P.M. in Room AD-128 of Loyola's Administration Building. Refreshments will be available. Physicist Speaks Dr. Calvin Kalman, Loyola Physics ·professor, will discuss the basis of scientific principles at next week's lecture of Loyola's "Conversation with Arts and Science" noon Thursday, Feb. 26, Rm 208 Bryan Building. ONCORDIA UNIVERSITY Volume 2, number 20 February 19, 1976 I Of his lecture topic, he said : "Scientists are human and fallible and consequently they and their discoveries are influenced by October 1st, 1976 a position of instructor for what might be called their cultural eo Simpson To Read francophone studies. Toward promoting contents." studies in the area of La Francophonie and Kalman feels that science, never working t SGW Friday Night encouraging Canadian studies in France, it is · in a vacuum, tends to reflect the state of Sir George's Department of English will hoped the first occupant of this post will be a man's communal activity and cannot be Canadian. present a reading by Leo Simpson this divorced from this. Friday night, Feb. 20 at 8 :30 in H-651. The successful candidate will teach three Similarly, he said, the same contraints Born in Ireland, Leo Simpson has been hours per week to approximat~ly fifty exist in literature, where an approach makes living in since 1961. He is a students at the second and third year licence of it a single thing, "studied only in terms of well-known book critic and has written a level. The course will consist of an its own internal structure and develop­ number of successful television plays as well introduction to French-Canadian civiliza­ ment." as numerous radio plays for CBC Stage and tion and literature as well as the CBC Playhouse. Several of his plays for .Jrganization of cultural activities reflecting Vernissage radio have been broadcast by the BBC in modern Canadian society with emphasis on England and by National Public Radio in the cinema and folklore. Preference will be Tonight Thursday, February 19th at 8 : 00 United States. given to persons commencing their P .M. is the vernissage of the Loyola Student In 1966 Leo Simpson resigned his job as academic careers who are Canadian Exhibition of paintings, drawings, graphics publicity director and editor for a Toronto citizens. Salary will vary between 5214 and and sculptures. 7900 Francs per month. book publisher in order to concentrate fully Two-dimensional art work will be upon hiswriting. His first novel, Arkwright, Mr. Jean-Herve Donnard, President of exhibited in the Campus Centre Lounge at was published in 1971 and his second, The the Universite de Grenoble III will visit Loyola, whereas the three-dimensional Peacock Papers, appeared in 1973; a major Canada from February 29th to March 7th, ·work can be seen in the Fish Bowl at Hings- satire of contemporary manners and 1976 to interview candidates. Applicants ton Hall, Loyola Campus. literature. He has also published a collection should telephone collect Mr. Stephen Some of the works will be for sale. of short stories entitled The Lady and the Goban at the Association of Universities The exhibit will continue through March Travelling Salesman. and Colleges of Canada, Ottawa, (613) 4th. In his presentation at Sir George, Leo 237-3330, for details of the time and place of Simpson will read from his forthcoming interviews. A curriculum vitae should also Zoopraxography novel The True Adventures of Invisible be sent to AUCC, ;J. 51 Slater Street, Ottawa, Jack. Ontario. KIP SNl. Revisited • Gilles Carle Mix To Second Cultural Film buffs take note : there will be a 60-minute film showing of "Eadweard Mex · Revolution in China? Muybridge : Zoopraxographer" on Friday, February 20at 8:00 P.M. in Loyola's Vanier A Third World Studies get-together on Serge Losique, director of the Conserva­ Auditorium. Friday, February 27th at Loyola will discuss tory of Cinematographic Art, off to Mexico Eadweard Muybridge is actually the "Confucianism and Lin Piao : The Second City _with his Gilles Carle retrospective to father of motion pictures, just in case you Cultural Revolution in China? run Feb . 26 - March 4 at the Mexican wondered. Back in about 1887 he invented China has had a major impact on her Cinematheque. the zoopraxoscope - a highly innovative sister Third World countries through the Carie's "Les Males" is now having a contraption that projected images through a examples she has set in self-s1.1fficiency and ·successful run across the alley from the shutter from a rotating circular disc which motivation of her people. Alamo, Losique reports, "so it is the right gave the illusion of continuous motion. In Guest speakers Paul Brennan and Robin time to make his work better known." other words, it was the first "motion" Porter will give their account of the. recent Flicks picked include "La vie heureuse de picture projector. That was, of course, in the social and political events within China and Leopold Z", "Le viol d'une jeune fille days before Edison invented the celluloid the impact these events are having on her douce", "Red", "La vraie nature de strips which evolved into what we are using people and those in other Third World Bernadette", "La mort d'un bO.cheron", and today. countries. "La tete de Normande St-Onge." Admission is free . For further informa­ Paul Brennan is a former student of Carle and lovely star Carol Laure will be tion, call The Workshop at 482-0320, ext. Loyola and has just returned to after on hand opening night ("La tete") . 207. spending two years at Peking University. Robin Porter is a professor of history at Job Opening Loyola and was himself not only in China but has offered courses on China and Asia in FYI is published Thursdays by the Informa­ At Grenoble the Third World Studies program. tion Office, Concordia University: Loyola This get-together is of particular interest Campus AD-233, 482-0320 local 421; Sir - The University of languages and letters of to Third World classes. George Campus 2145 MacKay,. basement • Grenoble, France, will establish as of Time and place: Friday, Feb. 27th at 8:00 879-4136. Joel McCormick, editor. groceries, telephone ordering and credit - I long a tradition at the corner store. Food Chains Said Mallen's two-pronged recommendation for righting the situation calls for increasing Wasteful the avenues of access for small retail outfits The telephone was ringing with such to move into shopping centres which have persistence in marketing professor Bruce f'een the biggest factor in the phenomenal Mallen's crammed YMCA office that one growth of the food retail industry. Up to might have thought he had turned part-time now, shopping centre landlords have been bookie to keep up payments on his Rolls less than enthusiastic about letting in the Royce. It was Monday afternoon and if you smaller merchants at their locations because read the Gazette's line story that morning, it's the big name chains that attract the you'd know why the professor cum shopping crowds, and besides that, provide consultant investigator was getting the ev~n greater assurance that the rent is paid phone calls. on time. "I can sympathize with that," says The Gazette had somehow cottoned on to Mallen, but iidds it's a practice that will have a report that Mallen had prepared for the to change if things are going to change for now defunct food prices review board. The the better. Part two of his recommendation report dropped the goods on the . food is that in some areas, the growth of the food chains, claiming that because of their chains should actually be restricted so that concentration and oligopolic slice of the the small retailers can pick up the normal food retailing market, Canadians were market growth slack and get a larger slice of paying an average of four percent more for the industry. their food. Mallen's second point might explain "Yes, when you take four percent of a 13 The Mallen study did not identify high perhaps best why the retail chains find his billion dollar industry, I suppose it is alot of price levels on individual items, but looked report so much buncombe. It's more than money," Mallen told one caller. How the at the total effect on the whole food basket. missing footnotes they're worried about. vport was leaked before the Ottawa . The report, titled "The Levels, Causes and Since the chains generally maintained mandarins planned to release the document Effects of Economic Concentration in the lower prices than the corner store, wouldn't is a mystery that no one seems able to Canadian Retail Food Trade: A Study of a further differential of say four percent answer. Perhaps we'll never know. "It didn't Supermarket Market Power", was commis­ mean that the corner retailer might fall come from this office," the professor told sioned by the Food Prices Review Board in hopelessly out of competition, even one caller. 1974. considering his extra services of free The chains were quick to condemn the Mallen was assigned the task after he had delivery, credit and phone orders? report', dismissing the document as publicly criticized the Board for not According to Mallen, the corner store uninformed opinion, having little to do with undertaking a much bigger job: Doing a prices would come down too. He reasons the facts. How did the professor react to the complete shake down of the entire food that the smaller merchant will only keep an reaction? "Well s---," Mallen enjoined. game, from farm gate to kitchen table. That, item priced at say, 60 cents, as long as· a "How do you answer something when you Mallen said then, was the only way to find chain store price was held at 50 cents. If can't? out who and what was causing the rampant there was a.drop in the chain price, the small Asked if he had lost any friends since the foodflation. After Beryl turned round and merchant would probably follow suit. Gazette released the story, he said he l told Mallen to study the effects of chain The chains studied - Loblaws, Steinberg, couldn't say. He said he'd been so busy concentration in the industry, he said then : Dominion and Safeway - control over 60 fielding media questions that he hadn't "Of course, this has nothing to do with what percent of Canada's urban markets, a degree heard from either his friends or his enemies. I was talking about." of concentration not nearly approached in "It saddens me," Mallen continued, The report gains a certain credibility the United States, according to the study. ff:iinking out loud. "I used to think that (the when one considers who Mallen is. It's So concerned about the state of things in food retailers) were rational beings." almost as if consumer advocate and Nader food retailing is Mallen that he's offered Investigator Mallen said he had hoped that pal Ken Dryden, was to launch an himself as an expert witness to give the report would hilve fostered some investigation into the high price of hockey testimony before the current ,royal discussion among retailers who would want tickets. As a past vice president of the commission on corporate concentration. to make course corrections to alleviate the Marketing Association of Canada, he's Mallen is quick to point out that not all problems. Mallen says there are no villains hardly the type to make the sort of radical food store prices can be attributed to as such in this story -- the wasteful practices assertions that an anti-food chain group wasteful practices and extra chain profits; that have developed in the retail industry member might make. No placard bearer he. some prices are simply higher because of just came with the growth of the food Nonetheless, one foodstore executive

Loyola campus LOYOLA FILM SERIES: Resnais's "L'Annee Derniere a Marienbad" (1961) at 7 p.m. and Chabrol's "Le boucher" (1969) at Thursday 19 8.45 p.m. in F.C. Smith Aud.; 99 cents the double-.bill. THE DEAN OF STUDENTS OFFICE: In collaboration with the ARTS & SCIENCE : Dr. Robert Philmus, English Dept. of Loyola, N.F.B. "Jean Carignan violoneux" in the Vanier Aud. at noon. on "Science Fiction Literature" in the Bryan Bldg . room 208, 12 to 1 HOUR OF PRAYER : 9 to 10 a.m. every Wednesday in the Loyola p.m. Chapel. SHARED SUPPER: An informal get-together for people on campus: bring some food for a common supper 6 to 9 p.m. in Belmore House; Pierre Allard, chaplain for Archambeault prison, Thursday 26 will be the guest speaker; further info at 484-4095. ARTS&SCIENCE : Dr. Calvin Kalman of Physics Dept. of Loyola FOLK GROUP : To prepare the Sunday singing in the Loyola on "Do the Arts and Science have anything to say to each other?" in Chapel at 8 p.m. the Bryan Bldg. 12 to 1 p.m. room 208. ATHLETICS : Badminton in the Athletics Complex at 6 p.m.; fitness class in St. Ignatius main hall at noon; judo lto 3 p.m. in the Athletics Complex. , cfriday 27 VERNISSAGE : The Loyola Students Arts Exhibit, two-dimen­ THIRD WORLD STUDIES GET-TOGETHER: Guest Speakers: sional work in the Campus Centre lounge, three-dimensional work Paul Brennan and Robin Porter on "Confucianism and Lin Piao: in the Fish Bowl of H.H. at 8 p.m., some works for sale; exhibit The Second Cultural Revolution in China?" in room AD-128 at 8 through March 4. · p.m. Refreshments will be available. Friday 20 Notices MOSLl;M STUDENTS ASSOC: Friday rrayer in the Campus CANADA MANPOWER: On-Campus Recruiting : Metropolitan Centre Conference room 2, 12 to 1 p.m. Life Insurance sales reps. interviewing all day March 9; Quantum : SKATING WITH BLIND CHILDREN : Not necessary to skate, just Placement Director on March 2. guide the children 9 to 10 a.m. in the Loyola Arena. Graduates in Accounting with outstanding marks for William CAMPUS CENTRE: Disco with Wild.Willy and the Disc Mobiles, Eisenberg Co., of Toronto. Anyone interested shou\d contact bar open at 8 p.m. Isabel Cloake IMMEDIATELY at 489-3885. FILMS: Eadweard Muybridge, zoopraxographer, at 8 p.m. in the Vanier Aud. 60 minutes film ; further info at The Workshop 482-0320 Joe. 207. Saturday 21 Concordia-wide BASKETBALL : Sherbrooke vs. Concordia at 2 p.m. Friday ·20 COMMERCE & ADMINISTRATION FACULTY COUNCIL: Sunday 22 Meeting at 9:30 a.m. in H-769. ENGINEERING FACULTY COUNCIL: Meeting at 2:30 p.m. in MASSES: 11.15 a.m. and 8 p.m. in the Loyola Chapel. H-769 . WEEKDAY MASSES: Monday to Friday at 12 :05 noon BASKETBALL : Concordia vs. Laval at Laval, women at 6: 30_p.m. Monday 23 and men at 8 p.m. FITNESS CLASS: 5 p.m. in St. Ignatius main hall. Friday 27 Tuesday 24 SENATE: Meeting at 2 p.m. in th~ conference room of the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal (corner Fielding and THE NATIVE PEOPLE OF CANADA: Real Boudrias, Cote St-Luc) . Vice-President of Laurentian Alliance on "The Contemporary I Non-Status Indian and Metis Experience" iri AD-314, 7 to 9 p.m. p.m. Sir George Campus WOMEN'S STUDIES SEMINAR: Gail Valaskakis, Dept. of 1 Comm. Arts on "Native Women" in ·CB-0112 to 2 p.m. Thursday 19 JUDO : See Thursday 19. CONS ERV A TORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "Three POETRY READING: Joseph Rogel at Marianopolis College 3880 Women" (Ernst Lubitsch, 1924) with Pauline Frederick, Marie Cote-des-Neiges at 9 a.m. and 12 noon. Prevost and Lew Cody at 7 p.m.; "Dinner at Eight" (George FILM SHOWING : Last year's Cannes sensation, "Hester Street" at Cukor, 1933) with John & Lionel Barrymore, Jean Harlow and 7:30 p.m. in the F.C. Smith Auditorium. Free . Marie Dressler at 9 p.m. in H-110; 75c each. FINE ARTS GRADUATE DIVISION: Ian Howard on Wednesday 25 "Soft-journalism" at 1: 30 p.m. in H-937. · HELLENIC STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION : Greek music, 2-5 p.m., FITNESS CLASS : 5 p.m. in St. Ignatius main hall. in H-110; free. COIN DU CAFE : Free coffee and French conversation every GALLERY ONE : Paintings and prints by Barry Wainwright, until Wednesday from 10 a.m. till noon in the Quiet Bar of the Campus Feb. 24 . Centre. WEISSMAN GALLERY : Paintings by Edwin Holgate, organized LITURGY PLANNING : Meeting to prepare and discuss the by the National Gallery of Canada, until March 15. Sunday liturgies in the Belmore House 3 to 4 p.m. ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES : Dr. R. Durie, director, Advanced Concepts Centre, Policy Planning and Evaluation Directorate, Friday 20 Environment Canada on "The Conserver Society" in the Vanier CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "Madame Aud. 7 to 9.30 p.m. X" (Frank Lloyd, 1920) with Pauline Frederick, W. Courtleigh and I 0 / Wil5on Br~t111 KB4 ~ 1u1ine,- MU:l audtet-

w-i/1 ~ a. hdzu.e. Mi, Sub /im in al SeJucfion M'l, t?l.aM 1llu/k ~- H-110 " FEB.23 · 3°0 p.m, D.1J.a . P~

C. Ferguson at 7p.m.; "Susan Lenox" (Robert Leonard, 1931) with Greece, 1-6 p.m., in H-110; free . Greta Garbo, Clark Gable and Jean Hersholt at 9 p.m. in H-110 ; POLITICAL SCIENCE DEPT. & URBAN FORUM : James 75c each. Morimer on "Land Investment and Urban Politics" ENGLISH DEPARTMENT : A reading by Leo Simpson, critic, BLOOD DRIVE : 9 a.m.-11 p.m. on mezz,mine. playwright, novelist, from his forthcoming book The True Adventures of Invisible Jack at 8: 30 p.m. in H-651. Wednesday 25 RELIGION DEPARTMENT : Sri Chinmoy, spiritual master and poet, on "Imagination, Inspiration and Aspiration" at 7: 30 p.m. in BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES DEPARTMENT: Seminar series - Dr. H-937. Talk followed by public meditation. S. Albert on "Insect Chemosensory Receptors" at 1 p.m. in H-1257. GEORGIAN CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP : Meeting at 2:30 p.m. Saturday 21 in H-617. 'INTER UNIVERSITY CENTRE FOR EUROPEAN STUDIES : Marc CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART : "Rose Bloch lecture - Charles Tilly, U. of Michigan, on "Questions Marie" (W .S. Van Dyke, 1936) with Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson historiques et techniques clans l'etude de )'action collective" Eddy and James Stewart at 3 p.m.; "Broadway Melody" (Roy Del (research seminar) at 2 p.m. and "L'action collective en France Ruth, 1936) with Jack Benny, Eleanor Powell and Robert Taylor at avant et apres la revolution" (public lecture) at 5 :30 p.m. at ICES, 5 p.m. ; "The Temptress" (Fred Niblo, 1926) with Greta Garbo, 1199 Bleury Street, 6th Floor, room 6405 . Antonio Moreno and Lionel Barrymore at 7 p.m. ; "The D.S.A. : Rene Dehincley on "The Sasqual Mystery" at 2 p.m. in Mysterious Lady" (Fred Niblo, 1928) with Greta Garbo and H-110. . Conrad Nagel at 9 p.m. in H-110; 75c each. FINE ARTS STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION : Crafts fair on mezzanine, 9 a.m. - 11 p.m. Sunday 22 Thursday 26 CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: Children's series- "The Savage Wild" (Gordon Eastman, 1970) with Gordon CONS ERV A TORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "The First Eastman at 2 p.m.; "Les Aventuriers du Fleuve" (Arthur f acobs, 20 Years of American Cinema" (part 3 - 1904 - 1905) and "The 1960) with Tony Randall and Archie Moore at 4 p. m. in H-110 ; 75c Single Standard" (John Robertson, 1929) with Greta Garbo, Nils each. .Asther and John Mack Brown at 7 p.m.; "The Merry Widow" CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "Riptide" (Ernst Lubitsch, 1934) with Maurice Chevalier, Jeanette (Edmund Goulding, 1934) with Norma Shearer and Robert MacDonald and Una Merkel at 9 p.m. in H-110; 75c each. Montgomery at 7 p.m.; "A Star is Born" (William Wellman, 1937).. GALLERY ONE: Sculptures by Celina Segal, until March 16. with Janet Gaynor, Frederic March and Adolph Menjou at 9 p.m. GALLERY TWO : Paintings by Michael Aranoff, until March 16. in H-110; 75c each. ARAB STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION : "The Hour of Liberation has Struck" at 2:30 p.m. in H-435. Monday 23 RELIGION SOCIETY : Martha Oppenheim on 'Women in Christianity" at 3 p.m., 2050 Mackai (basement). CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: "Lola" (Jacques Demy, 1961) with Anouk Aime, Marc Michel, and Friday 27 Jacques Arden at 8 :30 p.m. in H-110 ; 75c. YOUNG SOCIALISTS : Guest speaker on Angola, noon - 2 p.m., CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART : "Broadway in H-435. Melody" (Roy Del Ruth, 1938) with Robert Taylor, Eleanor BLOOD DRIVE: 9 a.m. -11 p.m. on mezzanine.' Powell, George Murphy and Judy Garland at 7 p.m.; D.S.A.: Bill Keys on "Subliminal Seduction" at 2 p.m. in H-110. "Forty-second Street" (Lloyd Bacon, 1933) with Ruby Keeler, Dick Powell, Warner Baxter, Ginger Rogers and Una Merkel at 9 p.m. in Tuesday 24 H-110; 75c each. ' · RELIGION SOCIETY : "Carl Gustav Jung : The Houston Films", CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART : "Apur 1-3: 30 p.m., in H-1209. Sansar" (Satyajit Ray, 1959) with Soumitra Chaterjee, Sharmila RELIGION SOCIETY : Talk and panel discussion on "Eckankar: Tagore and :ihapan Mukerji at 8:30 p.m. in H-110; 75c. The Ancient Science of Soul Travel" at 8 p.m. in H-609 . HELLENIC STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION: Information movie on \ executive committee rejects or accepts the as 'primitive beat' and other excessively Associates Set Up recommendations. Any money the Execu­ noisy, rhythmic music leads to the release tive Committee decides to spend must then of certain hormones." This usually involves Concordia Foundation be approved by the Board of the the ho"rmone, adrenalin, produced by the Associates. suprarenal gland which injects energy- . Somebody out there loves us. Although David Bernstein is a "1962 producing glucose into the circulatory It's the Concordia University Associates, graduate of Sir George, he points out that system. The hormone is concentrated a group of people independent of the many of the associates have no Concordia around the ear, one of the main organs of university who as its "friends" can provide connection, and yet they're ready, willing the body's inbuilt warning system, thus liaison with the community. As Associate and able to help the university. And not facilitating flight. At least that was the David Bernstein explains it, the group sees just by raising .funds. He's anxious that original purpose of this mechanism. tself as a communications vehicle, telling Concordia students should be aware of Noradrenalin, a hormone which prompts outsiders about Concordia and by the same what the associates can do for them. "In the attack, may also be released giving rise to token keeping Concordia from retreating past, groups of students have asked me as a aggression. into ivory-tower isolation. Bernstein says lawyer, for instance, to talk to them about "If modem music is listened to over short the Sir George Associates were formed in what being a lawyer is really all about," he periods during the learning process, the wake of the computer crisis. Now that says, noting that engineers, accountants, continued Professor Rauhe, "the small group is merged with a similar one from doctors, and all sorts of other vocations are amounts of hormone which are produced Loyola. represented in the several hundred people could lead to increased interest and Recently the Associates set themselves a belonging to the associates. attention. But listening to excessively loud highly specific task: creating an endow­ beat music leads to the glands producing ment fund in the million-dollar range to too much of the hormone. The surplus "guarantee the university's future". Interest energy thus created cannot usually be used from the fund could eventually be spent on up because of lack of space. · a range of things not accounted for in the "Beat Music Can Acoustic pollution of this type can lead university's operating budget - from after a time to arteriosclerosis and h'eart research to publications to special Make You Stupid" attacks, "We are talking in this context of educational projects. the stress caused by music," said Professor Paris Arnopoulos, who as a political For David Bernstein, the establishment of Rauhe. Whole areas of our knowledge may scientist is ever watchful for ramifications "Concordia University Foundation" (the not ohly be temporarily eradicated but may of the p(?litical clout of liberation move­ incorporated group who will run the fund) disappear for ever. Permanent gaps in a ments, sends us this item from the COilles about after years of his trying to person's memory would be an everyday­ Hamburger Abendblatt's January 3 edition. convince people of its merits. The Asso­ occurrence. In the wake of non-smokers' liberation, he ciates approved the idea at their annual Similar damage can be done by the suggests noise lib is the next thing Sir meeting a few weeks ago. restrained, almost imperceptible piped George needs. There are several distinguishing features music in department stores, supermarkets about the fund. Donors who give funds will Prolonged and frequent indulgence in and factories. "Although fewer hormones have their names kept in perpetuity by the noisy modern music can cause temporary are released in response to this type of foundation. All capital will be invested by or permanent gaps in the brain's memory music," reports Professor Rauhe, "the effect an investment committee whose mandate is store. Beat music can apparently make you is the same as with alcohol. Regular to "seek maximum total investment stupid. consumption of small amounts will in time return". According to Bernstein, Canadian "Experiments have shown," said Profes­ lead to undesirable effects." universities have been conservative to a sor Hermann Rauhe, an expert in the So, be warned and do not forget to fault in their investments and for that teaching and sociology of music from Ham­ switch off the music from time to time. reason their endowment funds haven't been burg, "that certain musical structures such Frauke Selle-PAM rousing successes in the past. He's confident that the Concordia foundation, with an investment committee made up of experts, will be a different story, following the successful route many U.S. universities have. university's patent policy regulations was Where will the money come from? "We'll B of G Gives Nod To brought to the Board. Student . Board canvass all business firms locally and all members Chris Secord and Gordon across Canada," says Bernstein. "In DSA Constitution Frampton spoke .about the need to have addition, we will try to get legacies made to Chairman Alec Duff started the open student representation on the patent policy the foundation and funds from the general session of last Thursday's meeting by making committee since graduate students in public." note of the fact that Board member Arthur particular might well be affected by the What the fund-raising committee will Pascal had been named a member of the policy. However, the Board decided to table really be after is non-specified donations, Order of Canada. the matter until the Rector's return from that is money without strings as to how it's The Board moved briskly through the New Zealand. spent. However, some donations are agenda. Following the advice in a message Finally, the Board considered the new expected to be specific, with money going from Rector John O'Brien, the Board referred constitution of the Day' Stl;ldents' Associa­ to a scholarship in a specific faculty, for issues arising out of a working paper on a tion. Executive Assistant to the Rector example. commission to study codes of conduct, to Michael Sheldon' suggested a few minor For the first few years (about 5, Bernstein Senate. It was evident that student Board revisions: that where D.S.A. activities were reckons) Concordia won't really see any members would have welcomed an referred to as "academic", the word be cold cash: funds received will be reinvested opportunity to voice misgivings about the changed to "educational" to reflect a wider to build up the fund. After that, decisions working paper, but there was general scope. It was pointed out that the drafting of on where the money goes. follow this agreement that debate would more properly the constitution needed some work. The procedure: the foundation's disbursement take place in Seante. Board agreed to these provisions, and committee, after consultation with Con­ A document containing revisions to the accepted the constitution in principle. cordia's Board of Governors, comes up with recommendations, which it presents to the foundation's executive committee. The