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l I • I I I
CTt 31970 l•yole .i Msnt,~.t
largest student weekly newspaper in Canada
------------------------------------------------- Loyala C .... allll Sir G-., Wiliams University,----------"
Faculty Associations Come to_ Terms With SA Commerce, Science, Engineering Call Off Referendums
The furor over the Student Legislative Co_uncil's executive honoraria and the Student Association budget is over as far as the Faculty Associations are concerned.
" We had a meeting with Stuart last Saturday before the open meeting and a satisfactory agreement was reached with all sssociations," Brian marshal!, president of the Engineering Undergraduate Association said last week.
Engineering will not go ahead with plans to hold a referendum on the issue of withdrawal from the Student association. Science and Commerce have also decided to call off proposed referendum.s.
At a meeting with F-aculty Association representatives Monday morning, Stuart and his executive presented a number of changes in their honoraria structure and proposed a few amendments to the SLC constitution.
The honoraria of the executive has been cut to $250 - the amount which has already been pairl out in tuition fees. Stuart's total honoraria will come to about $2100.
David Magee, SA Internal Vice President, told The Paper that some of the money cut back from honoraria will go into expense accounts for the SLC executive members.
" It still comes to an overall honoraria decrease," Magee said. "The money saved from this will go into expenditures for the carpets."
The SA has proposed that the
two student associations in the university pay for carpeting in the student study areas on the fourth floor.
Among the constitutional amendments proposed was the reducing the number of executives that can vote on the SLC from seven to three.
At present there are seven executives members of the SA elected by the student body at large. The executives look after the general affairs of the SA. Each has a vote on the SLC, the legislative body of the SA.
"This could be a preliminary step to reducing the number of elected executive members to four or five, " Magee said.
Other constitutional proposals would make th~ Secretary of the SLC a non-voting member and would hand the chairmanship of_ all SLC meetings to the ombudsman.
Magee also said that Faculty Association representatives on the SLC will be voted directly onto that body by their respective faculties and will not have positions in their faculty organizations.
"There will be no duplication of appointments," Magee said.
All the proposal will be discussed at the Student Association meeting on Tuesday and will have to be accepted formally by council before they Cat) be presented to the student body for ratification in a referendum.'
on the inside ... Loyola's still looking for that great College with the dreamy ~enter (Lowneys). and
Mary Bonar tangles the sticky question .... also. would E. Wood if they could. they should ... page 3.
Ron Blunn doesn ·1 clobber anyone whis week. but don't count the whole page oui. cause letters are in ... all the way from Mao to Mermelstein. and even some fencing with T.S.G ... so stay tuned for page 4.
Stop pollution ... don't burn The Paper. then get serious and read page 5 by Peter Glass.
Hardy tangles with Perry Mason. focuses on the enlightened lens of Tom Terrific, bares all for Oh! Calcutta. and with some help from Rudy Melnitzer. tells you where it's at with a virgin ... pages 10 - 13.
Spans leans hard on a football game which thrilled Verdun Thursday night. Since we are a two campus enterprise. we couldn 't lose. so with Robin smiling on both sides. Lorne Davis tells it like it was ... pages 14-1 6.
Our canoonist . leaked out some information on the F.L. 0. this week. but before he could finish. someone kidnapped him ... page 4.
Orange you glad you read Perception. Don't you wish everyone did? Arno doe s. so open us up down the middle.
·open Meeting Ends in Chaos
photo by Weisz
Stuart Stuart, SA president faces "the people" as he defends his association's budget and his honoraria before an open meeting of the day students last Monday.
Direct challenge to Code's validity
Monday's open meeting of the Student Association ended in confusion without any motions having been voted on or any decisions taken.
When the meeting was adjourned because of a lack of a quorum, there was still a motion on the floor to freeze the salaries of the SA executive members.
The quorum was lost after prolonged hassling about procedural rules and points of order.
Stuart Stuart was greeted with a chorus of boos and derision as he explained his honoraria and budget.
.__ Stuart outlined the changes that had been arrived at in a meeting with Fa-culty Association representatives that morning.
In effect, he said, the proposed changes would give the Faculty A sociations more power and this would fall in with his election promises of the spring.
A number of speakers criticised the SA president before one student presented the open meeting with a motion calling for the freezing of the executives honoraria allocations and a non-confidence motion jp. Stuart.
The motion was never voted on. Steve Selinger, a member of the Jewish Defence League who ran for SA president last year, delayed the procedings with repeated requests for continued debate on the motion.
The quorum wa lost when a vote of the as embly was being taken a.s to whether the motion should be further di cussed or voted on.
ESA Shuns Student Code The Evening tudents Asso
ciation has decided to directly challenge the University's Student Code of Behavior by witholding appointments to the code's various committees.
':Phe deci ion wa taken by the ESA council at a recent meeting.
"The Code must and will be changed" , Wayne Gray, ESA president told The Paper. "For as it is now, i was obviously an effort born out of panic by the administration".
In a letter to Robert A. Fraser, Secretary of the University Council, Gray outlined the objections of the ESA to the Student Code.
He cited articles 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 20 and 21 as being "procedurally incorrect, the majority of which are covered
by the Criminal Code of Canada".
Gray spoke for the association in refusing to nominate or appoint representatives for the Preliminary Hearing committee, the Hearing committee, the Student Court, the Rules committee, and the Academic Discipline committee.
All are committees involved with the application of the tdent Code.
"The above committees and. court are ,provided for under the Student Code of Behavior. After much discussion the Executive Council of the Evening Students Association has taken the position of respectfully declining to nominate or appoint representatives to these bodies" Gray stated in his letter to Fraser.
"I[ the ESA nominated individuals to sit on these bodies, · and an evening student was charged for an offense for which the ESA stood behind the student,· the result would be totally ambiguous".
"We were sitting on these committees as a matterof credibility . With the withdrawal of our upport, we are question- · ing the credibility of the Code", the letter continued.
"If a student wishes to gain ()Utside aid in defending himself against a charge, he does not have the support by himself. The ESA has $80,000 at its disposal for just such support".
The question of the Student Code is due to come up for question at the next meeting of the University Council.
Con't on pg. 2
2/THE PAPER OCTOBER 12, 1970
Gray gets board
of governors Kudos by !erry Bovain!
Wayne Gray, in submitting his procedure report following his return from Quebec City on behalf of the E.S.A.. received warm congratulations from an obviou ly plea ed Board of Governors.
Mr. Gray. along with Dr. Jack Borden, had met with Mr. Guy
t. Pierre. Dr. Victor Goldbloom. and everal other representatives of the Department of Higher Education.
Dr. Borden, Vice Principal. Academic. poke f:or the whole Board in congratulating the E. .A. President. and commended him for the way he handled him elf in a job well done.
·'The last time a ir George student tried to gain an audience in Quebec." said Dr. Borden. "Mr. Cardinal didn't how up. He had just forgotten us. This
time, the red carpet was rolled out for us and we were given the greatest courtesy."
" I found them very attentive," added Mr. Gray. " but found that there is a great lack of communication in the ministry. Mr. t. Pierre, the Education Mini ter. seemed to be under the impre -sion that along with the 10', increase to Evening students. there wou ld also be a 6' , increa e to dav students.··
Day students. as i turned out. received no change.
" I have found them mo t attentive in listening to us". finished Mr. Gray, ' and believe they will continue to be so in the future."
The Board of Governors completed the report by pledging anv financial support that the E.·S.A~ might need for further tri ps to the Provincial capitol.
Chaplains to Ope~ Evenings The Chaplains of Sir George
are making a concerted effort to reach the needs of the eveniifg-6tudents.
One of the immediate plans i to have one of the staff available every evening except Fridays.
At a recent staff meeting. they attempted to analyze the pecial needs of evening tu
dents and the ways in which they might relate to them.
The God Squad (Dave ]?rabant, Walter Goos, Israel Hausman, Joe Macalu o, Norm Perry, John Wright) has it offices in H-643.
Oct. 16 Beckett
Oct. 17 The Russians Are Coming.
The Russians Are Coming
Oct. 23 The Magus
Oct. 24 I l ove You. Alice 8. Toklas
Nov. 1 l ong Days Journey Into Night
Nov. 13 The Madwoman of Chaillot
Nov. 14 Fell ini Satyricon
Jan. 8 Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines
Jan. 9 The Balcony
Feb. 12 The Magician or Candy
Feb. 13 Cat Ballou
8:30 p.m.
Room H-110
Tickets sold at the door
At McGill
"Individual Merely
by Steve First a Mold'' -B.F.Skinner
Renowned Harvard beha-vioral psychologist B.F. Skinner was in Montreal la t week.
The author of the utopian novel ' 'Walden Two··. Dr. ~kinner gave a br!ef dissertation on his new book entitled ''Freedom and Dignitv·· at McGill niver ity on Monday. oc t. 5.
Profes or Skinner di scussed hi theory of what he calls the 'technology of behavior'. He compared it to such precise and exacting technologies that have led to successes like the moonflights ..1 and other similar progress in physics.
ln propounding hi purely descriptive brand of p ychology, which i but an analysis of behavior in terms of associations between overt timuli and overt reactions.
Skinner maintained that concepts such a ' per onality' were retrogressive to · psychology and tended to stymie advancements of the like enjoyed by the more rigorous phy ical sicences.
To illustrate his point. Dr. Skinner mentioned that. ''to sav I went because I. felt like go.ing is a phony explanation .·· And that it was open to analysis - that is. the whole operation could be explained in term of a strict stimulus - response model.
However. he went on to add that 'becau e we can't explain the behavior of the man we can ee. we invent a · man we can't,
see to explain human behavior .' ln doing so. then. people have refused to objectively access behavior in term of a technolo-gy.
The ba ic rift in psychology toda.v. related Professor Skinner. is the split between those psychologi ts who believe that human experience is the main approach to understanding human behavior, and tho e who think that an analysi of the h~--111an organism in relation to its environmental hi tory is the fundamental an wer. .
The latter has been the 'traditional notion ' of man. remarked Skinner in a negative tone.
A for himself, Dr. Skinner advocates that the environment. that is, selection through evolution. has ultimately shaped human behavior. In thi sense then. can we give an individual credit for anything that he ha done '>"
At best we can admire the environment which producec him. ·· answers Professor Skinner - for the individual is but a mould in relation to the function of hi history.
The ultimate problem to ponder for the future is if behavio-
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ral technology is accepted a a cientific fact, what indeed
would be the relationship between the concept of freedom to government practices?
" Rethinking", commented Dr. Skinner, " would be nece -ary. The value judgements
that have been imposed on the characterization of man in the past would have to be eriou ly questioned and thoroughly analyzed."
Probed a to what he thought of the experiments of Dr. Ti mothy Leary. Professor Skinner replied that he did not feel that Leary had ever done an objectively controlled experiment. A such, h~ does not believe that Dr. Leary has given a good idea of expanded con -ciousne .
Dr. Skinner further mentioned that he himself bas worked with marijuana, with pigeons. In a lighter note, he commented that the R.igeon were stirring advocate of its legalization. " I have tried marijuana. " inserted kinner nonchalantly "but not in an experiment."
Con't from pg. 1
University Council is the highest academic body in the university and has responsibility for the Student Code.
In his letter Gray said that t he provisions of the Code dealing with Socio-Academic offenses "are not o con tructed as to provide due process and protection of individual rights" .h
The ESA has pledged legal assistance to . " protect the rights" of any even ing student charged under the Socio-Academic port ion of the Code.
"The fact that employees of the un iYersity and members of the faculty are not placed under the same restraints as students insofar as regu lation of their conduct is concerned exemplifies the inequality of the current system", the letter to Fraser said.
THE PAPER OCTOBER 12, 1971/3
Loyola Campus Center Only a Dream by Mary Bonar
The new Campus Centre to be erectecf on the football field beside Hingston Hall is as far away as ever.
Approved in principle in 1964 by the Department of Education . along with the new Phy ical Educational Centre since completed, Loyola anticipated government grants of $800,000.
ln 1967 the student body pledged $1,000,000 toward the construction of the Centre. This was not matched by Quebec.
As of 1970 actual student contributions amount to $190,000 ·com pared to an estimated completion cost of $2.700.000.
A building committee was set up in 1965 but was disbanded in 1967. Students then took over the project of the fCampus Centre and in 1968 another committee was set up.
At this time Bob Eustace joined Loyola as Dean of Men's Re idence and since then the responsibility for continuing
through with t he project has been largely his.
1n a memo to the very Re~. Patrick J. Malone. S.J ., President of Loyola College, dated January 23, 1969, Mr. Eustace had this to say:
" ln December 1965. t he Student Body of Loyola. through a referendum, voted overwhelmingly to pledge $1,000,000 toward the erection of a Campus Centre.
Each year t he Campus Centre
fee assessment is to be included with the general student fee payment and deposited in a trust fund under the joint trusteeship of the Loyola of Montreal Students Association and Loyola College. .
These and other funds deposited in the Campus · Centre Trust Fund are to be used for the repayment of the capital and interest on the building if and when it is con tructed. ·
Trustees of the fund are the President of Loyola College.
>-
President of the L.M.S.A .. the Administrative Vice-President of Loyola College and t he treasurer of t he L.M.S.A."
Financial ~institution have been canvassed but refuse to commit themselves until t hey are certain of Loyola's continuing exi tence. that the student body is large enough to make the Centre elf-supporting and that Quebec has given the project it ble sing·.
On Dec. 1. 1969. Mr. Eustace wrote to Mr. Guy Bergeron. the
ASA-Evelyn Wood Wrangle Over Booth ecretary_ of the Internal Com
mittee for Student Re idences of the Quebec Government and on Dec. 10. 1969 the latter replied. aying that the e mea-ure would be di cu ed at the
next meeting of the Internal Committee. by Terry Bovaird
Evelyn Wood and their Reading Dynamic course have come head on with the A. .A. In a controversy bent on denials, each side is seemingly drawing away from any sort of solution.
During t he first weeks of thi semester. the Sir George mezzanine was the host of a portable booth run by the Evelyn Wood agency. The idea being to circulate adverti ing to the students. and if possible. ell their course.
The que tion now i ... just who's idea was it? .
Ed Ro enthal. Vice-President in charge of Eucation for the A.S.A.. approached Joel Bonn, manager of Evelyn Wood in Montreal. claiming to be a representative of an advertising agency interested in circulating book covers bearing Evelyn Wood advertising. The idea wa to circulate the e arou nd Montreal campu e .
Mr. Bonn expre ed intere t in this arrangement, and added that he would be interested in setting up a booth on the Sir George campu to explain t he
CLASSIFIED ROOM H-603
Evelyn Wood reading cour e in the hope of selling it to tudents.
At this point Rosenthal stated that such an operation would be no problem. in the light of his being a repre entative of the A.S.A.
Mr. Bonn tated that there is no and never was a contract between his agency and t he A. .A .. but t hat he had reached a verbal contract with Rosent ha ll b_v which the A. .A. would receive $5.00 for every student which joined t he cour e. Questioned a to ju t how many this meant. Mr. Bonn replied, "O h three or maybe four. but we certainly weren't lined up 25 at a time" .
Mr. Bonn till wanted to know what had happened to the book cover t hat Rosenthal had ini
tially approached him about. The Evening Students As
sociation, which handle a good deal of advertising from Eve.lyn Wood. contacted Mr. Bonn on fir t hearing that a booth wa to be . et up on the mezzanine . Mr. Bonn was then quoted a offering . 10.00 per tuden t to the A. .A. for the course. Neither the E. .A. nor the majority of the .A . knew anvthing of the
RATES AND CONDITIONS CARS AVAILABLE Advestising rates for one time TQ insertion is $1.00, ($2.00 for non-students) maximum 2s words. Toronto, Maritimes Ten cents per extra word. Dead- Provinces, Western ~=e !r!i::1~!;~~~Y cash only at Canada ·and Florida
Driver must be PART-TIME 21.or over and SECRETARY have any current
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arrangement prior to its commencement.
At this time. Wa.vne Gray. President of the E . . A. contracted Mag Flynn. Dean of tudent . on what he knew of the set up. Mr. Flynn nor the Dean of Student Office knew anything about it, and till have no record of any permission granted for the booth.
Ed Rosenthal states that indeed there was no written contract. but a verbal agreement had been reached. which included the fee of $10.00 per student to the A.S.A. for the cour-e. Rosenthal states that Mr.
Bonn told him that only one or two students took up the offer.
No money ha been mentioned .by either side ince the booth was closed down .
A to Bonn ' figure of one or two tudent having signed up for the course. Ro enthal tated, " he 's lying. "
Mr. Bonn did admit that there
are over 300 tudent at 1r George who have igned for the course. At $150.00 per cour e. this mean that ir George tudents have pouried $45.000. into Evelyn Wood and Mr. Bonn.
"If he's recieved over 300 application from Sir George. then where did he get them if not from the booth " . countered Rosenthal?" The figure of only one or two i ab olutely ridiculous."
Ro enthal reali ed that it was "a stupid move not keeping count of the tudents who igned up.''
He expressed the hope that the students who did sign up for the cour e through the booth . on the mezzanine would please contact the A. .A. to find out just what Evel.vn WG>od owe to the Universit_v.
Evelyn Wood is purportedly working on the idea of setting up a course in the Hall Building for 1971-1962.
HIGH AND MIGHTY Aviator Boot
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52 18 Queen Mary Rd . Open Thursday ond Friday nites. C.0 .0 . orders accepted Credit and Charge• cords hono red
Another letter was written. on Feb. 10. 1970. t his ti me to Mr. Roger Farrell. Department of Education. Government of Quebec.
The reply from Mr. Farrell indicated that " our central committee accepts to study a revi ed ver ion of the project ·Loyola Campu Centre· provided uch a programme con-i ts of a reduced initial pro
gramme, a lower cost of con truction. and a refinanci ng of the co t of investment and upkeep ."
Thi is the last word heard from the Government on this i ue . Repeated inquirie and req ue L have _proved u eless.
What will happen to the right of ever_\· College Student to have hi s own Centre? We are no nea rer to Government approval than we were ix vear ago when the whole idea of a Campu Centre was conceived .
Fairview Shopping Centre 662 l St. ffobert St. Plaza ·.•· · 11-0 'paYks'St. M all , Ottawa "·· ·
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' Tes Gaierics d'i\njou .,. '
4/THE PAPER OCTOBER 12, 1970
I
Coded Ethics The ESA has hit the Student Code of Behavior
right between its ambiguous unnecessary little bylaws with the Council' s decision not to appoint representatives to the Code' s various committees.
The ESA's decision will be discussed at the next University Council meeting. It should be interesting to see what comes out of their deHberations.
University Council will have to take s.ome sort of decision on the ESA's move. )'he whole issue has been effectively put "up against the wall" and will have to be dealt with in a significant manner by the university - and quickly.
In effect, the ESA' s decision is an indication that, as far as evening students are concerned, the Code is no longer operable in the university.
Good. University Council can decide to appoint mem
bers on the Code's committees without the r atification of the ESA but this move would prove highly unsatisfactory as it reeks of administration imposed " justice" .
It wouldn't be considered a popular move by the majority of students who already have little enough respect for the document.
The Code has never rea lly existed in the first place.
No one has attempted to test it , use it or directly challenge it until now. The only direct affect it's had on the university since its inception, has been the space it takes up in the Student Services handbook each year.
It takes five or six pages a year to reprint the stupid thing in the handbook. With printing c9sts for the handbook at $75 a page, that's about $400 to print the Code.
It's hardly worth the money to print - never mind use.
Letter s . •• Weired
Dear Sir: Who needs perception to un
derstand your centre picture of October 5, 1970? .It was obvious that some photographer found some young girls to exhibit all their wares in the name of" art".
Leave the nudes to Playboy. They do it with class.
Wayne Vibert Commerce IV
as sexual objects by everyone. I am very sorry that you see
it that way. Arn M 1 t . o erme s em Editor of PERCEPTION
Mao T. Stung Dear Sir,
The tudent i looked upon as being a mature rat ional hu man being who deserves to be delegated the power that has been entrusted to him b_v the admin-ist ration. This universitv asks Dear Mr. Vibert: ·
Nude children are not neces- the studen t to conform to a verv sarily sexual objects. To advan- li beral student code whic h
permits students great mobilitv ce the suggestion that the inno- in campus life. Yet when a st~cent young girls portrayed are
dent continually fla unts t his code "exhibiting their wares" in a manner similar to the silicone- the ad minist ration should. with-breasted Playboy Playmates thal out an.v hesitation. appl_v t he code
restrictions upon an_v guilt_v part_v you profess a preference for, is or part ies. immature, and at best reprehen-I am peaking of one. comrade
sible. Harold Glick. member of the S. Be assured that Thomas Weir G. \V. U. Maoi t part:v. F;ee
is not " some photographer" but a highly respectable American dom of political choice is
certainl.v a llowed to an>· univerlensman whose competence is well beyond such dist asteful in- . it :v member. but when the stu
dent continues to break the code timation. for the purpo e of his political
It would appear that you wish beliefs. then the administration to censure the purient interests ~hould take action. aroused in you by a photograph of three children taken in Au- The event which I am alluding
to took place two week ago when tumn. comrade Glick wa, di, tributing
I would like to ,stress 1tha \ , I I TI ' I I ..,
n ude children are not perceived , ,,,, , 1 'I C,i J) .t• con't on pg· 6
The editorial Pagel
John P. assured himself of a bad weekend when he decided to lose all his copy on Friday. The bearded bard payed for it with a few sleepless
' nights. Robin is up in Quebec ... seems he had a nat tire and uPon trying to change it, couldn 't break the paint seal. He had to spend the night there. Sure thing Rob-I hope she's nice-Where 'd .va drop Dale ofr. Bruce Pauluasaukuas ... is up in St. Jean somwwhere--either couldn"t his paint seal as well or joined the army. Tough luck Bruce. the game was in Lennoxvil.le ! Rommel let it all hang out this week ... thanks for posing Ron. After the great response to Perception last week. we·re planning on a sequel using Si.r George co~ s. All applicants contact the News Editor. The Paper rm. 639-2. Hall Building ... and oh .ves ... bring .vour own camera.
ThePaper ·
Sir George
Editor in Chief: Ron Blunn
Loyola Photo Editor: Jan Zajic ~ews Editor: Terry Bovai rd .. ports Editor: Robin Palin Copy Editor: Irene Silas Entertainments Editor: John Hardy Circulation Manager: teve First ·Perception Editor: Amo Mermelstein
Dina Lieberman Mary Bonar Anne Ricard Richard Pawlek Barbara Megan
· Published by the Evening Student Association of Sir George \Villiams niver ity. The editorial content is not necessarily the opin ion of the Publisher. THE PAPER may not be copied in whole or in part without the written permission oft.he Publisher. THE PAPER is published for evening students and the communities of Si r George Williams University and Loyola College. Sir George Office: 145-5 de Maisonneuve Blvd . W. Room H-639. Telephone: 879-2836. Loyola Office: 730 herbrooke St. W. Room Two. Telephone: 486-9890. Media Sales Department : 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd . W. Rooom H-603. Telephone: 879-4514
TYPE- ETTING & LITHO BY JOURNAL OFF ET INC. , , ] EL,, 331-~72/ , ,, ' -
THE PAPER OCTOBER 12, 1970/5
Peo·ple are d ying Drapeau' s Letter to STOP Dear Mrs. Shulman,
from pollution
I received your letter of August 26 and have since asked the advice of several municipal departments which might be involved by your suggestion . I myself have also considered the overall effect of such action in Montreal and have come to the conclusion that it is not advisable at this time to recommend to my colleagues on the Execu tive Committee to accede to your request.
The mot ives inspiring STOP to close off St. Catherine Street seem praiseworthy to me. As mayor, I favour any movement whose goal it is to combat air pollut ion. I am therefore happy with the work done by associations such as yours and by the newspapers. They have sensitized the public to the urgency of the issue and, as a result, there is every hope that the public w ill cooperate generously if stringent, perhaps unwelcome restr ictions are instituted
• right now 1n in this struggle. . ·
Montreal
by Peter Glass
The most ambitious Canadian assault yet in the struggle against pollution begins th is week as some 150 anti-pollution groups participate in the observance of Survival Day, Wed. Oct. 14. This reaction to the predominately American Earth Day originated with an anti-pollution group at McMaster University and was widely publicized in its paper Dasien.
Each group will concentrate on informing the public about the specific threats from pollution in its area. Some will attempt to have major streets closed to traffic, provide work parties on the banks of polluted rivers or pass out armbands depicting the Survival Day symbol - The Canadian flag shedding a dead maple leaf.
Montreal's main participation in Survival Day will be led by the Society to Overcome Pollution (STOP) in co-operation with the French Canadian Societe pour vaincre la pollution (SVP). Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau vetoed STOP's request to have a portion of St. Catherine street closed on Survival Day. His reply to Mrs. Sheila Shulman, the president of STOP is reprinted with this article. It seems most regrettable that the mayor would not permit the people of Montreal to experience, if only briefly, a downtown free from crowded sidewalks, rushing vehicles and obnoxious fumes. Perhap it was fel t renewed effo rts on the part of some groups to create a mid-town shopping mall might spark unfavourable publicity with elections ne~ at hand.
Since it was found in Oct. 1969 by Mrs. Marlin Cartwright and Mrs. Karl Forkas, STOP has grown into Canada's third largest anti-pollution group with over 1,400 members. Operating through a central committee and 15 local chapters, STOP members are providing Montrealers with facts on phosphate content in detergents or alternatives to pesticide poisoning and are heading a determined drive for the strict legislation required to combat pollution. STOP membership fees are $2 and information concerning STOP ma~ be obtained by writing : 14 Cedar Ave, Pointe Claire.
So far the political reaction to STOP was described as being "terrible" with the Drapeau-Sauln ier administration seemingly "uninterested" in introducing serious pollution controls. City Hall has given no firm commitment on recognition of survival day and has not commented on participation. A spokesman of the mayor's office seemed to doubt the authenticity of survival day as a national event. After checking with federal government sources he could produce no offic ial knowledge of survival day . It becomes increasingly clear that although the public is becoming aware of the problems of pollution, much work is required to bring public pressure on politicians who still respond to pollution with "no official knowledge", remarks.
The public is invited to show support of antipollution groups by attending a presentation at Alexis Nihon plaza th is week from T uesday to Friday. Social
Montreal's_ pollution
problem and this city's
participation in
Survival Day
A similar eager cooperation has proven itself successful in the program for city cleanliness and beaut ification - two qualities commented on by all visitors. The encouraging results have brought about an uninterrupted and self-renewing efforts by the1 public. In this way, the persevering work by anti-pollution associations has already brought about the result you hope to attain by the demonstration, so that the inconvenience produced would only achieve a benefit already existing.
Moreover since a similar demonstration h as already been organized in New York and Tokyo, it is nothing new and is not likely to catch the imaginat ion of our cit izens. If however something original could be found, I would be willing to consider it . Montreal has a flair for originality and a good idea is invaluable.
In the meant ime, people are looking forward with impat ience and a great deal of hope to the results of the 3-day symposium on air and noise pollution which I convened for next week. Experts and technicians from all three levels of government will take part. We thus attack the heart of the matter b:y coordinating the work to ensure optimum efficiency and by proceeding with an effective program of cohesive, inter-acting endeavours by all levels of government within a frame work of well-defined objectives.
S incerely Mayor of Montreal
Jean Drapeau
organizations will set up displays, distribute literature and show continuous movies provided by the N.F.B.
The C.B.C. and the Canadian · Council of Churches will sponsor a three day national conference on "Ecology and Responsibility at the Chateau Laurier Hotel in Ottawa. It is hoped this conference will produce "an all out effort to awaken the public conscience, and to focus public concern on its urgency" Sir George Williams Professor E.H. Knel man, well known for his work with the Citizens for Social Responsability in Science has been invited to attend as a member of the panel. When C.S .R.S. was formed , Dr. Knelman said that he was "absolutely convinced that people are dying right now from pollution in Montreal" ...
STOP will present the Montreal Urban Community with position papers on air pollution, sewage treatment, and solid wastes. Other student groups around Montreal will show their support by selling home grown plants as symbols of oxygen producers, or by positively picketing companies with commendable pollution records. One group in St. Laurent is holding a panel discussion entitled "Is. There Intelligent Life On Earth".
0 0 (\
The Air Pollution Associations of Quebec and Ontario were angered recently when a Drapeau sponsored symposium on air and noise pollution was held at the same time as their Montebello conference. No citizens groups were invited to attend and the symposium was held behind closed doors. City hall insists that the closed door policy was requested by the delegates who feared the public would be misinformed if their remarks were made public. This is credible, as in any scient ific discussion it is necessary to change or modify statements and it would lead to misunderstanding if delegates were quoted out of context. However, the mayor' statement that he was trying to create an atmosphere that would allow the delegates " to be precise about names, products, firms, and causes of pollution" is not completely understandable.
I don 't believe that politicians should continue to protect those large corporations responsible for the wanton destruction of our environment. T hey should be named, and exposed to public pressure.
No citizen groups were asked to attend because it was felt they would not be able to produce the scientific personnel required to participate in th is type of symposium; despite the fact that their techn ical advisors were perhaps more aware . of the problems in Montrea! than many of the invoted delegates. In all fairness, however, I know of no anti-pollution group which asked to be present at the conference and city hall maintains that a sincere request by qualified people would have been granted .
The doomsday clock ticks on, oblivious to the political rhetoric below, which tells the seeth ing masses that all is well, don 't worry, live well. It's almost 12 now and all is not well. "We have found the eqemy and he is us' · - Pogo.
6/THE PAPER OCTOBER 12. 1970
Letters continu ed ... con't from pg 4
copies of his left wing publication in the corridors of the chool. which is perfectlv ac
ceptable. Upon being a ked to simpl_v pre, ent his identification card to prove whether he was a registered student or not. comrade Glick replied ' by shouting tirade of in ults at the guard who simply wa doing his job on behalf of the student bodv.
The confrontation .the·n shifted to the cafeteria in front of a substantial student bodv. Comrade Glick expre ed th~ opinion that he was being uppresed bvthe democracv which was enforcing rules · and regulation . What eventuall.v transpired wa that comrade Glick. houting uncontrollably at the top of hi s h.vsteric voice. refu ed to present identification to two school , ecuritv guards. two Montreal policemen and Mr. Robert Pugh. Assistant Dean o_f tudents.
·· Article 10 of the tudent code states. 'Every tudent who refuse to " produce appropriate identification upon request bv authorised niver ity per onn~l is guilty of an offen e and is liable to (I l have his privilege re tricted . or. (2) be suspended ' '.
· At this point t he repre entative ol' the administration decided to leave the yelling comrade Glick in the cafeteria and return to the Dean of tudents office to take proper action not through bodily assault. but through the correct academic channel .
The ituation now rests fullv in the hand of the administr~tion. and I incerely hope that after due conside rat ion comrade Glick should immediatelv receive what i hi due for blatantlv 'flaunting the student code which ·remains the tandard for all proper student conduct.
Birks Bovaird Arts IV
Re MBA's Dear Sir,
Your work as the Editor is appreciated, particularly when I know how much you have to do. However, when articles are edited, something, as you can imagine, can get lost in the process.
In connection with the above I would like to point out that :
a) Asst. Prof. V. Kirpalani wrote "a" brief, b) Dr. Mallen is not just another professor in the commerce faculty, he is the Professor of Marketing, Chairman of the Department as well as the Chairman of Graduate Studies.
John Grunde Commerce Representative Evening Students, Assoc.
Anti-Apathetic Dear Sir,
It is indeed regrettable that the anonymous person, who experienced rather anonymous -circumstances at TVSG and who wrote a rather ·anonymo.us letter in "The Paper" last week regarding the veil of secrecy around TVSG, is not more aware of certain details regarding TVSG. I question whether the situation is apathy but rather just a lack of insight on his or her part.
I my elf am an evening student and I have been with TVSG for the past year and a half. The red carpet was never really laid out for me, but I can honestly say that I was never turned away or that I was ever denied the right
BULLETIN BOARD
SIR GEORGE I S.G.W.U. Hillel: Wine and Chee-
MONDAY: OCT. 12 Thanksgiving: NO da.v classe but evening class are till held. The library will be open from 5pm to 10.45 p.m.
e Party. 4 p.m. 'ti l the wine runs dry!!! FREE. Come to :2130 Bishop, 2nd floor (Ju t behind Sir George's Hall Bldg.)
Working Women's Association of S.G.W.U.: Meeting at noon in H-615.
TUESDAY: Oct. 13 Students International Meclitation Society: A meeting of all students practicing meditation. taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. At 2:30 p.m . in H-261.
French 201 - Section TV: Cable TV'.s channel 9 at 7 and :30 a. m. and 10:30 p.m.
. .
The Canadian North is Freedom.
freedom air peace and people snow ice snow skiing soaring snow tobaggoning now people ice fire warmth people.
People love touch feel ski dance. People sing sleep love snow freedom.
We're planning a week in the north during winter vacation. If you 're interested, come discuss it with us.
Hillel, 2130 Bishop, 2nd. floor. Call: 845-9957
Liinited registration (30-40). Call now.
Riflery Club: All prospective members come to 2160 Bi hop
t. at 4:00 p.m.
Weissman Gallery and Gallery I: _ ovember 7 - 11. 11 a.m . - 9 p.m.. ov. 12. 11 a .m. - 5 p.m. A presentation of "Andre Bieler: 50 year ". 66 work panning the 72 year of the artis ts . career.
WEDNESDAY: Oct. 14 Progressive Conservative .Youth Federation: General meeting at l p.m. on main floor on t he tudent Union. All welcome.
Operation Great Pumpkin: Come and help support the 2nd annual
ir George Halloween party held for the inner city kids. A meeting will be held at the
tudent Union at 4 p.m.
Soccer: Sir George \". . Loyola. 4 p.m. at Loyola.
THURSDAY: Oct. 15 French 201 - Section TV: Channel 9 at 7 and 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.
Students International Meditation Society: Introductory lecture on t ran cendental meditation as taught by Maharishi Mahe h Yogi at 2:30 p.m. in H-120.
Conservatory of Cinematographic Art: " Black Fox". 1962 Academy Award winning - documentary on the ri e and fall of the Nazi part.\· presented at i p.m. in H-110. ·'The Magnificent Ambersom," at 9 p.m. wlfh Orso,n Welle ( 1942). 50c
to learn about th~ medium or partake in any activities. The point that must be made clear here is that the basis of one's participation in any organization is directly related to the amount of work and initiative one desires to put into that organization. You can ask questions all you please but no one is going to hand you instant success or instant power. These depend solely upon how badly the individual desires to partake in an active learning experience.
As far as evening students at TVSG are concerned, there are about 20 actively involved. Not much, but as we all know, most evening students do not get that actively involved. These evening tuden ts at TVSG produced half
of the programming coming from TVSG last year.
I have seen much more apathetic groups and groups more concerned with petty power politics than TVSG and if TVSG does not have the atmosphere of being -close then this may be the result of lack of student support in allowing our great student politicians to exchange petty slogans at each other in the hallways and dressing themselves up with honoria, wall-to-wall carpets, touch-telephones and power instead of supporting true learning experiences in other student groups.
Finally, to you Mr. X, I state that as a producer-director of TVSG, I can offer you all the work and opportunity that you want on a show which I am presently producing. You name it, you can do it. But don't expect any money or compliments. The creativity isup to you.
Riki Stanford Producer-Director-TVSG
Ti-Apathetic Dear Sir,
It is extremely difficult to begin a response to an editorial so grossly misinformed and lacking in factual basis that it almost borders on the absurd. Th"e "few privileged Students" you speak of who supposedly reap the benefit of this "electronic Pad", this past summer devoted close to two thousand man hours without any sort of renumeration, rebuilding and reorganizing so that the students of this university could participate in TVSG productions. In past weeks, over one hundred students have signed up for and participated in training sessions. These sessions, dealing with various aspects of television are being given 16 to 20 hours a week by students who receive no financial gain for these efforts. We are constantly in need of new personnel.
Obviously, there are certain areas of operation which require
con'tonpg7
Notices should be addressed ' ,i. writing to Bulletin Board. At Sir George it's Room H-639 in the Hall Building. For Loyola, 7308 Sherbrooke St., W. , Room Two. Deadline for all submissions is Thursday evening prior to the Monday of publication.
for student . 75¢ non-student .
FRIDAY: Oct.16 E.S.A. Films: " Beckett"
tarring Richard Burton and Peter O'Toole in H-110 at 8:30 p.m. for 99a:
SATURDAY: Oct. 17 E.S.A. Films: "The Ru sians Are Coming. The Ru ian Are Coming''. tarring Alan Arkin from 8:30 p.m. for 99a:.
GENERAL: Students of Objectivism: Anyone intere ted in forming a tud:v group please call Patrick Morrison at 843-5096. leaving name and number.
CHAPLAINS: Available in H-643 (also freelancing). Monda:v to Thur day: 10 a.m. 0 p.m . Frida.v: 10 a .m. 0 1 p.m.
LOYOLA
TUESDAY: Guadagni Lounge: L.A.S.A. invites you to view the World Series Baseball games in comfort, with a pint of your favourite ale! Free admission. Beer 40¢ 12 noon - 5 p.m.
Gymnasium: CO-ED Fitness Classes - Ski conditioning. 1 p .m . - 2p.m. Athletic Classroom: First Meeting Women 's Varsity Ice Hockey 6:30 p .m . Rink: Evening Division Hockey . 10:30 - 12 midnite.
WEDNESDAY: F.C. Smith Aud: A rep of the American Deserters Committee is speaking at 12 noon.
Canada Manpower (Loyola Office): is holding a seminar in room 204 of the Bryan building from 1 to 3 p.m.
Senate Task Force Meeting: Will be held from 5 until 7 p.m. in room 128 of the Administration building.
The Board Of Directors: Meeting in room A-128 from 7 - lOp.m.
The Loyola Woman's Liberation movement: Meeting from 4 until 5:30 p .m. in the Vanier Library Auditorium .
Vanier Aud.: Dr. David 0 ' Brien, formerly of Loyola History Dept. and now at Holy Cross, Worcester, Mass. will be speaking on Canadian-American relations. 8 - 10 p.m .
THURSDAY:
The Loyola Liberal Association: Its first general meeting will be held today in A-312 at noon. :All new members are welcome!
FRIDAY: Le Citron Disco: Held in the Canteen on Friday nights from 8:30 p .m. to 1:30 a.m. All persons 20 years and over admitted.
compiled by Irene Biles
Letters continued ... con't from pg 6
their personnel to have a certain amount of experience. It would be foolish of us to allow someone completely lacking in engineering experience to function as an engineer. This sort of action could result in damage to extremely expensive equipment, much of which does not belong to us. However, this experience can be gained by participating in other areas of operation and observing.
The nature of the operation of TVSG requires that a \great deal of its •business must be conducted by telephone. Consequently, the executive of TVSG must spend time on the phone. These calls are often important and must be completed despite the fact that a prospective member who is in a hurry may be inconvenienced. To interpret this as a s'ign of disinterest or hostility shows an alarming lack of comprehension and a great deal of paranoia.
The operation of TVSG has always been and will remain open to all those interested in learning and devoting some of their time to its development.
Gary Shaffran Executive Producer
T.V.S.G.
Pathetic Dear Sir,
Once again, it seems "The Paper" has tried to discredit the work of those involved in T.V.S.G.
I am referring to the i'etter printed in the last issue of your paper, titled "Apathy". Although I agree there is this phenomenon of apathy in Sir George, and it is a menace to us all, . I see no reason to substitute it for ignorance as was displayed by your article.
I would like to make those, who have a greater appreciation for those clubs · fighting apathy, than yourself, aware of the true facts. I cannot speak for those involved in other clubs in Sir George, but I can speak for all ofus involved in T.V.S.G.
First, I would like to remind you Sir, that although you referred to us and our studios as "merely an electronic pad reserved for a few privileged students-taking care _to avoid outsiders from spoiling a good thing," we boast a staff in · excess of 150 persons, all trained or being trained in specific jobs they are interested in . This yea'r we have gained about 100 new persons: who, at the present time are involved in training sessions held twelve times a week during the day, and four during the evening.
The evening students in the past years have produced some of the better shows televised on channel nine, and it is for this reason , we have persons giving up their evenings to train those in the evening division , despite the fact that we are not getting a budget from the E.S .A. this year.
We have tried our best to make those interested in T.V. welcome here, and many hours have been spent in helping them.
ow, Sir, to you. I have fought bitterly with The Paper for the past two years on issues involv-
ing T .V. It seems you have a desire to crush the exist.ence of T.V.S.G., and I would very much like to hear some of your reasons for it.
As for your comment about us being "turned off not only to T.V.S.G., but about averything", I say this. "We are only turned off at ·those like yourself and your paper who breed apathy".
ed. note
David Thomas Nadler Producer, Director
T.V.S.G.
Whew! Boy did we get shit on.
Unfortunately due to a typographical error at the printers last week the name of the person who wrote the letter to the editor in question was omitted. His name is Marcel Collin. . .
It was not an editorial but
merely a letter brought to us by a concerned student.
In no way does it reflect the editorial stand of The Paper in respect to T.V. Sir George, or for that matt.er, in respect to apathy.
It seems that one David Nadler has "fought bitterly with The Paper for the past two years on issues involving T. V." I've never heard of him, nor, to my knowledge have I ever spoken with him or even seen him.
During the past year that I've been editor only one article has appeared in The Paper concerning T.V.S.G. That was a newsfeature about three weeks ago and complimentary, if anything.
Finally, I have about as much desire to "crush" T. V .S.G. as I have to watch it.
RonBlunn
UNIVERSAL PEACE ·
._egins with peace in the heart of each individual
The Transcendental Meditation of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi will help you to learn to utilize inner peace, harmony a~d energy. Maharish i Mahesh Yo1i
PLACE: Sir George Williams University, Room H-420 TIME : 2:30 P .M. Thursday October 15 th.
Teachers trained by the Mahari1hi at Ri1hilce1h, Indio will give a public introductory lecture ot:
Sponaored by Student• lnte..-notipnal Meditation Society
Sir George Williams University
NO ADMISSION CHARGE Information: 733-5990
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THE PAPER OCTOBER 12, 1970/7
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8/THE PAPER OCTOBER 12. 1970
PERCEPTION by Arno Mermelstein
THE PAPER OCTOBER 12, 1970/9
10/THE PAPER OCTOBER 12, 1970 '-
:stripping As Big Business
by Georges Michel, translated from the French by Helen Weaver, Doubleday, 192 pages.
When the first word of mouth came oozing up from Oh! Calcutta! reviews, it was clear that Kenneth Tynan's collection of pornographic sketches and nude dance equences would be, if the law did not interfere, ·a long running hit, no matter what prissy critics may have to say.
The more people described the offensiveness of the show. the more people lined up and bought tickets just to be offended.
·Oh! Calcutta! And so it has come to pa s. The New_ York daily newspa
pers have showered it with uch modifiers and ajective a sophomoric, anti-erotic, di gu -tingly clinical, cheaply sensational, degrading, witless, dull, tasteles and unfunny. Yet the demand for tickets i o great even this day (October 9, 1970) that Saturday evening performances are booked olid until December and as far a for the other ' not so popular' nights, ·'some" scattered seats were available, at going rate tarting from $25 each.
Revelation! Time magazine gave Oh' Calcutta! "two plu -es for the laughter it evoke
and its rou ing celebration of the body beautiful, " and in its usual pre ten tiou pseudo highbrow manner, Newsweek hailed the show a a part of ··a sporadic hammering process that will certainly crack, if not break, the petrifaction of our daily lives and ocio- exual behaviors." Blah .. blah .. blah.
Now while breaking t he petrifaction mu t be a good thing (for those with a dictionary) Oh! Calcutta! eems to be doing something quite different.
To an audience compo ed mainly of people between the ages of thirty and fifty it presents a naughty evening of calculated impropriety, a sophisticated smoker, not quite as arounsing as a stag film, but something that can be talked about mainly because it says and does in a commercial theatre what has so far been considered illicit. To discuss a stag film i to brand oneself (in fact) a lecher. But to mention Oh! Calcutta! is . to show one elf broad-minded (no pun inteded) and au courant.
Whatever . the rea on for its popularity, Oh! Calcutta! ha proven that it is here to stay. For all its drawbacks, it is not a totally unrewarding evenihg.
It begirr ·murkily bttt pro:
•!,; Mi~,, •• W
Inspired by a very tempting stage performance, ·the warmed up audience takes to the streets and puts on an act that is hard to follow.
misingly with an apt,calyptic tableau of garbage in which · portions of naked bodies can barely be discerned, and from which emanates a couple of orgasmic ighs. Next on a emi-darkened
stage the entire cast of five men and five women gradually removes their bathrobes to achieve a total nake9ness. It is not o much a striptease, as it is an acclimitization, a eeking by the performers to
make themselves. and the audience. comfortable with their nakedness.
Here, as throughout the evening. director Jacques Levy has een to it that there is never very much light in the auditorium , so that the individual
theatregoer is less aware than usual of the soc_ial presence of other theatregoers. It could be argued, of course, that this takes away the theatre's greatest and strongest virtue, which is that a theatregoer does become aware that his responses are shared by others, and' that it degrades the theatre event into a peep show. Perhaps ... maybe?
But quite practicall.v, it does decrea e the danger of embaras ment at responding to a socially di approved material. A danger which realistically does exist each and every pe;formance in each and every seat.
The re t of the first act consists of six coni/c sketc hes that
attempt to make us laugh at som~ of the absurd manifestations of modern sexual behavior. One, in which a young man tries to get his overly practical girlfriend to participate in his wild sexual fantasies, has nice flashes of irony, but takes too long to get to its final surprise.
Another, about an unorthodox masturbator, who can't help thinking of the Lone Ranger at the climactic moment, is slightly amu ing. And a burlesque-type routine about a bewildered :vouqg man and woman who ha~e volunteered for a exual response experiment does have many hilarious moments and a rrloi-~' than· adeduat'e purll::H
line. The authorship of each sketch
is not specifically revealed in the printed programme. Samuel Beckett, Jules Feiffer & John Lennon are prominent in a 'general list of contributors.' There are some other luminaries of the written word but it is fortunate that they are not singled out, as most ~( the material in the show is so weak and vague, that it is hard to believe that it was written by such experienced writers.
Indeed the one piece that mi~ht stand up in court, were it necessary to prove that Oh! Calcutta! is not completely without. redeeming social value, is also the one that has. infuriated some critics because of its debasement of the actress involved. In it, a gentleman asks his chambermaid to remove her bloomers preparatory to being whipped; while hunching over in totally revealed indignity, the girl points out that the girls is actually Nancy Tribush, a Phi Beta Kappa graduate from Brooklyn College, and she is not free - to do this and still keep her job. That she does not exercise this freedom, he suggests, may explain why he doesn't have complete faith in democracy.
There is also a parody of the decorous behavior, in which a well-bred young lady hesitantly peaks of "the moist mysteries
of my v1rgm reces es." But here. as in all the sketches, the action takes twice as much time a it hould. It is also possible that each sketch suffers from the whole show's constant preoccupation with one subject. As we all know, one or two risque stories exchanged at a party can be great fun. But an entire evening of dirty jokes tends to become monotonous.
In contrast to the general ineffectuality of the sketches, the show's nude dance numbers are very refreshing.
The free swinging naked finale is · representative of many views.
"What the fuck are they doing up there?" asks one of the actors. " Who wrote this piece of shit anyway?" inquires another. At the end, the entire company merrily rocks back and forth together singing, " I came here on a dare, but now I want it."
What more can one say. . . but the show speaks not only for it elf but utter what t"he audiea'ce i thinking.
Perry Mason is alive and well ...
There are ome shows on television starring certain people whom one has grown up with. that cannot be ignored. One of these show , whatever its magic appeal, is Iron ide. starring Ra:vmond Burr.
Maintaining the spell that has captivated Perry Ma on fan for over nine years, Burr still "keep still 'em itting b:v the tube" whenever hi new eries comes on.
IRONSIDE. starring Raymond Burr as Chief Detective Robert T. Ironside returned to the CTV :"Jetwork thi Fall. This hour long color erie re-appear at its old time of 10:00 pm EDT. on Monday evenings.
Set in colorful San Francisco. IRO SIDE involves the viewer in the behind-the-scenes working of a police depart-ment's special operation squad.
Chief Ironside. permanently confined to a wheelchair with a bullet smashed pine. live and works out of an apartment on the third floor of police headquarter . The 'Chief with three chosen a sistant to carry out the 'leg-work ' moves throughout the cit:v in a converted tation wagon . Thi mobile ccime laborator.v with a built-in Hydraulic lift. which raises and lowers Ironside, chair and all , enables him to appear whenever the personal touch i needed.
Thi highl:v dramatic se-ries regularly deals with so-ciall:v provoking i sue . Yet it handle each with fairnes , insight and an occasional wry humor.
Ra.vmond Burr, Canadian-born in Briti h Columbia. continue to prove his excellence a a
dramatic actor. A a television personality who won millions of admirer with his almo t legendar:v portrayal of Perr:v Ma on, Burr ha brought hi faithful audience renewed enjo:vment as Chief-of-Detectives Robert T. Iron ide.
Emmy Award winning Barbara Anderson (Policewoman Eve Wnitfield). contributes to IRO -
IDE not only her cool Southern beauty but also a fine record of achievements in both theatre and TV . Don Mitchell plays the role of Mark Sanger. a once embittered egro ghetto youth and now Chief Ironside's per-onal assistant. For Mitchell
IRON IDE i hi first TV series. but like Mi s Anderson. he has an impressive list of theatre credit to his name. The la t member of the squad is Don Galloway (Detective Sergeant Ed Brown). an ex-college athlete. who acquired his easy confidence in motion picture and uch TV hows as. " The Alfred Hitchock Hour· ·, "The Virginian " . and "The Secret Storm".
IRONSIDE now in it fourth :vear on the CTV Network is filmed bv Harbour Production sUniversai TV at Uni~ersal Cit:v. C:v Chermak is the Executive Producer.
When :vou have spent a lifetime as an actor. when :vou have brought enjoyment to millions of people throughout the world, and when :vou have won the respect of public and culleagues alike: then if :vou want to escape from it all who could criticize?
Raymond Burr who stars a Chief of Detectives, Robert T . Ironside of the CTV etwork show IRONSIDE i uch a man.
The man . .. Mr. Burr. Some cannot stomach him others are conditioned to his weekly appearance on the tube. '
A few years ago, Burr Fulfilled a lifetime ambition. He bought a paradise island hideawa.v in the Fiji Chain. "Like o many people.·· a:vs Burr
" I dreamed of running away whenever I felt like it to a faraway island. But when 1 actuall:v bought one I surpri ed even m:v elf."
Bun bought the island from Gustava Mura Hennings. the head of an old Fijian familv. Called 'Naitauba '. the i land ·i several thou and square miles in size . He has introduced both beef and dair:v cattle. planted several thousand trees and brought a herd of goats in to graze on the long grass. Neverthele s. even South Pacific i -land retreats mu t be se lf- ufficient: the inve tment has to be
able to pa:v for it elf. " I eriousl:v doubt if _ I'd qualif.v for
. . Government foreign aid' .. Burr sa.vs.
Ra:vmond Burr was born in Westminster. Briti h Columbia. where hi father was a hardware merchant. He spent most of hi fir t six year in the Orient where his father was an agent for the famil.v firm.
His first tage appearance was with a stock company in Briti h Columbia. He quickl:v moved into , um mer theatre in Toronto and then into repertor:v work in England .
Motion pictures in Holl:vwood. and tage appearances in London and • ew York. occupied his early years im how busine s. but he found time in 1940 to teach drama at Columbia Uni-
THE PAPER OCTOBER 12, 1970/11
versity. He has appeared in more than 200 stage productions in the course of his career.
Burr returned to Hollywo9d in 1942, teaching drama at the Pasadena Playhou e and at the same time beginning hi motion picture career. which has totalled more than 90 films. Two of his outstanding roles were those of the pro, ecuting attorne:v in "A Place In The Sun" and the murderer in Alfred Hitchcock's "Rear Window" .
During World Warr II, Ra:v-mond Burr served with the
nited State Nav:v and Marine Corps and ince 1951 he has traveled throughout the world to entertain the American Armed Forces. and has recorded 3.000 hows for Armed Force Radio.
Burr built up a solid reputation as an actor. but it was not until 1957 that he achieved household-word fame through hi portrayal of the famous detective. Perr:v Mason . The eries lasted for nine seasons and brought him personal honors in the form of be t actor awards from the Academ.v of Television Arts and Sciences and the TV Guide. Thi role also rewarded him in another area: in 1960 he was presented with an Honorary Doctor of Law degree from the McGeorge College of Law in Sacramento, California.
Ra.vmond Burr's personal intere ts cover a wide range. He i active in man:v fund-raising causes and has set up his own Raymond Burr Foundation which dispen e fund for charitable. educational and literar:v purpose . He is both a gardener and a gourmet cook. One of his mo t ab orbing intere t is art. He ha. worked out a plan by which a galler.v in Tucson. Arizona. upplie exhibition of American work to U.S. embassie in the Orient. o great is his interest in this field that he pa:vs mo t of the expenses of the program him elf.
The characterization of Chief Detective Iron ide means spending much of hi demanding role in a wheelchair, "but I'd be the last to com plain. " ay Burr. "After all. being wheeled around the et aJI day isn't a bad idea ."
Speaking o f a n ti h eroes ••• All we reall:v know about poor
Gu i that he i hort. puny. and cannot get rid of his dandruff. but we recognize hi sort right awa.v - the eternal aid ack. the schlemiel. introduced into French literature during the Depre sion b.v Celine in Voyage au bout de la nuit and featured in countle novel ince. Poor Gu (hi name in this book i actual!.\· Gugu~se) · has become Mr. Everyman. a modern Christfigure. the victim of technocrac>·· of capitali tic exploitation. of a universe in which God i. dead. Adapted to the particular preoccupations or capacitie of each author from Jean Cayrol. Jean Genet. Henry Miller, and Samuel Beckett to the most recent of epigones. he is. par excellence. the hero of the modern novel or. a we sa:v after Sartre, the anti-hero of the modern anti-novel.
As an.ti-heroes go. Georges
Michel 's Gugusse is an appealing ort. He gets up every morning
cussing his life, uses the sink rather than go down to the W. C. in the courtyard, shaves, has breakfast, and rides off on his motor-bike to wa h shop windows all da:v. He lives in the congenial Paris slums where something is always happening. So traffic accidents. sidewalk ale men, and prett:v girls di tract Gugusse and make him chronicall:v late. The sights and his fantasie fill his life. which ju t goes on and on. Thi not literall:v true: there are ome ~tor:v feature . Once Gugusse gets himself a girl and has several Sunda:v dates. until she find somebod:v better. He becomes involved with some protest instigators and is e\·en roughed up b~· the police in a demon tration. Also he lo es his job. But he finds another: and all the e epi ode . which might he high points in another kind of
novel. melt down and awa>· in Gugus e' daily routine of getting out of bed. going to work. and returning to eat supper in
ook Shelf
front of the window - in France. the poor man' s television screen.
Gugusse is excruciating!>· lone!:-,·. but he bores hell out of e\·er:,:one whom he manages to corner for conversation. Or else he stick his foot in it: what he offer a a funn~- tor:-,· about eeing the police haul off an Al
gerian almost costs him the onl>·
companions who will tolerate him - the ocial agitators in the cafe. o as not to lo e them he po ts their bill and participates in an aggravation and a riot. But hi · social conscience is nil: he would ettle for a tran istor radio and a well-built babe. He is too timid to approach the latter and too poor to acquire the former. On hi pa:v. all he can do i keep bod:v and oul together. Yet he ing on his job. the wav the sparrow that ·he rescue· chirps. and counts hi meager blessings. A man who keep writing in for literature on how to ucceed sociallv. how to develop biceps. or h·ow to grow mushroom in the cellar can never really know despair.
The pathos and humor that characterize the life of Gugu e the timid window-wa her is conve.ved b:v the interior monologue that runs from cover to cover of this book - a monologue in the
popular, poken language that was another ·'first" with Celine. It is no longer a great novelty, but it i till an effective device to tune us in on the character. and put event and emotion in the character's own perspective. Perhap it is overdone here. however: protracted to the length of a book it can grow tedious. lf Gugus e's day are depre singly alike. o are the pages of this novel. But we do get the point.
At lea t, I think the point is that Gugu se ha a tupid life and that life is like that. In pite of incidental jabs at the establishment and a finale eloquent in iron.v. the work does not add up to a social indictment. Gugusse would be a loser no matter what side he was on. If an:-,· social verit.v is demon trated. it i that a man can become a revolutionar:-· ju t to keep from spending his evenings alone.
. 12/THE PAPER OCTOBER 12. 1970
No co m ment ... iust summary Thi is not a film review , ection. We will Ii. t
the movies, ~hat they are about and ask you to participate bv perhaps telling us what you thought of them once you have seen the respective film.
Just a little note will do. a piece of toilet paper when you have a spare meditative moment. ,Jot it down. and tell us if you agree. di sagree or if the film ju t didn't fizz on you.
'Dionvsus in 69' is the up-dated god of wine. and tog~ther with Pentheus, King of Thebes. are reborn in primitive rituals.
Dionysu (William Finley) demands complete ·1ovaltv and obedience. and lures the citizens to· ab~ndon them elves to ensuality. Pentheus (William Shepard) discovers them dancing. bani ·hes Dionysus from Thebes. and restores law and order.
to death. Pentheus dies in the ver.v manner in which he was born: through a ritual dance. It i hi own mother who kill s him. under the spell of Dionysus. unaware of her evil deed.
Dionvsus makes it clear t hat his objective from the sta rt was to achieve total power. Hi promise of plea ure and total freedom for the people are prom ises that prove to be dangerou . ·
At the Little Cinema of the PYM. In Move. Hiram Jaffee (Elliott Gould) is an
unsuccessful pla.vwright in New York. who walks dogs and write pornographv to augment t he earnings of his attractive and practica l wife (Paula Prentiss). a receptionist for a psychiatrist. Gould's human contacts are in an advanced state of deterioration. including those closes to him -- wife. brother -- and he achieves empathy only with his 200 pound St. Bernard. Murph_v. ·
To punish Pentheus. Diony us froces him to submit a homosexual act. and when this experience does not have the effect of making a believer of Pentheus. Dionysus condemns him
The Strawberr.v Statement is about student unrest .. . C'est tout. Strawberry Jam - a squelched riot.
Fun'n Games'n Cash Virgin makes it Yes, very few tudents actual
ly sit home with the housewives, watching daytime television. but a great number of idle tudents
The Timid Adventures of a Window Washer
BOULEVARD DE PARIS
LOOK · FOR 1' SALE Sunday and Monday all day
Tuesday to Friday 11 a. m. - 7 p. m.
cio sit in sundry lounges throughout thi university and gaze at morning and afternoon TV.
Here is your chance to be an activist ... get out and DO IT
One of the original 'quiz-type ' shows is originating from Montreal. and overall. it is one of the most reasonable efforts pumped through the tube.
Having safely lasted the days ,of Payolla. Beat The Clock tapes every second week in the CFCF tudios on Ogilby Avenue. There
is but one criteria tb participate as a conte tant... you must be alive.
The contestant co-ordinator (Jerry Layne) will shoot very
1 mild questions at you (like 'What do you do in your spare time?') and mo t likely accept you as a future contestant. That is all there is to it. and it is con iderably less painful than a penn icillin shot. There is a lso much more to gain.
People have won up to $400 cash and a van fulls of prizes. The bow entail having fun, in a Grade 6 gym class ort of way.
Marriage or engagement is not a pre-requisite to being accepted as a contestant. but it i best to .go with ·a lady friend' a lobers usually get fixed up with a partner who may not be quite as flexible doing the stunts as one would have wished.
There are no pies. no seltzer bottles... just a lot of fun. · a lot of mone.v to be won and a lot of prizes to be handed out. What. .. what the hell is thete to lose.
Jerry Layne is the man to contact at 274-9467. He will chuckle each and every caller down for a Monda.v interview. (either 1:2 noon. 4:30 p.m . or 6:00 p.m.) and then one can prepare him or herself to carting home the loot.
If your eyes are hungry to lick up the fresh clear dew of nature's sublime beauty, 'The Virgin and the Gypsy' is the motion picture reserved for this delight. The setting of the English Midlands furnishes urban dwellers with an imaginative country vacation; a welcome for all of · us living in the miasma of an atmospheric sewer. It is a film where one can recline comfortably. arrest the flow of thoughts in one's mind and center one's eyes nakedly on t he aesthetic panorama that unfolds. If you have absorbed "Woman in Love'· t his movie which is optically similar. will involve you as effectively.
A monolithic greystone rectory is the home of a well to do mini ter, bis two daughters, a grandmother and other filial members . Home life in thi po tVictorian country manse is sterile. Conversation is expre sed in stifled comma .
Chri topber Miles. the director focu e, on the truggle of one of the nubile daughters to liberate herself from the boring confines of a puritanical narrowminded milieu.
Joanna Shimkus is the female protagonist who once again confirms her acting prowe s. She is portrayed as a ingle minded romantic young woman who retreats from the oppre ive climate of her home to the adolescent daydreams of freedom and erotic fulfillment. Encamped nearby is a hoteyed gypsy (Franco ero ). who's lifestyle contra ts that of her own . Nero act mostly with his muscle and is characterized primarily by a libidinous appe-
PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE YOUTH
GENERAL MEETING MAIN FLOOR OF STUDENT UNION
WEDS. OCT. 14, 1:00 P.M. ALL WELCOME
by Rudy Melnitzer
tite a are all Lawrencian heroes.
Yvette (Joanna Shimkus) revolts against t he stultifying value imposed on her as best she can . She refuse to marry a high collared stripling whom her fa ther and all about her wish her to betroth. She strikes up kin ship with a couple who have been o tracized by member of her father's pari h community for Living in sin . One afternoon picking flowers alongside t he river there is a flood on account of the dam which has burst. From the thicket comes the stiff phal· lic'd Nero who rescue the uneasy virgin by d ragging her into the attic of her home. Safe and alone with ero amidst the havoc recked by the flood (which svmbolizes her deflowering and · the genu of a new way of life) she becomes a woman.
The film cu lminates a Yvette awakens a lone in t he early morning to find her family and the sinful dyad waiting for her. She drives awa.v with the latter.
At time . the cenes appea red to be shifting discursively to eemingly disconnected events
giving the viewer a disjo in ted impre ion. Nevertheless t he film make for pleasant viewing and intere ting discu sion. The peaceful mood of the film will undoubtedlv convev itse lf as a edative t~ many· overwrought
viewers. Miles succeeds in delineating the conflicts of a vounofledgling struggling to ·alight from it nest amidst the details of a monotonous pastoral existence. He has rendered this film atisfying because his direction
and aim have been engrossingly accurate. The Virgin and the Gypsy depicts preci el.v what it . et out to.
~ t Ali() ~ ~~
I " 849-5038
• t ... 2-077 VICTORIA
(BEHIND EATON~)
I
o one i quite sure when Tom Weisz was born. a a matter of fact, many people doubt whether he actually wa . Legend has it, that the Weisz aga has its root in a quiet
little hamlet of Hungary.
Ju t a stone' throw from Buda and a spit-di tance from Pest, little Tommy Weisz made hi first goo-goo to the world which would later prove to worship the dark room he now u es ai; seclusion.
In this little Hungarian hamlet. the folk were not expecting the birth of uch a glorious · being. and ub equently were caught totally off-guard. There they were, peacefully, squashing grapes and vomiting goula h, a a tar hone in the sky. One peasant wa recorded as crying out. (tran lated) "What the hell is a star doing out at 2:30 in the afternoon?"
onetheles, , fo them a child wa born.
The followed the star which hovered over a dark-room, in, the foothills of Transylvania. They brought him gifts of fixer. Tri-X film and coptact heet . The shepherds brouiht whatever
i .... ' ....... · ............................ .
a legend they could crape up. And Tom own busines and forget about ju t bawled his fool head off. mine."
Many year pa sed. and little Tommy (now two year old) weighed 166 poind and was often caught sucking on cow udders in strange fields. He roamed the countryside. using outdated ubway transfer , and of, ten talked with the elder : he told them about enlarging their family hot in 5X7 and 8X10 copies. They aid, " o way. .vou dummie."
o on and on Tom went, combing the countryside, looking for good wherever he could get it. He tried to cut down to eight meal a day, but hi little tummy cried out in de peration.
o Tom fulfilled hi desires and went to great lenghts to ati fy his hunger: he bit into tree , and ide-order of poi-on-ivy green and picked his
fang with moose antler .
In order to chi el food wherever he went, he used to tell the elder , "I am here about my father' busine . " Thi worked quite well. until Tom received a call from hi father one dav. andwa told, "Look ' you ove·rsized gum-drop, you mind your
by Dina Lieberman
"THE FA TASTIKS". Lovola' first musital production. i a return (or escape, if vou need it) to thematic simplicity. It is a revival of t he archetypal "boy meet girl, boy lose girl, boy finds girl" plot of a long gone sensibi lity.
The title bespeaks of you and me who are found everywhere. on the treets. in hops. schools. leading average live yet attempting to 'find omething or omeone to . make our live
·meaningful and complete.
What is so fanta tic about THE FANTASTIKS is the musical core ranging from moody blues echoing the heartbeats of Georgia to the sophisticated operatic contraltos and sopranos foundin Aida.
It is an account of not only love, but hurt. A singeing. perpetual burn which only ends and heals when love is refound.
Di couraged but not to the point of abandonment, Tom grew and grew and grew and grew and grew. Many peopie would walk up to him, cl.imb the ladder and ju t ay Hi . Tom went to great expen e keeping a tidy appearance. He once puchased a big blue tent, had a zipper put on and wore it as jean .
Sir George William ni-versity. on the North American continent, threw it discriminating arms open to Tommv, and on the SGW tone To~ built his dark room.
Dale Carnegie pre ented Tom with a complimentar.v camera and patted him on the a while aying. "Here Tom. Go make a pile of friend . " Tom threw down the camera and set out to make a pile of friend ... none were willing at the time. o he went back to photograph.v.
Latching on to The Paper. Tom received a vehicle for hi -highlevel . photography. nder the motto Photo by Weisz". thi enormous being made his mark at the Canadian University.
Now flock are after him. ome for his pictures, others
Act I takes place in the moonlight where the heat of lover can freely ferment. This is followed bv Act II in the unlight where scar and fault are exposed to the har h and naked light.
Maxim Mazumder. the director. insists that it is about time for Lovola to have it own musical theatre. Both mu ic and diama are flourishing at Loyola. so why not combine the two? Though thi is the fir t attempt at a musical production: it is to be sung as it was origionally written.
As of yet, pa t theatre at Lola has not cultivated a "Loyola audience". This ·musical hopes to do just that - be the forerunner · in establishing an appre-
PIANO LESSONS
* Classical * Popular * Jazz
GEORGE MARTON
488-7608
THE PAPER OCTOBER 12. 1970/ 13
The Midas Touch
I
photo by "The legend"
for unpaid bill . o one is quite ure where Tom hangs out... and relatively few are intere ted. A late bulletin has
ciative musical theatre audience.
The players are involved in a difficult mu ical pre entation. but Mazumder i an inten e director which will have a tremendous effect on the mood and tempo of the play.
The ca t wa pain takingly cho en from amongst the tudents and the lead are as follow : The Boy. Mat. to be play-
ed bv Mazumder himself: The Girl, · Loui a. Carol haw: and the Narrator. Robert Vigod.
Because the actor are for the most part singers. there is likeIv to be, a definite lack of pretense and affectation. found in
iu t · been received that trange moan are heard from the ixth floor tudio-lab. Could Tom Wei z be making new friend ?
the normal college student production .
The men behind the scene like tever Berringer. the producer: Joanne Welsh, assistant producer: Don Carmody. lighting: Bev imon and Paul Mclsaac. publicity, have worked together before and therefore know the capabilities and limitation of one anothe r thus making for a good production team. ·~ece ary for theatre and any other art form.
A combination of these diYer e abilitie can onlv manifest it elf in a darn go~d mu ical. To be held at Loyola on Oct. 23. 24. 31 and '.'Jov. 1.
SOCIETY OF EXPERIMENTAL MYSTICISM
GENERAL AND OPENING MEETING.
• ELECTIONS • 1970-71 PROGRAM DISCUSSION
DATE: TIME: PLACE:
FRIDAY OCTOBER 16th 7:00P.M. H-511 EVERYONE WELCOME .
-. • !
14/THE PAPER OCTOBER 12, 1970
Varsity Hockey Prospectsfor70-71
SIR GEORGE: A lot of rooks but should make playoffs
by Eric'Bickerdike
Dryland training camp unofficially got underway on August 24th at Verdun Stadium for the hockey Georgians and they have been skating every Monday through Friday from 3 - 5 p.m. since the 21st of September at Confederation Arena in N.D.G.
At this point the original list of forty-two hopefuls has been split up into Varsity and Junior Varsity teams.
At the start of the camp there were eight people trying out for the starting position between the pipes. Since then, Tom Anderson, the Georgians veteran starter for the past two seasons, has packed up and left for the Syracuse Blazers of the Eastern League where he is reportedly faring very well.
Other potential netminders who are still in camp are Bernie Wolfe from N.D.G. Juvenile "A. A.", Tom Bickerdike, ex Ontario Hockey Association player from the Halifax Atlantics and former Georgian Dave Erskine.
The only returnees from last year's "blue line" corps are Mike McNamara and Tom Harrison . Brian Bedard has been moved up to forward. Barry Crosley from the Dorval Jets,
and two American school transfers, Kevin Cross from Dartmouth an<;l. Dalton Barnoff from Providence College round out this year's defense .
Heavily counted on for the first forward line are Georgian veterans Barry Cullen, John Murray and Bill Ellyett. The other two lines are still to be formed but will be largely composed of returning Georgians Brian Bedard, Ian Hale ," Neil Fernandes, Mike Bonkoff, Warren Gill, Phil Scheur, Greg Harmon, and Bob Schofield who is back after a year's absence.
ew hopefuls for a position on the forward lines are Tom Price from the West Island Fly:-ers, Ken Ekins from Verdun Maple Leafs, Ross Patterson, Rod Armstrong, and Gary Watkins.
The Georgians will have to count heavily on their newcomers for a strong performance this year but they should manage a pla.v-off berth.
Home games have been narrowed down to three arenas this year. Seven games will be play
. ed in Pointe Claire while the balance will be divided between Loyola and McGill.
Cole's Notes by Glen Cole
For the past two seasons in Sir George's intramural hockey league, the Reindeer have been the dominant team. Now it appears that they know how to play football as well.
In case you don 't know, the Reindeer are better known .as the Sir George Williams football Georgians and as you may have noticed they are starting to win football games.
As has been mentioned oftimes before, the football · programme at the concrete campus has undergone many trials and t ribulations. For a while at the start of this week, it appeared said trials etc. would reappear, but unlike past years things were settled and the result was probably Sir George's biggest athletic achievement since 1969 when the hockey and swimming teams competed in the national finals.
The Georgians won their second football game of the 1970 season, 14-9 over Loyola, and moved themselves into contention for the East division title of t he Central Canada Intercollegiate Fottball Conference.
There are still a few players around from the original Georgians and they have waited a heck of a long time to be able to savour the sweet meats of victory.
One name comes in to mind in particular -- former junior star Tom Dyce. Dyce has played phenomenal football for the Georgians this season despite the fact his knee swells up every time he tapes his ankles, at least that's what I'm told. He has been the workhorse in the back-field, the steady guy you can count on to do his job. Dyce has been given accolades from most of the opposing coaches in the league -- "He may not be as flashy as he used to be, but he's one of the smartest players I've seen", one observer remarked at Thursday's game.
While Dyce is probably best-known for his football playing he's not a bad hockey player either. Dave Dies, who coaches the Georgians in 1968-69, the year Sir George lost out to the University of Toronto in the final game for the Canadian championship, will attest to Dyce's hockey playing capabilities.
Dyce came out just after the Christmas break and added much needed beef to the Georgians' defense. Dyce admitted he as out of shape, but he still had the puck sense which made him a key cog in the Ottawa-St. Lawrence Athletic Association hockey championship drive .
Somehow, I think, Mr. Dyce, along with a (his) sheep-skin , would want to take a divisional title with him as he leaves Sir Georg_e in this his graduating year .
LOYOLA: Strong vvith good nucleus. All the vvay?
by Barry Learmonth
Following a month of physical training, the Loyola hockey Warriors took to the ice last Monday night as Coach Dave Draper greeted eleven veterans and over fifty newcomers to the hockev 1970 camp.
are set with sophomore Rocky Martin.
The ituation down center ice and on the wings seems promising. Center Chris Hayes returns, along with other notable veterans such as Ron Riley, Pat McCool. Jack Serby. Ron Clarke. Jim Once again , Draper' recruit
ing efforts have brought a host of talented athletes to the camp. And if the Warriors are to repeat as Ottawa St.Lawrence Champions, a number of these acquisitions will have to come through with more than adequate performances, especially on defence where the loss of Bill Doyle, Danny O'Conner and John Donnelly will be sorely felt.
undstrum, and Mike Thomassin. The graduation of Michael Lowe will be felt but not enough to create a real problem down left wing. ln Haye and Riley, t he Warrior may have the finest two way performer in the league.
John Hutton, another ret urnee, will fill the bill for the second center position while the vacant spot up the middle will be filled by Jean Fauteux. On right wing, the most dynamic newcomer is Brian Topp, who toiled for the Trail Smokeaters in British Columbia.
Fortunately for the Warriors la t year's all-star defenceman Larry Carriere has rejoined his school team after a highly successful training camp with the Verdun Maple Leafs.
As is the rule in any sport, the contending team that remains health.v throughout the season is the team to bet on for the Championship. · If the Warriors can avoid costly injuries throughout the 1970-71 campaign, and that is a big if, they may well represent the O.S.L. in the Canadian College Championships again this year.
Included in the impressive list of recruits challenging for the vacant defence positions are Mike Raynolds from the Ottawa Rangers, Steven Sly from the Brantford Forrestors and exPem];>roke Lu,mber King, Ron Swan. In the nets, the Warriors
SHOOT TO SCORE by Robin Palin
What is probably the greatest rivalry in Intercollegiate Athletics in this country, that of Loyola and Sir George got an even greater boost on Thursday night at Verdun Stadium when Loyola and Sir George met for their annual tilt on the grid-iron.
The score of that game was an important one because it probably decided which of these two teams should make it into second place and a shot at the defending champions in the ceded finals. But 1 wouldn 't write George Dixon 's Loyola Warriors off yet. A win over Bishop's will put this league in the closest race .in the country, that is, a three way tie for first place.
Loyola, although they would rather not have had it, needed a loss or at least a tough game to bring them back to reality. Last week, I sat at MacDonald college and watched the antics and clowning around on the Warriors' bench as Frank Belvedere, in his own inimitable style, waltzed unmole ted for four majors.
There was no clowning around on the Warriors ' bench on Thursday night and the sombre look on their faces, as they met the stark reality of defeat sent them to their dressing room with. grim determination .
They face Bishop's next weekend in a game that should decide the top three final standings. They will be prepared for them and the game could not possibly be scheduled at a better time from a psychological point of view for Loyola.
Gone will be the costly fumbles and untimely penalties that kill a team the first time they meet stiff competition. More to their advantage is Bishop's easy schedule so far.
Loyola didn 't lose on Thursday night. the Georgians won . Loyola played well. they held an edge almost a often as the Georgians but they failed to click on the clutch play!'; so ir George won the type of game that is the sweetest to win and the bitterest to lo e.
It should be a tough one next week, but don't throw your money away on the Gaiters just yet. Remember, Larry Smith can make mistakes too, and as far as Bill Macdonald goes, well you know all about him, don 't you? Bishop's can be beaten . so why don 't you knock them off??? It' s the surest way to meet the Georgians again , and a three way tie in the home stretch might just do something for this league .
S .G.W.U. Well fella 's, you're pretty cute! You won a
game against Loyola that could have gone either way but you did it in a way that sure made me glad that I had stopped to pick up a set of throw away paper underwear on the way to the game.
I think that it is safe to say that you can finally call yourselves a contender in the league. It was a big win but there are bigger games to come. if you make it to the eeded final.
Ted Elsby's Carabins are the only thing that are in your way. Bishop's, even with Smith, didn 't beat them by much more than they beat you in the season opener. ot too much has been said about the Carabins this year but they won't finish worse than fourth. They have been a lot worse and they have beaten the Georgians three times. This is the year to pay them back. But if you get sloppy, if you walk on to the field next Saturday with the idea that all you have to do is show up, then you are going to be in trouble. And if you blow that game, then Thursday's win will have been one big waste of time.
Play football now, and save the parties for the big one . You're at the half-wav mark in the season and you can't afford an~ther loss, especially a cheap give away.
Thanks very much for the game on Thursday, and thanks to the Warriors too' It was one of the greatest performances on the grid-iron that I've een in a long time.
lntrarnurals S .G.W.U. BADMINTON . Commencing October 5th at t he High School of Montreal every Monday and Thursday from 8:30. 10:15 p.m.
BASKETBALL - Commencing September 28th at Montreal High every Monday, Wedne day and Friday from 6:30 - 8:30 p.m .
CURLING - Commencing October 16th at the Royal Montreal Curling Club every Friday from 1:00 - 5:00 p.m.
FENCING - Commencing ovember 2nd at Birks Hall every Monday and Wednesday from 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
FIGURE SKATING · Commencing October 8th at the Montreal West Legion Memorial every Thursday from 3:00 - 4:00 p.m.
FOLK DANCE . Commencing ovember 3rd at Birks Hall on Tuesday from 8:00 - 10:00 p.m.
KARATE . Commencing ovember 3rd at Birks Hall every Tuesday from 4:00 - 6:00 p.m.
MODERN DANCE - Commencing ovember 3rd at Birk Hall on Tue day from 4:00 - 6:00 p.m. and Thursday from 8:00 - 10:00 p.m.
RIFLERY . Meeting to be held in the Athletics office on October 12th. Practices will be at HMC Donacona - Intramural every Tuesdav and Wedne day from 4:00- 5:30 p.m .
SKI CONDITIONING - Commencing November 2nd at Birk. Hall · every Monday and Wednesday from 8:00 - 10:00 p.m.
VOLLEYBALL - Commencing Sept. 28th at Montreal High every Monday from 6:30 • 8:30 p.m. econd location is being ought for a Wednesday or Thursday night.
WATERPOLO AND .SWIMMING. After a two year absence from wimming and waterpolo competition, ir George Williams will once
again have its Sea Lions roaring in the water. Coach Joe Roboz will meet with all intere ted players Tuesday. October 13th at noon at the Athletics office. Practice schedule will be:
One of two games this past week in which Sir George lost to C.M.R. 4-1 and beat Bishop's 5-2. Monday· 6:30- 8:30 p.m. at Westhill High .Tuesday· 8:00 - 10:00 p.m . at Westhill High Wednesday - exhibition game Tennis team preps for tourney Thursday - 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. Friday · 6:30 - 8:30 p.m.
ByBoeuf
This year's tennis team promises to be one of the best this school has seen in years.
Under the guidance of coach Tim Jones at the Hampstead tennis courts, all players are preparing hopefully for the O.S . L.A. tournament on Oct. 16 and 17 atC.M.R.
Although the final team has not been definitely selected Bob Berry (not the hockey playing one) appears to have the number one singles position sewed up. Bob is a well known player around the province and is one of the top ranked men doubles players.
He has played for Loyola for the last several years but is now taking his masters at Sir George.
Also coming over from Loyola this year is Gineo Dellos Barba who played with Berry last year. Gino might be the number two singles player or part of the number one doubles team.
The rest of the team includes Mike Byzah, who won the intramural tournament, John Niles a member of last years team and Wolfgang Kern& who plays out of the Monklands Tennis Club, as well as a prospect who played for the U ofM last year.
Unfortunately Coach Jones says he can only carry five of these six hopefuls to C.M.R. next week so until the final decision is made the team competition is hot and heavy.
Riflery: Tuesd_ays and Wednesda~s over
at H.M)C.S. from 4 - 5.30 all girls are welcome. '
Cheerleading: This years corps of cheer
leaders is lead by captain Rona GalGanov and co-captain Judi Cooper. The other . girls are Hannah Hill, Sharon Miller, Liz Konigsberg, Valerie Hanna, Ruth
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Freiman, Liz Shoofey and Fortunee (Cookie) Behar. If Sir George had more fans as keen as these girls, the stadium would be packed for every game.
Figure Skating: Started Oct. 8th at the Montreal
West Rink and will continue every Thursday from 3 - 4 p.m. under the supervision of Mrs. Janet Cummings.
Curling: Starts this week for the girls
on Friday afternoon, Oct. 16 from 1 · 5 p.m. at the Royal Montreal Curling Club.
THE MONTREAL PAPERBACK
aturday - league game
INTRAMURALS ROUND UP. The Rifle Club will hold its first meeting Tuesday, October 13th at 4:00 p.m . at the Athletics office. There are already 60 registered member . Recreational and instructional shooting will be every Wednesday and Thursday at H.M.C.S. Donnacona from 4:00 · 5:30 p.m. tudents must register at the Athletics office to participate .
VOLLEYBALL. Intermural Volleyball will start Wednesday, October 14th from 4:00 · 5:30 p.m. at H.M .C.S. Donnacona . Intramural Vollevball will run Wednesday and Friday from 4:00 • 5:30 p.m. until N~vember 1st, at which time a Var ity team will be added.
BADMINTON. Badminton has already tarted and will be continuing throughout the year at the High chool of Montreal every Monday and Thursday from 8:30 -10:30 p.m.
FIGURE SKATING. Figure skating will tart Thursday, October 8th at the Montreal West Memorial Rink, 220 Bedbrook, Montreal West at 3:00 · 4:00 p.m. the coach is Mrs. Janet Cummings.
INVENTORY
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STOCK TUESDAY OCT. 13th THROUGH SATURDAY OCT. 17th
OVER 20,000 TITLES UNIVERSITY PAPERBACKS
2075 BISHOP ST. ACROSS FROM S.Ci. W .U.
16/THE PAPER OCTOBER 12. 1970
It hasn't been this good
How sweet it is!
PAPER Sports Since Sherbrooke, February 28, 1969
Georgians Toppi~ VVarriors 14 - 9 by Lorne Davis
The Sir George Williams' football Georgians proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that they are for real by physically beating the previously undefeated and unscored upon Loyola Warriors 14-0 at Verdun Stadium last Thursday night.
Any suspicions that head coach George Dixon of the Warriors had about his team in tough competition were confirmed on the opening kickoff when Georgain end, Ralph Loader nearly drove the Loyola ball c-arrier four feet into the turf.
From there the defence took over and stopped the Warriors cold on two successive plays and forced a punt which set the trend for one of the hardest hitting college games in the three year history of Sir George, as was evidenced by the numerous Warriors who had to be helped off the field .
After rece1vmg the Loyola punt, Sir George moved to within field goal range on a Pierre Lefebvre to Tom Dyce pass and Pierre Lamarche's three point attempt wa good for a single .
The Warriors then took over the ball and quarterback Gerry Verge threw a long ideline pa s to Jim Lynch which moved the ball deep into Georgian territory and with third down and three to go a Loyola gamble wa stopped by the stubborn Georgian defense.
The second quarter opened with Loyola in possession of the ball after receiving a Georgian punt. A sustained drive on the running of half backs Frank Belvedere and Tony Accurso along with a pass to Tom Gatz- . mayer gave the Warriors first down on the Sir George 12 yard line.
Accurso then slanted off tackle to the five yard line and on the next play, Belvedere ran the ball into the end zone for the touchdown with Bob Mie1e adding the convert to make the score Loyola 7 and Sir George 1.
Georgian halfback Bob Bindon ran the following kickoff to the _ Loyola 54 yard line and might have gone all the way except for a fine defensive play by Belvedere who was the last man with a chance to stop Bindon.
Tom Dyce and Bindon along with some help from the referees via penalties brought the ball to the Loyola 18 yard line. From this point Lefebvre ran an option play to the seven yard line setting up a dive by Dyce which i::esulted in a touchdown. The convert by Lamarche gave the Georgians an 8-7 lead. ·
Sir George then tried and succeeded in recovering a short kickoff but were to lose the ball on the next play on a pass interception by Rick Niemirowski, who, by the way, was injured on this play and sat out the rest of the game.
The Warriors marched to the Sir George 19 yard line where a
- great play • by Ross Milligan on
an attempted pass forced Loyola into a field goal situation. The field goal try by Miele was wide and Garry Malekos ran the ball out the end zone to the Sir George 50 yard line only to have it brought back to the 10 for a clipping penalty.
A 30 yard sweep by Bindon and two options by Lefebvre moved the ball to the Warriors ' 45 yard line where B. B. Lefebvre threw to Ron Goldenberg who made a superb catch on the eight yard line with two Loyola defenders hanging on his back.
An offside call put the ball on the three yard line as there was just time left for one play and the Warrior defense came up tough to prevent a touchdown and the half ended at 8-7 for Sir George.
The third quarter was a knock 'em down, drag 'em out affair with each team exchanging two punts and the Warriors holding the upper hand as they kept Sir
George hemmed deep in !heir own zone.
The Georgians were again foi;ced to kick and Loyola took over the ball on the Sir George 45 yard line. Belvedere and Accurso, who between them accounted for all of the Warriors' total rushing yardage, moved the ball to the Georgians' nine yard line where inside line-backer Richie Wolfe forced a Warrior furn ble which was recovered by Gary Stephens, Sir George's premier ball hawk.
Loyola's ' defense kept the pressure on and tackled Lefebvre in the end zone to give the Warriors a 9-8 edge on the scoreboard. The teams each had time to exchange one punt .before the third quarter ended.
The fourth quarter opened with a 79 yard explosion from Q.B. Lefebvre to halfback Bob Dindon for the decisive touchdown, Lamarche's convert attempt was wide leaving the score Sir Geor-
ge 14, Loyola 9. The TD was due to the fact
that Bindon, swinging out of the backfield, had to be covered by a linebacker and the fleet flanker had just too much speed for the Warrior defender as he gathered in the perfect pass from Lefebvre and raced to the end zone without a finger being laid on him .
Loyo1a continued to apply the pressure but the Georgian defense came up tough to stop the Warriors at the six yard line with Ross Milligan again making the key play on a third down gamble.
The Warriors then forced the Georgians into a punting situation and Ron Goldenberg got Sir George out of · a deep hole when he unloaded a 59 yard kick to end Loyola back to their own
40 yard line. From this point, Loyola advanced the ball to the Georgian 42 yard and on a third and 10 gamble, Larry Tittley and Ralph Loader snuffed out
Head Coach Brian Hayes; "We did the job, baby, we did the job awright!"
,j..
"Don't look at me buddy .. . I'm as surprised as you are .. . ,,
any hopes the Warriors had of winning the game. The Georgian offence then took over to run out the clock for their second consecutive victory.
Coach Brian Hayes attributed the victory to the fine play of the defensive unit led by end Ross Milligan, linebacker Richie Wolfe and halfback Garry Malekos. Coach Hayes also had special praise for the players he asked to go both ways as they came up with a spirited performance. These double duty tars were Brent Terry, Chuck Luffer, Gerry Turner, Larry Tittley, Ralph Loader and Bruce "Butterball" Riddell. -
The victory tied the Georgians with Loyola in second place in the league standings as both clubs have identical 2-1 records but the Georgians would appear to have the upper hand for a second place schedule. The garnet and gold have two remaining games. One against University of Montreal next Saturday at the U of M starting at 2 p .m. and 1he following week at Mac Donald College. While these two games cannot be considered "automatic" it is a safe bet that Sir George should be able to pick up the four points as their defense is rounding into a cohesive unit and the offense is about one game away from getting it all together to run up some points. The Loyola Warriors host Bishops next week at the Sherbrooke St. field and a win by the Gaiters would almost assure Sir George a second place finish and a chance to avenge their opening defeat against Bishop in the seeded game for the Championship in Lennoxville on Oct. 31.
For all you people who were waiting for the second victory, the bandwagon with the garnet and gold trimmings is now rolling so why not jump on and ride it up to the U of M next Saturday to cheer the boys on to number 3. Under the Goalpost:
Unlike the Warriors, Sir George came out of the game without any injuries. The only casualty was equipment manager Wally Watkins who had blood dripping down both shins when he was cleated in some out of bounds play in front of the Georgian bench ... This victory probably has done more in uniting the Athletics Department with the rest of the school than anything else except the league title which would probable necessitate a 'for rent' sign on 2160 Bishop as the staff would want to move back to the Hall Building . . . As the players were heading for post game celebrations, the happiest scene had to be Coach Brian Hayes leaving the ball park with an ear to ear grin, his wife Donna on one arm and the game ball under the other. It was probably all the diminative Mrs. Hayes could do to keep the kindly old coach from floating out over Verdun Stadium with the ball.