IHE IHURSDA y IIEPORT. CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY • MONTREAL • VOLUME 1, NUMBER 23 • MARCH 9, 1978 S~nate gives nod to two more 'units'

Concordia Senate, completing a major phase of university re-organization, gave near-unanimous approval to a set of colleges expected to be in place this September. Last Friday's day-long session accom­ ATA GLANCE: plished the following: · -Approval in principle to create Norris Library has a new head of Lonergan College at Loyola. This college reference. She's Nancy Wells, who has is to have a religious base. been a reference-selection librarian here - Approval in principle to create a since 1970. After receiving her B.A. from liberal arts college. This college is to have the University of Winnipeg and her B.L.S. rigorous course and acceptance standards. from UBC, Ms. Wells was librarian at St. A week before, Senate -approved two John's College ·Library at the University other "small units such as colleges": of Manitoba • Chairmen have been ap­ . -Approvltl in principle to create a pointed for two more merged arts and Women's Institute (reportedly to be science departments. Dr. Michael B,rian is named 'Simone de Beauvoir Institute'). chairman of English and Dr. A. Kawczak This college, or institute, will offer women is chairman of Philosophy, both terms academic support structures. running until May 31, 1980 • Doug -Approval in principle to create a Devenne, director of ancillary services, centre for mature students, at Sir George. reminds us that liquor permits must be This centre, or college, will provide a place applied for for receptions on university · for older students to receive guidance. property by the tenth of the month continued on page 2 previous to the month in which the .reception is planned: so the deadline is March 10 for year-end April celebrations. At Loyola, student's apply to the Dean of · Disruption foil Students Office; faculty to Room 102, Hingston Hall. At Sir George, see Jack Police dispersed a group of 8 or 9 male Hopkins, Dean of Students Office • Beav­ students who were attempting to disrupt er Foods and the Loyola Campus Centre a lect~re at Sir George Friday evening: proudly announce the opening of Some­ The students, some wearing hard hats and place Else, a deli bar in the quiet lounge of some carrying sticks, were creating a the Campus Centre. Soups and salads are commotion outsided H-937 where Ken served from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. · Popert, president of Pink Triangle Press, 'daily • Pl.£ns are set·· for Engineering was speaking about the recent raid by Open House March 21 and 22 at Sir Toronto police of the gay publication The . George, March 29 at Loyola. Tours will be Body Politic. available between 2 and· 5 starting from Most of the 30 people attending the t he first floor of the Hall Building lect ure were not aware of the cause of the downtown and from CC104 at Loyola • A disturbance, but those sitting near the group of senior citizen part-time and door could see the students making independent students have formed a menacing gestures and could hear them Can·ada's· discussion and cJitural exchange group saying "this is the place" and "the faggots . at Sir George called The Sparklers. It's are inside". the brainchild of Willy Schiff, who can be A few members of the audience left the Heritagr reached evenings at 731-4569 • Fifty-nine ninth floor lecture hall by the back door to learned societies will take part in this alert Security. The police were called and year's L_earned S~ieties Conference May a security guard was posted outside H-937 21 to June 3 at the University of Western for the duration of the lecture. on page 6 Ontario. The Thursday Repor_t will carry -M.G. 'iuller details in the near fu tur,,·~. teachers; about $2,000 on the library and Senate continued about $6,000 on vending machines. Dean Stanley French asked about the Student senator David Hedmann led possibility of charging a higher fee to get the crusade for better libraries in Senate into the colleges and thereby assisting in last Friday, but he didn't get much more their funding. than sympathy. Charles Bertrand, history, who opposed The crusade came late in the day after a many aspects of the scheme, said he didn't weary senate had spent hours· discussing Senate also approved the creation of like parts of proposals which led to the and voting to create "small units such as Division IV , under Provost Robert Wall, possibility of colleges providing degree colleges." It wasn't long before Mr. which will be responsible for the organi­ programs, outside the control of academic Hedmann was deprived of a quorum, and zation of the "small units such as colleges." departments. had to proceed in what Dr. John O'Brien Senate's decision completes a major He was particularly upset with the idea wryly called a "post-meeting discussion." step in the merger process of Loyola that .the ·colleges would be able to hire Even so Mr. Hedmann, with an assist College and Sir George WiUiams Uni­ instruct ors without departmental ap­ from student senator David Gladstone, versity. proval. made a moving plea for better libraries When they joined, Sir George had a But Denis O'Connor, p ilosophy, in­ and a re-ordering of university resources Faculty of Arts and a Faculty of Science, sisted that the colleges should have that to provide them. They also wanted longer library hours 2'nd study areas within the while Loyola had a Faculty of Arts and degree of independence. university libraries. , Science. The Quebec department of Prof. J.C. Giguere, engineering, wond­ ered whether there was enough difference Faculty senators sympathized, but until education wanted the science programs the money situation changed little could merged, which led to the deans' report on between the liberal arts college and the religious college, to justify the existence be done. Michel Despland, associate university reform which called for ll vice-rector (research), even ventured to university-wide faculty of arts and science of the two. But Dr. Wall said he could see no great say that the library was not as bad as and a system of colleges. people said it was. Last spring, Senate approved the deans' similarity at all between the two, pointing out that one was to have a distinct He said that Concordia's books had been report and the university-wide faculty of bought within the last ten or fifteen years, arts and science was created. History religious orientation while the other was not. whereas many university libraries. with professor Robert Wall was appointed more books were older. Provost in charge of setting up colleges The liberal arts college, or LAC as it came to be known during the debate, is an Prof. Despland spoke of the library at elitist group, designed to siphon off the Mount Allison University; which accord­ better minds from the CEGEPs, parti­ ing to statistics is better than·Concordia's. cularly Marianopolis, where the better "But most of the books in that library," he said, "are about 19th century Method­ Dr. John O'Brien, rector of Concordia, minds tend to go. told Senate last Friday that it was Senators raised questions about the ist theology. They are seldom used-and never stolen." unfortunate that the Quebec government very toughness of the course proposed, has found it necessary to raise foreign questioning whether there were sufficient student fees to $1,500 for a two-term · intellects to teach it, or take it. year. Its courses range from Homer to But Dr. O'Brien, Senate chairman, also Einstein and the work load appeared Lonergan, a Loyola grad and Jesuit who is pointed out that despite the increase, incrediJ>ly difficult even to the professors thought to be one of the finest minds in Concordia was still less expensive to who might assign it. Christendom. He lives in the Jesuit attend than universities in the United Dr. Wall said that the syllabus proposed Community at Boston College. States or Ontario. was simply an idea and that it was by no Prof. Bertrand was worried about the He said that Ontario had raised foreign means final. He reminded the senators college eventually being in a position to student fees to $1,700 per two-term year, that by approving the LAC, they were not provide a degree programs without which placed Concordia in an advantag-• approving course changes. approval of academic departments. eous position in attracting foreign stu­ The question was called and the LAC Eventually the question was called and dents to the university. was approved unanimously. the college was approved all but unanim­ Prof. Sean McEvenue spoke on behalf of ously, with Prof. Bertr~nd dissenting. Lonergan Coll~ge, named after Bernard -Christy McCormick and last month he was ready to present four concrete proposals for colleges before Senate. The final debate was slow. Senators, many upset at the speed at which they had Beware the -Ides of March approved the creation of colleges, were in no rush to vote last Friday. Dennis Meadows, the director of the Sustainable Futures; which deals with There was the $68,000 that each college Club of Rome project that produced the constructive research on alternatives to was to cost. One senator wanted a world-famous book The Limits of growth. breakdown. Growth, will speak at the Sir George His first book, The Limits of Growth, Provost Wall said his figures were Williams campus on March 15. suggested that world resources would be tentative, but he said the money of the Professor Meadows, now a teacher of bankrupt early in the twenty-first cen­ women's institute would be spent in the business and engineering at Dartmouth tury if the rate of growth in the 1960s following manner. About $35,000 would go College in Hanover, N.H., will discuss and early 1970s were projected into the for stipends for the principal, fellows and "The Choice before 1984: self-control or future. The book was based on a secretarial staff; about $15,000 would be · big brother" when he speaks at 8 p.m. computer model of world consumption spent on supplies and public relations; that evening in the faculty club dining designed by the Club of Rome, a group about $12,000 would be spent on part-time room. of influential business, government and Professor Meadows is also the editor academic leaders from around the world. of Alternatives to Growth: A Search for . t rnat10· na\ 1\Wee~~ Canada and the Third World Prof. V. Corbo, head of • Concordia's He said that Canada also went into the ber of the United Nations, it took a great International Institute of Applied Econ­ field in the hope of developing trading deal 9f pride in that and it took its omic Research, explained the various partners, which often bore no relation to responsibility towards the world very stages of economic development in the the needs of the poor country in question. seriously," Third World in this century. Prof. Thompson said that it would do He said that there was hope that Speaking to the Utopia or Oblivion Canada good to deal with South American poverty in the world could be largely conference during International Affairs countries which have a good trading eliminated in those early days. But since Week, Prof. Corbo said that the dev­ potential as far as this country is those early days, he said, the world has eloping world has continually sought concerned. "But these South American come to know the true dimensions of the economic independence from the rich countries are the ones which require our poverty in the world. countries. assistance," he said. "And it now appears the poor will be Prof. Co-rbo said t hat when the Yet idealism played a role, he said. with us for some time to come," he said. depression struck before World War II, "When Canada became a founding mem- -C.McC. the rich countries could no longer buy the raw material exports from the third world. "In many of these poorer countries the GNP was cut by half, sometimes even = ,HE IHURSDA 1rHEPORT more," he said. "This wasn't simply a matter of going down three or four per cent." During the war the situation altered drastically. Prof. Corbo said that the Probe rihlal in broadcast richer countries were anxious to buy the exports, but were unable t o export The evolution and characteristics of the materials to the Third World. "public arts" will be examined by Dr. "With the world at war, there was no Stuart Hyde in a public lecture and audio­ means of transport as there was in peace visual demonstration on Wednesday time," Prof. Corbo said. March 15 at 2 p.m. at Loyola. During this period, Prof. Corbo said, Dr. Hyde's presentation, "A Closer manufacturing of retail goods was taken Look !lt the Public Arts" will take place in over by Third World entrepreneurs to room 204 of the Bryan Building, West service their local markets. Broadway and Sherbrooke. After the World War II, the Third Dr. Hyde will look at the media as the World attempted industrialization but the arena where we can see our public heroes cost of developing a manufacturing base to acting out their "rituals". He considers t he serve a comparatively small national ritual of today's public arts to be far more market proved very high indeed-in many important than the content and traces cases far too high. these rituals far back into history, Prof. Corbo said that the conflict within comparing contemporary popular stars these countries rested on notions of with the public heroes of religion and independence, in attempts to irnlate Third classics. World economies from the First and Stuart Hyde is author of the college text Second World and a compulsion to secure Te/,e vision, and Radio Announcing, of cheaper manufactured goods which are scholarly articles in such journals as more available through purchase on the in­ Journal, of Broadcasting, Southern Folk­ Fest set ternational market than they would be if lme Quarterly and Educational-Instruc­ produced domestically. · tional Te/,evision, ·and has written thirty articles on nineteenth and early twentieth for Tues. century American theatre for the current If you submitted one or more pf the 363 Encyclopaedia Brittanica. He is currently entries in this year's Festival for Creative chairman' of the department of Broadcast­ Work in the Arts, the quickest way to find ing A~ at San Francisco State -Univer­ out if you've won is to show up at this Canadian foreign aid is born of a sity. year's Festival, Tuesday (March 14) at 8 combination of idealism and self-interest, pm in the main Jounge of the Loyola according to Dale Thompson, candidate Campus Centre. for the Liberal nomination in Westmount. The Festival is for the entire university Thompson, a McGill political science community and even if you're not a professor, told a Concordia audience last == ,HE IHURSDAYH : potential winner, you will be able to enjoy week that when it comes down to it, the wit of MC Brian Counihan, the music Canada acts more out of self-interest Published weekiy during the academic year by the Information Office, Concordia Uni­ of the Concordia Jazz Ensemble and the than idealism when handing out goodies to reception following the awards presenta­ the world's poor. versity. Submissions welcome. Sir George campus: Bishop Court room 211, 879-8497; tion. There will also be award winning "Often our aid comes in the form of Loyola campus: Administration Bldg. room music, poetry, film, televisio_n, radio art providing credits to purchase our surplus 105, 482-0320 Joe. 689. and photographs. , commodities," Thompson told the Utopia Editor: Ginny McCormick A complete list of winners' will appear or Oblivion conference during Interna­ Contributors: Christy McCormick, next week in the Thursday Report. tional Affairs week. Mark Gerson. ISSN: 0704-5506 Garnet Key, Lacolle Ce_ntre offer service

Centre, we suggest that your letter any way in which use of t he Centre could LETTERS: include several alternative dates, and that be helpful to you in enriching your you seriously consider the use of week­ department, organization or classroom Dear Faculty Member: days for your program. Also, as purpose setting. For additional information please The purpose of this letter is to draw to for use is one of the essential determin­ contact Linda Allan or Marilyn Callan at your attention that the Garnet Key ants of decision·s made, we urge you to Local 344 or 494. Society is once again playing an active role . plan a program which could not be as Marilyn Callan in the activities of this University. I am effectively done on campus. Coordinator, certain that at some point during the We would be glad to discuss with you Lacolle Centre course of the year you will be involved either directly or indirectly in an activity where the Garnet Key·could be of service. If by some chance you are not familiar Nominations, application~ sought with the Garnet Key, here is a sample of our past functions: The Advisory Committee (Code of Code Administrator: -Open Houses Conduct (Non-Academic)) see,ks nomina­ For this part-time position some legal -Honorary Masses tions or applications for the following training is necessary. ·It is expected to -Convocations positions,_starting in June: require three or four half-days a week -Guest Speakers Part-Time Ombudsmen: 'divided between the two campuses. The -Visitors to the University There will be one part-time ombudsman appointment is for two years, and is renewable. -Student Elections on each campus. The code requires that . The basic purpose. of the Garnet Key each part-time ombudsman be someone Dealine for nominations or applications is March 31. can be summed up as follows: "To act as· already employed at the University­ the official hosts of the University". whether as faculty or staff. He or she will If you wish to apply or to nominate someone or would like further informa­ Our services are available throughout be. partly released from other dutie.s', or tion, please contact a member of the the entire year. I would also like to receive a stipend. The appointments are Advisory Committee: Mary Brian, Math­ mention that there is no charge for these for two years, and are renewable. · services. Full-time Ombudsmen: ematics Department, SGW; Patrick Hol­ land, English Department, Loyola; Dawn If you have any further inquiries, or feel There will be one full-tiJile ombud~man Johnson, Personnel Office, SGW; Ray that perhaps the Garnet Key could be of on each campus. The duties relate mainly Martin, Registrar's Office, Loyola; Kevin service to you or your department, please to student concerns, and the positions are Quinn, The Georgian, SGW; Michael contact us at either of the numbers listed likely to appeal to recent graduates. The Sheldon, Rector's Office; Anne Stanway, below, or drop a note in the n,ail. We do appointments are for · two years, and are LSA, Loyola. require a minimum of one week's notice, not renewable. preferably two. Brian Schacter, president H-0016 Film premieres· Job opening Those of us who work closely with the "Somebody's Kids," a Concordia-prod­ operation of Loyola's off-campus centre in uced film on educationally disabled jecretary (C-5)-Financial Aid Lacolle again wish to invite you to children, was·premiered before 70 people DUTIES: Takes shorthand and types consider its use ,in the development of in the Hall Building this week. such texts as: handwritten notes, letters, your class or organizational objectives. The 25-minute film, funded by the reports, etc.; maintains an accurate up-to­ Members of the campus community who Bronfman Foundation and the National date filing system; provides detailed have made use of the facility and our other Film Board and directed by filmmaker information to students concerning differ­ resources have found it to be an invaluable Katherine Frey under the auspices of the ent Financial Aid Plans; screens telephone aid · in further developing academic or Concordia education department, describ­ calls and provides routine information; group goals in a setting away from the ed the plight of three children. receives visito,s and directs them to the usual pressures of the campus. Each child had trouble with learning in appropriate individuals; performs various As the number of requests for use of the schools, yet had proved himself highly secretarial duties as• required to maintain Centre, particularly during weekends, capable in other areas outside the · a smooth running office. · continues to increase, we would ask that classroom. GENERAL: The applicant must have 3 to anyone wishing · to reserve weekends One was a creditable artist, another was 4 years of previous office experience; during the months of May-August submit a competent driver of trailer trucks and excellent typing skills; shorthand; the requests in writing before Fri.day, March assisted his father in a marshalling yai:d. ability to work well with other people; 10 I 78. And finally there was a story with a happy enjoy working in a busy office. Conversa­ This will allow time for us to review ending, a teenage lad who conquered his tional French a must. your request, meet with a member of your learning disability and is now ·embarked For further information or an appoint- group to discuss objectives for your on a promising life. ment please call:. · program, and help plan for ways in which After the showing of the film , education Nancy Barnes · to best achieve them. students and educationists discussed the Personnel Office Du~ to the demand for use of. the impact the film was likely to have. They Loyola Campus also discussed' the problems of learning 482-0320, ext. 267 disabilities and how and when to spot Deadline for applications is March 19, them in young children. 1978.

., FARE WARNING: New Yorker -at Loyola

written Jolis deuils, La Guerre, Yes Sir! Roch Carrier Floralie Where Are You? Is It The Sun, Philibert? They Won't Demolish Me! Contes pour mille oreilles, and fl n 'y a pas en anglais un pays sans grand-pere, several of which have been' translated into English by Montreal Star literary. editor Sheila Fisch­ man, and several of which have been adapted for the theatre (La Guerre was presented at Stratford). He has been resident playwright at the Theatre du Nouveau Monde; and his play version of Floralie was produced at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa this season. He has appeared in two television specials, one about his home town, and has read from his- works on CBC radio. He teaches at College Militaire Royale in St. Jean. · A stage version of his most recent book, fl n'y a pas un pays sans grand-pere, is currently being performed at Place des Poet Howard Moss will give the final Arts. reading in the term's series of visiting Montreal Star-critic Lawrence Sabbath artists in poetry and prose at Loyola. Moss in an uncharacteristically heated review will read from his work Monday March 13 on Monday said, "Carrier ignores all at 7:30 pm in the Vanier Auditorium. Roch Carrier, Quebec writer and play­ pretense and goes straight for the Not only is Moss an important poet in wright, will read from his works, in Anglophone jugular in as unsubtle a his own right, he is poetry editor of The English, at 8:30 p.m., Friday, March 17, in manner as the Quebec stage has ever been New Yorker magazine, . where for more . Room 420 of the Hall Building. Born in used for." He characterized Carrier's than 25 years he has been a major force in 1937 in Ste-Justine de Dorchester, Que­ play as "humorless, blatant hatf) propa­ encouraging and publishing American bec, he has studied and taught in New ganda" and called the PdA performance poetry. In 1971 Howard Moss was elected Br,unswick, Montreal, and Paris. He has "an ugly and sad evening for theatre". to the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Moss' poetry collections include The Wound and the Weather (1946), A Swimmer in the Air (1957), Finding them Lost (1965), Buried City (1975) and A German Canadian symposium Swim Off the Rocks (1976). He has written two critical books, The Magic Lantern of Concordia's Department of Modern Kreisel and Andreas Schroeder will read Marcel Proust and Writing Against Time, Languages and Linguistics, along with the from their work at 8 pm in the Vanier and is the author of several plays, among Universite de Montreal and the Goethe­ Auditorium. them The Oedipus Mah-Jongg Scandal, Institut Montreal, has organized the Concordia English prof Henry Beissel is and The Paku:e at 4 am. Second Symposium on German Canadian author of New Wings for Icarus and Face Studies which gets underway tonight at on the Dark. He has written many Loyola. successful plays, among them Goya, The three-day symposium will tackle performed last year in Montreal, and various topics in German-Canadian stud­ /nook and the Sun, performed at the Mitchell reads ies and will feature sp~akers from Stratford Festival. Beissel's poetry an- . universities across Canada. Tonight's thology The Salt I Taste was published in Canadian writer W.O . Mitchell will read opening reception is private but everyone 1975. his works at 2:30 p.m., Thursday, March is invited · to attend the remaining Henry Kreisel has written two novels, 16, in Room 110 of the Hall Building. sessions. Tomorrow (March 10), the The Rich Man and The Betrayal, a number Raised in Weyburn, Saskatchewan, he has symposium will be held at the Universite" of short stories and radio plays and become known through his novels Jake de Montreal (room M-415, main building) several critical articles. Andreas Schroed­ and the Kid, The · Vanishing Point, and during the day and · at Loyola in the er is author of Shaking it Rough, a Who Has Seen The Wind?, through the evening. Saturday (March 11) proceedings documentary novel, The Late Man, a radio and television adaptations of Jake will be at the Goethe-Institut in Place short story anthology, and Fil,e of Uncert­ and the Kid, and through his play Back to Bonaventure. ainties and The Ozone Minotaur, both Beulah , which opens at the Centaur The only session to be held in English poetry collections. Theatre in Old Montreal the evening of (the rest will be in German) will be the For a complete schedule of symposium the day he appears at Sir George. This public readings on Friday evening at events, call Modern Languages at 482- year he is teaching creative , yvriting at Loyola. Writers Henry Beissel, Henry 0320, ext. 436. York University in Toronto. Historical digestif from Reader's School_children (adults, too) might take journalists (notably ex-Time and Montreal can with, say, the British AA guide) since more of ashine to Canadian history if they Star staffers). highways and rail lines are not shown; and were given for a textbook a volume like Two Concordia history professors were such mundane details as sites' hours and Reader's Digest's brand new Heritage of involved in the project: Graham Decarie admission charges are mi ssing. One Canada (Our -Storied Past and Where to and Richard Wilbur contributed chapters wouldn't normally expect these details to be· Find It). and sidebar material. within the scope of a volume that has Not just because of the pictures: "312 There is one annoying discrepancy already attempted-and succeeded at- so archival illustrations, 328 color photo­ between Heritage of Canada's promotion­ much: making hundreds of years of history graphs, many specially commissioned, 5 al blurbs and the fi11i shed product. approachable and even exciting. But it's major new paintings recreating great Published in conjunction with the Canad­ disappointing not to have delivered what's scenes and events, 46 other specially ian Automobile Association, the book is implicitly promised. commissioned illustrations, 43 maps". touted as an "all-in-one guide to 591 Nevertheless, Heritage of Canada is What really sets the book apart is the heritage sites", as "a vacation planner and worth its pricetag of $27.50. It's wealth of side-bar material generously travel guide". Granted, the 591 sites are scheduled to be available iri bookstores in distrib_uted throughout its 376 pages. all there and ideas for outings abound. But April; we have spotted it already in Those buff-coloured boxes to be found on the maps are hardly detailed ones (you Classics. almost every page are a serendipitor's certainly couldn't set out with just this goldmine: we learn for example that volume in the glove compartment as you -Ginny McCormick ' Bovril was a flop in Montreal, where its nutritionist inventor introduced it in the Ice palace in Dominion Square 1885, from Heritage of Canada 1880s as a warm-up during winter carnival, but an instant hit in England; that McGill established rules for hockey around 1880; that Cape Sable, graveyard of the Atlantic, had its silver lining, netting residents from the wreck of the SS Moravian in 1881 "350 tons of cheese, 169 tons of bacon, 54 tons of butter, 1,108 quarters of fresh prime beef, 116 barrels of pork, .448 barrels of apples, 29,285 bushels of wheat and peas, flour, lard, canned meat and mutton"- a- boon for locals suffering malnutrition. So much for the condiments of this heritage feast. The meat and potatoes­ thirty-three thematic chapters telling the stories behind historical sites from Port Royal to the K1ondike rather than strict chronology-are. every bit as digestible. It's a testament to editor Hugh Durnford and his staff that in 150,000 words of text there's a sustained literacy but never a lapse into academic tedium. Perhaps this journalistic approach is explained by the fact that 011e spq_ts among the team of 60 people involved in the book's production the names of quite a few former

Awards SERVICE INDUSTRY. Scholarship Awards. April 1. Scholarships and Awards with deadlines in April. More NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON MENTAL RETARDATION. information available in the Guidance Information Centre, Awards for Research and Study in Mental Retardation. H440, Sir George Williams Campus. Type B. April 14. CANADA. DEPT. OF INDUSTRY, TRADE, AND CANADIAN OSTEOPATHIC EDUCATIONAL TRUST ~OMMERCE. FOOTWEAR CANADA. Scholarships in FUND. Canadian Osteopathic Scholarship. April 15. Europe. April 1. ALLIED JEWISH COMMUNITY SERVICES. Scholarship GREAT BRITAIN. CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY. Program. April 30. . CHURCHILL COLLEGE. Research Studentships. April 1. CANADA. DEPT. OF INDUSTRY, TRADE AND COM­ GREAT BRITAIN. CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY. ST. MERCE. Design Canada Scholarships. April 30. JOHN'S COLLEGE. Research Studentships. April 1. CANADA. DEPT. OF JUSTICE. Fellowships in Legislative MEDICAL RESEARCH COUNCIL. Fellowships and Drafting. April 30. • Studentships. April 1. GREAT BRITAIN. THE INSTITUTE OF CHARTERED NORANDA. • Fellowships for Postgraduate Studies in SECRETARIES AND ADMINISTRATORS. Postgraduate Science and Engineering. April 1. Exhibitions. April 30. U.S.A. NATIONAL INSTITUTE F_OR THE FOOD- Friday 17 THEOLOGY STUDENTS IN DIALOGUE: This week Dr. ENGINEERING FACULTY: Meeting at 2:30 p.m. in H-769, Paul Garnet presents "A Parable of Jesus: Then and Now". SGW Campus. At noon in HH-321. JAZZ: The Concordia Jazz Ensemble, under the direction of Loyola campus Douglas Walt(!r and Andrew· Homzy, will perform student Friday 10 compositions in the Campus Centre main lounge at 8 p.m. AFRICAN MUSIC: With Singer Clotaire Moulounda Free. Info: Ext. 614. (Congo). At 8 p.m., Monchanin Centre, 4917 St. Urbain. Info: ART WORKSHOP: Silkscreen class at 1 p.m. 7308 288-7229. . Sherbrooke West. Info: Ext. 207. FOOD FOR THOUGHT: An exhibition exploring issues such MEDIA LECTURE: Dr. Stuart Hyde of San Francisco State as the world food crisis, food co-ops, ecology and more, from University will speak on "A Closer Look at the Public Arts" 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Campus Ceotre. at 2 p.m. in BR-204. FILM LECTURE: Film-maker Lotte Reinig~r will speak at GAMES PEOPLE PLAY: From noon in the Campus 7:30 p.m. i_n BR-208. Info: Ext. 400. Centre's Main • Lounge, with guest speakers, games GERMAN-CANADIAN STUDIES SYMPOSIUM: Writers workshops and films. Henry Kreisel, Henry Beis~el and Andreas Schroeder will CAMPUS CENTRE: The Dating Game and Name That read from their work at 8 p.m. in Variier Auditorium. Info: Tune, from 8:30 p.in. in the Pub. Contestants can still sign up Ext. 436. . . at the front desk of the Campus Centre. CARIBBEAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: Discussion' Group session at 6 p.m. in the Canadian Room, Hingston Thursday 16 Hall. CAMPUS CENTRE: Tournament of Champions Ping Pong CAMPUS CENTRE: Disco Pub with Friendly Giant from 8 final at noon in the Games Room. p.m. LECTURE: Miss Gertrude Mulcahy of the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants will speak on Saturday 11 "Professional Responsibilities" at 9:30 a.m. in F.C. Smith BEER BASH: To subsidize a trip to Moncton for the national Auditorium. Discussion period follows. Info: Ext. 650. · hockey finals. In Guadagni Lounge, 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. Music by Friendly Giant: Admission $1, beer 50 cents. Friday 17 • ART WORKSHOP: Photographic exhibition by Michael Sunday 12 , Billingsley begins, through April 14. 7308 Sherbrooke West, MUSIC: CBC Radio and Concordia present Esther Master ext. 207. and Dorothy Morton performing piano duets by Mozart, FOLKLORIC MUSIC: Montreal folkloric group "Eglantine" Debus.sy, Schubert and Mendelssohn at 4:30 p.m. in Loyola will entertain at 8 p.m. at the Monchanin Centre, 4917 St. Chapel. Doors close at 4:15 p.m. No tickets required. Urbain. Free. Info: 288-72~. Monday 13 PHILOSOPHY LECTURE: Dr.· Dominik Morawski will speak on "Church and Christianity in Poland" at 4 p.m. in NOTICES Vanier Auditorium. RADIO LOYOLA PLAYS: Radio Loyola is accepting 1-, 2-, POETRY: Howard Moss will read from his work at 7:30 p.m. and 3-act plays written by Loyola or Sir George students. in Vanier Auditorium. Info: Ext. 534. There is no prize money, but winning entries will be aired. CAMPUS CENTRE: Coffee House in the Pub from 8 p.m. Submission should be sent by March 25 via internal mail to with weekly featured artist. Backgammon and chess ·sets Radio Loyola, c i o Daniel Fonda, CH-201. Info: 488-4622. available. REGISTRAR'S OFFICE (LOYOLA): Full time students may pick up ·a preregistration kit in AD-127 (Loyola campus) Tuesday 14 . through March 17, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Part-time students may NATIVE PEOPLES OF CANADA: "The Contemporary pick up a kit in CC-214 (Loyola) if registering only for the Experience: The Quebec Context." With Micheline · courses printed in the preregistration schedule which are "in Corneiller, Quebecoise artist, Rosemont CEGEP, Montreal. general" day classes, Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. From 7 - 9:30 in BR-206. · to 8 p.m., Friday until 4 p.m. Independent students may not LOYOLA HISTORY STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: General preregister. Students must bring their ID. meeting at noon in the LHSA office. All class reps should HOCKEY TRIP: The Canadian National Hockey Finals will attend. be held in Moncton March 16-19 inclusive. To register for · FESTIVAL FOR CREATIVE WORK IN THE ARTS: this trip, contact the Intramural Office, Sports Complex or Awards will be made at 8 p.m. in the main lounge of the call 482-0320, ext. 738. Campus Centre. The evening will also feature performances SOUTH EAST 'ASiAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATON by the Concordia Jazz Ensemble and a reception. LOYOLA: Nominations are now open for all six elected LECTURE: Dr. Alwin Spence will speak on "Caribbean posts of the SEASA executive for 1978-79. Names must be People in a Canadian Society" at noon in the Canadian Room, received by March 15 and elections will be held March 18 ·at Hingston Hall. P.m. in AD-128, Loyola campus. Info: T.G. Lee, 482-0473·or· EDUCATION AND ENLIGHTENMENT: A lecture on Amarjit Singh, 486-0364. transcendentalmeditation by Ron Silverman, B.Ed., M.S.C.I., CANADA MANPOWER CENTRE (LOYOLA): On-Campus at noon in AD-315. · recruiting-IBM (sign up by March 10) and Imperial Life iMarch 22).. Permanent positions-Sales reps, market Wedne!iday 15 analyst, credit officer, programmer, C.A. trainees, ac­ LOYOLA FILM SERIES: At 7 p.m. "La Notte" counting and methods analyst: bilingualism and ability to (Michelangelo Antonio, 1961), with Marcello ,Mastroianni, relocate are necessary in some cases. Part-time and summer Jeanne Moreau, Monica Vitti. At 9 p.m. "The Red Desert" positioqs- youth workers and yo-yo contest co-orµinator (, 1962) with Monica ViU.i and required. Contact Canada Manpower, Centennial Building, 3 Richard Harris. Each film is $1, in F.C. Smith Auditorium. rd floor. Wednesday 15 THIS WEEK: CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "Dreamspeaker" (Claude Jutra, 1976) with Ian Tracey, Sir George Campus George Clutesi and Jacques Hubert at 8:30 p.m. in H-110; $1. Thursday 9 (Mr. Claude Jutra will present his film.) CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "Great ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT: Prof. R.A. Berry, Univer­ Catherine" (Gordon Flemyng, 1968) with Peter O'Toole, sity of Toronto, speaks on "lncome Distribution Trends in Zero Mostel, Jeanne Moreau and Jack Hawkins at 7 p.m.; the Third World" at 4 p.m. in H-635-2. "Picnic" (Joshua Logan, 1955) with William Holden, Kim JOURNALISM PROGRAM: Dennis Meadows, the director Novak, Rosalind Russell and Arthur O'Connell at 9 p.m. in of the Club of Rome project, speaks on "The Choice before H-110; $1 each. 1984: Self Control or Big-brother" at 8 p.m. in the Faculty GAY FRiENDS OF CONCORDIA: Weekly meeting at 4 Club Dining Room, 7th floor, Hall Building. · p.m. in H-613. For information call 288-3787 (evenings). ACCOUNTANCY: Gertrude Mulcahy, FAC, Accounting . AUDIO,VISUALDEPARTMENT: Open lecture-demonstra­ Research Director, Canadian Institute of Chartered tion-Miss Janet M. West, Kodak Motion Picture Division,. Accountants on '"Practical Vi~wpoint of Accounting Theory" on "Choosing a 16mm Movie Film Stock" at 2:30 p.m. in with open discussion following; from 2-4 p.m. in H-110. ·H-110. (For Concordia students of cinematography and all those interested in Technical aspects of film.) Thursday 16 WEISSMAN GALLERY, GALLERY ONE & GALLERY CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "Wat­ TWO: Annual Fine Arts Student Exhibition, until March 21. erioo Bridge" (Mervyn Leroy, 1940) with Vivien Leigh, ART HISTORY SECTION :.Nicos Hadjinicolaou, Ecole des Robert Taylor, Lucile Watson and Virginia Field at 7 p.m.; Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, speaks on "The Birth of "Bitter Sweet" (W.S. Van Dyke, 1940) with .Jeanette Rralism in France in 1931" at 8:30 p.m. in room H-1070. McDonald, Nelson Eddy, Ian Hunter and George Sanders at 9 p.m. in H-110; $1 each. Friday 10 GAY FRIENDS OF CONCORDIA: Weekly meeting at 4 CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: p.m. in H-613. f "Strange Interlude" (Robert Z. Leonard, 1932) with Norma P.M. IN H-613. For information call 288-3787 (evenings). Shearer, Clark' Gable, May Robson and Maureen O'Sullivan .ENGLISH DEPARTMENT: W.O. Mitchell, Canadian. at 7 p.m.; "Three Sisters" (·, 1970) with Joan writer, reads ,his works at 2:30 p.m. in H-110. Plowright, Jeanne Watts, Laurence Olivier, Alan Bates and Louise Purnell at 9 p.m. in H-110; $1 each. Friday 17 STUDENT LITERARY ASSOCIATION: Reading by CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "The Montreal poet Gertrud~ Katz at 8:30 p.m. in H-420. Visit" (Bernhard Wicki, 1964) with Ingrid Bergman, Anthony Quinn, Irina Demick and Paolo Stoppa at 7 p.m.; Saturday 11 . "Romeo and Juliet" (George Cukor, 1936) with Norma CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "The Shearer, Leslie Howard, John Barrymore and Basil Trojan Women" (Michael Cacoyannis, 1971) with Katherine Rathbone at 9 p.m. in H-110; $1 each. Hepburn, Genevieve Bujold, Vanessa Redgrave and Irene CENTRE FOR INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES: Greta Papas at 7 p.m.; "The Madwoman of Chaillot" (Bryan Nemiroff and Christine Allen, Women's Studies Programme, Forbes, 1969) with Katharine Hepburn, Margaret Leighton, speak on "Women's Studies and Interdisciplinarity" at 1 Yul Brynner, and at 9 p.m. in p.m. in H-762-3. H-110; $1 each. POETRY: Roch Carrier, author of "La Guerre, Yes Sir", "Floralie, Where Are You?", "Is It 'the Sun, Philibert?", etc., Sunday 12 reads from his works in English at 8:30 p.m. in H-420. CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: Child­ ren's series-"Almost Angels" (Steve Previn, 1962) with Saturday 18 Vincent Winter, Sean Scully .and Pe.ter Weck at 3 p.m. in CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "As H-110; 75 cents. You Like It'' (Paul Czinner, 1936) with Laurence Olivier, CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "Jul­ Elisabeth Bergner, Henry Ainley and Sophie Stewart at 7 ius Caesar" (Stuart Burge, 1970) with · Charlton Heston, p.m.; "Golden Boy" (Rouben Mamoulian, 1939) with William Jason Robards, John Gielgud and Richard Chamberlain at 7 Holden, Barbara Stanwyck, Adolphe Menjou and Lee J. p.m.; "La Chambre" (Michel Mitrani) with Genevieve Page . Cobb at 9 p.m. in H-110; $1 each. and Michel Auclair at 9 p.m. in H-110; $1 each. Concordia-wide Monday 13 · · Thursday 9 CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "Toni" BOARD OF GOVERNORS: Open meeting at 1:30 p.m. in (, 1934)(Original French version) with Charles , H-769, .SGW Campus. . . Blavette, Max Dalban, E. Delmont, Jenny Helia and Celia Montalva~ at 8:30 p.m. in H-110; $1. Friday 10 FACULTY OF COMMERCE & ADMINISTRATION: Meeting at 9:30 a.m. in H-769, SGW Campus Tuesday 14 CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: ARTS & SCIENCE FACULTY COUNCIL: Open meeting at 2:15 p.m. in AD-128, Loyola campus. "L'Annee Derniere a Marienbad" (Alain Resnais, 1961) (French with English subt.) with Delphine Seyrig, Giorgio Albertazzi and Sacha Pitoeff at 8:30 p.m. in H-110; $1. Tuesday 14 SOCIAL ASPECTS OF ENGINEERING: Sam Silverstone, INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES: Information rpeeting to Northern Quebec Inuit Association, speaks on "Environ­ discuss current problems and future directions wif~ Provost mental Law" at 6:15 p.m. in the basement of 2010 Mackay Robert Wall and CIS Director Julio Tressiera at 5'p.m. in the St., Center for Interdisciplinary Studies . · Canadian Room, Hingston Hall, Loyola Campm;.

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