161 RIVALDA RD. RICHMOND GARDENS SWIMMING POOL Specialists In Designing And Building Pools For: SANELL! POOLS Schools Communities Motels and Hotels Institutions Golf Clubs Apartment Bldgs. Country Clubs Homes SANELLI POOLS LTD. CONTRACTING CO. LTD. Are 161 RIVALDA RD. FOR INFORMATION ON A SWIMMING POOL DESIGN AND ESTIMATED COST REGARDLESS OF SIZE CALL: ympic â€" standard â€" openâ€"air swimming pool was opened by Reeve Ozzie Watâ€" fle and A. C. Rooney. president of Home Smith Properties Ltd., on Wedâ€" nesday, August 1, in Richmond Gardâ€" ens Park. Built by Sanelli Bros, it is the largest nool now in oneration in Finbiâ€" coke, and has been built to Olymnie NEW POOL OPENS â€" A 25 metre Olâ€" SANELLI ANOTHER POOL DESIGNED AND BUILT BY to Olympic standards for competjtion purposes Floodlighting has been provided by four 1,500 watt units so that the pool may be used after dark. It accomodates 250 swimmers, has a maximum depth of 11 ft. 6 inches and has one and three metre diving boards for Olympic comâ€" petitions. WESTON RO. 6â€"1101 Home _ Smith _ Properties Ltd. chose the design and pool building construction of Sanclli Pools Ltd. to complete the _ recreation facilities for their residents in Etobicokes newest presâ€" tige subâ€"division . . . Richâ€" mond Gardens. Sanelli Pools Ltd. is pleased to have contributed their pool design and construction to this new subdivision. This pool is the 203rd pool conâ€" structed by us in Metro Toronto and Southern Onâ€" tario area. Onee assured of our sincerity, their stern faces relaxed into a smile of friendly tolerance, and they agreed to have their pictures taken with young Scottie. To forestall the arrival of a scalping party we hastened to exâ€" plain the reason for our visit, which was to allow our young Indian enthusiast to learn somteâ€" thing of Indian culture The first couple of honestâ€"toâ€" 5 goodness real Indians we met did & a quick doubleâ€"take in Scottie‘s’ direction, and we knew that anâ€" * other pet theory of ours had bilf the dust Arriving at the carâ€"park of the ‘Forest Theatre ‘on the Six Naâ€" tions reserve, Scottie changed into his Sioux costume, and in the space of a few minutes, was| transformed | into a relsunlble( facsimile of an Indian that,. in the | gathering twilight, we thought’f» was hard to distinguish from the real thing. ' So, having made such a ‘treaty‘ with our ‘Indian‘, we felt bound to reverse the usual white man‘s habit of breaking them, and so, on Friday evening, we, together with a wildly excited boy headed for the reserve. Before you could say ‘Pocahonâ€" tas‘, or ‘Sitting Buil‘, we found that we had promised to take him down there "the next time we go" â€" and wouidn‘t you know it, there was a Pageant this very weekend? We asked him waether he had been to any of the Indian Pageâ€" ants at the Six Nations reserve at Oshweken, near Brantford. He said he had, "a few years ago", but was too young to fully apâ€" preciate it, and, "would sure like to go again‘. â€" he said, changing his step, "the ‘Canoe Dance‘, which is a fourâ€"step, like this". He demonâ€" strated again, apologizing for not having a‘ canoe paddle, which apâ€" parently one is supposed to have when doing the dance. Within five minutes of visiting him at his home, we were surâ€" rounded with Indian garments and weapons that he has made. Pulling a record from its jacket and putting it on the player, he said, "I‘ve learned a couple of Sioux dances also. The ‘Social Dance‘ which goes like this" â€" he demonstrated with a sort of twoâ€"step, to the raythm of the tomâ€"toms and chant of the singâ€" ers, whose music was now throbâ€" bing loudly in our ears, "and", The beads are worked by him into a decorative pattern on his costume, using authentic Indian symbols. He even uses the furs of wild animals that be finds dead on the roadsite, to decorate his outfit, curing the skins himâ€" self. "I make most of my costumes from junk", he said, "though I have to buy the feathers and beads from a place in New York". He has an impressive library of recognized works on the subâ€" ject, and half a dozen scrap books filled with clippings from newspapers and magazines. So wrapped up is he with Indians, that he has made himself a full set of Indian regalia, and can do a couple of Indian dances. With the aid of reliable books, frequent visits to the Ontario Museum, and literature from the Dept. of Indian Affairs in Ottawa and Washington, young Scottie is fast becoming something of a junior authority on the "Vanish ing American". For Mr. McCarthy‘s eldest son, Cornelius â€" or ‘Scottie‘ as he preâ€" fers to be called, is a ‘Gone Kid‘ on the subject of Indians. Instead, a somewhat sad, monoâ€" tonous chanting, and the thud of a tomâ€"tom sound throughout the house, and if any images are conâ€" jured up, they are of sunâ€"burnt prairies black with buiffalo, or fiercely painted warriors astride fleet footed paint ponies, ornaâ€" ments jingling and feathered headâ€"dresses tossing defiantly. The music that Mr. and Mrs. John McCarthy, of 3500 Dufferin Street, find themselves listening to quite frequently i0es not conâ€" jure up any image»s of recording studios and a floppyâ€"haired adoleâ€" scent drooling into a microphone. Downsview Boy |im Goes ‘Native‘ , y With 6 Nations 4 By TOM LONGHURST While many parents of teenâ€" aged children try to ignore the raucous blare of the radio as their offspring tune in to the adenoidal whinings of the latest downy â€" cheeked, finger â€" snapâ€" ping ‘discovery‘, the parents of a 14 year old Downsview youth, bave a very different rhythm pounding in their ears. 8 WE VOL. 1 â€"â€" NO. 38 (Continued on page 2) (~ "Pol instanc imagin politic the pu culater | partic« He : meyer statem be ver "A fir the p burst true 4 Norm Winte leader ment, "assun cation