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KonluP-Contract Canned IN - Concordia University · KonluP-Contract Canned ... lup's "perfectly...

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largest student WIJIJ/dy IIIJWS/MPer in C11nMl11. V al. 3 N ..... , 16 JHIIIHY 18, 1971 ....... -------------------------------------------- -Jloy·~- Sir&..,..Wili-.1/_!ivenity.- -----~ KonluP- Contract Canned $50,000 PROJECT UP IN SMOKE by Robin Palin Father orm Konlup, Assis- tant Chaplain at Loyola College for the past two years, lost not only his job but a $50,000 dream project which he had been work- ing on, when Father Malone fir- ed him in a letter dated Decem- ber 17, 1970. ln the letter which sta1ted off ·' .. . I regretfully inform you that the College does not intend to renew your engagement for the Chaplaincy service ... ", Malone cited the importance of a " Team Concept ". The letter continued to state that while he recognized Kon- lup's "perfectly legitimate dis- agreement" and at the same time "respected Konlup's opinion" that he was forced to act on t he recommendation that the Chap-' lain be dismissed. The recommendation came to Malone from Father Nelson, Konlup's superior, who had reached this conclusion "after consultation". As yet it is not known who Nelson consulted with. The letter came at a time when Konlup was awaiting word to initiate his project and was surprised to receive a notice of non-renewal of his contract in its place. In an intensive in- terview with the recently fired Chaplain, Konlup told The Paper that he has been running a form .of sensitivity training in order to build a "better community of all the people at Loyola". It got underway last year when he started taking groups of stu- dents away for weekend retreats. The cost was $5.00 per person for the weekend and they were renting some old Jesuit proper- Prof. Shloma Avineri, Chairman of the dept. of pol. sc., of Hebrew Univ. in Jerusalem, speaking on Israel & The Palistinians -a clash of two national movements. Although this lecture sparked no imme- diate comment, Glick held a meeting on Friday "condemming the Zionists ... " Glick: ... "John O'Brien, Patrick Malone.- Racists': Messers Glick and Walker, two dedicated people in the nat- ional liberation struggle for op- pressed workers, held a meet- ing on Friday to determine the role that Zionism could play in that organization. Thirty-one people attended. Mr. Glick condemned the Zion- ists who supported Mr. Trudeau and his smashing of the national liberation in Quebec. He also condemned the recent me!lting of the National Jewish congress at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel on Dec. 30th, as a reactionary meeting where they had as guest speakers "noted racists· such as Father Malone and John O'Brien." Adherents to the cause as well as several of those who attend- ed this m;eting were labeled as by Jim Baxter "Fleas (sic) around the dung of_ Zionism" by Mr. Glick. Mr . Glick told the meeting how its purpose was to unite the revolutionary students around the national liberation struggle. According to Mr. Glick the main question is "whether the Jews friends are Richard Nixon and West German mono- poly capital or China and the Quebec struggle". . Mr. Glick s~ated "We support the Jews in their struggle a- gainst racism. We are against all racism. We are interested in uniting all people to fight U.S. imperialism." Calling King Hussein a "reactionary Arab" , Mr. Glick told of the number of Jews who has already left the ranks of Zionism and the num- ber of Arabs who had joined the fight against the monopoly capi- tal of wealthy Jews' the U.S., · , and West Germany. He blamed the Zionist organ- izations for not supporting the Feb . 11 struggle against racism at Sir George, defining Zionism as "reactionary nationalism" : Mr. Walker came under attack from one Jewish member of the audience: "Mr. Walker, are you a working member of the work- ing class?" No answer. Mr. Walker countered with a- nother question: "Are you int- erested in opposing facism?" "No", replied the speaker, "I am interested in opposing you". The meeting lasted for half an hour and broke up when all the Jews left, leaving four peo- ple behind. ties up North for the purpose. Konlup reported an over- whelming response to his pro- jects but it became jeopardized earlie last year. The rent for ,the proper_ty started to increase and he feared that he would not be able to continue beacause oi the rising costs. But once again, the response increased and he was subsequently able to main- tain the cost within reach of the students. Last summer however, he be- gan to realize the necessity for having permanent ' quarters own- ed by the University for this pur- ·pose. After consultations with Brian Kelly, the Director · of Phy~ical Plant, he began to rea- lize the problems attached to this sort of idea. In October 1970, he was con- tacted by a real-estate agent who informed him that he had heard what Konlup was looking for and he thought that he had just the place. As Konlup put it, "The Lake Manitou property could not have been designed more specificall v to suit our purposes, I could look for another five years and probably not find anything better.'· The price tag on the property . was-an awesome $42,000. Konlup knew that there was little way that he would persuade the Col- lege to part with that much money. He was contacted later that same week by David Webb, from a local foundation, and an appointment was arranged. The interview went well and Konlup was given an opportunity to pre- sent his case to the foundation. Once again he was succes ful and in mid-November Father Malone received a cheque for $50,000 in order to finance Kon- See "Grant Recieved" Con 't on page 3 on the inside ... ...~ .. ,.,.,.3, ... ,.4 . ... .,... ............... . .......... &. a-.. ... w ... Loym Wia 2. T1111 lllbs ii 2-1 far..,._ See .... 12. •• - ,.. ........ Stiff All•,. & ............ it. Ow .... rfllllafdleWNk--Ane'1._...M Oil ya III die Stiff All•,. & , ._ ... , .... ......... &•••a ...... ... ,... a. Sbff All ..... &. ................. , ...... .......... .. ..... P• 11•••ill .. 11i1 .... _ .... C. Tricb ..... 8.
Transcript
Page 1: KonluP-Contract Canned IN - Concordia University · KonluP-Contract Canned ... lup's "perfectly legitimate dis ... been designed more specificall v to suit our purposes, I could

largest student WIJIJ/dy IIIJWS/MPer in C11nMl11. Val. 3 N ..... , 16 JHIIIHY 18, 1971

....... ---------------------------------------------Jloy·~- Sir&..,..Wili-.1/_!ivenity.------~

KonluP- Contract Canned

$50,000 PROJECT UP IN SMOKE by Robin Palin

Father orm Konlup, Assis-tant Chaplain at Loyola College for the past two years, lost not only his job but a $50,000 dream project which he had been work­ing on, when Father Malone fir­ed him in a letter dated Decem­ber 17, 1970.

ln the letter which sta1ted off ·' .. . I regretfully inform you that the College does not intend to renew your engagement for the Chaplaincy service ... ", Malone cited the importance of a "Team Concept".

The letter continued to state

that while he recognized Kon­lup's "perfectly legitimate dis­agreement" and at the same time "respected Konlup's opinion" that he was forced to act on t he recommendation that the Chap-' lain be dismissed.

The recommendation came to Malone from Father Nelson, Konlup's superior, who had reached this conclusion "after consultation". As yet it is not known who Nelson consulted with.

The letter came at a time when Konlup was awaiting word

to initiate his project and was surprised to receive a notice of non-renewal of his contract in its place. In an intensive in­terview with the recently fired Chaplain, Konlup told The Paper that he has been running a form

.of sensitivity training in order to build a "better community of all the people at Loyola". It got underway last year when he started taking groups of stu­dents away for weekend retreats. The cost was $5.00 per person for the weekend and they were renting some old Jesuit proper-

Prof. Shloma Avineri, Chairman of the dept. of pol. sc., of Hebrew Univ. in Jerusalem, speaking on Israel & The Palistinians - a clash of two national movements. Although this lecture sparked no imme­diate comment, Glick held a meeting on Friday "condemming the Zionists ... "

Glick:

... "John O'Brien, Patrick Malone.- Racists': Messers Glick and Walker,

two dedicated people in the nat­ional liberation struggle for op­pressed workers, held a meet­ing on Friday to determine the role that Zionism could play in that organization.

Thirty-one people attended. Mr. Glick condemned the Zion­ists who supported Mr. Trudeau and his smashing of the national liberation in Quebec. He also condemned the recent me!lting of the National Jewish congress at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel on Dec. 30th, as a reactionary meeting where they had as guest speakers "noted racists· such as Father Malone and John O'Brien."

Adherents to the cause as well as several of those who attend­ed this m;eting were labeled as

by Jim Baxter "Fleas (sic) around the dung of_ Zionism" by Mr. Glick.

Mr. Glick told the meeting how its purpose was to unite the revolutionary students around the national liberation struggle. According to Mr. Glick the main question is "whether the Jews friends are Richard Nixon and West German mono­poly capital or China and the Quebec struggle". . Mr. Glick s~ated "We support the Jews in their struggle a­gainst racism. We are against all racism. We are interested in uniting all people to fight U.S. imperialism." Calling King Hussein a "reactionary Arab", Mr. Glick told of the number of Jews who has already left the ranks of Zionism and the num­ber of Arabs who had joined the

fight against the monopoly capi­tal of wealthy Jews' the U.S.,

· , and West Germany. He blamed the Zionist organ­

izations for not supporting the Feb. 11 struggle against racism at Sir George, defining Zionism as "reactionary nationalism" :

Mr. Walker came under attack from one Jewish member of the audience: "Mr. Walker, are you a working member of the work­ing class?" No answer.

Mr. Walker countered with a­nother question: "Are you int­erested in opposing facism?" "No", replied the speaker, "I am interested in opposing you".

The meeting lasted for half an hour and broke up when all the Jews left, leaving four peo­ple behind.

ties up North for the purpose. Konlup reported an over­

whelming response to his pro­jects but it became jeopardized earlie last year. The rent for ,the proper_ty started to increase and he feared that he would not be able to continue beacause oi the rising costs. But once again, the response increased and he was subsequently able to main­tain the cost within reach of the students.

Last summer however, he be­gan to realize the necessity for having permanent ' quarters own­ed by the University for this pur­·pose. After consultations with Brian Kelly, the Director · of Phy~ical Plant, he began to rea­lize the problems attached to this sort of idea.

In October 1970, he was con­tacted by a real-estate agent who informed him that he had heard what Konlup was looking for and he thought that he had just the place.

As Konlup put it, "The Lake Manitou property could not have been designed more specificall v to suit our purposes, I could look for another five years and probably not find anything better.'·

The price tag on the property . was-an awesome $42,000. Konlup knew that there was little way that he would persuade the Col­lege to part with that much money. He was contacted later that same week by David Webb, from a local foundation, and an appointment was arranged. The interview went well and Konlup was given an opportunity to pre­sent his case to the foundation .

Once again he was succes ful and in mid-November Father Malone received a cheque for $50,000 in order to finance Kon-

See "Grant Recieved"

Con 't on page 3

on the inside ... ...~ .. ,.,.,.3, ... ,.4. ... .,... .......................... &. a-.. ... w ... Loym Wia 2. T1111 lllbs ii 2-1 far..,._ See .... 12. •• - ,.. ........ Stiff All•,. & ............ it. Ow .... rfllllafdleWNk--Ane'1._...M Oil ya III die Stiff All•,. & , ._ ... ,.... ......... &•••a...... ... ,... a. Sbff All ..... &. ................. ,...... .......... .. ..... P• 11•••ill .. 11i1 ...._ .... C. Tricb ..... 8.

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2 I THE PAPER JANUARY 18, 1971

: - -/

BULLETIN BOARD ,,-

Notices should -be add,,nssed .'ii writing to Bulletin Board. At Sir George it's Room H-639 in the Hall Bttilding. For. Loyola, 7308 Sherbrooke St.,·W , &om Two. Deadline for all s~b~issions is Thursday evening prior to the Monday of pub-licat,on.

SIR GEORGE· Biology Club: Meeting at 1 p.m. I. Dean. and Julie Harris at 9 p.m. in H-110.

------------- in H-420. MONDAY: Jan. 18 Board of Graduate Studies: Meeting at 2 p.m. in H-769

The Philosophy Club: A lecture of political significance will be given by Warren Allmand, M.P., Liberal Member for N.D.G. At 2 p.m. in H-635.

LOYOLA

TUESDA y ·: Jan. 19

Home Game: Junior Varsity Basketball vs McGill at 6: 15 p.m.

Garnet Singers: Meeting 5-6 p.m. in 513. Everyone welcome. 1 Varsity Basketball: Playing at

McGill at 8: 15 p.m.

TUESDAY: Jan. 19

The Centre for Instructional Technology presents - "Civili­zation", the acclaimed B.B.C. film series (13 weeks). Showing in H-435 beginning Jan. 19. Two showings, Tuesdays - - 1 p. m. and 8:30 p.m. - 50 min. each in color. This week " The Frozen World". Further information a­vailable from H-960, ext. 4434.

THURSDAY: Jan. 21

Conservatory of Cinematogra­phic Art; "Viva Zapata" (Elia Kazan, 1952) with Marlon Bran­do and Anthony Quinn and Jean Peters at 7 p.m. " East of Eden" (Kazan, 1955) with James

CLASSIFIED ROOMH-603

Part time typing. English. Smith-Co­rona Electric. Simple letters. drafts. Sex. age unimportant. For middle-aged

•woman. Pay, hours. by arrangement. Call days, eves: 131-95 79.

DUPLICATING Have all your duplicating done by a student agency ! New pick-up and de­livery se rvices now available. Call

M.S.E.A. at 392-3002.

SUMMER JDBS Look for summer employment now in "JOBS SUMMER '70". Send $2.00 to

P.O. Box 1284, Station B. Montreal 110 or write for information.

SUBLET Nun's Island Sublet. One bedroom un­

furnished $130/ MO. Lease expires Sept. 30, 1971. Frequent bus service

downtown. 768-9100.

EUROPE RUSSIA , On a Mini-Budget for free information Goway, 53 Yonge St.. Toronto 1. Ont.

929-3001 .

F .C. Smith Aud. - Students of the Spanish Theatre Class: pre­sents - an interpretation of the famous tragic-comedy, LA CE­LESTINA, by Fernando de Ro­jas. Also on the bill with to­night's performance is a short sketch entitled "A Las 6 En La Esquina de! Bulevar" by E. Jardiel Poncela. Free admis-sion. At 8:30 p.m .

THURSDAY: Jan. 21 '

Hingston Hall: Weekly Open Fo­rum with Dr. Joseph Burke, A. V.P. 12 - 1 p.m.

Home Game: Women's Basket­ball. Check with Athletic Dept. for name of visiting team. Ga­me time - 6:30 p.m.

ABORTIONS I

are legal in New York. Pre­gnancy Control Center arran­ges all detail s for you. Fee paid by provincial medicare. Maximum waiting: 2 days. O­pen every day 9 AM-11 PM.

For appointment call: (212) 873-1496

Home Game: Women 's Ice Hoc­key vs McGill at 6:30 p.m.

Loyola Musical Theatre Society presents: Thursday, Jan. 21 -Sunday, Jan. 24 at 8:30 p.m. Loyola College Chapel. Tickets: $2 for adults; $1.25 for students; $1 for each in groups of 20. Te­lephone 482-0320, local 249.

Home Game: Junior Varsity Hockey vs S.G.W.U. at 8:30 p.m.

FRIDAY: Jan. 22

Home Game: Junior Varsity Basketball vs S.G.W.U. at 6:15 p.m.

Home Game: Varsity Basket­ball vs S.G.W.U. at 8 p.m.

Home Game: Varsity Hockey vs Bishop's at 8:30 p.m.

SATURDAY: Jan. 23

Home Game: Varsity Hockey vs Universite de Sherbrooke 2 p.m. Home Game: Junior Varsity Hockey vs McGill University 5 p.m.

Computer Seminar at Loyola: The Computer Science Seminar to be presented by COMPUTEL: IBM/360 JCL and Utilities, In­troduction to the IBM/360 Job

UNVERSITV OF TORONTO ENGLISH LANGUAGE

SUMMER SCHOQL A programme in communi­

cation for those whose native tongue is not English.

4 week programme - July 2 - July 30, 1971

6 week programme - July 2 - Augu t 13, 1971 For information write: Division of University Extension UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO 84 Queen's Park, Toronto 181, Ontario (416) 928-2400

AT THE

''Twelve Angry Men" 'Used

lnHuman Relations Course Control Language and Utility Programs, for programmers with little or no 360 experience, is a one-week introductory course. ATTENDANCE THE FIRST DAY IS MOST IMPOR­T ANT. If you plan to attend all or part of the Seminar, please confirm by calling local 298 or 301. The Seminar is open to all faculty, staff and students with some background in computer programming.

"Twelve Angry Men" is a movie used in David McPhillips, Business 306 course (Human Re­lations) at Loyola. -

On Dec. 10 .at the Windsor Hotel, McPhillips used this mo­vie in a presentation to the Plan­n'ing Executives Institute.

The movie depicts the jury's deliberation of a murder trial in which Henry Fonda gradually persuades the others that the defendant could be innocent. The central interests are the inter­_play of emotions and methods used by Fonda to overcome hos­tility.

When the first jury member changes his vote, McPhillips ~ep­arated the viewers to see if they could determine his identity. Both groups failed. ote that the viewers are executives who are familiar with motivating their own employers.

McPhillips suggested that members recall their own con­duct. Did the group leader con­trol the discussion?

A choice might have been ma­de sooner but much time was spent in giving each person his say. McPhillips pointed out that this occurred because each rea­soned according to his personal prejudices and experience.

A warm thanks was entended to-McPhillips by the Institute for a presentation in which the les­sons learned in formal school­ing were shown to be equally applicable to men who have prac­ticed their craft successfully for a number of years.

CARS AVAILABLE TO

Toronto, Maritimes Provinces, .Western Canada and Florida

Driver must be 21 or over a11d

have any curr'!nt driver's permit

CALL ANYTIME

937-2816 Montreal Driveaway

Service Limited 4018 St. Catherine St. West

The Graduate Students' Association is looking for a Chief Returning Officer for the up­coming elections in February. ANY Georgian interested should contact the G.S.A. in Room H-644 or leave their name with the secretary of the E.S.A. in Room H-603.

JOHN BULL PUB CORNER STANLEY &- de MA1S0NNEUVE 844·8355

STUDENT SPECIAL* STUDENT SPECIAL .. ; . .... ............. .......... .

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THE PAPER JANUARY 11. 1971 I 3

A.S.A. Reveals ''Teach-ln''Plan, A .S.E. T. Director Ousted For the first time in several

years, the Arts Students' Asso-. ciation will present a cohesive program of seminars and speeches for its member stu­dents .

A.S.A. President Steve Halpe­rin, revealed plans last week for the two week long Teach-in under the general heading of " Civil Liberties". The Pro­gram, which began Jan. 18, will run until Friday, Jan. 29.

"We felt that rather than e­mulate the other faculties with Beer Bashes and Balls, we would try an experiment by of­fering something intellectually stimulating", said Halperin. "We feel that we've got a rela­tively accurate cross-section of opinion on '9e topic we've cho­sen."

Highlighting the A.S.A. Pro­gram are Jerome Choquette, Quebec's Justice Minister, who spoke Jan. 18th; Dick Gregory, the radical black comedian. Turned Civil - Rights cflisader, and Reverand Ralph Abernathy, the man who succeeded Dr. Martin Luther King as Director

Con 't from Pa~e 1

of the Southern Christian Lead­ership Confere~ce.

Gregory will address students on Tuesday, Jan. 26 while Aber­nathy will _ be on the concrete campus two days later.

Other scheduled guests are F .R. Scott, Walter Tarnapolski, Father James Groppi, Charles Morgan, Jr., and the Honorable Grace M!J,ckinniss.

"Morgan might be the most interesting speaker we've got", mused Halperin of the Southern Regional Director of the Ameri­can Civil Liberties Union, who has defended, among others, Cassius against the U.S. Army and Julian Bond's right to be seated in the Georgia Legislatu-re .

"And of course, F .R. Scott distinguished himself by taking Maurice Duplessis Padlock Law to the Supreme Court."

Groppi is a militant Civil Rights oriented priest from the Detroit slums; 'J'arnapolsky, the Dean of the Windsor U Law School has written several books and articles on Civil Liberties

Grant Received !up's idea. ,

Konlup's ecstacy however was short lived. By the end of the month Konlup had received nothing but deferments from President Malone. Persuing the matter, Konlup was continually told that " no decision had been reached".

Two weeks later, Konlup re­ceived the letter from Malone notifying him that\e was, in ef­fect, fired . The cheque from the foundation is still at Loyola and nothing has been reported as to it proposed use .

Father Malone remained un­available for comment on the matter as well as Father Nel­son. Mr. Duder, assist&nt to the President, refused to comment when questioned on the matter.

A petition was presented to Father Malone asking for a re­view of Konlup's case. The pe­tition, organized by Peter Aiken, contained some six hundred si­gnatures, Said student Gary Mor­rison who presented the petition to- Malone... "He (Malone) doesn't put much weight on pe­titions".

Journal oFFset inc. 254 Benjamin-Hudon

331-9721

Join the independent's

- Give us a call. 0fu ~ 111

in Canada, and Mrs. Mackinniss the N.D.P. M.P. has a distinct point of view on women's rights.

Bruce McLean and Floren'ce Zwanziger have served as coor­dinators for the program.

Malone "No Comment"

Following an in depth interview with Father Konlup earlier this week, The Paper attempted to contact other parties involved in the conflict, notably Father Pa­trick Malone, Mr. Duder, As­sistant to Father Malone, and Father Nelson .

Many questions were unanswer­ed and in order to gain further information on the subject our reporter attempted to speak with these people. He was told that Father Malone was "not avail­able" and subsequently went to Mr. Duder's offiee. There he was met with a negative reception when he asked to see Duder to talk about Father Konlup. The answer to that question was a definite "no."

As a result, many questions rea min unanswered. Nobody was able to say who Father Nelson consulted with when he made the recommendation to fire Konlup . As yet it is unknown to what ex­tent if any, the project on which Konlup was involved is being carried out.

Active Student Employment Team director Alan Hirshfeld was dismissed on Tuesday, Jan . 12th in an S.A._ Executive Coun­cihdecision which resulted from what they called his " reluctance to follow acknowledged SA ac­counting and management proce-

Sir George Chancellor

Resigns. Chancellor and Chahman of

the Board of Governors' Fraser F. Fulton tendered his resigna­tion at a Board .of Governors meeting held on Thursday; Jan. 14. The resignation will go into. effect aft.er convocation this year. .

Reasons for his resignation are unknown and until press ti­me, Pa_per reporters were una-ble to reach him for comment at his home in South Lancaster, Ontario.

Fulton is expected to be on the Committee · headed by Principal and Vice Chancellor, John O'Brien , to find a suitable re­placement.

O'Brien reported that there is a growing trend in universities to have Chancellors take a much . more active role within their cap­acity . He said that Chancellors will have more work to do.

Konlup

<lures. " At the same meeting Assistant

Director Peter Spunt was named interim director until a new dir­rector is found.

Hirshfeld, however, described the move as "illegal" since in his opinion it must be passed by the Student Legislative Council.

"I was never asked to defend myself," he said, "they just gave me a letter."

The dismissal came in the midst of growing impetus for ASET whose four recently cre­ated divisions had just begun to show profits.

The last controversy centered around Hirshfeld·· s refusal to turn over to the Student's Asso­ciation a $300 profit which his film division had obtained from films shown in H-110.

"They wanted me to give my profits to the SA," he stated.

"There is no sense in J?Y doing anything if I can't ~1ve my profits to the students," he added.

Hirslfl'eld was appointed ASET director in an October SLC meet­ing.

"There was no opposition to me, " he said , referring to the council vote in which his ap­pointment was approved by all the members with only one abs­tension .

As director of ASET, Rirsh­feld earned a salary of $30 a week.

Moreover, in this situation, there is no specified means of recourse for Konlup, and at this moment it seems unlikely that the petition which was delivered to Malone will have any impact. The petition request a review of

Play the game or pack it up orm Konlup's situation.

One of the main contentions in the longstanding conflict bet-

THE GEORGIAN HELLENIC ASSOCIATION OF SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY

PRESENTS AESCHYLUS'

Ill IN MQDERN GREEK BY JOHN GRYPARIS

DIRECTED BY: ARISTIDES GAZETAS TO BE HELD AT THE F. C. SMITH AUDITORIUM,

LOYOLA COLLEGE, 7141 SHERBROOKE ST., WEST

* PERFORMANCE DATES:

FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY

JAN. 22, JAN. 23, JAN. 24,

AT 9.00 P. M. AT 7.00 P. M. & 10.00 P. M. AT 7.00 P. M.

* ADMISSION : STUDENTS $1.00 NON STUDENTS $2.00

FOR INFORMATION CALL 879-4556

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT:

C.H.C.R. CABLE RADIO T. V. 5899 PARK AVENUE - TEL. 273-2481

PHAROS TRAVEL AGENCY, 526 JEAN TALON W. - TEL. 276-2633

OLYMPIA EXPRESS 5200 PARK AVENUE - TEL. 276-8537

HELLENIC ASSOCIATION SC\\'l,; ROOM H-(34.'i

ween Father Konlup and- Father Neison has to do with the As­sistant Chaplain Konlup saying Mass. Mainly a question of prin­ciple, the Assistent Chaplain contends.. that he believes in "the act rather than just talk." The liberal priest concerns himself with being " faithful to the Truth as I ee it".

" I am not a crusader and I am not trying to change people's minds" he told The Paper in a lengthy interview earlier this week. He is worried that his cause will attract the militant elements on campus who are seeking to discredit the admin­istration.

He sees him elf as trying to carry out his work within the confines of a double jeopardy situation. "There are two clos­ed systems at work here," he said, "that of education and rel ­igion . Education at Loyola is highly defined and highly pro­ductive with respect to academic criteria while religion is highly traditional. The open system' one of non -man ipulation, open dialo­gue, c0nsensus, and openness, is much more apt."

' I think that the operative word in reaction to a closed system is "creative-alternative" cont­inued the Chaplain.

"The prime import of Mass" says Konlup, " is community". " It is a sort of mulling to explo­re ways of getting together to­wards a pure alternative".

" My main efforts are devoted to being concerned with the hu­man act," he said, "but the gen­eral attitude here seems to be that if you don't like the rules of the game' then get out."

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4 I THE PAPER JANUARY 18, 1971

the==~~~~~~~

EditOrial

Every now and then, in the course of normal endeavours, people run across something which to them seems inexplicable, incomprehensible and frustrating. Usually it is something which is so basically errant tha t the frustration lies in the fact that it is an actuality. It crops up, it is there, it is usually simple, it is always wrong, and yet there is very little that can be done about it. Norm Konlup must be experiencing, right now, the sickly feeling which one usually realu.es upon encountering this phenomena.

It will never come to be known as the "Konlup Affair", or the " Chaplain' s Case", or any other glamorous name because the man is not like that. Sure, he feels that it is perhaps unjust, but never­theless, that's the way he is. He, in his own words, is not a crusader. On the other hand, he is a man of convictions. He was hired to do a job. He

, did that job the very best way he knew how and he did it with a good degree of success. He did . it the way he believed it should have been done.

I

He was fired for doing this. In the letter that canned ·him, Father Malone stated that while he respected Konlup' s " perfectly legitimate" be­liefs, and that while he respected the concepts upon v,vhich Konlup carried out his work, and that while he acknowledged the dedication of Konlup' s efforts in carrying out his job, he was forced to act on the recommendation of Father Nelson, and fire him.

Quite frankly, if I respected anybody on my staff that much he would have my job.

Malone based his decision on Father Nelson's recc;,mmendation. Nelson on the other hand, based his recommendation upon consultation. But neithe1 knew, or had the guts to tell Konlup, who the consultation was with. Our efforts to discover this were also negative. In fact, our efforts to uncover more of this sordid mess were met with reproach. There is only one side of the story printed on these pages. The reason for that is that the other people refused to give us their story.

The fact however remains, that Konlup has been fired by the President. The type of unilateral power · descent pattern that 'is all too obvious at Loyola leaves no room for appeal. If the decision.is not revoked by the President it stands,

· and there is very little that can be done to in­fluence the President.

This is no new revelation. It has happened before and it will happen again. It will continue to happen until there is a change in the system.

A university is a place for exploration, for ex­perimentation. It is a testing ground for new ideas, for new thoughts. A university shoul~ literally burst at the seams with creativity. It is no place for tl'a~tion to the extent that tradition quells exploration and snubs out creativity in the bud, as · is apparently the case at Loyola College. And as long as it is so, Loyola 'College will be just that, only a college, dominated by· a Church, that is if it doesn't suffocate in its own foul stagnancy first.

R.P.

The Staff Ad on the opposite page was originally printed in our issue of September 28. The response was obviously not sufficient as four months later we are having to reuse it. One can draw several conclusions from this fact. Either people don't like to read about a mother who ate her children, goldfish, and husband, or people don't like to work for The Paper.

Since we know that the latter is not true, we apologize for the fact that lll(B had to insult you again with this ad. However, if we had more staff we would have had time to make up a new ad. But then again, if we had more staff we wouldn't have had to run a staff ad. See?

When the doors

of tradition are

locked to reason

ignorance becomes

the inmate 's

companion

The Peper INTERIM EDITOR Robin Palin

Sir George Photo Editor: Jan Zajic Co~y Editor: Irene Bilas EnU!rtainments Editor: John Hardy Circulation Manaier: Steve First Perception Editor: Arno Mermelstein Sports Editor: Brian Scoffield

Loyola

Mary Bonar Anne Ricard Pat Casey

Published by the Evening Student Association of Sir George Williams University. The editorial content is not necessarily the opinion of the Publisher. THE PAPER may not be copied in whole or in part without the writu,n permission of the Publisher. THE PAPER is published for evening students and the communities of Sir George WiUiams University and Loyo)a College. Sir George Office: 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W. Room H-639. Telephone: 879-2836. Loyola Office: 7308 Sherbrooke St. W. Room Two. Telephone: 486-9890. Media Sa1ea Department: 1455 oe Maisonneuve Blvd . W. Rooom H-603. Telephone: 879:4514

~ TYPE-SETTING & LIT HOB Y JOURNAL OFFSET INC. ~ ) 111 TEL. 331-9721

/

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' l

/

I

' Got you, eh? Well this is just another one of those temptations offered by this paper for new staff. If you would

like to contribute to THE PAPER in any way, come to room fi39, or call The Editor at 879-2836.

THE PAPER needs feature writers for entertainments, sports, news events, layout staff,

photography bugs and other help galore.

If you think you are man (or woman) enough ... come in and try.

By the way, the mother that ate her entire household is doing fine at The Home Fof Unwed Mothers, but she has

symptoms of a slight upset tummy.

/

...... ~··"··· ··" .. ............. , .... .. .... -._.._ ........ ._ .. ,.

THE PAPER SEPTEMBER 28, 1970'/ 5

' ,.

,..

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CUTLERY

teA!lpoon - 6 11

knife - R" ·

soup spoon _· 7t"

fork 7.1" - . KelloRR's Corn Plake!! - 2 7/~" x 4" mermA.lA.de - 11"

torsted sand'lfiches - 13 5/8" x 2t" in ca.se of fire hreak P'lass - 37 3/4" x 14 3/4"

Remo~al and/or misuse of fire _fi~hting equipment by anyone except in an emergenc~ will be prosecuted as s·tipulated by Montreal City By Law 2572 Art.0-7

mop (1) interior diameter - ·12" x 17"

conveyor belt - 11 7/8" wide

turnstiles - length of arm - 14"

numbP.r of 11.rms - 3

heiRht

1fiilth - 3f!"

- 1at 11

surpestion box - 8 1/8" x 13"

water fountain - 13" x 15 3/4"

cup top holder - 24" x at" 5"

- 511

5~ II

pl a!ltic- -: .. poon

'JllAstic knife

plastic fork

cafteri11 tray - 14 11 x lR" x 3/4 11

ice cream machine 48 11

tray slide

grapefruit

cherry

- 12"

4" diameter

3/4 11 diometer juice level - 2t 11

wallnut chunks on rolls (avPraP,e size) 1/R"

rolls <individual measurement) 2i~ x 2 1/f!" pizza - 41" x 3 3/4 11

? - 3 1/8" x 3\" (two per servinP,)

- 12 11 X 1 3/4"

F RU I T S E C T I O N

oranRe (approx.) 2 E/16" x 2f" bitnanR - 10}" curve x averaP,P It" diAmP.te·r apple - 2 3/4" x 2t 11

floor tile - 36" square

black line - It" wide

office siP,n 3 1/16" x. 18" menu s iP,n 24" x 40 11

letter sizes - t" x 3/4" .. 1r O R n M E A S U R E M E N T S

peanut buttP.r 8 11

tuna - 2 3/8"

yngurt natural - A 3/R"

office door - 37 ~/4" wide

windo'lf 7 3/16" widP.

door lock - 1 13/16 11 wide

keep the price!! down - 15" x 9"

hours of operation - 10 r./16" x 13 1/R"

PULL TIREZ coffee creA.mer!I - 2l" x 2

cup top - 2 5/16 dinmcter

sugar packet - 1 11/16" x 2t"

plastic cups - 2 7/R" diameter

coffee CllpS - 3t"

sA.ucer holder - 20 15/16" x 13!-"

STIJ? S'l'IX 'l)OUr le c11fe. Touch 1 , br Rli

la fo~tRine pour l'eau chaude, th, et cat (CI

w1tste coffee trity - 30" x 3 3/4"

ish tray - 6" x 131" x 51"

SEAL IT NOi' mnchine - 13", 18" 1 8 7 /8", lR"

room dividPr (nrotectrr) ten peices at 2'

mirrors - 2r 1/4"

-,.I tea pot.s - 3" diitmetPr x 3,t" deep

meter flo'lf dispatcher - 31 3/4" x 19 3/4"

CATRCO LF.UONAIJ)E dilllflcnser - 16t" x 13 1/1

hot bun box - 23" x 19"

tray for crackers - 10 13/16" x 15 15/16"

packet for crackers - 2 11 X 211 . X 15/16"

pea soup - 2 7/R"

GARLAW SOUP RECF.PTICLE - 15" x 10 3/4"

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r

!l"

i" X 13 1/R"

2t" X 2

!r

'n br~w Blickm'ln - 4f"

', the P.t Cafe - 30 3/4 11 X (c'est chAu~) 16 3/4"

1/4"

',A 7/P.", 18", 3", 7 1/16"

peice~ at 2' eArh, ?.0'

f4t1 X 19 3/4"

16t" x 13 1/R"

1 X 15 15/16"

' . x 15/16"

CAFETERIA 11

X 10 3/4"

DIMENSIONS

kitchen sink - 12" x 15" x 6"

cold water tap - 2 7/8"

mustard 4" (high} 3" (content)

mayonnaise - 4" (high) 3 3/4" (content)

relish - 4" (high) 2 1/4" (contPnt)

catsup - 4" (high) 3" (contrnt)

french dressing pots - 5" (averagP full)

vinaper - 4 7/P." (hiJ?h) 2!'' full (graduated)

oil - same As for dressing, 2" full

HONEYWELL thermostat - 3~"

eJCit - 10 3/P."

chocol'lte donuts 2 3/4" avPrngp

maple donuts - 3 1/16" average

SuJ?ar donuts - 2 15/16" aver~re

yo,v.u rt - 3 1/8"

ii a lad 2-'" - ~

chocolatr drink contniners - ~ 15/16~

SWISS KNIG}IT r,rocess cheeze ·- 2" x ?."

butter - Ii·" x H"

submri.rinC' siind"·ich - 9 1/4" x 2 S/8"

tuna sandwich - 2 3/4" x 5 5/R"

one i<t,raw - lOt" long

PON'T FO!WF.'l' TO PICK t:P YOPR Cl ' TLF.RY - 12" x 8"

Buvez COCA-COLA - 16" x ?.4"

napkin - R 7/R" x ~ 5/R" x 1/32" (folded)

cash register 15J2 x 17 3/4" x 14" (basP bot include~)

$50 button (on reRister) - t"

TAX button - 3/4"

cashiC'r's chnir - 15 3/4" x 14t"

cashiPr (not available at time of survey)

cashi,er's wasi.e paprr basket - 11 3/4" hip,h, 30" circum,

hot coffee machine 3lt" X 65~ 11

coin return button - 2 13/16" x l"

rectolinear table - 35"

rounrl tablP - 4~ 3/4" rlinmrtPr

ash t.ra;v-s - 3t" s(luarp

salt, prpner containPr - 3 1/R" x 1 1/2"

sugar - 5 5/R" x 2 1 "

j 1 !

chair.seat - 171" x 16 3/4"

bl\c-k of chair - 10~" x lRt"

wiQdows - 70 3/R" x 37"

cigarette butt - lf"

!_!£~~~!fi£_~~ in perceEtioh bl_ Claude _Ma~an _ & _ Paul Laberse

illustrations by Arno ~rmelstein

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8 I THE PAPER JANUARY 18, 1971

'

ENTER TAJN MENT -theatre -literature -cinema -art

-music

T H E

G R 0 V E L I N G

'

.

G 0 u R -M E T

Ponder the poor student and his sad existence. Nowhere to spend an evening, nothing to do, and little to spend. Montreal of course is not a Moose Jaw Sas­katchewan , but it does have something to offer - my problem is to seek some of these out. Many times I have racked by brains for the suitable spot to spend that quiet evening, that li­quid lunch, that unconscious af­ternoon, and a host of other in­nocuous moods. Self enjoyment is one thing but more often than not, the brain racking process occurs when accompanied by a person or persons who demand an impression. It is then that the discovery of some quiet can­dle light, sparkling wine, or a hot band becomes essential.

The choices of establishment in any field of entertainment vary quite perceptively from per­son to person most obviously. What is "in" to one may be out for the other. The af Cone for example may be magnificent for a married couple of 20 years, but there is no way that a stu­dent can find himself at home thue. Besides that, such es­tablishments require a year's tuition for a party of two.

My scope, then, will be cen­tered on the student in Montreal, his outlook, his finance, and his palate. The city is indeed ripe for such an investigation and in my limited capacity laced with immeasurable biast, Mont­real is far and away the urban utopia of all those with an eye for wine, women, and song.

I don't want to be serioos every time I write up a place, whether good or bad, and I don't intend to be. The truth is that I have a difficult time being serious at all with many of the places I frequent. Just to start out on the right track, however, I thought

• I might take the Hull by the Borns and COII,lmit myself right off to a ,good restaurant. ,The chore is more difficult than you might think, not because of my faith in the choice, but because such a venture is expensive any­way you look at it.

La Vieille France is located at 50 St. James Street in the heart of old Montreal. Located just east of the financial quar­ters surrounding Place d'Armes, the restaurant boasts an old and distinguishing history.

Once the merchant center of the city (circa two hundred years ago). The merchant class meant, then, that it was the residential center of Montreal.

Built in 1729, the building ser­ved as a private residence up

r

to 1900 when it was converted the type of meal that is avail­to a ·restaurant by J·oseph Ver- able only at such a place, this sailles. Now owned by Gerard is where to go. Let's face it Lestringant, a well known res- guys, there must be someone tauranteur around the city, La around who's worth it. Vieille France is well known Now that I have some interest for siring many a great chef. aroused, it's only fair that I ma-

The restaurant is rather in- ke some suggestions on the cui-conspicuous in the old quarter, sine itself. boasting no bright lights, large The Hors-d'Oeuvre selection signs or colorful flags. Like varies from a well spiced shrimp many of the first class establish- cocktail to winkles and rabbit men ts in the area, it rests on pie, both of which are better than its laurels alone, which includes they sound. an atmosphere of timeless gran- Their soups are a speciality deur. Located between St. James of oid Montreal, and I recom­and Notre-Dame, it is easily , mend the French-onion. Although accessible by auto. By continuing rather heavy with breaq, it is down Notre Dame until reaching still a worthwhile delecacy. the New Justice building (still The main course varies from under construction), turn back fish to entrees to meats from up to St. James and into the the grill. Although the selection parking lot on the left hand side. is not staggering, each is served The restaurant beside it is La with the perfection of many years Vieille France. The parking is experience. The lobster, scampi, free after seven o'clock, a de- and Dover sole all are re-com-finite plus in its favor. mended from the seafoods.

There are three doors on the From the grill, the sirloin is front, all of which inevitably well worth the $400 dollars, and lead to the same room, so use the filet mighon Strasbourgeoise the center one. The 1first impres- (lamb) is excellent although one sion that hits you upon entering should make sure that it is serv-is the tremendous odor of fine ed hot. The sauce, it seems is cuisine. The darkness is harsh often a,dded well after the filet for a moment, broken only by the has been completed. candle lighting at each of the ta- The desserts are exotic and bles, and an occasional flame extravagant, but not necessary. from the table ovens that fry Most people will find the two your filets at table side. course meal quite satisfying. A

The Maitred' will show you to cup of coffee and the draining of the table of your choice, whether the wine bottle will usually suf-in the corner for two, or more fice. central for a larger party. The That just about wraps up the setting is naturally rustic and first step of what most likely unpbtrusive. The walls are ut- will be a better than average tered with antique implements evening. While she lazily fol-of an earlier age in the city. - lows the accordian player across

The question on your minds the floor, you idly pilfer her by now, if you've made it this purse for her apartment key. far, is to how much will the One more thing, the waitres-evening cost. That depends on ses are really dolls, and for a you. You can expect that a full few bucks under the table, you course meal will start at $12- just get her apartment key. $15 for two. The wine lists vary Okay guys there's my ap­with your billfold from $5 for a praisal of La Vieille France. The bottle of red bourdeaux to $15 cost is high, but the potential for Chamberlin (Bourgognes well worth it. I'm just as glad Rouges). The complexity of such to get .it out of the way now, so a decision boggles the mind of the I can get down to the nitty­average student, but the maitre gritty places like Queen's Lunch d' will be happy to help you out. in the weeks to come. That's why he's there. So don't If you do fiJ:id yourself wonder-feel a;, if you've broken your i- ing where to go in the near fu-mage by condescending to ad- ture, and this place seems to fit vice. An average choice, whether the bill, give it a try and drop red or white, will run to about a line to the Paper to let me $6, a half bottle will do nicely for know what you think. two. That brings the whole thing Also, although I've got a list to $20, not including tip (add the length of my arm to try anywhere from $15 - 26~i). during the following weeks, I'd

Many of you now may be gur- love to hear some suggestions, gling to yourself about th is guy even if you're a part owner o who wants me to shell out $25 your brother's the bouncer. to feed a chick. I'm just saying that if you do want to t ake in Thanks for taking the time.

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Man of Forsyte by Gail Renard

Master of the dramatic art; force behind the Forsyte Saga; genius of the English theatre. To mention the name Eric Porter now would almost be a redundancy of the first sentence.

The Forsyte Saga has returned to CBC television, and with it comes the opportunity to witness the acting performance of the century. Soames Forsyte once again enters our lives, and for the next six months, most of us will be dedicated to the fine art of Forsyte following. And behind that dastardly disguise of Soames, is Mr. Eric Porter.

Mr. Porter began life as the son of a London bus driver, and his seemingly overnight success only took 25 years. Mr. Porter's first professional role was in the London production of " St. Joan", and he has never lacked an acting job since. Bigger and better roles came his way, and by 1957, this up-and-coming young actor was chosen by Lunt and Fontain­ne to join their theatrical tour of America and England.

Training for the part of young Soames could have come from Mr. Porter's later playing such lovable roles as "Shylock" , in the "Merchant of Venice", and a Nazi officer in the film, "Heroes of Tele mark".

If it is every actor's dream to play King Lear, (another part that Mr. Porter has success­fully tackled), then it must now be the ambition of every actor to play Soames in the "Forsyte Saga". In 1967 came the filming of the Forsyte Saga, and with it, international recognition for Porter. Today, the mention of the name Eric Porter brings commendation from critics and worship from housewives.

More recently, Mr. Porter re­turned to the BBC to play the lead in "Tolstoy", and to appear in a new production of "Separate Tables". At the moment, Mr. Porter is "resting" between toles.

Oddly enough, our favourite actor does not have a favourite role. Mr. Porter explained that­since he is not aware of every part ever written, it is impos­sible to choose the best one. An unknown play, brought out of its obscurity, might be found to be the most exciting thing in the world for him.

Whatever roles Mr. Porter se­lects for the future , it will be a difficult task to surmount his previous success as Soames. But, then again. how high is the sky?

eooe THE CHANGE

A card held in the hand n;iysteriously changes to an entirely different one .

There are several methods of performing the above sleight; but I shall describe one only, which I consider to be the best.

T he card to be changed is

held between the first and second finger of the right hand, the pack being held in the left, with the card for which the first is to be changed slightly projecting from the top. The right hand now makes a sweeping motion, and, as it passes the pack, leaves the card at the botton;i and brings

away, with the thumb and first finger, the top one.

This may appear to the neophyte to be impossible of indetectable execution, but with even a little practice it will be found that a perfect illusion can be created. If the body makes a half turn from right to left. it will

GEORGIAN FILM SOCIETY 1455 DE MAISONNEUVE

ROOM 339-1 TELEPHONE 879-4557

December 4 WAR AND PEACE Part I (Russian version) TIME : 5:30 and 9:00

December 5 WAR AND PEACE Part II (Russian version) TIME : 5:30 and 9:00

January 22 IF . TIME: 7:00 and 9:00

January 23 GONE WITH THE WIND TIME : 4:00 and 8:00

February 26 MIDNIGHT COWBOY TIME: 7:00 and 9:00

February 27 BONNIE AND CLYDE TIME : 7:00 and 9:00

March 5 EASY RIDER TIME: 7:00 and 9:00

March6 THE GRADUATE TIME: 7:00 and 9:00

PRICES: FffiST SHOWING .75 SECOND SHOWING .99

SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY. W 110. HALL BUILDING. BISHOP and de MAISONNEUVE.

. . , - i JJ ' J --' ..... , .~.) ..-:· n ~J~ r·q ~ ~l. l 'i v

THE P"APER JANUARY 18, 1971 / 9

Portrait of Fleur and Soames F orsyte.

•••

greatly facilitate the decep-, tion, or if done in the act of addressing a spectator, and slightly bending forward at the same time.

THE ORDINARY PALM It is often necessary to pain:

or conceal a card in the pa~m of the hand. Suppose, for in­stance, a card is chosen from the pack and replaced. The "pass" is then made and the card brought to the top. The pack is now held in the left hand, the right hand ap­proaches the same, and with the second finger pushes for­ward the top card an eighth of an inch or more, at the same time exerting a slight pressure upon it.

This causes the card to be

tilted into the palm of the right hand, which forthwith grasps the pack between the first finger and thumb.

The pack can now safely be handed to another specta­tor to thoroughly shuffle, and, when returned, the performer· has no difficulty in secretly replacing the palmed card on top.

While the card is palmed,

allow the hand to hang down in a careless position, and never, under any circum­stances, even glance at it. _

The beginner should devote as much time as possible to. the practice of the foregoing sleights, as when ... he is profi­cient innumerable new trick~ and combinations will suggest themselves to his mind .

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10 I THE PAPER JANUARY 18, 1971

THEATRE •

-

Centaur by Garry Tannyan

What happens to man when he joins or creates a civilized so­ciety? He alienates himself from nature and hi original environ­ment. He lives in a world of artificiality and superficiality. "The Architect and the Emperor of Assyria" by the Spanish Mo­roccan playwright, Arrabal, deals with such alienation .

A highly civilized Emperor is marooned on a desert island with the Architect, a simple­minded native. The Emperor e­ducates the Architect and the native becomes civilized with this knowledge that the Emperor has given him. The Emperor, however is astounded by the fact that although he is master of the Architect, he finds that the Ar--chitect has the power to move mountains, communicate with animal life and among other things control day and night. This is a very relevant tneme of to­day's society since man cannot communicate with nature be­cause of the way that he ha becvme civilized . The Emperor knows this and wishes to become as close to nature as the Ar­chitect is .

Throughout the play we see how the two characters react to their isolation and to each other. The Architect has been alone for a long time so solitude is nothing new to him. When he wishes to leave, the Emperor begs him to stay for the civilized man fears to be really alone and indepen­dent. The Emperor invents

MOVIES Britt (URSULA ANDRESS)

and her husband Lord Nicholas Dorset (DAVID WARNER) are the classic example of the live now, pay later - and hopefully never! Luxury is a necessity for the glamorous, desperate couple who live completely be­yond their means . Britt asks their bank Manager Mr. Gra­ham (STANLEY BAKER) for a loan so she can visit her ailing mother and promptly uses the money to buy a snappy car and another glamorous outfit!

Arriving at her fashionable but dilapidated home, laden with par­cels, Britt learns that her hus­band ·has gone unexpectedly to Ireland. Furious at being left alone with Nick's gin- odden nan ­ny for company, Britt drives to the bank in her new car and takes Mr. Graham for a picnic­dinner in the count ry .

Mr. Graham equates money

games to amuse themselves and to keep himself from losing his sanity. The Emperor goes on trial for his sinning in his past life as the Emperor of Assyria. He is condemned to eath for his crimes, and he decides that this time this little episode is not a game. As his last request the Emperor asks to be eaten by the Architect after the sentence is carried out. The Architect complies and becomes one with the Emperor and therefore total­ly civilized. He loses his control hat he previously had with na­

ture and alas he becomes dis­-traught in his loneliness as any isolated civilized man would be­come, and as the Emperor be­came when the Architect did leave the island for a brief time.

Finally the Emperor returns· to the island and he finds it.total­ly lacking of any human inhabi­tants . In being eaten by the Ar­chitect, the Emperor becomes one with the Architect and there­fore has a control over his na­tural habitat. Symbolically this island represents the earth or any planet and the societies that abound on it. We are left with the arrival on the island of a rocket-wrecked astronaul and therefore will now civilize the now native Emperor .. The cycle is to start again.

Director John Juliani's inter­pretation of this play is an as­tounding feat. Juliani has worked with Arrabal's material for many years and has really · a very good understanding of the statements

with power. He envies his cus­tomers their large deposits, and over the years has devised a foolproof plan to rob his own bank! Britt and Nick's despe­rate financial situation make them ideal accomplices. Mr. Graham attempts to ensure their loyalty by 'making love to Britt and paying her husband a retain­er.

Each of the three thinks he has the others in his power, but in fact they are all slaves to their individual lust for money. The whole operation is depen­dent upon timing. The robbery must take place on Friday -"Perfect Friday" .

Britt and Nick move into what is for them a slum apartment op­posite the bank, so they can be constantly on the alert for Mr. Graham's signal, and Nick's hair is cut in order to assume the various disguises he will need to wear during the robbery. And Britt puts a large empty box into safe deposit at the bank.

After various false alarms "Perfect Friday" arrives. Mr. Graham's superior, as is his

that Arrabal puts into his work. The cast of two actors is simply marvelous . Roger Blay is bril­liant as the Architect and Errol Sitahal portrays the Emperor excellently. These two actors carry the •tire play through quite astonishingly. A master­piece of acting. The Mousseau designed set serves the cast with a very realistic impression of a desert island. Spectacular de­sign.

An avant-garde play it may well be, but it is not so a,vant­garde just for the sake of being avant-garde. Arrabal has bril­liantly shown in his work his deep involvement with people and their reactions to various situa­tions. Although this play has a theme so relevant in today's so­ciety, Arrabal has still put a light and humourous side in his work. Amazingly funny yet to the point lines fill the entire script. Vulgar? Yes. Man is vulgar and his ways are vulgar. Arrabal shows us this in an obvious and straightforward manner. one­theless it is not exactly the kind of play grandma would go for, yet it might do her some good if she did see it. Some people will be offended no doubt, but they should also be offended with what really goes on in the world. That is what Arrabal says in this play.

The Architect and the Emper6r of Assyria at the Centaur Thea­tre until January 31st, a must see for . everyone involved with living.

custom when important golf tour­naments are staged, pretends to have the flu , and is absent. This is the chance the unlikely team of bank robbers has been wait­ing for .

Nick, posing as the bank in­spector, arrives at the bank. Carefully following Mr. Gra­ham's instructions, he noncha­lantly heads for the vaults . Once there, he turns to his well-re­hearsed duties, checking the nearly $1 mi.Ilion reserve, and swiftly transfers the money into Britt's deposit box.

As planned and with perfect t iming, Britt arrives at the bank to collect her bo,x which has been in the safe deposit. Five minutes later she drives off to the airport with the box contain­ing the fortune .

ick, Mr. Graham, and Britt's unknown lover, wait in different parts of the airport for her -and the money! Each is certain she is planning to doublecross the other, but they are uncertain who is to be the victim and' who the victor. She does not keep them long in doubt!

Loyola by Anne B urley .

Being exposed to three years of cultural hack and artistic mediocrity at Loyola to hear of a new drama production was just another tiresome detail to be dealt with. After seeing last . night 's preview rehearsal of Eu­ripides' "TROJAN WOMEN", I am willing to put most of my prejudices aside . Yes, these are second thoughts!

From the rough and intense preview, I think that Maxim Ma­zumdar has in the making, an artistic success (about a box­office hit I don't know) with "TROJAN WOMEN". Let me say first that I think it is a weak play; it is practically plotless and quite predictable. But Ma­zumdar's adaptation and direc­tion are masterly, the casting is excellent for the acting is superb. (Yes, I am pulling out all stops on this one) . ·

In this productionL "TROJA WOMEN" is no longer a rather pedantic anti-war tragedy; it is more relevant, more urgent. The play reflects on the destruction of a city's great in the drawn wind of pride'; a city fiercely beloved by its people ; a city populated now only by women, once proud, soon to be slaves in Greece. These women suffer one outrage after another and leave their city quite broken - as we in the audience wince and are almost glad to have it all over.

I think the play is still basical­ly heavy; it has hardly any re­lief. It almost seems like a long lament but in it there are sparks of fire that remind us of the di­gnity and ferocious spirit in man.

If you expect entertainment from "TROJAN WOMEN" and light entertainment at that, don 't see it. It will depress you. If you are looking for some good and often stunning intellectual drama, I can scarcely recom­mend it less highly. It should

be the best show playing in town. The play opens on Jan. 21 and runs on the 22nd, 23rd, and 24th . Time: 8.30 p.m . Place: Loyola College Chapel.

I cannot pass from "TROJAN WOMEN" without mentioning some of the cast - Francine Volk­er makes Hecuba a virtuoso per-

- formance, brilliant, moving and totally credible. Beverley Sy­mons is a flaming Cassandra,

-all spark and presence. Joanne Zuckermann is a remarkable An­dromache, powerful, bitter, the scene where her son is torn from her is poignant and me­morable .- Harry Hill as the Greek messenger, Talthybius, is bum­bling and · pathetic, whereas James Re!Jlington makes an ap­propriately bluff Menelaus.

Moving on to some of the plans that Maxim Mazumdar has in mind for his society. They · are ambitious, a bit incredible, but with the verve and enthusiasm behind this society perhaps any­thing is possible. Their next production is "STAIRCASE",

• the compassionate comedy about two aging homosexuals. It is di­rected by David Featherstonhaugh and stars Harry Hill and Maxim Mazumdar; should be good, Ma­zumdar is a magnificeqt actor.

For the 1971-1972 season, the society has four productions planned. They are: "OLIVER!", "RICHARD 11", "ANNE OF GREEN GABLES", and "THE DEVILS" . A studen_t subscrip­tion of $4.00 admits .one to all four productions and a Theatre Festival (normal student rate $6.50). Non-students pay $6.00 (normal rate $8.50) . Sounds groo­vy! I think a critic in a previous issue of "The Paper" said, 'Ma­zumdar has a good thing going. Loyola would be wise to hold on to it.'

I hope so. We need no cultural morass at Loyola.

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ACROSS FROM SIR.\. GEORGE.

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Gulgian Basketball

Cellar b~Bru§!!!~irity . -A long, cold bus-ride was the order of the day for Satur­

day as the Georgian basketball team rolled home after a disappointing weekend in the Eastern Townships. Friday night saw the team playing at Bishops where Coach Nathan and company put on a fine display of basketball before finally losing 60-57. Saturday saw Sherbrooke take the Georgians 69-50.

Friday night the first half­had the Georgians in a 2-1-2 offense and defense . The offen­se was impressive and at half­time the garnet and gold were up 33-32. Statistically, in the first half the Georgians scored 15 field goals on 29 tries. Foul shots were weak, scoring only 3 pts. out of a possible 10. Pete Hargrove was as hot as a chili pepper as he swished 5 field goals on 8 shots in that half. Rick Ballard kept hustling both offensivly and defensivly, which added greatly to the general hus­tle of the team.

- It was a see-saw half and at one point saw the Georgians up by 10 points, but great foul shooting by Bishops' M unzar and Harris put them back in the game. Bishops went 10 for 15 at the line in the first half which hurt the Georgians.

The second half picked up whe­re the first half left of, leading to a short see-saw battle again. This time the Georgians found the mark at the foul line as they hit 6-11 compared to Bishops, who went 2-9. What the Gaiters lacked in free throws they made up for in field goals. They swish-

Cole's-Notes. with Glen Ct»le

I cannot ·say that I was not surprised at the result of the Loyola-Sir George game Friday night at Pointe Claire.. Shock­ed is more the word for it.

No, I didn' t think Sir George could come up with such a per­formance against the Warriors, but, stranger things have hap-pened. /

We all know that the Sir George team has been having its troubles doing much of anything so far this season, but maybe Friday's game is. the tonic they need to sneak into the playoffs.

If they are to do well, a few of the players are going to have to try and put out the same amount of effort as defencemen Mi­ke McNamara and goaltenders Bernie Wolfe and Tom Bicker­dike .

McNamara kas been the most outstanding player for the Georgians all season. He has been a steadying factor on an otherwise shakey ship . Arsenault and yours truly don' t agree on very much, but I somehow feel that Mc amara is the top de­fenceman in the Ottawa-St . Lawrence Athlet ic Association . · There would probably be some disagreement from Loyola and

justly so, because of the usually strong play of Bill Doyle a nd Larry Carriere .

While most teams have only one good goaltender to depend on, the Georgians have been lucky to acquire two goalies of ·~­qua! calibre--Bickerdike and Wolfe. Wolfe has been particular­ly impressive in t he two games against Loyola and Bickerdike I am told has been the key factor in other strong performances by Sir George.

. .. .. . ...... ., .. ~ ........................ .

THE .. PAPER JAN~ARY 18, 1971 I 11

Perfect Record Possible ed 13 shots to Sir George's 9. At the mid-way point Bishops be­gan to pull away from the Geor­gians due to a loose man to man/ defense by Sir George. Terry O'Brien and Chris Countess did a good job of grabbing rebounds off the boards and in the dying · minutes the garnet and gold were charging . With a strong press in the last 3 minutes the Georgians narrowed the gap to 3 points, but time ran out and the final score read 60-57 in favor of Bishops.

It was a good game due to so­me great coaching by Howie a­than, with strong support com­ing from Karl Eliason, Guy Fo­rest and Gary Stephens, - and oh yes - Jeff "Nifty ' ,Nieman. Top scorer for Sir George was Peter Hargrove and for Bishops, Pete Munzar, both with 19 points. Munzar, by the way is the second

top scorer in the league. S~turday afternoon at Sher­

brooke started off bad with a one hour delay for a volleybaff ga­me, which didn't help t he Geor­gians, who were psyched for the game all right. Five minutes after the opening jump-ball they fell apart. At the 9 minute mark of the first half they had amass­ed 5 personal foul s giving Sher­brooke a 1 and 1 situation and they certainly capitalized, going 11 for 18 at the line . Field goals for Sir George were atrocious hitting only 9 of 35 and the 2-1 -2 offense and defense set-up that was so effective against Bi­shops was helpless against Sher­brooke. When a team gets 10 points driving up the center as Sherbrooke did, something's not Kosher. Anyway the half end­ed 31-23 for the Vert et Ors.

In the second half offenses and

defences were being yelled out along with 'Art come high', or ·Terry go low' · · we should have played so well.

Terry O'Brien exploded in the second half with 6 field goals on 8 shots with some lovely hook shots. I don' t know if it was the steak a nd s<;_rambled . eggs for breakfast, but nobody was hot. Shots landed on the rim, on the boards, on the net, but somehow just wouldn ' t go through. Some shots went so far as missing the board as well as the basket. The final score was 69-50 in fa­vor of the Vert et Ors. Top man for Sherbrooke was Ivan Ferdais with 25 points. Terry O'Brien with 19 points was tops for Sir George whose next home game is at Loyola against the Warriors.

P .S. What was the name of that blonde chick from Chicou­timi again Chris?

Cutline: Bernie Wolfe pounces on rebound as Mike MacNamara checks Chris Hayes. Wolfe nd MacNamara were undoubtably the best Georgians on the ice Friday night with Wolfe

constantl:x denying the league leading Warriors. See story next page.

photo by Gabor

with .d Laurenb e Ale!

I ·•

One of the great ales from Molson, brewed in Quebec.

I: • ' ' J ... , I • I ' I

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12"/ THE PAPER JANUARY 18, 1971

I Homecoming I Rivalry Reinca rnated

PAPER Spo~ts I Homesickness? I

Warriors Edge Fading Georgians by Birks Bovaird

Last Friday evening at the Pointe Claire arena the often used cliche of the infamous Bill Mazer almost came true. It was one of those nights when any given team, in this case Sir George, could best any other team in the league. Although in this case at least the saying did not ring true, as with most statements the " Amazing Mazer" has been known to make, the Loyola Warriors knew they had been in a first class hockey game as they came away with a well earn­ed 2-1 victory over the Geor­gians.

A crowd of some five hundred people, much more than the a­verage attendance at Sir George home games, were treated to one of those old tyle barn burn­ers that were the trademark of Georgian-Warrior clashes in years gone l,y. It was not until 13:16 of the third peoriod when Loyola defenseman Larry Car­riere beat goalie Bernie Wolfe with a low slap shot, that there appeared one of the teams was

Loyola goalie Rockie Martin watches puck as Carriere checks Georgians' Ian Hale.

going home a winner. . The game had started out as

if Loyola were going to hand the Georgians the two points as the Warriors con istently found them elve playing a man hort and only the great glove hand of goalie Rocky Martin kept ir Georg~ from jumping into a two nothing lead a Martin wa ab-olutely brilliant robbing first

Hale then Bonkoff on point blank drives. Loyola soon got to the

business of playing hockey and at 6:40 of the first, captain Chris· Hayes converted passes from Carriere and Jim Sunstrum to put the Warriors up by one. Then at 13: 16 of the same pe­riod the Georgians efforts were finally rewarded as a point shot from defenseman Mike MacNa­mara just trickeled past a sp~awled Martin who could not quite pull it in. A sist went to Watkins and Bankoff who did ome fine foreschecking on the

play.

The second period wa trict­ly a goal tenders duel as the

All alone again!ll _ Warriors Blank Patriotes

by Barry Learmonth The Loyola Hockey Warriors completed their sweep of

weekend action last Saturday afternoon at the athletic com­plex with a surprisingly easy 6-0 victory over the second place Trois-Rivieres Patriotes. Loyola 's win strengthened their hold on first place in the O.S.L. race, and diminished the Patriotes chances of catching them in the later stages of the season. Center Chris Hayes scored

what proved to be the winning goal · at the 20 second mark of he opening period as he beat goalie Hobert Lafleur from a sharp angle. Before the first pe­riod had ended the Warriors had upped the count to 3-0 with Jim Sunstrum and Ron Clarke each scoring once.

Loyola completed the game's scoring in the second period with a three goal output. John Hutton scored the nicest goal of the game at the 7:30 mark as he beat Lafleur on a long drive to the corner after skating around the Trois-Rivieres defence.

Ken ~acdonald and Mike Tho­massin rounded out the scoring for the Warriors late in the se­cond period on solid individual efforts.

The Patriotes seemed to have tapered off considerably after . their last meeting with the War-

rios in Trois-Rivieres which ended · in a victory for the se­cond year entry in the O.S.L. On Saturday afternoon their passing was remarkably sloppy and they repeatedly gave the puck to the Warriors in the corners. Goalie Robert Lafleur who was weak on all three first period goals set­tled down in the second and third periods and stopped the score from reaching the ·double figur~s.

The Warriors, on the other hand, came up with a fine team effort both offensively and de­fersively. Goalie Rocky Martin, was _rarely tested from close in

'and had little trouble register­ing his shutout.

Loyola;s next home games ·are scheduled for next friday night and saturday afternoon as they play host to Bishop's Uni­versity Gaiters and the Vert et Or from the University of Sher­brooke.

play carried from end to end. For Loyola, Martin was parti­cularly sharp on two quick shots off the stick of John Murray while Wolfe sparkled against Riley, Hayes, and Mike Tho­massin. Thomassin simply could not believe that his shot had not gone is as the puck lay right along the red line for what seemed an eternity before Wolfe was able to flop on it.

The third period saw Loyola begin to exert their dominance as time and time again Wolfe was forced to come up with the big save at the expense of nota­bly Glenn urbey, Ken MacDo-

C de Q Victory Sir George Williams Univer­

sity Georgians broke their los­ing streak in Coupe De Quebec action last night by defeating the University of Montreal Carabins 6-3.

Led by the two goal perfor­mance of · Barry Cullen the Ge9rgians managed to hold a four goal lead until Richard De­mers scored for the Carabins at the 20.00 minute mark of these- , condframe.

Mike MacNamara picked up four assists for the night's ef­forts as the two teams played to a 36-36 tie on the shooting sta­tistics.

Price scored once and picked up two assists while Murray, Harman, and Watkins · each scored one for the winners.

Demers picked up two gaols for the Carabins while Pierre Hebert rounded out the scoring for the losing team.

Upcoming Games Tuesday - MacDonald at Sir

George 8 p.m. Friday - Bishop's at Loyola

8:30p.m. Saturday - Sherbrooke at Loyo­

la 2 p.m.

nald Steve Sly and Chris Hayes on numerous occasions. The door was finally left open at 13: 01 as Sir George's captain John Murray went off for tripping, and fifteen seconds later Carri­ere slammed home the winner.

After the _game Loyola athle­tic director Ed Enos commented that it was definetly an impro­ved GeorgioQn hockey squad and that Loyola had won a well earn­ed two points. Meanwhile in the Sir George dressing room al­though somewhat. dissappointed at losing there was only opti­mism for the games ahead, as it seems at last the players ha-

ve really convin~ed themselves that they are part of a first class hockey team.

k side light at the game was that several of the former. Georgian hockey players were the guests of Athletic Director Douglas lnsleay. These were former team captain and all­star forward Trevor Kerr, all­star defenseman Harry "the hat" Wenger, all-star winger Alex Matthew, defenseman Bill

haver, and Canadian all-star. and Georgian coach during 1968/ 69 Championship year Dave Dies.


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