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The McGill news v.71 1991 PDF

168 Pages·1991·207.1 MB·English
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McGill University Libraries Mclennan Library NO MATTER WHERE IN THE WORLD YOU'VE BEEN THERE'S NOTHING LIKE ... Australia and New Zealand. Now you can join fellow McGill alumni on a fantastic 18 day Thrilling Extension To 11The Outback." CoclDauafdoeg rsvolegauek aioxn.lg sfetM. eu. f orQFhiergua u hynlteoltodyie uelt-nihe.sn stseI gtcnspo,oece wra laiutdnenkdvcd. eo ar.As efnE: dl ctpvAhiebiee nulrr eeeySc g k"obtiLrluesaataatvnrhunaedetdtly.ri s ond N anDe Atet oaawiltitpwsl s,h Zn b.to e erUtaasentln.als dsnMfe-edtrro'a.ss"u, k cneittny TaTAAdohl oidwrcneietnec iSs oeni-nptiieargni lht-n oantgsu-isl grai .ahf teMn tAt daiolmt iAt cCoeeyr a oceSiporrpsnpar sciRo.nh rogFt ctusurk.nla .lO in tRbsynrfo eeetuoar nn k teidhfgxa rhtpsortltiu o padgr taaeh iAi lTrty yhht.er eeaAr snhRl sieRcepaedoor cStrCk topa.e frtnO iitnothrngneees., Christchurch. Graceful, very British "Garden City." Outback. Visit to camel farm. Tour to Olgas. Sunset viewing Sydney. Australia's cosmopolitian harbour haven. and tour of Ayers Rock. Cairns. Home of Australia's glorious wonder of the $1199* world-The Great Barrier Reef. Graduates' Society of McGill University presents South Pacific and the Lands Down Under $5630 * 18 Days • Departing November 6, 1991 From Montreal 1 (800) 833-0899 Reserve NOW by calling TOLL FREE: or call Ray Satterthwaite (514) 398-8288, (or mail the coup~n below to our Travel Planning Professionals.) ASK ABOUT YOUR EARLY BIRD DISCOUNT THOSE LANDS DOWN UNDER ---------------------------------------------------- D YES !Please send me more information on the Graduates' Society of McGill University holiday to the South Pacific and Lands Down Under. I understand that making this request does not obligate me in any way. Name----------------------------------------------------------- Street & Number----------------------------------------------------- City------------- Province---------------Postal Code ________ Telephone ( Return to: The Graduates' Society of McGill University 3605 Mountain Street Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3G 2M 1 Tel.:(5I4) 398-8288 *All prices are shown in Canadian dollars, per person, double occupancy. EAT U RES 12 Nurse, PhD No longer content to follow, nurses are carving out a research role for themselves with a new credential. Francine Ducharme earned the first nursing PhD in Canada-at McGill. by janice Paskey 14 Not Another Art Cop For Ad am Gopnik, BA'80, a job on The New Yorker was the only job worth wanting. He waited six years. Now the magazine's art critic, he's also co-curated a show for the Museum of Modern Art that's redefining "fine art". by Kim Schenck, BA'Bl 16 Tokyo's Reign lt's where the world's economic pulse begins, and where rising numbers of McGill graduates want to go. As all eyes turn to Tokyo, what chance have these adventurers for career success as we know it? by Nancy McHarg 19 Don't Even Knock Walk right through the Yellow Door, hinged on the greystone in the McGill Ghetto, where neo-vaudeville and social work have meshed since 1903. by Denise Roig Tarr D E P A R T M E N T S ~tters ...................... 2 Editor's Notebook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Martlets .................... 4 Comic Perspective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Quebec Focus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Old McGill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Society Activities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Reviews .................... 24 Alumnotes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Alumnotation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Cover concept and design: Marc Drolet, Luc Prevost and Danielle Laporte. L E T T E R S Hart-felt thanks Feminist Ideology Unclear even more: caring, courageous leader Please give my thanks to the Hart couple In the Winter issue, you reprinted ship based on scholarhip that is honest who have generously paid for my recent Harvey Schachter's editorial "In Praise and forthright. How appropriate for your copy of the McGill News. (Ed. note: The of Feminism" in order to "commemorate Christmas issue. Fall'90 overseas distribution was funded the tragedy" of 14 women murdered at Bravo, McGill News! This truly is by grads Richard and Louise Hart.) Ecole Polytechnique. While it seems excellence, leadership and achievement As you know, Czechoslovakia is in appropriate to commemorate this event, to be proud of. transition. This change is going to be so that both women and men should Catherine M. Draper, BA'47 gradual and, as our government keeps learn from this tragedy, Schachter's Victoria, B.C. warning us, often painful. Our currency article is not a commemoration: it is an is not convertible so far and therefore we attempt to "praise feminism". cannot send McGill donations in Czech Unfortunately, opportunists have used Disagree with Schachter oslovak crowns. I am sending you a book, this event to manipulate people emotion however, about our town, which I am ally into supporting feminism. Instead, I disagree with several points in Harvey sure you have not heard of before. we need a sober assessment of this Schachter's article "In Praise of Femin McGill grad Mia Belsky has recently ideology. If the tragedy teaches us any ism" (Winter'90). First, I was disappoint arrived in Olomouc to teach English. thing, it is that the term "feminism" has ed to see Mr. Schachter cheapen the I hope her arrival will begin a more become an empty concept. This con Holocaust by comparing Marc Lepine extensive exchange of ideas, views and fusion explains Schachter's observation to "the Nazis at the death camps". Mr. visits between our universities. that "instead of rallying to support fem Upine was a minor character compared JOPaalrolaomcskolayuv cU, DnCiuzvesecershkiot,y sPl ohvDak'i7a0 fiiaentmiPes miednri ihasstanmapdn s bcf eetihnmcgeai"rune sia sewftt sieat,r s wt lhnaaoessr t e euym newcabalrres'as aca rtnir nta oiggm b eomdofyt eh.d wnwMooirt r.wh lS dotc hnphedoa ewecrnhe mort.er omIrfs d otfe ewunmsoy ikm ntihileslinitsns dg dsi iubsfftcyaeh nra e camnesc atehjo,e rtmh e n men and women what should be em selves from such feminist views. Intellectual Blackmail braced. Unfortunately, Schachter offers Secondly, he states that a three-year no help in this issue. He argues that all old cannot be sexually aggressive Although we desperately need to learn men and women should rally under the towards an adult male "even if there something from the murder of 14 women term "feminism", but nowhere does he remain patriarchal judges who believe at the University of Montreal, Harvey present a definition of this term. such anti-women myths". This particular Schacter's paean ("In Praise of Femin He offers credos for men and women attack on the judiciary strikes me as ism", Winter'90) will not help us to do so. to recite; men should say: "I am pro scurrilous and unsupported by fact. I Apparently, he believes that the current feminist. I must struggle to make challenge Mr. Schachter to produce the war between men and women will end changes in myself, always, and to help names of these judges. only when men accept feminist ideology. change society." No doubt, it is hon Third, he implies that it was "the 'radi He makes it clear, moreover, that only ourable to make changes in oneself, and cal' feminists who ... went to jail in uncritical acceptance will do. to help change society, but it is irre protests demanding the right to vote". It As he points out, a woman can "believe sponsible to do so by following ideologi was nothing of the sort. The suffragettes in freedom and equality ... even if as an cal dictates that are not clearly were responsible for those protests, independent person [she has] some understood. and they were in many cases so religious, disagreements with the feminist move family-oriented and conservative as to ment." But no such diversity of opinion Harold Wilson, BA'91 have little in common with modern is possible for men in this moral uni Montreal, Quebec "radical feminists". verse. The only legitimate position is Fourth, the Women's Movement con what he calls a "pro-feminist" one. If men Thanks for Feminism tains a wide spectrum of views, ranging argue with any feminist claims, in short, from those that are family-oriented (like they can be accused of sexism. That Thank you for reproducing Harvey the suffragettes'), to those that verge is intellectual blackmail. For scholars, Schacter's thoughtful article "In Praise of on man-hating. It is this latter "radical at any rate, every ideology-whether Feminism". I am struck by his integrity feminist" group that causes a majority of on the left, the right, or anywhere else and fearlessness in writing this. It is no women to distance themselves from the on the political spectrum-is subject to accident that such an article was penned term "feminism"-not ignorance, or critical analysis. And what are univer by a member of another oppressed seg selfishness, as implied by Mr. Schachter. sities about if not scholarship? It is thus ment of society, and reminds one of mid- Finally, there is something incongru ironic, to say the least, that the McGill 19th century United States, when black ous, perhaps even chauvinistic, about a News is promoting what will, if unchal leaders supported feminism after femin man scolding and hectoring women into lenged, defeat the efforts of McGill ists had supported emancipation. doing what he judges best for them. University. It is heartening that this article will reach a privileged audience whose status Charles Serrao, BA'68 Paul Nathanson, PhD'89 as leaders in society is taken for granted. Montreal, Quebec 'Montreal, Quebec Your winter issue reflects abundantly refreshing qualities that the world needs Letters continued on page 32. McGillNews 2 Spring 1991 is 1w here was I when Kennedy was 1~k shot? Too young to remember. When Hinkley fired at Reagan? Washing dishes in Banff. Lady Di's wedding? Rowing through the early morning rain. And on the night of January 16, I was in a boardroom at McGill-far from a radio-as the Graduates' Society Board of Directors concluded its annual meeting. For those around the table, the news looked good that night. Richard Pound ..s::0~: announced a first: the Annual Fund <1:: surpassed the $3 million mark. Alex G Paterson, Board of Governors Chair, re ~. ...~ ~&!::. ~....:.o......;_---i:~:S.:::.:::..:.....i ~ ported that McGill was hiring a lobbyist With athletics cancelled, student-soldiers lined the football field in 1941. to push its case in Quebec City. And Vice-Principal (Advancement) Michael Yet unanticipated links arose with sto him as a freshman at McGill: Kiefer gave results showing strong ries we thought had little connection to "Gentlemen, thank you for coming to support for a proposed University-wide the Gulf. Newsweek subsequently called this special assembly ofM cGill men. As campaign. staff at The Yellow Door (our cover you know, Canada is fighting against the Then, at 9:30 pm, the heavy oak doors story) to ask if they would assist Ameri Facist forces on many fronts. Canadian of the large boardroom were thrown can draftdodgers as in WWII. Moshe and Allied troops in Britain, and the open and, from the excited babble of Safdie (p. 4) had supplied us with a photo civilian population there, depend on student phonethoners (who were being of himself in Israel, but was uncertain Canadian wheat for their bread. We must sent home), the news of war hit us like at press time whether that building or not let them down-but we are going to, the icy air outside. We fled home to any he had designed was damaged. And unless we find the manpower to harvest our televisions. our profile this issue (p. 14) is of Adam the wheat for their bread. This was my first war, and it arrived as Gopnik, the art critic for The New Yorker, "Fortunately the authorities at McGill a rude banner of adulthood. (I later found a magazine that is attracting attention for University share this concern, and this that my twentysomething set had been its unequivocal opposition to involvement responsibility, and they are ready to artfully renamed "A New Generation" by in this war in the same way it opposed excuse you from classes to go west and USA Today, which solicited "first-war Vietnam. harvest the wheat. You may be away for comments" from us. Just like the movies, As I write today, Canada has fired a month, but I am assured no one will I'd tell them, except this movie is on all its first shots in the Gulf war, and I'm be penalized academically and you day and might be harmful to your health.) looking at the autumn 1939 McGill News will be given time to make up the work Executive Director Gavin Ross called cover, 'War and McGill, 1914-1939", and you have missed." the Graduates' Society staff together at winter 1940, "Editing the War News", Hundreds ofM cGill students boarded for a short meeting the next morning and wondering if we'll come to this. the special train for western Canada the to acknowledge that "this is not just I pulled out the unpublished memoirs next evening. That's how I began my another day'', and we bantered about our of John Summerskill, BA'46, U.D'71, the university career. thoughts on this 'Third World War''. past president of San Francisco State He later spent two years with the Cana Back in my office, I fretted about the University, who garnered fame for his dian Infantry. What will the memoirs of McGill News. As a quarterly, it is hardly clashes with California Governor Ronald McGill students hold now? This is sup meant to keep pace with the popular Reagan over American involvement in posed to be a short war. We11 see. press, but even so the war had sucked Vietnam. Summerskill's collegiate diary OONlli ~, the wind from the sails of most of our is honest and entertaining. In this clip, he spring issue. recalls the inaugural words spoken to McGill News EDITOR: ]ANICE PASKEY ACSIRSOCCUIlAATTEISO ANN:D A FLRLI GENRADDS UOAFT TEHS,E P UANRIEVNETRSS, ITY AssiSTANT EDITOR: DALE HRABI WHO MAKE AN ANNUAL CONTRIBUTION AND GRADUATES OF THE LAST TWO YEARS, REGARDLESS DESIGN AND TYPESEITING: INSTRUCTIONAL OF A CONTRIBUTION, RECEIVE THE MCGILL NEWS VOWME 71 NUMBER 1 SPRING 1991 COMMUNICATIONS CENTRE, MCGILL UNIVERSriY QUARTERLY. THE WINTER ISSUE IS SENT TO THE ABOVE AND TO ALL GRADUATES FOR WHOM WE MCGILL NEWS IS PUBLISHED QUARTERLY (MARCH, ADVERTISING MANAGER: RAY SATIERTIIWA ITE HAVE ADDRESSES. JUNE, SEPTEMBER AND DECEMBER) BY THE ADVISORY BOARD: GREITACHAMBERS (CHAIR), WRITE, PHONE OR FAX US: GRADUATES' SOCIE1Y OF MCGILL UNIVERSITY. DAVID BOURKE, J OAN CI.EATHER, ABBOTI CONWAY, McGILLNEws COPYRIGHT OF ALL CONTENTS IS REGISTERED. KATE MORISSET, CATHERINE EKERS, ROBERT FAITH, 3605 MOUNTAIN STREET PRINTED IN CANADA . . . . . . . . .ISSN 0709 9223 ADA VKIEDI TlAHI DHLAEMY,, DGAAVVIIDN HRAORSHS,> T, NOIMCHTOHLOAMS PHSOOANR, E, TMEOL.N: T(5R1E4A) L3,9 Q8-U35E4B9E C FHA3XG: 2(5M14l ) 398-7338 KATE WILLIAMS, ]AMES WRIGHT McGillNews 3 MARTLETS The Future Eventually, Murray says, she hopes tL Eureka! link McGill's collection by modem with Saf. Its off to Oxford next October for Fiona of the Past die's head office in Somerville, Massachu setts, giving him long-distance access to hi Stewart, a McGill honours English student, works, and researchers access to work stiJ: chosen as one of Canada s 11 Rhodes by Dale Hrabi in Somerville. (She says this experiment Scholars for 1990. The prestigious would push "interactivity'' to levels unequal scholarship goes to candidates who have Truckloads of drawings, architectural led in Canadian archives.) shown academic prowess, leadership, models, intimate black notebooks that led Normally, archives like Safdie's become compassion for others and, in the terms to some of Canada's most spectacular struc accessible only after their creators' death of the trust, "physical vigor". tures-Habitat '67, The National Gallery "I had no idea that he would offer it while Past winners have often been athletes of will soon find a home at McGill. The exist he was still in practice," says Professor Emer national-level calibre, a pattern that ing archive of Moshe Safdie, BArch'61, is itus Bland. The bulkofSafdie'sexistingwork. Stewart thought might eliminate her. due at the Blackader-La.uterman Library now scattered across the world in storage or Although she s no pallid scholar (active in this September, with follow-up shipments with clients, should arrive by September. Es intramural volleyball and The Outing Club), expected every year. Safdie, 52, says he's timates of its value enter the hundreds Stewart says: "I was quite convinced glad we asked. of thousands of dollars. Clients in pos· that I wasn't what the committee was Not that he hadn't been approached by session of drawings or models will be looking for. " other schools. "I'd always said it was pre encouraged to donate them. mature," he says. But when he sat down to "All of a sudden," Safdie says, "they look Clearly, she was. The English Departments lunch four years ago with Irena Murray, at a drawing that I made 20 years ago and top student, Stewart is interested in social Curator of McGill's Canadian Architecture they say, 'Maybe that's worth a lot of mon· literary history from a feminist perspective, Collection, and his former professor John ey. Why should I give it away?' On the other and hopes for a career in publishing. Bland, their offer struck a responsive chord. hand," he adds, "they can take a tax write-off Support at McGill came from her father, Robin, a professor of Entomology at "It seemed audacious to me," says Mur [if they donate the work to McGill] ."Accord· Macdonald College, and her mother, ray. A shy woman who speaks her convic ing to Canadian tax law, Safdie, an American Catherine, a faculty lecturer in Dentistry. tions softly, she wondered what to expect. resident, can reap no fiscal benefits. "My name didn't mean anything to him," The collection's research value is harder Each year, according to the Dean of Stu she adds, "but then, I liked the challenge." to estimate, and subject to many factors: dents' office, roughly 14 McGill under Last November, the deal was signed. future work, architectural trends, even war. graduates apply for the Rhodes, valued Safdie says that, despite a concurrent offer In early 1a nuary, with the future of many at about $10,000 a year for two years. For from Harvard University, he chose McGill projects in Israel (and the historical aspect Stewart, this financial shot in the arm for three reasons. With four prominent Ca of the corresponding archive) increasingly means less pressure to find a job this nadian projects completed or in progress, uncertain, Safdie spoke optimistically. "I summer. Instead, she hopes to see more he felt a Canadian depository was appropri think it unlikely that Iraq will be able to of Canada-the West, or perhaps the ate. As well, he felt he owes McGill. "Some significantly strike at Israel." Two weeks Maritimes-before leaving its shores. people, you know, say 'I've done well in spite later, Iraqi missiles had struck both Haifa of or without any connection with my edu (his birthplace) and Tel Aviv. (At press time, cation'," he says. "But I've always thought it was unknown whether any of Safdie's I was very fortunate to have been [at structures had been hit.) McGill] ." Finally, he was impressed, he As unpredictable, in a sense, is Safdie's says, by Irena Murray's curatorial track re future place in the grander scheme of cord. things. 'There clearly will be historical ex Murray and her staff get things done. In amination of Safdie's work," says Nicholas a vaulted room on the fourth floor of the Olsberg, Head of Collections at Montreal's Redpath Library, the Canadian Architecture Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA), Collection is an archive of work by architects "and the more complete his archive the linked with McGill and Montreal. Drawings more valuable. It's spectacular that McGill by Percy Nobbs (the McCord Museum, the has this opportunity." University Club) and Edward and WS. Max Both Murray and Olsberg dismiss sug· well (the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts) gestions of rivalry, despite potential over are among the works that have been cata laps in their collections. Murray calls the logued for use by architects, critics, art his two "complementary". The CCA, Olsberg torians, museum staff and students. It's a says, has never taken an active interest in quiet, efficient domain. Safdie, "partly because we knew he had a But with its high-tech demands, the Sat longstanding friendship with McGill". In die influx will change the character of the architectural circles, however, it's no secret collection considerably; most design in the that the CCA's powers-that-be have long held nineties, including Safdie's, is done by CAD Safdie's work in low esteem. Out in front: Rhodes Scholarship winner (Computer-Assisted-Drawing). Spinning Who is Safdie? He was the top student Fiona Stewart 3-D renderings, lit by simulated sunlight, who turned his bachelor's thesis at McGill are the order of the day. into Habitat, the add-a-block emblem of McGillNews 4

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.