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0830946

nCCIDFNTALIA
UWO OCCIDENTAUA:
Box A49655
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OCCIDENTALIA
1970 VOLUME XXXIX
Published by The University of Western
Ontario Students' Council
London, Ontario.
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2013 with funding from
University of Western Ontario - University of Toronto Libraries

http://archive.org/details/occidentalia70univ
The ending has come.
Graduation.
An end to my years at Western
And am glad to leave
I

To begin something new.


ill'lHIIIi

The memories will remain.


Inevitably.
Of what will they be?
Of people, and places, and things
Important, or now-forgotten.
^widtm

Of smiles in eyes and around mouths


Casually worn by friends
Who say, "Hello, see you in M.C. at one.'
m\

'Q^'HG
Service

:, 5f -.7?

Of scowls trying to conquer


A dumb librarian who says, "It's overdue",
A Delaware maid towing a vacuum at 9 a.m.,
A campus cop slapping a ticket on a windshield,
A million carefully-planned aggravations.
Of reading rooms and libraries,
Of cafeterias and the Hub,
Of Natural Science 1 and M.C. Theatre,
Of U.C. hill, up and down.
And of paths along the river.
::m?^ii^x-!:/^fiv.:ii'ii'^.

Of the drudgery in
Cramming for exams
Researching for essays.
Getting up for dull 8:30's,
Writing lab reports,
Waking up on rainy mornings.

"I3r J
f
Of the joys in

Discovering Gazette page fives,


Finishing essays and exams,
Listening to Lightfoot in person.

X Finding someone special.


Attending a Havel ka lecture.
Dancing to the sound of the Talismen,
Learning.
pfiif

,4/jf mm Hi -«f^

^s;,*^'!^f5*j^?S9iri^

Of returning after summer vacation and


home,
feeling at
Writing an exam with a thousand others
in Alumni Hall,

Going to the Ceeps with borrowed proof,


Reading an 800-page textbook.
Finding Mcintosh Gallery and the delights
inside.
Spending a whole day drinking coffee and
playing bridge in M.C.,
Getting soaked while the football 'Stangs
played in the rain.
Riding the Richmond bus.
Getting up for fire-drill at 6 a.m.,
Traying down U.C. hill.

10
Of those first days so long ago
When we learned the Western song
And formed a kick-line in Thannes.
When we were beanied by Purple Spur
And humiliated by "Dead-horse, Frosh."
When the President welcomed us
And we swore allegiance to Western U.

11
Enough.
Beanies have given way to cowboy hats
And dead-horses have been outlawed.
The changed
rules have
And so have we, know.
I

Thank you, Western,


And goodbye.

12
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EDITOR: Marianne Szabo

STAFF: TanisWhaley
Cheryl Purdey
DR. D. CARLTON WILLIAMS
President and Vice-Chancellor

D.C. SPEAKS
WHAT ARE YOUR GENERAL IMPRESSIONS CONCERNING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY CENTRE?

I am in favor of it. Western is one of the few well-established universities without a centre of this kind. It is bound to be
mainly student-populated but the community idea is good. I would enjoy associating with the undergraduates. Both
student and faculty should have a place of their own but recreational facilities should be for all on a first come — first

served basis.

WHAT DO YOU CONSIDER THE HIGHLIGHT(S) OF THIS SCHOOL YEAR?

The decision to purchase the Milton collection was the biggest highlight of the year. It puts Western on the map as far as
Miltonian scholarship goes. The whole university can take pride in it as it is the last private collection and the only one in
Canada. For the country, it will attract scholars in history, law, English and other related fields.

Western is proving itself by drastically modifying the entire system of government and making the two-tiered system work
well. The Senate and the Board are getting along very well. The action of the Senate on inviting fourteen students as
15
observers was done on its own and in two years when the constitution is renewed more students will be able to be full

members.

The announcement of Metras' retirement after 38 years of devoting his life to the university served to highlight the last

game where we watched him coach at J. W. Little Memorial Stadium.

We have had a good year. Western has been free of violence and agitation, not because the students are apathetic but
communication is worked at here. The initiative in pushing the UCC has been due to a more effective USC this year.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE NEW LENIENCY AT WESTERN (I.E. ONLY FIVE COURSES REQUIRED FOR
FIRST YEAR)?

The old idea of six courses gave people a survey of a broad


background rather than letting them concentrate in one area.

WfW^ Today undergraduates are better prepared; therefore, they can


afford to make better choices in greater depth. Thus, the same
amount of work will be involved but in greater depth. But we
will jealously preserve

The system
the student has
is opening up to
more
your democratic

a more
right to fail.

liberal, wider choice


responsibility for his choices than he
— but

previously had. If the student has chosen wisely and sensibly we


will provide him with a good education.
This does not mean we are lowering the standards — either there
will be a higher failure rate or students will be more dissatisfied.
Thus, we should encourage them to seek counselling and so
increase the number of counsellors.

WHAT DO YOU CONSIDER IS WESTERN'S PRIME


OBLIGATION TO a) THE STUDENT AND b) THE
COMMUNITY, and is it fulfilling these obligations?

The prime obligation to the student, as an individual, is to make


him feel he is here for an education and to allow him the
education he needs or wants.

The obligation of the university to the community is to stand as


a university of quality and to hold up to the people the idea of
the pursuit of excellence.

We are fulfilling it to some extent, not as well as we could or as


well as we like. The Milton collection is a mark of excellence
which we can strive for, the photochemical library is important
for medicine, nursing and the sciences. Also Western has revived
musical interest in southwestern Ontario with the companies of
Gilbert and Sullivan and Purple Patches.

16
DR. A. W. TRUEMAN
Chancellor

HORSDAL

A. E. SHEPHERD
Chairman
Board of Governors

ASHLEY &CRIPPEN

DR. R.J. ROSSITER


Vice-President
Academic

R.B.WILLIS
Vice-President
Administration and Finance

BARRETT

DR. O.H.WARWICK
Vice-President
Health Sciences

BETA
MRS. M. BARKER
President
Alumni Association

BETA

DR. J. K.WATSON
Registrar

BETA

T. L. HOSKIN
Dean of Men

BETA

DR. L. E. NEAL
Dean of Women

18
MISSA. M. ARMITT
Director
Summer School
and Extension

JENSEN

REV. J. G.MORDEN
Principal of
Huron College

AZIZ

SISTER ARLENE WALKER


Dean of Brescia College

BETA

DR.D. O.CARRIGAN
Principal of
King's College

BETA

19
DR.J. G. ROWE
Dean of Arts

C. A. VON KUSTER
Dean of Music

BETA

DR. A. E.SCOTT
Dean of Science

DR.G. L. REUBER
Dean of
Social Science

NELSON
DR.W. J. DUNN
Dean of Dentistry

ASHLEY & CRIPPEN

R. M.DILLON
Dean of Engineering

BETA

DR. R.S. MACKAY


Dean of Law

BETA

DR.D. BOOKING
Dean of Medicine
DR. J. A. STEVENSON
Dean of Graduate Studies

J. J. WETTLAUFER
Dean of Business
Administration

DR. A. D. OSBORN
Dean of Library and
Information Sciences

R.C.AIKEN
Dean of Nursing

BETA

DR. E. STABLER
Dean of
Althouse College

22
AWARDS
Faculty of Arts

J. P. Barabe University Gold Medal G.A. Pidgeon The Huron College Medal
C.A. Geretti The Brescia College Advisory Board Gold Medal Sister R. Renaud The Prize of the Cultural Attache of France in
B.F. Hessenaur The Spanish Ambassador in Ottawa Book Prize Toronto for Excellence in French 495
J.W. Knight The Huron College Medal Sutherland
J. A. University Gold Medal
J.R. Lisowski University Gold Medal N.K.Treloar University Gold Medal
M.J. May University Gold Medal D. Whelan The King's College Gold Medal
D.B.Millen University Gold Medal M.L. Young The Helen M.B. Allison Gold Medal
M.A. Parmentier The Prize of the Cultural Attache of France in
Toronto for Excellence in French 499

School of Business Administration

R. Boucher The GSW Centennial Medal J. P. Killing The GSW Centennial Medal

Faculty of Dentistry

D.J. Kenny American Academy of Periodontology I.R. MacLean American Association of Orthodontists' Award in
Canadian Academy of Periodontology Oral-facial Growth
Clinical Pedodontic Award M. MacLoghlin The Board of Governors' Medal for General
Dental Sciences Research Award Proficiency
Fixed Prosthodontics Award The London and District Dental Society Award
Pro Liberis Prize American Academy of Dental Radiology Award
J.R. Lind American Association of Endodontists American Academy of Oral Medicine Award
Canadian Society of Dentistry for Children Award

Faculty of Engineering Science

G. B. Atkinson The Engineering Institute of Canada (London K.P. Tang The Harry Cross Medal
Branch) Best Paper Award B.E. Voegelin, Jr. The Professional Engineers Gold Medal
M.E. Hare The Vance Medal University Silver Medal — Chemical Engineering
P.W. Jones University Silver Medal — Mechanical Engineering

Faculty of Law

P. Atkinson Arthur T. Little Scholarship M.P. Downs The Canada Law Book Company Limited Prize
The Butterworth Prize for Academic Excellence R.M. Martin The Carswell Company Limited Prize
The Canada Permanent Trust Law Prize J.W.Sabine The A.B. Siskind Scholarship
The London Life Insurance Company Ltd. Prize P.E. Vivian The Special Prize in Commercial Law Subjects

Faculty of Medicine

W.F.Clark The class of 1917 Prize P.M. Nichol The Class of '55 Prize
M.J. Gannon The Horner Ophthalmology Gold Medal S.R. Pearl The Dr. Lawrence A. Burk Memorial Prize
The Kingsford Scholarship in Pediatrics
C.N. Ghent The Pearl Devenow Fox Memorial Prize in E. Ralph The Medical Alumni Gold Medal
Obstetrics and Gynecology The Alpha Kappa Kappa Gold Medal
The Dr. T.H. Coffey Memorial Prize in The Eccles Scholarship
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation The Poulenc Award and Gold Medal
A.R. Kusher The Lange Award J.D. Spence The Ivan Hamilton Smith Memorial Prize
L.J. Margesson The Abbott Prize in Anesthesia W.J. Wall The Dr. Fred N. Hagerman Memorial Prize in Surgery
D.J.C. McCuaig The Lange Award D.D. Waters The J.B. Campbell Memorial Scholarship in Medicine
J.H.R.McKeen The Dr. R.A.H. Kinch Prize in Community Medicine W. Wassenaar The Roche Scholarship
R.R. Waugh The Horner Otolaryngology Gold Medal Award

Faculty of Music Faculty of Nursing

M.E. Henry The Alumni Gold Medal L.M. Donaldson The Alumni Gold Medal

Faculty of Science

R.G.Bain University Gold Medal B. Guindon University Gold Medal


R.F. Barr Alumni Gold Medal M.A. Hancock London Life Gold Medal
The Society of Chemical Industry Merit Award G. Harris The Dillon Gold Medal
S.J.C. Box The Raymond Compton Dearie Gold Medal M.C. Lawes The Northern Life Gold Medal
G.E. Branfield University Gold Medal D.E. Matthews The Joseph J. and Annie R. Kingston Gold Medal
R.W.Bradley The Stan C. Reade Essay Prize K.J.Smith The Dean Russell (Limited) Award
A. P. Gilman The Dean Russell (Limited) Award University Gold Medal
L.D. Gorman University Gold Medal G.A. Vilos University Gold Medal
A.N.Grace University Gold Medal

Faculty of Social Science

M.E.Antill The R.B. Liddy Gold Medal CD. French The National Council of Jewish Women of Canada
N.L. Bauer His Excellency the Governor-General's Medal (London section) Scholarship
The Frances Weir Scholarship J.F. Graham The S.F. Glass Gold Medal
J.W. Belcher University Gold Medal A.D. Hux The Joseph Henry Marshall Prize
G. Bolotenko The Robert LaVerne Eagleson Gold Medal P.J. Livermore The Canadian Association of Geographers Prize
J. R.W. Calvert University Gold Medal The Economic Council (Erie Region) Award
P.K. Cumberland The Brescia of Arts Award for Home Economics M.E. Lumley University Gold Medal
F.H. Cummings The Thomas B. Richardson Gold Medal H.G. MacKenzie The S.F. Glass Gold Medal
M.C. Martin The International Nickel Company Award
25
ABLE, NANCY ELIZABETH
B. A., Secretarial Science

AITKEN.RHODAJANE
OCIAL B.A., History

ALEXANDROFF, CHERYL HONEY


B.A., Sociology

ANDERSON, MARION MORSE


B.A., Psychology

ANDERSON, PETER ALLAN


B.A., Economics

ASHLEY, LESLIE ROSS


B.A., History

ASTLES, KAREN ANN


B.A., Psychology

CIENCES ATKINS, RANDALL LESTER


8. A., Economics

ANTILL, MARY ELIZABETH


Hon. B.A., Psychology

AYLESWORTH, RICHARD ALAN


E B.A., Economics

N
BACKUS, RUTH ANN

C B.A.,

BADALATO, WILLIAM JOSEPH


Geography

B.A., Geography

E
S
26
BAKER, THOMAS EARL
B.A., Economics

BAILEY, JANET LOUISE


B.A., Psychology

BAILEY, ROBERT ALAN


B.A., P.H.R.E.

BAILEY, SUSAN MARIE


B.A., Secretarial Science

BAIRD, SHARON ANN


Hon. B. A., P.H.R.E.

BALDWIN, THOMAS MURRAY


B.A., Political Science

BALFOUR, DAVID L.
B.A., Psychology

BANTING, BRUCE WILLIAM


B.A., Psychology

BARIL, LYNNE DIANE


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

BARILL, WILLIAM ANDREW


Hon. B.A., Political Science

BARKER, DAVID JOHN


B.A., Psychology

BARNES, CHERRY LEE


B.A., Sociology

BAUER, NANCY LOU


B.A., Psychology

BAUER, SHIRLEY JUNE


B.A., Home Economics

BAUMACH, MARGARET ANNE


B.A., Psychology

BAXTER, DONNA LOUISE


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

BEATTIE, SHIRLEY J.

B.A., Psychology

BEATTIE, STEPHEN GRANT


B.A., History

27
BEATTIE, WANDA E.
B.A., Psychology

BEAVERS, ROBERT G.
Hon. B.A., Journalism

BECKE, LORETTA
B.A., Secretarial Science

BEDDARD, BONNIE JOANNE


B.A., Secretarial Science

BEGGS, NANCY JANE


B.A., Politics

BERNSTEIN, WILLIAM
B.A., History

BERRINGTON, CHERYL LYNN


B.A., Secretarial Science

BERTRAM, JAMES ARTHUR


B.A., Psychology

BEZAN, DOROTHY J.

Hon. B.A., History

BEZAN, THOMAS W.
B.A., Economics

BLACK, JOHN THOMAS


B.A., History

BLACKBURN, OLIVE MARNA


B.A., Home Economics

BLACKWELL, DOUGLAS D.
B.A., History

BLACKWELL, MARGARET G.
B.A., Sociology

BIEWENGA.H.RENEE
B.A., History

BOLOTENKO, GEORGE
Hon. B.A., History

BONDY,JO ANN
B.A., Psychology

BONGARD, ANNE
B.A., Psych, and Eng.

28
BORSA, MICHAEL PHILIP
B.A., Geography

BOUCHER, MICHAEL P.

B.A., Political Science

BOURIS, WILLIAM G.
B.A., Psychology

BOWERS, DALE ANNE


B.A., Home Economics

BOWMAN, JUDITH A.
Hon. P.H.R.E.

BOWMAN, SHARON L.
B.A., History

BOWYER, SHERRY LEE


B.A., Politics

BOYCE, CYNTHIA J.

B.A., Home Economics

BOYCE, HARRY M.
B.A., Psychology

BOYD, DANIEL J.

B.A., Economics

BRACEY, ALAN H.
B.A., Psychology

BRANDON, MICHAEL A.
B.A., Economics

BREWITT, ROBERTA.
B.A., Economics

BROCK, MARGARET E.P.


B.A., Secretarial Science

BROCK, CHARLES JEFFREY H.


B.A., Psychology

BROOKS, RONALDS.
B.A., Economics

BROPHEY, EVA J.

B.A., History

BROWN, R. CHRISTOPHER
B.A., Psychology

29
UNIVERSITY COLLEG:

BROWN, DEBBIE SUSAN


B.A., Home Economics

BROWN, HELEN V.
Home Economics
B.A.,

BROWN, LAURIE E.
B.A., Psychology

BROWN, ROBERT W.
B.A., History

BRUCE,BRENDA J.

B.A., Psychology

BUCHOWSKI, RAY H.
Hon. B.A., History

BUCKRELL, MARGARET A.
B.A., Psychology

BUNDY,SUE
B.A., Psychology

BUNT, WENDY ELIZABETH


B.A., Sociology

30
BURCHMORE, CINDY L.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

BURGER, ROBERT F.
B.A., Psychology

BURLEY, PATRICIA M.
B.A., History

BYWAY, JUDITH D.
B.A., Psychology

CADE, JAMES R.
B.A., History & Politics

CALVERT, JOHN R.
Hon. B.A., History

CAMERON, ANDREW D.
Hon. 8. A., History

CAMERON, BARBARA JANE


B.A., Psychology

CAMERON, NANCY ELLEN


Hon. B.A., History

CAMPBELL, JESSICA J.

B.A., Psychology

CAMPBELL, WAYNE D.
B.A., History

CAMPBELL, J. WAYNE
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

CANE, THOMAS MICHAEL


Hon. B.A., Political Science

CARLESSO, SYLVANO ANGELO


B.A., Political Science

CARPENTER, HELEN L.
B.A., History

CARTER, CHRISTINE L.

B.A., History

CASCADEN, RONALD C.
Hon. B.A., Geography

CASH, LINDA M.
B.A., History

-^.'id

31
CASHABACK, THOMAS H.
B.A., Geography

CHARETTE, WAYNE
B.A., Economics

CHARRON, CAROLYN R.
B.A., Psychology

CHASE, RONALD J.

B.A., Psychology

CHILDERHOSE, LAURA E.
B.A., History

CHILDS, ROBERT L.

B.A., Sociology

CHM I EL, JOSEPH J.

B.A., Psychology

CHRISTIAN, PETER D.
B.A., Political Science

CHUBB, SANDRA D.
B.A., Economics

CLARK, ALAN
B.A., Psychology

CLARK, CHERYL A.
Home Economics
B.A.,

CLARK, JILL F.

B.A., Economics
^7;k
CLARK, RICHARDS.
Hon. B.A., Political Science

CLOSS,JANE A.
B.A., Sociology

COBB, ROBERT BRUCE


B.A., Geography

CONNELL, ROBERT E.
B.A., Geography

CONNOLLY, THOMAS R.
B.A., Geography

32
CONWAY, JOHN E.
B.A., Economics

CONWAY. WALLACE G.
B.A., Economics

COOK, SUZANNE
B.A., Psychology

COOPER, AUDREY F.
B.A., Sociology

COPP, SUSAN T.
B.A., Psychology

CORRIGAN,TERRY J.

B.A., Psychology

COUGHLIN, PADDY G.
B.A., Economics

CRAIG, DONALD L.
B.A., Geography

CRAIG, DOUGLAS C.
Hon. B.A., History

CRAIGEN, SHARON D.
B.A., Psychology

CRAMER, KENNETH H.
B.A., Economics

CRAWFORD, LINDA A.
B.A., Psychology

CREAL, CATHERINE J.
B.A., Home Economics

CREMA, ERMANNO
B.A., Economics

CROWE, RICHARD F.

Hon. B.A., Economics

CULLIS, SUSAN MEREDITH


B.A., Psychology

CUMBERLAND, PENNY KATHRYN


B.A., Home Economics

CUMMING, ROBERT ALEXANDER


B.A., History

33
CUMMINGS, FRANCIS HARRY
Hon. B.A., Geography

DADSON, MARGERY L.
B.A., Home Economics

DAGNEAU, NANCY E.

B.A., Psychology

DALLIMORE, RONALD I.

B.A., Psychology

DAMAREN, NORMAN J.

B.A., Psychology

DAPUETO, IRENE H.
B.A., History

DARNELL, JOHN L.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

DARRAGH.PAUL L.
B.A. Psychology

DAVID, MARGARET E.

B.A., Secretarial Science

DAVIDSON, NORMAN E.
B.A., Geography

DAVIDSON, ROSST.
B.A., Sociology

DAVIS, J. CAMPBELL
B.A., Psychology & Sociology

DAWSON, KENNETH J.

Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

DAY, MAUREEN L.

B.A., Secretarial Science

DEAN,BRENDAM.
B.A., History & English

DEANE, PETER A.
B.A., Economics

DECOEME, DIANE V.
B.A., Psychology

DEGUERRE, DONALD W.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

34
DE LEEUW, ERIC
B.A., History

DENISON, BARBARA P.

8. A., Psychology

DODSON, WILLIAM A.
B.A., Economics

DONIHEE,TILTONT.
B.A., History

DOTZKO, DEANNAM.
B.A., Secretarial Science

DOUGLAS, LINDAS.
B.A., Econonnics

DOVER, SUSAN C.
B.A., Secretarial Science

DOYLE, DOROTHY
B.A., History

DRAPER, ROBERT MAX


B.A., Sociology

DUBAS, LINDA SUSAN


B.A., History

DUNBAR, WILLIAM BRIAN


B.A., Psychology

DUNCOMBE, RONALDS.
B.A., Economics

DUNLEAVY, LINDA D.
Home Economics
B.A.,

DUNLOP, WILLIAM D.
B.A., History & Philosophy

DWYER, MICHAEL J.

B.A.,P.H.R.E.

DYCK, E. DENNIS
B.A., History

EADY,TOM FRANK
B.A., Psychology

EASSON,DOREEN LYNN
B.A., Home Economics

35
EATON, JOHN R.
B.A., Economics

EITEL, EDWARDS.
B.A., Economics

ELLEY, MARKB.
Hon. B.A., History

EMMETT, BRIAN A.
Hon. B.A., Economics

EVERETT, CATHRYN L.

B.A., Psychology

FAIR, DONALD BARRY


Hon. B.A., History

FALCONER, NEIL ROBERT


B.A., Geography

FARRELL, WALTER F.

B.A., Psychology

FEDCHUN, JOHN D.
B.A., Psychology

FERRIS, JACQUELINE L.

Hon. B.A., Psychology

FIELD, LARRY D.
B.A., Geography

FILION, LORETTA J.

B.A., Psychology & Biology

FISCHER, MARGARET PATRICIA


B.A., Geography

FONG, SHUK HAN BETTY


B.A., Psychology

FOREMAN, M. LYNNE
B.A., Psychology

FORREST, ELEANOR J.

B.A., Sociology

FORSYTH, JOHN E.
& Philosophy
B.A., Sociology

FOUNTAIN, ALISON A.
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

36
FRANCIS, BONNIE J.

B.A., Secretarial Science

FRASER, DOANIEL L.
B.A., Psychology

FRENCH, COLLEEN DOROTHY


B.A., Psychology

GALLOWAY, WILDAM.
B.A., Psychology

GAMMAGE, SUSAN A.
B.A., Psychology

GAMMON, JANET L.
B.A., History
i 'fir it >i M.
GARROWAY, SUSAN J.

B.A., Economics

GAUS, ARTHUR J.
B.A., History & Economics

GEMMELL. SUSAN M.
B.A., Psychology

GIANNANDREA, VINCENT
B.A., Psychology

GILES, DAVID CHARLES


B.A., Psychology & Sociology

GILLELAND, PATRICIA J.

B.A., Psychology

GINSBERG, PETER E.

B.A., Psychology

GODARD, D. GEOFFREY H.
B.A., Psychology

GOHM, GLENN HOWARD


B.A., Psychology

GOODWIN, CHRISTOPHER J.K.


B.A., Politics & Geography

GORDON, SUSAN G.
B.A., Home Economics

GORHAM, INGRID SHARON


B.A., Psychology

37
GOSAR, MICHAEL H.
Hon. B.A., Geography

GOSS, ROBERTS.
B.A., Economics

GOULDING, GEORGE DAVID


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

GOWDY, JOHN MICHAEL


B.A., History

GRACE, HAROLD ELLIS


Economics & Pol. So.
B.A.,

GRANT, ALEX J.

B.A., Economics

GRAVES, THOMAS E.
B.A., Economics

GREAVES, LORRAINE J.

B.A., Sociology

GREEN, DALE W.
Hon. B.A., History

GREENING, LAWRENCE W.
B.A., Political Science

GREENWOOD, MARY BERNICE


B.A., Psychology

GRIFFIN, MARY LEE


Hon. B.A.,P.H.E.

GUALTIERI, MICHAEL
B.A., Economics

GUEST, DOUGLAS G.
B.A., Geography

GUSEN, WILLIAM M.
B.A., Psychology

HALBERT, JUDITH L.

B.A., Political Science

HALL, KRISTIE M.
B.A., Psychology

HALMO, RUDY MICHAEL


Hon. B.A., History

38
HALNA, THEODORE L.

B.A., Geography

HAMILTON, DAVID R.B.


B.A., Economics

HAMMOND, SHARON G.
B.A., Secretarial Science

HARDMAN, PATRICIA ANN


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

HARRINGTON, NANCY J.

B.A., Secretarial Science

HARRIS, CHRISTOPHER C.
B.A., Psychology

HARRIS, GEORGE W.
B.A., Economics

HARRIS, JOY ANNE


B.A., Sociology

HARTWELL, DOUGLAS J.

B.A., Economics

HARVEY, CHERYL ANN


Hon. B.A., Psychology

HAWSON, MARY JANE


Hon. B.A., Economics

HAY, GWENDOLYN A.
B.A., History

HAY, MARSHA LEIGH


Hon. B.A., History

^WHS
HAZELL, TERRYLEA ANNE
B.A., Psychology

HAZLITT, GREGORY HILL


B.A., Geography

HEMMING, BRUCE CHARLES


B.A., Economics

HENDERSON, JAYNE ELIZABETH


B.A., French & English

HENDERSON, PETER M.
B.A., Economiics

39
HENDRICKSON, BERNARD W.
B.A., Geography

HENSHALL, JAMES ALBERT


Hon. B.A., Politics

HERTZBERG, STEPHEN A.
B.A., Economics

HIDER, CAROL L.

B.A., Psychology

HILHORST, ANNE CAROLINE


B-A., Psych. & Zoology

HILKER, DONNA MICHELE


B.A., Economics

HILL, GARY GEORGE


B.A., Psych. & English

HILL, SHEILA M.
B.A., Secretarial Science

HILLMAN, BEVERLY
B.A., Economics

HILTON, JEFFERY MALCOLM


Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

HIPWELL, JULIE E.
& English
B.A., Psychology

HODGINS, BRIAN J.

B.A., Economics

HODGINS, JUDITH M.
B.A., Psychology

HOGGARTH, GEORGE A.
B.A., Psychology

HOLLAND, SHARON R.
B.A., Psychology

HOLMES, BARBARA J.

B.A., Psychology

HOLOWCHUK, BONNIE E.

Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

HONCHARUK, KATHRYN J.

B.A., Secretarial Science

40
HORNE, ELIZABETH F.
& Zoology
B.A., Psychology

HOWE, BRIAN N.
B.A., History

HOWES, DAVID D.
B.A., Psychology

HOWES, PETER J.E.


B.A., Geography

HUl, LAICHI
B.A., Psychology

HUME, MICHAELS.
B.A., History

HURAS, ALLAN L.

Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

HUSTLER. JOHN G.
B.A., Economics

HUTCHISON, GAIL E.

B.A., Psychology

HUX, ALLEN
B.A., History

HUXTBALE, DONNA
B.A.,P.H.R.E.

INGLIS, ROBERT GRANT


B.A., Psychology

IVORY, ANNE LOUISE


B.A., Home Economics

JACKSON, DONALD DAVID


Hon. B.A., History

JACKSON, JOANNE A.
B.A., Secretarial Science

JACKSON, THOMAS W.
B.A., Sociology

JAMIESON, CLARA LOUISE


B.A., Home Economics

JASKOT, STANLEY PETER


B.A., Political Science

41
JELLISON, LINDA
B.A., Psychology

JENKINS, KATHRYN E.

B.A., Psychology

JOHNSTON, DAVID D.
B.A., Economics

JOHNSTON, LILAM.
Hon. B.A., History

JOLLIFFE, BONNIE L.

B.A., Geography

JONKER, MARY ANN


B.A., Home Economics

JORDAN, DIANNE B.
B.A., Political Science

KEAY, MICHAEL
Hon. B.A., History

KEENER, WILLIAM M.
Hon.. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

KELLY, ROBERT
B.A., Economics

KENNY, EDWARD J.

B.A., Economics

KERR. FRANCES I.

B.A., Secretarial Science

KEYES, MARGARET I.

Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

KILBREATH, ANN
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

KINCHLEA, MARILYN A.
B.A., History

KIRCZYK, ANNE
B.A., Psychology

KISLOCK, DONALD W.
B.A., Economics

KNIGHT, JAMES W.
Hon. B.A., History & Phil.

42
KNOWLAND, GRAHAM PAUL
B.A., Political Science

KNOWLES, JACK E.
Hon. B.A., Economics

KNOX, ELISABETH PATRICIA


B.A., Psychology

KOLENC, LORNA A.C.


B.A., Geography

KOSONIC, DAVID K.
B.A., Political Science

KOSTUR.BARBRAA.
B.A., Home Economics

KOZITS, BRIANS.
Hon. B.A., Geography

KOZLO, LINDA L.

B.A., Psychology & Sociology

KRISTOFF, F.WAYNE
Hon. B.A., History

KROKOSZYNSKI, CHRISTOPHER N.
8. A., Psychology

LACHINE, PATRICIA E.

B.A., History

LAI, 01 HENG
B.A., Home Economics

LAIKEN, GORDON H.
B.A., Psychology

LAMBERT, DOUGLAS WILLIAM


B.A., Economics

J^MXt LANGSTAFF,
B.A., Psychology
B.

LANCASTER, SYLVIA E.
ELIZABETH

& Psychology
B.A., History

LANGFORD, PATRICIAL ANNE


B.A., Psychology

LANGFORD, SANDY MICHAEL


B.A., Sociology

43
All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances.
And one man in his time plays many parts.
His acts being seven ages. First the infant,
. . . Then the whining schoolboy, with his satchel
And shining morning face, creeping like a snail
Unwilling to school. And then the lover.
Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad
Made to his mistress' eyebrow. Then the soldier.
Full of strange oaths. . .

Shakespeare, As You Like It

LAPOINTE, MARY LOU


B.A., Secretarial Science

LA ROSE, ROBERTA.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

LATIMER, HUGH ALLAN


B.A., Psychology

LAWSON, ORMOND KENNEDY


B.A., Psychology

LEACH, JOHN E.

B.A., Economics

LEAL, WILLIAM RUSSELL


B.A., Economics

LEAVY, MARIANNE
B.A., Psychology

LEBEER, FRIEDA MARIA


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

LEBOLD, HAROLD E.
B.A., Sociology

44
LEESON, JUDITH A.
B.A., History

LEIGHTON, DEBORAH M.
B.A., Psychology

LEITCH, COLIN DUNCAN


Hon. B.A., Political Science

LEITCH, PAMELA J.

B.A., Psychology & P.H.R.E.

LENIOR.KATHERINE M.E.
B.A., Psychology

LENTSIUS, MARIANNE
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E. & Psychology

LEONARD, PATRICK W.
B.A., Psychology

LESCHIED, DONALD W.
B.A., Sociology

LESCHIED, ROBERTS.
B.A., Economics

LEUNG, FAT KUEN


B.A., Economics

LEVKOE, STEVEN A.
B.A., Psychology

LENINGTON, ANN
Hon. B.A., Geography

LIN, NANCY (DING DING)


B.A., Psychology

LIND, MARY E.

8. A., Psychology

LINDSAY, JOHN M.
B.A., Psychology

LITTLE, BARBARA D.
8. A., Psychology

LIVERMORE, PERCY JAMES


Hon. B.A., Geography

LIVINGSTONE, RICHARD JOHN


8. A., Psychology

45
LO, MIRIAM
B.A., Geography

LOCKINGTON, DOUGLAS R.
B.A., Economics

LOFASO, GAETANO
B.A., Economics

LOGAN, MAUREEN E.
Hon. B.A., History

LOWE. PAULA D.
B.A., Home Economics

LUK, KENNETH
B.A., Political Science

LUMLEY, MARY E.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

LUSH, JOANNE E.

B.A., Political Science

MACDONALD, KENNETH R.B.


B.A., Economics

MacDONALD, MARYILYN, G.
B.A., Geography

MacDONALD, SANDRA M.L.


B.A., Psychology

MacDONNELL, DICK B.

B.A., Economics

MacDOUGALL, J.D. RUTH


B.A., Geography

MACIVER, ROLAND K.
& Political Science
B.A., History

MacKENZIE, DONALD KEITH


B.A., Geography

MACLEOD, MARGARET F.

B.A., History

MacPHERSON, JOANNE C.
B.A., Psychology & English

MacPHERSON, J. DOUGLAS W.
B.A., History

46
MACRAE, BONNIE M.
B.A., Secretarial Science

MAHONEY, RICHARD H.
B.A., Psychology

MALCOLM, KEITH

iTy ^^i^J I
J.

Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.
I
MALLOY, MARY F.
B.A., Home Econonnics

MARSHALL, MICHELE J.

B.A., Psychology

MARTIN, GALE A.
B.A., Geography

MARTINDALE, MARILYN J.

B.A., Secretarial Science

MARTINSEN, GERALDINE M.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

MASTRONARDI, ROBERT A.
B.A., Economics

MATHEWS, MARILYN J.

B.A., Psychology

MATTHISON, JOHN REGINALD


B.A., Economics

McALISTER, PENELOPE A.
B.A., Psychology & Sociology

McALPINE, DEBORAH E.
Hon. B.A., Economics

McCABE, KENNETH F.
B.A., Economics

McCALLUM, WILLIAM KENNETH


B.A., Political Science

McCarthy, JANE dorothy


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

McCarthy, robert bruce


B.A., History

McCLEAN, DORIS CATHERINE


B.A., Psychology

47
McClelland, suzanne e.

B.A., Psychology

McCLURE, DONALD M.
B.A., Economics

McCLURE, MARGARET A.
B.A., Home Economics

McCLURE, MURIEL M.
B.A., History

McCRACKEN, FAITH H.L.


B.A., Psychology

Mcculloch, ann louise


B.A., History

McCUTCHEON, GERTRUDE A.
B.A., History & English

McDonald, WENDY r.
B.A., Psychology

McFADDEN, GEORGE F.

B.A., History

48
Ican be half only when am whole: I

To sooth your nnind, of mine must be sure;I

To treat your sense, my own must pain endure;


To slack your thirst, my own must not toll.
I

How much am deserved of your soul


I

I weigh by mine; and if it cannot pure


Approach your own, but our love injure —
I

Imust be one to win toward my goal.


Thus if to you oft seem deep in thought,
I

Or too teasing with amourous delay.


It is that love is not so easy caught.
Ifwe our all do not bring into play
To wreath a love knot intricately wrought.
We are nought then but animated clay.

David Lindsay

McFADDEN, JOHN WAYNE


B.A., Geography

McFADZEAN, CHARLES DOUGLAS


B.A., History

McGAW, DARRY, LESLIE


B.A., Psychology

MclNNIS, BRUCE WILLIAM


B.A., Economics

McKAY, BRIAN A.
B.Th., Theology

McKEEVER, SUSAN R.
B.A., Psychology

Mclaughlin, Stephen j.

B.A., Psychology & History

McLEOD, JOHN R.
B.A., Economics

McKELLAR, GLENN NORMAN


Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.
McLEAN, WILLIAM DAVID
B.A., Political Science

McMillan, thomas john


B.A., Geography

McNABB, STUART A.
B.A., Economics

McNALL, BARBARA A.
B.A., Psychology

McNEIL, HUGH J.

B.A., Economics & History

McNeill, JUDITH T.
B.A., Home Economics

McTEER, WILLIAM G.
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

MEARS, SUXANNE E.

B.A., Sociology

MICOK, CAROL ANN


B.A., Sociology

MIDDLETON, LINDA A.
B.A., Secretarial Science

MIKITIUK, ESTELLE A.
B.A., Sociology

MILES, BRUCE A.
B.A., Psychology

MILLER, MAUREEN E.

B.A., Psychology

MILLS, FRANK L.

Hon. B.A., Geography

MINGAY, PAULM.
B.A., Economics

MITCHELL, BRIAN R.
B.A., Psychology

MONTGOMERY, NELSON C.
B.A., Geography

MOORE, ROBERTO.
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

50
MORLEY, ROBERT J.

B.A., Psychology

MORRIS, ROBERT J.

Hon. B.A., Journalism

MORROW, NORMA JEAN


B.A., Secretarial Science

MOSEY, ROBERT TERRANCE


B.A., Economics

MOSTOWYK, MORRIS
8. A., Economics

MULLIGAN, LOUIS J.

B.A., Sociology

MUNN, LYNDA E.
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

MURDOCH, MARGARET G.
B.A., Economics

MURPHY, MICHAEL F.

B.A., History

MURRAY, ANN A.
B.A., Economics

MURRAY, BARBARA A.G.


B.A., History

MUMBY, DAVID
B.A., History

MUNDS, MARY M.
B.A., Sociology

MURCOCH, KENNETH B.
B.A., History

MUZYKA, MICHAEL J.

B.A., Psychology

NAGELIESEN, NANCY E.
B.A., Home Economics

NESS, GARY WILLIAM


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

51
NEIL, DOUGLAS
B.A., Economics

NEMETH, ERNEST
B.A., Geography

NICOLSON, ELIZABETH LYNN


B.A., Psychology

NOLAN, DAVID CHARLES


B.A., Economics

NOONAN, ROBERT JOHN


B.A., Geography

NORRIS, SANDRA GALE


B.A., History

NORTON, GAY
B.A.,P.H.R.E.

NOWICKI, VICTOR
B.A., Geography

NYE, LAURA JANE


B.A., Psychology

NYWENING, SYLVIA
B.A., Psychology

OATMAN, DAVID W.
B.A., History

O'BOYLE, SUSAN M.
B.A., History

O'BRIGHT, DOUGLAS C.
Hon. B.A., Geography

ODELL, DAVID G.
B.A., History

O'FARRELL, JOHN H.
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

OLLERENSHAW, JO-ANN RUTH


B.A., Psychology

PACKOWSKI, MARY-MARGARET E.

B.A., Psychology

PAGE, LARRY B.

B.A., Geography

''^
I find that the three major administrative
problems on a campus are sex for the students,
athletics for the alumni, and parking for the
faculty.

- Clark Kerr

PAINTER, ERNEST W.
B.A., Psychology

PALMER, VIRGINIA P.

B.A., Psychology

PARK, MARY JANE


B.A., Psychology

PARKER, MARY ELLEN


B.A., History

PARRISH, PATRICIA ANN


B.A., Home Economics

PEARCE, SUSAN E.

B.A., Psychology

^^.W/ 4.

PEARCE, WILLIAM A.
B.A., Economics

PEROVICH, ROY
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

PETHER,GLENNA R.E.
B.A., Psychology

PFEIFER, JANE BARBARA


B.A., Psychology & English

53
PHILIP, KIM GIBSON
Hon. B.A., Geography

PIERCE, BARBARA
B.A., Geography

PIERCE, BEVERLEY ANN


Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

PIKOR, JACQUELINE
B.A., Home Economics

PINFOLD, HELEN-SUE
B.A., Psychology

PITHER, RONALD M.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

PITKIN, PAUL DAVID


Hon. B.A.,P.H.E.

POLISHUK, BORIS
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

PONESSE, RICHARD G.
B.A., Economics

POPE, DAVID C.
B.A., Geography

PORTER, GAIL L.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

POST, ELIZABETH M.
B.A., Home Economics

POWERS, MAUREEN L.
i
B.A., Psychology

PRICE, CAROLYN E.

B.A., Secretarial Science

PRITCHETT, JOANNE
B.A., Secretarial Science

PRONG, BRIAN D.
B.A., History

PUDNEY, MEREDITH LEE


B.A., Sociology

PUHKY, JANET L.

B.A., Psychology

54
PULLEN, RODERICK JOHN L.

Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

PURTON, JOYCE LYNN


B.A., Secretarial Science

QUANT, VALERIE R.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

RABEL, JOSEPH C.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

RABINOVITCH, JANNIT S.

B.A., Psychology

RAINER,BRIGITTE A.
B.A., Economics

READ, JOHN J.D.


Hon. B.A., Economics

RENKA, JUDY ANNE


B.A., Psychology

RENNICK, MARY GAIL


B.A., Secretarial Science

REYNOLDS, BRENDA L.

Home Economics
B.A.,

RICE, KENNETH L.

B.A., Psychology

RICHARDSON, ROBERT S.

B.A., History

RICHARDSON, WILLIAM J.

B.A., Geography

RIGSBY, TERRY J.

B.A., History

RILEY, HELENA JEAN


B.A.,Economics

ROBINSON, BARBARA E.
B.A., Home Economics

ROBINSON, ELIZABETH ANNE


B.A., Psychology

ROBINSON, PAULA LESLIE


B.A., Psychology

55
RODGM AN, SUSAN D.
B.A., Psychology

RODRIGUES, JAMESA.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

ROOK, PAUL
B.A., History

ROTH, HAROLD MILLAN


B.A., Psychology

ROWBOTHAM, BEVERLEY ANNE


B.A., Sociology

ROWE, WILLIAM BARRY


B.A., Psychology

RUFFELL, F.PAUL
B.A., History

RUNDLE, JAMES D.
B.A., Economics

RUPAR, PATRICIA ANN


Hon. B.A., History

RUTSCH, F.DENNIS
& Phil.
B.A., Psychology

SAARINEN, KAAREN N.
B.A., Psychology

SALES, LAWRENCE W.
B.A., Economics & Psychology

SALMON!, ALAN W.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

SANDERCOTT, LYNNE J.

B.A., History

SANNELLA, PAUL A.
B.A., Economics

SAUNDERS, LARRY M.
B.A., Economics

SCHMIDT, FREDERICK W.
B.A., Economics

SCHMIDT, OTTO L.

B.A., Psychology
SCHNAPP, STANLEY J.

B.A., Psychology

SCHOLZ, JOHN F.
B.A., Psychology

SCHWANZ, GARY E.
B.A., Psychology

SCOTT, DAVID
B.A., Psvchoiogy

SCOTT-WHITE, CAROLINE
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

SEABORN, JAMES EDWARD


B.A., History

SEBBEN, LINDA HEATHER


B.A., History

SEE, M.PATRICIA
B.A., Economics

SHAMAS, THOMAS BOB


B.A., Geography

SHELDON, TIMOTHY R.
B.A., Psychology

SHEPHERD, PAMELA J.

B.A., Psychology

SHOULDICE, JOHN GRAHAM


Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

SHOULDICE, WALTER ARTHUR


B.A., Geography

SILCOX, CHERYL E.

B.A., Psychology

SILVERTHORN, PATRICIA J.

B.A., Psychology

SIMPSON, JOHN C.
B.A., Psychology

SKVORC, MARCIA
B.A., Secretarial Science

SMALLDON, ROBERT D.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

57
A clerk there was of Oxenforde also,
That unto logichadde longe ygo.

For him was lever have at his beddes heed.


Twenty bookes, clad in blak or reed.
Of Aristotle and his Philosophye,
Than robes riche, or f ithele or gay sautrye.
But al be that he was a philosophre,
Yit had he but litel gold in cofre;

But al that he mighte of his freendes hente,


On bookes and on learning he is spent . . .

— Chaucer

SMELLIE, JAMES H.
B.A., Political Science

SMITH, BARBARA ANNE


B.A., Geography

SMITH, GREGORY G.
B.A., Geography

SMITH, ROBERT
B.A., Geography

SMITH, SALLY M.
B.A., Geography

SMITH, JANICE M.
B.A., Psychology & English

SMITH, SHARON ANNE


B.A., Psychology

SMITH, SHEILA RUTH


B.A., Psychology

SMITH, WILLIAM A.
B.A., Economics & History

58
SNYDER, ROSS BRIAN
Hon. B.A., History

SOMERVILLE, JANE E.
B.A., Political Science

SPENCER, JOAN L.

B.A., Psychology

STAFFORD, NANCY J.

B.A., Psychology

STANBURY, MARGARET JANE


B.A., History

STAPLES, GWEN M.
B.A., Secretarial Science

STECIUK, WILLIAM PETER


Hon. B.Sc, Physiology

STEINMAN, LARRY RAY


B.A., History & Political Science

STEWART, MARY A.
B.A., Secretarial Science

STEWART, NANCY ELIZABETH


B.A., Home Economics

STOKES, DOUGLAS J. K.
B.A., Geography

STONE, U. IDA
B.A., Psychology

STOREY, WENDY ANN


Hon. B.A., History

STORIE, ROBERT C.
B.A., Politics

STRACHAN, CLAUDIA JOY


Hon. B.A., Psychology

STRACHAN, ROBERT D.M.


B.A., Economics

STRAITH,M. VICTORIA
B.A., Psychology

STRASSER, GERTRUDE MARGARET


B.A., Home Economics

59
STRONGMAN, NANSI
B.A., Psychology

STUBBS, JAMES N.
B.A., Economics

SUFFIELD, LARRY O.
B.A., Economics

SULLIVAN, DAVID C.
B.A., Political Science

SUTHERLAND, IAN ROBERT


Hon. B.A., Political Science

TETERUCK, LINDA D.
B.A., History

TEWKESBURY, F. ELIZABETH
B.A., Psychology

THOMAS, SUSAN E.

B.A., Psychology

THOMSON, BARBARA JEAN


B.A., Psychology

THOMPSON, LYNDA SUE


B.A., Psychology

THOMPSON, ROBERT H.
B.A., Geography

TINGLE, DONALD WAYNE


B.A., History

TITCOMBE, PETER ALAN


B.A., Economics

TONGE, JOHN MURRAY


B.A., Politics

TOPPING, BARBARA M.
B.A., Home Economics

TRAVERS. RAMSAY RICHARD


B.A., History

TRAVIS, FRED LLOYD


B.A., History

TUCK, MRS. MARILYN


B.A., Psychology

60
TUGENDER, DAVID M.
B.A., Psychology

TUCK, ROGER N.
B.A., Political Science

TURLEY, BRADFORD T.

B.A., Psychology

UDRIS, ASTRIDAZ.
Hon. B.A., Political Science

UFFELMAN, SUSAN E.

B.A., Psychology

UNSWORTH, JIM A.
B.A., Psychology

VALASIS, DESPINA
Hon. B.A., Political Science

VALOVICH, MICHAELS.
B.A., Geography

VERGUNST, ANN
B.A., Dietetics

VERMEER,WILLEM JAN
B.A., Economics

VICARY, CHERYL A.
B.A., History

WALDIE,BRENDAM.
B.A., Sociology

WALSH, JANICE L.

B.A., History

WALTON, BRENDAM.
B.A., Sociology

WARDLE, LINDA J.

B.A., Secretarial Science

WARKMAN, RONALD H.
B.A., Psychology

WASYLKO, WALTER
Hon. B.A., Political Science

WATLINGTON, JAMES A.F.


B.A., Political Science

61
WAYNE, SHELDON M.
B.A., Geography

WEAVER, JULIE ANNE


B.A., Geography

WERRY, PETER N.
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

WESTCOTT, JOAN M.
B.A., Psychology

WHITE, CHARLES G.
Hon. B.A., History

WHITE, FRANCES LEE


B.A., Psychology

WHITE, WENDY JEAN


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

WHITFIELD, GREGORY G.
B.A., Economics

WHITLEY, SUSAN JANE


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

WILEY, JOHN THOMAS


Hon. B.A., Political Science

WILLIAMS, THOMAS G.
B.A., Economics

WILLIAMS, ELIZABETH ANN


Hon. B.A., Political Science

WILLIAMSON, LYNN JANE


B.A., Psychology

WILKINSON, CATHERINE RUTH


Hon. B.A., History

WILSON, W. DONALD
B.A., Economics

WILSON, FRANK JOSEPH


B.A., Geography

WILSON, GEORGE W.
B.A., History

WINTERMUTE, NORMA JEAN


B.A., Psychology

62
WOLFENDEN, WARREN REGINALD
B.A., Sociology

WOOLLEY, DOBORAH J.

B.A., Psychology

WONG, BAKIE
B.A., Sociology

WOOD, SUSAN MARGARET


Hon. B.A., Psychology

WOOSMAN, ROBERT M.
Hon. B.A.,P.H.R.E.

WOOTON, LYNDA KATHLEEN


B.A., Home Economics

WRIGHT, CRAIG A.
B.A., Economics

WRIGHT, DONNALYN MARY


Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

YOSHY, BECKY
B.A., Sociology

YOUNG, EGERTON B.
B.A., Economics

YOUNG, JAMES MURRAY


B.A., Sociology

YOUNG, LEITH H.
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

ZACKS, GERALD A.
B.A., Psychology

ZVANITAJZ, VALDEMARS
Hon. B.A., P.H.R.E.

ZYLSTRA, FREDA
B.A., Home Economics

Meek young men grow up in libraries, believing it

their duty to accept the views which Cicero, which


Locke, which Bacon, have given; forgetful that
Cicero, Locke, and Bacon were only young men in

libraries when they wrote these books.

— Emerson

63
AIKEN, CYRUS A.
B.E.Sc, Electrical Eng.

ALLIN, HAROLD D.
B.E.Sc, Materials Science

AMENT, WALTER M.
B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

NGINEERING ATKINSON, GERALD B.


B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

N
G AZIZ, JULIAN
B.E.Sc, Civil
P.

Eng.

BAETZ, LLOYD N.
I B.E.Sc, Electrical Eng.

N
BAILEY, THOMAS CHARLES
E B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

BARKER, JEFFREY ALAN

E B.E.Sc, Chemical Eng.

R BARRINGTON, JOHN PATRICK


B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

I
BEECHAM, RICHARD
B.E.Sc, Engineering

N
G BIES, RUDOLPH TED
B.E.Sc, Engineering

BIGGAR, DONALD CHARLES


B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

64
BROWN, JAMES RICHARD
B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

BUCHAN, ROBERT
B.E.Sc, Engineering

CALVERT, PHIL N.
B.E.Sc, Engineering

CAMPBELL, DUGALD KENNETH


B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

CARR, CHRISTOPHER JOHN


B.E.Sc, Engineering

CHAMBERS, DONALD A.
B.E.Sc, Electrical Eng.

^I^H •l^lHHHpi ^P^^H CHEUNG,


B.E.Sc,
SIT
Civil
WING
Eng.

tf^ ^Tl '*^^ COHEN, NATHAN


B.E.Sc, Chemical Eng.
P.

COOPER, ROBERT E.
B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

CUNNINGHAM, STEPHEN C.
B.E.Sc, Engineering

DANILIUMAN, EDWARD K.
B.E.Sc, Engineering

DECYK, PETER L.

B.E.Sc, Engineering

DICK, JERRY E.

B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

DMITRIENKO, ALEX
B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

FLINT, THOMAS JOHN


B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

EURO, ALEXANDER
B.E.Sc, Electrical Eng.

HARE.MARJORIE
B.E.Sc, Engineering

HART, ROBERT JAMES


B.E.Sc, Engineering

65
HENRY, PATRICK
B.E.Sc, Engineering

HORWAT, JOHNW.
B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

HUNTER, DONALD WM.


B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

IRELAND, DONALD O.
B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

JAM EBON, DOUGLAS SCOTT


I

B.E.Sc, Electrical Eng.

JONES, PHILIP W.
B.E.Sc, Engineering

LACASSE, GUY
B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

LEAKE, THOMAS BRYON


B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

LEMMER, FRANCIS J.

B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

LEUNG, KING LIM


B.E.Sc, Engineering

MACLEAN, DAVID A.
B.E.Sc, Electrical Eng.

MARIENFELDT, HENRY
B.E.Sc, Engineering

MARR, DONALD GRAHAM


B.E.Sc, Engineering

MARUSCAK, ANDREW
B.E.Sc, Chemical Eng.

McGLONE, JOHN J.

B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

McVICAR, DUNCAN S.

B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

MITCHELL, WILLIAM JOHN


B.E.Sc, Material Science

MORPHET, KEITH A.
B.E.Sc, Engineering

66
ORPANA, ROBERT JOHN
B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eny.

POWELL, JAMIE
B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

RISLER, ANTHONY
B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

ROCHETTE, REAL R.J.


B.E.Sc, Engineering

SAMMUT, JOHN A.
B.E.Sc, Engineering

SMITH, RODERICK
B.E.Sc, Engineering

STEVENS, F. HERBERT
B.E.Sc, Engineering

STEVENS, KEITH V.
B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

TANG, KOK PAN


B.E.Sc, Electrical Eng.

TAYLOR, GORDON W.R.


B.E.Sc, Electrical Eng.

TILLAPAUGH, MURRAY D.
B.E.Sc, Chemical Eng.

TREMBLAY, CLAUDE
B.E.Sc, Engineering

TROTT, CLARENCE R.
B.E.Sc, Mechanical Eng.

TRUDEL, LOUISE RENEE


B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

UESSON, REIN
B.E.Sc, Engineering

VELOCCI, RICHARD
B.E.Sc, Engineering

VOEGELIN.BLEFORD E.

B.E.Sc, Chemical

WALKER, JOHN G.
B.E.Sc, Civil Eng.

67
AGAR, SUZANNE E.
B.A., English & Sociology

ALLIN, SHIRLEY D.
B.A., English

ALLOWAY, DONALD MILLER


B.A., English

AMBROISE, SUSAN M.
B.A., French

ANTONUCCI, KATHRYN ANN


B.A., English & Psychology

ATKINSON, CAROLYN W.
Hon. B.A., French

AUCHINCLOSS, SUSAN E.

B.A., English

BAHNMILLER, DAVID LYLE


B.A., English

BAKKER, ELLEN
B.A., English

BALDOCK, ROBERT G.
B.A., English

BALL, TRACEY J.

B.A., English

BARON, ROBERT L.

B.A., English

68
BARTOLINI, CARLA LINDA
B.A., English

BATTEN, DELLAM.
B.A., French

BEATTIE, VICTORIA K.
B.A., English & History

BEAUCHAMP, GLENNA V.
Hon. B.A., French & German

BENNET, LYNN D.
B.A., English & Psychology

BEVAN, NANCY M.
B.A., Latin & French

BIOCCHI,GAIL ADELE
B.A., English

BODDINGTON, GEORGE B.
B.A., English

BODNER, SUZANNE J.L.


Hon. B.A., French

BONNER, MARGARET A.M.


B.A., English

BOOK, MARGARET J.

B.A., English

BOTHWELL, MARY
B.A., English

BOYES, JEAN M.
B.A., English

BRABANT, BARRY G.
B.A., English

BRADT, ANANCY LOIS


B.A., French & Spanish

BREZICKI, COLIN G.A.


Hon. B.A., English

BROWN, CAROL J.

Hon. B.A., Latin

BROWN, MAUREEN V.
Hon. B.A., English & French

69
BRYON, GAIL LILIAN
B.A., French & Spanish

BUCHKO, MARGARET F.

B.A., English

BURCH.MAXINE P.

B.A., Philosophy

BURKE, NANCY LORRAINE


B.A., English

BURMAN, SUZANNE M.
B.A., Philosophy

CAMERON, GEORGINA M.
Hon. B.A., English

CAMPBELL, JUDY-LYNNE
B.A., English

CAMPBELL, NANCY ILEEN


B.A., English

CAMPBELL, WENDY J.

B.A., English

CAREY, ELAINE MARIE


Hon. B.A., Journalism

CARSE, LYNDA M.
B.A., English

CEPONIS, PETER
8. A., English & Psychology

CHATER, PATRICE E.
B.A., French

CHINA, ANDREINA
B.A., English

CHOLOWSKY, ALEXANDRA
B.A., English

CHRYSLER, WENDY L.

B.A., English

CHUTE, PATRICIA ANNE


Hon. B.A., English

CLIFFORD, JOHN CHARLES


B.A., English

70
CLOUSTON, JOHN S.

M.A., Fa.'nch

COCKBURN, DONALD MICHAEL


B.A., English

COGHILL, JUDITH ANN


Hon. B.A., English

COLLINS, MARY LYNNE


B.A., English

COLLINS, PATRICIA ANNE


B.A., French

COLTER, ANN E.
Hon. B.A., English

COLTON, ALICES.
B.A., Philosophy

CONNOR, LEE ANNE


B.A., French

COONAN,DENISE
B.A., French

MIDDLESEX COLLEGE

71
CORNISH, KATHLEEN ANNE
B.A., English

CORSO, ITALO
B.A., French

COSFORD, SALLY JEAN


B.A., French

COWAN, BARBARA M.
B.A., English

COWAN, MARY KAYLEEN


B.A., English

CRAIG, SUSAN MARLAINE


B.A., Fine Art

CRAWFORD, TWYLA ELIZABETH


B.A., French

CRITES, CAROLYN E.
B.A., French

CROSSLEY, SUSAN
B.A., Fine Art

CUDNEY, LINDA E.

B.A., English & Psychology

CUMMINGS, ELIZABETH ANN


B.A., French

CURRAN, BARBARA ANN


B.A., English

CURRELL, JUDITH ANNE


B.A., English

CURRIE, LINDA GAIL


Hon. B.A., French

CURTS, BEVERLEY RUTH


8. A., English

DE COSTA, FRANCISCO MANUEL P.

B.A., Spanish

DAVEY, BARBARA JEAN


B.A., English

DAVIS, BETH SUSAN


B.A., French

72
DE BROUWER, JOSIE M.
B.A., French & Psychology

DEJONGE, HELEN
Hon. B.A., French & Spanish

DEJONGE, NELLIE
B.A., French

DENIS, H. BOURASSA
B.A., French

DEPUYDT, SUSAN
B.A., English

DODGE, DEBORAH LYNN


B.A., English

DOMINGO, ROSETTA ANITA


B.A., French

DONATO, NUCCIA
B.A., French

DOUGLAS, LESLIE ANN


B.A., English

DOUGLAS, RUTH AUDREY


B.A., English

DOWNE, MARY E.
B.A., English

DRUDE, ELVIRA
Hon. B.A., German

DUCHARME, DENNIS C.
B.A., French & History

DUJARDIN, AGNES LAURA


B.A., French

DUNCAN, LINDA ANNE


Hon. B.A., French

DUXBURY, DEBBIE D.
B.A., English

DZIEWA, CAROLE-ANNE
B.A., English

EBERLIE, PETER DYMOKE


B.A., English

73
ECKERT. LINDA LEIGH
B.A., English

ENGLISH, DAVID D.
B.A., Latin

EVANS, CANDICES.M.
& Mathematics
B.A., French

FAIRCLOUGH, SAMUEL
B.A., English

FARRELL, BEVERLEY N.
B.A., French

FAUBERT, GERRY
& French
B.A., English

FAULDS, MARY LOUISE


B.A., English

FENATO, BRUNAM.
B.A., English

FILMAN,MARGI E.

8. A., Fine Art

FINDLAY, LORRAINE G.
B.A., Russian

FORBES, ROBERT E.

B.A., French

FOX. JAMES PAUL


B.A., French

FOXTON,GWYNETH E.

B.A., English

ERASER, SUSAN M.
B.A., English

FRAUMENI, JANE ANNE


B.A., French & Psychology

FRENCH, WENDY E.

B.A., French

FRUCHTES, DIANNE E.

Hon. B.A., French

FULLER, THOMAS S.

B.A., English

74
FURLONGER, ROBERT THOMAS
B.A., Encjiisfi

GALLAGHER, KIM P.

B.A., English

GALLIVAN,TERRANCE E.

B.A., English

GARNER, GEORGE R.
B.A., German

GARRETT, EVELYN
B.A., English

GEE, CAROL ISABEL


B.A., French

GEMMELL, MARY E.

B.A., English

GENETTI, CAROL ANN


B.A., English & Psychology

GIBSON, SUSAN ANNE


B.A., English

GIDDENS, JUDITH L.

B.A., English

GLADSTONE, ROSS ALVIN


B.A., French

GODSOE, MARGARET JANE


B.A., English & Psychology

GORSKI, GLORIA M.
Hon. B.A., English

GORWILL, JANET RUTH


B.A., French

GOULDEN, DENISE M.M.


B.A., Philosophy

GRANT, GAIL E.

B.A., English

GRANT, LYNDA G.
B.A., French

GREGORY, KATHERINE E.

Hon. B.A., French

75
GRUNDY, CAROL LYNN
B.A., French

GULENCHYN, PAULETTE S.

B.A., English

GURNEY, ELIZABETH RAE


B.A., English

HALL, FRANCES ORLENE


B.A., French

HANSEN, ELIZABETH JANE


Hon. B.A., French

HARRIS, LYNN
B.A., English & Psychology

HARTLEY, ROBERT JAMES


Hon. B.A., English

HASSARD, DEVON LEE


& Psychology
B.A., English

HEFFRON, ROBERT JAMES


• B.A., French

Bright vocabularies
are transient
as rainbows.
Speech requires blood and air to make it.

Before the word comes off the end of the tongue,


While the diaphragms of flesh negotiate the word
In the moment of doom when the word forms
It is born alive,

registering
an imprint . . .

Afterward it is a mummy, a dry fact, done and gone.


The warning holds yet:
Speak now or forever hold your peace.

— Carl Sandburg

76
HENDERSON, PAULA M.
B.A., French

HENNESEY.JANISK.
B.A., English

HENRY, MARY ELAINE


B.A., Hon. Enghsh

HESSENAUR, BRENDA F.

Hon. B.A., Spanish

HILHORST, GERARD H.
B.A., English

HILL, LESLIE ANNE


B.A., English

HILL, RHONDA C.
B.A., English

HILL, TIMOTHY F.

B.A., History

HITCH INS, JANE E.


B.A., English

HOPF, MARGARET ANN


Hon. B.A., English & History

HOPPER, MARY LOUISE


B.A., English

HOSHAL, HELEN G.
B.A., French

HOWARD, JANET E.
Hon. B.A., English & French

HUGHES, GRAHAM B.
B.A., English

HUGHES, MARY G.
B.A., French

HUHCROFT, SHIRLEY ANNE


B.A., Psychology

HUMPHRIES, SUSAN LORETTA


B.A., English

IRWIN, LORRAINE BARBARA


8. A., English

77
JACQUES, BRIAN G.
B.A., English

JAMES, MARILYN L.

Hon. B.A., French

JARMAIN, JANICE M.
B.A., English & Psychology

JOHNSON, GERALD R.
B.A., French

JOHNSTON. MARGARET ANNE


B.A., English

KALL, ELEANOR FAYE


B.A., Russian

KELLY, BARBARA JEAN


Hon. B.A., English

KELLY, KATHLEEN T.
B.A., English

KELLY, SUSAN J.

B.A., French
'

KENNEDY, JANET E.
B.A., French

KIRK, MYRTLE
B.A., English

KIRKLAND, MARY E.
B.A., English

KOBAL, STEPHANIE
Hon. B.A., Spanish

LAKE, MARGARET ALICE


B.A., French

LALONDE.CLAUDETTE
B.A., French

LALONDE, YVETTE MARIE


B.A., French

LAMBIER, KATHY JOAN


Hon. B.A., French

LAROSE, MARIANNE
B.A., English

78
Opportunity . .

Opportunity hath all her hair on her


forehead; past, you may not
when she is

She hath no tuft whereby


recall her.

you can lay hold on her, for she is


bald on the hinder part of her head,
and never returneth again.

— Rabelais

most mortifying reflection for


It is a
a man
to consider what he has done,
compared to what he might have done.

— Samuel Johnson

LANCASTER, OLIVE M.
& History
B.A., English

LATREMOUILLE, GEORGIA L.

B.A., English

LAWRENCE, WENDY C.
& Spanish
Hon. B.A., French

LECKIE, JOHN K.
B.A., English

LEE, PAULETTE ANNE


B.A., English

LEETHAM, SUSAN E.

B.A., English

LEGAULT, PIERRE T.
B.A., French

LEGG, EVELYN L.

B.A., English

LEONARD, PATRICK W.
B.A., English & Psychology

79
.

LESTER, LARRY JAMES


B.A., English

LISOWKSI, JANUSZ R.
Hon. B.A., Russian

LITTLE KINGSLEY LOU


B.A., English

LODATO, LEONARD C.
B.A., English

LOW, BARBARAS.
B.A., Fine Art

LVESBY, CYNTHIA J.

B.A., Latin

LYNAM, SUSAN C.
B.A., English

MACARTHUR. KATHARINE ANNE


B.A., English

MACEACHERN, MARY LESLIE


B.A., English & Psychology

Time it was.
And what a time it was,

1 1 was . . .

A time of innocence
A time of confidences.
Long Ago . .

it must be . . .

I have a photograph.
Preserve your memories. —
They're all that's left of you.

— Simon and Garfunkel

80
MACKENZIE, CAROLINE
B.A., English

MACKENZIE, CATHERINE C.
B.A., English

MACGILLIS, JAMES R.
B.A., English

MACLEAN, ALEXIS M.
B.A., Fine Arts

MACROW, JOAN L.

B.A., French

MAHOOD, DELORESH.
B.A., Latin & Psychology

MANSFIELD, ERICG.
B.A., French

MARKHAM, MARGARET ANNE


B.A., English

MARTIN, SUSAN D.
B.A., French & Psychology

MASALES, MARLENE
B.A., English & History

MAY, MARCELLA JANE


Hon. B.A., English & Latin

McCAHERY, BARBARA MARY


B.A., English & Psychology

McCarthy, harry t.
B.A., French

McCarthy, thomas john


B.A., French

McCartney, Catherine e.
B.A., English

McCALL, GORDON R.
B.A., English

McCartney, margaret jane


B.A., English & Psychology

McCAW, LINDA M.
B.A., French

81
McCLEISTER, WILLIAM EDWARD
B.A., English & Economics

McGEE, JOHN RICHARD


B.A., French

McKELLAR, KATHERINE ANN


B.A., English & P.M. R.E.

McKENNA, FRANCES JANET


Hon. B.A., English

McKENZIE, BARBARA ALICE


B. A., English

McKEOUGH, ANGELA F.

B.A., French & Psychology

McKINLEY, MARY E.
Hon. B.A., English

McLAREN, KATHRYN R.
B.A. English

McLEAN, JUDITH ELLEN


& French
Hon. B.A., English

McLENNAN, RUTH EILEEN


B.A., English & History

McLUHAN,CARL J.

Hon. B.A., English

McMillan, MARIANNE
B.A., French

McNAMARA, JOANN M.
B.A., English

McNEAR.DANAM.
B.A., English

McRAE, DAVID L.

B.A., Philosophy

MEADOWS, DAVID M.
B.A., English & Psychology

MEATHRELL, KAREN J.

B.A., English

MEES, BARRY JOHN


B.A., English

82
MELLEN, BRENDA A.
B.A., French

MICUS, ALLEN JOHN


B.A., French

MILES, DALE ALLAN


B.A., French

MILLEN, DONNA BETH


Hon. B.A., French

MILLER, CAROL JOAN


B.A., English

MILLER, MARY ARLENE


B.A., English

MILLER, PAMELA JANE


Hon. B.A., French & German

MILNE, KIMBERLEY A.
B.A., French

MOFFATT, RICHARD ALLAN


B.A., Enghsh

MOFFIT, DEBBIE JANE


B.A., French

MONNIER, ELIZABETH JANE


B.A., English

MOORE, LINDA LOU


B.A., English

MOORE, MARY JULIA


B.A., English

MORRICE, ELIZABETH A.C.


B.A., English

MURPHY, ANNE LOUISE


B.A., English

MURPHY, HARRY B.
B.A., French

MURRAY, MARY LYNN


Hon. B.A., French

MYSKA, PHYLLIS S.

B.A., French

83
My Brother Waking Up

There are times when all that is important


is the ripple of a goldfish, or the smell of a new book,
the crease of a blanket and the shadow it makes; maybe the
grain of the wood in a door, the click of the phone when
you hang it up and the silence after — a button, a glass,
the grace of a falling leaf, or just the fee! of a
quiet house. These are times that pass like petals falling
from a blossom, when you feel a moment stretch and yawn, i
and open its eyes.

Bloch-Hansen

NARUSEVICIUS, ANGELIKA KRISTINA


B.A., French

I
NESBITT, KAREN ANNE
B.A., French

NICHOLSON, JAMES RONALD


B.A., English

NIVINS, BARBARA DIANE


B.A., English

OATES, MARY JANE E.

B.A., English & Psychology

OATMAN, CATHY i
B.A., English

O'HARA, KATHRYN ANNE


B.A., French

OLDRIDGE, KENNETH ALAN


Hon. B.A., French & Latin

OROVAN, ELIZABETH MAE


B.A., English

84
LAWSON LIBRARY

O'SHEA, MAUREEN L.

B.A., English & Psychology

OVEREND, JOANNE SUSAN


B.A., English & French

PARKER, LOIS PATRICIA


B.A., English

PATTERSON, EDITH
B.A., Arts

PATTERSON, JUDY TREMAINE


B.A., English & Psychology

PATTINSON, PATRICIA E.B.


B.A., English

PEARCE, LOIS MAE


B.A., Latin

PETERS, MONICA ELISE


Hon. B.A., Spanish

PETRYSHYN, OLESHIA
B.A., Russian

85
PICKERING, SUSAN C.
& Psychology
B.A., English

PIDGEON, GAIL ANN


B.A., French

PILLMAN, PATRICIA LYNN


B.A., English

PIOVESAN, MARIO
B.A., French

PLOWRIGHT, JANE L.
& Psychology
B.A., English

POWELL, JUDITH ANN


B.A., English

POWER, BARBARA JOAN


B.A., English & Psychology

PRENDERGAST, SHARON ANN


B.A., English

PRENTICE, WENDY L.

B.A., English & Fine Art

PRESTI,CARMELO
Hon. B.A., French & Spanish

PROCUNIER, EVA LOUISE


B.A., English

QUINN, PATRICIA L.

B.A., English

RANGER, JANET MARIE


B.A., French

RASTOW, STEVEN W.
B.A., English

REES, MARGARET E.
Hon. B.A., French

REID, VALERIE JEANNE


Hon. B.A., French

RENAUD, SISTER RACHELLE


Hon. B.A., French & Latin

RICE, PAUL DOUGLAS


B.A., English

86
"It is a piece of idle sentimentality that
truth, nnerely as truth, has any inherent power
denied to error, of prevailing . . . The real

advantage which truth has consists in this, that


when an opinion is true it nnay be extinguished
once, twice, or many times, but in the course of
ages there will generally be found persons to
rediscover it, some one of its reappearances
until
falls on a time when from favourable circumstances

it escapes persecution until it has made such

head as to withstand all subsequent attempts to


suppress it."

John Stuart Mill

RIKLEY, JAMESW.
Hon. B.A., French

ROBERTS, SIMONE J.

B.A., Spanish

ROBERTSON, A. MARIAN W.
B.A., Enghsh

ROBILLARD, ANNE M.
B.A., French

RODER, SYLVIA BETH


Hon. B.A., French

ROSS, BARBARA LYNN C.


B.A., English

ROWE, PATRICIA M.
B.A., English

ROY, JOHN F.

B. A. .English

RUNDLE, JAMES D.
B.A., Economics

87
RUSCIOLELLI, DAVID JOHN
B.A., Latin

RUYPERS, JANET M.
B.A., English

SADLER, MARTHA H.
B.A., French

ST. PIERRE, CATHERINE M.


Hon. 8. A., French

SASKOLEY, BEVERLEY DALE


B.A., English & History

SAUNDERS, CHARLES F.

B.A., English

SAYER, JACQUELYN L.

B.A., French

SCARFONE, JAMES
B.A., English

SCARROW, JANET MARIE


B.A., English

Education

"Reeling and writhing of course to begin with,"


the Mock Turtle replied.
"and the different branches of Arithmetic —
Ambition,
Distraction,
Uglification,
and Derision."

— Lewis Carroll

Learning is acquired by reading books; but the


much more necessary learning, the knowledge
of the world, is only to be acquired by reading
men, and studying all the various editions of
them.

— Lord Chesterfield

88
SCHAEFER, NANCY E.
B.A., English

SINGLETON, RICHARD G.
B.A., English

SMITH, KAREN LEE


B.A., Latin

SMITH, LYNDA DARLENE


B.A., English

SMITH, PETER G.
Hon. B.A., English & History

SMITH, SHARON A.
B.A., English

SMOOTHY, MARY JANE


B.A., English & Psychology

SPANO, PAULINE M.
B.A., French

SPARKS, BARBARA A.
B.A., English

SQUIRE, LYN E.

B.A., English

STEWART, REGINE ANNE


B.A., English

STOLL, KLAUS PETER


B.A., German & Economics

STREET, PATRICIA ANNE


B.A., French

STUART, MARGARET JANE


B.A., English

STUART, SUSAN M.
B.A., English & French

SULLIVAN, BARBARA JO
B.A., English

SULLIVAN, IAN B.

B.A., English

SUTHERLAND, JOHN A.
Hon. B.A., Philosophy
NATURAL SCIENCES CENTRE

SUTTON, JAMES D.
B.A., English

SYLVESTER, JUDITH E.

B.A., English

SYMONS, BONNIE ANNE


B.A., English

TALBOT, JOAN M.
& Psychology
B.A., English

TANNER, JOYCE ORAN


B.A., English

TAYLOR, JOYCE
B.A., French

90
TAYLOR, JUNE K.
B.A., French

TENHAAF, CATHERINE M.
B.A., English

THEORET, DAVID JOHN


B.A., French

THERIEN.CATHRYN LEIGH
Hon. B.A., French

THOM, ELIZABETH C.
B.A., English & French

THOM, JANE KATHLEEN


B.A., English & Psychology

THOMSON, DIANE E.

B.A., French

THOMSON, HOPE BOYD


B.A., Fine Art

THOMSON, IRENE MARY


B.A., English

THORNTON, MILLICENT SUE


B.A., English & Psychology

TINDALE, BARBARA ANN


Hon. B.A., French

TOMLINSON, ANTOINETTE
B.A., English

TOWN, STEPHEN W.
B.A., English

TRAYNOR, CANDY NORENE


B.A., English

TREITZ, LINDA DARLENE


B.A., French

TRELEAVEN, ALAN DISBROWE


B.A., English & History

TRELOAR, NANCY KAREN


Hon. B.A., Spanish

TREMBLAY, MICHAEL
B.A., Philosophy

91
TUCKER, ERNEST G.
& Phil.
Hon. B.A., English

TUFTS, RUTH ANNE I


B.A., English

TULL, CAROL MARLENE


B.A., English & Sociology

TURNER, CHRISTINE E.

B.A., English

VANDERPARK, MIRIAM
B.A., Phil. & Psych.

VANVAERENBERG, NINA
Hon. B.A., French

VERMEERSCH, SHEILA B.

B.A., French

VMADERKAS, BRIGITTE
B.A., German

WACHOWINK, FLORENCE U.
B.A., English

WALKER, KENTW.
Hon. B.A., English

WARD, KATHELEEN ANN


B.A., English

WARNE, KENNETH E.

B.A., Economics

WARREN, KAREN ANNE


B.A., Fine Art

WAUGH,TOM
Hon. B.A., English

WEBB, NEIL B.

B.A., English

WEISHUHN, MARILYN M.
B.A., English & Psyc.

WERSTINE, EDWARD PAUL


Hon. B.A., English & Phil.

WHITE, CATHERINE JOAN


Hon. B.A., Spanish

92
WIERICH, HEINZ DIETER
B.A., German & History

WILLIAMS, SHARON LYNN


B.A., French

WILLIS, ROSLYN JOAN


B.A., French

WILSON, ALICE MARILYN


B.A., English

WINHOLD, DOREEN LAURA


B.A., French & Psychology

WITTIG, MARGARET FRANCES


B.A., French

WOLANSKYJ, IRENE
Hon. B.A., French

WONG, KENNETH
B.A., Computer Science

WOOD, DENNIS A.
B.A., English

ZAVERL, VERONICA
B.A., French

ZUCCALA, RONALD L.

B.A., Zoology

ZYBALA, LINDA M.
B.A., English

93
ADAMSON, WILFRID LAWRENCE
Hon. B.A., Business

ANDERS, THOMAS NORTH


Hon. B.A., Business

ARMSTRONG, R. BROCK
Hon. B.A., Business

BELL, JOHN KEARNS


Hon. B.A., Business

USINESS

BOUCHER, RAYMOND G.
Hon. B.A., Business

BOWEN, JOHN DAVID


Hon. B.A., Business

I
BROWN, ROBERT JON
Hon. B.A., Business

BUCHANAN, PETER JOHN


N Hon. B.A., Business

E
CARRUTHERS, RON A.
Hon. B.A., Business

S COHOE, DANIEL B.
Hon. B.A., Business

S
COOPER, JACK CHARLES
Hon. B.A., Business

COOPER, PETER MICHAEL


Hon. B.A., Business

94
CRAIG, JOHN A.
Hon. B.A., Business

CROCKFORD, ROBERT DAVID


Hon. B.A., Business

CUDMORE, GORDON DOUGLAS


Hon. B.A., Business

CULVERSON, GARRY WAYNE


Hon. B.A., Business

DOMELLE, BRIAN GEORGE


Hon. B.A., Business

DRINKWATER, DAVID W.
Hon. B.A., Business

FIEBIG, RICHARD K.
Hon. B.A., Business

FRANCIS, DAVID G.
Hon. B.A., Business

GETTAS, GEORGE PETER


Hon. B.A., Business

GHENT, RODNEY G.
Hon. B.A., Business

GIBSON, ROBERT PERRY


Hon. B.A., Business

GORRIE, WAYNE ALLEN


Hon. B.A., Business

GRAY, WILLIAM ROY


Hon. B.A., Business

GUNTER, MALCOLM H.
Hon. B.A., Business

HARFIELD, RICHARD KEITH


Hon. B.A., Business

HEBERT, GEORGE LAWRENCE


Hon. B.A., Business

HUDSON, SUSAN M.
Hon. B.A., Business

HURLEY, COLLEEN F.

Hon. S.A., Business

95
IMLACH.G. BRENT
Hon. B.A., Business

JONES, RONALD M.
Hon. B.A., Business

KILLING, JOHN PETER


Hon. B.A., Business

LEGROW, WALTER D.
Hon. B.A., Business

LINDROS, CARL BRYAN


Hon. B.A., Business

LOWRY, GREGG RUSSELL


Hon. B.A., Business

MACDONALD, DAVID F.

Hon. B.A., Business

MCGREGOR, RICHARD LYLE


Hon. B.A., Business

MADILL, WILLIAM GLEN


Hon. B.A., Business

MAJOR, BRUCE WAYNE


Hon. B.A., Business

MARLATT, TIMOTHY COULTER


Hon. B.A., Business

MITCHELL, TIMOTHY C.
Hon. B.A., Business

NASH, GORDON DOUGLAS


Hon. B.A., Business

PERCY, ALAN ROBERT


Hon. B.A., Business

PHILLIPS, LARRY
Hon. B.A., Business

PIPER, MICHAEL DAVID


Hon. B.A., Business

PIPER, STEVEN WILLIAM


Hon. B.A., Business

PIRIE, JOHN A.T.


Hon. B.A., Business

96
PUHACH, ROBERT BOHDAN
Hon. B.A., Business

RAMSAY, KENNETH B.
Hon. B.A., Business

RANKIN, TOM DONALD


Hon. B.A., Business

RENAUD, ROGER LUCIEN


Hon. B.A., Business

ROBINSON, JOEL HARTLEY


Hon. B.A., Business

RODDY, JAMES MILTON


Hon. B.A., Business

SALMON, ROBIN D.
Hon. B.A., Business

SHARABURA, JOHN WILLIAM


Hon. B.A., Business

SHEARER, ROBERT T.
Hon. B.A., Business

SHRUBB, WAYNE D.
Hon. B.A., Business

STRUTHERS, JOHN B.

Hon. B.A., Business

SZEGO, WILLIAM ALLAN


Hon. B.A., Business

THORN, JEREMY MICHAEL


Hon. B.A., Business

THORNTON, PAUL DAVID


Hon. B.A., Business

WATERS, WILLIAM E.
Hon. B.A., Business

WILSON, PHILIP W.
Hon. B.A., Business

97
BAXTER, RUTH JOYANN
M.D., Medicine

BEECROFT, DAVID JOHN


M.D., IVIedicine

BERGEN, HARRY JOHN


iVI.D., Medicine

BLACKSHAW, WILLARD ROY


M.D., Medicine

EDS

E BLOOMFIELD, BRIAN GORDON


M.D., Medicine

BOUTROS, GEORGE A.M.

D M.D., Medicine

I BROWN, GERALD
M.D., Medicine

BRYANS, FRANKLIN
C M.D., Medicine
C.

I
CARSWELL, DAVID JAMES
M.D., Medicine

N CHAUDRY, AZIZ-UR-REHMAN
M.D., Medicine

E
CLYSDALE, MARILYN B.
M.D., Medicine

COX, JOHN OSBORNE


M.D., Medicine

98
DEBRECENI, ANDREW E.
M.D., Medicine

DE JONG, TERESA
M.D., Medicine

DUNN, ROBERT LAWRENCE


M.D., Medicine

DZIOBA, ROBERTS.
M.D., Medicine

FERLISI, ANTHONY JAMES


M.D., Medicine

GAIR, GRAEME A.
M.D., Medicine

GHENT, CAMERON N.
M.D., Medicine

GIBSON, GLENN C.

M.D., Medicine

GREGG, JOHNS.
M.D., Medicine

HOLMES, JOHN EDWARD


M.D., Medicine

HUNTER, ROBERT R.
M.D., Medicine

KREPP, JUHO
M.D., Medicine

KUSHNER, ARTHUR M.
M.D., Medicine

LAWFORD, A. GRANT
M.D., Medicine

LEAL, NANCY J.

M.D., Medicine

MARGESSON, LYNETTE J.

M.D., Medicine

MATHE,TOMC.
M.D., Medicine

McKEEN, JOHN H.R.


M.D., Medicine

99
NICHOL, PETER MICHAEL
M.D., Medicine

PARKS, DONALD HARRY


M.D., Medicine

PEARL, STEPHEN R.
M.D., Medicine

PEARSON, JOHN CHARLES


M.D., Medicine

PORZECANSKI, ANA MARIA


M.D., Medicine

ROSSI, SUSAN JENNIFER


M.D., Medicine

SCHULZ, JAN IVAN


M.D., Medicine

SIBBALD, WILLIAM JOHN


M.D., Medicine

SIMMONS, MICHAEL ELLIOT


M.D., Medicine

SOLTAN, HUBERT C.
M.D., Medicine

SPENCE, ANN KIMBER


M.D., Medicine

SPENCE, JOHN DAVID


M.D., Medicine

THOBURN, WILLIAM MICHAEL


M.D., Medicine
EIEIE]
TRAVISS, BRIANS.
M.D., Medicine

WALL, WILLIAM JOHN


M.D., Medicine

WAUGH, RACHEL R.
M.D., Medicine

YOVANOVICH, ROBERT M.
M.D., Medicine

100
BELANGER, JUNE MARIE
B.Sc.N., Nursing

BROWN, SHEILA G.
B.Sc.N., Nursing

BURROWS, RITA
B.Sc.N., Nursing

CAPUTO, JOSEPHINE
B.Sc.N., Nursing

CARTER, PEGGY ANNE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

CORNELL, KATHRYN E.

B.Sc.N., Nursing

DEADMAN, AUDREY LYN


B.Sc.N., Nursing

DOLAN, NANCY ADAIR


B.Sc.N., Nursing

DONALDSON, LINDA M.
B.Sc.N., Nursing

DYER, CHERYL M.

^^M
B.Sc.N., Nursing

ELLIOT, MARY ALISON


B.Sc.N., Nursing

EVERS, CYNTHIA J.

B.Sc.N., Nursing

FORD, SHEILA M.
B.Sc.N., Nursing

FRY, JEAN ELEANOR


B.Sc.N., Nursing

HAIR, JUDITH ELAINE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

HAIST, MARGARET ANNE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

HEYKING, MARIANNE
B.Sc.N., Nursing

HILTON-JAMES, PHYLLIS
B.Sc.N., Nursing

101
MIDDLESEX COLLEGE

JOHNSON, MARY JOANNE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

LEVER, MARY ELIZABETH


B.Sc.N., Nursing

MAYER, ULRIKEB.
B.Sc.N., Nursing

MAZUREVICH, JULIE
B.Sc.N., Nursing

McDonald, carolyn jean


B.Sc.N., Nursing

McNAIR, ELIZABETH D.
B.Sc.N., Nursing

McNeill, linda
B.Sc.N., Nursing

MITCHELL, CONSTANCE IRENE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

O'CONNOR, JENNIFER M.
B.Sc.N., Nursing

102
OSMOND, MARILYN MAE
B.Sc.N., Nursing

PATERSON, MARY MARTHA


B.Sc.N., Nursing

RATTRAY, NORMA JEAN


B.Sc.N., Nursing

SIMMONDS, ANNE LOUISE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

TALACH, GAYLE DIANNE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

TOFFLEMIRE, NANCY ELAINE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

TONGE, LESLIE IRENE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

TYNDALL, PATRICIA JEAN


B.Sc.N., Nursing

WARDER, LYNDA NOREEN


B.Sc.N., Nursing

WILSON, BRENDA EDITH


B.Sc.N., Nursing

WILSON, MARY RUTH


B.Sc.N., Nursing

WISMER, CHERYL ANNE


B.Sc.N., Nursing

WOODYARD, MARGARET ANN


B.Sc.N., Nursing

WRIGHT, MARY ELISABETH


B.Sc.N., Nursing

For reason, ruling alone, is a force confining;

and passion, unattended, is a flame that


burns to its own destruction.

Kahlil Gibran

103
ATKINSON, PETER Y.
L.L.B., Law

BANGARTH, DANIEL STEPHEN J.

L.L.B., Law

BLACKBURN, ROBERT A.
L.L.B., Law

BECCAREA, ROBERTA.
L.L.B., Law

BELECKY, MR. AL
L.L.B., Law i^H "^^^bft ^
CALDER, ROBERT
L.L.B., Law

CALZONETTI, VINCENT J.

L.L.B., Law

CARMICHAEL, GORDON
L.L.B., Law

CARTER, MICHAEL BRANT


L.L.B., Law

CASTRODALE, PHILIP
L.L.B., Law

CLAYTON, WILLIAM ROBERT


L.L.B., Law

DICKIE, CHARLES GRANT


L.L.B., Law

104
DONALDSON, WILLIAM B.A.
L.L.B., Law

DOWNS, MAURICE PAUL


L.L.B., Law

FARQUHAR, K.B.
L.L.B., Law

FELLMAN, RICHARD
L.L.B., Law

FONG, KENNETH M.
L.L.B., Law

GLITHERO, CHARLES STEPHEN


L.L.B., Law

GORDON, JEFFREY WILLIAM


L.L.B., Law

HAMMILL, TIM DAVID


^ylr^^ VK^ L.L.B., Law

HOLMES, JOHN RUSSELL


L.L.B., Law

HOPKINS, EDWARD P.

L.L.B. Law,

1
JINNAH, ALLAUDIN H.
L.L.B., Law

JUDD, ALLAN
L.L.B., Law

KLEIMAN, GERALD HARVEY


L.L.B., Law

LOCKWOOD, JOHN RICHARD


L.L.B., Law

MARTIN, ROBERT MICHAEL


L.L.B., Law

MAMO, ALFRED ANTHONY


L.L.B., Law

MIRINELLI, DANTE
L.L.B., Law

McCONNELL, MALCOLM HAZEN


L.L.B., Law

105
Mcculloch, david william
L.L.B., Law

McDonald, HUGH d.
L.L.B., Law

MCGRATH, FREDERICK W.
L.L.B., Law

McGregor, JOHN r.
L.L.B., Law

McNEIL, JOHN S.
L.L.B., Law

MORGAN, JOHN RHYS


L.L.B., Law

MYERS, JACK E.

L.L.B., Law

OUELLETTE, GARY GERARD


L.L.B., Law

PARKER, GLENN G.
L.L.B., Law

We think so because
other people all think so.
Or because — or because —
after all we do think so,
Or because we were told so,
and think we must think so.
Or because we once thought so,
and think we still think so.
Or because having thought so,
we think we still think so.

— Henry Sedgwick

106
PATERSON, JOHN CRAIG
L.L.B., Law

RICHARDSON, THOMAS ALAN


L.L.B., Law

ROSE, RICHARD F.L.


L.L.B., Law

RUSAK, HENRY
L.L.B., Law

SABINE, JOHN WILLIAM


L.L.B., Law

SCOTT, MRS. V.
L.L.B., Law

SHEPPARD, WILLIAM GRAYDON


L.L.B., Law

SUZUKI, BARBARA ANNE F.

L.L.B., Law

SWEETLOVE, JAMES A.
L.L.B., Law

TAUSENDFREUND, WOLFRAM U.
L.L.B., Law

TICKTIN, PETER DAVID


L.L.B., Law

WATSON, NIGEL PHILIP


L.L.B., Law

WHITE, ROBERT GRANT


L.L.B., Law

WHITNALL, RAYMOND A.
L.L.B., Law

WOOD, ROBERT JOHN


L.L.B., Law

A good night of drinking.


Is worth a year's thinking.
- Cotton

107
BONISTEEL, HELEN M.
Hon. B.Mus., Music

CAIRNS, JANET ANN


Hon. B.Mus., Music

DIRSTEIN, MARGARET A.
Hon. B.Mus., Music

FISHER, SARAH A.
Hon. B.Mus., Music

HOPKINS, BELLA MARY


B.A., Music

USIC HYNDS, JOY ELEANOR


B.A., Music

u
JOEL, ALLAN M.

s Hon. B.A., Music

KARGES, SYLVIA

I
Hon. B.Mus., Music

X7
c KENNEDY, LYNDA L.
B.A., Music

LACROIX, RAYMOND M.
Hon. B.Mus., Music

LAMANES, KENNETH
Hon. B.Mus., Music

LEWIS, JOAN CLARE


Hon. B.Mus., Music

108
L'homme qu'un roseau, le plus faible
n'est
de la nature: mais c'est un roseau pensant. II
ne faut pas que I'univers entier s'arme pour
I'ecraser: une vapeur, une goutte d'eau suffit
pour le tuer. Mais quand I'univers I'ecraserait,
l'homme serait encore plus noble que ce qui le
tue, parce qu'il sait qu'il meurt et I'avantage
que I'univers a sur lui; I'univers n'en sait rien.
Toute notre dignite consiste done en la
pensee. C'est de la qu'il faut nous relever,
et non de I'espace et de la duree, que nous ne
saurions remplir. Travailler done a bien penser:
voila le principe de la morale.

— Pascal, Les Pensees

MACLEAN, KEITH N.
B.A., Music

MILLER, DAVID K.
B.Mus., Music

MITCHELL, DAVID G.
Hon. B.Mus., Music

NIGHSWANDER, PENNY
B.A., Music

ROBERTS, BRIAN A.
B.Mus., Music

ROBERTSON, LAUREL M.
B.Mus., Music

TAYLOR, JANE FRANCES


Hon. B.Mus., Music

THOMPSON, NANCY H.
B.Mus., Music

TOWERS, ROBERT W.
B.Mus., Music

109
ALLEN, MARILYN E.

B.Sc, Computer Science

AMADIO, JOHN E.
B.A,, Mathematics

APPLEFORD, DOROTHY LOUISE


B.A., Zoology

ARMOUR, WILLIAM JAMES


B.A., Botany

CIENCES
AUCKLAND, KAREN E.

B.Sc, Mathematics

AUSTIN, LORRAINE
B.A., Mathematics

E BACKUS, JAMES W.
B.Sc, Physics

N BAGGOTT, SUSANNEM.
B.A., Zoology

C
BAIN, ROBERT GEORGE
Hon. B.Sc, Geology
E BALLANS, ANNA BRIOSET
B.A., Zoology

S
BARKEY. SHIRLYN E.
Hon. B.Sc, Botany

BARR, ROBERT F.
Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

110
BAXTER, LLOYD WALKER
Hofi. B.Sc, Geology

BENSTEAD, DOUGLAS E.
B.Sc, Mathematics

BERG, ALLEN S.

Hon. B.Sc, Applied Math

BERTRAND, RUTH G.
B.A., Zoology

BEST, MARION E.

B.Sc, M.R., Physical Therapy

BIANCHIN, RENZO L.

B.A., Mathematics

BIEMANN, HANS PETER


B.A., Biology

BIRD, WILLIAM GEORGE


B.A., Zoology

BLACKWELL, DAVID S.L.


Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

BLACKWELL, STEPHEN D.
Hon. B.Sc, Physics

BLAIR, BARBARA LYNN


B.Sc, Computer Science

BLAIR, CATHERINE L.

Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

BLANCH, PATRICIA ANNE


B.A., Zoology

BLANCHETTE, RICHARD A.
B.Sc, Mathematics

BOX, STEPHEN JOHN C.


B.Sc, Physics

BRADFIELD, GARY E.

B.Sc, Botany

BRADLEY, ROBERT W.
B.Sc, Physics

BROCK, LINDA E.

B.Sc, Mathematics

111
MCINTOSH MEMORIAL GALLERY

BROUGHTON, WILLIAM FREDERICK


B.Sc, Chemistry

BULLAS, GEORGE A.
B.A., Botany

BURKE, MARLENE ROBERTA


B.A., Mathematics & French

BURTON, MIKE
B.Sc, Computer Science

BUTZER, JOHN B.

B.Sc, Computer Science

CAIRNS, BEVERLEY JANE


B.Sc, Mathematics

CARLSON, KURT
Hon. B.Sc, Biophysics

CARWARDINE, JAMES E.D.


B.Sc, Computer Science

CASLICK, BRIAN W.
B.Sc, Chemistry

112
Love has no desire but to fulfill itself.
But if you love and needs have desires,
let these be your desires:

To melt and be like a running brook


that sings its melody to the night.
To know the pain of too much tenderness.
To be wounded by your own understanding
of love;
And to bleed willingly and joyfully.
To awake at dawn with a winged heart and
give thanks for another day of
loving;
To rest at noon hour and meditate love's
ecstasy;
To return at eventide with gratitude;
And to sleep with a prayer for the
beloved in your heart and a song of praise
upon your lips.

Kahlil Gibran

CHAUVIN, WILLIAM JOSEPH


B.A., Zoology

CHENG, SIEN-BOON
B.A., Zoology

CHEUNG, BENJAMIN
Hon. B.Sc, Bacteriology

CINNAMON, BEVERLEY RUTH


B.Sc, Physiology

CLEMENTS, NIGEL DAVID


Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

CLIFFORD, DAVID EDWARD


B.Sc, Mathematics

COLE, BONNIE ANN


B.Sc, Chemistry

COLE, VIRGINIA JANE


Hon. B.Sc, Mathematics

COLLAR, BRYON E.

B.Sc, Chemistry

113
COOK, CASEY NEIL
B.A., Zoology

COULTHART, KENNETH C.
B.Sc, Zoology

COWAN, ROBERT JOHN


B.A., Zoology

COX, CHARLES MILTON


B.A., Zoology

COX, FREDERICH M.
B.Sc, Biochemistry

COX, WILLI AMJAMES


B.Sc, Computer Science

CUMMING, ALICE MILDRED


B.Sc, Mathematics

CUNNINGHAM, ROGER BRIAN


Hon. B.Sc, Physics

DALEMAN, JOHN P.M.


B. Sc, Computer Science

Profs . .

There is nothing on earth intended for innocent


people so horrible as a school. To begin with, V

it is a prison. But it is in some respects,


i
more cruel than a prison. In a prison, for
i
instance, you are not forced to read books
written by the warden and the governor.

— George Bernard Shaw


; (

Most commonly the authority of them that


them that would learn.
teach hinders

— Cicero

In an examination, those who do not wish


to know ask questions of those who cannot
tell.

Sir Walter Raleigh

114
DINGLEDINE.GARYS.
B.Sc, Computer Science

DODD, ROSEMARY E.

B.Sc, M.R., Physiotherapy

DRESSLER, JUDITH K.R.


B.Sc, Mathematics

DIDDY, JAMES S.

B.A., Zoology

DUNCAN, JUDY E.

B.A., Mathematics

EBY, MARILYN E.

B.Sc, Mathematics

EDMONDS, ALLAN H.
Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

EGLESTON, LOIS KATHERINE


B.Sc, Mathematics

FAMME, EARLH.
B.Sc, Mathematics

FARKOUH, GEORGE M.
B.Sc, Physics

FAWCETT, PAUL D.
Hon. B.Sc, Biophysics

FIELD, DONNA M.
B.A., Mathematics

FILION, CHARLOTTE ANN


B.A., Botany

FINDLAY, PATRICIA ANNE


B.A., Zoology

FINNIGAN, NADINE MARY


B.A., Zoology

FISHER, ELIZABETH ANNE


Hon. B.Sc, Botany

FLEET, REGINALD JORDAN


B.A., Zoology

FORBES, LOUISE M.
Hon. B.A., Actuarial Math

115
FRENCH, LAURA E.

B.Sc, Mathematics

FRYER, JAMES N.
Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

GALLOWAY, KATHLEEN E.
B.A., Zoology

GIGNAC, PAUL HENRI


B.A., Zoology

GiLMAN, ANDREW P.

Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

GLENN, BRIAN THOMAS


B.Sc, Computer Science

GOODALL. MARK FLETCHER


B.A., Zoology

GRACE, ARCHIE N.
Hon. B.Sc, Physiology

GRACE, MARY JEAN


Hon. B.A., Mathematics

GRAHAM, CARLAN A.
B.Sc.M.R., Physical Therapy

GREENWOOD, CHRISTOPHER C.
B.A., Zoology

GOBLE, KENNETH E.

B.A., Computer Science & Ec.

GORDON, DOUGLAS A.
B.Sc, Chemistry

GORDON, E. LESLIE
B.ScM.R., Physical Therapy

GORMAN, LILLIAN DALE


Hon. B.Sc, Biochemistry

GUNDY, DRENA CATHERINE


B.Sc, Mathematics

HAGARTY, JEROME MICHAEL


B.A., Zoology

HAIST, JAMES VERNON


B.A., Zoology

116
HALL, BERNARD E.

B.Sc, Computer Science

HALTER, PAT L.

B.A., Mathematics

^J^ HANCOCK, MARGARET ANNE


Hon. B.A., Mathematics

HARDY, JOHN A.
B.Sc, Computer Science

HARRIS, GLENN
Hon. B.Sc, Applied Mathematics

HELGERS, JOHN
Hon. B.Sc, Biochemistry

HENDERSON, JEANNE M.
B.A., Mathematics

HIGGS, iVlARILYN A.
B.Sc, Mathematics

HOMMERSEN, JOHN PHILIP


B.Sc, Computer Science

HOUSTON, ROBERT F.

B.A., Zoology

HUNT, ELIZABETH J.

B.A., Zoology

IZAWA, RICHARDS.
B.A., Zoology

JESSOP, KRISTIN H.
B.ScM.R., Physical Therapy

JEWKES, DIANE M.
B.Sc, Physiology

JOHNSTON, LINDA ANN


Hon. B.Sc, Computer Science

JONES, DONALD ROSS


Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

JONES, RAYMOND A.
B.Sc, Physics

JORDAN, LESLEY ANN


Hon. B.Sc, Computer Science

117
Words

He gave man speech, and speech created thought.


Which is the measure of the universe;
And Science struck the thrones of earth and heaven,
Which shook, but fell not; and the harmonious mind
Poured itself forth in all-prophetic song;
And music lifted up the listening spirit
Until it walked, exempt from mortal care
Godlike o'er the clear billows of sweet sound.

— Shelley

Words do but
are wise men's counters, they
reckon by them: but they are the money of
fools.

— Thomas Hobbes

JULL, MURRAY R.
Hon. B.A., Mathematics

KANDIUK, NICHOLAS S.

B.Sc, Computer Science

KAUFMAN, BRYAN D.
Hon. B.Sc, Astronomy

KELLY, ROBERT JOSEPH


B.A., Zoology

KENNEDY, JAMES R.
Hon. B.Sc, Physiology

KEPPLER, PHILIP NICHOLAS


B.Sc, Chemistry

KING, JANICE ELIZABETH


B.A., Zoology

KLARAY, C.THOMAS
B.Sc, Chemistry

KOCHA, WALTER I.

B.Sc, Biochemistry

118
KONIETZKO, KARLH.M.
B.A., Zoology

KRUEGER, WILLIAM DALE


B.Sc, Chemistry

KUHN.DIANNE R.
Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

LAMBLE, DAVID R.
B.Sc, Chemistry

LANE, LARRY D.
B.A., Zoology

LANGER, ROLF
B.A., Zoology

LANGFORD, JAMES DONALD


B.A., Zoology

LANGTRY, EDWARD K.
Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

LATE LLA, JOSEPH M.


B.Sc, Chemistry

LAWES, MURRAY C.
Hon. B.A., Mathematics

LEAH, TIMOTHY D.
Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

LINK, DOUGLAS G.
B.A., Computer Science

LOUGH, RICHKY LEO


B.A., Zoology

LOVEDAY, DOUGLAS J.

B.A., Zoology

LYONS, RONALD W.
Hon. B.Sc, Astronomy

MACDONALD, ELIZABETH ANN


Hon. B.A., Mathematics

MACKILLOP, ROSS
B.Sc, Chemistry

MACRAE, MALCOLM CARL


B.A., Zoology

119
MACROW, DONNA M.
B.A., Botany

McBRIDE, BARRY K.
B.Sc, Computer Science

McCARTER, ROBERT M.
Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

McCUBBIN, RONALD M.
B.A., Mathematics

McCULLOUGH, NORMAN F.

B.Sc, Chemistry

McFARLANE, SHARON LEE


B.A., Zoology

MclNTOSH, MURRAY W.
B.Sc, Chemistry

MclNTYRE, ALLAN LEA


Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

MclNTYRE, DANIEL C.
Hon. B.Sc, Physics

MclNTYRE, KATHRYN
B.Sc, Chemistry

McKEOUGH, MICHAEL J.

B.Sc, Chemistry

McLEAN, CHARLES TERRENCE


B.A., Zoology

McLEOD, JOHN TIMOTHY


B.A., Zoology

McMillan, KEN f.

B.A., Mathematics

MARCHANT, MARION RUTH


B.Sc, Computer Science

MARSHALL, DAVID G.
B.Sc, Chemistry

MARSHALL, MICHAEL JOHN


Hon. B.A., Mathematics

MARTIN, MALCOLM DAVID


B.A., Mathematics

120
MASHINTER, DONALD IAN
B.A., Zoology

MATHESON, DOUG
B.A., Mathematics

MATTHEWS, DAVID E.
Hon. B.A., Mathematics

MATTHEWS, ELIZABETH JANE


B.A., Zoology

MERCER, IAN ANTHONY


B.Sc, Chemistry

MILLER, DERWYN L.

B.Sc, Zoology

MILLER, JOHN C.
B.Sc, Chemistry

MILNER, WILLIAM BRUCE


B.A., Computer Science

MIZON.BOB E.
B.Sc, Math & Computer Science

MOORE, KATHLEEN A.
B.A., Zoology

MOORE. LAURENCE F.

B.Sc, Botany

MORGENNOTH, DONALD A.
B.Sc, Science

MORRIS, RICK J.

B.Sc, Computer Science

MOSSOP, CHERYL A.G.


B.Sc, Computer Science

MOTZ, P. IRISM.
Hon. B.Sc, Physiology

MUNRO, MARION L.

B.Sc, Computer Science

MURPHY, PETER F.

B.A., Mathematics

NELSON, JOHN SHANNON


B.Sc, Mathematics

121
NELSON, JANICE ELAINE
B.A., Zoology

NEUDORF, SHIRLEY L.

B.A., Zoology

NG, KATIE
Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

NICOL, JAMES F.

B.A., Zoology

O'HALLORAN, KENNETH R.
B.A., Zoology

OPER, THOMAS F.

B.A., Zoology

PATERSON, ROBERTS.
Hon. B.Sc, Physics & Geology

PATTERSON, KEITH J.

B.A., Sciences

PATTERSON, PHILIP R.
Hon. B.Sc, Physics

WALKWAY . . . + THAMES . . . + BUSH

:i >.C

122
PAXTON, DONNA D.
B.Sc, Mathematics

PEPIN, JOHN W.
B.A., Zoology

PEPPER, WAYNE F.

B.Sc, Chemistry

PETERSON, JURRAY ELMER


B.Sc, Mathematics

PIDHURSKYJ, JOSEPH
B.Sc, Computer Science

PIRK, GERHARD KLAUS FRIEDRICH


B.Sc, Physics

PYNN,DAVID J.

B.Sc, Zoology

RAWANA, WILLAIM P.

B.A., Zoology & Psychology

RAY, ROBERT G.
B.Sc, Mathematics

REED, W.GARY
B.Sc, Physics

REEDER,MARYC.
B.A., Zoology

REINHART, PAULM.
B.Sc, Computer Science

RENWICK, GREGORY K.
B.Sc, Chemistry

RIGG, MARY CATHERINE


B.A., Zoology

ROBERTSON, DANIEL J.

B.Sc, Mathematics

ROBERTSON, SHEILAGH M.
Hon. B.Sc, Bacteriology & Immunology

ROBINSON, RICHARD REYNOLDS


B.A., Mathematics

ROCK, MIKE G.
B.Sc, Chemistry

123
ROZELUK, JOHN
B.A., Computer Science

RUECKWALD, JOANNE S.

Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

RYAN, JAMES F.

B.Sc, Computer Science

SALTER, ROBERTS.
Hon. B.Sc, Chemistry

SALVIAN, ANTHONY J.

B.Sc, Chemistry

SANDERS, WM. A.
B.A., Zoology

SARTOR, JAMES F.L.


B.Sc, Physics

SCHAEFER, JOHNC.
Hon. B.Sc, Physiology

SCHNEIDER, PATRICK R.
B.Sc, Computer Science

SCOTT. JOHN A.
B.Sc, Physics

SEMOTOK, JOHN DAVID


B.A.,

SEWELL, WILLIAM GREGORY


Zoology

B.Sc, Mathematics

SHERMAN, ROBERT
B.Sc, Computer Science

SHERWIN, RICHARD
D.

D.
i% ^
Hon. B.A., Mathematics

SLAVIK, DONALD J.

B.Sc, Physics

SMILEY, ALISON M.E.


Hon. B.Sc, Applied Math

SMITH, KAREN J.

Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

SMITH, A. SHAWN D.
B.A., Zoology

124
SNELL, ELIZABETH ANNE
B.A., Zoology

SORENSEN.OLE TOFT
B.A., Zoology

SPROTT, CHRISTINE ANNE


B.A., Zoology

STAUTH, DOUGLAS A.
B.Sc, Computer Science

STEVENS, JAMES
B.Sc, Computer Science

STOKES, LINDA M.
B.Sc.M.R., Physical Therapy

STOTT, GRAEME F.
B.A., Zoology

SUMMERS, RICHARD KEITH


B.A., Mathematics

SUROWIAK, JEAN J.

B.Sc, Mathematics

SZABO, PAUL J.M.


B.Sc, Computer Science

TATRALLYAY, PETER S.

B.A., Zoology

TEMMER, ELIZABETH
B.A., Mathematics

THOMSON, MARGARET
B.A., Zoology

THORNLEY, STEWART
Hon. B.Sc, Botany

THORPE, TIMOTHY R.
B.A., Zoology

TIPPING, THOMAS N.
B.Sc, Physics

TOMLINSON, CHARLES W.
Hon. B.Sc, Physiology

TONG, LUCY ROSA S.I.

B.A., Computer Science

125
TRAQUAIR, JAMES A.
Hon. B.Sc, Botany

TROSCINSKI, GLENN
B.A., Zoology

TUER, JOHN GREGORY


B.Sc, Physics

VANDERGRIENDT, JOHANNA F.

B.A., Mathematics

VANSTONE, DONALD L.
Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

VESSIE, JOHN r!a.


B.Sc, Mathematics

VILOS, GEORGE A.
Hon. B.Sc, Biophysics

WARD, KEN
Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

WATSON. SHEILA M.
B.A., Zoology

WATT, SHEILA E.
B.Sc, Zoology

WATTERS, CAROLYN R.
B.Sc, Chemistry

WATTERS, CONRAD W.L.


Hon. B.Sc, Biophysics

WEBER. HANS JUERGEN


Hon. B.Sc, Biophysics

WILLEMS. LINDA M.
B.A., Zoology

WONG. PARKIN DOMINIC


B.Sc, Chemistry

YARDLEY, TREVOR W.
B.Sc, Chemistry & Physics

YEE. NANCY
B.A., Computer Science

YOUNG. JAMES KENNETH


Hon. B.Sc, Zoology

126
YUAN, BETTY HOI-MING
B.A., Computer Science

ZACKS, EDWARD NATHAN


B.A., Zoology

ZADEL, FRANK
B.Sc, Chemistry

ZITER, MICHAEL JOSEPH


B.A., Zoology

Know then thyself, presunne not God to scan.


The proper study of mankind is man.
Placed on this isthmus of a middle state,
A being darkly wise, and rudely great.
With too much knowledge for the sceptic side.
With too much weakness for the Stoic's pride,
He hangs between: in doubt to act, or rest
In doubt to deem himself a god, or beast
In doubt his mind or body to prefer.
Born but to die, and reasoning but to err.
Alike in ignorance, his reason such
Whether he thinks too little or too much.
Chaos of thought and passion all confused;
Still by himself abused or disabused;

Created half to rise and half to fall;

Great lord of all things, yet a prey to all.

Sole judge of truth, in endless error hurled.


The glory, jest and riddle of the world.

— Alexander Pope

127
''.'' '?.'
'V-,' .i''.'t,.' -. V'iB
(j*-^-*

ri''i«i:i.'' '^^ v 'v.'H' ',< ';'.j:^'-^. m.', /,

ATHLETICS
EDITORS: Pete Harvey
Leith Young
Sue Whitley

Judy Gear
Dennis Monteith
Anne Pirle
Don Thomson
Jim Wigle
132
JOHNNY METRAS

Johnny Metras, grand old man of football, has retired after thirty-five years of

coaching at Western. J. P. Metras is not leaving Western, but has decided to devote

full-time to his duties as director of athletics, a post he has held, along with the

head coaching job of the football Mustangs, for a number of years.

Sixty years old, Metras is only the third coach Western has had. In 1935 he came

here as assistant coach, following his old teammate Bill Storen. In 1940 he took

over as head coach for football; in 1945 he was appointed athletic director as

well.

Metras has created a legend in his own time. Not only a top notch coach, Metras

was also an outstanding player. In his native Michigan he won All-State honours as

a halfback. At the University of Detroit he gained the All-American mention.

Playing in Canada he was a member of the Senior O.R.F.U. All-Star Team. The

following year, 1934, he was All-Canadian.

However, Metras' greatest fame is in the OQAA. He has won an impressive nine

league championship. Other statistics are equally revealing of a demanding coach:

109 wins, 1 1 ties, and 80 defeats in thirty seasons. During one, the Mustang were

undefeated in 29 games.

J. P. Metras was once a successful basketball player also, retiring from that

position in 1964. In nineteen years of basketball coaching his teams participated

in fourteen titles. Also, his team once held an impressive record of twenty-four

victories in league play.

Johnny Metras can be equally proud of some of the talent he helped move along
its way. In the professional leagues are such former players as Frank Cosentino,

Whit Tucker, Dick Suderman, John Wydareny, Pete Martin, and Tom Beynon. As

well as playing, many of Metras' understudies went on to become successful

coaches. Included are Geno Fracas of Windsor, Harvey Scott of Alberta, Wally

Delahaye of Waterloo, Ray Johnson of McMaster and Ron Preston of Laurentian.

Another famous personality to have served under Metras is the Hon. John P.

Robarts.

133
r '\

134
FOOTBALL

THE MAN
with the whistle appeared to be no

friend of the football 'Stangs as the

season's play commenced. In

exhibition games, Western came on

strong, defeating Windsor and tying

Toronto. In the two games Western

appeared strong not only on

offense, but on defense. Western's

hopes on offense were with Joe

Fabiani, a freshman from Port

Colborne, and Steve Stefanko. On


the defense were Steve Derbyshire

and Larry Bird, key players in

keeping U. of T. to only 77 yards

rushing.

At Windsor, Western came on with

a strong 33-15 victory. The offense

was a balance of passing and

rushing — 186 yards on the ground

and 181 in the air. Western

appeared ready, even with less than

two weeks of workouts.

Toronto put up a strong defense,

compelling Western to go to the air.

Three passes were intercepted. Back

in the 'Stang's line-up was Bruce

Macrae, a veteran receiver who had


been sidelined with a hand injury.

135
136
Western's first game in league play was an overwhelming success for Johnny

Metras' last team. The 'Stangs stomped all over the Marauders for a 40-3 victory.

The highlight of the game was Kevin St. Michael's pass-interception, and the 33

yard return for a T.D.

The McGill Redman scalped Western 30-1 1 despite the presence of a large number

of Western fans there for the traditional weekend. Western only managed six first

downs, but a strong defense was able to contain the rampaging Redmen. The

highlight — a 77 yard pass and run play by Doug Digby from Stefanko, for a

touchdown. The defensive unit of the 'Stangs held McGill to 88 yards on the

ground and 89 in the air. However, 12 penalties against the 'Stangs cost them 98

yards.
ii

^J ^^^-^1 _
THE GOALPOSTS TOO

Western lost not only its second

game to Queen's, but the goal posts

as well. A dreary Thanksgiving

Weekend, with a 17-6 defeat at

hands of Queen's University, was

not, however, a prelude for

Homecoming.

The Mustangs came up with a big

win and the fans a record crowd at

the Homecoming festivities.

Western held Waterloo scoreless for

three quarters, until Waterloo

retaliated in the fourth with 4 TD's

for Western's 3 in the third. The

score: UWO 28- UofW 19.

In the next three games Western

salvaged only one win. The Stangs

fell to the U of T team, 41-16. In

three quarters of play, Western

managed only two points.

At McMaster, the Mustangs fared

better, registering a 38-0 win. Jeff

Hilton, carrying 16 times for 94

yds, scored four of the five TD's.

The season came

last quarter rush


to an end with a

by U of W to
K ^
**'

7/ r^ \
defeat Western 29-20. Western lost

3 of 5 fumbles in the last quarter. It

was a heartbreaking defeat for the

last game of Metras' career.


At the beginning of the year. Coach

Stan Hill's Soccer team appeared to

be greatly strengthened by both the

quantity and the quality of the

recruits. The season opener was

played against the highly rated

Guelph Gryphons, The Mustangs

played a strong game and downed

the Guelphmen 3-1.

This promising start was carried

through the team's second game of

the year, played Oct. 11. In that

game, the Mustangs made a strong

showing on defence and held the

defending OQAA champion


Toronto Blues to a 1-1 tie.

5J55'

^^^^iPHv,. ^m^
140
In their next start, the 'Stangs

whipped the University of Waterloo

5-0. Coach Hill could claim that the

players were really beginning to

work as a team. Following this with

a 1-0 victory over McMaster,

Western moved into a tie for first

place.

It was not until Oct. 25 that the

Soccer team suffered its first loss, a

4-2 setback at the hands of the

Toronto Blues. The 'Stangs rallied


^..^rf"*^^**!***-*^

in their next game to down


Waterloo 3-0 and then battled to a

1-1 tie with McMaster.

Highlight of the year had to be the

Team's Nov. 1 game against

Guelph. By downing the Gryphons

4-0, Western captured the OQAA


Western Division title. Western had

last won the OQAA soccer title in

1937.

In the championship match for the

Blackwood cup, the 'Stangs were

pitted against Queen's, winners of

the Eastern division. Although the —r— 1


-"* I''
tough Queen's team

decision and the championship, the


took a 3-0
m^Emm^m
'Stangs could point with pride to
\
their season accomplishments.

SOCCER -1
^
A
RUGGER

SCRUM

The Rugger 'Stangs looked forward

to a good season based on previous

years' records. With a new coach,

Dr. Andrew Wilson, and some

back-up experience, hopes were

quite high.

The Mustangs opened the

season with a 6-6 tie in a

game against a strong

Gryphon team. Western

remained undaunted.

However, the Mustangs

soon fell behind,


registering a tie with the

McMaster Marauders and

a loss against the

University of Toronto

team. Western's
experience and ability to

control the ball

compensated for a weak

backfield. With another

year of experience

behind them, hopes are

even higher for next year.

142
jS>^b

THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY


TRACK AND FIELD

UP, UP
Western had high hopes for its thin

lads this season, especially in the

pole-vaulting and the high-jump. The

bases for these hopes were Ray

Anthony and Dave McGuffin, who

were both jumping over six feet in

meets prior to the OQAA, and

freshman Don Anderson, who had


vaulted 12'6" at Waterloo in a

previous meet. Other prospects were

Rick Hughson in the three mile, Chris Bolten in the mile, Jim Clare in the triple jump, and another freshman, Tony Scott
in the 880.

AND AWAY
The OQAA held at the University of

Waterloo was the first official league

meet to be held in metric distances.

UWO finished fourth behind

Waterloo, U of T, and McMaster. Dave

McGuffin placed first in the

high-jump,

hopeful,
while

Don Anderson,
the pole-vault

finished a
I
*^."S^aMfe ^
disappointing fourth. Chris Bolten

took the 1500 metre in 3:53:0.

-^riG

144
BASKETBALL
From the start of the season, Western's basketball

Mustangs were heralded as the team to beat in

OQAA competition. The team had an excellent

combination of solid returnees and talented

newcomers, headed by the incomparable Bruce

Dempster. Actually, the 'Stangs compiled only a

mediocre exhibition record of 4 wins and 3 losses.

But their potential was shown in their win over

Mercy College.

In regular season play, the Mustangs got off to a

torrid start as they won their first six contests, and

seven of their first eight, a feat which assured them

of a playoff berth. In their seventh win, the 'Stangs

blasted the Guelph Gryphons 105-72 and Bruce

Dempster scored a career-high 42 points. As the

'Stangs continued to roll over their opponents,

their home games were attended by capacity

crowds. For the first season. Western's home games


were all played in Alumni Hall.
One of the individual highlights of the

season had to be the naming of UWO's


Bruce Dempster as Captain of Canada's

National Basketball Team. Guided by

Dempster's leadership on offence and

defence, the 'Stangs continued to display

solid teamwork. Although they faltered

toward the end of the regular season, the

'Stangs did manage to win the league

title and looked ready for the playoffs.

146
n i ni mii iiiii iiw w iiii ni

Although the 'Stangs did lose the

championship to McMaster, they

represented Western well in OQAA


competition. Bruce Dempster was

selected as "Most Valuable Player in the

Championship Tournament". He and

Bob LaRose were also named to the

First and Second All-Star teams

respectively. Although the 'Stangs lose a

number of seasoned players through

graduation, the future is quite promising.

147
The most consistent feature of the hockey Mustangs this season was their

inconsistency. First sign of this came in a preseason exhibition game loss to the

Fanshawe Falcons, 3-2. In their next exhibition contest, the 'Stangs showed more

H
N
O I

C
G
K
H
E
T
Y
W
E
S
A
T
T
E
R
N

promise, as they downed the University of Bowling Green 4-2. But this was

followed by a surprise rout of the Cornell Big Red, who defeated Western 8-2 at

Ithaca. This nnarked the first time in years that UWO was defeated by Cornell.

%»«^i
The 'Stangs regular season performance was equally erratic. In their league

opener, they battled to a 5-5 tie with the Guelph Gryphons. But the following

night, they were blitzed 14-1 by a powerful Varsity Blues squad.

Coach Ron Watson's problems were represented and magnified by a three-game

suspension incurred in the team's final league game before Xmas at Waterloo, But

the highlight of the year for Watson and his players had to be their success in the

Cleveland tournament played in the Christmas holdiays.


Unfortunately, Western missed a


JM
T-A n r^Y
1
berth in the league playoffs.

although the team finished


And
in third
^
i,^

U
«-i- "

losing record was


place, its

OQAA
a "first"

hockey
*^
for the university

competition.
in

iur^' m

1(
SPORTS •«# 4 J^

Rowing Sailing

For three years in a row, Western Western's brighter moments in this sport

oarsmen have successfully competed for were at the Hudson International

the OQAA title. The Western crew was Trophy Races in Detroit. Ron Hugli

overwhelming in defeating its nearest took top skipper honours in "B" division

rival, the University of Toronto, by a to give Western an overall third.

wide margin, in clenching the Eastern

Collegiate Rowing championship. Dr. P.

C. Fitzjames plans to enter a team from Skiing

UWO in the World Rowing From a field of 10 universities. Western's

Championships to be held in St. skiers took top honours for the OQAA
Catharines. The team has been training title. Doug Leigh, Jeff Heintzman, Pete

since Christmas with weights but with McGibbon, Doug Mitchell, and Bob

spring will return to Fanshawe. Leigh emerged as the top ski team.

152
"iM^

^x ^ - *% UNLIMITED

Swimming Gymnastics

Western finished third in the OQAA Mike McKay, a freshman from Port

finals and fourth in a field of twenty at Colborne, was a key man in Western's

the CIAU championships. Outstanding gymnastics designs this year. Other

for Western were: Ken Fowler, Craig strongmen on the Western team were

Gould, Doug Darling, and Paul Walker. Ted Moores and Gord Kruger.

Tennis Water polo

Western division OQAA finals were A new addition to OQAA sports this

held in Waterloo. In a round-robin year, the waterpolo 'Stangs were not

tournament, Lyall McCurdy and Gord to be left out. A rigorous training

Clark went unbeaten to take the programme and enthusiastic

doubles. Western's team effort of 20 participants gave Western access to all

pts. was 2nd to U of T's 24. but the title.

153
WRESTLING
Western lost its OQAA title for

wrestling to the Waterloo Warriors.

In competitions held Feb. 20-21 at

Western, the Warriors edged out

their hosts 58-51. For the first time

the teams fought under Olympic

rules whereby wrestlers accumulate

minus points as they fight. When a

wrestler accumulates six negative

points, he is automatically

eliminated from further


competition.

Western's efforts in the OQAA competition were personified by such season

regulars as Eric Cunningham in the 1 18 pound class, and Mike Lethaby in the 126

pound division. Tom Wily gave Western a second place in the 142 pound division

bouts. Ole Sorensen reached the finals undefeated, but could still not give Western

its badly needed first place points. Sorensen fought to a draw with Bruce Todd of

McGill, but he had accumulated more negative points, leaving him in second

place.

In the final analysis, the 'Stangs collected five second place awards and four third

place finishes. Not until the second last of the 107 bouts did the Warriors clinch

their victory. Western lost its title

by managing only one win in six

'WHiWBI^'^^S^,
fights of the fifth and final round

of competition. The mat-men well

deserved second place, and with the

old scoring system might even have

moved into first. The second place

laurels were quite respectable

considering the quality of

competitors.

154
WOMEN'S
ATHLETICS

The Women's Athletic Council (W.A.C.) provides


the leadership, organization, and co-ordination of
the Recreative, Intramural and Intercollegiate
aspects of women's athletics on campus. From this

'W.A.C.-iest' Western group come these pages


featuring the athletic fun and (funnies) enjoyed by
many coeds. It seems agreed — you can't beat it, so
join us!

Paddy Hardman

PADDY HARDMAN
President

W.A.C. EXECUTIVE

BACK ROW: Linda Graham, Chris MacGillivary, Caroline Scott-White, Peggy Keyes, Arcee Gedye, Leith Young. FRONT
ROW: Nancy Nisbet (Incoming Pres.), Miss Joy Taylor (intramurals), Paddy Hardman, Mrs. Elfrida Berzins (Women's
Athletic Director).

155
FIELD
HOCKEY %si^0^
^:^-^

^
•i«w,«.«

BACK ROW: Chris MacGillivary, Chris Thompson, Diane Townsend, Linda Grahann, Paddy
Hardman, Ann Woodland, Jean McKenna, Sue Whitley. FRONT ROW: Judy Lake, Nan
Nisbet, Sue Funston, Telia Sametz.

4 — .-•.

41

*
IV
n
* __ -.- -«' .^«*

''O -•
^ '..-^^
TRACK
N
FIELD

ieJEJiCSS^ESZ..
DIVING

Diane Thompson, Mr. J. Richardson (Coach), Cynthia Burchmore.

SWIMMING TEAM

1
BACK ROW: Terry Gri, Val Hardacre, Lyn Gordon, Gaye Wigston, Tasie McCullough, Mary Pattinson, Debbie
Aston, Lorraine Aho. FRONT ROW: Barb Green, Susan McCaskill, Miss J. Eastwood (Coach), Louise Kennedy, Joan
Garwill.

158
FRONT ROW: Diane BACK ROW: Faith
Cowden, McCracken,
Elisabeth Mae Hah Lum,
Hardolf, Cheryle Ko, (Capt.)
Vici<i Taylor, Mrs. Berzins,
Loretta Barb
Roper. Grinius.

A
R
C
H
E .: f
*

R
Y

1/

ml f^

JJ a

159
Y

E
BACK ROW: Sue Whitley, Marion Munroe, Diane Campbell,

Y Caroline
Pederson.
Scott-White,
FRONT ROW:
Sue Morton,
Leith
Miss J. Taylor, Claire
Young, Joanne Garrod, Lyn
McAvoy, Ann Paterson, Janice Ramsay.

B
A
L

160
G
Y
M
N
A
S
T
I

C
S
Donna Wright

Virve Ruhno

-f-..

>

Geri Martinsen

Mary Turner

Mary Lou Armour Geri Tannis


161
CURLING

TEAM MEMBERS: Sue Chandler, Katherine McKeller, Marilynne McNeil, Judy Ritchie.

BASKETBALL

BACK ROW: Bev Pierce, Diane DeCoene, Miss M.L. Dresser (Coach), Lorilee Matheson, Wendy
FRONT ROW: Helen Greaves, Linda Munn, Diane Dunn, Cathie Clarke. ABSENT: Marcia
White.
Skvorc, Evelyn Weatherston.

162
TENNIS
CHAMPS

Wendy White, Marion Munroe, Donna Ceponis, Denise Turcott.

BADMINTON

TEAM MEMBERS: Jane Gregory, Celia McDonald, Irene Rosen, Holly Child, Karen Lake, Debby McAlpin.

163
ICE

HOCKEY

U ^^^Tfsv^M:.

^.

164
Bev
Pierce
ATHLETIC
F.W.P.
JONES
Award
BANQUET

WHITE BLANKET WINNERS


Sue Whitley, Bev Pierce, Diane Townsend

PRESENTATIONS To Mrs. Elfrieda Berzins, Retiring Director


of Women's Athletics, On Behalf of:

The Coaches Athletic Directorate

"^Sl-'^^v

165
Diane Donna
Cowden Baxter

Archery Intramural
Special Honour
Award Award

Cindy Alison
Burchmore Fountain

Intramural Skiing
Honour Special
Award Award

p ^H '
..MB
BH B !i ,^^/CjH
Marion
Munroe
Wendy
White

^H, Bronze Bronze


^j^w. -''^^^^^M

JE^E ^'^ M
-W' 'W'

.^JH Wtr.M fjy J H

Leith
Lee
Young
Griffin

Accepting
Intramural
On Behalf of:
Honour
Trophy Track
Award
& Field

Jane Caroline
^ ^^
« ^ McCarthy

Skating
Special
Award
Scott-White

Intramural
Special
Award

166
^

'^M.

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5te

THE YEAR
ORIENTATION
The 3400 freshmen who came to

Western this year got their first taste of

college life during orientation. The


program, which was supposed to bring
the first year students together, was
organized by Mike Graham with the aid

of our local computer. It was crammed


full of a variety of planned activities

which ranged from political seminars to

dances to professional entertainment.

Last, but not least, there was the

infamous "Slosh Hop" at Port Stanley.

Along with the "planned" events, there


were the usual residence antics, the

panty raids, and the mysterious

disappearance of some 13 parking gates.

Brings back memories — right, frawsh?


LONOOiM FREE PRESS PHOTO

LONDON FREE PRESS PHOTO


169
REGISTRATION

'£k^..
LONDON FREE PRESS PHOTO

LONDON FREE PRESS PHOTO

170
Well, you have to admit we were warned. That little blue

booklet told us Registration was going to be changed this

year. But for the better, so Watson said. The idea was to
make course registration more efficient (that is, less

time-consuming) while, at the same time, to give students a

chance to preview different courses before making a final

selection. Terrific idea, lousy procedure.

The result was complete chaos. Some students were forced to


buy computer cards to get into their required courses.

Bargain-basement mania was the rule at mob scenes in

departmental offices all over the campus. And instead of

getting it all over with in Thames Hall in a couple of hours,

you had to take at least a week to complete enrollment. Of


course, the lines weren't any shorter — while those at the

front were having their pictures taken in Thames, the lucky


ones at the end got to browse through Lawson's stacks and

the people in the middle just suffered.

LONDON FREE PRESS PHOTO LONDON FREE PRESS PHOTO


171
SARNIA DEMONSTRATION

Following the lead of the University of


Victoria, the USC arranged a protest against
an American nuclear blast at Amchitka Is. in

the earthquake-prone North Pacific. About


1000 students set up a blockade at the
Bluewater Bridge in Sarnia.

The demonstration was a success. Only 2


i«^f^
cars crossed the border during the hour-long
protest. It was an impressive display of
organization and control, thanks to its
planners and to the participants who were
determined not to create an "incident".

But the blast went on as scheduled. And, as


noted in a Gazette editorial, the protest was
not "a sign of a new awakening at Western",
but only "a surprise break from routine, a
free bus ride to Sarnia with 1000 other kids,
and a chance to be in a protest march". D.
B. Scott seems to have been right — nothing
else happened this year, and the social and
political conscience of Western remains
undisturbed.

172
173
FUN AND FOOTBALL
- McGill Weekend

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174
175
HOMECOMING '69

The Maitland-Saugeen Smoke Bomb


176
* -i

/
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'^.'
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n
THE LINE

THE WAIT

THE GAME
178
Flapjack Flip

Brenda Scarrow, Homecoming Queen


179
U.C.C.

ucc SITE

"An occasion when the university and

the students have agreed on something

besides the time of day."

In early October university president

D.C. Williams and USC president Ian

Brooks turned the first sod on the

land north of Weldon Library which,

by 1972, they hoped would be the

site of the 60,000 square foot, $3.8

million first stage of the proposed

University Community Centre.

U.CC.

SITE

Ai^CHlTECTS

MURPHY & SCHULLER


CCNS-LT'SG ARCHITECTS'

PRATT LINi)GREEN SNIDER


TOMCEJ & ASSOCIATES

180
t hI
i
I

They were optimistic that the students would vote


in favor of the UCC when given the opportunity a

couple of weeks later and they had every right to

be so optimistic. Over 67 percent of the students

showed up to vote (compared to 8.4 percent for


Senate elections at the same time) and 83 percent

of those who voted said "yes".

I
The university had already collected $100,000
from increased student fees. A "no" vote would

have meant the money would have been returned

to the students.

But the building will go up as scheduled. The first

stage of the building includes commercial facilities,

food services, offices, meeting and lounge spaces,


and fine arts and recreation facilities.

Architects are Ron Murphey and Norbert Schuier


of London and UBC designer Ken Sneider.

181
BLOOD CLINIC

"DROP IN AND DRIP", the


posters pleaded and close to

2000 students and faculty

members did just that for the

annual Red Cross Blood Clinic.

The examination rooms on the


third floor of Talbot College

were taken over by the Red


Cross and the School of Nursing

for the week. Beds were set up


and rapidly filled with students

eager to wear the red pin of


courage and humanity. Mrs.

Wallace, the supervisor of the

Clinic, said that "the response

was marvellous" even though the


goal set was not reached.

— *-'

182
Late flash — Gazette sold to Thomson —pg. 3
Hey

Vol.
Gazette

78 No. 11
The Gazette UNIVIRtlTY or WISTIRN ONTARIO, LONDON, CANADA
-""'

N*«»«<b*r 14, mt

Gazette sold fo
Thomson - USC
The Gazette has been sold to Canadian born Late last night, as this story was being
communications baron Lord Thomson of Fleet for Gazette staffers and editors across Canada w
S 7 5, 000. by phone and have pledged to meet the costs.
Thomson's take over was to have been made pubUc Brooks and Cudmore both deny The <

late next week when the portly multi-miilionaire comes to been sold and deny any knowledge of negotii
Canada but late Thursday The Gazette uncovered a so.
confidential memoranda to Thomson from USC President a member of the USC executive, wh<
But
Ian Brooks agreemg to the terms of the sale. secret memoranda to The Gazette and aske(
Severe pressure was applied to kill this story. identified, said all six members of the USC ex<
Gord Cudmore, USC Vice-President Finance, been offered positions in Thomson's about-ti
informed Hob Southcott, owner of The Exeter college press division providing no news of tl
Times-Advocate where The Gazette is printed, that the over breaks until it can be presented as a "fait

USC would not pay for this issue if this story was printed. "What's happened is the executive h
name The Gazet
right to dist
campus," he said.

Thomson takeovers He went


the plans and negc
or

Acquiring a small newspaper nothing new for "On Sep


Lx)rd Thomson. The baron of Fleet Street whohas
news of the U5.(
been at it for years, has been so successful that he is deficit was publisi

recognized today as the world's leading newspaper than a week lat'


owner with total corporate assets of about representing Lor*
$500,000,000. contacted Ian B
He built his empire slowly at first. He started the first tentative
out selling radios and after piecing together a chain of "Brooks di:

provincial papers and radio stations in Canada over offer as impract


many years, moved to Scotland in 1957 and bought week later disc
The Scotsman in Edinburgh and a controQing interest further financial
in Scottish television. He had reached the age of 63, Brooks of the Western Pi
an age when most people think of retiring. about to contact
But not Lord Thomson. Driven by a nagging in Toronto when the lawyer contacted him.
sense that he would fall behind if he stopped there, Brooks a job heading up a college press divi.*
he acted on the conviction that "money must be used would be in charge of securing rights to co
to make more money" and he set out to expand. In across Caiuda. Bro>oks said he'd have to think
less than a decade he headed one of the fastest mentioned he'd, like to discuss the sale of The
growing communications corporations in the world. 'Thomson originally offered $125,
In 1968, as chief of Thomson Organizations outright purchaae attempt. Brooks an<
Ltd., Thomson presided over a business that in countered with $100,000 plus five perc
addition to newspapers and magazines embraces 12 advertising revenues and a guarantee of a om
television stations. 1 1 broadcasting stationi, seven section every Friday. Thornton indicated m
book publishing houses, five educational aid haggle and ofTered S75,000 plus two and on6

It was the topic of conversation on Nov. 14 - The Gazette, sold to Thompson chain? That was what the "late flash"
claimed, and hundreds of students were taken for a ride by the imaginative Gazette staffers. This year's hoax was even
better than last year's "Gazette Tower" and D.B. Scott and Co. laughed loud and long at the gullibility of Western
students and at least one local radio station.
183
UNDER ATTACK
"Under Attack", Canada's unique

vehicle for airing student opinion,

taped several shows here this year. It

is a public affairs progrann which


actually makes news, and the news it

nnakes depends entirely on the student

panel, and on the questioning student


audience. According to Fred Davis,
the show's nnoderator. Western
students are known for their

"intelligent, incisive questioning".

Attacked by Western students this

year were: Miss Ti-Grace Atkinson, a

member of the militant Feminist

organization; Dr. Pierre Grondin, a

Montreal heart transplant surgeon;

Allan J. McLeod, Canadian


Commissioner of Penitentiaries; Dr.

Franklin Kameny, President of the


Mattichine Society, a group of

crusading homosexuals; Walter

Teague, chairman of the U.S.

Committee to aid the National

Liberation Front; Herman Kahn, an


advisor to the U.S. Military

establishment; Dick Gregory,


American comedian and civil rights

worker; and Stanley Burke, former


CBC newscaster and Biafran Relief
crusader.

184
I

185
ASSORTED GUESTS
Western welcomed many guests to its lecterns this year and a
few of them are pictured on these pages. Leighton Ford made
an appearance at Alumni Hall during October's London
Crusade for Christ and played to a small but interested crowd.

The Sociology Club brought Rene Levesque, leader of the


Parti Quebecois, toWestern to participate in a debate entitled
"Canada: One Nation or Two?". He predicted (correctly, as it
turned out) that his party would win 20—25 percent of the
vote in the Quebec general election. Scoffers beware!

Dick Gregory spoke to a full house in the Business School


prior to his appearance on "Under Attack". His evaluations of
Nixon as "dumb" and Agnew as "the type of cat who would
make crank calls on the hot line" were applauded by the
student audience which also agreed when he said that
university students were the most honest and sincere people
on earth.

Dr. Jean Paul Vanier filled Middlesex Theatre for his lecture
on "The Poor of the Earth" — not the financially poor, but
those whom we reject because of some physical, mental, or
social disability.

Middlesex was also the site when David Depoe said that the

hippie movement was "a futile attempt to bring about some


changes in society". He advocated getting to know the people
in the working class so that change could be brought about by
using an economic lever — strike power rather than the hippie
flower.

And Marshall McLuhan Was Here.

Depoe

Levesque
Ford
186
Vanier

jiij^^i,.

Gregory

McLuhan
187
use

IAN COMMENTS ON
THE YEAR ...
1969-'70 was a year in which the

University Students' Council talked

about involvement and, to a certain

extent, achieved it. Apart from putting

the use back into a sound financial

position, a greater emphasis was placed


on concrete programming rather than on
philosophical debates. As a result,

programs such as the Community Action

Centre, the London Tenants'


Association, the Tutoring Program,

Course Unions, and, of course, the

University Community Centre came into being. Emphasis was placed on working in the community. Based on the

philosophy that students have an obligation to become involved with the problems that afflict our society, a great deal of

time and energy was spent in the core areas of our city.

A more definite commitment was made to education this year, as the USC, for the first time, hired an educational

fieldworker to work in education, establishing course unions and planning free courses and interdisciplinary courses. The
work that was done had many results — some of the most obvious being the formation of a credit course called "Man in

Contemporary Society" hopefully to be introduced in the Faculty of Social Sciences in 1970-'71, and the revisions in the

BA program which were approved by the Senate in the spring of this year.

The University Community Centre, formerly called the Student Union Building, has been talked about at this university

for over 40 years. This year, it progressed from dusty files to architectural plans with construction expected to begin in

late 1970.

However, this year we did not address ourselves to some of the fundamental issues, as the student body seemed unwilling
to tackle them. Issues such as: Why the University?, The Role of the University in Society, and Democratizing the

University, were not topics of discussion throughout the campus. These are questions that still have to be answered and,

after leaving the University, perhaps you will have some thoughts on this area.

The future of the University and, in part, the future of our society depends upon the answers to these questions. They
certainly cannot be ignored forever.

188
above: the USC
in session

Ian Brooks and


Gord Cudmore
189
January was USC election time

and people began to wonder

who would be able to fill the

gargantuan shoes of Ian Brooks.

Three willing (but unknown)


candidates were found in Gerry

Roberts, Tom Skillman, and

Larry Steinman. Steinman came


out on top with 1927 of the

4137 votes cast, but was


immediately faced with the

prospect of having to do it all

over again. Steinman posters

had been put up after the 4

p.m. election-eve deadline and

some 750 ballots were missing.

The USC declared the rules

infraction played no part in

Steinman's victory. Don


Thomson, the Chief Returning
Officer, found the missing (and
unused) ballots, and the

outcome was finally made


official.

190
use President Larry WHO???

Rob McKenzie, shown here


polishing the pate of Elwood
Lemon, the USC Executive
Secretary, is the new
Vice-President of Finance. He,
too, has a great act to follow
— Gord Cudmore managed to
eliminate a $25,000 deficit
AND come out $1,000 in the
black. Let's hope McKenzie
proves as efficient.

191
WINTER WEEKEND

The Weekend began on Wednesday this

year. The Opening Ceremonies were

followed by the Basketball Mustangs

squeaker 76—74 win over the Windsor

Lancers and the January fun-fest was off

to a rousing start.

But the highly-touted Peace Parade show


Thursday night was close to disastrous.
Billed as "picking up where 'Hair' left

off", the group's performance came off

more like amateur night at the local high

school.

The Wild and Woolly West Carnival and

Casino Night proved successful — a nice

touch was the "routine check" made by

the London City Police. Middlesex

Theatre was packed full by horror-show


fans Friday night and again on Saturday

afternoon by cartoon lovers.

192
,.
a i
f,
i
J
H^H^H^^H^
^r
Snow Sculpture

Snowshoe Race

Pancake Luncheon

Chariot Race

194
Saturday was a lot of things — the

interf raternity broomball game,

toilet-bowl race, cross-country skiing,

powderpuff football. Pancake


Luncheon, assorted indoor sports,

another basketball ganne, the

snowshoe race, chariot race,

snow-sculpture judging, and the best

show ever at Alunnni Hall,

Chuck Berry, with Teegarden and

Vanwinkle and the Catharsis light

show, packed Alumni to its fullest

possible for two shows and "absolute


delirium" prevailed. The crowning of

Debbie McAlpine as Miss Western

took place at the Thames Hall dance

featuring The Apple and the Talismen.


Carnival

But, best of all, for the first time in

several years, there was SNOW for

Winter Weekend.

Pancake Luncheon
195
f
*%'-"'*^»..

Top: Debbie McAlpine, Judy Halbert, Sue Bundy. Bottom: Jacquie Ferris, Laura Nye.

Chariot Race Pancake Luncheon


196
Bob Shipley — Winner of Snowshoe Race Chariot Race

•m»^.

^^<

*^-^j^

Snow Sculpture
197
f

i If.

r
I
\
Chuck Berry

Miss Western — Debbie McAlpine

198
"

PARKING
IK i^f WtBSS^i^' A LTC plot to get rid of all

on campus by frustrating
1 4 cars

their owners? No, not at all.

'Twas just a scheme of the


Parking Committee, headed by

Dr. R.N. Shervill, to sort out

the parking mess. It did get

sorted out, but just into a

mess of a different kind. Red


lots, blue lots, green lots, and

reserved spaces were created.

Hundreds of students
complained that they were

"discriminated against" since

they were forced to park in

the areas furthest from the

main buildings.

-y'^ '

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199
PARKING
AT ANY

200
By the year's end, the Parking

Committee had resolved to

look into the matter.

Other than that nothing was

changed. Parking tickets still

cluttered the windshields of

almost all the cars on campus,

and Doug Waite's Towing


Service was busier than ever.

>'<B^")K3iPff^.
201
THE HUB
For the under-21 crowd (or those who forget

their I.D.), the Hub was open every Friday

and Saturday night. Here, surrounded by a

coffee-house atmosphere (dim lights and lots

of smoke), a person could relax and listen to

both local and visiting folk singers. They sang


everything — folk, classical, popular, jazz, and
even the occasional blues.

If you arrived before ten, you usually got a

seat, but quite often the basement of

Somerville got so crowded, people Utterly

lined the walls. The audiences were terrific,

the coffee and hot chocolate came from


upstairs (need we say more) and the

entertainment superb.

.1

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202 ""
Hi 1)
I
SPOKE 'N' RIM

^vii^^t^i'Hiid It seemed, at the beginning

of the year, that the Spoke


'N' Rim was going to follow

the trend set by previous

campus pubs. That is, it

seemed likely to prove a

dismal failure.

203
But believers such asStu Boyd

and Kent Taylor, with the

help of some good live

entertainment, managed to

make the Spoke 'N' Rim a

moderate success.

Low prices (or at least not

high ones) and a consistent

effort to provide popular local

groups combined to draw a

faithful drinking clientele. The


pub's popularity climbed

steadily and another Western

tradition was begun.

204
If spring didn't come, would they?

*t
Although each year less emphasis is being

placed on final exams, most students still

have to go through the torturous ordeal.

From Italian 2 to Advanced


Electromagnetic Theory 420, the hot

Aprils in Thames or Alumni Hall all seem


the same as we file in to have our brains

drained. And who can forget the all-night

booking sessions in which no sleep was


obtained and from which no knowledge

was retained.

Yes, for seven months we can't wait for the

finals to come, but when they do, we wish

we had another month before they started.

205
PEOPLE AND ART

206
207
TACHYCARDIA
"Tachycardia" — the Meds' annual immorality revue — lived up to tradition
again this year. After a musical opening by Mike Simmons and his band, the

renowned Vic nurses danced through a lively rendition of "Those Were The
Days". Then "Laugh-In" arrived in the hilarious duo of Jerry Brown and
Bob Page. Meds '73 started off the class skits with "Ovulate", a takeoff on
the musical "Oliver", followed by Meds 72 and their tale, "How Elijah Lily

Pushed His Way Across the West". The award-winning number was Meds '71

spoof — "Julius Robartus and the Fateful FOSIP". The evening ended with
Meds '70 and "The Midnight Cowboy Visits Victoria Hospital" riding off

into the night.

f_SilA^ii.

208
^MERGOyfY

I M-
THE GONDOLIERS
- ANOTHER SMASHING SUCCESSI
So said almost everyone who saw this year's

production by the Gilbert and Sullivan

Society. "The Gondoliers" celebrated its 80th


birthday this year, and it's still coming on
strong, with digs at society as relevant today

as in Victoria's age. The contemporary mood


was enhanced by costuming, impressionistic
sets, experimental lighting, unique dialogue
interpretations, and lively music. Brenda
Mellen as the rags-to-riches heroine, Harold

Johnson as the pompous duke and Elizabeth

Jacobs as his wife, Ed Ward's Grand


Inquisitor, and the would-be gondoliers and
their wives, Jim Francom and Gord Sinclair,

Ann Glover and Sylvia Karges, played their

roles with feeling and humour. The fine work


of the chorus added a professional air to the

whole show.

210
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^Bhhh Mf 211
CAMELOT CAME!
And with it, a year of change and Innovation for Purple Patches.

For four years. Patches had used the 665-seat Althouse College
auditorium for an eight night run of their productions. This year they
moved to the 2100-seat Alumni Hall for a three night run of
"Camelot". This was the first time that the Hall had been used for a

theatrical production.

Another 'first' was the use of a thrust stage for the main playing area.

No other major production in London had used this technique


previously.

The result of the experiment? Hard work and fun for the entire cast,

and an evening of enchantment for all who attended.

212
213
PLAYERS'
GUILD
Players' Guild activities this year

concentrated on two major


productions — Woyzeck. a heavy,

psychological drama using


multi-media stimuli, and Lysistrata, a

light comedy with a sexual, feminist,

anti-war theme. The aim of Players'

Guild is to offer experience in all

aspects of play producing, including

acting, designing, etc. They try to

choose plays which have scope for


development in all these areas.

Y
Z
E

C
K

214
LYSISTRATA

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215
UWO CHOIR
Entice a collection of students to conne to a practice by offering
glowing promises of seeing the world and what do you get?

A choir?

Correction.

A lot of hilarious situations which are well hidden behind a facade

of formal gowns and bow ties at concerts.

It requires a miracle to hammer a group of musical amateurs into a

professional- sounding chorus, but director. Professor Gordon


Greene manages just that.

The result is entertainment for both performer and audience.

And the University of Western Ontario Choir has been doing that
on campus only twenty years!

. . . concerts
travelling,
parties . . .

216
^

217
GREAT ARTISTS' CONCERTS
The Alumni Association, again this year,
provided program of concerts for
a varied
interested people both on and off campus. The
artists included:

Les Feux-Follets

Mantovani and his orchestra

Ray Charles and his orchestra and show

Lionel Hampton and his orchestra

NHK Symphony Orchestra of Japan

OSIPOV Balalaika Orchestra of Moscow

Vladimir Ashkenazy, pianist

Cannonball Adderley and his jazz group

Jacqueline Du Pre, cellist, and


Daniel Barenboim, pianist

Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra

Danzas Venezuela, dancers, singers

Marcel Marceau, French Mime

Joan Sutherland, opera star, and


Richard Bonynge, pianist

Preservation Hall Jazz Band

The Barrow Poets from England

218
Ray Charles

Marcel
Marceau

Julian "Cannonball" Adderley

219
SUNDAY NINE O'CLOCK
Again this year, Sunday Nine
O'clock presented a diverse
and exciting series of concerts
to suit every mood and taste —
classics, folk music and jazz.
Artists included Erroll Garner, The Sandpipers,
Carlos Montoya, Ronald Turini, and students from
the College of Music in the UWO Choir and
Orchestra Concert, the Concerto Concert and the
Symphonic Band Concert.

Ronald Turini's classical piano

The jazz piano of Erroll Garner


220
The Sandpipers . . .

smooth, subtle, professional.

221
dXY
It is customary to have on this page candid

shots of our staff, hard at work. So where are


they? Well, we were so busy arranging for pics
of pie fights and football games, examinations
and protests, that they somehow did not get
taken.

Oxy this year was a lot of work for a few


people. This probably reflects the dying
interest in having a yearbook. Less than 20%
of the undergraduate population, at whom
the book is primarily aimed, purchased Oxys
for this year.

But for those who gave their time and effort,


it was fun. This book, far more than this page,
represents our activity for the year.
^=^J>^^!>^-<
FOLIO this year underwent an ..; %%^ <
-^t*"^ o^
'
~^^^^^t^ ideological revolution. Convinced of *^^%, '^
9.'^^^
its own irrelevance, Folio exploded
sporadically with
but futile defiant
attempts to challenge, lull, titillate,
and enrapture students with the raw ^^'
'^^•<^
.NN'H^'\
1
power of art. With wild abandon, we rf>0^
i\*

till' -<<^
scattered mimeographed Mini-Folios
around cafeterias (about 15,000 of
ax<^
them); we held a whole week of ft-*

noon-hour orgies of poetry reading in


which campus poets spewed their
n»'^'^-::.n.i'^:;ara'^^^:tiv'^'^
creativity out upon their audience, fit
though few. We published the first
authentic anti-book, anti-black and
•*r«'^»' n""C>"* white, anti-continuity, anti-folio
is brif^^ atc^>'
iovc-„ot»^7:;„rU'''-,aciay- Folio, and called it "dimebag", hoping
It
do ^,a(it
I'
..irt^at*^
'
rall a'l students would get high with the
hc»i technicolour little poems and pix. If a \<^

•^ '^'^o single poem decorated a drab wall, ''Sr 'O,


re ^,>.
V ''<<'/,%/% developed into a pretty lecture note, ./<- ^"^

^K!-^- or convinced someone that poetry


isn't what profs make you read, we
''-'/

1^. ^^^ ^^'^/^ <^o.%£a^


>,^
feel art has triumphed again, even if it :;^ed.."-
is irrelevant. O

V,. ^.r
Tom Waugh editor
'^/.

t. waugh
\>
assistant
<•/..
j. parikhal
.6=
/)
''

business
b. crockford
N ..S"-*
^'-.c
<6 .xft
^ -5)
v^ 4J
board
5- - c .— E
>> d. babcock
c tj S^i .5 -3

c
>, T3

r, ^ -2
^'
p. chute
ra f> .t; (A
O c
c/i
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^^".c^ c ^ -c
"-^ oco - t: s. Cornell
ra ;x
-*' ;*-^ c -
./ c?"^

O ^ —
f3 <L) -r- "O — '~.

j. hamilton
"Today o t. handford
is the day
first Ci..— cT3nnr3— r^n^.— ra

of the rest of your life" m. Johnson

223
S&M

THE GAZETTE
One of the Gazette philosophies —

Your college life is like anything


You will get fronn it only what
else.

you put into it. If you spend all


your time studying electron orbits,
that's how you'll develop — a shell
of little circles, mostly hollow.

R. J. Strupat

And so, the Gazette staff is out to get


what they want from college . . .

D. B. Scott

Darryl Gibson

Judi Timson Thomas Aquinas Bob Morris


224
Fred Darke and Nancy Grylls Don Thomson

Peanuts Robert Tex' Ritter

Jan Fry Perrin Beatty, Rod McPhee, Dennis Nagata


225
I

Len Lizmore, Nina Aprile, and 'The Flying Phone'

Hard at work — Meegan Rossiter, Kim, Cathy Battel, Judi, Tom McKegney

. . . and to those of you whose efforts were not depicted in these


pages — even the camera exhibits a blind justice.
Peanuts

226
.-,'^5 '•"' .•''',."''•.'
'>v"'l "'''-','

ADVERTISING
VERTISING INDEX

Alumni Association
The Audio Centre
J.H. Back & Co. Ltd.
Baldwin Garnnents Ltd.
Bernardo Tile Co. Ltd.
Beta Photos Ltd.
Birks Jewellers
Book Store - U.W.O.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
Canadian Ingersoll-Rand Co. Ltd.
Canadian Westinghouse Co. Ltd.
'

Channer's Decorating Centre


City of London
Coca-Cola Ltd.
College Sports
Costain-Stiles-Langford Ltd.
Dow Chemical of Canada Ltd.
Eaton Automotive Canada Ltd.
Eaton's
Emco Ltd.
Allan Johnston Typewriters Ltd.
Kingsmill's
c

Doug Kirk
Roy Kumano Portrait Studio
Marks & Co.
McDougall Construction Ltd.
Middlesex Motors Co. Ltd.
Murphy & Schuller
Nash Jewellers
Ron Nelson Photography
Postian's Rugs Ltd.
Pratt Lindgren Snider Tomcej & Associates
Richardson Securities of Canada
Roberts Holmes
The Royal Bank of Canada
The Royal Trust Co.
J.M. Schneider Ltd.
Silverwood Dairies Ltd.
Simpson's
Erik Singer
Smith-Graham Drug Stores Ltd.
The Steel Co. of Canada Ltd.
Sumner Jewellers
Supertest Petroleum Corp. Ltd.
Tillmann & Lamb
Whitehills Development Corporation
'Canada's Largest Broadloom and Oriental Rug Showrooms'

Direct Importers of Exclusive Persian,


Chinese and Indian Carpets

Tremendous Variety of Quality Broadlooms

MODERN FULLY EQUIPPED PLANT FOR


EXPERT RUG CLEANING AND REPAIRING
Wall to Wall Carpets Cleaned In Your Home

CONTRACT DIVISION: Schools, Hospitals,

Institutions, Churches, Offices, Stores

397 - 401 DUNDAS AT COLBORNE - 434-1626 LONDON


58 - 60 KING STREET EAST - 745-8418 KITCHENER
58 ST. CLAIR STREET - 345-9000 CHATHAM

229
.k

Good Luck

GRADUATES
Graduation

Photographs by

^-A^
^
May your motoring be

SAFE, PLEASANT, and


t(-:^WlI^
ALWAYS WITH
1

SilPEilTEBr
PORTRAIT STUDIO
CANADA'S ALL CANADIAN COMPANY
432-9479

451 Hamilton Road

/( ^iSi\ LONDON, ONTARIO


SUPERTESI

230
{
\
^^ 5
/
^^f^y.Jr''^'.fff^«^•^ .

COMPLIMENTS OF

t
DOUGflLL
LTD.

OENERAL CONTRACTORS

HEAD OFFICE - London, Ont.

BRANCHES - Toronto, North Bay

AFFILIATES - Edmonton, Alta., St. John, N. B.

231
Best Wishes for a

MIDDLESEX Successful Future

MOTORS
COMPANY (1965) LIMITED

Congratulates the

GRADUATES OF 1970

Photography
We look forward to serving you.

• LINCOLN • COUGAR
• MARQUIS • MAVERICK
• METEOR • CORTINA
• MONTEGO
100 Queens Ave. London
Phone 433-3721
Phone
432-8381
212 Dundas Street (upstairs)

232 London
EAT . . . Sxhterwx>ods
cream
deluxe ice

MARKS AND CO
DRINK . . . Sii^^terwjDods
safe milk

'- - HEALTHY
Suppliers of plumbing, heating and industrial

supplies for home and industry

^jcuuxes , iww
MEAD OFFICE LONDON, CANADA

720 Quebec Street Phone:


1903 - 66 YEARS - 1969 London, Ontario 451-8570

Owned by Canadians

233
ComplimenU of

BERNARDO
MARBLE, TERRAZZO & TILE
CO. LTD.

THINGS
245 Maitland St. London

TERRAZZO CERAMIC TILE


Hon nelso>|
MARBLE

COLD MASTIC RESILIENT TILE

AND ALLIED PRODUCTS

234
t '"^vr^'

'

n 111 ^itfc \t

MNTTO DO YOUR THING?


then let's talk
We're a fast growing Canadian
manufacturer and supplier of
products for the control and
transfer of liquids and gases.
These products are
manufactured and distributed
from facilities across Canada,
in the United States, England,

France, Germany, Australia and


Japan . . . with head office in

London, Ontario, Canada


We're looking for people who
know what they want; know
what they have and want . . . to
work at it Interested?
. . . . . .

EMCO LIMITED
BOX 5300
LONDON 12, ONTARIO

235
DIAMOND IMPORTERS SINCE 1902

doug kirk

423 Dufferin Avenue


THE # T ,

(2 blocks East of Victoria Park) ^wick; N ^A^ax


CANDLE SHOP
PHONE 439-5901 DIVISION DF

Open Evenings Ample Free Parking


C. R. SUMNER & SONS LTD.
392 Richmond St. London 12, Canada 432-1131

236
\Co^^ '^f'^/^oik^
"THE STORE THAT SERVICE BUILT"
181 King St., London, Ontario - Phone 439-0186
2 doors east of Richmond

We Have Everything You Could Wish For In Western Sportswear

WESTERN JACKETS Men's and Ladles' WESTERN SWEATSHIRTS


Purple & White in 10 Styles Long & Short Sleeves
For Fall - Poplin, Nylon Scarves, Nightshirts, Navy, Powder, White
For Winter - Melton, Nylon Toques and T shirts and Burgundy Henley Styling
with zip-in lining & Leather
Ladies Western
SKI EQUIPMENT Blazers and Capes MOTOR BIKES
SKIS by Head, Fischer, by Suzuki
and Canadian ABC. SALES AND SERVICES
BOOTS by Tyrol, Lange, SKI RENTALS
Caber and Humanic.
& REPAIRS Sorority and Fraternity
CLOTHING by White Stag,
Nancy Green,
Pedigree, Gibralter,
SWEATSHIRTS
SKATE SHARPENING — 5 day
Crested to order delivery
Cortina and Head

237
^K

^^>J^
. jIk ^^^^^H
1^PS LgM^^^^H
k %^\^^^
^^^^^P^jt^^^B

r ^ fl
^^Hj^
*^'
a^^P^MK^

1 ^^B J^ %.

5esf Wishes from

THE "U" STUDENT'S DRUGSTORE


Regular Daily Deliveries To All University Residences

•LADIES COSMETICS
Bonnie Bell, Love, Max Factor,
Yardley and Dubarry

BALDWIN GARMENTS • FRAGRANCES


Faberge, Chanel, Caron, Prince
Matcheabelli, Hartnel's In Love,

LIMITED and Shulton


•MEN'S COSMETICS
Faberge, Yardley and Old Spice
Prescriptions
Fast Service on Photo Developing and Printing
Coin Operated Photo Copier
Carlton Greeting Cards
Large "Contemporary" Card Selection
Stationery Supplies and Gift Wrap
Notebooks, Refills, School Supplies
Forum House Study Notes

SMITH-GRAHAM DRUGSTORES LTD.

1 135 Richmond Street 434-2721


200 Adelaide South
Street,
(at the "U" Entrance
London, Canada
ALSO
Institutional and Commercial Garments 952 Oxford Street 451 -51 GO
238
239
'BWW'WS^Sfe

HEADQUARTERS for the finest m


STEREO HIGH FIDELITY cuip^ent

featuring:

TUNERS, AMPLIFIERS Mcintosh, Scott, Fisher, Sony, Kenwood, Sansui,


8e RECEIVERS by Bogen, Harmon Kardon, CM Labs, A/R, JBL
DO-IT-YOURSELF KITS by Dynaco, Eico, Scott
LOUDSPEAKERS by JBL, A/R, Sony Bozak, E-V, Sansui,
RSC, Scott, Fisher, KLH, Harnnon Kardon
TURNTABLES, TONE Dual, Garrard, Miracord, Thorens,
ARMS & CARTRIDGES by: A/R, Ennpire, Sony, Stanton, Shure,
Ortofon, Pickering, Lenco, ADC
TAPE RECORDERS Sony, Viking, Magnacord, Roberts,
& TAPES by: Revox, Crown, Audio Tape

COMPLETE DEMONSTRATION FACILITIES

THE
audio centre
CANADA'S FINEST HI-FI/STEREO SALON WITH AUDIO SPECIALISTS TO SERVE YOU
PLENTY OF
FREE PARKING

782 YORK AT RECTORY PHONE 438-7291 LONDON, ONTARIO


240
Whatever you do

YouHl enjoy shopping


at Sim^psons

241
Compliments
and Best Wishes from
London's favorit-e

One-Stop

decorating centre

Bob Latella

FOR C.I.L. PAINT. WALLPAPER.


DRAPES AND FLOORING

Be sure to visit our Art


Gallery for Picture Fram-
ing and Art Supplies.

DECORATING CENTRE

Phone 104 Dundas Street


519 Richmond St. London 432-6171 ot Talbot
Call 438-7196 or 438-1061
242
243
EATON AUTOMOTIVE DIVISION
j

EATON YALE & TOWNE J. H. BACK & CO.


LIMITED
CANADA LIMITED
Wholesale Photographic Supplies
LONDON. ONTARIO

GRAPHIC ARTS
INDUSTRIAL & SCIENTIFIC V

PORTRAIT & COMMERCIAL

TWO LOCATIONS

EATON A progressive Company

YALE e In a
London Hamilton
270 Sherman Ave. N.
TOWNE
^^ INC. ^^
progressive Corporation
931 Leathorne
Phone 434-2159 Phone 547-3779

PRODUCER!5 OF:
(SAME DAY DELIVERY)
• Axles and Transmissions.
Specialized Fasteners for Industry.
Quality metal and molded plastic parts.
Creative Research for manufacture of Western Ontarios Largest Photographic Supply House
Truck and off-highway components.

244
f

k
;

Vv

-.
J

<

A'
f
1-
sr B SS ' fcK. e

^MKlBiJ

You've already invested in education...


Ask us about an investment in the future

The dramatic expansion of Canada's industry

in recent years has created new interest among Canada's


people in the field of investment securities.

As a result, qualified young people now look to the

securities business for an ever-increasing number


of excellent career opportunities.

If you'd like to build a lifetime on the foundations of your


own integrity, imagination and industry, you're invited
to consult us about the requirements we set and
the rewards offered. The securities industry may well be

the place where you can make an investment in your future

Richardson Securities
OF
Canada
AFFIUATEOF
JAMES Richardson a Sons, Limited
ESTABUSHED1»57

HEAD OFdCE: WINNIPEG


OFFICES IN All I'RINCII'AL CANADIAN CITIES,
NEW YOKK, CHICAGO, LONDON. FKANKFURT.

245
i

PRIVATE GROUNDS

THE UNIVERSITY OF
WESTERN ONTARIO
NO THROUGH IRAFFIC

NO CONSTRUCTION TRUCKING

246
^

247
248
Keep Ingersoil-Rand in mind
Products bearing the name, Canadian Ingersoll-Rand are
at work across Canada pumping liquids, compressing
. . .

air and other gases, drilling rock, aiding labour with power

tools, and making paper. Throughout industry and


wherever major projects are undertaken.
At C.I.R., research, design, manufacture and application are
integrated for one purpose— to produce better products
for industry. Something we've been doing since 1882.
Quality and craftsmanship are two ingredients of which
reputations are made, so we are always on the lookout
for new skills. While it is unlikely that your career will be
with us . .certainly your career and our products will
.

become acquainted. So keep Ingersoll-Rand in mind.

CANADIAN
f| Ingersoll-Rand
COMPANY LIMITED

Head Office: Montreal • Plant: Sherbrooke, Que. • Branches Across Canada

249
op ROYAL TRUST
Canada's Largest Trust Company
Offers a Wide Range of Complete
Personal Services TILLMANN
& LAMB
Term Deposits Architects
Savings
Investment Management
Managed Funds
Estate Planning & Administration 318 Wolfe Street

Mortgages and Real Estate


LONDON, ONTARIO

PETER F. TILLAAANN, B.Arch., M.R.A.I.C.

WILFRID B. LAMB, BArch., M.RA.I.C.

137 Dundas Street 672-2550


250
Bl R KS B I ft K S

8-13 El-B

ot/ife OtamoHclg
Created Especially For
YOUNG FASHIONABLES

Registered Jewellers
of
The American Gem Society

Official Jewellers to The University of Western Ontario

BIRKS
JEWELLERS
173 DundasSt.
LONDON

Wellington Argyle
Square Mall

251
over a century of retailing

130 Dundas opposite The Market Lane


PRATT LINDGREN SNIDER TOMCEJ
AND ASSOCIATE • ARCHITECTS
575 ST. MARYS ROAD
WINNIPEG 8. MANITOBA TELEPHONE 233-7186

K. R D PRATT. B ARCH . MRA.I.C.


S. E LINDGREN. B ARCH . FRA.I.C. A. TOMCEJ. B ARCH . M R A.I.C.

K. R SNIDER. M ARCH . M R A.I C. E JOHNSON. B ARCH . M R A.I.C.

MURPHV. SCHULLER
GREEN AND MARTIN
ARCHITECTS
R E MURPHY. B ARCH M R . A O
I

N J StJHLJLLER. B ARCH M R . A C
I

J F GREEN. B ARCH M R . A CI

B W MARTIN. B ARCH M R . A CI

J PATTERSON. PROJECiT
CO-ORDINATOR

B WATEHUnO BTREET. LONDOM 11. f )NTAHIO AHF A t^OOE S1H TELEF'HOfSiE 4Dri-fiUi1
SO-l TALHCIT HTHEET HT THOViAS IJMTAHK) AMt A CODE SIS. TELEPHONE S31-TOar)

'V^

^x

i\\\\f^^^^p;^j^^^^^5^S\^

y.o. (So ^^[i®^[l[Ri[W]


RE MURPHY. B ARCH. M R A C I /N J SCHULLER. B ARCH. M R A IC PRATT LINDGREN SNIDER TOMCEJ AND ASSOCIATE • ARCHITECTS
TTO WATtHLCHi BTHCET LO«Sil)l)iN.1l ( >'SiTAMK > AMlAC:OUE OtO TELCf^MO^E *:i;» 0101 975 9T MANY S flOAO WINNIPCC a MANITOBA

253
BEST WISHES

GRADUATES

From
The Mayor and Council

of the Corporation of

CITY OF LONDON •m k!"

j»«"rar

1
Ml
d&SIlL
f*F'
/-^L*»
_d5fe**

•«»• *.

S'

254
COSTAIN STILES LANGFORO LTD
479 HIGHBURY AVENUE
LONDON CANADA
''CREATORS OF BETTER
OFFICE ENVIRONMENT':

255
-^-j** '^Wdt

Compliments of

ALLAN JOHNSTON
TYPEWRITERS LIMITED

Authorized
SMITH-CORONA
Dealer Service
Sales and Service by
Factory Trained Technicians
on Smith-Corona Electric
Standard or Portable Typewriters
Centre
Need banking service? We've got it. . . plus over
a hundred years of experience, and branches
Smith-Corona Portables right across Canada. For the sort of service you
The only portable typewriter
with a 5 year guarantee on —
want, see the service centre the Commerce.
both parts and labor

Special Student-Rental Rates CANADIAN IMPERIAL


BANK OF COMMERCE
(Free Delivery)

97 King St. -Dial 432-7564


LONDON
256
What's Canadian
Westinghouse
been up to lately?

About 1 ,000 feet.


Shooting film. '<#{?«i«^S.-31M*y' •WT'^M

Canadian Westinghouse gets around. On sea, A camera operator inside a helicopter has complete
land and in the air. And great ideas always seem remote control over his filming. He sees the picture
to follow. on a monitor before his eyes. Hollywood and
Take the WESSCAM system for instance. Toronto film companies have already been using
It's a camera mount. And the most versatile and the WESSCAM system.
stable one around. As stable as a ground-based Developed in our Electronics Division, it's only one
tripod. The WESSCAM mount can be used to take of the many great ideas we've had lately. Canadian
movies from helicopters, boats, automobiles and Westinghouse is up to all sorts of things.
just about anything else that moves. You can be sure if It's Westinghouse

Canadian Westinghouse Company Limited A^^


TOWN HOUSES!
Your own intimate private courtyard. Classically styled.
Precision-crafted. When you look through the homes in
Whitehills you will find no short cuts in quality.

SINGLE FAMILY HOMES!


This could be your
home in Whitehills with
many extras included
and no extra cost.

WHITEHILLS comprises 400 acres of roliinq land.


GO MODERN-GO GAS
It takes only 12 leisurely minutes to reach downtown London,
5 minutes to Western. Bus service is provided to meet City buses
for University and College students.

The same professional team that designed and developed


University Orchard Park and Sherwood Forest, all
Heights,
show places of exciting beauty and admiration, are planning
Whitehills.

WHITEHILLS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION


197 HOMESTEAD CRESCENT, LONDON, ONTARIO. 471-5680
Once you saw it . . . now you don't, because

Steico is turned on!


Nearly eight-million-dollars-worth of equipment • Various oil recovery and acid disposal
on Stelco's open hearth furnaces is now "turned systems.
on" to prevent air contamination. This equip- • Various closed water-recirculation systems.
ment IS 99% effective.
• An acid regeneration system for re-use of
In other areas of quality control of air, Steico waste acid.
has installed —
• Electrostatic precipitators on all blast
Total expenditures since 1953 amount to
over $17,000,000.
furnaces.
Dust collection equipment on the sinter plant.

Stelco's policy is now well established. The
A smokeless charging car for the coke ovens.

company willaccept the very large expenditures
involved in solving existing problems; and by
In the drive to eliminate water impurities, Steico
including control devices m the original engineer-
has installed — ing for future facilities, will prevent new problems
• A phenol recovery plant for the
coke ovens. from arising.

The Steel Company


of Canada, Limited
StGiCO
70 PR 7
.^^

fa

260
f,
(7

1
k J.

1 :(»•.

# V: ,^ ».-> r:^

M\m

The University of Western Ontario Alumni Association

Don M. Scott G. Campbell McDonald


President 1970-71 Director of Alumni Affairs
Art Supplies Leather Goods
Office Supplies Juvenile Books
School Supplies Photo Albums
Stationery Gift Wrap
Fountain Pens Greeting Cards

BOOKS • SCHOOL SUPPLIES • STATIONERY


One Location:
240 Dundas St., Opposite the Odeon
^^f^^'°^'
oV-
\o

Ifyou want advice or information


on any of the financial services
we offer to students,
drop in and see us soon.
We're approachable I

ROYAL BAN K
263
WHAT'S
DOW?
Dow is people — people engaged dustrial chemicals, plastics, agricul- evolve new products for tomorrow.
in research and development, pro- tural chemicals, pharmaceuticals and Dow is good place to work. At
a
duction, design, sales and technical flexiblepackaging from manufac- least that's what our employees say.
service —
people creating a better Sarnia, Toronto
turing facilities in Fringe benefits help make it so;
way of life in Canada. and Thunder Bay, Ontario; Mon- stock purchase plans are offered
Dow is opportunity — opportuni- treal and Varennes, Quebec; Fort periodically; low-cost hospital and
ty to grow and develop within the Saskatchewan, Alberta; and Ladner, medical plans and life insurance;
limitations each person's own
of British Columbia. In addition, annual salary reviews with empha-
capabilities. Employees are trained Dowell operations provide oil and sis on merit; pension plan; educa-
to take advantage of opportunity. gas well service and industrial tional refund plan for advanced
Assignments are made with a high cleaning from strategic locations courses.
regard for individual development. across Canada For further information about
Promotions are made from within. Research goes on endlessly in your career with Dow please write
Most men in key positions today Sarnia. Basic research, process de- to Industrial Relations Department,
began their careers with Dow. velopment and application research Dow Chemical of Canada. Limited
Dow is a major producer of in- make today's products better and at Sarnia, Ontario

DOWCHEMICALOFCANADA, LIMITED
^Trademark ol The Dow Chemical Company

265
.11 9 q (rsfe M 9 . :i^i ii-^

'

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ffl 111 mn ni"

'a?'*

ip^

rn, till kit

-fc» -t
n. *H»MftK tAK www <I IH i I JW WW W >|» . .. -^^ ,
:-ffr5

You'll Enjoy

FOODS
Taste The Difference Quality Makes
The
Book Store
Somerville House J.M. SCHNEIDER
Mon. 4:45 p.m.
to Thurs. 9 a.m. to
LIMITED
Friday 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Kitchener Ontario

267
268
.

»^*NjS>^.

:'^' J^>

>

*?*?•

"^ ''-^iom^J^^^

IT*SI«70.
LET*S TAKE A STAMD.
Published by Eaton's in the interests of people . .

We're heading into the seventies. More leisure, lots of future. If things are to get better (and we can't help
money, good times for all. We don't think so, somehow. feeling they will) we are all going to have to work at it. It
We've weathered the sixties and that alone automatically won't be easy — the sixties proved that. So before we leap
puts a restriction on any blind optimism we might feel into the fray, let's look at the decade just past. Where did
that everything is going to be peaches and cream in the we go? What were the issues? The triumphs? The lessons?
Youth War Responsibility Discrimination Population explosion Space travel Pollution
Now there's a loaded issue' Must always bt> with us.'
it There's a new style in Cerlainly the sixties gave Have you noticed thai Four men have walked on Need we even mention it?
Every time a youth move- Perhaps as long as wi- politii-s. Our leaders are us ample opportunity to discussions about this the m<K)n. Incredible! Can there slill be holdouts
ment rears it head it weal's view it and speak "f u beginning to present govern- examine this age-old ill. problem always seem to .^nd while we may remember against cleaning up our
a new disguise that always, dispassionately it always ment foi- what il is— people. Il became the basis of end in a general kind of the events as 1969's best world? We think nol. Any
alu-ays enrages its elders. will be. There must be few Not so.ne invisible, fog- revolutions. slitH?t warfare. di'pression? You gel the television spectaculars, person who thinks, breathes,
Yet if there's hope for the faniilii-s in this country shruuded machine thai end- political campaigns. And fi-eling thai even while inside each of us we carry sees or hears knows that
seventies at all it springs who don't have at least one lessly protects, reward.'*, or yet, of all the issues of the y<»u're talking, the birlh the eery knowledge that the time is now— not ten
from the fact thai the youth member who has actively taxes us but people grap- sixties, this was the easiesl rale of the world churns on. four men hai€ actually walked years from now— but now.
of the sixties spoke with participated in one war or pling, wisely or not, with to decide which side was making any kind of sug- on the moon We would like
'
And who knows? Maybe in

such a strong social con- another. Yei we tend to the issues of the day. We right For all their carefully gestion you might have to salute the skill and the mid seventies Canadians
science—no matter where accept it as a kind of natuial think this is good because planned, "sensible" argu- seem rather silly We know courage of everyone in all will once more go lo their
they were— in Canada or state, a time measurement the issues inevitably bounce ments, the discriminators the feeling. Kxcept we countries who contributed beaches to swim, instead of
in the world. And what — "we moved here duiing back onto us and we must eventually revealed the put our faith in another to this remarkable feat silling on the littered sands
gladdened our battened old the war" "(irandpa
. . .
act. We become the re- hysterical kind of fear thai explosion; ihe technology Was it jusl us, or did watching the hazy sun
hearts so much was that married her just after the spoi^ible ones. This trend is always the base of their explosion. Man has always everyone get the feeling dance on the waves and
they were so often right. great war" "Susie was
. . .
will grow in the seventies. beliefs. Hut they have their had a marvelous capacity that while the miwn was feeling sad b«rause they
This large, noisy, vital pari born just before Ken was It will spread to include role: they force us to for dealing with problems inhabited those of us who know it's als') darKing on a
of our society was working, shipped overseas". War is all forms of government, look deep into our own at hand This will be no were down here looking up build-up of pollulion-loving
actually working to right not inevitable. Perhaps we large corporations, ariy and consciousness and rid our- exception. Il seems to us had a feeling of community algae, dying or dead fish.
some of the wrongs in our should be more passionate all projects made up of selves of any trace of this that the same kind of — world conmiunity? And aT>d tons upon uiKounted
world. And they did it with about ii. Perhaps we should people whose actions affeci same irrational fear we may dedication that sent man lo on a nmre ethereal level, tons of senseless filth. Have
that marvelous sense of take our cue from youlh other lives. If the sixties find The seventies are the moon must now turn we can't help feeling that we any suggestions? Yes.
show biz thai jusl naturally and fight it as passionately taught us anything, they going to be full enough of to the problem of feeding. the expansion of man's Keep getting angry — the
got attention and, better as we would any other taught us once and for all rational problems without cloihitig and housing every horizons is a i^ect-sisary thing. angrier the better. Because
yet. results. So rant on you cruel injustice. Youth has that we are a communily. having to expend energy citizen of the world. We In each of us there seems time, as we all know, is
elders, if you must, about found hard to hate another
it Anyone who saw the pic- on irrational ones. Surely think the seventies will see to be this small hungering running out.
their looks or their habits people as an enemy. In tures of the larth taken by now we have learned the first big steps taken outward— perhaps lo
or their attitudes.But don't some quarters this may be from the Apollo space crafts that disiTimination is towards this goal. a return.
get loo carried away. The called treason but we view now knows thai for better morally wrong, cruel, and
object of youi scorn— that it as a 5rst step to what or for worse, in sickness or worst of all. a senseless
single, defiantyoung person might be a marvelous in health, peacetime or war. waste of hunian potential.
is,without doubt, the most new age. we are all in this together.
valuable commodity this
battle-torn centui^ has
yet produced.

EATON'S 269
EDITORS' MESSAGE

All year long, people kept asking us why we actually chose to be the editors

of the 1970 Oxy. We often asked ourselves that same question. We were in

the fourth year of an honours program, hadn't worked on a yearbook since

high school, and hadn't participated too much in any of Western's student

clubs and organizations. In short, we weren't the "type".

Why, then? Because we were disgusted when the '68 book came out in the

spring of 1969 and it was then that, without really thinking about what we

were getting into, we decided to try to get the 1970 Occidental ia out on

time.

And here we are struggling with the final pages of the last shipment. All our

deadlines have been met and, hopefully, the book will appear on September

1, 1970, as promised. Our book may not achieve the high standard set by

Evan Browne's 1969 book, but we hope it will satisfy you at least half as

much.

We learned a lot in the process of producing this book. We learned about the

difficulties involved in getting people to work on something to which they

do not have a real sense of obligation. And we learned about the problems

involved whenever two people with different personalities have equal

responsibility for a single task. It certainly was not easy at times to agree,

but we managed, and the friendship has survived.

There were many people who played an important role in the production of

the book. There was David Carswell whose camera gave us a lot of unusual

impressions of the buildings and scenery we've been looking at for years.

And Lome Millar was very helpful. He put together the advertising section so

that all we had to do was add the pictures. Without his cooperation, we
would never have met the deadlines.

John Jukes did a great deal of work at deadline time too. He printed pictures

when we needed them the most. We must also thank all the Gazette

photographers who provided most of the pictures we used:

270

k
Rick Allen

D.R. Brown

Evan Browne

John Crossley

Fred Darke

Tonn DeYoe

Gary Dingledine

Harry Driedger

Jan Fry

Brian Elliot

Mike Hasek

Brian Latham

Len Lizmore

Dave Matthews

Tom McKegney
Peabody

Peanuts

Chuck Petersen

Tex Bitter

Gerry Rowe
Gerald Simons

Hersh Stemeroff

Don Thomson
Rene Whipp

Brock Wylie

We are graduating from Western this year, and, to our fellow graduates and

to those of you who will be returning next year, we wish the very best.

Maribeth Antill

Cheryl Harvey

271
AUTOGRAPHS, INSPIRATIONS, MOODS . . .

COOKSVILLE, ONTARIO.
272
:"*#

>>' 198

'^'ri.\-'''

'*«^

M.
'S--fi-

^•V^

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