IR IIORGE WILLIA UNIVERSITY

------1~c.-...-·..-...,,, --...... ;. Marcus New LESA • President, Cop is Vice Hal Hinton, L.E.S.A. Presi­ T and still obtain their degree dent, has been transferred by from Loyola. his company to Toronto. He ten­ Hinton stated that this agree­ dered his resignation to. Council ment was reciprocal. last Saturday. to "tt\& r>_t~tC._-\ORCJt ~R~Dl)~ s.+uct~ A provisional election was held Mrs. Marcus mentioned that the previous weeli: to handle the students requiring information o~ CPtt'

At Loyola · Dr. Charles Taylor last week Philosophy. Active in politics, warned a filled auditorium of Sir he has run as a federal candidate George Williams students that for the NDP party. Theology, violence, while sometimes ju ti­ In an interview following his fied in promoting change, usually lecture at Sir George, he had this backfues and defeats it's own to say; purpose. Philosophy The McGill Political Science On the War Measures Act: professor and Philosophy pro­ I feel it was a case of over­ fessor at the U of M, was speak­ ;reaction, however it was quitt. Stays in ing to students and faculty at a understandable because of exist­ Philosophy club lecture. ing circumstances. To continue Dr. Taylor said that in some with it is terrible - to outlaw the Evening situations, "constraint of a non­ FLQ creates for the first time force kind is as execrable as a class of political prisoners. The good news is that the violence". In certain cases, vio­ The substitute bill is not as Loyola Senate has authorized the lence used to achieve change may bad, but it is still not a satisfac­ dropping of philosophy and theo­ be no more harmful than that tory solution. I do feel though, logy as requirements for under­ which already exists. that special police powers of graduate degrees starting next But, he warned, "Introducing search are in order. However, winter season. violence (into a situation) will the Criminal Code should not The bad news is that it doesn't change the whole set of rapports, altered. affect evening students presently and may just deepen brutality." Look at Chartrand. He's a registered at Loyola. "Hence, violence against 'la moral leper, who will most cer­ Doug Potvin, Director of the violence du systeme" is phony. tainly become a hero because Evening Division, feels that it is That is not to say that there of this prosecution - it's im­ very important to protect the can be no legitimate use of for­ becilic. rights of the students by gua­ ce - violence, as in certain re­ ranteeing that they continue volutionary situations." On the reduced university grants: under the program for which they Dr. Taylor added, "The me­ A terrible thing to do. Any have registered. thods of the FLQ are based on forward looking province can All students registered under the premise that fundamentally, little afford to compromise its the old program will continue to people are not responsible. How­ universities. It's really an a­ have the philosophy and theology ever, people are responsible and mazingly shortsighted policy on requirements which were in ef­ thus violent acts by self appoint­ behalf of the Provincial Govern­ fect at the time of registration. ed minorities must be opposed." ment. Another development affects The author of several books, This futile battle against in­ evening students over 25 with Dr. Taylor is a Rhodes scholar flation that the Federal Govern­ five or more credits at Loyola. from McGill, and a graduate of ment is waging hasn't helped the Oxford University in London where provincial monetary situation con'tonJJC3 Charles Taylor at Sir George; "We live in a cult of violence". he won the John Locke prize in because it would be far easier 2 I THE PAPER NOVEMBER 16, 1970 Burke Hea~s Students Gripe,.. .- well, a few of them anyway

The forum, originally set up to give students a ny books are dropped after one year's use, the chance to air their beefs and to be informed on bookstore had to charge a lot so as to counter the the activities of the administration, is held every deficits incurred as a result of having stocked Thursday from twelve o'clock to one. useless books. It was star~d by Acedemic Vice-President The publishers usually refuse to take back any Burke who attempts to answer any complaints or of the books, once ordered. The administration questions regarding Loyola. is making an attempt to insure that books order­ From the looks of this week's session it seems ed for a course be used for at least another year, that the student body hasn't been informed of its thus safeguarding against the build-up of past existence or there aren't any beefs to be aired. texts. Out of ten students asked, only three knew ot its Dr. Burke seemed to agree with the students existence, and of those three, only one knew when present regarding the atmosphere surrounding and where. the Vanier Library. The noise-level, country­ Dr. Burke feels that even though there were club atmosphere are difficult obstacles to sur­ only a few students coming, he was still able to mount but neither staff nor faculty are interested gain information about some of -the problems in this. Once again, it seems like another stu­ within Loyola. dent problem which can be solved by students. Complaints about the cafeteria and canteen Dr. Burke seems quite confident that this con­ were met with some agreement. "Never has so frontation with the students will be a help in little cost so much" but Dr. Burke argued. that improving things at Loyola. The meeting is in­ it was the students' problem and that they would formal. have to correct themselves. . . occupy the kit­ Dr. Burke is approachable and not the beady­ chens?? eyed, cold administrator most students seem The problem of our expensive bookstore arose. to expect. He does listen, not just lecture. This Burke at sparsely attended "Forum". but as the Vice-President explained since so ma- ,week's forum will be held in the canteen, next to the bookstore, Thursday from 12 to 1 p.m. Taylor...... An Interview urban studies. con'tfrompg I for the Provincial Government to national unity and rekindle a sen­ Social Order of the Slum Black Chicago borrow if there wasn't such a se of common purpose. Ethnicity and Territory in the The Making of a Negro Ghetto tight money policy in Ottawa. Inner City Allan H. Spear Gerald D: Suttles 254 pages $3.45 On high rate of unemployment: On racial discrimination: 243 pages $2.45 Again - we can attribute this It certainly does exist in Can­ The City ada. We have a color bar in home Culture and Poverty Robert E. Park, Ernest W. Burgess, in large measure to the anti-in­ flationary postures taken by the rentals. How many native Indian Critique and Counter-Proposals and Roderick D. McKenzie children attend school with white With an Introduction Trudeau government. Obviously Charles A. Valentine not working anyway, and they Canadians? Not many. A the level 216 pages $2.50 by Morris Janowitz of Federal Government, there hsi.s­ 239 pages $2.45 just serve to deflate the economy Urban Blues and to increase the level of never been a Jewish Cabinet Min­ Charles Keil The Ghetto general unemployment. ister. 231 pages $2.45 Louis Wirth 298 pages $1 .95 On free education: On violence in Quebec: Every person with the talent Certain aspects of Quebecm:.---- ' should be provided with free tionalism strongly encourage the education, for it is essential to use of violence in this _province. our economic growth, and pro­ The myth that French Canada is gress. Poorer regions should re­ at present in a colonial status ceive higher federal grants for makes the use of violence to a­ ' education on a per capita basis. chieve independence a possible option in many people's eyes. On the French - English problem: The French - English problem If we really live in a colonial exists on two levels. Level one situation then the choice between violent and non violent means On the City The Gang exists because of the place given to the French language in Canada, becomes a tactical choice, not one Physical Pattern and Social A Study of 1,313 Gangs in of principle. So, a section of our Structure Chicago whch has been far too small in the past. ' intelligentsia, while condemning Charles Booth Frederic Milton Thrasher the violence of the FLQ, gives Edited and with an Introduction Abridged and with a New Canada cannot survive unless French is given equality within it the right to exist. by Harold W. Pfautz Introduction by James F. Short, Jr. The concept that Quebec is in 314 pages $3.45 388 pages $2.95 English Canada as a whole, and I include the Federal Govern­ a state of colonialism I reject Urban Sociology Second fditior:i- ment and the Civil Service, where completely, and maintain that the Ernest W. Burgess and Machine Politics French Canadians must be able reasoning behind this concept is Donald J. Bogue Chicago Model to work in their own language. bizarre indeed. 325 pages $2.45 Harold F. Gosnell In addition, French I speaking On Cities and Social Life 247 pages $3.45 minorities throughout Canada Selected Papers La Guardia Comes to Power, should enjoy the same rights as !Offl[WH[rt[ 1ft YOUrt Louis Wirth 1933 those of our English speaking HEAD TH[lt'S A minority in Quebec. Edited and with an Introduction Arthur Mann by Albert J. Reiss, Jr. 199 pages $1 .95 Level two is economic and en­ 349 pages $2 .95 tails a new policy of regional planning. To solve the problem :aa: in depth necessitates a radical the· university of chicago press new policy of regional develop­ uCOME SEE IT INa 100,o• ment which will bring all of Can­ ~i•1r,ut;t,W• ada up to the same standard of · where underiround fflNII unde,-1,d AVAILABLE AT THE LOYOLA BOOKSTORE GUY& living. As I see it, these two •u,i? MAIIONEUVf levels are necessary to save ~"t.M' GUY TH C!Jt 1912

AT THE JOHN BULL PUB CORNER STANLEY &- de MAlSONNEUVE 844 ·8355 THE PAYER NOVEMBER 16, 1970 I 3

AUEC Conf.erence _ Oklahoma-First to Have Educational Talk-back TV

On Feb. 1. 1971, Oklahoma almost 350 directors of evening Prof. Kreigal stressed the " However," he said, "assu­ enabling students who wish to will become the first area to colleges who attended the con­ refinements in the Oklahoma ming adequate industrial sup­ proceed toward a graduate de­ have a state-wide talk back edu­ vention, Prof. Kreigal said the system including a daily courier port we will have the system in gree b\lt who do not live in a cational television system. Prof. system was patterned after one system to all classrooms to operation and we believe it will university town, to do so. Monroe W. Kreigal of Oklahoma in operation in Florida and a pick up and deliver homework, be particularly helpful in link­ Four satellite towns with-in State University said Wednes­ similar one in Dallas. Money notes, quiz~s and hand-outs. ing together the graduate pro­ a 120 mile radius were chosen day. for the program came from a In addition, he pointed out, grams of one private school and and professors travelled to the He added that "the system one million dollar state grant "The talk-back system will al­ the two state universities." students to give classes. "Fa­ will also be the first to be fi­ and $500,000 from industry. low a student in any classroom Prof. Kreigal went on to dis­ culty participating are paid on nanced by both public and pri­ to ask a question over a con­ cuss what he felt was another an overtime, extra compensa­ vate institutions. "Initially, only graduate cour­ viently located telephone and-be notable achievement by his De­ tion basis with transportation Prof. Kreigal presented his ses will be offered, "Prof. heard in all classrooms". partment of Engineering and In­ and meals provided," he said. paper at the Association of U­ Kreigal said. "We also hope to dustrial Extension: the intro­ A total of 157 students have niversity Evening Colleges con­ tie in with the junior and se­ Kreigal added that in many duction of an off-campus Mas­ enrolled in the program. Three vention held November 8 - 12 nior colleges of the state and ways television teaching .bad ter's degree program. students so far have received at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel. teach a number of undergradua­ been over-simplified and Okla­ their Master's degree with- six te courses on a truly statewide homa State did expect a num­ All course requirements may more expected to graduate at Speaking before many of the basis," he adde4.: ber of problems to develop. be met at off-campus centers the end of this academic year.

Professor Monroe Kreigal at last week 'sAUEC Conference

photo by Jan 8hhh 'IQ.ck§rs

Theology con't from pg 1 Potvin stated that the Educa­ For He and She THE tion Committee of the Evening Division at t heir next meeting will authori ze an automatic ad­ Digger Boot fo r he Navy Suede mission policy for tfiose qua­ MONTREAL lifying evening students who Rust Suede desire a transfe r to the Day Only$20.00 PAPERBACK Division. Half-kickers for she : avy and Burgandy Suede "ACROSS THE ROAD" CARS AVAILABLE avy and Sand Suede · 10 Only$15.00 For he Navy and Sand Suede roronto, Maritimes avy and Red Suede Provinces, Western Navy and Burgandy Suede Canada and Florida Only$17.00 Driver must be 21 or over and have any current driver's permit CALL ANYTIME 937-2816 Montreal Driveaway 2075 BISHOP ST. Service Limited TEL: 845 -1016 4018 St. Cath erine St. West The Peper Editor in Chief: Ron Blunn Managing Editor: Robin Palin Sir George Loyola Photo Editor: Jan Zajic Loyola Editor: Dennis Cusson Open Th ursday and Friday nites. C.0.D. orders accepted. Copy Editor: Irene Silas · Dina Lieberman Credit and Chargex cards honored. Entertainments Editor: John Hardy Mary Bonar ~ irculation Mana£er: teve Fi rst Anne Ricard Perception Editor: Amo Mermelstein Pat Casey Asst. Sports Edito~: Lorne Davis 52 18 Queen Mary Rd . 1478 Peel St. Published by the Evenin,t tudent Association of Sir George Willia ms Universi ty. The editorial content is not necessarily the opinion of the Publisher. THE PAPER may not be copied in Fairview Shopping Centre 6621 St. Hubert St. P laza whole or in part without the written permission of the Publisher. THE PAPER is published fo r Place Victoria Les Galeries d'Anjou evenin,t students and the communities of Sir Geo~e Williams University and Loyola College. Sir George Office: 145.', de Maisonneuve Blvd . W. Room H-639. Telephone: 79-2836. Loyola Office: 7308 herbrooke St. W. Roo m Two. Telephone: 486-9890. Media Sales Department: 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W. Rooo m H-603. Telephone: 879-4514 110 Sparks St. Mall (Ottawa)

~ TYPE-SETTING & LIT HO B Y J OURNAL OFFSET INC. "Design and Word Trade Marks in Canada of T he Villager Shoe Shoppes Ltd." ~ ; 111 TEL. 331-9721 4 I THE PAPER NOVEMBtR 16. 1970

-Letters IIIOl8 on Pl 6 Editorial The Georgian s ·noopies Reply Sir: I'm glad to see that someone port Meteorolo~cal Branch re­ the Ge9rgian ~noopies as a has at last taken the time and ports the worst winter for fly­ research project in his post effort to investigate and to com­ ing in years). When it became graduate marketing course. Al ment on the affairs of the apparent that our original ob­ a result of these in depth stu­ GEORGIAN SNOOPIES (THE jectives would not be obtain­ dies, these graduate students in­ PAPER, Nov. 9, 1970) and I able, steps were taken to re­ tend to present a series of re­ would like to congratulate Mr. duce operating costs, and in one commendations for over-all im­ Richard Firth on what could of the several economy measures provements to our operation. Like it is have been a first rate report. that we undertook' we released 2) The RCFCA (Royal Canadian Many of his facts are accurate, a full time instructor who earned Flying Club Association) which although perhaps taken out of a total salary Curing his period is not a "cartel", has offered This editorial is being written to highlight context, and apparently well­ of employment of $3000.00. their assistance, both legal and some of the specious situations which have oc­ researched, however, there are On the basis of iast year's otherwise, in helping uus to ob­ curred over the last duo decinanUJll. This situa­ some inaccuracies which must experience, a budget was drawn tain our CANADIAN TRANS­ be corrected. up for the period of Spet. 1st PORT COMMISSION licence to tion just has to be remedied. Although in itself of little con­ 1970 to Aug. 31 1971. Although operate an independent flying Conditions have deteriorated to the extent that sequence, the entire tone of we had actually flown over 2600 school, a pre-requisite for which the artic}e is established by hours during the previous year, was our incorporation. This further discussion of the matter becomes re­ would enable us to break away prehensible. .Nevertheless the situation pre­ the picture that was captioned we decided to anticipate only· " . . . one of the E.S.A.'s un­ 2400 hours th,is year. This was from the restrictions imposed cludes a more thorough and culminative analysis. paid for planes" . As a matter a deliberate attempt to be con­ upon us by the Montreal Flying Therefore is it not obvious that the current of fact, this particula~ aircraft servative in our 1!stimate and Club and their surcharges about anxiety is manifest? Thank you. · shown is not an E.S.A. plane yet present a balanced budget which help us to reduce our at all, nor is it a Snoopy plane, that would not only cover our operational costs while allow­ Prior to a thorough examination of the situa­ nor is it unpaid for, but was expenses, but would leave enough ing us to expand as the need tion under study, a review of the pertinent details donated the Georgian Snoopies to repay a substantial part of rises. must be entertained. The elusive nature of these by the Cessna Aircraft Co. free our debt to the E.S.A. as well 3) As was the case last year, of charge, for use in our pro­ as to increase the E.S.A.'s e­ a re-assessment of operating facts must indeed be an a priori consideration. motion last fall, and that pic­ quity in the aircraft by another procedures will be made should Essentially the problem at hand is a grave one. ture was photographed at that $6000.00 . we encounter unforeseen events. Justification is difficult to obtain. Both sides time. However, for the record, Our projections so far have For instance, if we find that the " unpaid" aircraft that are · proven to be correct. The hours our operating costs increase be­ have persisted in repetitive attempts at modifica­ owned by the E.S.A. are in fact flown to date this fiscal year yond our estimates, then efforts tion. We feel therefore that it is contingent upon being paid for by the Georgian are almost the same as that of will be made to increase re­ ourselves to clear things up, as they say. Snoopies, to the tune of some last year, despite the fact that venues, and to reduce expendi­ tures in other areas, as is the We'd like to point at you now. $6000.00 per year. So that from we operated with only one full the original investment of $4500. time instructor instead of two practice in any business organ­ This increasingly hazardous situation cannot 00 as a down payment, the E.S. 11s had been the case last year. ization. be underscored. A. will own outright some $24, And so, Mr. Firth's "black cat" To sum up, the Snoopies Are At this very moment that you are being written 000 of property - a substantial prediction of a projected "loss" Healthy and prospects appear return on an_y iQvestment. of $14,877, could in reality be a bright. Anyone truly concerned at forces are at work fervently attempting to des­ Mr. Firth is substantially cor­ profit of some 8 or 9 thousand with understanding the facts is troy and jeopardise the aforementioned circum­ rect in stating that we last year dollars, all other factors re­ welcome to contact me at any greatly over-estimated the maining constant. time. We are open for business stances. I ~umber of flying hours expect­ However, I . must admit that from 8:30 a.m. every day at This is not a time for panic. I repeat, this is ed, and of course, he is correct Mr.. Firth's suggestion that we St. Hubert Airport, and will not a time for panic. in stating that we finished our " re-chart our flight plan" is a also be at the ground school This editorial ··has been written to highlight first year of operation with our good one ... we are doing this every Friday evening in H-635 own aircraft with a loss of some constantly. For example: at 8:30 p.m. Come up and see some of the specious situations which have oc­ $3000.00. (The Dept. of Trans- 1) Professor Kirpolani of the for yourself. curred over the last duo decimanum. Facultv of Commerce is using Herb Bernstein Chief Flight Instructor. Georgian Snoopies Flying Club,

.,. ,, , , 1, I I 1 I \I I ). 1•1 JI I THE PAPER NOVEMBER 16, 1970 I 5

ly a used car deal it was, ties, strung out like beads byR. Bryant too. The subway proposal on a necklace round the (Associate Professor had been kicki'ng ' around station stops of the "Tun­ for decades, and only got off nelbana". pf Geography) the pad in the 1960's. Without going into grisly detail, I state that the Stock­ The presently an_.nounced "Subways are for slobs" - holm set-up makes Dorval extensions are a perfectly and Chateauguay look pretty oops - slobways are for logical and necesary deve­ subs - at least, so they silly. They even have a lopment. A Montreal-sized whole satellite suburb, with used to say in New York. agglomeration "must" have heating and hot water pro­ On the other hand, when the a really rapid transit sys­ Germans pinched all the vided by a · nuclear reac­ tem - and what is there other tor. buses in Paris during W.W. than subway? I don't reckon II, how else could people much to monorail, carveyor, Just ask any Quebec sub­ get around except by Me­ moving sidewalks, etcetera. divider or building con­ tro? tractor to do that, inKirk­ They may have specialis~d land or Repentigny! We have Every big city in the and limited applications. the technology, but not, as world has or is thinking But imagine a monorail yet, the social organiza­ about building a rail-based system on concrete stilts tion. rapid transit system:· most­ through the city's streets? ly subway. Even the greatest New York got rid of its Now, our Montn:al Metro trailer camp in the worJd, elevated railroads years serves the densely built-up El Pueblo de Nostra Senora ago the noise and so on areas, in town. We are for­ BCJ'Sically, la Reina de de messed up a swathe a couple tunate, in that our down­ Porciuncula - L. A. for of blocks wide. town has not degenerated, short, 1s trying to get a as is the case in many an rapid transit system off the A city transit system American City. People the only thing pad - it being obvious to all should be properly articulat­ live in and near downtown, but the most dim-witted ed - high-capacity main and Ste. Catherine is lively (which includes the Cali­ routes, with lower-capacity with people late in the eve­ I fornia State Highways De­ feeders. Buses i31 fact for ning. Hence, we do not have wrong with the , partment) that it is unfeasi­ the latter. For high capaci­ the problem of revitalizing ble to accommodate the ty, nothing can beat the an­ a decayed core. Basically, urban comings and goings cient device of the North­ dependence on automobile of 6 million people only with umberland (England) coal­ transportation results is a automobiles and freeways - mine wagonways, namely, spread-out sprawling city - driving round in ever-de­ pairs of rails, iron, steel we have plenty of that in our creasing circles un ti! they or concrete, with trains. I'm own suburbs - whereas ef­ MONTREAL penetrate their own tail­ nut about trains - but if one fective public transporta­ pipes. wants to hike a lot of people tion tends to reinforce the from A to B, I can't see centripetal tendencies. Basically, the only wrong anything to beat a train. thing with the Montreal Me­ The automobile has its Once we allow the auto­ tro 1s what, it is half a uses, but m cities, it is mobiles to get on top of METRO century too late. It should counter - productive and the situation, and create have been built long ago - ruinously expensive. There spread-out low-density but in the dim distant past, is nothing undemocratic in suburbs (slurbs, they call • the Montreal Transway set the idea that downtown them in ), then we is that it IS up was an appanage of the centres should be closed· off are faced dth a vicic. 1s Hold empire (the ol Holt to private cars, it would be circle that is hard to break~ Renfrew) and.nobody gave a simply a sensible measure T)iere can be no frequent half a damn about"the relationship of social discipline. I never and efficient public trans­ between transportation and drive downtown, myself. I port - bus or train - in these the shaping of cities, other live in N.D.G., anyway, and low-density areas, simply than how it related to mak­ don't need to. I don't see because there are not century too late ing a buck (or lots of bucks). why folks from more dis­ enough people with a short Came the time, after tant suburbs shouldn't be radius of any given point, W.W. II, when the Montreal compelled to park their or station stop - to support Transways were taken over cars, say at Dorval or At­ a good service. Where there by the Montreal Transpor­ water or Henri Bourassa, is a compactly built-up tation Commission. Strict- and do the last leg by area, as m Montreal city, public transport. anti the nearer municipalitie! A look into rapid transit in America, Verdun, for example, then Here agai'n one has a vi­ a high-capacity transit sys­ Europe and ... Montreal cious circle. In N rth .tern is both necessary and • America, cities h a v e worth its cost. sprawled out any old how without any effective pu­ I'm not about to suggest blic controls, such as are that the Drapeau administra taken for granted, say, m tion has done everything Stockholm or Amsterdam. for the best. It ought for Therefore, we have enor­ example, to have been much mous residential areas, more vigorous with lowcost sprawled out at excessively housing, but neither am I low densities, which there going to carp and cavil are simply not enough needlessly. We must give people, within a given ra­ that administration credit dius of any given point, to for having built the subway, support an effective public whereas its predecessors transit system, bus or had simply talked about it, rail. for decades. I would like to see the In Stoqkholm, which has presently announced exten­ as many cars per 1000 nobs sions followed by others, to as any Canadian city, p(oduce a network within tht they've been a darned sight densely-built areas, so ef­ more sensible. They laid fective as to make a size­ out and planned the current able duct in the use of the expansion of the city round automobile. This in-town a rail rapid transit system - rubber-and-concrete system the "Tunnelbana". The should also be supplement­ suburbs of Stockholm 'do ed by steel wheels and rails, not sprawl any old how, as on a regional scale - elec­ ours do, according to the tric trains from Rigaud to private whim of specula­ Sorel, Scholastique to Ste. tors, landowners, real Hyaci~the: a radical re­ estate sharks, and so forth. .furnishing of existing rail­ The Stockholm expansion road rights-of-way. This takes the form of carefully pho~byJan is usual in European cities - planned satellite coinmuni- why not here? 6 I THE PAPER NOVEMBER 16, 1970

· Notices should -be add,-essed .'11 writing- ·t; Bulletin Board: At Sir George it's Room H-639 in' the Hall Bttilding. Fo-,;, Layo/a, 7308 Sherbrooke St., •W., Room Two. Deadline for all BU:LL-E.T .IN BOARD, submissions is Thursday evening prior to the Monday of p'ub­ l lication.

Employment Team will be sell­ ing Nations of Africa". From House - Folk Workshop. All Main Libr ary: Open from 10 ing second hand sporting equip-. 5 - 6:15 p.m. H-420. It's FREE. are invited. a.m. - 6 p.m. until Dec. 23. SIR GEORGE· ment on the Mezzanine of the FRIDAY: Nov. 20 Georgian Marketing Society: West Hill High: 5851 Som­ '------'·I Hall Building from 12 p.m. - merled Ave. ~7 Cote St. Luc 6 p.m. to raise money. It will Presents - Mr. Larry Chaisson Student Union: Front Room MONDAY: Nov. 16 (Director of Publicity). The to­ corner Westminster. "People's S.G. W.U. Riding Club: consist largely of skiing equip- - Philosophy Discussions on Zen Youth Clinic Benefit". Featur­ ment. · pi!! will be "How the Expos Buddhism from 2 - 5 p.m. Cof.: Meeting to discuss riding les­ ing Jesse · Winchester, U.F.O. were sold to Montreal". In room fee House - S~ve Finchan will sons at 5:15 p.m. in the Athlet­ Dean of Students Office: $1.25 advance at Phantasmago­ 2G (YMCA) at 5:30 p.m. perform from 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. ics office, 2160 Bishop. The first set of loans have come ria, Galaxy, Stash Record Shop, (Saturday also). For the per­ Hillel: McGill prof. A. Teit­ from the Province of Quebec. Sherman's Vibration. $1.50 at Hillel: Living theatre work­ formers a hat is passed around lebaum talks on Hasidism at Check the 4th floor notice board the door. Support your clinic. shop and beginners folk guitar - as long as that works there 8:30 p.m., 2130 Bishop. under Financial Aid if you are At 7:45 on Nov. 25. at 7 p.m. 2130 Bishop. is no cover charge. TUESDAY: Nov.17 expecting a loan. If your student Student U nion: Rap Room number is listed there, your Georgian Snoopies: Ground - from 10 - 12, Humanities loan ii- in. this office, H-405. THURSDAY: Nov.19 School in H-635 from 8:30 p.m. Conservatory of Cinemato­ ·or Science Conference. Front Bring your student contract for All welcome. LOYOLA graphic Art: "The Horse's Room Hillel Sensitivity 1970-71 in to claim your loan. Mouth (1959) with Alec Guinness, SATURDAY: Nov. 21 Group, Paul Gregg from 7:30 No I.D. cards are accepted. Student Union: C.L.U.G. F .C. Smith Auditorium: D. - lOp.m. They will be available from 10 at 7 p.m.; "I'm all Right Jack · Hillel: Barry Luger, Roch­ (1959) with Peter Sellers, at (Community Land Use Game). W. Griffith's " Intolerance" dale survivor and York Univer­ Prof. Bryant from the Geogra­ (1916) will be previewed on Wed­ a.m.-4 p.m. only. 9 p.m. in H-110; 50¢ for stud­ sity prof. talks on "Everything's ents, 75¢ non-students.· phy Dept. Come and see it, it's nesday, Nov. 18 at 7 p.m. for ' Georgian Players: " Rosen­ Right On Time" at 2 p.m. in phem:imenal. the Loyola Film Series. crantz and Guildenstem are Ski Club: There will be a H-435. " Quebec-Today and Quebec­ Dead", directed by Gary Plax­ meeting in H-333-3 at 2:30 p.m. Radio Sir George: Every AIESEC: Anyone who has Tomorrow: Kevin Drummond, ton, 8:30 p.m. in the Douglass Saturday at 11 p.m. You are signed up or would like to join Provincial Minister of Lands Burns Clarke Theatre; $1.50/ Georgian Christians: From invited to "Join In" with Getty AIESEC is invited to sit in $2.00. ' 12 p.m. - 1 p.m. in H-615. Maffre and David Nayman on and Forests, will be guest the meeting and find out what Weekly meetings ··are heid for CFMB 1400. speaker November 20th at 8 p.m. we have to offer. It will be in Vanier Library Auditorium. WEDNESDAY: Nov.18 all those interested. held from 4 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Chaplains: In H-643 from 10 This talk is part of the· con­ African Society: Two movies in H-609. Student Union: Rap Room a.m. - 8 p.m. Mondays - Thurs­ tinuing series "Quebec-Today will be shown: "Black and White 10 - 12 noon Humanities of days. Fridays from 10 a.m. - and Quebec-Tomorrow", spon­ ASET: The Arts Students in South Africa" and "Develop- Science, Confere~ce. Coffee 1 p.m. sored by the L.E.S.A. Letters continued ... FREEPORT I somehow doubt whether any­ certainly does not apply to a 306St. Catherine Street~ Snoopy-dupe thing terribly constructive is go­ bunch of men getting together ing to be accomplished with it. to affirm their uperiority to 288-1922 -- Sir: The impres ion I have is that women, and bear peeches about I was quite appalled by Mr. Gray's move wa mainly vin­ the alimony laws. Firth's article on the Georgian dictive, the idea being to obs­ But I seriously doubt whether WE NOW CARRY Snoopies. truct the activities of the wo­ Gray understands any of this Although he made an attempt men's group. or could care less. and possibly a sincere effort ot only is this counter-re­ I wasn't too surprised last ELECTROHOME ncn to present a factual report, the 9 volutionary {Gray is probably month when the georgian's pa­ r whole article appeared to be only too pleased to hear that), ranoia led it to cancel the wo­ SONY PANAS0NIC 1111 patently colored by his own ne­ but it's also depressingly nean­ men's issue. I'm not surprised fjSANVO gative emotional bias towards derthal. It reveals that some to hear about this new event. [D!~ ~ Jll !LLOYD:S.! the club. It had the " flavor" (agressive, vocal, and powerful) The prospect of women holding of the kind of "expose" one people really think that the lib­ whatever miniscule amount of !AMPEX J fa·i'lrl'l'E HITACHI finds in a tabloid. Moreover, eration of women is threatening power is enough to give some it is most unfortunate that there to men. men epileptic fits. . ROBERTS NORDfflENDE were many glaring inaccuracies Actually, women's liberation "Castrating bitches." " What in his facts - for example the is a threat only to certain ag­ you need is a good fuck ." "Ugly internal inconsistency of his own gressive, vocal, and powerful broads." "Unfeminine." "Penis deficit figures which escalated men. And quite rightly. They Envy." "Frustrated." PRE-XMAS SPECIAL from $3470 to $8877 for the oppress women. If women free The response to every wo­ first year and were then pro­ themselves, these men stand to men's action is predictable eve­ ONE HOUR TWO TO A CUSTOMER jected to $14,877 for two years. lose their most prized posses­ ry time. Immediate overreac­ (There is also a reference to WITH THIS COUPO N sion (no, not your penises, boys. tion, sometimes heavy personal CASSETTES 50c $20,588 for a two year period Those are probably number two attacks against the women, and but it is unclear whether Mr. on your list, anyway): their right a frenzied attempt to regain con­ Firth also intends this as a to domination. My heart bleeds. trol of the situation. deficit figure). Let's be somewhat preceptive. It's pretty amusing at first. I would also question the res­ The issue should not be " who Eventually, though, the joke ponsibility in attitude of a mem­ exploits whom more?" Women's starts to wear thin. ber of the E.S.A. Council who, position in society forces them Well, well. When will the wo­ as a representative of the Uni­ ALL EVENING to exploit men in certain ways, men wake up? versity community, uses such admittedly. More frequently, and Acapulco Goldstein words as "cartel" which could with a much more crushing in­ (woman of the streets) conceivably leave the E.S.A. and STUDENTS CAN VOTE. tensity, however, it is men who, possibly the University open to both consciously and uncons­ legal proceedings if the Royal Stat-ic ciously, oppress women. Men Canadian Flying Clubs Associa­ IT'S A RIGHT ! COME themselves are not really to Sir: tion chose to take such action. blame. Their insensitivity, ag­ I really don't think statistics I am left with a disquieting gressiveness, and failure to un­ " proving" quantitative points of concern for Mr. Firth's real HELP ELECT I PEOPLE derstand women are not natural argument are valid. Certainly motivation in writing his article. male characteristics, but a cul­ the quality is of more import­ J oan Rubin tural role they've been trained ance. Statistics are always open FOR THE E.S.A. to _live up to. to argument and so are attempts to }ustify one's performance by Women's Lip Obviously men and women ha­ introducing the past. Certainly, ve to work together. Mutual un­ Sir: the editor has ideals and stand­ derstanding is probably the best ards of his own with which to Wayne Gray and his boys thing to work towards. " Libe­ ELECTION compare his performance rather should explain what they intend ration" is not a little word. to do with the money they ripped than a shabby reference to his off from Women's Liberation. It's about on the same level predecessor to seek justification. NOVEMBER 23, 24, 25, 26, 27 Account for yourselves, " bro­ as "love", in fact it means Wayne Gray thers". practically the same thinl'j. It PS. Poor Glenarthur! THE PAPER NOVEMBER 16, 1970 I 7

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A Ba-,, of Hope for the Left and I or ~~Just Wait Till ~,21~~

for profits. He thought yes. T he voters thought no. He lost. Nixon paid lip services to ecology and - In Tennessee, the Nixon then ignored it for law and or­ strategy received its purest vic­ der. Muskie, the uncanny guy like Senator Yarborough (who tory in the unseating of liberal from Maine who has an unde­ Bentsen defeated in the prima­ dove Senator Albert Gore by niable cool which should come the Republican super-conservat­ in very handy for him, may byJ. F. deWilde gnew, (tried by fire and water), ry)? Was there a real alter­ and exorcised to the Nirvana native for them in the system? ive William Brock. ride his background as a doer - But in California and Illi­ on ecology and like-issues into Joe like a tribal shaman, in­ of John Lindsay's Gracie Ma­ From the perspective of a Mc­ nison by the metaphorical head­ Carthy-Kennedy democrat, who nois, liberal Democrats surviv­ the White House. Muskie's A­ tent on exorcising all the im­ ed super-dirty campaigns to un­ merica, for example, would not purities from his pure view of hunting witch doctor, Joe, what still managed to cling to faith story did the electicn tell? and interest in such things as seat Republican senators. John • be a post-Revolution utopia, but the world. Joe, a frightened Turney, the guy who looks more that expression may contain an practitioner of the new voodoo - The election did not display elections, what did the results show? like a Kennedy than Edward Ken­ internal contradiction. Muskie's in a war against that which he the hard polarizat"ion which Ni­ nedy, defeated Shirley Temple's America, or McGovern's Ame­ cannot try to understand. Joe, xon-Agnew were trying to achie­ In the Senate races: former dancing partner and i­ rica, or Ted Kennedy's Ame­ an alienated libido looking for , ve in their favour. Connecticut: Chairman of the deological cohort, George Mur­ rica just might be a better A­ a place to happen. Joe, a very Americans for Democratic Ac­ phy in California, and in Illinois, merica, one which may give peo­ real American tragedy? - The election was decided primarily on economic and local tion, super-liberal, super-dove Adial Stevenson ill survived ple a chance to focu~ on those The citizens of the U.S.A. issues. As usual, foreign policy Reverend Joseph Duffy lost in having called the Chicago police many social problems which voted last week. Or was it two was not a major issue in the a three way race to the Re­ "stormtroopers in blue" • and cannot be solved simply by e­ weeks ago. The 1970's have hard realities of the vote-count­ publican Lowell P . Weicker Jr. beat Republican Senator Ralph lecting a name and the man greeted us with a very blase ing. In what Smith. behind the name to any position perception of the election game. described as the "Test of the no matter how powerful that po­ If the supporters of the new - Nixon lost inasmuch as he 'New Politics' ", Duffy only lost sition may be. For those who still care, there staked so much prestige on win­ politics didn'f have a pure al­ is always the fun of analysing because former Democratic Se­ So it seems that not all the ning. He now knows that the nator Thomas Dodd split the ternative pragmatically they had the results. Yet even though the potential for building a ba~e. American voters bought the sim­ " emerging Republican majority" Democratic vote in a mixture plistic name-calling, polarizing only the most insensitive poli­ is not an historically inevitable tical observers would attempt of vanity and vindictiveness. Footnotes to a campaign like techniques of the Republican Ad­ trend and indeed, if , he does this can be compiled ad minu­ ministration. And whereas the to equate elections with demo­ not change, he may very easily Maryland: The National Rifle cracy any more, the electoral tiae. However, it is worth noting victory of some Democrate like lose in 1972. Association target, Democratic process still contains within it Senator Joseph Tydings lost in that the southern strategy failed. tlubert Humphrey in Minnesota the seeds of a new and poten­ - Despite this, America dis­ an upset. However, the vote to­ can hardly be hailed as a victory tially better phoenix. The os­ Even if the Democrats elected for the New Politics, and the played red, white and blue con­ tals revealed that he lost to in such states as Georgia were tensible stalemate of the 'mid­ defeat of such liberal doves as servative post-Halloween co tu­ conservative Representative not plugged-in prophets of the term elections gave even Ame­ Hoff in Vermont, Gore, Tyd­ mes. As Georgia state legislator Beall because his traditional new politics, neither were they rican democracy a two-year ings, Duffy can hardly in them­ Julian Bond remarked before the support in Baltimore's black caricature Wallace Democrats. pause to revitalize itself. How election: "The negative mood districts stayed home en masse selves be a cause for hope, it meetl! its task will unfortu­ of black people and black voters as a result of his vote for the In a conservative state like there can be a layer of optimism nately have profound effects on is markedly deeper than in past Washington D.C. crime bill, a oith Dakota, a liberal Demo­ discerned beneath the gloom of us, even now when the world's .el~ctions." . piece of legislation which gave crat was re-elected. Quentin the next two years of the Nixon crisis focus is more on Quebec the police extensive powers and Burdick's name is not likely presidency. There is evidence than Washington. The mood was felt beyo nd just enraged many liberal supporter . to become a household word or that with work, and a renewal black c.irc' .s. Leftist· candidates much else, but his victory was of participation in the political Did the Joes of America win such as they can be found in - In New York, the 'real Re­ a symbol of voters putting system by those who, have had the el~ction? Are they the "e­ American electoral politics we­ publican,' third party capital-C bread-and-butter before the dog­ little reason to trust the past merging Republican majority"? re on the defensive right from Conservative, James Buckley, ma of law and order, as they few years, a socially-concerned Is this the start of the apo-, the beginning. The mood of alie­ fielded the fumble of the split did in almost every state except President can be elected to end colypse of the mediocre? In nation that Bond describes was liberal vote and with a neat Tennessee. the Johnson-Nixon nightmare. "The Strawberry Statement", understandable in light of the bit of broken-field running But, he may fincf' the powers Jim Kunen writes in the theme Agnew-hardhat love affair which through the Catholic Italian dis­ In traditionally Republican I­ of his office are insufficient to words of the non-revolutionary appeared to be blossoming into tricts of New York City and daho, the Republican Governor heal a nation instantly. Then, left: "Since the first republic a new fascism. How could the traditionally conservative upsta­ Samuelson lost. In itself, that maybe Joe will be exposed as of the is one hun­ McCarthy kids be expected to te New York, beat Republican isn't much to invoke 'Ave Ma­ an extension of his own schi­ dred and ninety-two years old get excited over the victory Senator Charles Goodell and rias' about. However, the key zophrenia who really needn't ex­ and I am nineteen, I will give of a conservative Johnson De­ Democratic opponent Richard issue of the campaign was whe­ ist at all. And maybe then, in it one more chance." For those mocrat like Bentsen in Texas Ottinger. Note: together the two ther or not open-pit mining the bitterly-hopeful words of de­ looking for signs of life in the when the seat h~d previously liberal candidates received 60' c should be allowed to spoil the feated Senator Gore, "the truth rad libs, indicted by Spiro A-· ,been held by a dovish liberal of the vote. Idaho ecology and countryside will rise again".

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Dear Sirs: at all possible for you to ENTER I have read with great run even a short bit on Ju­ interest in THE PAPER a lie Andrews. I realize some JULIE number of what may be people are not very keen on TAIN called 'profiles' on some her, but she appears to be people I have always want­ a very interesting ac- ed to know more about. Judy tress. · Riva Myers .- POPPINS MENT Garland and Lucille · Ball Ed. note stand out in my mind, and no Dear Miss Myers: -theatre doubt some others have Goodness knows we've appeared in issues that I've searched. Hi and low, in missed. and out, and the only thing -literature I am an evening student we could scrape together here, and when I come for on America's sweetheart, -c,nema class at 8, it is very relax­ is what you find here. But, Julie Andrews •came to Holly­ and we were over budget. To let ing and just the kind of humility is a virtue (and wood in 1964 (after her two her go for a day would have · thing I look forward to read­ plagerism is a crime) so Broadway successes) a cinema cost the company $40,000, which -art ing. It is pleasant change we must give credit where unknown, and broke box office would have been absurd. Mine's . from the heaviness of the credit is due: this article records with her first two films, the blame, not Julie's." -music daily news. was snatched from the The Sound ,of Music and Mary She was then goaded by various May, 1970 edition of G~od Poppins. Happily married since writers about a lawsuit she filed Being of a minority in 1959 to designer Tony Walton, against a movie magazine which asking the following request, Housekeeping. The original she was Tinsel Town's Golden had hinted at a romantic attach­ se of humor is a kind of sta­ but I wonder if it would be author is George Christy). Girl, the girl every mother want­ ment between Julie and super­ bilizer for her in a community ed her daughter to grow up to be star Sydney Poitier. that takes itself too seriously. like, the actress every studio A friend, publicist Mike Kap­ She'll do things like flying the sought. (Her movies grossed $210 lan, wonders if perhaps Julie Union Jack on her ste, dropping million -- not including the most hasn't opened a hornet's nest 25 pound bags of popcorn on the recent Star! and Darling Lili.) with the press. "One observer doorsteps of her friends at Hal­ But after making Star!, a super­ cracked that Julie wanted Harry loween. Tom Jones tells of having slick trumped up musical based Belafonte to appear on her re­ dinner with her at New York's on the tough saga of English cent TV special to cancel out any staid old Plaza Hotel JVhen her actress Gertrude Lawrence, Ju­ anti-Negro reactions the lawsuit zipper broke. Julie's reaction lie's golden-girl status changed. may have provoked against Julie was characteristic. "All I need The picture opened to poor among her fans. In other words, now, luv," she said "is to drop notices in the summer of 1968, the inference was that Julie didn't me drawers." and events suddenly began to approve of being linked to Poi­ She describes her life, between work against Julie. Racy rumors tier. This is just not so. movies, as "very unglamorous." were spread by columnists. Her She sued because the article She rises early, around seven -­ marriage, in Julie's own words stated that she would submit to "to get the children breakfast "disintegrated into a farce." And studio pressure to terminate any and drive them to school." Some­ there were sudden, disturbing relationship that wouldn't be good days, she and Blake drive to changes in the movie industry it­ for her public Mary Poppins ima­ their beach house in Malibu, self. ge." Kaplan says: '"Julie is not where he writes, and so does Behind each cheap accusation, biggoted, nor can she understand Julie -- she's working on a child­ he friends avow, there are valid bigotry in others. She takes ren's story. "It's a forfeit, ac­ reasons why Julie did what he people as she meet's them. When­ tually, thag I owe Blake's daugh­ did. "It's true Julie didn't make ever I ask her to meet some­ ter Jennifer. We were playing a the opening of Str! in England" one, all she asks is "Is she a game and I lost, so I decided says director Blake Edwards, good person?" to write a story for her. I've her longtime friend and -- as of The people who have known done 190 pages. It's about a young October, 1969 -- her husband. Julie Andrews since she came to girl, in search of a family and " We were shooting Darling Lili, Hollywood, believe her zany sen- home, who makes it."

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The Paper is looking for people who enjoy watching A COMPLETE l/NE. FOR THE ARTIS-Tl films, going to the theatre, reading current books, going to, PdA festivities and then wirting down their com­ ments of what they 1387 St Catherine St W. Montreal Telephone: 842-4412 saw. The Paper picks BOULEVARD DE PARIS up the tab. You go to the show, enjoy p-resents yourself or other­ wise, and then jot down your op1mon DATURAL liAS of what you saw so FINAL WEEK - FINAL WEEK - FINAL WEEK that we may print it. SPECIAL PRICES How about, hot Sunday and Monday all day­ stuff. Apply at The the rest of the week 11 a.~ - 1p.,,. Paper office or by calling 879-2836. THE PAPER NOVEMBER 16, 1970 I 11 To know Dylan is to live in him·

Bob Dylan has never been big Having cleared up one mystery you know? And I don't want to "I didn't put out any of those that I wrote books, they began on interviews. For one thing, he for his fans, Dylan turned to an­ live that way anymore." stories." He "didn't get a pen­ to send me contracts... Double­ doesn't like questions; for- an­ other - the new and notable rich­ ny" from the documentary movie day, Macmillan . .. we took The adulation heaped upon Dy­ other, he doesn't need publicity. ness and resonance of his voice about hi_m, DON'T LOOK BACK. the biggest one and then owed Since 1966, when he broke his in his most recent LP, Nashville lan over the years makes him His best songs have been written them a book. You follow me?" neck in a motorcycle accident, he Skyline. His explanation: "When uneasy, at best. When told by the in motel rooms and cars. try has avoided reporters almost en­ I stopped smoking, my voice interviewer that many writers '1 to write the song when it Twice Dvlan turned in manus­ tirely - much to the despair of changed so drastically, I couldn't and college students were "tre­ cripts and twice was so dissa­ mendously hung-up" over his comes ... And when they don't millions of young people who believe it myself. That's true. tisfied after reading proofs that words and asked if he felt any come, I don't try for it". idolize him as a primogenitor of I tell you, you stop sm~king he refused to allow the work to responsibility to them, Dylan the rock generation. Now Dylan those cigarettes, and you'll be be printed. Finally, he took his begged off. "Boy, if I could ease In his inimitable language, Dy­ has had a change of heart and able to sing like Caruso." research and a typewriter along someone's mind, I'd be the first lan also told how he almost wrote . granted an interview to a San on a European tour. "I was going one to do it. I want to lighten a philosophical memoir of sorts Francisco-based rock magazine. Dylan revealed that he has to rewrite it all", he explains. every load. Straighten out every called TARANTUAL: "It begins Why the long silence? "If you written "a· whole bag of new "But still, it wasn't any book; burden. I don't want anybody to with when I suddenly began to give an interview to one maga­ songs" for a U.S. tour he is talk­ it was just to satisfy the pu­ be hung-up - especially over me, sell ..., quite a few records . . . zine," he explains in the cur­ ing about launching in the next blishers who wanted to print or anything I do. That's not the and I was doing interviews be­ rent issue of Rolling Stone, "then month or so. But the tour will be , something that we had a con­ point at all". fore and after concerts, and re­ another one'll get mad. People a lot different - - slower, less porters would say things like · tract for. Follow me? So even­ don't understand that the press, frantic - from his tours before Among other revelations about 'What else do you write?' And I tually I had my motorcycle ac­ they just use you to sell papers. the motorcycle accident. In those the life and times of a folk hero: would say, 'Well, I don't write cident and that just got me out And, in a certain way, that's not days, say Dylan, "I was going at the familiar story of Dylan's · much of anything else.' And they of the whole thing, 'cause I didn't bad, but when they misquote you ~ tremendous speed . . . I was running away from his Hibbing, would say, 'Oh, come on. You care anymore. As it stands now, all the time, and when they just on the road for almost five Minn., home at age 10, 12, 13, must write other things. Tell us I could write a book: But use you to fill in some story, it years. It wore me down. I was 15, 15 1/2, 17 and 18, and being something else. Do you write I'm gonna write it first, and hurts because you think you were on drugs, a lot of things. A lot brought back all but once, is books?' and I'd say, 'Sure, I write then give it to them. You know just played for a fool". of things just to keep going, strictly a publicist's pipedream. books.' After the publishers saw what I mean?" Dig.

.. ,;, Falsies, 0 ~ tache was a phony, held in place York. the offi~ y It, be a coating of spirit gum. Un­ Artificial hair is answering a clean-shaven face~~ add paste-anst ~ ~ daunted, he has sported his brush variety of needs. Ernest Fer­ for a bristling night on the town. ~, on several occasions since. "It's guson, a barber in Fort Wayne, "It's strictly for evening wear, $ S a great comfort when you're Ind., reports that he gets orders for theater and discotheques,'.' feeling low," he says. "It's as for sideboards from college boys says Dr. Allan Lazar, 30-year- t:. restorative as a Bloody Mary who can't grow their own. Stu­ old Manhattan periodontist, des- ~ when you have a great hang­ dents who play in rock groups but cribing his new mustache and ~ over". who either don't want to grow goatee. Sybil Burton Christopher Hotchner, 48, is typical of a long hair or are prevented by reckons that at least half of the host of depilated dandies who are school regulations from doing so popular Pancho Villa or Zapata -discovering that it can be fun to find that pop-on wigs are essen­ mustaches seen in her Manhattan When Hemingway Biographer switch images by passing on tial. "We wouldn't be hired if we discotheque, Arthur, are phonies. by mail. A.E. Hotchner showed up for a m u s t a c h e s, sideboards looked clean cut and normal", Narcotics agents regard hoked­ Falsies have even been res­ party in Manhattan last New and beards. Sometimes, for the says Don Gabler, a Brooklyn up hairiness as an invaluable aid ponsible for saving marriages. Year's Eve, his hostess did a complete transformation, they College senior who plays in a in infiltrating hippie drug cir­ One young Los Angeles husband - trouble take at his bushy mus­ slip on long-haired hippie-style trio known -as The Brooklyn Dod­ cules, and servicemen feel an tried three times to grow a tache, then decided on drastic wigs as well. Manhattan's Holly­ gers. "The minute we stop play­ added hank of hair increases beard, and three times he had to measures. Recalls Hotchner with wood Joe's Hair Piece Co., one ing" adds fellow Dodger Elliott chances that the weekend pass shave it off because his wife a wince: "She ripped it off the of the nation's leading suppliers Dombroff, "the wigs some off." will be completed. According to hated it when she kissed him. moment I walked in." That could of fake facial foliage made from one mother, her son and all his Now that the husband has finally have been a moment of pa:in for human hair, is now shipping out Come sundown, businessmen friends at Fort Still, Okla., have compromised with a part-time "Hatch", except that the mus- 2,800 beards, boards and brushes who wouldn't be caught dead in ordered mustaches and beards mustache, all is bli s. [ 12 I THE PAPER NOVEMBER 16, 1970 Your· school My school Is, TV high school

Stereotype No. 1: High school dark, and neither is life in Room to reject his counselor's recom­ of weeks like that." Hence, there school athlete, is based on a si­ teachers are fussy, frightened 222. "If you have a serious si­ mendation that he go to college. are seemingly endless bull ses­ milar incident at L. A. High. Rey­ and old, hiding from the world tuation, you want to give it the From time to time, the show sions between cast and producer nolds happened to be in Schacter's in a cloud of chalk dust. Stereo­ full weight it deserves," says has run into problems -- first to work out better dialogue and office one day, and overheard type No. 2: High school princi­ Constantine. "But if you play it of all, the net-work's own atti­ clearer confrontations between snatches of a telephone conver­ pals wear three-piece suits, like Hamlet, you'll be left stand­ tude. "They are frightened to characters. One day Haynes ve­ sation between the principal and stern expressions and are totally ing with drama all over your our being too heavy, and are dis­ hemently announced: "These a college coach who was trying devoid of humor. Good shows face." trustful of their being too come­ scenes are so far away from to lure one of L.A. High's black often result from giving the lie Striking a balance between hu­ dy-ish," says Producer Gene reality! There's no attempt to get sports stars to his team. to stereotypes, witness ABC TV's mor and concern, man­ Reynolds. "The powers in TV­ any sort of realism in the dialo­ The show has yet to touch on Room 222, which features a hand­ ages to teach moral lessons with­ land want to know whether it is gue between the black actors." subjects that are heavy but very some black history teacher out being preachy. A new teacher, comedy or drama; it is very Result: there's more realism real to today's high school stu­ (Lloyd Haynes) and a rumpled, straining stolidly to be as hip difficult for them to twist their now. dents: narcotics, pregnancy, a­ comfortable principal (Michael as his students, is joshed into the imaginations to encompass both," The idea for the show grew out bortion, anti-Semitism, racial Constantine), whose strongest realization that he will get along says Constantine. The show is of Producer Reynolds' friendship polarization, the draft, some of trait is a sence of underplayed much better if he is just him­ billed as a "comedy-drama", with Dr. Norman Schacter, prin­ which were dramatically depict­ humor. It works·; in the current self. Students petitioning for the but the show's originators man­ cipal of . ed six years ago on the Mr. season, Room 222 has appeared replacement of an elderly teach­ aged to pursuade the network Many of the show's exterior sce­ Novak show. consistently among the ten-top­ er who is using an archaic teach­ to eliminate a standard but nes are shot at L.A. High, while "Mike Constantine and I would ped programs, and deserves it. ing approach in a marriage-pre­ bothersome sitcom laugh track. the series' interior sets are like to see them go into more paration course are gently prod­ "Our humor is too subtle for based on the classrooms,, corri­ serious areas," says Haynes. "If there's a formula for Room ded into more understanding of it," Reynolds explains. dors and offices of the school. "But if we do a show on narco­ 222, I guess it is to show some­ there teacher. A few episodes Says Constantine of his role: Several script ideas have taken tics, for example, then we've thing that's wrong," says Haynes do deal with weightier stuff: the "There came a point where I re­ shape in the minds of the show's got to show an out, a solution. of the series, "and maybe show problems of a militant black fused to do another joke because writers after spending time on Otherwise we're only talking a­ how to help it." Out of this no­ youth involved with a middleclass I felt my character was being the campus talking to teachers bout what people already know." tion have come some pertinent black girl, the dilemma of a written like a clown. One week and students and sitting in on Nevertheless, he adds, "in some and moving moments of television Mexican-American boy who ba­ I came very close to asking to classes. "Arizona State Loves cases we should be honest enough drama. Life within the confines lances his academic limitations be let out of the entire series You, " the story of a college to show that things can't be of any school is not all light or against his ambitions and decides because there had been a couple coach recruiting a black high made right ." The Long ... and the Short of it

After waiting 15 minutes for the projector to be set up, we Homespun Loyola Flic got to see "And we love", a ten minute flic. It starred Bar­ ry Smith, and Collette Le Cu­ yer. Make not of these names, clear in its statement. "And We many post-explanations? Bounds of energy, pressure you may never see them again. Alid Love"... contained just the The story is quite simple. Boy right touch of Rossini, Chopin, and emotion went into "And We meets girl. . . boy makes Antonione, Claude Ledouche Love"... and most of it well girl leaves boy. He is left alone (Man & A Woman), but not enough worthwhile. I anticipate that the with memories and a lot of ~e LOve of Gerardo leraci. The photo­ next film done by Ieraci and phallic symbols. Aha. . . she graphy was well done, bu the his crew will be more than returns and drags him off on whole sttement of the film e~periential, but will contain the end of a rope and hangs missed its director's intentions well developed thoughts and him! Alas our hero is a swing­ "And We Love"... is a 10 road. The sequences developed entirely. Thematically, one ideas giving a film the clarity er. . . we all have our hang­ minute, 16 mm. approximately from a direct boy-girl relation­ could take the film for exactly that it should inherently have. ups. $1000 film trade by the LESA ship, with the girl spending most what it conveyed visually - a during the summer of 1970. of the film running towards the spontaneity between a guy and a boy (the closer she gets the girl - coming almost together, The Georgian Pla)·ers "And We Love" ... is also a better she looks?) From a one parting and their finality in his present film which just missed fulfilling level film, what follows is a death. But, as Ieraci explained its potential as perhaps a strong dichotomy of emotion and actua­ after the film, this was the short film. Gerardo Ieraci its lity. As much as our girl runs case of an individual reaching RBSE NC:RANTZ director, seemed to. get highly to him, he quite willingly opens for acceptance in the establish­ involved wi h symbol after his arms, but, they never really ment (girl) being ultimately AN B symbol - bolts on constructed come together except in his rejected (death). It is extremely strictures of dead wood, girl death (another symbol). A short difficult to relate the title "And handing an egg to guy, blind­ sequence of blind man's buff We Love" ... the staccato rela­ GlllbBENST ERN fold, whip, hands parting at the ends up in the hero being bru­ tionship of the two, with the es­ croddroads, blind man's buff en­ tally whipped (stills flashing tablishment. The film does not ARE BEAE acted by the guy searching for alternately with motion of this realize the inner moral feelings something. Filters of red and act) meekly led to the juxtapos­ of the director. The sensitivity Xov. 17~2] 8 ,30 p.m. yellow were abundantly used to is there, but anything of moral ed blocks of deas wood (high matinee Nov. 21 2:30 p.111. convey sharp internal emotion noon configuration) and without nature cannot be fully explored contrasting with bland external a word - he allows himself td in just 10 minutes. Moral im­ realities; flashbacks projected be strung up. He hangs there plications are heavy - the film ir George \"\Till iams Un lY(:'l'Rit~· lapses of time but not space. solemnly and dies! is not. It is a snappy, momen­ The location remained about the "Poor Crazy", says she, "he tous occurance in a 10 minute Douglas Burns Clarke Theatre same throughout the film; parks, tought I really loved him". In­ span. 1455 (k Maisonn<'UYe blnl. W. playground filled with monkey terpretations of multi-symbol­ Does there always have to be bars (symbol) small tunnels for ed films are always going on. heavy symbolization unclear Information & Heserrntions 879- -1557 children to crawl and peep Personal emotions sensibilities to anyone? Why cannot a ·"'ork of_ public 2.00 st11

"I know it'll take time", said inands more hustling off camera On a typical day, the waiting 21 year old Jean Burdett, from than on. lines may be studded with out­ Tampa,-"Florida, sitting at a Non-acting in Hollywood is a of-demand starlets, well ·turn­ table for two at Alfie's on Holly­ constant pre-occupation. On of ed out men in pinstriped double­ woood's Sunset Strip. "In Flo­ the 12,000 card-carrying SAG's breasted and Dashiki clad rida they warned me about all in Los Angeles, only 4,800 black actors with fashonably these producers. How they'd made any money from acting looked after Afros. Most of promise you this and that and all as such, and half of them made them read the screen capital's they'd want is to make you. I less than $5,000. ;bibles, the Hollywood Reportei: had to see it for myself -- and and Daily Variety, for announ­ So you I like it her_e. The people aren't To fill their free time, the cements and auditions an

A young lady with a double Still single, Peggy lives in Other roles followed, inclu­ by the enormous following the edged approach to show busi­ a small house in the Hollywood ../ ding parts in, "Sarah and Sex", show has, especially among ness and successful at both is Hills. She enjoys horseback rid­ ,"The Great Indoors" (with Ge­ teenagers, and the enthusiastic - Miss Peggy Lipton star of "The ing, swimming, softball, and raldine Page and Curt Jurgens), reception the program received ballet, and is an advocate of Three Mod Squad." l'The Party On Greenwich. Ave­ both for its scripts and its Not only is Miss Lipton one health foods. vue", Shakespeare's "King 'starts'. Her starring role in "The o s most talented new ac- John" and finally his biggest The son of an electronics sa­ Modd Squad" received such criti­ tesses but also a talented suc.cess, "Slow Dance On the lesman, Michael was born in cal acclaim that it led to her re­ mods singer. Peggy explains, "I've Killing Ground". Madison, Wis., where he at­ ceiving a TV Emmy nomination. been writing songs since I was Bill Cosby saw this play and tended high school. The family, seventeen. Then I thought: 'why was bowled over by Clarence's which included an elder brother not sing my own songs?' so I performance. Later when Aaron and two younger sisters, later tried it." She first sang on TV who "He's not a black actor, not Spelling was looking for some­ moved to Milwaukee, where Mi­ a couple of seasons back on a white actor, not a colored ac­ one to fill out the team on "The chael bagan to feel the need to "The Hollywood Palace". Last tor, he's an actor, the most Mod Squad", he sought Bill strike out on his own. year she topped that by singing professional I've worked with Cosby's advice. " Clarence Wil­ This urge to wander led him on CTV's "This is Tom Jo­ made in my life." So says Aaron liams ill", suggested Cosby. to Chicago, Las Vegas, San nes". How did she react to Tom Spelling, Executive Producer of "Clarence Williams ill" , sug­ Francisco and finally Los. An­ Jones? "Fantastic. . . I've al­ "". Who is the gested Sammy Davis when Spel­ geles. Along the way he ac­ ways been a fan of his have actor? Clarence Williams ill who the ling sought further advice. So, quired a list of notable employ­ collected all his records." plays "The Mod Squad's Linc after a few featured roles in ment credits as a dishwasher, But for Peggy, a striking Hayes, the kid from the Watts .such ;rv series as "Tarzan", busboy, bartender, handyman blonde from New York, singing District of Los Angeles. Daktari" ajid:\' a Danny Thomas and a bookstore clerk. still takes second place to her "They're always la"ying that one special, thi!'"' star lead of "The In Los Angeles an enquiry acting career. Holly- on me, " says Williams, "about Mod Squad" became his. about acting lead to two pieces how do I feel being black and Clarence is married to ac­ The daughter of a lawyer and of advice - "Study" and "Vi­ 'blah-blah-blah - I spent 10 tress Gloria Foster; they have a professional painter, Peggy sit Estelle Harmon's Acting years to become an actor. I an apartment in New York and was an established photographic Workshop". Miss Harmon gave am an actor I play the part." wood rent a home in Hollywood d1:1ring him a hard audition before ac­ model in her early teens. "There are things Clarence the filming of "The Mod Squad She attended New York's Pro­ cepting him as a student. With does like nobody else. He's so Clarence says his two interests fessional Children's School and the studio group he appeared in good," says Spelling. are his wife and work. Lawrence High School on Long "Sweet Bird Of Youth" and Clarence is not a angry young Island b~fore moving to Los An­ squad "The Sign In Sydney Brusteins man searching for an identity, geles with her family. There Window". This was a lean pe­ but a thoroughly professional One actor who has not been she attended the Valley State riod in his new career, at one actor. He trained and studied soured by the so-called phony College in Northridge Califor- point he even made his 'home' hard to be where he is. Hollywood scene is Michael Co­ ma. le. on the prop bed on the work­ Born in Harlem where he and part. He stayed at the Harlem shop stage. "I can honestly say that Her first . professional acting his sister Sandra were raised 'Y' for four more productions. With Miss Harmon's help he everyone I've been around so role was in "", in by their grandparents, Claren­ By then he knew that acting acquired an agent and his first far ~n the TV industry has been which she said just two words ... ce went from junior high school was his vocation, and full of role in the pilot for "Felony ·'you're late." Later she ap­ into vocational training to learn confidence Clarence approached groovy to me," Michael says. . Squad". The original format peared on such shows as "The to be a cook. After two years Producer Cheryl Crawford ask­ "I've heard a lot about Holly­ was scrapped as was the pilot, Show", "The ln­ over a hot stove he found a job ing for a chance at a professio­ wood 'phonies' ... if these peo­ 'but studio casting directors saw _vaders", "The Virginiim", in a ew York advertising a­ nal role. She gave him his first ple are phonies they have sure his performance and Michael "The Road West", and a three gency as a "general all-around big chance, five lines in the done a good job of fooling me. " was signed for appearances on part Disney production " Willie flunkie". Broadway production of "The "The Mod Squad" is Michael's , "Gunsmoke" and "Run For the Yank". Her only motion pic­ It was a chance incident at Long Dream". That show, to first leading role. His portrayal Your Life". He has also ap­ ture role was a small part in a Y.M.C.A., where his sister put it politely 'bombed'. He then of Pete Cochran, the rich-kid .peared in tw moves, Arch 0- "Blue" with Terence Stamp. worked as a switchboard ope­ joined the army, spending two member of the Squad, marks his boler's " The ~ubble " and Peggy was singled out from rator, t hat lead to his interest uneventful years with the 101st emergence as a true TV star. "Chuka" with Rod Taylor, John .dozens of applicants for the ro­ in acting. The 'Y' was re­ Airborne Division in Kentucky. "First of all I'm not a star, " Mills and Ernest Borgnine . le of Julie Barnes, of the "Mod hearsing a play in the basement, From the army back to ew he states flatly. "Production Michael is a bachelor and li­ Squad", because of her proven and Director, Vinette Camon, York where after an almost companies, TV Networks can't ves in Hollywood's Laurel Ca­ ability, her cool natural beauty needed a child actor. Although endless wait he finally found a make you a star; the audiences nyon. He enjoys traveling, read­ and that intangible quality call­ Clarence was a trifle too old ,part in a low budget play "The do that." This hot denial of star ing, playing pool and 'just sit­ ed 'soul'. he was talked into taking ,the status is more than contradicted ting around doing nothing'. Cool World". , ,~ ...... , •• • •••••••--••••••••••••••••• • ••••• • "• • •• • f I ' ' ' I• ,. ' 14 I THE PAPER NOVEMBER 16, 1970 Loyola _ Basketball ~oyola leads Longstanding Rivalry

by Roger Zenobi was a fine display of poor ·,tes second and third scoring in jeopardy. The closest that bounds, this time defensively, not giving the visitors the se­ The Loyola College basket­ shooting by both clubs with Lo­ chances. the Ravens could get to their cond and third chances that he ball Warriors, after dropping yola holding a great edge. The opponents was 10 points at Warriors, while leading 18-11;­ Loyola, using a one-three-one around the eight minute mark had given to his teammates their first exhibition game seemed to be very edgy. The offensive set-up and zone de­ of th_e third quarter. earlier in the game. to the touring Yugoslavian lead could have easily been 28- fence, seemed quite content to The visitors from Ottawa With ten minutes remammg, Team, bounced back to defeat 11 for the home team as they trade field goals with their op­ showed signs of coming on in the Warriors lead 60-49. Ra­ the rival Carleton Ravens controlled the play but could ponents and keep their eight to the first few minutes of these­ ven head coach Dick Brown de­ 88-67 for their third win in not put the ball in the basket. ten point lead in the final ten minutes of the first half. Al­ cond half, but like the Warriors, cided that it was time to press five games against the Ravens Time and again, Coach Daig­ _though the Warrior shooting im­ the Ravens ran into shooting his opponents and sent his fi­ Tuesday night at Loyola Col­ nault's charges worked the ball proved a little, coach Daignaults troubles and just couldn't put ve men into Loyola territory in until they had a good scoring lege. The game, which was a crew couldn't seem to shake the basket. Once again it was an attempt to bottle them up opportunity from close in only dull one to day the least, was their edgyness and took a mea­ McAuliffe grabbing off the re- in their own zone. to miss the easy shot or the never in doubt for the War­ gre 44-35 lead with them to the cont' on page 15 lay-up. riors as they tood an early locker room at half time. lead which they maintained Big John McSuliffe, who had a great night rebounding for throughout the contest. The second half wasn't much Loyola, kept snaring the War­ better different from the first. .Cole's ·Notes· The first ten minutes of play rior misses giving his teama- The Warriors lead was never with Glen Cole I would be a failing in my duties as a reporter if I did not make some comment of Friday's hockey article on Sir George in the Montreal Star. WaterPJ!J9. Georgians Clinch Title Judging by the article it seems that someone's memory is not too good and I don't mean the reporter who wrote the by Brian Scoffield story. With just one game remaining in their s.£._hedule, Sir George's Waterpolo team has clinch­ So just to set the record straight, the Georgians hockey team ed the Ontario-St. Lawrence Athletic Association Waterpolo Championship for the third has not been in the dumps for the past three years, just two of time in four years. Last year there was no entry from the concrete campus and so the team the past three. has not been beaten in three consecutive years in regular leagueplay . In 1968-69, most Sir George students will recall that the On Saturday afternoon, they locked up the championship with victories over College Mi­ Georgians participated in the Canadian Intercollegiate Athletic Union finals and lost 4-2 to Toronto. litaire Royale and Royal Military College. In the first game with C.M.R. the Georgians took Perh-a ps the reporter who wrote the story shouldn't be ex­ an 11-3 decision over the Cadets from St. Jean and with only ten minutes to rest, they met · pected to know this, but somebody did and I guess just "forgot" the Cadets from Kingston in a game that ended in 9-8 thriller for our boys. to mention it. The C.M.R. game was rather Tulton's goal for R.M.C., Kahane foul resulted in a penalty shot one sided although Coach Roboz added one to end the quarter 2-1 for the Cadets. MORE ON HOCKEY was saving his first stringers in Sir George's favour. In the In waterpolo penalty shots are The time has come to make our fearless predictions for the for the game against R.M.C. second Duncan, Gladstone and almost sure goals as the best 1970-71 Ottawa-St. Lawrence Athletic Association hockey sea­ Again it was Enkin with four Enkin started what looked like a shooter on the fouled team lines son. goals in two quarters of play runaway for Sir George with up four yards from the crease Here goes: who did the most damage. Robert three quick goals but R.M.C. and on the referee's whistle lets 1. Loyola Warriors - The defending champs haven't lo'st a: Duncan, Pierre Dussault, and scored twice before the end of go a shot with no one but great deal from last year except for Mike Lowe. Dave Draper's George Elias, with two apiece the half to narrow the gap to the goalie between him and the annual excellent recruiting job has turned up a number of good and Stuart Stuart with his second 5-3. net. solid replacements and thus the Warriors have the best balanc- ed club in the OSLAA again. '""""....r, of the season rounded out the I have only seen three such =.=-...... The third quarter was almost 2. Sherbrooke Vert et Or - Coach Tony Heffernan has lost scoring. even with Enkin's two _goals and shots stopped in my career in Waterpolo but George Elias but three members of last year's team which gave Loyola a run In the second and perhaps best Gladstone's single offsetting for their money in the OSLAA playoffs. Sherbrooke's excellent R.M.C.'s two by McAlpine. With came up with one of the finest game played in the league this moves I've ever seen to stop record at home should help them. year Sir George had to hold on Sir George ahead 8-5 the fourth 3. Sir George Williams - The Georgians could be the dark­ quarter set the stage for the Douglas' shot. The shot almost against a three goal outburst by tore Elias' thumb off and he was horse team in the OSL this season. They have added some R.M.C. in the fourth quarter to most dramatic action that this strength to the blueline which will take most of the pressure of reporter has seen in almost eight forced to leave the game for at­ win. tention to his hand, but the save Mike MacNamara who was the only guy that consistently hit years of watching and playing back of the blueline last season. The goaltending shapes up With Pierre Dussault opening the game. killed R.M.C.'s momentum. Al­ the scoring for Sir George after though the . Cadet's scored to be about the same as last year, but judging by Tom Bicker­ R.M.C. came out shooting and dike's performance in pre-season games, it may be a bit better. pressing for two quick tallies to another goal and were pressing at the final whistle, it was all More muscle and hopefully more hustle will make this SGWU narrow the Georgian lead to one team the best since 1968-69. goal. Enkin answered one of them over after that save. Final score, - Sir George 9 R.M.C. 8. 4. Bishop's - The Gaiters have lost a lot of top men from for Sir George to pick up his last year, but Al Grazys have always been able to ice a compe­ fourth goal of the game and give Next Saturday the team goes tct Kingston for a rematch with the titive club in Lennoxville. The Gaiters should have enough to be Sir George back a two goal lead. able to finish ahead of RMC, University of Quebec and Mac­ That should have been it, but a Cadets in a nothing game. The only thing at stake is an unde­ donald in that order. feated record this season for It could be one of the best OSL races yet, but with their ex­ CLA·s ·s 1FIED the greatest team in Sir George's perience and superior coaching, Loyola should be No. 1. ROOMH-603 1thletic history.

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c:::fVotE.5- f-wm a Cagers Downed by Drug Pushers _ .~ ~ru~ P1:1~auskas · Friday, November 13 held its tradition of being an un-. took an 87-73 victory out of the lucky day as Sir George's Varsity Basketball team lost foul ridden game. Albany had a .-£ockei-11.oom c:::/VannJ it's first game in the Can-Am tournament hosted by Mac­ couple of big forwards in Mike Donald College. The opener saw Coach Nathan's squad Levine and Ed Shortsleeve. walk off the )loor with a 56-55 loss to Albany Business They hurt the Georgians badly Wally Watkins has served Sir George Williams University College. The Georgians were down 33-19 at the half but compiling a total of 44 points for 25 years and will be facing retirement in December this between them. the great second half rally by the Georgians just didn't Sir George started the game year. . last long enough. In the past three years Wally was played mother to many with a man to man defence, guys, picking up their smelly socks and jocks, and wiping the The first half turned out to be a disastrous affair as and by half time the tall men sweat off their brows with his cleam white towels. He has Albany scored 18 of their 33 points from the foul line. Art McQuade and Christ Countess terrific in giving moral support to the players and acting as Added to this was the fact that the Georgians couldn't make had picked up four personal Sir George's equipment manager. 1 a single point for a total of eight and one half minutes. fouls each. The score was close Prior to his postion in the Athletics Department, Wally At half time coach at the half, 40-37 in favour of worked in the Norris Building, first in the checkroom and then­ Nathan scraped the zone defen­ Albany. in charge of maintenance. He came to work at Sir George in ce in favour of a man to man. The first half was a see-saw October 1945 after several years in the army. Wally was a The difference in the calibre battle in which the lead changed private in 1915 and again in 1939. After the Second World of play was that of night and day many times. The Georgian shoot­ War he recieved an honorable discharge as a Sargeant from as they quickly narrowed the ing was good with Jeff Nieman, the Canadian Army. . Albany lead to within four points Gary Stevens and Chris Coun­ Wally has been married for 48 years. He has three married on the strength of some fine . tess racking up 32 points bet­ daughters and two eligible sons. One of them·, Wally Junior, shooting by Chris Countess and ween them. Albany got twenty earned a hocky scholorship to Michigan State University. Jeff Nieman. Art McQuade of their forty points from the Although Wal1y is 73 years old, he says he has kept young began to leave his mark on the foul line. at heart working with the students. You can't help but keep up backboards and it · seemed that Much of the second half re­ with the times when you're hanging around with dirty young the Georgians were going to sembled that of the first but with men in the locker room and on the field. take control of the game. · about eleven minutes to go in Wally _says "with the students I've been very happy during With 90 seconds left to play the game Countess was fouled my stay at Sir George." the game was tied, at 48 to 48, out. This left McQuade the only , He still plans to look for another job, something involved but fouls began to plague the man to play the posts. George ' with Athletics' when he leaves Sir George. "I love sports" it's · Georgians, due to the Albany Keri and Pete Weinstein steppet. · been my life" said Wally. What else is a guy supposed to do attempt at ball control. Albany in to swish some long shots : when he is still going great guns at this age. made seven points from the from the outside but drives by He's got a pretty keen eye under that grey peaked cap of his foul line within that time and Albany's Levine kept the score and that Sir George "P.E. Staff" jacket, makes him feel young. that was the final story as the out of reach by the Georgians. With the guys Wally is a .great man to shoot the shit and many Georgians only managed to ans­ The final blow came inthe times can be seen sitting in the cafeteria with an attentive au­ wer for just six of t_hem. form of an excellent display from the foul line by Albany's dience. He has always got a story for the fellows but who The second game of the Rick Zelewski as he hit 80 per­ wouldn't with 73 years experience? tournament for Sir George, 'cent. Sir George could not main­ Wally was brought up and lived most of his life in Verdun. which took place on Saturday af­ tain the pace and even good He told me that he'd been brought up the hard way and often ternoon on the West Island drives by McQuade failed to ~ had found things tough. But the tougher it goes the greater Campus against Albany Phar­ narrow the margin:- Consequent­ the thrill.s maceutical College turned out to ly, Coach Nathan's squad lost Wally is really happy with this years football team - "I've be a high scoring one in favour the tournament. Jeff Neiman seen all the championships but this year, coming from now­ of the American squad, who ""'"··· vvafys gratest thrill at Sir George Student Associa­ came through as high sco·l'f!f~---i tion, and this will be one student that the school will really again an,.i Albany's top man was miss. John Be, -~r with 26. I know Wally will always remember his day at Sir George. Sir George held the edge in Out hats off to him, he's done a great job - now let's all re­ · Graduating Students field goals in that game 60-52 member Wally. but the fouls were the main rea- - 1971 son for their defeat. The Georgians played these .Photos now being taken games with three junior varsity for GARNET and composites. players, and Nieman, Countess and Carl Elaison who never came THOSE WISHING TO JOIN C~me early to avoid the rush. out to Varsity practices. THE Open daily 9-6. On the whole the team played good ball and once the rough edges have been worn off the (;iera/Jine C arpenter team can look forward to some MENS LIBERATION CLUB ·good games. Coach Nathan has PHOTOGRAPHERS a big job ahead of him but with the available talent should be Contact E.S.A. Secretary al 2005 BISHOP STR(ET able to produce a contender. 879-2832 or H~603 and leave 288-8998 I cont from page-14 However the attempt back­ · your name & number fired and it allowed the home side's forwards to slip in hehind their defenders to score on easy · lay-ups. Loyola widened' their lead rapidly and when the final buzzer sounded the score board showed Loyola 88 Carl­ ALL EVENING ton 67. Coach Daignea'!lt wasn't too STUDENTS CAN VOTE. impressed however, "I don't know why, but our boys seemed ve.ry tight out there· tonight" IT'S A RIGHT ! COME said the victorious coach. "We 1 played fair defensively but our zone still didn't rotate rapidly HELP ELECT, PEOPLE enough. FOR THE E.S.A. Tuesday night 8 p. m. at ELECTION Pointe Claire Arena. S.G.W.U. YS NOVEMBER 23, 24, 25, 26, 27 U. de Q. 16 I THE PAPER NOVEMBER 16, 1970

IFrom: HALIFAX] ITo: WINNIPE(; I Sports IT o: WESTPOINTI ...I _____ I Gee-Gees, Bisons to Clash 1n• College Bowl By T~t,ry Snell' Winnipeg Correspondent The Paper By Qlaude Richards Maritime Correspondent The Paper (WINNIPEG, MAN. SUN. NOV. 15) - In perhaps the most exciting and hard (HALIFAX - Saturday November 14) Representatives of the Central Cana­ fought battle on the collegiate grid-iron circuit in years, the Defending cham­ da Intercollegiate Football Conference put the league on the map Saturday pion University of Manitoba Bisons came back from a 7-0 first quarter afternoon in Halifax when the underrated University of Ottawa Gee-Gees,. deficit at the hands of Frank Tindall's Golden Gaels from Queens University, under the leadership of quarterback Paul Paddon, defeated the University to beat the hapless squad from the prison city 24-20 in the second overtime of New Brunswick Red - Bombers 24-11 to leave some doubt as to Coach period. · Dan Underwoods claim to the position of Coach on the Canadian College All­ The action packed semi-final thriller was staged on the prairie campus Star team. This marks the first time that a team from the C.C.I.F.C. has Saturday afternoon and for the most part the Ontario team held a slight margin made it to the College Bowl, home of the finals for the Canadian Collegiate on the scoreboard. The final outcome did not come as ·much of a surprise as football championship. the powerful Western Intercollegiate Athletic Association representatives were favorites to represent their league for the second time in the college bowl. Paddon was mainly reponsible for the managed a singie point in the third quar- What did come as a big surprise was the fact that Queen's put up more than. victory by the capital city team. Paddon, ter when Bob Kay put the ball in the end- a good fight and that the Bisons are lucky to be where they are now. who has connected on 60 percent of his zone on a sixty five yard kick. Ottawa passes during league play this year for answered that with a 13 yard field goal The scoreboard was first lit up under the endz~ne_to _narrow _the lead to seven a total of 1,211 yards, went into this by Valle six minutes later. the visitors column when Golden Gael points. game with 13 touchdown passes under halfback Brian Warrender scored on an The gruelling contest contmued into the his belt. The Bombers came·back early in the end sweep from 10 yards out in the first fourth uarter with the Gaels trying ball He put Ottawa on th·e scoreboard and fourth quarter when quarterback Pete quarter. Doug Cozak, a Queens nominee control and both team fighting for field took over the 3-0 lead that U.N.B. had Merrill hit Rick Kaupp on a 29 yard · to the All Star team, converted for the position. With only a seven point deficit enjoyed in the first quarter on the touchdown play which Kay converted to visitors. the Bisons weren't willing to go to the strength of a 26. yard fiel.d goal by John round out the Blue-Nose Conference The Bisons tied it up mid way through air for t he long strike while Queens was Mitchell, when he tagged Michel LeVeille scoring this sea~n. the second quarter when Mike Shybo inten't on trying to maintain possession of with a with a 25 yard pass early in the ' Paddon had not finished however as he plunged over from the two yard line and the ball hoping that their defence would second quarter. Gee-Gees end Pete Rib- threw a forty yard pass to Jacques Bu- Wally McKee converted. McKee gave the contain the defending champions. hons caught another Paddon toss with 49 rele qhich Valle converted to gjve the Bisons the go ahead point on the strength .But late in the final quarter Henry seconds left in the quarter to give Ot- triumphant Gee-Gees a 24-11 victory and of a 65 yard single off the kickoff. But the Lodewyks, All Star Defensive half from 'tawa a 14-3 lead a half time. Both touch- a berth in the National finals next Sa. Gaels were quick to answer that with a 34 Manitoba who was playing both ways, downs were converted by Claudio Valle. turday afternoon in Toronto, where the) yard field _goal by Cozak. At the half forced overtime when he grabbed a 21 The Red Bombers continued to be stymied will meet the defending champion Uni- Queens walked off tne field with a 17-8 yard Bob Kramer pass and ran it into by the Gee-Gees defence as th~y only versity of Manitoba Bisons. margin over the Bisons, the last seven the' endzone. McKee converted to leave ------­ points in the quarter contributed by Heino the score 17-17 with four minutes and favour, at the end of the first overtime strong running drive that culminated on Lilies from a ten yard touchdown around forty five seconds left in the game. period. the one yard line when Kramer took it the end, which was converted by Cozack Queens came out strong in the over­ over himself on a quarterback sneak. once again. . time period trying to put the points on the If they could hold that lead for another McKee converted once again and at· the The Gaels maintained there lead board. Again they drew first blood as seven and a hau· minute overtime period sound of the gun the Bisons walked off the throughout the third quarter allowing only Doug Cozak struck with a 15 yard field the game would be theirs. But such was field with a 24-20 win over the Golden two points when McKee laced the ball into · goal to make the score 20-17 in Queens not the case as the Bis9 ns erupted in a Gaels. ·Georgians- Split VVeekend Series by Birks Bovaird (WESTPOINT NEW YORK SUN, NOV. 15) This past week-end the Sir George Varsity hockey team travelled south of t he border to play Rensalear Polytechnical In­ stitute and Westpoint both in New York State, and caII_le home with a week-end split losing 2-1 on· Friday and win­ ning 4-1 Saturday. The Georgians accounted themselves well as they were spurred on by stingy goaltending on the part of both Tom Bickerdike and Bernie Wolfe.

The loss to RP.I. was a de­ team. Generally the Garnet and finity heart breaker as t he Geor­ -Gold get their scoring punch by gians lost with only eight seconds con-stantly forchecking in the op­ left to play in a ten minute sud­ posing zone b~t m the American den death overtime perios which rules such tactics would bring on had been called after the teams a penalty. Yet it more accustomed to the style. of were tied 1-1 at the end of re­ was Sir George which got on the the startled Army goalie who great game but just could not buy gulation time. It seemed as play. They continued to improve was still on the other side of a goal and Brian Bedard and score sheet first after Tom until the sudden goal with only 8 though the Georgians were going Bickerdike had stopped every­ the net. Sir George went ahead Ross Patterson seem to use to come away from RP.I. with a seconds left put an end to the 2-0 on Scheuer's 2nd goal of the their size to better advantage thing shot his way, which left the contest. well earned tie but seconds be­ majority of the tweJ!!y-five hun­ period on a pass from Barry each successive game. Defense­ Cullen. man Gary Crossley seems to be fore the end of the third period dred RP.I. fans wondering in Over all the Georgians were the public address system an­ getting more confidence all the disbelief. outshot 47-21 yet the team played In the second period the M ur­ nounced the upcoming over time time and promises to give the It took an . offside pass from a very creditable game against ray, Cullen, Ellyett line finally which neither Coach Arsenault Georgian defense steady pre­ Mike MacNamara to Ian Hale whc a very top notch American school clicked with Captain John Mur­ or any of his players knew any­ formances all season long along ...1 deked the untested RP.I. goalie which had everything going for it ray getting the goal at 8.59 to thing about. Both teams had ex­ with new comer Dalton Barnoff. and just pushed the puck passed including the fact that everyone play on assists from his line­ cellent scoring opportunities in Assistant Captain Ken Ekins his out stretched glove hand into of their players were Canadian mates. Mike Mac amara put Sir · overtime but the days travel and continues to give every indica­ the net to put Sir George ahead. at school down there on hockey George ahead 4-0 at 2. 51 of the the change to American rules Only fine back checking and scholarships. · ti0n of his value to the team as third period on pass from Kevin a steady and knowledgeable ho­ was definitely telling on the clearing of the ·goal area kept ::Saturday evening saw perhaps Cross and Ian Hale. ckey player, and young Rod Arm­ team: Sir George in the game during the best combined effort of the Finally at 9.52 of the sudden It looked as if Sir George was strong showed indications of the the second period as RP.I. Georgian hockey team so far this death overtime RP .I. scored on going to get a shut· out but Army talent which the team hopes he constantly fired a barage of long year as witli a game under Ame-. a twenty foot wrist snot from finally deflected a high slap shot can display in the coming years. shots at the Sir George goal. rican rules behind them, t he dead on which just elluded Mike past Georgian goalie Bernie Finally at 22 seconds of the third team was markedly improved MacNamaras attempt to block Wolfe who played an out standing On the whole the Garnet and period RP .I. got the puck past both offensively and carrying the it and went just inside the post ·game flopping his way to twenty Gold have nothing to be ashamed Bickerdike who had no chance puck out of their own end. Phil in the lower right hand corner ix saves. of with their weed-end showing o na tip in. Scheuer scored for Sir George past a partially screened Tom and they certainly deserve all The Third period saw an im­ first as he took passes from Tom Bickerdike. The game was a total tean the support Tuesday night when proved Sir George offensive out­ Price and Mike Bonkoff and skat­ effort which saw all players get­ they open the regular season at The RP .I. game was a study in put as they were only out shot ed around behind the-hack of the ting ice time and playing good Pointe Claire Arena against contrast for the Georgian hockey I3 to 10 and seemed to become Army net to push the puck past hockey. Greg Harmon played a Three Riv~rs.