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looking, maybe
reasons why no one else was sitting with him. Another sad
looking football player, who just flunked his English exam
or had been rejected from Missoula? Don't sit with him, I
thought. But for some reason I did. "What are you taking?"
"English" he said. "Ya, me too." Then thot, this guy better
switch to phys ed and sociology like the rest of the dumbos
- then he might pass out of here, or al least cheer up. " I
write songs and poetry" he said. " I write poetry", I
said.
Over the last semester at MRC we'd exchange poetry. I read
his with a sense of envy. He was very good despite the
football player look. We became an odd bohemian pair:
ectomorph and endomorph. ( I was 5' 10", 125 pounds - a lean
and hungry chainsmoker. Sid was big - over 6' 2" and l85
pounds).
That August we
paired up on the CP platform for the train ride east - Sid
with duffle bag, guitar, me with a set of drums, suitcase,
typewriter and a bag of sandwiches to last us the next few
days on the non-stop economy car hurtle to Montreal.

ONCE
IN
MONTREAL
Once in Montreal Sid and I had planned to find separate
apartments. We'd leave each morning from our dingy downtown
hotel just off St. Catharines, and go on a separate search.
Later we'd meet over beer and smoked meat sandwiches or
hamburgers, to complain about the $65 a month dives,
cockroaches and weird Montreal landlords. This was the time
of year that hundreds of other students were moving into the
downtown. We had to get places and fast. Because of our fear
of big city loneliness, and because of our budgets, we
decided to apartment-hunt together and found a huge basement
room for $100 at 1559 McGregor Ave, across from the American
Embassy. For a short while we were happy room-mates,
dividing up the space, organizing our books and study desks,
partitioning the fridge, and re- aligning beds and
furniture. But privacy was impossible until we brainstormed
the situation and decided to make a wall between us; we hung
a 12 foot stretch of burlap from ceiling to floor dividing
the apartment in half. That room smelled of potato sack for
a year, and made any sex a public affair.
The domestic routines kept us busy, but my overall sense
that autumn was one of disbelief that we were actually there
in the complex magic of Montreal The city was beautiful with
tension and energy. Each street held a surprise of
architecture, colour, and history, mixed with language,
smells from the restaurants, bistros - and the constant
visage of the city's beautiful, perfumed women. Why even
bother to write in a place where you could live the poem,
and dress up to look the part?

PLEASE
DON'T
HIT
ME
"Please ... don't hit me " is what I said, according to Sid.
We were walking up Cote de Neige, two college boys with bags
full of groceries on the way to our basement pad. It was
rush hour and the sun melting us in our uniforms: corduroy
jacket, patches on elbows, jeans, loafers, JC Penny work
shirt, loose knit tie - standard college fare). A guy in a
car with 2 other guys, stalled in the rush hour traffic
yelled out: "Loookit the faggots!" Sid eye-balled him with a
fierce look, and yelled back " GET OUT OF THE CAR AND SAY
THAT YOU FUCKING ASSHOLE! They did, all 3 of them. Two guys
grabbed me around the neck and pinned me to a stone
retaining wall. Sid dumped the groceries, hunched into
boxing position, clenched his fists and waved the guy toward
him. WHAD YOU SAY ASSHOLE? I was thinking at this point
about my jacket, my teeth, my career, my face and
instinctively knew that going limp in the arms of these two
goons was the smart thing to do, and at 125 lbs,, my fast
logic was saying, how the hell could I rescue Sid anyway?
Fists flew in a whack and thud of equal exchange until the
goon started kicking. Sid kicked back, got him in the
testicles, so the fight was quickly over. Cars honked,
drivers yelled, and the 2 goons dragged the other whimpering
goon hunched in pain to the car. "Sid, you got him in the
balls!" Sid was hurting, but his

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