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Stewart, V
VS1 · Personne · [19- ?]
Slattery, Timothy P.
TPS1 · Personne · 1911-1985

Timothy Patrick Slattery, lawyer, author, and historian was born in Montreal on February 4th, 1911 and died in Montreal in August 1985. He was educated at St. Leo’s, Westmount, and came to Loyola College where he graduated magna cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1931. The same year, he entered the law faculty at McGill University and graduated in 1934. During his last year at McGill, he received the Alexander Morris Exhibition award for highest standing, as well as the Lieutenant-Governor's Silver Medal for Roman Law. With his graduation, he won the Macdonald Travelling Scholarship, which entitled him to a year's study in France 1934-1935. Back in Montreal, he commenced the practice of law in association with Col. Trihey. In the early in 1940s, he formed his own law firm “Slattery, Bélanger & Fairbanks”.

As legal advisor to Loyola College, member of its Board of Directors and later of its Board of Governors, Timothy P. Slattery contributed in the 1960s to the College’s attempts to get a university charter from the Quebec Legislature. He was also instrumental in drawing up the legal documents for the 1974 merger of Loyola College and Sir George Williams University to form Concordia University. He was appointed to the Advisory Board of the Concordia Board of Governors on October 10, 1974.

Timothy P. Slattery was referred to as the historian of Loyola College and a biographer of Thomas D’Arcy McGee. He was also a long-time historian of the St. Patrick’s Society of Montreal. He was the author and illustrator of the following works: Loyola College and Montreal (Montreal: Palm Publishers, 1962), The Assassination of D'Arcy McGee (Toronto: Doubleday Canada, 1968), and They Got to Find Mee Guilty Yet (Toronto: Double Day, 1972).

Timothy P. Slattery married Patricia O’Brien, they had three children, Maureen, Brian, and Patricia.

Duder, R. Patrick
RPD1 · Personne · [1911?] - April 7, 1980

After a long career in the Canadian foreign services, Dr. R. Patrick Duder joined Loyola College in 1966 as Assistant to the President and Secretary to the Board of Governors. He also, became Secretary to the Board of Trustees, in 1970. After the merger of Loyola and Sir George Williams, for which he was a mainstay in the process of negotiations, he became Assistant to the Vice-Rector and Principal of Loyola campus until his retirement in 1977. He was also appointed Secretary of the Board of Governors on August 10, 1973, a position he still held when he suddenly died on April 7, 1980.

Young, Anson W.
AWY1 · Personne · 1867-December 21, 1960
Mather, Alice
AM1 · Personne · [19 - ?]
Schull, Helen
HS2 · Personne · [19-]
Allan, Ted
TA1 · Personne · 1916 - 1995
Dinsdale, Del
DD3 · Personne · [19-]
Caplan, Rupert
RC1 · Personne · 1896 - 1979
Mann, Stanley
SM1 · Personne · 1928 - 2016
Pearce, Diana
DP2 · Personne · [19-]
Breen, Melwyn
MB2 · Personne · –1968
Diehl, Fred
FD1 · Personne · 1901-1988
Boyd, Gary
GB2 · Personne · 1934-2011

Gary MacIntyre Boyd was born in Toronto on October 9, 1934 and died in Montreal on April 3, 2011. He received a B.Sc. (Physics) from Carleton University (Ottawa) in 1957, a M.Sc. (Physics) from the University of Saskatchewan in 1961, and a Ph.D in Geophysics from the University of British Columbia in 1968. He also received a Diploma in Computer Assisted Instruction Development (Education & Training Consultants, Los Angeles), in 1970.

In 1968, Dr. Boyd began his career at Sir George Williams University (SGWU) as Assistant Professor of Instructional Communications and Assistant Director (Research & Development) of the Centre for Instructional Technology (later the Concordia Audio-Visual Department). He later started teaching in the Department of Education of SGWU. In 1974, SGWU merged with Loyola College to form Concordia University. Dr. Boyd went on to teach at Concordia University until his death in 2011. He also kept his position of Assistant Director (Research & Development) in the Concordia Audio-Visual Department until the ends of the 1990s.