12
FOOTBALL GEORGIANS CRUSH U OF Ml see page 12 The Pep~,.!'9 ' Price Five C ents Mul v aney_ Charges Humanities Club Blackmail Evening Students Budget Approved With Cuts .) The Evening Students Associa- tion 1971-1972 annual budget was passed at 9:58 P.M., last Wednes- day night including major cuts in faculty and clubs allotments. The seven members of the Ex- ecutive Council, deliberated through two separate sessions marked by outbursts from In- ternal Vice-President, Stephen Huza and an initial closed meet- ing and his minority disagree- ment over various items in a budget that called for a twenty- three hundred dollar surplus on the fifty-five thousand, six hun- dred dollar expenditure approv- als. In a low keyed allegation, in- terim External Vice-President, John Mulvaney, in presenting his club budgets, charged that the E.S.A. was ~more or less blackmailed into providing funds for the Humanities of Science Club. He told council that Roger Tyrnell of the club's steering committee told him in a conver- sation prior to the Council meet - ing that ' unless he heard from us (E.S.A.) about getting some money for his budget, he would be unable to put any evening stu- dents in the assembly": The as- sembly is a similar to that instituted two years ago in the Political Science Department. Despite the approach taken by Bentley Grabs Money Control Mr . Tyrnell on the grant re- quest, the Council voted the funds to the club. The only points of the budget that ran into opposition in the final meeting were the "P resi- dent 's Special Project " allow- ance of one hundre<,i dollars, and the Greek Hellenic Club's al- locations. The former expense was being requested by President Richard Firth to compensate for expenses he incurrs meetipg with Univer- sity officials and outside people where meal, beverage or trans- portation costs incurred while representing the Associa- tion. S.A. Ombudsman Declares Presidency Vacancy The Ombudsman of the Student Association, Victor Lazarovici, has declared Lenn Bentley ine- ligible to hold office and advised members of the Student Legisla- tive Council that the office is vacant on the basis of a reply , from Dean Magnus Flynn to the S.L.C.'s inquiry into the eligi- bility of a Councillor to hold a position, under the provision of Article 3, Section 8 of the S.A. Constitution. The reply, dated September 22, ruled everyone except Lenn Bentley eligible to hold office according to the criteria estab- lished by the S.L.C., and the con titut; · The S.L.C. had inquired as to the eligibility of each member of the Council subsequent to Lenn Bentley's refusal to confirm or deny reports of his academ.ic record The declaration of vacancy came on the heels of Steve Hal- perin 's resignation who as Exe- cutive Vice-President was next in line to the President. Coupled with other resignations by Ed Aust, David Magee, and Ed Rosenthal 's earlier withdrawal, Victor Lazarovici felt he had no choice but to intervene, be- cause of the "a bsence of five of the seven elected ~xecutives and considering the inability of the two remaining executives to legally take action ." September 24, advising of the Ombudsman's decision under the general responsibilities and au- thority of his office to uphold the constitution. At the same time a letter was forwarded to Principal John O'Brien advising the university of the decision and the Ombuds- man's proposal to assume the administrative responsibilities of the Student Association, with a freeze being placed on any new or previously unfinalized fiscal programs. Faculty association presidents who, along with the Ombudsman are to provide a management board during the internal before a new president is installed into office are seeking an early meet - ing with the Principal , to discuss a suspension of the constitution. The Arts Student Association President thi nks that the Prin- cipal will ap prove a suspension on the ·basis of a referendum RAVI KUMAR seeking similar approval fro~ the student body. In its place, he said that a new constitution would be worked out, eliminat- ing the expensive .A. executive structure in favor of the inde- pendent associations function- ing multi-laterally through a ~enate based on proportional representation. This would mean a saving of some $30,000 an- nualky. Jonathan Fisher alleged that Lenn Bentley, Gilles Wooding, and Rick Mills had, last week, changed the signing officer of the association bank account o- ver to themselves, eliminating Elizabeth Bundalek from the li st. Their authority to undertake the action is bague, but no motion was passed by the S.L.C. on the move. The account holds all the association funds. 1n the meantime, che dead- lock over Lenn Bentley's remov- al have led to the lock system of the executive offices being replaced to forestall any diffi- culties should Mr. Bentley refuse to vacate his office. Gilles. Wooding anp. Rick Mill, the re- maining executives will be al- lowed access under the new sys- tem. AT THE. Stephan Huza objected on the grounds that include arguments that, any work or representation carried on outside Association offices should be paid for out of personal funds, and that " be- cause we are students we shouldn't be expected to pay" in reference to costs of beverages. His argument was defeated after he focused in on what appeared to be the primary ;eason for his opposition: th at the fund wasn't to · be extende d to include other executive members. Councillors agreed that the Presid ent is the primary representative of the Association an d passed the item .. A separate public relation ex- pense was a pproved totalling twelve hundred dollars with no detailed program. Greek students at Sir George can expect curtai led oper at ion in the Greek He ll enic Club after its budget request was slashed from eleven hundred and fifty dollars to seven hundred and fifty dollars. The Club, one of the mo t successful on campus, claims over one hu ndred mem- bers and over maintains a re- cord of solid achievement in social activities, such as English teaching programs for members of the Greek community and an avoidance of political dispute that plagued earlier organiza- tions at Sir Geor~. The debt that plagues the Georgian Snoopies, now on their way to financial recovery, was reduced by five hundred dol- lars, deducted from amounts owing to the Association from previous years operations. Last year the E.S.A. wrote off forty six hundred dollars after financ- ing the Snoopies to the tune of over twenty three thousand dol- lars in 1968-1969 and 1969-1970. The · qudget wi ll be published in the October 25th "Financial Record " sup plement to The Paper including aud itied state- . ments from last fiscal year, an in-depth interview with President Richard Firth and a comparative analysis between last year and this year by former Presid ent and editor Wayne Gray. ON THE INSIDE Serge Losique attacks Tenure . . . page 3 Cyrus Ea ton (ex-Canadian) nixes N'ixon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p age 4 George Proussaeff has his op- portun ity in Commentary. . . . . . page 7 Georgian Snoopies School Starts. . . . . . Ground Roger Hollander commences a page 7 & 11 series of book reviews. . . . . . . . page 9 The bear came over the Moun- tain and the Georgians sent them back bare. . . . . . . . . . . . . page 12 ,t ~ ,! _ -,,~ JOHN BULL PUB 1ffl1·~ CORNER STANLEY&-deMAISONNEUVE 844·8355 AND HIS ~am,1-.r . WELCOME BACK TO STUDENT SPECIALS

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Page 1: New FOOTBALL GEORGIANS CRUSH U OF Ml The Pep~,.!'9 · 2019. 12. 29. · FOOTBALL GEORGIANS CRUSH U OF Ml see page 12 The Pep~,.!'9 ' Price Five Cents Mulvaney_ Charges Humanities

FOOTBALL GEORGIANS CRUSH U OF Ml see page 12

The Pep~,.!'9 '

Price Five Cents

Mulvaney_ Charges Humanities Club Blackmail

Evening Students Budget Approved With Cuts.) The Evening Students Associa­

tion 1971-1972 annual budget was passed at 9:58 P.M., last Wednes­day night including major cuts in faculty and clubs allotments. The seven members of the Ex­ecutive Council, deliberated through two separate sessions marked by outbursts from In­ternal Vice-President, Stephen Huza and an initial closed meet­ing and his minority disagree­ment over various items in a budget that called for a twenty­three hundred dollar surplus on the fifty-five thousand, six hun­dred dollar expenditure approv­als.

In a low keyed allegation, in-

terim External Vice-President, John Mulvaney, in presenting his club budgets, charged that the E.S.A. was ~more or less blackmailed into providing funds for the Humanities of Science Club. He told council that Roger Tyrnell of the club's steering committee told him in a conver­sation prior to the Council meet­ing that ' unless he heard from us (E.S.A.) about getting some money for his budget, he would be unable to put any evening stu­dents in the assembly": The as­sembly is a similar to that instituted two years ago in the Political Science Department.

Desp ite the approach taken by

Bentley Grabs Money Control

Mr. Tyrnell on the grant re­quest, the Council voted the funds to the club.

The only points of the budget that ran into opposition in the final meeting were the "P resi­dent's Special Project" allow­ance of one hundre<,i dollars, and the Greek Hellenic Club's al­locations.

The former expense was being requested by President Richard Firth to compensate for expenses he incurrs meetipg with Univer­sity officials and outside people where meal, beverage or trans­portation costs incurred while representing the Associa­tion.

S.A. Ombudsman Declares Presidency Vacancy The Ombudsman of the Student

Association, Victor Lazarovici, has declared Lenn Bentley ine­ligible to hold office and advised members of the Student Legisla­tive Council that the office is vacant on the basis of a reply

, from Dean Magnus Flynn to the S.L.C.'s inquiry into the eligi­bility of a Councillor to hold a position, under the provision of Article 3, Section 8 of the S.A. Constitution.

The reply, dated September 22, ruled everyone except Lenn Bentley eligible to hold office according to the criteria estab­lished by the S.L.C. , and the con titut; ·

The S.L.C. had inquired as to the eligibility of each member of the Council subsequent to Lenn Bentley's refusal to confirm or deny reports of his academ.ic record

The declaration of vacancy came on the heels of Steve Hal­perin 's resignation who as Exe­cutive Vice-President was next in line to the President. Coupled with other resignations by Ed Aust, David Magee, and Ed Rosenthal 's earlier withdrawal,

Victor Lazarovici felt he had no choice but to intervene, be­cause of the "absence of five of the seven elected ~xecutives and considering the inability of the two remaining executives to legally take action."

September 24, advising of the Ombudsman's decision under the general responsibilities and au­t hority of his office to uphold the constitution.

At the same time a letter was forwarded to Principal John O'Brien advising the university of the decision and the Ombuds­man's proposal to assume the administrative responsibilities of the Student Association , with a freeze being placed on any new or previously unfinalized fiscal programs.

Faculty association presidents who, along with the Ombudsman are to provide a management board during the internal before a new president is installed into office are seeking an early meet­ing with the Principal, to discuss a suspension of the constitution.

The Arts Student Association President thinks that the Prin­cipal will approve a suspension on the ·basis of a referendum

RAVI KUMAR

seeking similar approval fro~ the student body. In its place, he said that a new constitution would be worked out, eliminat­ing the expensive .A. executive structure in favor of the inde­pendent associations function­ing multi-laterally through a ~enate based on proportional representation. This would mean a saving of some $30,000 an­nualky.

Jonathan Fisher alleged that Lenn Bentley, Gilles Wooding, and Rick Mills had, last week, changed the signing officer of the association bank account o­ver to themselves, eliminating Elizabeth Bundalek from the list. Their authority to undertake the action is bague, but no motion was passed by the S.L.C. on the move. The account holds all the association funds.

1n the meantime, che dead­lock over Lenn Bentley's remov­al have led to the lock system of the executive offices being replaced to forestall any diffi­culties should Mr. Bentley refuse to vacate his office. Gilles. Wooding anp. Rick Mill , the re­maining executives will be al­lowed access under the new sys­tem.

AT THE.

Stephan Huza objected on the grounds that include arguments that, any work or representation carried on outside Association offices should be paid for out of personal funds, and that " be­cause we are students we shouldn't be expected to pay" in reference to costs of beverages. His argument was defeated after he focused in on what appeared to be the primary ;eason for his opposition: that the fund wasn't to · be extended to include other executive members . Councillors agreed that the President is the primary representative of the Association and passed the item ..

A separate public relation ex­pense was approved totalling twelve hundred dollars with no detailed program.

Greek students at Sir George can expect curtailed operation in the Greek Hellenic Club after its budget request was slashed from eleven hundred and fifty dollars to seven hundred and fifty dollars. The Club, one of the mo t successful on campus, claims over one hundred mem-

bers and over maintains a re­cord of solid achievement in social activities, such as English teaching programs for members of the Greek community and an avoidance of political dispute that plagued earlier organiza­tions at Sir Geor~.

The debt that plagues the Georgian Snoopies, now on their way to financial recovery, was reduced by five hundred dol­lars, deducted from amounts owing to the Association from previous years operations. Last year the E.S.A. wrote off forty six hundred dollars after financ­ing the Snoopies to the tune of over twenty three thousand dol­lars in 1968-1969 and 1969-1970.

The · qudget will be published in the October 25th "Financial Record" supplement to The Paper including auditied state-

. ments from last fiscal year, an in-depth interview with President Richard Firth and a comparative analysis between last year and this year by former President and editor Wayne Gray.

ON THE INSIDE

Serge Losique attacks Tenure . . . page 3

Cyrus Eaton (ex-Canadian) nixes N'ixon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 4

George Proussaeff has his op-portunity in Commentary. . . . . . page 7

Georgian Snoopies School Starts. . . . . .

Ground

Roger Hollander commences a

page 7 & 11

series of book reviews. . . . . . . . page 9

The bear came over the Moun-tain and the Georgians sent them back bare. . . . . . . . . . . . . page 12

,t~,!_-,,~ JOHN BULL PUB 1ffl1·~ CORNER STANLEY&-deMAISONNEUVE 844·8355 AND HIS ~am,1-.r . WELCOME BACK TO STUDENT SPECIALS

Page 2: New FOOTBALL GEORGIANS CRUSH U OF Ml The Pep~,.!'9 · 2019. 12. 29. · FOOTBALL GEORGIANS CRUSH U OF Ml see page 12 The Pep~,.!'9 ' Price Five Cents Mulvaney_ Charges Humanities

2 I THE PAPER, SEPT. 27, 1971

CLASSIFIED Bulletin Board, a calendar of upcoming events of interest to the University com­

munity, invites anyone with such information to forward it to us at H-639, for in­.sertion - free of charge.

Transcendental Meditation at 1 P.M. in H-621.

Fri. 1: Friends of China

POL. SCI. BOOKS FOR SALE:

The Government of Canada, 5th. ed .

!SIR GEORGE i Scien<:e Students Association

meeting to vote on S.A. exe­cutive at 12 P.M. in H-635.

People' s Literature meeting at 2 P.M . in H-537. . Tues. 28: Friends of China

Association are hold ing a con­ference on " Batir de Socialis­me" . University Settlement, 3553 St. Urbain St. at 7:30 P.M.

Political Science Society presents Mr. Pierre Bourgault for a lecture and discussion. H-110 at 2:45 P.M.

Geography Students meeting at4P.M. inH-420.

Mon. 27: Fr iends of China Association presents "Taking

Tiger Mountain by Strategy" . Physical Sciences Centre Au­ditorium, McGill University at 7:30P.M.

Thurs. 30: Friends of China Association are having a talk on "The Lessons of the Chinese Revolution in Relation to the National Liberation Struggles". Dawson College, 350 Selby t., at7:30P.M .

Conservatory of Cinemato­graphic Art showing " Every­thing for Sale" . Poland 1968 .. Directed by Andrzej Wajda. " Giuseppe In Warsaw" . Polish comedy. At 7 P.M. and 9 P.M. respectively in H-110. Admis­sion for students - 50a:, non­students - 75¢.

Introductory lecture on

Association rally to comme­morate the 22nd Anniversary of the founding of the People's Re-

. public of China. P lus a film and photographic exhibition. E­cole de Lanaudiere, 4300 de La­naudiere at 7:30 P.M.

Philosophy Council meeting in Room H-769 at 10:30 A.M.

Arts Faculty Council: Meeting at 2 P.M. in H-769.

Science Students Associa­t ion: "The Fixer" (John Frankenheimer, 1968) with Alan Bates and Dirk Bogarde at 6 P.M. (75a:) and 9 P.M. (99¢) in H-110.

Sat. 2: Football : McGill vs Sir George, 2 P .M. at McGill Stadium.

Sun. 3: The Philosophy Club reque ts the pleasure of the

Mac Gregor Dawson. The Nature and Function of Inter­

national Organization, 2nd. ed. te­phen Goodspeed .

Peace-keeping: International Chal­lenge and Canadian Response. A.M. Taylor.

Call Linda, 879-2836.

company of all Faculty, Grad­uate, Qualifying year, Honor and Major students. Both those who have transportation and those who do not, would please contact the Secretary of the Philosophy Department, between 5 P.M. and 8:30 P .M. as soon as possible at 879-7262.

Students of Objectivism: Anyone interested in forming a group call Patrick Morrison at 843-5096.

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INSTRUCTOR WANTED Part time - morning clas es - teach­ing bookeeping through tria lbalance, experience preferred. 844-8888, 1 -4p.m.

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equipped, unfurnished. Free cable T .V. Available "immediately to the end of April. Call 481-8767.

FOR SALE Apartment size Arborite table -$5.00. ight table - $10.00. Barbara 935-2624.

STUDENT (Bass-Vocals) Own equipment. Looking for rock group or interested musicians. Pref­erably union . Russ 697-1034.

BOOKS WANTED Bowen - Mathematics with Applica­t ion, Math 251.0 course notes and Boreham - Money and Banking. 684-0784.

VOLUNTEERS WANTED To work in LITTLE BURGANDY COMMUNITY in morning, .afternoon and evening programs. Please contact Judy Brown 739-6900.

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THE PAPER, SEPT. 27, 1971 / J ·

Present Tenure System .. An Absurdity

by Dr. Serge Losique

Serge Losique is Professor of French at Sir George where he recently completed a term as Chairman of the French Department. He is founder and Director of the Conseruatory of Cinematographic Art which recently sponsored the Third Annual Canadian Student Film Festiual. His major publications include "l'ldeal Humain de Saint-Exupery", ( 1965); "De Z a A", a nouel published in 1968 and "Dictionnaire etymeslogique des noms de pays et les peuples", published in 1971. He has produced one feature film, "No More Wads" to be released later this month. ·

To a large extent, the problems encountered by universities today are rela.,ted to the system of granting tenure to faculty members after only a few years' teaching. Particularly, tenure means a contract cannot be terminated under -any circumstances. Actually, there is a virtual tenure the moment someone steps into the uni­versity. There seems to exist no reason, of an academic nature or otherwise, that would prevent him from obtaining tenure after three to five years. Through friends of all kinds, through social intrigues inside and outside the university, through aut9matic pro­tection by CAUT and so on, permanent contract is more or less assured. If a serious department even tries to deny or two postpone someone's tenure, it exposes itself to a very dangerous disruption of its normal functions for a long period. Frankly speaking, the whole mess of tenure and appeals procedures is so frequently unacademic that it bears more resemblence to the court of Borgia than to a university in search of truth and knowledge.

The result of such a system is obvious. A number· of faculty members, being human beings like everybody else, take advantage of that perfect and unique security, to do as little work as possible while trying to get as high a salary and as rapid a promotion as possible. In some fields, there is no control of programs, teaching techniques, exams evaluation, etc. There seems to be lack of effort to even coordinate similar courses giving same credits. Research, of course, is neglected despite some beautiful projects on paper. Freedom is complete, salaries are good and should be always better, holidays are very long, so the life of a university professor is enviable. That is the • reason why a student sees a professor today not as educator but as someone who got a better job before him. When one sees that so many professors are wasting most of their time in internal intrigues and infernal fighting through numberless committees instead of devoting it to their students and research, one wonders how this can be.-

This situation is unique and unjust for society. Tenure d<>Js not exist in any other field. In business, industry, hospitals, banks, civil service etc. nowhere is there anything resembling tenure. In a company where success depends on the efficiency of every employee, a system like tenure would mean bankruptcy. At university if tenure was suddenly abolished or at least regularly reviewed by academic experts the quality of teaching would probably rise by soc, and human relations between students and professors would be . greatly improved, and in time, society would have the benefit of better university education. An enquiry would easily show how much more devoted and consciencious in their work are some part-time people who liave no tenure and no security other than their annual contract with their small salaries. A simple look at corrected papers would suffice to convince anybody.

The first victims of this present system are, of course, students. tudents have been aware for some years that something was wrong

and so have proposed to set themselves as judges of their teachers. Questionnairs on courses (even on the knowledge of the subject by the professor!) have been circulated -in classes. tudents want to sit on faculty meetings and committees and have obtained that privilege. Students have even demanded a say in the choice of professors and in some instances have succeeded. All this reflects the realization by students that they are not getting what they should and that something can be done about it. That is why one of the first steps would be to look into the real problem posed by tenure.

New payment plan adopted

One does not see the necessity for present tenure if the system of promotion was established in such a way as to ensure relative security that it is necessary in our agressive society. Each pro­motion level should correspond to a certain number of achievements and these achievments would in themselves protect from a r-0pture of contract. Thus a lecturer would be less protected than an assistant but this is only normal. The criteria for promotion would of course, be academic, that is teaching and research and nothing Iese. Without a PH.D. and other research project finished there should be no promotion to associate professorship. Teaching would have to be controlled in the beginning. This does not mean that a professor would lose his freedom, but only that fie would lose his excess of "freedom" . One of the possible- ways of controlling teaching withqut eliminating freedom would be to test students in order to see if they have mastered the contents of the program. As for research, it should be in the general field of teaching and regular results should be made public. There should be a sharp line drawn between real research and "social research" such as television interviews, photographs in newspapers, elegant conferences, etc ... The same applies to attendance to congresses and leaves of absence. In the first case, a congress should be attended for something else than cocktails and leaves of absence should be used to other purposes than tourism or political activities.

In my opinion, good teaching is always connected to good research. If a professor is a real university professor, he will always find some new discovery in his subject if he is going deeply into it and th is is better for students. One can do research without teaching (as it is practiced- in specialized institutes) but one cannot teach at university level without research.

I know that the cooperation of CAUT branches on campuses is necessary to have any serious reform at university especially in tenure cases. But let 's say that until recently in may universities, the main task of CAUT was to obtain better salaries for professors and to protect almost every member so that he might keep his job within the university. Maybe this was a normal attitude due to the fact that in the past, many university administrations treated even excellent scholars in a very cavalier fashion. But as it stands now, the CAUT is more a union organizat1on than a professional one and "occasional professors", who mostly try to control executive positions, use the CAUT to become real professional association (something like College des medecins du Quebec). Only a reorganized CAUT can play a meaningful role in protecting professional ethics. I hope that in very near future, CAUT will become an academic .fortress of all fully qualified university professors. The strong voice would then exist which could be raised against all possible abuse by different levels of the administration inside and outside the university.

In expressing these personal views about the tenure at universities in general, I admit that it will be not easy to find a perfect solution to this important problem. At another place and time my thoughts will be expressed in more detail. But briefly, the problem exists and no university can mortgage its future with the present of granting tenure. Tenure went too far and something should be done .. On the other hand if we, the university community, do nothing about it, I am sure that somebody else will do it for us and even, I fear, unpleasantly. The University community, administration, professors and students, must have courage and intellectual integrity -and face realities and act wisely in order to give the best possible education to our society in this rapidly changing technological world.

E.S.A. Grant System Funded:ss ,000 The Evening Students Associa­

tion has voted a total of five thousand dollars to fund the new­ly named "Evening Students As­sociation Bursary Fund", chang­ing at the same time the quali­cations and extent of individual studen t grant.

This years ' allocation is a three hundred dollar reduction from last years five thousand three hundred dollar· grant re-

fleeting the reduced revenue picture subsequent to the sixteen percent reduction in the associa­tion fee and a modified payment system.

An ad.Jioc committee was for­mally set up last August 31st by Executive Council to study, along with Mr. David Ramsay, financial aid officer, to make recom­mendation to the Council on de irable change . The commit-

tee composed of Richard Finch, President; Marianne Fisher, ex­ecutive secretary; and Stephan Huza, Internal V.P. which we approved last Wednesday.

Included in the changes is an extension of the qualification criteria to allow students with less than five credits but at least three academic terms to be eli­ble for the non-repayable grant .

However, this year will ee the

institution of a· two-thirds tuition concept. Last year the full tuition fee plus students services and, now the Association will pay two-thirds only of tuition fees of qualifying students. ,

The grant application deadline is still set at October 8th Forms are available in Room H-603, Hall Building and must i:i'e de­posited with David Ramsay in the office of the Dean of Students, Room H-405, Hall Building.

Page 4: New FOOTBALL GEORGIANS CRUSH U OF Ml The Pep~,.!'9 · 2019. 12. 29. · FOOTBALL GEORGIANS CRUSH U OF Ml see page 12 The Pep~,.!'9 ' Price Five Cents Mulvaney_ Charges Humanities

4 I THE PAPER. SEPT. 27. 1971

Referendum Off

by CyJ1'B Eaton Mr. Eaton, Canadian-born Cleuelan~ mdus- Finance Post '

CLEVELAND - To one who has survived all the financial panics of this ,century, has known all the presidents and has been privileged to partici­pate in building up U.S. indu try and agriculture, the disgrace of the dollar in world financial centres is sobering.

Who ha the main responsi­bility for this economic debacle?

In effect we have a presid­ential dictatdrship sustained by the greatest propaganda machine in history: nation-wide prime­time television. The President ignores Congress, rarely con­sults his Cabinet, bypas es the United Nations and announces his decision over the air to the unsophisticated.

In contrast to democracies such as Britain and Canada where members of cabinets must be either member of Parliament or the Upper House, and where premiers and their advisers are always available for public questioning by their fellow elected representatives, U.S. enterprises are carried on by the President in secrecy ex­cept for several cronie in the pertinent departments.

trialist who originated the Pugwash conferences between scientists and statesmen of the East and West, is a leading advocate of an East- West detente and a strong oppon°nt of the Vietnam war.

race, he carries on illegal fo­reign wars with the aid of thou­sands of spies in all nations.

Three Wall Street lawyers Richard Nixon, John Mitcheii and William Rogers, are spend­ing the taxpayers' money around the world li~e drunken sailors.

ow without warning, advice or con ent, .let alone consultation, they have overnig_bt adopted sen­sational policies offensive to all other nations.

These lawyers have no invent­ories to liquidate, they have lu-crative Wall Street practices waiting where their services will be especially in demand in view of the recent additions to the upreme Court.

But many U.S. corporations will have to struggle against the crushing burden of taxation, the high cost of money and for­midable competition from fo­reign corporations that have been subsidized by U.S. funds.

Billy Graham, for while scient­ists and astronomers eek an answer to the riddle of the uni­verse, . Mr. Nixon apparently accepts - or wishes to give that impres ion - Dr. Graham 's naive -theory on the origin and destiny of man. It, too, lends it elf to di tribution by televi­sion.

No other µian I have met has uch an accurate and complete

understanding of Mr. Nixon as Premier Phan Van Dong of North Vietnam. He aid to me: "There ' will be no end to the war in Vietnam while Mr. ixon i President. He will use any pretexts for renewed military attacks on us. The war will end only when Congress refuses 'to provide the money for further participation."

The time has come for the Congress to accept its respon­sibility and to act vigorously through the appropriate com­mittees, bearing in mind in this time of our financial humiliation the injunction of the ancient pro­phet to "do justly, love mercy and walk humbly".

Seven months after being re­acclaimed to the office of Vice President-Finance of the Evening

tudents Association, Peter Klyne has tendered his resigna­tion. The letter dated eptember 13th is the culmination of a en I prone and unfortunate relationship between Mr. Klyne and the As ociation.

Peter Klyne assumed office in ovember 1970 after Wayne Vi­

bert resigned his office to direct more attention to studies. His letter detailing a variety of charges inconsistent with facts contained in Association files, wa the first written communica­tion by Mr. Klyne to the As­

.sociation after a stream of cor-respondence originating last March 11th.

The former Vice President Finance ' term in office was marked by unilateral changes in accounting practices on hi part and a fai lure to fuli"ill the duties as determined under the Finance Bylaws and general accounting principle . ince his acclama­tion to office last March, Mr. Klyne did not attend Council meetings nor did he undertake any of his responsibilities de­spite Counci l overtures.

The most obvious move to help the dollar is to cut out the expense of maintaining U.S. troops, wives and children in the style to which they have become accustomed all over the world. Chartrand on Federal Gov,t

Mr. Klyne 's failure to admin­istrate the financial affairs of the Association contributed to additional employee expenses for external accoun ting assistance as well as a deficit resulting from incomplete information during the final months of budgeting and allocation.

The resignation puts an end to speculations on the necessity of a referendum to seek Mr Klyne's ouster by the student body.

The A ociation has yet to come up with a replacement and various Executive Counci l mem­bers have openly di cussed the possibility of a constitutional referendum to seek the abolition of the elective po t in favour of more satisfactory arrangement with a hired accountant or trea -urer answerable, not to the Council, but to the President or ome other designated official.

The issue of how best to fill a financial post that requires more administration than legislative time and that requires certain skills that often are not present in elected representatrves has festered off and on in ratio to the workblood impo ed on the individual holding office and his abili ty to meet Association standards of performance. The President has determined

disastrous financial policies and international relations. As Com­mander-in-Chief of the armed forces, a position of power strangely out of place in a de­mocracy, especially in this nu­clear age when one man's fa­natacism could end the human

Future historians may use such epithets as dictator and demagogue to describe the President. Philosophers mav assess his intellectual depth i; terms of his association with

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Michel Chartrand, Quebec la­bour leader, spoke to students at the Univer ity of Saskatche­wan, Regina Campus last Thurs­day. The program utilized a question and answer format. Mr. Chartrand began by relating hi experiences during and since the October crisis in Quebec. He poke of his unjust internment

and series of trial po t-pone­ments.

When questioned about a free and separate Quebec he aw this a the only way to rid Quebec of the repression of fascist and hypocritical Canadian govern­ment. He said the Quebecois' status was that of Indians with white faces.

Mr. Chartrand was asked what the re ponse to his views had been throughout the country. He replied that it had been favor­able but in every case they said they didn 't know anything about what was really happening in Quebec; then or now. Chartrand

.claimed it is all caused by conspiracies involving the huge capitalist-controlled media in­formation network . He told of at least a dozen Quebec papers controlled and dictated to by media-combine which are intent on brainwashing and misinform­ing the people not only in Quebec but all over Canada.

On the topic of democracy in Canada he spoke of it as a non­entity. He said that whenever the people of Canada try to set up a true democratic state it will be crushed in the style of Latin

Reprint from the Carillon

American fascist regimes. As examples he used the rallies of both June 24 and October of last year. He illustrated the "ramp-

Michel Chartrand

ant fasci m" of the Amencans in ixon 's wage freezes. In this recent move the "capitalist elite's" domai n of profit, inter­est, and dividends remains static while the common working man suffers under a wage freeze.

A question arose about how hard hit the trade of a free Que­bec wou Id be in regards to for­eign markets, with the U.S. as a potential antagonist. He replied that just as the West had sold wheat to Mainland China, Que­bec. would sell their paper pro­ducts so the Chinese people could read even more of Chairman Mao.

Speaking of the new and young generation in Quebec he said they had lost their parent fear of the power elite and gained a hither to unknown higher standard of education. They are now politi­cally aware enough to ee through the hypocrisy of the pre ent society and realize it has broken down to the point where it holds no future for them. This he said was borne out by the vast unemployment figures.

He complained that the uni­versity should not be in the business of just teaching how to make money but how to live bet­ter and live together better.

In regards to violence he says he is content te let people do what they ·feel they must even if death ensues. The doctor's strike in Quebec " killed people in cold blood" the same week as Pierre Laporte died yet no scandal or denunciations against these fine professional men followed.

He described the DP govern­ments in Canada at present as without true socialism because they don't have the power. They won 't change the system or men­tality of the Liberals· and Con-ervatives they replaced because

of the fear instilled by the U.S. imperialist organization.

The question of ·politician like Trudeau and Marchand was an-wered by the forceful reply of,

"you worry about th.em, it's not my government any more . Men like them are your problem now".

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Too Many Ph.D,s .

Woodrow Wilson :Fellowships Scratched

This fall, for the first time in more than twenty years, there will be no Woodrow Wilson Fel­lowship competition.

In announcing that the fellow­ship program would be temprari­ly suspended, H . Ronald Rouse,

world, will design a new fellow­ship program taking into account recent developments in graduate education and in the teaching profession, and seek funds for this new program."

dations and contributions from individuals, including over 2,000 former Woodrow Wilson Fel­lows.

As a result of rapid growth of graduate chools, more Ph. D.'s have been produced this year than can be placed. The economic recession and the recent wave of anti-academic sentiment across the country have combined to · reduce dras­tically the amount of money available for college faculty sa­laries. As a result of these two facotrs the demand for college teachers had dropped just as the time when the supply is increas­ing. The U.S. government, which previously supported nearly

ational Director of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, said, " Funds cur­rently available to the Founda­tion for first year graduate fel. lowships are being used to sup­port over 200 Fellows during the 1971-72 academic year. Pros­pects for securing new funds are uncertain. During the coming year, trustees and officers of the Foundation in cooperation with representatives of the academic

Other foundation programs will be continued during 1971· 72 and 1972-73. The e include the Dissertetion Fellowships, the Martin Luther King, Jr. Fel­lowships and the Graduate Jn. formation and Counselling Serv­ice for Black Veterans, the Teaching and Administrative In­ternships, and the National Hu· manities Series. To support its . programs, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship- Foundation receives grants from other foun-

JOHN KEULE: Never Too Many PhDs!

John Kettle, Canadian futurist and consultant to the Hudson Institute in New York, suggests that it is absurd to suppose that we can ever have too many well educated people.

to benifit society with its "in­creasing wealth, increasing technological sophistication, in­creasing urbanization, increas· ing internationalism and increas­ing communications".

tion believes them, Mr. Kettle suggests either 1) we are too stupid to know how to use them our PhDs, or 2) all or some of the " increasings" listed above ' are false assumptions, or 3) our PhDs are not, in modern terms, well educated.

Citing a few of his reasons, he suggests that we will need more and more PhDs trained

If universities are "over­producing" PhDs., as they claim, and the Woodrow Wilson Founda-

with Norcene Cu,ntiBi~ The dollar crisis occasioned by President ixon's recent measures to ease pressure on

the American dollar has been a matter of utmost concern in the Carribbean. It is hoped that the result of this decision would eventually put the West Indian dollar in an advantageous position.

Until the present date the West Indian dollar with the exception of the Jamaican dollar has always been worth in the vicinity of fifty to fifty· three cents on the Canadian market. The Ja. maican dollar is now worth one dollar and twenty-seven cents. The result of that the Can­adian spending his money in the West Indies was is an extremely advantageous position, whereas the West Indian using his currency in Canada suf. fered a great loss.

This great difference in the exchange rate in favour of Canada affects to a great extent West Indian students in this country.

You may raise the question, if this is the case, why don't Caribbean students study at home?

There is a perpetual craving for a higher education throughout the Caribbean Islands. A vast number of young men and women in these islands desire to attain a higher University education.

Although there is such a thing as the Universi­ty of the West Indies, there are only t,hree of its kind located in Jamaica, Trinidad and Barbados, the bigger and more developed of the islands. Every island is not in a po it.ion, financially and otherwise, to have its own University and it is impossible for the e three Universities to admit all the potential students from throughout the islands.

'I

Although there are some Caribbean students who choose coming abroad in preference to at­tending their own University, there are many others who would like to attend the University of the West Indies but are prevented from doing so due to lack of space. At this point the rate of currency exchange becomes a matter of deep concern.

Some of these students immigrate to Canada and have their education financed by their pa­rents. However, for all except the very wealthy this is a great sacrifice. To be sent $1000 and only to receive $200 because of currency ex­change rates is somewhat disheartening. You will agree with me that it is quite rough to have to contend with this situation for four or more years of full time University.

As a result of this some Caribbean students find it necessary after about two years of day school to get themselves a job, if one can be obtained, and continue the remaining two years as a night student. Others, for lack of a summer job, are also forced into becoming night students.

It would be so much easier for these students if President Nixon's move resulted in some sort of equality with the dollars.

Many of these Caribbean students who are faced with this problem are not even aware of the fact that the Sir George Evening tudents As­sociation offers grants and that their is such a thing as a Quebec Students Loans and Business Service.

If thi problem happens to be yours perhaps you should investigate these grants.

11,000 fellowships for beginning graduate students, has reduced or eliminated several programs. It will provide only about 1,500 new fellowships for 1972-73. Similarily, state and cooperate programs have also been cut.

While the country may have overreacted to the college teacher shortage of a decade ago, there is now the danger that it will similarly overreact to the current problems of higher education by discouraging out­standing students from consider­ing academic careers.

"Therefore, young people _ planning for academic careers should make flexible plans," Dr. Rouse advised. It is unlikely that they can expect to step into the fellowship escalator and be car­ried smoothly up through the Ph.

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THE PAPER, SEPT. 27. 1971 I 5

D. and into an academic post. Many may wish to secure certi· fication for secondary schcsol teaching to provide an alterna­tive either temporary or per­manent, to doctoral work.

Nevertheless, ".The officers and trustees of the Woodrow Wilson ational Fellowship Foundation are convinced that there is not, and never will be, an oversupply of truly outstand­ing teachers, combining dedica­tion to scholarship with a sen­sitivity to people and their needs. They are determined to find some means of continuing to identify, encourage and assist young people with these qualities in preparing for careers ap­propriate to their talents and society's needs", Dr. Rouse concluded.

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6 / THE PAPER, SEPT. 27, 1971

The Paper ESTABLISHED 1968

Editor-in-Chief Wayne S . Gr ay

· Published by the Evening Students' Association of Sir George Williams Uniersity; ·

Editorial content may be reprinted with credit. 1455 De Maisonneuve Blvd. W. Suite H-639

Editorial 879-2836 Adv~rtisiilg 879-4514 Type-setting & Litho by Journal Offset Inc. 331-9721

Student Affairs Council An Exercise in Futility

It Jias been eleven months since the University Council in Student Life forwarded its final draft of a new Students Affairs Council to Principal John O'Brien. At its time of trans­mission, Dr. O'Brien indicated in his reply that the -University was having the proposal review­ed legally, that he would hold

· the report until the legal aspects had been clarified and that he would keep the UCSL inf armed "as matters develop".

The document in question cov­ering a new Student Affairs Council was the result of over two years germination and lengthly discussions subsequent to a proposal originated by past S.A. president Manny Kallas; Allan Hilton and other members of day student government dur­ing the years 1968 to 1969.

The heart of both the original and final documents was the es­tablishment of a non-academic council operating at the same level within the University structure as the University

Council but unlike the USCL, the majority of the voting de­legates would be students from the day, evening and graduate divisions.

Since that propitious occasion last October, the entire matter has been at a standstill. The UCSL has not followed the mat­ter up and the Principal has not kept that body informed as to the progress, if any, the pro­posal has been making.

Now it appears that the Lo­yola/Sir George merger idea will become the focal point of senior University Administrat­ive resources over the next year. The portent of such a plan necessarily raises doubts as to the viability of a Students Affairs Council on the scale en­visioned in the report.

It seems quite probable that, given the weight of the merger issue and its implication, that neither the UCSL nor the stud­ent association will hear any­thing positive and action orient­ed for quite some time.

Comic Relief: no line ups!

O. t< . QIJT YOO\ \. l,IAVE lb lX) IT

l'li "lllE EIID Of"ll!E ~we~=

Open Letter To Lenn Bentley Dear Lenn,

Today the Student Association of the University stands on the brink of administrative and legislative disaster. Its character and reputation, already weak from years of strife and internal bickering, is held in low esteem by far too many people. The Ombudsman has had visited on him the ominous and unre­

warding task of keeping a leaderless association together and he has been forced to involve the university in fulfilling his respon­sibilities to the student body as a trustee of the Student. Association.

For all practical purposes the business of the association -which is serving its contituencies - has come to a standstill, while those " leaders" that are left attempt to grasp the situation .

Last March, when you ran for the position of President of your association, you promised great things to students. They respected you enough to elect you to a post that placed you in the public eye and carried with it the responsibilities and authprity to build an organization that was in the final stages of ousting it President after a year of bitter dispute and a disease like impotency and mass irrelevancy.

At that time, and for some months afterwards, if we are to believe all those who talk about this unfortunate affair that has developed, your qualification to hold office was questioned . People, especially those on the third floor of the Hall Building where the Association has its offices, questioned your right to hold office on the basis of your academic record .

You omitted information and remained totaly oblivious, to the inqufres of the Student Legislative Council, acting as a formally convened body. Individual queries were met with silence,evasion, or a mind your own business attitude. '

Finally, after T he Paper established and published the information that you had failed four credits, and were subsequently ineligible to continue in office, the S.L.C. voted a motion of non-confidence in you. The Paper tried openly and above board to a certain, from you, what the true story was. You declined .

Instead of taking that motion of non-confidence as a proper in­dication that the S.L.C. was fed up with your failure to carry out your election promises and your established inability to hold office, you reacted by accusing them of attacking you because you were black.

Not only that, but you even called me at The Paper and threaten to "escalate things" because you were psychologically injured and that because of the story, your chances of getting a good job would be affected. You had the unmitigated gall to link the story with the November 3, 1969 cartoon that was published in The Paper

and for which I was cavelierly denied any rights by this university to publish a newspaper, and was eventually ousted from office.

You accused me, like you accuse your S.L.C. o( racism. You felt that we were getting at you because of your color. Somehow you couldn't understand that the S.L.C. is suppose to question yours or anybody's eligibility to hold office or carry out their responsibilities, when they suspect that established by-laws, rules and the constitution are being violated, or that a representative is the students in not living up to the promises on which she or he was elected.

You somehow felt, Lenn, that nobody had the right to question you, that your political confreres were wrong, and that we were completely unaware of Qur " place" .

You told me, in between the stream of accusations and veiled threats, that you weren 't a politician like the others. I told you I would support your reform programme editorially - if you worked on it and produced.

Yet all you have been is a politician trying vainly to usurp the power of your associations' constitution and maintain you~ position and your reputation.

The position of the president of Student Association is not a post of renown. It is a place of responsibility, difficult decisions, and hard, and sometimes unrewarding, work. It is subject to attack by third floor charletans and disgruntled groups, frustrated with the imperviousness of the association to change and relevancy.

T he state of the association and your reptuation is your respon­sibility. You have brought on the destruction of both by yourself. The Student Association will somehow s~rvive, although things are grim now that one half of your executive has resigned.

But Lenn, your case is different. You have sacrificed yo ur repu­tation and tarnished your image by fighti ng the will of a democra­tically elected body of students who are your peers and have every much responsibility and authority as you do.

You have jepordized your chances of future success in favor of the bad decision t hat the present politics of student government deserve your due consideration.

We make concessions to our personal integrity for political expediency so that solutions, and hopefully progre will arise out of comprimise.

Yet in doing that and devoting our human resources to the extent that we are concious, we sometime~ forget the main reason why

· we are here is: not to fight political battles, but to get an education and a degree.

Its time you made that decision Lenn, before its too late to save your academic career. But it is your decision.

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George .Proussaeff: Young People do not not Have

a Monopoly on Imagination Mr. Proussaefs is a first year student at Sir George who spe­

cializes in the study of the Canadian political scene. His articles, which should appear in The Paper each week, will focus in on a variety of contemporary issues inside and outside the University. Letters and rebuttals are invited.

One of the most controversial programs to come from the federal government has been "Opportunities For Youth". Its purpose was to create summer jobs for students and un­employed young people while at the same time allowing them to use their creative ingenuity by submitting their own ideas for projects to work on. From all across Canada, youth res­ponded as never before. More than 11,000 ima­ginative projects were submitted before the deadline, over 4,200 from Quebec.

This indicated that despite high unemployment and an unsteady political climate, Quebec's young people still had a strong desire to improve their society , through constructive action. The recognition of this desire came in the way of Quebec receiving the largest amount of mo­ney, over $9,000,000, around 3gc~ of the national total.

The 802 projects accepted from Quebec pro­vided a kaleidoscope of interests from social services such as day-care centres, helping se­nior citizens and hospital work, to hardcore research projects in such fields as anti-pollution measures, the degree of justice in court rooms and an examination of an individual's legal rights. There were numerous recreational pro­jects such as · the formation and running of summer camps, establishment of recreational facilities where there were none, and massive environmental clean-up campaigns. There were also cultural projects such as theatrical pro­ductions, musical concerts and ballet troupes. There was something for everybody.

For the most part the projects were suc­cessful, but there were also some basic faults. Some young people who really didn't need gov­ernment aid got federal money, while many especially worthwhile projects did not get ac­cepted, including my own, incidentally. Also, the bookeeping of the money was a disaster. But all things taken into consideration, we must remember that this was a new approach, and really just an initial test. And it did provide many thousands of summer jobs, not to mention the lasting benefits to the different communities. When all the factors are put on a scale, the good points far outweigh the bad ones.

It is for this reason that a movement spear­headed by Quebec is now underway to secure the continuation of "Opportunities For Youth" beyond the official closing date of September 30th, into the winter and next summer. A petition is circul?tion on every campus asking the Sec­retary of State to announce its continuation by November 1st. At S.G.W.U., this petition is making the rounds in both Day and Evening divisions. It also includes support for imple­menting the ·P-2 program of the Youth Com­mittee Report, encouraging older citizens to participate in the restructuring of society, as it is understood that young people do not have a monopoly on imagination.

So when you see the petition, sign it; it's in your interest. Then, think up some projects, because next time around you may get your chance.

Loyola-Sir George Merger Talks : A history

by M icheal Sheldon

Discussions between SG WU and Loyola regarding the possi­bilities of a joint future began nearly two years ago, and a num­ber of meetings have been held since then. Last spring we re­ceived a proposal from Loyola outlining a possible form of as­sociation, and this was accepted officially by University Council and the Board of Governors as a good basis for negotiation.

T he main elements of this pro­posal were: a Loyola Faculty of Arts and Science ; a SGWU Facul­ty of Arts and Science; and Asso­ciated University Faculty of Com­merce; and Associated Universi­ty Faculty 0' Graduate Studies. There would. be close inter-de­partmental cooperation between the two campuses. There would be no immediate integration of the Evening operations.

At a meeting of the SG WU · committee on relations with Lo­

yola last Tuesday, September 21, a statement of our position deri­ving from and developing the Lo­yola document was approved as a

Michael Sheldon is Assistant to the Principal of Sir George Williams University. He is a member of the Do­mestic Committee at Sir George that hos been reviewing and formulating merger proposal with Marianapolis College and Loyola College.

suitable basis for further discus­sions.

This statement envisages a Fa­culty distribution not dissimilar from that put forward in the Lo­yola document, while taking into account the academic strengths of the two institutions and the im­portance to the community of maintaining the two separate campuses. It also suggests an organization and structure, both academic and administrative, for an integrated university. We be­lieve it is most important that the structure of decision-making and the lines of authority be clearly defined and be accepted by both parties before detailed discussions take place.

It is clear that the government supports the amalgamation of the two institutions. We, ourselves, believe that such a strengthening of the second English-language

university in Montreal will be in the best interests of the commu­nity, providing that the present qualities and services of SGWU and Loyola are properly protec­ted . Our proposal, as we see it, will in effect bring Loyola into the Quebec university system, and this should offer both acade­mic and financial advantages, par­ticularly over the longer term.

While it is impossible to fore­cast the duration of this new stage in our negotiations with Loyola, we see no reason why the matter should not advance with reasonable rapidity, and the foun­dation of an integrated universi­ty be established by next fall. But this will rquire the declared goodwill of both institutions and considerable hard work by all those who will be involved in the many-faceted series of negotia­tions which must ensue.

THE PAPER, SEPT. 27. 1971 1 7

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THE PAPER, ROOM H-639

Georgian Snoopies

Ground School Director, Frank Hoffman will commence The twelve week ground school course October first at 8:30 P.M. Sharp in Room H-435. GROUND SCHOOL OCTOBER 1st 8:30 P.M. H-435

Ear11 JI011e)l Selli11g Ca11ada Savi11gs Bonds

9 1, Yot ·R~P.-\RE THIE

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL: Larry Levenstone 392-7246

M•ARIU L.VNCH, PIERCE, FENNER & SMITH INC

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8 / THE PAPER, SEPT. 27, 1971

ENTER TAIN MENT

Sad-urday Night Viewing he portrayed a jazz musician in

this week's "Orff ' . If he didn't stop the show with his perform­ance, he at least managed to slow it down. Andree Boucher, Yvan Ducharme, Peggy Mahon, France Castel and Terrence G. Ross were all · faceles names or namele s faces to me. I do know that a certain number of other actors occasionally circulated around the stage, but they were never identified. Lucky them.

with gail renard entertainments editor

- art

- cinema

- theatre

• - music

- television

- literature

- radio

by Gail Renard

I wa grateful last June when the CBC removed ' Zut" from television (Saturday nights at 7), to air "Laurel and Hardy" . I figured that it wa about time that we had some comedy in that spot. But now, the immortal "Laurel and Hardy" have been taken off and replaced by CBC's new "Let's Call The Whole Thing Orff' series. Talk about the whell going full circle.

'""' evening students' association SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY

APPLICATIONS ARE NOWBElNG ACCEPTED FOR THE POSITION OF

CHIEF RETURNING OFFICER

ELIGIBILITY: Any Sir George Student (Day or Evening) is

eligible. As long as the individual is not employed by or holding a seat on the

E.S.A. Executive Council.

DEADLINE: Friday, October 8th at 5 P.M.

PLACE: Evening Students Association H-603

. BOULEVARD DE PARIS

presents

EROS Fron1 Philadelphia, Pa.

START/IVG: TUESDAY SEPT. 28. FOR DIVE WEEK OIVL Y.

Lower pr.ices are in effect all day Monday and 11 a. m. - 7 p. m. the rest of the week

893 Ste-Catherine St. W. Phone 842-6562

The television listings de­scribe this show a ' ' comedy" . Don't believe it. Although the show is Canadian, it reminds me more of Que.bee ----- a confusing mixture and French and English, that doesn ' t know where its going, and with amateur clowns in charge. Bar­rie Baldaro, late of "iut" and " Funny You Should Say That", is one familiar face in the new cast.

Harry Haldaro made a great impression on me, and was truly unforgettable . Carrie Caldaro isn' t a bad actor but he could use a better vehicle . Preferably one that's leaving Central Station tonight. The actor that I so fond­ly remember from "Funny You Should Say That" is now but an­other blemish on the acned face of "Orff". Ari is joined by Wal­ly Martin, who used to do non­speaking parts on "Zut". Wally has now worked his way down to a starring part on "Orff". Mr. Martin was truly something when

In all fairness, I believe the show i mainly rotten because of the material and the production. The jokes (?) were nothing spe­cial, and the old, stale jokes were the mo t enjoyable of all. The camera also had the nasty habit of not moving quickly enough. There is nothing funny about holding a camera on an actor's frozen expression one full minute after the punch line has ended. It's comparable to remaining at the funeral home ten day after the burial.

There was one enjoyable spot in the whole show. The com­mercial. Done by Ann.e Murray. How bright, witty, and animated she appeared after 'Orff" ! See how desperate I am?

The CBC should stick with the original title --- "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off' ---- and then do it. Immediately. Please.

What's Wrong with the Picture?

WELCOME NEW

QzlJ!~ STU!::>E.N"TS f

s \R. FUN Pi.A CE To

lo SCHOOL!!

by Rourke Tapp

A. the freshmen at SIR GEORGE always observe the no smoking signs for the first couppl'a weeks anyway.

E. who the hell wears FROSH buttons any more?

B. Who the heck can get books on the first day?

C. No freshmen wear suits or have sport hair because now they'r in 'COLLEGE, and they let their hair grow all sum.mer, and wear old jeans, to be IN.

D. there's never anyone in the welcome booth.

F. The city of Montreal repossessed our campus tree a -long time ago.

G. There's no 18 TH floor in Sir George and every one knows that the PAPER offices are on the 6th floor... don't they?

H. This whole thing is totally rediculous.

I. There's no THIS _in the capt_ion question .

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THE PAPER, SEPT. 27. 1971 I 9

FUTURE SHOCK: Evolution for the Sell of' it by Roger Hollander

Future Shock 1s a book worthy of being taken seriously only because _of the tact that millions are reading it and are taking it seriously. With the nauseating cleverness and gim­mickery of his presentation (via the chapter beadings), Alvin Tef­fler earns himself a position along side of Erich Segal as a master ' feeder of mush to a hungry North American audience.

Futurism is the newist fad. What Marshall McLuhan and Buckminster have made intel­lectually respectable, Alvin Tef­fler has come along to vulgarize. The thesis of Futui'e Shock is that the future is arriving at so rapid a pace (more technological development has occurred in the last generation than in the hun-

dreds of preceeding generations) that society is freaking out and individuals are having difficulty adjusting to change. Social prob­lems are therefore a result of overly rapid technological deve­lopment and their solution lies in learning to cope with techno­logy rather than in fighting' against it.

On the surface this may seem to be an innocuous argument, but the implications it holds -- and Teffler drops them throughout the book -- are a source for serious concern, If Future Shock were simply riding the crest of the wave of interest in ecology

and technological change, it could be written off as just a bad book. But the re~ctionary fll!lction it serves -- and this, J· submit, is why all the fuss and adulation -­must be understood and exposed for what it is.

Future Shock is not a politi­cally neutral document. To the contrary, it is a powerful piece of propaganda written to serve the needs of the intellectual hard-hats who govern the uni­versities and research institu­tions of America. The mantle of "objective social science" (translation: anti-Marxist, pro­D.S. power elite) has now been passed from the followers of Daniel Bell and John Galbraith to those of Buckminster Fuller and Alvin Teffler. Future .Shock set out to do for our minds what Love Story was supposed to do for our emotions -- get them off such ugly topics as Vietnam and racism and back to more whole: somely American pursuits.

One doesn· t have to read far into Future Shock to divine Tef­fler's most fundamental objec­tive, which is to pull the rug out from under what he terms the "orthodox social criti cs" Kafka, Orwell , Whyte, Marcuse, Ellul (he 's too out of it even to acknowledge Bobby Seale, Reies Tijerina, or even Jerry Rubin). He labels these critics as "pes­simistic" and ridicules their " unreasonable" and "emotion­al" fear of bureaucracy. To wit: "The kinds of organizations these critics project unthinking­ly into the future are precisely these least likely to dominate tomorrow. For we are witmes­sing not the triumph, but the breakdown of bureaucracy. We are, in fact, witnessing the ar­rival of a new organizational system that will increasingly challenge, and ultimately sup­plant bureaucracy . . . -r call it 'ad-hocracy' ... instead of being trapped in some unchanging, personality smashing niche, man will find, himself liberated, a stranger in a new free-form world of kinetic organizations."

Incredible bullshit. Obviously Teffler has never tried to change

courses at Sir George Willia~s University or had anything at all to do with the phone company. More obviously, he has never had to deal with sexism, racism, or anything at all like a welfare bureaucracy. Teffler is educated and wealthy. A former editor of Fortune magazine, he jets around the continent interviewing the elites. Naturally, to him, the future looks rosy if somewhat shocky.

Ironically, what this prophet of the future boils down to is an apologist for the status quo. A dressed up modernized-to-the­hilt version of the Catholic Church's centurys old message to the peer. Don't bitch about what is wrong with this life. The next one (Future) will be better even if one must pass through a bit of purgatory (Shock) to get there.

Teffler's vision is a cruel il­lusion. He feeds us drivel about how technology can lead to di­versification rather than stand­ardization. He points to the clothing revolution and postulates that once 'they really get together they' ll be turning out shopping centers as diversified as mod clothing. Are we really supposed to get off on this and forget about what the monop­olies -- General Foods, General

STU DENT FILM FESTIVAL , Montrealer Overall Winner

Fifty cents bought a lot of entertainment last night for hundreds of people watching the third Canadian· Student Film Festival. Fifteen hundred dollars bought · even more entertainment last night for the nine b~g winners of this year's festival.

The festival has been running at Sir George Williams University for the past four days. Out of 107 films entered in this year's competition, 37 were selected, and viewed this week as finalists. Out of these 37 films, 32 were from Ontario and Quebec---a strong indication where the bulk of this country's film makers lie. ·

It was a difficult decision for the panel of judges to make, but it was one that the jury was more than qualified to decide. Panelists included Sir George's own Dr. Serge Losique (director of Cinematogra­phic) , ).\1arc Gervais (professor of Loyola's department of Communication Arts) , Andre Guerin (chair­man of the Quebec Cinema Supervisory Board), Martin Malina (film critic of the Montreal Star) , and Luc Perreat.ilt (of La Pre~se) . Honourary jurists included the National Film Board's Norman McLaren and Cinemathelue Fran9aise 's Henri Langois. ·

The festival has also looked forward to welcoming Italian film director Roberto Rossellini as presi­dent of the jury, but a last nrinute trip to Red China caused him to resign and miss the festival.

Motors, Standard Oil, etc. -- are In all honestly, I cannot re­doing to us, body and soul? Tef... commend Future Shock. Nine­fler's own book is a crude parody · teen-Eighty Four is still more of this nonsense. It is marketed relevant. Death Ship, written in a variety of brightly coloured in 1934 is more humanly ac­covers. _,.. Clever? Yes. · Saleable? curate about bureaucracy than Certainly. Substantial (in terms Alvin Teffler will ever conceive of solving real social problems)? ofbeing. . Don't make me laugh. Please don't tell me the future

I am an unashamed pessimest. is arriving at breakneck speed It is not because of a cynical and that is why I'm disoriented. nature or sour spirit. To the I, too, have a dream of tomor­contrary. I dig life. But I cannot · row. And it's not coming fast deny in _my mind what I see with enough. my eyes. A world order suffering · from suicidal imbalance not be- , cause technology has run amuk, but because the profit motive remains the final and absolute standard of all human and social relations. Not a problem of cop­ing with technology, but with man's nature.

Looking ahead, in itself, is no sin. But the only real hope for a livable future lies in making an un-sentimental hard-nosed ap­praisal of the past, an analysis

· f the spiritual, political, and economic forces which have led us to our present predicament (and there is still no substitute for · beginning with the traditional sources of criticism, Marx and Freud) . And then doing some­thing about it. Frankly, I'm not overly optimistic.

,.

evening students' association~ @~'I:}

~ "'SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY ~ - _ _,

HAVE YOU APPLIED? YOU MAY BE ELIGIBLE

FOR AN E.S~A. GRANT! Apply before Oct:. 8th

Evening Students AssociatitJn H-603 Hall Bldg. Phone 879-2832

CATEGORY 1: SCENARIO The Winners

1st PRIZE: "No Deposit" - No Return. Boston University by Law­rence Seligman 2nd PRIZE: "Under Glass" - Sheriqan College (Ontario), by Eric

_ Huurre

CATEGORY2:EXPERIMENTAL -1st PRIZE: "Next tome" - Charlottetown (P .E.l.), by Rick Hancox 2nd PRIZE: "Roll Bar Roll" - School of Art (Montreal), by Richard Halliday -

CATEGORY 3: ANIMATION 1st PRIZE: "Le Premier Accident d 'Auto" - School of Art (Montreal), by Jean Michel Labrosse · 2nd PRIZE: "Tricycle" - Sir George Williams University, by Joyce Borestein

CATEGORY4:DOCUMENTARY 1st PRIZE: " I, A Dog" - Charlottetown (P.E.I. ), by Rick Hancox 2nd PRIZE: " Isolated Incidents" - Queen 's University, by Peter Duffy.

OVERALL WINNER: " Oasis" (animation) - CEGEP - Vieux Mont­real, by Andre Leduc.

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10 / THE PAPER, SEPT. 27, 1971

Is Soccer ..... PAPER Sports .I

a Ball ?

Soccer Team VVins: Again

OITAWA, CANADA-WITH two exhibition victorie already firmly implanted between the cleats of their occer shoes, the Georgian travelled to Car­leton University yesterday.

When the squad got back on the bus 3 hours later, they had stretched their impres ive pre­season winning treak to three. The final score wa 3-1 for the undefeated Garnet and Gold and in the three games the defensi­ve record ha been just short of superlative, averaging less than a goal-a-game against. The of­fence, meanwhile, has hit the op­position with a total of 14 goals and it was a combination of the two departments that et up yes­terday's victory. Anastius Kou­verianos and Alex Mengoli split up the net-minding chores yes­te rday and each had to come up with a number of incredib le stops to hold off the Ontario team. Especially outstanding was a closing minute play by Meng­oli, who had come into the game with eight minutes to go in the

_ game.

The game started on a low, quiet tone as the teams tried to establish some ball-control au­thority. It wa close for a while, but the ir George defence held tight and the offence managed two good goals and held a half­time lead of 2-1. In the final 45 minute , Sir Georges beat the Carleton goalie once more and the soring ended on hat note. There could have been at least two more markers in the game, however, one for each team.

ir George's Miguel Augostino had the first penalty kick of the year for the Georgians but the ball sailed over the crossbar of the net. Only Alex Mengoli' alertness kept the local from making the game clo e towards the end, when he hurled him­self at a ball ear-marked for the high, right corner. Augusti­no didn't fare too badly, in spite of his missed free kick though, and collected two goals to run his pre-season total to six. Joe Battista, whose exhibition per­fromances indicate that he will probably have his best collegial

Why test, when we already

season ever, scored the other tally for..the Georgians.

. There were approximately 60 fans spread .out along the side­lines to take in the game under unny Ontario skies. Coach Li­

corish stated that the trip we t was a "good thing" for the soc­cer players -and felt that it puts them in the right frame of mind for the season opener on Wed­nesday afternoon (4:00 P.M) at the Loyola campus.

This was the last exhibition match for the Georgians and followed a Thursday night 3-1 victory over the Montreal Larks, a emi-pro team that plays in the Quebec ational League.

corers on Thursday . were Joe Battista, Miguel Augustino, and Len econdi. The Larks were supplemented that night with three professional players who were on suspension from the Greek tars Soccer Club and still our defence held them in check. o now, the fun and ga­mes are over and everything counts.

We're still in the Birks Hall temp­orary location and you late buyers have an opportunity, until October 18th, to get those required texts.

We11 be back at our Hall Bldg. main bookstore after mid-October to give you the best deal on texts, soft-cov­ers, and other supplies. have the

secret formula? The Bookstore ALL BOOKS YOU NEED '1 ezzanine F loo r, Ha ll 8 1,11,!.

Elvidge Abstract -- Drew Morris, one of Sir George's cheerleading guys, ap­

proached me after Friday night's football game and croaked hoarsely, "Do you think we did~ good job?" In reply to ~hat ques­tion, I spoke in representation of the nearly 2,000 fans pre en t and aid that I thought they did a great job and that each cheerleading

member gave an exhaustive effort. At 7:45 P.M. in that cool, 50° Verdun Stadium, I doubted that the attendance would peak 200. Then, as my eyes swept the stands for a second time, 1200 people had descended as though prayed for, with uper Georgie and Paul Arsenault apparently leading that prayer. But while the tudent body was adequately represented , it was left to the cheerleading gang to stimulate some spirit and yelling. That might sound like an easy chere but just try to get a mountain to move with 2 1 1 hours of sustained shouting. The cart-wheeling misses of ir George that were responsible for the stimulation are: Dolce McKibblon, Heather McKenzie, Pat Fibe, Adrienne Gelfand Paula Morell, Bonny Thar, Janice Ostling. The guys who encouraged and sup­ported Sir George's team are: Drew Morris, Al Little, Bob Bar­ringer and Doug Cully. Super Georgie, our penguin mascot, was present and after Sir George's first touchdown, the fans responded quite warmly to his antics and clowning. Work conquers all, and if our cheerleading group continues their hard work, they will certainly move that maountain ----

After· the game, Coach Hayes of the football team was undecided as to what he wanted to predict. Hayes implied that his team has all the ability and that all that is lacking is for everyone to get it together. Encouraged by the improved play of the Georgians be­tween the halves, he was pleased with the victory, but wouldn't suggest what the rest of the season will be like.---

-- "" Hockey Georgians were spread throughout the stadium. Bernie Wolfe, Brian Bedard, John Murray, Ross Patterson and Mike Mac amara were a few of the stars present. The hockiy out­look is already great. The returning members all feel that this will be the strongest team iced by Sir George in a long time and they all want to succeed. While speaking of success, on behalf of "The Paper", good luck to Mike Mac amara and his bride-to-be· Judy, whose wedding is next Saturday, Oct. 2------

--- More additions to this year's hockey Georgian training camp are Allan Stanley and Mario Couttini. Allan played Junior a hockey in Toronto and has some "kin'in the Maple Leaf organization. Couttini played Junior B with Boucherville last season and is a highly touted player----

---- Then there's Mike Lowe, one of the greatest hockey stars the Loyola Warriors have ever had, and they've had a few. Mike Lowe has decided to return to school after being traded by the St. Louis Blues to the Detroit Red Wings. Lowe is going to attend Sir George Williams. He would look good in a Garnet and Gold uniform, wouldn't he?

---- It's going to take a lot of noise to drown out the McGill fan thi aturday afternoon at Molson tadium when our football Georgians jump jnto their second match of the season. It's at 2:00 P .M.----

---- The soccer Georgians are eagerly awaiting their season opener this Wednesday afternoon at 4:00 P.M. against last year's regional soccer winner , the Loyola Warriors. The occer players feel that they will devour the home team---Bon appetite- ---

---- George Athens is a student at Sir George. George Athens .is also the world's greatest water kier. Athens holds the Can­adian title and travelled to pain last week for an international .meet. There he swept the world 's title and brought it home to Canada---humility is not bragging about what one has; "The Georgian" is very humble----Congratulations George----

WANTED For indecent exposure. If ap­prehended, notify Athletics Of­fice . May be armed and dan­gerous.

J unior Varsity B asketball Schedule

November Wed 17 at CMR

at 20 at Loyola Tue 23 at Ude Q (Mt!)

December Wed 1 CMR at GWU

at4 Chicoutimi at GWU Sat 11 Ude Q (3 Riv .) at SGW

January Wed. 12 Ude Q (Mtl) at GWU Tues 18 at CMR Fri 28 at Chicoutami

at 29 at Chicoutami

Frebruary Wed 2 de Q (Mt!) at GWU Fri 4 at Ude Q (3Riv.) Wed 16 at Loyola

at 19 at Ude Q (3 Riv.)

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I I THE PAPER, SEPT. 27, 1971 I 11

l Happiness is ... PAPER Sports Three Pages

Flinkfeldt's Forum

Coaching is Bliss by C.K . Elvidge

The Athletics Office this year announces the appointment of Bill Bliss as coach of the Junior Varsity Basketball team. An in­terview with Mr. Bliss revealed that he is very pleased with his new position, and that he wel­comed the opportunity to coach once again.

Bliss is a graduate of the Uni­versity of ew Brunswick where he played basketball with Sir George s Varsity basketba 11 coach Wilf Jackson. He and Jack­son have been associates for many years, and Jack on appa­rently opened the door for Bli'lS.' appointment.

Presently, Mr. Bliss is Pro­grams Director for the downtown branch of the Y.M.C.A. where he has worked for five years. Bliss offered suggestions concerning program organization during 'off hours of the 'Y' in order that programs like judo, karate, yoga and others may be followed by interested students. The 'Y' ca­ters to bus iness men, but, as students have more flexible time­tables, the student·should be able to fit in at times or the day when the facilities are unoc­cupied.

The difficulties 0f orgamzmg events is realized by· Mr. Bliss and he discussed the location problem and the lack of facili­ties at Sir George. Blis hopes for closer affiliation between the Concrete Campus and the Y.M.C.A. in terms of programs and sports and hopes to see a change in the near future.

Perhaps with Bliss around our

Athletics Office a new pact may be sought to bring the 'have' and the 'have-nots' (in terms of fa­cilities) closer together.

As to his basketball team, the new coach is guardedly optimis­tic. He inherits a fine ball club left by Jackson from last year, but the better ball players will most likely be given a chance to work with the varsity team.

Around the League ...

After the week-end's games, all six teams in the Q.U.A.A. football schedule have played one game. Last week, the Mc­Gill Redmen travelled to Len­noxville where the Bishops Uni­versity team handed them a 22-16 loss. In Saturday action, the cadets from R.M .C. in Kingston travelled to the home of the Loyola Warriors, the home team winning their initial match of the season 24-0. Scoring for Loyola were Tony Accurso with two touchdowns, · Frank Belve­dere with one, and Mike La­pensee with a field goal and three converts. It would seem that the 30 new faces on Loyo­la's team are getting together early.

GP W L F A Pts Sir George 1 1 21 0 2 Bishops 1 1 22 16 2 Loyola 1 1 24 0 2 McGill 1 - 1 16 22 -UofM 1 1 0 16 -RMC 1 - 1 0 24 -

MumblyPeg · The Mumbly - Peg team is back. Even after an improved season last year when the team lost 32 and won 1, there was some question as to whether the Athletics office would support the team. However, in response to letters from Thousands (Samuel Thousands, that is, who delivers the laundry) the team will be sup­ported for the upcoming season. Coach Bradley Mekinwack has made a daring statement that his 15-man team "Will make a run at 2 in '72" and the Mumbly­peggers will be hard pressed to achieve this goal. Coach Mekin­wack was in the process of be­ing interviewed by "The Paper" when the meeting was abruptly cut short. Mekinwack spilled his Crispy Critters on the kitchen floor and was spanked and sent to his room by his mother. In a note thrown out his bedroom window he expressed hope that he would be let out of the house by September 32nd when the sea­son opens. All Mumbly-peg home games will be played in the third cubicle on the right in the wo­men's washroom on the 6th floor . Watch for Mumbly-Peg news in "The Paper" sports section.

CALENDAR Wed. Sept. 29th: Soccer, 4:00

p.m. S.G.W.U. at Loyola. Thurs. Sept. 30th: Golf. Fri. Oct. 1st: Q.U.A.A.

Championships at Bishops. Sat. Oct. 2nd: S.G.W.U. at

McGill - Football - 2:00 p.m. Sailing Q.U.A.A. Champion­ships at Kingston.

Rob Jadah's Column

There's nothing wrong with collegial football that a longer schedule wouldn't cure. An early loss in the Q.U.A.A. football season as it now stands gives the loser little chance of recovery. It's like a patient whose doctor is performing an appendectomy in a time-limited "Beat the Clock" format.

Here's our athletics office pouring somewhere in the vicinity of $40,000 a year into the football team. That might seem like a large sum but when one takes into account the equipment, rental space, staff salaries and travelling money, it is evident that it is pretty economical. But the fact remains that the Georgians have now played their first season game. That leaves four. This coming Saturday night, 2/5 of the season will be behind the Georgians' backs. One crucial fumble; one misdirected pass may tum a victory to a searing defeat for any team in the Q.U.A.A. When you play each team only once, a defeat is not any king of setback - it's the death sentence. That puts a lot of pressure on the shoulders of the 30-odd athletes wearing their university's colors. And to win the division, a team cannot afford to lose .more than one, or, at the most, two ball games. You look at the last two games of the schedule and you see Bishops and Loyola. To be safe, that forces you to think in terms of 93 and O record going into the last 40ci, of the sohedule. A key injury on a team is not an "unfortunate turn of events" - it's plain horror.

Am I putting too much emphasis on victory? Hell, the average cost of $8,000 dollars per football game, I'd personally carry Bob Bindon, Ron Goldenberg, Gary Pucklitz and the whole defensive squad to the ball game in my arms.

So you say that a short season quickly weeds out the bad and ushers in the best. Yeah, and if golf tournaments were 2-hole af­fairs, Rob J adah would have been the 1971 Masters winner.

A competitive season must be long enough for a team to flex its muscles, feel out the opposition and draw from recent experiences to put up the performances that will bring it the ultimate victory. When the season encompasses only five matches, the championship comes down to flukes and that is no way for a university class league to find their best team. A. good tram, even a great team, will inevitably win, but a better team could easily be mired in 2ND or 3RD place ..... easily.

Get your official S.G.W.U. Windbreaker

FALL and WINTER WEIGHT

special school price· $18.00

~0/14'4 Stw,t~ NOTE NEW ADDRESS 1485 ST. CATHERINE ST. W. NEXT TO YORK THEATRE

Georgian Snoopies·

Ground School Director,

9;32-2176

Frank Hoff man will commence The twelve week ground school course October first at 8:30 P.M. Sharp in Room H-435. GROU/110 SCHOOL OCTOBER 1st 8:30 P.M. H-435

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12 / THE PAPER, SEPT. 27, 1911

I Hayes ... PAPER Sports

Season U nderwav •

Georgians Shut Out Uof M During the first thirteen min­

utes of Friday night's football game, it was impossible to tell which team was going to lose­both teams apparently wanted to.

The University of Montreal Carabins and the Georgians ex­changed mid-field mistakes and blunders for most of the first quarter, until Alvin Johns, Jerry Puklicz and Ron Goldenberg teamed up to light both the scoreboard and the Garnet and Gold team.

after a broken play on which Jerry Puklicz made up for lack of speed by carefully plucking his way to a 14 yard gain. The field goal attempt was wide but Georgian Bruce Charron hustled into the end zone to drop the Montreal receiver.

A few minutes later, Georgian Jim Davis bulled his way to a touchdown punt return but he was called back on a penalty. The return, however, heralded two things: 1) Jim Davis worked, hustled and squirmed for the rest of the game and more than made up for the lost touchdown, and 2) it was the first really appreciable Sir George punt re­turn in three games and a few more followed.

Makes Ways ...

21-0

byrobjadah

After offensive half-back Al­vin Johns carried the ball twice in succession for gains totalling twenty yards, Puklicz rolled out left and chewed up nine yards and about 35 inches. These he­roics put the Georgians on the Carabins 36 yard line with under a minute of play left in the opening quarter. On the second down and short yardage situa­tion, c.ool Georgian quarterback Jerry Puklicz chose to loft the ball 37 yards to waiting Ron Goldenberg, who scored the major and hung up a convert as well.

The rest of the second quarter belonged to the following; Bobby Bindon, who is nursing a bad thigh but still put on a fantastic 23 yard rush in his first carry of the night; Ron Goldenberg, who kicked a 27 yard field goal; the Georgian defense, who held the Carabins near the end of the half, just as things were getting a little tight. The U of M squad had pushed the Georg­ians to their 18 yard line and worked it to third down and two yards to go. With time run­ning out, and the score at 11-0, Montreal coach Dave King de­cided to try for the first down. Dan D'All not only stopped the attempt, but cut off the Cara bins quarterback three yards back of the line of scrimmage. Bindon ended the half with a beautiful 19 yard gambol up the sidelines.

Windsor throws · an elevating block at a cJ of M defender as Bindon :up some of his 52 yard total.

is on his way to picking

Goldenberg got the call again in the second quarter when the Georgian offence could not drive past the U of M twenty yard line. They had got to that point

The Paper's Three Star Selection:

l. Ron Golden berg 2.Jim Davis 3. Dave Stirling

The opening of the third quarter saw two separate Sir George run-backs, one each by Davis and Charlebois, that were 40 yarders. In the latter case, Dave Stirling opened the road with some amazing blocking. Puklicz and Goldenberg began oa passing barrage midway through the quarter and pene­trated deep into the Carabins zone, where a 13 yard loss to Sir George's quarterback snuffed out the threat. A Gold­enberg field goal attempt was

Linesman swings to the tune of Georgian runner trying to elude a U of M tackler.

blocked but the Carabins squad could not struggle out of their end and conceded a two point safety touch on their third down punt attempt. The entire Georg­ian defensive line had trength­ened by this time and the Ca­orabins offence gained only through a wealth of penalties to Sir George.

The fourth quarter began with a lot of rough play from both teams and an early scuffle at mid-field. Two Jerry Puklicz passes could easily have result­ed in major coring plays but he overthrew slightly a chance to Goldenberg and Bobby Bindon let one lip through his fingers at the U of M fifteen yard line.

At the 8:00 minute mark, Goldenberg punched a kick 55 yards to the Carabins goal line and George Hayes and towering Jim Rayside trapped the receiv­er for a two point safety touch. Jim Davis intercepted a Mont­real pass attempt and returned it to the U of M twenty yard line but he was again cursed with a penalty. He finally suc­ceede.d three minutes later when he got hold of a partially blocked Carabins pass and ran back thirty yards for his first reg­ular season collegial touchdown. Goldenberg made the convert good but had it taken away due to roughing on the line of scrim­mage against the Georgians.

After the first quarter, there was no doubt as to which team was going to lose. Through the entire 60 minutes, the Carabins managed only one real threat, and could not stand up- to the defensive shelling from the Gar­net and Gold. This Saturday it's the Downtown Rivalry, as Sir George goes to Molson Stadium

Game

Scoreboard ....

First: ir George, touchdown;

Gbldenberg. ir George, convert;

Goldenberg.

econd: ir George, safety single;

Goldenberg Sir George, field gcal ; Goldenberg

Third: ir George, safety touch

Fourth : ir George, safety touch ir George, touchdown;

Davis

Stats. Rushing:

14:33

8:35

11:51

12:07

8:00 10:57

C TY FD Sir George 26 96 4 UofM 36 104 4

Passing: A C y FD

ir George 19 6 99 3 UofM 20 8 46 2

1'otals: Yards First dowm:

Sir George 195 7 UofM 150 6

Goldenberg punted 10 times for 352 yards. Bindon carried 3 times for 52 yards. Attendance: approx 1,800.