Loxola, Sir Georg~ to Team UB

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Loxola, Sir Georg~ to Team UB Loxola, Sir Georg~ to team UB Loyola and Sir George teams are likely going to close ranks in a year or so because duplication will cost too much, say campus athletic chiefs. The traditional rivalry between Warriors and Georgians will con­ tinue 'for at least another season, they say. · "M Y FIRST. REACTION to China," says a. Sir Geo.rge student China, Taschereau says, cou­ Not that a bit of sporting com­ who's heading back for a year's stay in Peking in two weeks, ples are sep_l!rated for long petition is necessarily bad: at the "was . over-enthusiasm." Suzanne Taschereau, a master's student periods but because there is intercollegiate level, as Loyola's in educational technology, says she forgot about her educati_on this feeling of relationship physical education director, Ed and communication studies and "fell in love with everything to society, as well as to fami­ Enos observes, the University of that is happening there," during her month-long visit last sum­ ly, separation is acceptable if' Quebec at Montreal faces off mer. it benefits society. against .U of Q campuses in other , "The role of women in China cities every winter. "There was a total lack of gle, and struggling collectively made me feel great because Bui at Concordia, although commercialism in the coun­ where community goals are put there have been no definite steps try," says Taschereau, "no ahead of private ones. In ~ontinued next page taken, a merging of teams by next people hustling you to buy. I season seems inevitable, says had a sense of well-being _ Sir George's athletics director, a sense of security." George _Short. And when the How did our girl get to go mergers come, major sports like on her month long trip last intercollegiate hockey and foot­ ~ummer?' McGill and U de M. ball are destined to be centred at students, under McGill China­ Loyola. watcher Paul Lin, organized Short feels the new university· an inter-university study tour shouldn't pass up the opportunity of China and Taschereau was · that sports offer for ·bringing the one of 25 candidates selecte4 formerly separate campuses to­ from 400. Paying the $2000 gether. He maintains that" a bas­ bill for each student turned out ketball or hockey team comprised to be a chore when federal, of the best from Loyola and Sir provincial and university agen­ George would go unbeaten in cies, (including Sir George) got Quebec. With hockey in particu­ wet or insolvent feet: In the lar, he says there would have end each student .ended up pay­ been -no question that a combined ing $800. team would have \ triumphed over Taschereau anticipates her Waterloo in the national collegiate second visit will bring first championships last year. (Sir impressions into sharper fo­ George lost to Waterloo by one cus. She suspects . that in the overtime point.) · family environment, women "Winning the Canadian champ­ still carry the burden of house­ ionship is one of the greatest -work. "Feudal habits towards unifying forces a school can women are sometimes hard to . have," Short said, citing the break," she says. / extraordinary school spmt the What impresses Taschereau Waterloo game in~ited at Sir is the Chinese sense of strug- George. Another reason for a sports merger is money. Short figures it_ would cost about $60 - 70,000 to operate two hockey teams, for Royal Shakespeare to Loyola continued next page If you've sat through a pro­ is. a "unique anthology" composed Crown_ is a provocative example duction at the Shakespearian of letters, speeches, poems, songs of how wit may anchor a civiliza­ theatre in England s Stfatford-on­ and music by and abouJ the rulers tion." And Michael Billington of Avon you'll be sure to appreciate of jlritain from Anglo-Saxon times continued.next page how comfy the seats are at the· to the Victorian age. It is set ;\ F.C. Smith Auditorium! against a .back/ground of simple The Royal Shakespeare Com­ design, allowing the content to set pany will be presenting two origi­ the scene through its historical nal productions, entitled The ano artistic sense of realism. Hollow Crown and Pleasure and According to Richard Coe, of Patience paid Repentance, . respectively, in the the Washington Post: "The Hojjow F.C. Smith Auditorium, on Loyola I remember bidding at an auction on a Modigliani once and losing to the Campus, October 21st and 22nd. Remember Robin 1/ood (feared by Museum of Modern Art, or-which I On Monday, October 21st, at the bad, loved by th e good, Robin was then president. And years later 8:30 p.m. the curtain will rise Hood. Robin Hood)? Remember another one came on the market and I on The Hollow Crown, a collection Ogilvy Flour? Well forget Ogilvy was fortunate enough to get it. So it­ of readings by and about the kings Flour. .But Richard Todd, ' who sh2ws if you've got patience and per­ and queens of England, starring zapped the folks in Nottingham sistence, . even though you may be Richard Todd, Prunella Scales; Forest as Robin Hood during the thwarted at one point, you can. And Hugh Sullivan and Clifford Rose, 50's will be here ( Loyola Campus)' I'm a great believer in that. with songs, guitar and lute by with the Royal Shakespeare Com­ Nelson Rockefeller, 1970 · Martin Best. Devised and directed pany during their double bill at by John Barton, The Hollow Crown the F.C. Smith Auditorium. / Rosaries and Russians Reputed hockey hit man Fred Shero is actually a nice guy, says Loyo­ la's physical education director, Ed Enos. His remark comes from spending time with the notorious Philadelphia Flyers coach in a Russian hockey school this summer. Enos relates this incident: While passing through airport customs, Shero set off the alarm on- one of the metal-detecting surveyors designed to trap passengers concealing weapons.. What rang the bell? Rosary beads, Enos says. " I don't think he's a hypocrite," Enos says. " He wouldn't carry rosary l:ieads and then send his playe~ out to hit opponents over the head." Shero may be tough but as fa r as Enos is concerned, he plays by the rules. And this all-out attitude was carried into the R.ussian classrooms. " He was sold on the application of science to hockey; he· was. the first to arri.ve in class and the last to leave." · · Enos', tpo, was impressed with the science of hockeYj. Canadians have been wrapped up in the game for so long, he says, that they take too much for granted. · ,..... Soviet physical conditioning was one aspect with which he was espe­ ,cially impressed. (Georgians and Warriors, alike, take note.) "I think __ our teams will be in better condition than they ever have been in the " past." artists such as Tennyson, Byron, _..., Transcript Keats, John Donne, Charles ATHLETICS from page I Money is also the reason_that Transcript is a weekly devoted Dickens, · Thomas Hardy, e.e. major sports are bound to be to covering the Concordia cummings and D.H. Lawrence to example. He also figures, quite ·centred at L oyola. As Enos points campuses in the:;e areas: deci­ .provide differing views of the reasonably, that · the university out, it boils down to the cold sion making at university · subject matter. community would not tolerate economics of square footage. meetings; g1vmg representation Tickets for · the Loyola perfor­ duplication at that price. Of his Even i( the larger university re­ to all sides in debates going on mance 'will go on sale September own $25 ,000 hockey budget, Short quires another arena, it will be around the university; keeping 23rd, at the Chameleon Theater forks out more than a third for cheaper to build in the · west end. tabs on upcoming events around box office, on Loyola Campus. renting the Verdµn arena. A If Concordia gets into. football, the place; covering both major The · presentation is sponsored by single Concordia team would pre­ Loyola has the playing fields. .and off-beat stories o't: as many Drama Loyola, Department of sumably use the Loyola rink, thus And for basketball, they have the people and events as we can. If Fine Arts. For information call trimming the budget considerably. gym-space for spectators. you've g.ot, ideas for the paper, 482-0789. Travel, accommodation and new please pass them on.· equipment take a big slice of the Short concurs. While there are present budgets at both campuses plans for an athletics complex on ,Awards and these expenses would theoret­ Bishop St., there will be no room . SHAKESPEARE from page I · The Canada Council recently ically be halved through consol­ for a rink or large playing fields. the (Manches~er) Guardian says announced the following awards to idation. For the 1974-75 season, Sir it is "one of the great delights Sir George students: The same reasoning holds for George hockey will be played at of modern theater." M .A . Scholarships: ,!l.G. Harris basketball ' soccer and any other the Verdun arena and basketball Pleasure and R~pentance will (Psychology), E.L. Johnston (En_g- sport the '·university cares· to try games will be held at the Show­ be presented in a matinee per­ lish), D.E. Milner (English) ' out. mart. formance at 2:30 p'.m. and in the Doctoral Fellowships: J.N. evening at 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Hackett (English), V..ictoria Le October 22nd. Devised and direct­ Blanc Stephens (Humanities), - ed by Terry Hands, the review CHINAfrompage I Fran(es Piva (History), Wanda Her rethink' of things cast .r stars Richara Todd, Prunella Sca­ Teays (Humanities) women are considered part of doubt in every direction: "I les and Hugh Sullivan, with songs, Renewed Doctoral Fellowships: society," reiterates the gradu­ was working in a re-education guitar and lute by Martin Best.
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