Expo 67. The FLQ crisis. The run-up to the 1976 Summer Olympics.
Almost five decades after he was a member of Concordia’s inaugural class, John Hayto, BEng 75, comes to life when asked to reflect on his student days.
Hayto attended both the Jesuit-run Loyola High School, where he served as an altar boy at St. Ignatius Church, and, across the street, Loyola College. The latter merged with Sir George Williams University to create Concordia in 1974.
“It was an incredible time that, for a teenager in Montreal, felt alive with possibility,” says the retired telecom executive.
“There was the wider counterculture movement, there were anti-war protests on campus. It was very sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll, and there was this rising political and social consciousness.”
Hayto remembers when the Front de libération du Québec set off a bomb on Loyola Campus on May 5, 1969.
“Thankfully nobody was hurt,” he says. “I think that incident just underscored for a lot of us that we were coming of age during a time of great uncertainty and change.”