, Robots coming but. don.'t be sc-ared ----"-,

ROBOTS COULD WELL re­ _ those with more flexibility and "It's only when you get to the "I h'ave _never run into anybody pl~ce teachers in certain teaching . you could use computers and third generation that you get who is designing robots to pick · functions, says Concordia me­ other types of programmers to extra:Sensory intelligence, things up egg shells but the idea is chanical engineering prof Richard carry out functions." like a television eye, things like there." Cheng. "Y~ could train _a robot ~Up to now,- we have robots with building something into , the me­ - Can a competitive sense be in­ to teach simple functions like no intelligence and functions are ·chanical hand so -that only a stilled- in robotic minds, Cheng making pottery, for instance," he carried out on the bll,sis of -a certain amount of force can be is .J!Sked . "Yes, in the sense that says. But Cheng says he wants specific _ program, Cheng says exerted. Continued on page 2 to dispel Orwellian fears of an inhuman nightmarish world in the - coming age of robots. "I want to interject something that hasn't come out in publicity," Cheng says, "something that is ---..ii tragic fact of its own.'' Rob­ botics, as the science of robot aciiSCii _t - development . is called, goes far Volum, l ,.N,mb" 6, Octob" 25 - "!o,ombe, I, L974. _ beyond hideous notions of·science rp, fiction, Ch<:;ng says. "Robotics have much wider industrial impli­ cations and in anything which can be programmed to carry out a certain sequence of operations, we Prison-rejects can replace the human operator Seasoned because of the tediousness or hazards of a particular job. "The idea of robotics is very school scheme generalized to include anyth-iflg riibbler m~hanical whicfi can b.e trained A L()YOLA PROPOSALto .provide Archambault penitentiary • to _ move in a predetermined inmates with university courses was rejected recently by prison series of operations," Cheng em­ authorities. coming phasizes. "It's something that's The idea for credit courses followed v1S1ts by- Loyola chaplain coming and we have to be psy­ Bob Gauder and a dozen students to the federal.mt,(imum secu­ Agents from social movements chologically prepared and edu­ rity pen where they held informal discussions with inmate mem­ of all k-inds might take a few tips cation is im portant to brush away bers of the Archambault Protestant ministry's ·oasis group. from a grand old man --who's ideas that robots are mrsteri- Thinking that more formal coming _to Loyola soon. _. ous." ,.., classes would be valuable for Lanza del Vasto, the 75 year Cheng says that the robot scare" the inmates, Gaudet, sociology old Christian Gandhian who has is the result of increasing so­ prof Barbara Ruttenberg · and become wise · in · the ways of phistication of devices that have admissions director Grendon setting the establishment on its been around for a long time. He Hawes submitted a proposal ear, non-violently, will speak at traces the development of ro­ to the chief academic training Loyola on Tuesday, November 5 botics in three generational officer for the Canadian peni­ at noon in the conference room stages. "The first generation I tentiary service in Ottawa 9n the second floor of the campus - would describe as a mechanical J.D. Wier. , ,,... ' ,centre. device which can pick and plays Wier was enthusiastic about Del Vasto, or Shantidas (Servant always repeating the same cycle the pl~n and suggested they of Peace as Gandhi named him) which is pretty short. send it on to Archambault is the founder of a self-sustaining, "The means of asking the authorities, Gaudet recalls. non-violent community in ·France. device to do something - the But Archambault director He is a poet, philosopher, mu­ control power - is what we can G. Marineau rejected their. sician and author of more than consider 'hot wire logi_c' . In proposal. In a letter he said 20 books. . other words," Cheng explai-ns , the Ste. Anne des Plaines in­ He is also a bit of a rabble "you take some logic devices and stitution's educational pnon­ rouser-;- in his own non-violent connect them in a particular way ties were to provide full-time way. and · the control circuit wiJ.I ask courses at the elementary, ·During the Algerian War of the _device to do a specific set of secondary and collegial levels Independence del Vasto' fought to jobs.,,. and · part-time and/or coach­ close the "concentration camps" - Cheng, who has done a con­ ing for those taking .university iQ which the French were hoard­ siderable · amount of work de­ correspondence courses. ing suspicious Algerians. As he signing hot wit"e circuitry, was " Our pnont1es were set tells it to the Catholic Worker: the only Canadian delegate to de­ after considering the needs of "We went there and said we liver a paper world-wide robotics the_majorit y of our population, also are suspicious, so put us conference held several O months the needs of some important in "the camps. Well they turned ago in London. minorities, the _practical us out, but we came back again, "The second- generation of ro- aspect of academic · education makes little sense m terms of and lfgain, and again. We began bots," Ch~ng says, "would be towards rehabilitation (job ' rehabilitation. with thirty people and ended with seeking and obtention after re­ - Gaudet, who has worked at 5000 saying, 'we are all sus­ lease), our actual limited Collin's Bay penitentiary in picious, but us all in the camps. ' Honorary space for academic l!Ctivities, Kingston and at Don jail in They had to shut the camps." budget possibilities," he con­ Toronto, believes that educa­ Del Vast and friends also Degrees tinued. tion is the key to rehabilita­ fought for recognition of consci­ Archambault houses some tion and that sooner or later­ entious objectors in France. They Concordia University honorary 5()(J inmates; of the approx­ Archam~ault _ will !\ave to say opened work camps where consci­ degrees will be awarded in 1975. imately 50 English-speaking yes to university courses.- entious objectors ~aboured with The Graduation Ceremonies C9m­ men ,- perhaps five would be Not having them, he says, others. When the police ·came to mittee invites mem._bers of the ready for university courses, is · like not having honours ask for a particular objector, they University community to send in Gaudet says. programs at university - tbe would say that he was not there the names of persons whom--the · But classroom space is at prisoners have to be able to at the moment but promised that University might suitably honour premium in prisons. It's not reach for something higher. · he would present himself the next in this manner at the first Con­ just a matter of throwing a In the meantime, Gaudet and day. cordia Convocation. few chairs around a portable about 40 students are con­ "We always do what we say and Such names, accompanied by an blackboard. There have to be tinuing discussions with the -the police know it," Del Vasto explanatory statement and, if pos­ security precautions. Oasis group_ says._ "But it is always a great sible, biographical notes, should All classrooms at Archam­ For the first Sunday of every surprise to them because we don't be sent to the _Secretary to the bault are watched by guards month a Loyola group of four do it just the way they-expect." Committee, Michael Sheldon, Ex­ a_nd there are two gun turrets prepares a contribution to the The police found the objector ecutive Assistant to the Rector, overlooking the chapel, Gau­ prison's religious service and all right, along with several other (A7 - SGW). They should be for­ det observes. meets with the inmates in a objectors, all carrying pamphlets warded by Thursday, November 7. and all chained to a conspicuous Nonetheless, he figures that socia·I gathering afterwards. Marineau's budget argument Continued on page 2 Continued on page 7 } A rundo?IJn .on ·possible wiys to keep warm creating s~m wells in hot dry fuel reprocessing plant. The dan­ Mechanical engineering prof along with more uranium-238 to rock. gerous plutonium generated in the Hugh McQuee.n reports back from fuel another breeder reactor. Solar energy is certainly being · thermal reactor~ _described above the recent Ninth World Energy The breeder reactors will thus I examined seriously by research will . cease to be a threat when Conference held in Detroit. As oil serve to extend · the usefulness of groups in many countries. The it is put to use in the breeder stock is depleted further, dele­ uranium resources by using up use of silicon solar cells, as in reactors which are shqrtly to gates looked to other fuel sources the plutonium wastes from the space craft, does not appear sat­ come into service. In the breeder some of which McQueen outlines thermal reactors and · the ura­ below. , isfactory because their low ef­ reactor the fission of the pluto­ nium-238 which is not usable in ficiency (ab.9ut 10%) would require nium atoms produces many neu­ the latter. It is calculated that Coal is now being considered large areas and vast capital ex­ trons which con.vert the non fis­ 30% breeders and 70% thermal as the most versatile and secure penditures to achieve reasonable reactors will be neatly comph,­ energy resource since the re­ sile uraniu[)'l 238 to more pluto­ capacities. Furthermore, the c~r­ serves are sufficient for several nium. lri about 10 years, a mentary. The U.S. breeder will rent technology for producing the .breeder reactor contains - twice centuries and are well distributed not. be readx until at least 1983 cells requires so much energy as much plutonium as it had at the because of technical problems; around the world. The differential that it would take between 30 and beginning ·even though it was however, the French have already in price between coal and oil 40 years of operation to regain it. burning plutonium to generate successfully operated the "Phe­ _ makes possible innovations which Transmissiorr of energy from power. Some of this plutonium nix1' breeder for several months. were previously uneconomical. orbiting solar. stations is not be­ Increased use ·of coal for genera­ may then be rel'l_'!~Ved _!or _ _!!Se ing considered seriously. The tion of electricity will give rise to g~eat difficulty with solar -energy logy to shake hands with the two increased production of fly ash, ROBOTS/rampage I is the provision of economical compressed air controlled ~obots in terll_lS of millions of tons per a robot can operate m adverse and efficient storage of sufficient that are on display in the base­ year. ~esearch has fortunately conditions in which no human energy during sunny periods to ment Engineering !_abs in the Hall found new uses for fly ash in being would like to work in. What tide over dark periodi,: The most Building. building materials and as a soil is not competitive is the degree suitable collecting system ap­ · conditioner, which actually give of intelligence;" Cheng contends. pear~ to be individual home units econorpic returns and diminish "It may have a television eye which could provide from 30-80% the consumption of other raw and a sensor for noise detection of the energy · needed for heating materials. but it can onl y do as much as or cooling a house. In Ca~da, a An example of modern coal you have programmed the thing to ( supplementary - heating • system technology is found in Scotland, do, unless something -goes beserk would be necessary; ·unfortu­ where four new underground in which case there is no way for nately, dual heating systems mines are being operated to feed the thing to rectify itself. would considerably increase the a generating station at Longannet. People do talk about_ 'adaptive cost of a . home. Wind power in To maintain aesthetic quality of control' of robots, learning robots most places is so irregular that this rural region, the coal is (based on working its own new it does not appear promising ex­ moved from the rriine shafts to program out · in different combi­ cept for chores such as pumping . the boilers on underground con­ nations) but I would rather look water. · • veyors which are more efficient, at that as the very end of tlie The most widel j' used renew­ safer and cleaner than surface tliir~ generation, perhaps the be­ able resource, hydro'electric rail transport.· In Germany, sur­ ginning of the fo urth generation." power, will increase by a factor face mining or' coal requires the Cheng says. of three as , compared with an resettlement of small towns in The mechanical engineer who is expected increase in electricity ne~ locations with provisions of part of Concordia's fluid control consumption of about five times. improved social facilities and reasearch unit says· Canada's lack In general, hydro power is non­ PRISON from page I road networks. The mined areas .o.f robotics know-how could hurt polluting but it can create prob­ are later reclaimed (or both our industrial role in the world. On the first Tuesday another lems by flooding valuable land farms and forests. In Canada, Japan, the U.S. and now Sweden four organi ze discussions on and diminishing down. stream flow coal fired thermal stations are and Britai n, Cheng says, are in one of the topics chosen in · with attendant reduction in nu­ pl anned f~r Alberta, New Bruns­ the forefront at the moment. "But advance by inmates and stu­ trient flooding and cleansing wick and Nova Scotia where they we shou dn't_ jump on the robot dents. power as has been observed in can be sited· beside the mines. bandwagon io an effort to, catch The inmates are particularly the Nile and in the Peace-Artha­ Nuclear power is growing in · up," he cautions. He says there interested in astrology, orien­ baska Delta. The cost . of elec­ importance and will gradually are now over' 250 types now em­ tal religions, palmistry · and tricity from new dams will be displace all the fossil fuels for ployed in various industrial music, Gaudet says. much higher than in the past be­ generation of electricity. While projects in automotiv,_e and steel One· student who had con­ cause of inflation and high there are potential uranium re­ works and furniture manufac­ nections with the rock band interest rates. sources to last for a century or turing, among other things. Mahogany Rush, arranged fo; more, the proven reserves are The production of e,Jectricity by Canadians should become fa­ the band to visit Archambault only sufficient to fuel present and nuclear power has grown rapidly miliar with the advantages of Therese Humes, Belmor~ planned reactors · until approx­ in • the past decade. Canada has robot technology rather th an enter House's "mom", tells us. imately 1987. The present rate of five power reactors in operation, the expensive invention game, Prisoners become ecstatic at exploration is just sufficient to the U.S. 30, United Kingdom · 14, says Cheng. the thought thought, she says. find new reserves equal to cur­ France 7 and the other countries . "We should make a selection of The inmates showed great rent consumption. If the life of the in the rest of the non-comrn.unist areas where robots, big or small, interest in discussing " I'm, reserves is to be kept greater · world 30. The Canadian heavy first generation or third gener­ OK- - You're OK", Thomas than a decade, the rate of finding water reactprs have been able to ation and see where we can build A. Harris's book about Trans­ new ore bodies must become . .operate a larger fraction of the up our expertise to · make su e actional Analysis which at­ equal to expected consumption in time than the light water reactors Canada doesn't -lose out on robot tempts to bring psychiatry the final year of the decade. It is because they can be refueled application. down to the layman. not clear, ' that sufficient capital while in operation. The CANDU Strangely, the prisoners investment can be attracted to pressure tu be design has been "When I say ce~tain conditions, don't want to read the book, maintain such a rate of explora­ less subject to difficulties than meaus possible financial condi- · not even a chapter before the tion. those with pressure vessels; 21 lions, hazardous conditions or discussion. The Loyola group Geothermal power is being U.S. reactors were recently sh.ut where there are labour shortages had provided 25 men in the . examined carefully and well down for pressure vessel inspt;e­ in cettain parts of Canada," he Oasis group with copies of the known sources are being brought tion, The CANDU reactor burns says. book but have had to resort into production. The Geysers up the fissile portion of the fuel The Concordia fluid control labs to mimeographed summaries plant· in California represents (uranium-235) to . such a high are in large part devoted to find­ of chapters to get discussions 40% of world geothermal produc- degree that it is not necessary to ing out where robotic;s can be off the ground, Gaudet says. /tion of 1,000 million watts. Cen­ reprocess the fuel to recover the appl ied to industry and, with the Another book which appeals tral American countries are look­ remainder as the Americans must help of National Research Courcil to the inmates is "Chariot of ing to geothermal sources to do. In Canada, the· burnt out fuel funding, have carried out research the Gods'.' , by Erich von Dani­ expand their generating capacity. bundles are stored intact so that for Quebec's woodworking and ken which sets out hi s own The Atomic Energy Commission there is much less chance of small industries. " theory that beings from outer is conducting research -in utiliz­ environmental pollution than there Cheng invites anyone who wants space onc·e inhabited the ing hot mineral springs and into is with the waste products from a to know more about robot techno- Earth.

2 /TRANSCRlPT / OCT. 25 - NOV. 1, 1974 /

The 'changirlg

fac / ·es of thB college scene·

I

Busting tenure ,, ments increased. That expansion took place Buckner. " He knows he can get a joll anywhere. or bust in the face of an extremely tight academic But the least competent, those who have pub·­ labour market. lished and researched little, will stay. Uni- For one reason or another, observers· tend " A major consequence of an expansion in versity staffs-will be closed to qualified new to classify students according to the decade. a tight labour market is a lowering of the blood for thirty years to come." Those who went to school in the 1950's are quality ohthe newly-employed staff ... In a dif­ Hamilton sees the tenure process as one by described as harmless, fun-loving, career­ ficult situation, the universities took on whoever which " mediocre talents are entrenching them­ oriented and generally lacking in social cons­ was available. People were hired without ad­ selves on the Canadian universities. There is c iousness. The '60's saw stude!lts of ,a different vanced training or advanced degree ... People every likelihood that they will be succe'ssful sort: they were characterized by " serious­ , of doubtful ability .with advanced degrees were in their efforts." ness" . They seemed to be aware of the politi­ also among those taken on to 'meet the rieed'." Buckner, for his part, would like to see cal structure of the world and to be intent As less and less attention was being paid·/ tenure abolished in favour of offering five­ on doing some drastic reshaping in th.at regard. to a professor's qualifications, job security year contracts to deserving faculty members. Student governments of the day were proclaim­ was becomin.9 more of a force to reckO F) with, That way, he says, everyone would be subject ing that there are no " student problems" but until now faculty tenure is to be liad pretty to a periodic review. - social problems in which students can ac_tively well for the asking. A good part of the problem The prevalence of tenure, Buckner notes, involvEr themselves. A university was looked lies right there, c lai'ms Sir George sociology will have the added effect of shutting women upon by this new breed not as a stepping-stone prof Taylor Buckner. off from academic pursuits, " since the in­ to a lucrative career but as a means of ac­ Tenure, of course, means permanence. A crease in the numbers of profe_ssional women quiring knowledge - for its own ,sake. tenured professor cannot be fired except for is only very recent. " Now that the '70, are upon us, it is hard to demonstrable inco_Ql petence or moral turpi­ Incidentally, roughly 63 per cent of Sir escape the conclusion that the energy of the tude, " both of which are very difficult to p ove. George professors are tenured. Buckner him­ previous ten years burnt itself out and led " To the truly competent professor tenure · self is one of them. " They gave it to me," nowhere. Sir George -students show signs of is not particularly meaningful," accordi_ng to he explains. " I didn't chase afte~ it. " returning to a 1950-type environment, only without being quite so fun-loving. One Sir George student characte~ized his report on running a newspaper from a peers this.way: " They come here to do their Parastudent projects m, nagement point of view . Still another earned courses, have a couple of beers and get home credit for her work with a GJ.rl Guides pack. as quickly as possible. This is a university The opportunities for earning credit for work Perhaps six to ten students have taken with a trade-school mentality. It loses all pre­ _p utside the classroom at Loyola are almost advantage of the para-academic credit program tension to being a community of thinkers when limitless, assistanl'dean of students Brian since its inception two ~ ars ago, Counihan the one goal in sight is the job that comes Counihan tells us. says. \ after graduation." Para-academic credit, as it is called, may be As far as he knows, most students have Not that Sir George is unique in this. IA granted for just about anything - theatre, alrea·dy been involved in the activity for which recent issue of Time magazine drew the same radio, athletics, volunteer work, extra­ they are seeking credit - they don't get involved conclusion about universities throughout the curricular research - you name it and you've in something for the purpose of getting credit, United States: "Not since the 1950's have probably got it. and there's good reason for it, he figures: students been so pragmatic in their outlook, Only one half-credit is granted for each "Students realize that it takes more work to so highly oriented toward careers and financial project and only one project may be submitted get para-academic credit than it does to get security." , during the year, but students may earn up to regular credit in tl'le Classroom. " And while this trend develops, university one credit for their entire stint at university. standards are going steadily downhill. Students, Interested students must first round up a faculty and administrators all seem to agree faculty member from a suitable discipline to on that point. With job. security taking pre­ help map out the direction the project will take Education for the job seekers cedence over consideration of abil jty, the and the form o.f the final report. With inflation being the talk of the town these . modern un iversity is becoming a haven for The report, too, may take many forms. It days one might reasonably expect Loyola's the mediocre. might be a paper or a film, anything which evening division to receive mass orders for ,an McGill Sociologist Richard Hamilton, writing provides a permanent record of the pr:.,oj ect. economics course that could explain what it's in the Montreal Star, sums it up this way: On e st udent did a paper on his summer work all about. " In the last two decades Canada's universities at Archambau lt pen itentiary. Another was Not so, says director Doug Potvin . Now if we have been greatly expanded. Existing facilities involved with a student newspaper and got were offering a course-in econometrics, we'd were enla~ged and the number of establish - togeth,er _with a commerce prof to put together a h,ave them banging at the door, he says, because

TRANSCR IPT/ OCT. 25 - NOV . 1, 1974 / 3 there's a big hole in the labour market for somewhat by the dictates of the Quebec­ and an approach that combines the social goals econometricians. - education department, Potvin observes. of the Quebec society with the economic goals Job-getting potential, pure and simple, is Similarly many students have their tuition paid of the private entrepreneurs. Hence I believe what students are looking for in the evening wholly--0r 'partly by their employers and they, that the next period will be characterized by division, Potvin says. Course enrollment figures' too, set limitations on the kinds of courses their the " total system approach"-to management back him up: employees can take.' of resources. This method of analysis wi lJ Business-or1ented courses, maths and Potvin says a growing number of students are incorporate considerations for social costs arid computer science, for,example, have by far the coming to the evening division with first degrees social benefit~ in addition to the customary · · most students. and he ex·pects the trend to continue. concerns for private costs and private benefits. Also popular are health courses which train But he also expects to see more CEG!,:P b) Secondly, as Quebec is not a hoinogeno~s nurses for work in the community; library graduates in the evening division. Less than 20 product of industrialization but, in fact, courses which prepare students to become percent of the Dawson grads went on to day possesses the whole spectrum .of stages of librarians; and bio-physical education. university last year, he says, and number of industrial development from the small manually English, on the other hand, is sinking. Potvin Loyola's-CEGEP grads are-now in the evening - operated agricultural farms to the"large totally figures there is a glut of English teachers on division and working during the day. The automated industrial assembly lines - we as' the market. The same thing happened to new reason? University tuition is just too high, he educators of University Faculties of Commerce ·maths a few year-sago, he says. suggests. · - and Administratioh must also reflect in our Many of Loyola's evening students are A final note: Andragogy, the teaching of adult approach all of the above listed items of main teachers, so their course selection is limited education, is joing well at LciyoJa. concern. In Quebec, the historical concerns (listed earlier) did not succeed one another but they have all survived and now co-exist. ·Trying -a specialist _ Hence our management ideology and practice film_approach must be !>roader and more sensitive than in other less heterogenous industrial societies. . The current film series at the Loyola campus c) Thirdly, as Quebec is-not as u·niform in featuring the Western and John Ford is also - ethnic origins as many other parts of the world, a course offered by Communication Arts. our -teachings and curricula must be so oriented __? rot. Marc Gervais is teaching the course. that we capitalize on that fact. We have a chance The series is well under way, but there to shape the development of future managers are still some fine films to come, among them; who are truly cosmopolitan, multilingual and The Informer, Stagecoach, The Grapes of multicultural who will possess a broader view Wrath, and The Quiet M~n. (It is still only 99¢ and understanding than th~ir contempo'raries. the double bill.) In my view, the magnificent tranquilizing role Althoug.h the series is well-attended by the Switzerland played in Europe over the centuries outside community with attendance at 250 people is nothing compared to the leadership role ,( 100 students), past series have done better: Quebec could play in the world in general, and The reason for this, Prof. Gervais feels, is­ in the Americas in particular, if-we o_nly exploit that film series wtJ_ich feature European heavies, instead of deplore the multilingual and like Bergman and others, do better because multicultural characteristics of our population. the film~ series goer is usually serious about Leading business schools became what they are films. Since European movies are regarded as because they recognized the particular _" culture with a capital.C" and as art, they characteristics of their student bodies and their are generally well-attended by serious supporting community - and they were not afraid film freaks. to declar,e these unique characteristics as their -Hollywood productions, however, have no s.uch strengths and virtues. reputation. " Hollywood movies ·invite a - In brief, the further development and behaviour 'familiarity breeds contempt' response and of business schools in Quebec must and will take are therefore not taken seriously." account of the social goals of our milieu, the-­ He feels that this attitude should change since varying degrees of industrial development and the Hollywood movies tell us much about our - its associated ailments, and the multilingual society. He notes that change is probably in the and multicultural mix of tl:le population. If we offing because many serious students of film concentrate on educational strattlgies, utilizing are shifting their attention from the European these characteristics we cannot go wrong, we masters to ignored American directors. sliall be unique, but uniq'uely successful. Our Besides the western course, prof. Gervais is social role as institutions of higher learning teaching a course on German film in the 20's will be thereby actualized arid our constituencies and 30's. He has taught a variety courses from will be appropriately serv_ed . the Russian cinema to the Japanese, but is a bit uncomfortable with the situation. "Have you ever heard of someone being an expert in world literature? Well, the-same thing p.ertains to the cinema. I can't possibly be an . Greek gaining over expert in all the different national cinemas." J disco courses .,. Prof. Gervais sports impressive credentials for his film courses. He is the-author of What are the fastest growing courses in·the P'asolini ~nd articles in Sight and Sound,,the Arts·and Science faculty at Loyola these days? film journal. He has also served on the juries Latin and Greek are two of them. Enrolment of the Cannes and Venice film festivals and in these pure language courses has risen to 30 is the President of the International Catholic students from about a dozen a year ago and only Film jury, Venice. After the present series ends, he is scheduling four or five a few years ago. Classics chairman Dari Brown feels that after an Italian film series. Instead of the shotgun the period of " so-called relevant courses - the approach in covering all the directors, he is managers were trained to maximize shareholder kind that were held in discotheques," students choosing several representative films in order profits during a laissez-faire period. This are moving back to the "gut". courses. The to stucly-the-development and technique of the period was followed by a aevelopment of training ability to read Latin of Greek with the aid of a director. His choice, however, is limited by the programs concerned with scientific management dictionary at year-end gives them a feeling of "crime"-of so many films simply not being and measuring effii;iency, Berczi says. ,, having accomplished something, be says. available. • Management training then became concerned Also, the recent upsurge of interest in ar­ Beginning in January, he plans to show: with human relations "as soon as it was cheology has led to an increase in the number of Fellini, La Strada, La Dolce Vifa, 8 ½, generally recognized that men are not students entering courses like ancient history Fellini Roma,~Antonione, La Ventura, La Notte, machines," he says. This era wa S:-:followed-by and " The -Aztec, Inca and Maya", which are Blow-up; Pasolini, Aquitone, Gospel According the industrial relations movement of labour also offered by the Classics department, he to St. Matthew, Teorema; and movies by unions working with management through says. • "" Rosselini, De Sica, and Visconti. collective bargaining and controlled working Chemistry is another rapid rising depart­ Michael Sotlron conditions. Profit sharing and fringe benefit ment. Enrolment has risen from 80 students last schemes began to come.into play. A concern for year to 145 this year. environmental quality then followed. A period ' Bio-chemistry is doing especially well, chair-= " Business education, then and now which B_erczi says business schools are just now man Mark Doughty observes. He thinks that the Concordia Commerce and Administration Dean entering is concerned with the overall quality students who were thronging the biology depart­ Andrew Berczi traces formal business education of life in today's fast changing business scene ment for ecology courses now tend to want a from its North American beginnings just over a of increased leisure time and organizational combination of chemistry and biology. 100 years ago with the founding of Wharton development experiments in improving job · Another reason for bio-chemistry's recent School of Business. From that point, Berczi satisfaction. Berczi writes: popularity, Doughty points out, is that it touches traces the 15 year cycles of business teaching The challenges. for Faculties of Commerce on medical chemistry and graduates of programs philosophy. " The major role (at fi;st) was to and Administration within Quebec are threefold: like this are just what the Montreal area's many prepare 'professional' managers, " h·e says, to a) First, as public citizens of a province pharmaceutical companies want. Pharmaceutical fill new posts created by the separation of which is characterized by an extraordinarily companies are desperate for employees, he ownership and management brought on by the high social consciousness, we must instill social adds . .J industrial revolution. This period was followed responsibility in our students of business and Qemand for c,ou rses in recreation and leisure., by one in which students as prospective administration. We must develop an attitude is booming, and so is the demand for graduates

4 /TRANSCRIPT/ bCT. 25 · NOV. 1, 1974 / of these courses, says interdisciplinary studies says. They have only one or two all-weekend But, he adds, the old notion of a university head, Michael Hogl1en . bashes in a year now, he says. acting toward its students as a kind of Alex Wright, who teaches some of t~e recrea­ So the era of setting up separate bathrooms substitute parent, prevalent during the '50's tion and leisure courses, says his students are for women and putting goldfish in the toilet and of the '60's, is very much dead. Contact interested•in helping people adjust to our new are over, it seems. Fraternities don't earn between faculty and parents is non-existant. age of leisure and are not simply out for the .their reputations on the basis of crazy "I've never ~et met a student's parents, except buck. stunts anymore. According to Moshonas; by chance at Open House.'' But he admitsJhe bucks are there. During the there is more emphasis on socially useful - He suggests that the most important three years up to 1972, government expenditures pastimes. - _ explanation for effort~ on the part of universities at all levels rose from $.5 billion to $3. billion · Theta Sigma, for example, holds a party to reach out to parents is an economic one. and they're still climbing, he says. A typical at Shriners Hospital every Christmas and "It is a way of digging money out of them. If community, say NDG, which might have had $20- they buy presents for the kids with their you have a rich student body it pays to tap the $30 thousand a few years ago, would today have own money and any they can solicit from parents. '.' closer- to $500 thousand for recreation, he adds. sources, like department stores. Th is year, Indiana's Notre-Dame College, where McQueen As Hogben points out, you can't.have incompe­ ttie fraternity hopes to put part of its budget studied for his doctorate, depends very tents handling that-sort of money, and that's towards adopting a foster child through one largely on parental support. probably why a lot of students are taking busi­ of the overseas agencies.· Why isn't Si'r George tapping parents as a ness and management courses related to re- financial source? , creation . . For one thing, McQueen says, no organization Voyage of discovery was ever set up to take care of it. And for Frats are on another, " at Sir George we tend not to attract the establishment. Certainly engineering students the upswing The clamor of student protests and sit-ins are not drawn from the Anglo-Saxon Fraternities have been making a comeback have come and gone on campus but all has establishment. recently and the ones at Loyola are no remained quiet on the job front, according to the "Going to Loyo.la, on the other hand, is exception. dire.ctor of Loyola's Canada manpower center, something of a family traditi.on. I did Loyola has three frats and one sorority. , Evelyn Allen. '--- undergraduate work at Loyola, and many of the John Mosh6nas, president of Theta Sigma, In the seven years that she has held the job children of my classmates are going there now. says membership in his frat has climbed to post, Allen has never once witnessed boy(;:ott of It's easier to solicit from parents under those 18 active members and four to six pledges campus recruiters from corporations of circumstances. You don't see that much at this year from a low of five members only ill-repute. Sir George.· two years ago. While Theta Sigma hasn't Allen and the center's two _counsellers, Isabel " But," he is quick to add, " th is sort di Cloake and Pierre Petroff, agree that most parental involvement has no influence students leave their politics behind when the wt atsoever on teaching content. It only means time comes to look for careers and bucks. that a certain amount of energy has to be With the exception of Commerce students, who expended by faculty deans for sending out know exactly where they're headed, the majority information bulletins." of students don't know what to expect of the employment world, Cloake says. Commerce students, she suspects, have a Rapid geor.g1an reading better picture because a lot of their prqfessors Around 1950 the SjLGeorge student nespaper hold jobs and teach on a part-time basis. was running blank editorial columns with the Students who opt for big companies rather caption " you wouldn't have read it anyway". than smaller firms often do so because they figure they will have fewer initial That was-at a time when something called responsibilities, she observes; most want to " college spirit" was showing itself in the.Jorm feel their way around the work scene before of sports, dances and freshman hazings. Who taking on too much. had time to read editorials? • The manpower staff can report few changes Today, twenty-odd years later, " college spirit" over the years. L is no longer a force to be reckoned with . The chartered accountant firms, which Student§ began focu sing their attention on more generally bear Anglo Saxon names, seem to be serious matters. Yet editors at the georgian are looking more for accounting graduates who can still complaining about not being reacted to by speak French. The insurance companies are pickin~ p B.A.'s becaus_e, as Cloake puts it, they'll take anyone they can get these days. And finally, extra time had to be set aside for the RCMP recruiter because 28 students (up 20 over last year) have applied for an interview. ,, These included prospective graduates in psychology, economics, business and science. Corporal Philion at Montreal Headquarters says that the Mounties need students from · several disciplines: political scientists and psychologists are useful in secu rity and ., intelligence operations; the scientists, engineers, computer scientists·and mathematicians find work with the police information system and crime detection labs; and commerce grads are well su illld for investigation of large commercial frauds. Philion is not surprised·that the number of students applying for jobs as " civilian members" of the force has increased in recent years. " We offer pretty good starting salaries · ($10,974 p.a.) and excellent chances for advancement," he says.

reached the highs of a decade ago - 40 active members and 20 pledges per year - Parental guidance Moshonas expects the current resurgence to continue. What part are parents playing today in the Hazing, the pledge's first rite of passage, scheme of university affairs? is not as tough as it used to be, Moshonas No direct part at all, according to mechanical claims. In their heyday frat brothers used engineering prof Hugh McQue~n. He does to put pledges through the mill by requiring concede, however, that the feelings of parents -; them to sing in the cafeteria or stand in the are not always ignored in the decision-making . , library staring at the statue of David (the process. one that was run out of Fairview shopping During the summer McQueen was involved in centre years ago for indecent exposure) . the decision not to .rehire a Sir George chaplain It was all very embarrassing for pledges, who had fallen into disfavour with the Catholic Moshonas says, so his are not asked-to make Church. He justified his stand on the grounds public spectacles of themselves on campus, that-" the university cannot place itself in a although they may be asked to do so in position that it can be accused by parents of taverns, he admits. inducing Th eir children into heresy." . Theta Sigma holds parties for brothers "This particular situation was an ambiguous and their lady friends in their Walkley St. one," he elaborated. "It was the sort of case apartment (still a far cry from the large where a Catholic parent might very well raise house they had a decade ago) but the parties hell, and the university didn't want to leave are not as wild as they used to be, Moshonas itself open to that. ;,

TRANSCRIPT/ OCT. 25 • NOV. 1, 1974 / ~ . '-. , .

students. Letters to the editor are few and far Muster blusters I between. 11'1 a 1973 issue the editorial column was devoted to an examination of the problem, First prize for novel course titles in these days of novel courses goes to Interdisciplinary and to the question of why it exists in the first Studies· 370: " Three quarks for Muster Mark" , a course about the interaction of science and place: culture taught by physics prof Calvin Kalman and English prof"t..inda Rahm-Hallett. " Of late, we have begun to feel like a blind man The title comes originally from a passage at the end of James Joyce's Finnegan's Wake but wandering around in the dark. Does the lack of the word quarks wa~ adopted by physicist Murray Gell-Mann to name his newly discovered letters indicate carte blanche agreement? Does sub-nuclear particles in the theory that netted him the Nobel prize this year; Kalman tells us. it mean we have already alienated so many of Thus " Three quarks for Muster Mark" epitomizes the close relationship that scientists and our readers that they find it a meaningless artists have maintained over the years, he explains. exercise to respond in writing? Or are peqple. simply reading the georgian with their eyes tan! dean of Arts and Science, Sean McEvenue. staff and administrcition) soliciting opinion on closed?" Beginning next fall , all honours programs will what new direction the university should be The,piec.e ended with an invitation - which consist-of 10 courses from the discipline con­ taking. QuesUonnaires were sent out and among sounded more like a plea - to students to cerned (nine was typical in the past) and stu­ the di"sconcerting results, the paper received express their th6ughts and outra9es in print. dents will be encouraged to take four specified a letter " from an administration official", wt,om · it discretely left unnamed, telling it that the " We ran-that article in January," recalls courses for a minor, McEvenue says. university's operations were none of the ' current georgian editor Ev,elyne Michaels,; :and In addition, some departments have set up students' bus.iness. Many faculty 'members issued for the rest of that academic year we didn't '.' specialized programs" which are essentially similar rebukes. However, others commended receive a single letter." honours programs without the stringent require­ ments for marks, seminars and papers. them and cooperated. From the replies and The lesson, Michaels feels, is that you don't One important reason for the changes is that obviously a good deal of serious thinking on its encourage response by pleading for it. She runs the Quebec government is leaning towards a own part, the paper published its recommen­ her show accordingly: " Instead of wasting space preference for graduates with 10 course pro­ dations' for the future of the university. on that kind of invitation, we try to get students _ 1 grams behind them when Q(anting teacher and The proposals ar~ as good an example as interested by the quality of our copy itself." civil service classification, McEvenue says. The any of the new seriousness characteristic of How well has that approach worked?·" Well," government has yet to issue any formal procla­ the rest of the decade. There seemed to be she says, " the number of letters has increased mation on the matter, he continues, but Concor­ widespread agreement among responding students somewhat. I'm not too displeased with the dia officials dor't want students to be caught out that academic life should become more rigorous, result. " in the eyent of any overnight changes for whicb with a recommendation for more and more She adds that you have to make allowances for a Quebec classification officials are infamous. difficult exams. Better qualified teachers were certain atmosphere, or lack of it, peculiar to Sir In cc ntrast to the honours trend, the Senate • called for with the s~estion that at least a George. " It's just that kind of place. There's · has decided to lower majors requirements to master's ~nd preferaqly"a doctoral degree be no real sense of community here. Only a very six courses (from the usual seven) in accordance the prerequisite for associate professorships. few students centre their lives around the with a Quebec decree, McEvenue says. Sir George should bring in visiting scholars, camp~ . Most of them live far away from the give the faculty sabbaticals and try to get more Mind you, majors students may find them­ I' university and come in exclusively for classes. selves being urged to become d9uble majors money for scholarships. Honours and graduate They read the georgian on the way from the students. McEvenue, who favdurs the move to · programs were urged, as well as a 750,000- mazzanine to the fourth floor." tighter options on course selection, says he cer­ volume library. Al!hough the university did tainly would recommend to. majors students that indeed embark ill all these directions during Dollar scholars they double up. the next few years, commitment to a mechani_sm The new honours program combined with a whereby students had decision-making powers 'Th~ Match of Minds scholarship was set up specified minor leaves the student with only one was n·ot so easily forthcoming. . at Loyola three years ago to give a break to free el~ctive course. Student .representatives on Nevertheless, political awareness began to students who had the kind of brains and drive curriculum,committees have not voiced any flourish . Model parliaments and UNs became that doo't show up on academic records. opposition to the changes, McEvenue says; but a lively though short-lived activity. Annual 'Ten full-tuition scholarships were awarded that doesn't necessarily mean that students are seminars on international affairs on such topics annually to students wt,ose oyerall average was happy with the move, he points out. as the causes of war or the situ.ation in the not high enough to put them in the running for Congo, were widely attended. Georgians regular scholarships but w~ o could demonstrate participated in protest marches concerning the competence in a particular academic field or bomb and U.S. nuclear bases in Canada. Literary show initiative in extra-curricular activities,.. efforts filled the pages of the georgian. The for example: student governmenror community university kept pace, with more and more affairs. • I / - courses, .honours programs and the beginning The scholarships were renewable for two of the graduate faculty, summer institutes and more years· provided the student maintained of course the new Hall Building facilities in a 75 pf;)rcent averagE) while at Loyola. 1966. Students made themselves heard as never Candidates' expertise would have to fit before on issues such as the Vietnam War and within one of the regular academic programs. closer 19 tiome, the mismanagement of the Once they had chosen a department, they would Bookstore where tankards and sweatshirts spend a day matching minds with a departmental seemed more plentiful than reasonably priced team and an interdisciplinary committee. books. By the late '60's, students had won The departmental team quizzed the candidates repr_esentation on all major decision-making on their knowledge of the discipline involved, councils, including the Board of Governors. - · history prof and formen Match of Minds The UCSL, a body from whom recommendations committee chairman Mary Vipond explains. -concerning student affairs and services issue, Candidates,were asked to write an essay, was now formed with student parity take a test, or perhaps prepare a film representation. But in retrospect we can presentation, aepending on the department; they probably say that ironically, by the time student may be asked to do one of these things on the• · representation on decision-making councils spot or to have it done prior to coming· to the was in full swing, the zeal of tb.e early sixties­ interview. was already ebbing. The interdisciplinary committee questioned the candidates on such general matters as education, the role of the university in today's Edge of Night world, etc. to establish whether they had given The public wants practical subjects from any thought to these questions. Vipond continues. Continuing Education, courses that teach skilis · The final grading was split two-thirds to one­ that can be put to use immediately, Loyola's third in favour of the departmental team's continuing education director Do.ug Potvin tells report card. us. Vipond does not expect the Match of Minds Not surprisingly then, yoga, indoor gardening, scholarship to continue, now that Loyola is part typing, shorthand, interior design and tips on how oj Concordia. ·As a college, it could be more to buy a house are very popular courses . • flexible with allocation of government funds By contrast, courses on the Canadian short story for scholarships, she says. But now, the whole and children's literature were a flop this year. business of scholarships at both campuses is " You c·an't give a watered-down course in being rethought. English," Potvin says. Between 120 and 150 sllJdents applied for the scholarship each year; most of the 10 who won Because continuing education programs can be made_above average contributions to the Loyola more flexible than the regular degree programs, community, she says. Potvin observes, there is competition in some . instances. Continuing education F rench, for example, takes a lot of students who want simply to improve Tightening up loose ends their grammar without having to get too _p eeply into Literature as they would have to if they The age of permissive cour se selection and were going for a degree, Potvin says. free-wheeling education is fading. Old Sir George Many students enrol in continui ng education art The trend at Concordia is towards stri cter ( courses because they prefer the six-week honours requirements coupled with pre-arranged In November, 1961 , the georgian decided packages which concentrate on a particular facet pac kages of minors courses, says Loyola assis- to launch a university-wide survey (students, to the broader and more disciplined degree ' 'course, he says .

6 / T~ANSCRJPT / OCT. 25-NOV. 1, 1974

( PREVIEWS I and tune in to · channel 9: dress administrators please note that a "student entrepreneurial socie­ TVSGand · rehearsal tapings of all D. B. this is not to be confused with ty" set-up whereby student crews Clarke Theatre performances; a the engineers' annual "Deep are contracted for outside assign­ all that jazz news . magazine ~how inti,rviewing Throat" extravaganza). And there ments (karate demonstrations, TV screens at Si/ George may the hkes of Ench von/ Daniken will be coverage of local Georgian junior hockey games, who knows? soon be busting out all over with and · Michael Fish; productions hockey games, and of Germaine - maybe even bar mitzvahs a la performances from jazz heavies stemming from creative writing Greer and Stan Lee for those who Duddy Kravitz) in order to bring Keith Jarrett, Mose Allison, Elvin classes (a half-hour one-act play couldn't squeeze inro H-110. home more bread. Jones 'and Sonny Stitt. · is now in the works and they're TVSG spokesman George Mihal­ . looking· for more scripts); magic ka says the group is aiming for The club is after anyone ·who It can .happen because a fresh shows ,with commerce student a "grand opening" November I, wants to play a part in more batch of students at TV Sir George Blair Marshall' , . said to ·be famous with regular noon through 3 P..m . original programing - writers, soon expect musicians' guild clear- for his floating ball number; stu­ Monday-Friday programing t he- interviewers, researchers; as well ance to tape lively sets at the In dent-made films; and club speakers reafter. 1 as commerce students to drum up Ci:mcert club · for - free screening of interest. On the financial front, Mihalka outside business, and electrical in the Hall Building. Old favorites will not suffer: explains that the $8000 the club gets engineers "who know how to sol­ Other programing plans geared Monty Python will be back, as from the DSA is barely enough to der," says Mihalka: Those in­ to getting students to turn off will that zany "Movie Orgy" se­ sustain a mediocre video o-pera­ terested should drop in to , H-65 I­ Beat the Clock-soap opera drivel ries (Morality Squad-and paranoid tion. So they're trying to ·· 1aunch I from 10 a.m. to S p.m·. •

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)~~ L././/.E. ain't femininity, range of sexual ex­ pression, myths and fallacies just a bowl about sexual behavior, methods of contraception, anf ac­ ·ever extent he or she feels look at homosexuality" - has about that comet of a few years donaid Carey, Viveca Lindfors com fort able." been replaced ·b "The Boys back, plus the fact the major and Oliver Reed in a symbol­ Areas to be explored include in t_.he Band". studios are about to launch istic gripper; Dec. 2: "Pani­ no.tions of masculinity and See back page for schedule. voice-of-doom blockbusters. que Annee Zero" (Ray Mil­ So wh y not a vest pocket Mon­ ·land, 1962) with Ray Milland day retrospective further bun d­ (you know things aren't going RABBLERfrompage I ied under "Ecological Disas~ too well when Ray Milland monument in the town square at SIR GEORGE JOBS ter" and " Battle for Survival" ? speaks French); Dec. 9: "No rush hour. SECRET ARY - DEAN OF If we have to go down, at least When none of them would admit ARTS OFFICE (sc 2) Blade of Grass" (Cornet Wilde, Duties: Typing and general office it won' t be said that we went 1970); Dec. 16: "The Omega to being the man the police were .work. A great deal of telephone work down without a preview: Man" (Boris Sagal, 1971) with after, they were all thrown in is involved in handling inquiries on the part of new students. The candi­ Ecological . Disaster - Oct. Charlton Heston (Ben Hur jail. Says del Vasto: " ... whole group would stay in ' date will be responsible to two 28 : "The Magnetic Monster" 'meets mutants). persons within the department. (Curt Siodmak, 1953) with Ri­ Bonus - Dec. 23: "Things to jail, sometimes for months, at Q°i:aliHcations: Good typing skills; chard Carlson and King Dono­ Come" (Wilt.iam Cameron the expense of the government experience in reception work; bilin­ van, wherein a bright scienti­ Menzies, 1935) with Raymond until they discovered the iqentity gualism preferred. fic investigator uses some­ Massey and Ralph Richardson of the man they wanted. Upon SECRETARY· PHYSICAL PLANT (sc 3) thing called a "deltatron" to in H.G. Wells' accurate fore­ their release the whole group would go to another province Duties: The · candidate will act as squash a super-blob (might cast of WW I I. secretary to the director of physical scare t hose who have no sto­ All in H-110 at 8:30 p.m. for where they _were unknown and be­ plant. She will deal with superin­ mach for words like ' ' implo 75 ¢. gin the entire process over again. tendants, faculty, ,students and After: a year and a half of this persons outside the university com­ game we had a statute for consci­ munity. She will perform typing and general secretarial duties; maintain entious objectors." budget records; take minutes of When del Vasto was helping a meetings and compose own corre- Ecumenical ·ulster,Report group of shepherds to defend their spondence in both English and land from the govefnment, which French. Qualifications: Fluently bilingual; Out from under the bullets and bombshells of Northern Ireland wanted it for a military base, excellent typing and shorthand skills' comes a group which has gotten it together on both the religious the shepherds were a bit hesi­ in · both English and French. Ability and labour fronts. . tant at first but they soon caught to work under minimum supervision. on to del Vasto's notion of non­ Interested candidates are invited to A Belfast delegation of Catholic and Protestant labourers submit applications in writing ·or by a nd managers- who have found some common ground will be at violence a:'nd developed a few contacting the personnel.,, officers · as Loyola Monday, November 11 to show a 40 minute film , "Bel­ tactics of their own. They trucked indicated below: fast Report", and answer questions on the civil war--torn Bri­ 300 of their sheep to Paris and Mk:hael Gluck, 879-4521; tish province, at 8 p.m. in the F.C. Smith Au.ditorium. set them out to graze on the Lynn McMartin, 879-8116. lawns of the military school. Sir George Williams Campus

TRANSCRIPT/ OCT. 25 - NOV. 1, 1974 / 7 in the 7th floor cafeteria; Chinese Georgian Associa­ tion & MCSS $1 , non-members $1 .50, girls & football ./ players free.

Sunday 27 CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: " Franr;:ois I" (Christian Jacque, 1937) with Fernan­ de!, Henri Bose and Alice Tissot at 3 p.m. ; " Le I Mouton a Cinq Pattes" (Henri Verneuil, 1954) with Notices should be in Thursday morning for Friday publication. Contact Robin Palmer for Loyola events (AD Fernande!, Franr;:oise Arnoul and Louis de Funes at 233, 482-0320, ext. 438 ). Contact Maryse Perraud for Sir George events (2145 Mackay, basement, 879-2823) . ' 5 p.m.; "L'Auberge Rouge" (Claude Autant-Lara, . 1951) with Fernande!, Carette and Franr;:oise Rosay at 7 p.m.; "Le Petit Monde de Don Camillo" (Julien At Loyola Campus McCrea at 7 p.m. ; " The Wild Bunch" (Peckinpah ----0-uvivier., 1951) with Fernande!, Gino Cervi and Syl­ 1969) at 8:45 p.m. - both in F.C. Smith Auditorium vie at 9 p.m. in H-11 O; 7~¢ each. for 99¢ the double bill. Friday 25 SQCCER: Warriors vs. SGW at 4 p.m. at Loyola. PHOTO WORKSHOP: " Un avion un oiseau" exhibi­ Monday 28 tion by Michel Bonneau through Oct. 31 , Mon . • Fri. / 10:30 a.m. - 11 p.m. at 7308 Sherbrooke W. Tuesday 31 CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: LIBRARY EXHIBITION CENTRE: Pamela Harris' I ~·The Magnetic Monster" (Curt Siodmak, 1953) with LUNCH -,HOUR LISTENING: Schubert's Four Lieder "Admiral's Cove and Trout River" Nfld. photos Richard Carlson, King Donovan and Jean Bryon at ~ at noon in Studio One. through Nov. 5. 8:30 p.m. in H-11 O; 75¢. SEXUALITY WEEK: Ranges of sexual behaviour with SOCCER: Warriors vs . Bishop's at 4 p.m . at Loyo­ STUDENT INTERNATIONAL MEDITATION SOCIE­ SGW's Bob Nagge and Loyola's Sup Mei Graub at la. TY: Meeting at noon in H-627. noon; " The Boys in the Band" film at 2 p.m ., 2nd SKATING.PARTY ; 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Loyola. CENTRE FOR INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES: Da­ floor, Campus Centre. HOCKEY: Warriors vs. Ottawa U. at 8 p.m. at vid B. Brooks, director. of Ottawa's Office of Ener­ Loyola. gy Conservation, speaks on " Energy Conservation: FARMWORKER DAY: Why We Boycott (current posi­ Friday 1 How big a Target?" at 8 p. •m. in N-308. tion & short lil,m) af 3:30 p.m. in Loyola Chapel; URBAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION: Meeting with can­ Dolores Huerta (UFW co-founder & vice pr.esident) LUNCH HOUR LISTENING_: Schubert's Symphony no. didates from the three parties contesting ttte muni­ on " The Non-violent Social Revolution" at 4 p.m. in 5 in Bb in Studio One at noon. cipal election (moderator, CJAD's Peter Sherman) the Loyola Chapel; Farmworker ·Shared Supper (bring HOCKEY: Warriors vs. Waterloo at 8 p.m. in Loyo­ atB:30 p.m. in H-937. something for a common meal) at 5 p.m ..-, at the la. FINE ARTS FACULTY: Judy Burton, English Art Belmore House; car caravan to the Dominion Store SEXUALITY WEEK: Noon session on expectations in Educator, speaks an " Adolescence-Art- Education, picket line (St. Denis & Rachel) at 6:30 p.m. ; soli­ relationships; film " About Sex" 2-2:30 p.m., · Cam­ England, France & U.S.A." at 4 p.m. in H-520. darity rally with Dolores Huerta at Salle St. Louis pus Centre, 2nd floor. ENGINEERING: Films - " The Hollow Mountain" de France (750 est Roy, corner of Berri) at 8:30 (Hydro; Scotland) , " Saharan Venture", " Radiation p.m. Hazards" 11nd " Pax Atomis: Snap 7" (isotopic ener­ LS.A. FILM SERIES: " Clockwork Orange" at _12 Monday 4 gy) at 6: 1-5-p.m. in H-651 . noon, 3:15 p.m. and 8 p.m. in the F.C. Smith Au­ POETRY SERIES~ John Hollander reads at 8:30 p.m. ditorium for 99¢. in the Vanier Auditorium, free. LUNCH HOUR LISTEN ING : Schubert's Trio in Bb GEOGRAPHX: Dr. Eric Waddell on the breakdown of Tuesday 29 Major, op. 99, at noon in Studio One. culture on contact with colonialism in Melanesia at CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: 7 pcm~ in the Drummond Science Bldg., rm. 133. " La Templlte sur l'Asie" (Poudovkin·e. 1929) and Saturday 26 " La Terre" (Dovjenko, 1930) at 8:30 p.m. in H-110;- 75¢. , FOOTBALL: Warriors vs . Wilfred Laurier, at 2 Notices ENGINEERING FACULTY: Films (see Monday) at 1 p.m. at Loyola. . LOYOLA SKI CLUB has $.115 Dec. 26-31 week- at p.m. in H-905 . Mt. St. -Anne including meals, tow, transportation Sunday 27 and lodging; more from Rod at 488-4306 or Erwin; 768-0369. Wednesday 30 SUNDAY EUCHARIST: Celebrant & homilist is Bob CANADA MANPQWER knows of jobs for '75 grads Gaudet, S.J ., and the Loyola Choral Group under the with IBM, Atomic Energy, Dupont, Sun Lile,. Impe­ GEORGIAN CHRI STIAN FELLOWSHIP: General direction of El izabeth 1;:taughey at 11 :15 a.m. in the rial Oil , Royal Bank and Shell with application dead­ meeting at 3:30 p.m. in H-973. Loyola Chapel. lines late Oct. - early Nov.; Centennial Bldg., 489- INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS SOC IETY: Meeting at RESIDENCE COMMUNITY FILMS: "Getting Straight" ~5. - . 6 p.m . in 1:i -333,-6. with Elliott" Gould ,and Candice Bergen at 8 p.m. in b.OYOLA ENGLISH STUDENTS ASSOC. wants book BOARD OF GRADUATE STl:JDIES: Meeting at 10 th e Drummond Science Bldg., rm. 103 lor 99¢:- donations at its office in the Centennial Bldg. a.m. in H-769. · (they'll even pick them up if you phone 482-9280, .ext. Mooday 28 32); also looking for unpublished poetry and short­ stories for pr.oposed· journal (more from Deborah Thursday 31 TOUCH FOOTBALL: Play-offs begin at 12 noon at _ Barry, 932-4842 or at t_t,e office). Loyola. . ITALIAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION : " Alfredo;' Al­ GEOGRAPHY: China expert' Dr. Louis Veilleux at fredo" (Pietro Germi, 1972) with , 7 p.m. in the Drummond Science Bldg., rm. 133. Stefania Sandrelli and Carla Gravina at 2:30 p.m. LUNCH HOUR LISTENING: Schubert's " Die Winter­ Concord@-Wide in H-11 O; members 75¢ others $1 . CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: reise" nos. 21 -10 24, at noon in St1,1dio One. ; SEXUALITY WEEK: " Pregnancy: Qnoice or .,, " High Sierra" (Raoul Walsh, 1941) with Humphrey chance?" film 12-12:30 p.m.; Family Planning As­ Friday 25 Bogart and Ida Lupino at 7 p.m. ; " Machine Gun soc.'s Lou Connor 12:30-1 ; dramatization of real McCain" (Giuliano Mqntaldo, 1968) with Jolin Cassa­ life situations 1-2 p. m.; " The Story of Eric" (nat­ SENATE: Meeting at 2 p.m. in the C9nlerence vetes and Peter Falk at 9 p.m. in H- 11 O; 75¢ each. ural childbirth film) 2-2:30 p.m. ; film ·" About Sex" Room (main floor) of the Protestant School Board of UNIVERSITY COUNCIL ON STUDENT LIFE: Meet­ 3-3:30 p.m. - all at Campus Centre, 2nd floor. Greater Montreal building (corner of Fielding and ing at 4 p.m. in H-769 . C6te St. Luc Road, N.D.G.). SOCCER: Sir George vs Loyola at,t..oyola, 4 p.m. Tuesday 29 LUNCH HOUR LISTENING: Schubert's Symphony no. At Sir George Campus Friday 1 3 in D, at noon .i n Studio One. WOMEN'S BASKETBALL: Tommies vs. Vanier at _ MODERN LANGUAGES DEPARTMENT: German 7 p.m. af[oyola. / Friday 25 films " Im Darf der weissen Storch" , " Erdentage" , SEXUALITY WEEK: Myths & fallacies with SGW's " Marchenwald" and "Aul geht's" at 7:30 p.m. in Judy Dorfman 12-2 p.m.; " Sexuality and Communi-· CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: H-520; free. _ cation" film 2-3 p.m. at Campus Centre, 2nd floor. ''La Porteuse de Pain" (A. Rene Sti, 1934) with ARTS FACULTY COUNCIL: Meeting at 1:30 p.m. Fernande!, Jacques Gretillat and Germaine Dermoz in H-769. at 7 p.m.; " Angele" (, 1934) (Engl. CUSO: Information session 12:15 - 2 p.m. in H-620. Wednesday 30 subt.) with Fernande!, Henri Poupon and Jean Ser- SOCCER: C.M.R. vs Sir George at Trenholme Park vais at 9 p.m. in H-11 75¢ each. _ (past C~vendish in N.D.G.), 5:1.5 pm. HISTORY OF MONTREAL SERIES: SGW's Terry O; SOCIOLOGY: Jean eowell, executive director of HOCKEY: Guelph vs Sir George at Verdun audito­ Copp on " The Condition of the Working Class in rium, 8 p.m. Montreal in the early 20th Century" at 8 p.m. in PONY (Prostitutes Organization· of New York) speaks ·1 - 3 p.m. in H-620; free. the Vanier Auditorium. SEXUALITY WEEK: Concepts of masculinity & femi­ GALLERIES: Works by SGW students Francine Bour­ ninity with McGill's Ted Maroun 12-2 p.m. ; films get, Therese Cholette, Jean Jacques Giguere, Roz Saturday 2 Goodman, Mike Koolen;" Peter McGilton, Eii een Me­ ''About Sex" 2-2:30 p.m.; " The Story of . Eric" 3- HOCKEY: Waterloo vs Sir George at Verdun audi­ 3:30 p.m. at Campus Centre, 2nd floor. dinger, Hannah Ridolfi, Derry Timleck antl Yves Fontaine, until Nov. 12. torium, ~ p.m. COMMITIEE ON VISITING LECTURERS: Joseph WOMEN'S STUDIES ASSOCIATION: Meeting at 8 Ryan on the Arab- Israeli problem and the Middle p.m. , 2010 Mackay. East at_ 11 a.m. in the Drummond Science Bldg ., rm. 103. PSYCHOLOGY OPEN HOUSE: Series of lectures, Satur,day 26 discussions, demonstrations, films, coffee & donuts from 9 a.m. throughout day in the Bryan Bldg., 3rd CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: floor - SGW students welcome. " La Fille du Puisatier" (Marcel Pagnol, 1940) (Engl. • STUDENT SERVICES " FOCUS. QUEBEC" : NFB's subt. ) with Fernande!, and Josette Day at 6 ~ansCi-ipt " Un pays sans bon sens" (Pierre Perrault) at 2 p.m. p.m.; " La Vache et le Prisonnier" (Henri Verneuil, in the Vanier Auditorium, free. 1959 ._( Engl. sub!.) with ~Fernande!, Rene Havard and Published Fridays by the Information Office, Concor­ LUNCH HOUR LISTEN I NG : Schubert's Quintet for Albert Remy. at 8 p.m.;. "'Le Grand Chef" (Henri dia University, M,_ontreal H3G 1 MB . Office: 2145 Strings, op. 163, at noon in Studio One. Verneuil, 1958) with Fernande!, Gino Cervi and Pa­ Mackay (basement, 879-4136). Michael Hoffman, LOYOLA FILM SERIES:· "Ride the High Country" poul at 10 p.m. in H-110; 75¢ each. Malcolm Stone, Don Worrall (482-0320, ext 314), Joel (Sam Peckinpah, 1961) with Randolph Scott and Joel CHINESE GEORGIAN ASSOCIATION: Dance at 8 p.m. McCormick, editor. Submissions are welcome.