the university of newswestern ontario

Voi. 5 No. 30 March 12, 1970

Published for the Faculty and Staff of The University of Western Ontario by the Department of Information Services and University Publications

Toronto Economics Prof To Give Ford Lecture On White Paper on Taxes

Professor John Bossons, of the University of Toronto Economics department w ill present Nurses To Introduce a Ford Foundation Series public lecture on "The White Paper Tax Reform Proposals". Competition Deadline for New Program To Prepare 1970 President’s Medals Teachers of Nursing The lecture w ill take place Wed., Mar. 18, Announced as May 1 at 12:00 noon in room 40 of the School of A program to prepare teachers of Nursing Business Administration. Western's President, Dr. D.C. Williams, has has been established by Western's Faculty announced the opening of the competition of Nursing. It will begin in September of Professor Bossons served for the President's Medals for 1970. These this year. as Research Supervisor medals are awarded annually for the best with the Carter Royal single poem, best short story, best scholarly Western will offer an M.Sc.N. to students Commission on Tax­ article and best general article submitted for who complete the special program in one ation from 1964 to the competition. A cash award will year. The program is needed, says the 1967. He has main­ accompany each medal. Faculty, because of the increasing demands tained and extended his for teachers for schools of nursing with tax interests by produc­ To be eligible, work must be written in preparation at the graduate level. ing over the past five either French or English, by a Canadian years 15 articles, studies citizen or a person resident in , and Students entering the degree must have and working papers on must have appeared in a Canadian publi­ a baccalaureate degree in nursing with various aspects of tax­ cation in the calendar year preceding the a minimum B. average. Students with a Prof. Bossonsation, some of which year of the award. The closing date for B average from either of Western's two were an outgrowth of the Carter Commission. entries is May 1, 1970. Winners will be new baccalaureate courses may enter In addition he has published in the economic informed and announced early in October. directly into the new program. Graduates and corporate finance areas. from earlier programs or from other Competitors should submit three copies of Universities must have their credentials Although Professor Bossons is on the Faculty each entry, at least one of which must be assessed and a qualifying year may be at the University of Toronto, he is at Yale required. clipped from the issue of the publication University for the 1969-70 academic year as in which the entry appeared. Each copy a Visiting Professor of Economics. He has a should be clearly marked with the name and The course arrangement is designed to Ph.D. from Harvard and has held academic address of the person submitting the entry introduce basic concepts and theories of appointments at Harvard, M.I.T., U.B.C., and with the name of the category in which learning and education and to demonstrate Carnegie-Mellon University and the Univer­ it is submitted. No entries will be returned. their application in nursing education. sity of Chicago. Editors of Canadian periodicals may also Courses have been developed keeping in select and submit what they consider the mind research findings of studies of He is actively engaged in the government best pieces in their publications. nursing teachers and their preparation for field and is currently a Consultant to the teaching. Student participation in course Ontario Department of Treasury and Entries should be sent to the Chairman of work with laboratories and practice will Economics. He is also at home in the the Awards Committee, Professor R.G.N. business world and is a Director and be stressed throughout the year. Bates, Department of English, University Treasurer of Markham Publishing Company, College. The courses include: current issues in Chairman of the Board of Canadian nursing; research methodology and clinical Resource Management Limited and Judges reserve the right not to make an investigation; education and the teacher's a Director of Hytec Electronics Limited. role; measurement and evaluation in award if the calibre of the entries does not nursing education; human learning and warrant it. planning for teaching and student personnel services in nursing education. Applications Invited for Dons In Women’s Residences Preparation of the nurse-teacher implies IMPORTANT MEETINGS consideration of those concepts and Applications are invited for the position of assumptions relative to learning behavior Don in the Women's Residences at Western. University Senatew ill meet Fri., Mar. 13, and their application to teaching. The The positions are open to members of the at 2:30 p.m. in room 110, School of education of the nurse-teacher that will Faculty and to students of senior standing. Business Administration. prepare her to guide students toward the Applications may be obtained from the provision of health needs of individuals Office of the Dean of Women in Stevenson Board of Governorsw ill meet Fri., and families in a rapidly changing society Hall or from the Office of the Warden of Mar. 20, at 2:00 p.m. in the Board Room is the focus of the program. Residences in Delaware Hall. of Stevenson Hall. Dr. Haust moderated a panel discussion on Western Faculty "Problems in Pediatric Pathology". On Mar. Make The NEWS 11 she was co-chairman of a scientific session on Endocrinological and Bone Diseases. Professor Paul de Mayo,of the Department She will conduct a short refresher course WESTERN EVENTS of Chemistry, has received a grant for on Placental Pathology Mar. 13 for the fifth consecutive annual meeting of the I.A.P. $15,743 from the United States Department Geophysics Guest Speaker,Dr. A.G. Darnley, of Health, Education and Welfare. The mon­ Geological Survey of Canada, will speak on Professor Harry Beatty,of Althouse College ey will.be used in his studies on "The Consti­ the "Development of a survey method— of Education, has been chosen by the Govern­ tution of Primycin" and the award was gamma-ray spectronometry" THURS., ment of Canada to serve on a team of experts recommended by the Allergy and Infectious MAR. 12, at 1:30 p.m. in room 46, to study technical education and technician Biological and Geological Sciences bldg. Diseases committee of the health department. teacher training programs in South East Asia. Professor Beatty w ill be one of a team of Physics Colloquiumwith Professor William Professor John-Paul Bracey,of the Faculty five, from Canada, India, Japan, Pakistan Chupka, Argonne National Laboratory, of Music, was the featured soloist in the and the United Kingdom to be seconded by Argonne, Illinois, will be held THURS.,MAR. London Symphony Orchestra "Pops" the Canadian International Development 12, at 3:30 p.m. in room 233, Physics bldg. Concert held last Sunday in Centennial Hall. Agency for a period of three months. He will speak on "Photoionization Mass Mr. Bracey, an instructor in piano, performed This team will visit 17 countries currently Spectrometry". the Saint-Saëns Piano Concerto in G Minor. benefiting from the Colombo Plan assistance. English Department Lecture Serieson Professor Richard Stanjforth,of the Depart The Romantics as Critics of Wordsworth, ment of Botany, attended the 24th annual continues THURS., MAR. 12, at 4:00 p.m. technical sessions on Biological Research, Business School in room 342, Talbot College. Dr. R.G. held at Carleton University at the end of Announces New Program Woodman, Department of English, will speak February. He presented a paper on "The Dis­ In Business Research on " 'That Thou Shouldst Cease To Be': tribution of Three Polygonum Species near Shelley as a Critic of Wordsworth". London, in relation to Soil Type and Land Use" during the sessions. Western's School of Business Administration has established a new program. Called a English Department Film Seriescontinues THURS., MAR. 12, at 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 Dr. S.M. Dickinson,of the Faculty of Engi­ Workshop in Business Research, it is to run p.m. in Middlesex Theatre, with two show­ neering Science, w ill attend a Symposium on from the end of May to mid-August. ings of "Rashomon", a classic Japanese film Structural Dynamics at the Loughborough Purpose of the workshop is to bring by Kurosawa, which put Japanese cinema University of Technology, Leicestershire, on the map. Admission is 75 cents. England from Mar. 23 to 25. Dr. Dickinson together Faculty members at Western and will present a paper on "The free vibration other Canadian business schools in an Botany Seminar Speaker,Mr. J.S. Maini, of a model of a car body". atmosphere conducive to research so that they may work on their individual or joint Canadian Forestry Service, Ottawa, will speak on "Ecology of Widely Distributed Professor Sam Martin,Chairman of the research projects. During the workshop Species—Populus tremuloides" THURS., Finance Department, School of Business regular seminars w ill be held to discuss MAR. 12, at 8:00 p.m. in room 116, Administration, has been elected a Fellow research proposals, methodology, output Biological and Geological Sciences bldg. of the Institute of Chartered Accountants and conclusions. of Ontario. The Fellowship was announced French Film Seriesat the London Public at the annual dinner of the Institute last For the first year of the program six fellow­ Library and A rt Museum, continues THURS., Friday evening. Professor Martin w ill receive ships will be available to cover the costs of MAR. 12, at 8:00 p.m. with a film entitled his certificate at a special ceremony from residence, research assistant, office facilities, "Gribouille" by M. Allegret. Admission is $1. Mr. R.D. Mackenzie, President of the computer time, secretarial service and Institute. travelling. Three of the fellowships will be awarded to Faculty of Western's School 20/20 Gallery Poetry Readingby Margaret Atwood, winner of the Governor General's Dr. M.A. Bergougnou, of the Faculty of and three to Faculty from other Canadian Award for Poetry, w ill be held THURS., Engineering Science, has recently participated business schools. MAR. 12, at 9:00 p.m. in the gallery, in an exchange of conferences between 68 King Street. The reading is sponsored Western and the Universities of Waterloo in Candidates for fellowships must be full-time, by the Canada Council and is part of a series Ontario and Sherbrooke in Quebec. He pre­ permanent business Faculty members of on at the gallery. Admission is free and sented lectures on the fluidized bed reactor Canadian Universities offering a bachelor's everyone is welcome. at both universities and Professors of the degree in business or commerce. People other two universities w ill give seminars to undertaking a research project as a require­ Noon-Hour Program at the London Public Western's graduate students on reactor ment for a further degree are not eligible. Library and A rt Museum FRI., MAR. 13 at stability and control. Selection of research fellows w ill be based 12:15 p.m. will be "Paint-by-numbers" a talk upon the research proposals submitted by by Bryan Maycock, an assistant curator with Dr. D. Borwein, Head of the Department of the candidates and the selection committee the galleries. Mathematics, w ill be one of the main will be primarily concerned with the speakers at a Colloquium on Sequence Spaces quality, importance and feasibility of Faculty of Music Recitalwith James and Summability to be held at York Univer­ the proposed project. MacDonald, french horn, assisted by sity next week. Another of the speakers, Sheila Ryerse, piano, Antonia Mazan, Professor A. Peyerimhoff, of the University Fellowship winners will be announced piano and Sandra Stark, violin, w ill be of Ulm, West Germany, will visit in the Fri., Apr. 10 and the deadline for appli­ held F.R I., MAR. 13, at 8:30 p.m. in the Department of Mathematics at Western cations is Fri., Mar. 27. Applications should Faculty of Music annex. Works by Mar. 16 and 17 before proceeding to the be addressed to The Director of Research, Beethoven, Hindemith and Brahms will colloquium. School of Business Administration. be performed. Admission is free. They should be accompanied by an out­ Dr. F.R. Sergovich,of the Department of line of the research proposal and a letter Exhibitions Official Openingsat the London Anatomy and the Children's Psychiatric of reference from the Dean of the Public Library and A rt Museum will be held Research Institute, has been invited to business school. FRI., MAR. 13, at 8:30 p.m. in the galleries. participate in a symposium on the Biological Architectural hangings by Guerite Stein- Basis of Behavior, at the California Institute bacher and Carl Schaefer's Retrospective of Technology, Pasadena, California next w ill be opened. Both artists w ill be on hand. Monday and Tuesday. Staff Positions Open at Western Spanish and Italian Department Colloquium Dr. M. Daria Haust,of the Department of on Calderon w ill be held SAT., MAR. 14, Pathology, is attending the annual pathology Secretary II — Political Science beginning at 11:30 a.m. in room 147, meetings at St. Louis, Missouri this week. Secretary II — Law Medical Sciences bldg. Dr. C.A. Jones, She was invited to participate in the sym­ Secretary II — Accounting (Fees) Trinity College, Oxford, w ill speak on posium on fibroblasts at the annual meeting Secretary III — Admissions "Shakespeare and Calderon" at 12:00 noon; of the Pediatric Pathology Club Mar. 7 and Secretary III — Registrar Professor P.N. Dunn, University of delivered a paper on "The fibroblast—its Secretary II — Information Services and Aberdeen and Rochester, w ill speak on structure and function in health". At the University Publications "Calderon, poet of extremity" at 2:15 p.m.; annual meeting of the International Academy and Dr. Jones w ill speak on "The comedies of Pathology which followed on Mar. 10, Technician I - II — Anatomy of Calderon" at 3:30 p.m. Classics Department Colloquiumon Faculty of Music Recitalto have been p.m. to the music of The Play Boys. "Catullus" will be held SAT., MAR. 14, presented by violist Mikiko Kohjitani, Dinner tickets are $4 per person and dance from 1:00 p.m. in room 110, School of TUES., MAR. 17, at 8:30 p.m. has been tickets are $1 per person. Attendance is Business Administration. Professor N.B. postponed until Wed., Apr. 1, at 8:30 restricted to members and their adult Crowther, of Western, w ill speak on p.m. in the Faculty of Music annex. guests. T.G.I.F. is cancelled on this day. "Catullus and His Contemporaries" at 1:00 p.m.; Professor D.F.S. Thomson, U.W.O. Symphonic Band,under conductor, Humanities Association of Canada (London University of Toronto, will speak on Professor J. Paul Green, of the Faculty of Branch) w ill meet FRI., MAR. 20, at 8:00 "The Lyric Epigram: Catullus 85" at Music, w ill present a concert WED., MAR. p.m. in the Sage Room of Huron College. 2:00 p.m. and Professor K.F. Quinn, 18, at 12:30 p.m. in Talbot Theatre. The Professor Ernest Redekop, of the Depart­ University of Toronto, will speak on band w ill play works by Bartók, Bilik, Jacob ment of English, will speak on "Brave New "The Dismissal (Poem 11)" at 3:30 p.m. and Respighi. Admission is free. World: Paradise Lost in Cooper's 'The Crater' and Thomas Coles' 'The Course of Medical Educational Television Series Geology Film Seriescontinues WED., MAR. Empire' ". continues SUN., MAR. 15, at 9:00 a.m. 18, at 12:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. in room 22, and immediately following the last program Biological and Geological Sciences bldg, with broadcast for the day and Tues., Mar. 17, at showings of "Alaskan Earthquake" and Law Reform Commission 7:45 a.m. with a color program on "Seizures" aerial photographs of Hydro resources. involving Faculty of Medicine staff, Dr. A. Admission is free. To Hold Public Hearings Hudson, Dr. John Girvin, Dr. G. Hinton and Dr. A. Kertesz. Sociology Seminar Seriescontinues WED., The Ontario Law Reform Commission will MAR. 18, at 12:30 p.m. in room 288, hold public hearings in the Faculty of Law's India-Canada Associationwill present the University College, with a lecture by Moot Court Room Monday and Tuesday, film "Ram aur Shyam", a Hindi movie with Professor Walter Gagne, Department of March 16 and 17 from 10:00 a.m. to English subtitles SUN., MAR. 15, at 2:00 Political Science, on "Social-Class Voting approximately 4:00 p.m. p.m. in Middlesex Theatre. Admission in Canada". charge is $1.50. Subject of the public hearings will be Physics M.Sc. Colloquiumw ill be given by "Sunday Observance Legislation in Ontario". Sunday Nine O'clockwill present Carlos Mr. L.J. Sennema, WED., MAR. 18, at 2:30 Montoya, renowned classical and flamenco p.m. in room 233, Physics bldg. He w ill The Commission w ill receive briefs and hear guitarist SUN., MAR. 15,at 9:00 p.m. in speak on his thesis work on "A Spectrometer oral submission during the two-day sessions. Alumni Hall. A reception in room 15 for the Sub-Millimeter (50—1000 Microns) follows the concert. Students admitted free; Region". Members of the Commission are: H. Allan non-students $2. Leal, former Dean of Osgoode Hall Law 20/20 Gallerywill show films by Michael School, Chairman; the Honorable J.C. Engineering Seminarswith Dr. Myron Snow WED., MAR. 18, at 7:00 p.m. in the McRuer, retired Chief Justice of the High Robinson, Health Protection Engineering main building of , room Court of Ontario; W.R. Poole, a London Division, U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, 232. Tickets are $2.50. lawyer; the Honorable Richard A. Bell, will be held MON., MAR. 16, at 2:30 p.m. an Ottawa lawyer; and W. Gibson Gray, in room 120, Engineering Science bldg, U.W.O. History Clubw ill meet WED., MAR. a Toronto lawyer. Counsel to the and Tues., Mar. 17, at 1:30 p.m. in room 18, at 7:30 p.m. in the Graduate Students' Commission for this project is Professor 210, Engineering Science bldg. He w ill speak Lounge, Somerville House. Professor Ronald Atkey of Western's Faculty of Law. on “ Recent Advances in Electrostatic Wallace K. Ferguson, Department of History, Precipitation" Monday and w ill make will speak on "The Study of History". Professor Jim Rendall, also on the Law comments of particular interest to students Faculty, and several Law students at of Electrostatics Tuesday. Kinotek Film Seriesat the London Public Western are expected to present briefs to Library and A rt Museum will show "Duck the Commission. Soup", a feature-length Marx Brothers film Visiting Lecturer in Botany,Dr. E.L. WED., MAR. 18, at 8:00 p.m. in the McWilliams„Botanical Gardens, University auditorium. Admission is 50 cents. U.W.O. Choir Sings of Michigan, will speak on "Comparative Genecology of Amaranthus Retroflexus and Economics Seminarwill be given by Prof­ Bunny Bundle Concert A. Hybridus" MON., MAR. 16, at 8:00 p.m. essor E.D. Domar, Department of Economics, in room 47, Biological and Geological Massachusetts Institute of Technology Western's President, Dr. D.C. Williams, Sciences bldg. THURS., MAR. 19, at 3:30 p.m. in room London's Mayor Herb McClure and CFPL 84, University College. Radio DJ, Bill Brady, w ill be guest conduc­ Pollution Probe Public Meetingw ill be held tors when the U.W.O. Choir sings a Bunny MON., MAR. 16, at 8:00 p.m. in the English Department Lecture Serieson Bundle Concert Sat., Mar. 14. auditorium of the London Public Library The Romantics as Critics of Wordsworth and A rt Museum. The gravel pits, the continues THURS., MAR. 19, at 4:00 p.m. The concert will include a wide variety of London freeway and the non-returnable in room 342, Talbot College, with a lecture choral works sung by the 70-voice extra­ bottle problem will be discussed. Every­ by Professor C.E. Sanborn, Department of curricular choir under the direction of one welcome. English, on "Arnold as a Critic of Words­ Professor Gordon Greene, of the Faculty w orth". of Music. Curtain time for the concert to Faculty of Music Violin Recitalw ill be be held in Alumni Hall is 8:30 p.m. presented by violinists, Peggy Hills and Astronomy Colloquium with Mr. George Sylvia Novak, MON., MAR. 16, at 8:30 Brandis, Radio Astronomy Observatory, The choir has just completed a week's tour p.m. in the Faculty of Music annex. University of Michigan, w ill be held of Ontario singing nine concerts in five days They will play a program of works by THURS., MAR. 19, at 4:00 p.m. in room in communities from Georgetown to Ottawa. Ba:h, Bartók, Brahms and Grieg. Admission G10, 1383 Western Road. He w ill speak is tree. on "The Michigan Radio Source Survey". Tickets for the concert are available from Words and Music, 426 Richmond Street at Faculty of Music Student Ensemblesw ill English Department Film Seriescontinues a cost of $2. All proceeds are for the perform TUES., MAR. 17, at 12:30 p.m. THURS., MAR. 19, at 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 Crippled Children's campaign. in the Faculty of Music annex. String, brass p.m. in Middlesex Theatre, with two show­ and woodwind ensembles w ill present a ings of "The Trial". Admission is 75 cents. program of chamber works. Admission is free. Rhubarb Experimental Theatrewill present four, one-act plays by American playwright Astronomy Colloquium with Mr. Thomas Sam Shephard beginning THURS., MAR. 19 G. Braneslll, David Dunlap Observatory, and continuing Mar. 20, 21, 26, 27 and 28 will be held TUES., MAR. 17, at 4:00 p.m. in the London Little Theatre's Mini Theatre, in room G 10, 1383 Western Road. He will 214 Richmond Street. Curtain time is speak on "The Period-Luminosity Relation 8:00 p.m. Admission is $2. for Mira-type Variable Stars". University Club of London Supper Dance Faculty of Law Flicksw ill present the film w ill be held FR I., MAR. 20, beginning at "Le Bonheur" TUES., MAR. 17, at Z:30 6:00 p.m. with a reception, followed by p.m. in the Law bldg. Admission is 50 cents. dinner at 6:30 p.m. and dancing at 9:00 Western Purchases Milton Addenda

One hundred and twenty-three titles were Published by the added to the Milton Collection in January. Department of Information Services Referred to as the "M ilton Addenda" they and University Publications were collected during the past six months Editor Margaret Chartrand by Mr. G. William Stuart, of California, The Phone 679-2329 from whom the original Milton Collection was purchased last March. U.W.O. NEWS Deadline Friday prior to publication The most valuable single item in the addenda is "Lycidas", a six-page poem in "Justa Edovardo King Naufrago" 1638, a collection of obsequies to the memory of Edward King, a Cambridge school mate Western Student Wins Alleged Space Surplus in who accidentally drowned. A very rare Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Ont. Universities Created item, it is doubtful that another will ever come on the market. Almost as rare is A Western Graduate Student in History has By Inaccurate Statistics "Literae Nomine Senatus" . . . Liepzig, been named one of five winners of Queen 1690, the addition which completes Members of the Committee of Presidents Elizabeth II Scholarships awarded by the Western's holdings of Milton's letters up have been concerned about the damage done Ontario Government. to 1700 in all editions, states and issues. to the image of the universities by articles Gaps have also been filled in "Paradise Lost" and editorials in the press based on statistics so that now Western lacks only one pre Miss Margaret Mattson, M.A. has been published in the Committee on University granted the scholarhsip valued at $5,000 Affairs' annual report, alleging a substantial 1730 edition. to continue doctoral studies in History. surplus of space in Ontario universities. Her thesis will be entitled "Protection of Mr. Stuart brought the addenda by train Canadian Interests in trans-Atlantic and In an attempt to correct some of these from Marino, California to Sarnia where he trans-Canadian Aviation 1919-1937". misleading impressions, the Director of was met by Mr. Lloyd Pfaff, U.W.O. Research for CPUO prepared a letter which Customs Officer and Mrs. Lucy Greene, The scholarships were established in July was published in The Globe and Mail on Rare Books Librarian. of 1959 to commemorate the visit to Feb. 12. Ontario by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. They are intended primarily for doctoral Mr. Hansen's letter pointed out that the students in the humanities, social sciences Sensitivity Training Course statistics in the CUA report contained To Be Offered at Western or mathematics who express a serious inaccuracies leading to a significant over­ interest in University teaching. statement in the amount of space in the The Summer School and Extension Depart­ Swedish Economist universities, and that the calculations of ment will offer a sensitivity training course "surplus" had been based on a square-footage from Mar. 30 to Apr. 11 (eight evenings and allowance which was not agreed upon. The To Lecture at Western two Saturday afternoons). letter further pointed out that interpretations of the CUA report failed to acknowledge Swedish labor economist, Dr. Rudolf The course entitled "Sensitivity Training: that with the rapid growth of the Ontario Meidner w ill present an Economics A Laboratory in Interpersonal Dynamics" university system and the fact that building seminar Tues., Mar. 17 at 2:30 p.m. (for personal growth and more effective must be done in block fashion, many insti­ in room 84, University College. leadership) is aimed at improving skills of tutions had necessarily acquired lead space understanding one's own behavior as well Dr. Meidner is the leading labor market to accommodate future enrolments. It was also noted that the space statistics cited as that of others in interpersonal and in economist in Sweden and in addition to group relationships. extensive writings on labor market problems, contained many older facilities, some of which were obsolescent. he has also had very considerable influence Registration for the course is restricted to on Swedish policies in this area. Mr. Hansen's letter concluded: "...we must two groups of 15 persons each. Tuition is $55. For further information contact the He studied in Sweden and obtained his emphasize that the allegations that Ontario Summer School and Extension Department doctorate from the University of Stockholm universities now enjoy a cushion of 1.2 at 3632 or 3634. in 1954. From 1945 to 1966 he was the million square feet and 'should have their director of the Economics Secretariat of wings clipped' simply does not represent the Swedish T.U.C.(L.O.). A t the present the true situation. It is regrettable that Educational Technology time he is the director of the Swedish a report by the Committee on University Study May Be Done National Institute for Labor Market Affairs contains outdated, inaccurate space Research. data and estimates of space surpluses which A t a recent meeting, the Committee of are based on a standard which has not Presidents discussed with Dr. D.T. Wright, been established except as an interim Applications Invited for Chairman of the Ontario Government Com­ measure. The universities collectively are mittee on University Affairs, the possibility CUTA Executive Secretary not out of line in their space and some of of undertaking a study of educational tech­ our universities are operating with less space The Council for University Theatres and Art nology. Dr. Wright stated that a great deal than they need." (CUTA) invites applications for the position of simplistic opinion had been expressed of Executive Secretary to the Council. on applications of technology to education, The calculations of required space in the but that these opinions had never been CUA report were based on a standard of 130 The candidate should have administrative properly studied or verified. He felt that net assignable square feet per full-time ability and an interest in the arts. Salary it would be worthwhile to investigate the student, a figure utilized in the Department would be commensurate with qualifications state of knowledge in this field and of University Affairs' interim capital formula. and experience. The appointment would potentialities for applications to the CPUO has submitted a brief to the Com­ be for one year, renewable. Ontario university scene. mittee on University Affairs arguing the Responsibilities of the Executive Secretary inadequacy of this standard. After under­ Draft terms of reference for such a study would be: to act as secretary for the council taking comparisons with a number of other are being discussed by CPUO and CUA. as well as for the sub-committee on Althouse, jurisdictions in the United States, CPUO The study will attempt to evaluate the use Middlesex and Talbot Theatres, for its sub­ has recommended acceptance of a minimum of educational technology as a means of committee on Alumni Hall and for its sub­ average of 132 square feet per full-time enhancing university-level education. committee on A rt; to deal with all reserva­ equivalent student (including part-time "Educational technology" will be broadly tions and bookings for these facilities in the students) which is approximately 140 square defined to include educational television context of policies established by the feet per full-time student. (both closed-circuit and broadcast), other council; and to provide information on audio-visual media, and programmed cultural activities on the campus and in the instruction (including computer-assisted). City of London.

Applications with references should be sent by Apr. 1 to Professor P.D. Fleck, Chairman, Council for University Theatres and Art, The Department of English, University College.