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CONCORDIA M G A DECEMBER 1992 Two Concordians, One Concern 1: II ,~ 1: II HI I I A Vol.15 No.4 s ARTHUR CAMPEAU: Canada's guru of green lryjulia Malusky is published four times a year by an editorial board for alumni and friends of 9 DESIREE McGRAW: Report from our World the University. Opinions Youth Ambassador to the UN Earth Summit expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the views of the alumni associations nor of the University. ISSN 0706-1005. Depot legal: Bibliotheque nationale du Quebec. © 1992. Printed in Canada. Please address editorial COVER: Loyola grad correspondence to the uate Arthur Campeau editor, Kathleen Hugessen, and Concordia student Office of Alumni Affairs, Desiree McGraw shared Concordia University, 145S de Maisonneuve Blvd. W., their thoughts as Cana BC 101, Montreal, Quebec dian Ambassador and H3G 1 MS; telephone (514) World Youth Ambas 848-3826. For advertising sador, respectively, to 11 LIVING ON IN OUR MEMORIES information, contact Maria the United Nations Concordians remember the four men who died. Ponte at (514) 848-3825. June 1992 Conference compiled try Kathleen Hugessen EDITORIAL BOARD: on the Environment Ann Vroom, chair; and Development in Kathleen Hugessen, editor. Rio cle Janeiro. Members: Linda Armitage, Photo by GEORGE ZIMBEL Sheila Arnopoulos, Lindsay Crysler, Michael Hains worth, Christopher Hyde, Michael Judson, Eric Serre, Ken Whittingham. DESIGN: Eric Serre (Studio Bi) ro DESIGN CONSULTANTS: {A ""KJ cPorinnttaeidn ionng Nmoourvee tlhlea Vn ie5 0p%a preerc ycled paper Eliot Edwards, \(:::J<;7 (10% post-consumer fibres). Kate McDonnell 2 MY WORD The mixed emotions of Homecoming '92 3 LETTERS Complex concerns; thoughts about policing thought 17 ADVANCEMENT . Leonard and Bina Ellen Art Gallery opens 18 SPORTS Women's soccer gets a talented new coach 19 HOMECOMING 1992 The many faces of this annual fall event 22 ALUMNI NEWS Alumni Recognition Awards 1992; Association news; Loyola Corner; Cha/Jter news; Class Acts Half-time at the Homecoming Football Game saw players from the championship 31 COLUMNIST teams - Loyola Warriors '62 and '72, and Stingers '82 - run the gauntlet of this Graeme Decarie: a lesson learned in the hardest way year's players. Here Peter Connolly (L BA 63) charges onto the field. For more on Homecoming, see pages 19 to 21. ■ ■ Peace of mind Homemming 1992: shared memories, shared grief T here were so many things for of my teachers [Douglass and Saber]. Concordia to celebrate this I said, 'I wonder what they're doing Imported from fall - a new building, a new now - some new research or some library, a new art gallery, the thing.' Then I turned the page and Europe third annual Homecoming, our first it said 'In Memoriam.' I couldn't Open House - until, that is, the believe it. I was planning on going to $85.00* unimaginable happened. Until four see them just two or three days later." Only members of the community were She was so distressed she almost can taken from us in the senseless act celled her trip. She was inconsolable. of a lone gunman. But, after some thought, she and Ken This is one hotel that The Office of Alumni Affairs consid decided to stick to their plans and understands the most powerful tool in the modern business ered cancelling Homecoming in the attend Homecoming. "I went to the arsenal is still peace of mind. wake of the murders. Homecoming Hall Building to show my husband implies joy, and joyful the University where I had studied and I saw the While they readily provide certainly was not. Btit those on cam memorial in the lobby. I just lost it. all of today's technology -at your pus are not the only members of this The whole time I was in Montreal I request -they still realize the secret to success is comniunity. There are 60,000 Con was very close to crying." a good night's rest. cordia, Sir George Williams and She took Ken to Concordia's new Loyola alumni. Some had studied Webster Library. They found a hard And the best preparation for with the dead men. All deserved an bound copy of her thesis. On the page soothing slumber is smooth opportunity to return and share in and seamless service of official signatures was that of the during the day. the grief. With some trepidation and chair of her thesis review committee, no lightness of heart, the decision Matt Douglass. "It was pretty emotion Amidst an atmosphere that was made to go ahead with Home al," she says. "I took a picture of the exudes professional proficiency, coming 1992. Montreal's most potent business page." weapon is Chiileau Versailles. Jackie Leclair-Patterson, BEng 82, Jackie and Ken stayed only a few days MEng 83, lives in California. She before returning to California. "I went *Alumni rate moved to a job 1ight after she defended for too short a time, but just being her master's thesis. She has not been there, it helped me in more ways than Reservations: 1-800-361-7199 back since. In the spring, she decided one,"Jackie says. She's grateful she to come to Homecoming for her 10th had the opportunity to come back, to reunion and to show Montreal to her visit a few old haunts and to say good husband, Ken. She especially wanted bye to some very special and sorely C'HIATErAU to introduce Ken to a couple of her missed friends. VERSAILLES favourite professors:Jaan Saber and Homecoming had proved more Matthew Douglass. With each day, she important than ever. became more excited at the prospect. She'd heard on the news about the HOTEL & TOWER shootings at Concordia, but no details, no names.Just days before 1659 Sherbrooke SL. West, they were to leave, she received the Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3H 1E3 September issue of Conrordia U11ive1° ~h,\rRl \L's O\L\ mt L\ Et ROPE\\ HonL sity Magazine. "I saw a picture of two KATHLEEN M. HUGESSEN, EDITOR D CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE DECEMBER 1992 L E T T E R S Where was Loyola gress." It would be nice to seems that what we see today Is new complex in Montreal tour? know, perhaps as a follow-up is notl1ing less than a a wise idea today? to the 350th anniversary, tremendously expensive In these days of political I read with interest your what ever happened to the design compromise. uncertainty in Quebec and June 1992 Concordia series Jesuits in Montreal and their Sadly, Concordia continues a constantly shrinking anglo of articles on the settling of commitment to education. to display only token respect phone population, I wonder 350-year-old Montreal, as the By comparison, I note that to the rich architectural his if Concordia was justified in alumni magazine is one of in the San Francisco area tory of Montreal. Remember building a $65-million com the few items that reminds where I now reside, there are tliat, in 1975, the University plex. me of growing up in Quebec. two vibrant Jesuit schools bestowed an honorary doc The political reality of the vVhile I enjoyed the half with much the same excel torate upon the developer many closures of English dozen pages of perspectives lent reputation that Loyola remembered for levelling elementary and post-sec on old Montreal, I was sur had in 1963. Indeed, there is the Cornelius Van Horne ondary schools is depleting prised to see no mention of also a very well-respected mansion at the corner of the student base for which le College Ste-Marie, from Loyola in southern California, Stanley and Sherbrooke, anglophone universities are which Loyola originated at near Los Angeles airport. destroying a legacy of the going to compete in the the turn of the century. I was PAUL VILANDRE, BCOMM 63 building of the Canadian next decade. The commu fortunate to attend both Ste MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA Pacific Railway. He erected nity might not be able to Marie and Loyola, although a tower of glass and steel support two big universities both are now history in the Royal George fa~ade in its place. in the future. Concordia annals of Quebec. The a tough survivor Maybe then, in a small way, seems to be acting in a con beginning of the end of Ste that feisty chunk of the Royal tradictory fashion by adding Marie came when Dorchester I read with great interest Boulevard was extended the presentation of the new George Apartments stands a 10-storey complex afte1- east, thereby truncating the library building, "A complex today for the Van Horne expanding the Vanier mansion and all the landmark Library and opening a new schoolyard which, till then, of many functions," in the buildings that have bowed to concert hall. still had six-feet-thick walls September issue. After see to protect it from Indian ing the building on a visit to the name of progress. Anglophone institutions are attacks. It is a strange feeling Montreal this past summer, DAVID F. HANEY, BFA 76 already dealing with tl1is sit to lose both one's high I was taken aback by the (GRAPHIC DESIGN) uation. Hospitals, for exam school and college to the visual jostling that's going WILTON, CONNECTICUT ple, are planning to merge, march of progress. on between the remains of - the proposed "Super Hos the seemingly insignificant pital" for example - to mini- I left Montreal after graduat Royal George Apartments ing in 1963 (BComm), so I and the dominant Lego-like tend to lose track of "pro- blocks surrounding it. Is tl1is how the University has 1W~~~ \ (AN1 chosen to present its respect Note of thanks and acknowledgement of w~~--rs ~ffof Our heartfelt thanks to past architectural form and l~t- ~'IAL G~~ -- members of the Concor - design? Or is this new com dia alumni who shared plex (a good word to use) our sorrow and expressed the result of a begrudging their sympathy through compliance with the wishes flowers, cards, letters and of local preservationists and donations to both the hos the bylaws of the City of pital fund and the endow Montreal? ment fund. Well, as your article points We always knew that Matt out, the architects' plans did was a very special man, win a major design award but how wonderful it was for the building. But those to find out that so many of award-winning plans did not you thought so too. His include tl1e Royal George memory will live forever fa,;:ade. And tl1e City of in the hearts of those who Mon treat insisted (sine qua knew him. non) that the "bathroom building" be included in the JOYCE DOUGLASS & FAMILY MONTREAL, QUEBEC final design. From this, it D DECEMBER 1992 CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE LETTERS mize costs in serving a Folk should be free I'd like to ask Mr. Lewis acceptable than rescinding declining anglophone popu- to air different views what he proposes to do with a degree for expressing an lation. Churches are facing people who cannot accept opinion. the same dilemma and are I'd like to ask Mr. Lewis to homosexuality because of think very carefully before CHRISTINE SWANEVELT, BSC 91 thinking along the same religious beliefs? Will they MONTREAL, QUEBEC expressing sentiments such lines. Universities seem to not be allowed to register? as he did in your September be ignoring this fact and car- I myself am neither religious issue. It seems to me that he rying on business as usual. nor homophobic, but I do is unaware of the concept of Concordia University Magazine have a number of extremely I know Concordia's down- free speech. Even though welcomes readers' comments. religious friends. We do not town campus desperately the movement of political Letters should include the bother each other about our needed a decent library, but correctness advocates accep- respective beliefs and opin- writer's full name. address. why not a joint venture with tance of alternative opinions; ions, but I'd hate to think school(s), degree(s) and year(s) McGill? Concordia Univer- ideas and lifestyles, it is all how their lives could be of graduation for alumni. sity seems to have become a too eager to punish people little too extravagant in hav- for voicing certain opinions. derailed by the wheels of Letters may be edited for Mr. Lewis's morality police. ing two huge modern I did not read the letter Mr. length and clarity. I suggest that, if he feels so libraries in the midst of the Lewis referred to, but the Correspondence should be offended by the opinions political upheaval occurring fact that this magazine sent to the Editor, Office of expressed in the letters in in the community. printed it suggests that it was question, he get in touch Alumni Affairs, Concordia LUIS CORDEIRO, BA 85 at the very least within the with their authors and dis- University, 1455 de Maison- ST. HUBERT, QUEBEC legal boundaries of Canada's cuss the subject with them. neuve Blvd. West, Montreal, hate propaganda laws. To me this seems far more QC, H3G 1M8. You've worked hard to build a future for yourself and your family. So when it comes time to insure that future ... you don't want to gamble it all on just any type of coverage. Your alumni association understands. 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Canada escaped the United States' shadow and assumed a leadership role at the United Nations Confer ence on Environment and Develop ment (UNCED). The prime minister Canadians love to hate became the hero of the Earth Summit. Three days before the conference began, George Bush announced he wouldn't sign the international agree ment to protect the biological diver sity of animal and plant life. Twenty four hours later, Brian Mulroney broke rank, boldly stating Canada would sign. Other industrialized nations soon followed Canada's lead and isolated the U.S. in its opposition. Canadian delegates to the confer ence say Arthur Campeau, a Loyola graduate, successful lawyer and one ofMulroney's best friends was the man responsible for convincing the prime minister to take a tough stance. "Ifit hadn't been for Arthur's determination and personal influence with the prime minister, l doubt other countries would have supported what turned out to be the only agreement with any teeth in it," says Desiree McGraw, a Concordia student and one of the conference's two world ;~ youth ambassadors. N One of Canada's leading environ w ~ mentalists, Elizabeth May, agrees. ___8 "' "A lot of heavy-hitting departments in .~0 __, i the Canadian government sided with Bush," she says. "If Arthur Campeau D DECEMBER 1992 CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE hadn't known the bio-diversity issue resifting information and refining his "Arthur's purity of vision inspires inside out and didn't share a personal environmental principles. others," McGraw says of the man who history with the prime minister, I Once Campeau believes in some has become one of her role models. doubt Canada would have done the thing, he won't compromise his sup She intends to emulate Campeau's right thing." port of it. This was the spirit he took style, using logical training to support Campeau and Mulroney have been to UNCED. new, intuitive approaches to initiate buddies since they started practising May credits Campeau with bring global change. "Lawyers, architects, law at the same firm in the mid-60s. ing non-governmental organizations economi,sts and other professionals For years, they were neighbours. (NGOs) into the conference's negoti listen to Arthur because he comes Their children played together. ating process. The issue was to have from the same kind of background as In the spring of '89, Mulroney asked been resolved at the first of four them," she says. "When he starts Campeau, a bilingual Montrealer, to month-long meetings leading up to telling them about right-brain versus become his personal representative the Summit, but it kept being pushed left-brain thinking, it blows their to the world's largest environmen socks off." tal conference. Campeau knew he Campeau was forced to begin would have to overcome the exploring the right hemisphere of stigma of being Mulroney's his own brain when the left, logical appointed crony. side stopped delivering satisfactory "It was a challenge," Campeau answers. says, as he so often does in response He had a life most would envy. to a question. Challenge seems to He earned $300,000 a year as a govern Campeau's existence. high-powered corporate attorney After law school, he passed up with Montreal's largest law firm. cholarships because he couldn't He lived in a Westmount mansion wait to face the challenge of with his wife and three children. pleading cases in court-even Yet, he was depressed. The though the prospect made him depression worsened as he ques physically ill. He obtained a pilot's tioned the meaning of life and his licence as part of the challenge of own significance. He bought 20 overcoming vertigo. This approach books on how the brain operates stems from his childhood. His dad to try to determine whether he was used to put a ladder up the side of going crazy. Campeau says he still the house and offer him money to doesn't understand what provoked retrieve tennis balls from the roof. his crise de conscience, but it coin Campeau, 49, met the Rio chal cided with the entry of a new lenge by saturating his mind with woman into his life. information on all the environ He first met Cynthia Drum mental issues. Whether discussing the aside. A few countries openly opposed mond, then a 23-year-old television NGO involvement, others paid lip pulp-and-paper industry, the seal reporter, in 1976. He asked her out, service to it. On Friday night, with hunt or the threat of human over but she refused. "He projected the delegates anxious to leave for the population, he automatically supports image of a sleazy, big-shot lawyer who weekend, Campeau dug in his heels. his arguments with specific scientific just wanted to fool around. I wasn't "Arthur insisted the business of the research and hard statistics. He's interested," says Drummond. She still committee couldn't be continued rumoured to be the only person in believes Campeau wouldn't have held government who reads everything until a process for the full participa her interest back then. It took another tion of the NGOs was established," that crosses his desk. five years before she accepted his invi May says. It took several hours, but a Yet, even as he speaks on a subject, tation. She sought his legal advice on structure was created for handling he is analysing whether what he's say incorporating her own business. He the NGO question first thing on ing still holds true. He credits his legal told her he was booked for the next Monday. training with helping him to keep six months, but free for lunch the D CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE DECEMBER 1992 next day. They arrived at the Beaver didn't alleviate his need to search purpose. The next step came when Club around noon and didn't leave within himself-· he says she inspired the prime minister offered him the till almost 5:30. more of it. He continued to pursue job of leading Canada's preparations They couldn't stay apart. On her changes he thought would finally for the Earth Summit. birthday in May 1982, he told her they make him content. He left Ogilvy Campeau views the challenge of had to get married. They moved in Renault to join a smaller law firm. economic development as one of together. Several months later, they Soon after, he started his own firm. eliminating, or at least minimizing flew to Bermuda for their wedding. Each move was successful, but his dis the negative impact of human activity Campeau speaks eagerly of how illusionment with the legal system on the environment. He insists this much he remains in love with his grew. "I stopped believing that the responsibility falls to every individual. wife. He regards her as his biggest only way to obtain justice and truth "All I'm asking is for people to think challenge. "If one of my ideas doesn't was to produce winners and losers. about what they can do to help the survive a discussion with Cynthia, I There had to be alternative solutions." environment in the course of their know there's something wrong with Drummond introduced Campeau own lives. It doesn't have to be the idea or the way I'm trying to to Michael Bloomfield, a wildlife bio dramatic." explain it." logist who wanted to encourage envi He believes friendships forged Drummond says their relationship ronmentalists and corporations to during the two years of preparation feeds off mental energy. "Arthur gets work together. In 1985, Campeau and for the Summit will produce better it. I can talk to him in shorthand and Bloomfield launched the Harmony co-operation between and within he understands." Foundation in Ottawa. The project countries. He already sees a less While Drummond brought new inspired Campeau but, once it was set adversarial stance between govern meaning into Campeau's life, she up, he fell back into questioning his ment and NGOs in Canada. But he Arthur Campeau and Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney in consultation during the Earth Summit proceedings. IJ DECEMBER 1992 CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE stresses the responsibility of Rio's become prime minister and solve the starting his studies at Loyola in engi 30,000 participants to keep up the constitutional crisis. "I know what neering and later pre-medicine. "I momentum by educating and moti Arthur is doing for the environment finally found something I liked and vating the citizens of their own is important," Habib says, "but I still was good at," Campeau says. Under countries. feel he has a larger role to play in the Habib's tutelage, Campeau gradu His own post-Rio scheme focuses history of Canada." ated with honours and several awards. on community empowerment - bring He and Campeau have.maintained Habib eagerly lists the reasons he'd ing community members together to a close friendship since 1962, when vote for Campeau as prime minister: identify projects they can initiate to Campeau his understanding of constitutional make their community and, thereby, law and of Canada's two founding the world a better place. "If I were cultures; his devotion to his country; going to do this, I would bring to his charisma; his energetic vision gether people who aren't afraid to of what could be. think the unthinkable - professors, But another close friend, students, business people and pro Yves Fortier, doesn't see it. fessionals - put them in a room "He certainly has the and let them discuss how they qualifications," the can work together as agents for former Canadian ambas change." He elaborates until sador to the United he's sure his listener is con Nation says, "but I don't vinced his plan can work and think Arthur has the should be started patience to become immediately. the leader of a polit "That's one of his ical party." Fortier few flaws," McGraw sees Campeau as a says, "he tends to future environment keep preaching to the minister or in another converted. And he role that allows him to stays stuck in the vision continue as Canada's ary mode without dealing "environmental guru." with the nuts and bolts." Campeau doesn't know "I plant a lot of seeds," whether he'll enter the main Campeau acknowledges. "Some political arena. "I want to do of them start to grow quickly, whatever I can to effect change," others need more nourishing." he says. He becomes visibly agitated when He is aware of the sacrifices that discussing the constitutional debate would be involved. He's seen his and how it has pre-empted Canada's friend Mulroney take enough blows. environmental efforts. "The environ Earth Summit Logo He also realizes it would mean even ment issue is Canada's chance to less time with his wife. He now sees become a leader in the new world obtained the highest mark - 95 per her only on weekends as his job is in order," he says. "Ifwe don't put this cent - ever granted by Habib on an Hull, hers in Montreal. constitution thing behind us, we risk exam. "I couldn't believe the bril In the final analysis, however, losing out on that chance. Canada liance of his responses," Habib says. being prime minister may not be should be one of the countries to "I didn't know who this Campeau was. enough of a challenge for Campeau. produce measurable results by the I told some students to find him and Saving the planet is. first anniversary of the Summit." tell him to come to my office. I had Dr. Henry Habib, chair of Concor to meet him." dia's political science department, The meeting prompted Campeau believes his former student should to specialize in political science after Julia Malusky ( BA 89) is a Montreal freelance ,miler. She has served as a dfrector of the Concardia University Alu11mi Association. II CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE DECEMBER 1992