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SHOWROOM FOR Q UO TATIO N S LOWEST PRICES ANYWHEREI FREEPORT CAMERAS - RADIOS TV- MEZZANINE FLOOR Sheraton Mt. Royal.He 288-1922 play by Djugashuili, directed commie was Leon Jacobs. He I know it, the W.S.A. knows by Tim Buck. A representative represented theblack students it and so do the other 6000 from each of the unlimitedly arrested on Feb. 11. He spoke students in this university. large number of front groups of the discrimination against Not that I would disagree Phony radicals blow it of the Sir George Student the black students, the vicious that these sects act as though Movement and its compatriot attacks in the liberal press their major function was to If your classes last Thursday of a third faction (Trotskyite, organizations made a short which found the students destroy the left (that includes were on the higher floors of 7 members) to speak. speech condemning some guilty before they went to trial the W.S.A.) I doubt that Mag the Hall building, you may minor aspect of reality, exor­ and the subtle racism still at Flynn has sufficient creative have had time to read a leaf­ What happened was that a cising some local witch in the work in Sir George. intelligence to think up so let printed by something call- meeting to pledge support for hierachy of demons and ex­ This was followed by various dramatic an idea. His acting d the Worker-Student Al­ the 97 students arrested last pressing support for Albania. “progressive” speakers, in­ talents lie elsewhere. All that liance (W.S.A.) If you are a Feb. 11 was called by the Sir The fact that the 19 front cluding the marching band of you can say about the Sir psychology student you would George Student Movement froups represented have col­ the third Beylorussian army. George Student Movement is . have immediately recognized (or whatever its name was lectively only 14 members is At this point one of the Trot- that they are dumb and seem ;the contents of the leaflet as that week). Maoist factions of beside the point. After all, shyites asked the chairman to have a fantastic amount of : an interesting example of re- differing views generally react showmanship is the art of the why he was not allowed to money, source unknown. - gressive infantilism. The to each other like Eaton’s and impossible. speak, to which the reply was Finally, some notes about leaflet told the rather unin­ Simpson’s in a very closed Naturally this left the that police agents would not be the problem of factionalism. teresting story of some minor consumer market. Everyone W.S.A. slightly in the lurch; allowed to speak and misguide It is perfectly valid for Leftists ? fisticuffs between members is at each other’s throats; this they had been undersold by students. Pandemoniumbroke to engage in political debate of two rival Maoist groups. time quite literally. It is in the grocery store across the loose; Macy’s saw an opening amongst themselves in order Amidst accusations and complete opposition to what street. Their opportunity -to in Gimbel’s right flank. Dennis to clarify issues and evolve counter-accusations of “police left-wing politics should be. recapture the market, how­ Kaye, erstwhile leader of the tactics. What is invalid is agents”, two minor factions The tactics for this particu­ ever, appeared shortly. W.S.A. immediately rushed groups engaging in conflict ~one haveing 2 members, the lar meeting were done in The first speaker and the forward with the major'tenet totally divorced from political ; Other 6) fought over the right classical Maoist style, screen­ only one who wasn’t playing of the Stalinist program — reality. This is a common civil liberties! “I do not agree weaknessofallLeninistgroups. with what this man is saying,” They are over-organized. The once wrote Joseph Stalin, “but members eat, talk, and think ^ ^ « > ( 8 0 $ I will defend to the death his together. They sit in tight right to say it” little groups and reinforce A minor scuffle followed each other’s convictions. The and the United Front scored emotionalcapital they ought to another victory. Anyone who be using to oppose the system was seriously considering is spent in sterile quarreling. changing his values or de­ When the W.S.A. handed veloping an interest in the out their leaflets they were political left was given several convinced that they had ac­ good reasons not to. tually struck a powerful and In passing I think it would resolute blow for the left. be worthwhile to mention a Their seriousness brooding number of points in order to moral sense was not quite in clarify the issues and dispel keeping with the significance any vague paranoia that may of the issue. The intensity with remain. The W.S.A. leaflet which these people can argue claimed that a letter purport­ about “the correct line”, with­ ing to link the Sir George out in the least bit taking into Student movement with the consideration the people they Dean of Students office was in are trying to convince, would there possession. This letter is be amusing if it were not a fake. It was made up as a gag pathetic. It is not the approach by two assholes on the student for Radicals. council last year and is as real as a ’69 Edsel. Murray Smith

N e w V . P . n a m e d 1969, representative of facul­ ty, adm inistration, students and Board of Governors. Professor Bordan had been Acting Vice-Principal, Aca­ I S ® ' " demic, since August 1969. A native of Montreal, he holds B. Eng. (Engineering Physics) and M. Sc. (Physics) degreesfromMcGillUniversity. He joined Sir George W illiam s in 1952 as Lecturer in Physics. ÏÏCasy te e lk He was made Professor of $ BY BRAYCO Only $ Engineeringinl 962,becoming BY BRAYCO Only 14.99 16.99 the University’s first Dean of Kid Leathers, Open Thursday Kid Leathers, Engineering in 1963. and Friday Nftes Black - Bone - Navy Navy - Red - Burlap C.O.D. orders He was the Sir George Wil­ (Tan) - Black Patent accepted. Vintage Patent, liams representative to the Credit and Black - Red - Chargex Cards Gauthier Committee on pro­ honoured. Navy - Tan Professor Jack Bordan, for­ vincial university operating mer Dean of Engineering, has budgets in 1969, and has been named Vice-Principal, served on the National Com­ Academic, of Sir George mittee of Deans of Engineer­ Williams University. ing & Applied Social Science hê^Ü ûger The appointment, effective of the Association of Univer­ June 1 for a period of five sities and Colleges of Canada. shoe ?i)oppe? years, was made today by He is a member of the Am eri­ 5218 Queen Mary Rd. Place Victoria Dr. John W. O’Brien, Principal can Society for Engineering 1478 Peel St. Les Galeries d’Anjou and Vice-Chancellor. It was Education, the Canadian Fairview Shopping Centre made on the recommendation Association of Physicists, 110 Sparks St. Mall, Ottawa of a 14-member search com­ and the Engineering Institute mittee, established inOctober, of Canada. the georgian

Editor-in-Chiof Steve Halperin Managing Editor...... David Saskin This issue was conceived Associate Editor. Ken Waxman Photo Editors. . . . Jan Dvorak and created by Ken Waxman Nook layout...... Hilton Rosemarin Howard Kay Nook art...... Emil Grunberg Desk Editors Marlene Gerson and Hilton Rosemarin Int’l Circulation. . . Ivan Shaffer Daina Kerbelis Business Manager...... Jtuart Bernstein Circulation Manager...... Marv Rotrand Advertising co-ordinators Alan Hirschfeld, Peter Schwarz Editorial Dep’t 879-4585 Advertising Dep't. 879-4462 was a case of politics inter­ arrested on February 11th fering with, and wrecking, The georgian is an editorially autonomous publication of the Student's LETTERS Association of Sir George Williams University. Offices are located in 1969, we would like to ques­ good intentions. Rms H-647, H-649 of the Henry F. Hall building. Typset and composi­ Dear Editor: tion the Young Socialist Mike McMenamin tion by Northern Press Graphics 750 Rue Lucerne. Litho; Imprimrie For two weeks now I have Society and the Sir George and Dumont. read the Dear Carlyle column. Student Movement’s defini­ Terry Smith I wonder if you can tell me tion of solidarity. The vio­ what he is trying to prove. His lent expulsion of one student Dear Editor: knowledge of sex? A witty by two people, unfamiliar to The Sir George Young mind? A bastardized ver­ the University, was contrary Socialists would like to extend EDITORIAL sion of the Playboy Philoso­ to the intent of the meeting. its appreciation to Dennis phy? OR Is Mr. Williams try It seemed to be an excuse Kaye of the Worker Student ing to show the student body to have every revolutionary Alliance for defending our what to do with itself in lei­ body in Montreal express right to speak at an “open sure moments. (Pardon the their ideas using the verna­ meeting” spondored by the bad pun). I would also like to cular familiar to Maoist Sir George “Student Front” know if his column is for leaflets. last Wednesday, Feb. 11th. real or a bad attempt at sat­ As soon as the room was The tanks we extend is limited irizing Dear Abby or Ann full the chairman cautioned however by criticisms which Landers’ advice to the love­ everyone that he wasn’t about we must make of the further lorn and other related to feel sorry for those stu­ conduct of the W.S.A. leader. problems. dents facing the courts, and It became very obvious to i If this column is for real, that should have tipped every­ most people attending the I hope that the poor suckers one off as to what it was really meeting that the “Student don’t take it seriously because about. But no reaction was Front” was using the issue of then they will probably be forthcoming from the people Feb. 11th to promote its own worse off than they already who were in sympathy interests. The lengthly dis­ are. If someone has to ask with the students in custody, cussion by Bob Walker, mostly advice concerning his love nor was there a reaction from outline the various ways in life, it is bad enough, but to the other two groups — those which the “Student Front” ask it of an unqualified per­ who came to disrpupt the has helped its parent orga­ son is disastrous. meeting and didn’t, and those nization, “the Student Move­ If it is satire, the attempt who came just to see what ment” or “Internationalists” is lousy, and that is stating was going, on. As members out of trouble, illustrated this it kindly. In any case, for real, of the latter group, we most clearly to those who were or an attempt at satire, found that opening line kind there. This was particularly the column just doesn’t make of strange, but let it go irritating to us who partici­ it, probably in the same way as part of a lack of oratorical pated in the struggle (both that its author doesn’t make talent on the part of the chair­ Dennis and myself were ar­ it. man. rested “by accident” outside Irene Krausz The chairman of the meet­ the building) because neither Arts 3 ing made a pathetic attempt Bob Walker nor “the Student to express his views and was Front” were anywhere to be Dear Editor: instrumental in guiding seen at that time. This was On Wednesday February the discussion away from its further reinforced by the fact 11, 1970 the student body objective (i.e. solidarity for that it was obvious that this of this University was again alleged vandals). Other ex­ “chairman” did not intend to subjected to the stupidity of pressions of solidarity mean­ let us speak at the meeting. the socialists. dered carelessly about the After Marily Raphael de­ These persons proved globe touching on every manded to know why the themselves incapable of hold­ country sporting a revolu­ Young Socialists were not ing any sort of open meeting. tionary body in opposition to allowed to speak, a large part The fact that a student was their present governments oftheaudiencebegantodemand not allowed to present his (and the common-denomina­ this right for us also. It was opinions and was removed tor-evil, American imperia­ then that Dennis Kaye began forcibly with a great deal lism). to exploit the situation by his of unnecessary violence this There was only one speaker accusationsagainsttheseother was a clear violation of “The who made any sense; he ex­ Maoists through innuendo Code of Student Behavior” pressed the views of his and hints of an alleged police in that a registered student brothers in jail and of the conspiracy which he’d never was denied his right to the rest of the Black students in been able to prove anyway. use of university facilities. Sir George. It was obviously It did not seem to occur to I therefore submit that a hard act to follow a d for Mr. Kaye that this was a so­ if these so called “Demo­ the rest of the meeting the lidarity meeting with the ar­ cratic” groups continue to level of pertinence of the rested students and not a side deny the fundamental rights other speakers steadily de­ show for his personal and of students to free speech clined. political vendettas. This did speech which is the right that Another note to the meet­ not seem to occur to Mr. Kaye any university must uphole, ing is that there were a num­ before his denunciation of the \ these meetings be refused ber of individuals persent other Maoists (W.S.A. is the use of the university. who were not part of the Un­ Maoist oriented too) as police Yours Truly, iversity Community and as agents. This provoked the Brian Marshall such should not have bee fist fight which led to the Interanl V.P. allowed into the building. breakup of the meeting. Mr. Engineering Undergraduate In summation, the whole Kaye could not forsee that this Association meeting ended in chaos, presented an opportunity leaving everyone bewildered to educate the people there Dear Editor: as to what it was all about, as to: KW In reference to the meeting apart from the original idea which was supposed to express of solidarity. Once again it cont’d on page 20 I J

the the georgian / 5 (roger tan trey) (andreas schroeder) !» Well I been sittin here for awhile beach debris. The man in the middle Notice that he is man noton surprised.the other intoThebank a notebook;is sifting debrisnotice him. The man He is stepping on the fish. he is intent. The fishhim andswim he throughwalks through the fish. walking. THIS IS JUST AN OLDSITTIN MAN ON HERE A ROCK and he says: take a walk Been some lonesome times lately but there’s the children of course Be seein yu continually shouting at the man on the of the stream is stepping on the fish; The man in the middle of the creek is and people comeand andevery people now andgo then I get up and upon our backs and then (scratch of his chinwhiskers) on the bank is now measuring the size oh we’re carryin such a heavy load and the chance of a good laugh andnow somehow it somethingall seems to be opposite bank who is sifting through or other Well thats all for now and take it easy of the sand grains. ’PR. ' v * Robert Hogg Vancouver poet and teacher will read with Ron Feb. 20 at 9 PM. Loewinsohn in Rm H-651 Friday Z s£

f

ROBERT HOGG ROBERT

My My eyes (mary bruce) one disk of fire one disk form snakes into form forms the oracle forms Out of the of bareOut Earth circlea fire of I walked have the center into me enfolds I am made magic, the flames red fire... the Earth red light upon the of white Out air her hand across vision my ECLIPSE oracleThe are bodies whose are circles of focus come They into to pass comes she Introduction the last days maybe 60 i i have been walking inside print i want to leave to bring you back georgia & granville atall up the anal of clearair. and, hand of i i want to hear you come a bouquet of poemscan’t say no as you beg me it’s in your breath smeared with paint down the with a blue or not come of the red angel street of vancouver fo r a bus token on the corner \leaving everyone poems by 28 West vancouver; david phillips and talon books, jim brown, ed Coast poets; West Coast Seen: an an anthology of $3.50 bank; he is measuring holes in the imagine them walking along the water; middle of the creek, stepping on the And if you looksee out three one eveningmen in tails yourand cornfieldwalking across toto yourthe worldcreek, gobehind back the glass: I will side, one is making his way up thefish. The third has stayed here on this is alive. Notice his surprise. He is tell you why they exist. You must one has walked through to the other sand with a small tape measure that Anne McLean Developing out of the kinds of (“ poets being the antenna of the Probably no-one here really knows It’s only the great, ongoing, North Maybe it all fits into some kind of The vancouver poets have formed The poems in "west coast seen” Enough, anyway. Here are some They seem to be edging their way It’s a gradual process of breaking resources, keeping his discoveries race” ) . . . experience poems, is a heightened suggestedman perception as a member of in of a these community. man asrelypu a individual ego, and an rection or another, perhaps in all regions of experience that have been political terms, maybe it’s a good down the old rigidities in thought and pre-individual cosmic web. important provement than of the the if each whole. simply overall went Through along on his im­ own parts of a whole. Though many arelink up with the others in pointing to "actualities” , as david phillips says. it’s clear thatmotion there is goingan awful lot on of there, in one di­ ignored because language wasn’t make blanket statements about it’s attempt to weave him back into thea com m unity, in whicheach the success member of is regarded sharing, as less everyone profits more than and mistakes to himself. stand alone, but they are veryvery much beautiful,themselves asfinished they products. don’t They a point reality to whichbeyond it. is not in poetry but and laughter & touching & fucking; what’s going on onthe west coast. But directions. new uses for wordslooking and new at waysthe of world throughAmerican words.middle-classlution, Charlie cultural brown, revo­and rather than thing just to look at it in itself. feeling which arose out of a view of democratizationing process to we’re start­ undergo, where eventually equipped to deal with them, evolving validity or non-validity in purely everybody is engaged in the task of everybody ends up waking an all the others artist up. and toward new concepts, investigating samples.

west coast seen the literate res­ m and and — and lives 2 . 2 . ' 4 — new wave of writers whose . . . .a what is believed as dogma limits there was once, not the categories is now divided, that is sometimes response to life in language is not but it is in thatthe tissues literature of language I I can’t speak for the entire book But increasingly seethe I recurring re-unitedin thepome, that we must to sea from one point and divisionscome by to which know we things, have a form of death. “poets being the antenna of the provincial or limited by borders. . . get back to or move only to com­ Jim brown writes, in his intro­ ponse perception that was total skin, that plete division, isolation, eventual but blindness. of view only is not sight But not in thearchibald lampmanor Perhaps it would not be too pre­ I I went looking for race’’ "it . . . is all a rhythm’’ duction, which I quote at random mental distrust of language. because I still haven’t read all of the here: is human communication. And the starting point is often a very funda­ many differentsingle angles, principal you thing find being that explored fluid, moving things liketim e & space, 200-odd poems. I keepones re-reading I am getting the to know. themes, in the passages about wet, consciousness.Again andagain, from gether, and they arepoems. mostly Canadian irving laytoncourse. sense of the term,tentious ofto say that these are poems of a somewhat new kind of Maybe some prised, people since it’s wouldon thecoast Canadian west that be sur­ the book was gotten to­ mansfield mcgill book and mart theyhad across one from copy left, places I was in had heard of it, but in severalin bookstoresonste.Catherine So where it’s selling, it’s selling well. classic's, where ly,I had seen was it original­ sold out. Finally I tried the which I bought with all good speed. street west of peel and none of the

■■tmtMtMimnniinffrrTrrrFrrrhrrrrrrrnTnîtrfir i rfrrm ’rn ! mi rn f i T111T11TI f t r ! 111rn i 1H IT . < heavy, costly equipment. tinent, Radio Sir George we would never have had the and, to respect professional R adio S.G. Radio can be heard anywhere members have had to build problems we have encounter­ equipment. CRSG can be a there is a portable receiver. their own control board., a ed this year. media, like the georgian When the Henry F. Hall You can’t read a newspaper costly and time-consuming I th in k it’s a bit much to and instructional media. building was being built, the or watch television while task, considering the build­ have the students build their CRSG can be a source administration invested vast you're driving. A radio ing is done on school time. own station. The georgian of information and music to sums of money in a commun­ program can be broadcast CRSG, as Radio Sir George is printed on professional Georgians, only if it is given ications set-up which fea­ over a telephone line, as is called, being a club under presses, and I’m proud to say the chance to prove itself, i tures the use of television. Radio Sir George has done SA, is granted a sum of money has a professional appear­ CRSG is open to construc­ Televisions were installed many times already. from the Students’ Associa­ ance. TV Sir George has bene­ tive criticism and suggestions in every classroom and at The problems of this Un­ tion every year with which fited greatly from the admin­ from anybody. Right now, strategic locations through­ iversity’s radio station stem to operate. The sum is always istration’s decision to invest we are trying to provide the out the building. Instruc­ largely from the administra­ less than needed and is usual­ in television, by using in­ students with many types of tional media was to produce tion’s decision to invest in ly spent repairing equipment structional media’s equip- music, ranging from light many educational programs television as its major com­ that breaks down because mentto produce itsprograms. popular to progressive rock, for this school network. The munication outlet. Whereas it’s the only euqipment we CRSG can be more than and news, from Sir George, programs were to replace radio stations are being built can buy with the money. a club in this university, given Montreal, the country, and the classroom roles of pro­ for students by administra­ My point is this: Had a radio the proper facilities and per­ the World. We have a rapidly fessors and enable the larg­ tions elsewhere on the con­ station been built for CRSG, sonnel willing to work with est amount of people to re­ ceive the same informa­ tion at one time. Great idea. But so far, very little if any­ thing has been done in the way of producing these TV 'Group 8 0 ’. A ir Canada’s lectures, or other educa­ tional programs. The cost involved in producing for TV, is tremendous and each one *165 -w ay to Europe hour production requires as much as 72 hours of pre­ paration. Because the investment and back in TV was so great, the ad­ ministration gave no consid­ eration at all to providing a less costly, and perhaps more practical school radio set-up. Because TV programs must be watched, it is necessary for the student to remain in a fixed position for a long time staring at a TV set in order to receive all the information being presented. From my experiences at Sir George, I find that people are too lazy This amazingly low new group af­ to sit or stand in one place finity return fare is yours when you for a long time, in order to ab­ organize and fly with at least 79 sorb all the information, or other members of a bonafide asso­ whatever is happening. Ithink ciation or organization, the main aim of which is not travel, and of TV definitely has potential which you have been a member at Sir George, but I don't for at least six months. think that we should sacri­ You go and return as a group on fice a radio set-up in favour regularly scheduled flights. And of TV. you can stay as long as a year. Firstly, radio is a lot less Air Canada affinity ‘Group 80’ expensive medium. All that Economy Class fares apply from major cities in Canada to dozens is required to hear a radio of exciting European cities. Start program is a simple radio your 1970 holiday planning now. receiver. As for producing Air Canada can clear up any ques­ tions you may have about organ­ radio programs, a turntable, izing your group. But do it now tape recorder, and a micro­ and make your arrangements very phone are usually the soon to get the benefit of the low­ est affinity ‘Group 80’ fares of the only essentials. Radio has year. more in its favour. It is the most mobile medium. Radio From In effect from programs can emanate live ( Montreal ) Now to Mar. 31 Apr. 1 — May 31 to Nov. 1 - Mar. 31/71 Aug. 10 — Oct. 31 from anywhere, at any time of June 1 — Aug. 9 the day or night. London $165 $189 $236 Newspapers are always hours late with any story Paris $171 $194 $246 because of the writing, type­ Ask about affinity ‘Group 25’ and ‘Group 40' fares as well. For all the details , call Air Canada. Fares subject to Government approval. setting, and printing involv­ ed. TV programs always require a cameraman, ouundman, and other tech­ Go'Group 80’ A IR C A N A D A ® nicians, as .well as lots of

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\ , H “ It is not true that the Arabs hate the Jews for personal, religious or racial reasons. They consider us — and ju s t­ ly, from their point of view — as Westerners, foreigners, invaders who have seized an Arab country to turn into a Jewish State.’’ ^ . ,, . _ — General Moshe Dayan Both Israel and the Arab tantly opposed the idea of a large, clumsy, bureaucracy Soviet Revisionism. Similarly pressures have been brought States have called them­ Jewish-Arab state in the Mid­ that has its strength in the Israel must not antagonize its fortheAmericansandRussians selves progressive socialist east and thus has done nothing national bourgeoisie, Syria’s provider, the United States. to impose a peace settlement, countries and have called each to alleviate the plight of the left-wing Baathist Party is no Both A1 Fatah and the P.L.F. both are in the Mideast for other fascist. Both are racist nearly 3/4 of a million Pales­ more than gentry and Shieks recruit among the people, and their own benefit. For sup­ and imperialist and are sup­ tinian refugees living in the turned phony Socialist. The effectively control some areas plying arms to Egypt, and ported by larger imperialist Gaza Strip. Prom pted by Jews rulers in each Arab state are where they are attempting to Syria the Russians have gotten powers. Young Jews and all over the world who pro­ an elite, primarily from rich implement socialism on an lucrative oil rights and ports Arabs carried away by ex­ claim that they possess no families that could afford to agrarian base. Jews point to of call for their Mediterranean treme nationalist zeal will homeland but Israel (Shove send their sons to English their terrorist tactics and cry fleet. France has recently show their support for their it to the idea of Canadian universities. Supposedly de­ foul, not looking to the 1945- gotten into profitable arms government policy and thus in Jewry. Georgian Letter to mocratically-elected repre­ 1948 period in Palestine when business by selling for cold effect are saying ‘Israel from Editor, February 4.), Israel sentatives (in the Western the Jewish Irgun fought a cash to the Arabs and provid­ the Nile to the Euphrates’ or has pledged to defend the sense-you vote for whom you terrorist war of national ing the Israelis unofficially. ‘the total destruction of Jewish state to the death of the want) they rule like the tra­ liberation against British im­ The United States is little Israel’ which does not mean last Jew. However, graciously ditional Arab nobility. They perialism. Israel has support­ interested in protecting little the destruction of Zionism but it has consented to allowing are motivated more by their ed other wars of liberation ‘innocent Israel’. Their fleet the annihiltion of the Jews. the forming of a Palastinian own pocketbooks than by any but apparently is commit­ is in the Eastern Mediteranean Each is being imperialist and state in the tiny Gaza Strip. In real effort to aid the Pales­ ted to keeping a Jewish state, too. The U.S. is playing power racist. protecting itself from ‘Arab tinians. They are just as racist Israel opposes even Arab balance games. It is protecting Israel: the Lie aggressors’ who are sup­ as the Israelis, and use school attempts to implement social­ its commitments with the and the Reality posedly on the perpetual brink books that show Arabs killing ism by deeming the guerril­ Greek military dictatorship The early Jewish settlers of attacking and murdering Jews and destroying Israel. las racist, misled, and govern­ and uses Israel as another came to Palestine in the hope every Israeli (some would Many Arabs have realized ment provocateurs. Guerrillas means of counterbalancing the of establishing a Jewish state undoubtedly want to) Israel that they cannot get anything will continue to fight with Soviets. Their is also valuable based on the historical claim has overwhelmed its neigh­ out of their governments and Arab governments afraid of trade with Israel that the of their ancestors having pos­ bours by surprise attacks in have begun independent ac­ reprisals and will try to lead the United States would like to sessed the land. As Theodor 1956 and in ’67. This is what tion. The Israelisunabletocon- Arab people. It is doubtful if retain. They alsoareexpanding Herzel said the historical claim the Israelis call preventive tain such groups have start­ they can establish a mass base Mideast investments and ex­ of the land of Israel stretches warfare against an enemy that ed reprisal raids against the in the near future and lead an ploring oil reserves in the from Egypt to the Euphrates is never truly united and Arab states who are suppos­ Arab victory. Thus terrorist Negev desert. There are river. This necessitated the cohesive enough to pose a real ed to be better able to control raids will lead to reprisal and other economic reasons removal of the Palestinian threat to Israel’s super­ the guerrillas. (The Israeli re­ invariably more raids. besides that will keep the U.S. Arabs from the land. During efficient military defences. prisals seem reminiscent of behind Israel. The U.S. has United States vs. the war to gain independence The Arabs may be armed with American attacks in Vietnam) said that it deplores acts of this was done effectively in a much of the Soviet Union’s Some guerrilla groups are Soviet Union Israelis during their reprisals. campaign of terror that caused arsenalbut their armies cannot nationalist. Others such as A1 Some say that were the But the U.S. continues to sup­ most of the Arabs to flee. Those match Israel until a battle­ Fatah and the Palestinian giants not behind the belli­ ply Israel militarily (both who remained were not grant­ worthy national army, with Liberation Front proclaim gerents there would be peace officially and unofficially ed citizenship but were how­ central control, is trained and themselves to be socialist but, now. This is doubtful. Israel through private dealers). The ever granted the right to re­ tested. The Israelis claimed like the Arab governments, would first have to renounce U.S. will counterbalance any main “temporarily forever”, they had to attack in 1967 be­ are dependent on Russia’s the ‘Jewish state’ before the increased Soviet presence. But whatever assurances this pro­ cause of massive enemy for­ arms and thus must follow Arabs will talk. But although” cont’d on page 15 vides means “Don’t get in­ mations near Israel’sfrontiers. ! volved or out”. They attacked for concrete Attention members o f M.S.E.A. Israel then proceeded to enough reasons, not the ones pass all sorts of ‘socialist’ they told the United Nations. measures. This included far­ Israel wanted to destroy or mers subsidies that went only delay the chances of any united to Jewish farmers and meant Arab action, to set traditional STUDENT AIR that they had the necessary Arab rivals against each other, capital needed to buy the and to pressure the Arab equipment needed to reclaim governments into recognizing the land, produce more, and in a Jewish state of Israel. So far effect sell their produce for a Israel has not annexed any EUROPE ’70 higher price on the open mar­ Arab territories except the ket. Many Arabfarmerscannot city, of Jerusalem, but they compete and must sell their have said ‘No end to the oc­ land. It is then bought out by cupation before meaningful the states’ Jewish National negotiations with the Arabs.’ MAY 18-SEPT. 4 Fund which holds the land in LONDON $199 trust for a two-year period and The Arab States: then sells it to anyone who can Elitist Rulers significantly improve the ThePalestinianPeoplehave PARIS MAY 27-JULY 20 $199 land’s value. The subsidy sys­ a valid cause for a war of lib­ tem makes sure that only eration frqm Israeli rule. They Jews will buy the land. could not get the Jews con­ The Arabs living in Israel senting to a bi-national state, PARIS MAY 10—AUG. 1 $209 are that land’s Jews and nig­ but the conditions of their gers. They go to separate exile has instilled a fierce na­ schools which are inferior to tionalism in the Palestinians. LONDON AUG. 10-SEPT. 7 $204 the state’s Jewish schools. Yet the Arab people are being Technical schools provide very ruled by elitist governments little to the Arabs and con­ that have their own interests sequently they get the worst at heart and in more than one jobs. The unemployment rate case, the actual situation con­ is high. Granted there are cerning Israel was distorted FOR OTHER FLIGHTS PLEASE CALL Arab civil servants and com­ and amplified to divert the pany managers but primarily people’s attention from bu­ 392-3002 332-3094 they occupy the lower eche­ reaucratic inefficiency. lons and have minor power. S’ audi Arabia’s king is absolute 1009 SHERBROOKE ST. W MOMTRFAL. QT/FBEC Israel officially has cons­ ruler, Egypt is based on a 8 /the georgian Wednesday, February 1

Looking down at her, At once I realized What each line meant, each freckle, She would never be photo: Dave B. Clarke photo: Carlos El Campesino possessed by anyone Not by me, not by concurrent others, She was too free And I male and romantic Softly I leaned down and kissed her eyelids Twice, Then I lay back But did not sleep.

photo: David Duchow Jonathon Fisher Sir George Williams University NOMINATIONS FOR ELECTION The following positions are up. for election. Nominations will be accepted by the Department of Education third floor receptionist. Nomination Arm s may be obtaied from the receptionist, and must be returned in sealed envelopes addressed to the Chief Returning Officier. presents 40 Nominators are needed for S.L.C. positions, and twenty from the respective faculty for faculty positions. SJ..C. President Finance V.P. Executive V.P. Education V.P. Lecture Series in Educational Technology External V.P. Student Affairs V.P. Internal V.P. Ombudsman Lecture No. 5 FACULTY “ Educational Technology and the Schools" ARTS COMMERCE ENGINEERING President President President by Executive V.P. Executive V.P. STudent Affairs V.P. External V.P. External V.P External V.P. Dr. Willard Congreve Education V.P. Internal V.P. Internal V.P. Superintendent, Newton Iowa Public School System Student Affairs V.P. Finance V.P. Executive Secretary Internal V.P. Executive Secretary Recording Secretary Secretary Communications V.P. 2 Faculty Council Representatives Humanities Representative University Council Rep. 1st Congress Ombudsman Social Sciences Rep. 8:15 p.m. February 20th, 1970 Room H-635 3 Faculty Counril Representatives

For information: Dept, of Education 879-4535 SCIENCE ATHLETICS President 3 Athletics Council Representatives Executive V.P. The Faculty of Commerce Internal V.P. has set aside three days in Feb­ External V.P. All nominations must be in by Education V.P. Feb 20 at 12 p.m. ruary by cancelling classes and Secretary Treasurer 2 Faculty Council Representative Certified a correct list of positions inviting all students to partici­ University Council Rep. that are up for election. pate in a series of meetings. Stu­ Science II Rep. dents now have the opportunity Science III Rep. Bjoem Streubel Science IV Rep. Chief Returning Officer to meet members of all areas of business through the special McGILL WINTER FESTIVAL seminars and dinners planned on their behalf. Active participants are the THESES PRINTED FROM STUDENTS' presents Department of Marketing and TYPED MASTERS GRAPHS REPRODUCED the Georgian Marketing Society. In affiliation with the American Marketing Association, the Sales • Duplicating and Marketing Executives Club, • Offset SLY and the Ad and Sales Executives • Ruled Forms Club of Montreal, the Georgian Marketing Society will be host­ • Brochures ing the “ First Montreal Market­ Taylor • IBM Letters & THE FAMILY STONE ing Congress” . Never before Printing and Direct Mail has an attempt been made to Mailing Ltd. Addressing bring together students and pro­ & mailing fessors from all univer­ sities with Canada’s leading executives in the field of market­ 1231 ST. CATHERINE WEST (at Drummond) Tel: 849-3778 ing, to become acquainted and clear up any misconceptions regarding a career in marketing. Here is your chance to further your understanding.

The keynote address will be delivered by Mr. Logan R. Brown, President of Robin Hood Multifoods Ltd. on the top­ ic “ IS MARKETING YOUR THING?”

The Congress will be held on Wednesday, February 25, 1970 in the Hall building (7th floor) of Sir George Williams University. It is scheduled to run from 12:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m., Tickets now on sale at McGill Union Box Office with cocktails being served at & at the Forum high noon, followed by a 12:30 5.00, 4.50, 3.50, 2.50 luncheon. A question and an­ swer period will follow Mr. Brown’s speech.

Don’t miss this unique op­ portunity to meet Canada’s business leaders; they sure as heck wanna meet you. Tickets for the First Montreal 25% to 33 ^ % o f f Marketing Congress are now on sale. Prices are, students $2.00, professors $3.00, and (ON ALL) SKIS businessmen $5.00. Tickets can be picked up at and SKI EQUIPMENT the booth on the third floor of the Norris Building, or in room ALL FAMOUS BRAND 025-6 in the C.S.A. offices in NAMES! the basement. For further information, or for ticket reservations, call THE MOUNTAIN HUT 879-4544 or 879-4584 or write: Sir George Williams University, of the c/o Georgian Marketing Society, 1435 Drummond Street, Canadian Youth Hostels Assoc. Montreal 107, Quebec. NEAR 1324A SHERBROOKE ST. W. MOUNTAIN H.S.I. frosting, or is everything victory for one of the par­ Laura Nyro straight imagination per­ ticipants. sonified. If we take the lyrics But you can’t really analyze Laura Nyro is coming to as truth, it would seem that her lyrics without her. She Place des Arts on March 7th. Nyro’s life has been one has to be there flailing away The first thing that strikes you mind-wrenching experience at thé piano, and putting when you hear Laura’s two after another, her travels pur- visual expression into the Columbia albums (Eli and gatorive descents until she meanings. Laura Nyro is the Thirteenth Confessional couldn’t think of how to get coming to Place des Arts and New York Tendeberry) back up, and her loves’ wit- March 7th. is that here is one strange matchings that only result in Ken Waxman chick. Her albums are sombre and black, with the lyrics as extraordinary as they are exposed in the sparse ar­ rangements and the convul- tions of pronunciation that only Nyro is capable of. Eli is probably the more HOUSE OF QUICHE LORRAINE accessible album. It’s been around longer and includes more back-up musicians to clothe Laura’s rather sepul­ chral message with sparkling musical notes. Besides this, the Fifth Dimension and others have made us familiar with “ Eli’s Cornin’ ” , “ Sweet SERVING INEXPENSIVE BUT DISTINCTIVE MEALS Blindness,” and “ Stoned Soul Sly and Family Stone OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. Picnic”. The only “hit” on Tenderberry is “Save the Sly and the Family Stone Their following albums and LOCATED AT 1622 ST. CATHERINE W. Country”. These songs had gained their first fame with singles have shown people NEAR GUY reached many with the “ Dance to the Music” , one of that the Sly phenomenon is airwaves/cover versions, but thefinest dance and earsongs that of a musically sophisti­ did anyone listen to the of recent years. The harmon­ cated group whose com­ lyrics? ies and “ boom-boom” chorus positions are based on the Laura Nyro wails as if she let you into the scintillating sociological reality of the ( jf e e n flc r e A fe a if weregrieving atafuneral even rhythm of a professional slums, sex and drugs rather when she is wildly happy. group that knows how to than hackneyed love ditties. Fast tempo songs would seem bring the best out of its au­ Their styles have gained them to be the happy ones, and she dience. Written and arranged many emulators as well as Summer Staff Positions seems to be getting sadder by Sly (as all their singles and fans, but the Mod togged and sadder. It’s Nyro’s voice albums are), the follow-up group remains as elusive as which acts as the primary album proved they were more they are inimitable. apparatus, with the accom­ than a singles group. It panying instruments filling features the combined sound Sly and the Family Stone the spaces left by her vocals of soul blues and gospel held will be at the Forum Feb. 23 and piano playing. This together with a relentless along with the Fifth Avenue natural device can perform beat. Band and the Jam factory. with a sultry whisper, then scream a lyric and just as easily fade into heartbroken wails. Nyro can sound like an M iid o n & M o w U i O n e . operatic soprano, or a smokey DISPENSING OPTICIANS jazz/blues singer. 1460 SHERBROOKE W. information and To fully understand Nyro’s comar MacKaySt lyrics you have to be Nyro. & /.: 842-3809 application forms. 5016 SHERBROOKE W. Are they autobiographical 3550MOTE DES NEIGES NEAR CLAREMONT SEAFORTH MEDICAL BLOG. compositions about her hard 487 5131 932-6806 life coated with surrealistic France Explodes A-bomb Feb. 13,1960 Cuba Invaded McGILL WINTER FESTIVAL presents Apr. 17 1961 Adolf Eichmann Sentenced to Death May 31,1962 Glenn Orbits Earth 3 Times TOM PAXTON & FRIENDS Feb. 20, 1962 lohn F. Kennedy Assassinated Nev. 22,1963 France Recognizes Red China JESSE WINCHESTER PENNY LANG Jan. 27 1964 BRUCE MURDOCK TEX KONIG lohnson Introduces “ Great Society’’ ' BERT MASON JUDY HENDERSON Jan. 4,1966 Canada Celebrates Confederation M y 1,1967 Sir Arthur Currie Gym. Trudeau Elected Prime-Minister Sat. Feb. 21, 7:30 P.M. June 26,19(1 L. B. I. Bids Farewell to Congress Blanket concert (Bring a Blanket) Man On Moon M y 20,1969 $2.50 T h e G azette 86H 111 tickets at McGill Union Box Office Montreal mornings aren’t the same without it and at the door. blues singer Len Chandler) to near “ pop” material like “Two Loves Have I” (with the band riffing as if they were playing thesupper-club circuit).

Every song goes through the blues transform ation in Joe’s instrum ent, his voice. This is the potent sound of and freaky clothes can make a name pianist Pete Johnson, while your old­ a man conscious of performing but for themselves as a “blues” group er brothers and sisters might remem­ also telling a story he’s experienced. and end up making more money for ber the “ Big” Joe Turner who had The backup band (arranged and con­ one night than people like Joe will some of the earliest Rock’n’Roll ducted by Gene Page) isa perfect com­ make in a month. These people flood successes with “ Shake, Rattle & Roll” pliment to Joe’s vocals. Obviously the scene with watered down imi­ and “ Corinne, Co rin a” new vers ions of at home in the blues idiom, they can JoeTurner“TheRealBossoftheBlues” tations and blitz listener with their which are included in this set), yet if work all forms from slow, indigo story (Polydor 543.118) mockeries so that even a person who this disc is any indication, there’s evolution to fast jump tunes. The band considers himself a “heavy blues still plenty of music left in this “ living features a competenet and firm Ture innovators of music have man” will more likely list as his pre­ legend.” rhythm section (especially the “walk­ never gotten their just rewards. To ferences relative mediocrities like ing” bassist) and two outstanding repeat this, as Frank Kofsky does in Ten Years After rather than say Otis As an original, rather than an soloists, a harmonicist, whose the liner notes for this album, is a bit Rush or Buddy Guy innovators in the emulator, Joe doesn’t have to worry chromatic work resembles Little redundant. Joe Turner will be better tradition. Hopefully, with more con­ about the “proper” material to do. Walter’s, and a tenor saxist whose served if you buy this album (and you cerned musicians telling about their Whatever he sings, comes out blues, showboating honks and shrieks, should!) than if we moan about the raw idols, some of that gelt will be spread so the tunes can range from “ How remind me of the tenor man of the deal he received. around. Long Blues” (which was a “ monster early fifties — King Curtis. Yet Kofsky does make the point Your parents might remember Joe smash” for Leroy Carr and Scrapper What else can I say about the disc. (and I emphatically concur) that any fromthethirties, when heworked with Blackwell back in 1929) to “ Plastic Except, if you want a blues album alive group of white youths with long hair Count Basie and boogie-woogie Man” (a recent composition by folk/ with motion and maturity, this is it.

THF ALLMAN The Allman Brothers Band (Atco D Gregory Allman’s organ. seem natural and unprepossing BAND 33-308) Duane Allman shows his stuff in except for the few times he gets taut lead guitar attacks, tradition- carried away with the speed of a This album is a fine debut album by growth slide work and if necessary number and lets loose with some a hard/blues combo of white Souther­ acoustic stylings. This solo manner, Winter gutteral vomit. ners. Their relentless sound is almost while outstanding, never gives way as pure as Butterfield’s on slow to exhibitionism and distracts from Although the band isn’t yet great, numbers and as intensive and loud theconcentrated arrangements which their cohesive, stouthearted sound as Johnny Winter on most othertracks. move with a clean rampant canour- and pure arranged blues work mark The band’s distinctiveness comes ness like the Butterband’s easy rifting them as one of the few “white blues” from Jai Johnny Johanson’s conga flow. bands who won’t be washing cars work and the pulsating undertow of Brother Duane Gregory’s vocals within five years.

The Fifth Avenue Band “ Nice Folks” and it could easily be even their youthful experimenting on (Reprise 6369) their theme song. For when they sing side two when they mistakingly add You can’t help but like the Fifth about “being younger” on “Sweet strings, voices and horns. Avenue Band. They have no pre­ Lady of Toronto” you sorta wonder Thegroup issupposedtosound like tensions about being anything that just how much youngerthey could be. the Lovin’ Spoonful. I might as well they’re not. Nice, cleanshaven Jewish They’re so innocent and efferves­ mention that fact too. After all one of kids, they even go as far as smiling cent you want to forgive them almost their producers (Erik Jacobson) had in their album cover picture, some­ everything. The chutzpah involved in the same job with the Spoonful, while thing no group of alienated “ heavy” calling a number “ Eden Rock” (the the other two (Jerry Yester and Zal musicians would do. Wearing T-shirts, name of a Miami Beach hotel); the Yanofsky) played in that band. Not jeans and running-shoes, you expect fact the amateurish love and like song only that put the Fifth Avenue’s lead them to come up to you chewing lyrics get downright embarrassing singer sounds like John Sebastian bubble gum and shouting “Whoop! (as they do “ In Hollywood”), the way and they used to be Sebastian’s Whoop!” One of their tunes is called everything ends in three minutes; and continued on p. 15

The Best of Thelonious Monk listic and alive that you wonder why time) and the fact that most jazzmen (Riverside RS 3037) his acceptance took so long. Perhaps are neither young nor white. Hope­ There, of course, is no such thing. it’s because we’re in the Rock gene­ fully however as the renewed interest No “ greatest hits” or (in Monk’s case) ration, and have our ears consis­ in blues was caused in part by young familiartune collection can match the tant^ bombarded by newer sounds emulators, so perhaps the extended performances an artist chooses to put so that we can accept Monk’s strange instrumental work of some rock together on disc by himself. This syncopation. Years of change have bands will lead some onto jazz. however is a fine sampling of Monk's taught us that there is no “ right” This Monk album would be a fitting fertile work during the Fifties. way of doing anything. introduction for anyone. Besides Monk’s individualistic and enig­ Perhaps this isn’t the place to go Monk’s inimitable piano sound, it matic piano style took many years to into the lack of acceptance of jazz by features such expected Monk cohorts be accepted by the general public. the public. Most likely it’s the perjora- as Johnny Griffith, Charlie Rouse, His witty and angular lines exhibited tive sense of the word, the fact of (they of the plunging romantic hard- on these tracks are so individua­ instrumental work (in avocal-oriented icontinued on p. 15

The Mothers of Invention “Burnt liters ditty) which are ample vehicles Monkish piano work, while Sugar ' Weeny Sandwich” (Reprise 6370) for the band’s satiric falsetto and Cane Harris shines with an outstand­ is yet bass vocai stylings. ing jazz violin piece played over a another chapter in what must be the Except for the obviously funny wailing bass part. The fact that Zappa most interesting continuous musical burps and grunts (which Zappa con­ would make this hitherto unemployed story around today, that of Frank siders as an integral part of his instrument one of his main voices Zappa and . sound) and the intentionally hilarious (here and in ) shows the As with most of their recent sets the “cocktail and country” tenor sax involvement that he invests in finding album is mostly instrumental de­ solo on “Holiday in Berlin, Full sounds to fit his original visions. pending on the considerable ins­ Blown” , the music is of such a high The fact of Zappa’s genius is that trumental talents of Zappa (with quality that you wonder if the Mothers this iconoclastism draws from every his phantasy conceiving guitar licks) can produce anything less than ex­ source of modern music and creates and (master of the cellent work. The guitarfillsareamong a consistant body of works, definitely jazz sax and classical piano). The on­ Zappa’s best, the music loops along identifiable as Zappas which not ly vocals are Mothers recreations of with seemingly effortless changes only is satisfying, but will go the way 1950 shits, “ W(hite P(ortand) L(emon from waltz extravaganza to jazz solo­ of establishing him as the Igor J(uice)” (an old Four Deuces smash) ing to oboe classical-breaks. Ian Stavinsky of the latter part of the and “Valarie” (a Jackie & the Star- Underwood exhibits his sterling, twentieth century. Dr. Richard Felger, Senior Curator 100.000 towns, all making their per­ of the Los Angeles Museum of Natu­ manent contributions to the atmos­ ral History, and Professor Barry phere. Comooner, Washington University, An important doctor from the The End o St. Louis, estimate that man has American Medical Association said, about 40 years left to live on this “ Unless the combustion engine goes earth. Dr. P.C. Orloffs of Canada gives in 5 years — we will.” Eddie Albert (re| us only 15 years to live. A gloomy How does smog affect man? 1 conclusion. Is it valid? Chronic bronchitis is seven times were finally up to 50 applications of at first equal, then exceed, that of the Let’s look around. A short news higher than it was ten years ago. DDT a year on their cotton acreage. 1952 London smog disaster.” (Nearly report. Lung cancer is twice as prevalent in The pink bole worm and other insects 3.000 Londoners died from the effects Sign on Los Angeles schoolroom the cities as it is in the rural areas. of course became resistant and came of smog during the Christmas season bulletin board. Warning!! Do not Bronchial asthma and emphysema back in stronger waves until 50 ap­ of that year.) exercise strenuously or breathe too are up eight times in the last ten years plications yearly were applied. This, During the 1966 Thanksgiving deeply during heavy smog con­ and skyrocketing. One day’s breath­ of course, pushed the cost of cotton weekend in New York, it has been ditions. APCD. ing of New York smog is equivalent out of sight. The DDT killed the soil estimated that 168 deaths were caus­ Announcement from National to smoking 5 packages of cigarettes. bacteria and ruined the soil. The ed by smog. Cancer Institute: “ DDT is a cancer It is anticipated that before many cotton went to hell. The DDT run-off Smog damages crops to the tune causing agent.” years have passed, ten thousand into the rivers contaminated the fish of 1/2 billion annually. In New Jersey Egypt: The Aswan Dam has slowed people will die daily of pollution. which killed the cormorants that alone 36 crops have been seriously down the Nile. Six hundred miles Doctors are advising 10,000 patients manufactured the guano, reducing damaged. Spinach, lettuce, beets, down river sandbars have stopped a year to leave California. their numbers from twenty million etc. Food gone and oxygen gone. Dr. building up on the delta. The Medi­ Scientistsfrom the National Cancer down to six million, and the guano O.C. Taylor, “ If the pollutants in the terranean is flooding the delta, and Institute state, “ DDT is a cancer- harvest from 170 million tons down to air are unchecked it won’t be many one million fertile acres have dis­ causing agent.” 35 million. The anchovies which feed years before agriculture in certain appeared under salt water. Hungarian scientists examined off the plankton, that required the parts of America ceases to exist.” Below the dam, snails carry the 1.000 mice for five generations. Leu­ droppings from the guano birds for Less food. blood flukes of schistosomicosis and kemia appeared in 12.4% of the DDT their nutrients, began to disappear, Up in the Lake Arrowhead area thousands of men, women and mice but only 2.5% of the non-DDT so the fish meal industry is being about 10% of the Ponderosa pines, children are going to die of this pain­ mice. Tumors appeared in 28.7% wrecked, and the guano birds which 1.300.000 trees, have died as a result ful, cruel disease. 1of the DDT mice, but only 3.8% of the feed on the anchovies are starving ofsmog. Itisestimatedthat10% ofour The Nile no longer carries its non-DDT mice, and most of the malig­ to death, therefore, less nutrients for farm produce is being damaged by nutrient-rich sediments out to sea and nancies were in the later generations, the plankton, less food for, etc. etc. smog which means less oxygen, less the fish are disappearing. The fishing children indicating genetic damage. Guano is the only fertilizer which food, and less water. families are moving into the slums of According to the University of seems to work in the harsh mountain “ One of the most tragic ironies of Cairo and Alexandria. That source Miami School of Medicine, people soil. Half of Peru depends on this our age could be in the making, if of food is disappearing. Also Oxygen dying of cancer contained more than food production for survival. The certain tests at University of Cali­ from loss of greenery, and water. twice as much DDT in their fat, 20-35 result has been expropriation of fornia, Los Angeles, prove correct. In Tokyo, traffic policemen take an ppm, as victims of accidental death, American interests and a stepped-up Scientists claim that the present oxygen break every half hour. 9.7 ppm. hostility toward our American trawlers anti-smog device placed on our cars Holland’s agriculture needs water Dr. Donald Chant, Chairman of the cruising in the open sea nearby. Their may be increasing, not reducing air from the Rhine to flush the salt out of Zoology Depart­ fishing boundary has now been pollution.” Engineer, Air Resources, reclaimed areas. The Rhine has be­ ment, states, “Absolutely undebat- pushed out to 200 miles. All of this Channel 7, 7/30/69. come Europe’s filthiest, most con­ able evidence that DDT causes can- has greatly harmed American- The final contribution of the com­ taminated river. Holland is now trapp­ cer.. - „ 1! Peruvian relations and now becomes bustion engine to us, seems to be ed between invasion from the salt Jerome Gordon, president of a a political problem. death by disease and starvation. sea, and the dirty, polluted Rhine. research firm in New York, added Zoology Professor Kenneth E.F. The gentle dust of DDT blows off Less food. more fuel to the fire while testifying ! Watt said in a prepared statement, the farms, ranches, plantations, into Minamata, Japan — 100 people before the Senate'Sub-Committee on i “ It is now clear that air pollution the sea for the plankton and the fish dead of poisoned clams. Migratory Labor. He attacked parath- concentrations are rising in California to absorb, which are then eaten by South Pacific — Australia, Guam, ion menthyl parathion, tepp and mala- at such a rate that MASS MORTALITY the birds. Last spring, with Dr. Rise- Saipan, Panape, Truk, Palau, Hawaii thion, calling them “first cousins incidents can be expected in specific brough and members and scientists — their coral is being killed by star­ chemically to a German nerve gas areas, such as Long Beach, by the of the Western Vertebrate Foundation, fish which are proliferating in a used in biological warfare.” 1975-76 winter. I went to the pelican rookeries on the puzzling ecological explosion. Dr. “Fifty million pounds are being “The proportion of the population island of Anacapa to observe the Bruce Halstead told me — that when spread unchecked on America’s which will die in these incidents will nesting of the pelicans and the 10,000 the coral is dead, a weed will grow farms and gardens,” said Gordon. which will contaminate the fish, “The result is that uncounted thou­ eliminating the fish as a food source. sands of the' nation’s migrant farm Natives who eat the fish then die of workers, farmers and suburban cigarua disease. homeowners have been fatally over­ Over 15,000,000 fish died last .year come or seriously disabled.” from water pollution. He said more than 100-thousand The Missouri River is to bec6me cases of pesticide poisonings and the Colon of America. The Mississippi several hundred fatalities occur each carries signs, “ Don’t eat your lunch year. near the water.” Dr. Samuel Simmons of the FDA Germany — the Rhine along with states that 150 to 200 persons are hundreds of other rivers, has been killed annually by pesticides, and 100 straightened out. This lowered the times that many are injured. water table from 10 to 25 feet. DDT attacks the central nervous 35.000 acres of productive Hungarian system, upsets the body chemistry, farmland have dried up and been distorts cells, accelerates gene muta­ taken out of production; 200,000 tion, and affects calcium absorption acres in Alsace. Same thing in the by the bones. Sahara — w ater table lowered, DDT, being a poison, lodges in the 1.000.000 date palm dead and liver. Being non-soluble in water, a 120.000 natives face disaster. frenzy of enzymatic action takes place The Apollo 10 astronauts easily to get rid of it. The enzymes are not picked out Los Angeles from hun­ discriminating, however, and attack dreds of miles out. They could see the other things, such as steroid sex blotch of ugly, cancer-colored smog, hormones, estrogen, etc. What do you 4.000.000 cars vomiting cancer-caus­ suppose our daily dose of DDT in ing gases, 16 million tires vaporizing small amounts is doing to us? deadly asbestos particles, and the In Peru, the economy consists of new, polychlorinated hydro-carbons cotton agriculture, some tobacco, onto the pavement — into the at­ guano fertilizer from the cormorant mosphere and into the sea. New birds on 36 offshore islands, and York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Denver, thefish-meal industry from anchovies. Washington, Boston, St. Louis, The cotton growers, feeling that, if a Mexico City and Tokyo. 100 cities, little DDT was good, more was better, /

waters, next day mudflats. we have killed about 475,000 child­ Why don’t they suggest sewage ren in their first year of life. This, equipment and complete removal the result of 20 megatons. We continue the World of pollution? Why always a big the testing. dam? Currently, the Atomic Energy The Engineer Corps is especial­ Commission is examining the feasi­ sd from Helix) ly good at dams. Thirty years ago bility of blasting out a new Panama the slogan was, “dams, more dams Canal. 250 megatons. Fallout clouds baby chicks that ordinarily are born the DEEP, blue sea. Another food for hydroelectric power,” and they 40,000 feet high. Evacuating tens of in the spring in that rookery. We dis­ source is in danger. It doesn’t take built dams, good dams. The dams thousands of people for over two covered that all the eggs had collap­ much. held back the water and wiped out years. To where? To what end? sed and the embryos killed, because The Rhine disaster, which killed all millions of acres of scenery, living What happens when the Pacific, 18 DDT ingested by" the mother bird fish in the Rhine recently, was caused room and productive land. The water feet higher than the Atlantic, rushes upset her calcium metabolic by one sack of insecticide falling off slowed sown, the lakes behind across the Isthmus bearing millions processes, causing her to lay thin- a dock into the water. the dams silted up, and are now of tons of water with a different sal­ shelled eggs which could not support Should DDT be banned? Of useless. inity, a different temperature, a dif­ her weight. Three or four days after course, but it may be too late. All of Lake Erie, 10,000 square miles, ferent population of sea organisms, laying, they collapsed. Instead of the above is the result of only 1/3 of is biologically dead. Zero oxygen. thousands of species dying in the 10,000 baby chicks only two were the DDT that has already been spread Beaches are unsafe, algae coats new environment, the climate being hatched there this year. The same on the land. 2/3 still hangs in the air, the bodies of swimmers, and piles altered, agriculture suffering, the was true of the rookeries of the 1 billion pounds, and will be settling up in foul smelling reefs at the shore­ lives of nations being transformed pelicans on the Mexican islands. on us, slowly, for the next couple of line. Flies everywhere. Fishing, once . . .for what? We also found the first thin-shelled years. One billion pounds left up major industry, has dwindled to a After the plankton the remaining cormorant eggs. Now they have there. Twice as much coming down small fleet of boats. The lake has 30% of our oxygen supply comes become quite common. Recently like a ghastly dew on the sea, on the aged a million years in the last fifty. from our forests, our greenery. We I was told that the first seagull eggs, land, on us, for the next few years. The Cayuhoga River which flows have destroyed 93% of our forests, thin-shelled, had collapsed. The The Department of Agriculture into Lake Erie is so loaded with oil and we’re losing one million areas pelican, the osprey, the cormorant, says, “We control the spreading of wastes that is has been declared a of greenery each year. 1,300,000 the petrel, the seagull, the American DDT.” Flow? Ninety percent of it fire hazard. A river — a fire hazard? Ponderosa pines up at Lake Arrow­ Bald Eagle and the peregrine falcon, blows into the air, all over the world. As a matter of fact, it did catch fire. head have been killed by us. Each eggs all collapsing. No new gener­ Polar bears in the Arctic, penguins Burned two bridges. $50,000. Sunday edition of The New York ation is being born. in the Antarctic, eel pouts, 1,500 feet Congressman Blatnikof Minnesota, Times killed by each Sunday edition Now — who is going to discover deep in McMurdo Sound at the South author of the water pollution bill, of The New York Times consumes the first collapsed hen’s egg. Pole are loaded with DDT. There isn’t points out that on the banks of the 150 acres of timber. Multiply that a cubic inch on earth free of DDT. Mississippi, down below St. Louis, by 100 cities and 10,000 towns. Sev­ I have mentioned plankton. These Mercury poisoning. The run off there are signs warning picnickers en days in the week. There go the microscopic plants serve two pur­ of mercury into the sea, from indus­ not to eat their lunch on or near the trees, oxygen and water. poses. First, plankton, microscopic trial wastes is contaminating the banks of the river. The spray from the One car driven down one block sea-animals, are the base of the whole North Sea, according to Dr. Bruce river contains typhoid, colitis, hepa­ consumes the oxygen one hundred fish food chain from anchovies to Flalstead, to the degree that in three titis, diarrhea, anthrax, salmonella, people need to survive for one month. whales.‘Without plankton there would years the fish from the North Sea will tuberculosis and polio. In simple The U.S. destroyed 340 million be no fish, whatsoever. Secondly, be too poisonous to be edible. Mer­ language it is an open, running sew­ acres through urban spread, high­ plankton provides 70% of the earth’s cury is used in the U.S. in the man­ er. This water is so toxic that if ways, erosion, dustbowls. With each oxygen. 70%. Take 70% of the oxygen ufacture of plastics, paint and paper you place a fish in a container of acre gone we lose oxygen, food, out of this room and you and I are soon pulp, and as a fungicide for wheat river water the fish will die in 60 se­ water. In the major cities, in many gasping. Well, eleven parts per bil­ seeds. conds. If you dilute the river water areas, the production of carbon lion of DDT, that’s at the ratio of about In the little town of Minamata, in 100 times with clear water, the fish dioxide already exceeds that an ounce to a thousand railroad Japan, almost one hundred people will die in 24 hours. The plain truth of oxygen. The moment is not far carloads, 11 ppm of DDT in water have died as a result of eating clams of the matter is that we all drink off when the oxygen content in our are sufficient to kill off the plankton. contaminated by the mercury in water a chlorinated soup of dead bacteria atmosphere will fall below the mini­ No oxygen. No fish. Already, this is wastes from a nearby plastics factory. that in some cases has passed through mum required to support life. happening in the estuarial areas Mercury poisoning is passed on eight or ten people. It can only get We will not be the first civilization close to land, but a couple of weeks from the wheat seed into the bread worse. to die. Much of China and India have ago, an FDA man told me they had made from the wheat flour, into Speaking of arrogance — the Un­ gone back to sand as a result of picked up their first load of contami­ the mother and congenitally into ion Oil Public Relations Department man’s greed. Syria and Turkey, by nated deep-water fish. DDT is now in the child, who dies at the age of told quite a few fibs about the amount land misuse, have created pover- two or three in convulsions with brain of oil spilled at Santa Barbara, ty-striken wastes. Very little topsoil damage. and the extent of the damage to is left in Greece. 2,000 years ago Recently, in Lake Boone in Ten­ beaches and wildlife. Our govern­ they cut down all the timber to build nessee, millions of fish died as a ment went right , along with them. warships. The Sahara, once a land result of mercury poisoning from bar­ Our Governor says not a word, Sec­ of rivers and grasslands — now a rels that had been used in the man­ retary Hickel talks of another 50 sea of sand. ufacture of paper pulp and then turn­ wells, Union continues to pump, and In the past when man abused his ed into floats for docks. Traces of the oil, as of this minute, continues environment he had a choice. He mercury leached out of the barrels to smear and smell up the beaches, didn’t have to die. He could migrate. two and three years later, killing the kill the wildlife on which we depend, Today there is no place to which we fish. and ruin the real estate. Union oil can migrate. We have only one choice Wilamette River, Oregon — dying. claims there is no danger. left. Control our population, con­ Several pulp mills, five of which use Where do we go for unbiased, serve our plant and animal life, or die. the sulphite pulping process produce authoritative evaluation? Our re­ The ancient controls of famine, 70% of the pollution, thousands of search scientists at our universities? disease and war are not standing gallons of dark, chemical poison, Let me quote the Chief Deputy At­ by awaiting our decision. They are daily. About cleaning up the river, torney General of California: already moving in. America is not the pulp mills pretty well control “The University experts all seem immune. state politics on pollution. to be working on grants from the Six years from today we shall The Potomac is a sewer for oil industry. There is an atmos­ export our last grain of wheat. We every town it passes. It is drying phere of fear. The experts are will have no more wheat surplus. We up, and its ancient, historic bones afraid that if they assist us in will not have enough for ourselves. are now desecrating the scene. Its our case on behalf of the people Dr. Paul Ehrlich: ' mudflats are now showing, covered of California, they will lose their oil “The battle to feed all of with garbage, old tires, junk, human industry grants.” humanity is over. sewage. During cherry blossom Los Angeles Regional Water Qual­ in the 1970’s the world will un­ time it is the best-dressed cess­ ity Control Board has the problem of dergo famines. Hundreds of mil­ pool in America. harbor pollution by Union Oil. One lions of people are going to starve The Army Corps of Engineers of the Board’s voting members is an to death in spite of any crash pro­ suggests putting up a large dam employee of Union Oil. gram embarked upon now.” (here they come again) at Seneca, A recent study at the University Let me repeat our opening words. building up a huge head of water, of Pittsburgh suggests that down­ Drs. Felger and Commoner estimate and then releasing it suddenly to wind from our atomic testing infant that we have about 40 years left flush out the river, exactly as you mortalities rise about 50%, and that for us on this earth. Dr. Orloffs gives Emit GromWc^ would flush the john. One day flood since the Alamogordo blast in 1945, us only 15 year. Les Ballets Africains comes extremely complex. A was tragic to realize that they noticeable influence on wes­ had actually been in their na- by Moose Bard tern song was the use of the tiveland. The performances, The Africaine Ballet at the “call and response” pattern instead of each being cut Comedie Canadienne 'as an between leader and chorus seemingly at the point where exposition of Cameroon cul­ which is often utilized in things really got moving, ture through music, song and American Gospel music. would have undoubtedly con­ dance. Unfortunately the only Along with various drums, tinued on for hours. information the audience other instruments employed received was provided by an in the show were an African announcer who before each xylophone (played by three half rattled off the titles of men) zanzas thumb pianos) the pieces to be performed. animal horns, wind instru­ This made it difficult to grasp ments as the voice (mimicking the full meaning of the songs instruments and animaleries). and ceremonies. The dancers themselves But African music is an were instruments (beautiful integral part of the culture, ones) and added to the music THE not an adornment. It was used by clapping, stomping, swish­ as a signaling language over ing their skirts and making Bill the jungle expanse and the use of the rattles and bells people expressed feelings attached to their feet. The through it that were otherwise numerous dances represented NOOK BOOK hidden, such as resentment the facets of social and re­ The SGWU Conservatory Sly and the Family Stone, against colonial authority or ligious life-war, seduction will show two Charlie Chap­ the Jam Factory and the Fifth mockery of tribal chiefs. (with the phenomenal woman ^ WITH SPECIAL OUEST Q lin sound films on Feb. 19, Avenue Band at the Forum The music communicated, lead dancer as the seducer), SARAH VAUGHAN The Great Dictator (1040) at Feb. 23. it talked, it moved. It forced a fire, black magic, alligators, 7 PM and Monsieur Verdoux Tom Paxton and Friends at you to dance (though to dance moving huts (haystacks?) SUN. MARCH 8 (1947) at 9PM Next Thurs­ the Sir Arthur Curie Gym while being forced to sit in a love, rivalry, and puberty. The Two Performances - 2:30 & 8:30 p.m. 1 Tickets: $6.50, 5.50, 4.50, 3.50 day at 8:00 PM Paul Leni’s Feb 21 at 7:30 PM chair is extremely difficult). bodies seemed like elastic, The Cat and the Canary (1927) The Centaur Theatre Com­ Its influence on “Western” themovementsvaried-smooth, MAIL ORDER: Send cheque or money order with stamped self- pany present Harold Pinter’s folk music and jazz was so ap­ graceful, slow, rigid, forceful, addressed envelope to Place des Gordon Lightfoot will be at The Birthday Party until parent that the music, though furious. Arts, Montreal 18, Quebec. Place des Arts from Feb. 20-22 March 1st played by strangely costumes Despite the microphones, Bill Cosby will be at Place des Squeeze I I continues it’s people on strange instru­ lighting, and the Comedie SALLE WILFRID-PELLETIER Arts March 8. run at Mother Martins ments, had an unmistakable Canadienne interior, the troop fik PLACE DES ARTS Le Theatre de lUniversite de The Georgian Film Society familiar ring to it. The timings was able to transport the G /XD M ontréal 18, 842-2112

Montreal presente un spec­ offers Abbot and Costello are similar to the common audience to the Cameroon. It IA MARTIN ONROT PRODUCTION tacle experimental le passion meet Frankenstein and a “W estern” 3 4,4 4, 6 8 but as a d’A le 19-22 Feb. a20:30h. Charlie Chan flick Jade Mask result of the rhythm holy- Ritchie Havens and Clouds Jesse Winchester is at the phony (different rhythms will be at Place des Arts Back Door (corner Sherbrooke played and or sung simul­ Graduating Students March 15. and McTavish) this week. taneously) the rhythm be 1 9 7 0 Photos now being taken for GARNET and composites. Come early to avoid the rush. Open daily 9-6.

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photo: Dave B. C larke 1447 St. Catherine St. W. between MacKay & Guy Street During the break between the 23rd and 25th of February College Supplies — Stationary 1970, the Department of Economics will be available Greeting Cards — Office Supplies for consultation. The hours must be arranged with their respective secretaries. *Sabertons J C inti ted C.U.S.O. an open invita­ tion to a round table discus­ sion on Volunteer Service with returned volunteers The Savoy Society Tuesday, February 24th at presents 8:00 P.M. at 4824 Cote des Neiges. Coffeeandbeerserved. The PIRATES of PENZANCE Society of Experimental Mysticism will have a meet­ ing on Monday, February 23 Feb. 25-28 8:30 p.m. at 8:30 P.M. in Room H-1070. Moyse Hall, McGill University All are welcome. photo: Peter Psaris Tickets: $2.00 Info: 288-2062

PEOPLE’S BANNER east. There can be no peace racism based on an invalid cont’d from page 7 until there is an Arab-Je wish historical claim, nurtured by state that can resist im­ the feeling of “We’ve suffered even with Russians out of the perialist efforts to control its so much that we deserve our Mideast, the U.S. would hap­ resources and political future. homeland of 2000 years ago” SEE pily remain there pursuing To do this the Arabs must rid or “the Arabs are ready to kill Europe its own imperialist interests. themselves of elitist govern­ us” (I’ve heard the same said Two small fascist blocks ments and the right-wing and about the black man in the each with a large ally continue nationalist bureaucracies. U.S.). Long Live the Arab- ON $ 2 ’ 5 ° ADAY Jews must renounce anti-Arab Jewish people’s State! to face each other in the Mid­ Canadians travelling abroad recorded over 164,000 overnights last year at Youth Fifth Hostels. Most were students. continued from p. 11 Missing Boy Europe has over 3,000 Youth Hostels. They backup group. They even have the same photographer (Henry Diltz) Sought in Montreal provide low cost accommodation, meals, as the Spoonful). Yet contrary to this and a friendly welcome. evidence, coupled with the fact that of those who may have seen Eighteen months ago, Marc If you are planning a trip, contact us soon!! their acoustic folk/country material Sobel disappeared. He has his son or know his where­ has a lazy jugband drawl, the voca­ not been heard from since. abouts. lists can sound Tim (Hardin or Buckly) Marc was supposed to Any person having any Canadian Youth Hostels folky, while Murry Weinstock’s con­ start New York University information regarding the Association tribution is pleasant jazz-oriented in September, 1968. He work­ whereabouts of Marc Sobel 1324 Sherbrooke St. W. keyboard work. ed in a New York bank the are asked to notify the Mont­ Montreal 109, Que. The Fifth Avenue Band is a group summer before he was sche­ real contact 761-4663 or 842-9048 of young, happy people that duled to start college. Then 392-5956 (Styan). musically conjure up visions of he vanished. Summertime and yourfirst love. We’ll The 6 foot 3 inches, 19-year see how they fare at the Forum with old Marc may be in the Mont­ Sly and the Family Stone in the Winter real area. His father, a stat­ of Feb. 23. istics professor at the Univer­ sity of Minnesota, says his Monk son is a “big-city type of boy” continued from p. 11 who would choose Montreal bop tenor voices), witty John Ore or perhaps Toronto. Marc’s on bass and steady, consistant fondness for large cities Frankie Dunlop on drums. The tunes and the fact that he is against (“ Blue Monk” , “ Straight, No Chaser,” the war effort in the States “ Nutty” etc) are familiar to any Monk had led Prof. Sobel to be­ fan, yet here’s a chance to make them lieve his son is in Canada. better known. Prof. Sobel’s crusade is Above all don’t be scared away by a lonely one. The police, Monk’s first name, behind it lurks the more involved with juvenile bobbing fingers and whimseyish runaways (18 and under), beat of a man who knows what he can co-operate only to a cer­ wants, and loves what he’s doing. tain extent in the case of How many other people can you say Marc Sobel. So Prof. Sobel that about? is counting on the assistance

] This is the fourth and final sumed his superior insight. Bryant wants is intellectual thing but ideology, a set of article of the Smith-Bryant This still remains true. He rigidity, peripheral discussion beliefs that serve to main­ Controversy. objects to this label and in and a bit of folksy humour. tain the existing order and the same breath accuses It is not enough for a radical. that are imposed from above. Polemics can be very bor­ me of not discussing things A* radical is a man who is For a radical the significant ing. By their very nature on “a serious adult level”. continually testing his theory category is social class and they tend to stretch out over Stanley Grey is too young “to and his politics and trying the conflict that occurs time; people forget the ini­ contribute usefully to social Reply to communicate what he has between classes. And no tial point of contention by progress”. Initially it was learned. amount of liberal ideology the time the last argument that we hadn’t read Franz to Radical are people who can obscure this. Insofar as has appeared. It is a tedious Borkenau. When he finds are trying to do several things; he acts politically the radical endeavour. It is not in the out that we have it suddenly Professor they are trying to make people is concerned with this. His least bit rewarding to contin­ becomes experience rather aware of the specific nature program and his theory are ually re-examine Professor than learning we lack. When Bryant of their problems and how concerned with educating Bryant’s arguments. To de­ we ask him to seriously in­ these problems relate to people to understand social vote time to examining il- dicate precisely where it structures in society. And class as the exterior and dom­ logic and inconsistency is is that we can justly be crit­ they are trying to change inant reality of possible an intensely morbid occupa­ icized, his only recourse is those structures. Their anal­ change and the necessary tion. Nonetheless, it must be to ask what we were doing yses of society must be both area in which structural re­ done; idiocy has no rights in in 1937. This appeal to author­ sociological and ideological. form can take place. the century of the concentra­ ity rather than reason; to in­ It must examine specific In Canada the problem is tion camp. This time we must nuendo rather than argument by Murray Smith forms of consciousness in exasperated by the existance hit the nail on the head. Let is a classical tactic of all society and understand of what Rioux calls ethnic us proceed. conservatives. how these forms of social class, the theory that social There is a myth, ancient More. I spent a substantial consciousness relate to social class most radically man­ in liberal society, that, if we amount of time trying to see structures; how these struc­ ifests itself along the lines say, “ What does this mean?” the word fascism and any tures condition and delin­ of ethnic differences. Cleav­ and then repeat the word meaning it has in the context eate the views of particular age along class line occurs “ why” six times in rapid suc­ Prof Bryant uses Iwas individuals and the groups in all areas in Canada but is cession we have done some­ trying to see if a sound made in which these people live more significant in French thing dreadfully intellectual. by forcing airthrough a larynx open for everyone. Why, if a and act. It is impossible to Canada because the split Prof. Bryant had obviously was comprehensible or just French Canadian works hard explain to people why what occurs along lines that mani­ succoumbed to this myth. Hav­ nonsensical mumbling. As he may someday invent the they think is self-defeating fest themselves in terms of ing read my critique of his far as I could see it was snowmobile. He stands back unless you can show them linguistics and cultural en­ obscurantism he obviously the latter. in awe, wondering why a the specific mechanisms tities. Granted there are gave in to the urg to do me Professor Bryant has done people who have nothing, that give rise to that think­ poor English Canadians one better. He was obviously absolutely nothing toconvince keep asking for something. ing in the first place. This in Quebec, granted there are intent on borrowing my me­ anyone otherwise. He keeps French Canadians are author­ understanding is a first part rich French Canadians; none­ thod and making an effort to aski ng,” Is Lemieuxa Fascist.” itarian. Of course they have of any radical theory. theless most French Cana­ analyse in detail what it was He assumes that since he no authority. They have an Additionally, radicals are dians are economically disad­ I was saying. This, in itself, is understands what he means all-or-nothing attitude. It’s people with a programme. vantaged and most English not in the least bad. Imitation that other people do too. Is just that for the present they They are proposing specific Canadians benefit from this is the sincerest form of flat­ Lem ieux a fascist? Is he an have nothing. Does it take steps to be taken to modify disadvantage. Any program tery. The only hitch being eggplant? a mind so fertile to go beyond society. It is useless to ask forthe reform of political struc- that Prof. Bryant hasn’t the More Again. The ancient its narrowness and see that people to attempt a funda­ take this into account, but vaguest idea of what it was bugbear about education in there may be some justifica­ mental critique of society recognize it as the dominant that I was trying to do. French Canada is raised. Pro­ tion for anger? unless you can show them an political reality. Failure to do His essay was a repeat of fessor Bryant is convinced Again his method is ar­ alternative, unless you can this removes one from the its previous -performance. “that there was absolutely gument by insinuation. Read­ show them a direction in logical class of all radicals. It is totally devoid of any nothing to have prevented ing his text I find that I am which they can work to affect For a radical nationalism theoretical meaning and in­ Tascherau or Duplessis from somehow connected with the their own conditions and is not a particularly signifi­ telligible only to himself. He setting up a modern educa­ convolutions of Stalinist the conditions of society cant category. It is invar­ cannot or will not attempt tional system” . Untrue. Mo­ policy. I am a dogmatist. Prof in general. “ The philosophers iably a liberal ideology. It to deal with the issues in dernization would have meant Bryant stands for integrity have only interpreted the may or mya not contain some themselves and turns to every secularization and all the and common sense. He tells world differently, the point radical content. In Quebec type of insinuation and rhe­ governm ents of the past in us that the m ajor problem is however is to change it,” the most important separa­ torical device to give the Quebec were dependent on the American Empire, imply­ wrote the philosopher in 1845. tist party, the Parti FQuebe- appearance that he has the an alliance with the church ing in some way that I think It still remains true today. cois, obviously does not least bit of a leg to stand on. to maintain political power. Rock Robertson is. The essential point for a have at the present time He writes: “ Let us pause, Naturally the church also Prof. Bryant inquires of me radical to grasp when he much of the latter. Speara- analyse, and dissect.” An helped to maintain the ap­ as to what I mean by the word examines the structure of tism would be largely a trans­ excellent idea; we wait expec­ propriate attitude of passivity neurotic. This syndrome — society is the existance of fer of power from Westmount tantly, we hold our breath. amongst Québécois and help­ inconsistency, insinuation,ap­ social class and the unequal to Outremont and would not But, nothing! It is a sour joke. ed maintain Quebec as peals to authority, ill-logic, distribution of wealth, proper­ measureably change the The questions reel off. Maz- a source of cheap labour. emotionalism, suspicion — ty and power in society. Lib­ economic system or politi­ zini? Spinoza? The answers It is quite interesting to could only be characterized eral theory is concerned with cal situation of the majority recede. After all, “ I’d rather view the various idealogies as neurotic. Not that Prof representing society as com­ of Québécois. But it would make a positive statement that English Canadians have Bryant is neurtoic — I am pletely homogeneous, or be a step in that direction. than sort out all these loose regarding what Québécois not competent to say this, if it admits that there are ends.” Precisely, he doesn’t are like. If you have little nor am I particularly concern­ classes, it argues that they It would be one enemy to have an inkling about what education, you think all Qué­ ed. But I think we can rea­ are a necessary product of fight rather than two. It would is happening. bécois do is drink and sonably maintain that the the division of labor and the additionally create the situa­ Let us look at who is stand­ have sex. They drink lots of argument is neurotic. unequal distribution of talent. tion where the people of Que­ ing logic on its head. “The pepsi-cola and have rotten After all this he informs me Of course it admits that there bec would be in the position New Left,” writes Prof Bry­ eeth. If you are a little more that we are both entirely in are inequalities but it main­ to understand the cleavages ant, “ cannot be readily char­ educated you of course ad­ agreement. I am not entirely tains that these are transient, that exist in Quebec society acterized, because it is not mit that there are problems convinced. The difference that they are not central and take the first tentative a homogeneous movement.” butyou blame the wholething between myself and Prof. and that the system will steps towards defending their Trjje. But then how can Prof. on the educational system. Bryant is not a difference in eventually iron them out. In interests as a class towards Bryant characterize it as Which is complete nonsense. age — that is not important classically obscurantist their own — political ed­ being racist, as not knowing The educational system is — but a fundamental differ­ fashion they may refer to. ucation. Separatism is a what it is talking about etc., a m anifestation of a much ence in political philosophy. these problems as “ peripher­ necessary but by no means etc. Obviously there is a dou­ broader exploitation. A fact He is a liberal, I am a radi­ ally dysfunctional” and a sufficient condition for ble standard in use here. which comfortable liberals cal. I see no common meet­ maintain that all talent is socialism. The job for rad­ Let us go on. I wrote in do not want to face. ing ground. What I propose is rewarded and that merit icals is to grab the left wing my last article that Prof. Bry­ But still more. Prof Bryant’s a fundamental critique of is the sole or major criterion of this movement and make it ant preferred not to deal with im agination overwhelms us. institutions, an open-ended for opportunity or advance­ act as a catalyst for structur­ the rights or the wrongs of Someday, Trudeau may sur­ political theory and a willing­ ment. a l change and an instrument an issue but rather, just as­ prise us. Anyway, the future is ness to innovate. What Prof. For a radical this is no­ of political education. These days, when one notices a movie theatre with a long que leading up to the box office, the censor board A has most likely not passed the arereferredtoasconservative ALL rating. The older gener­ ation goes to such movies with the fore-knowledge that they will have to walk out “ in disgust” either because they fear that one of their ac­ quaintances could possibly be in the theatre watching F them as they watch the movie, or because they become so frustrated that having spent another minute in the theatre they would find themselves clawing at the person next to I them. The middle-aged go to the accepted skin flicks to photo: Robert Lecker witness liberalized censor­ postponed for it was felt that was the lady’s retort. place in his heart for it was ship, of the type that was not the public, moreover the cen­ Should someone ask me his am bition as a teenager to prevalent twenty years ago. sors, were not ready for the what is playing at the local become the g reatest tenor ev­ Young adults go, (as a result film. The cinematic accom­ cinema emporium, I would er to sing Handel’s Messiah. of the m ale’s suggestion), in plishment was officially an­ L reply: “ Nothing!” Should that One day tragedy befalls aspiration of getting their nounced during the week of person return with “ Isn’t Grey him when the chauffeur, while dates into a state of mind January 3 on Jack Curran’s Flannel Cowboy playing” , my driving all the choirmembers where they would be more “In Town” program by its reply would be “Well, that’s to midweek rehearsal, in­ responsive later during that producer director Zalman the same as nothing.” volves the automobile in a evening. The teen-agers who Yanofsky. Mr. Yanofsky, ex­ That is not to say that the massive accident where all fall below the age required for lead guitarist for the Lovin’ M film was dull. In fact, it was the passengers lose their entrance yet manage to make Spoonful rock group, is also one of the most enjoyable I lives. The choirmaster is their way in anyhow, do so to well known for his production have ever seen, yet it left me stunned and left dumbfound­ fill the gap left open between of Magistrate’s Court, a daily empty-headed. (Some say I ed in realizing that he will the pictorials of Playboy and television drama, so camp it’s was left in that manner long have no choir to conduct the the literature of Time. comic. Unfortunately, or ago), previously mentioned following Saturday morning. These bedroom bonanzas possibly fortunately, depen­ Grey Flannel Cowboy, in So to soften the shock he are referred to as conserv- dant upon whether Magis­ terms of underground cinema borrows the choir of the First tive stag films, cinema vérité, trate’s Court finds favour in is extreme. To quote director Avenue Pentecostal Church erotic, art, or underground your eyes, Grey Flannel Cow­ Yanofsky, “ It’s worse than which happens to be all film s. Grey Flannel Cowboy boy is not pursued with the R Warhol’s“LonesomeCowboy”. female.After“ horsingaround” is classified in the under­ same initiative as is the T.V. It was originally scheduled to intimately, he converts to ground film category. show. It would seem as if the be shown at the System Thea­ their faith. He divorces his News of the supposed maj- producer is using a different tre yet they refused to accept Jewish wife and marries a esticity of this film was leaded mind for television and responsibility for the film. wailing Moslem fakir. only a few months ago when cinema si nee they are contriv­ Zalman went to the extent of the distribution company ed in distinctly different offering to pay them an un­ Yanofsky makes use of handling Grey Flannel Cow­ styles. It could besaidthatthe E disclosed sum, without asking practical jokes in all these boy accidentally sent it out film hasasemblance to eating for a profit return for the films to the extent that they to a childrens theatre in place fish. There is a lot of protein screening of thefilm, but again have become visible as a of the originally requisitioned intake, but hardly any fat his offer was turned down. significant characteristic of Bambi and Rudolph, Donald consumption. To analogize it Last week’s showing at the his style. With every one of his and Minnie. It had been to a situation I would des­ Blue Carpenter Underground films I see I become so much secretly filmed two years cribe it as such: Theatre ought to change that greater a fan of his. The tech- V nicolour finishing in “Gone prior to that time in New The mother of a friend of sort of reception. York’s Central Park but the mine does not like me. My With the White Tornado” was The story centers around a frankly the work of a master. release date was continually friend and myself are in his seasoned corporation exe­ garage when suddenly his cutive who lives in a middle “Take the Tail and Run”, the mother appears. I happen to class, ethnically defined, second Yanofsky film is the be behind the door she opens I suburban area. Asidefrom his story of a young man by the to enter the garage. breadwinning duties he acts name of O’Hare and his ex­ “ Are you alone?” , she asks as a father to three fanatically periences as a comedian and her son. i religious children whom he children’s fairy storyteller at He replies affirmatively. mistakenly sent to an orthodox Playboy clubs across the Ten minutes later she re­ parochial school, and hus­ North American, continent. appears only to see me in full band to an orgiastically prone view. E wife. In the line of community To my thinking, by the time “ I thought you said nobody service he is the choirmaster Zalman Yanofsky has ten was here”, remarked the forthe local conservative syn­ cine-works to his credit, he mother, to which my friend agogue group. Of all his re­ will rank with Fellini, Zeffireiii, replies, “Well, Stan just quired or volunteered acti­ and Lean as one of the greats dropped in.” vities, this one takes a special among film-makers. “ Having Stan here is the W photo: Jan Dvorak •"XvX'XvrXv.'.v.v.v.v MINI — MIDI —-MAXI WE DO HAIR Skirts Stan Racoon Coats • Jackets jean-pierre Hollander New and Used coiffeur Hats 2065 rue Bishop ' Just across from Bishop St. Exit 288-4111 OLGA UON FU IS 2087 PEEL ST. J M U M M u e p r e e r Poems of Oppression and Liberation

Bruce Innes

ZEITGEIST

Never have I seen so many days where the lost cried out breaking the air with hungry screams; caught in the rigid grip of sentences like a crim inal, or a dead novelist.

PRAXIS

Is todays world, tomorrows garden of death? What have we done to deserve this? Nothing? precisely.

(Biafra) There is no more senseless act than to write a poem on war, for the dead cannot read, and the living will not.

t k c^o cï\icms Icï\icms «xslfCed. c^o iosY iosY m a. Sea. bxcs hoi fnaVber V\ouo V\ouo Vnaun^ clas-ses SO WCTe .OTouoded . 1 t> eciwne 1 . eciwne t> .OTouoded t o n th e one c.oncU'tiOYA, -VV\at -VV\at •jOO -Veil rvo or\e o-f ! [ ^ I-VVws I-VVws re ^ u o jc Need artwork or posters There will be a meeting of Organizational meeting^ If you can’t attend the done? Contact Steve Lin- strom (creator of Lenny the Liberal}, at the georgian office. P.M. in Room H-820. The the Youngon Feb. Socialist 20 from 8:15-11:00 Club will be shown. Admission is free. 11. 11. Room number to be an­ film, “In the Year of the Pig” unteers willingBlood Drive to on March work 10 and for Blood Drive office Room 351. Feb. 27 at 2:00 P.M. for vol­ nounced in the future. meeting please contact the i uoas uoas -Vhere \% ■çla.c.e. l-t "VoJfte OjOO ... OjOO "VoJfte ol ol ouj \-fc V\ \ o ..-Ç oim d ojoiét «and calm, none o-Ç- Wie noise awd clamour I had hame b e , C o m e .Wvoit 1 .Wvoit W io o u Bruce Innes V\orw\ou\Va.>\A The biggest"V\orw\ou\Va.>\A ■ 3 0 Ü 3 r e a c t io n 1 woul«A 1 1 u>ou\

1965)

Ho Chi Minh, inU.S. Moratorium organizers of Nam, perialists, Get out of Viet On the battlefront against At present, to oppose the “ Our people have fought the the .

i r N Libera" policy for American resis­ izations such as the Voice of effective InternationalCommission.Control The indications sympathetic immigration the U.S. for the duration of American interferencenam, to Viet­in produce an embargo fromdozensofdifferentcrgan- Ottawa have received mes­ ernment initiative for the re­ the war, to institute a more on all military supplies to march are: to pressure the Exiles committees; as well as sages of intended support Busloads of marchers will have upgraded their estimate establishment of a fair and tors; and to produce a gov­ Canadian Government into schools. The aims of the Women, Hillel, Deserters and patriot.” not yet been released; plus Saturday,themarchwill begin arrive in Ottawa, Friday beFeb. a folk (etc.) concert with between 10-20 thousand. such that the organizers taking an official stand on York to Mt. Allison, and high and proceedtothe Parliament Cockburn, Albert Bruce Failey, Peterandothers Murdoch, Hodgson,whose nameshave of the number of marchers to of massive support have been thePeace-weekend/March on country is task the of most every sacred (Vietnamese) buildings where demonstra­ arranged for at Friday the University night. of Ottawa, 27. Friday evening there Jessewill Winchester, Bruce from various universitiesfrom peoplesuchasClaireCulhane,Laurier Lapierre, Douglas. and Tommy but also very glorious. United States and save the tors will be addressed by films.Accommodationisbeing people’s task is very heavy in the world. and made sacrifices not only also for the commonand freedom independene of the the U.S. agressors, our other peoples, and for peace for the sake of theirdom own and free­ independence, but

«•mmwrnrnFFmrrrrrrrrrrrrm rmrrîrn i nrmnrv/n rrmïrm un i ri rrm r it RSG media, both radio and news­ events and this year we have ontinued from p. 6 papers, for our external news. provided many of the local panding record library, This is a time-consuming and radio stations with tapes of Carlyle ut I'm sorry to say our news often difficult process. As events at Sir George. Un­ service is not what I hoped for Sir George news, we try fortunately we’ve been off Carlyle My problem is that I can no would be. to present all the important the air this year too long I find it difficult to amuse longer study my work. I find Not having the money to stories before the two news­ to do too many people any my friends at parties. What myself more involved in skiing urchase a teletype, we are papers can, as we have the good. It’s unfortunate, be­ type of jokes do you think I and everything else. I find it I?forced to monitor the local advantage of broadcasting cause it’s the student’s loss. should tell. difficult to keep my boy­ throughout the day while So there you have a gen­ Shy, friends interested. I find it the newspapers come out eral picture of the situation Shy, difficult to relate to the people only once a week. at CRSG and in the univer­ I think the best jokes, are around me. . . In short I am ART’S BARBERSHOP As a public-service fac­ sity in general. CRSG has big those which involve human searching for something. 2300 GUY ST. ility, CRSG has always gone things planned for next year. despair and suffering. If these D.C. all outto publicize SirGeorge We hope to be part of a un­ are polished properly, they Dear D.C., iversity radio network link­ can wreck the heads of the If you cannot keep your ing Loyola, Macdonald, Party. Here are two examples: boyfriends because you are a and Marianopolis with Sir Mommy: John say your virgin, they are not worth it. SIR GEORGE HILLEL George. Our programs will prayers, say after me... . Our Just think when you are be broadcast over Bell father, which art in heaven, seventy-five years old you can Wednesday, Feb. 18,1970 Telephone lines, and though Hallowed by thy name... etc look back at these temptations this is an expensive proposi­ John: Mommy, I don’t like 3-4:00 PM and cry your heart out. IN ROOM H-820 tion, it is the only way we can that prayer, it’s too long. I like provide the student body the one you say every night What about your dreams. MURRAY BOOCHIN with diversified and inter­ when you go to bed. Do you dream of waterfalls and esting programming from Mommy: John, what type of great bodies of water, gushing Noted Ecologist and Anarchist the whole island. The poten­ prayer do I say.... out of the wilderness? speaks on anarchism in the tial is unlimited. John: It goes like this. Do you love to eat hotdogs, Post-Techonological Age David Nayman oh my God; oh my God. . . and do you spend much time I am coming. I am coming. at Dominion mainly because Thursday, Feb. 19 3:30 P.M. / * * * of the meat? in Room H-635 Letters con’t The rat ran across the room Do you find yourself point­ and the cat hurriedly grabbed ing at everyone. Do you find RABBI RICHARD RUBINSTEIN 1) the nature of the necessity him... by the throat of that the boys you go out with k of democracy in the left course. . . After struggling have no interest in broad author of “After Auschwitz" 2) the undemocratic nature fruitlessly the dying rat whis­ jumping or breast stroking, probes a “Godless Judaism - 20th Centruy style’ of the “Student Front for pered. . .Like I sometime do in short are they non-athletic? Democratic Rights” . . . This pussy is killing me. Do you believe in the old I 3) What a united defense * * * adage...Spare not the rod Judaic Studies effort of those oppressed Carlyle, and spoil not the child? at 2130 Bishop really means I am glad to see that we can If you do, read my last 1 Monday at 6:00 but no, Dennis Kaye, because send our problems to someone week’s reply and organize a Friday at 12:00 he is a Maoist decided to ex­ who really cares. group therapy session. Living Theatre ploit the situation and confus­ Coffee Sunday at 7:30 ed, distorted or negated the necessity of these objectives 18YEARS in the minds of everybody. Adults COMING SUNDAY Fraternally, M ARCH 1 Victor Raymond draft-didiers Richard Alpert President, Sir George Young Socialists who flee to Canada... TODAY’S GENERtmOH- living by their own code!j r Strung-out, hung up, hassled by the establishment!

AX INVITATION IIUUSIXO To further an appreciation for the warmth of chas­ The Chabad (Lubavitchcr) Chassidim invite Jewish sidic living, all the participants will be housed with college students to spend a sabbath weekend with them. chassidic families in the immediate area. This “encounter" will comprise almost three days ol active participation in chassidic living. Seminars on the LOCATION general them e o f Doina Youi Own Thing—Jewishly will All meetings will take place in the vicinity of the form the intellectual milieu for the program. Rabbinical College of Canada, Montreal, Quebec

FEE A registration fee of $10 is required to help defray PU RPO SE ■ ' expenses. Checks should be made payable to the Luba- vitch Youth Organization and be enclosed with the regis­ The encounter is designed to allow anyone who is tration form. seriously concerned about his commitment to Judaism to see, first hand, that Chassidism can contribute to this. DATES There is no prior background or commitment required. > •Registration: Friday Feb. 27 12.30 pm — 2:30 pm

REGISTRATION First session Fri., Feb. 27 Registration is open to any university or college student who is Jewish (iruduatc students arc also invited to Last session attend. Sun. morning — Mar. 1

SEMINAR LEADERS P R O G R A M —DOING YOU* OWN THING—JEWISHLY from the rabbinate: Wiih come justification. Jews can claim to be the origi­ nators of the idea behind "doing your own thing." Through­ Rabbi S. D. Lipskar, educator, lecturer, principal out their history, insistence on maintaining their beliefs and Ohlei Torah Schools, Miami Beach, Fla. way of life in the face of all kinds of opposition, has allowed JULES BRICKEN'S “EXPLOSION”»™ , DON STROUD. the Jewish people to survive. What are the well springs The atmosphere ol University life from academia: from which such a tenacity stems? What, in fact, does Prof. Y. Block, Philosophy, U. of Western Ontario. COLOR sorocwthousoh it mean for a Jew to do his own thing? Chabad Chassidism places the Jewish student in an environment «SRICHARD CONTE gives answers to such questions which have found a wide normally detached from society and Prof. A. Teitelbaum, Mathematics, McGill U. audience among Jewish college students. This year, seminars every day life. Prof. L. Mendelson, English, SGWU led by Chabad Rabbis and by University Professors will This character of University life pins STARTING FRIDAY! be devoted to an in-depth exploration of these answers and the mingling with ail types of people Prof. E. Cohen, Mathematics, SGWU their contemporary relevance. and ideas, are certainly instrumental in broadening his outlook, but also cause the CAPITOL DORVAl 60 DOHVAi. AV student to question or even reject his own r. CATHERINE W ?6V6b'28 upbringing while searching for his role in society. LAVAL His Jewish identity can be weakened or REENFIII.D PARK nulliiied unless he ensures that it is UNtV.A-; M. 8,8200 maintained while he is at University the economic accomplice of board construction comes system. It is failing; it will die. monopoly capital. Like arms first; building materials must RADICALIZATION Advertising manufacture, the advertis­ rot in lumber yards. ing factories, are immense Marx can tell us what the In one sense then, advertis­ parasites. So while indus­ result will be. He says that ing does make ‘good things try under produces and under when the class which controls happen’. For as the working In Society employes, advertising boosts the means of production and class becomes increasing­ prices to keep up this limited the economic relationships ly conscious of its essential Rick Shaw production. involved in that control, ossify, productive role in society OUTBUYING JONES. portant of all, the fate of pri­ stability disappears. But, he and as it is made aware that vate property in the indus- Industry in North America goes on, when productivity in­ labour and nothing else con­ “Life is not a bowl of cher- trialsystem,themediacrusade has thus come to a road creases, wheninventionmakes stitutes the value of goods, ries and Buick knows it.” for reaction. It is no coin- block. Its bourgeois masters increased social wealth poss­ then it will also realize that This is the innocuous start of cidence, of course, that radi- will not unchain it, will not ible, then existing economic it works to support a huge a T.V. spot for General Mo- cal publications (like Ram- employ fully, cannot in fact. relations become chains upon military and advertising es­ tors, Buick Division. It con- parts) are almost ad-less, Meanwhile, the money which production. The ruling class, tablishment which produces tinues. Our hero is an affable Advertising operates then industry produces for its always a parasite, becomes nothing but inflation. It will middle American washing with devastating efficiency owners, which cannot be re­ exposed as imprisioned pro­ come to see the military as his new Buick Le Sabre. His on a society-wide scale. No invested in production except duction declines or bursts its greatest enemy. Every ‘friend’ Harry approaches. commisar for literature and on the basis of modernization apart its integument. Revolu­ billboard which denies “Hi Harry — How’s Helen? publications could so effec- of plant, must go somewhere. tion is inevitable. The num­ decent housing, every T.V. Oh, she is — that makes six tively stifle comment and Some is used to pay taxes, erically superior exploited spot which helps raise prices doesn’t it?” Harry is a rap- suppress the truth. All this, some to mechanize, some rise, the ruling class is des­ and unemployment figures acious moral idiot to start, while the bourgeoisie main- invested in scientific research troyed and society resumes will be a running sore to the But there is worse to hear tains the myth of a free press, but huge amounts are left forward motion on a new working class and those to about Harry. Free from what. From com- over. Where does it go? Asia, class basis. Unplanned pro­ whom the system has denied “How’s the car running misars — yes. But from Latin America and Europe. duction and crisis of over­ the right to work. Like mam­ Harry? Oh — that’s too bad” giant social parasites who Why does it go? Because there production, inflation and the moth military spending, ad­ Upon our hero’s face there is rule industrial society in their is no use for it. People may be dictates of monopoly capital vertising will clearly show a Machiavellian grin; triumph own interests, from adver- hungry, 30 percent of America are all links in the chain of the real priorities and beams from his paunchy tising that makes truth a may be hungry, but land must thrown over industrial pro­ limitations of bourgeois so- • visage as he trumpets “Well nice idea but an unattainable lay fallow; butter must be duction. The bourgeoisie, ciety and of petty attempts to we both looked at Buicks abstraction? No. burned. People may live in merchant in origin, cannot reform that society and its Harry.” Harry doesn’t reply; Thus “advertising makes rat infested hovels, but bill­ apply its rule to the industrial base exploitative essence. Harry never replies. Harry good things happen”, the is damned and dumfounded. latest chant of bourgeois The remainder of the pur- Catholicism goes unchalleng- gatorial (for Harry) 60 se- ed except on a small scale in conds are spent showing us this society. Without adver- and him how cuddley our tising, attacks on this chant i> tr d w irij? P ub middle class protagonist real- are most difficult ot finance, ly is. He bangs the side of The advertising “industry” the Le Sabre and withdraws is free then to go into ecstatics his fist in pain — “crafts- about itself while it, like an manship Harry”. His wind- insatiable social python, shield cleaning tool falls swallows vast economic meta- apart as he is spreadeagled physical resources, while o K n V $75 over the hood. This whole it vomits back to the people thing winds up with the cent- nothing but “marks of excel- ral character polishing his lence” and “Uncoloas”. vehicle in the middle of a torrential downpour — ADS AND CAPITAL ANY LIQUORS “Buick gives you something to believe in” is the pro- From the 1 million plus peo- found moral lesson. pleandthe$18,000,000,000.00 (1969-U.S.A.) employed dir- MAISONNEUVE & BISHOP This advertisement, along ectly by the advertising ‘in- r with many, many like it, have dustry’ of North America, escalated the middle class society gets no physical pro­ status struggle in the western duction. One million people world. Now it is no longer are paid and spend what are, GEORGIAN FILM SOCIETY presents: permissable only to keep up on the average, high wages with the Jones, it is far bet- while they produce no goods PI A DEGERM ANK (Best actress Cannes Festival 1967) & ter, far nobler to beat them to buy. The advertising ‘in- from the first whistle; to dustry’ creates, therefore, by Swedish award winner, TOMMY BERGGREN; out-manouver them in the its very operation, a great de­ neurotic dash for goods that mand for goods among its Directed by BO WIDERBERG; is “consumer society” but own employees, demand with- this is by far the most out supply; it adds to infla- IN palatable of advertising’s tion. Of course it creates more aims and effects. demandwithoutsupply;itadds to inflation. Of course it ADS AND INFORMATION creates more demand by func­ tioning properly (by urging In the radio, press and tele- the consumer to consume). v vision — the “consciousness The system as a whole industry, advertising operates adapts. It produces less for ELVIRA MADIGAN as an unseen censor as, to- more instead of as formerly, gether with private ownership more for less. It has discov- of the media, it provides the ered that the only way to pre­ r basis for the bias for private vent price fall is to limit “THE MOST BEAUTIFUL MOVIE EVER MADE.” property against revolution- competition and production, V ary overturn in the set. Since Thus it keeps unemployment NEWSWEEK. ads provide funding for broad- at a ‘reasonable’ level while it casting and printing of ideas, lets Harry and his friends 'I. V the companies represented outbid each other for goods have the power to break net- and while it gleefully per- works and publishing chains mits ad agencies to stoke by withdrawing business, the fires of consumer rapaci- So when the vital issues of ty. Advertising, like military Friday, February20 7:00 &9:30 P.M. H-110 our time are raised, most im- spending, has thus become Georgians take on Loyol in annual Forum clash Arch foes meet tonite

One of the fiercest rivalries in Canadian College sports will be renewed tonight when the Georgians of Sir George Williams take on the Loyola College Warriors in an Ottawa St. Lawrence Hockey game at the . The cross town foes face off at 8:00 p.m. Warriors who have all but clinched their third straight OSL League pennant, won the first two games between the teams and Georgian Coach Paul Arsenault is anxious to get a bit back from his old friend Dave Draper. Loyola is undefeated in League play this season, with a 4-4 tie at Sherbrooke being the only blemish on their record. Goalmouth action in Carnival hockey game. Sir George sports an 8-4 league mark and the Georgians are assured of a spot in the league playoffs. Last season, Sir George took 3 out of a possible six league points from the Warriors and were the only OSL team to Cullen’s goal Beats Laval beat the regular season champions. The Garnet and gold also A breakaway goal by val players had visited the that the Georgian spirit had upset Loyola in the playoffs and went on to a strong second Speedy Barry Cullen with perturbing penalty pad. At collapsed, but with only two place finish in the National Championships at Edmonton. less than two minutes re­ 8:18 John Murray assisted minutes remaining, Barry Tonight’s game marks the last regular Sir George - Loyola maining gave the Georgians by Cullen Ellyett, scored his Cullen picked the puck off battle for several seniors on both teams. Loyola’s great Mike a 5-4 victory over Laval in second goal on a sharp angle the sloppy Laval defense and Lowe, who has made a shambles of the league scoring race, the CARNIVAL GAME at the shot. Murray Goldfarb scored a “picture play” will be playing Sir George for the last time, as will defence- Forum Thursday night. tallied at the 13:34 mark and breakaway goal to shatter men Bill Doyle John Donnelly of the Warriors; Sir George Cullen’s goal broke a tie put the Georgians ahead by the deadlock. Captain Jim Webster, Defenceman Ray LeCouffe and Gaolten- which never should have three goals. Goldfarb, who I must also add that the der Tommy Anderson also say goodbye to their enemies after happened. Georgians carried does not see as much time officiating crew, headed by the game. a 4-1 lead into the final twen­ on the ice as he should, dis­ Jack (I didn’t see that play) One of the interesting features of tonight’s game could ty minutes before a fired up played superb stick handling Bowman, Scotty’s ex-brother, be the battle between Lowe and Sir George’s John Murray. Laval squad capitalized on in scoring, what I thought, was extremely poor. There Murray, who has blossomed into a bonafide star this season, sloppy Sir George defence was the most well-earned were at least a half-dozen must cover Lowe like a glove to keep the great Loyola for­ and offensive lapses to bring goal of the evening. minor infractions that were ward in check. If he can come up with a sparkling perfor­ about the tie. The third period saw a not acted upon. mance like he did in last season’s OSL playoff game be­ Laval opened the scoring rejuvenated Laval team un­ Final Score: 5-4 tween the teams, the whole complexion of the game might at the 7:00 mark of the first wind. Michel Vandal open­ Shots on Goal: S.G.W.U. 37 change. In that game, Murray held Low'e scoreless while period on a screen shot ed the scoring at 1:57. Near Laval: 27 netting a pair of goals in the 4-2 win. by Jean Rioux, which Tom the five minute mark Mike Three Stars: Barry Cullen, Forwards Phil Scheuer and Mike Bonkoff will not dress Anderson had no chance on. McNamara was handed a Jean Rioux, John Murray for Sir George. Each is out nursing an injury. The Georgians countered holding penalty on a play in Tip Ins Phil Sheur is lost forty seconds later on a daz- which he appeared to have for the rest of the season with zler by John Murray, assist­ injured his shoulder. Lorne a broken arm. . . Mike Bon- ed by Barry Cullen and Billy Davis sat out the penalty for koff was another squad mem­ LINEUPS FOR Ellyett. Near the twelve-min­ “Mac”, who exited briefly ber not in the line-ups. . . La­ ute mark, with Laval’s Gilles for repairs. Meanwhile, back val’s Jean Rioux, a gawky- Gagnon serving a tripping on the ice, Marcel Dufour looking brute, does a fine TONIGHT'S GAME penalty, Ellyett put the Geor­ scored on the Laval power- job in a very quiet manner gians in front 2-1, on a de­ play. With a 4-3 lead Sir . . . This week’s num ber one fensive shot. The period saw George went on the defen­ Georgian fan is Myron X. Lax Sir George Loyola —. our boys play solid hockey, sive. Lack of hustle and weak . . . Good to see team support 1 Tom Anderson 1 Rocky Martin impressive passing on offense power play opportunities from SA members Allan 2 Mike McNamara 2 Larry Carrière and excellent penalty-killing. gave Laval the encourage­ Hilton, Irwin Litvack, Bill 3 Ray LeCouffe 3 Bill Doyle The second period com- ment they needed to tie up Schwartz and our own Steve 4 Warren Gill 5 Danny McCann — menced with what appeared the score at 16:02 on a goal Halperin. . . Hope to see you 6 Lorne Davis 6 Ron Clarke zzl to be a penalty accumulation by R.M. Rioux, assisted by all tonite at the Forum as 7 Jim Webster 7 John Donnelly rally. In the first six minutes, Michel Audy and Pierre the Georgians tangle with 8 Greg Harmon 8 Pat McCool three Georgians and two La­ Piche. It now appeared first place Laval. 9 John Murray 9 Chris Hayes 10 Don Piece 10 Sean McDonough 11 Bob Philip 11 Mike Lowe 12 Brian Bedard 12 Alain Tremblay Draw a Decal Contest 13 Graham Ledger 14 Jack Surbey 14 Barry Cullen 15 Mike Thomassin 1ST PRIZE: $25.00 gift certificats froai 15 Tom Harrison 16 Ron Riley 16 Bill Ellyett 18 Danny O’Connor WOLFE CYCLE SPORTING GOODS 17 Mike Bonkoff 20 Bruce Wickham 18 M urray Goldfarb 21 John Hutton Wellington Avenue Verdun. 19 Len Lewin 22 Jim Sunstrum Rules: 25 John Burns 1) The entrant must be a student of Sir George Williams University Day or Evening Division 2) All Entries must be submitted by February 28, 1970 Tickets for the Ottawa. to; St. Lawrence Hockey Athletics Department 2160 Bishop Street Playoffs Are now on Montreal 107, P.Q. Sale at The Athletics 3) Entries should consist of a new and creative design to replace the “G” that Department, 2160 is currently the insignia on the Georgian Football helmets. Bishop.

J ; Sir George Intramurals: Something for all

INVOLVEMENT - that’sthe ways a favourite on the Con­ Co-ed recreation aimed need of new people so anyone is no talent qualification. name of the game as far as crete Campus, is comprised primarily at the evening stu­ wishing to take part is re­ Twice a week, HMCS the Sir George intramural of fifty members. dent takes place on Friday quested to apply at the Ath-lei Donnacona echoes to the program is concerned. Ob­ Fifteen people spend two evenings. The club features sound of some twenty Geor­ viously not all Georgians evenings a week learning an open-ended type of pro­ Varsity star Richie Cam- gians involved in the riflery have the time or talent to the intricate tne demanding gram in that its activities are poli heads the intramural club. Beginners and marks­ play sports at the Varsity le­ sport of fencing. Instruction determined by the interests basketball program. The men take part at the nomin­ vel, so an extensive series in this field is provided by of the members. Among twenty Georgians in the group al cost of one cent per bullet. of activities has been set up former Olympic competitor other things, the people in­ play Wednesday and Friday Rifles and targets are sup­ with the student popula­ John Eldery, who is still rec­ volved have so far favored fit­ and are still looking for new plied, and the six most pro­ tion-at-large in mind. ognized as being one of ness classss, basketball and bodies. As is the case with ficient shooters get a chance Intramural hockey, always Canada’s top fencers. volleyball. The club is in all intramural sports, there to compete in the OSL cham­ one of the most popular sports pionships held later in the on campus, is presently en­ year. joying its best year. Unfor­ tunately, there was not enough For the fair sex, the mod­ space on the teams for all SCHEDULE ern dance club offers the op­ who wanted to play this sea­ portunity to have fun and son, so over thirty people had learn some new steps. The to be turned away. Hope­ A ctivity fifteen members go through fully, the number of teams Site Day Tim e the motions Tuesdays at will be increased next year Fencing Birks Hall Tuesday 8:30-10:30 p.m. Birks Hall. so that all who want to par­ Thursday 4:30-6:30 p.m. Among the other activities ticipate may do so. now in swing are floor hock­ As Sir George lacks a Karate Birks Hall Tuesday & Thursday 6:30-8:30 p.m. ey, badminton and curling, Junior Varsity team, the in­ Modern Dancing Birks Hall Tuesday 4:30-6:30 p.m. while earlier in the year tramural hockey activity-pro­ Basketball HMCS Donnoccona Wednesday & Friday 4:00-5:30 p.m. touch football and golf were vides a valuable service in featured. Badminton High School of Monday 6:00-9:00 p.m. that it allows over two hun­ Most of the intramural dred Georgians to gain ex­ Montreal - Thursday 8:15-10:15 p.m. activities are organized along perience which can be put Riflery HMCS Donnoccona Wednesday & Friday 4:00-5:30 p.m. club lines, thereby providing to sue when they move on an informal atmosphere in Hockey McGill U Saturday to the Varsity squad. Geor­ 4:30-8:30 p.m. which undergraduates can gian football and hockey star Curling St. George's ' Friday 2:00-5:00 p.m. get together, enjoy some ex­ Tom Dyce heads the organi­ Floor Hockey Birks Hall Monday& Wednesday 2:00-4:00 p.m. ercise and make friends. zation. Joe Roboz, head of the in­ Another of the most popu­ Co-ed Recreation Y.M.C.A. Friday 7:30-10:30 p.m. tramural program, summed lar activities this year is the up the activities with the Ski Club, under the direction statement that “The quality of A1 Hirschfeld. Plans are of the activities is determin­ in the making for about five ed solely by those who play”. future trips to Mont Trem­ Students wishing to take~~* blant at a cost to members The Editor and staff of the part need not have any ex­ of only $5.50, including LOST perience — all you need is bus and tows. Approximately Georgian wish to apologize to Mr. Richard E. Shadley for a willingness to learn. 75 people have joined the A gold ring with two pearls One often hears the com­ club to date. in the girls’ 8th floor bath­ the remarks made about him in the February 11, 1970, plaint that university life Karate instruction under room on Monday, February is cold and impersonal. It the expert leadership of black 16 at around 4:30 P.M. It has issue on page 5, which re­ marks upon verification have doesn’t have to be, thanks to belt holder Jacques Brejd- sentimental value. Reward the fine intramural program win takes place Birks Hall offered. Call Joy 487-3461. proven to be totally unwar­ ranted, unjustified and untrue. that has been set up for all twice weekly. The club, al­ Georgians.

Cagers near playoffs after weekend split The Georgian basketball too much action this season. On Friday, the Georgian place Bishops. McQuade, 4; J. Brummer, 3; team was up to its old tricks In addition, Varsity stars plans for a third-place OSL No doubt the Georgians D. Wilding, 3. last weekend as the cagers Richis Campoli and Peter finish were bounced to the had their minds on the Carn­ Several of the Georgian managed to split yet another Tulk were both playing tune of a 100-77 defeat at ival Ball that afternoon as rookies looked promising OSL doubleheader. Two with painful injuries and the hands of Sherbrooke. thé cagers looked somewhat in the action last week. In-t victoriea would have sent saw only spot duty. The Sir George five just less than impressive against eluded in the group would i the Sir George squad into The Georgians started couldn’t seem to get untrack­ the Gaitors. All the Geor­ be Jim Rosison, Art Me- \ the championships next slowly and fell behind 11-1 ed in the game as the squad gians could do in the first Quade and Norm Einheiber. week, but the fact that the early in the game, but the trailed throughout the half was manage to tie the The court five now travels team lost one game means squad then began to play match. As can be seen from visitors 38-38. Aitken led to Macdonald for a must-win they have to beat Macdon­ together and narrowed the the score, great defensive the attack with a fine 18 game with the Clansmen. ald tonight to keep their’ gap to four points at the play was not a highlight of point effort. Richie Campoli is a doubt­ playoff hopes alive. half. the contest. Good outside shooting by ful starter as his injured ankle Sir Authur Currie gym was The next twenty minutes Top scorer for the Garnet Peter Tulk and strong board is still giving him severe the site of the first game, saw both squads trade bas­ and Gold was Jim Aitken with play on the part of Rod pain. Tulk and Wilding ap­ Coupe de Quebec exhibi­ kets before costly Georgian 20 points. Tulk was good for Ward and Dave Wilding were pear to be making re­ tion affair. McGill won the turnovers allowed the Red- 15 while Art McQuade enough to keep the Concrete coveries from their injuries game by a score of 85-75. men to salvage the win. picked off 14. Aitken, lead­ Campus Crew ahead of the and both will be much need­ Well aware of the impor­ For Sir George, captain ing the league in offensive small but scrappy Gaitors in ed tonight. On the Farm. tance of the upcoming Jim Aitken hooped 27 points. rebounds, also hauled down the second half. The Georgians tackle un­ league contests, Coach Na­ Peter Tulk followed with 12 11 more bounds. GEORGIAN SCORING: defeated Loyola on Saturday than attempted to rest sev­ while Jim Rosison hit for 11. The Georgians’ single vic­ J. Aitken, 20; J. Rorison, 11; i in the last league game for eral of his regulars in favor Pierre Brodeur scored 31 tory came in the form of a P. Tulk, 11; N. Einheiber, 7; the squad, after which comes of cagers who haven’t seen for the Redmen. 70-60 decision over last- Ward, 7; K. Kurtz, 4; A. the OSL finals - hopefully. 24/the georgian Wednesday, February 18, 1970

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