454 dollars for the cause - leaving no shoe
unshined in their efforts to make the most out of
a couple of feet.

Committee On University
Affairs At LU
The Committee on University Affairs will be meeting in the LU Senate Chamber on October 16.
The Committee, which acts as a Government ad-

visory body, is, this year, moving across the
province from university to university - eliciting
answers to questions, covering a broad spectrum
of university related affairs, previously submitted
to each university. A brief is presently being
readied to answer the Committee's questions
about LU. It will also cover several topics of
special interest to this university not covered by
the Committee's inquiries; including sections
dealing with extra formula funding, LU's extension
programme, early university entrance for exceptional children and the Confederation College/
LU co-operative BA/BSW programme.

World Report Premieres
World Report began its new season on CTNO-TV
Channel Seven last Tuesday, September 25th at
7:30 p.m. Hosted by LU's Dr. Chris Jecchinis and
Dr. E. Zimmerman, the programme, which will be
a weekly feature, deals with national and international news. This live presentation features
audience participation by telephone.

Combined Biology Field Trip
During the week of August 6, Dr. Ozburn of the
Biology Department participated-along with professors from Wisconsin State University - in the
presentation of a wilderness Biology course. This
course, available to students of the newly formed
Lake Superior Association of Colleges and Universities was held on Isle Royale. Students and
staff rendezvoused at Grand Portage for the trip
to Washington Harbor on the vessle "Wenonah".
Upon arrival and subsequent signing in with the
ranger, subgroups backpacked to various points
of biological interest at the western end of the
park. Dr. Ozburn's group hiked the Minong Ridge
Trail to Lake Desar where time was spent observing moose feeding habits. Other animal and
plant life was observed along the route. On the
return trip to Washington Harbor, a side trail
to Hugginnin Cove was explored. In addition to
the wild life observed, a number of old copper
mines - likely the original reason for the trails,
were examined.
To earn their credit, the students were required
to keep a log of all activities including observations arising from the discussion on the wilderness areas visited. Upon return these logs were
then transcribed into a report for submission
to obtain a grade.
Dr. Ozburn hopes that in the future, Lakehead
University students may have the opportunity of
participating in courses of this nature as a result
of our involvement in the consortium.

Faculty And Staff Appointments
FACULTY OF ARTS
Mr. C.C. Mutambirwa, Lecturer, Department of
Geography.
Dr. H. Seyffert, B.A. M.A. Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Languages
Mrs. Clara Kaipio, Lecturer, Department of Languages

�Student Placement Notes
The Public Service Commission of Canada
will be holding a CAREER DAY on campus on
OCTOBER 1st. There will be information sessions
open to all graduating students whoa re interested
in careers in the federal government. Undergraduates are also invited to attend as these sessions
may prove helpful in career planning. Please
note the time and location of each sitting:
ADMINISTRATIVE TRAINEE PROGRAM (open to
graduates in all disciplines)
9:40 - 10:30 a.m. University Centre Theatre
10:40- 11 :30 a.m.
- UC 1017
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICER (open to ~raduates
in all disciplines)
9:40 - 10:30 a.m. Lakehead University Stu10:40 - 11 :30 a.m.
dent Union Boardroom - UC
1:30 - 2:30 p.m .
2014
2:40 - 3:30 p.m.
AUDITING/ACCOUNTING
9:40 - 10:30 a.m.
Aesthetics Lounge
10:40 - 11 :30 a.m.
ENGINEERING/ARCHITECTURE
2:30 - 3:30 p.m.
Lower Lecture Theatre
3:40 - 4:30 p.m .
UC 0050
NURSING
1:30 - 2:30 p.m.
MB 1001 A
2:40 - 3:30 p.m.
PURE SCIENCES (Biology, Chemistry, Forestry,
Geology, Mathematics)
1:30 - 3:30 p.m.
Senate Chambers-UC 1001
2:30 - 3:30 p.m.
Upper Lecture Theatre
UC 2011
ECONOMICS /MATH/STATS/AGRICULTURE
ECONOMICS /ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
1:30 - 2:30 p.m. Ryan Building - RB 3046
2:40 - 3:30 p.m.
PSYCHOLOGY/SOCIAL WORK/CRIMINOLOGY
1:30 - 2:30 p.m.
MB 1025
2:40 - 3:30 p.m.
If students are unsure of which sessions to
attend or would like further information they
should contact the Student Placement Office immediately.
The following deadlines should be observed
by graduating students interested in any of the
aforementioned programs or others included.
OCTOBER 2
Information session with the
Atmospheric Environment
Service (federal government) to familiarize graduating physics students with
careers in meteorology.
1:30 - 2:30 p.m. Senate
Chambers - UC 1001
Last date to pre-register for
OCTOBER 12
the written exam for the PubI ic Service of Canada, Administrative Trainee and
Foreign Service programs.
OCTOBER 15
Deadline for applications
for Meteorological Branch
of the Atmospheric Envir-

OCTOBER 18

OCTOBER 18

OCTOBER 18

OCTOBER 29

OCTOBER
29,30,31

onment Service.
Written exam forPublicService
Canada, Administrative Trainee and Foreign
Service programs.
7:00 p.m. - Upper Lecture
Theatre - UC 2011
Written exam for Foreign
Service
7:00 p.m. - Ryan Building
RB 2047
Deadline for applications to
Bell Canada for graduating
students interested in careers and for students graduating in 1975 seekingsummer work.
Public Service Canada interviews for Economists and
Statisticians.
Public Service Canada interviews for Administrative
Trainee Program.

ALL STUDENTS WHO WILL BE GRADUATING
THIS YEAR ARE URGED TO REGISTER WITH
THE STUDENTPLACEMENT OFFICE AS SOON
AS POSSIBLE AS MOST ON-CAMPUS RECRUITING WILL OCCUR BETWEEN NOW AND
CHRISTMAS. A SCHEDULE IS POSTED ON THE
BULLETIN BOARD OUTSIDE THE OFFICE AND
IT WOULD BE TO YOUR ADVANTAGE TO BE
AWARE OF WHAT OPPORTUNITIES ARE
AVAILABLE.

Parking Committee
The new members of the Parking Committee
are Dr. N.A. Weir, appointed by the Lakehead
University Faculty Association; Mr. J.D.M. Robson, appointed by the Lakehead University Students' Union; and Mrs. Geraldine Service, appointed by the President to represent the Administrative Staff. Members of the Committee
normally serve for a two-year term. The Parking Committee has the authority to establish and
amend parking regulations, to review and decide
on appeals, and to recommend parking fees to
the Board of Governors for ifs approval.
The parkingfeestructurewhichwas recommended
by the last Committee andapprovedbytheBoard
of Governors is as follows:
(i) For permits valid from October 1st, 1973
to August 31st, 1974
Faculty/Staff Vehicle
$15.00
Full-time Student Vehicle $15.00
Residence Student Vehicle$15.00
Part-time Student Vehicle $ 5.00
Motorcycle, scooter, etc. $ 5.00
Visitor's Vehicle
$15 .00
(Unlimited entry)
(ii)

For permits valid from May 1, 1974 to
August 31, 1974, the fee is $5.00.

(iii)

For permits valid from July 1, 1974 to August 31, 1974, the fee is $2.50.

�(iv)

For a temporary visitor's permit, valid for
the date issued, the fee is 25¢.
The increase in fees is intended to offset increases
in salaries and in charges for electricity and contracted services (e.g. snow removal). Parking must
be a self-supporting operation. The 1972-73 year
of operation resulted in a deficit which has had
to be carried forward.
The 1973/74 Traffic and Parking Regulations come
into effect on September 1, 1973. Parking permits
for 1973/74 are required by October 1, 1973.
Copies of the Traffic and Parking Regulation
and Applications for permits are available from
the Securty Office.
Some of the highlights of the 1973/74 Traffic
and Parking Regulations include:
i) unrestricted parking (i.e. all permits) in the
ot near the Regional School of Nursing Building,
the lot between the library and the Residences
and the lot beside the Centennial Building. In
the past, the Regulations provided for each lot
to be restricted to Faculty and Staff or to Students.
(ii) parking in the Agoro Circle is restricted to
vehicles with temporary visitors' permits.
(iii) the parking permits are backtothetype to be
affixed to the inside of the window.
(iv) "wheel blocks" will continue to be in use. Cancellation of parking privileges will result from
damage to or unauthorized removal of a "wheel
block."

I

Co-operative Library System

The June issue of C.O.U.'s Monthly Review reported that C.O.U. has approved the establishment of a Co-operative Library System for the
fourteen provincially assisted Ontario Universities. The main activities of this system would be:
1. The creation of a Union Catalogue or Union
Data Bank of holdings of Ontario University Libraries designed to provide a variety of bibliographical and processing functions more efficiently, easily and hopefully more economically than is possible at present.
2. To investigate the feasibility of Depository
Library, i.e. a centralised store for the deposit
of little used material which would be available
on loan to any of the libraries concerned, and
to survey the cost of such a depository, and the
possible resulting savings in capital expenditure.
3. To establish an office for the Ontario University Libraries Co-operative System with a Director who would act as the pivot of the system
and provide the necessary co-ordination of effort
and provide the necessary co-ordination of
effort. The office would act as a centre for information both on the system and on more general library matters.
4. To continue existing co-operative schemes
already launched by co-operation between two
or more libraries and to develop these. They include a Government Document project, a Union
List of Serials project, a Subject Authority project
and a Map project.
A Monograph Demonstration rroject is proposed
to examine the possibility o such a province-

wide Union Data Bank and its associated services. Lakehead is not one of the six in the experiment but will stand to benefit from the lessons learned from it. If it is successful and shows
that the service can be extended to all of the
university libraries the advantages could be farreaching.
C.O.U. has now announced the appointment of
the Director of the Co-operative System. He is
Dr. Ralph Stierwalt, Assistant Director of Libraries/
Processing Division, University of Western Ontario. In the coming year Dr. Stierwalt will devote
only a limited part of his time to the work of the
Office under a secondment arrangement but will
take overfull-time in 1974. Assisting Dr. Stierwalt
during the initial year will be Mr. Larry Porter,
Assistant Librarian for Systems nnd Development,
University of Guelph, serving on a secondment
basis until June, 1974.

Credit Union Notice
All Lakehead University employees are reminded
that they are eligible to be members of
the Thunder Bay Educational Employees' Credit
Union Limited which serves employees and relatives of employees of all educational institutions
in the Lakehead area.
T.B.E.E.C.U. has recently moved into new premises at Suite C, Ruttan Block, 4 Court Street,
Thunder Bay "P" (opposite Eaton's). Office hours
are 1:45 p.m. to 5:45 p.m. weekdays. The Secretary-Manager is Mr. Dave Joyal and the phone
number is 344-2233. The Credit Union offers
facilities for interest-earning savings and low cost
loans. Payroll deduction is available to University
members who complete application formalities
before the end of September.
Further information may be obtained from University officers of the Credit Union: Walter Bilyk
MB-1043B (ext. 407), Dave Elliot MB-1061 (ext.
438) or Tom Harris RB-1011 {ext. 303).

Published
Dr. Pradip Sarbadhikari, Department of Political
Studies, has returned from his sabbatical leave
during ·which he published a book under the title
"New Nationalism and International Society"
(World Press). This volume studies the trends towards conflict both within Western and Third World
states focussing on contemporary movements towards international co-operation suggested by recent developments in global diplomacy. Essentially, the book investigates the paradox of nationalism as ennunciated by Karl Deutsch "while nationalism has grouped people apart from each
other, at the same time it is preparing them for
a more thorough going world wide unity than has
ever been seen in human history."
Dr. Sarbadhikari also published a chapter entitled "Towards a Foreign Policy of Bangladesh"
in a volume called "West Bengal and Bangladesh.
Perspectives from 1972", by Michigan State Universtiy, which also contains contributions by Stephen Clarkson (Toronto), Richard Tabora (Harvard), and Barrie Morrison (U.B.C.).

�'
Dr. Brian J. Bigelow, B.A. M.A. Ph. D., Lecturer,
Department of Psychology
Dr. R.P. Fisher, B.A. M.A. Ph. D., Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology
FACULTY OF UNIVERSITY SCHOOLS
Dr. D.J. Malcolm, B.Sc. M.Eng. Ph.D., Lecturer,
Department of Engineering
Mr. D.E. Meyers, Technical Assistant, Department
of Engineering
Dr. John G. Locker, B.Sc. M.Sc. Ph.D., Associate
Professor, Department of Engineering
Miss J.T. Stupendick, Technical Assistant, Department of Forestry
Mr. C.R. Birston, Technical Assistant, Department
of Forestry
Dr. H.C. Cumming, B.A. M. Wild!. Mgmt. Ph.D.,
Associate Professor, Department of Forestry
Mr. S.T.B. Losee, Special Lecturer, Department of
Forestry.
Dr. L.N. Burkett, B.A. M.A. Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Physical and Health Education
Dr. R.T. Mitchell, B.A. M.A. Ed.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Physical and Health Education

Economics Notes
Dr. K.J. Charles gave a talk on the "Distribution
and Utilization of Public Expenditures in Tamil
Nordu" at a Seminar of theWorldBankin Washington, D.C. on August 28, 1973.
Dr. K. Kim is the co-author of an article on the
"Dynamics of Wage Structures", which was published in the Southern Economic Journal of April
1973.
Dr. C. Jecchinis ·attended the 3rd World Congress
of the International Industrial Relations Association in London, England from September 1 to
September 7, 1973.
Mr. C. Nicolaou attended the 14BiennialSeminar
of the Canadian Mathematical Congress which
was held at the University of Western Ontario
from August 12 to August 25, 1973. Thetheme of
the Seminar this yeor was the "Optimal Control
Theory and its Applications". Mr. Nicolaou's participation was funded by the Canadian Mathematical Congress.

Psychology Note
Two members of the Psychology Department of
Lakehead University participated in The American Psychological Association's 81 st Meeting held
in Montreal, Quebec on August 27 to 31st.
Dr. Jim Evans read a paper entitled "A possible
relationship between rivalry and impending social comparison". Mr. Arieh Bonder is second
author of this paper and is presently a graduate
student at Lakehead University in the Department of Psychology.
Dr. Ed. Bauman read a paper entitled "Input and
output interference in schizophrenic short-term
memory". Mr. Eugene Kolisnyk is second author
of this paper and is a graduate of Lakehead University in the Department of Psychology.

Language Department
David W. Lewis, Associate Professor of Modern
Languages, returns to the Department of Languages after a sabbatical year spent in France
In June 1973, the University of Paris (Sorbonne)
awarded
Professor Lewis a mention tres
honorable for his doctoral theses on the 19thcentury French poet Verlaine.
In his study, Poesie et conscience chez Paul
Verlaine, Professor Lewis examines the creative
processes of a poet who, with Baudelaire, Mallarme and Rimbaud, became a hero of the Symbolist movement. Verlaine's work is diverse. Its
numerous variants and his well-documented life
show that, both as man and as artist, he sometimes sought to create a fa~ade, to delude himself and his reader. His finest work, with its characteristic musicality and fragile evocative imagery, demonstrates superb craftsmanship, yet retains a na'ive, spontaneous quality based on a
poignant search for clues to the enigma of existence.
Apart from his teaching and research, David
Lewis will be co-operating with Alain Nabarro in
production of the Thunder Bay television programme in French, Dans le Sil/on des Voyageurs,
for which federal and provincial grants were
recently awarded. The programme will be shown
weekly on Channel 7.

Philosophical Appointment
Professor R.C.S. Ripley of the Department of Philosophy was elected to the Board of Directors of
the Canadian Philosophical Association at its Annual Congress at Queen's University, June 4-8,
1973, where he delivered a paper, "A Theory
of Volition". lnJuly hewasappointedtothe Board
of RefereesofpapersfortheC.P.A.1974Congress
in Toronto.

Nelson Elected To C.I.M. Post
Professor Ronald A. Nelson, School of Business
Administratior&gt;, was recently elected to the office
of Education Director for the Canadian Institute
of Management, Thunder Bay branch.
The Canadian Institute of Management provides
an opportunity for those in the management
field to better qualify themselves for their present
,::&gt;osition and to prepare for future advancement
through a four-year programme of instruction
leading to the "C.I.M. Certificate".

Additional N.R.C. Grant
In June, 1973, the Notional Research Council
announced
an additional Grant to Lakehead
University, Department of Physics - $6,000.00,
D.G. Frood.

Extraordinary Faculty Member
Dr. J.S. Griffith, Department of Mathematical
Sciences, was one of ten Canadians invited to
the Extraordinary General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union held in Poland
during the first two weeks of September as the

�weeKI~ even~s
Friday
September 28
Saturday
September 29
Monday
October l

-Nite Club "Blue Things", Main Cafeteria 9:00 p.m.
-Nite Club "Blue Things", Main Cafeteria 9:00 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Great Hall, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Xaviera Hollander, author of "The Happy
Hooker", C.J. Sanders Fieldhouse, 8:30 p.r-:.
Talk, Panel Discussion and question and
answer session.

Art Exhibition
There will be an exhibition from the Art Gallery
of Ontario, Extension Division, from Saturday,
September 29 - Thursday, October 4, in the Great
Hall, l O a.m. to l O p.m. The subject is "Swedish
Posters" and is described as expressing "the
traditional role of the poster as a contemporary
form of communication". The artist "with the advancement of materials and technology, has adapted new processes and exciting forms atwill. ..
to create new visual experiences and aesthetic
expressiveness in the poster."

LU Alumni
Lakehead University Alunmi cordially invites all
faculty, staff, potential 73-74 graduates and especially students who will be graduating during
the 1973 Fall Convocation, to attend the first
Annual Oktoberfest on October 5, at 9 p.m.,
in the Main Cafeteria. Tickets may be obtained
at the L.U.S.U. office or by telephoning the Alumni office at extension 732 between 12 noon
and 4 p.m.
culmination of the Polish commemorations of the
500'th anniversary of the birth of Copernicus.
The particular set of meetings that Dr. Griffith
attended was concerned with the stability of small
stellar systems and of the solar system. He presented a paper on escape and .capture conditions
for the n-body problem, dealing with equations
from which the possibility of the escape of a particular body (star or planet) from a system of n
such bodies or its capture by n other bodies can
be decided. At the seminar it was pointed out
that such theoretical equations are of great benefit to those astronomers engaged in computer
aided simulations of the orbits of bodies such as
asteroids, stellar clusters or galacies. These astronomers need a set ofcriteriatodecidewhether
particular bodies have really escaped from or
been captured by the system of n bodies, or it,
after many more hours of expensive computing
time (equivalent to perhaps millions of years
of real time), the apparent escape or capture
would prove to be false. To the excess computing time has to be added the limited region of
space that can be simulated within the computer,
and less precise criteria than those derived by
Dr. Griffith are already in use by astronomers.
Dr. Griffith was elected to membership in the International Astronimical Union.

m,e eY.!O
September 30

Wednesday
October 3

Q . ~ Te&lt;hnidan, A,so&lt;~tio,
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Library Technology Departmental LAB Room L-5022. All
graduates and students are invited toattend
-a proposal regarding a non-credit AV
course for graduates will be discussed.
Board of Governors Meeting, SenateChamber, 4:00 p.m.

Russian Visitor
Dr. Mikhail A. Semikhatov, a Senior Research
Scientist with the Geological Institute, Academy
of Sciences of the USSR visited the Geology Department during July. Dr. Semikhatov is a specialist in Precambrian paleontology and stratigraphy, and was particularly interested in visiting
occurrences of Precambrian rocks in the Thunder
Bay district which contain abundant evidence of
1.7 billion year old algae growth. These rocks
have been extensively documented, and are of
world-wide interest. Dr. Semikhatov visited under
the auspices of the Exchange of Scientists Agreement between the National Research Council of
Canada and the Academy of Sciences of the
U.S.S.R. and was accompanied by Dr. J.M. Franklin during the Thunder Bay portion of his tour.

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L£

&gt; t).l\&lt;US

L..

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[!]W88K

a publication of the Lakehead
University information office

VOLUME 6
NUMBER 7
SEPTEMBER 4, 1973

REGISTRATION EDITION
Important Dates
September 4, 1973
September 5, 1973
September 13, 1973
September 14, 1973
September 15, 1973
September 17, 1973
September 18, 1973
September 19, 1973
October 12, 1973

Forestry Registration
Forestry
Field School
Commences
Registration
Registration
Port-Time Registration
Registration
Registration
First Doy of C.1asses
Final Dote for Late Registration and or Changes in
Course Registration.

The Dean of Students
The Dear . of Students and his staff ore concerned
with helning students to take advantage of the
opportun ,ties the University offers for personal
growth, Loth intellectual and emotional. A number of problems often interfere with a student's
academic and social development. If you hove a
problem of any kind, find yourself bewildered,
or just suffer from general disorientation, the
Dean of Students, as a Counsellor, will always
be available to you. His office is the first in the
series that runs along the west side of the AgoroUC-1002, Telephone 345-2121, Extension 206.

STUDENT FINANCIAL AID
The Deon of Students Office is responsible for
forms of student aid such as the Ontario Student
Awards Program, scholarships and bursaries and
loans to port-time students, as well as providing
advice and information to help students deal with
a wide variety of financial problems.
The Ontario Student Awards Program is the
prime source of financial assistance. Application
forms and explanatory brochures can be obtained
from the Deon of Students Office. Private counselling in relation to the student's status, eligibility, and possible appeals for review is available
from the staff.
Loan applications for part-time students are also
now available through the Deon of Students
Office. Counselling relating to the student's eligibility is available from the office staff.
If a student has previously negotiated a Canada
Student Loon at any bank in Canada his Canada

Student Loan for the 1973-74 academic year
must either be negotiated at that some bank or
if you wish a local bank all previous loans must
be transferred to the new bank.

STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
The Health Unit is located in a wing of the
Women's Residence opposite fhe tennis courts. It
contains an infirmary of two five-bed wards, two
isolation one-bed rooms, two examining rooms,
a nurse's station and a doctor's office. The Infirmary is used to give students nursing core who ore
not sick enough to send to hospital but too sick
to leave in their rooms on or off campus. Dr.
William Diggins and Dr. Clayton Eyjolfson conduct four clinics a week. Student's con make arrangements to see either of the physicians through
Miss Jess:e Sutherland, R.N. B.A., the University
Nurse. The Student Health Service provides
twenty-four hours a day coverage throughoutthe
year to deal with medical emergencies.

FOREIGN STUDENT ADVISORY SERVICES
Overseas students who need information about
the University, financial matters, or immigration
requirements may consult the Deon of Students
or his assistant. The services offered on a continuing basis include personal counselling, assistance with immigration, liaison with governments,
administrative support for foreign student organizations, and a general "ombudsman" role to
assist foreign students in their dealings with the
University and community.
The Deon of Students' office co-operates with the
International Students' Organization to provide
a reception service throughout September for
newly arriving foreign students. Under a similar
co-operative effort hospitality is offered to foreign
students by Thunder Bay residents at such times
as Thanksgiving, Christmas, and other holidays.

Student I. D. Card
Your 1973-74 student identification card will be
very important to you. This year your photo I.D.
cord will be embossed with your student number,
initials and surname.
You will be required to use your student cord
when borrowing books from the Library and making any changes in your records through the
Office of the Registrar.

�Hous: ,g

writing supplies, drafting equipment, dissecting
sets, and a great variety of stationery items.

A. ON-CAMPUS RESIDENCE - Those students
who have obtained accommodation on-campus
should contact the Residence Office located on
the left hand side of the main entrance to the
Men's Residence. The office is open regularly
from 8:45 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. as well as during
some evening hours. (Please refer to the map in
locating the residence buildings.)

Booklists of all required texts are available for
your convenience during the Fall Registration
and will make your textbook-shopping easier.

B. OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING OFFICE - The OffCampus Housing Office is located in the Student
Union Office (University Centre). ltoperatesfrom
May until the end of September each year, and
provides current listings of a variety of accommodations available in Thunder Bay. Students
who wish to use the Off-Campus Housing service
must make a personal visit to the office to choose
accommodation from the lists provided. It is the
responsibility of the student to contact the landlords who have registered with the Off-Campus
Housing Office.

Library's New
"Tattle Tape"
Over the past year losses by reason of unrecorded borrowings and non-return of items by a few
readers have continued to cause difficulties and
dissatisfaction to the majority of library users
and much extra work for library staff. In order
to cut these "unofficial borrowings", an elec:tronic
check will be instituted as early as possible in the
new academic year to replace the personal check
by commissionaire at the exit. This will call the
circulation staff's attention to any material being
taken out of the library which has not been officially recorded.
The system is produced by 3M Company and is
known as 'Tattle Tape'. It has been introduced
with good results in a large number of libraries
including Guelph University, University of Minnesota at Duluth, State University College, New
Paltz, N.Y., Fanshawe College, London, Ontario.
We are sure our library users will accept it for
what it actually is - a necessary check to ensure
that the stock of the library is maintained in circulation and is available for use by all.

Commencing Monday, September 17, 1973 Library Hours will be as follows:
Monday through
Friday
8:30 a.m. to 12 midnight
Saturday
9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sunday
2:00 p.m. to l 0:00 p.m.

LU Bookstore
The Lakehead University Bookstore stocks all required textbooks for courses offered by the University, as well as an extensive selection of
recommended and peripheral reading material.
In addition, the Bookstore carries paper and

Bookstore merchandise must be paid for in cash
or by Chargex Card. During the Fall Registration
rush no personal cheques can be accepted.
A cash-register receipt for the amount of texts
and supplies purchased will .be issued at the time
of purchase.SAVE THESE RECEIPTS CAREFULLY
in the envelope provided for this purpose, since
at the end of each term these receipts can be
redeemed for a CREDIT VOUCHER to the amount
of 5% of their total value. (CHARGEX sales are
not eligible forthis5%rebate). YOUR BOOKSTORE
RECEIPTS MEAN MONEY TO YOU!

BOOKSTORE ,_, ..&gt;URS
Sept. 4 to !:.ept. 7
Sept. l O to Sept. 12
Sept. 13
Sept. 14
Sept. 17 to Sept. 20
Sept. 21

9:00
12:00
9:00
12:00
9:00
12:00
9:00
12:00
9:00
12:00
9:00
12:00

a.m. to 11 :30 a.m.
noon to 5:00 p.m.
a.m. to 11 :30 a.m.
noon to 5:00 p.m.
a.m. to 11 :30 a.m.
noon to 8:00 p.m.
a.m. to 11 :30 a.m.
noon t.o 5:00 p.m.
a.m. to 11 :30 a.m.
noon to 8:00 p.m.
a.m. to 11 :30 a.m.
noon to 5:00 p.m.

Oh Campus· Parking
All students full or part-time, who are bringing
a motorized vehicle on campus are required to
purchase a parking sticker. Parking stickers will
be available during the Registration period.
LOCATION: AGORA
After the 18th of September, students wishing to
purchase a parking sticker should contact the
Security Office, room UC-0003 G.

Cafeteria Hours
MAIN CAFETERIA
Mon. to Thurs.
8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Friday
8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Saturday
l 0:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Sunday
Closed
Full meal service available from September 4,
1973 for 3 meals per day.

RESIDENCE CAFETERIA
Residence Meal Plan - Commences September
19, 1973
Mon. to Fri.
Breakfast
7:30a.m.- l 1:00a.m.
Lunch
11 :00 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Dinner
5:30 p.m.- 7:00p.m.
Sat. and Sun.
Breakfast
8:30a.m.- 9:30a.m.
Lunch
11 :30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Dinner
5:00 p.m.- 6:30p.m.

�The Message Centre
The Message Centre, as the name implies is intended to provide you .vith a central location at
which you can leave a message for or receive a
message from other students during the registration period.
LOCATION: AGORA-ADJACENT TO THE LUSU
BOOTH

Lockers
Lockers are available for the 1973-74 academic
year from the Security Office in the lower Agoro
UC-0003 G (under the Agoro)

Athletic Facilities
Lakehead University has a wide range of athletic
facilities available to students. For further information contact the office in the C.J. SANDERS
FIELDHOUSE. 345-2121, Extension 213.

Student Awards
The Government of Ontario announced on April
13th that financial aid to students in post-secondary education will be substantially increased in
the 1973-74 fiscal year. Budgetary estimates
allow $38.4 million for the Ontario Student
Awards Program, Ontario Graduate Fellowships
Program, and high school bursaries. In 1972-73
the budget was $27 million.

Higher Exemption for Academic Awards
In previous years all awards in excess of $150
were considered as resources in the assessment
of an Ontario Student Award. This year the limit
has been increased to the level of a student's
tuition and incidental fees. An ARTS student at
Lakehead University, for example, would be allowed to receive $665 before it affected his Ontario Student Award. It is hoped that the higher
exemption will encourage scholarship and academic excellence.

Improved Parental Allowances
The parental contribution tables have been modified to help offset increased cost of living for
those families with children in post-secondary
education. Additional relief is provided in the
new contribution tables for families with two or
more children in post-secondary education. Adependent student's Award could increase by as
much as 30% or more under the new regulations.

Miscellaneous Allowances
Miscellaneous allowances have been increased
by 10%. Such would make a difference of about
$30 on a student's Ontario Student Award at
Lakehead University.

Married Students
Assessment procedures now reflect the increased
cost of living by a higher maintenance allowance
of $3400 versus $3000 in previous years. Other

changes include an increase in allowable babysitting costs, a more generous assessment of
student summer earnings, and allowances for
children based on age.

Independent Clause
Students who have worked a total of 24 consecut~c months in full-time employment may elect
for independent status from their families. They
will be eligible for up to $1400 in Canada Student Loan.

Modified Group 'A' Students
Students who, prior to the first month of registration:
(a) have completed three successful years of
study at an eligible post-secondary institution;
or
(b) have spent three periods of twelve consecutive months as a full-time member of the work
force; or
(c) have a combination of successful academic
years and periods of twelve consecutive
months in the work force totalling three years.
are assessed in the same manner as Group A
students except that an additional basic deduction
is made against the gross parental income in the
need assessment process. For Group A Modified
applicants with three years work/education
history th€ additional deduction is $5000;forthose
with four or more years, it is $6000.

Aid to Part-time Students
A pilot program for loans to part-time students
is now being offered thro1Jgh the co-operation of
the Ontario government and certain Canadian
banks. Loons are interest-bearing from the date
of negotiation. Reparment commences 10
months ofter t~e date o negotiation or 2 months
after the end of the student's course whichever
occurs first. A minimum of $100 to a 11aximum
of $600 may be borrowed.
Applications for assistance and counselling relation to a student's eligibility are available from
the staff in the Deon of Student's Office.

New Students
Be sure to drop by the Campus Welcome
Centre adjacent to the Photo 1.0. Centre.

Shopping Mall Hours
MATCHBOX
Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. to8:00 p.m.
Saturday
11 :00 o.m. to2:00p.m.
Sunday
Closed
POST OFFICE (located in Matchbox) Open 8:30
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
NIRVANA Open 10:00 o.m. to 5:00 p.m.

CANADIAN IMPERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE
Open 10:00 o.m. to 5:00 p.m.

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:E 3 /?//-(LI 5

l

QJW88K

a publication of the Lakehead
University information office

University To Honour
Senator Paterson
Senator Norman Mcleod Paterson, recognized
numerous times in the past for his contributions
as b_uilder and philanthropist in the Canadian
Lakehead since the turn of the century, and in
Ottawa since being called to the Senate in 1940,
will celebrate his ninetieth birthday on 3 August,
1973. In honour of the occasion, and in recognition ·of Senator Paterson's outstanding contribution to Lakehead University as its founding
Chancellor, 1965-1971, the University will
confer upon him the degree of Doctor of Civil
Law (honoris causa) in a Special Convocation
Ceremony at 4:00 p.m., 2 August, 1973, in his
home at 500 Wilbrod Street, Ottawa, Ontario.
Although Senator Paterson has not held permanent residence in Thunder Bay since accepting
his Senate appointment in 1940, his presence
continues to be felt in the imposing grain elevators and massive shipping industry which he
was most instrumental in founding since first
arriving in the Lakehead in 1908.
Born in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, 3 August,
1883, Senator Paterson was educated in local
public schools and at the Wellesley School in
Toronto. He began his career with the Manitoba
Railway and Canal Company in 1897, later joining the Great Northern Railway of Canada as
telegrapher and rising to the position of purchasing agent before resigning in 1903 to go
into the grain business with his father.
In 1908, he founded and organized N.M. Paterson and Company, Limited, now succeeded by
N.M. Paterson and Sons,, Limited, owners and
operators of large numbers of grain elevators
in Ontario, Manitoba and Saskatchewan, aswell
as many freighters on the Great Lakes. In addition to his business accomplishments, Senator
Paterson has been responsible for considerable
public contribution in Thunder Bay. He was alderman of the City of Fort William in 1919. He
helped organize the Canadian Club and the Fort
William Ski Club. He donated his home to McKellar Hospital in Fort William and a Cobalt
Bomb Installation to Port Arthur General Hospittal. Even in his absence he has continued his
active citizenship to the point of donating a park
and municipal parking area.

VOLUME 6
NUMBER 6
JULY 26, 1973

Since accepting his appointment to the Senate
in 1940, he has continued his strong citizenship
in Ottawa. His numerous donations to Carleton
University have been instrumental in the development of many new buildings, programmes,
and student awards. He has served as a member
of the Board of Governors at Carleton since
1947. That University honoured him with an.
honorary doctorate in 1959.
Senator Paterson continues to have far-flung
business and community interests and responsibilities. He is president of Western Engineering Service, board chairman of the Royal Edward Hotel, past-president of both the Canadian
Club of Canada and the Victorian Order of
Nurses. He is a patron of the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters, as well as the Orpheus Operatic Society.
He was appointed Knight of the Order of St.
John by King George VI in 1945. He married
Eleanor MacDonald in 1915, and has six children.
The Lakehead University Board of Governors,
Senate, Faculty Association and Student Union
will take an active part in the Special Convocation Ceremony, to register the appreciation of
all segments of the University for the many
years of support Senator Paterson has so unselfishly afforded Lakehead University.

New Appointment
F.X. Shea, Chairman of the Board of the Lake
Superior Association of Colleges and Universities, has announced the appointment of Dr.
Donald Fouts, Illinois educator, as Executive
Director effective August 15, 1973.
Prior to accepting the appointment Dr. Fouts
was head of the Department of Higher and Continuing Education and Assistant Superintendant
of Public Instruction for the state of Illinois.
Earlier he held teaching and administrative
posts at Western Illinois University and Northern Illinois University.
Fouts earned his B.A. degree at the University
of Chicago and his Ph.D. in political science at
the University of Minnesota. He is a member
of the American Association for Higher Education, the Adult Education Association of the
United States and the American Political Science
Association. He is married and has three child-

�ren. The Lake Superior Association of Colleges
and Universities was formally organized at a
two-day meeting held at Lakehead University,
Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada, in October of
1972.
According to Shea, who is also President of the
College of St. Scholastica, the purpose of the
Association is to develop coorerative links
among the institutions which wil improve academic programs, expand educational opportuntties, and increase the efficiency of institutional
operations. The Executive Director will be responsible for planning and coordinating these
joint endeavours.

Mental Practice Studied
Mr. Bob Elvin and Mr. Eero Vuorinen who are
teachers at Hammarskjold High School recently
completed a study entitled "The Effects of Mental Practice on Motor Performance and Learning". These teachers completed a course given
by the Lakehead University B.P.H.E. Department and headed by Professor Gorden T. Garvie in the area of Human Motor Performance
and Learning.
Well, what about mental practice and rehearsal
and how does it affect performance and learning? Elvin and Vuorinen cite studies by Vandell
(1943) and Twining (1949) which indicate that
mental practice does in fact aid performance,
although learning was not specifically examined.
Other studies by Clark (1960) and Start(1960)
have found that learning has been positively
affected by mental rehearsal.
The two teachers examined the effects of mental
practice on performance and learning on the
labyrinth game. This game may be found in
novelty stores and requires manual manipulations of dials in order to move a steal ball
around a maze on a moveable platform. Two
groups of people we defined: Group A (control)This group practiced for 15 trials with no mental
practice; Group B (experimental) - This group
practiced for 15 times but with trials three to
thirteen under conditions of mental practice.
A trial was defined as practice until an error
was committed at which time the subjects r eceived a thirty second rest break. This is where
the main practice difference occurred. The control group (a) read names and p ho ne nu mbers

out of the phone book to occupy themselves
while the experimental group (b) observed an
expert practising the task and mentally rehearsed the desired physical movements.
Several scores were calculated once all the subjects were tested. (a) An initial score, the average of trail one and two indicated no significant
difference between the groups to start with. (b)
A performance score, the average of trials 3 13, was the second calculation made which also
indicated no significant differenc.e between the
two groups although the experimental group
performed slightly better than the control group.
(c) the final calculation, that of a learning score
(average of trials 14 or 15 minus the average
trials of 1 and 2), resulted in a significant
difference between the two groups. The mental
practice group learned more than the control
group.
These results then support the findings of Clark
(1960) and Start (1960). Mental practice of a
physical activity does seem to aid in learning.
Mental practice seems to aid the performance
as according to Vandell (1943), Twining (1949)
and others. This type of work has a definite
and logical application to teaching and coaching. For example, we all know that periodic
rest breaks aid performance as fatigue, both
physical and mental, may dissipate. Why not
then, to increase learning efficiency, interpolate
mental rehearsal during actual physical practice
rest breaks? This is logical as time is saved and
the participants learn at faster rates.
Let's make direct application to hockey, young
boys are being instructed on how to perform
the slap shot. They practice the skill physically
until they become tired. The coach orders a rest
break while he demonstrates again and the boys
continue to practice but now mentally. Then they
return to physical practice. Don't you think learning rates would increase?
The results of this study can only give insight
into coaching since the task used doesn't even
remotely resemble hockey although it is a physical activity. We may now ask what is the best
combination of physical and mental practice for
hockey? Does this vary with skill level and are
there differences depending upon the sport?
These and many other questions are asked.
In other areas such as feedback or knowledge of

�results, is feedback about performance essential
for learning? When should it be given and in
what form?
In order to efficiently instruct srorts it is most
beneficial to study the area o human motor
performance. For all you amateur coaches out
there, sure you're pressed for time and you
coach because in some cases nobody else would
do it. But, by examining these basic problems
you will enjoy your teaching more, receive
greater satisfaction, the participants will become
more skilled and you as an instructor will be admired more for simply throwing the puck on the
ice, umpiring a scrub game of baseball oftentimes called a practice or simply getting boys
together to wrestle with no thought of detail.
Keep up the good work you are doing while at
the same time improving your teaching methods.

Watch For It
Portions of language training sessions in the
regular French and English Immersion Progammes at Lakehead University will appear on local
Cable Television in the coming weeks. The first
in a series of six programmes will appear on
"Ethnic Report", Channel 7, Tuesday, July 31,
at 6:30 p.m.

Drama Award
The Clifford E. Lee Award is a National Playwriting competition and Playwright-in-Residence
program, designed to encourageCanadianwriting of importance totheStage,whileatthe same
time affording the playwright in-depth experience of the process of stage production. The
program and Award are jointly sponsored by
the Clifford E. Lee Foundation (Edmonton), and
the Department of Drama at The University of
Alberta, Edmonton. The winning play will be
produced by the Department.
A prize of $1,500, plus travel and in-residence
expenses, will be awarded to the flaywright
whose script makes, in the opinion o the Selection Committee, the mostsignificantcontribution
to the Canadian Theatre, and which satisfies the
selection criteria. The winning playwright w ill
live in residence at the University of A lberta,
as a guest of the Department, during the rehearsal period. All production expenses w ill be

paid by the Department. Deadline for the script
entry: November 30, 1973.
For further information write: The Clifford E.
Lee Award, Department of Drama, The University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta.

New Officers
As of July 5, 1973, the student executive for
the Summer Session Society of Lakehead University is as follows: President, Lynda Pettit;
First Vice-President, John A. Butler; Vice-President, Rick Potter; Director of Finance, Laurie
Fraser; Secretary, Carol Crabe.

Interstellar Editor
Dr. J.S. Griffith has been appointed to the Editorial Board of the Journal of Interstellar Studies.
This new journal will cover th.a field of scientific
research into interstellar communication and exploration. Topics such as biological and biochemical investigations into the evolution and
means of detecting planets; interstellar propulsion methods and spacecraft; radio or other
techniques for contacting extraterrestial civilizations, if such exist; the probability of other intelligent life in the universe, will be included in
the journal.
In the 1930's the British Interplanetary Society
was pursuing the idea of lunar and planetary
missions when such ideas were unfashionable.
Over the past twentyJears we have seen manned lunar missions an various planetary probes
become a reality, and the Society has decided
to raise its sights by initiating this new journal
and move into a realm which at present may
appear to be science fiction, but which may yield
discoveries which would remove the last vestiges of egocentricism from the human race.
At one time the Earth was considered to be at
the centre of the universe, then it was the turn
of the Sun to be thought of as central. Eventually
we discovered ourselves tobe inhabiting a small
planet orbiting a mediocre star in the outer regions of an average galaxy. At present the only
unique aspect left to our planet is the presence
of life, and reputable scientists haveputforward
the proposition that life spores may exist on
Mars. Other scientists have discovered planets
around other stars, but the existence of life
forms elsewhere is as yet undecided.

�for Library Use Olly
W88KI~

even~s

Thursday
July 26

-Canadian Chamber Ensemble, 8:30 p.m.
University Centre Theatre.

Friday
July 27

-Summer Session Dance, "Trinity Freak",
9 p.m. - 1 a.m., Cafeteria

Saturday
July 28

-Summer Session Dance, "Trinity Freak",
9 p.m. - I a.m., Cafeteria.
-Summer Session Movie. "Summer of'42".
6:30 - 9:00 p.m. University Centre Theatre.

Sunday
July 29

-Summer Session Movie, "Summer of 42",
6:30-9:00 p.m., University Centre Theatre.

Wed.
August 1

-Summer Session Beer Garden, 4:00 - 8:00
p.m., Cafeteria.

Friday
August 3

-Summer Session Dance, "Brutus", 9:00
p.m. - 1:00 a.m., Cafeteria

Saturday
August 4

-Summer Session Movie, "Glen and
Randa", 6:30 - 9:00 p.m., University Centre Theatre.

Sunday
August 5

-Summer Session Movie, "Glen and
Randa", 6:30 - 9:00 p.m., University Centre Theatre.

Ace red itation
Dr. Andrew D. Booth, President of Lakehead
University, recently announced that the School
of Forestry has been accredited by the Ontario
Professional Foresters Association. This means
that all degree graduates of the school will become Registered Professional Foresters upon
application to the Association.
Among the Lakehead University faculty whoare
active in the Association, Ken Hearnden, Chairman of the School is a past president, and John
Blair is currently Northern Counsellor for the
Association.

Ensemble Visits
The Canadian Chamber Ensemble will be the
guests of the Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra
on Thursday, July 26. The Lakehead University
community and public at large are invited to
take in the performance, which is scheduled for
8:15 p.m. in the University Centre Theatre.
There is no admission charge.

mee~ings
Manitoba Trip
From Friday, July 20 to Sunday, July 22, staff
and students of the Summer Immersion Programme travelled by bus to southern Manitoba
to join in a social weekend with the immersion
students of the University of Manitoba.
The group arrived in Winnipeg Friday evening,
settled into Tache Hall at the University of Manitoba, and participated in folk singing and dancing with the students there.
Saturday and Sunday were spent touring the
area. Stops on the excursion included the Planetarium and Centennial Building in Winnipeg, the
Parliament Buildings, the Musee Historique de
Louis Riel, as well as tours of the University of
Manitoba campus and the Winnipeg Zoo.
Dr. M. Colina, director of the Lakehead University programme, thanked hiscounterpart,Professor Philip Clark of the University of Manitoba,
for making the group so comfortable.

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QJW88K

a publication of the Lakehead
University information off ice

In Recog nit ion
Dr. Melvin W. (Mel) Bartley has been appointed
Honorary Professor in the Department of Geology at Lakehead University. Tlie announcement,
was made recently by Dr. Andrew D. Booth,
President of the University.
Dr. Bartley's association with post-secondary education in the Lakehead goes back to 1943 when
he was involved in the first committee to investigate the feasibility of forming an institute
of technology. Always in the vanguard, he was
the founding principal of Lakeheaa Technical Institute, Board member for the Lakehead College
of Arts and Science, and founding chairman of
the Board of Governors of Lakehead University
in 1965.

, .J

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O£C fi

)91

VOLUME 6
NUMBER~5V
JULY ~13, 1973

of geological theory in the minds of future geologists. Commenting on his ap_pointment as Honorary Professor of Geology, Dr. Edward Mercy,
Chairman of the Department of Geology saia:
"Dr. Bartley has a unique experience of mi_ning geology in Northwestern Ontario and a wide
knowledge of the mining industry on several
continents. His appointment is welcomed by the
present members of the Department of Geology
because of his expertise in applied geology
and his enthusiastic arproach to the teaching
of potential professiona geologists."

Summer Info
In keeping with its policy of year-round academic
activity, Lakehead University's Summer Term,
underwar since July 3, will continue until the
middle o August. Faculty, students and members
of the University community who are new to the
Thunder Bay area are invited to come around
to the Information Office which is located in Room
MB 1057, nextdoortotheSwitchboardinthe Main
Building. Brochures and pamphlets regarding
local and district tourist attractions, camping
facilities, and the like, have been collected for
your convenience. You are welcome to this material, as well as to any information which might
make your stay in Thunder Bay more comfortable
and enjoyable.

Mini Basketball

Dr. M. W. Bartley

In 1934, he obtained his B.Sc. from the University of Manitoba, followed by an M.Sc. in 1935.
Thereafter he lectured in geology at the University of Toronto, where he earned his Ph.D.,
granted in 1940.
From 1940 to 1947, he was employed as production manager at the Steep Rock Iron Mines.
He accepted the appointment as principal of LakeTechnical Institute in 1947.

One of the pressing needs in the development
of Canadian basketball is to start the players
at a younger age. The Lakehead University Basketball Camp, under the direction of Nor'Wester
Coach Howard Lockhart, will be offering mini
basketball for youngsters ages 8 to 12, boys and
girls included. The program, which commences
August 20, employs small balls and lower goals
to suit the needs of the smaller plarers. The aim
is to provide a program that wil develop the
overall motor skills, give them an idea of what
the game is about, and to develop an interest
in basketball and sports asawhole. The program
will include lead-up games and activities which
will develop the basic skills of the participants.
Individual attention and instruction will be stressed.

In 1952, Dr. Bartley left the Institute to set up
his own consulting firm. To this day he remains
president of M. W. Bartley and Associates, Ltd.

The mini program will begin at 9:00 a.m. daily
and end at 4:30 p.m. following a swim in the
Lakehead University pool. A visitors' day will
end the camp at noon on Saturday.

In the fall of 1972, Dr. Bartley returned to the
classroom at Lakehead University, determined
to promote respect for the practical applications

Persons requiring more information or application forms may phone 345-2121, ext. 650 or
ext. 213 at the University.

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Top Coach To Instruct
From August 20 - 25, Dr. Daniel McNair,
Wrestling Coach of Southeast Missouri State University( will helJ&gt; with the instruction of the third
Annua Lakehead Wrestling School.
Dr. Daniel P. McNair, a former NCAA Heavyweight champion, teaches and coaches at Southeast Missouri State University, Cape Girardea,
Missouri. Prior to this he has coached and taught
at Pembroke State University, North Carolina
for three years and at Frostburg State College,
Maryland for one year. His first coaching experience was at Auburn University in Alabama,
his alma mater, where he worked under his
former coach Arnold."Swede" Umbach, for five
years as assistant wrestling coach.
Dr. McNair graduated from Auburn in 1953 with
a B.Sc. in Physical Education. He received his
M.Ed. from Auburn in 1959 in School Administration and his Ph.D. in Physical Education from
Louisiana State University in 1967.
As an undergraduate at Auburn University,
McNair was a three-time chamJ&gt;ion in his weight
class (heavyweight) in the Southeastern Conference and has a 39-1-1 dual meet record. He
copped the NCAA heavyweight championship as
a senior. Recently he was honoured by Auburn
as the "Wrestler of the Half-Century".
Dr. McNair and his wife reside in Cape Girardea, Missouri with their two daughters.
Applications forms and further details for the
School are available by phoning 345-2121 1 ext.
544 or by writing Lakehead Wrestling School,
Ath(etic Building, Lakehead University, Thunder
Bay, Ontario P7B 5E1.

balcony of the Library Building. Those interested
should write their names on a list on the door
of room
5036 (Fifth floor, library building),
or telephone Ron Stuart (577-3943).

History Note
At the recent meeting of the Canadian Association of Slavists at Queen's University, Dr. Ernest .
R. Zimmermann, Assistant Professor of History,
was elected to the Editorial Committee of the Canadian Slavonic Papers.

Additional Duties
Dr. A. D. Booth, President of Lakehead University, is rleased to announce the recent appointment o Mrs. Geraldine Service to the position
of Assistant to the President, which she will hold
in addition to her present position as Institutional
Research Officer. Mrs. Service, who holds an
M.Sc. degree in Mathematics from Lakehead University, was 'first employ_~d by the University
as Research Assistant, Office of the President,
in August, 1970. In July, 1972, she was promoted to the positi(?n of institutiOf\al Research
Officer. ·As ·of Joly l, 1973, Mrs. Service has
accepted the additional responsibil ites of Assistant
to the President.
•

Economics Note

Dr. Chris Jecchinis, Chairman of the Department
of Economics gave a series of lectures on Technological Change, Job Security, and Income Distribution at the C.L.C. Summer School in Petertribution al the C.L.C. Summer School in Port Elgin
from June 10 to June 15. Dr. Jecchinis was inv.ited also to give a series of lectures on Collective Bargaining at the Postal Workers' Summer
School in Peterborough from July 1 to July 6.
On June 20, Dr. Jecchinis gave o talk on the
Dangers of Industrial Conflict at the 18th Annual
Management-Night Dinner sponsored by the
Lakehead and District CreditUnionsattheSlovak
L'1ion Hall of Thunder Bay.

A_stronomy Nights
During the summer observing facilities will be
gvailfl_hle _on clear Monday ev~nings from the

Mrs. Geraldine Service

As Institutional Research Officer, Mrs. Service is
involved in the preparation of reports for senior
administration, deans, Senate and its committees,
as well as for some government departments
and external agencies. She is currently workin9,
along with others, upon the development , of
a University Management information system.
As Assistant to the President, Mrs. Service will
aid Dr. Booth as required in discharging his
duties and responsibilities.

�Assignment Com pleted
Ha r ry D. Elmslie, Associate Professor in the
School of Business Administration, Lakehead University was invited by the Institute of Chartered
Accountants of Onto rio to teach at its June Summer
School in Toronto. All chartered accountancy students in Ontario who have completed the lnstitute's required educational programme of 45

Nor' Wester Hopefuls
• Brian Peters a former all Canadian basketball
player at Dalhousie University will attend Lakehead University where he will be seeking a
bachelor of education degree.
Peters has been out of University for a year but
was a member of the men's national senior championship team this year. Peters served as Captain and was the second highest scorer with an
18 ppg average.
In addition to his 'on the court' achievements
Peters has been involved with wheelchair sports
for three years. In 1972 he coached the Nova
Scotia wheelchair basketball team to the National Championships. During 1972 he coached the
Canadian Paralympic team in Germany. This
summer Peters is coaching the Canadian team
at the World Championships in England.
Brian is twenty-three years old, six feet fou-r
inches and 192 pounds.
Brian Peters will no doubt be of benefit to our
community as well as to the University. He w,ill
make his mark on the Lakehead basketball team
in that one year.

Prof. Harry O. Elmslie

semester hours of study in accounting, auditing,
taxation and related subjects were eligible to
attend. If a satisfactory grade is obtained at the
School, a student is permitted to sit the final
examinations of the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants. Professor Elmslie also taught
at the School in 1971.

Summer Hours
Commencing July 3, 1973 and continuing
until Friday, August 17, 1973, the Library
hours will i&gt;e as follows:
Monday toFriday-8:30a.m. to 12:00Midnight
Saturday
- 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sunday
- 2:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.

N.B. On August 6, 1973, the Library will
be closed.

• Lester Barkman, a 1972 graduate of Bedford
Road Collegiate in Saskatoon Saskatchewan, has
announced his intentions to enroll at Lakehead
University in September.
Barkman will bring an illustrious record with him
to the Nor'Westers next season. In addition to
leading his team to the Provincial championshi·ps •
he is the only player to ever compete in four
Provincial finals. After being his team's most improved player in 1970 he was team captain,
M.V.P., leading scorer, and leading rebounder
in 1971 and 72. In addition to his outstanding
physical skills Barkman was voted Bedford Roads
most sportsmanlike player with ability.
After taking a year off to work in B.C. Barkman
will enter first year and study either Geography
or Physical Education.
According to Coach Howard Lockhart, "Lester
is 6'5" and over 200 lbs. He could play bigger
than he is because of his strength. It will take a
while to get back into condition but he could
help in his first year. We feel fortunate to land
a player of this caliber who has one of the best
records to ever come out of Saskatchewan. We
have been getting a lot of inquiries this year
from all across Canada."

�for lirary Use Oa1J

W88KI~
Thursday
July 12

Friday
July 13

Saturday
July 14

Sunday
July 15

Wednesday
July 18
Thursday
July 19
Friday
July 20
Saturday
July 21

Sunday
July 22
Friday
July 27
Saturday
July 28
Sunday
July 29

even~s

-Beer Garden - No Admission Charge - 4 to
8 p.m. - Cafeteria
-Moonlight Melodrama - 8 p.m. Water Street
"The Last Loaf"
-Dance "Black Lightning", 9 p.m., Main Cafeteria.
-Moonlight Melodrama, 8 p.m., Water Street
"Dracula"
-Dance "Black Lightning", 9 p.m., Main Cafeteria
-Movie "Last Picture Show", 6:30 p.m. and
9 p.m., UCT
-Moonlight Melodrama, 8 p.m., Water Street
"Only an Orphan Girl"
-Movie "Last Picture Show", 6:30 p.m. and
9 p.m., UCT
-Midnight Melodrama, 8 p.m., Water Street
"The Secret c:J the Spyglass"
-Moonlight Melodrama, 8 p.m., Water Street

Award Renewed
Dr. Andrew D. Booth, President of Lakehead University, recently accepted a Lakehead University
Alumni Assiciation Scholarship cheque in the
amount of $600.00 for the(;cademicyear 1973-74
from Mr. Peter Prior, treasurer for the Association. Also pictured are, from left, Dean John
Kerr, Dean of Students and University administrator responsible for alumni affairs, and Mr.
Gary Kunnas, Association president for 1973-74.

-Moonlight Melodrama, 8 p.m., Water Street
-Nite Club "Phyllis Brown and Junction,"
9 p.m., Agoro and Main Cafeteria
-Moonlight Melodrama, 8 p.m., Water Street
-Nite Club "Phyllis Brown and Junction,"
9 p.m., Main Cafeteria
-Moonlight Melodrama, 8 p.m., Water Street
-Movie "Woodstock", 6:30 and 9:30 p.m.,
U.C.T.
-Movie "Woodstock", 6:30 and 9:30, U.C.T.
-Moonlight Melodrama, 8 p.m., Water Street
-Dance "Rise and Shine", 9 p.m., Main Cafeteria
-Dance "Rise and Shine", 9 p.m., Main Cafeteria
-Movie "Summer c:J '42",6:30 and 9, U.C.T.
-Movie of '42", 6:30 and 9 p.m., U.C.T..

Director Honoured
1

mee~ings

Mr. Glen Davies, Assistant Executive Secretary of the National Association of lntercollegegiate Athletics gNAIA) announced today that
George Birger, irector of Athletics at Lakehead
University has been appointed as President of
the NAIA Ice Hockey Section and also a member
of the NAIAC Board of Directors. This appointment is for a term of two years, 1973-74.
Mr. Birger was also named to the National
lte Hockey Tournament Committee. Other tournament members are Dr. Vic Weber, Bemidji
State College, and Mr. Mertz Mortorelli of the
University of Wisconsin, Superior.
Mr. Davies complimented Mr. Birgerfor his many
years of service to the NAIA. He also stated
that Mr. Birger did an outstanding job as Director of the 1973 Ice Hockey Tournament which
was held in Thunder Bay. "Financially and artistically it was our finest hockey tournament"
said Davies, "and I can lay the credit for both
at your door step."

J. Kerr, P. Prior, Dr. Booth, G. Kunnas

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VOLUME 6

a publication of the Lakehead
University information office

Rare Honour
Grant Thompson, Vice-President (Finance) for
Lakehead University, was elected Fellow o( the
Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants at
the Annual Meeting of the Institute of Chartered
Accountants of Ontario, which was held in Toronto
on June 25. Mr. Thompson was one of 58 chartered
accountants to be so honoured, first since 1970.
The honour will be formally bestowed ata special
reception at the Granite Club in Toronto.

NUMBER 4
JUNE 21. 1973

fluencing students' choices on financial grounds.
Consequently, the Council passed a resolution
which calls for the university shown asfirstchoice
on a student's application on May 18 (the collectively agreed first date for offers of admission) to
retain the formula grant for that student even if
the student subsequently accepts another university's offer and receives an entrance scholarship
at that university. The Council is asking all boards
of governors to agree to this arrangement for
one year only. The Council will provicle a clearinghouse function to redistribute income to accomplish the objective.

Correction
Last issue included an error and an omission in
the "Special Awards" article. Correct information
is as follows:
Dr. D. Eldon, Vice-President(Academic), presented the Lieutenant-Governor's Medal to Helen D.
Keller, B.Sc., for the highest ranking graduating
student of the third year of the Bachelor's degree.
Dr. A.D. Booth, President, presented the Governor General's Medal to Man-Yuen Wong, B.Sc.
(Hons.), for the highest ranking graduate in the
graduating class of the Honours degree.

National Training Camp

Mr. Grant Thompson

Mr. Thompson graduated as a CA in 1956, joining
the Thunder Bay firm of F.H. Black and Company,
now the Clarkson-Gordon Company. He became
a partner in the firm, but left to become Comptroller at Lakehead University on July 1, 1966.
He became Vice-President (Finance) in January,
1973.

Entrance Scholarships
The Council of Ontario Universities hasdiscussed
at length the recent trend for universities to introduce new or expanded programmes of entrance
scholarships. Although there was general support
for the desirability of attracting to the universities
more students of high ability, it was recognized
that entrance scholarships could have the desirable effect of causing students to alter their first
choice of university, thus denying the original
university both good students and the government income attached to them. Such a situation
was viewed as representing an undesirable and
unnecessary competition which would aim at in-

Gord Garvie of Lakehead University, Manager
of the 1973 Canadian Wrestling Team which will
compete in Moscow August 15-25, has announced
that the team will train at Lakehead Universitr
from July 28 to August 9. The national teams
stay in Thunder Bay will be interrupted for a 4
day period during which time it will travel to
Minneapolis to work with the American national
team.
The main try-out camp will be held in London,
Ontario, July 20-27. During that period the Canadian Senior team will be named and a Junior
team sent to Miami for the Junior World Championships. The Senior National Wrestling team
will then fly to Thunder Bay and work out at the
C.J. Sanders Fieldhouse.
Area wrestlers who will travel to London for the
try-out camp are to date: Brian Renken (Lakeview),
Andy Connell( Greg Koza, Lindsay Koze (Selkirk};
Kim Dudley Churchill) and Frank Troughton of
Dryden. Tl-iese wrestlers are all of junior ag e.
Lakehead University wrestlers who will try for the
student and senior teams are: Mitch Kawasaki,
Cheyenne Ashukian, Dennis Marshall, Grant Lavallee, Don Roy, Elvin Ma r tin (who represented
Canada in the World Cup), Richard Beauparlant
and Terry Paice. Paice is eligible for the Junior
team as well as the Senior and Student team.

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Sports Coordinator
Dick Henderson, recent recipient of the President's Award for his outstanding work with intramural athletics over the last few years, has been
appointed sports co-ordinator for the Northwestern Ontario Sports Council.
The
Council is a volunteer organization with
broad purpose of promoting and developing athletic and competitive competence among coaches
and youth in the region. Acting president of the
Council is Don Domansky, computer analyst at
Lakehead University; the treasurer is David Cain
of the Parks and Recreation department of Thunder Bay; and Struchan Gilson of Fort Frances
is the Council secretary. The Council has received
a grant through the Sport and Recreation Branch
of the Ontario Ministry of Community and Social
Services for the purpose of financing the co-ordinating operation.
It will be Mr. Henderson's responsibility to develop and maintain liaison with individual groups
and organizations who are interested and involved in athletic programmes throughout the
region. Part of his purpose will be to determine
the demand and requirements for coaching clinics
and workshops throughout Northwestern Ontario,
and to recommend experts in the various fields
of athletics to act as consultants, workshop directors, and leaders for coaching clinics and seminars.
Continuation of provincial support for the work
of the Council will depend upon the response of
the people of the region and the success of resulting clinics and workshops. Should you require
further information of Mr. Henderson, or if you
have any suggestions which could make his work
easier, you can contact him by mail through P.O.
Box #773, Thunder Bay "P", Ontario.

Suzuki Method
The Faculty of Education Auditorium was the site
of a rare talent education demonstration on Monday evening, June 11. At that time, Mrs. Marian
Moody and her five-year-old daughter Lisa, pictured below, explained and illustrated the Suzuki
Method of early child training for the violin.
Mrs. Moody holds a Bachelor of Music Education
degree from the University of Toronto, and has
been involved in thetalenteducationprogramme
in Saskatoon for a number of years. She explained how this approach to early musical training
grew out of the philosophy of the great Japanese
violinist, Shinichi Suzuki, who wrote, shortly after
the Second World War, that "All human beings
are born with great potentials: each individual

has within himself the capacity for developing to
a very high level. Education begins from the day
of birth. We must recognize the amazing power
~f the infant to absorb everything in his surroundings and add to his knowledge. If attention is not
given to early infancy, how can the child's original power be developed?"

· . ·Lisa and Mrs. Moody·

.

The talent education programme based on this
philosophy entails the joint training of parents
and their three-or four-year-old children. While
the mother, in private and group sessions, becomes familiar°with the fundamentals of handling
a standard violin, her son or daughter is given
a bow and styrofoam replica of a violin with
which to become familiar. After a few such sessions, the child is given a miniature violin ranging in size from J/l0to J/4 the volume of a standard instrument. From then on, mother and child
learn together.
Suzuki's faith in the tremendous learning capacity
of young children becomes apparent in a few
short weeks when the child begins to learn faster
than his parent.
Mrs. Moody leaves soon for demonstrations of
the Suzuki Method in Europe.

0 n Li bra ry Services
The School of Library Technology hosted a Workshop on Library Services in Health Care Institutions, June 14, 15 and 16 which was sponsored
by District Hospital Council No. 12, Ontario Hospital Association, Ontario Medical Association
and the Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario. The Workshop co-ordinator was Mrs. M.A.
Flower, Librarian, Ontario Medical Association,
Toronto. Miss Verla Empey, Reference Librarian
at the Toronto Academy of Medicine acted as
Resource person in addition to a number of Library Specialists from the Thunder Bay area.
Mrs. June Leath Huntley, Health Sciences Resources Centre, National Science Library delivered the opening address entitled "The 1Challenge of Library Service" at a dinner on Thurs-

�day eveining. A seminar on location and use of
resources was conducted the next morning. On
Friday afternoon registrants visited the Regional
Nursing School Library and the Lakehead Psychiatric Hospital Library.

Challenge Met
The famed CKPR Redeyes, local fastball mentors
par excellence, have accepted the upstart challenge of a University squad of dubious hopefuls
known as Lakehead University .Computer Center
Campus Chaos lncorporatell. Even though it is
highly un(ikely that such a sorry c~ewwill succE:ssfully tarnish the Redeyes' reputation for swatting
flies, it promises to be an entertaining event. The
game (?) will commence at 8:00 p.m., Thursday,
June 28 at Port Arthur Stadium. If you look like
a kid; it will ·cost you a di.me. The rest of us get
in free for ci quarter. The attendance of fastball
fans wi•th weak stomachs is discouraged. But, if
you have a mildly sadistic disposition; you'll
probably enjoy yourself.
·
.
.

Roy.I ·visit •
Tuesday, July 3, 1973 has been declared a civic
holiday in Thunder Bay. The reason is what could
be the event ofa lifetimeforthecity, and for you.
At 2:00 p.m., Queen Elizabeth 11, accompanied
by Prince Phil~p, will arrive at the Thun~er Bay
airport. She will be welcomed there by His Worship Mayor Assef, and many members of parliament, federal and provincial. Canadian Legion
colour parties from all across Northwestern Ontario will salute the royal couple.
After a brief ceremony, the entourage will proceed down Highway 61 to Broadway Avenueand
thence to the Point de Meurons site of historic
Old Fort Willia m. There, government officials
will again make I1resentations to the Queen, with
the primary gift lteing a souvenir study kit which
is designed to commemorate the occasion.
This kit, which explains the significance of Old
Fort William as the main working hinge of Canada in the fur trading days, will be available for
distribution to school children in Ontario and the
United Kingdom.
The Queen will then be treated too brief pageant
organized by the local branch of the Ministry of
Natural Resources for Ontario. It will consist of
the landing of two canoes, replicas of those used
in the l lOO's by the Northwest Company and the
Hudson's Bay Company. Also, the Fort William
Male Choir will welcome the voyageurs with
traditional Canadian folk songs in French and
English. The pageant will culminate in the symbolic presentation of a pack of fresh pelts in ex-

change for a typical pack of trade goods.
• • •
The entourage will then proceed to Taitt's House,
t,he residence of the Superintendent of Old Fort
Willi•m, from whence they will depart to the
strains of "God Save the Queen".
Public ente~tainment, including choirs, bands,
folk-dance groups, etc., will begin at 12:30 at the
Old Fort William site. Since no vehicles will be
allowed near the location, tourists and citizens are
asked to watch and listen for news reports which
will inform you of the location of parking lots
from whence you will be taken by bus to. this historic opening of Old Fort William.

Pregram Launched
The Ministry of Colleges and Universities has
announced that funds have been made available
for support of the Ontario Universities Program
for Instructional Development. The program will
operate under the direction of the Joint Subcommittee. on Instructional Development of the
Council of Ontario Universities arid the Committee on University Affairs.
Up to $150,000 will be available in the current
year for support of projects approved under the ·
program. Funds for the operation of an office to
activate and administer the program hav.e also
been provided.
.
The Joint Subcommittee instituted a search in
March for a director for the program and has now
appointed Professor Harold M. Good to this position. Professor Good has rece~tly been Associat1e
Head of the Department of B1olo.9y at Queen s
University. Formerly presillent of CAUT, and an
officer of the Ontario Committee of Heads of Departments of Biological Sciences, he is the author
or co-author of several reports on university
teaching and related matters. The Director will
be seconded from his normal university appointment for an initial period of two years.
The aim of the program is to assist individual
faculty members in Ontario universities and the
universities themselves in improving the effectiveness and efficiency of their instructional processes. No approach consistent with this aim
whether concerned with the contribution of students the organization of teacher time, the de0
mands of research and administration, or the use
of technical devices such as TV or computers is
regarded as outside the scope of the program. ·
The Director has expressed the hope that all members of the university community - students, staff,
and administrators - will take an active interest
in the program. Letters to the Director reporting
activities which relate to instructional development, and suggesting priorities will be welcomed.

�hi lirary Use
W88KI~
Camp First

evencs

For the first time in Northwestern Ontario there
will be a special summer camp for children with
Learning Disabilities, Mrs. Janet Tothill, President
of the Thunder Bay Chapter of the Ontario Association for Children With Learning Disabilities,
announced recently.
This Association which helps children with Learning Disabilities is conducting a campaign to raise
funds to finance the project through public subscription. The Camp will operate during the last
two weeks of August.
In describing the activities that will take place Dr.
J.H. Widdop, Programme Director, states that a
major part of the programme will be taken up
with specially designed exercises to improve coordination and eye-hand movements. Such exercises have been found helpful in the treatment
of Learning Disabilities. Dr. Widdop, who is Director of Physical Education at Lakehead University,
conducts a similar exercise class throughout the
winter months.
Located at the Anglican Church Camp at Sandstone Lake, the camp will beabletoaccommodate
fifty children, twenty-five during each week.
The child with a Learning Disability associates
school with some very unpleasant experiences,
resisting learning in a school situation. Mrs.
Doreen Kronick of the Canadian Association says,
"In the camp situation the child is more relaxed
than in the school atmosphere, and a child who
normally resists walking along the walking board
will follow his cabinmotes across a fallen log. A
youngster who would neither print nor spell in
school may proudly label the things he has found
in the woods."

Pool News

Lakehead University completed a Royal Life Saving Society Programme with the following successful candidates: Elementary: - Mrs. Carol
Hubelit,Mrs.Elaine Maclean, Tina Diasmirro, Roberta Savioli, Mrs. Eleanor Sparks, Susan Smulski,
Marcel Dania, Joyce Hubelit; Intermediate: Mrs.
Carol Hubelit, Linda Covello; Bronze Medallion:lris Zebryk, Mrs. Faye Steadwell, Marianne
Brownszuk, Lynn Webster, Gerold Hotherley, Ed
Thurston, Frank Balent; Bronze Cross: - Gordon
Mott; Award of Merit: - Carol Sinclair; Distinction
Award: - Bob Haig, Rebekka Mueller, Scott Sellick;
National Lifeguard: - Bob Thompson, Sue Harris
Janet Sillman; Red Cross Leaders: - Tracy Dry no~
and Celina Reitberger.
A complete life saving programme is available
at the University Pool, as well as Spring Board
D iving classes for all ages. Mr. Lou Adorns
teaches the divi ng. Two group learn-to-swi m
cou r ses are begin ning this month . Thefirstcourse
begins on Saturday, June 23, at 10:30 a.rn. The
second programme begins July 3 every morning.
Registrations are being accepted at the pool of-

meecings

fice by moil, or telephone.
A Scuba Course will be beginning soon. Our
Mom and Me Programme and Mother's Club programme ore continJJing throughout the summer
months.

Men's Basketball
A summer men's open basketball league is being
considered by the Athletic Department at Lakehead University. There will be a meeting Wednesday, June 20, at 8:00 p.m. in the classroom at
the C.J. Sanders Fieldhouse. All persons interested in playing in a summer league should be
present. Anyone unable to attend may indicate
interest by phoning 345-2121, extension 650. All
ages may indicate on interest.

Info Available
Faculty, students and members of the University
community who ore new to the Thunder Bay area
are invited to come around to the Information
Office which is located next door to the Switchboard in the Main Building. Brochures and pamphlets regarding local anddistricttouristattractions,
camping facilities, and the like, have been collected for your convenience. You ore welcome to
this material, as well as to any information which
might make your stay in Thunder Bay more comfortable and enjoyable.

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