largest student weekly newspaper in Canada.

Loyola College and Sir George Williams University, VOLUME 2 N. 22 JANUARY 12, 1Q70

~ . . ... ~"~.;,.~ "'· ~ . ... pbotobyzell plioto byju A ~l?eaker makes his point as Loyola English department gathers to discuss Bookstore: It all started back in '67 when a bunch of these kids sat down crisis. outside my front door ... Faculty Strike Jack Silver Resigns by Eddy Wiesel Imminent At Loyola "I'm tired of beating my head against The Bookstore task force has re­ the wall after seven years". So said commended the disintegration . of the by Gary Languay Jack Silver after his resignation (dated present bookstore operation in favor August 15th) was accepted by the uni­ of handling over the service to an Loyola, a name that has become Professors Davies, Newell and Rus­ versity as of December 31. Miss outside interest. synonymous with. turmoil in the last sel, all prominent figures in the dev­ Margaret MacMurray, a bookstore em­ The new Bookstore manager, Miss six months, is once again facing dis­ elopment of Loyola's English depart­ ployee of some time has taken over MacMurray, is trying to reduce inven­ aster. The English department could ment, spoke along similar lines and all the direction of the operation, which tory. She believes that a potential go out on strike as early as January three stated that they would resign if by all indications appears to be only exists for a successful bookstore. When 26, if the non-renewal of twenty-seven continued page 14 temporary in its current format. Jack Silver was queried about the contracts is not recinded. · continued operation of the present store A meeting was called Tuesday, Jan. 6 he said, "I can't see anything happen­ ·by the Engltsh faculty to discuss the ing for the better". mattei: with students and close to one Student Association president Bill thousand people packed the Drummond Schwartz commented that, "The ad­ auditorium to hear the professors' INSIDE... ministration should have got rid of side of the story. In front of the cap­ Jack a long time ago". John Jackson, acity crowd, Dr. Hooper, chairman of former chairman of the now defunct the English department, tendered his bookstore committee said, " If I were resignation as chairman. Most of the Loyola In Tumoil Page 14 Silver I would come to a point where assembled students were intrigued to I would be so fed up I would say forget see the usually quiet gentleman lash in­ it. I quit" . Apparently Silver had to. the administration with great vigor. been thinking of resigning for the past Dr. Gross, the next speaker, was the Bookstore Reshuffled Page 4 two years; since the 1967 bookstore individual responsible for organizing the strike. He claimed hat he never en­ English instructors into the team that joyed working on an academic level they now are. Dr. Gross was appalled and having to cope with bureaucratic at the number of charges that were laid Theatre In The Nude Page 9 structures and administration hang-ups. against himself and the instructors in The resignation was tendered on Aug. the Administration's newsletter of Dec. 15 but was hushed up by the adminis­ 15. He told the assembled students and tration so that even the bookstore staff faculty that unless the seventeen letters Poet Smith Replies Page 13 did not know of it until the end of of non-renewal of English professors September. Apparently Silver was the and instructors were declared null and only one who knew the bookstore situa­ void by the administration and a public HayesNewF-Ball Coach Page 19 tion ·~fficiently to insure its smooth apology was made, he would tencler his operation until a new bookstore policy resignation. could be formulated. 1·He· JOH't\J .BU'LL PUB -. SPECIAL

OPEN TO All · The John BuU Pub LOYOLA AND SIR GEORGE 12.01 de Maisonneuve STUDENTS EVENING & DAY + ( betwe_en Stanley Sunday to Thursday Only Buy one_g .ef. one free NO .LIMIT tmd de Maisonneuve) 2 I THE PAPER J111uary 12. 1970 Student Union delayed $8,000 made available The final decision on the ac­ coming next week", he said. ceptance of a Student Associa­ The wording of the contract has tion bid on a building in the to be altered as there are a from revamped loan fund immediate area of Sir George total of five parties to deal with has been delayed for another in the transaction. The S.A. law­ Students looking for emer­ and in the majority of cases, good will prevent concrete ac­ week. Don West, in charge of yers expected to have the revi­ gency loans will now be able to pick up his money within twenty tion until corporations can be the negotiations for the S.A. sions done by earlier next week, get that money from the Dean minutes at the bank. approached. expressed confidence about the with the final decision to follow of Students office. The Univers­ The university funds are kept The possibility of approach­ outcome. "We know definitely shortly there after. The Stu­ ity Council en Student Life, act­ in an account there and ate act­ ing business with a program of that there has been other bids dent Association has over $100,- ing on a motion by E.S.A. Vice­ ually never touched. The Bank continued page 4 but a decision should be forth- 000 in its Student Union fund. President Wayne Gray, passed of matches the money a resolution to make some $8,- (in this case $8,000) with $24,­ 000 available for immediate use. -000 which altogether constitutes The funds, part of the 1968- the present loan fund. Interest COMMITTEES EXPOSED 69 co-curricular fund is to be of 10.8cr per annunt will be · Alright, everyone , here who tee of twelve which after due con­ committee should be set up to matched-on a three-for-one ratio charged on all loans. has ever served on a universi­ sideration has decided that such study proposals towards the aim with funds from the Bank of Dave Ramsey, in talking about ty committee of some sort put a presentation is in the interests of abolishing many of the cur­ Montreal at Guy and DeMaisori­ future possibilities, mentioned up your hand. Let's see 1, 2, 3 ... of Sir George students. rently existing commit at the neuve. the recent Loan Fund committee hmm, not too many. You seem We the aforementioned com­ university. This committee has Under the emergency loan that is looking into external aid to see the same faces no matter mittee of twelve (sounds sub­ the power to create sub com­ program, 126 loans were made programs. The idea of intern­ which of the hundreds of com­ versjve) after, lengthy delibera­ mittees, who in turn create sub­ in the first term totaling over al fund raising has been exhaust­ mittees meetings yo·u attend at tion, have come to the conclu­ sub committees provinding that $26,000. Last year, $4,000 was ed for all practical purposes Sir George. For that matter, it sion that an article appearing the overall is the disman­ loaned out over the same period. and the desire to get out of a seems as if you hear the same tling of the bewildering commit­ The program, administered by loan program in favour of _ a dialogue at each meeting too. a tee-structure of Sir George. Dave Ramsey of the Dean's of­ grant and bursary system is by I think it's called bureaucra­ Seriously, did you know that fice is part of a growing plan appealing. cy. You know, that system of go­ reliable source the Committee on Philosophy and of comprehensive student fin­ Ramsey doesn't like the idea vernment whereby no one makes Goals was recently disbanded be­ ancial aid envisioned for the next that students have to get loans decisions and no one is respon­ in the January 12th edition of the cause it could not keep pace few years. only to face the crushing reality sible directly to anyone or can Paper, would serve the interests with the changing nature of the The emergency loans policy of repayment later in the year. be held to be at fault if some­ of the student body in that it University. Toomuch paperwork uses need as the sole criteria Putting the student in debt is thing goes wrong .. .somewhere ... qould alert them to the true na­ I guess. Franz Kafka is alive with a normal maximum of $150 of no assistance at all. However if you know what I mean. ture of Sir George "government and well and lost somewhere for a period of up to ninety days. a shortage of capital and the This article isn't written by by committee". A resolution was in the University! A committee Under the program, a student necessity of relying on the a single person, it's being put passed, after due deliberation of six has been formed in or­ may come in, explain his need, Bank's extensive resources and together by an ad hoc commit- (of course) to the effect that a der to locate his whereabouts.

Notices should be addressed in 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 BULLETIN BOARD· submissions is Thursday euening prior to the Monday of pub­ lication.

30 and 1:30 on Channel 9, has Ingrid Bergman, Akim Tamiroff. Gary "Cooper Festival: Sun­ Arts Association: Presents SIR GEORGE deconstipated the art of news day at 7, "Dallas", (Stuart Heis- John Monroe, Minister of Health, · reporting. Latest bulletins, vi­ Hockey: Bishops versus Sir ler, 1950) with Ruth Roman, Wednesday 12-2, Smith Audito­ deo-tapes from around town, George, Friday, 8:00 at Loyola. Steve Cochran. At 9, "The rium. Engineering Students Asso­ peeks at parliament, and, of Post-in-Residence: Frank Fountain-head", (King Vidor, · Loyola - Sir George Philoso­ ciation: Will have a display course, the weather with Boris. Davey speaks on " A poetic, for 1949) with Raymond Massey, phy Seminar: Prof. P. O'Neill set up on the Mezzanine during Love", Friday, 2:15, H-539-L Patricia Neal. discusses "Philosophy; or the this week to advertise upcoming Biology Club: Thursday, 1-2, Process of Thinking, Not the Engineering Week. H-920. Quantitative Methods De­ Photo Club: Meeting, Mon­ Product" from 3-5 Wednesday The Chaplains: are now lo­ partment: Prof. John W. A­ day January 19, 7:30, H-637. in the Centennial Building Se­ cated in their new offices in Italian Students Association: brams, University of Toronto Bring slides. More discussion minar Room. H-649-1 and -2. Contact can Thursday, 5-6, H-51L speaks on " Organization Prac­ on darkroom. Call Pat, evenings Commerce Students Asso­ tice and Implementation of Ope­ except Thursday, at 738-4_173. be made directly at 879-7205 Conservatory of Cinemato­ ciation: Curriculum committee or through the Dean of Students rational Research", Friday, 10: meeting for 2nd, 3rd, and 4th graphic Art: Gary Cooper 30, N-408. Office, H-405 at 879-5935. Festival begins Thursday with year students, Wednesday, 7-9 Channel 4: " Communications in the Vanier Library. Allen "High Noon" (Fred Zinnemann, Students International Medi­ LOYOLA and Education" - a series of 1952; with Lloyd Bridges, Katy Roberts has 'further informa­ videotaped lectures by Prof. tation Society: Introductory tion at SAC OFFICES. Juado, Grace Kelly) at 7 in H- lecture on Transcendental Me­ Charles Siepman, N.Y.U. This 110. At 9, " Meet John Doe" Student Health Services Of­ L.A.S.A. Documentary Films: week until Friday, "Propaganda: ditation of Maharishi Mahesh fice: Open Monday to Friday, Thursday noon in Smith Au­ (Frank Capra, 1941) with Bar­ Yogi given by teacher trained International and Domestic" at bara Stanwych, Walter Brennan, 9-7 and Saturday, 9:30 - 1:00 ditorium. Free with Arts I.D. 10, 10:30, 2, 2:30. by the Maharishi at Rishikesh, or 25¢. Edward Arnold. Admission for India. Friday, 8:30 p.m. H-635. Worker Student Alliance: . Women's Intramural Judo­ Modem Language Student As· both films: $LOO for students; All welcome. o charge. Karate: Throughout second Monday, 4-6, H-613. $L50 for non-students. For 9:00 sociation: Meeting, "Constitu­ Liberal Club: Monday, 2-3, term, Tuesday and Thursday p.m. show only: 50¢ for stu­ Inter-City United Nations tion and Elections", Thursday H-605. 11 to noon in the Athletic Com-, dents, 75¢ non-students. Annual League: Friday, 8:30 - 10:30 12-1, C-310. Yoga: Directed by Ram plex. Pass (200 films) - $10.00. p.m. H-520. Science Film Series: "The Karnani, on Channel 9, Monday Science Faculty: Council World · at Your Feet" and at 12:30. Georgian Film Society: Folk Music Society: Friday, meeting, Tuesday, 5-6:30, D- "Polyole Films". Free, Thurs­ Georgian Film Society: The Buck Rogers, Thursday, 1:15- 1-2, H-520. 105. day, 12:15 - 1:00, Drummond year 2440 as seen in with Buck 2:15, H-110. Auditorium. Rogers; also, selection of shorts Gary Cooper Festival: Sa­ Women's Basketball: Mac­ of the period and door prrzes. Yoga: Thursday, noon, Chan­ turday at 7, "Task Force" (Del­ Donald at Loyola, Tuesday at Italian-Ca~adian Society: Ge­ All for 25¢ in H-110 on Tuesday nel 9. mer Davies, 1949) with Jane 8, i~ the Athletic complex. neral meeting, ·Thursday, 12-1, from 1:15-2:15. Wyatt, Walter Brennan, Julie A-30L Gamet Singers: Tuesday, 4- Georgian Snoopies: "An In­ London. At 9 "Hanging Tree" Hockey: McGill at Loyola at Montreal Stock Exchange 6, H-513. troduction to Aviation;" with an (Delmer Davies, 1950) with Ma­ 8 on Tuesday. Tour: Bus leaves Bryan Building Folk Music Society: Tues­ evening of films and guests from ria Schell, Karl Malden, Geor­ Bloodanza: Sponsored by Com­ parking lot, Thursday at 1:30. day, 4-6, H-1070. CFCF (Keith Randall, Darrel ge C. Scott. merce Students' Association. Tour finishes at 3:30. Yoga: Tuesday, 12:30, Chan- Janz) and Air Canada at 8:30 Objective: 1200 pints. CFOX and nel 9. · in H-435, Friday. Admission: Hockey: Sherbrooke versus Radio Loyola provide music and Women's Hockey: McGill at Meet the Chaplains: Every FREE; tickets available at Hall Sir George, Saturday 8:15 at entertainment. Ski passes, gift Loyola, at 8, Thursday. On Tuesday from 5-9:30 and Thurs­ Building Information Desk begin­ U. ofM. certificates, dinners for two, Saturday at 2, MacDonald versus day from 2-5 in the southwest ning Monday, January 12. trophies to faculty, fraternity Loyola. Basketball: R.M.C. versus corner of the Cafeteria for in­ Arts Faculty Council: Fri­ and sorority with highest p~r­ Wine and Cheese Party: formal discussion. Sir George; Saturday, 12:30 at day, 2:30, H-635. McGill. centage of donors, Evelyn Woods Jan. 22, 8 till midnight, Gua­ Communications Committee: Speed Reading certificate valu­ dagin Lounge. Admission: $LOO. Meeting, Wednesday, H-762-1, Gary Cooper Festival: Fri­ Mass: Sunday, 11:30 a.m. at ed at $175. Grand Prize: Air Sponsored by Loyola Evening at 5:30. day at 7, "Bright Leaf', (Mi­ 2185 Bishop St. Canada Champagne Nite Flight - Student Association. S.G. W. Investments Club: cheal Curtiz, 1950) with Lauren 40 couples eligible to win. Guest Wednesday, 4-6, H-408. Bacall, Patricia Neal in H-110. · Main Library: will be open John Monroe, Minister of Health. T.V. Sir George: "The At 9, "For Whom the Bell on Sunday from 10 - 6 for study Wednesday, 10-10, Athletic com­ Compiled by Frank Howard News Show", Wednesday at 11: Tolls", (Sam Wood, 1943) with and circulation. plex. THE PAPER J1nury 12, 1970 I 3 Vatch gets Gold from SAM

Mr. La~rence Vatch who: should be given. The award is NOTICE served as Chairman of the Act- sponsered by the members of ion Pollution Seminar which was S.A.M. (Society for the Advan- sponsered by the Science Stu- cement of Management) to any dents Assoc, ESA and the Pa- person at Sir George. The sti­ Loyola Evening per has been awarded "THE GOLD STAR OF THE MONTH pulation is that their service AWARD". Lawrence is 21 or contribution of their time Students: years old, fourth year, physics added significantly to the suc­ major. He also holds positions cess bf any event. This could on the Science Faculty Council also include faculty or staff who Effective this Monday the Dept. Of Student Services will and the Student Request Com­ have aided an ·organization with­ serve a new role in the Loyola community and, according to mittee. o"ut any monetary awards or ex­ . Rod Shearer, Dean of Students, will "assume the role of a The Seminar was a FIRST pectations. The vote is up to catalyst". for Sir George! The presentation ~OU---the students (day or The responsibility of calling in outside assistance in· the of speakers (including Mr. Hub­ evening) of Sir George to give case of uncontrolable situations has been shifted to Fr. Patrick bard from Europe who made us the name of persons who Malone. Gordon Meyers, Assistant Dean Of Students, · will his only speech on his North have contributed their time and assume responsibility for the handling- of student unrest on American tour at Sir George); effort. If you know of someone campus. films have raised the interest that fits this catagory then of such magazines as 'Mac­ please fill out the below entry: Instead of acting on the behalf of the Administration, the Leans' who phoned from Tor­ Award-winning Vatch Student Services will try to assume the role of. mediator, onto. Ghallenging the position of all sides of an issue through informal meetings with all factions. Lawrence admitted sheepishly of spending one solid week plus Name of nominee: The Loyola Evening Student Association, in conjunction with in organizing the Seminar. As the Student Services Dept., has arranged to make this service anyone who has attended can Position held: available to evening students_ for the duration of the protest. admit, it was a great success and we owe a debt of thanks Reason for selection: To accomplish this the Student Services Dept., located in to Lawrence Vatch. Room A-315 on the bottom floor of the Administration Build­ ing, will be open until 10:00 p.m. during the current protes_t. It might be interesting to note Name of elector: that the government is If nominee wants to remain anonymous, it will Members of the L.E.S.A., as well as representatives of the spending $1 million and is rais­ * Student Services Dept., will be on hand to answer any questions ing it to $15 million on pol­ be upheld. that you may want answered. lution control. This still looks small to 's $60 million, Deposit in: S.A.M. mailbox in S.A. office So, if you are confused and/or concerned please do not . so keep at them Lawrence! - 3rd Floor Hall Bid. hesitate to drop in at your convenience. Dick Key, As this is the first time the S.A.M. box in Commerce Assoc. President, "GOLD STAR" has been of.fice-basement Norris Bid. L.E.S.A. awarded, an explanation of it A AREEH __ you'll ge1i life for it Your career is a lifetime proposition. And we figure Now you can benefit from this past research if you have to work, you should work at something when you're choosing your career. you'll enjoy. Career Assessment Ltd. will find out what your Improve the odds. when choosing a career by thing is and where you can do it, too. We'll give learning more about yourself. you: STEP ONE: 1. A confidential counselling resume of your Take inventory of your real interests and abilities. results on the BIB. STEP TWO: 2. Occupationally-oriented assistance for those Calculate your chances of success. who desire additional job exposure. How? By completing the Biographical Inventory The Biographical Inventory Blank will tell you more Blank (BIB) .... a multiple-choice inventory of about yourself, and the fields in which your interests auto-biographical questions. There are over 500 will best fit your abilities. Then, your career items to answer and there is no time limit for decision will be made that much easier. completion. All of the questions in the BIB relate to Make sure your career is your thing .... it's a life your own past experience. The BIB is based on the sentence. psychological fact that people will tend to act in Watch this newspaper for further 'details on the the future as they have acted in the past. Thus, your Biographical Inventory Blank. past behavior can be related to that of persons who _have done well in certain fields or occupations. EERCflREERCflREEH Ci1AEEA Your BIB responses will be recorded and assessed with techniques developed during thirty years of 3f;I E~T fU3SESSfaE~T i1SSESS1':1 Ef;-fl intensive research, financed mainly by various ~UTEU Ul':'l~TElJ government departments. This continuous research tTEIJU r~UTEIJLJ was initiated during WW II with recent applications St PRINCE ARTHUR AVENUE TORONTO, ONTARIO by NASA and the Peace Corps. · (416) 964•7721 , 964•7725 4 I THE PAPER J Muary 12, 1970 from Page 7 one month and we will have BOOKSTORE -TO BE RES HUF FLED a degree worth holding. There is a lot of work in­ volved. But using a system such as I have outlined, students by Eddy Wies~l follows from the Bookstore 1'ask fully, they would be much more Smola, vice principal of admin­ would have better degrees make Force report, presented to the efficient. Cited in favor of the ' istration and finance and the one better graduate school choices· The present bookstore opera­ Board of Governord last Dec. proposal was the fact that out­ in charge of implementing the and would be generally better tion will probably be disbanded 11. Among the main recom­ side bookstores have better con­ task force proposals assured equipped to deal with the pres­ at the chlose of the year and mendations was the contracting nection with publishers and more the Board of Governors that sures and problems of todays management of the venture will of all bookstore operations to experience in handling books the University would receive a society. be turned over to an outside an outside bookstore chain. A than would a lone university number of gurantees as to th~ If our university system ful­ concern by next September. This number of bids from bookstore facility. Inventory could ·be facilities offered by the book­ fils the demands of society. If chains are being considered by shuffled from store to store with store. "The bookstore cannot the standard honours Bachelor by the Deam of Students office. the administration, with· an eye the result being less chance for be judged on business alone. It degree equips us for working · Unfortunately progress in this to those enterprises that have overstocking. Also profession­ is a service to faculty and stu­ with others and if you can prove · direction is being hindered by had experience running univers­ al experience would . be readily dents". it to me, I will weat this edition a lack of facilities and per­ ity bookstores (the University of available and the university of the Paper. sonnel. Toronto and the University of would be guaranteed a small Classic Book Stores and W.H. What do you think? Ramsay estimates that less · are among these with profit out of the operation with­ Smith and Son are known to be' than 2r o of the money loaned is outside ventures running their out any actual investment. How­ among the bidders. Classics Loan Fund from page-21 never repaid. As a conti:.ast, bookstores). Operations would ever a certain amount of control indicated that while the univers­ summer employment a.s a form Quebec suffers a 5or;, loss on be much the same as under the over bookstore affairs would ity would ·be guaranteed a profit, of aid is also being considered similar programs. present system except, hope- slip out of the university's hands. they would have limited control Faculty could not be guaranteed over inventory. Also no· mis­ that the texts they choose for cellaneous articles (bear mugs, their course will be available in t-shirts, nylons, etc) would be necessary quantities. Dr. John sold. Ru mblings of disco·ntent heard ' • from s-taff by George Neuwirth

A number of people have left ness amongst the employees. At the bookstore since the beginning the moment services at the of this year while a number bookstore are being maintained more are looking for other jobs. on a day-to-day basis. This was learned last week in Among the people interviewed an interview conducted among by a 'Paper' reporter a number the staff members of the Book­ express reservations about store. While not all of depar­ commenting about the situation. tures can be attributed to the One expressed the fear of los­ upheaval in normal bookstore ing his job if he were to be foo operations, caused by the furore outspoken. However, a certain over the bookstore committee amount of frustration did sur­ and the subsequent task force, face. One person claimed that the fact that employees are dis­ Silver resigned because he got contented is obvious. One memb­ 'fed up' with being unable to All is quiet in the bookstore, perhaps because everyone is out scrambling for new jobs. er, the Supplies Manager, an manage the bookstorp according employee of five years, has been to 1-iis wishes. He was constant­ siness 866-1987. for only $49.95. Freeport 288- fired since the new supplies are ly subjected to outside pressures 1922. Tutor Wanted for Mathematics being ordered by the bookstore concerning management and the 251. Phone Mr. Johnson at and present 'Stocks are being Apartment Large bachelor apart­ administration never backed him CLASSIFIED 341-7000 or 733-9496 after 6 depleted and discontinued. ment to sub-let Feb. 1st. Over­ up. The last straw, the employee p.m. dale 878-2564. No communication exists bet­ believed, was when Principal Apt. to share 4 Y2 room apart­ O'Brian ordered Silver to sell Lift Student requires lift from Experienced Typist Neatly type­ ween Administration and the ment to share in the Snowden books to the Student Associa­ Hall Bldg. to vicinity of Notre­ written theses, assignments, es­ staff concerning the· continua­ area, about $70 per month. Call tion booksale in September, Dame and Elizabeth in Chome­ says, etc. Telephone during tion of present operations be­ Mr. Takikawa at 342-1862. Bu- yond the end of the year. It is thereby aiding a competing op­ dey on Monday nights at 8: 15 the day 489-7464. eration on campus. p.m. Share expenses. Contact not known whether any new op­ Sandi at 738-7883. Unusual Camel skin lamps for eration to take over control of At the moment things at the FORMAL \VEAR sale at Artisanat Bijoutique. In­ the store would retain the pres­ bookstore ·are in limbo and RENTAl,S Parking Guy and Sherbrooke re­ dian handicrafts, rugs, sil~, ent staff. Thus there is a deep under these conditions no one served outdoor parking with jewellery and pakistani coats. feeling of insecurity and uneasi- can work properly. plug-in and snow removal, $15 . Guy Metro Station. l\Htlt a cpetcgottaQ' per month, 935-4754 evenings. Wanted German Nazi World tfouclt Typewriter s-Bargains Students War Il' items. Will pay good only will have the privilege of money or trade. Call Mike Look smart, The Paper be smart buying a brand new fully gua­ after 7 p.m. weekdays, anytime RENT all renteed typewriter at Freeport weekend 671-4646. your Sir George Editor: Ron Blunn Loyola Editor: Ma,;k Herscovitch Formal AUTHENTIC Wear. CUISINE Photo Editor: Jack Miller Our gar­ News Editor: Uary Languay EXOTIC Sports Editor: Robin Palin ments ore Photo Editor: Gerry Zell Copy Editor: Irene Bilas Features Editor: Dina Lieberman oil modern XEROX LUNCHEONS Perception: Amo Mermelstein styles FROM $1.24 Freshly (FULLY LICENSED) Managing Editor: Preston Gun! cl!l(lned. to lit 9c Be 5c CHICKEN CURRY /RICE ~J~es . I I Published by the Evening Student Association of Sir George Williams University. The editorial 011 models. SHISHIHAB FREE DESSERT WITH content is not necessarily the opinion of the Publisher. THE PAPER may not be copied in whole or in part without the written permission of the Publisher. THE PAPER is published for 10 CARDS. evening students and the co mmunities of Sir George Williams University and Loyola College. Montreal Copy Center 11 STEPS FROM Sir George Office: 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W. Room H-639. Telephone: 879-2836. Loyola HALL BLOG. Office: 7308 Sherbrooke St. W. Room Two. Telephone: 486-9890. Media Salee Department: 1455de Maisonneuve Blvd. W. Room H-639. Telephone: 879-4514. McLAUGHLIN & HARRISON 2019 Bishop (/!.-·~~...... TYPE-SETI'ING & l/THO BY JOURNAL OFFSET INC. TEL. 331-972 1 2005 Drummond - 288- 3544 (at ~aisonneuve) 214111aou, It, -· I THE PAPER January 12, 1970 I 5 SOME.BODY NEEDS YOU •••

(We're enlarging our staff at The Paper)

Are you a typist. ... we need you! Can y·ou do artistic illustration.... we need you!

Care to be Loyola's Circulation Manager (to help our newspaper distribution).... we need you! Are you a photographer? Can you write news? Would you like to help with our lay­ out? .... we need you! Are you a sports writer interested in hockey, basketball, intramural and women's athle- tics. .... we nee d you.I Would you be interested in writing feature articles concerning news, cultural events, social and political happen ings .... we need you! Just a sample of the warm welcome you'll receive Administrators, Faculty, Students· who have from the staff at 'The Paper'. briefs, term papers, reprints or · critiqu es.... (you guessed it) we need you ! Prut-reed? .... we NEED you!

Its an invitation to Day or Evening students at Loyola and Sir George.

At Sir George: drop into room 639 or call 879-2836. At Loyola: A staff meeting will be held on Thursday January 15th at 6:30 P.M. If you cannot attend call 486-9890 any time after 6:00 P.M. IF WE HAVEN'T INTERESTED YOU IN THE ABOVE POSITIONS, WE STILL NEED YOU.... TO READ THE PAPER 6 I THE PAPER J.. uary 12." 1970 APPENDICITIS I I've developed a pain in my belly from looking over Editorial Appendix 1. You probably have forgotten about or didn't pay any attention to the principal's t08k force report when it was issued after the 'Paper' cartoon hassle of November. And therin lies its strength, the only reason why it can exist. Evening students! Under the guiding paternalistic hand of father administration, Appendix 1 guarentees the E.S.A. executive council the right to review all copy the 'Paper' produces before it goes to press. And further, which is even more distressing, the E.S.A. council has the right to ~top circulation of the 'Paper' while explaining their actions afterwards. This situation can be likened to the Montreal Star or the Gazette crossing the desk of Jean­ Jacques Bertra_nd every morning for approval, before they can be circulated. Outside the university such a situation sounds ridiculous; only at Sir George is it possible. The E. S .A. finds . itself in this position not by choice, but rather by necessity as the people that run the university handed down an ultimatum of 'sign the document (Appendix 1) or continue postponing publication'. Without a paper on the stands each week, advertisers become upset so there was little opportunity but to go along with adminis­ ·tration blackmail. We have been allowed to publish a newspaper, but the concept of freedom of the press had to be buried to do it. A little closer look at the appendix: point 3 - "The president of the E.S.A., or his designed representative, who will not be a member of the staff of an E.S.A. publication, has the responsibility to review all editorial content of such a publication before it is distributed to the university". · I ' _-::::----··-- This is tantamount to state control over the press, ----~- muc~ like in Brazil, South Vietnam, or (yes, of course) Nazi Germany. point 4 - "The president of the E.S.A. shall have the authority to prohibit distribution of any edition of such a _ publication at Sir George Williams University or remove it from circulation". H~re, destroyed, in two paragraphs, is the principle of freedom of the press that has been fought for ever since words could be mass produced. Contemplate a (purely) hypothetical situation of malpractise in the E.S.A. I think Jack would be proud of me .. MOVE OVER! offices concerning your student fees. Would the 'Paper' be able to expose a body that has the right of censure over it? There are, however, some pretensions toward a 'gua­ "SANTHANAM TIMES 27" rantee' of editorial freedom in the appendix. They center After wasting valuable time it seems that riously questionned when it gets to the around the concept of bias, which is about as stable as a the students of Loyola have finally decided point where the Administration is prov id­ tightrope walker with whooping cough. The Appendix to act on the Administration's non-renewal ing coffee, sandwiches and even vitamin states: "The Executive Council of the E.S.A. will re­ of twenty-seven teaching contracts. Due pills. cognize the editor's right to freedom of expression and to the line of action taken, this editorial It is certain, since the Administration debate so long as he maintains an unbiased presentation is directed towards the majority of you is now contributing to the cause, that the of the news". My bias, your bias, our bias. Everyone so-called "demonstrators'' who are par­ sit-in will not convince Malone to rein­ has a di{ ferent concept of the word bias. · In other words ticipating in what was first planned as a state the twenty-seven professors and ins­ it is open to opinion, the opinion of the E.S.A. executives. sit-in in the Administration Building. tructors. And finally, one last magnanimous gesture is included It has become apparent that either you Therefore, other plans must be made. in the appendix to supposedly right the wrongs that may are completely unaware of the purpose of Action can only be achieved through action. h~e occ.urred through the mishandling of the preceding a sit·in or that you have decided to take Obviously the sit-in does not inconvenience eight points. An appeal board may be formed to hear advantage of the situation so that you could the Administration sufficiently to warrant the greivances of the editor or the editorial board against be part of the "in" group. Therefore, Malone and O'Brien to open their eyes. the E.S .A. The appeal board, however, is entirely chosen perhaps several facts should be made clear. 'I_'here are several channels open. · We are ?Y members of the E. S.A. executive council! The defendent The expressed purpose of a sit-in is to quite aware that the financial status of the in the case zs allowed to chose the jury! The obvious demonstrate that the students of Loyola college is in a very sad state. Therefore, verdict would be 'rwt guilty' and the last nail in the coffin are not about to sit back and accept the all students who still owe mo.ney to L6yola of freedom of the press is driven in. bungling of matters by Malone and O'Brien. for courses should withhold pay ment until We ·are dealing here purely in hypothetical terms, but Once a sit-in is in progress the issues such time as satisfactory results are achiev­ Append~ 1 was devised to cope with just these hypotheses at hand should be discussed and further ed. and obviously as a solution it fails. The administration plans laid out. Furthermore, the day-to-day running of in an attempt to delineate editorial responsibility ha~ Granted, it is necessary to create a the college must be further hampered through overreacted in a mad scramble to prevent another Fe­ conductive atmosphere in order to com­ occupation of a strategic area. Yet the bruary eleventh over the cartoon. The situation has pensate for the luxuries of life that you necessary precautions n, ...,1,st be taken in cooled down, and jobs are secure for a few months more are being deprived of by sit.ting in. Yet order to prevent any material damage what­ ever. yet an obvious injustice has been created. That this does creating a conducive atmosphere does NOT not faze the administration is depressing. Their policy mean going so far as "turning on" on Finally, it would seem that much more of 'no news is good news' is a mistake. A system of school grounds. It would seem that either ~hought is required. Instead of bringing checks and balances is necessary for the proper operation you don't give a damn or are completely in the Quebec Department of Education, of any democratic process. The Paper, with the restric­ unaware of the repercussions of such an we must settle the matter internally. After tions imposed, can no longer serve as an effective balance. act should the police be called in. This an we have seen how Monsieur Cardinal The scales are tipped dangerously and eventually you is demonstrating gross selfishness, firstly and his gang operate. In the Long run it the student, will pay. ' because it is quite possible that you are would be to the disadvantage of Loyola should When an appendix becomes diseased, and dangerous to jeapordizing the innocent people who may the government place it under public trust­ an individual or corporate body it must be removed. be totally unaware of your actions and, eeship or force it into a merger with Sir George. The Paper suffers from appendicitis. Let's hope that secondly, you will definitely destroy any the Principal's task force on publications which was headway thus attained should your actions The final decision rests with you students. recently formed can perform a successful operation. be discovered. Either smarten up or hustle your ass out of ~ithout a doubt the success of the party, there and leave matters to those who take RONBLUNN originally planned as a sit-in, can be se- them seriously. M. HERSCOVITCH THE PAPER Jnury 12, 1970 I 7 Specialization lncommunicando

.If the university .is to continue dent as a person, not the pro­ of the jargon-block. The today - these are the doers. · What it how to use a library. Teach to exist ·as an institution of mo­ duction of the bachelor whetijer graduate in chemistry-or in ac­ a tragedy if they are rendered the child how to write papers dem society, it must learn to in Arts, Science, Engineering counting or in social work incommunicado by the jargon­ and theses and through them throw aside some of its most or Commerce. This type of leaves the university with, pos­ block. teach him/her how to study the hallowed traditions. One of these training, i.e. the .modem bachel­ sibly, an honour degree. What What is the answer to this disciplines. traditions is that of early spe­ or degree, is nothing more or has he learned? He has learned problem. The CEGEP puts off Give the child the tool and cialization. Specialization is fine less than a throw baek to the the jargon of his speciality. He the specialization decision for through the use of the tool, teach and essential today, but at what concept of the student seated has become, even at this very some two years and it acquaints the concept and teach him how level is it practiclll, and at what at the feet of the master. By early stage in his development, the student with many of the to make other tools. educational level is it relevant? promoting this system of thought a stereotyped picture created disciplines - it broadens his If tool making and tool using You honour students, you ma­ in education, the teacher is not by a faculty and administration scope. One major disadvantage marked mans' escape from the jor students and you .Science, teaching; the student is not which is itself out of tune with which it may have, is that in monkey surely we can use the Arts, Commerce and Engineer­ learning; both are simply per­ the needs demanded by the mar­ the market-place the CEGEP same breakthrough in the edu­ ing students are being sold an petuating the ancient and accept­ ket-place · society. He she can student is in a non-competitive cation of our young people. Giv­ anachronism. You are the buggy­ ed paternalism associated with ~ scarcely communicate with position. en students graduating from high whip salesmen of today's socie­ the university of the olive other " specialists" in other Shoul

from underground to legitimacy 1959-69 .HAPPY NUDE YEAR THEATRE ~

The theater has stripped for action. tions. The actio.n: the audience was of Miss Jean Brodie", she keeps ease the subject to the floor and pro­ This apocalyptic fulfillment comes invited to participate in the noise­ · her back to the audience -- she is ceed to fondle, kiss and caress. long after the trendsetters of fashion making, at will, and those who first posing for her lover, an artist. In gave the "see-through" the green 'doffed their duds' were welcome to Bruce Jay Friedman's black comedy light; and long after topless cuisines The boldest of the bold, in what join in 'on stage' in the totally im­ "Scuba Duba", instead of having a has only been a series of nude pro­ embossed themselves as twentieth _promptu performance. Euphemistic­ voluptuous beauty show her topless gressions, (the winner of the giant century institutions. Nudity seems ally, the purpose of 'Revelations' was charms, a -'droopy' matron surprises 'N' for nudity) is the current Off­ to have landed upon the stage at the to extend an opportunity for the the audience by pendulating her aged Broadway production of Kenneth Ty­ perfect crucial moment -- at a time audience to 'join in'. bare breasts. However disgusting nan's "Oh! Calcutta!" It is a fifteen when the theater seemed to be dead; or 'off-colour' it may seem, it is a These performances, as well as scene sexual romp. In the opening suffocated by its own stuffiness. brilliant parody of titillation as a their contemporary by-products, look­ scene, the cast members introduce joke on audience expectation. Both ed and look quite different from the themselves by performing random As the butterfly evolves from the beautiful and ugly hippies, take it all audience's point of view than from stripteases as their photo and cre­ cocoon, so the theater of nudity has off in Broadway's "Hair". The nude the performer's. This presents the dentials are flashed upon the cyclo­ its roots in catalysts of the past. scene in this production became the blaffing and undoubtedly subjective rama. Veteran actress, Shelly Win­ classic, mainly because it was vir­ question; "is theater an "audience­ ters, was quoted in what may be the In 1959, a group of New York tually the first time - Broadway had art" or "is theater a performer's embodying attitude toward the current artists and sculptors created a' thea­ ever seen young hippies -- or any art?" However, anyone who has an 'trend' in theater of nudity; "I think ter and art form' called 'Happenings', actors -- stark, raving naked. How­ overhelming desire to gawk . at a , it's disgusting, shameful and damag­ which assimilated into either a script­ ever, the performers 'peel', and then man's or woman's genitalia had every ing to all things American". She ed or an improvised theatrical format, just stand in view of the audience -­ -opportunity to do so in 'Revelations' said. "But if I were 22, with a every field of art-from music to dance, why? It would be much better if and has the same opportunities in the great body, it would be artistic, taste­ to film, to poetry, painting, sculpture they danced or even made love. But current trend of theater. Those who ful, partiotic and a progressive reli­ and even to monologue. The first perhaps the 'trend' is not ready for pay the price of a ticket to be sexual­ gious experience". Regardless of such 'Happening, 'Allan Kaprow's "18 that much activity -- yet. Becau~e ly aroused should not be scoffed at. moral taboos, 'unhealthy' or other­ Happenings In Six Parts" took place the scene in "Hair" is rather dark, That, in essence, is what 'Revelations' wise, "Oh! Calcutta!" is the only at the Reuben Gallery in New York some onlookers miss the nudity al­ and the theater of nudity are all show in New York that has customers City. Other such 'Happenings' soon together, while others snap away with about: people doing what they desire. piling into $25.00 seats -- armed took place in church basements, barns, cameras . .back yards and on one occasion -­ with opera glasses. Here, precisely, the 1963 performance of Oldenburg's The new playwrights who believe may be the core of the question. To touch on theatrical 'subcultures', "Autobodys" -- in a public parking in following their 'innage' or acquired while Broadway and upper-Off Broad­ lot. talents wherever it leads them, are In London, censorship by the Lord basically affording each individual in way has stopped at variations of the Chamberlain ended in September of striptease, the avant-garde and low­ 1968. Once the lid was off, experi­ Actors in a 'Happening' were utiliz­ the audience an opportunity to take er-Off Broadway has pursued beyond mental 'sexplorations' that flourish­ ed as props or stage effects rather from the experience on stage whatever the 'skin-deep' in realism. Theatrical ed only in private theater clubs and than individual personalities, and the he or she chooses. Nonetheless, lovemaking has become incredibly ex­ lu~ch hour cafes had began to surface. people on stage ended up represent­ nudity on the legitimate stage is still a special issue, and at times is label­ plicit. In Rachelle Owens' "Futz", a ing 'things', while the 'things' became tragic farce about a farmer who lov~s people. 'Happenings' were the be­ led 'unhealthy' as a result of the effect The current nude fad, however, still it leaves uoon the audience. How­ his pig (emotionally and physically) depends on the audience's desire to ginnings of the realization of the the actors go through extremely raw, dramatist's dream of destroying and ever, skin fs finally beginning to be do or view the forbidden. The theater, employed as a costume -- that is through symbolic, burlesque of oral, (current or archaic) depends on the eleminating the aesthetic distance that anal and genital intercourse. In Rich­ had come to separate the performer undoubtedly healthy! financial and spiritual support of an ard Schechner's total theater work, audience. Fortunately, (regardless from the audience in the tradional FroJI} generalizations to specifics; "Dionysus in 69", the ' audience, as theater. of the bait) the audience is still bit­ we ndw progress. in 'Revelations', is invited to dance ing. If some theatergoers are 'shock­ with the cast in a discotheque atmos­ ed' for any response which is prefe­ When an extremely mature school­ In 1963, the number of 'Happenings' phere. $ome are invited into 'the rable to affirmation of socially ap­ girl strips to the waist in "The Prime being performed around the nation playing area, where seminude actors proved values. noticeably declined. Late in 1965, director Ben Jacopetti founded the The 'new' theater, that of nudity, "Open Theater and Gallery". This does not want the audience sitting provided a showcase for a newer and safely in the dark. They want to nuder variety of 'Happening' - like knock down the barrier between art experiences which came to be called and life, and make the audience a 'Revelations'. This was a highly re­ part of the action. Drama will then vealing form of 'total theater'. 'Re­ become a sort of ritual, where every­ velations' created a colourful onstage body is involved and the 'sound and cathartic synthesis of sight and sound, the fury' is all around. Nudity is through the use of stage settings, part of this drastic revolution. It lights, multiple colour slide projec­ stands for freedom, for shedding old tions, recorded and live music, and taboos, for throwing off the "up-tight" most important, nudes who either pos­ conventions of the conventional and ed in given positions or danced across vericosed traditions. Nudity is the the set while various abstract objects way to be honest and open. It means, were projected unto their 'unfettered pardoning the pun, bare facts and frames'. Stage props generally in­ emotions. cluded chairs, tables, ladders, doors, windows and pieces of filmy or gauzy Regardless if we saw more of the cloth that served as suitable screens body last season than ever before, for slide projections and allowed for nudity in the theater is still not an the alteration of the apparent onstage accepted part of life. Soon it may · nudity by the will of the performers. be. We have shed a lot since the Taped recordings of recitations from 'Happenings' of 1959. It will no the "Book of Revelations" and "The doubt continue, and nobody should be Tibetian Book of the Dead" with the worse for wearing Jess. multiple musical backings of jazz pia­ no and electronic music enhanced and basically comprised the audial attrac- BY WAY OF ILLUSTRATION: John P. Hardy a scene from 'Futz'. 10 I THE PAPER J••ry 12, 1970 PERCEPTION

Hard core Pop art as des­ In a statement in the 1965 cribed by. one American edition of Collage, art cri­ art critic, " ... is a product tic G.R. Swenson wrote, of America's long-finned, " ... a great deal which is big-breasted, one-born­ good and valuable about every-minute society ... ". our lives is that which is public and shared by the community, it is the "Within its sanction of the most common cliches that oommercial image lies its we must deal with first, significance... sometimes if we are to have some providing an uncritical understanding ... ". look at our environ- ment... ", reads the cover of a book on Pop art by Not too unlike the plays Lucy Lippard. of Becket and Albee, the novels of Robbe-Grillet Thus Pop art may be con­ ::\nd Butor, and th~ films sidered as that in which bf Antonioni, Pop art can the commercial ( or com­ be both simple and intel­ mercial connotive) is uti­ lectually complex, it can lized as a basis for fine have little meaning or a art, giving artists an in­ great deal of significance, dividual manner of person­ al expression which owes The choice is the viewers. little to prevailing modes.

edited by Arno Mermelstein

ROY LISTENSTEIN. As Opened Fire... 1964. Magna on canvas. 68 x 56. One of three panels.

TOM WESSELMANN. Bathtub College No. 3 Mixed Media 84 x 100 x 18 THE PAPER Jmnuary 12, 1970 I 11

SU NAO URATA, Acrylic Kisses. 1965.

ANDY WARHOL, Marilyn . Monroe. 1962 Oil on Canvas 81x663/4.

JASPER JOHNS, The Critic Sees Metal + Glass on plaster

ALLAN D'ARCANGELO, Flint Next. 1963 Liquitex on Canuas

Andy Warhol. who gained 'creations' in a photograph notoriety for his red and by George Lois and Carl white depictions of Camp­ Fisher taken for E~quire bell soup cans is dipicted magazine . . as drowning in one of his

GEORGE SEGAL. The Ory Cleaning Store, 1964 Plas­ ter, neon. wood, and other materials. Life Size.

Tide:M__...., 12 I THE PAPER January 12, 1970 In This Corner: ' THE ODD COUPLE by JOHN P. H4RDY

Last Wednesday, the Centaur ruin it for the body to the side-­ and even the eloquently orato­ Foundation laughed-in their 1970 ME. rical manner in which Podbery season at their beautiful little Maurice Podbery and his mot­ delivers the word 'Luau'-all con­ theatre, with a beautiful little ley crew evoke a full evening tribute to make a wonderful per­ play and made for the audience of laughter and truly merit the formance a pleasure to watch. a beautiful little evening of en­ applause they receive. However tertainment. hesitant the performers were There is just no cliched man­ to defrost on opening night, by ner in which to recommend this production. It is light, it is fun­ The production was Neil Si­ now the nip must have vanished and that familiar 'Neil Simon ny, it is charming---it is en­ mon's hillaribus three-act an­ tertaining. You can't ask for thology of the ups and downs one-liner warmth' must have settled in to the entire evening. much more. I would rate this of a by now very familiar and tid-bit of adult ent~rtainment as accepted ODD COUPLE. The play itself unfolds the 'M'--a Must-see programme. occupational hazards of a male The place is the Centaur theatre I sat immediately next to Vir­ marriage based on divorce. The in Old Montreal. It is running ginia. At least that is what her males are Felix (David Schur­ until February 1, 1970 and in­ yum-yum called her as she mann) and Oscar (Maurice Pod­ formation may be obtained at tromped in ten minutes late, bery.) Having left their mates 288-6315. "Psst, Virginia!" She unfortu­ and family, both 'fellas' set up nately made one fatal mistake-­ shop and proceed to 'play house.' P.S.- Don't sit beside Vir­ showing up at all. Throughout They entertain guests, they va­ ginia! She may continue to la­ the performance, she leaned to cum-, they dust and burn the ment the death of English thea­ him and he leaned to her as supper and bicker in the style tre - in Montreal. Yes Virginia ... they bliss-fully exchanged com­ of true conjugality. The pregnant there is an English theatre in ments like, "This is where Jack pauses, the poker games, the this city; too bad you missed Lemmon did this, and Walter big supper, the Pigeon sisters it! Matthau did that etc . .'. " If any­ one else attends with the in­ tention of comparison--forget it! Maurice Podbery and David Schurmann in 'The Odd Don't waste money and don't Couple'. JOHN MAX GOES to PARIS

John Max, 33, was born in having been at the Fifth Paris Canada and resides in Montreal Biennial in 1967. with his wife and family. He His works have been shown has been a member of Loyola's in many North American and Communications Arts Depart­ European photographic exhibi­ ment for the past three years tions since the early '60's and teaches a course irl "Photo­ including a photographic exhibit graphy - ~ Visua, Language". at the McGill -School of Archi­ tecture, February and March, He was present at the open­ 1960; "Photography 63" an in­ ing of his one-man showing of ternational photography exhibit 57 photographs at the Societe in New York in 1963; "Dreams", Fran~aise de Photographie in an exhibit sponsored by the Paris on January 5, 1~0. This National Film Board in 1966 exhibit, running until January and, "Focus 16" also presented 29, 1970, is the first one in by the NFB; "Photography in which the works of a Canadian the Twentieth Century", Ottawa photographer have been included 1967; "Montreal lnsolite" in an exhibit sponsored by the opened in Montreal in 1967 and Department of External Affairs later shown across Canada; and as part of their Franco-Can­ "Other Places, Sous d' Autres adian cultural exchange pro­ Cieux", Ottawa, 1968. gram. Following the presentation of The exhibit, whose theme is, John Max' works in Paris dur­ "And the Sun Shone White All ing January 1970, the exhibit Night Long" is John Max' sec­ travels to Belgium, the Nether­ . ond important showing in the· lands, - Austria, Germany and French capital, the first one Scandinavia. Con,servatoire Brings Cooper To SGWU This week, the Conservatory (1926), where he fully developed (1941), HIGH NOON (1952) and of Cinematographic Art is pre­ his technique, which has been nominations for MR. DEEDS senting its first major enterpri­ described as "non-acting". Coo­ GOES TO TOWN (1936), THE se of the new year; a Gary per was, and played the role PRIDE OF THE YANKEES Cooper Festival. of, the quiet spoken, self-cons­ (1942) and FOR WHOM THE cious gentleman of integrity. He BELL TOLLS(1943). He star­ Cooper, · who became an ins­ was not cast as a person of red in more than eighty films titution in the American film high position, but rather as an before his death on Ma/31,1961. industry was born on May 7, average American. His films of­ The Cooper films in the up­ 1901 in Helena, Montana. He ten centred around a conflict coming festival include: HIGH was raised in the west, except 'between ' a man of honour and NOON (1952), MEET JOHN DOE for the three years that he spent less moral individuals. How (1941), BRIGHT LE.AF (1950), in an Ehglish public school. His much abuse this man could ta­ FOR WHOM THE BELL background created a man whose ke before reacting, was the ve­ TOLLS (1943), TASK FORCE roles before the camera reflec­ hicule by which suspense was ( 1949 ), HANGING TREE ted his true identity. He began created. (1950), DALLAS (1950), and his acting career during the si­ THE FOUNTAINHEAD (1949). lent era, and ' obtained his first Gary Cooper won Academy The Festival begins Thursday important role in THE WIN­ Awards for "Best Actor" in his and continues through to Sun­ NING OF BARBARA WORTH f i I m s SERGEANT YORK day. THE PAPER January 12, 1970 I 13 RADIO SIR GEORGE IN TROUBLE by Paul ]. Erriah

The golden toi'ies of Radio Sir George are university, he said, and the Communications no longer heard on the Concrete Campus. C.R. Board, which has existed in years past to co­ S.G. has been off the air since the end of No­ ordinate such matters does not even exist this vember, just, as a matter of fact, when they year. He wen t on to say that while the station were about to broadcast a week-long _feature was broadcast ing fo r 12 hours daily the respon­ show ent itled "The ,Greatest Show on Earth". se from students was very positive. The Greatest Show never showed up and neither Still, a number of measures are in the works. has a long list of possible and probable ventu­ The station may be on the air for a fe w hours res that the intrepid station' staff has ex plore d. this week if their equipment can be straighte­ Danny Kiperchuk, the stations manager, com­ ned out. Previously tbe station operated on bor­ plained thl!t it is next to impossible for a ra­ rowed equipment, but recently the decision was dio station to operate on a budget of only ?600, made to install as much of its own facilities while similar operations in other universities as possible. Speakers may also be placed in have much larger sums to work with. The sta­ the Norris Building. Cooperation between Ra­ tion's budget was cut from $900 eariier in the dio Loyola and Radio Sir George has begun year at a Student Association budget meeting. with the exchanging of ideas and knowledge and Kiperchuk was upset with the attitude of the CRSG has been heard a few times on the Loyola S.A. in not taking a closer look at the impor­ campus. Kiperchuk also alluded to the fact tance of the Radio Club on the campus. He that both campuses are discussing plans with emphasized that CRSG needs assistance and the York University, near Toronto for a multi-uni­ chief problem between the Student's Associa­ versity rad io network. tion and their clubs is a lack of communica­ But for the meantime, the problem remains tion, yet neither situation is being rectified. • money. And it is still uncertain as to when the Th; studio remains incomplete ... The S.A. has no co111 munications policy for the sounds of CRSG will grace Sir George again.

And the staff struggles on ... While the cupboards remain bare. Poet Smith rebuffs Paper reviewer•

The following is a letter written to pressions: an alleged utopia of stan­ choked with chlorine to kill the ing poets, can afford any more. How the Paper-by poet Ken Smith, in answer dardised units for standardised people, bacteria P.Umped in without controls much of a chance should I give it: to Dina Lieberman's review in the De­ denuded landscapes populated by a peopl1 to prevent it; one eats a sticky paste how long do you think we have? What cember first edition of the Paper con­ without self-criticism, a can-op~mer called bread or meat in the land of you're saying is I should weigh in some cerning his November Loyola poetry culture. If law has little to do with plenty. All Ford ~an offer against air good with all this heavy ballast - which reading. morality and making money has little pollution is an attachment to the pres.umes you can find some good to to do with knowing how to spend and engine that will make him more money strike a balance with. What 'good' do Dear Miss Liebermann: use it - that is, how to live decently, - not an alternative to the petrol engine you balance against Vietnam? What do Your review of my reading at Loyola and if the methods of blackmail and itself; the foundations see the poverty you measure against Seale's gaggibg and misses the point: titles list, misquotes, coercion (yes, why so many police and .,programme as just another means of the killing of Hampton? Dead rivers out of context quotes, titles of poems soldiers everywhere?) then the language making money from the ghettos - but don't cease being dead by ignoring them; I didn't read and never wrote, etcetera, · has to be bent to accomodate these the ghettos remain. This is a society massive prejudice, institutionalised culminate in a putdown that my picture lacks. The warped language is every­ set in its ways, that won't change ignorance and oppression are not al­ of the US 'disheartened' you. What a where, and as a poet that is my con­ (stockholders have no interest in scrap­ leviated in the discovery of a few shame. Since when has it been a poet's cern: I note that war is called peace, ping existing production lines so long benign bodies; the police and the po­ lot to cheer up little girls? If that's poverty called plenty, refined ignorance as they make money) - but whose in­ liticians don't cease being corrupt, and all you want go see a musical, but passes for education, and the whole dustrial processes are killing the none of the terror is mitigated by a please don't bother any more poets for muckheap is called freedom. Well try very ground it lives on, and worse, the 'softer' approach. Cheery poems are silly interviews where you can't even dealing with these maniac· bureaucrats sea. Yes, I do find that bleak and de­ only possible where one is willing to get the lines right. If you became de­ who preside over everything, their pressing, and no I have no 'softer ignore the evidence, and I am against pressed after listening to me that's empire as sure as Rome's was. So works' with which to mitigate that fact silence where everywhere I see the will your tough luck, but for you illumina­ read what Marcuse and Barthes say alone: what price poems about birds and the ability to destroy and the tion and your readers' l offer the fol ­ about the effect of politics on language. when the birds are dying under aerial psyche that ignores the obvious in a lowing comments and suggestions: So look at Montreal and check up crop-sprays and when we too are in language about a thousand miles away 1. So far as I know poets don't write who owns it, and then think through danger? from reality. Would you expect me to anything but what they understand by why there is so much poverty there. 5. Finally, just think what all this come out with soft poems if I'd been what they see and feel : if my picture I'm talking about America, which is was supposed to be originally. The writing in and about Nazi Germany - the of the US

Campus

Senate non-confidence against Malone defe:.tted / On Wednesday December 17, debate was in order. Shortly There were only three 'motions a motion of non-confidence a­ after, Fr. Malone announced that passed during the three hour gainst Fr. Malone as chairman the debate was out of order, meeting. One was to adjourn the of the senate was defeated by and ,that senate should proceed meeting not later than 5.00 p.m., a vote of 14 to 11, with 2 absten­ to other business. and two dealing with amend­ photo by:r.ell tions. The non-confidence mo­ Prof. Waters, in an indignant ments to Fr. Graham's motion tion was brought about when Fr. address to the senate, alleged regarding the make-up of the Marchers rally in cafeteria for mock funeral Malone ruled a debate, that had that the chair was prejudiced in task force. These amendments been going on for forty-five min­ the matter and that it should gave the task force the power utes, out of'order. have stepped down to an im­ to fill its ranks should they be At the start of the meeting, partial party before making any depleted, from the respective English Dep't buried Dr. Savage, one of the newly­ decision. She then asked for a area that the opening was in, elected Arts senators, asked that motion to overthrow the chair. by appointment. The other a~ all business be put aside so that In a secret ballot, the chair mendment passed instructed the Friday at eleven o'clock a dents stood in the cold wind. A the non-renewal of thirty-three was upheld by three votes, with senate to circulate the three wake was held for the "re­ short luncheon was held in· the contracts could be discussed. two senators abstaining. suggestions for the task force's cently deceased English depart­ refectory after the funeral Dr. Savage told senate that the The majority, if not all, of composition among the various ment" in the cafeteria. Students services were finished. criteria used to determine which the elected senators decided to organizations concerned, so that jammed the caf as a soft drum The students' conduct at the contracts would be renewed was filibuster the meeting because a report could be made to the roll continued for close to half vague and misunderstood. He of the refusal to discuss the senate between Jan. 8 and 15. an hour. After a short speech, funeral was lauded by Prof­ essor Russel at the assembly asked for some clarification of contract disputes, and the sen­ _The proposals made as to the the pall-bearers and procession the issue by senate. ate ceased to function properly composition are as follows: Fr. carried the coffin, draped in that followed. He stated that any member of the surrounding A fiery debate raged for three as a governing body. After an Graham - 5 senators, 1 dean, flowered wreaths, past the Jesuit quarters of an jour to determine hour and a half of argument, 4 faculty members, one from residence and finally, to its area could only be impressed by the numbers that attended whether or not the issue was the task force on senate reform each faculty, four day students, burial plot on the Chapel steps. of sufficient urgency to put aside was accepted in principle, and one from each faculty and one Speeches were read on behalf and the seriousness of the whole affair. all other business. A five min­ although three proposals were evening students; Prof. Waters of the English department, by ute recess was called by Fr. made as to what the composition - must include 10 faculty, 7 various members of the Loyola The coffin now rests on the' Malone at 2:45 p.m. so that of the task force should be, none from Arts, 2 from Science and faculty and by representatives of third floor landing of the main the chair could decide if the was accepted. Engineering and 1 from · com- McGill, Sir George and U. de staircase in the administration M. while over two thousand stu- building. STRIKE IMMINENT continued from page 1 the matter is not cleared up to their will discourage all applicants fr~m satisfaction. taking positions at Loyola, unless the The newsletter of the fifteenth stated administration agrees to render the that the twenty-seven contracts were letters of non-renewal null and void; not being renewed in order to " up­ 3. The English faculty voted to throw grade the academic standards and com­ its support behind the recently formed pensate for a decrease in student numb­ Association of Loyola Professors; ers in coming years because of the 4. The English faculty will distribute CEGEPs". However, the speakers a statement to all forms of media stat­ -pointed out, in order to " upgrade the ing their case; academic standing" at Loyola, the ad­ 5., All other universities, especially ministration has fired four professors those in the immediate area, and the with doctorates froqi some of the best CAUT will receive a statement from universities in North America and Eur­ the English department; ope, seven people that are making ex­ 6. All English -classes 'Will be can­ cellent progress on their doctorate celled Friday, January 9, and a day of thesis, and eleven people with only B.A. nourning will be declared for the degrees, most of whom will receive recently deceased English department. .... - ,.,.,,._-".,,,,,. their M.A.'s this year and one who has There will be a solemn funeral pro- just received the Presidents Medal at cession and mock burial; ' the University of Weste~n Ontario for 7. The English department will ask the best short story of the year. the administration to discuss the issues After a brief question and answer with them and the Board of Trustees period, the English faculty made ,at an open meeting on or before Jan­ various proposals as to the courses of uary 13; action they will take in order to rect­ 8. There will be a general assembly ify the situation. All of the following o n Tuesday if there has been no reply proposals had 'been accepted by the by the 13th and an announcement will English faculty earlier in the day: be made stating that the English dep­ Tell-tale signs of a sit-in 1. The English department will turn artment will work to rule. This could de'partment will probably vote to strike; meeting that it is they who will suffer. in no or few results of Christmas possibly mean that although the prof­ Loyola has spent the last five years The professors will have no trouble exams to the registrar's office until essors will be in class, they will not building up one of the finest English finding new jobs, but students will have there is meaningful dis~US!!ion between teach as such; departments in the area. The staff in- a hard time putting an English degree the faculty and the administration. Stu­ 9. If there has been no reply by eludes two of the leading English schol- from Loyola to any good use if the dents will be told their marks by their January 19, there will be only general ars in North America, the Drs. Phil- College is censured and the word gets professors, if they so desire, but no lectures, no individual classes; mus. Loyola now has one hundred and out about the condition of the English official transcript of the marks will be 10. The last day the administration forty-four students taking majors or department here. made; can act is January 26. If the decision honours English, in third or fourth 2. The English department will re­ to recind the letters of non-renewal has year. The cry of "SANTHANM TIMES 27" fuse to start recruiting procedures and not been made by then, the English The students were reminded at the echoed through the auditorium. THE PAPER January 12, 1970 I 15 In Turmoil Dr.Hooper, head of motion• by 2 English Dept., resigns ~t a meetµig ?f students and faculty last Tuesday, Dr. Hooper merce; students - 8 students, 4 resigned as chairman of the English department. The reason from Arts, 1 from Science, 1 behind the resignation is the nonrenewal of seventeen contracts from Commerce, 1 from En­ in the English department. gineering, 1 from the evening Earlier this year, acting on figures ratified by the acting Dean students, 7 faculty, 4 from Arts,- of Arts, the hiring committee decided to recommend the non­ Dr. Hopper: resigned in protest 1 from Science, 1 from Com­ renewal of two contracts, and the re-issuing of contracts to all merce, 1 from Engineering and other personnel. Prof. Blainar, the acting Dean of Arts, when two administrators. p~esented with the recommendations of the department, gave Prof. Waters was willing to his approval and even suggested increasing the departmental Reason for Furore: 33 withdraw her proposal if the strength. students would change theirs to Since that time, however, the Administration has told the com­ read 5 students from Arts, and munity that the figures used by the English deJ?artment were wrong, 5 faculty from Arts. and because of a decline in enrolment over the next three years, Contracts Terminated Prof. Hanrahan, an elected they would have to decrease staff. By Gary Languay Dr. Hooper has found it impossible to continue as chairman senator from the Commerce Thirty-three professors at department, withdrew from the of the department that he has built up so carefully "while it is the academic" performance of destroyed". He has been with the college for over six years, Loyola College will not be back the College and the prospective meeting after the non-confidence next year. The thrity-three careers of junior personel". vote failed. He stated that in and it was his task to build the English department at Loyola into teaching contracts that will be Within the next few years, the an impromptu poll taken by him­ a University structured system. Early in his stay at Loyola, Dr. terminated include twenty-seven College expects enrollment to self among the Commerce fac­ Hooper tried to tender his resignation as a professor because that the college refuses to re­ level off at approximately 3,600. ulty, BOCo demanded a debate on of some difficulties with the Administration. He was then asked new, two resignations, and four The enrollment for 69-70 is the criteria used in the non-re­ ~o stay on and continue the good work he had been doing for the cqntracts that were initiated as 4,200. Because of this, neither newal of contracts and the college. temporary replacements. the finances for as large a fac­ criteria to be used in the search In reply to Dr. Hooper's letter, Fr. Malone stated that he The twenty-seven contracts ulty, nor the need for one will for a new Dean of Arts. Neither found it highly unusual that Dr. Hooper found it impossible to that the college refuses to re­ ~xist within three to four years. of these debates took place and continue as chairman, yet could continue as a professor. The president felt that Dr. Hooper's resignation as a professor new include the contracts of With regards to the instruc­ Prof. Hanrahan felt that until twelve instructors who do not they were placed on the agenda, should have accompanied his resignation as chairman. However, tors, the college has stated that have their Master's degree. E­ he would not be representing the Dr. Hooper was cautioned by the English department not to the concept was originally put leven of the twelve instructors Commerce faculty. resign until the matter is cleared up. into practice with the intention are currently engaged by the . that the junior academics would English department. assist the professors for a per­ The reason stated for the non­ iod of one year. Since that time, renewal of the other fifteen con­ however, the English department Admin Building Occuppied tracts was the educational rev­ has revamped its policy so that olution in Quebec. With the ad­ instructors even choose the At a general assembly attended again, following the recognized Fr. Malone came to Wednes­ vent of the CEGEP courses, the· texts. by close to one thousand stu­ procedures and channels so that day's meeting after over five projected number of Loyola stu­ dents for the years 70-71 and The College feels that is is dents Wednesday, Fr. Malone communication between the two hundred students occupied the complying with C.A.U.T. direct­ was thrashed through a mill of factors could once again be Administration hallway follow­ 71-72 have beep found to be very high. The CEGEP courses ives by not rehiring the instruc­ questions by both students and possible. ing an earlier general assembly. tors. It feels that renewal of a professors. The students seem­ Fr. Malone replied that the Fr. Malone agreed to talk to the have brought about a decrease in the number of required contract would indicate an intent ed dissatisfied with the answers administration has been fair to students in the auditorium if to keep the instructor on as a that Fr. Malone supplied, and the best of their ability in the the hallways were cleared. courses and the disappearance of University 1. full-time member of the Aca­ after half of the question period case and that the only reconci­ Immediately following the demic community. was completed, Fr. Malone liation would be through the The College _will continue to question and answer period, the drop one year University for the The Administration also be: seemed tired and frustrated, and established channels. The pro­ students once again occupied the his answers, m some cases,. fessors do not seem to think next three years and feels that lieves that a return to short­ hallway, and vowed not to leave it would be inconsiderate to en­ term appointments at the junior were vague. that the Committee on Appoint­ "until we get some straight and The English professors plead­ ments, Rank and Tenure would courage personnel to remain in : level would be advantagious to honest answers". They have what are probably temporary the College. It has stated ed with Fr. Malone to try to •give them a fair hearing, as been sleeping and eating in the positions. However, the Admin­ that "If junior people wish to see their point of view. They the committee is chaired - by hallway since and have the ad­ istration stated that the reduc­ choose an academic career, they suggested that neither side give Fr. O'Brien, the· Vice President ministration's perm1ss10n to tion in staff would in no wav must be encouraged, even prod­ in, but rather that both sides and the appointed members out­ stay as long as they like. impede the normal )icadem1c life ded, to attain full academic regress three months, and start number the electe::! nnes. • After the funeral for the Eng­ at Loyola. Tb" shift in staff qualifications and some diversi­ lish department Friday at noon, has been designed ·to "enhance ty of experience". another assembly was held in the F.C. Smith auditorium. A motion was proposed to the one thousand students present that a true "occupation" be put into effect immediately. This would have blocked all passage through the Administration building and all unwanted persons would have been evicted. This motion was defeated by the students, who then voted to continue the " live-in" indefinite­ ly, in larger numbers. Though there is no break in sight, the morale of the students is high. The major problem facing the students is the flu epidemic currently going around. How­ \ ever, the Student Services has set up a room equiped with vi­ Stud.ents encamped in the administration..Jb~{idj~ tamins and cold pills, available are prepared and equipped to stay for some time. at no charge to the students. The burial party on the march 16 I THE PAPER January 12, 1970 I Visions of culture at Loyola It all began with a little art fice, but this was turned down. that there is the distinct need hang material representative of people'? Catastrophe unmitigat­ gallery, in Old Montreal, whic h The theatrical centre over the in Canada for an interest in certain areas of the country of ed. Social Revolution". was closed in '68 due to lack cafeteria was also negated be­ photography. certain generations. What is David Evans can never be born of funds and, according to the cause of the fire hazards. The gl:!llery in the Vanier Li­ strongly needed is a diverse enough as evidently conveyed in Cultural Affairs Committee and The choice of the Vanier Li~ brary is not solely the , work representation of Canadian cul­ his photographs. The faces of Father Malone, the purpose in brary pleased everyone and part of Loyola students; but if a ture, the social classes it con­ the elderly people throughout the exposing Loyola students to art of the budget was used to erect student's work is equivalent to tains and the problems to which province reflect the loneliness was not being served. the partitions. This past sum­ that of the rest of the country's it gives rise. and deprivation suffered through mer a proposed program was then it will certainly be dis- Therefore it was up to Char­ Mr. Gagnon mentioned that if many many years of emptiness presented to Mr. Duder and Fr. and hardship. The adject ex­ les Gagnon, Associate profes­ there should be sufficient funds Malone. sor and Artist-in-Residence to sometime in t he future, perhaps pressions of t he children reveal - Though this is to be used 1- by D. Lieberman solve the problem of bringing books containing photographic how aware they are of the gray mainly as a photographic gal­ a bit of culture to the Loyola essays reflecting t he world we future which is really their pre­ played. In place of renting ex­ Campus. This past year with lery, it will also include dis­ live in (community to country) sent. As they are now living, hibitions, as do most universi­ some money left there was also plays of graphics. The reason could be published. Most photo­ that is how they will always ties and museums, Professor the decision of where the most given by Professor Gagnon, as graphic books are American and live. In poverty they languish Gagnon and those concerned will space was available. It had· to why there will not be an tend to present splices of Ame­ without the will to become the do the assembling of various been suggested that the lobby exposition of paintings, was that rican life. Professor Gagnon, fu lfilled human beings they can works into complete showings. .. of the Bryan Building or a room there exist a sufficient amount within the future, will select be. They seem to see the no­ He feels that it is wrong to in the Bryan Building would suf- . of art galleries in the city and and display Canadian individual thingness as it looms ahead of works. He can project to the them. David Evans captures time we might have a printing these emotions in his photo­ graphs. The assemblage, though press at Loyola for the above PROCREATION in black and white and consis­ purpose. But first he has begun The dictionary definition tently on the ame ubject, de­ with individuals who reflect the says to procreate is to create HEE-HAW pict a different sensitivity in more of; to produce by gene­ realism of our country such as "In a crowded · F.C. Smith au­ ne, put his hand on Malone's DAVID EVANS.· eacli one. His choice of subject ration; to beget. is excellent, the symmetry in In Creative Arts, you con­ ditorium, Father Malone spelled shoulder, remove this weeks ta­ out the truth concerning t he re­ pe and replace it with a new one David Evans is a third year each photograph well thought out ceive an idea. You put it to Communication Arts' Student.. and the photos enable us to 'see; work. You nurture it and cent cancelling of 27 teaching for next week. And so, the Trus­ contracts. Sufficient time was tees wind up another successful The most he will say about him­ David Evans as well. I was develop it and never let it self is that: "I was born". As quite stirred by the display and die. This is, in essence, the allotted and the clouded issues meeting. are now clear to all. The Trus­ Let us look carefully at Fa­ E.E. Cummings says, "What feel that as many students as Creative Arts programme does being born mean to 'most possible hould get to see it. sponsored by the Loyola tees are proud of their mouth­ ther Malone. Here is a man Evening Students' Associa­ piece, who took the bull by the who heads a small but succes­ tion. horns and eased the minds of sful college. He finds it diffi­ * Film Making: Gerard many troubled students." cult to operate in such a re­ Ieraci 279-1363 The above statement is pro­ laxed atmosphere. Confession is * Pottery: Monica Roma­ bably what will be published in a thing of the past, there is no Professors 111ail nowski 658-1547. the information sheets which are one to console him for his mis- * Painting: Sylvia Green 488-9026 EXPRESSION BY J. ZELL * Drama: Jocelyne Ber­ being opened nard 277-0586 handed out at all Trustee meet­ takes. His peers control him * Poetry Reading: Della ings,informing the members of the like a puppet. He is confused. Two Loyola professors have the two professors that an in­ Marinucci 933-4824 goings on of the College. Father What to do? Take a stand and complained to the senate that vestigation would take place. * Sculpture: Claude Gold­ MacGuigan will congratulate Ma­ be excommunicated or remain their mail has been opened be­ berger 688-7352 lone and bestow upon him the status quo and lose respect as fore being delivered to them. * Music: Sylvia Green Silver Muzzle, which, in the well as public opinion? Father Prof. Adams and Dr. Savage CAFt ANDR£ 488-9026 future, will be handed out more Malone thus leads a very diffi­ both have alledged that their * Your Creative Arts freely to any administration cult life. He plays two rolls - mail is being tampered with. member who feels that he or he is schizoid. chairman is Sylvia Green. NOW APPEARING Why not invest your talents, she is qualified enough to speak Father Malone has no mind At the senate meeting on latent or otherwise, in one on behalf of the administration. of his own. He lost it in a ga­ December 17, Prof. Adams of the above activities. After a short round of applau­ me of Jesuit roulette. Instead rose on a point of priviledge Maybe we should call it se Father MacGuigan will quiet­ of giving his soµ! away, he blew to complain that a telegram se nt MAIN FLOOR the Procreative Arts Com­ ly w_alk ovez: to Father Malo- his mind. to him by the C.A.U.T. was mittee. opened and held up for four days KEN TOBIAS before being delivered to his office in plain Loyola sta­ UNIQUE COMRINEO FITTING ANO LABORATORY ESIABLISHMENT tionary. Dr. Savage, illustrat­ MEDICALLY SUPERVISED ing that this was not an isolated TV STAR ··':WE -CAN~ incident, told the senate of a SELL ~OR LESS similar case in which a tele­ o\\\1~CT LENS CEIIJr, gram to him from C.A.U.T. was FOLK SINGING opened and delivered in a t . 1610 11~ 7 DAYS A WEEK SHERBROOKE WEST 935 5291 ~ Loyola envelope four days late. Nationally AJvertiseJ lranJs SPECIAL CONSIDERATION TO STUDENTS Fr. Malone denied any know­ 2077 VKTORIA STRm ledge of the cases and assured 149-5031 (NEAR UTON'f, • Hi-Fi Stereo Components • Tape Recorders • Record Changers SIB GEOBGE INTBAMIJBALS • Home-& Car Stereo Tapes • Speaker Systems • Radio & TV Sets • Electronic Equipment Ne~ Schedule

BRAND NEW AND FULLY GUAR~NTEED CoDIDleneing January 5,1970 WE.. . CAN .. SAVE Activity Site Day Time Fencing Birks Hall Tuesday 8:30-10:30 p.m. ·vou MONEY Thursday 4:30-6:30 p.m. Folk Dancing Birks Hall Thursday 8:30-10:30 p.m. lo, FREE U11;ng Karate SEND : of 1000', of item~ . .• Birks Hall Tuesday & Thursday 6:30-8:30 p.m. Modern Dancing Birks Hall Tuesday 4:30-6:30 p.m. Basketball HMCS Donnoccona Wednesday & Friday 4:00-5:30 p.m. LOWEST PRICES ANYWHERE! Badminton High School of Monday , 6:00-9:00 p.m. Montreal Thursday 8:15-10:15 p.m. Riflery Hmcs Donnoccona Wednesday & Friday 4:00-5:30 p.m. Hockey McGill U ,Saturday 4:30-8:30 p.m. St. George's Friday 2:00-5:00 p.m. Floor Hockey Birks Hall Monday & Wednesda) 2:00-4:00 p.m. Co-ed Recreation Y.M.C.A. Friday 7:30-10:30 p.m. THE PAPER January 12 .... 1970 I 17

THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT RESPONDS

In an official news release dated 15 ford, Michigan, Minnesota. Yet we are structors in English "who hold only a to reshape the policy, and though a December 1969, the administration of told that in order to "upgrade academic B.A. degree. Loyola has reaffirmed its completely new program cannot perhaps Loyola College announced the non­ standards" two of those with doctorates, view that an M.A. is a basic pre­ be expected to please everyone, what renewal of 27 teaching contracts for publishing scholars and recognized as requisite." For what? and when and cannot be denied is enthusiasm of 1970-71, g.iving as its reasons " an outstanding teachers, are not being where was it previously affirmed? instructors and students for the pro­ upgrading of academic standards, co~pl­ rehired. Of the other three not being gram, and the notable increase in the _ ed with an expected reduction in the rehired, two are near to finishing their The English department's Joint Com­ numbers of honours and majors in En- · student population over the next few dissertations. The third has just sub­ mittee (made up of members teaching glish. The statement that in reshap­ years." Seventeen of the twenty­ mitted a statement fronl her thesis at the university and the college levels) ing its policy "the department . . . seven faculty members affected are in adviser expressing satisfaction with the drew up the following criteria for hir­ has left itself open to charges of the English department. We are asked prog.ress and promise of her work. -Yet ing of new personnel at the collegial poor standards" is an assertion made to believe that it is no more than the reason given to the chairman dur­ level: in direct contradiction of the evid.ent coincidence that most of those not ing "consultation" was that two of them success of the program as affirmed to be rehired openly opposed ad­ should not be rehired because they A. An M.A. degree or an equivalent by the senior members of the depart­ ministration policies during the past were making no progress toward their degree (M. Ed., M.F.A., etc.) , ment, those who obviously have the few months, policies which are now doctorates. We may therefore conclude B. .And/or teaching experience and most expertise in such matters. under review by the Canadian As­ that, if "an upgrading of standards" professional expertise. sociation of University Teachers. An is to be taken seriously, the action of It is also alleged that the depart- - examination of the facts suggests that, the administration in not rehiring these C. And/or an outstanding under­ ment laid itself open to charges of contrary to the reasons given by the people will in fact accomplish the re­ graduate record at Loyola and the re­ "inbreeding." Out of 20 Instructors administration, this unprecedented mass verse: viz., the downgrading of the commendation of t he English depart­ this year, ix are Loyola graduates. "non-renewal" is a political purge. manifestly high standards of the depart­ ment; and the following (or the renewal Of the six, one has an M.A., two are ment. The news release reported that Pre­ of contracts: near to an M.A., and another has begun sident Malone "said the great majority M.A. studies. Only two, therefore, have As for the "expected reduction in the of the recommendation 'of the English A. Teaching effectiveness no academic experience outside Loyola, student population," it should be made department, had fo~nd itself unable, in B. Participation in the life of the and those two were at the top of their clear that student enrollment in En­ some cases (emphasis added), to fol­ department and C-ollege. class in English in their respective glish courses will continue to increase low the proferred (sic) advice." The C. Professional development years. In the nature of their job all at least until 1972. The news release, facts reveal that only one of the seven D. Scholarly or creative achievement six work· closely all the time with the however, states that "the statistical recommendations forwarded by the E. Recognition _ by professional so­ remaining fourteen. This hardly seems ~ata on which the English depart­ English department has apparently been cieties. an unhealthy situation, especially when ment's projections are based differ accepted; the other six were either F. Further, the committee will re­ one recollects that only a few years substantially from those 'which the ignored or arbitrarily rejected without cognize that experience within the Loyo­ ago, when there were but teachers in College can at present accept." It adds due consultation apd with no explana­ la situation is an important criterion, the Loyola English department, ,were tion offered. "inbred" Loyola graduates.

Thus, in the first place, it should be The news release claims that "Lt>yo­ made clear that the non-renewal of Printed here is the full text of the la's policy in regard to renewal of contracts for the seventeen members contracts is in keeping with the guide­ of the English department is directly Loyola English department's refuta­ lines of .the. Canadian Association of contrary to the department's recom­ University Teachers." The guidelines, mendations. Furthermore, it should tion of the news release issued by however, also stress the importance of be made clear that there was no academic freedom, which includes ~he proper consultation concerning the Loyola College on December 15, 1969. right of the professor to criticize the decision not to rehire three assistant administration. The political fact is that professors, no consultation at all con­ most of those not rehired (as well cerning the decision not to rehire that a professional consultant "had especially given the nature of the ex­ as the English department as a whole) two assistant professors with doctoral set more realistic figures last October perimental programs in progress and have been known to oppose administra­ degrees, and only minimal consultation (emphasis added)." These more rea­ the team-teaching that these programs tion policies which deny basic acade­ concerning the cases of one lecturer listic figures have never been com­ .require. mic rights: e.g., non-consultation in and eleven instructors, five to seven municated to the chairman of the English matters of contract renewal, the over­ of whom are just months away from department. Furthermore, in November ruling of departmental recommenda­ earning the M.A., and one of whom tions, the arbitrary handling of the the Acting Dean of Arts reviewed the These criteria were approved by the was just awarded the President's Medal Santhanam case. Even more significant figures carefully with the official re­ department ·unanimously, but were ·re­ at the University of Western Ontario is the fact that those not rehired re­ presentatives of the department and jected summarily by· the administra­ for the best short story of the year. present' collectively the margin by which approved them - and even suggested tion. On the basis of the above criteria, the Arts Faculty Council, the body an increase in faculty to accommodate each of the present Instructors having which constitutes over two-thirds of fa­ Of the reasons given for not rehir­ the increased enrollment. The insinua­ only a B.A. was considered, and the culty, has been able to oppose con­ ing the seventeen ("An upgrading of tion, made more than once by the ad­ department's recommendation was that sistently the repressive actions of the academic standards, coupled with an ministration, while the Acting Dean was all should be rehired. expected reduction in the student po­ away recently on sick leave, that he was administration. pulation over the next few years''), the a sick man when he reviewed the first is a very serious relfection upon figures and therefore not entirely res­ The news release also reported er­ The administration has said from the professional competence not only ponsible, is particularly despicable. roneously that "graduate assistants ori­ time to time it wants· quality faculty. of all those not rehired but also of the ginally were hired by the English But it has learned that first-rate fa­ English department's Executive Com­ The administration has attempted to .department with the rank of Instructor culty are quick to challenge any en­ mittee (made up of four members with convey the impression that it does not to help professors but not to givf. croachment upon academic freedom. doctorates from Harvard, Yale, Cor­ know how many students the English courses.'-' Since there has never been a nell, and Leeds), which recommended department can expect next year. It graduate program-in English at Loyola, that new contracts be given to all of has also created the unfortunate im­ instructors have never been considered The Jesuit administration acts as though those in the English department who pression that it really does not know .graduate assistants by the department; it wants to have it both ways: it wants have.indeed been denied contracts. how many courses students take in nor were they h1red to help profes­ to run Loyola like a high school and English, or even which course&_. If ~t sors, but only to help the professor in still have first-l'ate faculty. It will have The first reason given is moreover does not know, how can it decide charge of the freshman program. "How­ to choose, however, between quality and manifestly untrue. Of twenty professors how many faculty the department needs, ever," the news release conti'nues, "the docility. Its recent actions make clear · in the English department teaching sec­ whether it is necessary to get rid of English department itself had reshaped the choice it has made to date. But if ond, third, and fourth year students, any, and, if so, which ones and how this policy so that instructors not only students and parents, alumni and ten have doctorates. The universities many? As it is, four of the five not were g1vmg courses but (ultimate donors expect Loyola to be something which awarded these doctorates in­ rehired are specialists in the same wickedness!) were even choosing texts ." more than a small Catholic college, and clude Oxford, Yale, Harvard, Cornell, area, and the department will be left A year ago we appointed a new director expect it to offer a first-rate educa­ Toronto, Leeds, University of California with only two men (if indeed they do not of the freshman program and were tion, they should insist upon quality at San Diego, Pittsburgh. The remaining resign .in protest) to cope with some 200 fortunate to get a man who is unusual­ and not allow the administration to get ten are almost all in the position of hav­ honours and majors students who have ly well qualified for such a post. Where­ rid of first-rate faculty for reasons ing completed all doctoral requirements to take courses in that 1·area. This hard­ as in the two preceding years we re­ that have been shown to be less than except the dissertation; these ten (in­ ly looks like careful planning-unless gistered some 80 honours and major satisfactory. cluding one Woodrow Wilson Fellow) ,the planning is based on other than students in the second year English are candidates for doctorates at uni­ academic grounds. program, this year we have 200. The vers1t1es such as Toronto, Cornell, The news release also records that introduction this year at freshman level A.G. Hooper, Chairman Brown, New York, Pittsburgh, Stan- of those not rehired eleven were In- of a CEGEP program made it essential S.C. Russell, Vice-Chairman 18 I THE PAPER January 12. 1970 HOCKEYVVARRIORSDOVVN R.M.C by Howard Galganov

Saturday's game at Loyola, to check and skate hard, but out. Inadvertently, John sent the every on<;e in a while." The on­ where R.M.C. met the Warriors tough luck. The Warriors ca·me puck behind Rocky for R.M.C. 's ly man for R.M.C. that skated could be said to have been an up with two more, by Larry first goal. Chris Hayes got the and hit was Pierre Michaud. extra hard practice for the po­ Carriere and Jack Surbey. Ano­ last goal for Loyola on a break­ BITS AND P IECES werful Loyola team. The War­ ther goal was disallowed becau­ away. Pierre Michaud came back Two standouts on the Loyola riors rallied to a fine start se of a Warrior being in the with a pass from his brother te.am were John Hutton, who play­ with two good goals in the first crease, although the R.M.C. goa­ Andre to connect on a beauti­ ed a hard-hitting and fast-ska- • period; goals coming from -Jim lie was fifteen feet from the net. ful goal which ended the scoring. ting game along with Jack Sur­ Sunstrum and Jack Surbey. R.M. In the early minutes of the third, The game was marred with bey who netted two goals. C. played the fir t period without R.M.C. got lucky, but really penalties, scuffles, and one fight Perhaps R.M.C. went into Sa- ' any apparent ambition to win. lucky. Rocky Martin stopped a which e;pelled Loyola's Danny tuday's game too confident after R.M.C. came back to play hockey shot and left the puck in the McCann from this game and sus­ defeating C.M.R. 15-0 the night ...:1 .. in the second period, they began crea e for Jolin Donnely to clear pended him from the next. It all before. Dave Draper said his Hutton - Star Performer happened when he went in on the Warriors stopped skating after Pat McCool was out of this ga­ boards with Andre Michaud. the first period . me, because he was suspended There was a little shoving and Loyola playing personnel is a' from the last game against C.M. then the roof fell in on M icliaud so hurting. Mike Lowe is ou, R. for spearing. Incidentally, he as he was pounded to the ice. with a mouth infection from stit­ scored four goals in the same Paul Richard, goalie for ches he received in Charlotte­ game. Ron Reilly is out inde­ R.M.C. played a good game with­ town. He won't be available for finitely and most probably won't out d~fence. He said "the War­ the McGill game. Ron Clarke is finish the season due to a res­ riors are bigger than us and out for ten days or more, and piration disorder, which he re­ are playing a dirty game. I could might be back for Waterloo: he's ceived from breathing metall ic count on a stick across the ears suffering from water on the knee. dust while sharpening skates.

SCOREBOARD LOYOLA 5, R.M.C. 2 1st Period L LOYOLA: Sunstrum (McCann, Carriere) 2. LOYOLA: Surbey (McDonough, Doyle) 2nd Period 3. LOYOLA: Carriere (Hutton) 4. LOYOLA: Surbey (Tremblay, O'Connor) 3rd Period 5. R.M.C.: Langstaff (Unassisted) 6. LOYOLA: Hayes (Carrier) 7. R.M.C.: A. Michaud (P. Michaud) Shots on Goal: Danny McCa11n drags Andre Michaud tu the ice after LOYOLA 38, R.M.C. 20. an incident along the boards. Officials waltz in. HANGAR FLYING by Herb Bernstein R.M. C. net minder Richard stymies attackers on this play as the Warriors streak in behind the porous defense. CHIEF R YING INSTRUCTOR GEORGIAN SNOOPIES

NEW ACTIVITIES I have always felt that a his teaching techniques ac­ the course of the student's pilot never stops learning, , cordingly. People learn m flight training and new meth- Monday & Wednesda y and each flight involves ei­ different ways and have dif­ ods that work with one Floor Hockey at Birks Holl ther a new experience or a student will likely help 2:00 · 4 :00 P.M. ferent reactions to the same sudden reminder of some long methods. For example, a others. · sticks & pucks provided forgotten fact. ' · join the league, form your own very tense person who is For example, a certain Following through with this team overly concerned about his student recently has had dif­ idea, I also feel that my own · use Y.M.C.A. locker room to performance may freeze up ficulty in learning to use the experiences are enriched by change & shower. and be unable to respond if rudder pedals. Somehow, he my students, such that I find goad·ed by a demanding in­ couldn't co-ordinate his feet and Thursdays 8 :30 · 10:30 in many cases that I have structor whom he feels is ha­ either used too much pressure co-ed learned as much from some Folk Dancing rassing him. or too little; sometimes he · bring your do ry cing shoes of them as they have learned · Israeli, Greek, Ru ss ian & Slow Another student with more even press.ed the wrong ped­ from me. Dances. self confidence may accept al, thus causing the aircraft One of the most outstand­ the ame demand for perfec­ to slip to one side. In try­ Fridays 7 :30 · 10:30 Y.M .'C. A. ing lessons that I have tion a a challenge and will ing out different methods of Coed · swinnings, Volleyball, Bodmin· learned involves the handling produce more. The instruc- demonstrating the proper way ton, Ba sketball, conditioning of people. An instructor mu t tor also ha to en e the to apply rudder, I came up Recreation · designed for the working Stu· understand what makes a dent. variations in the mood of with an exercise that clearly person tick and must vary the individual student . .. who indicate the yaw and at the may at time react com­ same time develops the co­ pletely contrary to hi pat- ordination of the student. I .tern. don 't think that I discovered A kind word at the right anything earthshattering be­ with Langc-flo moment may mean the dif­ cause I'm ure that other Makes The Most Comfortable Boot ference between a good or flight instructors must have The members of 16 National a bad lesson or ometimes a done the same thing before; ski teams use La nge boots. You should use them t oo! student may need a good however, it's new to me and "kick in the pants" for the WE SELL ' EM!!! I ubsequently used this tech­ same effect. In other words, nique to help other students. I have learned from my So if you happen ,to look up ARliNGTGN students that being a good at an airplane that's rocking 1235 St. Catherine W. 842-1115 pilot is not enough measure from side to side, it's not of a competent instructor. severe turbulence, it' the

15 daya of fun, 1u11 ~ aki in the Italian Alp•. Win a trip via Alitalia. Inquire a t Arlington. That extra personal touch can Snoopies' own version of have a significant effect upon "rock and roll" . THE PAPER J1nuary 12, 1970 I 19 ******************* !SHOOT... . 1 THE WAY Brian Hayes Is New 1 . TO SCORE;.: Georgian Grid Coach · with Robin Palin I SEE IT by King Doug lnsleay, Director of Athletics at Sir George Williams University, has announced the appointment of Mr. Brian Hayes Number·One Too Long? Dick Irvin, sports director of as head football coach. CFCF Radio and TV appeared Hayes, 30, a native of Montreal, replaces Phil Chiarella at From the beginning of the Ottawa - St. Lawrence Athletic As­ on channelr 12 the other night the helm of the squad. sociation, back when some of you didn't know what skates were and flatly stated that college "The biggest problem in having an outside football coach is for, it was very obvious that there was going to be a fierce rivalry sports promoters in the Mont­ the lack of time they have to devote to the program", said Ins­ between two great hockey schools, -and that the league would be real area seem to be havlng leay. dominated almost entirely by Loyola and Sir George. trouble selling their sports pro­ " We were satisfied with job Chiarella did but we agreed that Statistically, in the past decade the Georgians have won the duct: he didn't really have the time available to devote to football". title six times, and Loyola twice, with Ottawa U and Sherbrooke Chiarella is involved with a Montreal west-end sporting goods stealing it once each in the early sixties. Browsing through the What Irvin says is true but firm. record book, the ice Georgians share 3 records,' two with Loyola it is people like him who are "Hayes will be able to come in at least two afternoons a week and one with Bishop's, while claiming six of the remaining ten mainly responsible for the lack to see his players and we feel that this important," added lnsleay. outright, including the longest winning streak (20 games bet­ of promotion of collegiate act­ Hayes played for NDG Maple Leafs in the junior section of the ween Jan. 28, 1966 and Feb. 8, 1967) and the most goals scored ivities. Quebec Rugby Football Union from 1959-61 and was the winner in one season ( 141 - 1955-56). of the Joe Di Censo-Red Russell Memorial Trophy as the most How often have you heard col­ valuable player in the junior QRFU. This is a pretty tall record for one team in so short a time lege sports scores mentioned but unfortunately when you happen to be number 1 there is no wher; Hayes w.as a playing coach for Chomedey Vikings in the now­ on CFCF? If they have nothing defunct QRFU senior league. While with Chomedey, he won the to got but down. The Warriors have had their turn at being number else to mention the scores will two, but to use an old expression, they tried harder and now Jim Ambrose Memorial Trophy emblematic of combined sports­ get on the air, otherwise forget manship and ability in the senior QRFU. they are on top. it. And so it seems, the roles are reversed, but is that really He was line coach with Loyola High School Senior team for six so? Are the Georgians number two or nutnber four, or maybe Of our many Montreal radio seasons and during that time Loyola won one Greater Montreal five? Are they trying harder or are they in the last throws of stations the only one which gives Interscholastic Athletic Association senior fqotball title. inevitable death of all champions? any kind of promotion t9 college It takes two to tango fellas and the rivalry, which is probably . sports regularly is CJAD. Hayes was head coach with NDG in 1968 and his club won the the greatest in coll~ge hockey in this country, 'will not last long pro.vincial junior title. Last season he served as a line coach under without a rival who tries harder. Terry Pye at Loyola told me Chiarella. last week that one local station How do you try harder? - go out and look for players, talk to Hayes is rated as a task-master as well as a top recruiter. He them and expound on the educational benefits that you have to refused to carry the scores of the Loyola hockey tournament. demands and usually gets the most out of his associates as well offer on the concrete campus. Who needs a campus, a football as his players and for this reason lnsleay has decided to let him stadium and a hockey arena, to be number one? "We're not interested," Pye was 'hand pick his own assistants for the upcoming season. Bob Pugh, Director of Athletics, at Macdonald College, who told. struggles along on his recruitment program, explained that most Hayes is married with two children and lives in suburban kids today don't know what they want to do when they enter college The local newspaper coverage Pierrefonds. He is active in social work and for the past nine and so the best benefit that any school can offer these people is isn't very impressive either but years he has been director of St. Thomas Aquinas Boys club in a large, diversified Arts program, or a good commerce program, in this town professional sports the St. Henri district of Montreal. 01 maybe an engineering course or a bachelor of science program. come first and everything else Well, its all here on the concrete campus. Look around, with a moves to the rear. bit of effort the Georgians might even become number two again. CFOX, supposedly the station for young people, feel that col­ lege sports have no place on their sportscasts this year. Last SNOOPY season they carried a regular show on college and high school sports, this year it was dropped. League publicity directors can NEWS feed these people all the ma­ terial they want but the chances A belated Happy New Year service will be provided for li­ of getting it used are slim. censed pilots in the form of from Sir George's dauntless So Dick, help us if you really an advanced ground school to doggies! want to help ctfllege sports. Don't be given by Chief Flying Ins­ just talk about how much trouble Despite snowstorms and ho­ tructor Herb Bernstein. Further there is in promoting it. lidays, the club carried on as details will be provided in the usual. New first solos during next issue of The Paper. ~~ this period were: Beverly Saun­ ders, John Mahoney, Bob Bam­ Canada's withdraw! from the Regular Ground School will international hockey scene may ford, Robert Issenman. New pi­ resume on Friday, January 23 seem stupid to some people, lots: Danny Hevyitt. at 8:15 in H-435. It is stressed especially when one considers The year will open with a that having completed one series the amount of money that will special evening of guest speak­ of lectures doe.s not rule out be lost from the removal of e.rs and films on Friday, Ja­ continued attendance. On the the championships from Mont­ nuary 16 at 8: 15 in H-435. Speak­ contrary, those who have repeat­ real and to Sweden. Michel Cyrenne, 15, was presented with a battery-operated ers will include Keith Randall ed the course suggest they- have For too long now Canada has whellchair this week by the Athletics department at Sir George. and Darrel Janz of CFCF and been able to glean more from been bowing to the wishes of A student at the McKay Center for Deaf and Crippled Children, he Captain Robert Dick of Air Ca­ Frank Hofmann's vast fund . of the International suffers from rheumatoid arthritis, amenia, and is unable to walk. nada. The program will highlight knowledge after having mastered Federation and its president J. The wheelchair will enable him to get about on his own without the theme: "Ground School - the fundamentals. The "proof F. (Bunny) Ahearne. Maybe having to rely on somebody to push him. Your Introduction to Careers In of the pudding" is the club's they call Ahearne "Bunny" be­ Aviation". Admission is free but 93 average on the D.O.T. written cause of the way his jumps at due to limitations of space, tick­ examination, still far above the Russian commands. ets will be required. They may national average. Therefore, all UNIVERSAL PEACE be obtained at the information are encouraged to take advan­ The financial losses are un­ begins with desk, Hall building from January tage of the fact tl:iat there is fortunate but the prestige we Peace in the heart of each individual. The 12on. no charge for the course, thus would have lost by accepting the transcendental meditation of Maharishi providing the opportunity for re­ IIHF decision and by staying Mahesh Yogi will help you leani to utilize President Harold Fues· has· petition. Needless to say new in the tournament without the inner peace, harmony and energy. announced that an additional students are welcome as always. chance of playing with our nine Teachers trained by the Maharishi at Rishi Kesh, India will give a professionals would have been .- Public Introductory Le~ ure at: greater. ~llhh.­ .. iahl Maheih Yell AVANT-GARDE CENTER LTD. PLACE: Sir George Williams University Hall Building Earl Dawson, president of the (comer Bishop and Maisonneuve) ,,_/ties, posters, gihs, school S!'pplies, film, s,reeti_ng card,, records, Canadian Amateur Hockey As­ Room B635 . pod

F-Ball win: Hayes-stack? A needle in a PAPER Spo~ts : I Firewagon hockey revived Hwding Georgians DO'Wn Carahins

by Chrys Goyens of the first period the Georg­ With some of the more ians led 1-0 with Don Pearce recognizable names on the slamming the puck home be­ Georgian puck squad ailing hind an unprotected Michel Wednesday, three of the Trudel. Six minutes later Bill "rookies" came through, Ellyett's forechecking was leading Sir George to a 5-2 rewarded as he picked up a win over the University of loa;e puck and sent Phil Montreal Carabins in a Cou­ Scheuer into the clear. After pe de Quebec encounter. twenty minutes of play · Sir Jim Webster paced the George led 2-0. Gamet and Gold with a pair of goals while singles by John John Murray scored what Murray, Phil Scheuer, and eventually turned out to be Don Pearce rounded out the the winning goal at the 6:53 scoring. Jacques Dube and mark of the middle frame, Carol Bellemarre replied for out muscling several defend­ the Carabins. ers to the puck in a goal­ The bright lights for Sir mouth scramble and firing it George were winger Don into the corner of the net. Pearce, goalie Graham I.edg­ (Murray has held a hot hand er, and defenceman Brian Be­ lately scoring goals in four dard. Pearce kept his line­ of the last five games. This mates Webster and Barry includes a h~t trick against the McGill Redmen in the Cullen flying with his hustle Barry Cullen enjoys ring-side seat on Don Pearce's opening sco~e. and heads up play. He out­ Centennial Tourn!llllen t). skated every opponent in Two goals by the "Silver sight, infecting his team, wards were sent away mut­ Carabins in their own end. lines continued to pour on the ·Fox", Jim Webster at 5:16 which has bee.n lackadaisical tering as he committed Grand The Murray-Ellyett-Scheuer pressure and just a few sec­ and 13:24 of the engagement of late, with his inspiration­ Larceny between the pipes. and the Gill-Philip-Bonkoff onds after the halfway mark followed by the two Cara­ al performance. He ended the He made some exceptional bins' markers closed out the evening with a goal and an saves in the first two per­ game. assist, · giving the Carabins iods giving the Georgians a: fits every time he was on the chance to pile up a 5-0 lead Ejaculations - (Printed with ice. Scoreboard before being beaten twice late the sole permission of• the in the third period. One thing Sir George 5 at U of M 2 Third Period one and only "Beach Boy" Bedard did an excellent job that this reporter has noticed 4) SGWU Webster (LeCouffe) 5:16 Bindon) Referee Marc For­ at the Georgian blue-line, in recent games is that I.edg­ First Period 5) SGWU Webster (Pearce, Cullen) tier called thirteen penalties, keeping everyone"'s heads up er is alway15 there to make 1) SGWU Pearce (LeCouffe, 13:24 seven to Sir George. The Philip) 10:06 6) UM Dube (Fortier) 14:28 game threatened to erupt into with his stiff body-checking. the big stops early in the 2) SGWU Scheuer (ELLYETI) _ 7) UM Bellemare (Quane, Dube) On a night where the defence game, thus allowing his team ~~ - ~~ a brawl on two different oc­ was ailing (Harmon and Mc­ a chance to pile up a score. Pen. Trudel 1:31, Pearce, La- Pen. Murray 3:09, Guay 9:01, casions but cooler heads pre­ Namera were suffering from At the opening face-off, Sir rouche 4:36, Cullen, Paiement 16:45 Larouche 13:03, LeCouffe 14:44, Be­ vailed and the belligerents injuries and the flu' bug and George carried the play to dard 15:39. settled down to play an enter­ shouldn't have been playing) the U. of M. zone as Pearce Second Period Shots taining brand of hockey. It he filled the gap admirably. and Co. demonstrated some 3) SGWU Murray (Scheuer) 6:53 SGWU 13 11 12 36 was disappointing to see the With the aforementioned offensive punch, hemJ!ling tbe Pen. Murray, Paiement 19:45 UM 12 14 11 37 great gaps of empty seats at duo sparkling on offense and the U. of M . .arena as many defense the third member of people missed an excellent the r~kie trio to catch the hockey game. I doubt that• eye of the spectators was this will be the case this goal-tender Graham Ledger. coming week~end as the Time and time again the U­ Georgians play host to Bish­ niyeristv Of Montreal for- op's and the University of Sherbrooke on Friday and Saturday. The games will be Buy your -tick­ held at Loyola and the U. of M. rinks respectively. Good ets early and attendances are expected as one of these two t.eams will save. Next be the squd to beat out for a play-off berth. Di.n't forget Georgian home to buy your tickets \ arly and games Fri. save. Jan. 16 VS Bishop's (at Three Stars Loyola) Sat. Jan. 17 vs. Graham*** Ledger Sherbrooke (at Don Pearce UofM) Game "wcky" thirteen, Graham Ledger, stops the Carabins cold as Referee Marc Brian Bedard Time 8:00 p.m. Fortier, looks on.