Saturday, July 11, 2009

Q - what did it say on this sign?


This commercially defaced 1983 image depicts a then-recently-defunct Montreal landmark showing the lettering removed from its sign. Two part question (no part-marks): 1) Exactly what had been inscribed on that landmark sign? 2) What is inscribed on it today?

(Bonus pointz if you can expound on why, if there's any difference in wording.)

Right enough. As you can see above, it used to say SNOWDON. Then, after the landmark cinema was shut down in the early '80s, somebody took down the lettering and -- in a truly bizarre act of revisionism - added the word "Théâtre" at the top of the sign -- at the very moment that it had ceased being a theatre! Then they added new letters fashioned to look like the old SNOWDON -- but not quite. Check out the shape of the new "S" -- looks like something off a Nazi uniform.



The second picture is from about '89. The whole place is an eyesore today. The strip is rundown and, by the looks of it, low-rent. As for the revisionist move against the sign: only the private owner knew exactly why this was done, but perhaps a nudge of encouragement -- who knows, even funding? -- had been received. After all, hundreds of thousands of Decarie Expressway motorists can see the sign, which indicated a largely Jewish, anglophone, neighbourhood-in-decline that does not officially exist. Now, perhaps, Toponomy Commissioners can sleep more soundly at night.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Why July 8 is a bad time to go swimming near La Ronde

On July 8, 1979 - that's 30 years ago now - Concetta Di Micco, 47, hopped on the Mississippi, a little boat that was part of the Man and his world (aka La Ronde) attractions in the adjacent Dolphin Lake. Amazingly the ship went down and Concetta died trying to save her daughter Assunta Di Micco, 6. Son Robert Di Micco was also aboard but he managed to hang onto a woman who had managed to snag a life preserver before the ship went down.

Sisters Anna Di Rocco, 14 and Amelia Di Rocco, 16, were not on board, as they waited at the wharf for the 15 minute ride to end.

Amelia had even warned the authorities that there was water in the boat as it took off, and they told her it was normal, but she noted that it was going very slowly right from the start. Father Francesco Di Rocco, a gardener, became a single parent of 4 that day. The Mississippi was grounded from then on. There were about 55 others on the boat in the 15 foot waters of the man-made lake. Performers from a water-skiing show saved several people from drowning.

Maurice Catavolo, 6, died in front of his mother's eyes.

Georgetta Farah, 51, also drowned.

Six years earlier to the date - July 8, 1973 - two police officers drowned trying to save a woman who found herself in the water in Dolphin Lake. The two had climbed onto a ski jump to help a woman who was drowning. They fell off and neither knew how to swim, which is an extremely difficult task while fully clothed. The woman survived but both officers drowned on that day.

Andre Desilets, 25 (left) and Claude Sarrazin, also 25, (below) both died tragically on that day.

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Photoshop from the early 1900s


Alfonso Ponzi was a barber from an Italian sheepherding clan who moved to Montreal and became a bit of a high-living bon vivant. He also spent time in Pittsburgh where he posed for that fabulous pic on the left here. He wanted a family portrait so he brought a shot from his Pittsburgh photo shoot to a special photo lab on St. Lawrence Main Street (International Photo Studio Registered 202 St. Lawrence) where the photo geniuses added him in, with the results as seen above.

Up until the early 90s at least such stores still thrived on the Main, you'd see photos advertised in the windows - before showed a woman with a sailor and after, poof he was gone.

Alfonso become a bit of a drunk but he is still remembered lovingly and stylishly in his grandson Peter Ponzi's photo collection, many of which can be seen on his facebook page.

Alfonso and Peter and the rest of their crew are unrelated to the Montreal banker Charles Ponzi, who pioneered the pyramid scheme that still bears his name.

Q-Replacement Quiz, last one was too easy apparently

Juno, 29 & Jacki, 33 - as they were known in Montreal nightclub circles when this photo was shot 40 years ago - became notable enough for a movie to be made about 'em. Anybody?

Q-How was Montreal the first on the moon?

In spite of what the Yanks tell you, Montreal - Longueuil, to be exact - was the first on the moon. The above photo demonstrates how. Can somebody guess?

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Car surfing - it was a problem in 1937 too

Car surfing is in the news again as a guy died hanging onto a moving car in Montreal just a few days ago. Well apparently the problem was large and widespread in 1937, perhaps we could learn something from these streeters with Montrealers asked about what should be done about kids getting hurt from hanging off of cars.

Joseph Chaperon 5197 St. Ambroise - rabbit breeder - "Give them a swat and make them cry, that way their parents will see it and raise them better."








Arthur Larue driver 1421 Henri Julien - "I did it as a kid but it was less dangerous then. Parents should keep them from doing it."





Joseph Gingras - Carpenter 6425 St. Denis - Punish them and tell them every time a kid gets hurt or dies doing it, that should modify their behaviour."




John Walker 6745 Adam - mechanic - You can never really stop them but explain the dangers to them, show them education films and such stuff.




Arthur Saint-Onge 371 de Beaupre Police should stop any car with a kid hanging off the back and bring them to juvenile court. The parents would be more worried if they were getting fines.






Jean Jean Travelling Salesman Ahuntsic - build cars so that the children have nothing to grab onto.




Alfred Barrette - 6415 Jeanne Mance- Travelling salesman - it's extra work for the driver but he should really get out and shoo kids off his car whenever he sees one hanging from the back.

Drive-bys and nattering points

Time to stop whining about what a dark, wet, chilly summer it's been. You haven't seen a nice July since 2006, so get over it -- like these happy pedal-boaters captured under somber skies on Mount Royal a few days back.

Now that's a good-lookin' shack. Not all modern architecture sucks (overdue nod to Drapeau).

Ignatieff's corner: left, right or dead-end?

If you like animals, you should denounce graffiti. This 1907 fountain was dedicated to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. It was designed and executed by E & W.S. Maxwell Architects -- legendary firm of some of Montreal's greatest treasures. It provided a welcome pause to thirsty horses, even as their seated masters chuckled among their spoiled selves. Now it has been defaced, and the city hardly seems to care. It stands defaced still, more than a week later.
Hard labour for grafitti criminals. If they can't police each other, they will be policed nevertheless.

The second-most-boring Moving Day photograph. Stay tuned until next July!

Name the vantage point!

Don't worry, they have a net: a Battle Net!

Uninspired at Inspiration Point.

Recession shopper.

No money down. No interest. Don't pay until ever.

Dental floss will save your lawn. Really, you've got to give the people what they want: a shortcut!

Stalin lived here. (Newly demolished Drapeau-style building across from the old Union Stamp Shoes wall; too obscure?)

Scenic Montreal or Why West Is Best Part 1.

Another Montreal postcard moment.

Book your romantic Montreal getaway now!

We took this picture because a world-famous painter had set up her easel here. (Not.)

Scenic Montreal, or the recession predicted. (Don't worry, UQAM always knew we'd bail em out. Part of the plan, see? - Chimples)

Clamato and orange. (Cue the St. Denny mini-tour.)

I'm not really with Peter Gabriel, gurlz.


What happened to the bar hoppers that used to pack down this alley? Too much fun? (Too much 'asssssh, more like it. - Chimples)

The Franco American.

St. Denis -- go figure. Gems like this but a shambles still.

Motorized Bixie unveiled


With all those creeps pedaling Bixies around parts of town they don't belong, it's no surprise the city came up with something even more intrusive: the motorized Bixie. Sorry, you need a helmet for this one.

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Pier into the past

Pretty, eh? But this rustic sketch of backlogged cargo on the Donaldson Line Pier at the Port of Montreal back in 1907 is the result of a strike -- bravely held when a walkout was as likely to earn you a bust head as a raise. After dropping their sacks, which met with strangely little reaction from cops, the workers were being offered by the CP Railway about 2.5 cents more an hour to keep loading, but Irishmen and Scotsmen, Joe Strummer, and some of the new village arrivals were blessedly stubborn. The whole thing was front-page news, of course. Now the port is a sirk-tent-blighted, concrete Disneyland. If you can't make it a port, make it a beach.

Housing collapse in the Griff

It might seem like yesterday that these fine old abandoned homes on Young Street near Wellington in Griffintown simply collapsed. Surely you remember it. It was just 70 years ago. There were no known human victims. There was a tiny cross street named Smith at the time which was erased with the onset of the big warehouses.

Sunday, July 05, 2009

Oka beach tat Q


One row of photos is laden with beach-goers almost all needled up with tattoos, the other row has exclusively are ink virgins (at least as far as we can see). For the purposes of this quiz, we've erased the tats. Which row are the tatty women at? Click on the photo to see detail.

We have some winners. It is indeed the top row. All but one photo - the one on the right contain at least one girl with a tat, mostly on the belly, semi-hidden by the panty line.

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Great parade - Montreal's Carifiesta - good time had!



















Friday, July 03, 2009

Pigeons subsidized housing

To the pigeons in the readership. Here's a great place to set up shop. Over on Demaisonneuve just west of Decarie.

Q-who's this guy and what's he doing?

Watery grave for 4 local females

That's the car, and here's a panoramic, animated tour of the Kingston Mills Locks. That's right near the spot where a Parks Canada employee noticed an oil slick that led to the discovery of a submerged car containing the bodies of a middle-aged woman and three young sisters, all from Montreal. They were identified as: Zainab Shasia, 19, Sahar Shasia, 17, Geeti Shasia, 13, and Rona Amir Mohammed, 50.

Thursday, July 02, 2009

It's a cool, cool summer

Michael Jackson May Get Laid ...

Here's one for your Klassik Headlinez file -- Montreal web surfers checking out Google's news aggregator would have seen this headline about a minute ago. See it? (Hint: it's on the left and it's not the top headline. If you don't know: click the picture to see full-size.)

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Dear Montreal: A Craigslist personal

If you didn't know already, the world's biggest free classifieds site has a Best of Craigslist section, which is nominated by Craigslist members.

Now, go there and search for "Montreal." All right, be that way. We've done it for you all the same. There are just a half-dozen ads -- supposedly the wittiest, weirdest and knee-slappingest. But of those six Montreal-"related" ads, only one (count 'em: 1) really has anything to do with Montreal. A tongue-in-cheek paean (Ponce! - Chimples) to our Eye-land in the Slorrence it is simultaneously misguided and, occasionally, funny.


Here it is:

best of craigslist > montreal > Dear Montreal Originally Posted: Thu, 30 Oct 11:06 EDT

Dear Montreal


Date: 2008-10-30, 11:06AM EDT


Dear Montreal,


Go ahead, and jab me in the subway with your hardback novel, and then make a tutting noise at me for being in your way.
Go ahead and walk with two friends, six inches between each of you, on the same sidewalk, and roll two pairs of eyes if not all three when I walk up in the opposite direction, breaking your stride.

I love you, and you can't stop that. Even your weather can't stop that, and if anything could, it would, with your hot as Georgia summers and refusal to air condition or even dehumidify. I actually don't mind your winters too much myself -- what I don't like is how your winter makes YOU feel. Well, that, and the fact that you want every indoor space heated above 80 degrees Fahrenheit from October through April.

We both know that you're not one to let a little snow and ice get in your way. My God! A blizzard comes through and you've cleared it all away within half a day. That's you, Montreal! But you'd think you were Moscow, with the way you carry on about how winter's on the way when the first hint of a cool breeze blows across you in August. Has my undying love not warmed you yet, even a little? I hate to see you ruin your beautiful autumn year after year by moaning about winter coming from the first day the temperature dips below sultry until the "W" word actually comes for real sometime in December. Life is short, Montreal, don't wish it away. I love you and want to see you smile like you do when it's almost the jazz festival and promise is in your air.

Go ahead. Tap your car's bumper against my heels a few times as I run through the rain on the green light. That won't stop my love. Go ahead and hit me if you want to -- I could actually use the money! Oh wait, if you hit me, all I get is a predetermined sum from the provincial government based on their assessment of level of my physical and mental suffering. That is, as best I understand it from the rather confusing brochure on this that was sent to me in French, unlike some other things you send me, that are in both English AND in French. I think you explained it one night when we were drinking, so it's kind of hazy. But I remember you said something about only stuff that has to do with health and safety is translated into English? Anyway, did I mention I love you?

Go ahead. Answer the simple queries I pose to you in French in disdainful English. The fact that I can't understand 100% of your automobile insurance literature or be hip with your slang is proof that the two decades spent learning your language, which included acquiring a university degree in French and spending vast amounts of time other, lesser Francophone nations, were not quite enough. I think you did understand though, that I did it all for you, because I love you, and this is why you gave me a day job. I thank you for that. I will do whatever it takes. One day, it will come naturally to me to enter a shop and instead of saying, "Bonjour, j'aimerais une baguette, s'il vous plait," I will say, "Seigneur! L'hiver s'en vient! Heille, tu as-tu un pain complet biologique aux atocas?" Or somesuch. And you will answer me, accordingly, however that is, and I will quiver with ecstasy.

I swear, I am trying, because Montreal, baby, I love your French. Please never stop talking that way. Keep being insanely creative with the boring old traditional notions of grammar, usage and form and keep twisting your mouth assymetrically over your vowels -- that really makes me hot. Lord, is anything more tiresome than Paris, with its prune-lipped, pantyhose and perfume French and its chilly delight in psychological manipulation, including but not limited to its never-ending campaign to convince you how serious, intelligent and too busy it is for you? While some of us, like you and me, Montreal, are too busy doing real things to spend hours lounging around playing mind games.

I even love your rules about French signage and all, and all your other rules for that matter, because how am I to do what is expected of me if I don't know what that is? Thank you for being so clear, Montreal, and for being such a mensch whenever faced with either of the two assholes to which you are wrongly compared to New York or Paris. You are gracious beyond comprehension, and this inspires me.

It actually was one of the ways I knew that how I felt about you was much, much more than physical.

What got me, though, is the sincere way that underneath it all, you believe in yourself, and you don't just give yourself away to the first person who asks. This is evidenced in so many ways. One way is your food.

I hope I won't hurt you when I say this, Montreal, but we both believe in being straightforward, so I'm going to take a chance -- a lot of your food is really bad. More than half of it, actually. Like, bad enough to be sent back to the kitchen in other cities. But you have convinced the rest of the continent, at least, that you have the best food on it. And it would be true if all your food was as good as your food that is good, which is probably what you believe is true, or could or will be true? Anyway, we all have our dreams and delusions, and the fact is, your good food is absolutely exquisite, and has to be patiently waited for and then magically discovered by those who really want it--kind of like true love! But if you don't care enough to try to find it, there are many traps along the way, like the hybrid food troughs with Chinese, Japanese, Italian, Greek, Turkish and Canadian food which always offer some scary-sounding thing called pizzaghetti, or the overpriced places that charge a lot of money for odd and maybe not so delicious things, like truffle ravioli in a fenugreek-wasabi infusion or foie gras on French fries. Your PR campaign has worked brilliantly, despite being home to a host of professional restaurant reviewers who are very specific when they don't like a place. Hey, two years ago, you had a big-name American food magazine devote an entire issue to you and I read the whole thing, of course. They knew about your bagels, but did they know about your Ethiopian or Spanish restaurants? Did they know where your best Chinese food is? No, because they were too mind boggled by the fact that the lesser product known in their country as pastrami is called smoked meat here, and several pages were devoted to them wrapping their minds around that. That's not real love, Montreal. Not like mine. I wouldn't question your judgment that way. I never even asked what smoked meat was. I just wanted to taste it, and since then, all I want is more.

Let's feed the world a plate of foie gras pizzaghetti avec sa sauce de figues biologiques du Quebec, Montreal, and let's you and I go out to a bring-your-own. My treat. I know one with a fireplace, and I've got a bottle for each of us. Because I love you. And, I want to know where you're keeping the real pizza.

  • Location: Montreal
  • it's NOT ok to contact this poster with services or other commercial interests
PostingID: 899245647

Insider view on the boutique murderer

Sometimes a friend can have a secret life that would send chills down your spine if you were to know the truth.

The following text was sent to Coolopolis by a one-time friend of one of the city's most cold-blooded killers, Agostino Ferreira of 1032 Ontario East, who worked at the Crocodile restaurant on downtown Cathcart street. Ferreira later became the 173 th Canadian convict to be deemed a dangerous offender, which means that he will likely never set foot outside a Canadian prison again. I'll add a photo if and when I can find one.
---
Last night,I watched a program on tv called UN TUEUR SI PROCHE, and it was about the serial rapist Agostino Feirrera who was arrested on January 4, 1995. I remember that night very
well; Agostino Feirrera, Tino as I used to call him, was one of my employee and sadly, my friend. That day he was supposed to come in at 4-4:30pm for the evening shift, he was the only waiter that night because it wasn't very busy that time of year. He was late and for the past week, he was acting very strange, telling me stories about demons and him couldn't getting out of his room the day after Xmas...so I called his place to know if he was coming to work or not. I talked to one of his roommate who told me that he'd already left. And I waited for him but I was little bit pissed off...I wanted to threaten to fire him if he would be late again (that was the second time in a week). He showed up...a little after 5, he wasn't himself...he had shaved part of his head and was pale as a ghost. He told us (a barmaid, a busboy and myself)that he was leaving on a trip, so I asked where, he said he didn't know where or why or how long ! Then I tolded him to get lost and call me when he will be able to talk to me in a reasonable way. And he left...So, I couldn't believe it when a detective came to see me at the restaurant where I was working as the head manager to tell me that the police was looking for Tino. He told me that Tino had kidnapped and rapped 2 girls that same day and that he was very dangerous as he was walking with a bomb around his waist...

Then he asked me to call him if I ever have some news from Tino.
So I called his place and I talked again to his roommate,who said that Tino was busy...so I told the guy that if Tino wouldn't answer the phone, he could kiss his job goodbye...
And Tino talked to me at last, don't ask me why, maybe because we were friends I don't know.

I never mention the policeman who was looking for him, neither I talked about the girls, I just asked him what was going on, what was wrong with him lately. He told me that he wasn't able to answer me right now, that he wasn't in a good state of mind...
We hanged up as he promised me he will call later that evening.
Right after that, I called back the detective and told him that Tino was home and they could go get him. And they did, with the S.W.A.T. team and everything.
The rest is history.

I never suspected him of anything, he was good looking, smart, funny and very protective of me. By the way,I'm a woman, I was born the same day and year as Tino.
To this day, I still don't understand how someone could act that way with other human beings.

I'm glad he was caught but I honestly think that it was what he wanted that day.