a. · we resume publication on jafluary 13, 1983. for notices and events untii that date, please...

8
.. One more issue of T he Th ursday Repo rt A. & S. Council votes Next week's issue of TT R _ (Nov. 25) will be the last i ss ue of 1982. We res u me pub li catio n on J afluary 1 3, 1983 . For n o ti ces and eve nt s unt ii th at date, please send or bring them to ,Maryse Pe rr~u~, ro m 2 13 in Bish op Court . D ea dl in e is Monday , Nov . 22 al 5 p.m . ·for single Fac·ulty dean By Mj nko So ti ro n The Art s a nd Science Fac ult y co unci l voted ( 17 for, 7 against, 4 a bstentions ) LO reco mm e nd having a single dean of Art s and Scie nc e at its Nov. 12 mee ting . Th e mo tion wa s passed in light of the rece nt Fahey Re port reco mm e ndati on of having a single vice-rector, acade mi c, inst eado ftwoandaDe c. 18 , 1 981 Board of Gov e rn o rs ( BOG ) resol uti on that " after serious study and , if ratified before .June I, .1985, a res tru c turing of the senior a dmin- istra ti o n o f the Universi Ly be i mp lementecl s uch t hat there would be one Vice-Rec tor Aca demic. " (T he BOG reso lution also authorized th e Rector to instruct Arts a nd Science LO re-e xamine the senior reporting structure of the Fac ulty if thi s change occurred.) Much of the thr ee hour de bate was based on th e impli cit assumptions that having one vice-rector academic and ma intain i ng the prese nt An s and Science (A. & S. ) struc- ture with three division cle ans wou ld even- tua ll y lead to the evol ut ion of th ree separ- ate Faculties. Lon e rg an. University Co llege pri nci pa l Sean McE venue argued in favour of a si ng - le dea n. Having one dean wou ld assure th e unity of A. & S. , • a concep t which he believed was as valid as when t he si ng le Facul ti es of Ans and Science jo ined together after the merger of Loyo la and Sir G eo rge Williams. Said McEve nu e: " Th ere is no larger qu es t ion of know- ledg e wh ich ca n be solved wit hout the joim know ledge em bod ied in Arts and Scien ce." · McEven ue sa id that de pa rt me nt al chai rm en have LO be a ll owed LO have _ respo nsib ilit y for their departme n ts a n d dis cip• Ii nes. As it stands now, the Facu lt y doesn't have real chai rmen as long as the i-vis ion dea ns are responsi ble for th disciplines. Furthermore, t he prese nt A. & S. struc- ture promotes the illu sion that the three dea ns can master a ll the discip lin es u nd er the ir purview, w hi ch he sai tl wasn't the case. He al so po i m ed ou t th at the U niv er- sity of Toro nt 6 Fac ult y of An s a nd Science func ti oned very well und er one dean. The question fo r A. & S. bo iled d ow n Lo having one sijlg le d e~ n or div idi11g th e Facu lty in to thr ee sep ara te Fac ulti es, accord ing to hi m. Rel ig ion ac tin g cha ir ma n Mich ae l Op pen heim wo nd ered abo ut th e all oca - tion of res ources w ith one <lea n especially regard in g depa rtm e nt s like Relig ion whi ch thou gh small were s tron g in research. He asked whether a s in g le d e.a n wo uld he sensitive to the special fiKi a nd conce rn s of all th e depa rtm ellls or wo u ld he s imp ly do every thing acco rdin g to th e lowes t common deno min ator in a llo ca t- ing money? He feared th e latter wo utc:l occ ur , a nd said he o ppos ed a sing le <l ea n on th e grounds h(' would he fa r too bus y to e ff ecti'vely oversee all the depa rt me nt s. Eng lish c ha ir man A.T . Bro es said tha t in the new Facu l ty structure the de pan- men ta! chairmen wou ld hav e more impo rt ant roles and be more fo rceful·. Oppos ing a single dean, prof. Brian Pe~rie (Sociology a nd Exe rcise Science) sa id he didn't li ke a si ngl e cl ea n wh o wou ld hav e " super-power" status. Su ch a dean, he observed , wou ld be hard to find since he wou ld ha ve to be a " Tarza 11•in th e acadt;m ic ju ng le." He doub ted th at such a "Re na issa n ce" figure ca pab le of handl ing all the var ied A. & S. disc ip lin es was avai lab fe. He arg ued for separate d ea ns for separ- ate disciplines. We wi sh a ll our readers a h appy ho li day season and a merry New Year. " IV lt y discuss Darw i11 ?" is Geology prof. Digb')' McLaren 's topic 011 No v . 24 at 8: 30 p.m . in room 820 of lit e Hall B ui ld- i11 g. Sponsored by Lonergan U 11 iversity College ~ Mc'Laren, w lt o teacltes al lite Uni v ersity of Ottawa, is also a fellow of lite Royal Society of London, a sen i or advisor to tli'e D ept. of Energy, Mines and R esources, and a pas t president of lit e Pal eon t ologica l Society. Also oppos i ng a sing le d ea n, P sycho l- ogy pro f. Tanni s Maag-Arbuck le not ed t ha t hav ing one dean for an A. & S. Fac ulty at the Un iversitc de Montreal wasn 't work mg. "O ne pe rson simp ly can't ha nd- le so ma ny subjects, " she said, po inting ou t th at th e P sycho logy d ep t. opposed a single cl ea n . - Vice-rect or academ ic R uss ,.e ll Breen sa id the Fac ufty h ad to decide t hi s q ues ti on fas t, espec ially in l ig ht of expecte~ ·enro l- :me nt d rops in A. & S. H ow will the Facul ty cope w ith {hat, he asked? It 's i mporta nt to deter min e th e p hi losop hy of edu cation so as to kn ow what direc tio n to take. A. & S. c ·ore Curriculun1 workshop hears calls · for broader edllcation He po int ed out tha t n ot opt i ng for a si ng le dea n mea nt opt i ng for several facu lties. Di visio n I d ean Do n Tad deo arg ued for ma int a inin g An s and Science und er one <lea n. "T here _are en oug h artificial di v- ision in aca d em ia as it is," he said. Di visio n II d ean June Chaikleson won- d ered wh ether the Facu lt y really needed its ow n vice-r ector acad em ic. ·s he sta ted th a t A. & S. didn 't need som eo ne LO coordin a te the di vision s. Alt ho ugh she wasn't ure of wh at was best for th e Fac ult y, she has noticed that "w hen you brea k thin gs up , th ey gro w. Wh en you co mb ine th em th ey declin e." Mathema ti cs c,; h a ir m a n Hal, P ro ppe noted th at one d ea n wou ld have only one- half ho ur of tim e a year for each fa c ult y me mb er. H e sai_ <l the Fac ulty needed mor(' S er "C O UNC IL " page 2. By B7u ce Wallace "Whatever h appe ned to Weste rn Civili- z<1 ti on IO I?" was the pre po nderan l con- cern vo iced at the Arts & Science Work- shop on Core Curric ulu m for tht Hu man iti es. held on Nov . 11. Most of tht partici pa nt s from the Hum a ni ties disc i- p lin es · agreed that today's university grad - u ates were da n gero usly ove r- specia l ized, but th ey o ff ered few sp ec ifi c recomme n da - tions beyo nd hav in g a com pre hensive lib - eral arts edu ca tion as a remedy. I n h is imrodu ctory rema rks, sociology pro f. Jo hn Dr ysdale, the Tas k Force Cha ir ma n, said he di dn 't wa nt "h and- wri nging a nd finge r- po intin g ." R at her,.he wa nt ed the wo rksh op to help hi s Task Fo rce de fine th e wider ecl oca- tional nee ds of Con co rdia s tud ents in an age of increased speciali za tion. Th at co uld in vo lve the creation of a co re-cu rr ic ulum to ens ur e th at gra du a tes are fam il iar w ith a wider scope of kn ow ledge than all owed for by th e c urre nt d eg ree s tru c tur e. Th e works hop showed th a t d espi te rh e- Statement concerning - Bill 70 Vice- Rector , Acad('mic Joh n Daniel has -issu ed the fo ll ow 1n g statem (' nl : " It a pp ('ars that stateme nts made hy some sp ea kers at the 'R oa db locks to Edu catio n' havc given the impression that memb ers of CUFA and CU NASA will be subject to the salary ro ll hac ks o f Bil l 70. Th is is not the case." . · Mor e compl ete info rm at ion with r spect to Bi ll 70 was gi ve n in issues· of · th (' Thursd ay Re port of Sept. 23 a nd Oc t. 24. tor ica l calls to brea k down the barr iers betw ee n dis c iplin es, 0 Lh e humaniti es faculty still h olds a somewhat ten..tat i ve and prel iminar y vision of what constit ut es a well-round ed edu cation. "Bu t t ha_t was n 'l un expected ," sa id H is- tor y prof. Steve Schein berg, who sits on the Task For ce. "Al though we were hop i ng th ey'd embrace a wider definit io n of core curr icul um, you must remember t hat we on the commiuee have been look ing at t his issue (or a co nside rab ly longer ti m e. At t his stage we just want to ge nerate som e di scuss i on on the issue LO see wh at pitfal ls lie ahead." Schein berg said that Con cordia mu st in novate to keep pace wit h the cha ngi ng face of t he lat e 20th century. "Th ere's a feeling that if we stag nate, if we don't seek to differe mi a te o ur se l ves fror ot h er un i- versities,.we will be th e ulti ma te losers ." T he res ult is a des ire LO fos ter a co re c urri cul um re fl ec tin g the spi rit a nd char- ac ter of Co n cor d ia. " It ca n't be an im po rt ed c urri cu lum ," said Dr ysdale in hi s opening add·ress. " It mu st acco unt for the uni vers it y's reso ur ces, and re fl ect the interests and streng th s.of the fac ult y. " Ju dgi ng by T h urs day's wor kshop, m os t H uma niti es re prese n tativcs wou ld like to· see more e mph asis on classics, int ellec tu al hi sto r y, a nd the lib eral a rt s. "S pecializa- ti on does n ot produ ce good specialist s," sa id Phil oso ph y pro f. Jo hn Doyle. Oth ers ech oe d th e se ntim ent. Many told o f d i ffi culty teac hing s tu de nt s who had no_ sh ared reference of kn ow ledge. Sugges- tions on h ow to remedy matters varied fr om co m pe llin g s tud e nt s LO take a 30- cr edi t co re o f co ur ses to advis ing s tud e nt s S ee "CU RR I CU L_ UM" page J.

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Page 1: A. · We resume publication on Jafluary 13, 1983. For notices and events untii that date, please send or bring them to ,Maryse Perr~u~, ro m 213 in Bishop Court. Deadline is Monday,

..

One more issue of T he Thursday Report

A. & S. Council votes Next week 's issue of TTR

_(Nov. 25) wi ll be the last issue of 1982. We res ume publication on J afluary 13, 1983 . For no tices and events unt ii that date, p lease send or bring them to ,Maryse Perr~u~, ro m 2 13 in Bishop Court . Dea d l in e is Monday , Nov. 22 al 5 p.m .

~

·for single Fac·ulty dean By Mjnko Sotiron

The Arts a nd Science Faculty counci l voted (17 for , 7 against, 4 a bstentions) LO recommend having a single dean of Arts and Science a t its Nov. 12 meeting.

The mo tion was passed in light of the recent Fa hey Report recommendati o n of having a single vice-recto r, academi c, insteadoftwoandaDec. 18, 1981 Board of Govern o rs (BOG ) resol uti o n that " after serious study and , if ratifi ed before .June I, .1985, a res tructuring o f the senior admin­istra ti o n o f the Universi Ly be i mplementecl such that there would be one Vice-Rector Academ ic. "

(The BOG reso lution a lso authorized the Rector to instruct Arts a nd Science LO

re-examine the senior reporting structure of the Faculty if thi s change occurred.)

Much o f the three hour debate was based on the implicit assumptions that having o ne vice-rector academic and ma intain ing the present Ans and Science (A. & S. ) struc­ture with three d ivis io n clea ns wou ld even­tua ll y lead to the evo lut ion of th ree separ­ate Faculties.

Lonerga n. University College pri ncipa l Sean McEvenue a rgued in favour of a sing­le dea n. Having one dean wou ld assure the unity o f A. & S. , • a concep t whi ch h e beli eved was as va lid as when the sing le Facu lti es of Ans and Science joined together a fter the merger of Loyola and Sir George W ill iams. Sa id McEvenue:

" There is no larger ques tion o f know­ledge wh ich can be so lved without the joim know ledge em bod ied in Arts a nd Sc ience." ·

McEven u e sa id that de pa rt m enta l cha irmen have LO be a llowed LO have _ responsibility for their departmen ts a nd discip•Ii nes. As it stands now, the Facu lty doesn ' t have rea l cha irmen as lo ng as the

i-vision dea ns are responsi ble for the· di sc ip lines.

Furthermore, the present A. & S. struc­ture promotes the illusion tha t the th ree dea ns can mas ter a ll the di sc ip lines under the ir p u rview, which he sa itl was n ' t the case . H e a lso poi m ed ou t tha t the Univer­sity o f Toront6 Faculty of An s a nd Science fu ncti o ned very wel l under o ne dean .

The question fo r A. & S. bo iled down Lo havi ng o ne sijlgle de~n or d ividi11g the Facu lty in to three separa te Faculti es, accord ing to hi m.

R e lig io n ac tin g c h a ir ma n M ic h ae l Oppen heim wondered a bo ut the a lloca­tion o f resources with o ne <lea n especia lly regard in g de p a rtm ent s l i ke R e l ig ion which though sma ll were stron g in resea rch . H e asked whether a sing le de.a n wo uld he sen siti ve to the spec ia l fiKi a nd concerns o f a ll the depa rtmellls or wo u ld he simply do every thing according to the lowes t common denomina tor in a lloca t­ing mo ney? H e fea red the la tter woutc:l occur, a nd said he o pposed a single <lea n o n the grounds h(' would he fa r too busy to

effecti'vely oversee a ll the departments. Engli sh cha irma n A.T. Broes said tha t

in th e new Facu lty structure the depan­m e n ta! chairmen wou ld have more important roles and be mo re fo rcefu l·.

Opposing a single dean , prof. Brian Pe~rie (Socio logy a nd Exercise Science) sa id he didn't li ke a si ngle clea n who wou ld have " super-power" status. Such a dea n, he observed, wou ld be hard to find si nce he wou ld ha ve to be a " Tarza11•in the acadt;m ic jung le." H e doub ted that such a " Rena issa nce" fig ure ca pable of hand ling a ll the var ied A. & S. discip lines was avai lab fe.

He argued for separate deans for separ­ate d iscip li nes.

We wish a ll our readers a happy ho li day season and a merry New Year.

" IV lt y discuss Darw i11 ?" is Geology prof. Digb')' McLaren 's topic 011 Nov . 24 at 8:30 p.m . in room 820 of lit e Hall Bui ld­i11 g. Sponsored by Lonergan U 11 iversity College~ Mc'L aren, w lt o teacltes al lite University of Ottawa, is also a fellow of lite Royal Society of London, a sen ior advisor to tli'e Dept. of Energy, Mines and R esources, and a pas t president of lit e Paleon tologica l Society.

Also oppos ing a single dean, Psychol­ogy pro f. Tanni s Maag-Arbuck le noted tha t hav ing one dean for a n A. & S. Facu lty a t the Un ivers itc de Mo n trea l wasn ' t work mg. "One person simply ca n ' t ha nd­le so ma ny su bjects, " she sa id, po in tin g ou t that the Psychology dept. opposed a sin g le clea n . -

Vice-rector academ ic R uss,.e ll Breen sa id the Facu fty had to dec ide thi s q ues ti o n fas t, espec ia ll y in light o f expecte~ ·enro l­

:m ent d rops in A. & S. H ow will the Facu lty cope w ith {ha t, he as ked? It 's importa nt to determine the phi losophy of educa tion so as to know wha t d irection to take.

A. & S. c ·ore Curriculun1 workshop hears calls · for broader edllcation

H e pointed out tha t not opting for a sing le dea n mea n t opt ing for severa l facu lti es.

Di visio n I dean Don Taddeo argued for ma inta ining An s a nd Science under o ne <lea n . " T here _a re enough artifi cia l di v­isio n in academ ia as it is," he sa id .

Di visio n II dean J une Cha ikleson won­dered whether the Facu lty rea lly needed its own vice-rector academ ic. ·s he sta ted tha t A. & S. didn 't need someone LO coordina te the di visio ns. Altho ug h she wasn ' t ure o f what was bes t for the Facu lty, she has no ti ced tha t "w hen you brea k things up, they grow. When yo u combine them they decline."

Ma thema ti cs c,; ha ir ma n H a l , P roppe no ted tha t o ne dean wou ld ha ve o n ly o ne­ha lf ho ur o f time a yea r for each fa culty member. H e sa i_<l the Facu lty needed mor(' Ser "CO UNCIL " page 2.

By B7uce Wallace " Wha tever happened to Western Civil i­

z<1 tion IO I?" was the prepondera n l con ­cern vo iced at the Arts & Science Work­shop o n Core Curric ulu m for t h t Human iti es. held on Nov. 11. Most o f tht pa rti cipants from the Hum ani ties disci­p lines ·agreed tha t today's un iversity grad­uates were da ngerously over-specia lized, but they o ffered few spec ifi c recommenda­tio ns beyond hav ing a com prehensive lib­era l arts educa tio n as a remedy.

In h is imroductory rema rks, socio logy prof. J o hn Drysda le, the Task Force Cha irman , sa id he didn ' t wan t " hand­wri ng ing a nd finger- pointing ."

Rather,.he wanted the workshop to help hi s Task Fo rce define the wider ecloca­tio na l needs o f Co ncord ia students in an age o f increased specia liza tio n . That could invo lve the crea ti on o f a core-cu rr iculum to ensure tha t gradua tes are fam il iar w ith a wider scope o f knowledge tha n a llowed fo r by the current degree structure.

The wo rkshop showed tha t despi te rh e-

Statement concerning -Bill 70

Vice- Rector, Acad('mic Joh n Daniel has -issued the fo llo w1ng s ta tem('nl: " It a pp('a rs tha t sta tements made hy some speakers a t the 'Roadb locks to

Education ' havc given the impression tha t m embers o f C U FA and CU NASA wi ll be subj ect to the sa la ry ro ll hacks o f Bil l 70. Th is is no t the case." .

·More complete info rma tion with r spect to Bi ll 70 was gi ven in issues·of · th(' Thursday Report o f Sept. 23 a nd Oct. 24.

tor ica l ca lls to break down the barr iers between dis c iplin es,

0

Lh e humaniti es faculty st ill holds a somewhat ten..tat ive and preliminary vision of what co nstit utes a wel l-rounded educa tion.

"Bu t tha_t was n 'l unexpected ," sa id H is­tory prof. Steve Schein berg, who sits on the

Task Force. " Although we were hoping they'd em brace a wider definit io n of core curricul um, you must rem ember that we o n the commiuee have been look ing at this iss ue (or a considerably longer ti me. At this s tage we just want to generate some d iscuss ion o n the issue LO see what pitfal ls lie ahead."

Schei n berg said tha t Concord ia m ust in novate to keep pace with the chang ing • face of the late 20 th cen tu ry . "There's a feeling that if we stagna te, if we do n ' t seek to differemia te o urselves fror other un i­versities, .we will be the ulti ma te losers."

T he result is a des ire LO fos ter a core curri cu lum refl ecting the sp irit and char­acter o f Concord ia. " It can ' t be a n im ported curri cu lum ," sa id Drysda le in hi s o pen ing add·ress. " It must account for the uni vers ity's resources, a nd refl ect the in teres ts and streng ths.of the fac ulty. "

Judgi ng by T hursday 's worksho p , most H umaniti es represen tativcs wou ld like to· see more emphasis o n class ics, intell ectua l hi sto ry, a nd the libera l arts. "Specia l iza­tion does not produce good specia li sts," sa id Philosophy prof. J ohn Doyle.

Others echoed the sentiment. Man y to ld o f d iffi cu lty teach ing students who had no_ shared re ference o f know ledge. Sugges­ti o ns o n how to remed y ma tters va ri ed from com pelling students LO ta ke a 30-credi t co re o f courses to ad vis ing students See " C URRICUL_UM" page J.

Page 2: A. · We resume publication on Jafluary 13, 1983. For notices and events untii that date, please send or bring them to ,Maryse Perr~u~, ro m 213 in Bishop Court. Deadline is Monday,

2 Th~ Thursday Report

On the University Mission-Study & the -chemistry dept. accomplishments . e.~~ ~? To the Editor: ~

I fi nd the general tone and em p has is on ' p layed a major role in our acti vi u es even ~ -~ _ ..,_ opportuniti es of the Phase I R eport of the wh en it was unfas hionable. T he demand f ;r-...._~ - - -U ni vers ity Mission Stud y mos t exciting. for ch emists in Quebec is fo r ana lyti ca l 1

1. · · ·• . "'·

In order to develop these important sug- chemists. T h us, we have a ttached pr io rity ges tions in the second Phase, it wi ll be to this a rea . necessary to give concrete expression to Our suE ess has been recogQized by the genera l objectives o f Phase I. externa l appra isa l and the high-density of

I believe tha t the planning process Concordia gradua tes in Mon trea l anal yti-which has gone on in chemistry in the last ca l la bo rato ries. In the las t two years , this few years has,-in fac t, anticipa ted much of integra tion into the community is being the thinking of the mission study and completed with the CO-OP program . Our deve loped the specific machinery to g ive excellent rela tio ns with l'Ordre des Chi-them concrete effect. I feel, therefore, tha t it mistes du Quebec a lso demonstra te o ur is useful to share o ur experience wi th the success. uni versity com m unity. For any uni vers ity to -succeed it needs a

Our effo rts have used six of the "oppor- good reputa tion in the academic com-tuni ties" defin ed in the study to formula te • munity:-- This mean s "academic excel-our departmenta l goa ls with -approxi - Jenee". But, academic excellence canno t ma tely the fo llowing prio rity: be achieved everywhere. Prio rities must be

1. Opportunity V: "Economic develop- se t. ment of Quebec" We have chosen physical inorganic

2. Opportunity IV: "Professional and bus- chemistry for our lead a rea . In this choice, iness community" we p-re unique in Quebec and no t dupli-

3. Opportunity I: "Academic Excellence" ca ted in Eas tern Canada. The success of 4. Opportunity III : "Cost-effective quality" this"program basedon a t leas t fo ur profes--5. Opportunity VI: "Social development " h ' t d I · t d

sors, t ree pos - octora assooa es, an 6. Opportunity II : "Service to the total community" 8-10 g radua te students, is demon stra ted by

The first two a re closely linked. Our NSE"RC and FCAC opera ting grants o f ro le in the economic development of more than $ 100,000 per year, and the Quebec is commonl y played th rongh ser- recent award o f a capita l project o f vice to the p rofess ional a nd business $500,000 p erhaps the largest sing le· g rant co mmunity. Our resea rch e ffo rt s do a t Concordia. inciude such crucia l acti viti es as research The g roup p ubli shes a bou t twenty toward entirely novel p roducts for the items per year: Apprecia tion of o ur Quebec asbes tos industry but ou r fir st dep artment 's academic excellence is a lso pri o rit y is a n edu ca ti o n a1 p rogra m exp ressed in a recent mem bership on the oriented to loca l needs. NSERC chemistry g rant 'selection com-

T his has been o ur historic ecological. mittee and two current memberships on niche. McGill and the Uni versite de Mon t- FCAC se lectio n com m itiees (too much a rea l have chemistry departments orien ted rarity at Concordia) . to the p r ioriti es o f the in terna tiona l scien- T he ques tion of cos t effecti veness can be t ific com m uni ty. Our first com mitment addressed two ways. First is the " outgo" has been more loca l. side of the )eager. At Concordia, thi s

T h ere fo re, a n a l-y-ti ca l ch emi stry h as requi res considera tion o f the two ca m-

puses. The CO-OP progra m costs mos t uni versities considerably to support the summer term .

We have used the two campus opera tio n to introduce CO -OP at nearl y zero cost. With · trade-offs- in some la b loca tio ns between campuses, we expect to make o ur two campus opera tion less costl y than mos t one campus operations while being a ble to ga in the academic advantage o f two distinct environments for students so that each student may choose the more effective fo r h er/ him.

A second Co ncordia fact is the Hall building. This has fostered the very cos t effecti ve jo int development of biochemis­try research and graduate study with the department o f bio logica l sciences . •

Next comes the " income" side of the ledger. Our ana lytical chemistry emphas i5 has required development o f a specia lized instrumenta tion capacity. In conjunq ion with 0 1..1r special local orienta tion this has led to the Science Industria l Research U nit, a service which makes our specia l resources ava ila ble to so lve proble1ps fo r loca l industry and provide specia l resour­ces to Montrea l a rea ana lyti ca l la bo ra to­ries. This research service to the loca l a rea a lso adds app roxima tely $150,000 directl y to department revenue.

Also, it has genera ted rela ti o nships tha t lead to fund ing of 5% of our p rofessoria l staff by non-government resources . T hi s is

,,

a n initia ti ve that shou ld be initia ted by o ther units.

T he ·fi na l two a reas o f our p lanning, socia l deve lopment and· service to the to ta l com munity have developed out o f two ac ti viti es. T h e CO-OP program h as ch a n ged th e ba la n ce o f our s tu de nt recrui ts. T his is mos t evident in the second year.

We are con sidering fo llowing thi s with introduction o f selected course section s in Fr('.nch to better serve no t onl y o ur franco­p hone students but a lso our ang lophone students who wish to p racti ce their profes­sion in Quebec.

Our plan s for socia l deve lopment o bjec­ti ves have been fo rmula ted in consulta tio n w ith o ur community based chem is try advisory council represent ing industry and government la bs. They have ider,1ti­fi ed occupationa l hea lth a nd sa fety as th!'-' highes t priority- retra ining a·rea. We are p resenting our second profess iona l devel­opment course in thi s area.

This is cost effecti ve because a signifi­cant pa rt of the teaching is done by full time staff. We loo k forward to deve lop­ment of th is area toward paying ano ther 2- 5% o f our ·staff bill from n o n­government sources!

We have found an exercise in setting prio riti es and do ing a crea ti ve criti cal appra isa l o f o ur acti vities rewarding and mora le building. We have been a ble to d eve lo p_ a rea li s ti c, ch a ll e n g in g, a nd rewarding model o f the futu re in concrete terms.

We hoge putting fl esh on the skeltqn of the Phase I Uni versity Miss ion Study can be as constructive an activitv for evervonc as we have found it in the 1·as t fe" · v~ars. We certa inl y believe the term "op po;tuni­ti es" fits . We ,ee a fe w yet ahead in toxi­cology, bio technology, and a program in instrumenta tion a nd contro ls.

Cooper H. Langford, Professor and Chairman _ Dept. of Chemistry

COUNCIL_ co11ti11urd fro m pagr I .

time to think a bo ut the ques tion and therefore moved a motion to ta ble it. T he mo ti on was defea ted.

Proyos t Mart in Singer, who was cha ir­ing the meeting, sa id tha t the cu rrent structure mean t the rec to r was in rea lity the vice-rector academic and the two vice ­recto rs academic were thus onl y super­deans. " Wi th o ne vice-rector academicwe are free ing the recto r to look at other issues of academic pr iori ty ," he sa id.

administer ing A. & S. is no longer neces­sary, indeed, it is· wasteful ," he sa id .

He sa id a decisio11 had to be made. " No decision is a de~ision . Doing no thing means tha t things happen tq you ." An s and Scien-ce should be preserved as a unity since it has what should be at the core of a university.

"Looking to the Future": what's up?

Russe ll Breen sa id tha t a t the begin ­nin~, hav ing two vice-rec to rs academ ic was good , now there sho uld bt· onl y one. "We're a t a crucia l time, " he sa id , "one

·person sho uld be in cha rge of academic p lanning,)10 t two. T ha t doesn ' t work.

" Con tin uing to have three heads of Facu lty is a lso not good," he con ti n ued. "T he res ult wou ld be the di vision of fo rces especia ll y i n times o f anti cipated d rops in en rolment a nd resource cutbacks.

" Bu t the voice of one dea n o f Arts a nd Science would be very powerful. "

Ph ysics prof. Ca lvin Ka lman agreed, say ing the q ues ti on for him was whether to have one dean o r a " tro ika" of three deans. He bel ieved tha t one sing le· dean wo uld be better.

Di vision III dea n Ro bert Roy sa id that before he ass umed hi s pos it{on , he su p­po rted hav ing one dean , but now a fter some ex perience o n the job, he was n ' t so sure. He wondered w hether one dea n could n-present such a large and va ried constituency.

Stepping down momenta ril y from the cha ir , Martin Singer said he was unequi v­<>ea ll y for o ne dean . "The current fi ve­headed J a panesi· style tea m we have

"The di visiona l structure is d ivisive," he o bserved . " In the who le time of the, Fac ult y's exi s te n ce, th e de p a rtm enta l heads haye never met toge ther. "

As fo · the p ro blem o f size, he pointed o ut tha t it was poss ible to crea te "cl usters"

·wi thin the Faculty fo r sma ller, more inti­. ma te intercourse. "S i_nger sa ia he couldn ' t _imag ine havi ng three different faculties; wha t wou ld happen to the co lleges in Di v­ision IV, he asked, fo r instance?

" If we conti n ue as we are, we' ll be spell ­ing the end to multid isciplina ry and interdisciplinary studies and the colle:~es," he concl uded .,

Brian Petri e moved to ta ble the mo tio n until ea rl y next _ yea r. Council vo ted this_ down, and then passed the mo tion .

In an effort to clarify the sta tus o f the current o n-campus debates concerning the future of Concordi a Uni versi tv, Recto r J ohn W. O 'Brien issued the fo llowing statement on Nov. 11 :

"The U ni versity community is di scuss­ing the future o f Concordi a using as re­source ma teria l bo th the fin a l repo rt o f the Committee on Priorities and Planning (Fahey Committee), published on Sept. 16, and the Phase I repo rt prepa red by o ut side consultants fo r the U ni w rsit,· Mission Stud y, published Sep L 28. ·

" T he Fahey Co mmittee, hav ing com­pleted , in it s view, the manda te assigned to it by th e Bo-a 1id o f G o \' ern o rs las t December, has di sbanded.

" The work o f the-Steering Co111111i11ee o f the Miss ion Study is still •in progress. T hat g roup , co111posed of senio r adminis-

Henneneutics scholar Gadamer to speak Prof. H an s-Georg Gadamer o f the U ni ­

versit y o f Heidelberg, a renowned henne­neutics (the science of interpreta tion ) scho lar, will be spea king o n "Heraclitus and the Discovery o f the Soul " on Nov. 26 a t 5:30 p.m . in AD-1 28 at Loyola .

Spon sored by the Philosophy dept. a nd co-sponsored by Class ics, T l\eology and· Lonerga n Universit y Co llege, Gadamer explains the mean ing o f text interpreta-

tion : · .. Every 1i111e will han ' to understand a text ha nded down to it in it s own way, for it is subj ect to the \\·ho le o f a tradition in which it has a matnial interes t and in

· which it seeks to understand ic self. "The real meaning of ·1 text as it

addresses the interpreter _does no t just depend on the occas io11al factors which diaracteri ze the author and hi s orig ina l public. Fo r it is a lso alwa ys co-detennined

tra tors a)1d ass isted by student , faculty and o u.ts ide co111111unity rep resenta ti,·es, expec ts to issue a pos ition pa per to the U ni\'ersity com111unity for comment and deba te w ry sho rtl y.

" Tha t docu111en1 will present the , ·ision of the future of the U ni\'ersity , in b1:oad, conceptual 1er111 s, held by members o f the Steering Committee. It " ·ill be the result o f a sys tema tic and leng th y ana lysis o f the Mi ssion Study Phase I Report underway since las t April when the Phase I repo rt was co111pleted. At the same time, it " ·ill perforce refl ect the administra tion 's reac­ti on to the more important obsen ·a tions 1

a nd re.co mm e nd a ti o n s o f th e Fa h e y Committee, a nd to the Uni,·ersity com­munity's concerns being a rticul a ted in the current ro und o f deba tes a t depa rtmental and fa cult y council 111eetings and in o ther fo ra."

by the hi stori ca l situation of the interpre­ter and thus by the " ·ho le o f che o bjecti,·e course o f histo ry .. .

" The meaning o f a text surpasses it s author no c occasiona lh·, but a lwavs. Thus under standin g is n ~ t a re p ro.ducti,·e procedure. but ra ther always a producti,·e one .. . It suffices to sa,· tha t onr 1111drr­sta11ds di_ffrrently wh{'J ,· 0 11r w1drrs ta11ds at all ...

Page 3: A. · We resume publication on Jafluary 13, 1983. For notices and events untii that date, please send or bring them to ,Maryse Perr~u~, ro m 213 in Bishop Court. Deadline is Monday,

CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY ..

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·REPORT-AND

.FINANC.IAL STATEMENTS'

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MAY-31, 1982 / •

AUDITORS' REPORT ' The Members of the Corporation, /

Concordia· University.

We f\ave examined the balance sheet of Conca .dia University as at May 31, 1982 and the statements of revenue and expens~, changes in funds balances, and capital fund source and application of funds for the year tHen ended. Our examinati9n was made in accordance with generally a-ccepted auditing standards, and accordingly included such tests and other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances.

In our opinion, these financial statements present fairly the financial position of the University as at May 31, 19.82, the results of its current operations and the changes in the funds balances and the source and application of the capital fund for the year then ended in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles applied on a basis consistent wit that of the p~eceding year.

Touche Ross & Co. Chartered Accountants Montreal, Quebec, August 6, 1982.

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SUMMARY OF, SIGN~FICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES/ MAY 31, 1982

The University follows the accounting policies and practices as well as the presentation format as recommended by the Adminisfrative and Financial Affairs

· Committee of the Conference of Rectors and Principals of Quebec Universities, and their application is consistent with that of the preceding year.

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Fund Accounting 1

In order to ensure observance of limitations and restrictions placed on the use of the resources available to the University, the accounts pf the University are maintained in accordance with the principles of "fund accounting" by which resources for various purposes are classified for accounting and reporting purposes into funds that are in accordance with activities or objec_tives specified .

generafly recorded as they are incurred. An amount equivalent to commitments for outstanding purchase orders for materials and services is appropriated from the current year's revenue. However no provision is made in the accounts for accumulated holiday and sickness benefits.

Restricted gifts, grants, appropriations, endowments, and other restricted resources are accounted for separately in the appropriate restricted funds . Such funds may only be utilized in accordance with the purposes established by the source of such funds and are in cont ta t with operating and capital funds,over which the Board of Governors retains full control to use in achieving any of its institutional purposes.

Accrual basis Transactions are generally recorded on the accrual basis.

University and schools revenue and expense c Tuition fees are recorded as revenue in the financial year in which the course

sessions are held . t Operating grants are accounted for as revenue in the financial year to which they

apply. Revisions thereto are accounted for when they are definitely established. Other fees and income, mainly interest earned and computer centre revenue, are

recorded as they are earned. Academic and other operating expenditures, including library acquisitions, are

Inventory valuation Inventories of bookstore and other materials are valued at the lower of cost as

·determined -by the retail cost method and net realizable value . Provision is made for slow-moving and obsolete inventories. ·

Def erred charges and prepaid expenses Improvements to leased premises represen.t the principal deferred charges and

are charged to operations over the terms of the related leases. Other deferred charges and prepaid expenses are generally charged to operations in the subsequent year. · '

Capital expen__diture grants and subsidies Capital expenditure grants are accounted for upon Order-in-Council of the

Province of Quebec. These .grants are funded in due course by the issue of long­term debt to be subsidized from funds voted annually by the legislature of the Province of Quebec for this purpose.

Capital expenditures grants are recorded in the University equity account. The capital portion of subsidies -is recognized upon issue of the long-term debt and it is reduced by the capital portion of the annual debt service subsidy.

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Page 4: A. · We resume publication on Jafluary 13, 1983. For notices and events untii that date, please send or bring them to ,Maryse Perr~u~, ro m 213 in Bishop Court. Deadline is Monday,

Balance Sheet/ As at May 31 1982-.,.

1912 1911 . I ASSETS , LIABILITIES

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Operating Fund r Operating Fund -Cash $ 130 756 $ 89 051 Account s payable and accrued li abilities

Accounts receiva ble (Note. 2) 1 158 697 1 038 858 Unea rned revenue - '

Due fro m Provi nce of Quebec (Note 3) / - 1 261 000 Due to Restriu1::J Fund s

Inventor ies (Note 4) 825 732 839 825 , Deferred charges and prepaid expenses (Note 5) 3 973 670 4 677 369 - -· Due from Capi~ Fund

~

9 362 141 4 479 913 .. Accumulated operating deficit - 2 607 552 3 535 540 - I

$ 18 058 548 $ 15 921 556 . \

Capital Fund Capital Fund

Bank loa ns

Due from Prov ince of Quebec (Note)) .

$ 10 027 654 $ 10 816 422

Capital portion of subsidie~ gra~1ed to - -

the Universit y .. by the Provi,..nce of Quebec 18 546 884 13 666 951

AccounIs payable and accrued liabilities

Due to Operating Fu nd

Fixed asse ts (Note 6) 87 619 007 85 651 508 Lo ng -term.debt (Note 7)

,.,.. /

' $ 116 193 545 $ 110 134 881

Capital equi ty ... ' I .

Restricted Funds . Restricted Funds --

Ma rke table se c urit ies at cost (marke t - Accounls pa)lable and accrued liabili1ies

value - $165.097; 1981 - $168,931 ) . . $ 232 042 $ 232 042 Fellowships, schola rships and o ther funds

Account s rece ivable ( O\e 2) .

1 906 444 \ 1 460 593 Unexpended research granIs ,

. Due from Operating Fund 7 587 938 6 059 797 Trust accounts

- t , . - -· $ 9 726 424 7 752 432 •.

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Stat~ment of changes_ in funds balances/ F~r the year ended May 31 1982

1982 1981 - , I OPERATING FUND ' RESTRICTED FUNDS -

.Balan ce of accumulated operat ing . - - ' Fellowships, defi cit a1 June 1 scholarships Une,pended as previousl y reported $ 4 581 340 $ 2 205 296 ' and other funds research grants 1

Adjus1men1s to pr ior yea rs {No1e 1) ' ~ (1 045 800) (?64 397) Balance at June 1 $ 1 618 528 - s ~ 3 523 735

As restated · 3 535 ~ • 1 640 899 Increase

Excess of revenue over expe nse Donations 982 487 (ex pense over revenue ) for the year

' -927 988 (1 894 641) .

Grants 6 769 833 Balance of ~ccumul~ted operat ing deficit at May 31 '

.. ,, 5 2 '°! $52 $ 3 535 540 ,.1 -ec Investment income ' 188 173

CAPITAL F!c.JND \ Transfers frolTI Balance oi capi tal ,equ i1y at June 1 s 83 351 755 $ 80 521 692 o therrf und s 3 324 - 281 324 •

Fix.ed as '.:>e ls written off (Note 6) (3 233 923) (3 496 705 ) 1 173 984 - 7 051 157 1,

Library co llections financed b y th e Operating Fund 1 283 978 12 10 002 Dec rease

Capital expenditure grants / ... From the Provi nce of Quebec 2 738 000 - 3 776 000 .. I

Schol arships, fe ll ows hips ar,d

bursaries awarded - 530 888 From research projects - 1 256 564 1 043 590

Resea rch . Interest portion of subsidies granted 10 expe nditures 5 979 795

th e Universit y by the Pro vince of Quebec 1 708 177 ,

1 256 168 -Transfers ,,. Donations and investment in come 109 939 197 176 to o th er funds 121 091 -87 214 490 84 607 923 Other expenditures 145 590

Deducl interest expense , 1 708 177 1 256 168 797 569 5 979 795

Balance of c.pilal equity al May.31 s 85 586 313 y s 83 351 755 Balance at May 31 $ 1 994 94J s 4 595"197 · I

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Statement of Capital Fund Source and Application otFunds/For the year ended May 31, 1 -

1982 1911 - -· -- .

I Application of funds '

Source of funds Long -t erm debt service '

Prov ince of Quebec . . - ,., Ca pit al portion, ne1 -

Ca pi ta l expendi1ure grant $ 2 738 000 $ 3 776 000 Interest portion

Lorig- term debt maturities ,i - -paid by 1he P~ovince of Quebec 1 120 067 119 007

Pur chase of fixed assets

lntercsI cxpe·nse paid -by the Province of Quebec 1 708 177 1 256 168

Increase in ca pital pprtion of subsidies

granted to the Universil y by the Province of Quebec due to 1he issue of long-term debt

"' " 4 566 244 5 151 245 I Lib rary collections financed by '

1he Operating Fund ) 283 978- 1 , ) 10 002 Net increase in funds

Equipment p urchased Repr1;,sc nted by

wi1h grant\ n.:<.civcd ' (Decrease) increase in due from Province of Quebec

for rC'.:>Ca rch 1 256 564 1 043 590 Deer.ease (i ncrease) in bank loans

Donation-. and in vc<,tmc nt income 109 939 197 176

(Increase) decrease in accounts payab le ' and a.ccrued liabilities

l <,~uc of long-term deQI 5 000 000 Increase in d ue to Operating Fund -

$ 12 21' 725 s 7 702 OlJ Net lnaeue in funds I

Page 5: A. · We resume publication on Jafluary 13, 1983. For notices and events untii that date, please send or bring them to ,Maryse Perr~u~, ro m 213 in Bishop Court. Deadline is Monday,

... - . - < < . -Statement of Revenue and Expense/ -

For the year ended May 31 ' 1982

II 1982 1981

I - 1982 1981

Untestricted Rl'Slricted Tolal s 8 333 420 $ 6 039 641

REVENUE - -2 137 190 1 821 916

7 567 938 6 059 797 University

St udents' tuit ion fees s 11 456 960 s $ 11 456 960 $ 10 426 662

Province of Quebec . -ope ra ting grants - 76 734 189 76 734 189 69 937 497 ·,

- Miscell aneous fees -

I ' and o ther income 1 590 243 1 590 243 1 369 142

$ 18 058 548 s 15 921 556 ~

89 781 392 89 761 392 61 755 301

- . Student services 2 495 518 2 495 518 2 362 795

Scholarships and fellows hips 530 888 530 888 496 002 . s 2 450 000 $ 8 350 000 Assisted research gran ts 5 979 795 5 979 795 • 5 466 891

328 207 286 262 . ~

.. ~ Total University and 9 362 141 4 479 913 research r~enue 92 276 910 6 510 683 98 787 593 90 120 989

18 ' 546 864 13 666 951 ' . . - Schools . ' -85 506 313 63 351 755 Tuition fees 217 714 ... 217 714 194 401

I $ 116 193 545 $ 110 134 881 - Ancillary services . - . Bookstore 3 063 264 - 3 063 264 3 149 353 . . Residences and food services 468 360 468 360 396 645

s 1 701 728 $ 1 ~OS 125 Printing and

1 994 943 1 618 526 • reproduction services 1 227 779 1 227 779. 1 322 469 - 1, ,..;. r . ·..: 4 595 097 3 523 735 Day Care Ce ntre 11 761 11 761 64 127

. Parking

.. 81 10, 81 105 76 642 1 434 656 r - 905 044 -

t s 9 726 424 s 7 752 432 1,. . . -· 4 852 269 4 852 269 5 033 636

. Total rewenue . $ 97 346 893 " s 6 510' 683 s 103 857 576 $ 95 349 026 . - - - . .

; . - -- . . I I -·

1982 1981 , . .

- Unrestricted Restrkted Tot;,I

- EXPENSE -t 198J 1981 Unive rsi ty /

< Academic s 54 ·589 145 s s 54 589 145 $ so 426 996 - .

Jed Library 5 952 044 5 952 044 5 635 466

mis Registrar - 3 477 237 - 3 477 237 3 467 296

735 $ 5 142 263 $ 4 366 351 Computer centre 2 456 106 2 456 106 2 485 516

66 '474 532 66 474 532 62 237 280

982 467 669 052 Ad ministrat ion . 6 826 964 6 826 964 7 062 198

833 6 769 833 5 876 377 Operational se rvices - 15 521 325 15 521 325 -- 14 473 512

188 173 132 378 88 822 821 88 822 821 63 792 990 .

~ Student serv ices 2 445 632 2 445 632 2 215 631 ~ .

324 •• 284 648 , 225 689 '• . Scho larships and fe llowships 530 868 530 888 496 002

157 ' 8 225 141 . 7 123 496 Assisted research 5 979 795 5 979 795 5 466 891

Tota l UniverS'it y and ,

resea rch expense 91 268 453 6 510 683 97 779 136 91 991 514

-530 888 4% 002

Schoo ls

Academic and ad minis1rat ion 278 834 ,

278 834 l - 294 763

795 5 979 795 5 466 691 Ancil lary services - , -

Bookstore 3 077 118 3 077 118 3 151 ~91 121 091 286 960

Residences and food services 493 265 493 265 431 824

145 590 75 711 Print ing and -

795 6 777 364 6 347 584 reprod uctio n services 1 187 325 1 187 325 1 212 067

ti97 s 6 5911 040 - $ 5 142 263 Day Care Centre 24 687 24 687 76 942 . Parking 89 223 89 223 64 546

- 4 871 '618 4 871 618 4 957 390

Total expense 96 418 905 6 510 683 102 929 588 9} 243 667

Excess of revenue over expense (expense ower rewenue)

for lhe !"~• 927 988 927 988 (1 894 64 1) - ,

1981 $ 97 346 1193 s 6 510 683 $ 103 857 576 s 95 349 026

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I ~ ·summary continued from page 5-1 ,

·. . --

120 067 119 on-, Fixed assets .

' Fixed assets are valued as follows: • 1 708 177 1 256 168 . )

.. • Land is va lued at cost; 1 828 244 1 375 245 • Buildings are initially val ued at ·cost and are reva lued every 50 yea rs ; 5 201 422 . 5 690 522 • Build ing alterat io ns and improvements are capitali zed but are written off after

one yea r; • Furniture and equipment is va lued at cost but is written off after 15 years ;

5 000 000

L • The full cost of library acq uisitio ns is charged aga inst revenue of the Operating

12 029 666 7 265 767, Fund in the yea r of purchase. At the sa me time an amount eq ual to the full cost is s 187 059 s 436 246 - added to the va lue of fixed assets shown in the Ca pital Fund and credited t9

ca pital equity;

($ 788 768) $ 4 940 746 • Deprecia tion , other th~n the above reductions, is not recorded in the accounts .

5 900 000 (1 600 000)

Pensions .

(41 945) 4 903 The University has a partly contributory, trusteed and funded pension plan . The

(4 882 228) (2 909 403) current service cost portio n is charged to operations as i ncurred . Defic iencies

I $ 117 059 $ 436 246 revea led by a va luation of the fund made by the actuaries as at Janua ry 1, 1980 are being amortized by instalments over a period ending in 1991 in accordance with the

- recommendations of the actuaries.

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Page 6: A. · We resume publication on Jafluary 13, 1983. For notices and events untii that date, please send or bring them to ,Maryse Perr~u~, ro m 213 in Bishop Court. Deadline is Monday,

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Notes to Financial ,St~tements/ May 31 ·1982 .-

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,_;,.; 'l ~~ - ·.''".'it ,;,' -:~ .. ~-ti -

1. .\dlultnlenll to.-~ --~ .,·;; . ; ' /ft · .... •·. , • ,., ••• ! Changes during the yJ ar:

1980 •nd ·, - 1982 1981

prior , . 1981 Toul

Additions • , yeus ~

Univer'sity's share of municipa l tax . •· - . Land $ 848 700 s 1 059 ·778 .. ·, .. reassessments on premises occupied " Bui lding aheratiolls and improvements - - 1 073 610 1196 ~ 6 . under a net-net lease s 215 200 s . $_ 215 200 '

Furniture and equipm1en1 , . 1 813 027 2 082 935 . . . .,

Additional grant received from / ' ' Government to cover i ncreases \

Acquisition of library volumes, financed by the Operating Fund 1 283 978 1 310 002

in rented premises costs . (568 603) - (564 397) (1 133 000)_ , ~

Adjustments to operating grant . Buildings . ~ 182 107 . 241 451

Medicare (151 000) .

(151000) ·, 5 2111 422 5 890' 522

' Formal ion de chercheurs et

Reduction~ ~. ,r I

acrion concertee 16 000 . 16 000 Building alterations and improvements 1 196 356 2 331 348

Fonds de depannage 7 000 7 000 Furn itu rt! and equipment . 2 037 567 1 165 357

($ . 481 403) IS 564 397) (S \

1 045 800) 3 233 923 - 3 496 705

2. At:coantsftlCmale . ~"r.· v : '.·

, \ I Nel in~re.ise s 1 967 499' $ 2 393 817 . • . .

198_2 1981 I 1. ldlnr-Tei'nl Deht · 0 ·~- ¾ "' •;•

Operating Fund ' ' , ' 1982 1981

' Tuition and e ucation fees, less - ' 10½'X, Series " A" Bonds maturing ;

allowance for doubtful accounts - . s 293 795 s 320 927 May 3. 1986 s 5 000 000 s 5 000 000

Services, advances and other . 864 902 717 931 9½'X, Series "B" Boncfs repayab~ in five . equal annual instalments commenci ng on

. . . s 1 158 697 s 1 038 858

May 15, 1979 ,

100 000 200 000 ·-- . ' Restricted Funds ..

18½'X, Series " C" Bonds maturing on --Natural Sciences and Engineering Octobe r 26, 1984 ... 5 000 000

Resea rch Counci l grants $ 1 804 '879 s 1 450 093 10% Series ' ' B" Bonds maturing on

Formation de chercheurs et May 15 , 1988 . 2 500 000 2 500 000

action concertee . ' (44 921) . 91/i Firsl Mortgage repayable on

Medical Research Council of Canada 146 486 December 15, 1982 1 500 000 1 500 000'

Other accC:unts relating to trust funds 10 500 5 1/ 8'X, Mortgage loan from 1he Cari:.da Mortga e

s 1 906 444 s 1 460 593 and Housing Corpo ration . repayab le by semi-annua l payments of $52 ,622 indudiflg in terest to

3. .,_ ..... ~'of~ . ' ~ ·

i'•· ? ' ~ - . ""t,½ l\'.!lc'-'' •:•. , - & "';.1vtl March 1, 2014 1 646 884 1 666 951

~

1981 81¼, Debentures repayable in five equal annua l 1982

Operati ng Fund installments of $560,000 commencing March 1, 1990 2 800 000 2 BOO 000

Current year operating grant ., s $ 1 261 000 - s _18 546 884 $ 13 666 951

Capital Fund Assets pledged under the long-ierm debt agreements are as follows:

Capital grants 10 027 654 10 816 422 • The W.X. Bryan Building is pledged as securit y for the repayment of the First Mortgage Bonds assumed

4. .. wefttorles I from _Loyola College .

1982 , 1981 • Hingsto n Hall is pledged as security for the repayment of a mortgage loan fr0m Canada Mortgage and

Housi ng Corporation. Bookstore .

t .. Commitments '¾ 611 801 Books s 555 359 s

a. An actuaria l va lua'i ion of th e pension plan at January 1 , 1980 showed a net unfunded liabilit y of Supplies 156 685 112 650 $2,376 ,000 calculated as fo llows :

712 044 726 451 Present va lue of annual past ,

Statio nary and supplies,..,· I

service payments s 2 984 000 113 688 113 374 '

~ I' s 825 732 s 839 825 Less cont ingent su rplus 608 000

s. Defened Charges and Prepaid &oenses j - t s 2 376 000 , - ,The liabilit y f2_r past service payments is being reduced by annual payments in accordance with a

' 1982 - 1981

schedule recommend ed by the actuar ies. Improve ments to leased premis~s s 3 344 194 s 4 063 082

b. Lease ag ree[Tlents having an initial o r remaining te rm of more than one year exist for premises and . Insurance 85 899 74 515 equipment. The ren tal payments of the next five years ending on May 31 are as follows:

Other expenses and deposits 543 577 539 772 1983 $ 3 872 540 -s 3 973 670 s 4 677 369 . ', ' 1984 3 609 840

Fixed Assets .

< I 1985 3 123 410 6. ' 1986 3 028 825 -1982 1981 1987 1 725 850

Details: \ s 15 360 465

l a nd s 13 001 863 s 12 153 163 Cur-rent government policy is to provide for such re nt als in the operating grants.

Buildings ,

36 027 477 35 845 370 9. Comparative figures . I I

Building ahera1ions and improvements 1 073 610 1 196 356 Certa in of the 1981 figures have been reclass ified to reflect the prese ntat ion adopted in 1982.

furn iture and equ ipment 17 683 816 17 908 356 -Library collection 19 832 241 18 548 263

$ 87 619 007 s 85 651 508

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Page 7: A. · We resume publication on Jafluary 13, 1983. For notices and events untii that date, please send or bring them to ,Maryse Perr~u~, ro m 213 in Bishop Court. Deadline is Monday,

/

-·Workshop pai~ts grilll future for -universities By Minko Sotiron

The Canadian university system is in fora period o f in stabili ty a nd plain " trou­ble", accordi ng to J ohn Cruickshank, a former ed ucat ion reporter for the Gaulle and n o\\· a Toronto G lobe and Mail reporter .

The root o ( the problem, he said, stemmed from Ottawa's paying almost 60% of to ta l U niversity cos ts, yet havirig no say in the running of the system, because the Briti sh North American Act stipulated that educa tion was the responsibility of the provinces.

Making these remarks at a workshop on · provi11cia l-federal rdations in educa tion

held at this week's " Roadblocks to Educa­tion " conference sponsored by CUSA , Cruitkshank sa id tJ-iat increasingly the federal government is seeking to in fl uence how the money is spent.

'" For its dough , Otta\\"a is getting neither recog11i tion--:-the feds don't expecl appreciation-or assurances that stand­ards- and programs " ·ill be ma intained. ;'I/or can they dictate-_or e\Tll examine­at present , how or where their money is being sp('nt. _ .

"Th('y a r(' \,·illing to nego tiate to achie\·e these ends- but thev have let it be kno\\"n they don '.t bclie\'t' th~y have to bar­gain. And n e ither responsibility nor accountability can be excluded from a 1ww package. ''

It 's th(' making of the new packagt' tha t will also pose problems, according to Cruickshank, who noted that the last

provincial-federal negotiations on ed uca­ti on took ten years to complete. Given the lack o f money ava ila ble, the squabbling sho u Id be ferocious, he predicted. Worst of all, the party most affected by the wran- · gling - the universi ti es = will be neither partner nor advisor to the negotiations.

" Long-term planning will be difficult to make for the universities," he said, "and l'duca tion will .suffer, especia lly given the fa ct tha t it makes ten years for the system to produce a lecturer or professor. With this kind of instability , how can the uni­vers ities prepare themselves for what stu­dents wi ll need in the next decade?" , he asked.•

At the same workshop, Liberal MNA for Wes tmount Richard French said that recent provinc ial cuts in the higher educa­tion budget didn ' t make sense and were politica ll y motivated. He pointed to the university sys tem, adult education and private schools as being targetted for cuts because they couldn't defend themselves politi ca ll y.

The cuts to universities are especially dangerous because the economic future of Quebec depended on viable universiti es, he said. Money could be saved by cu tting the more than $100 million in security to employment provisions and using those iunds for the universities , he suggested.

H e also said that eventua ll y tuition fees would have to be ra ised, no matter which party formed the government.

Nex t week's Thursda y R eport wi ll carry · a fuller report 011 the conf ere nee.

Zastrozzi to be performed The Theatre department will present

George F . . Walker 's play Zastrozzi from November 23 until December 4, excluding Sunday, a t the Hall Building's _ D.B. Clarke Theatre.

Zastrozzi is a contemporary "tongue in cheek" morality play set in the 19th cen­tury. Zas trozzi is a man obsessed with avenging the murder of his mother. As a conseq uence, sword fights , violence, and sex arc pa rt of -the play's actio n and attraction.

Tor~mto-born playwright George F. Walker, rec ipient of numerous Canada Council grants and the Dora Mavor Moore

,A ward ( 1981 ) was the fir st Canadian­resident playwright to be produced by Joe Papp's Public Theatre in New York.

Zaslrozzi was first produced by the Toronto Free Theatre in T oronto in 1977.

Since then , it has been produced in Eng­land, New Zealand and the U.S.

Guest Director Paul H anna was fo und­ing director of Theatre New Bruns:wick's Young Company. H e has been assistant managing direc tor of Theatre New ,Brunswick and workshop director for the National Arts English Theatre.

The set has been dt'signed by second­year student Lucie Lorti e; cos tumes by thea tre department chairman Don Childs; lighting by Richard O ' Nea l (Assis tant T echn_ica l Director of the D.B. Clarke Thea tre).

Curtain is 8:30 p.m. Begi nning November 20, box office hours are Mon­day through Fri day 6:00-9:00 p.m ., Satur­da y and Sunday 4:30-9:00 p .m . For reser­vations and information , ca ll 879-4341. G enera l admission is $4.00; senior citizens . and students with ID, $2.00.

-W TRIS COFFIN & ASSOCIES OPTICIENS D"OI\DONNANCES / DISPENSING OPTICIANS

Glasses and' contact lenses at reduced rates

Th rough a "VISION PROGRAM", now available to all members of the Concordia Un iversity community

For details and your FREE "VISION CARE" card,

/ please contact Joan L. Johnstone, Head Nur.se, Concordia University, Health Centre, 2145 MacKay St.

Tel: 879-4012

U rhan expert Sennett to speak

"Urban Form and DemocraticTheory"­how <lo the ways in wh ich cities are designed and used encourage or discour­age democratic discourse?"- is the topic that Richard Sennett will.discuss on Nov. 24 at 8:30 in room 110 of the Hall Building. -

Sponsored by the Liberal Arts College, Richard Sennett, the director of the New York Institute for the Humaniti es and a sociology professor at New York Univer­sity, is· a widely-published scholar and novt·list.

His works include The Frog Who Dared Croak, On Authority, Th e Fall of Public Man, Th e Psychology of Society, Th e H idden In juries of Class and Th e Uses of Disorder. '

3

CURRICULUM , continued from page I .

to take advantage of Concordia's large selection of courses.

Yet some paneli sts expressed fears that any move towards a core curriculum would lead to a quagmire of admin istra­tive problems. The lim itations imposed by the 90-credit degree was seen as the <:rucial stumbling block, but many a lso resented the intrusion of an imposed curriculum.

" One's role as an educator is a fundion of one's personality," sa id Etudes Fran­c;aises prof_. Albert Jordan. He saw the movement towards a core curriculum as a "bureaucratic fo rmalization of my role as an educator andJ'm dead against it. "

Jordan obj ected to the lofty heights to which the advocates -of a core curriculum aspired. He believed that integrating stu­dents into ;i " multi-lingual , multi­cultural society by giving them reading and w~iting tools should be the limited goal of the university."

Some in the audience agreed with Jor­dan 's assessment, while Communications Studies pr;f. Denn.is Murphy was a minor­ity o f pne in calling for computer literacy for -Arts grads. But the over-all tone of the meeting reflected little sense of urgency on the issue. The Task Force, however, feels differentl y, sa id Scheinberg:

"There is a backlash aga inst the laissez­faire attitude towards curriculum require­ments that developed in the 60s. What we want is to ensure that it doesn't degenerate into a kind of 19th century nostalg ia ."

Liberal Art s College principal · Fred Krantz summed up the sentiment of the meeti ng when he acknowledged that "we are failing . (our students)" by denying them a wider educa tion .

NOTICES continued from Th e Backpage. •18•1-40!F,. THE DEAN OF ST UDENTS OFFICE is currl"n tl y S<"tting up an int<"rnational library/ loungl" locatl"d with th<" offices of th<" lntnnationa l/ Ethnic Stud!'nt Association at 2020 Mackay Strl"t'l, room P-203. Thl" purposl" of thi s ar!'a is to providt· a wl"koming atmosph!'rt' whnl" intl"rna tiona l s tud!'nts can k!'l"p abr!'ast of nt'ws from hom!' and wlwn· a ll mt'mlx-rs of th<" Concordia commu nity can find informa tion about othn parts of thl" world and llll"l"t with studl"nts from a broad.

Th<" Qul"h<"i· Govnnnwnt and many t'mhassit's and consu latl"S havl" madl" contribu tions. If your dl"partml"lll nn·ivl"s information (i.t'. , nt'wskttns , rl"ports, l" tc ). ,vhid1 would hl" of intt'n·st to intl"rnational studt·nts, W(' wc,uld rt'qul"s t that th<"y ht' donatl"d to th<" library onn· you haw madl" u s<· of th!'m . Any contribut ion s ca n h<" S!'llt to M-106, 2 13:, Mackay, S(;W campus. ~l"aSl" ca ll Elizab!' th Mor<"y at 879-28'10 for furth l"r information . ...._ NOW IS THE TIME TO SEE THE GRADUATE AWARDS OFFICER FOR INFORMATION ABOUT FUNDS for graduatl"

• study ll l"Xl yl"ar. Appli<·a tions an· avai lable for th<" Quchl"c-China program , th l" Soroptirnist Foundation , l'ACFAS, !' tc-. For nHm· informaticil1 a bout thl" scholarships for gradual(• Study, drop hy 2 11', Mackay Stn·t·t ,'3rd floor , or phonl" 879- 7317. BASIC LIFE SUPPORT REFRESHER: 8 Hours f,;r Life, Wt'dnl"sday, lkcl"mhn 8, 9 a .m . t,; 'i p.m . For mmT information, ra il 879-8'i72. CREATIVE AGG RESSION FOR WOMEN: Saturday workshops, 9 a.111. - 1 p.111. l.l"arn to <'xprl"ss your natura l aggrl"ssion <·onstnu-tivdy in ordl"r to attain you r full l"s t potl"ntial in l"vnyday li ving. For rl"gistration or futlwr information ca ll '181-2826. CONCORDIA COLLEGE SKI WEEK, · JAN. 2-7: Smuggll"rs' Notch, $179 U.S. or Sugar loaf, $19:, U.S. Condominiums 111dud<· full kitcht'n a nd fin·plan1. For informa tion call fi88-2177 or vis it th!' CUSi\ booth (111<-zzanin<·) W!'ds, 12 noon - 2 p:m. THE CODE ADMINISTRATO R rrn·i v<"s

formal compla illts of 1w11-auidr111ic· bt'haviour on univnsity prl"mist's , brought by om· mt'mlx·r of th<" univl"rsity aga inst anothn, and ('llSUITS that th<" compla int proc<"dur<"s Sl"l out in th<" Codt' of Conduct (Non-Acadt'mic) an· propt·rl y carri<"d o ut. Loyola campus: HB-420, 482-0320, t·xt. 'il2; SGW campus: 21'i0 Bishop, 879-7386. STUDENTS NEEDED TO SIT ON HEARING BOARDS: What is a h<"ari ng hoard? It is part of a syst<"m S<"l up by virtul" of th!' Codl" o f ('.ondun (Non-Acadl"mic ) to hear formal complaints mad<" hy Oil(' mt'mher of th <" univnsity again st anothn. This cod!' is publish!'d o n p.96 of th!' 1982-83 ll ndngraduat!' Calendar. W!' n!'ed 40 stud<"nls , st'ven of whom must ht· r<"sid!'nl ­stud!'llts , who wou ld hi' willing to give a small° portion of thl"ir tim!' to hear non-acad!'mic complaints against sllltknts, such as va nda lism , fight ing, l"IC. If you ai-<" inL<-rt·st('(I in ht·coming a ' nwmh!'r, pleas!' ca ll tlk Offic!' of th!' Codt· Administrator at '182-0320, t·xt. 'il2/ 'i l3 a n y day ht·twt·t·n 9 a.m . - :, p.m. We an· loca t!'d in Hingston Ha ll , room 120, Loyola campus.-OLD TESTAMENT PROPHETS: i\ lt-ctun· S!'r it's of th <" Proph!'ts who hav<" left us with a hl'ritag<" of moral rt·ll(·wa l all(I confidt·n< <' in th<" Divi n!' Pn·st·nn-. Fr. Gt'org!' ovotny, S.J. will off!'r 9 ll"ct Ur!'s on Tut'sday aft!'rnoon frc1m I - 2 p .m . Thi' sa m<' lt·c·tun· ~i ll h<' r<'p!'at!'d on Thursday <'V!'ni ngs. FREE, a ll wdconw. LOYOLA CHAPEL: Th!' Chapd is op<'n for prayn a nd rt'fknion evny day , 8 a.m. - 11 p.m. Mass.is n·ldirat!'d at 12:05 noon, Monday to Friday, a nd on Sundays at 11 a .m. and 8 p .m . BELMORE HOUSE: Iklmon · Hous!' is for stud!'nl s. It has quit't spac<" for r!'ading, a nd ki1dwn facilitit's you can 11st' for lunch . ( ~unpus Ministry has offic!'s and llHTting rooms th<"n· for volunl <'l'r prog-ran1s. proje('1S and <·t11Tt· 111 issues of conn·rn to studt'nts. CHAPLAINS: Ann<' Shon·, lloh Nag·y and Boh ( ;audt't , S . .J . an· th!' Chaplains. Tht'ir offic!'s ar<" in Bdmon· I lou s<" (.'ViOO lldmor!') just hd,irnl thl" Campus Ct·ntn· and ca n Ix· n·adwd at '18'1-109'i. L ymw K!'all(·, th <" s<TITtary is thn<" to hdp you.

Page 8: A. · We resume publication on Jafluary 13, 1983. For notices and events untii that date, please send or bring them to ,Maryse Perr~u~, ro m 213 in Bishop Court. Deadline is Monday,

17,.. 1/1111·." I;,., N,.,,,, ,., i, puhli,hnl ,wekly d ur in!,! 111 >tic,·, a nd d a"ili,·d ad , 111u,1 read1 the l'uhl ie th,· a ,·ad e111i ,· , ·,·ar h) t h,· l'uhlic Rdati on, OffitT . Relati on, Offi,·c (BC-2 1.1) no lat er than Cll 11,·ordia l ' ni ,c r,i ty. 1-15 :i d,· Ma is.11111c11, c lll , d . .1//.l\'/1.- I )' \'()()\' prinr Ill thc I hu r,d ay l'l >"I I OR : \1 in~ o Sllt irlln \\-,. ,1. \1 o ntr,·a l. () 11 ,·h,·c ll .1( i I ~X. (51-l) XN- p11hl i,' a1 io n dat,·. l>i , pl a, rat,·, for ll ff-ca 111p us a 1id RH i l ' l .i\ R CO.\ I RI Bl ' I <>RS : Lisc· \la ri i' S-! ~)7_ \1 a tc-rial puhl i,h1.:d in "/ 11<' "/ll ur.,da, ~ l?c/ Jn rt n;,1t ilrn ;tl ;,1\h t.:rt i;'\ in~ arl· ;,na ilahlc.: l i ft n: qw:;'\ l frum B i,'.\ lllllll.'tl L' . C a rok· K kin!.!rih . \t ,in'.'\1.: Pcrra ud. n1'1\ hc rq,rll d11 ,:,·d \\ 1tlHl t1 t pn111ission . C:rcdi t I.I. /,' l(Ol'/' /:' C IJ .\/ .\ll .S/-( '().\'.\F/1. /SC .. 1611 K,·n \\ 'hi tt inl,! ha,n :O nd l>,; , id .·\lln ,;tt , \\ll uld he apprn·i a_i ,·d . St - l kni, Str,·l'I . \1 ll ntrc·al . ()uc· h,·l'. 112.\ .1K .1. I Yl'l'SI' I l l.\(i : C u,;i S,·t

1·11i , n ,i1, ,·,,· nt, ;111d not in ·, ar,· p11~ li , hcd frel' ll f l ,· k plw n,· (:i i-I ) X-ll/-l.1-11. ll i,pla,· a,b l' rt isc· ml'n1' l'R I.\ 11.\( i: Ric hdi ,· 11 Rll tt1 - I ith ,, d 1;11·!',·- ( ' la,., il i,·d ad , ,·,"t 15, p,-r \\Ord up Ill 25 111 11 ,1 rc11 d1 I ,· ( iroup,· Cll n11 11 1111i -Co n, l' il lnl'. ' " " C IRC l 'I.!\ 11 0.\ : l/000 n •pi,·,

_____ ______________ " _"_r,_1,_._a ~ ~- ~~!~ ::.r ,\ n rd_,_" _'·~r_2_5_,_,_o_r,_Is_._l_' ,_c_·n_l_, . ___ " _'·_,·_~,_ l'_ri_ll_r_1_ll_t_h_,·_ll_11_11_·,_d_a_, ,...'_" _' h_l_i,_·a_1_i,_" '_d_a 1_,·_. ___ _ ------------ -----

e back page the back page the back pa EVENTS Th ursday 18 CONSERV,\TORY ·of CIN EM ATOG RAPHIC ART: Ca11adia11 St11d,•11 / Fi/ 111 Frsti1,al -S('ll'ct ion of thl' hl'st fil m s mad(' hy stud('n ts d u rin~ thl' y,·a r 198 1-82 a t 8 p .111 . in H -1 10. BOARD OF GOV ERNORS: Op('n m1·1·1in ~ at 1:1 °, p .111 . in H -7W, H a ll Bid ~ .. SGW ca mpus . POLITICA L SCI ENCE DEPARTMENT & CO NCORDIA PlllLOSOPHY ST U DENT S' ASSOCIATION: Prof. Jos(' p h O ' Malll'y, Marq11t· 111· lln ivn si ty, w ill ta lk o n J\l arx anti T l1tJ111as ,Jq 11 i11as 011 }11stiff a t 8 p .m . in room 20-1 B1ya11 Bldg ., Loyo la Cun p us . F R EL C USA- - i\ Im ·i<' - T id1t·I lo I l t'il l't' II a t 2:30 p .111. in 11 - 11 0, l l;i l l Bid~. SC\\' .-a mpus. FR EE LESBIA N AN D G AY FREIN OS OF CONCORDIA: C roup dis.- u ss ion o n tra ns­sn,u ;i lit y \\'ith g u('st sp<'a kn, -I - Ii p .111. , in 11 -'l:l:l -li . I !a ll Bldg., S(;\\' r.1111pus. For 1110n· in formatio n c;i ll 87!)-8 101i. ~

RO ADBLOCKS TO EDUCAT ION : I 1:'10 - 12:30 " Sl'xua l S1.1;11ifi'c11io u in Th l' llni\'('rs i ty" 11-li:>I \\'ORKSI IO I' . I :00 - 2:00 "Farn lt y -S tud l'nts Rdations in Th <' 80 \ " 11 , li:·, I \\' O RKSI IOI'_. . ~:00 - -1:00 " ,\cadrn, ic Ad ,·isin g , Fact or Fict io n " I ( .. ! 'Vi \\' O R KS I IOI'. WEISSI\IA N G ALLERY, GA LLERY I & GALLE RY II : Tl1t• I fr ritagt' of j ack Bus l, , ,-1 Tri/m t,•, unt i l Nm·. 27. On the nwzza nin,· ol th l' H al l Bid~. SC\\' ,am pus. I\IONTRE AL CHI LDREN'S HOSPITAL

-C HRISTMAS CARDS: Chri stmas ca rds will h(' o n s;ilt- u111 il Nov. 30 in the Ma in Lo bhy of thl' I !a ll Bid~. SC\\' campus. SOC IAL ASPECT S OF ENGIN EERI NG: Prof. F.11. K111'1111;u1, Sci,·nn · & Hum a n Affa irs !)('pt. , on Ro il' of Expl'rt W itll('SS o n EAR P Pand : C.1s1· S tudy - Ura n ium 1-kxa fl o rid(' Rl'finery Warman , Saska tchl'wan , 11:-1;, a .111 . - I p .111 ., in H-63:>/2. SC\\' campu s. LOYO LA CAMP US CENTRE: Jnvcllery Sale sta rt in ~ at 11 a .111 . in thl' Mai n Lo unge .o f the ( ~unpu s Cl'n tr(' . Loyo la ca m pus. LOYOLA CAMP US CENTRE: Ca mpus Ct·nt re Bi rthday in Wo lf & K('ttll' a nd Ma in Lounge st art in~ a t 8 p .111 . FREE Admi ssio n. Loyola ca m pus.

,.

Friday 19 ENGI N EERI NG AN D COMPUTER SCIENCE FA CU LTY CO UNCIL: M('('ti n g at 2:30 p .111 . in l_l -71i9, H a ll Bldg,. SGW cam pus. PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT : Sem inar -P rof. Josq )h O ' Ma llt-y, Marq ue lte U n iversi ty, wi ll c-om m,· 111 o n so m ,· tex ts o f Marx a nd Th o mas Aqu inas al 10 a.m . in H -769, H a ll Bldg. (For prof('ssors a nd advanced students o nl y). sew cam pu s. APPLIED SOCIAL SCIENCE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION: Co ff('l' House a t 8 p. m . in F- 107, Annl'x F, 2085 Bisho p Street. All studt·n ts wl'lco mt•. sew ca m p us. CONCORDIA GRAD UATE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION: Vi1lt-o ta pt·s o f ta lks g iven in En g lish in Broc kwo od , Engiand 198 1, hy J. Krishna muni. Today at 8 p .m . in H -·120, H a ll Bldg . SG W ca mpus. FR EE. For fu rth('r information call 897 -72 19 ( I -6 p .111 .) o r 932-63(i2 (('VI' . )

ROADBLOCKS TO ED UCATION: 12:00 - 3:oo • " Wra p lJp " H-65 1 R('view o f Sp('a kns (CUTV). Rl'vi(•w o f Wo rkshops. Clos ing Pl ('na ry. CONS ERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: XIV STUDENT FILM FESTIVAL, 6 - 11 p.111 . in H-110, H a ll Bid~ .• SGW ca m p us. WOMEN'S HOCKEY: O11a wa a t Concordia , 8 p .m . Loyola ca mpus. · LOYOLA CAMPUS CENTRE: Ba nd Wet Pa int in th(' Wo lf &-K('llk sta rting a t 8 p .m . Loyol_a rn mpus. PUBLIC BROADCASTING IN THE U.S.: PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE. A talk by Rohht·n W. Fle111 ii1g , Pn·sid('nt of th(' Corpo ration fo r Publi,· Broadcas tin~. Washington , from 1979-81 . a nd no w a la w proft-ssor a t tht· U nivn sity o f Mich igan (wh('r(' lw was presid('Jll 1968-79) , · from Cw 2 p .111 ., in tht· Bryan Building, roo m 208. Loyola campus.

Saturday 20 CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: XIV STUDENT FILM FESTIVAL,

(i- i I p .m ., in H - 11 0, H all Bldg., SC W ca mpu s. WO MEN'S B S-K-ETBALL: So. Co n n('c_: t ini t a t Co!1Co rdia , 2 p .111 . Loyo la ca m pus.

Sunday 2 1 CONCORDIA UN IVERSITY & Q U EB EC­USSR CU LT URAL ASSOC IATION·: lnt l' nl a t iona ll y acd ai nlt'd ,\ n n l' ni ;in sta r, from Sm'it-t A;-n;(' ;Ji a w ill h(' g i,·in g· ;,_co n n-rt a t 2: :IO p.111 . in th(' Loyola C ha pd , 71 ·I I Sh n hrnotc(' St.\\'. Thi' prn~ ra mnw ind ud l's works h" Bach . Dl' hussy, Cliu ka , Bi 1.1·1, P uff in i ;ind m;i n y o thns. Tick(' tS c;in ill' o ht a in l'd at th(' doo r. d >o na tio n S'>) . For iufo nnatio n call ·182-0,120 loca l :, 1-1.

Mo nday 22 CON ERVATORY OF CI N EI\IATOGRAP HIC ART: I .a ( ;rn,1tlt• ! l/11sio11 (Jl' ;i n R,·noir. 1937 ) (En g lish suht. ) \\'it h J('a n Cahin ; P il' rn · h1·s11ay , Erich von Strnli i·i111 ;11ul Di 1;i l!arlo a t 8:'.IO p .111. i11 H -110; Sl. 0,0. SC\\' ca mpus. · ARTS & CRAFTS SHOW: 011 th <' llll 'Ua ll illl' . 9 a .111. · 9 p .111 ., I l; ,11 Jl ldg. S( ; \I ' c,11 11p11, .

Tuesday 23 CO NSERVATO R\' OF CI NEI\IATOG RAPHI( ART: T l11111t!t-rl"' li (Jost' f \ '0 11 Stl' rnh,-rg , l 'J:!,!J) (English ) " ·it h (;('(1rg,· B;11 1noft. R ic hard ,\,l" n · ;i nd Fa y \\'ray ·11 8 :'.lO p :111 . i11 11 - 11 0: S l. ',0 . SC\\' , ·am p us. ARTS & CR AFTS SHOW: O n th(' 111 t"aa11i 1u·. 11 ,1. 111. - 9 p .111 ., l lall Bldg . SC \I' c;11 11pus, MUSIC DEPARTMENT : Pi ;, 11 0 rffi 1;i l \\'ith Rosliliud Ed \\' a rds a t 8:30 p .111. in th (' Lo)·o b · Cha pl'I , Loyo la ca m pus. (T h <" rffi ta l ind ud('s . \\'orks hy Mt'ssi;,('11 , Stockha t1 S('ll , Ran·I, Sn i;i hin. D('hussy and Alh('niz ). FRE E. WOMEN'S HOCKEY: Bis ho p 's vs Conrnrdi a , at Conco rd ia , 8: I', p .111. Loyo l;i ca mpus . LESBIAN AN D G AY FRIEN DS OF CONCORDIA: Forum 0 11 th,- Cri111i11 t1 ! Cod,· and it s i111plica tio11s fo r \Vo 1111·11 a nd Cays , \\' ith m t· mb('rS of Par lia 111 1"11 t. Tim <' a nd pla n· T .B.A. For 111 0\'(' in fo r111a ti o 11 call 879-8-106. LOYOLA CAMPUS CENTRE: i\-lo\' it· , i ig ht in th <' Mai n Lou 11 ~1· - Tl1t• (? 111,' 11 a l 7 p .11 1. ;i 11d Da 111 it' 11 - 0111 ,-11 #2 At 9 p.111. FREE. Loyo la campus. LESBIAN AN D GAY FRIEN DS OF CONCORDIA: N OP Sn ·1HI Ro h i11 so 11, i\lP , "' ill

: spl'a k 0 11 th(' Crimina l C od(' reform s, th<' Canadian C hartn of Ri g ht s, a nd th t' irn p li ca tion s for wo1ncn and g-a ys , 12 110011 10 2

- p .111 . Room T .B.A. For nwn· in fon na tio n ca ll 879-8 106. SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR INSTITUTE: Cu('st sp l'a kcr G!'IH'\' ii·, ·t· Dor111 a 1111 will ta lk a ho ut hn las t hook L ,, m111a 11 ,1,, Soplt i,, -..r .-,,b11c/lt'/, -I to Ii p .m . in the S('minar rno111 o f th(' Si mon,· d !'

B('a u voir ln stitut (' , 2 170. Bisho p St. Tl'I . 879-8,,2'1. 879-852 1.

Wednesday 24 CONSERVATORY OF CIMEMATOGRAPHIC ART: Th e l'la i11.rn1a 11 (C('cil 8. Dc Mill t·, 1936) (En~li sh ) with Cary Coop <' r , ] <'an Arthur, C haril's Bickford a nd J ames Elli son a t 5:,IO p .111. in H - 110; S l.:,0. SC\\' ca m p us. LOYOLA FILM SERIES: Th e l.ady t:,,,,. (P r('s lon Sturg('s, 19·1 I ) (En~ lish ) with H <'nry Fonda, Ba rba ra Sta nwyck a nd Charl ('s Co burn a l 7 p .m .;-Tlte Awj11! Tnitlt (Leo l\kCan ·y, 1937) (Eng lish ) wi 1h ( ~t ry Grant, lr('n(' Dunn!' a nd Ra lph Ikllam y at 8:-1!'> p .n1. in th(' F.C. Smith Au'i. litorium , Loyo la campus. FREE. CONCORDIA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP (GROUPE BIBLIQUE UNIVERSITAIRE): Etudt· hihlique t·t discussion, ·I - 5 p .111 ., in H-65 1.. SC\V ca mpus: LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE: Public L,·cttm· -Gu!'s t sp<'a k(' r Ri cha rd St·nm·u , Dirt"l'lor of th<' N('w Yo rk Institutl' for tht· Humaniti ,·s , on U rban Form and /),,11wcratic Tl1t'OI')' ;ti 8:30 p .m . in H-110, H a ll Bid~ .. SG W campus. FREE. LONERGAN U NIV-ERSITY COLLEGE: Puhlic Lectun· - Gu('s t speak1T Di~hy i\,kL,n•n, Prof('ssor, De pt. o f C ('ology, llni\'nsity o f O ttawa , Fe llow..!.'[ Th(' Ro ya l Soci(' ty o f Londo n , 011 !Vlt y Di.w- 11ss Da rw i111 a t 8:30 p .m . i11 H-820, Hall Bldg., SCW t'a~npus. FR EE CONCORDIA JAZZ: Co ncordia Jazz Et1s('lnhll' II a nd Jan Flute Ens('mhlt·, \\'ith Charks -­Elli son , Din·nor, at 8::IO p.111. i11 th(' Loyo la

C 11n p us Ct·111,-r , Loyo la ca mpus . FR EE. ·ARTS & C RAFTS SHOW: O n thl' 11k n 111i 11(', !J ;i , 11 1. - !J p .11 1. . I la ll Bid~. SG \V ca mpus. LOYOLA CAMPUS CENTRE: C:ll SA COM l\l ED\' N IGHT in tlw Wolf & Kl'ttlt­sta nin~ (II 8 p .111 . Loyola c; 11~1pus.

Thursda y 25 CONSERVATORY OF CI N EMATOGRAPHIC ART: l .t's J) lrn rrn is dt• /'Nh •t· To ni,·.,.,. (D('r j uugr To('r ll'ss ) (Vo lk l' r Schl o ndorff , 1% !'>) (Frl' n ch s11ht. ) \\' i th l\lat h it"u Ca rrii·r(', Bl' rnd Ti sch l'r a nd Ba rha ra Std ll' at i p .111 . ; T l1t· S11 dt!,·11 ll'ndtlt of tl1t· /'()(, ,- l ' ,·0/1!,· of Ko 11 1ba,-/1 (Dl'r p lotl.li ch(' R(' id11u111 dl' r arn1<·11 L,·ut,· , ·o n K1>111 had1) ( \'o lk"r Sdilo ndorff, 1970 ) (Eu ~ li sh su ht. ) \\' ith Ct·org Ll'h n , Rl'in hard I bu ff ;ind Ka rl -J osef Kra ll l;Tal 9 p .111 . in 11-1 10 ; $

0

1.!',0 t'a ch . SC \I' ca mpu s. _, ARTS & CRAFTS S HO W: O n tlw 111,·aaui m ·, !J a .111 . - 9 p .111 .. I !;i i I Bi d~. SCi \\' cap1p us. H U MAN ITIES SEMI NA R: P rof. Di<"t n i\ l is~(' ld ; Dl'p t. o f lli story a nd Ph ilosophy of Ed 11 ca 1io 11 , T lw Ont a ri o ln sti tu t(' for S111d il's i11 Educa tio n , 011 / .if,·-ll'or /d a11t! S yst,·111: jl lrg,•11 l/ab,•m 1as t111tl I frm1t•,1t•11tics at -I p.111. in I l-71i2 ' I · 2 3. 1-lall Bi d~. SCW c;1111 pus . C US A: i\l c" ·i(' - 0 l .w'i1y 1\fa11 a t 2:30 p .111 . in H -I 10, H a ll Bldg . SG \\' ca mpus . 1-:R EE. _ l\l USIC .DEPART I\'I ENT : T h ird conn-rt of th<' s1·aso 11 \\·ith a p<' rfonn;in n · hy th l' Mor('ncy Qu;irtt' t at 8: :l0 p .m . in th(' Loyo b C: ha pd, l .11n1l;i .-a mpus. (Wo rks hy lkl't lll>\'t'll , Str;i,·in ,ky a nd !)('hussy). FR EE. T H EATR E: Pla y - 7.a., trn: :i hy C ('org(' F. \l ';d kn a nd din·ct"d hy Paul I la n na a t 8:30 p .m. in tl w D.B. C lark" T h l';itn·, I !a ll Bid ~. Pu h lic, S-1, s tud(' lll s & sl'nior l' it i1.1·11 s. $2, 879--1:11 -1. LESBIA N AN D G AY FRI EN DS OF CONCORDIA: Film - J) yh,·tact ic, a nd (! u r T rip (hy B;irhara I la mmn) a nd , J So11 of ti,,• Fam ily (hy Sha w Sd\\'a y); ·I - Ii p .111. , in H -333-li, Hall Bid~. For mo n · in forma tio n call 879-8·106. sew cam pus. ATTENTION ALL CHEMISTRY ST U DEN TS T h('n- w ill I,(' a spt'cia l informat io n S('Ssio n conn-rning th (' O rdl'r of C h('m ist s o f Qud>t-c a t 1:30 p .111 . in H -1272, H a ll Bid~. All dlt'mis1ry/ hiod1(' lll istry stud ('nt s an· 1·11cou ragt'd to a lt ('nd . SG \\' ""mpus. LOYOLA CAMPUS CENTRE: TKE Pa rt y in th <' Wo lf & K(' ttle a t 8 p. 111. Ad mi ss ion : S l.50. Loyola ca m p us . F.C.A.C. FELLOWS HIPS FOR GRADUATES ST U DIES: Do yo u havt' a n y qu t'st io n s co nct'rn in g tht'S(' fell owshi ps , the a p plinttion for m , yo ur t' ligi hil ity, 1·1c.? Mr. Guy Berthiaume, Di r('nor o f tht· F.C.A.C. . Fdlowsh ip p rogra m , will 111 t't'l w ith studl'nl s from 2 to ·I p .111 . iii 1-1 - 1006, Ha ll Bid~. In th(' 11H'a nt i111t·, in for!natio n a nd appl ica tion for m s a n · a va ila ble from tht' G rad ua l(' Awards Officn, 2 14 r, Mackay Str('('I , 3rd fl oor , 897 -73 17

Friday 26 CONSERVATORY OF CINEMATOGRAPHIC ART: Ll' J\lora l dP Uutl, llalbfa.u (Mora l Ruth H a l bf ass) (Vo lker Schlondo rff, 1971 ) (Frrnch suht. ) w ith St·nta Bn ~n . Mar~an·1h1· von T ro tt a a nd 1-klmul Grit'm a t 7 p .m. ; A Frt'r Wo111a11 (Volker Sd1lo ndroff, 1972) (En~ li sh suht. ) w ith Ma rga retlw vo n Troua , Fri('dlwlm Ptok and Ma rtin Lutt~t· a t 9 p .111 . in H-11 0; $ 1.!',0 !'ach . sew campus. SENATE: Mt'('ting a l 2 p .m . in th(' Conft·n ·nn· Room of th(' Prnt('stant Sd11K>I Bo ard of Grl'at('r Molllrt'a l (rorn('r Fil'ldin~ and 0 ">11· St-Luc) . ARTS 8c CRAFTS SHOW: On th(' mt'zz;mint·, 9 ,I.Ill . - 9 p.m ., Hall Bid~. sew campus. PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT: Puhlic Lt·nun· - Gu('st sp('aker Hans-(;('or~ G ada nwr, Prof('ssor a l th t' U niV!'rsit y of 1-kiddbl'rg, on I frrnclitw and tl, r Disco1•rry of thr Soul al 5:30 p .111 . in rrn un 128, Adm inistration Bid~ .. Loyo la c 1111pu s. FREE. THEATRE: St·1· Thursday 25. CONCORDIA GRADUATE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION: Vid('o tap('s of talks giV<'n in English in BnKkwood, Engla nd 1!!8 1, hy J. Kri shna muni . Toda y a t 8 p .111 . in 11 --120, Hall Bldg. Se\V ca mpus. FREE. For furth (' r informa tion call 897-72 19 ( I - Ii p .111. ) or 932-li.%2 (,·,T) .

MEN'S HOCKEY: I ~" ·al at Cournrdia , 7:30

p .111. Loyola ca mpus. WO I\I EN 'S HOC KEY; Conrnnl ia at i\kC i ll , ,, p .11 1.

. LOYOLA CAMP US CENTRE: CIRL P;irty in th (' Wo lf & Kl'ttll' a t 8 p.m . Loyo la ca mpus. ' IRANIA N ST U DENT ,5 ASSOCIATION: Fi lm -T all Slltldo11 •., of tl1t• ·Jl' i11d ,11 !I p.m . in 11 -110; sltld l'nl s, Sl.,'.i 0; publ ic , S2.',0. SC \\' ca m p us. INTER U NIVERSITY CENTRE OF · EU ROPEAN ST U DIES & THE MO NTREAL CHAPTER OF CAA NS (CANA DIAN ASSOCIATIO N FOR TH E ADVANCEi\fENT OF NETH ERLAN DIC STU DIES): L,·nun· hy I .ui s dt' Mo ura Sohra , l lni\'n s it{· dl' i\lontr{·; ,I , o n )ans Ir S i /lag,• t!r U11b,·11.,: 11/ll' Shit' t!r /" ·i11 turt•s i11 h litr·.1· :11 ·7 p. m . a t IC ES, 119:l P hi ll ip s P lacl'. 100111 :l·IO0. (Td . 282-li l!J:l). Fo r 111 o n · i11fonn;11io 11 .-a ll 392-881i2 or 621 -7899.

Saturday 27 CONSE RVATOR\' OF CINEM-AT OGR APHIC ART: Tl1t· l. ost 1/rm rm r of Katlw ri11t1 R /11111 (Di<" n ·rl o n ·1H· Ehn· dn K,11 hari11a Blum ) (Vo lk,-r Schl o ndo rff, 197'>) ( Eng li sh suht. ) \\'ith ,\ng/lika W iu kll'r a nd Dit't<T Lasn a l 7 p .11 1. ; Cm1/J tit• (;,-,;,.,, (Dn Fa n ~sd111 s~J (Vo lk(' r Sdilo ndorf, 1971i) ( l:'n·11d1 suht. ) with Ma r~a r<"t lw ,·o n Trotta , M,11 hi,1s l lahi d 1. R udi~n Kirsch t(' in a nd \' a ll'ska Cnt a t 9 p .11 1. in 11 - 110, Sl. ",0 (';i d 1. S(; W c;11 11 p u, . DOCTO RAL T H ESIS: Mr. (;('o r~(' Ka nda lq,as, st ud('n t 11 1 Eco nomics, o n ,·I Fiscal lncid1•11t·,, Stud )' fo r (; r,•r·a at 10::IO a .11 1. in H -7(i9, H a ll

· Bl dg . SC\V campus. THEATR E: S('1' Thursd ;iy 2'> . MEN 'S---H OC KEY: C:011rn1 d ia at McGill , 7:30 p .,n. IRA N IA N ST U DENT S ASSQCIATION: Film -Tall .'ilt t1tlows of tf1t· ll' i11d at -I p .11 1. in 11 - 11 0; stud,·m s, Sl.50; p u h lic, S2.',0. SCW G1111pus. BASIC LIFE SU PPORT: /5 /lours for L ift' , toda y a nd tol110ITO\\' , fro m 9 a .11 1. to 5 p .m . For

- m ore informa tio n ca ll 879-8:, 72.

Sunday 28 CONSERVATOR Y OF CINEI\IATOGRAPHIC ART: Ch ildrrn 's snit's - l't•ln Ha bbit and T alt·s of /Jt,a trix Po/In (Rt'~ ina ld Mi ll s, 1971 ) (En g lish ) w ith C1rn k ,\ in s\\'o rth, Fr('d l'rir As h to n a nd Ro ya l Ba ll(' t Da nn-rs a t 3 p .111 . in H - 11 0; SI. SC W , a m p us. CONSERVATO RY OF CINEM ATOGRAPHIC ART: V,•m,s l m/Jhia lr (jl'an Dda nno y, 19(i2) (Fr('J) ch ) \\'ith Gi na Lo llo bri~ ida, S tt'phm Boyd , R a ymo nd P(' ll('grin a nd Mid1dint· Pn·s l(' a t 5 p .m.; T fu, T i11 V n,111 (Di(' Blech trn111111d ) (Vo lkt' r Schlondorff, 1979) (En glisl'i suht. ) \\' ith Mario Adrof, Ang,· la \\' in kie r, D;ivid B,·11111·11 1. Dan iel Olbrysd1ski , C harl ('s A,na \'o ur a nd Andr('a F('rrt'o l a t 8 p .11 1. in 1-1 -110; $ 1.!',0 t'ach . sew ca m p us.

NOTICES FCAC (Quebt'c goV(' l'l1111('111 ) applica tio n form s for g radua te fell o wships an· no w a vail a ble in tht· G radua l(' S tudit•s Offin- ;11 2 1-15 Macka y Stn·t·t, 3rd flo or. Tht·y must h<' suhmitt('d to yo u r dq,artnH'nt by /)('{'r 111b,·r Isl. Tht'S(' awa rds a r(' op,·n to C madian c it iz(' llS and la nd('d i111111i ~ral1l s who hav(' rt's id('d in Qud>tT fo r at ll'as t 12 months. Th(' \'alul' of th l' award~ \'a ry, with $7 .;,00 a s th(' minimum amo unt. Fo r 111,m· information coman thl' Gradual(' Awards Offic('r at· th(' a bo\'t' addr('ss, or phont' 879-731 7. TRIP TO LACOLLE: Nov. 19 - 20 - Dq.>a n11 n· 1i111(' : 2:30 p .111 . Fo r mo n · info rmation , lea n · you r n:l nlt', phom· munht·r or li st in thl' Cht·111is1ry Cluh mailbox at DS-308. 71 ·1 I Sht'rhr<K>kt· St. W., Loyola ca mpu s or at 1-1 - 11 38/ 1/ 3, Hall Bldg. S(; \\' b mpus. OFFICE OF THE OMBUDSMAN: T ht' Omhudsmt·n a n · a\'ailabll' lO all ll11'111bt-rs of tht' llni\'(' l'sity for co11fidc111ial i11for111a 1io11 , a ssistann· and ad\'i n-. Call -182-0320, ,·xt. 2:,7 or d rop into AD-3 11 o n tht' Loyola campus, or phont· 87!J-,12•17 (2 1°,0 Bisho p ) on th(' SG\\I ca111pus.

.LOYOL<\ CAMPUS MI N ISTRY: G a lik(' Experi (' llC(' in Vorn ti o n~,I Disn·rnm('lll , Frida y, No v: 19 - 21-A \\'('('k('nd for mt·n and \\'01111·11

·who an· consid('rin~ a call to religio u s l ift' or th (' pri1•s1htKKI. A Vi ll a i\larg1ll'ri11·. lnquir('

S<'e " NOTICES" pag<' J.