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Loyola-Alumnus-1972-Nov.Pdf ..... ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 72 Warriors' Club set up. New organization for alumni and friends. A new club for Loyola Alumni and a Family Skating Party on Friday, the YMHA, is serving as a consultant friends of the college has been November 24 from 6:30 - 8:00 p.m. to the Committee. launched by the Alumni Association in at the Loyola Rink, a reception with Warrior Club membership - cost­ conjunction with the college's Athletics cash bar following the Loyola/Univer­ ing $ l 0 .00 a year, - is open to all Department. sity ofToronto Hockey game on Friday, Loyola alumni and alumnae. Asso­ Named "The Warriors' Club" it December 15 and a morning ciate memberships ore available for focuses on the sports at Loyola. Mem­ Children's and Family Christmas non-Loyola graduates whose applica­ bership benefits include a season ticket Party with skating and Santa Claus tion is endorsed by two Loyola grad­ to all Varsity games, admission to on Saturday, December 16. uates. special receptions following major Funds collected by the club will be sports events and family use of the directed towards the Athletic Com­ college's Athletic Complex at specified pl ex. Proposed financing includes times. Loyola Sports Hall of Fame, a Loyola Plans include the setting up of ska­ Sports Honour Roll, the Bio-Physical ting, hockey and fitness clubs at the Education Laboratory, fitness testing, Athletic Complex for Warriors' Club research equipment and student members. A newsletter from Loyola loans. coaches is also envisioned. Events already scheduled include "THE WARRIORS' CLUB" LOYOLA OF MONTREAL Why a Warriors' 7141 SHERBROOKE ST. WEST Club? MONTREAL 262, QUEBEC $10.00 is enclosed for one year's K something is good for Loyola, the Alumni subscription lo "The Warriors' Club". Association will support it. If it is good for our mem­ bers, we will support it. tf it serves both, then our e ndorsement must be complete. W e think the Name Warriors' Club is such an undertaking. It is on enterprise which will strive to maintain Warriors' Club President Bud Patton. and create and interest in Loyola, its teams and Address its athletes. It is an enterprise which brings to The Alumni Association has as members tangible benefits, the schedule of which will be expanded with increased member­ selected Bud Patton, '53, as the first ship. It is an enterprise whKh in time will contri­ President of "The Warriors' Club". bute financially to the ahtletic programs of Loyola, An honourary President - a promi­ City .... .. ... .. Zone programs which are now subject to the severe nen I figure from the and business constraints of li,~ ited budgets. Province .... .. .... The contributions that sports hove made to the world - will be appointed shortly. traditions of Loyola are very significant and we Directors already named are are wrong is we fail to recogni1.e the full role Pl ease check the following: Bill Pelton '48, Wendy Linton '72, of our Warrior teams. At his recent induction Please send additional information to the Sports Holl of Fame, George Pigeon spoke Gord McCarthy '57, Bernie Mc­ of this institution which we hove all attended. Callum '43, Pat Boland (Director of I intend to contact other Alumni. The words were simple, but to some they said Women' s Athletics), Frank McNally ii all- " It has been so importonl lo belong" . That is why the Warriors' Club will be o success. Jr. '68, Pat Dubee Jr. '69, Len Swan­ son '72, Connie Broden '54, and Ed I intend lo contact non-Alumni. Bill Pelton President Enos, Director of Physical Education. I will be attending the post-game Alumni Association Morrie Bruker, long lime Director at reception (Dec. 15). Many University traditions to end­ Paul Gallagher at Fall Convocation Changed roles and an end "The college and university student to many traditional facets of the is no longer necessarily the young university within the next decade were adult; institutions no longer shut their forecast by Dawson College Director doors to students for five months a General Dr. Paul Gallagher '50, year or turn off their lights at 5 :00 speaking at Loyola's Fall Convocation, p .m.; the familiar divisions of learn­ Sunday, October 29. ing into disciplines and departments Dr. Gallagher predicted that Sp ring and faculties are now seen as often Convocation, homogeneous classes, as obstacles to real learning as they full -time formal education, univ ersity once were seen as essential lo learn­ studies organised to be completed ing." in four~ years, would disappear. Loyola President, the Very Rev­ Addressing a capacity F. C. Smith erend Patrick G . Malone, in his audience of graduates, their guests, address reported that negotiations on faculty and administrators, Dr. Gal­ the Loyola/ Sir George union were lagher pointed to education reform of progressing and an agreement was the '60s and indicated that the '70s hoped for in the next few weeks. would continue lo see the trend of He also reported progress on the change. student campus centre, scheduled for The Fall Convocation itself, a rarity Dr. Gallagher addressing opening next year and commented 10 years ago, he said, was a pioneer­ Convocation audience on changes inteaching -learningstruc­ ing trend that would receive I ittle vi nee." tures at the university level. attention in another decade. Education Dr. Gallagher stated that "in many Fr. Malone congratulated officers would be regarded as a con ti nu ing respects, it is this sense of constant of the Evening Division for their "great and normal activity that would need change that is so mystifying and un­ effort" in assisting the college and the no special recognition. settling for most of us. But it is this evening students. Virtually every feature of Quebec's very sense- and the ability to live educational system had been modified with it- that is critical to education Major prize winner was Zavohir in the last decade, he said. "Schools for the future." Patel, 22, of Mariette Street, N .D.G. do very different things than they The major change wa; that today He received the Evening Division used to; schools and colleges and education is no longer re11arded as Medal for gaining the highest overall universities are financed in quite dif­ something one received in tender academ ic average and the Loyola Eve­ ferent ways; educational architecture years, but as a lifelong process giving ning Students' Association Science and equipment have been modified; a person the potential lo appreciate Medal for the highest average in the teachers are different and act differ­ and enjoy his humanity. Faculty of Science. ently. All of this fundamentally be­ This was leading to colleges and Velma Bourque, Regional Teach­ cause it has been recognized that universities Iran sform ing them selves ing Supervisor for Indian and Eskimo students are different." into centres of continuing education Schools, Department of Indian Affairs He pointed out that the pivotal where traditional forms of undergrad­ and Northern Development, Quebec point for reform has been the estab­ uate study becomeonlyoneofseveral C ity, and form er principal of Karon­ lishment of the CEGEP's- " symbols patterns of learning rather than the hianon ha School, Caughnawaga, re­ of the new age of education in the Pro- central work. ceived the Loyola Evening Students' Association Arts Medal, awarded to the graduate with the highestav erage in the Faculty of Arts. William Surtees, Central Office Manager at Bell Canada' s Montreal Netw ork Serv ices Plan t, gained the Loyola Ev ening Students' Association Commerce Medal, awarded to th e graduate w ith the high est averag e in the Faculty of Commerce. V a ledictorian w as Norma n Daniel Rya n of LaSalle. A teacher at Mac­ Donald Cartier High School, St. Hu­ b ert, M r. Ryan w as one of the two Sci ence graduates this y ear lo re­ ceive his Bachelor Deg ree M agna Alumni Association President Bill Pelton congratulating major medal winner Cum Lau d e. Zavahir Patel. LOYOLA EVENTS The computor as tutor WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15 Loyola Film Series presents: The Band Wagon (1953) and Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954). Time: 6 p .m. ar.d 8 p .m. Place: F. C. Smith Auditorium Admission: S1 .00 non -students THURSDAY, NOV EMBER 16 OPEN LECTURE Pierre Vallieres will speak and answer questions. Time: 4 p.m. Place: F. C. Smith Auditorium Admission: Free Canada Council Poetry Series pre­ sents: Fred Cogswell. Time: 8 p.m. lo 10:30 p .m. Place: Vanier Auditorium Admission: Free Dr. Kalman demonstrating the computer tutor. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20 Guest Lecturer: Douglas Saunders of the Faculty of Computer given tutorials for al most Law at the University of Windsor will Loyola's Chem every subject taught at Loyola. That's speak on: Treaties in Historical Per­ the aim of Dr. Calvin Kalman, Assis­ spective. tant Professor in the college's Physics Time: 7 p.m. lo 9:30 p.m. Study Institute Department. Place: A 314 Dr. Kai man has experimented with Admission: Free computer aided instruments (C.A.I. ) praised. for the past three years with calculus WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22 students. Last week he demonstrated Loyola Film Series presents: A Hard Day's Night (1964) and Sweet Charity Loyola's Summer Cl,em Study In­ his method to Loyola faculty to encour­ (1970). stitute, inaugurated this year by the age expansion of the program. Time: 6 p .m. and 8 p·. m. college's Summer School, and Chem­ " I feel we have reached the stage Place: F. C. Smith Auditorium istry Department and directed at high where C.A.I. can be experimented Admission: Sl.00 non-students.
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