ALN ALi Tt aaa Re eee eee e eee eee eee We Bel d aes hee A a Bhat lid oe i Ah ah th Sen Rn ell NTN ZI ZIN EAL Salen Sad To oot tN it Nl ot cD oe Pe am fe Ca gh ea file dee ana ACD ay APP oa / (604) 520-5400 700 Royal Avenue, New Westminster, B.C. Mailing Address: P.0. Box 2503, New Westminster, B.C. V3L 5B2 Changes pondered as College expands The following is a summary of a discussion paper on new cam- pus development. A complete copy of the report is available by calling 527-5384. This is the first in a series of dis- cussion papers intended to _ encourage discussion and feed- back from the College community to assist in organizational planning as Campuses open in Maple Ridge this fall and in Coquitlam in 1994. This paper briefly outlines basic variables that will affect the struc- tural changes within the College. The first variable to consider is the rate of change. The College could opt for a major change on a specific date, which could be very abrupt. The other extreme is a series of small, gradual changes. It is possible some units may have to change abruptly while others take a gradual route. The second variable is com- prehensiveness. The clearest finding of the President’s Commis- sion was that the College should be comprehensive on each cam- pus, as opposed to spreading different options over different campuses. Comprehensiveness has been seriously taken into ac- count in the planning for new campuses. Another factor is the location of employees at specific sites, a variable which will also determine how curriculum is organized. This boils down to travel between sites, if any, and who does it. College continued on page 4 Riding the ECE range Queen’s Avenue daycare cowgirl Anna was riding the range and strumming her six—-string during the weekly Children Teaching Teachers session here at the College. INSIDE INSIDE March 31, 1992 College briefs College Assembly New staff profile Events Calendar Inside Zone Work-Study/Superannuation OO 1a In |w |W IN IN Sports David For Queen, Choral Society performances upcoming in April On the surface, David Billings is one of those guys in high school who’s got it made. He is popular, a sharp dresser and dates the best- looking girl in school. Everything seems cool, but it isn’t; he’s not so sure about the girlfriend. But it’s not that David is afraid of commitment. In the play David For Queen, written by Vancouver's John Lazarus and now being produced by the Douglas College Theatre Depart- ment, David is confused about his sexuality. “The play is not just about David’s sexuality. It examines how hard it is for people to stand into their own truth,” says Theatre In- structor Cheryl Matheson, who directs the Douglas College production which opens April 3. David /Choral continued on page 4