Woodland Indian Artist
Benjamin Chee Chee
Alumni M edia is pleased to present 9 reproductiom of W01-kS by the late Benjamin Chee Chee. These are the only reproductionJ authorized by the tIT路tist 's estate. A mainly self-taught anist, Chee Chee was a prominent member of the second generation of woodland Indian painters. Unlike many of his contemporaries who employed direct and "primitive" means, Chee Chee's work was influenced by modern abstraction. His style reduced line and image in keeping with international modern art. At the age of 32, at the height of his success, Chee Chee died tragically by suicide. These reproductions are printed on high quality, rextured srock and measure 48 cm x 61 em (l9"x24") .
A Friellds
B SwatlOWJ
C Good Morning
D Proud Male
E Mother & Child
F Sun Bird
G Spring Flight
H Wait ForMe
I Autumn Flight
Please send me the following Benjamin Chee Chee print reproductions at $23.95 each or $88.00 for any four, plus $4.95 for handling and shipping
(overseas: $7.50). Ontario residents please add 7% sales tax to combined cost of print{s) plus shipping/handling.
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UNCONDITIONAL MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE. If you are not satisfied, please return your purchase to us and your mo ney will be remrneci (len handling and p Mtage).
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GuelphI Spring 1986 Vol. 19, No.2
UNIVERSITY Of GUELPH ALUMNI ASSOCIATION HONORARY PRESIDF.NT Dr. Bun Matthews, OAC '4 7 PRES IDENT; Ros> p."rry, CSS
' ~O ,
PAST PRES IDENT : Gle nn Powe ll, OAC '62. SENI OR VICE·PRESIDENT: Dr. Ron Downey, OVC '61. SE RETARY : Dr. We nJ y p.Jrkcr, OVC ' 7 1.
TRE \ SURER; B. Ke ith Harris, CBS '76, ASSOCIATE SECRETARY : Ro.c mary Clark, M,,,, '59 .
VICE·PRESIDENTS : lohn Alvi ano, CSS ' 74; B. Kc ilh Harri s, CBS ' 76; David Hou ghlOfl, HAFA ' 75 : lean (Fullc r) Hu me, Mac ' M; An P\: ppin, OAC '4 1: Margo Shuemaker, AI1: '79: Barry Smuh, CPS ' 79: Dr. Donald Wi"" n. OVC ' 66 .
DIR ECTORS : Debbie (N,,< h) Chambers, Al1s '77, Uarn.rn Chance, CSS '74 ; Nan Chapman. FACS ' 74: Kari n Davidson·Tay lor. CBS '83 : Gran t Lee. CS5 '73 : Uill M""donald, Ans '78: Roben Mun son. ODH '63: Dan Ro.e, OAC ' 60: Rusemary (Schmidt) Smith , FA S ' 79: Dr. Tony va n DIl:lI mel. OVC ' 63 .
EX·OFFICIO DIRECTORS , Marjorie E . M,llaf. di,....,tor. Depar1ment of Alumni Arrairs and De ••lopment; Marlon McGee. C55 '71 , president. Colltge of Social Science Alumni Association; Carole Rowse ll. HAFA ' 74 , president. Hote.l and Food Administration Alumni Association; Connie (Hau b ) lasinskas , ILK. ' 76 , president. !!uman Kinetics Alumn i Association; Da llame, OAC ' 53A , president. OAC Alumni Association; laye Robin. on , president, Ce ntral St udent Association; Bonnie Kc,,; lakc. FACS '82, president, Mac-FACS Alumni Association; Dr. Ken neth Gadd , OVC '56 . president. OVC Alumni Association; Mich3C1 Bedford , president. Graduate Stud.nl~ A"wciation; Linda McKe nZle·Carelick , An, 'H I. president. College or Arl~ Alumni Association; I.u'a> Va n Veen. CPS '74, president. CPS Alumni Associlltion; Dav id Atrllnc. CBS '82, president. College of 8iological Science Alumni A..""ciation .
The Guelph Alumnus is published four limes each year, in February. May, Aug ust and Nove mber, by the Dcpanmc nt of Alumni Affairs and' Deve lopment in co-operation with f>'u blic Relations and Informatio n. Univers ity of G uelph. EDITOR : Mary Coc lvera. I){:panmcnt of Alumni Affairs and Development Unddhef1'<l copies should M relurned 10 lbe Departmenl 01 Alumni Altairs and De,,,lopmenl , Uni"u.ily 01 Gudph. Guelpb , Ontario NIG 2WI. Canada,
On the cover: Bloodroot, photographed by Arboretum biologist Alan Watson along the John McCrae Trail in th e U of G Arboretum.
"When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life_" hose wOrlh o f Samuel Jo hnso n. 1709- 178--1 , a rc ~till true tod<lY And when yo u <Ire tired o f wa lk ing , then by all means hop on a #53 Lo ndo n bus back to Guelph Lo ndon Hou ~e in Camde n Town, London , Eng la nd . '[be House, at 105 A lbe n S treet , Lo ndon NWI a l Ihe edge of Regents Park, is ide a ll y loc alcd for tran s portatio n by bus or tu be. e n hli ng vi s itors e a ~y acces, to a ll parts of Lond o n. O wned and ope rated by the nivcrsi ty of G uel ph , it is used as a stude nt residence duri ng the fall and win ter ~elll e stc rs but is ava ilahle to vi s itors during the ba lance o f the yea r. In 19 86 , the: sUJllmer v i~ it or season will run from Ihe th ird wee k in A pril to mi d -Sep tem be r. Alumni are e nco uraged to use the house if 1986 summer vacatio n pl an~ include Lo ndo n. Acco mmodation in Londo n Ho use incl udes two self-conta ined full y furnished apan ments each s lee pin g fu ur pers o ns. Eac h ap<lrtment has a fully equipped ki tc hen and private hat hroom . Two double roo ms with two s ingle beus and two s ingle roo ms arc a lso avail ab le. Vi 'itors usin g the roo ms have access to a fu ll y eq ui pped kitc he n an d a comfonable com mon room with televis ion . These s ix unit s are available at reason ab le rates. For fu n he r infonnation wri te Jo hn Will s. Prope rty Mana ge r, Univers iry of G uelph, G uelph, O ntario N IG 2W I or call (519) 824-4120, extension 273 4 during norm a l busin ess hours, 0
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Over the Top
By Bal'bal'a Chance. Public Relations and Infol'mation Services
Y
Ou've done it aga in' Your alumni do nat ions to the Univers ity of G uel ph's ann ua l Alma Mater Fund campa ign have he lped push the fund to an other record total, we ll in excess o f the 1985 goaL Gue lph. alumni . facul ty. staff and frien ds d o nated a total o f $687, 893 to the 19 85 AM F campaign, an inc rease of $1 65,568 fro m the previous ye ar. and a lmost $ 113,000 more than the ca mpaign goaL Alumni donated $407,61S to the fund ; Guel ph faculty and staff donated $ 126. 282. The balance came fro m friends of the niversity and othe r credits. Some 5.385 J o nor.. contribu ted to the ca m pa ig n. more than 1.300 of them a t the major gift level. (The three major g ift lev Is are $100, $200 a nd thc rece ntly in trod uced $ ['000 Pres ident's Co un ciL) Th e average donation in 1985 was $127 .74 . Alu mni partic ipation in the ca mpaig n was 12 .5 per cent. with an average gi n of $86 .82. Some 18.8 per ce nt of Gue lp h's faculty a nd stafr cont ri buted, giving an average $ 360.81 eac h. Frien ds of Univers ity uf G ue lph, Inc, a c haritable organ ization establ ished to accept donatio ns to the Uni vers ity from do no rs in the United States. recei veu 279 gifts tota ll ing $80 ,879 . O f that, $~9 , 6 90 was fro m Gue lph alumni. Marj orie M illar. di recto r of the De pa rt me nt of Alu mni Affairs and Devclop m nt. says the niversity "h a~ a lot o f peop le to tha nk for 1985's record ac hieveme nt - not just the thousalH.!s w ho Jon ated their moncy, hu t the hu nd red s of volunte e rs who dllnatcd the ir ti me a, we lL We shOltlJ be prouJ o f the vol unteer comm it ment ,It Gue lph and bu il d on that. " Vol u nteers invo lved in rhe cam pa ign incl uded c lass agents , ca n assers , th e AMF a illpaign Ma nageme nt Co m mi t! e and the AMF Adv i~() ry Cou nc il. The adv isory cOllnci I. w hic h sel ec ts the projec ts that rece ive AMI' funoi ng , was chai red in 198 5 by Ken Gadd, OVC' 56 , ano vice-c ha ired by Gord Nixon , AC'3 7. The ma nagcmc nt cOlllm ittee, whi ch is respons ible fo r rai sing the money. was c ha ired by Bill Sargant, CSS '69. De pu ty chair wa.' John Currie, CSS' 70 . Major g irts chai rpe rson was Barbara Dell. Mac '68 . The mo ney ra ised during 19115 has been cOlll mitted to a wide variety of projects . includi ng schol arships, thc instru cti on a l devclopllll'nt program. lib rary and art acqu isi t iom. bu il di ng re sto ra t io ns . labo ratory and athletic equ ipme nt. c l;lss projects and deve lopme nt of the Arborefllm . Ma ny othe r :2
the outdoor labo rat ory school facility in the Co ll ege o f ami ly a nu Co nsumer S tud ie s. The presc hool play area is an import ant part of the C o llege's child stud ies prog ram , says FACS Dean Ric hard Barham , but the facil ity had deterio rated over the years and the Co llege had no fi nancial mea ns of rev iving it. It was in s uch disrepair, in fac t. that "our prog ram was serious ly in jeopard y." The Mac- FACS Alum ni Associati on hega n the redevel opment project in 1984 , a nd is now involved in help ing rai se the more than $60.000 needed 1O pay fo r new equ ipment a nd landscapin g the s ite. Although the p roject is not quite com pleted, the new eq uip ment alre ady in place and the si te development in progre ss are "even now providing st ude nt s with a far more comprehe ns ive range of early childhood urri culum plann ing and im pleme nta tion expe ri e nce s than was po s~ib le be fore ," says Barham. " With thi s new ra ng of activ it ies avai la ble for the presc hoo l child, th ere are also muc h bette r. .. opportuni t i e~ fo r condu ct ing resea rch o n eh iId deve lopmen t problems and curric ulum."
In 1986 Alumni H Ollse will em erge .
projects rece ived su ppo rt from the AM well du rin g the year.
as
Johnston Hall Restoration The AMF has made a three-year com mit men t to the rest o rat ion of Jo hnsto n Ha ll as OAC's admini strat ive headq uarters. Co nceiveu hve years ago by a group of OAC alu m ni , the project has in vol cd redesig ning orhce ~ pac e. refurbishing the de an\ o fti cc and the OAC se min ar room, rebuildin g antique panelli ng a nd plas te rwork a nd reti nishing period furniture. TIle result. says OAC [)can Freema n McFwcn. is a hom fo r OAC that "we can he pfo ud of. " A t a timc when the U nivers ity is st riv ing fo r exce ll ence, he says , "restoring some o f the uni q ue features of thi s buil di ng is one o f the e'x ce llent thi ngs we can do. A nd it woul dn't have bee n poss ib le without al um ni suppo rt ... When OAC a lum ni co me back to Gue lph, Joh nsto n Ha ll is one of the pl aces they grav it ate to, says Dave Barrie, OAC' 53 A pre~ i d en t of the OAC A lumn i Assoc iati on. "Thvse roo m. h It! many fond me morie s, " he says, "so to see them res to red and loo ked after is meaningful. " Laboratory School O ne of the newest proj ects approved fo r fun di ng fro m the J\MF is redeve lopment of
Forster Fellowships Anothe r of the newe r projects the AMF suppo rt s is the Forster Fe ll ows hi p. named ill me mory of the late pre siuen t Do nald Forste r. The fe ll ows hi p, wh ich provides fund s for facul ty develo pment, rotates an nua ll y among the seve n colleges. -Ine C ol lege o f J\ rt s received the first fe llows hip in 1985: in 1986 , it goe ~ to the Co ll ege of Soc ia l Scie nce. Co llege of Art s Dean Dav id Murray says the fe llowship "has met a g re at neet! at the Un iversity fo r faculty to h ave re lease time to con ti nue the ir resea rch." Each of the s ix Arts fac ul ty me mbers who rece i ed fellowship funu, las t year were "cngaged in work ()f major. c hol ars hi p," he s ay~ , a nJ "I have great antici pa tio n of the 4 u~lI ity and , ig n ifi ca ncc of the work that wi ll be produced. " One of the recip ie nts of th fiNt fe ll ow ~ hip. Fine Art professor Chand le r Kirw in, vi., ited some of the rnitj or art Ill u,c ums in Europe to do research l'or a book he is wr it ing on the arts o f art and war during the reign o f Pope rhan VIII. Hc say.s the fellow sh ip was "a ti mely in tervent ion" tha t alloweu h im to move ahead on h is rc,earch muc h Inore quic k ly th an he haJ ho ped. His trave ls have brought h im back to the Un ivers ity " wi th a reneweJ se nse of my miss ion" a nd "" refresheu eye, whic h I ho pe I am able to hring into the c lassroom . "
Unrestricted Funds Important Although th e AMF I'cached a record total this year, the advisory council wasn't able to give as much fin anc ial support as it had hoped 10 so me projec ts, S<lys Don Livin gs ton, director 01' annual gi vin g, Alumni Affairs and Dc ve lop me nt. TIlat's because 60 per ce nt of the money rai sed was designated for specilic uses by donors , and th e rcmaining undcsi g nated funds weren 't enough to support each AMF project at the leve l originall y plann ed, he ,ays. In rece nt years, donors have increas ing ly chose n to design ate their support to projects in whi ch th ey have a spcc ifie inte res t. or to areas where th ey believe th ere is a significant need, says Li vin gston. As a result, thc am ou nt of unres tri cted funding has deelined, "a nd that ITas had a signilicant imract on how th e ad visory council se lec ts projects lor su pport ." Although every gift to the ni vers ity is impol1ant, he says, "we hope to incrcase the amount of unres tricted dollars available in th e future Unres tri cted dollars give thc ad visoty co unc il some licxibili ty in all oca ting ['und s to take adva nt age of specia l oP Pol1unitics that ari se from tirne to tim e."
discirlines: agriculture, vc terin;HY medicine and famil y and co nsumer studies. Ellen Pearson, associate librarian, inCormation se rvices, says Library fundin g frornthe 1985 AMF "was about 50 per ce nt less than we had hop ed for." Thc reduction .. is particularly devastating because th e Alma Mater Fund is one of our very Cew so urces of funding that ca n be used to suppon spec ial ac qui sition s project!>." Adding to the impact of the funding cutback is the Canadian doll ar\, loss in purchasing. power over th e past year, says Sauer. Sixty to 70 per ee nt of the Li brary's purch ases are made in U. S. funds.
More Alumni Involved In 1986, the goal for Guelph's annual giving program is $700.000. It has been se t only slightly hi gher thallthe I~K5 con tribution le vel " in recog nition of th e fact that we' re coming into a capital campaign thi s yea r," says Livingston. " Both campa igns will run concurrently, and we'll be as kin g peorle to not onl y continue their suppOI1 of annual giving, but to make a srec ial gil't to the cap irul ea l11raign as we ll. "
A ITl<lJor goal of th e 1 ~86 carnpaign, he says. i ~ tll gct more alumni in volved in annual giving. " The amount of th e gift isn't as important as the fact that you suppon the institution in a tangibl e way and maint ai n that suppon on a regul ar bas is. " Annual giving is the University's basic private tinan ci al .s urrort rrogram. say s Livingston, and the AfvlF is the hea l1 of Guelrh's annual giving. Whe n th e AMF staned in 1 ~69. hc says, it \Va, a tirnc wht:n funding was not th e proble m for universi ties that it is today. The mon ey rai scd dur-ing those early years was, filr th e 1110st pan , " icin g on the cakc" fo r G ue lph. Since then, however. "t hings have changed dramatically. Traditi onal funding sources can no longer meet all th e basic rcquir-e illents of thc Uni vc rsity, and annual gi Ving is cruc ial to help makc up the difference. Of co urse, wc horc it will provide so me of 'the ex tr-a< as we ll."
Matching Gifts Man y donors can mak e thcir contributi on to Guelph's annual giving
COLLEGE RESULTS
Library Acquisitions Bein g able to take ad vantage of special is pal1icul arly imponant for th e McLaugh lin Library. whi ch has beco me increas ingly depend ent in recent year, on thc AMF's undesignated funding to purchase special collecti ons or vo lume s th at may become available periodi call y. The numbcl' of' found ,l ti ons and granting ag enc ies to which the Library ca n apply fo r acquisitions fun di ng is limited. and the Uni vers ity and government have both cut back on such funding, ~ays Bernard Katz , head of the LibralY's humanities and soeial sciences division. Kat z says the Library uses AMF money to "buy things that we would not othcrwi se be able to," primaril y ra re, antiquarian and out-Qf-print items that are impol1ant to. teachin g and research but are onl y on the mark et for a shon period of time. Beca use the Libl'ary has had cQ nsistent AMF suppon over the years, he says, it has built up a good relati ons hip with dealers. They oeten let th e Library kn ow when ce l1 ain items are avail ab le befme they put them in th eir sales ca talog ues opportuniti e~
AMF funding has allowed th e Lib rary to build somc of the tinest collecti ons In Ca nada . NOr1h Amcrica and the world, in such areas as landscarc arc hitcc tul路e. apiculture, Scottish studi es, ;lgricullural and rur,JI Ontarip ir istOl'Y and theat re art" says Kat !.. Rec entl y the Li bra ry purchased one 01' th e best private col lections of material> by and about Ci enrf! e Bcrnard Shaw. With AMF SU ppOI1 . the I.ibrary has also built extcnsive specia l eol k ui ons in G uelp h's f(lunding
College Arts CBS CPS CSS OAC OVC Mac-FACS
% I'artidpation 6.7(1c
6 2 elc
70q, 7. SCfc I S9 ck ILl'i<
15.7't(
Average Gil'! $ 37 . 19 5 41(l I $ ~2.6 2 $ 38.53 $ 108. 1j $ I3 LlO $ 5798
DISTRIBUTION OF FUNDS Co llege Alumni Assoc iation Sch olarships Co llege Advan ce me nt funds CSS Gl'aduatc Scholarships LibralY Acqu isitions Instructional Dt: velorl11e nt Program Athleti c Progralll and Equipm ent Art Ptlrchascs Londo n House Bursaries Music Prograln John ston Hall RCSlOrat ion For-stcr Fellows hip Child Stuciies Program OVC Equiprncnt MacKinnon Building Rcd Lounge Ren uvat lo n WOl11en's Studies Winegard Visiting Pl'Ofcssorship Ge ograph y Field Coursc Class Project s Ci ryphon C luh Schol ;II'sh ip funds Me l110r ial Funds Gifts -in-Kind Rc sedrch Funds Other DC Sltl l1<ltcd (iifts
$ 16 ,2()()
,(lOO 5.000 25.000 20.000 10.000 I () .000 S(lOO
~2
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:10. (lOll IS.OOll 3(),OOO 2 I ,(100 7. )()O , .l)()(1
I ) .([Oil 6, S() ()
) I .7()(l -PU ll 7:'i ,h1 X ~L~ .1 3 3
)5 ,I(I() ()O. X7 1 li ).'i ()(l
TO IA L o,(lX 7, KlJ3
program go even further by hav ing it matched by their employers, Hundreds of Canadian and U ,S, companies have a marchi ng gift program: whenever an emp loyee makes a contribution to hi s o r her uni versity, th e firm will match the gift, or in some cases , double or triple it. Some compa ni es will also match a contribution made by an employee's spouse, by a retired cmployee, or by a member of their board of directors,
Alumni Carriage House The major prOject slated for AMF fund ing in 1986 is restoration of the Alum ni Carriage House to se rve as headqu arte rs for Guelph's alumni and alum ni associations, and to house the De pal1ment of Alumni Affair, and Development. The alumni associations have commi tted $100,000 a year over the next three years to rebu ilding Alumni House, Other projects ap proved for AMF
funding in 1986 include an extens io n to the header house in th e Department of Botany, purchase of a photomicrosco pe in OVe. acquisition of music sco res in th e Department of Music, and sc holars hip program, in the colleges of Physical Science and Social Science, 0
Hats off to the Volunteers
The I'ollowing alumni \Vere mSlru足 lll e ~l al In helpIng 10 achi eve a new record for Ih e Ins Alma l"laler Fund , As class agen ts u r di vis ion c hatrm en, Ihey asked fellow c lass足 mates 10 generously sup pon their Alma Maler: the re sul" speak lo r themsel ves l We thank yo u tor a job well done,
PC ler ''''tcCart hy H arry W;"dICf
AI Mclean llon Ward Pau l h ' h GeorgI.' Grcl"nkL"" Walil.:r Atkin 'on Han'ey Brown ROil Pcrriman
59A
Eli /;t!x,.th Manning
Jim Schroder
'4~
JC::t1l
Don C hi istie
, ~ ,l
Mel Poland Murr4..lY Mu(nc
'44
Bob BlIe ~ Sid Brown
'-16 '47
'520 '53 '53ll "54 '54ll '55 ' 55ll
':"9 '59ll '60 '6 t
Cliff BMkcr
61 '61 A 61 '62A
'63 '63A
'4~
'49 '50 '5 1 '52 '54 '55 '50
'5 7
Jo NUn4..l11
'5~
'59 '60 ' 01
bllc Hu", Donna Gr"cey Kalh y John'l on Pair;"" Black
'62
An ne A lton
'03
'620
JlIll BtileS
'~ 2
Jim Brimmer
HU!!h Elllu{[ i\cbon
' 23 '24
Do n Kcyn okl> Colin Tnver!>
'67
B()wc.r Forw<.Jrd
'25 & 2:1 A
'67A
Deni~
Eddic Garrard
'17 & '2 5A 'n & '2M
Don I:lraekcn Graham Hart
'b~
for Year( s)
John Zelld
J a~l...
Tom G raham Ted Heming
Mike Che pew ik Earl Mighlon Har v~y
Pettil
Ted H ee~ AII' Halc s Glad Ridler Bill Tollon Art 1l10~l1p,on Frank Chase' Les Laking John Ecc tes Don Hunt ley Glen Warlow PhIl Burk e Len McQuay Haro td Young Alcx Hunl Gord Oughlred Do ug Cunninghan l Don Jo,e Stewart Anderson Heinz Braun
Feilion Carroll James Bell Alan Fi sher AI FUlcher Bill Gregg llavid Barrie Ll oyd Ro>s
'29 '30
'J t '32 '.13 '34
','5 '36
'37
'38
'39 '40 '41 '42 '43
'44
'45
'46 '47 '48 '49 '49A
'50
'5 t '5 1A
'51 ' 52A
'53 '53A '54
Brian Jonc~
'54A
Ron Lilchfietd
'55 '55A
Barry Jame~
Ken Graydon Art John,on VInce Eagan Don Dodds Doug Colquhoun Gary Powell Owen Gibb
4
Pau l Hannan
Pete 'A'ang
'65 '65.0. '66 '66A
OAC Cias, Agents
'64
'56 '56A '57 '57A '58
'58A '59
Don Rich"'lnJ ~ Jim Arnold Ronald Tr,tl lIlh.' r
'64A
King
Fran PClSier Nanc' y Railhby Marg" rCI Clark F. 4..In Bov.~c n Carolyn M"eKtnlle Carolyn Kelman Muriel Taylor Barb T"le Lilti an Emberson Mar;lyn M"eQu arrtc L,n ua McLeod P4..Il ricia Sleek Ne il Joncs
Fred Harden Calli MacKay Don Homey Mauri ce CI"rk Tom Dc Gee r I:lill Vivian Kcn Gadd
Name
Harold Benlley Chud Caughlll
Paula Bca vcl
'40 '4t
RlchanJ Helling'
' 60 '60A
O'Connor
'08A
Rod Oav iC\ Gu y Glddinp
'6~
Tim LUnl sdl' n
'69A '70
'45
' 5(,
' 560 '57
' 57 0 "58 '5~D
'61 D '62
'70A
Owen S loeom"" Bob Ubukala Rob Knud"n
'7 t
JIl11
Rodg.cr Wi II iams Peler 8i1eon
'7 1A
'66
Rod Mc Kay
' 7.' '13A
Andy Flel ch Ed Dahl Neil Ande rson
Slephanie Po,",cll Linda HUlchlll,on Sharon Black Carol McArthur
'67
Milrg4..lfct Will ~low
"6 7
AI Bownes$
'6~
Bob Bra ndl
'70 '72
Lillua Mow Sandy Milrtin Sharon McMorTln
'69
'70
'7}
Marianne Brorn lcy
'7 1
'74
Ly nn Ca mpbell Cle ll and Karen Snyder-McDougall Jane Slolz Karcn Bennell Robyn Bell Janel Tay lor Healher Mart'" DIane Sacklield trene Good Joan McHale
'72 '7.1 '75 '76
'77
'78
'79
Marg Auld Gordon Weedell Robert Ross
BnJi,,:e Cn,," \small Murray Brownridge
David Mayberry Adri"n Dykstra Jame:::, Earl Richard Buck Doug Bat , i1lie Gany Milne Viek y Osborne
' 72
'74 '74A
AI BinninglOn
' 7SA
John Allen D'Arcy Reade Pal Shewen Wayne Murray Diane Smilh Dave Atves Ken Baleman
'76 '7M
'n
A li ce Van Ballcgoole Barbara Davi s
'77A '78 '78A '79
J2Icq uee Herma n
'79A
'80 Teny James 'SOA Dee RO lh 'St
Lisa Robinson '8 t
Ji m Poel '8 1A
Sparky Clark '82
Li z Wise Fedorkow 'S 2A
John Alton '83
Joe Omielan O,D,H,'63 - '84 Bob Mead
ovC Class Agents Ro""" Henry Rendle Bowne.s Trevor Jones
westey Cox on Sian Ward" Francis Filzgerald Vince Kulh Norm McAninch
Loti
'3 1 '32 '34 '3 5 '36 '37 '38
'39
'64
'65
'75 '76 '7~
'~O
'S t
O;<deccased
'64
'65 '66
'68
' ~O
'82 '82
Mac-fACS Class Agents
Grace Gibson Belh Partridge M"ry Hale, Jean SCUll
'290
'310 '32 0
Marjorie Thomas Olive Thompson Joan Nixon
'340 '35 D '360 '370 '380 'W ll '40ll '410 '470 '480
Florence MoodIe Mary Kelly Eila Lawson ElIcn SCOII Marion Aitkin Belf), Hampe Florencc Rileu M"ry Willi ams
'33D
'490
Oi\"ision Chairmen
Tom Morris, OAC5 t Tim Fleming, '74 Michaet Streib, '69 Dave Airdrie, 'S2 Rich Moccia , '76 Gary I'drtlow, '69 David Jaek,o n, , 70 Paul Mooradian, '6~ Tom Sc hmidl , '7 1 Nea l Sloskopf, '57 Bob Silk, '64 Edylh Bray, reI. fac,
Chalfman
HAFA '7 3 -'84 ARTS'6 7- '84 CBS Micro, CBS Marine BiD, All olher CBS CPS CSS OAC Degree OAC Assoc iale OVC Mae-FACS
The Parenting Challenge By Jane Lind. Public Relations a nd Information S ervice s
areIl t!> may cmbal' k on r;lI~ il\g a ra mily wi lh a '<':lbC (,I' wo ndn and joy. hut SOTllC tinl '\ the ~t re ssc\ and fru st rdt io ns Il l' a crying hilhy or an as<;e rt ivc toddil' r leave' thl' m l it ~ra li) gasp ing for hreat h. Pa re l1 tlllg Gi n he like sell in£, sui l in unpre dic t;J hlc \\'l:atllc L Ch ild rcn devclllp '0 fa... t th at it's ha rd 10 ill1ticl patc the squ'llh and ride out the he,l v) tlll'lns. N" pa re nt . I<)r examp le. expecls a haby to cr~ i'or eig ht ho ur. ' every day f;"r threc months , and few iIJ'<': prepa red lilr a toddl e r who r)l'crace\ ~very senle ncc wit h "no, " \Vhil e ,'hi ld rcarin£, hrings milny q ti,faCl io ns. II also t:hallcnges parents to push their undcr-( ilnd ing to new li mit s and deve lop \\' i ~ d om ilnd slr<': ll gths 'hey may mit ha\c be lieved til em,elles capable or
P
Born Criers So me bab ies are naturall\' diffi c ul t. Pro rcssor Mmg arct Mc Ki m. [)epaIl ll\ent of fam ily Slu dies . says it is importan t rClr pa re nts nOI to blallle the m, elves whe n Ih eil' baby erie, and aho to realife that inl'anl cryin g is a 101 more co mill o n Ih an most peop le ex pect. In one of he r research projects, Dr. McKi m ask ed parents 10 kee p track 01' their ow n and Ih eir baby's ac ti vili es for one 24 hour period 'llle survey showed thaI as many as 20 per cen l of all inLlllts uIllkr Ihree month :, arc cryin g al il ny one lime het wee n Ih e hou rs of s ix and eleven o' cloc k in Ih e (wning. Man y parents kn ow Ih ei r bahy has a "fussy" lillle everyday. bUI Ihc res earc h conti rmed Ihat from around Llinner time 10 II o'c lock al nigh t. mo st babies cry frequently. In fad. Lluring the nrsl three monlhs of Ide. most cry ing is duri ng that evenin g period . Dr. .\1 c Kim is con vin ce d Ihat "soille babies are hor n criers." A few infanl s ery reg ulurly for as long as 10 hours at a slrelch , Parents of Ihese childre n obviously expcrie nt:e a greal deal of S lr~" and they need s upport . For thi s reason. th e Departmenl o f Family Studies initialed a Cry C linic a few years ago. a nd a more form al program for parent s of infan ts bet ween bir1h and 12 mo nths. l11(:se SUppOr1 services help parents and ali o\V fur ther resea rch inlo othe r as pccls or infanl parenl relat ionship s. Becausc the pa rent-c hild re lati o nship is Ihe cen tre of Ih e baby's life. Ih e quality of the pare nls' resp onse is t:rucial. "\\!hile be in g a parcnl is natural, bein g a good parenl is nOI as easy as o ur soc iety would have us believe." Dr. McKim says,
Toddlers Bring Changes DUl ing Ihe fir~1 )ear of;t c hil cl '~ lite the parent 's mit: is prilllaril y Ih :lt nr can>gi v~r, The inla nt needs tn he fC:J . di 3pe red dnd hwed in an ' nVlnlnlllent that is rco:p tlvc and Interes ling, Howeve r. df(l und the age of OIlC. tl1 <.: Irnnsi lion !"n li ll Infa ncy to childhood bcgin . . hring ing rather dr,llll ii ti, changcs and adj llsllll ' llt , in the li fe of pare nt s, Pro tbso r I.. 'on KUC7 \'Il J..i . Dcpal1 11 1cl1 t of Family Studies . spe ll a l i /~s il re<;~arch In lo Ihe parcnH.: hi ld relalions hi p" n r d11Id[l.'11 be l\l eC Il I ~ lll() nlh, and Ihr<.:e and ~I h<d f years of age. ,\t Ihe bcgrnnin),! of thc secnn li ) ea r. par~nl\ \I an to hold children respol1s ihle fnr th c lr he ha\ Ill[", he 'ays, "Untilthc ll the parcnt I.:o-()P ra t~ ' with til..: child, hut after the tirs t ycar Ihe rc is a dra mati c change in paren ta l demili ids on the child. CU fllIl)ands and pro hi bt tl ons inllu CIl l'e more and Ill ore aspec s o r the c hild \; be hav io r. " Pare nt al inHu cnce 011 chilLl r n', he havior is or pal1i eu lar inter ' sl to Prol e,sllr Kucz ynski. l ie is inl(:fcsted in III)\V pare nts go abo ut llla n a~in !! their e hil drc n's day-tll-ua} hehavior. why they use part icLl br tec hn iq ues in pa r1icular siluations. and Ihe clTcets of pa re nl al sll'ateg ies on chilLlre ll , [n observa tions 01 palcnls and children in the lahoratory and in natural se lli ngs. Professor KUClyn ski ha~ in ves tigated IWO basic discipline slnll c gie ~: powe r asse r1ion. which n: li cs o n Ihc tact th at the pare nt is hi gge r or more powerfu l Ih all the child : ilnd rea so ning. whe re pa ren t. us u<tll y l'x plain or ju sli fy the ir co mmand s. Power assertIO n ilnd I'easo nin g see m 10 affect children in differcnt ways. Dr. Kucz ynski found, Powe r asser1ion works he ller in t..: rm s of sec ur ing IIl1 111cLliate co-ope ration . whe reas reason in g seems mClI'e e ffec ti ve in sec uring longer-Ie rm comp li a nce o r co-operation. 'Thc same parcnls use hoth tec hniques. Professo r Kuczynski has deve loped a hypothesis thaI spec ific silllations e li ci t spe cific goals for pilre nt s. Somc linlCs Ihese goals are shon-term (stop Jumpin g tIow) and some times Ihey are lo ng-term (Ll on'l run inlo Ihe stree t in rront of a ca r, (-'\ '(T) \\!he n he tested thi s hypothesi s with a se t of cxpe rime nls wilh Illolhers and f(lI lr-year olLis in a laborato ry se lting. he fou nd Ihat in the more inco nseq ue ntial types o f mi s behavior. pare nts used power aSSC r1ion techniques, For misbehaviors in vo lving moral iss ues. or wilh lo nger-term implicali o ns for th e child. pare nt, used reaso ning techniques, Dr. Kuc zy nski beli eves the di scrim ination s maLi e by parent s between d i fre re nl types of
\llu iltiom, arc :Ill impo rt.llIt part of pa re ntal ski ll hecallse some tcch nique ' dre Jllorc appropriate than othe rs in ac hi eving panicul ar goals.
Sophisticated Noncompliance Pro le,so r KU Clyns ki plans lU explore t: hild compliance IUI1hel" in rut urc rescarch . !\b ny past sllIllics ha\'<': fl)(uscd Simpl y on \\heth ' r m not ~I c hil d complies. " The child is .;cen as a p,l"ive cJ\:aturc w ho can o nly react 10 lile parcnL BUI onc lIf the intc resting Ihing, is no t on l) ho\\ often the child complie s \lith Ihe: parcnt. hut ..tbo hm\' llften 11lL' child tne:s w change and negoliate Ihe parent's original demand. 'The child aL"llvc!v tric' III innucn~'C the paIt' nl " Chi l dren '~ negll li atinl1\ .Irc inlerc"ti ng hec<lllsc they take a mure: suhlle ilild sl'ph isti cateJ form 01 tl(}Il Clllllp lian 'c th an d irect oppll,i tioI1, " Sollle pa ren ts IlKI)' inle rprct Ihe'>c In. 1~I1C C\ ot ne~ o ll a Io ns a~ Ilon ' co mpliance or dd i ant heha\ ior 011 Ihe part of th e child . whe reas (lIh n pare nt.. . who m lg hl not tolerale t ' Ill pc r lantrulllS m d ircL"I \l ppos i lio n. Ill ay lole ratc negolialions a.\ an accepta ble t()r l1l o f ' c l f:' ~ ssert ive ll e" , Wh ~1 1 I' m tryin g to i n \'e~ t i g a l e is how pare nts deal w ith Ih e increase in 0pposilion durin g lod dlcrilood. ancl wh ether they mak c d" tillclio ns ~llllong different Iype,; of no nco mplianl he haviol's. " Profc.\.sor Ku uyn ski" tcds thaI issues o r parenta l d isc ip linc becoIlle importan t during th e lod dl e r pe riod because the re is a g row ing sense of auto no my on Ih e pan of Ihe child who is Il'yi ng to es tablis h a se n\ c of idcnlity "Whe n o ppositio n occurs duri ng this per iod. il is a posilive deVt'I( 'pm ' nt al stagc of Ihe child . II's hard 1(lr the parenls. bUI il '; a hea llhy s i~n in tCrIll> of Ih e c hild." he says. A, Ihe chi ld hccomcs morc and more ca pable of res po nding to parell tal influ cnl' e, Ihe parelll mak es Il1nre deillands. Al the same time. hy k)stc [Jng growt h and aUl o nolllY in the chilLi . Ihe parenl ca n encourage Ih e natural dev elop ment of a n in de pe nci en l person. Pa rent-chil d relationships arc Ih e most irnponant l'ill· torS in th c variou.\ stages of a child's cieve lopment, Re search into how Ih ese re lationshi ps work adcb 10 our und ers la ndin g of Ihe in fluences that go int o lor ming the li fe of a youn g person. With a clea rer understa nd ing of how thesc relationShips infl uence thcir child ren, nlOt he r, and falhc rs al'e Ill ore likely to give th oug hl to the ir res ponses, and in fact, educate Ihemselves to beco me beller parents, 0 Thi s ar1icle was ada pled from a FACS Shf!eI. " Coping w ith th e Cha ll e n gc~ of Parentin g"
College oyal '86 A kaleidoscope of images from Canada's oldest and largest university open house.
,
Per n° G ro!>e dished oW smile.1 {II/{I i llforl1l(l{ iun III Co//ege
Rowl l'isitor.l .
Fi.lI/ laSlicjclces, courll'S\' orl /Il' Fill(' A rl D t:!10r/I//CIlI ,
11'('1'1'
ill el'id(,llc(' (Ii i
over li'/l' cillnp /./s .
A lillIe sleighl offoOi III Ihe Psychology display.
lim Pinkney, OVC '37, fi rSI winner of Ih e lacobine lanes Trophy, presel/Is il 10 Lynden Buslard, OAC '86A , overall gralld champion shmvIIIÂŁl Il ,
Ohl Tlte wonder of life.
. in old Ma cD onald's Farm .
Double, double, toil a nd trouble . greetil/g from Mll cheth.
Laurie
SC OII
." bewitching
served good cheer for th e j Ullio r Nm ners.
From the pas t: medic' val combat staged hy the Society for C reative Al/a chrol1ism .
tlrt O n 'sdole ofCFRB radiI! il//en 'iewed Pres itlerrr B.C. Mal/hell'S,
OAC '85A elw ICC'拢! a\\"oy lI路i/1l !IIP hOllors ill the OtiC A lumlli square dUl/cil/g cOlllpe t it iUII .
7
'1\ Fire On The Top Of A Mountain"
By John Hearn, Public Relations and Information Services
I
f this were England. Nic h()las Goldschm idt would I ng si nce ha e received his knigh t足 hood and we would now be referring to him as Sir iek . But out of ddcrenee to Lhe national modesty of whic h Canada is so pro ud. we will acknowledge his recen t retirement after 20 years as artist ic direc tor of the Guelph pring Festival wi th a few words of apprec iatio n rather than with the world足 class accolades he ~ () ric hly dese rves. Thetury. as far 3\ Guelph i ~ concemed, begins in 1967. whe n Nicky Go ldschmid t was chief of the Performi ng An~ Di vision of the Cente nnia l Commiss ill n whi ch presided over Canad a's mo~t bri llian tl y memorable year of the century. By tha t time. he already enJuyed an intcmat ional reputat ion with a stri ng of fi rsts . including fir, t music director of the Royal Conserva tory of Music Opera School, first music director of the Canadian Opera Company. managing director of the Vancouver Intemaliona l Festival and member~hip in the San Franci,co and New York un ive r,ity music fac u lt i e~.
Cultural Running Mates It was as the Centennial Performing Arts
chief, however, that he li rst met Guelph 's then Dean of Well ington College. Dr. Murdo MacK innon The encounter wa~ to prove synergistic for both me n and wa, of great historical portent for the City of Guelph . Between them , Nie" y and Murdo dreamed up the National Conference on the Ro le of niversit ies a.' uh ural Leaders of ll1cir Commu nities. 'l11eir idea was that Illetropuli such a' Toronto anu Mon treal wcre already capab le of ini tiating and sustai ning significant performing art~ insti llltions ; it was the smaller population centres tha t were cu ltura ll y deprived . and those that prov iued homes fo r uni e r~it i es might rc.L\u nabl look to these centre, of I 'arning for lucal cultura l in it iatives. The consequences of that con ference have been fel t all across thc nation. no t least he re in Guelph where. in 1968. Dr. Goldschmidt wa: inv ited to j in the fac ul ty :IS music d irector. There was , however, a prev iew to this appoin tment which is al 0 historically signi fi cant. One of Nicky's Centennial chores was to organi ze national viollll, !l iano and vocal competitions. Pi anos and violins had already been spoken for in other parts of the co untry wh n it occurred to Dr. Goldschm idt, who had be'cn a person al fri end of Guelph's famed Edward Johnson, that there couldn't be a better location fo r a national vocal
Mail. quotes Nicky as sayi ng "My mai n t hnl~ t in formulallng programs was directed at Ca nadIan pcrklrmers and composers. but not to the ex cl u~ ion f great an ists fro m the internat ional scene. .. NiCK y's vis ion has bee n fLlI l rea lized over the years wi th a galax y of internat ionally renow ned .m ists. the produ ction of Illany ra rely heard works and Illore than 25 specially cOllllllis, io neu pieces by Canadian cO lll po~cr~.
It i\ Wlll1 h recall ing that du ring its li N the Guelph Spring Festival was almo,t excl usive ly ~la l'[cd and fi nanced by the Univ..:rsity of Guelph. lt~ offices were in the Art s (now MacKinnon ) Bui ldi ng and ic ky douhkd a~ the Fesliva l\ artist ic director and the nive rsity',' director of mus ic . In the lal! r capacity he was respl. ns ible for all music Oil C'llllpUS. One of hi s most important legacIes was the strengthen ing of Ralph Klud\ popu lar ,tuuen t glee club to inc lude stalT anu faculty. and frulll this emerged the Univer.ity of Guclph Choir which suhsequcntly ' taged li vc succes...Iul Europl:an tours in ten year~ . What comes next fo r Nid..y Go lu~chmiut? No one is taking his reti rement very seriously. Guelph wi ll now manage withou t him but the ge neral <tss uill pt iun is that he still ha); new worlds to conquer. Afte r al l. he's on l ' 78 . Dr. MacKi nnon has the last word: " For 40 years. Nicky has challenged CanadI ans with his enthusiasm . e nergy and creativity. His leadcrship is li ke a tire on the top of a mou ntain. " 0 , i 'l.
com petition than Gu..: lph. especia\l ) as a competi tion cou ld be staged under so distin gu i, hec\ a name. The voca l competition wa, a great ~ucces~ and when Nicky became Professor Goldschmidt the 1()\Iowing year he had no great diflkulty in persuad ing hi. 'uhura l runn ing Ill'HC. Murdo MacKinnon. that an annual (e~t i va l should be launched in the spring.
World Standards that nothi ng wa, ever quite as imp0l1an t as their fir~ t uecis ion. which was to accept not hing less tha n world standards for G u t:1p h '~ th ti al. The Goldschm idt/ MacKinnon team was ofT and ru nn ing. John Krag lund, wri ting in the Globe (/1/(1 It is
p(ls~ibl'
~ea,ons ,
Nicky's genius/or exciling programming was evidenl in lh e 1985 opera , The Prodigal Son by fJe njamin B rillan.
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OVC Museum Gets a Boost By Martha Leibbrandt, Co-ordinator, Communications, OVC
E
xac tly 50 years ago thi s pa\t March, Roben James Pinkney, ove '37, wo n J u~ t about every awarJ at Co lJe ge Roya l ' 36. This year. tll the J e light of a ll. he was back a~ a Jbtingu is h u g u.:~t , tu take part ill the upe ning c;erelllo n ie~ anu to prese nt the fam ous Jacob ine Jones Trophy to the top w inner.
Gift to Museum Now re tired. Dr. Pink ney has not forgotten his A lma Mate r. He an d his w iti:, Marjorie. have es tab lished a fun J fo r the developme nt and contin u ing opcratio n of a mU$eum and gallery cont ain ing the 'ollege", - anJ to a large extent. Canad,l\ - hi story of veterinary mediline anu pract ice. 'Their ge nerous g ift initi ates the C ollege's lapital campa i n for fu nd s to bu ild a n academic/teach ing bu dd ing w hich ill ho u ~e the museu m and galle ry. "Jim " Pink ney was born in Coo ksvi lle. Ontario in 1911. By his ow n r co ll ec tion he o ncd a calf al m()s t [ro m the time he coul d walk and leJ rned the bas ics of raisi ng swi ne and beef catt le while worki ng on hi s fathe r's farm . His prowess in rai s ing crops Will> equa lly form idable. At 14, as the yo ungest ntrant in a J uni()r Farmers' ~win e judgi ng co mpetition, he captured the top pri l e in Pee l ' ounty wit h an a l m o~t perfect score. At 2 1, at the Royal Agricu lt ural Winter Fair. he won the heef e hampi()nshi p fo r a ll of C anada . Small wonder that with these diverse interests and talen ts he fou nd it hard to make up hi s mind whether to beco me an "Aggie" o r a ., Vet." O pti ng for OV , he continu ed to d i~tingu i s h hi m~e l f in c m peti tions at the Canadian National Ex hibition am.! the Royal Agricu ltura l Winter I-"a ir.
College Royaf Winner But the Ill l ~ t exc iti ng developme nts. a t leas t from OVC's ,tandp{)int. began to take ~ hape in 1935 <lnd were con nected with Jim Pin kney's panic ipation in Colleg.: RoyaL In tho,e days few OVC stu dents entered the even t - it was genera ll I regarded as a sh owcase o f OAC ta len t. Bu t Jim t'ntercd and Jim won. He was named champ ion sw ine exhibitor and run nt:r- up for prem ie r hono r~. The fo llowi ng year he delayed registeri ng so long that by the ti me he came to c la im his an imal for showi ng there was only o ne left in the barn, a heifer named OAC Lottie Brae. But Lottie Brae cou ld n't lose in the ha nds of suc h a 路m a ...te r. Co llege Royal '}6 was to be an almost clean sweep for the young man from Cooksvi ll e. 10
Jim Pinkney came away as C hampio n. Cereal G rains Sectio n; G rand Cha mpi on, Agronomy D i isi on; Champion , Bee f Section; Gra nd Champ ion, Livestock Division a nd winn er of th e o llege Roya l Showman ship Trophy. Among the go ld medals , " j] er cups and Ill oney was the crow nin g gl o . ' the Jacohi ne Jones Trophy (1 933 ). Th is bronze mode l o f " High fi eld Dream ing Ma,ter, " OAC's Je rsey herd sire, had been created and donated to OAC by cl ass ica l slulpt or Phy llis Jacobi ne Jones (1898 -1976).
Persuasive Force Follow ing graduation Dr. Pink ney est ahl ished a on e-ma n. m ixed vete rinary practile. servi ng the co mm uni ty aro und his hometow n of C ooksvil le. At the same time. he continued to ra ise Yo rk-hire pi o ; to yua li ty standard as h is fam il y had bee n doin s ince 1857 . H is G rave l Ridge Pats. Be~~es and Ladies not o nly carned off the hono rs w hcrever they were shown but served as models for the bn::ed. As h i~ beau ti ful, leane r pigs were so ld all over Canada, th roughout the U .S . . to So uth A meril3. C uba. Italy and a. far away as Chiml, Dr. P inkney beC<Inle, hy ex amp le, a pe rs ua. ive forcl! fo r the betterme nt 0 swine ~ t ock and improveJ health manageme nt. In rec ogni ti o n of his years of o tltsta ndi ng service. the Ontario S wine Breeders' Ass()c iati o n presented hi m wa h its Award of le rit in 1977 . He is also a Life Me m ber of th e Ontar io Veterinary Aswc iati o n ;lnd a charter lll clil ber o f the Canad ian Ag ri cu lt ura l Ha ll of fame Assoc iation.
Livestock Judge As a judge of li ves tnd. , D r. Pink ney eamed an eyua lly d istingub hed re pu tati on . He W,IS asked to judge . ix co nsecut ive year; in three se parate catego rie s at the Royal Ag ricultural Winter Fa ir and the c. . .E . . the onl y judge to be so honored. and he was a freque nt and re ~pected figure in compet it ions across North A merica. "Throughout hi s ca reer h..: was fort u n; te to hilve the full , UpP()rt of hi, wif'. Ma rjor ie. whom he ma rried in 194 1. A lthou 1!h " a city girl, " s he set to the task of keepi ng his book., and managing hi , prilct ice office, whic h she ran out o f the ir own home. Marjorie Pinkney 's grac ious ness and warm th won her ma ny friend". S he as al ,o a very capab le organiler, a ~ she prov.:d d urin g the jo int Illerican Ve te rina ry Med ical As~o e i ation/C anaJ i a n Veterimlry Med ica l A\$ ociation An nua l C on vent io n in Toro nto in 1953. It was she who organiled and co颅 ord inated the entire p rogra m lor the 500 women w ho attended the co nven ti on. History Buff In later year~ the Pinkneys fo und tim e tu travel the world, bringi ng buc k t rea~urcs in c hi na. cr sta l. pressed glass and jaue. and this ex 'rie nc e may we ll have add ed to the ir conv ic tion 01 the impo rta nce of p rese rving one's c ult ure. one'~ ow n p a~ t. Now. the ge ne rosity of James and Marj orie Pinkney w ill further the work of D r C . A. V. "Clilr' Barker, OVC '4 1, who hilS taken o n the co ll ec ting a nd catalog uing of College a rtifacts . ove r many ye ars. It is s ingu larly appropr iate that the m use um sho uld fin d its place in the propo sed teachin g huilding. since the Co ll ege perce ives lhe m use ulll to he a va luab k teach ing tool for its stude llls . for the general publ ic now and for futu re ge nerations. 0
Dr. Jim Pinkney poses wilh some College Royal lrophies he WOIl 5U years a fl o. Ihe trophies lVere on display m the Macdollald St ewart An Centre earlier this vear.
Colleges Il l' Bio logical Sc ience and of Phys ical Science (B,Sc . deg ree )
Alumni Nominees to Senate Al umni have nine rep resentatives on the Senate of the Univers ity of Guelph. Each year. three of th alumn i Se nator." terms expire. Re tiring after th e years on the Se n ate arc: Rithard D . Moccia, CBS ' 76 : Donald C . Rose, A[1 S ' SO , an d Tony K. Sobczak, Ar1 s '77. 'me 1;)llowing Senators will ~erve unt il Augu t 1987: H. Clark Adams, OAC ' 56. Jack George, OAC '4 8; and Patricia Gre nier, Art, '72. llle following Se n at or~ will serve unti l August 1988: Norman Hawkins, OvC' ' 57 ; Rita (Klassen) Weigel, foACS '77 ; and Jame White,OAC 'SSA and '61 , Fi e alumn i havc been nom in ated for the th r e posit ions which will become open 10 Au gu~t 1986 . Electio ns will be h 'Id at Alumn i Weekend in June and throu gh mail in ballots, Paul Aiello, Arts '83, live, in Wes ton and works for Marb and SpenCl:r. \-\fh i/c a stu dent at Guelph, Pau l wa, on th e vars ity soc (er tcanl, won an athlct ic ho nor award. was a member of Prcsidcnt\ Ath lctic Counci l and was acti ve in residence and In terhall Coun ci l. He stud ied for two years in Gre nob le, France. George Atkins, OAC '39 , of ak vi lk, is di rector of the Develop ing Countries Farm Radio Network. which re ac hes an estil1lated 100 million 111 ird Worl d farmers in 100 co untries, George spent 25 years with CBC in fa rm radi o ami te lev ision programming He is a member of the advisory comm illee of rhe niversi ty Sc hool of Part--Time Stud ies and Continuing Edu atio n, Don Harlow. OVC '48. is a veterinarian with Agriculture Canada in the Stratf() rd area. He spcnt 16 years with Agricultu re Ca nad a in the Mari times. duri ng which ti me he wa$ pres ident of the Nova Scoti a Veter in ary ssociati on, He returned 10 Ontario as the first fu ll-time exe' utive officer or the Ontario Veterina ry Association and later was the organ ize r, directo r and teacher in th e animal health lechn icia ns program at St. Clair College in Wi ndsor. Hc., ides enjoyi ng Stratford':, G'. tiva l, he is an avid sailor. Basil Kamel, OAC M.Sc, '73 . is a labora tory ma nage r for Atke mix Inc, in Rrantford. Basil earned a Ph .D . degree at the Un iver si ty of Maryland, U ,S ,A. , and was on th e faculty at the Un ive r, ity of the Distric t of Columbi a and a project leader <It the Kuwait Institute Illr Scientific Resea rch, He is cha ir man of the Guelph ,c<:t ion of the Canadi an In stitu te of Food Sc ience and Tech no logy and is a member of th e board of di rec tors of Canad ian Scholarship Tru:,t fou nds.
Kevin Ker. OAC '80, M.Sc. '84, is a pest manage men t spec ialist wil h th e Ontario Mi ni st ry of Agr i 'ult ure and Food . Vineland Station. lie worked as a re,earch associate in the Department of En viron menta l Biology and as a private consultan t b 'fore .iom ing OMAF in 198..1. He is in vo lved in crop adv i sory serv ices. an d is re, ponsible for pest manageme nt in grapes and pOllle fru its, C
Regulations Governing Election of Alumni to Senate All al umni shall be eli gib le to vote. provid ing they have graduated from the lIn i vel', ity of Glie iph or the foun ding college,. Alumn i member, of facult) at the Univers ity of Gue lph or f'ull - or part-timc ~ t u dents en ro lled in a progr<llll unde r Ihe j urisd iction of th.: Sen 'lte of the Un iversity of Guelph may not VOle in the elcc ti on of alLi n ni to Senate if they have pdr1 icipated in the cu rre nt elt:d ion of fac ulty or the elect ion f ~llIde nts to Sen ate. There sha ll be a min imum of one and a maximum of three elected alu mni from an y one of the following five alumni groupi ngs: (a) Macdona ld Inst itute or its sucres,or. the Cl liege of Fami ly and C nSlI n er Studi <:: s (b) 111e Ontari o Ag ricultural College (cl The Ontario Veterinary College (d) As a group, Welli ngto n College and the Colleges of Arts and Social Science (B .A. degree) (e l As a group, Wellington College and th e
Voting Instructions Plea~e vo te for a TlI[l,i ll1u fll of three candi da le:s on till' hall ot fo rm , Voti ng shall be b an" X" or cheeklllark. An v mar" on th e bal lot uther th an those requir d for marking the votcr\, prefere ncc , ha ll make the h:lIlot null and vo i 11le completed ballot fo rm should be cli pped and placed III <I n .: nve ill pe on whic h you are requc tedt n put your namc and yea r in the upper Idt-ha nd corner. Two ba llot for m ~ .Ire provided to facil itate voti ng hy an alu mnus whose spo usc j, abo;1I1 a l ltmnu~ of the nivers ily of Guelph <tnd ho. therelorc. loi lltly rece ive only one copy of the Cll c/I'h 1, /111111111 1. A jOlllt retllrn (t\l,m ha ll,)ts in the 'ame envelope) i\ acceptable onl y if the nam.:s, c lie 'c and car of graduation of bot h voter, arc on the cnvl'lo pe , Mai l to : Alu mn i Offi c , nivers ity of GUl! lph. Gue lph, Onlario N lG 2W I. An on - c ~lI11p ll S pull ing booth will be open b t wccn the h lur, of 11:00 a, m. and 1:30 p.lll. on Saturday durin g Alu ilin i Wee" I: nd. Ba llot fo rms and c n ve l ope~ will be available, When the ball ot i ~ receivcd at the Alu mn i Office. eligihi li ty to vote wil l be veri fied, llle enve lopes will be upened on or after June 13 . 19Ro . and Ihc ballot~ counted by scruti nec rs appo inted by the excc uti ve co mmitt ee of the University of Gucl ph Alum ni Assoc ia ti on, On ly va lid bal lo ts. with vo ter name, co llege and yea r of gradu a tion on the envelope, received on or before that da te, will be: cou n'ted.
II------~-------r--------------, Senate Ballot Form I Senate Ballot Form I
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Forelec tion of three alli mn i to Senate. ni- I f--o r election of three alumn i to Senate, University of Guelph, fo r the threc -year te rm I versity of Gue lph, for the th ree-yeJr term
commcncing September I, 1986 , Vole for I comme nc ing September I. 1986 Vote for
a maximum of three nominees. One bal- I a maximum IIf three nominees. One bal- I lot per voter. I lot per voter. I
r NAME OF NOMINEE
VOTE
NAME OF NOMINEE
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VOTE
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AIELLO, Paul Art s '83. Wes ton
AIELLO, Paul Arts ·In . West on
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ATKINS, Geo rge OAC ' 39 , OakiV ille
ATKINS, George OAC ' 39. Oak ville
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HARLOW, D o n
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HARLOW, Don OVC '48. Stra tford
KAMEL, Basi l OAC M,Sc . ' 73 . Brantford
KAMEL, Bas il OAC M,Sc. '71 . Hrantford
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KER, Kevin OAC '80, foe nw ick
KER, Kevin OAC 'SO, foenw ick
! OVC '48 , Stratl()rd
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College of Biological Science Alumni Assoc. BIO·ALUMNI NEWS
Editor:
Marie (Boissonneault) Rush, 'SO.
The Plight of the Haiji Dolphin T he Newsletter 01 rhe I CN (I nternational Unio n for the Co n ~e r at ion of Nature and Natura l Re~o lln;es ) Cetacea n Spec ialis t Group rece nt ly focused on the pi ight of the Baij i dol phi n (Lipolt's I'ex ill ifrr ) in th e Vangtse Rive r. Professor Zho u Kaiya of Nanj ing Uni ven,ity. People's Repub lic of China, has led and co-onJ inated the tl eld stu dy and conservat ion effort fo r th is species in recen t years, He has concluded that the total po pulalion of Baij i now probably num bers barely 200 indiv iduab inhab iti ng the midd le and lower sectors of the Changjiang (Yang tse ) River. The BaiJi rivab the Cochito (Phocuena Sinus ) in the upper G ulf of Cali fornia as the rareS! small cetacean in the world. [n the sum mer }f '85 , Profes:,or David E. Ga...kin, Departmen t of Zoology. worked fo r :;evera l weeks with the research group at Nanjing. During this periud he lectured at the uni versity. jui ned in a survey of the Changjiang in the Tongling-Datong reg ion and took part in intensive discussi ons of new proposab for the conservation of 8a iji .
very you ng call'. plus at leas t on~ ~ m a ll ani mal which co uld have bee n " yearl ing. Ap proximately three rimes a" many finlcs~ P lll' poi ~c , (Neophucoel/ ll pIIOCfl(' l1o ide.l ) were recorded Jurin g the sa me c.:ruise, so melimes withi n a few hundred me tres of Ba iji. Sa iji seemed to lavor areas whe re bad, eddies mi ght foml a the n; ~u lt or the CUITent break ing aroun d small b land". An il ilais showed no in tere,t in boo ts; in fae! only one time di d a pair or l3aiji pass the survey boat at a di stanc.: c a~ close a, RO metres , and the n the boat was moored agai nst a sm all island. \\ ith the engi ne oiL 111C hab it 01 stay ing close to sho re along the J ow nst ream ex t re miti e ~ of i ~ I H nd s ma kes Ba lj i part ic ul arl y vul nerable tu II,h ing gear such a\ multi pk-huok li nes set for stu rgeon. (ji ll ncb and stak e net trap, an; abo set close to shore in th e Chang iian g. The laller are , irnil ar to the herring we irs of Eastern Ca nada and upper New Englan d, and to the herring pou nd ne t, of the Balt ic . Such nets u ~ u ~lIy tai-.e porpoi ses alive so that they ca n be rel eased. Unfortunately Baij i. which have poor vision. tend to ex plore such nell ing with the i( long ~ n 'J lIh , and because of thei r relat ivel y la rge teet h, eas ily lJecome en tan gled. Situation Critical
Pmfessor Zhou es t i mat~d that abollt 37 per cen t of the animals killed acc ident ly arc taken in ~oll1e kind of fi sh In g geJ r. Most of the rest are. lashed by boat [lmpe llers. Tral~ lie on the Changj ia ng i n clud~s craft ranging Iroll small scows to n odem tn nker~ , cargo ve., 'e ls and pa'>se nge r ferries. While rive r traffic is not hea y by European Slandard" it h:J S do ub led since 1969 . anel und r the new program of economic expa nsion. IS li ke ly to double again in less than tou r years. Des pite strict g lilat i oll ~ agains t hunt ing Balj i and an extensive educatio n pro grum . the spec ies faces an increasing ly critical ,i tuati un. After disell ssions with the
Survey
As the rains were beginning, it was possible to spe nd only one complete day on the su rvey. The ,eare h concent rated on a series of l ocat i on~ where animals had been reported bel()re. The tim mg of the cruise wa~ lortu nate. because an unusually large nUTll ber of the Baij i seemed to have (;oncentrated in the region. A total of 21 sight lngs were made of at least II different ind ividuals. im; luding one 12
Na /lji /lg U /l i w:rsily.
C hin l!~c
experts, Dr. Gas kin agrees th at th.: popu lation is in thc low hundreds and ap proaching a crillca l rn ini ll1111ll . 'n1e behav ior or the anim al exa(' e rb ate~ its vulnerabi lity, anJ the distribut io n of scat tered grou ps may mit igate again,t maximal reprodut'l ion of the remaining pop ulation Assuming l1lost uf the ind ivi duals haw a three-year reprod uc tive cyc le, an nual calr prod uct ion can nut exceed eight to twe lve indivi duals at must . and is li kl!ly to be less if the reproduc tio potenti al of the pop ulatIO n is no t m il;( i mi7ed. III 1984 ZhoLl recorded 13 Baiji deaths fro m all causes in the J iangxi and Anhui ~e c lOrs alone; others almost certai nl y we nt und etected or un reported . It is safe to as sume th at numbers wil l co ntinue to decrease In the nat mal hab itat, says Professor Gaskin. China\ ind ust rial ex pansion. the urgen t lo cal requirement for sus tained prud uc tion from fi shing, an d li mited resources C!l'.u re that the habitat for Ra iJi in the ma in ri ver ')'stem will not im prove. a tl~a~t in the "hort run. Emergency Measures Profe ss \)r~
Gask in and Zho u agree tha t pleas and recommendations tu improve rhe hab itat wo ul d no t yield res ults in time tU save the n:l11l1ant po pul ati on. although ob vi ously hClb itat illlprovcmen t hCls to be a lo ng-term goa.l for the cco logieal health of th e C hangjiang rive r ~ y ste lll a~ a who le. Professo r ZhOll, h i~ co lleagues and th authorities of An hui Prov ince ar conVi nced that emergency mcasures arc the onl y way to save the l3<1 iji . In fact. this was publi cl y li sted in 19R5 as une of the lOp 20 priorities or the goven men! of An ui Provillce. Semi-Natural Reserve
Proft:sso r Zho u and hi s 'o Jle ague \ ,hare the doubts expressed by ot her ceta cCCln spec iali ·ts that a capti ve breeding pru gram in an aquari um situation would suc
(
Alumni FeUowships
I Winners ofthe CBS A/I/II1/1 i Associatiun SciJ o/anhips and Alma M(I{ er Scholarships fjat hrr after the CBS AA AI1 11 1/01MeN illl: ill Mllrcil . From left , Karell /-loti/I' , Patricia SIV idills/.;.\', Christopher SCOll ami Cherri Recchio. Nut piclII red is Andrea Ch apin.
ceed. In~tellu. they propose to tran~ loc;He
enoug h Raiji to form a viabk co lony from
the mam Chang.liang ,ystcl11 to a ,em f-natu
ral reserve area where ~h ipping and fi ~hil1g
arc prohibited and water flow ca n be control
led .
A :,uitablc site, a l'i kill channel, has
already heen elected ncar the smali town of
Datong in Tongl ing Co unry. It ral1ge~ from
fi ve to ten metres deep and holds one-ha lf to
one-and -a-ha lr mil lion cub ic metres , far
more tha n the larges t arti ficial <lquarium
system th at cou ld conce ivahly he co n
~tructed for this purpo,e.
A pumping facil ity will ma intain a con
tinuo u~ flow of natu r~l water, and loa acres
of fi~ h poob adjacent to the channe l wili
ensure an adequate supp ly of live food yellr
round.
Professor Gas kill be lieves th ,1t the
~e m i - natura l rescrw ()ffer~ tht: be~t hope of
sav in g lJ aiji in rC"\(l nah le nu mbers. al
though the Daton rescrve will cventually
have to be (I nc 01 a serics. 111ere IS a low
traffic area of the major Chang,jiang syste m
where a tCw d01.en BalJ I migh t b~ left in the
wild if fi ~hing with dangerous gear~ cou lJ
be pn1hib ited .
11K mai n problem remall1 ing IS to de
wlop methods for captu ring lJalll unharmed
in the fa~t-now in g . ~xcceJingly turbId wa
ters of the Chungl iang. Trans porting them
out of water f( r extens ive periods appe ar, to
he no 11I0re diffic ult than in the case ur
bottlennscd Jolph in s. Pr()~ ssor Zhnu and
his col leagues arc so lic iting ad ice fro m
hi s co ll eag u e~ are soli cillng adv ice from
overscllS experts on capture tcchl11<.jues.
He and the Ba iJi Soc iety arc also seek
in" li nanc ial a,,~i~tance from the in terna
tional co mmun ity to build the resave. Tota l
building costs could'x eeed a qU<.Jrter of a
million uol lars, on ly a pa rt of which can be
ra i~ed wi th in the Peoples' Republi c of
China. Th is project may represent the last
hope for this unique an d vul nerab le species.
which can be descrihed as one of the" living
fo'S il s" of the gloha l cetacean faun a. 0
Marg Docker, CBS ·85 , (I) is thefirst recipi (' Ill (llt hl' $1,000 Keith Ronald je//()II'.lhip. Pro{i:ssor ROllald prescllled tlte l/\\'(I/"t! ill jllll L/llrr. Kri.lta SliP ' r, represelltillg tire CI3S A/I/ fll ni Association , H'Iiicli e.\1l1/)lixliet/ the el/(//II,./l/ ell/ ji)r tire l/ltvrd, looks /III . The Keith Ronilid / cllmnliip lI' ill bl:' w m ri/ed {'acli \ 'ellr to a graduate of the ColleRe ol Biological Sciellce/or graduate lI'(lrk at the Unil'ersit." oj Guc!pli.
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Ontario Veterinary College AluUlni Assoc. OVC ALUMNI NEWS
Editor: Dr. Cliff Barker, '41.
Donation of 'Heirloom' Beans T he search for an e~! rly maturing wh ite bean k l\ reached th e point of part ing people from their L1m ily heirlooms. No, people haven't so ld off antiq ue Cur ni tu re or cl assic jewellery to tin ance breed ing projects, \Vhat they hal' c done is donate seeds tn science - in part icular, e,lrly-ma turing bean, which have bee n in their fami ly for a few ge nerat ions. 111e search for " he irloom" beans was onl y the beg inning or a project hy Uni vers ity pl an t breeden. thai mi ghl offe r growers a new varie ty or carl y maturi ng ~all to re place, or offe r an altern ati ve to, va ri eties preentl y ava ila ble, Professo r 'Thom::L\ Mich ae ls. Depan men t of Crop Science. says if all the breed in g work goe~ well. growers could have a hi gh- yi eldin g whi le bean that matu res eal~ lier than Seafare r or OAC Seaforth , two in d u ~ try m onoli th ~ . It\ all depe nde nl. says Dr. Mic hacb . on \ hat co mes up when he plants lhe I I differe nt types of beans he received recentl y in the ma il. l ie circul awd a notice a~ kil1g tanllers in various counties to send in ea rl Y- lliaturing bean~ tha t had hee n in tht: fa mil y for a nu mber of years, He wa~ n ' t pid,y about size or . ha pe. an d a,J..ed for a hrief hi5tory. if pos,ibk. of th e hea n" To d ~ te, he ha~ recei ved II dif!crent ryp... ~ of bean in th c mai l. "nley have CO llll~ packaged in evcryth illg from cigarelll: p;Jds to vitamin hOllies , and all 3rt: a bit of a my ,ter), at present. Michaels ,ays th e first ste p is to grow the bea n to increase the basic am ou nt of sec avai la hle, Wh ile they arc growing. he wi ll mo nitor them for g rowin g habits . di s ease resistance and other trai ts. Th e jc)lIowi ng year, arl y lines of beans wil l be ,e lec ted fro m plots . and yields wil l 14
be com pa red with CO lml10 1l arie tie,. From lhere. Mkhac h wil l worl-. towarth isola[ing favorable ge rm pla'llI in the bea ns an d incor por,lt ing it into lhe l'()mmo n varietie,. 111c re,earcher sa) s he chose to go the "hc:i rioolll " m ul e because it e nabled him to drop a few steps from his hrl.!eding wo rk. 111e reaso ning be hi nd the ap proach. he says. is tha t the bans are already adaptcd to the On ta rio e nviron ml.! llt if th ey ha vc bce n gmllJ1 and h arve ~ t ed by s llc ce~~ i ve gene ra tio n, of" ram1 ram ili e~ , The scie n ti ~t says bean~ arc an interes[ ing crop [0 do breed ing work wit li beGIU,C of their ab il ity to inlcn; n1'~ frl!dy. Thai abI l ity. he sa 's, allows hree der to move goot! ger m pl3, m fca ture~, ~ u c h as earl y matu rity. in to a no ther var ie ty without tak ing th e bean\ ~ile and :,hape alllOg with it. " l his is why I can ge t away with my schl.!l1lc fo r earl y rn alurily." he :, ;Jy ~ . " Wh at you do is make the cro~s and :,l'i c~t for the ty p~ you IVanl. II d ()e~ n ' t alw;JYs worl-. but
thal\ what you hope for, " /\ nother trait th ai Dr. Michae b witl be look ing lor in his "hei rloom.,"' j, an upri gh t bush-style of bean. wit h a growing habit ,im ilar to a soya bean, Hc says thi , would all ow ,oY:lhea n grower, to grow whi te bean~ wililout huying new machinery 10 harve:, t thcll) . He says th,1l some people hay.; selll long hi sto ries along with their fa mil y-grown heans. () th er~ are relatively short. '[he be an with the longest hist ory goes bac k to nOI1h ern ha ly. Professor :'vlichae ls says that an carl mat uri ng whi te bean won't be avai l,lblc com l11erci ally l<l r ;mothe r tcn yeLlrs, Th at's h(IW long itt ah's to gil thro ugh J IIl he cross ing and rec rossing of varie ties, Waili ng for the hna l res ults i,., jusl part of his job. " Pl alll breedi ng" , he sa id . '" always re qu in:s more pa ti ence fr< m the people wa il ing fo r the fi ni , lled product thcln it do ~ rrom the peNln doing the breeding work, " 0
M. Agr. program begins in September
A study pmgram le;Jdin g
[ 0 a Ma~te r\ of Agribusiness Ma nageme nt will be offered at th e Uni versi ty beginning in Septe mbcl'. 111c new program i ~ designed to prcpare \ tu dcnts to fun ction success full y ;11 middle and upper levels of manage ment, say ~ ProlCssor Tom Fun \.... Depdrtme nl of Ag ric ultural Eeo no01 ics ,mel Businc:,s. Farmers and peo ple employed in agri busi ne~ s. including mm'keting boards . could benefit from the program. says Dr. Funk. It shou ld be particu larly Ilseful fo r lhose at IOIVer manage ment leve ls who want to illl provc th eir chances of advance ment, he says,
The new program will ,Kcept about 20 studcnh a year. About ha lf of lhose arc ex pected to hc new gradua tes : thl: rc ~t will be peop le already in the work force, The prugra m wil l rC4 uire four se mesters of ~ lUdy, but will not re4u ire the
lraditio n<.t l [hes i, of llIos t grad uate study programs. Instead. il wil l focus 011 course wo rk. C,ISC ~;[ udic~ and a manag<: me nt tra in ing proi c l~ l. One co-op'rat iyc work term will he in(' ludctL T11<:rc will bl: an emphasis on d e c i ~ ion ma king, co mmun icat ion ;J nd lead'rs hip in [he program. wi tli ha nds-o n expaie nce in solving business prohlems. In add ition. vis iting speak.ers and held trips will enable stude nts lO mee t and in te ract with successfu l agribusiness managl:rs. Leaders in the farm ing an d business communi ties. as well as those in govern ment and the academic communi ty, reeog niled the need for an agrib u,i ness manage ment progra m anc! have wor\...ed together to bring it ttl lite, For more informa ti o n on th e prog ram . contact Pwfes,or Pu nk at (5 19) 824-4 120 Ex t 34]7 , 0
Etches Awarded D.Sc. from Reading P rofessor R9berl Etc he's . Department of Ani mal and Poultry Science. has received a coveted Doctor of St: ic nce degre e from Readin g Unive rsity, En land. The award was prese nted at Reaclin i!.'s December '85 convocatio n, English uni ver,itics confe r lhe D.Se, on grad uates of' their 0 n programs who have made di, tinguished con tribut ions to scie nce since g r,lduation. Dr. Etc hes re cei ved a Ph, D. from Readi ng in 1972 , He earned the D , c, fo r his research in th e area of rep roductive phys iology uvu latory cycles in hens . the endocrine 1~lc tors relating to hen s sitti ng on eggs . and hormonill activity in the egg- lay ing process. Othe r Guelph faculty who have earned
a D. Sc . degree include Dr. lIow:J rd C lark, vice -pro ident . ac ade mic ; Pro !"c,s op, George Fergu son and RobeJ1 McCr indle. [)epart me nt of Chemistry and Biochemi,try. and Prole,sor John Campbell. Depart me nt of Ph ys ic>, 0
New Bag of Breeding Tricks
Today's cattle breeding i ndu ~try i ~ facing " a whole new bag of tncks" and, according to Professor Ted Burnside, '59, Depart ment of Animal and Poultry Science, pro ducers could soon see a "cow turned into a sow" - on a reproduc tive basis. Dr. Burnside, director of the Centre for Genetic Improvement of Livestock at the University, noted a great deal of progress has been made in breeding techniques over thc last two decades. And by fine tuning IOday's proge ny tests , future genetic improvemen ts could see current production rates doub le. With pres ent readily available techniques suc b as mul tiple ovu lat ion and embryo transfer, he explained tha t a cow could potentially pro duce as ma ny off. pring as a sow normally would in its lifetime. A few of th newer breeding concept, have already been in ex istence for a number of years , but have only been actively prac tised more recently. " We knew how to get cows pregnant art ificia ll y in the '40s, but it took us unt il thc '60s to app ly that tech no logy to very efficient progeny testing sys tems , amI today we're working very effi ciently in Canada in this regard, " he ,aid.
Exceptional Opportunities Citi ng ex isting breeding oncepts, he noted three possibilities that "offer excep tional opportunities, to enhancc our current rates of genetic progress. ., 'These consist of multi ple ovulation and embryo tran~fer, em hryo spli tting, and embryo !>exing, He reminded CAAB me mbers that the concepts of multiple ovulation an d , ub~e quent embryo transfer have been demun strated effectively since the early ' 70s and are currently avai lab le on a commerc ial basis in Canada. " It's a fai t accompli for ex pandin g the reproductive performance f cows," he said. In thi s proces~, the cow is given dnlgs to encourage the release of a number of embryos instead of only one. These are re covered and then transferred into other re cipients. Embryo splitt ing, on the other hand, has reall y only Jus t hegu n. Spli t portio ns of the embryo are tra nsferred into a separate embryon ic sac, and then into two reci pients, "Generally speaking, tod ay we can split an embryo into two pieces which wi ll grow altho ugh it's not considered fe asible to go beyond that as a routine. That allows us to get the ident ical genetic make-up into two separate an imals ," he explai ned.
And according to Dr. Burnside, the idea has many exciting possi bilit ies. For ex ample, one of the embryos could be grown out and progeny-tested wh ile the other re mained in a froLen state. While the third concept. sex ing em bryos, has been avai lable as a technique for some time, it's " not quite with us ye t, but should be very soon, .. The idea was originally deve loped with embryos that were beyond the stage of early transfe r into recipients . .. You cou ld draw off part of the embryo and de tennine whether the animal was male or fema le, but then transferring the embryo and gelling it to go to teml was very difficul t, ,. he !>aid. And wh ile early theoretical work re garding all three of these concepts suggests the current rate of progress in generics could be doubled in cattle popu lations , Burnside
also warned of risks Involved. Possib le drawbac ks include anima l housi ng emts - which could increa~e, thereby putting pressure on capita l ex penses. -The dange r of selecting the wrong am mals is also enhanced du e to the tocus on a relat ive ly small number of anima ls. As wel l, there is danger of gett ing re cessives which may be carried by a smaller number of animals, and the potential rates of inbreeding in the popU lation (due to the use of ICwer animals for the ba.~e population) are also Increa\ed. But despite possible negative factors, the director told hi s colleagues he fe lt op timistic for the potential of technology to prov ide new break th mughs. "because we're all interested in economic succe~s and mak · ing the farmer\ lot better. " 0
Ideal Soy Planting Conditions
If the morn ing is coolon the day you plan to plant soybeans, yo u might hetter stay in bed until noon than ru~h to get your seeds in the grou nd. The latest researc h by Professor Ed Gamble, '52, Department of Crop Sci ence, shows tha t so il temperat ure and moisture content of a seed have a large Im pac t on its vigor. Ideall y, soys should be pi, nted at 25 degre s Celsius and 95 per cent humidity Unfortunately, these idea l conditions do not occur too frequent ly when you go to plant the bean~, Dr. Gamble said. Ilowever, growers can compensate by planting when the seedbed is warmes t One of Dr. Gamble's graduate students has been study ing th effh;t of th e time of day of plant ing as its affects the temperature of the top two to five centimetres of soil. Re!>ults to date confirm that emergence and yield were both reduced amo ng plants planted in soil below 10 degrees even if the ~cedlots haJ high vigor. The closer the soi l is to the ideal temp rat ure of 25 degrees. the belter. If the temperature drops agai n at night, growers should stop planting in ti me to avoid chilling injury to the seed. Th is takes place within two to eight hours afte r planti ng in cool soil , Ed Ga mble said. He estimated there is a two-ho ur lag in the ti me in wh ich the ai r warms and the soi l warms, and be tween the ti me the air cools and the soil cools. He said one way to avoid chill ing injUry is to in rea~e the moisture content of the seed to 16 to 20 per cent, but no one has flgured out a way to do th is.
The Illoisture ~ontent in the ,eed can also compensate ror low seed vigor. Seed planted at 12 per cent or more moisture give~ better emergence. Again, however, the prob len is how to maintain seed at a high mois ture leve l or how to raise the moisture leve l of drie r ~eed. He sa id one possibi lity i ~ storing the seed in an insulated stee l storage silo and us ing a blower to ma intain the high moisture without ,eed spoilage. lie said the idea needs testing. but one grower has told him it's possi ble, Another possibi li ty is ~toring the seed dry and then increasing the moisture level wi thin days of planting. For instance, revers ing a blower to force dam p air into the seed storage are,l on a wet day in April might do the trick . Resea r c h ers know what impact moisture content ca n have on genninat ion and , ul timately. yie ld . but more work is needed to fi nd ways to con tro l mo i ~ture leve ls, 0
35th Reunion Plans are we ll undcr way lor the 35th reunio n of OAC ' 51 duri ng Alum ni Wee kend 'H6 . J un e 20-22. Year members are remi nded to ge t infor mat ion ror the news letter 10 Murray MacGreg L We hope tll be house d in Joh nston Hall (fo nnerly the Adm in istralio n Bu ilding). Return to campus for our 35 th and re new acquaintance... wit h cla ... smate, in our flrst- and see Ond-YCa r residence. 0
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15
Wild Blueberries... Still Wild
Go od id e as do n' t a l w ay~ bear fruit. Graham Gambles, ' 79 , knows this as well a.<' anyo ne after spend ing two years on a Northern Ontario blueberry project whic h - well - hasn't borne an y at all. For two yea rs Graham has bee n at tempt ing to prove uncult ivated bl ue berri es can he inex pensi ve ly prod uced in Northern Ontario and shi pped down to the popul ated markets in sOllthern Ontario tor a profit. So far the bluebe rry plants have produced little to no frui t. and Grah am has , for th mo~t part, learned what no t to do if grow ing blue berries as a con mercial vent ure in O n t a ri o '~ nO l1hland. As well. he faces an additional pro blem at th i ~ poin t. Project fun di ng throu gh the now defun ct Northern Ontario Rura l De velo pment Agreement (NORDA ) ha~ run out, and Grah am, if he still belicves there is promi.<,e 10 the fa lte ri ng project, will have to go it alone this year. Gra ham is un willin g at this point to make <lil y co nclusions ahou t the project un til he gives it fu rt her thou gh t, but he di d , tate "i t's still got some promise. " He also noted, however, that he woul dn't r commend any one try growing bluebernes in Timis ka mi ng Di ~ tr i ct unt il he has anothe r year to test th e proj ect. He bega n hi s plans two years ago, armed with a previous U n i ver~ity of G uelph study amI a more recent area ~t ud y which s ugge~ tcd there we re po~~ibil it i e s for )!row ing the cro p in an ul1 cultivatcJ manner in a rca~ <tl re ad y produc ing blueberri es, but cleared of th c:ir , urrounJ ing tfee ~ . So Graham approac hed NORDA l'l)r funding and began the 20-acre pro ject. The land chosen is remote and we ll hidden, a Few miles from Kirk land Lake. In the begi nning, it wa\ comp lete ly covered wi th tree .... all of the III eventu al! cle:.lred by h,Hld wit h the intent ion of ,avtng the wood Jnd doing little da mage to the lan d it,e ll. The trees we re remo ed to the lowe... t point pm,ib le, wuh a l11ulcher and mower later u ,~d tll furt he r clear the lan d. Thi ~ wa.\ Cllm pleted in the fall of 19B3 . A ponJ w,,\ deve loped ncar the plot Illr irrigat iona l usc J ur in g dry times and 10 help preven t (rost Ja mage in the sp ri ng. In 1984 , f' nilizc r was pl aced in the proj ect area in a number of app licat ion" with no expectatio n of harves tin g a crop until the flll!owi ng year. In the spring of last yea r more fen ilizer was app lied, and portions of the trial area were irrig<lted to prevent frost dam age. Fa l 16
lowing study recommendations, Graham ir rigated the remain ing plots after fin din g 10 per cent of the blueberry buds in place. Evaluati ng this crop at up to $4 per quart, he was expectin g to harvest J 560 ,000 crop las t su mme r. What he ha r e s te d am ou nted to a handful of berries, and what he discovered was an error in judgment in a num ber of areas. There were few buds on the bl ue berry plant s last sprin g. He bel ieved two of the main causes to be lack of proper ferti li 7.ati on and too- late irri gati on for frost. Eve n the buds that did form in the sp ring di d not survi ve to prod uce fru it last sLImmer. "'This is jus t a demons tra tion project, " he noted, addi ng he's 'ust " taki ng a fCw shots in the dark" at what sho ulJ or should not be done to properl y produce the berries. Wh ile the initia l NORDA project is completed, Gra ham said he will work one more year to make a ' 0 of his blueherry project lie has plans to .:hange fert il ize r rates an d limes. as we ll as irrigat ing for fros t as soon a~ the snow ha!. lert. His plans. as we ll. are to mow down the fi eld in the fall of 1986 to give the crop a period of rest. A bluebe rry crop in Non he rn Ontario wi ll have to prove ih elf before then or he will not cont inue the ent ure. 0
Alumni Seminar T he challenge of farm ing , and how to meet it, was th e focu s of the an nu al OAC alumni sem inar in Fe bruary at the Arboretum Cen tre. Speaker:. included Protessors Jack Tan ner, ' 57, and George Jones, '50 , Crop Sc i ence : Profes,or Gt:orge Brinkman , Depart me nt o f Agr icult ura l Eco nom ics a nd Bu sine s~: Rev. Ed. Den Haa n, Counse lling and Stude nt Resource CC[1tr' an d fou nder of ProJcct Hope: Ed Baskicr, Toronto Dornin ion Ra nk. To ro nto: and Rri gid Pykc, first vice-pres ide nt of the Onturio and the Cana dian federations of Agricu lt ure. Protc,sor Jo nes recei ved the co ll ege's fi rst T R. Hilliard Extens ion Award in 1983 for his rlO earch ill plant breeding. A farmer as well as a <;ess io nOlI instructor in Crop Sc ience, h i ~ semi na r topic was " 111<." f'arm Call 'J Southern Ontario. " Professor Tan ner is chairman of the Ontari o task force n the long-term fut ure of the O nta rio Wine and Grape Industry. Hc di scLls,ed " 111e Winc t ndll ~try : The Best of Time" Th ~ Wors t of Times." Farm lina nc e~ were the su bject of three ~e minar p re~c nt a tion, Brinkman\ "l1']e Farm In come Sit uat io n in the Ino s ." P ke 's " farmers' Pe rs pecti ve of fa rm In come," and I:laskier\ "Banking f\.)r Farm in g. " The se min ar concluded ith De n lIaan's d isc uss ion of "'Imprr'ving the De liv ery of Compassion to Farmers in Cri sis." IJ
OACTIes
Support
Alumni House OAC-crested school ties are being sold by the OAC Alumni Association as a fUlld raisinf{ projec/ fur Alumni House ($10 from each tie IVill be dOllated to the pro j.:'Cf). The ties will be on sale for $25 (including tax) at Alumni Weekend or can be ordered from the Alumni office. When ordering by mail. please make cheques payable to "OAC Alumni Association" and in clude $3 .00 for pos/age and handling .
ON THE ROAD Arboretum is at its fragrant best in Junc. and the trails on campus and beyond are nearl y irresistible to romantics and outdoor enthusi aMs. Is art your passion? The Wil dl i ~ rt Show and Sale at Mllssey Hall and the Fine Art Print Sale in Zavit z Hall will tr'at your eyes and tempt you to expand you r own art collection. We partic ularly we lcome " golden alum ni" - those of you who grad uated 50 or more years ago - an d invite you to be guests at the Golden An niversary di nner on Saturday. We hope you will come to sh are me mori es with yo ur classmates and ex pericnce the vib ra nt campus of the mid-eight ics. Make your reservat ions now; mark your calendar and get on the road to Guelph for an unforgettable weekend, June 20 to 22 .
TOGUELPH All roads lead to Guelph on Alumni Weeke nd in Ju ne. hut thi s year, you can detour via Monte Carlo. The weekend starts off with a bang Friday night. June 20th, when Creelman Hall wi ll be turned into a reasonab le fac~ i m ile of the fa mous gambling ca.\ ino. Proceeds of th evening will go towards IUlllni House. Perhaps you prefer solitary stro lls through the woods or a bris k jog under clear Guel ph skies. You and your fa mil y can have it all - thc
GENERAL INFORMATON Accommodation
Meals on Campus
Rooms will be available in Macdonald and Johnston Halls for those who want to stay on ea lll p u~. Please make your reservations on the form on the back cover of this program . A reg istration des k, where na me tags and other information will be available, will be located in the foyer of Joh nston Hall between 10:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. on Friday, and from 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m . nn Satu rday. You and your cJassmates ca n be ass igned rooms in the same sect ion of the residence if reservations are received before June 6. Cost will be $27 per couple per night, $1 9 si ngle, or $16 duuble p r person. Students will be charged $1 3. 75 per night. There i. no charge for children 12 years of age or younge r who stay in their parents' mom and usc sleeping bags. If you pre fer camp ing or hotel accommodation plca,e ma ke your reservatio ns di rect ly. Area hotels and motels: Biltmore In n (519) 822-9112 College Motor Inn (519) ~n6- 1240 lIoliday Inn (519 ) 836-023 1 Camping facili ties are avai lab le at the foll owing locations : Elora Gorge Co nservatio n Area , Box 35 6, Elora , NOB ISO (519)846-9742 Rockwood Con,ervation Area, Roc kwood (519) 856-9543 Guel ph Lal-..e Conservation Area, R.R. #4 , Gue lph (5 19)824-5061.
Dinner on Friday evenin , fo r alumni n t attendi ng banqucts, will be served from 4: 30 p.m . to 7:00 p.m. in Der Keller, Johnston lIall. All other meals . including Sunday breakfast, il l be on a ticket basis. Some snack out lets and the Brass Ta ps bar in the Uni versity Cent re wi ll be open du ring the weekend. Informati on and ti mes will be available at the regist ration desk .
AlulI/n i Weekend i,1 a fWl/ i/1' affilir jar Paul Millard. OAC '67. his wife , '-irula . 1I11d Iheir four da llg hler~ .
Athletic Facilities The swimming pool at the Ath le tic Centre ill be open to the public fro III 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. both Satu rd ay and Sunday. Other faci lities such as the tennis courts may bc reserve d (It the At hletic Centre desk.
Photographs Group photos of c1asse~ will be taken on Saturday. ~ reque~ted. Please read yo ur cl as~ reunion notice lor '>pt!ci fi c in filrmat i )n about time and place. Mo"t wi ll be taken just pri or to the reu nion meal. Photo" wIl l be produced in color, si le 8" x 10", and can be ordered on the attached rese rvati on form , at $6 per pri nt. mailed . (Orders rece ived follow ing lum ni Weekend may not b fi lled. )
Parking
Parkin g will he free after 4 00 p. m. on F-riday. June ~O and throughou t the weekend . The par killg 10(, 'I<.:rn~~ Cram Wa r Me!l1on ::d Hall;l' we ll a' tho,e in front alld rear uf JohnMoll Ha ll will he mo,[ <.:o nvcniellt if you arc \ lay ing in ri!~itlencc . There are al\tl several lo[s nCa r the niversi ty Centfe,
Official Unveiling At 4:00 p.m .. Saturday. Ju ne 21. a broll/.e ,cu lpture of i:l !lor,c and standi ng figure will be ullveiled in Donaltl F-oNcr Sc ul plU re Park ;]t !he lacdonald Stewan An Centre. 111C Cynthia Short ~cul pture II ';], pur· chw,eJ wit h funds tlonatcd by alu mni th r'ough the Alma Mate r Fund . wit h the as, i,tancc of the Canada ounci!. 11H' suppor1 of the Govern me nt or Ontario lhrou gh the Ont;1rIil Min i,try of Citl 7en,h ip and Culture. i\ aek nuwk dged . C "nthta Short is a prom inent Canadi;1Il ~c ulptor whose ,tud in is located in Toronto. She has taught at the Un ivers ity of Guc: lph. and her art wa: featured recent ly in a major ex hibition at the Ma<.:donald Stewart Art Centre. 'fh c lifcs izetl scu lplllrc conveys feel ings or vu lne rabi li ty. and a wO ll1an'~ private rnu ~in g on the my ~terie of li fe . It wil l he a wckoillc addi tion to the Scul pture Park and an impo rtant ~tep in t hi ~ outstanding art ist's caree r.
£ n lilll sia.1"/1I p rcm il.v (1/ Ih(' c(I·ed 51011' pilc h WI/mall/elll .
Reservations
UGAA Annual Meeting
Reservations for events anti accommodat ion can be made by com pit::ti ng the form ill t hi~ brochure. l11is is the only general re~ervati on form you will rece ive b<!fore Alu mni Weekend. Please kee p it handy r All .-eSCf valions for the evenls listed should be made thruugh the Alumni Office. Reservat ion forrl1~ for spec ial reu nions will be sent wi th reu nion informatio n. Read the program of events carefull y, and make reservat ions as soon as possible for the events you wish to altentl. Las t minute reservations for class reunJOn dinners cannot be ac cepted because mea ls mus t bc guarantced a wee k in atlvance. Refunds will be matlc on ly if tid,ets can be re-sold. Some events are Ii ~tecl at . '110 charge, " but for book ing purposes we need to know if yo u wis h to atte nd .
Association President Ro~s Parry. CSS ·XO . extends an Invi tat ion to all ~ I umni to ~tle n tl the An nua l Mee ting. Sat urday. June 21 at 1:15 p.m . Presentatio ns of the ' l:!6 Alu mnus of Honou r and the Alurnn i ~kda l of Ac hievemen t wili be made and Pre,iderll Ma tthews will adJre~s the alu mni.
Sunday Concert Anya La urence and Andreas lllic i will prc~en t a piano rec ital of Mozan. Chopin, Li 5Lt. Brahms and Walton at 1: 30 pill .. Rllom 107 MacK innon Bu il di ng. Anya Laurence made her New York debut at Carneg ie Ha ll in 1968 and has appeared as a recitalist and ~() I o i s [ with orche~tra, in many Nort h Ame ric<ln cit ies. And rea\ 1l1ici is study ing piano with Anya and ha~ been a rec ipien t of many awards while at Guelph.
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PaUl'
SPOil"('/'. H AfA '86 , allli J 1111 /1(1/;.el",
OAe '18, "I/l'r a lI'arll/ we/come III jolill Dalrymple, OAC '35 . (1/ Alumni Wt'e/..eIlJ '85. Pally \1'£/.1 (I ,1 /llI/lIler cOll/en' IICt' C(I ' ordina/or
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1986 PROGRAM OF EVENTS
Friday, June 20
T!ME
EVENT
LO_CATION
1000 a.rn.R:OO p.m.
Registration Chcck-rn for n::sidc ncc accom modatio n
roye r, Johnston Ha ll
1:00 p.m .
Gryphon Club Go lf Tourn ament
Victori a Ea~ t Golf Course, Vic toria Road Sou th , Guelph
1:00 p. m.6:00 p.m.
Cam pus Walkin g Tours - sel f-guided tour informati on ava ilable Plan to visit professo r, in thei r depanmcn ts (by appo intment)
Depan urc from Johnston Ha ll Coye r
2:00 p.m.7:00 p. m.
Fine An Pri nt Shuw
Zavi tz Hal l
300 p.m. 8 00 p.m.
Hospitality Suite fur Alul1lni-in -Acti on
Roo m 104, Johnston Hall
Dinner. cash bas is
Ocr Kc ller
6:00 p.m.
Barbecue spuo sored by Co llege 01 An s Alumn i Assoc iation
Rrani on Plaza
6:00 p. m.
Mac ' 31 55th Anniversary Di nner
Mabel Sand erson', home, 2 1 Vardon Dr., Gue lph
8:30 p. rn .
Alumni Monte Carlo Night
Creelman Hall
4: 30-7:00 p.m .
Saturday, June 21 TIME
EVENT
LOCATION
8: 00 a. m.
Alumn i Break fast
Cree lma n Hall
9:00 a. m.足 4:00 p. llI .
Registration
Foyer. Johns ton Hall
9:00 a.m.
Elora Gorge Walk, >pu n\ored by the CBS Alum ni
As~ociat i o n
Bus leave, frUIll behind Joh n,ton Ha ll
10:00 a.l11 .
OAC IUllln i Association Annu al Meetin g Mac-,..ACS Alumn i As~ociatio n Annua l Mee ti ng
Ro lin 149, Macdolw ld Ha ll Room lOll. Macd una lJ In,t it ute (FACS Bu ild ing)
10:00 a.m .
Sl ow Pitch Softball Tournamc:nt
South ball dia monds Reg ister At hlet ic Cen tre fronl desk
II :00 a. m.
College of
A n~
Alumni
A~,ociatio n
Annua l Mee ting
Room 4JO , Un ivc rsily Cent re
College 01' Social Sc ie nce Al umni Association An nual Mee ting
Lennox-Addin gton! lal l. Fi res ide Lou ng.:
11 :45 a.m.足 1: 15 p.m
Alumn i Picnic Lunc h
Cree Iman Plaza
12:00 p. m.
School of Ilotel ;)nd Food Adm ini,trat io n Annua l Meeting
Room 209, lIAFA I3ui lding
12:1 5 p.m.
Class Reunion Luncheons: OAC ':1 I 55th Anniversary Lunc heon Mac ':16 50th An nivcr,ary Lunc heo n OAC '36 50th Ann iversary Luncheon Mac "56D 30th Ann iversary Luncheon FACS '76 10th Anniversary Luncheon HAFA ' 76 10th Anniversary
Roo m 441 , Univers ity Centre Lennox -Add ington Ha ll At picnic , Creelman Plaza Fac ulty Lou nge, FACS Building Room 103 , Un iversit y Cen lre At picniC . Creelrnan Plaza
G4
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.......
12 30 p_m .
I
J
CBS IUl11 ni Assoc iat ion Noon Barbecuc CSS Alumn i Picn ic
Guelph Lake Conserva tio n Area Games Ficl d, Ea~ t Res idenc e
1 00-5 :00 p m_
CBS Wild li f,
Ma.'isey Hall
11 5 p_ m_
University of Guelph Alumn i Association Annual General leeting Awards Presentation: 1986 lumnus of Honour
and Alu mn i Meda l of Ach ieve ment
2: 30 p_lll_
Trivial
2: 30-4:00 p m_
(' mpus Wagon To urs to Alu mni Ho use
Cont inu ous depa rture: front of Macdo nald Iiall
3: 00 p_ m_
Auction Sale of OAC chi na and other alumni a n ifoc t~
Te nt al
3: 00 p.m_
OVC
Macdonald Stewart Art Ce nt re Lec ture Koorn
4:00 p_m.
Sculpture Un veili ng & Rece pt io n
Macdonald Stcwal1 Art
6 00 p.m_
Golden Anniversary Reception and Dinner
C ree lman Hall
600 p.m.
Class Reunions, Receptions and Dinners Order tic ket s under " Clas~ Reun ion dinner," Mac 8.:.0AC '4 1 &' 9A OAC '51 35 th Anni versary Mac '6 1 15t h Anni versa ry OAC '61 25th An niversary OAC '66 20th Anniver~!t ry OAC '7 1 15th Anniversary FACS 'S I 5th Anniversary
Check your class newsletter or your ti cb:ts for spec ific times Lennox -Addingt on Hall Pete r Clark Hall , nivers ily Ccntn: Peter Clark Hall , Side sec ti oll 00 IA Roo lll 103, University Ce ntre Arboretu m Centre Wh ippletree, Un ivers ity Cen tre La mhton Fi replace Lo unge
6:00 p_lll .
Alumni Barbecue
Te nt at Alumni Ho use (Rai n locat ion : Maritime I lall )
6:30 p.m_
OVC Alumn i As_ociation Recept io n. Ann ual i)in nc r and Awards Presentation s
Room 44 _. Uni\'ers ity Centre
8:00 p.1ll
Coun try & Wes te rn b sponsored by th e Coll ege of Ans Alu mni Associati on Mee t an d Mingle Pre-Dance Recepti o n sponsored by the Coll ege of Social Sci ence Alumni Assoc iati n
Ocr Ke ll er Dining Hall
Alumni [)ance Music hy th e Bru c McCo ll Quint et
Pete r Cl ar" Hall
'1:3 0 p.l11 _
, j
11 Show and Sale
FOOl Pu r~ ui t
sponsored by CSS
lumni Assoc iati on
lumni Associat ion Ann ua l Meeti ng
Roo m 149 , Macdonald Hall
Ga m e~
Field, Ea,t R('siucm:e
lurn ni Iio use
ent re
Wh ippletr.:c I.ounge
Sunday, June 22 TIM E
EVENT
8: 30 a. Ill .
lOCATION Cree lm;]n Hal l
10:.10 a_ lll_
Chu rch Service
_War Memoria l Hall
12 :00 noon
"Soup and Sandwic h" Lunc h
C r~ el m <l n
1:00 p.m. 5:00 porn .
CBS Wildlilc AI1 Show and Sale
Mass cy Ha ll
1:30 p_m _
Coneen - Pi ano recita l with Anya Laure nce and Andreas 'nl icl
Roo m 107 , Mac Ki nnon (Arts ) Building
2:30-4 :00 p_m_
Major Gift Club Mcmbers Rel:ept io n (By in vitation )
Creel man If,JII
-
Pln <l
(i;'i
Good food i~ ill (I/JllI/cillllcc . whether ill Gil i l/(url/wl /Jrcaklilst or tile Co/dell Anllil'e/"
son dillller.
CBS Alumni Association Camp-over The CBS Alu mni A,>soc iation ha, reserved space at the Guelph Lake Co n~ crva t i on Area for Alu mn i Weekend. Campsitcs and l:anue, arc' awa iting yo ur rese rvation, AlU llmi comi ng to thc l a~~ of '76 10th An ni ver,>ary Re un ion arC especially inv ited to pan icipate. Many of the wild li fe anist, whose work will be shown at the Wild life Ali Show will Joi n us. Bring your own food and refreshments for the tradit ional camp over. Windsu rfi ng lessons wi ll be available and you are in vited to try your hand at the exce llent bass fishi,ng. Barbecue and even ing campfires 3re the favo rite events of the wed,e nd. Yo u need only show up at the cllmpground and pay a nomina l fc:e for ei ther onl: or two nig hts. 'The group camps ite on the Island ha, been reservcd. as hal> the PicniC Shelter, in the even t of rai n. If you 'd rather hav\! the "com fon . " of University residence or one of the loeal motels. you can Mi ll wille to Guelph Lakc for the day. Pleasc u ~c the reservat ion form prov ided, and return it to th ' A lUlll ni Offi ce .
Wildlife Art Show "Inc CBS Alum ni A~soelation's ~ec()n d an nual Wi ldlr iC An Show & Sale wil l ra ise money for 'cholarship fund~ . lll iny profess io n.!1 and newcomer an ists exhihit an in a wide range of media. A n w event this year will be a " quick draw " in which several of The an isb (reate: works of art whi le you ",atch. Th i' special event wi ll take place in Massey Hall (bot h floors) rmnr 10 a,m, to 5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
Elora Gorge Walk TIle BS Alu mni Assoc iation wi ll sponsor a guided nature walk through the Elora Gorge Co nse rvat ion Area Saturday morn ing. The group wi ll leave cam pus by school bus and ret urn in tllnc lilr lunc h. Please wear comfortable walking shoe, . dres, suitab ly and bring along your camera. lhis evellt ha\ been very popu lar during pas t yt:ars. Early re~erva lion are rcclll11l1lcncled. a:; the hu, capacity is linli ted .
OVC Alumni Association The Annua l General Meeting of the Association \.\ ill take place Saturday. Junc 21 at 3:00 p.m. at the Macdonald Stewan An Centre.
Go
A reception and dinner tor OYC al umn i il nd gues ts will he held Saturday. June 21 at 6:30 p,m . in Peter C lark Ha ll. Univer~iry 'en trc. Tables wi ll be arrangcd so that class membcr~ may ~it together. lliis year the Association will ho nor the lasse~ or 1936 al1lll<)46 , nyc ·.:I t and . 51 have abo planned reunio n, at the dinne r. and following the meal. the /) istinguished Alu rn nus Citation will be presented
OAC Alumni Association The Annual General Meeting or the Assoc iation will be he ld on June 21. President David Barr ie. OAC ·53A. has called the mceting ttlr 10:00 a . 1l 1. in Roo m 149 , Macdonald Hal l. At 3:00 p, m. the Assm: iat ion will hoi I an auction sale of old OAC china and other mc morabilia at Alumni House with the lIon, Jac k Ridde ll. '57 as auctioneer, "[h is wi ll bc thc fina l su1c of the OAC chi na, Rai n or shine. the sale wil l go on in the tenl. Hig hligh t of the day will be th e Golden Ann iversary Dinner in Creel man Ila ll at6:00 p. 111 ,. whell OAC and Mac grad uates of 50 year or llIorc will he guests of thei r respect ive associations for dinne r. A spec ial welcol1le is extended this year 10 mc mbers of thc cia,>ses of 1936 , celebrating the ir 50th anniversary.
Softball Tournament and Barbecue An alumniis tudent co-cd ~I()w pilCh tournament wi ll bl: held Saturday. .lU ll\! 21 , starting at IO:()O a.m. At lea~t six females are required on e,iCh team of 12 to 20 players. Entry fl:e will be $35 per team . Register 110 later (han June 2 using The re servation form in this progr..lln. and includc players' na mes on a ~eparate sheet of paper. Three one hour games per tea m are guaranteed, University slow pitch niles wi ll apply. At 4:30 p.m. awards will he presented to the w inninp. team. and other awards will be given for best dressed, nlO.~t spirited. etc . All participants are invited to the barbecue at Alum ni House at 6:00 p. Ill . on Arhoretum Road (Rai n loc<ltinn. Maritime Hall). Please mdcr tickets in advance on [he registration rOm1 in this program . An al umni dance will follow in Peter Clark Ha ll.
Archives You are invited tl' vi~i[ the OAC Archivc ~ in the MLLa ughlin Library on Friday, June 20 trom 1:30 [04:45 p.l11 . 1\11 donntions of OAC memo rabilia to the Archive, will be welcome.
Mac-FACS Alumni Association
College of Arts Alumni Association
'The Annual Meeting will be held Saturday, June 21 at 10:00 a.m. In Room 106 , Macdon ald rn ~t i tute. All members of the Association arc invited to attend . Mac ' 36 class members will ce lebrate thei r 50th anniversary an d will be honored at the Golden Ann iversary Dinner in Creelman lIall. All gmduates of 50 or more years will be guests of the Mm: -FACS and OAC Alumni Associations on this occa~ ion.
Department or Fine Art Print Sale - You are invit d to attend and suppo rt this sale at Zav itz Hall on Friday. June 20 between 2:00 and 7:00 p. m. Proceeds from the sale wi ll be divi ded equally between two projects: the Pri nl St udy Collection. and students' cnst recovery. 8arbecue - Plan to Join fellow al umni ancl fr iends at 6:00 p.m . Fnday in rront of Zavitz Hall. The Annual Meeting will be held Satu rd ay. June 21 at 11:00 a.m . in Roo m 430 . University Centre. You are encouraged to exercise your privileges by partic ipating and voting. A Western Pub will be the highligh t of the weekend . un Saturday at 8:00 p.m. in Ocr Keller Dining Hall. Professor David Farrell, Depart 足 ment of History. will begin th eveni ng wi th a humorous, iIlu. trated lalk on the history of American Western fi lms - . "'The Reel Cowboy" . Saddle up and mosey on over! Wear your ~tetson'
College of Social Science Alumni Association 'The Association encou rages yo u to bri ng fami l and frie nds to enjoy
these weekend festi vitie :
The Annual Meeting will be he ld in the Fireside Lounge. Lennox足
Addington lIall at 11:00 a.m . All alumn i are welco me.
Picnic - You and your family are in vited to a pic nic Saturday at 12:30
p. m. Bri ng your own picnic lunch . lawn chairs. blankets. refre, hrnents. spo rts equ ipme nt. etc . and meet at the games fi eld east of Al um ni Stadiulll off East Ring Road. near the East Residence. (The Athletic Centre will be the rai n location). A reg istration fee of $ 1 per fa mil y will cover pop anu prizes. Activities will include slow pitch hall, three足 legged race. sack race, egg toss, and races fo r the kids. Trivial Foot Pursuit - Aft er the picni c and games on Saturday, join fellow alumni fo r a campus " trivi al tour" . The rae starts at 2:30 p. m. and will take competitors nn a revealing search around the cam pu s. A trophy will be awarded to the team that co mp l ete~ the race most5uecess足 full y and effi cien tl y. 'There will be a prize fo r the CSS alu mnus wh o travel. the fa rt hest di ~tance to co me to Alu mni Weekend. Please use the reservation form to indicate you r atte ndance. If you are stay ing in res idence. bab silti ng arrange ments may be made through Marian McGee at the annual meeting Saturday morn ing. You <.Ire all invited to the harbccue Saturday at 6:00 p.m. at Alumni Hou~e (Rain location. Maritime Iial l) and the dance at Peter Clark Hall later in the even ing A pre-dance " meet and mi ngle" will be held in the Whipp letree Lounge. University Centre. at 8:00 p. rn . , followed by the dance.
HAFA Alumni Association At the annua l meeting durin g Ho mecoming Weeke nd. me mbers voted to ho ld future ann ual meet ings at Alu mn i W ekcllll in Ju ne. Therefore. the 1986 Annual Meeting ofHAFA Alumni Association will be held at noon on Saturu ay, Ju ne 21 . Room 209 . HAFA Build ing. Rl llowing the meeting. alumni, fac ulty and frie nds will join all alu mni at the annua l pi nic in Cree lman Plaza. (Order tickets on the al\acheJ reservation f nll). The cJa::.s of '76 will celebrate its tenth an nive rs ary dllring the wcckend_Plan to meet at the picnic 011 Saturday afternoon at 1:00 p. m.
-
Staving ill r('.lidl' lI("I' (/",1 s('(' illg o ld fril' l/ds will brillg !}(Icl.. jilll" IIll'lII oriej. AI le(f . RII.I'.I M cA:(/\', OAC '50 . (filii hi.1 II"//i: Elcllllor ;1/ 19R5.
G7
RESERVATION FORM
NAME(S) _ _ __
-
olkgc
&
y~aL _ _ _ _ _ _ __
FUlJ_ I\fA IUNG ADDRESS:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ p(l~ln l
CoLl.:: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
' AMES OF OTHERS IN I'ART '{ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ TELEPHONE:
H I)ll1~
B u ~inc~~
I wi ll he allc n d ing
rcunion ( C\)I I ~gL'
.Hld 'n:<lr)
I/WC wish to order t l c k Cl~ and plan to attend thc following ew nts :
PIoR I 'I:.KSON COS't
FR\J)"Y, .It.:NE 20
Cnlkgc nl An, A )url lnJ i\""c ialiun B a rb~l'U':
"
<)
95
Gr:-'pIH)Jl C luh Gulf Tll urnall1e nl
3500
MoniC C~rJl1 I'iglil
15.00
SATl IIW.\\,
"-
Jl' "r:
'to I'M .
NO.
21
·UKI
A lumn i Bn;:"hl"'1
r-
-1 ,00
Elm" (il)rgc W,1 1k ~uch Sollh,,11 'I\Hlrn"nlcnL HIl'iud~ li'l o f pIJ)lT'
,:; 00 leam (d )()
Alumni Picn iC Lunch
10 ,00
Rcul1ll) n I un.:hc,'n' - ,pc'c lly Colle!!<= a nJ Year
5.()O
CBS Alumni H"rhecut: Inull n)
I (X)
CSS Pic ni c pe r r''' ll ily Gol tien Anni " ;,,,,,,, Di nner lor OAOM a, Alumni. 1936 "nti before: une complimentary t: uc,1
NIl'
O ther, illlcntiing (l u lue n An n ive r,ary l) ' n ncr
15.'iO
ove
1 ~ . 50
A lumni A~)""' l a li(Jn D inner
A lum n i Barbec ue (evening ) Cia" Reunion Dlllncr
\1. ')5
I H.50
'pcc i]y C ollege a fl u ) b r
SliNDAY, ,1l,NE 22
-1 .00
A lumn i Brea U a)1 (res ide ll ce )
(; 00
Al urll n i L Ulll' h Majo r G ift Mell ,ha, Recq :Hio n
N /C 6 ()()
C lass Reunion Pho t ogr a ph TOTAL TICKET COST A('cmnmodation : No. of
KUlJm ~ R~qu i r("cJ ·
jun~·
20 _ _ _ June 21
.
lpeT I",,,,,, n)
' Coupic
(0
S27 .00
X
-
Single
(0
$ 19_00
X
-
OOllnlc
(0
'iIi 6 00 x
Ipc r re" on) Stude nl (u
)
U 75 x
-
TOTAL COST OF ACCOMMODATION
TOTAL AM OUNT E:-ICLOSI:.D i:nt.:l o:o.cd i.... m)' l'hL!'fju c for S
(payahl. 10 Alu mni
Wc c ~cnJ ' ~ 6 )
M",I til: Aluilln i Weekend ' k6, j(lhn'ton 11"" , Un" c" i!) 01 Guelph . ( ;ucl ph , Onl aru ' I\IG 2W I
Please order on or bcroft' June 6. 1986 - T icket;, .. ill "" mai led upo n receipt or J uu r ('hequc.
Gil
OI'IKI' L1 SL
Macdonald Institute Family and Consumer Studies Alumni Assoc.
Editor: Carol Telford-Pittman, '75.
From the Dean
In
recent letters I have been pass ing on news of sOllle of the ncwcr and rather spec ifk developments in the College: corre~ p on dcnce courses. six we k sum mcr cou rses, our use of mie n cOJJ1pute r~. and so on. In look ing back over these lettcr~, I realize thnt I have not recently givc n you Illuch idea of the overall extent or scope of our ac ti vities in FACS . Le t me do so now, for I am sure that pcople mu ~t ofte n turn to you for inforn1a tion about our programs. "mere is. of course, more to say than I can sensib ly condense into olle shon leller. In vicw of th is I shall focus on the scope of our teach ing program~ in this letter and shall turn to ollr research aC'tivitie~. perhaps in my next. The nu mbe r of g rad uate stude nt s changes vi rt uall y from mo nth to mo nth, sincc the students' M.Sc . and Ph.D . pro grams arc comlneted at various points in the year. At the pca k annual enrolment period , howeve r, we now havc a combined total of between 50 and flO graduate stude nt.'> in the DepartmenLs of Consumer Studies and Fam il y Studies, includ ing the lallcr's Master's and Doctoral programs in Iluman Nutrition. Along with courses , the graduate stu dents are engagcd in very vigorous and ill1 [lortan t rese arc h problems that generally compl ement the longer-term faculty re search projeCb. For somc years now tilt' College h,,, been res ponsible for two undergraduate de gree programs. One of these, the B.A .Sc . degree, is associated with the Departments of Con ' ume r Studies and Fam il y Studies. Early la'-l t~lI l. there were about 1.060 ~tu d ent~ enro llcd in fo ur year~ of this program. Even the smallest of the four majors. Fdm ily Studies, had a very hcalt hy ave rage of 40 students in each of thc four year groups . or a total enrol ment of abOlll 160 students fo r the major.
The most heav ily enrolled major this year, as in most recent years , is Child Stud ies. Last lall the re were 35 7 st udents in that major, closely fo llowed by 338 in Applied Human Nu tri tion. lhe Cons umer Studies major had an cJI[olment of about 166 students. There are always a few who take a emestcr or two to sclectthe ir major and so there were abo ut 40 add itional students in the fall who had no t elected their special iza tion. The second undergradu ate degree pro gra m in the College is the fou r-year, honors B.Comm . degree based in the School of Ilotel and Food Adm inistratio n. "l11 is popu lar and competitive program oflers two ma Jors. One of these, Hotel and f'Ood Admi n istration, is a manageme nt program focused on the hospitality indw,try : food, l od gi n g~ , touri,m . The othe r, im,titutional Foodser vi e Managemen t, is more special ized aro und the foodse rvice sector. cl11al major, incidentally, represents the fie ld into which our earlier work in adm ini strative di etet ics has deve loped La,t fall we were ollce aga ill at capm:ity enrolment in the I-Iotel School wit h slightly more than 400 B.Comm. stu dents. TIlese youn g people plan careers in the hospitality industry. an important and gene rall y thri v ing sector of the Canad ian economy. All of our deg ree program" uf course,
cater to the educational and vocat iona l inter csts of both men and women. TI1is is inevita ble, if not neces sary, givc n th c way that car er opport unit ies and asp iration s fo r equal op ponunity have developed over the years. TI1e management progra m ill the Hotel School, fo r example. readi ly appeals to both me n and women students. So. too, docs the clearly business-oriented major in Con sumer Studies. Gradu ates from that fie ld are generall y desti ned for pri ate-sector careers in product development and produ ct man age ment, or alte rnati vely, are int rested in publ ic pol icy as it rela tes t the markc tplaee. Now mo re than e er before, both men and wo m n are preparing themselves for careers with in the broad fi eld of huma n ser vic s. Some have goals rel ated to profes ~i ona l practice, as in the case of the cl inical nutri tionist or family the rapi st. Others have interests , say, in program managcment or pol icy devel opment in such s phc res as gerontology or chi ldre n's services. Wc arc pro ud that our teachi ng pro grams in FACS arc serving the i ntere ~ ts of a great many studen ts, over a wide rangc of app li ed and professional fie lds. Let me tell you about the scope of our research programs in my next letter. In the meantime, plan to meet some frie nds here at the Co llege during Alumni Weekend ' 8fl, lun 20-22 . 0
Nabisco Grant
The Deparlmelll of anSI/mer Studies and Nahiscn Brand Ltd. have signcd a fil 'e-year agreemelll under which Ihe company lVil! provide $125,000 to SlIpporl sludies in consumer affairs and p roduCI developmenl. Da vid S.R . Leighwn , vice -chairman Of Na bisco , (second from right), discusses lite project with FACS Deall Richard Barham, Profe~sors hevor Wails and Dick Vosburgh, Department of Consumer S/lulies, and Vice-President, Academic. Howard Clark . 17
Co-op Education, FACS Style
finding it "exc iting to be on the border of new sc rviee~." She has found her course wort.. u ~eful on the Job, but ha, ~ bo learned to fee l her way. Whl:n wor!..ing wit h two l: lderly WOlllen with AILheimer\ Di~ca~e, ~hc found <I.:ac.lemic knowlec.l ge wa, no t enough . She i1:.1c.l to wort.. o ut her own tech niques Karen's wor" terms have been with the aged - with Peci Region Soc ial SCf\' i (,l:~, the Linhavcll I lo me in St. Catharine,. and the Min i ~try of Community and Social Ser vices in Toronto. Assignments included pro gram c.lelt very, research poliey deve lopment anc.l administrallon. For her fourth work terlll ,he pla n ~ In wor" in staff traini ng ilnd de 'e lopmcnt. \1argaret "Il\lr'~ intere, t i, at the othcr end 01 the "at.:. "lnfall1~ have alway' heell Ill) favorite people," she says. Her fir~t wor!.. term look her to northwest.: rn Ontario, to a soc ial ,erv i n~s delivery rll"C;1 - Kenora and Kecwatin - as large a, the whole of Fr,mce. She \ Ia.\ a mcmbl.'r orthe in fant deve lopment tca m ,upervi~c d b) Deborah Everley, Chi ld Studie~ , '~4 , and operatec.l by the Ken Dra Kcewat in District As,ocia tion for the Mc n tally Ret3rded. V,li lh ~n o t h t:r member of the tcalll she visitec.l tile fam ilies of habies anc.l todd ler, thou ght tLl be at ri, k ot ul: layed phySI cal or e mot ional deve lopment. Mall Y of the Gtlls were to one of the aTt:a\ lou l Indian rc.' erva fi onS. Dehorah points out that , tuuent, can play an important ro le in a hu man scrvicl:s sett ing. " The stafT somet ime, becomes c.le· se nsitiled to certai n fam il ies ,t udem,
8y Ann Middleton, Public Relations and Information
A n~w breed 01 uni ver\ity grad uate i, enter
-
Ing the job market. In add it ion to a \olid academ ic hHckground. thes~ youn g people have well over a year's rekvant work experi ence when they grall uate. Chi lli Stud ies and F~ll1liy Studies progran ls arc all10ng the mo~t recent add itions to th.: Un iver\ity of Gu.:lph \ three-year-old cu·upe rallve edu L"<.I lion program . Jane Murley. OAC M.Sc. '87. a wort.. ,tud) fid el cll-o[(linator tilr thc Wor" Study Progr<l 111 in the Univer\ity\ Counselling ami Student Re,OlHce Centre, say~ the co-op program benef its employers and SlUdent, ah"c "Employer, arc kce nl y interested in tht: uni que !bturcs of the Fami ly Studie<' and Child Stuuie, pmgrams and they appre l·iat.: the high l'alihrc of students cnrollcd ill thc co-op program , ·' Ilurllali \en' l.:e~ Clll ployers , like ot hcr bU'lncsse\ operati ng in lean timcs, neec.l guod empillyecs to \ 1 on ,hort -term l:o\t-benefi t as·~ignmcnt'. ,he ,ay\. Su,an Fletcher. ,eIlIOrC()II\ulrant in th e fec.le ra l governme nt', Ottawa Olli(e on Aging, ha<, had fiv.: i-'ami ly Studies ,tud.:nt' work lor her. "I u<,c the progra m heavily hccau., e I ge l henefits ," , he sa)\, noling that govern ment offi l:es have hac.l to 1:1el: i"unc.ling l:ut, \1 hih: the volume of work ha, cOflt inuec.l to grow. Co-op ~tuc.lent~ li ll some () f t h i~ g<Jp. " ' 111~Y c.lo Iihraf) re,earl: h, prog ram evalua tions and keep our c.locuml'nt at ion ,lIld inttlr mat ion ecntre going and up to date," ~h~ say~ . " They bring to Ihe job :J f,,( illty and t.. nowlec.lge that outwe ighs th eir lad, of ex pcrience. Stuc.len t Churll: nc Ryan worked with th e Ottawa llffit'e for rwo term" and ul\(l wi th the Slx:ial Services Departme nt oj" the Re giona l Mu nicipa lit) of Oll<.lwa-Carlcton. A i-'ailli Iy Studies major, ~hc caille to Gue lph frolll nca r Pre~cott wit li the ide a of training to become a tC<l( her, but uncr three work term, she ~ay' . 'Till thin" ing of goi ng into social work ." 111e experience ha~ " opl!ncd my eye , and broadened my ho ri/o ns in temlS of what I want to do. " Vocat ional dec i,ions are top priority fo r muny ~tude n ts, Morley poilll\ OU I. But the co· op progra m abo accom moc.lates stu uenb li ke Charlene Ryan who wa nt 10 ex pl!riment with dificTent type\ of worl.. bc lon: making a career deci~io n . Karen McNe il. of Acton, is a Fami ly Stud ies ~tuc.lell t who uee idec.l ca rl yon th<lt she wanted to work in gero nto logy, a clec i ~i(Jn ori ginall y hascd on the novelty of the ~ubje(t. But a, ~he geh further into it, \ he is
or"
IX
fi nd c haflenge, in situat ions that rcg ular stalf find routinc or hard to dea l wi th . .. Margaret, wh o come, from Barrie, fnunc.l the , umnlt:r expe rience very valuabk. " I c.lic.l a lot of Jcam ing," ,he say\ Before tha t she wasn't ,ure where ,he wantcc.lto go with her degree. " The work terms have given me an opponull ity to check out dll Ji:r~nt areas ," ,he says. Mary Jac"~on , a hfth ,emc~ter Falll il y Stud ies stuc.lent from l1l!ar Wyo l1l ing, put her "C.lc.lemil' inten::qs, as well as her agri cultural backgro und , tll good bcm:tit la,t \UmIlICf uuring her wort... term as a you th mpilly nient co-orull1ator I(lr the Ontario Min i,tf) of Agriculture and rood. She ad ministered a program that pl accu teenager~ with no agril:ultural background on farm ~ for ~evera l weet..-. In addition, ~he hirec.l and s(hcdulec.l three crews of young fa rm wor" l:r, tor Job, on local Jarms. In her curren t job with thl: Peel Region Soc ial Serv ices D~p:Jrtnlcnt Divi, io n on Ag ing. Ma ry is writi ng rCptlrts fo r politica l b()d ie~ anu galili ng valuable l: .\p()~urc to c.li reG service del ivery. " Whe n I fin al ly g~t Ill} degree I' ll h,,'·e lour sl:mestcrs' expericnce. ·n l is is wha t emplo}cr, ar\! loo!"lng lor." she ,ays. Alt houg h Mary \t il l c.l<X:SIl'[ t.. now wha t ~ h e walll\ to do. ,he " doesn't wa nt to wipe out any option, yet. .. Lynn Goudw in. a Ch ild Studies major fro m "I(l ron to, is tf)'ing to get a, much l:xpe ricnee as she can wit h children of al l age, and capabli itie\. III the summer she d\! velopl:d an integratec.l prog ram at Sauble Beach to complemcn t the exi... ting ~ um l1lcr c.lay camp. She ic.lcntih ec.l 12 children who co ul c.l be nefit an c.l then arranged for [he hand ieappcc.l young people. severa l of them with c·erebral paby, 10 join the program .
~
<t
. 1 ~
.:l
~ ,;;
M(/ ry Jacksoll. a S<'lIIcster 5 Familv S tudies .I I//(/e l1 /. right, wilh all ag riu cw lI'ilh whom sill' worked ill Lalllii/Oll Counly as pa rt of her co -op placemcnJ .
lllis sellle~te r she is workin as pro gram a,sistan t for a day car~ centre in a Nonh York Sdl 0 1. Since the program has before and after school care, the children range in age from three to e ight. "The ~k il\ s I' m deve loping can be adapted to any age group," she says. "The greatest value of the co-op i ~ that you graduate wit h ex perience. " nla t ex perience '· helps yo u decid~ what age group and type of work Yl)U pr fer. " Anothe r important a'pec t of the work term i, that it helps put a ~tude n t through ~(hoo l. '· When yo u come rig ht down to it,· ' she says, ·'That 's important." Jane Morl ey points ou t tha t employers va lue the re i tionshi ps be tween the educa tional se ' tor and the wo rk worl d tha t the co op program pn>vide,. Employer Deborah Everley says , " students bring a breat h of Ii·cs h air into the offi ce. Their questio ns and enthusiasm help ens ure the ongoing mainte nance of high standards of serviee.'Dou gl a~ Rape Jj ,d irector of the t~nior Cit ize ns Departmen t. Regi ona l Munici pality of Niagara. sees hiring co-op ,tudents a~ an investment in the fut ure. Students need to get away fro m their text books. he say,. "B y prol iding d irect programm ing for youn peo ple, we believe tha t. in the long run, we will attrac t b tter people to the fi eld . " Co-operative programs are beco ming increasingl y po pular with studellls and em ployers, and plans are now underway for the introductio n of a Con~ ulTler Studies co op program , probahl y in the wimer of 1987 . 0
Fete for '86 FACS Graduates
The Ma c-FACS alumni associ(({iol1 hosts (/ part I ' each I'('{lr Fir ' he grods. Ma ry F:llen F,;ellch, Carol A l1IllIarding , am/Trudy Wa lther, all FACS' 86 , elljul· th(' kerboard a rtiSTry of Andreas Thiel, a music IIl1ci(' rW·(lduat(' .
Help! ! We are nuw compil ing a hb to of the Mae-FACS Al umni AS~llc ia tio ll (publicatio n date, Fall 1(87) and wc need your in put. Plea~e drop u, a line /MMI:D1ATUj' with any or all of the fo ll owing . persona l rcmi n i scence ~, photogl ap h ~ , progra ms . pre~~ cu t ti ngs, n 'w ~ fro m homc and abroad th roughou t the year. , great and fa mo us occasions tha t must never be forgotte n. and comments on what you per. ona ll y wou ld like to see in cluded. 1\ archival mate rial will be return d promptl y if requested. Mai l to Mac -FACS Hi ,tory, P.O Box 711 . Guelph, Onl. NIH 6L8. Thank You. Mac -FACS A lulIllli Association Presidell t Bonnie Kc:rs/ake , '82. and Dean Richurd Barhom share a light moment . I)
College of Arts Alumni Association DELPHA
Editol': Tel'l'Y AyeI', '84.
Impressario
at Expo '86 t is filling that the 1986 Spri ng issue of the C uelph !\Ii/ mil liS should leawre the Canad ian who wi ll be 1ll0 ~ t re :.pon ~i bl e in r~pre~cn t i n g our culture at Expo '86 . John Criploll, '70, is a produ cer and impr ' ~~~Irio of gre;,t renown. Hi s caree r hilS led hi m to hi, presen t po~ it io ll of producer of c ult ura l pro grams and specia l event~ , Canaua Pavi lion. J hn C ri pton bega n h i~ caree r a~ a ma nager pf n u~ i c i a n s anu art ilols in 196 1 when he held the po, t of as si~ t ant talent co ord inato r for, CBC-TV .. You th Speci dl" and " -m e New Generati on ." He was stage ma nager and tec hnica l di rector (1 968- 1970) with the Guelph Spri ng Festi val. The Da lh o u ~ i e Arts Centre att racted him nex t. He worke d there as firs t co ord ina tor and ge nera l adm in i, trato r of cultura l activi ties until 1973 when he Joined the Canada Council as firs t general l11an ageL He es tablished numerous innova tive programs during his te nure, like the reg io nal artists mar keting con ve ntions , the Concerts Canada prog ra m of direct as,i\tam;c to de ve loping comme rc ial a rti ~ t~' Illanager~ , <t nd the Performi ng Art, Inve~tment Prugram . With his partne r, Michael Tabbitt, John Cri pton wa~ re~po n ~ i ble for co-ord in at ing an d imp lemen tin g Jl llnh:rOli S p roj ec ts abroad, inc luding the w'ek-Iung Canad ian Fe~ ti va l in Was hington in 1975 : Muslc" na. a fest ival of Canadian Conte illporary ll1u,ic and art ist;. in Londun, Paris, and Bun n in 1976; the Montrea l Symphony Orchestra european tour in 1975; the Festiva l Singers, Lo i<; Marshall, and Cillad ian BriC>s tl ur to !I IC USSR in 1970; th e V:J IlCU LIver SYITI )
20
phony Orchest ra To ur to Japa n in 1974; the Peter;,o n USSR tour in 19 74, a nd Canada wed, in Mexicu City in 19 74 . Juhn Cripton and Mic hael Tabbitt were also re<,po nsible for budget allocations for cultu re and entertainme nt fo r the Ed monto n COll1monwealth Ga me' s in 1978 and the Mo ntreal O lympi c;, in 1976. In 1980 , John Criptun branched out on his own with his part ner Michael Tabbi tt and form ed Canada's leading cultura l brokerage firm , Great World Artists, of wh ich he is pres iden t. The firm has been awarded con tracts of loca l, nati onal, an d illl rnational im portan ce. SO IllCof the IlIOI recent eve nts in which tht::)' have part icipat d inc lude the e ntertainment progralll , Can adi an Pavil ion for Expo '85 in Ts uk ub a, Ja pan; the Trihac h Bach Tercentenary Festival, Edm on ton and Calga ry in 1985; the Toronto International O~ca r
(J ub ilee) reslivaL l C)~ 'L " Singi n' & Dancin' -Ihn lgh t. " the Char! olletllw n Fe~ t il'al\ Ca nad ia n ati ona l TJur in 19X3; and th e Sadler's We ll s Roya l Ball cl Canad ian Na ti onal '[bur in 19113 . John Cripton ha, heen i n~trull1enta l in bri nging to Ca n ad~, a wiue variety of talen t from abroad, but hi, greatest ac hievement i ~ the pro lll nti )11 of Canadian art i,ts to the re,t of the wor ld. lie has h ~l pL'd Canadians to ta ke pridl: i n th ~ i r artl~b . He he lped to fo und the As~ociat i u n of Art ists Managers ane! is assuc iated wi th IlU merous profe ssiona l an d service orga ni 7.a t io n~ , includin g the Canadian Confer<: n.:c of the rt ~, and the A~~ o c i a tion of Co lleges , Universities and Comm unity Cone 'rt Com mi ttees. John Cript on, we salute you. 0
Oxford Theatre
Companion
A
major new reference work for Canau ian urama and theatre is in preparat ion at the niversi ly of Guel ph. Guelph has become we ll known for its contribution to the ~tudy of anadian urama and th atre. In co opcrallon with the Ul1Ive r ~it 's Department of Drama. th University Library has collceteu . sorteu anu catalogueu th~ arc hi ve~ of :.everal Ontario theatres includi ng the Shaw rest ivai , Tarragon. Open Ci rcle. Phoeni x. NDWT. CentreStage. The atre Plus . YPT, and Robi n Phillips' one ~ea son st int at th e Gra nd in London. The arch ives of the Profess iona l A~so c ia tio n o f Canad ian Thea tres are a l ~o hou:.eu at Guelph. In audition to th theatre arc hives . two signi fican t schola rl y theatre journal· are edited at Guelph. The editors of th ese Journals have embarked on the new rt fere nce wor", The Ol.}ord CompaniON 10 Canadian Drama alld Thl'alre . I::.ditor 01" /:';ssays in Thealrl' (anu aho chai rma n of Gue lph 's Departmen t of Drama ), Professor Leona rd Cono lly. has joined Professor Euge ne Benson (eultor of alladian Drwna!C art dramal ique calld d iell) to pl "n this importan t addition to the internat ion;dl y renowned Oxfuru niver,ity Pres, "Companions" to world literature. A $90. S00 aW'.Jrd from the Social Sciences and Humani ties Rese arch Counci l (SSHRC). the larges t grant ever receiveu by the Co l lege of A rt ~ faculty. wi ll underwrite research for the pu hlicat ion. In add iti on to the SSHRC gran t. the euitors received start -up grants totalling $2 .500 from the Office or Researc h and from the Alma Mater Fund'~ College of Arts advancement funus. Whi le other referenc works, such as the rccently pub lis hed Canadiall Encyclo pedi a , pay some attention to Canadia n drama a nd thea tre . and whil e ano the r "Compan ion" - Thr Oxford Companion 10 Canar/ia/l Lileralll rc contains ent ries on plays and pl aywrights , no sing le source bring· together the kind of comprehensive information tha t Professors onolly an d Benson believe Canadian theatre scholars, practi tio ners and the general public will ap preci ate. The Oxford Companio/l /() Canadia n f) rama and Th ealre wi ll consist of some 400 .000 words. together with illustrations on over 700 ~ u bjec t s. As general editors, ProfessQrs Cono ll y and Benson will co ordinate the work f some 150 theatre crit ics, scholars. administrators , practitioners and teacher· fro m across the country. An advi~() I)' boaru of fi ve distinguisheu schol ars (Dianc Bes~a i . Richard Plant. Renate Usmian i, Leonaru Doucette and Jean-Cleo
Goui n) and Oxford Universi ty Pres~ Edi torial Director Will iam Toyc have bec n ac tively in volveu ill determi ning th e subjeLls and thei r authors 1m the C ompanion . There ha\c been sOllle difficult uel'l ~ions to ma ke. Which ac tors sho Id be in cluded') Whic h theatre companies? Shoulu Canadian-born r\c tor... who have madc their careers elsewhere be included ') How many ord~ ~hould he alloucu to each entry '! It Toronto Free Theat re get 1.000 wo rd~. how ma ny ~h o u ld. say. Theatre Plu: gc r l Which ent rie, dese rve illu ~ trat i on., ·.) One i~s u e that lA'as ljuic" ly rcso l cd was th at Quebec sho uld be given ample at tent ion. Many a t" the Quebec entries will be wri tten by Fre nch-Canad ian ~cho l ars, in French. With tran~ l ations commissulfle for publ ic ation in the COll1panion. Some CIl tries . such as Theatre in Alberta. or Radio Drama in French . or the Shaw Festi val. will command sevcral thou .~and IA nrd~. Eri tri c~ on Inu ividual actors . de signcr~ or di rec t or~ will Ix: re lat ive ly brief !JOO word... or \0 ). Promi nent play ~ - Blood R('/({ I llins. Cre('p.I . Les Fee.1 (JIll .wit anu 50 nlore will have ,epJ ate cntrlcs. I! i ~[()ri 'ally im, r ort an t figures su.:h as ('.P Wa ll,er. Harold Nebon or the Marb Sr thers wi ll be gi\(!n thei r uue. so that the fu ll hi<;tory anu uc vclopl11ent of ClIl;,dian theatre (allli)ur cen luries of it) ",Ii I be de ta iled In the rOIl/Jillllioli . Planni ng fi)r The (JlJord C()III11{lIIiolllO Calladian Drama alld Ih('(lrrl' hcg,an ,everal nlonths ago. Now fi nanci all y .,lIppor1ed hy the Social Sciellces anu Humanities Re search Council of Canada. work on the C OII/pallioll is gat hering 1ll0lllcnt uni. Most nf the cntr ies will be co mple ted by the end of 1986, and the boo" shou ld be in b(Jo" ~ tores by earl y 1988 at the l ate~t.
A Pub for the Stetson Set Th'
Reel Cowhoy. a humorous hi story of American Western film., . will \cad ofT a Country and Western Pub Saturday. June 11st at R p.m . in Der Ke ll er. The Alumni Weekenu ' SO even t i~ \ponsored by the Col lege of rt ... Alull1 ni A...socia tion and the Dcpartillent of 1listory. Profe,~or David htm: II , Cha irman of the Hbtory Depart ment. i~ fo nel ly remc lll bered for hi~ amal.ing , tories of what Iili: was rea lly like 111 the old American We~t. "The Reel CowbllY" oilers Illore of hi.. in ~iglm in to the nld We~t. Follow ill),! Dr. farrell's tal". alu mni will pu t on thcir ~telso n, and strai ghte n up th eir spurs li)r a co untry and w·~tcrn pub in the atmosphere 01 an Ame ri c lil West sa loon. Anyone who ha, ever taken a hi\tory ·!lurse, partic ipated in Hi~tory Cluh l;vents. or h", an inten:\l in cuwboy movie, ...... ill enjoy th is l"o r we,t e 'ent. Bring al on g a friend for the fun. !l YOLI have any "we~tern "tyle" eire". by all means wear It! 111el is no Icc or regi,trat lon for this even t. .Iu~ t pan icipatiofl I Vnlull tccrs are sti ll neeueu l If you Jre wil ling to hel p or just want lIlo re inlt)rnM 1I0Il. plea,eeall Manly n Arm"fOl gat (519) 7 l3 -927 I (wor") or dro p a line to the Al umn i Office.
Fine Art Print Sale
The Depan ment f Fine rl prin t shop will hold it s sem i-annual prin t sa le on Friday June 20 , fro m 2:00 to 7:00 p.Ill .. during Alum ni Weekend 'S6 . The sa le wil l be h lu in the lower leve l of ~\vi tz Ila li. Sampl ~ of multiple pri nts wi ll be ex htb ited on corriuor wa lls, hilt:. inglc prints will be on display ill room 105. l1le !'talc i::. bein g organized by the staff, facu lty and students in Fine Arts . and proceeds will be divi d\.:d equall y hetween two projects: the Print Study C Ilectiun and ,1lIuents' cost recovery_ Previolls pri nt salt:s have cnableu thl· Depar1ment of fin e Arts to purchase ' Dme excell ent origina l prints. whi· h .... ill be avai lahle fo r iewing dunng the print sale. In the Print Stu y Collection arc a numhcr of Goyas, an original Rembr:mut etching. a lew Picas. () lith ogra phs , and so me exce llent
lithograph . . by 10th century ani,l, Kathe Ko ll itz. In combinati ull with the print " li e. the College of Art'> Alu mn i As~ oci at i ()n will .sponso r a barbecue ui nner in Branion Pla/,1. Check your Alu illni Weeke nd program for information rcga rdll1 g ti c"et sa les.
-
The Execut ive or th e C,)lIege llf Alh Alum ni As~oeiati()n wishes to an nnunce that DIMENSIONS. thc s ~()e l alllln\ annua l Jur ieu art ,how. IS hci ng pu t nil the bad hurn er thi ... ~ear. It is horeu that it Wi ll bc rc\ur rCl:ted in a ne\\· It) mat next year.
21
Ontario Agricultural College Alumni Assoc. OAC ALUMNI NEWS
$13 Million Expansion
Takes Shape
Editor:
Dr. Harvey W. Caldwell, '51 .
CVMA Creates Award Th.: CanaJia n Vd.:riJlary lI.1cd ical A\\() <.: iatio n ha ~ created th e R. V. L. Wall-xr Award to honor Dr. Walker, . 2.6 , who was the fiN full -time cxec litiv secretary of the ('V\I !\ . Or. Wa lf..cr was an avid \t;\mp col Ic · tm an I (In hi~ dcath I JI~ famil y don atc u th e pro cceu ~ from the \ ale of I i\ ~ ta lllp col Iccti on ro a trw;t for the e \ tabli ~hmc nt ()f an aw,u'J to encourage ve terinary studcnb tn he intcre ,ted In the national \'cte rina ry as,()c ia ti on. 'n le 5500 awa rd Wi ll be give n an nual ly tll th e unuergrau ua tc ~ tudcnt at one of the ve terinary col lege in Canada who ha\ milde th c great est co ntribution in promoti ng stu uent in te r(', t in the C MA , has dc mo n ,trated :.I<.: tl v,,: in te rcs t in slUdcnr Jnd CO ll q!l' aflilirs. anu has a \ati s laetory acad e mi c recoru.
Behind the existing Clinical Studies building . much improved/acilities f or large al/imal admissiol/. examination and surgery are taking shape . The federa l alld provil/cial gOI'emmellts have each committed $6.5 million to renovations and additions at OVe. The familiar gmy bam (/ar right) will be demolished in the near /liture .
Veterinary History:
Fitting the Pieces Together
OFFIOE OPEN TO DAV OR NIOHT CALLS.
Distinguished Life Member Dr. Norman .. Lou , . ."IcBrid~ ' :IX, 'ew· pllt1 Ika<.: h. ·a lifil rnia . received a di\lin gUlSheu li fe me mbersh ip in the Ca lif(l rni a Veterinary Mc di<.: al A~s ()cia ti ()n uuring th e A"oc iation's 79t h Sc ientific Seminar. lie was honureu for his c,X cmrl ary service 10 the profession anu active ranicir ation in a., so cia ti on rc spl)llsibililie s. Dr. McBr id e.: has been vi tally in te rested and in vo lved in c(ln tinuin ~ edu cation illr veter inari ans in Ca lil(lrnia and around the nati(ln. He wrvcd Oil th e fi rst CYMi\ con tinui n)! educatio n commi ttee, and hd[>nllo dc\t: lop a contin uous prograi1i oi' ac tive and p~lssive educa ti on for the pr;Jc tis ln g vet erinarian throu gh the Un ivcr\ ity of Ca lil(lr nl ,l, Irv ill e. and the Un ivcrs it\ oi' '"It/()r nl;J, Da\'is.
"
J. F. McGR.EGOR, VETERINARY SUR~EON AND DENTIST.
Infll'mal'Y In Connection.
COMMUNICATIONS BV MAIL OR TELEGRAPH PROMPTLY ATTENDEO TO.
Delaware, Ont.
The above personal advertising card was recently donated to the ove museum. Alumni who could sllpply more in/ormatioll ahow this practice in Delawurl'. Ontario should write to fhe ove bulletin editor. Box 3 71. OVe.
Dear C lijf I thuug hl you wOllld like 10 s('c' Ihe g;OIl/ " -I. V/::ARS l ATER . ., II('II·.I· I I' I/ er Ihol I Dr. Amreck Singh, MSc ' (1). Ph f) '71. lI'rOle alld sent oW 10 all .\ IIITi,·ing lI1e/lll)('I"s who taugh t for ,c eral year.. in thl' DepMt (!f ave' 40 at th e elld of last year. men t of Biom 'd ical Scienc~ .. . i.. now a pro Th e /v llr ofus " 'hu //leI ill Pe lllicloll lasf k,sor al Ihe At lantic Yctainary Co llege. lui,· decided Ihol If \1 '(' wcre 10 succeed ill a CharlOi telOwn, P.E .1. 50lh re ulli(ll1. 11 '1' had /0 sfUn bealillg Ihe drums early. I (( lway.1 elljoy YUIH "OYC Alu mni Dr. Frank Milne, lormCf professor of sur Bul ll;tin" , ulld if was YOllr rellwr" ill l/ie ge ry in the Departme nt of C linical Swdie .. , /Vo,'ell1ber . 85 S upplcll'lenl 10 /h" Bllilelill rc wa.. eb:ted a di,t ingui shcd lik member of '11I('slin g illformat ioll O il .Iii/mer gruds I/1UI the American Assoc ialion of E4uine Pm ti fw s proll1pled 111 1' 10 send -" ou lie is . I !I0f!e tio n r... He cont in ues as edilO r of the Ann ual yo/.( will filld il (If sum I.' valu e. ings Book . Proceed 0111.' idea would be 10 huve a 511101/ box periodical/y labelled, "PLAN Al/EAD /" in which yuu cO llld IiSf ul/ upcomillg class re Dr. C.A.V. Barker, ' 4 1, Charter Di plo mate unions, perhaps wilh u nute for c/USS f'S uf the American Colleg.e of 111criogeno ll l plullning u relll1i(lll lu cOllfUeI W)U so Ihul gi,ls , ha, bee n el ected to cmerit u.. mernhe r \'1)// could 1!lI/JIish Ihl' illforll1({/ioll. AI/ulh er . hip in the (0 11 'ge. idea is 10 do WI arlie/e (III hu\l' /() orgWli:e w!IIr clus.\ rt'Ullioll. II /ook liS 40 ."I'ars /() gel aroulld 10 ho ldillg our .lirst "q[jiciul" 1'1' Ul1iulI . . by which lime ~, 'eIo ul/d Ihalloo mallY grods j usl didll ' l seell1 10 care UIlY Graduates Photos more . Ma llY /WI'S !i"ing lVilhill IOU miles jroll7 Guelph did 1101 shUll'. which \l'as reall,' a shame as Ihe-,' missl'd (/ J.:real lime fur The OYC Muse urn has black and white fellowsh ip and reminiscing abow "Ih e Rood ~Srn l11 negati ves of eve ry graduati ng dass old £lars.'''
Ex Faculty News
1884-1945
Sincerely, Cyril l. Padjield La Mesa, Calijvrnia
between 1884 and 1945 . exce pt 19 16. If any one could supply an ori g inal photo of that cl ass we wo uld be mos t ap preciati ve. The pho to we have is not in good eno ugh 011 dit ion to copy. Please reply to the ayC Mu se um, Box 371 , aye.
Memorial Tablet Relocated
T ht! ero,,-, h:llxd Wo rld War I mcmorial wh ich h a~ hung in OVC\ main e ntran ce , ilKc 1922 has h 'e n rcfurh i,hcd and moved to a Illore apJ1rupriatc lucation in the memo rial ~cc ti o n of the ove library. 111e tah let was tiN unvei led in 1920 in th e a, ~emb l y hall the Ontario Ycnteri n3ry Collcge in Toron to by Maj . D. Kin g Smith . 'n . When the Cnlkgc: mnvcd to G uelph in 1922. the tab let was placed in the mai n e nt ra nce, where it ha.. hun g evc r since. Te n OYC fac ult y Illc:mber~ and graduate!> an: remcm bered on this memoria l. 0
or
Returned after 50 years llle lil llowing leucr was rece ived recently by Ihe ayC library : Dear Sir : Ifuulld Ile eS<' /lV() huoks am () IIK tl/V hus band's Ihill RS and (1 111 rC/ urnillJ.: lleelll IV YO II . Afll! r aI/ Ih e.H' yellrs Ih ey I\'ill hI' a surprise 10 you . III' gradlla ted ill 193-1 and d ied l uly 24. IY8-1, su Ihey /Ita ' he 5U H' ars o ,·ar/II£'.
Sincere/,' \'C lUrs . Rlllh C. Heishlllall (Mrs. JOllies Ogdell Heish mall ) Wa rde/lsville , West Vi r ~ ini(/
(Editor\ note: One fth books, Furl ), Years
lI'ilh Dugs . wa.., checked out of Ma~scy Li
brary in 1932 ' 'nle othcr was Dr. Ilcishman\
perso nal copy of Wild Piallls £If Canada,
used as the reference text in a co urse on
poisonous plants and weed seeds. 0
Dr. Alln Lonergan' 74, has been leaching (/nimal hca illi I('(' flllicioll sllldl'III.1' (I( the A nimal Heallh Inslillll c, Debre Zeit, Elhiupia. for the lasl six ."('lIrs . S he is showlI wilh (I g roup of graduale f ollowing Ih e cOf1v()caliuf1 ceremonies ill Ih e jitll £If 1985 . She C.tpress('s her appreciQ/ion 10 QVe Alwnni jvr Ihe bo ok.1 alld ills/rumenls selll dLirillg Ih e p as t IH'O years . There is a cUl1linuing needfor scienlijicjuuma ls and tOI books. Address currt'spolI(/ellce /0 Dr. Ann LOll erf;<Jn, do C anadian Embassy. Addis Ababa, £1hiopia. 0
College of Social Science Alumni Assoc. PEGAS·US
Editor: Dorothy Barnes, '78.
The College Seeks Alumni Reactions
Tht: LJn iven.ity. the Cuilege and iL' fi ve dcra rtm ent~ arc current ly engaged in a ma Jor planning exc rl i ~c. In all organ izations. plann ing i ~ , of couf'.\~ , a co nti nuing preUl: l upatllln , incc cvery dcc i ~ i on is, in a ,en~e. part of ~(l m e overall plan if onl y impli cit ly. But tlie Univcr ... ity\ Aims and Objectives report . adopted by Senate late in 1985. provides a major impetus for the current long· range planning (;xcrc i...e. In th i ~ :,j l tOD hrief communicatton, I propose to givc you ,om(; insight into the idea... and que 't i un~ that concern w'- We wi ll app rec iate recei v ing comment, and reactions 011 any or all qu e\t iol1, being rai,cd. During the 1960~ , the depart ments in the Co ll ege of Socia l Sc ience "tailed off as r,ml y typ ical genera l di,(;i pline units. Whi le th c Un i ver~lly had its un ique historical backgroun d, the Collcge of Social Science departme nb did not attempt to differe nti ate thcm,c lves in th i~ connection or in other way,. Since the early 1970s . ;] 11 five depart ments have devel uped and matured. Re sea rc h ac tivi ty ha$ seen a very strong growth ratc in the recent decade. and due tu the growing reputa tions of the fac ulty, enrol · ment at the graduate level has increased co n ~ide ra b ly in recent yea rs. ithout ig noring the core cleme nts of its disc ipli ne, each depart men t has act ive ly pur, ued a unique ide ntity in te rill s of spe cial i7.ati on and ·c mp hasi~. A few examples may be us efu l. Economics has initi ated a ve ry ~ uc ces,fu l program in Ma nagement
24
Econo mi cs , in collaboratio n with Agri cultural Econo mics and Busi ness. Geogra ph y puts emphasis on rural and agric ultu ral geograp hy, land planning and bio· physical geography. which directly re lates to the Uni vw.ity's mission. Polit ical Studies spccial ize~ in pub lic ad min ist ratio n and public poli cy, and i ~ respons ihle for a un iq ue and flouri, hing progra m in internatio rwl de ve lopment. In Psychology spec i alt i e~ re late 10 ap plied and child p~y e hlliogy, whi ch prov ide links wit h Fam il y Studies. and with indus· tri al and organ izati onal psychology. Rura l ,tuJics and ~ocia l change art: two significant strand, in Sociol ogy an d Anthropolog y. Ead l de partment plans to strengthc n and extend ib uniquc areas uf .:m ph a, i ~. Wh ile there arc a num ber of ~ pcc ific pl ans re lated to graduate programs in cluding some proposals and tdea, fur spc· c i .~l i 7t:d Ph.D. programs thiS brief ac count will riJ b e questions only ahout the Co ll egc '~ ll ndergraduate progra m,. The foll owing idea' are adv,lIlced to pivc the College\ prug nlm~ a greatL: r uni quene~s , tll mect ge neral learning ubjec ttve" tl) improve the qua lity or the overall cdueationa l experience, to ma inta in strong s t a n da rd~ uf acade mic performance. and to attra(;t more cummitted and be:;tler qua lified Sludent5. l. The B A. progra m, whic h our College shares with the Colleges of Art s and Phys iell l Science. ha, a r:lther weak iJ nd il l-de lined core. Wou ld it he u ~t:ful to prc~er i bc a ~ tr(l n g common core to be completed by all B.A. ~tudents in the ir fir~t tour semestcr~') One specific idca is to have ~ total of 14 req uired COll rse~ : five in humanities. five in ~oc i a l sc icnce. two in se ienccs and two in mathem at ic, and c()mput ing. Such a core would hel p in the ac hievemen t of a var iety of ICiJrning ohjectives re lated to breadth. liter acy, numerac y an d ethica l and aest hct ic maturity.
2. The three- ycar general B. A. program has not been successful in sat isfyi ng depth-of. study object ives, and it att racts quite a few ~tud cn t s who are not academi ca ll y com mitted. Wo uld it be appropriate to reduce enrulment of the three·year program or per· haps even phase it out complete ly? 3. The four·year Honors prog ram is academ ically stro ng but has fa r fewer stud ents th an the th ree -year program . One of the re a~o ns may rela te to the 70 per cent require ment in the disci plinc of specializati on. Since the B. A. requ ire ments for contin ua ti on of stud y are now the sa me as for the B.Se .. would it be ad vant ageous to eli minate the 70 per ce nt requirement?
4 . The semester system is quite de mandin g in terms of number of cou rses, and it proba bl y docs not perm it enough time for inde pendent study and reflection. Wo uld it he useful to reduce the total courses required for a four-year degree to 36 so that a stude nt takes only four courses per semester in the last two years? 5. Social Science alumni and students have complai ned about the B.A. as their desig natcd degree. The mai n point i~ that they feel the Bachelor of Ans designat ion does not do Justice to the type of specializati on taken by a ,ocial science grad uate. The crcdt ion of a new and separate degree program (such <IS B. Soc . Sci .) would have some r i ~ks and wou ld also reduce the fl ex ibili ty curren tly ava ilahle to B. A. students. The questions arc : how wides prL:ad is th is fee ling of un hap· piness with the B.A . de~igmH io n , and are there other solutions to th is problem? 6. For more tha n ten years th e London Se· me~ rcr has been a successful component of rh e B.A. program . Every winter. some 30 ~tude nt \ and a facu lty co-ordinator (from onc uf th e departments in humanities or so cial sciences) spend the semester in Londo n invo lved in courses geared to that locatiolt. There are plans 10 increa,'>e such offerings (e. g. in Nice and Strass bourg) and abu to ex tend the work-and-\l udy-ahroad aspect of the Interna ti o nal Deve lopment Program. Would such an expansion be useful a, a way of enrich ing our programs and im provi ng the University'S profile')
7. Every uni vcr~ ity ha.s a problem with stu de nts droppi ng out hefore l'ompktion of a degrce. How (;a l1 we Cllu ntcr this tendenc y'1 Would an im provcd counsc lling an d advi sory prof!ram be lI se ful in ident ifying prob· Icms \\'h ic h lead 10 drop out') Mo,t of (lur universities are organ i/c d alun g department·d isei pline lines and thi .~ ha, ge ne ra ll y created proble lm in mo unt ing inter-diSc iplina ry co u rse~. Such integrati ng courses are partic ularly scarce between social an d biological sciences , or between hu man ities and physical sciences. It has been suggested that Guelph should establish a School oflntegrated Stud ies to mount such courses wit h teams of fac ulty from these di fferent areas. Wou ld there be any merit in such an initiative?
1).
Please take the time and effo rt to respond to these qll c~t i on s and ideas. If any of you would li ke a draft copy of the strategic plan for the College of Social Science we woul d he happy to send you one. You r input would certainly be appreciated.
CSS Toasts '86 Grads
['r«fe.l-so" Vi cto r Uj im%, D I![i,ll'lIllCI1/ I if' Sueioiog\', ('.\[ires,w·s l ite Xel/era i high spirits
The College uf Soc ial Sci ence Alumni As sociatLull, Dean Va nderka mp an d the CSS Student Guvern ment sponsured a wine an d cheese palty in rebrual)1 (( )r the CSS ' X6 gradua ting lass. The tUI'll ll ut wa~ grea t. in fac l, greater tha n ant icipated, an d sl ud ents ovcrllowed intu th c IOll nge area. We hopc lac ulty me mbers wi ll forg ive LI S thc inconve nience they experi enced. Dean John Va nder kamp welcomed the s tu lents, expressed the hope that they wuu ld keep in touch with other ~i1l1m n i , ,1I1 d sug.gested that one good way to do this was by joining the CSS Alullln i As,uc iati un. There are ~ om ~ pe rttct ly good rea,on s to d,l tbb : 111l: l11ber~h ip ICes arc low (we
and good , heel' alill e galh eril/g .
anti cipate an increase soon - now is the tilllC to jo in c o ll e a g u e,I )~ you'll have clo~e con tac t wilh othe r CSS alumn i; yuu'll have fiN -han d kno\ ledge ul p rop()~ed A'ls ucia li on ac tivilie, and the opportunity tll have input into those a('tLv i ti~~, Your in put is what he lps keep your Associatiu n a viable entity, 8rennan Smart, Student Counc il rep resellt~tl i vc, advised the soon - to - bc - g rad ~ ttl lI ~C the Alumn i Office to ~eep in tu uch ami to " cal. drin !... and be merry. " Eve rybod y did JU!;t that. John Currie . '70, ill1llled i:llc pa\1 pre, idcnt ui'the Assoc i;llion spo h.e on behalf of the l'\l'cuti v~ when he th~lnl-.ed th (lse stu dents who had , du ring. their stully ycars, ('\pre,'>ed an imerest in alumn i il", iv iti es Jnd Donna Webb, \.I ur liaisOIl reprc,clltat i\ e r 0111 th e [)epanIl1ellt or Alum ni Affair'> allLi Deve lopment. "po!...e about our aft Ikltioll with the LJn iversi t) of G ue lph Alulll lll Asso ciatl OIl and that organi Lallon\ role in rcLt liolltu future graLi:;. She al,,) enlarged un the sen'ices avai la hl e frol11 Alumn i AIi:Jir,. Yo ur ed nor gav.: an illi promptu spi el reg,mjill ),! I1 lJi nt'lI nlll g llllt :.tl't \~ ith the Co l lege: via the grad n ew~ coluilln and grad praltle a\1 lc ll' s in the (,'u('/ph /lilllllllll.l. We w~lIt you III keep in touch , :llld we l'~ n ' t lel your (lllka),!ucs "no\\, \\I.at you' re do ing if yo u don't te ll us. W<: n<:<:d yo u ," act ive 1l1l: ll1 bers ll f th e exe<:uti \'e ur as support lll g panners. 1 0 111 us. Please com plete tliL' ll1 cll1ber~ hip app lica tion ll1rm be low (before ilillati on lo rees l " to increase ICes) ,tnLi mai l. proll1ptl v, tt' the adelress shown.
Dea n Vankerkamp, John ClIrrie, .70 , pasl presiden! I!{ lhe CSS M , (/n d Brenllal/ 5111(1 1'1, '8 7.
1986 CSS M Membership Application NAME (Please print )
... YEA R
MA ILI NG ADDRESS (Please prim ) PROVINCE Please enro l me as a me mber under the plan indicated:
POSTAL CODE
o
Lite Mem bers hip $50
CO NTRY
L J Lifc Members hip plan init ial payme nt of $6
foll owed by nine co nsccutive pay mcnts of $6
o Ann ual Mc mbership $5 CS3 fo r grad s in thei r tirst year fo lluwing graduation ). I enclose my che4 ue fur $ .
. .... payabl to CSS Alu mn i Association
Please return to : CSS Alumn i Association c/o Department of Alulllni Aftilirs,
SIGNED
n ive r~ ity
DATE . .
of Guelph, Gue lph , Ontario, N IG 2W I.
College of Physical Science Alumni Assoc. SCIMP
derived names to consider, as new machi nes arc added to the inventory. A Sun-3 worksta tion is due to arrive short ly. Meanwhile, several faculty have volu nteered to try an Apple 0 11 Snow Wh ite. Unix - From backroom to boardroom
Editor: Bob Winkel
Fairy Tales Can Come True By Tom Carey, Department of Comput ing and Information Science Once upon a time. therc were sevr n dwarf~ and a fa ir maiden na med Snow Wh itc. We ll actuall y. it happened more th ,1J1 l1T1 CL' upon a time. First there was the f;lmi liar fa iry ta lc version. Then there was the .:om pu \t: r ind ustry vers ion: in the 1,)50s. ind us · tf) pundi ts rdcrred to IBM a' Snow White and it s competitor, ,I.' tht dwarfs. Out of th e sevcn com petitur,>. live - Honeywe ll. Bur ro ughs. Contro l Da ta, NCR and Un ivac (nllW Sperry )- still compete wit h IBM ;Jnd late r ent rics to the fray. The old fairy talc has yet another com puter vers ion in the Depart ment ofCompu l ing and In for mat ion Scie nce. TI1C Depart men t replaced two Vax computers with a set of six " microVnx 2 " mach ines , whi ch looked like dwarfs by com pari son. The two Vax co mputers were called simply Vax I and Vax II . unl ike some other Vax s i te~ where simi lar mac hines were dubbe d KimNovax. ErnieKnvax. ctc. Wit h six microVax dwarfs to name. syste m m,lJ1ager Rick MacKlem ('79) borrowed fro m the fairy tale tradit ion to add colo r to the departme nt's computer ro O IJl .
S tudent ~ in first -year courscs sh are Sleepy ;lIld Sneezy. bmh rtl nnm g the Unix operati ng sy~tcm . Undergrad ua te'> in infor mation pn)Ces~i n g lI.'.e Bashfu l. whi ch i, confi gured with large di sc space and Digi wi's VMS operating ~ystcl1l . Se ni or studen ts usc Gru mpy. while research users work on Doc and Snow White. Rumo rs that Snow White would be avail ab le only to the Depart men t's !c male facu lt y proved to he un lllUnded . What bappened to Dopey and Ilappy') Do pey I S J venerahle PDP II and Happv is an Iris color g ruph i (; ~ workstat ion. 111c Department we lc omcs sugge~ tions lrom alumn i lor addilional fairy tale ~(,
With the latest equ ipment changes the Uni x operati ng ~y$ t ell1 becomes the main stay 01 system soft ware within the depart ment. When CIS hegu n using Un ix in 1977. the Bell Labs system was used almost ex clusively at academic sites. Now Unix is a major comme rcial prodUct, used widely in ma mframe com puting an d ~pecial markets like off ice s ystem , and computer- aid ed des ign. Unix began at Be ll Labs in 1969 as a person al projec t of software deve lo pers. who designcd the system to meet the ir own nc e d ~ . Later. Be ll Labs began licensing Unix to academic u se r~ for a nomina l fee. and Unix very quick ly earned a rep ut atio n. Students found Uni x. wi th its conceptual simplicity and elegancc, a joy to u ~e, once th ey overcame the cryptic user interface. Un ix appeared at Gue lph in 1977, run ning on the department's PDP 11/34. At that time there was lill ie commerci al support, and learning occurred by word of mouth in the ten11 inal room (usu all y late at night). Un ix achieved CUll statu, on campus vcry quickly. Remember the Vermont li cense plate hanging in Debbie Sta(;ey's ot: fi cc, which gave the state sloga n new mcan-
The Computer Revolution Has Just Begun.
T hat was the message Nobel laureate Ken neth Wilson of Cornell Un ivers ity brought to abo ut 250 people attending a lec ture at the University of Guelph . Dr. Wi lson. a phys ics professor who won the No bel Prize in 1982 fo r his researc h on critic,,1 phenomena and phase trans i tions , cut thro ug h the techn ic,,1 gob bledegook to outline the impact of ~ u per com puters on everyday life. The de finiti on of a ~upe rc omp ut er changes with every adva nce in techno logy, he said . At any parllcula r time, super compute rs arc s im ply the most powe rfu l class of computer commercially available for scient ific and engineering computatio ns. BLlt whi le supercom puters tend to be viewed as expensive toys Jor theoretical sci entist, and resea rchers. the push to develop them will come from outside the ivory tower - in private i ndu~try.
ing: "Unix-Live Free or Die"? The veterans of that early Unix exposure went on to use the system for a variety of companies and labs: Mark Ashworth, '80, at Bell North ern Research; Chris Retteralh, '8 J, Eddy Chik, '80, Jim Peters, '80, and others at Human Comput ing Resources; and Dave Legg, '80. at the Defence and Civil Institute of Environmental Medicine, to name just a few. The cryptic user interface of Un ix has also become legendary. Professor Ton y Sal vadori, C1S , clai ms that Un ix caused hi s daughter to swear off com puters forever. It sce ms she used to hel p Dad punch in his bird migration data, and decided one day to use the system for a high school essay. After long and laborious hours of typing. she hit the ' q' kcy to termi nate instead of 'w ' . As every Unix ini tiate knows, her file disap peared forever (in those days nobody di d backups for you). Now Un ix is a respected commerc ial prod uct and a closely guarded trademark. The long-hai red, guitar-strumming Unix hacks of yesterday have been joined by (o r become) the w rporate marketing ma nagers of today. OVC's Ve terinary Medica l In forma ti on Managcment System is being moved to Uni x, and Un ix has even infi ltrated the Uni versity's IBM mainframes- the highly suc css ful CoS y con ferencing system was developed in Unix by staff of the Institute of Computer Sc ience (now Comput ing and Communications Services). 0
"Take any indust f)l and poke around in it," he said, " and you' ll fi nd a use for supe r computers... Car production is one example where the need is already being discussed, he said. .. People in the automobile industry te ll me it's not unreasonah le that ,ometime in the 19905 you'll go into a car dea ler's show room and be shown electronicall y what kind of models might be possi ble. And you'lI sit down wi th the sa les man and together you' ll design your car - and maybe it' ll even work when you're fi nished." Another industry already desperately in need of supercomputers is .. ir travel, he said. Ai rli nes cou ld usc th em for red irecting traffi c when an airport is fogged in. That" done now by computer; but in stead or tak ing half an hour to an hour to decide which airpl anes ~hould be re- routed, the job could be done in one or two min utes. He said supercomputers will have an impart on our II1tellectua l and soc ial life that can only he compared to one other period of hiswry - th e Renai~san c e, whic h saw th e developme nt of pri nt ing during thc 15th centu ry. 0
German Scientist On Campus
\lO\l recen t ly. Boc k', resc;lrL'h i nler Dr 1-\;.111 , Bm· k. In , tIl LIte 01 I llu f(:!aIl IC Chemi stry, li niver,ily 01 f'ra nkl'u rt . was a di,ti ngui,hed lect urer at tlK Ci u clph-Watel~ lou Centre Il)r G rad u~l te Wmk in (, h ~ lll i,try
esl , have: een t r~ d O il lh~ prl::para tion . de lcc \1<)11 and electroni c ,truetll rt" unsl able
nr
Illo il:cul es,
In Fehruary. A gr ad u <l te 01 t he U n iv <.: r sity oj
He is Ihe Juthnr (II l( hlu th~lI' of !\lure Ihan 25() s<.: ienlili L' ani ek s. an d the rccIJ1 1cI1i
HMO
01 a 1I11 111bc r o i awards. inc ludi ng the C he l1l i , t r~ Award of the Acadctll) 01 Scicllces in
Munich. B ock is co- auth or of
TlU!
M odel <Inri il.\ ilI'JJ/icor;I!/I s. a th ree- vo l ume tcxl that hJ,' heell tran , IWed i nto several Ian ~lU a gc~ . He wa, appoi nted In 1961) to th e chall' of i llurganic c hemi,l ry al Frank lurt. \I here he IIJS cx p ~ m k:d hi., illlc n.::-1\ in Ihe app lica tion olllloicT ular orhital IlIcthmh to in organic and ol'l.'dni c compounds.
LJ oll l nlle n Jnd th e Frederic' Stank, KIPPIIIg. ;\w<l l d 01 the A illericall C helll ical ~()( i L'ty. \\~l ik O il C~l mp Ll~ . Hod , ,kliw l -:J 1\ \ <1 k c tur,, : " Sh(}rt - l. l ved Mo lecule s," and
"M oiL'culcs
011
Il vper smClc,:,>. " 0
Chemistry and Biochemistry Liaison
T he Dep artment of C hemistl)' and B io chcmistry recently initiated a liaison eff(111 by se nding undergraduates and g raduates as dcpanmc nt al rep re se ntatI ve s to tllelr home high schools. Students arc seiccted on the basis of academic achievcment and personal initiative as re llcl'tcd by their interest and invol vCl1 lcnt in departmental affairs, The for mat for high school presentations usually includes a shon slide pre se ntation. a COIll mental), on life at lhe U niversity. as well as
\ ei"i ty \ li al S(ln activllics and receive a cr ~" h co urs';: in cOllllllunication ami public n:la tions. To date. the departlllc'n t has se nt out nine rCflresentatives and has reccl ved a VCI)' positive response IWIIl high , chool teachers. students and guidance ofitcers. Some 15 pl'l' cent of the students contacted thl'ough the pl'OgTalll have indicated the ' arc Illtc re.sted in
The University of Tours in the fabu lous Chateaux Country offers one month langu age cou rses fo r beginners to advanced students of French. After noons are free to enjoy faculty·conducted excursions In tile beautiful LOIre Valley , Brittany, Normand y , etc Our low rale Includes sc heduled return fHghtS to Paris, univerSity residence accom mod ation, most meals, tU ition, group transfers fro 111 Parisi Departures on June 29 . July 30 an d Au gust 29 InclUSive pri ces from To ronto. Mont real $1995.00 Edmonlon, Calgary $2248.00 Vancouver $2298.00 Special ad d'on rates from other major Canadian cilies Other language programs offered: Immersion In Spain and Immersion in Germany . Departure d ates avai lable upon req uest. Reg ular monthly departures now available. Ca ll or write for full details
attending tile University 01 G uelph.
an open dial og ue with the students to answer pe rtll1cnt ljucs tiuns. In training ses sions with Ch er vl
Alumni intel"C'i tcd in ral1icipdting in this liaison effort by visiting theil' hOl11e or loca l high schoo ls. <11\' invited to L'ontact Heather K irhy. l iai so n (; O-liI'cilndtl1r. D cp;.trt
l-\cll lStrect. ass ist anl rcgi.st rar. l ia i ~ ()n . the student reprocn tati vcs learn aboul the U ni
(51l) ) 824-,,\ 120.
Ship'. School Educational Tours Ltd . 95 Dal housie St., Brantford, Ont. N3T 2J1 Tel (519) 756 -4900
ment ol C he nllStry and B ioL' hemistr], : orcall CAt. 3S 0 ~ .
Alumni Day at the Ballpark TO l'< m to illcn lbcrs o f the
:dl'l
Immersion in France
GA/\ i nvol ved ill tlIe V\ll Lll1 tcCrS in
SU flPort 01 A dmi,s io th ( V.IS , A .) Pro e:.l\llll h<lY\: l'e'';:l'ved a lillli ted num ber t ic ke ts for the To ron to B l ue Jay' ga me on Sat urday,
or
Aug ust 2 . 1'.)86 - lJoll1 inion WJtclt Dav, w ilen al l attend in g you ng ste rs 14 and under will receIve a J'ree wat ch. Ti ck et costs arc' $ 1)~ 0
r
Toronto Blue Jays
\IS
Baltimore August 2
$4 .25 for vOLl ngs tel ' 14 and lInd el-. Youl ticke t for the ga llle inc l ude s entry to 0 11 (;11 '" PI:Jl'c t\l'\l hOllrs pnur to game tllllC (1.l') p . l11 ). Sent lU the: ad drc ss , ho\\ n 1\)1' adults and
bc lu\\', t icke l orders mu st be p",t llldrked on nr hdo rt' Juh I. IlJr;6 , [
University of Guelph Alumni Association - Alumni Day at the Ballpark - Saturday, August 2. 1986 Nal1lc :_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ C ollege and Year: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Te:l (_ __
Add r ~ ~ ~ :
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Postal Codc: _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Ticf; cts RC ljuired
Adu lt ~
n.
Amo un t
at $l) 25
o C hequc t payable to Toronto Blue Jav,S)
o V IS Card #: _ _ _ __ _ _ __
C h ildren at '54 .25
( 14 and u ndCl')
Handling charge
$ 1 00
E xpiry Da tc :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Aulhorizing Slgnaturc :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Mail by July 1, 1986 to : Total
Toronto Blu e Jays. Attention: G roup Sal es Dep artment
PO
B OA
7777. A delaide Sr. Post Olfice. Toronto. Ontacio M 5C 2K 7
-
Gryphon Hall of Fame
GoUChamp
III;;t lln, D.C. for th e hanqu et. fOrlllt:r G ry phon l'oac h Garney He nley and Ihe lall' Al ex " Sas ," Pl!e{ll"e were in d ucted ,, <.; Au il c r, <llId the ir names aoded to tile Buildn< Plaqu e II hidl l <ln gs in thc I lall 01 1'.1111 ,' Lou nge in Ih e :\th lc ti cs Ce ntrc. i th k tc, ind uI: tcd IIlto the Hall 01 h un e in 1<)1\5 Il c n.: . Davc CI,uf.-c, CSS ' 7 1. Adam 8 m\\ 11 : thc lale ,\ 11 Wi l'lIl1, OAC '29; Aliso n 13 a) , Vandenlx'rg . C BS ' 7,, : (,mJ Wri llh l. O:\C 'JJ ; 1-. !ari-. Walto o. esc; '72; Ell 1-.l il l ard, C BS '7(): Bill I'an Dlcpcn , OAC 'J5, ;\ nu ;\ I.In S~<':(lrd , OVC '2') .
N ine outstand ing athletes ilnd two men who hal e COllll"ibut cd ~ig l1 l h ca ntl \' to build ing the <t thlet ics pmg raill" <I t the 1I llivl'I"slt) II\.'rc Indlldcd II1t(l l h ~ i l) 1'11011 Ci li b I-b ll <1 1 Fall1t: in 1<):{5 . The ckg.l ll i 11:t11 or I'anlt: Ban4u.: t tC:llUred as <I spe<l kn the RC\l:n: nd Bob RlI lllh:IiL :I IOl lllel ( TL playe r II'ho Is n,)I\ a li aptisl mi ni ster ami IOll nde r ()r the Boh RUlllh:11I Ceillre Ill!' the Deaf. .-\Illong the guest' ;It the ha ll4l1c[ wcre SClera l mc mhers or thc Ot\C d ass 0 1 ':n Iw callle to sec their leamrn;lte. G(lrd \\ righ t, ilol111 rc d Glies t' cam.: fmll1 a, 1:lr a, VanCO ll l'Cr, rhlcl)!o, Fio l id a <I nti W~, h
Gllry
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lite I Y85 n l1lllrlo ( ' lIin' nllies ,II l hl,' I/C ,.1 .>1 0
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Grad News
111I1'eil n/ hI' ,liarjori!' M i l/ar (1'). Gomer Henle\', (I),
Th e H a/I II/Filil/!, Rli liders' P ill e/ II I'
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{)U\'ld C"PI), direclor
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Football AII·Star
Mark Morton , OAC ' ~ (" celc h ra t ~d his K~nd hirthday in Janu ary and IS enjoying good heal th. lie and hi..; w ife, [ dlla, li ve in G uc lph Two of their jour g rand ch ilu ren arc Gue lph g rads : Heather (Cormick ) Prall. Arts '76 , an o Tim Cormick , OAC BL ' KJ . Mark's favo ritl: pastil1l': I rc aui ng - he says he reads evt: ry thing hc ca n lay h i ~ hands o n.
10m Graham , OAC 'n, i" slill very active and wi ll reac h his :{ :1 rd bil1hday o n AU L! u..; t 26, He was a faculty me mber from 1944 t() 1')67 wi th the De part men t of Horticullllral Sc ience. He and his wife, rvelYII , repo rt that th e ir son, Gart h, an inforilla tion ..;c ie ll tht (an expert on lihrary "cie nce), is working In Na irobi ,
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$500 il1 Lou's l1ame 10 1171' UnivcrsilY (if
G~() rg~ Mt:Cagul', Oi\C ' 2X, ad mits he was a wo rkah o li c. I-Ie lTlil keJ nv~ r IOO cow<.; and lim11ed 1.700 acres during 15-hourdays; he teeh th aI ruggeu li ll: con tribut ed to the good h.:a lth that he c njoy" nnw. He' ll be 81 in JUl y. A widowe r and a Waterloo reside'nl, he re tired in 1969 afte r len ye ars with O MA F lie was chai rman o ft ht: Far m Prod ucts Ma nage ment Boaru and the On tario Milk Commis sion.
CUflp h gel1('rul scholarship jillld. Recei l' ing 117 1' ch('que jrom Roy Gosse, Nesllt sales mOI1I1j!,1:'r is Lo u , occomp(lllied bl' C ryphOlljo()lh(l11 coach Johl1 Mu ssf lmal1 (/j, direCTor oj (llhl('/(cs O(lI'Id Copp (lnd, Jim Ruffer/V, Ihe Ne.I/"! sales represel1la live jor Ihis regioll (1').
Harold Go ble, OAr 'J I, a professor with th e Dcpal1 l1le nt of En viro nmental Biol ogy
and Provincial Entom o logi st, re tired from the University in 1973 . He ce leb rated hi s 78 th birthday la:,t Decc mber, and te ll s u\ he's in good health ant.! staying busy be tween hi s kitchen garden in Guelph and the family co ttage on Conestogo Lak e some 15 miles nort h of Elmira. Four generation\ 01 the Goble family have graduated from Guelph. Ha ro ld 's father, Fred Goble, OAC '00, died in 1950 Daughter Judy (Goble) Palmer i\ a Mac '62 grad, and son Rob Goble is an OAC ' 68 ant.! CPS '70 grad . Two of Harold and Jea n's granddaughters, Donna Palmer, OAC, a nd Barb Palmer, Arts, are students. Ross Garvie, OAC ' 50, is proj ec t co -or dinator, operations, Carling 0' Kee fe Brew er ies, Toronto. Glen Peister, OAC '50, is pre s ident, McLean Pei ster Ltd., Kitchen er Helen Bell , OAC '53, is superintendent of opera ti o ns, Sault Ste. Marie Board of Edu cation . Robert Marshall, OAC '55 and a former OAC faculty, is retired and living in M eaf~ ord. Son Steven Marshall, OAC '76, Ph.D. '82 , i:, in the Department of Environ mental Biology (Entomology), OAC.
David Hales, Arts '70 , was promoted to vice-pres id e nt of North American Li fe Assurance Co. , Group Sa les Di vision of Canada , Winnipeg.
Mary Forster, SS ' 73, is it se nior soc ia l worker for the K- W counselling service, Kit c hener, and is also vice-pres id e nt of th e Ye ll ow Ros e Ranch House Res taur a nt, Cambridge
Marj orie (Mair) Hors ley, Arts '70, is a bibliographic associate at the University of Toronto Library
Janet Ham ill, Arts '73, is staffing ofncer for Publ ie Works, Toronto.
Elizabeth Hoyle, Art s '70, is a second-year law student at O sgoode Ha ll Law School and li ves in Downsv lew. R, Charles Burgis , CSS '71, is a pract is in g law yer with Mold a ue r, Burgis in Peter boro ugh. He and hi s wife also live in Peter borough. David Wendt, AilS '72, is a quality control officer with Artistic Hom es , Springhill, Florida, U.S.A Michail Williamson, Art s '72, is president of Craigmore Offshore Ltd . a nd li ve ~ in Armdale, N .S , Heather Baylis, CPS '72, is a se ni o r ana lys t for Impel'ial Tobacco Ltd . in Mo ntreal. Roger Trudel, CPS M. Sc '72, is sen ior qati,tician for Agriculture Canada in Ottawa.
Joseph Leach, OAC '54, M.Sc. '66, is re search sc ient is t, Provi nce of Ontario Lake Eri e Resea rch Station , Wheatley.
Susan Bentley, CSS '72, M .Sc. '76, has moved from Kirkland, Wash. , U .S. A , to Winnipeg, Man . She is a se nior ana lys t, Employment Services and Economic Sec u rity, with the Province of Manitoba.
Marjorie (McKague) Windover, OAC '66, is a teac hing master at Durham College, Oshawa.
James Robinson, OAC '72, is plant man ager, M cGav in Foods Ltd .. S t. Albert, Alberta.
Henry Robertson, OAC '66, is owner, Scotch Mou ntain Farms Ltd., Mcaford. Mary Hofstetter, Arts '68, nils the chair of vice-pre s id en t, acade mic, at Mohawk Col lege, Hamilt on. Robert B. Channing, Arts ' 68 , is a senior consult ant with Pea t, Marwi ck and Partners , Toronto.
Hamid Saleemi, OAC M. Sc. '72, is acting head, Department of Adult Education, Bay ero University, Kano, Nigeria. Ken Knox, OAC '72, ha s been named di rec tor of th e Ontario Mi ni stry of Agriculture a nd Food 's farm products branch and is now loca te d at th e ministry 's head office in To ro nto.
Hazel "Kate" (Pratt) Moggach, CSS '69, is unit co-ordinator with the Brockvil.le Psy chiatric Hospi ta l.
Murray Morrison, OAC '73, is a sa les rep with Chipman Inc, Collingwood.
George Rose, OAC ' 70, is with the Depart ment of Biology, McGill University, Mon treal.
Don Ridley, CPS Ph.D. '73, and Joan E. (Kent) Ridley, CPS Ph. D. '77, work as Direc tor of R&D, Ciba-Geigy and Cana dian Direc tor, Thorn EMI Computer Soft ware respecti vel y.
Fred Sheldon, CPS '70, of Richmond Hill is providing lega l cou nsel to Roya l LePage LId . John McWhinnie, CPS '70, M.Sc . '7 1 is manager for th e Em ployment and Immigra tion Commi ssion in Hull.
Bob Hornick, CPS ' 73 , of Mi ss iss auga, is direct o r o f ClM-DATA Bryan Beveridge, CSS '73, is co-ordinator. pastoral c are for the North Bay Civic H ospi tal. He has moved to North Bay from Nepean.
Bruce Smi th , Arts '73, is a tcac her with the Toronto Board of Education, pre\ently at Central Tec hnical School. Mary ( Mi tte n ) Ball , CSS '74, is personnel manage r for Millen Vinyl Inc .. C ambridge. She and he r husband , Gary, O AC '76, live in Cambrid ge. Verna " Ell)''' (Crooka ll ) G ee, CSS '74, has moved to Ga ribaldi H ighland" B.C., and has c hosen th e role of homemaker for a time. Bar ry W. Stahlhaum, CPS '74, moved from Guelph to Charlottetown where he is the project mana ge r o r the Animal Produc ti vity and Hea lth Informati o n Ne twork at the Atlantic Veterinary Colle ge, PEl. Peter Delemere, Arts '74, is a Prudential
Insurance agent in Ma rkham and lives in
Scarborough.
Karen (Pentney) Sepers, Arts '74, is proj
ect assistant with the Deve loping Countries
Farm Radi o Network ( DC FRN) at the Uni
ve rsit y of Guelph . She li ves in Fergu s.
George Atkins, OAC '39, has directed the
project from it s in cepti on, DCFR N is now
managed in th e Uni vers ity Sc hool of Part
time Studies and C o ntinuin g Educa tion.
Andrew Reko, CPS '74, of Milton is direc tor of matcriais and distribution for Exide Canada Corp. David Dow, OAC '75, is area se rvice man ager, John Deere Ltd., SI. Bruno de Montar ville, P.Q. Chris Hildreth, OAC '7 5 , is are a sale s
manager, Pfi ze r, Guelph
Sandy Smith, OAC '75, is manager, Tam worth Branch, Canadian Imper ia l Bank of Commerce. Lloyd Davenport, CSS '75, is a manager
with Price Waterhou se, London.
Honey Kerr-Went, CSS '75, is exe cutive vice-pres ident , Community Outreac h in Ed ucation Foundation , North York . She is a doctoral candidate in Clinical Ps ychology at York Uni vers ity, Toronto. David A. Mc Lean , CSS '75, OAC M.Sc. '81, is president of Nati o na l Job Scarch In stitute in Burlington. He developed th e Jo b
-
I~
search training progra m marke ted by th e fi rm . Tricia Siemens, SS '75, is ow ner of Wordsworth Boo ks, Waterloo. Tri cia and her husband, Chuck Erion, CSS '72, li ve in Kit chener.
Susan (Little) Sanders, SS ' 77 . is an editorial assistant wit h CBC Nati onal Rad io News, Toro nto.
Christopher Reid. 5 S '78 , is a se nior co nsultan t with Tho rne Stevenson and Kel logg, Ottawa.
Ro s .~
julia Shields-Bucher, CSS '78, is self em pl oyed as a graphics designe r. She works out of her ho me. Juli a's hu sba nd, Rob Bucher, is an OAC Eng ' 79 grad and her fath er is Don Shields, OAC '50.
McKay, OAC '77 , is subroga ti on of fi cer, Gore Mutu al Insurance, Cam bridge.
Jo hn Archibald , Al1S '75 , is pres ident of Archangel Producti ons . with o ffic es in Toron to and Tara.
Gaetan Paquette, OAC '77, formcrly as soc. agr rep., has taken a posi ti on as na ti onal progra m spec iali st in vo lved in th e gradin g and inspec ti on of dairy prod ucts. Gaetan rece ived his Master's degree fro m U. B.C. 's Dept. of Food Sci ence, while on ed ucational leave from the Food Research In stitute. Researc h Branch of Agriculture Canada.
Rohert Berrier, Arts '76 , is a se ni or pro gram mcr anal ys t with Travelers Insurance Co.. Hartford. CI. . USA .
Clarence Swanton, OAC M .Sc'77, is an assistant professo r wi th the Department of Crop Science, Uni versity of Guelph .
john johnson, Al1S '76, is a re port er wilh the Kaml oops News, B.C.
Barbara (Sherwood) Moir, Am '77, is a teacher at St. Mi chae l's Schoo l, Dresde n.
W. George Tomlinson, CSS '75, is assoc i ate manager, Mutual Life, Hamilton . Roger Wells, CSS '75, is a planner with the city of Dal1mouth . N.S .
Sydney Wood , Arts '76, is head of adult and circulati on servic es with th e SI. Albert Public Library in SI. Albert, Alta. Gary Logan, OAC '76, is vice -president manufacturing, Mitten Vin yl Inc., Cam bridge. Donald Millar, OAC '76 , is a chi roprac tor with th e Co lborn e Chiro practi c Office, London
Kim Muller, Art s '77, i s a soc ial worker wilh th e Gue lph and Wellingto n County Child re n's Aid Soc ie ty. Dennis Ring, OAC '7 8, is a cred it adviso r, E\I'm Credit Corporation , Chatham . Evel yn (Eason) DerstrolT, Arts ' 78, is an acco unts c lerk with Consumers Gas and li ves in Oshawa.
Matthew Tang, CSS '78 , is ma nage r of Matang International, Scarborough. Robert Bucher, OAC '79, is director, sa les and marketing for Tano in Baton Rouge, Loui sian a, US A. James Gu nning, OAC '79, is a ph armac ist wit h Lovell Dru gs, Kingston. Robert Kemp, OAC '79 , M.Sc. ' 8 1, Ph . D. '85, is assista nt prokssor. Uni versi ty of Wi sconsin, Madi so n. Wise, U.S.A. Mic hael Lachine, OAC '79, is G consultant with Arenburg Consultanh Ltd ., Kingston. jonie Hruce, Ans '79, is an art/ Eng li sh/ drama teacher at 1. A. Turner S5. Brampton. She lives in Mississauga. janice Nutle r, Arts '79, is a ac tress li vi ng in lIa milton.
se Jl~ emp l oye d
J. Michael Fitzge r ald , AI1 S '78, is a se lf
Werner Peterson, Art s '79 , IS assis tant ma nager. Ca nada Tru st, Weiland.
La therine Cameron, CSS '76, is pres idcnt of K2B Consult ant s, Inc., Birmingham, Ala., USA .
emp loyed artist. He is th e pro prietor of Michael Fit z.gera ld and As soc iates Inc .. Aginco urt.
l OllY Sepers. An s '79 , is a pi ctul'e framer with Sun Art , Fergus.
Scott Murray, CPS '77, is man ager of pro ces,ing service,. computing and com muni cations for the Hudson's Bay Company in Toro nt o.
Valerie Stone, Arts '78, is an acco unt ex ecu tive with Tabloid Newspapers, Newton, Mass., U.S.A.
Laura Snetsinger, Arts ' 79 , is bar manage r, th e Keg, The Mountain. Whi ,tl er, B.C. Expo '86 anyon e')
Reid Wilshire, Art s '78 . is a teac her with th e York Region Boa rd of Edu cati on and lives in Down sv iew.
Rick Cawthorn, CBS '73, M .Sc. ' 76, Ph . D. '79, is an assoc iate professo r in the Atlantic Veterinary College, Univcrsity of P. E.! Pri or to his appoi ntment in P. E.!. Ri c k work ed at th e West er n Vete l' inar y School in Saskatoo n.
Dan Remmerswaal, CPS '77. is teac hin g lo r the Dryde n Board of Educa ti on and liv ing in Ignace.
E. Joan (B ur wash ) Duncan-Lowry, CSS '69 . M.A. '77, is a psyc hometrist with th e Oxford Region al Centre. Woodstock. Cheryl Langtree, CSS M.A . '77. received her Ph.D. in c linica l psychology in 1984 Crom th e Universit y o f Manit oba and in 19H5 was an <I,s is tant profc ssor in clini cal psycholog y at the U. 01' M. She and her hu , band, John Briere, also a Ph.D. in psy dK>! ogy. havc moved to Los Ange les and thc\' arc hoth pos t-do c toral fc ll ()ws ,It UCLA. Dnminil' nelli~siIllO, OAC ' 77 . i, ,11IJy ing Frcnch ;It Ll\al U ll ~\ cr, It\. SI. -h)y, P.O .1t l
Captain W. Henry Brynkus, CSS '78 , is an air defence instructor with the Depart ment of Natio nal Defence, CFB Gagetown, Oromocto, N. B. Stephen Green, CSS '78, is a key acco unt manage r with abisco BI'ancis Ltc!. , Scar borough. Hi s wife, Cat herine (Telfer), is an Arts '77 grad.
jeremy Adams, CS5 '79, is a res iden tia l sales rep resentat ive wi th Jo hn ston and Daniel Limited, Toront o. Edith (Yam ) Chan, C 'S '79 , IS a loans officer with the Co-op entre C rcdit nion. Calgary, Alta.
Jennifer (Cross) Murrant, CSS '78, is sec rctal'y/rcsearche r wit h Site Design Ser vice,. ()I·illia . She i, marricd to Brian Mur rant, rts '80 .
jane Ereaux, CSS ' 70. i., job \[Jb ili 7.ation offic er. sup poni vc cmpl()ymcnt service, P0I1 Ho pe and Di strict Hos pit :iI .
Neil :\I c(:oag, C'iS '78. is ,l\s istant r;lec secretary. FI,lI 11 tmr<l Downs Ra cway, Dun das.
Jo-Ann (Sandersnn ) Freeze, SS '79. is a special ed ucat ion teacher wit h Sr. 'nlo illas More School. M is,i ssauga.
Kathryn Lynes. CSS '79, is co-ordinator, school progra ms , with Alberta Energy and Natu ral Reso urces, Energy C onservati on Branch , Ed monto n, Alta. Jennifer (Vaughan) MacKenzie, CSS '79, is a com munity worker with Rainhow Pro grams fo r Childre n, Guel ph. Joseph McKenna, CSS ' 79, is an env iro n men tal technologis t (c urrently une mplo)ed). He Jives in Red Deer, Al ta. N, Clark McLeod, CSS '79 , is invo lved in sports marke ting wi th Christopher Lang and Assoc iates , Toron to. Rick Moran, ' 5S ' 79 , is manager, cus tomer systems , In teg rated O ffice Systems, Toronto. Catherine (Rae) Oldford, CSS '79, is a reg istered nurse. She lives wi th husband, Ranc e, in Markham. Ronald Philpott, SS ' 79 , works for Amsco C lnad a Ltd., Brampton. He and wi fe, Sharon (Duncan ), ArtS ' 1l 2, live in Orangevill e. Jennifer (Lawson) Shanks, CSS ' 79, is an artist with " Jen nitCr" in Uxbridge. Eleanor "Ellie" Grace Thrney, C5S ' 79 , is a mana ge r with Rci tm an~ Inc . , Edmon ton, Alta. Paul Warbeck, 55 ' 79, is an i nte m (M.D. ) with Chedoke -Mc Maste r Hosp itals, Hami Iton. Valerie "Dale" (Sweet) West, CSS '79, is audit supervisor/ private in ves tigator, Tuff Control Systems Ltd. , Wi ll owdale. Doug Allen West, CSS '79 , is a reso ur'e tec hnic ian/project s uper isor with the Rai sin Regio n Co nse rvati o n Authori ty, Mar1 in tow n, Vicki Whitmell, CSS '79, is a librarian wit h Blake, Cassels and Grayd o n, To ronto. George Gillson, P5 '80 , l ive~ and works in Thornh ill wh ere he is a rc,eareh 'cient ist with SCIEX. Susan Brownson, CSS '80 , is a case worker with Metro Social Services , Toronto, Shauneen (McKague ) Bruder, CSS ' 80 , i~ an accoun ting manager with the Royal Bank of Canada, TOflln to. Shauneen's hus band , Micbael, C5S '8 1, is a bar ad mi ssion stu dent with the Law Soc iety of Upper Ca nada.
Dawn DeCunha, CSS '80, is the director of "Sanctu m, " Miss issaug a. Bob Elliot, CSS ' 80, is a spec ialist, proles sio nal relat ions , Canadi an Ge neral Electric, Toronto. Bob and hi s wife, Gail (Lenington), FACS ' 80 , live in O akville. Elizabeth Ives-Ruyter, CSS '80 , is a teach in g maste r with Algonq uin College, Pem broke Her hu sband is Antonius Ruyter, OAC '79 , OVC ' 83, Paul MacPherson, CSS '80 , is a territ ory manager for Parker Han nitin, anada Inc. , G rimsby. Paul and his wife, L.eslie (fan shawe) C5S '78 , live in Calg ary, A lta.
Mary Foran, OAC '82, is a marke t analyst. Farm Inform atio n Centre, Auburn. Steven Stehouwer, OAC ' 82 , i ~ a livestock and pou ltry p rog ra m~ offi ce r for the ew Brunswick Gove rnment , Keswick Ridge, N. B. Andrea Da Rocha , OAC 'll2, was married last Oc to ber to Norman Stein hausser, OAC '82, who is a hrewer trainee, Carl ing 0' Keefe, Toron to. A nd rea complet d her M .Sc . in Plant Patho logy at the Univer. ity of A IDerta. Edmo nton. Bruce Thompson, OAC '8 2 , is a marketing associa te with E lanco Products , London, Ont .
[)onna (Orr) Senior, Arts '81, is a records ana lyst with the Privy C ouncil office, Ot tawa, and lives in Nepean.
Brent Thomson, OAC '82, i ~ a gradu ate studen t wi th the De part ment f Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vanco uve r.
Donald Walls, Arts '81, is an insura nce adj us ter with C rawfo rd and C om pa n ., Toronto, but lives right here in good old G uelph .
Elizabeth (Unger) Hodgkinson, Ar1s '82, is a free-lan ce art ist livi ng in Toronto.
Ken Bobinchak, OAC 'X l. is a yua lity con trol inspec tor, Ca nron [ne . , Pipe Division, To ron to. Alt hough Ke n gradu ated in 198 1 he was with year ' 80 for most of hi, academic program at Guel ph. Helena Champion, OAC M .Sc. '8!. is president. Bed B reak fa~ t Ma rb le head and N0I1h Sho re, Bedfo rd, MA ., .S.A . Manin StemeroIT, OAC ' 81, is a re,earch wi th Stcmcroff & ssociates Ltd . . G uelph.
co n~ ultant
Brian Tapscotl, OAC '81. is a ranch fox represe ntative ( .S .I\, ) \ ith the Hud so n's Bay Co., Fur Division . Gue lph. Laurie (Ricker) van Hurk, OA ' ' 81, and hushand, Ted. are teachi ng at Ussoke Sec ondary School. U" o ke via Ta bora, Tanl.a n ia. 'Illey left Canada last Augus t (o r ~l three year term and represe nt the Unite d Ch urch of Canada. Lois Colley, CPS '82 , is a soft ware engi neer wit h lIT Bu,ine~s Co mm unicat ions in G ue lp h. William Summers, OAC '82 I. Sc. ' 84 . is product develo pment I'epre~clltative, Du Pon t Ca nada, Edmonton , Alta. Catherine Airth, OAC '82, IS an agr i cultu ra l officer, Agricult ure Canad a. Wes l mo unt, P.Q . Paul Peters, OAC ' 82 . is a qu al ity co ntrol , uper visor wit h United Co-o pe ratives of Ontario, Chatham.
Shari Ann (Clarke) Wortel, Art s '82 , is an artist -typese tte r wi th Biz Cards Today, London. Brian Buchardt, OAC BLA'83. is wit h Landesi g n, Landscape Des ign and Co n ~t ruction , Kings ton. Dianne (Coker) McDowell, OAC '83, is a q ua lity ass uran ce su pervisor, Ric hardson Foods Ltd., S t. Marys. Calum Thrvey, OAC ' X3 , MS~ ' 85 , is a grad uate re,e '-1rch a ssi~ t ant in th e Ph . D. pro gram, D partment of Agricu ltural Econom ics. Purdue Univer~ity. West Lafaye tte , Ind .,
S. Marc Whitford, OAC ' R) , is a g ratlu;lle st uden t, De part men t of Microbiology and Immunol ogy, Queen's niversity, Ki ngsto n.
L.en Low, CPS ' 84 , of Pahang, We~t Ma lay sia, is projec t engineer with GI\E I\STRA . Jeremy Hutchings, CPS '84. work s as sys te ms analyst for the James River Corpora tion of Norwal k, on n., U.S .A . Sigrid Grimm, C PS '84, is now working in prod uct speci ficat ion and user inte rt:'Ke de sign for oftice automat ion ~o ft ware at Bell Northern Research. She writes that she is ··pleased as punCh " becau se "the ellviron me nl is ri ch . profess ional , ~o c ially warm , very dem a nding and the proJuct is "reat." She 'ame to B R after short st ints at ' lllcr ai d C ity an d In fom ar1 . Shc Ii es in Weston.
31
Marilyn Armstrong, Arts ' 78, M.A. '84, is assi tant arch ivi st, Grace Schmidt Room of Local History, Kitchener Pu blic Library.
Elizabeth Brabec, OAC M LA' 84 , is a planner with the Pioneer Valley Plannin g Com missio n, Warren, MA., U.S.A .
Nancy (McDevitt) Kelly, Arts '84, is a pub lic re lations st udent at Hu mber College and li ves in Toronto with her hus band, Ray mond, Food Science '82.
Michael Celetti, OAC M.Sc . '84 , is a my cologist/ pat hologist with the P.E.I. P tato Marketi ng Board , Charlottetown, P. E.I.
James Baker, OAC '84 , is a licldman in British Colu mbia and lbert a for the B.C. Aniflcial lnsemina tion Centre, Surrey, B.C.
Kai Hoe Ho, OAC '84 , is an estate as sistant, hu an Moh San Esta te, Sarawak. Ma laysia.
InMe moriam
Helen Eo (Hall) McCabe, Mac 'JOD , in Toronto, January 21, 1986.
David G. laird, OAC '1 5, a long-time pro fessor of agricultural sciences at Univer~ ity of British Colu mbia, died October 16, 1985' in Vancouver.
Hugh l. PaterSQn, OAC '32A . in Rock wood.
Russell G. Beatty, OAC ' 20A . '22 , cl ied Febru ary Ig, 19X6 in Kitc hener. lie was a meat inspector wit h the fcdera l government fo r more th,m 35 years and was a li fe lllem her of Trinity Un ited Chu rc h, Kitchener. He was a veteran of World War I and a member of the Mason ic Lodge. Hazeljackson, Mac ' 24D , in Palm Harbor, Flori da . January 28, 1986 . John S. Morrison, OAC '24A , ' 27 , di ed December 5, 1985 , at hi, home in Ti ll,on burg. He is ~ lI rv i ved by hi s wife and six childre n. Alice j. (McGujre) Thicke, Mac ' 260, in Ollawu, February 3, 1986 . Frank F, Baird, OAC '28 , in Ollawa. Samuel P. Giebelhaus. OVC ' 28 , in Kc lowna, B .C.
Emjel C. Griesbach , OAC '30, in Co lling wood. James J, Macllraith, OAe ' 30 , died Scp tember 7, 1985, in So nom a, Californ ia. Jimmy, as many knew him. was the flrs t indi vidual in an ada to receive the Poultry Specialist Dip lo ma. [n 1946 , he beca me field su pervisor with th Californ ia Tu rkey Breeders Association in Davis , Cal ifo rnia. He joined Ca lifornia Royal Turkeys, Inc. in 1954 and was a partner until he moved to Williams Tu rkey Breeding Farms, Oakdale, Cali fo rn ia. In 1970, he joined Nicholas Tur key Breedin g Farms. He is survived by his wife, Louise, and two daughters. 32
Herh Edward Markle, OAC '35 , died Feb rlj ary I , 1986 in Guelph . Known to the City of Guelph as .. Mr. 1I0rticult ure." he served on the execut ive of the Guelph and Ontario 1I0rt icu ltura l Soc ieties fo r mo re tha n 30 years. He received many awal'(b , including the Centenn ial Medal in 1967 and the Paul Harris Fe ll ow~h i p for di ~ t i ng u i s h e d CO I11 muni ty service from the Rotary Cl uh of Guelph . I Ie was employed by th e Ontar io Department of Agric ulture. Lela nd Electric and the University 01 Guelph and retired in 1':173 . lie i~ ~urv ived by his wife. Allne, and two children. Gordon C. Ashton. OAC ' 35 , M. Sc. (McGi ll). Ph. D. (North Ca ro lina State), died Janua ry 8, 1986 in Guelph. He joi ned th~ facul ty of OAC in 1956 ancl wa.<; a faculty membe r in the Depart me nt of Mat hemat ics and Statistics, Univers ity of G uel ph wh n he retired in 1973. He was named a Professor Emeritu s at Guelph in 1975. Professor As h to n h a~ a li fe -long interest in the O ntar io Inst itute 01 gro log ists and the Ag ric ultural Institute of C lIlada. In 1985 the Agricult ural Institute of Canada presented Dr. Ash ton with a citation "in recogni tion of his out stand ing servi ce as a pro fess ional agrologist to agricultu re and to the professi on of agrology . . . " He was a isi ting professor at the Un iversity of Ghana in 1968- 1969 and at Texas & M University in 1973. Frank Chase, OAC ' 38, died ~uddenl y in SI. Aug ustin . Fla. , U.S . on March 3. 19R6. He was a life member of the OA Alu mni Associati on, class agent tor OAC '3 8 and took an active interest in alumni activities. He was faculty mem ber and form er chairman of th e De partm e nt of Microbiology, . of G . John R . Davis, OAC '38, died December 14, 1985 in G ue lph. He was the Brew Master
Joyce (Elder) Thomson , OAC '84 , is a lab assistant, Departme nt of Zoology, Un iver sity of Brit ish Coill mbia. Hus band, Brent, is an OAC '82 grad.
Claude Gilbert, CPS Ph. D. ' 85 and Anne Marie (Chapleau), CPS M.Sc. '85, li ve in Jonquic re, Quebec wh re ' laude is a re search sc ientist for Alcan [nternational Li m ited.
of Carl ing-O'Keefe an d was a Member of the Institute of Brewi ng. London, England. IIe is survived by his \ ife, Alexan dra, and twu childre n. Ellen Elizabeth Wright, Mac '3gD, in Port Ho e, January 3 I. 19H6 . Mary Edna Singer, Mac '·WD, di ed De cember 18 , 1985 , in Guelph . Mary was born in SI. Catharines ;lIld <tllended pub lic and high schoob in Niagara-on - the - L~I"e . She taught at Bresc ia College and London Cen tral Collegiate befo re comin" to teach at Macdona ld [nMitute from 195 1 unti l 1977 . She was head of the department fro m 1965 to 1969. During this time, Mary carlll:d a Mas ter\ degree frO! Pennsy lvania Stale Uni ve r sity and a Ph . D . from Ohio State niversi ty. both in Ho me Ma nageme nt. She was a member of the SI. James Anglican chu rch . James M. Elliot. OAC '49 . M.S A."5 1, in Til l~on bu rg .
Elton H. Misener, OVC ' 5 1, February [3, 19K6 in Port Dover. Kenneth J. I. Smith, DVC '5 , in Allen Park , Mic hi gan , USA . William B. Howell, OAC '56A, died Dc cember 30, 1985 as a result of a fa rm ing ac cid'nt on his fa rm in SI. George. Mary Elizabeth (Mclndoo) Hay, Mac ' 59 , M.S.A . '6 1, in Ottawa. Peter l. Bl'erstecher, Johan neshurg. S. Africa.
. S . A . . 60. in
Victor M . Romans, OAC ' 72 , died in De cembe r 1985 in Jamaica. He was the di rector of beef produ c tion for the Agricult ural De ve lo pment C orpo ration in K in gs ton, Jamaica. Catherine O. Moyer-Berg, CBS '83 , di ed January 12. 1986 , in an automobile acc ide nt in Cambridge. She was the office manage r for Tenetech Ma nufacturing in Brantford.
CANADIAN LANDSCAPES Images of Canada by Peter and Traudt Markgraf Acknowledged by their peers and by collectors as outstanding silk screen artists, Peter and Traudl Markgraf have
produced many beautiful images of Canada,
Each of the nine images offered here is marked by exceptional expertise in shading and flawless screening technique,
Each of these images was a sellout in its original form,
You may now purchase high quality lithographic reproductions of these images for your home or office or as a
thoughtful gift. Each image is reproduced on heavy stock and is unconditionally guaranteed,
B Summer Morning
C Sakinaw Lake
E Summer Rain
D Early Frost
A Low Tide
I
F Cove
Sunday Night
H Indian Summer
G Porr Moody
A
BGH
C F
Sheer Size 18" x 18Y/' (46 x 47 em) Image Size 14" x 14 " <36 x 36 em)
Sheer Size 18" x 20 '/''' (46 x 52 em) Image Size 14" x 16" <36 x 41 em)
Sheer Size 25'1/' x 19" (65 x 48em) Image Size 20" x 14" (5 I x 36 em)
DEI Sheer Size 24" x 19" Image Size 20" x 14 "
(6 I x 48 em ) (5 I x 36 un)
Please send me rhe following Markgraf prim reproducrions ar S23_95 each or S88_00 for any four, plus S4,95 for handling and
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