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<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="43" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://omeka.uottawa.ca/lifeoncampus/items/show/43?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-14T00:44:58-04:00">
  <itemType itemTypeId="4">
    <name>Oral History</name>
    <description>A resource containing historical information obtained in interviews with persons having firsthand knowledge.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="31">
        <name>Birth Date</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="425">
            <text>1952</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="32">
        <name>Birthplace</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="426">
            <text>Ottawa, Ontario, Canada</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="60">
        <name>Schools Attended</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="427">
            <text>Catholic grade schools</text>
          </elementText>
          <elementText elementTextId="428">
            <text>Immaculata High School</text>
          </elementText>
          <elementText elementTextId="429">
            <text>University of Ottawa</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="58">
        <name>Degree</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="430">
            <text>BA</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="57">
        <name>Career</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="431">
            <text>professional</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="34">
        <name>Occupation</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="432">
            <text>Nurse</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="52">
        <name>Ethnicity</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="433">
            <text>Swiss</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="55">
        <name>Religious Culture</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="434">
            <text>Catholic Christian</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="56">
        <name>Devotional Life</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="435">
            <text>casual</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="53">
        <name>Gender Identity</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="436">
            <text>woman</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="54">
        <name>Sexual Orientation</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="437">
            <text>straight</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="2">
        <name>Interviewer</name>
        <description>The person(s) performing the interview</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="442">
            <text>Paradis, Philippe</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="3">
        <name>Interviewee</name>
        <description>The person(s) being interviewed</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="443">
            <text>Palmer, Elizabeth</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="4">
        <name>Location</name>
        <description>The location of the interview</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="444">
            <text>Ottawa, Ontario, via Teams</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="5">
        <name>Transcription</name>
        <description>Any written text transcribed from a sound</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="807">
            <text>0:0:13.260 --&gt; 0:0:28.940&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So for the first question, cultural historians have argued that television, Hollywood, popular music and consumer culture built around automobiles created a more integrated North American popular culture.&#13;
0:0:30.50 --&gt; 0:0:37.920&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Ottawa has a bilingual institution and we want to better understand how anglophones and francophones related together.&#13;
0:0:39.50 --&gt; 0:0:44.50&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So the first question would be there were less electronics in Canada in the 70s.&#13;
0:0:45.700 --&gt; 0:0:46.220&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Like none.&#13;
0:0:48.410 --&gt; 0:0:53.390&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So how was your leisure time structured or what did you Ottawa students do for fun in the 70s?&#13;
0:1:1.570 --&gt; 0:1:4.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, we went to the pub after school.&#13;
0:1:4.130 --&gt; 0:1:6.950&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I'm sure they still do that now, but there was.&#13;
0:1:14.60 --&gt; 0:1:15.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We went to my father, used to laugh.&#13;
0:1:15.880 --&gt; 0:1:21.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We went to the library every night and after the library closed that cause I was studying nursing.&#13;
0:1:21.140 --&gt; 0:1:27.210&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So we were at the medical library, we would go to the the Albion, which I don't think is there anymore.&#13;
0:1:27.220 --&gt; 0:1:30.830&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It's gone and probably went there almost every night.&#13;
0:1:31.120 --&gt; 0:1:32.750&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were dances, there were.&#13;
0:1:34.100 --&gt; 0:1:37.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We ran the School of Nursing on.&#13;
0:1:38.910 --&gt; 0:1:43.140&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We were in the and at that point we were at the building where engineering is now.&#13;
0:1:44.750 --&gt; 0:1:50.940&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Which is probably an old building to you, but for us it was brand new and every Friday we ran a pub.&#13;
0:1:51.530 --&gt; 0:1:56.410&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
One week it was by nursing and the other week it was by the engineering students.&#13;
0:1:57.150 --&gt; 0:2:3.220&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So there were lots of pubs, parties, lots of get togethers.&#13;
0:2:3.750 --&gt; 0:2:7.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm, that kind of thing.&#13;
0:2:7.190 --&gt; 0:2:9.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And there was some art groups.&#13;
0:2:10.230 --&gt; 0:2:12.800&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were readings.&#13;
0:2:13.470 --&gt; 0:2:14.230&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were.&#13;
0:2:16.730 --&gt; 0:2:18.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Poetry readings auto.&#13;
0:2:18.10 --&gt; 0:2:21.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You had a lot of that kind of stuff and they used to go to all those sorts of things, yeah.&#13;
0:2:22.820 --&gt; 0:2:25.360&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So like a lot of obviously in person activities.&#13;
0:2:25.250 --&gt; 0:2:27.100&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
All it was all in person.&#13;
0:2:32.10 --&gt; 0:2:36.980&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And so you mentioned pubs, so that sort of answers the question.&#13;
0:2:36.990 --&gt; 0:2:40.260&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
What we're the most popular hangout spots on and off campus.&#13;
0:2:41.770 --&gt; 0:2:51.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It would be the Albion for us and and then the pub that we ran, the weekly pub that ran at the at the at the build.&#13;
0:2:51.430 --&gt; 0:2:54.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I forget what the name of the building is now, but it was it's.&#13;
0:2:55.70 --&gt; 0:2:56.620&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It's the engineering building now.&#13;
0:2:56.710 --&gt; 0:3:2.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They had a big common room there and that's that's that was every Friday night through the through the whole year.&#13;
0:3:3.520 --&gt; 0:3:3.870&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Nice.&#13;
0:3:4.620 --&gt; 0:3:7.750&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Did you attend any live music events during the university years?&#13;
0:3:8.990 --&gt; 0:3:12.100&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh yeah yeah, a lot of those things that we went to had live bands.&#13;
0:3:13.300 --&gt; 0:3:17.10&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Some of them had DJ's, umm.&#13;
0:3:17.210 --&gt; 0:3:18.920&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There was no rap in those days.&#13;
0:3:18.930 --&gt; 0:3:23.790&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Everything was disco in the 70s, so yeah, it was, yeah, pretty much.&#13;
0:3:25.380 --&gt; 0:3:32.280&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh, looky, Looky Boo was a big deal on Sussex and it was alternative music at the time.&#13;
0:3:33.170 --&gt; 0:3:37.720&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm, it would have been folk music, different things like that.&#13;
0:3:38.590 --&gt; 0:3:42.470&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Different groups would have come into that smaller area.&#13;
0:3:42.840 --&gt; 0:3:44.620&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Bruce Coburn in different people like that.&#13;
0:3:45.650 --&gt; 0:3:47.660&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Were there a lot of rock bands back then?&#13;
0:3:47.970 --&gt; 0:3:49.120&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
At these places.&#13;
0:3:49.100 --&gt; 0:3:51.710&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh yeah yeah, there were some that wasn't really.&#13;
0:3:51.720 --&gt; 0:3:54.80&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I I liked a lot of different music but.&#13;
0:3:56.250 --&gt; 0:4:3.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Trying to think of there were quite a number of Ottawa that five man electrical band I think was one of them.&#13;
0:4:5.140 --&gt; 0:4:7.340&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So disco is the big one.&#13;
0:4:7.840 --&gt; 0:4:10.30&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Disco was the big thing at that time.&#13;
0:4:10.40 --&gt; 0:4:18.40&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Probably more into the mid 70s, but I started in started Ottawa U.&#13;
0:4:18.50 --&gt; 0:4:21.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Guess it was September of 1970, yeah.&#13;
0:4:26.990 --&gt; 0:4:29.920&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Ottawa said earlier auto you auto was the bilingual institution.&#13;
0:4:30.370 --&gt; 0:4:34.0&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
How linguistically integrated was it during the 1970s?&#13;
0:4:39.700 --&gt; 0:4:40.640&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yep, Yep.&#13;
0:4:34.10 --&gt; 0:4:40.930&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Did francophones and anglophones enroll in the same university courses and participate in the same clubs? Yeah.&#13;
0:4:41.860 --&gt; 0:4:43.550&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I wasn't a big club person.&#13;
0:4:44.310 --&gt; 0:4:46.980&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
The nursing program was very busy.&#13;
0:4:48.510 --&gt; 0:4:50.930&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We had lots of classes in.&#13;
0:4:50.940 --&gt; 0:4:53.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Mike was interesting in my class Ottawa.&#13;
0:4:53.330 --&gt; 0:5:1.930&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You the first year there were, I would say, 120 students, 130 students maybe.&#13;
0:5:1.940 --&gt; 0:5:2.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't know.&#13;
0:5:2.680 --&gt; 0:5:6.440&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They seem to be a lot out, I'd say more than half of them were French speaking.&#13;
0:5:7.260 --&gt; 0:5:11.430&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They had very little, if any, English.&#13;
0:5:11.580 --&gt; 0:5:13.670&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Most of them came to Ottawa.&#13;
0:5:13.680 --&gt; 0:5:17.550&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Because they were told they could take their course in French.&#13;
0:5:18.120 --&gt; 0:5:25.600&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
However, the nursing program at that time was very new in on Canada and especially on Ontario.&#13;
0:5:25.870 --&gt; 0:5:30.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So they're all the teachers came from the US or had been trained in the US so they all spoke English.&#13;
0:5:31.640 --&gt; 0:5:37.730&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So all the nursing programs were done in English, but they could do all their other classes in French.&#13;
0:5:38.260 --&gt; 0:5:45.630&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So we lost, I would say at least 1/3 of the students after first year because they couldn't, they couldn't.&#13;
0:5:46.220 --&gt; 0:5:52.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They weren't good enough in English to to pass to sit through the classes, so I don't know where they went.&#13;
0:5:52.880 --&gt; 0:5:57.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They may have gone to to Montreal or to Sherbrooke, or I don't know where they went.&#13;
0:5:58.110 --&gt; 0:6:2.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But the English, the nursing program was only offered in English.&#13;
0:6:2.330 --&gt; 0:6:5.170&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I'm I'm not sure, but I think it still is even to this day.&#13;
0:6:6.400 --&gt; 0:6:7.310&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Huh, that's interesting.&#13;
0:6:9.30 --&gt; 0:6:10.590&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
They were really just French.&#13;
0:6:10.600 --&gt; 0:6:12.60&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
There weren't as many bilingual people?&#13;
0:6:12.660 --&gt; 0:6:21.160&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, the bilingual students were fine, but there were a large number of French only students, and they came from all over Quebec.&#13;
0:6:21.420 --&gt; 0:6:24.830&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Small a lot of them came from small towns, northern Ontario.&#13;
0:6:25.820 --&gt; 0:6:29.500&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Some of them came from New Brunswick and and they only spoke French.&#13;
0:6:30.650 --&gt; 0:6:35.460&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So, but anyone who was bilingual and and had enough English.&#13;
0:6:35.940 --&gt; 0:6:36.290&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh.&#13;
0:6:36.300 --&gt; 0:6:44.240&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
A number of my friends were French Canadian and they but they were bilingual and they had enough of English that they could.&#13;
0:6:44.250 --&gt; 0:6:51.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They could handle the course load, so that was fine, but if you were totally French, it was very difficult.&#13;
0:6:53.60 --&gt; 0:7:1.240&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
You might not know this cause it's like a really specific question, but do you have any information on if anglophones and francophones dated each other during the 1970s?&#13;
0:7:1.710 --&gt; 0:7:2.820&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Oh, absolutely.&#13;
0:7:3.300 --&gt; 0:7:3.500&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:7:3.210 --&gt; 0:7:4.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Absolutely. Sure.&#13;
0:7:5.100 --&gt; 0:7:5.540&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Interesting.&#13;
0:7:7.70 --&gt; 0:7:7.730&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Why wouldn't we?&#13;
0:7:6.270 --&gt; 0:7:8.930&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm, so we use the term alright.&#13;
0:7:10.940 --&gt; 0:7:13.350&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
I mean, I guess like the language barrier with a lot of them, right?&#13;
0:7:13.360 --&gt; 0:7:15.580&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
If they if they just spoke French, they.&#13;
0:7:16.270 --&gt; 0:7:19.400&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Most I'll tell you, most French people speak some English.&#13;
0:7:19.870 --&gt; 0:7:22.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Most English people don't speak very much French.&#13;
0:7:24.810 --&gt; 0:7:25.800&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, yeah, yeah.&#13;
0:7:23.370 --&gt; 0:7:26.330&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
I've I've found that to be true as well, yeah.&#13;
0:7:25.870 --&gt; 0:7:35.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I spoke, I I grew up in a Ottawa in a in a real working class neighborhood and I would say more than 50% of the people in my neighborhood spoke French.&#13;
0:7:39.70 --&gt; 0:7:39.500&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:7:35.920 --&gt; 0:7:39.900&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So I could speak French to A to some degree, yeah.&#13;
0:7:40.50 --&gt; 0:7:40.330&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:7:40.730 --&gt; 0:7:45.920&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So we use the term party culture to refer to social activities outside of the classroom.&#13;
0:7:46.160 --&gt; 0:7:50.910&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
How do you describe the party culture on the University Ottawa campus during 70s?&#13;
0:7:52.480 --&gt; 0:7:53.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Vibrant.&#13;
0:7:56.820 --&gt; 0:7:57.470&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was.&#13;
0:7:57.880 --&gt; 0:8:0.230&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was very active and it was great.&#13;
0:8:0.240 --&gt; 0:8:0.600&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:8:0.660 --&gt; 0:8:2.20&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, we had a lot of parties.&#13;
0:8:2.30 --&gt; 0:8:5.530&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We I remember everything was face to face.&#13;
0:8:5.540 --&gt; 0:8:7.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There was no virtual stuff.&#13;
0:8:7.670 --&gt; 0:8:10.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Computers didn't really exist.&#13;
0:8:10.450 --&gt; 0:8:12.10&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I had a friend who was in.&#13;
0:8:14.30 --&gt; 0:8:19.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh, in computer math at in Kitchener.&#13;
0:8:19.880 --&gt; 0:8:21.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Waterloo at Waterloo.&#13;
0:8:21.430 --&gt; 0:8:23.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You and she.&#13;
0:8:24.710 --&gt; 0:8:31.60&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I would go down to visit her and I would go into would go in at 2:00, o'clock in the morning to play, quote, unquote play on the computer.&#13;
0:8:31.70 --&gt; 0:8:34.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And the computer was the size of a of a huge room, right?&#13;
0:8:35.80 --&gt; 0:8:42.240&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So computers, that's the that's that was probably 7273 somewhere in there.&#13;
0:8:42.330 --&gt; 0:8:48.900&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So at that point, there were no tabletop computers or anything that you could that you could easily use.&#13;
0:8:49.50 --&gt; 0:8:52.460&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were no phones like cell phones or anything like that.&#13;
0:8:52.470 --&gt; 0:9:4.90&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So yeah, the whole culture was, uh, face to face party, music, dancing, you know, different things like that. So.&#13;
0:9:5.20 --&gt; 0:9:5.360&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:9:5.370 --&gt; 0:9:7.390&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
You really had to like if you want to have fun.&#13;
0:9:12.540 --&gt; 0:9:13.250&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, it was.&#13;
0:9:7.400 --&gt; 0:9:13.300&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
You really have to like set up events and stuff that there wasn't as much digital stuff you want or any digital stuff you could do, yeah.&#13;
0:9:13.320 --&gt; 0:9:15.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was normal to set stuff up.&#13;
0:9:16.270 --&gt; 0:9:16.500&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:9:15.600 --&gt; 0:9:22.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, whether you go down to the market, the market was a place that you could go to, but it wasn't the way it is now.&#13;
0:9:22.780 --&gt; 0:9:28.170&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Leibu was on Sussex and then there were a couple of other coffee houses in the city, but.&#13;
0:9:30.360 --&gt; 0:9:36.650&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
If you wanted to meet people, you had to go out and and it was just you.&#13;
0:9:36.660 --&gt; 0:9:38.410&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Just everybody just went out all the time.&#13;
0:9:38.420 --&gt; 0:9:43.110&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was none of this, like, you know, covid's really put a damper on a whole lot of stuff.&#13;
0:9:43.120 --&gt; 0:9:45.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So life was very, very different.&#13;
0:9:46.820 --&gt; 0:9:47.230&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:9:47.240 --&gt; 0:9:51.430&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Today, if you want to go to a party, you like have to seek it out pretty intensely.&#13;
0:9:52.580 --&gt; 0:9:53.490&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, I.&#13;
0:9:51.440 --&gt; 0:9:55.980&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
I find like the you have to, you have to really look for it. Umm.&#13;
0:9:56.40 --&gt; 0:10:1.650&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So yeah, the and the girls that lived in the I lived at home, I say half the class.&#13;
0:10:1.660 --&gt; 0:10:4.350&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
The My class still lived at home in Ottawa.&#13;
0:10:4.800 --&gt; 0:10:11.290&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
A few were from outside the city and a number of people lived, you know, on on campus.&#13;
0:10:11.800 --&gt; 0:10:12.830&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And there were campus.&#13;
0:10:12.960 --&gt; 0:10:17.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were parties, you know, and on campus as well.&#13;
0:10:17.810 --&gt; 0:10:21.70&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And there was, I think there were.&#13;
0:10:23.170 --&gt; 0:10:31.540&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Not that I went there very often, but there were small little cafes all around the university and you could go there and just drink.&#13;
0:10:31.630 --&gt; 0:10:35.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They didn't have booze or anything, but you go drink coffee and meet your friends and stuff.&#13;
0:10:35.190 --&gt; 0:10:37.60&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And there were a number of those places around.&#13;
0:10:37.810 --&gt; 0:10:40.60&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were couple on on Laurie.&#13;
0:10:40.70 --&gt; 0:10:48.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There was a coffee, quote unquote coffee house at the university, but it was kind of more like a, you know, a great big open area.&#13;
0:10:48.310 --&gt; 0:10:53.240&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It wasn't very intimate or small or anything like that, but yeah, yeah.&#13;
0:10:57.400 --&gt; 0:10:57.630&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Mm-hmm.&#13;
0:10:54.930 --&gt; 0:11:0.890&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Total like 180 from that what did the student body think about the Vietnam War?&#13;
0:11:2.320 --&gt; 0:11:3.310&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like the general sentiment.&#13;
0:11:6.390 --&gt; 0:11:7.410&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Pretty much over by then.&#13;
0:11:8.340 --&gt; 0:11:8.570&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:11:10.960 --&gt; 0:11:12.750&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was in my life.&#13;
0:11:12.760 --&gt; 0:11:14.90&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It wasn't a huge deal.&#13;
0:11:14.280 --&gt; 0:11:17.480&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
The bigger deal, because I was at school during the October crisis.&#13;
0:11:18.620 --&gt; 0:11:18.810&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh.&#13;
0:11:18.740 --&gt; 0:11:19.50&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And.&#13;
0:11:18.820 --&gt; 0:11:19.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
With the FLQ.&#13;
0:11:19.780 --&gt; 0:11:25.880&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So when I was walking up to school, there were soldiers in the streets and there were tanks in the streets.&#13;
0:11:26.860 --&gt; 0:11:39.100&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And that was interesting, I mean, but it just was there, I mean those things you know, if there's, you know you're walking up to school one day cause I lived in new Edinburgh and I would walk up to Ottawa.&#13;
0:11:39.110 --&gt; 0:11:51.990&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You where I take the bus and all of a sudden there were tanks in the streets and there were and they because Ottawa U was a French university, quote unquote. It was.&#13;
0:11:52.260 --&gt; 0:11:54.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was classified as a French university.&#13;
0:11:55.590 --&gt; 0:11:57.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They had a lot of soldiers and stuff around there.&#13;
0:11:57.870 --&gt; 0:12:4.810&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Nothing ever happened, but it because of the FLQ crisis and everything that happened after that, there was a lot of.&#13;
0:12:7.360 --&gt; 0:12:12.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I guess there was a lot of people watching to make sure nothing else would happen, but I never saw anything happened.&#13;
0:12:12.780 --&gt; 0:12:19.900&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I just remember walking up and seeing this and being thinking ohh, but I wasn't terribly politically involved at that point.&#13;
0:12:26.910 --&gt; 0:12:28.470&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Exactly, yeah.&#13;
0:12:20.640 --&gt; 0:12:34.420&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right, that, that reminds me a little bit of my first year when I am I could hear like the trucker convoy honking like it's it's just kind of jarring to know that there's like a large group of people that in, like, tensions are really high.&#13;
0:12:34.490 --&gt; 0:12:34.690&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:12:35.120 --&gt; 0:12:37.80&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, that must have been something to witness.&#13;
0:12:36.970 --&gt; 0:12:42.240&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It it it was, it was quite something that we never seen anything like that before, right?&#13;
0:12:42.250 --&gt; 0:12:50.30&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And but there was no like, I mean there my parents would say, well, I I tell them what happened and they say, oh, well, just stay out of the neighborhood or walk around it.&#13;
0:12:50.40 --&gt; 0:12:56.520&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And nobody had little fits about, you know, all the oh, my God, my kids gonna get killed or something.&#13;
0:12:56.530 --&gt; 0:12:57.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was nothing.&#13;
0:13:1.260 --&gt; 0:13:1.540&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:12:58.180 --&gt; 0:13:2.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I guess people just didn't realize what could have happened if something had happened.&#13;
0:13:2.380 --&gt; 0:13:4.600&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know, I don't know, but.&#13;
0:13:4.700 --&gt; 0:13:13.510&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, it's interesting that people weren't as well, like, at least some people weren't as interested in the Vietnam War cause the way like I was taught it, it was such like a contentious thing.&#13;
0:13:13.740 --&gt; 0:13:16.840&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
But I guess by the 70s it was, it was mostly done with.&#13;
0:13:16.770 --&gt; 0:13:18.800&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was contentious in the states.&#13;
0:13:19.520 --&gt; 0:13:19.810&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
0:13:19.50 --&gt; 0:13:21.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were in Canada.&#13;
0:13:23.280 --&gt; 0:13:23.890&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were.&#13;
0:13:23.900 --&gt; 0:13:39.810&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There was a woman in my class whose husband was a deserter or a conscientious objector or deserter, according to whichever side you were on and and she and she and her husband moved up from the States and she was quite a bit older.&#13;
0:13:39.820 --&gt; 0:13:49.550&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
She was probably in her mid mid 20s and she had a child at that point, so they came up ohm because of that and that was always interesting.&#13;
0:13:49.560 --&gt; 0:13:49.920&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You talked?&#13;
0:13:49.930 --&gt; 0:13:53.260&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Or kept in touch with her for years and years after.&#13;
0:13:53.430 --&gt; 0:13:54.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But they never went back.&#13;
0:13:55.430 --&gt; 0:14:0.920&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They stayed in Canada that they liked it and they didn't want their son to end up going through what they had gone through.&#13;
0:14:0.930 --&gt; 0:14:3.980&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But I mean, it was in the news all the time and whatever.&#13;
0:14:3.990 --&gt; 0:14:10.780&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But it was just part of it's, you know, part of the regular news news reports.&#13;
0:14:11.710 --&gt; 0:14:12.130&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:14:13.320 --&gt; 0:14:19.610&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm so rock'n'roll artists and the 1960s had promoted various forms of protest.&#13;
0:14:19.680 --&gt; 0:14:24.360&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Did your parents see rock'n'roll as rebellious or just a form of popular music?&#13;
0:14:26.640 --&gt; 0:14:33.840&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Thanking care one way or the other, my parents were from Switzerland, so they were first generate like they were.&#13;
0:14:34.70 --&gt; 0:14:43.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They both came in the late 40s and had every intention of moving back to Switzerland, but then somehow with four kids, it didn't happen.&#13;
0:14:43.370 --&gt; 0:14:44.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So they were really.&#13;
0:14:46.150 --&gt; 0:14:46.890&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Music.&#13;
0:14:46.930 --&gt; 0:14:49.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, rock'n'roll was just a type of music for them.&#13;
0:14:49.340 --&gt; 0:14:52.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They didn't particularly like it, but we didn't.&#13;
0:14:52.510 --&gt; 0:14:59.790&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I didn't really start listening to the radio till I was about 12 years old, maybe 12 or 13 or so.&#13;
0:14:59.800 --&gt; 0:15:8.880&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That would have been what, 6465, somewhere like that, as I really didn't know much about the music at all.&#13;
0:15:8.890 --&gt; 0:15:10.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I was the oldest of four.&#13;
0:15:14.970 --&gt; 0:15:15.360&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:15:10.370 --&gt; 0:15:15.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So U the others followed whatever they wanted to.&#13;
0:15:17.430 --&gt; 0:15:20.360&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So they were kind of just indifferent about it, uh.&#13;
0:15:19.840 --&gt; 0:15:21.220&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, it was, yeah, pretty much.&#13;
0:15:22.70 --&gt; 0:15:28.30&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Uh, so some youth culture voices of the 1970s promoted taking recreational drugs.&#13;
0:15:28.200 --&gt; 0:15:32.20&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
To what extent were recreational drugs available on campus during the 70s?&#13;
0:15:33.280 --&gt; 0:15:34.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Not quite available.&#13;
0:15:33.470 --&gt; 0:15:34.950&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
If you know, yeah.&#13;
0:15:34.620 --&gt; 0:15:35.990&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, they were quite available.&#13;
0:15:36.380 --&gt; 0:15:37.290&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, they were.&#13;
0:15:37.300 --&gt; 0:15:43.510&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There was always somebody you could always buy something you always knew there was somebody around who could get stuff for you.&#13;
0:15:44.220 --&gt; 0:15:47.450&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Never did anything for me, just made me feel sick.&#13;
0:15:47.460 --&gt; 0:15:48.900&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So I never did much of it.&#13;
0:15:49.550 --&gt; 0:15:51.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm so it's.&#13;
0:15:53.820 --&gt; 0:15:57.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And we were so busy with other things that we didn't have time for that.&#13;
0:15:57.680 --&gt; 0:16:7.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, you know when when you're doing a nursing program, you went to school five days a week and then, but then you had to do, we had to be in the hospital 3 mornings a week.&#13;
0:16:7.710 --&gt; 0:16:11.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So you didn't have time to, you didn't have time for any of that nonsense.&#13;
0:16:11.380 --&gt; 0:16:18.810&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And we were all older and most of us, well, certainly me didn't have any access to it.&#13;
0:16:18.820 --&gt; 0:16:24.30&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I went to a Catholic girls high school, so it was pretty strict and my family was very strict.&#13;
0:16:24.140 --&gt; 0:16:26.930&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So I never really had got into this.&#13;
0:16:34.80 --&gt; 0:16:34.810&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:16:34.880 --&gt; 0:16:35.110&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:16:29.0 --&gt; 0:16:37.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Probably until I got to university, but and it was never a big deal for me or my friends, yeah.&#13;
0:16:35.120 --&gt; 0:16:37.770&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Today it's pretty common like today, it's pretty common.&#13;
0:16:37.780 --&gt; 0:16:41.430&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
You'll see, like I'll be in the parking lot and I'll see someone smoking something a little funny.&#13;
0:16:42.110 --&gt; 0:16:42.310&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:16:41.440 --&gt; 0:16:47.970&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And and you know it's it's very it was it open like that back then like it was just or well a more secretive.&#13;
0:16:46.370 --&gt; 0:16:49.840&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No, no, because it it was far more secretive.&#13;
0:16:49.850 --&gt; 0:17:1.830&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, I mean, the best thing was, is I remember we go to parties and there were brownies and I love brownies, so I would eat these brownies and and feel really weird after that.&#13;
0:17:1.840 --&gt; 0:17:4.160&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And then somebody would say how many did you have?&#13;
0:17:4.170 --&gt; 0:17:9.790&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I say I had two or three and I said, Oh my God, you better go home or go sit in the corner and fall asleep.&#13;
0:17:9.800 --&gt; 0:17:11.730&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So that's all it ever did and made me sleep.&#13;
0:17:11.740 --&gt; 0:17:21.460&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So I was no fun at a party if they if if there were any drugs like that around it, it just wasn't something I wanted to waste my time or my money on.&#13;
0:17:21.470 --&gt; 0:17:22.610&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I didn't have any money either.&#13;
0:17:22.620 --&gt; 0:17:24.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So you know that was the other thing too.&#13;
0:17:24.0 --&gt; 0:17:26.660&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, not super appealing.&#13;
0:17:27.390 --&gt; 0:17:27.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No.&#13;
0:17:29.260 --&gt; 0:17:38.930&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And the 19 in the 1970s see a lot of talk about tripping and taking psychedelics to reach like a higher state of consciousness.&#13;
0:17:39.800 --&gt; 0:17:43.340&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Do you know like to what extent people use Hallucinogenics specifically?&#13;
0:17:45.520 --&gt; 0:17:46.950&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Not many people I knew.&#13;
0:17:46.960 --&gt; 0:17:49.280&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We just, we all just figured it was stupid to do that.&#13;
0:17:50.700 --&gt; 0:17:50.920&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Fair.&#13;
0:17:50.620 --&gt; 0:17:52.610&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So why would you want to do that to yourself?&#13;
0:17:53.460 --&gt; 0:17:53.650&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:17:53.780 --&gt; 0:17:58.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Like we, we were not umm, we're very practical.&#13;
0:17:58.600 --&gt; 0:18:1.60&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Down to Earth people, I don't know that it was just not.&#13;
0:18:2.680 --&gt; 0:18:17.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, I guess also because we were in nursing in medicine, we would see the results of some of this and it was very you know when we're doing mental health, there were a lot of people at the royal at that time who had tripped badly and there was no way I was gonna do any of that stuff.&#13;
0:18:18.170 --&gt; 0:18:18.880&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
That's interesting.&#13;
0:18:18.890 --&gt; 0:18:23.230&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
You actually got to see like the the bad results from that. Umm.&#13;
0:18:23.20 --&gt; 0:18:23.310&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:18:23.320 --&gt; 0:18:34.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And if some of them were pretty awful, I mean that that was, I think the thing being in medicine or nursing or anything is that you you saw the result of bad medicine or bad tripping or bad drugs or whatever it was.&#13;
0:18:34.920 --&gt; 0:18:37.540&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And you know, it was not pleasant.&#13;
0:18:38.820 --&gt; 0:18:40.100&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And and again we weren't.&#13;
0:18:39.90 --&gt; 0:18:40.220&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Did you get a lot of those?&#13;
0:18:42.850 --&gt; 0:18:43.580&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were some.&#13;
0:18:45.640 --&gt; 0:18:48.70&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know, we surgeries that went bad.&#13;
0:18:48.80 --&gt; 0:19:4.610&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh, I saw a 12 year old have a baby and decided that point that maybe you know that having an abortion was not a bad thing, got into a lot of our angry discussions with my own parents who are fiercely Catholic and whatever.&#13;
0:19:4.620 --&gt; 0:19:15.350&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And at that point, I left the church, and because there's no way that I could ever condone a 12 year old having a baby because that was, you know, she was my she was my client.&#13;
0:19:15.360 --&gt; 0:19:20.280&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I'm thinking, Holy God, you know, that's just not a way for anybody to start their life.&#13;
0:19:21.320 --&gt; 0:19:21.600&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Nope.&#13;
0:19:22.350 --&gt; 0:19:22.540&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No.&#13;
0:19:24.130 --&gt; 0:19:26.270&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm, alright, so this one.&#13;
0:19:30.420 --&gt; 0:19:30.630&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Mm-hmm.&#13;
0:19:26.280 --&gt; 0:19:43.250&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Will this next section will focus more on the female experience, so cultural historians have written a lot about what they call second wave feminism that as a part of the counterculture movement, women during the early 1970s sought to break down gender barriers.&#13;
0:19:43.840 --&gt; 0:19:44.80&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Mm-hmm.&#13;
0:19:43.720 --&gt; 0:19:49.50&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Does this argument resonate with your experience on the University of Ottawa campus during the early 70s?&#13;
0:19:54.310 --&gt; 0:19:54.820&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't know.&#13;
0:19:54.830 --&gt; 0:19:59.800&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, there was we, we read all the the books and we, you know, we followed all that sort of stuff.&#13;
0:20:0.810 --&gt; 0:20:2.530&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Probably more so than the war in Vietnam.&#13;
0:20:5.830 --&gt; 0:20:14.760&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But everything was changing at that time, so it was very different from probably people have been at university in the 60s like.&#13;
0:20:14.770 --&gt; 0:20:25.730&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, if you if you would talk to someone who was university in the 60s, if you'd get it very different viewpoint, I think umm, it was accepted that women would work.&#13;
0:20:26.740 --&gt; 0:20:30.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was accepted that, you know, women would get equal pay.&#13;
0:20:32.70 --&gt; 0:20:33.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh, of course.&#13;
0:20:33.140 --&gt; 0:20:36.170&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
At that point, everybody is saying, oh, yes, yes, yes, that's the way it is.&#13;
0:20:36.180 --&gt; 0:20:42.380&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And it wasn't till 20 years later that we realized that women were being paid less for the same jobs.&#13;
0:20:42.450 --&gt; 0:20:42.980&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:20:43.580 --&gt; 0:20:43.850&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:20:43.860 --&gt; 0:20:44.580&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
They're wage gap.&#13;
0:20:43.90 --&gt; 0:20:44.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But that had yet to come.&#13;
0:20:45.130 --&gt; 0:20:45.530&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:20:45.590 --&gt; 0:20:51.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So the so the possibilities were there, everybody looked forward to things changing.&#13;
0:20:52.440 --&gt; 0:20:59.560&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know the burn, your bra thing that was there were a lot of went to a lot of those sorts of rallies and things like that.&#13;
0:21:0.580 --&gt; 0:21:6.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm, but honestly, we were so busy we didn't have time to do a lot of that.&#13;
0:21:6.140 --&gt; 0:21:12.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, we were busy living our life and going to school and doing stuff was, you know, we didn't.&#13;
0:21:12.810 --&gt; 0:21:14.450&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You had to hand write all your essays.&#13;
0:21:15.770 --&gt; 0:21:17.140&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I didn't have a typewriter.&#13;
0:21:17.430 --&gt; 0:21:25.60&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So you can imagine like you know, you were busy doing stuff and you actually had to go to a library and use books to look things up.&#13;
0:21:25.70 --&gt; 0:21:27.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There was nothing online to do it.&#13;
0:21:27.10 --&gt; 0:21:33.760&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So your life was busy doing things that now take a tenth of the time of what they used to take.&#13;
0:21:35.250 --&gt; 0:21:35.710&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:21:34.730 --&gt; 0:21:44.340&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And there's no there were no chat bots or whatever to get you through stuff, and there was no AI to write your papers for you or anything, you know.&#13;
0:21:44.350 --&gt; 0:21:46.340&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So it was it was.&#13;
0:21:46.570 --&gt; 0:21:47.280&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was different.&#13;
0:21:47.290 --&gt; 0:21:47.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was a very.&#13;
0:21:49.450 --&gt; 0:21:56.290&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Different time and I guess for women, I do remember I had a a friend in my class.&#13;
0:21:56.300 --&gt; 0:21:58.560&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Her father was a physician here in Ottawa.&#13;
0:21:58.670 --&gt; 0:22:0.440&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Old, old fashioned.&#13;
0:22:0.890 --&gt; 0:22:1.740&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Nice man.&#13;
0:22:1.750 --&gt; 0:22:3.310&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Old-fashioned French Canadian.&#13;
0:22:5.360 --&gt; 0:22:7.190&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
His daughter is was brilliant.&#13;
0:22:7.280 --&gt; 0:22:14.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Probably the smartest of the whole family should have been a position, but he wouldn't allow her to do medicine because she was a girl.&#13;
0:22:14.820 --&gt; 0:22:22.400&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Because women should stay home and have babies and look after their families and and at the time, I couldn't.&#13;
0:22:25.340 --&gt; 0:22:25.620&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:22:22.410 --&gt; 0:22:25.830&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I I had really had a problem with that because.&#13;
0:22:25.630 --&gt; 0:22:33.630&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So you went to like some events because like, I imagine that probably like sure like that made you feel stuff there that that's pretty that's pretty like upsetting to hear.&#13;
0:22:33.980 --&gt; 0:22:35.40&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah. Yeah.&#13;
0:22:33.930 --&gt; 0:22:37.690&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh yeah, it was I I found it very upsetting but I have to.&#13;
0:22:38.580 --&gt; 0:22:44.210&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It wasn't till years later till I realized that my parents were very different from a lot of other.&#13;
0:22:44.220 --&gt; 0:22:47.70&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I came from a low a very working class neighborhood.&#13;
0:22:48.490 --&gt; 0:22:54.350&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
My parents both worked with no choice because they, but because they came from Europe, they were.&#13;
0:22:54.360 --&gt; 0:22:58.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They weren't German, they were Swiss, but they were always treated as if they were German.&#13;
0:22:58.330 --&gt; 0:22:59.990&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So post war, that was a big deal.&#13;
0:23:2.400 --&gt; 0:23:12.10&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But my parents always said to said to my sister and I at the two oldest you guys are going to go to university like there was never any option that we wouldn't go.&#13;
0:23:13.50 --&gt; 0:23:17.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was expected that we would go to university and that's all there was to it.&#13;
0:23:17.170 --&gt; 0:23:18.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We grew up that way.&#13;
0:23:18.430 --&gt; 0:23:30.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
My brothers, my two younger brothers, went as well and I didn't realize till I was quite a bit older than a lot of women like they had to pay their own way to go to universe.&#13;
0:23:30.710 --&gt; 0:23:35.580&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Their parents wouldn't pay for it because women didn't go to university in those days.&#13;
0:23:36.130 --&gt; 0:23:36.710&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They just didn't.&#13;
0:23:37.810 --&gt; 0:23:41.450&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm, it was just you would go to.&#13;
0:23:41.460 --&gt; 0:23:43.190&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know you could work in the government.&#13;
0:23:43.200 --&gt; 0:23:44.790&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You could do secretarial school.&#13;
0:23:44.800 --&gt; 0:23:52.470&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I had good friends that did secretarial school, but out of my like, I'm thinking about my my sort of grade school class.&#13;
0:23:52.480 --&gt; 0:23:55.100&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
My even my high school, my high school class, was the best.&#13;
0:23:56.770 --&gt; 0:24:10.780&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Graduated June 1970, I would say 1/3 of 1/3 of my class went on to university and I would say about half my class got married because they were.&#13;
0:24:11.130 --&gt; 0:24:14.960&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They were Italian background so they got it.&#13;
0:24:15.70 --&gt; 0:24:21.560&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They were lucky they got through high school and then they got married that summer and then the rest of us went on to do different things.&#13;
0:24:21.570 --&gt; 0:24:25.310&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I say maybe 1/3 of us out of that class went on to university.&#13;
0:24:26.120 --&gt; 0:24:27.620&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So it was a very different time.&#13;
0:24:28.480 --&gt; 0:24:28.830&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:24:34.860 --&gt; 0:24:36.750&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I wasn't inequality, it's just the way it was.&#13;
0:24:36.760 --&gt; 0:24:37.230&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was.&#13;
0:24:28.840 --&gt; 0:24:37.470&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So like as you went along, you started being exposed to more of these like injustices and like inequalities and a little bit, right?&#13;
0:24:37.240 --&gt; 0:24:38.70&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was cultural.&#13;
0:24:38.80 --&gt; 0:24:46.280&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was very, very cultural and because because it was a Catholic girls school, there were a lot of Italian young ladies there.&#13;
0:24:46.290 --&gt; 0:24:52.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They were friends, but those of us that weren't that were from different backgrounds.&#13;
0:24:52.190 --&gt; 0:25:0.140&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I would say uh, as I said about 1/3 a third of bus went on to university and and finished university and did different things.&#13;
0:25:1.550 --&gt; 0:25:4.140&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But then a whole lot of them didn't.&#13;
0:25:4.210 --&gt; 0:25:7.960&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know, some went on to secretarial school, some worked in a government.&#13;
0:25:9.40 --&gt; 0:25:12.110&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was umm, but I didn't realize again.&#13;
0:25:12.120 --&gt; 0:25:21.280&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
As I said earlier, until much later in life that my family was very different because the expectation was that we would go to university and my parents paid for it.&#13;
0:25:21.290 --&gt; 0:25:22.160&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That was the other thing.&#13;
0:25:22.780 --&gt; 0:25:23.110&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:25:22.750 --&gt; 0:25:23.390&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
My dad.&#13;
0:25:23.120 --&gt; 0:25:23.530&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like you.&#13;
0:25:23.470 --&gt; 0:25:24.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:25:24.350 --&gt; 0:25:25.240&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, my dad sort.&#13;
0:25:29.220 --&gt; 0:25:29.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:25:23.680 --&gt; 0:25:32.80&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, you didn't realize like maybe later other people wouldn't agree with that, like other people might not like the notion of a woman going. Yeah.&#13;
0:25:33.980 --&gt; 0:25:34.200&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:25:32.820 --&gt; 0:25:34.690&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Oh yeah, no women didn't.&#13;
0:25:34.780 --&gt; 0:25:41.90&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There was still that that old fashioned idea that women don't go to university, they don't need higher education because they're just gonna get married.&#13;
0:25:41.100 --&gt; 0:25:43.100&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And they're gonna have kids, and they're gonna stay home.&#13;
0:25:43.850 --&gt; 0:25:49.490&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, neither myself, my sister nor my good friends did any of that.&#13;
0:25:49.500 --&gt; 0:25:50.800&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We we all.&#13;
0:25:50.860 --&gt; 0:25:53.200&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, most of us married, we all had jobs.&#13;
0:25:53.210 --&gt; 0:25:53.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We worked.&#13;
0:25:54.330 --&gt; 0:26:7.310&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We were like that whole generation of younger women that had our children use daycare or whatever and and continued working right up until we retired.&#13;
0:26:8.700 --&gt; 0:26:9.150&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Alright.&#13;
0:26:9.330 --&gt; 0:26:13.910&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And gender distinctions were more pronounced in the 1970s than today.&#13;
0:26:14.120 --&gt; 0:26:14.630&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
How did?&#13;
0:26:14.740 --&gt; 0:26:15.470&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
How did that?&#13;
0:26:15.480 --&gt; 0:26:16.790&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:26:17.180 --&gt; 0:26:17.620&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No kidding.&#13;
0:26:16.830 --&gt; 0:26:18.250&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
How did peeing a woman?&#13;
0:26:18.400 --&gt; 0:26:18.890&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
How?&#13;
0:26:18.900 --&gt; 0:26:26.400&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
How is it being a woman result in different treatments and expectations in classrooms where at social events compared to male students?&#13;
0:26:27.970 --&gt; 0:26:31.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It's hard to say because most everyone in my class was female.&#13;
0:26:31.130 --&gt; 0:26:33.390&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were no male students, so.&#13;
0:26:33.450 --&gt; 0:26:34.20&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Alright.&#13;
0:26:34.750 --&gt; 0:26:41.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So in those days, yes, if you were going in to a building, the men would hold the door for you.&#13;
0:26:44.300 --&gt; 0:26:44.500&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:26:44.230 --&gt; 0:26:45.340&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That's all I.&#13;
0:26:45.380 --&gt; 0:26:52.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But as you know, when it came to other, I think expectations of female students and male students were the same.&#13;
0:26:52.370 --&gt; 0:26:53.480&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You had to produce.&#13;
0:26:53.790 --&gt; 0:26:58.950&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know, if there was paperwork to be done or essays to be written, you had to produce those.&#13;
0:27:0.540 --&gt; 0:27:5.150&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't because my class was all women and all taught by women.&#13;
0:27:5.160 --&gt; 0:27:7.670&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were no male teachers either it.&#13;
0:27:8.800 --&gt; 0:27:16.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, I took the psychology and philosophy and I did some film classes and art classes and stuff, but.&#13;
0:27:21.150 --&gt; 0:27:21.540&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:27:18.470 --&gt; 0:27:22.210&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I didn't feel that there was any difference, to be honest. Yeah.&#13;
0:27:24.230 --&gt; 0:27:24.990&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That was it, yeah.&#13;
0:27:21.670 --&gt; 0:27:26.250&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
You just attended class and did the work and that was that. Yeah.&#13;
0:27:26.360 --&gt; 0:27:39.160&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So in the 1970s, were there, you oughta programs, departments or clubs or like just social events or anything where women like or maybe you or just women in general, like felt less like present and accepted.&#13;
0:27:42.750 --&gt; 0:27:42.930&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
No.&#13;
0:27:42.750 --&gt; 0:27:43.930&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No, I never felt that.&#13;
0:27:44.980 --&gt; 0:27:45.260&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Alright.&#13;
0:27:45.340 --&gt; 0:27:47.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Now if I wanted to be there, I'd be there.&#13;
0:27:47.140 --&gt; 0:27:49.500&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
If I didn't, I didn't. Yeah.&#13;
0:27:49.860 --&gt; 0:28:0.90&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Alright, alright, so historians have written a lot about what they call the counterculture revolution, meaning that you're generation rebelled against the values of your parents.&#13;
0:28:1.390 --&gt; 0:28:1.640&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Mm-hmm.&#13;
0:28:0.100 --&gt; 0:28:9.700&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Generation to what extent did people in your social circle see themselves as needing to mobilize for a more just society and better world?&#13;
0:28:13.170 --&gt; 0:28:15.380&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm interesting question.&#13;
0:28:18.600 --&gt; 0:28:23.140&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I think we all felt the need to see it to get into a better world, for sure.&#13;
0:28:24.550 --&gt; 0:28:30.150&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm, we certainly felt that women were equal to anything a man did.&#13;
0:28:31.370 --&gt; 0:28:31.990&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:28:34.650 --&gt; 0:28:41.450&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were probably guys I met that were stupid, but you know, they didn't last long in my world.&#13;
0:28:44.960 --&gt; 0:28:45.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't know.&#13;
0:28:45.880 --&gt; 0:28:49.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I most of the boyfriends I had were older.&#13;
0:28:50.610 --&gt; 0:28:54.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
UM, at the time the like.&#13;
0:28:54.710 --&gt; 0:28:55.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was interesting.&#13;
0:28:55.370 --&gt; 0:29:1.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
The engineers in our building were big drinkers, Big partiers.&#13;
0:29:2.850 --&gt; 0:29:10.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't know if they're still the same I, but at the time that's the way they were the, you know, there was the football games and all that stuff.&#13;
0:29:10.190 --&gt; 0:29:12.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And they were always drunk or whatever.&#13;
0:29:12.570 --&gt; 0:29:21.230&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And they always sort of made stupid comments, but as we got to know them and they got to know us as people, it was that kind of disappeared.&#13;
0:29:21.550 --&gt; 0:29:22.470&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
But humanize them.&#13;
0:29:21.680 --&gt; 0:29:22.610&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But that whole?&#13;
0:29:22.960 --&gt; 0:29:24.310&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, exactly.&#13;
0:29:24.320 --&gt; 0:29:29.510&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But you know at the beginning it was all this stupid stuff and we just told them to get stuffed.&#13;
0:29:29.520 --&gt; 0:29:37.390&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I mean, it was just most of our friends most we did a lot of work with the with medicine.&#13;
0:29:37.400 --&gt; 0:29:51.740&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Like we took some of our courses with the medical students and as we got to know them really well, like the people in that like their first year medicine and stuff we did, we did some anatomy and Physiology classes over at the medical building.&#13;
0:29:51.750 --&gt; 0:29:52.260&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't know.&#13;
0:29:52.270 --&gt; 0:30:2.930&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't think they do that anymore, but I I don't know how it's set up, but we got to know those guys and there were a few women, but again, it was mainly men there as well.&#13;
0:30:3.630 --&gt; 0:30:8.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So and the and the nursing was all was all women and all female teachers.&#13;
0:30:8.10 --&gt; 0:30:10.970&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So yeah, I guess.&#13;
0:30:13.100 --&gt; 0:30:13.780&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't.&#13;
0:30:17.780 --&gt; 0:30:18.0&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:30:15.10 --&gt; 0:30:20.170&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't remember being terribly conscious about it, but it was certainly something that we were aware of.&#13;
0:30:20.180 --&gt; 0:30:20.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Let's put it that way.&#13;
0:30:21.310 --&gt; 0:30:21.600&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:30:22.330 --&gt; 0:30:30.120&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And to what extent did your generation believe that your parents, notions about gender, family and dating were outdated?&#13;
0:30:35.780 --&gt; 0:30:37.690&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, well, that was an interesting one.&#13;
0:30:38.160 --&gt; 0:30:45.100&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm my, I would go on a date in the first thing my mother would say is what is this father do and where does he go to church?&#13;
0:30:45.840 --&gt; 0:30:47.390&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I said I have no clue.&#13;
0:30:47.440 --&gt; 0:30:48.250&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I could just.&#13;
0:30:48.820 --&gt; 0:30:52.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
To me, that was that was the traditional role, right?&#13;
0:30:52.700 --&gt; 0:30:58.390&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I I remember at one point I was going out with a fellow for for quite a while and my mother was getting very insistent.&#13;
0:30:58.400 --&gt; 0:30:59.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I said, mom, I'm going to dinner.&#13;
0:30:59.880 --&gt; 0:31:9.470&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I'm not marrying the man and she was, like, totally blown away because if you were going out to someone, then the possibility was there that you're in it, married.&#13;
0:31:9.480 --&gt; 0:31:10.450&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I said absolutely not.&#13;
0:31:10.810 --&gt; 0:31:12.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, we're just going out for dinner.&#13;
0:31:12.340 --&gt; 0:31:13.890&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We're going to a movie.&#13;
0:31:13.900 --&gt; 0:31:15.150&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We're going to a concert.&#13;
0:31:15.160 --&gt; 0:31:16.450&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know, whatever it is.&#13;
0:31:17.140 --&gt; 0:31:29.570&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So I I would say that yes, our our notions of dating and marriage and and as I mentioned, you know, some religious notions were were very much at odds with each other.&#13;
0:31:29.580 --&gt; 0:31:36.720&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But you had to respect your parents because they were older and they lived a different through a very different time than we did.&#13;
0:31:37.690 --&gt; 0:31:42.440&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm, but that didn't mean that I had to follow like as I said with the religious thing.&#13;
0:31:42.450 --&gt; 0:31:47.40&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And there were things I saw when I was working in the hospital.&#13;
0:31:47.50 --&gt; 0:31:55.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And you know things that happened to people as a result of stupid religious stuff like, you know, not being able to have an abortion or something and it.&#13;
0:31:55.670 --&gt; 0:31:59.460&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And as I said, that was I would never do that for myself.&#13;
0:32:3.800 --&gt; 0:32:4.450&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:31:59.470 --&gt; 0:32:4.990&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But then I never got myself in that into that position either, so yeah.&#13;
0:32:4.900 --&gt; 0:32:9.850&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, that's interesting, because that's a like the way that you see the situation of just going to the movies with someone.&#13;
0:32:9.860 --&gt; 0:32:13.470&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And the way that your parents look at it is so vastly different.&#13;
0:32:13.590 --&gt; 0:32:14.60&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh yeah.&#13;
0:32:14.200 --&gt; 0:32:17.740&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
It's like you're not like marriage is not a thing that like you're going to a movie.&#13;
0:32:16.540 --&gt; 0:32:17.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yo, I got I.&#13;
0:32:18.340 --&gt; 0:32:20.190&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, and all the time.&#13;
0:32:20.380 --&gt; 0:32:20.520&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:32:20.200 --&gt; 0:32:28.240&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, most of my friends during that time, we all, most of us married in in the end.&#13;
0:32:30.0 --&gt; 0:32:32.990&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But it wasn't till later and I actually got married.&#13;
0:32:33.0 --&gt; 0:32:33.790&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I met my husband.&#13;
0:32:33.800 --&gt; 0:32:35.290&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I graduated in June.&#13;
0:32:35.660 --&gt; 0:32:47.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I met my husband the following September and we got married the following June and most of my friends got married after that course and a couple got married.&#13;
0:32:47.190 --&gt; 0:32:57.810&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Just sort of at the end of that school year, those four years because it was just too hard to deal with marriage and living together and all that other kind of stuff.&#13;
0:32:58.700 --&gt; 0:32:59.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
A lot.&#13;
0:32:59.140 --&gt; 0:33:4.790&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
A number of people did live together with their boyfriends, but that again was later on.&#13;
0:33:6.390 --&gt; 0:33:16.350&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ottawa was still a pretty small town in those days and we weren't big city people either, so there was a lot of it was still a little bit of that hanging on.&#13;
0:33:17.60 --&gt; 0:33:17.400&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:33:18.440 --&gt; 0:33:25.30&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And looking back at the 70s, what aspects of Canadian society do you see most out of whack and either fixing?&#13;
0:33:25.40 --&gt; 0:33:28.270&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like what were you the most passionate about problems wise?&#13;
0:33:30.250 --&gt; 0:33:32.160&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Sorry, I don't really understand that question.&#13;
0:33:31.800 --&gt; 0:33:39.80&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
I'm like for example like it could be like feminism or something like what in Canadian society back then.&#13;
0:33:41.930 --&gt; 0:33:47.570&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Did you feel like the strongest about that you felt needed changing like a societal thing?&#13;
0:33:48.520 --&gt; 0:33:49.200&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Oh, I see.&#13;
0:33:49.710 --&gt; 0:33:49.950&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
0:33:51.340 --&gt; 0:34:0.460&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
While religion was still very, very strong, had a big especially in a small town like like Ottawa was a small town a feminism.&#13;
0:34:3.90 --&gt; 0:34:4.450&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Was certainly talked about.&#13;
0:34:5.350 --&gt; 0:34:11.610&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I looked on with a great deal of hmm, you know, do we do?&#13;
0:34:11.620 --&gt; 0:34:12.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Do we want this or not?&#13;
0:34:15.820 --&gt; 0:34:32.170&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I I would think that religion really, when it comes down to it was it was still had a huge hold on and certainly in the early 70s had a huge hold on how people thought about their lives, about how they lived it, umm, how they brought up their children.&#13;
0:34:33.330 --&gt; 0:34:37.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ah, what they would stand for and what they wouldn't so.&#13;
0:34:39.280 --&gt; 0:34:45.670&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, families at the war in Vietnam also was an issue because we had so many people.&#13;
0:34:45.680 --&gt; 0:34:55.730&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We we know there were a number of people that came up to Ontario and there were other people that I had met later on in the years that came up because of that. Umm.&#13;
0:34:58.130 --&gt; 0:34:59.600&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We didn't have a lot of money.&#13;
0:34:59.610 --&gt; 0:35:1.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Money was still a big issue.&#13;
0:35:1.10 --&gt; 0:35:10.560&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Money was still a really big class issue in those days too, so if you didn't have a lot of money, you didn't travel, you didn't have the fancy clothes.&#13;
0:35:10.570 --&gt; 0:35:13.140&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You didn't live in the fancy houses.&#13;
0:35:13.150 --&gt; 0:35:21.620&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You, you know, again, as I say, I came from a pretty working class neighborhood, but my parents, you know, they did everything for us kids.&#13;
0:35:21.680 --&gt; 0:35:30.60&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They they lived and so their children could do, I guess, could do better in their life, right?&#13;
0:35:29.260 --&gt; 0:35:30.700&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm yeah.&#13;
0:35:32.370 --&gt; 0:35:33.80&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There wasn't.&#13;
0:35:33.90 --&gt; 0:35:39.810&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It's not like now when you know people have kids and they kind of let them go feral and do whatever they want.&#13;
0:35:41.150 --&gt; 0:35:43.50&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Your parents, you know, you came home.&#13;
0:35:43.60 --&gt; 0:35:44.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You had dinner every night together.&#13;
0:35:45.630 --&gt; 0:35:49.80&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh, and that's what I did with we did with our own children.&#13;
0:35:49.90 --&gt; 0:35:50.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Is that, you know, dinner was important.&#13;
0:35:50.670 --&gt; 0:35:54.820&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You had to come home, have dinner, unless you had a hockey practice or something like that.&#13;
0:35:55.330 --&gt; 0:35:56.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But family came first.&#13;
0:35:58.520 --&gt; 0:36:2.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Your work and then your schooling, etcetera came was ever.&#13;
0:36:3.470 --&gt; 0:36:4.780&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Is there one of those issues?&#13;
0:36:4.790 --&gt; 0:36:6.840&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
It sounds like you mentioned religion a few times.&#13;
0:36:15.630 --&gt; 0:36:15.840&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Mm-hmm.&#13;
0:36:6.850 --&gt; 0:36:19.560&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Is there one of those issues that like to at the time you were, like, frustrated about it like you like, like like you mentioned for example, like religion a few times like you saw someone at like in that, like clearly needed an abortion.&#13;
0:36:19.570 --&gt; 0:36:23.410&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So like that sounds like that like struck a chord with you a little bit like, yeah.&#13;
0:36:22.90 --&gt; 0:36:23.980&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh definitely that was a it was.&#13;
0:36:23.990 --&gt; 0:36:32.400&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was a very big deal for me and because my parents were such staunch Catholics, that became an issue in our family, between myself and my mom.&#13;
0:36:32.730 --&gt; 0:36:40.650&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
My dad was pretty easy going because my excuse me, my dad was originally Lutheran but became Catholic.&#13;
0:36:40.660 --&gt; 0:36:44.30&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So he could marry my mother because she wouldn't marry him if he wasn't cast like so.&#13;
0:36:44.40 --&gt; 0:36:51.20&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That's how strong her religion was, and we were brought up very strictly in the Catholic faith and we didn't know any better.&#13;
0:36:51.30 --&gt; 0:36:53.540&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And we, you know, we actually had a very good life.&#13;
0:36:54.640 --&gt; 0:36:55.150&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:36:56.370 --&gt; 0:36:58.290&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And you know, very safe.&#13;
0:36:58.720 --&gt; 0:37:2.630&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, like I mean, you know, we were never in any danger.&#13;
0:37:2.640 --&gt; 0:37:3.840&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We always had enough food.&#13;
0:37:5.290 --&gt; 0:37:14.920&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, when you look at what people are going through today, we actually even though we didn't have a lot, we were always you know, well looked after well fed and well loved.&#13;
0:37:15.720 --&gt; 0:37:27.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But as we got as my sister and I both got older and even my brothers, because they are quite a bit younger than we are, we all left the church behind, which was really interesting.&#13;
0:37:27.170 --&gt; 0:37:28.20&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
None of us.&#13;
0:37:29.290 --&gt; 0:37:32.970&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, my kids, I took my kids to church.&#13;
0:37:32.980 --&gt; 0:37:35.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They went to Sunday school, but my husband's not Catholic.&#13;
0:37:36.440 --&gt; 0:37:39.970&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
My mother in law just about died when she had to go to a Catholic Church.&#13;
0:37:39.980 --&gt; 0:37:40.940&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We got married.&#13;
0:37:40.950 --&gt; 0:37:44.510&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That was hard for her, but you know, it was those.&#13;
0:37:44.520 --&gt; 0:37:45.850&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So those religious things?&#13;
0:37:45.860 --&gt; 0:37:48.580&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Protestant, Catholic, whatever were very, very strong.&#13;
0:37:57.520 --&gt; 0:37:57.810&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
0:37:51.190 --&gt; 0:37:59.30&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But I guess that that was probably the biggest, the biggest thing, I think until until we got older and things.&#13;
0:38:1.520 --&gt; 0:38:2.240&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Mellow down.&#13;
0:38:1.140 --&gt; 0:38:2.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Sort of resolved, but again my.&#13;
0:38:2.840 --&gt; 0:38:4.340&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, yeah, yeah.&#13;
0:38:5.0 --&gt; 0:38:5.310&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:38:5.640 --&gt; 0:38:9.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And then the church changed in the 70s and the late in the 80s too.&#13;
0:38:9.280 --&gt; 0:38:11.620&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So that was a whole other big issue then.&#13;
0:38:13.460 --&gt; 0:38:21.460&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
What did you see back then as the biggest form of injustice in Canadian society, like the things that you found the most unfair?&#13;
0:38:23.70 --&gt; 0:38:23.480&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
0:38:27.800 --&gt; 0:38:28.30&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:38:25.940 --&gt; 0:38:30.850&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
In the at that time, probably women's rights. UM.&#13;
0:38:32.870 --&gt; 0:38:39.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There wasn't much I worked one summer up north in Moosonee.&#13;
0:38:39.380 --&gt; 0:38:55.490&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I worked at A and indigenous hospital at the time and that was the first time I really saw the differences between living, you know, as a white person living South and then going up to an area cause I worked the whole summer up there.&#13;
0:38:55.500 --&gt; 0:38:56.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I would take.&#13;
0:38:56.660 --&gt; 0:39:4.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I would take patients back up north to different we they fly them up north and the nurse would have to go with them.&#13;
0:39:4.340 --&gt; 0:39:5.500&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I was going as the nurse.&#13;
0:39:6.570 --&gt; 0:39:12.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That was the first time I really saw those types of injustice, and that was that was a huge deal at the time, I remember.&#13;
0:39:13.550 --&gt; 0:39:16.70&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm but.&#13;
0:39:18.200 --&gt; 0:39:25.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Probably I, you know, I wasn't terribly aware in those days of those things to be quite honest, it was.&#13;
0:39:25.390 --&gt; 0:39:31.340&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
But it was clear that something had to had to be done about it, and it's.&#13;
0:39:30.490 --&gt; 0:39:32.630&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, the women's rights were a big deal.&#13;
0:39:36.670 --&gt; 0:39:43.510&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Medical medical advances that were available to some people and not to others available in some areas but not in others.&#13;
0:39:44.810 --&gt; 0:39:55.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were, you know, when I was up north, there were women used to come quote unquote S to musani to Moose factory to have their babies.&#13;
0:39:55.190 --&gt; 0:40:2.390&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And there were a lot of babies born with very awful birth defects that most of them didn't live.&#13;
0:40:4.450 --&gt; 0:40:10.820&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So there was a lot of that that we saw and they're just because they lived in small places like small villages and stuff up north.&#13;
0:40:10.870 --&gt; 0:40:11.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
He had to come that far.&#13;
0:40:11.920 --&gt; 0:40:25.250&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So, but you know, it was it was just a very different life, and that was the first exposure I got to, you know, women that would have 10 or 12 children and and with the child didn't live, they were OK with that because the kid was.&#13;
0:40:32.220 --&gt; 0:40:32.450&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:40:25.260 --&gt; 0:40:36.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So I mean, there was no way the child could live because they were so badly are they had so many health issues that they wouldn't live outside of an incubator, right.&#13;
0:40:37.410 --&gt; 0:40:37.880&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:40:37.260 --&gt; 0:40:40.890&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So those those children died within a few days, and the mother was sad.&#13;
0:40:40.900 --&gt; 0:40:44.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But it was an acceptance which you would never get here.&#13;
0:40:44.940 --&gt; 0:40:45.640&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Never get here.&#13;
0:40:45.380 --&gt; 0:40:47.690&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, that sounds quite jarring to witness.&#13;
0:40:48.170 --&gt; 0:40:50.70&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm I was and and then.&#13;
0:40:47.700 --&gt; 0:40:52.580&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And that's yeah, like to see that that that was like normal sort of there was.&#13;
0:40:52.590 --&gt; 0:40:53.280&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Exactly.&#13;
0:40:53.490 --&gt; 0:40:55.880&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was, yes, more normalized than it should have been.&#13;
0:40:56.750 --&gt; 0:40:56.970&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:40:56.840 --&gt; 0:41:1.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But then the children were born with birth defects that you wouldn't see here because of the inbreeding.&#13;
0:41:1.600 --&gt; 0:41:2.250&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That a lot of it.&#13;
0:41:2.300 --&gt; 0:41:4.70&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That's how it was explained to me at the time.&#13;
0:41:5.170 --&gt; 0:41:10.680&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But I think now it was also things like mercury in the water pesticide use.&#13;
0:41:10.720 --&gt; 0:41:12.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There's probably all that kind of stuff.&#13;
0:41:12.310 --&gt; 0:41:14.800&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That was all in there, but we didn't know about it in those times.&#13;
0:41:15.460 --&gt; 0:41:15.690&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:41:15.700 --&gt; 0:41:23.540&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So you saw some pretty pretty like bad issues on the reservations that that's that that's quite a good example of injustice.&#13;
0:41:23.550 --&gt; 0:41:25.160&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
That's that's tragic.&#13;
0:41:30.640 --&gt; 0:41:30.810&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:41:24.790 --&gt; 0:41:36.820&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, that was the reserves were very also, you know you go up there, you land, there's a nursing station and the house where the doctor lived or the nurse lived at the social worker and the teachers lived.&#13;
0:41:36.830 --&gt; 0:41:41.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And then then there's where the actual people in the village live.&#13;
0:41:42.660 --&gt; 0:41:42.870&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:41:41.270 --&gt; 0:41:50.70&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Very different and my husband will actually was a was a teacher for, I think two years in a northern community as well on the reserve.&#13;
0:41:50.80 --&gt; 0:41:53.680&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And you know, his stories were very similar to that as well.&#13;
0:41:56.880 --&gt; 0:42:1.990&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Did you feel that the political system was democratic, fair and responsive to citizens needs?&#13;
0:42:2.0 --&gt; 0:42:4.310&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like when addressing any of the any of these issues at all.&#13;
0:42:5.900 --&gt; 0:42:8.830&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh, probably not, but honestly I wasn't.&#13;
0:42:8.840 --&gt; 0:42:11.200&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I really wasn't into politics at that point.&#13;
0:42:11.180 --&gt; 0:42:11.500&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:42:11.990 --&gt; 0:42:18.350&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I was my family was liberal and I used to work at different.&#13;
0:42:18.360 --&gt; 0:42:19.30&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I used to.&#13;
0:42:19.100 --&gt; 0:42:19.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I used to.&#13;
0:42:21.660 --&gt; 0:42:25.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Work at, you know, different times when they were elections and stuff.&#13;
0:42:26.620 --&gt; 0:42:27.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I was part of that.&#13;
0:42:27.740 --&gt; 0:42:35.160&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I used to go to meetings, political meetings and stuff like that, but it was never John Turner was who I worked for.&#13;
0:42:35.170 --&gt; 0:42:41.280&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I think when one year, but he lost out to Pierre Trudeau senior, so that was different.&#13;
0:42:41.690 --&gt; 0:42:44.30&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But anyway, so it was the again.&#13;
0:42:46.0 --&gt; 0:42:47.670&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Different times, you know.&#13;
0:42:47.920 --&gt; 0:42:48.550&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:42:48.620 --&gt; 0:42:52.850&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Was there like an assumption that, like the government wasn't doing things correctly back then?&#13;
0:42:53.520 --&gt; 0:42:53.930&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Oh, no.&#13;
0:42:52.860 --&gt; 0:42:54.800&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like when addressing these things, no.&#13;
0:42:56.840 --&gt; 0:42:57.280&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
OK.&#13;
0:42:53.940 --&gt; 0:42:58.680&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No, no, no, no government could do no wrong in those days in our household anyway.&#13;
0:43:2.550 --&gt; 0:43:20.280&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Alright, so for the this next section, cultural historians have argued that introduction of the birth control pill, legalization of abortion, and dissemination of the free love ideology, change, gender relations and dating practices in the early 1970s.&#13;
0:43:20.590 --&gt; 0:43:22.70&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Do you agree with that statement?&#13;
0:43:22.380 --&gt; 0:43:25.470&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh, absolutely absolutely yes.&#13;
0:43:26.480 --&gt; 0:43:32.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yes, with the pill you could do whatever you want and you didn't have to worry about getting pregnant, right?&#13;
0:43:33.200 --&gt; 0:43:33.470&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:43:33.480 --&gt; 0:43:34.950&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
That must have been a huge change.&#13;
0:43:37.10 --&gt; 0:43:38.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yes and no.&#13;
0:43:38.640 --&gt; 0:43:39.120&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Compared to.&#13;
0:43:38.880 --&gt; 0:43:42.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean it compared to before, probably, yeah.&#13;
0:43:42.480 --&gt; 0:43:45.70&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But the pill had always been available.&#13;
0:43:45.870 --&gt; 0:43:50.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, even though I went to a Catholic girls school, we all knew about the pill.&#13;
0:43:50.130 --&gt; 0:43:51.400&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
My mother was very good about.&#13;
0:43:53.940 --&gt; 0:43:58.150&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh, you know, teaching us the sex education schools didn't do it in those days.&#13;
0:43:58.160 --&gt; 0:44:5.310&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Like, I mean, your parents did it, but my parents were very open about things and they were very good about that.&#13;
0:44:5.320 --&gt; 0:44:9.190&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So we we knew about those things, but of course we were allowed to take it right.&#13;
0:44:11.640 --&gt; 0:44:12.0&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:44:9.200 --&gt; 0:44:13.460&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And of course, there was no sex before marriage and all that other kind of stuff.&#13;
0:44:13.470 --&gt; 0:44:15.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But that all changed.&#13;
0:44:17.130 --&gt; 0:44:20.790&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And what did dating look like at Yowa during the 1970s?&#13;
0:44:22.890 --&gt; 0:44:23.820&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But how do you mean?&#13;
0:44:23.830 --&gt; 0:44:26.400&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Just ohh guys got.&#13;
0:44:23.500 --&gt; 0:44:27.760&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm, I'm just like, yeah, very generally speaking.&#13;
0:44:28.110 --&gt; 0:44:29.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Oh, just guys.&#13;
0:44:29.330 --&gt; 0:44:30.110&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ask girls out.&#13;
0:44:31.300 --&gt; 0:44:31.980&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:44:33.790 --&gt; 0:44:35.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You would go for coffee.&#13;
0:44:35.330 --&gt; 0:44:37.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were the coffee go to movies.&#13;
0:44:43.270 --&gt; 0:44:43.560&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:44:39.350 --&gt; 0:44:44.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Nobody had any money, so nobody really went out to dinner unless you went out with someone who was older.&#13;
0:44:45.110 --&gt; 0:44:49.220&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So you would go to concerts, you'd go to movies, you'd go to parties together.&#13;
0:44:49.670 --&gt; 0:44:50.720&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know, that kind of thing?&#13;
0:44:51.890 --&gt; 0:44:52.140&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Just.&#13;
0:44:50.810 --&gt; 0:44:53.200&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, pretty normal stuff, yeah.&#13;
0:44:53.990 --&gt; 0:44:54.300&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:44:54.310 --&gt; 0:44:54.830&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
That reminds me.&#13;
0:44:54.840 --&gt; 0:44:55.970&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like what you were saying earlier?&#13;
0:44:58.300 --&gt; 0:44:59.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, yeah.&#13;
0:44:55.980 --&gt; 0:44:59.620&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like you do a lot of really casual things and just like normal.&#13;
0:45:0.980 --&gt; 0:45:1.220&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:44:59.720 --&gt; 0:45:3.340&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hang out and yeah, and then your parents had their views on it.&#13;
0:45:5.170 --&gt; 0:45:5.740&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:45:4.640 --&gt; 0:45:6.590&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, yeah.&#13;
0:45:5.790 --&gt; 0:45:6.840&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
What is this father do?&#13;
0:45:6.850 --&gt; 0:45:7.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And where does he go to church?&#13;
0:45:7.960 --&gt; 0:45:9.240&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I've no clue.&#13;
0:45:8.870 --&gt; 0:45:9.920&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
I haven't even met him.&#13;
0:45:9.250 --&gt; 0:45:10.20&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't know.&#13;
0:45:9.970 --&gt; 0:45:10.620&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
I don't know his name.&#13;
0:45:10.230 --&gt; 0:45:13.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I will he be live in Montreal?&#13;
0:45:14.20 --&gt; 0:45:15.850&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Because a lot of people came to Ottawa.&#13;
0:45:15.860 --&gt; 0:45:17.950&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You from a lot of different places, right?&#13;
0:45:17.920 --&gt; 0:45:18.330&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
0:45:17.960 --&gt; 0:45:31.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So because they had programs there that didn't have any other places, so there were lots of and and the other thing too is that it was thought that was the easy to get into Ottawa because they always were looking for students.&#13;
0:45:32.20 --&gt; 0:45:32.230&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:45:32.90 --&gt; 0:45:37.310&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But then of course, my sister went to Saint Paths, which was a separate college.&#13;
0:45:37.400 --&gt; 0:45:39.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But then became part of Carlton.&#13;
0:45:40.90 --&gt; 0:45:47.90&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But then, of course, he always disparage Carlton because they were just the, you know, anybody could get into Carlton.&#13;
0:45:49.540 --&gt; 0:45:50.500&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So yes.&#13;
0:45:50.190 --&gt; 0:45:50.650&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:45:50.690 --&gt; 0:45:59.180&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And was it ever look down on, like just dating casually, like amongst just just the younger people, just the uottawa?&#13;
0:45:59.710 --&gt; 0:46:1.150&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Or was it just totally normal?&#13;
0:46:1.900 --&gt; 0:46:4.30&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh it's not you mean what do you mean dating?&#13;
0:46:7.880 --&gt; 0:46:8.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh.&#13;
0:46:4.630 --&gt; 0:46:8.470&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like, yeah, like some parents might not approve of, like their kids going around and dating it.&#13;
0:46:8.480 --&gt; 0:46:8.860&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
You Ottawa.&#13;
0:46:8.870 --&gt; 0:46:10.320&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
But amongst students, was it.&#13;
0:46:10.760 --&gt; 0:46:11.390&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Oh, it's not.&#13;
0:46:10.330 --&gt; 0:46:12.560&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Was it frowned upon at all? No.&#13;
0:46:11.400 --&gt; 0:46:12.930&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No, no, not at all.&#13;
0:46:12.940 --&gt; 0:46:13.680&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Day dating was.&#13;
0:46:14.730 --&gt; 0:46:16.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, that's how you got to meet people, right?&#13;
0:46:16.960 --&gt; 0:46:18.80&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right, right.&#13;
0:46:18.170 --&gt; 0:46:19.490&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like just relationships and stuff.&#13;
0:46:19.500 --&gt; 0:46:21.160&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
That was just it was just normal.&#13;
0:46:21.720 --&gt; 0:46:22.450&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, yeah, yeah.&#13;
0:46:29.550 --&gt; 0:46:29.770&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:46:22.460 --&gt; 0:46:31.760&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, I think my sister in law put it when you went to university to to earn your Mrs right and your misses like to find your husband, right?&#13;
0:46:31.770 --&gt; 0:46:32.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Your Mrs?&#13;
0:46:32.270 --&gt; 0:46:33.770&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right, right. Yeah.&#13;
0:46:41.380 --&gt; 0:46:41.740&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
0:46:33.670 --&gt; 0:46:44.670&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, that's, I guess that was kind of what it was like, but I mean, no, everybody just dated and and sometimes it worked out and sometimes it didn't, you know.&#13;
0:46:47.20 --&gt; 0:46:49.610&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
How did your generation look at family and marriage?&#13;
0:46:49.620 --&gt; 0:46:50.530&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Was there any like?&#13;
0:46:50.820 --&gt; 0:46:56.470&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Did they ever really like challenge those notions or discuss it or yeah.&#13;
0:46:55.680 --&gt; 0:47:4.850&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh yeah, I think a lot of younger women because of the pill and because of the changing morays of the time.&#13;
0:47:4.860 --&gt; 0:47:12.950&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You could you could have a relationship with someone you could move in, but you didn't have to get married, and that was a huge deal for a lot of girls.&#13;
0:47:13.20 --&gt; 0:47:15.880&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And a lot of women guys, of course, were happy with that.&#13;
0:47:18.350 --&gt; 0:47:18.530&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But.&#13;
0:47:21.460 --&gt; 0:47:28.630&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I think in the end they're probably more after we graduated that happened, I would find.&#13;
0:47:28.640 --&gt; 0:47:33.580&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But because when we were at school, nobody, as I said, nobody had any money like so.&#13;
0:47:33.590 --&gt; 0:47:37.150&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Certainly my friends in my class, most people didn't have a lot of money.&#13;
0:47:37.460 --&gt; 0:47:45.150&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So, you know, we were living at home or we were, you know, living on campus or you were living in an apartment with two or three other people.&#13;
0:47:45.160 --&gt; 0:47:48.600&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So you were scrimping and saving, so it was.&#13;
0:47:50.700 --&gt; 0:47:51.990&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was kind of different.&#13;
0:47:54.660 --&gt; 0:48:2.310&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So yeah, I guess the the fact that you didn't have to get married anymore was the that that was a huge deal.&#13;
0:48:3.70 --&gt; 0:48:3.290&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:48:2.960 --&gt; 0:48:5.680&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That was a huge deal at the time and I think that made a difference.&#13;
0:48:6.600 --&gt; 0:48:9.880&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm, because you didn't really need to.&#13;
0:48:12.820 --&gt; 0:48:20.220&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh, you didn't really need to worry about getting married, cause all of a sudden you didn't really need to get married.&#13;
0:48:21.550 --&gt; 0:48:26.350&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But still, having kids without a partner, I always felt was very difficult cause.&#13;
0:48:28.390 --&gt; 0:48:29.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Kids are a lot of work.&#13;
0:48:30.270 --&gt; 0:48:30.650&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, yeah.&#13;
0:48:33.200 --&gt; 0:48:33.360&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:48:32.490 --&gt; 0:48:36.690&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I take a lot out of the you need two people to do that or or a village to raise a child, yes.&#13;
0:48:35.260 --&gt; 0:48:38.70&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, for sure. Right.&#13;
0:48:38.300 --&gt; 0:48:41.930&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So like just the notion of like, do you like having to get married and stuff?&#13;
0:48:41.940 --&gt; 0:48:46.730&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
It was looked at like more practically, if at times by younger people, yeah.&#13;
0:48:45.750 --&gt; 0:48:47.170&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, it was it.&#13;
0:48:47.210 --&gt; 0:48:49.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There was no notion of having to get married anymore.&#13;
0:48:49.470 --&gt; 0:48:49.680&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:48:49.670 --&gt; 0:48:50.280&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You got married.&#13;
0:48:50.290 --&gt; 0:48:54.110&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
If you wanted to, and if you wanted, if you wanted to, that was great.&#13;
0:48:56.370 --&gt; 0:48:56.570&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:48:54.120 --&gt; 0:48:57.380&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But if you didn't want to, you didn't have to, which was fine too, yeah.&#13;
0:48:57.560 --&gt; 0:48:57.690&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
No.&#13;
0:48:58.610 --&gt; 0:48:59.140&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:48:59.670 --&gt; 0:49:15.910&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And just before I move on to the last section, do you like, do you think that like just regarding all of these things and and just general attitudes, behavior and stuff on campus, do you think like movies and music and stuff influence like people's behavior a lot?&#13;
0:49:15.920 --&gt; 0:49:18.800&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like maybe like rock becoming popular a little later.&#13;
0:49:20.360 --&gt; 0:49:20.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh.&#13;
0:49:18.810 --&gt; 0:49:25.250&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And did you ever see like the impact of like media on people and their behavior on campus at all?&#13;
0:49:26.670 --&gt; 0:49:27.580&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
It's gonna make but.&#13;
0:49:33.390 --&gt; 0:49:33.660&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
0:49:30.330 --&gt; 0:49:34.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yes, music in particular, music.&#13;
0:49:34.130 --&gt; 0:49:34.940&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Governed.&#13;
0:49:35.110 --&gt; 0:49:35.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Who?&#13;
0:49:35.330 --&gt; 0:49:37.400&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Your friends were where you went.&#13;
0:49:37.460 --&gt; 0:49:44.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
The concerts you went to, the books you read, the group she belonged to. Uh.&#13;
0:49:47.560 --&gt; 0:49:53.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Disco was part of it, but then I was far more at.&#13;
0:49:53.320 --&gt; 0:49:56.670&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
At one point I was far more into umm.&#13;
0:49:58.620 --&gt; 0:50:0.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It's sort of the coffee house scene.&#13;
0:50:1.90 --&gt; 0:50:1.990&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:50:2.910 --&gt; 0:50:10.620&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And all those, all that kind of sort of stuff, we were far more hip than the people that went to do disco.&#13;
0:50:12.470 --&gt; 0:50:14.190&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We thought we were like, put it that way.&#13;
0:50:15.940 --&gt; 0:50:17.190&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We were that we were smarter.&#13;
0:50:17.200 --&gt; 0:50:20.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know, we've always thought we were better than the rest, but I mean, we were just stupid.&#13;
0:50:21.300 --&gt; 0:50:23.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But umm, it was.&#13;
0:50:25.540 --&gt; 0:50:32.540&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I think it really led into how you lived, who, where you went, who your friends were.&#13;
0:50:40.670 --&gt; 0:50:41.30&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Wow.&#13;
0:50:33.830 --&gt; 0:50:42.910&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
As I said, the books you read the the opinions you held and who and in the end who you ended up voting for too, it was, you know, so it it.&#13;
0:50:42.980 --&gt; 0:50:43.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:50:43.340 --&gt; 0:51:8.20&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Because you know, if it was, it's as I got older, I got more and more into the into the political stuff because you you always, you know, sort of became aware as time went on as of how who you voted for in the election would affect how much money was going to education or healthcare or you know the what was going into you know whatever was affecting the world at that time but umm.&#13;
0:51:10.90 --&gt; 0:51:14.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah, I think I think there was certainly a correlation in there for sure.&#13;
0:51:14.580 --&gt; 0:51:20.480&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, that that's interesting because you named basically every facet of like what makes someone and like an individual, right?&#13;
0:51:20.680 --&gt; 0:51:20.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:51:23.400 --&gt; 0:51:23.540&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:51:20.490 --&gt; 0:51:28.40&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like their opinions, they're the people they hung around with that then all of that, like music, had a pardon. Hmm.&#13;
0:51:25.750 --&gt; 0:51:40.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And and movies were a big thing, too, because we got very snotty about about watching French films, and I'm I learned, I I I started to smoke when I was at university, cause everybody smoked and it ought to be you.&#13;
0:51:40.10 --&gt; 0:51:40.490&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You smoke?&#13;
0:51:40.500 --&gt; 0:51:42.180&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
God was in Japan, right?&#13;
0:51:42.190 --&gt; 0:51:43.220&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
The French cigarettes.&#13;
0:51:43.760 --&gt; 0:51:44.70&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
0:51:43.440 --&gt; 0:51:47.960&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So anything French became very ohkura very.&#13;
0:51:51.220 --&gt; 0:51:54.850&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right trends and stuff, but that could all that. Mm-hmm.&#13;
0:51:49.910 --&gt; 0:51:55.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
In very if you want trend trend, yes, trendy.&#13;
0:51:55.490 --&gt; 0:51:59.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And if you wanted to be, quote unquote, one of the cool kids, this is what you did.&#13;
0:51:59.330 --&gt; 0:52:1.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So you wore certain clothing you.&#13;
0:52:3.900 --&gt; 0:52:6.810&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You went to certain places, you went to certain clubs, you.&#13;
0:52:7.670 --&gt; 0:52:10.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh, you spoke French or you didn't?&#13;
0:52:10.710 --&gt; 0:52:12.840&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Or or you pretended you did.&#13;
0:52:12.850 --&gt; 0:52:18.640&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Or, you know, whatever it it did affect your it did affect your life at one point.&#13;
0:52:19.420 --&gt; 0:52:19.650&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:52:19.250 --&gt; 0:52:21.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So yeah, I would say definitely.&#13;
0:52:21.780 --&gt; 0:52:26.670&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And and movies from the states, I mean, you had you had Deer Hunter you had.&#13;
0:52:28.350 --&gt; 0:52:28.970&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Taxi.&#13;
0:52:33.820 --&gt; 0:52:34.150&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:52:28.980 --&gt; 0:52:37.40&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You had all those other movies that came in to being at like I Love films, so that was something that I really like to to to do.&#13;
0:52:37.490 --&gt; 0:52:41.620&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But in a place like Ottawa, there weren't a lot of, you know.&#13;
0:52:43.430 --&gt; 0:52:46.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Films that came out that that were anything.&#13;
0:52:46.930 --&gt; 0:52:48.450&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
The what was it the?&#13;
0:52:51.70 --&gt; 0:52:57.210&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I forget that the theater on Queen Street Bank and Queen forget.&#13;
0:52:57.220 --&gt; 0:52:58.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I think it was called the realtor.&#13;
0:52:58.370 --&gt; 0:52:59.210&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No, it wasn't that.&#13;
0:52:59.680 --&gt; 0:53:1.50&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Forget what it was called anyway.&#13;
0:53:1.660 --&gt; 0:53:4.30&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They would have foreign films come in.&#13;
0:53:4.40 --&gt; 0:53:8.760&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So you'd have foreign film festivals or you go to Montreal to see movies and stuff like that too.&#13;
0:53:9.920 --&gt; 0:53:10.570&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Interesting.&#13;
0:53:11.160 --&gt; 0:53:14.20&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So this final section is totally optional.&#13;
0:53:14.580 --&gt; 0:53:21.590&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
There's a disclaimer that comes with it because it it's a it's a very, very sensitive topic, so if I'll read this claimer and you just have to say yes or no.&#13;
0:53:21.600 --&gt; 0:53:25.300&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And if you say no, I won't ask any questions and that'll be it for the interview.&#13;
0:53:25.920 --&gt; 0:53:26.160&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:53:26.80 --&gt; 0:53:32.140&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm, OK, so this glimmer is the following section is optional and concerns sexuality and harassment.&#13;
0:53:32.580 --&gt; 0:53:39.90&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
We appreciate that not everyone will feel comfortable with these questions and we want to reiterate that your participation is entirely voluntary.&#13;
0:53:39.300 --&gt; 0:53:43.470&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
You may choose to not answer questions that make you feel uncomfortable or skip this section entirely.&#13;
0:53:45.170 --&gt; 0:53:47.650&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I'm fine with that. Yep.&#13;
0:53:46.800 --&gt; 0:53:53.250&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
OK, so many universities today have been, uh, forced to police sexual harassment.&#13;
0:53:53.360 --&gt; 0:53:58.640&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
To what extent did university authorities monitor mixers and social events to keep women safe?&#13;
0:54:1.450 --&gt; 0:54:2.530&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I don't think they did anything.&#13;
0:54:4.980 --&gt; 0:54:5.500&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Why would they?&#13;
0:54:6.650 --&gt; 0:54:8.960&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Did did you see it as much of an issue back then?&#13;
0:54:8.970 --&gt; 0:54:12.130&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like, were there rumors circulating or like, people getting caught?&#13;
0:54:12.500 --&gt; 0:54:12.850&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
No.&#13;
0:54:12.730 --&gt; 0:54:13.610&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No, no.&#13;
0:54:13.800 --&gt; 0:54:17.860&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So it must have been like pretty like hush hush if yeah.&#13;
0:54:17.160 --&gt; 0:54:19.680&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
If it happened, we didn't hear about it.&#13;
0:54:19.120 --&gt; 0:54:21.70&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm wow.&#13;
0:54:20.500 --&gt; 0:54:21.780&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Let's put it that way, yeah.&#13;
0:54:21.80 --&gt; 0:54:26.890&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah, because I like I have seen stats and so I was like, I have seen people seen stats and stuff and it seems that it was it was quite it.&#13;
0:54:26.900 --&gt; 0:54:29.480&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
It turns out like now we know that it was quite prevalent.&#13;
0:54:29.490 --&gt; 0:54:33.310&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So it's interesting to hear that it was kept like you know.&#13;
0:54:35.920 --&gt; 0:54:36.140&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:54:32.930 --&gt; 0:54:38.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I think you have to look at the times from the perspective of the times.&#13;
0:54:39.770 --&gt; 0:54:43.520&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Nowadays, women get all upset because the guy whistles at them on the street.&#13;
0:54:44.10 --&gt; 0:54:44.270&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:54:45.340 --&gt; 0:54:46.650&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No big deal in my day.&#13;
0:54:47.240 --&gt; 0:54:47.820&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So what?&#13;
0:54:48.430 --&gt; 0:54:49.70&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
If you.&#13;
0:54:48.260 --&gt; 0:54:50.510&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So good, I appreciate what you looked like.&#13;
0:54:50.990 --&gt; 0:54:51.290&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:54:50.580 --&gt; 0:54:54.970&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Nowadays someone will go hearing off to the police saying, Oh my God, he whistled at me.&#13;
0:54:56.530 --&gt; 0:54:56.880&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
0:54:56.310 --&gt; 0:54:58.690&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That's harassment in some women's.&#13;
0:55:0.560 --&gt; 0:55:4.490&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know and and fair enough if they feel harassed and that then that's it.&#13;
0:55:4.840 --&gt; 0:55:6.440&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But in our day, that was not a deal.&#13;
0:55:7.220 --&gt; 0:55:9.790&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
If you applied, I'll put A twist on the question.&#13;
0:55:9.990 --&gt; 0:55:10.210&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:55:16.90 --&gt; 0:55:18.100&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Oh yeah, they're probably was there.&#13;
0:55:18.230 --&gt; 0:55:19.80&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was there.&#13;
0:55:9.960 --&gt; 0:55:19.590&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
If you apply just just for fun, if you applied today's standards of sexual harassment, what would it would have been bad, yeah.&#13;
0:55:22.300 --&gt; 0:55:22.570&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And.&#13;
0:55:19.150 --&gt; 0:55:28.20&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I would I remember being on the bus and a man sitting really close to me like and pushing me like coming right close to me.&#13;
0:55:28.110 --&gt; 0:55:30.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That's harassment as far as I'm concerned.&#13;
0:55:30.590 --&gt; 0:55:34.900&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I got up, stepped on his foot, got off the bus.&#13;
0:55:36.390 --&gt; 0:55:38.730&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So never reported it.&#13;
0:55:39.850 --&gt; 0:55:41.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That happened all the time.&#13;
0:55:42.370 --&gt; 0:55:42.660&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:55:41.950 --&gt; 0:55:43.390&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
If you were young woman, yeah.&#13;
0:55:44.940 --&gt; 0:55:45.210&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I'm.&#13;
0:55:45.220 --&gt; 0:55:46.770&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I'm not gonna say all the time, but it happened.&#13;
0:55:47.190 --&gt; 0:55:47.390&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:55:46.780 --&gt; 0:55:48.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It happened a lot.&#13;
0:55:48.520 --&gt; 0:55:52.980&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There were, but As for me, I was never.&#13;
0:55:56.170 --&gt; 0:56:0.550&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I was never a victim of that type of harassment.&#13;
0:56:0.560 --&gt; 0:56:1.430&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Let's put it that way.&#13;
0:56:1.440 --&gt; 0:56:5.470&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Like anything that that these days, women would complain about.&#13;
0:56:5.480 --&gt; 0:56:9.920&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, yeah, some guy would punch your pinch your bottom or something.&#13;
0:56:12.420 --&gt; 0:56:13.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So no big deal.&#13;
0:56:14.170 --&gt; 0:56:14.620&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:56:13.780 --&gt; 0:56:18.830&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, that's just, that's just what happened and that's how it was thought of in those days.&#13;
0:56:18.840 --&gt; 0:56:19.970&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Nowadays it's not.&#13;
0:56:19.980 --&gt; 0:56:20.730&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It's different.&#13;
0:56:20.860 --&gt; 0:56:21.180&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:56:20.880 --&gt; 0:56:27.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
My daughter, would you know, she she would probably, Umm, report somebody who did that.&#13;
0:56:27.960 --&gt; 0:56:31.350&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But in my day it was part of the culture.&#13;
0:56:31.480 --&gt; 0:56:33.950&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
If you can put it that way, I mean, I'm not saying it's right.&#13;
0:56:32.300 --&gt; 0:56:34.740&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm it, yeah.&#13;
0:56:34.400 --&gt; 0:56:36.880&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I'm just saying that that's that's the way it was.&#13;
0:56:36.890 --&gt; 0:56:41.560&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That's that's what guys did and I grew up in working class neighborhoods.&#13;
0:56:42.770 --&gt; 0:56:44.250&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
There's normalized totally.&#13;
0:56:41.570 --&gt; 0:56:45.670&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So there was it was exactly.&#13;
0:56:47.570 --&gt; 0:56:47.940&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:56:45.740 --&gt; 0:56:48.500&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That's a very good way to put it was normalized, so yeah.&#13;
0:56:47.950 --&gt; 0:56:50.200&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So it wasn't even viewed as a problem that needed fixing.&#13;
0:56:50.210 --&gt; 0:56:52.480&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
It was just how? Wow.&#13;
0:56:52.30 --&gt; 0:56:54.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It's just the way some men are stupid.&#13;
0:56:54.770 --&gt; 0:56:55.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That's the way they are.&#13;
0:56:55.830 --&gt; 0:56:56.440&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You didn't.&#13;
0:56:56.450 --&gt; 0:57:2.600&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You didn't have anything to do with those guys, but you know my my mom used to make it very clear.&#13;
0:57:2.610 --&gt; 0:57:3.440&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You just ignore it.&#13;
0:57:3.570 --&gt; 0:57:4.290&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You just ignore it.&#13;
0:57:5.350 --&gt; 0:57:5.800&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:57:6.60 --&gt; 0:57:6.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
OK.&#13;
0:57:5.930 --&gt; 0:57:11.580&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And our yeah, our generation is interested in a like in a free love movement.&#13;
0:57:11.670 --&gt; 0:57:17.380&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
What was the perception of premarital sex on the University of Ottawa campus in the 1970s?&#13;
0:57:17.390 --&gt; 0:57:21.640&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Was it viewed negatively accepted or like literally encouraged?&#13;
0:57:21.650 --&gt; 0:57:23.560&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Or like amongst the.&#13;
0:57:22.730 --&gt; 0:57:23.700&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Was accepted.&#13;
0:57:24.50 --&gt; 0:57:24.940&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was accepted.&#13;
0:57:24.950 --&gt; 0:57:29.0&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I meet most of the girls in in my class had boyfriends and.&#13;
0:57:31.230 --&gt; 0:57:31.470&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:57:31.170 --&gt; 0:57:32.480&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
They all went to bed together.&#13;
0:57:32.490 --&gt; 0:57:33.40&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, it was.&#13;
0:57:34.550 --&gt; 0:57:34.760&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:57:33.50 --&gt; 0:57:35.260&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
No, it was accepted.&#13;
0:57:35.270 --&gt; 0:57:35.600&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was.&#13;
0:57:35.610 --&gt; 0:57:38.680&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
It was your choice if you wanted to, umm.&#13;
0:57:42.890 --&gt; 0:57:43.140&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:57:39.330 --&gt; 0:57:50.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
As it as of whether they were pressured, I don't know what was never brought up as as an issue like I never knew anybody who was upset by the fact that some guy had pressured.&#13;
0:57:50.710 --&gt; 0:57:52.840&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, there were guys that were stupid enough to.&#13;
0:57:53.640 --&gt; 0:57:53.870&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Umm.&#13;
0:57:54.830 --&gt; 0:57:56.720&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Think that you know you didn't talk to each other.&#13;
0:57:56.730 --&gt; 0:57:57.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There was one guy.&#13;
0:57:58.810 --&gt; 0:58:1.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
He was in law and he was a football player.&#13;
0:58:2.410 --&gt; 0:58:7.520&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
He was going out with a girl in my class and he called me up and asked me out on a date and I said ohh great and I.&#13;
0:58:7.530 --&gt; 0:58:9.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But aren't you going out with so and so's?&#13;
0:58:9.430 --&gt; 0:58:11.340&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh no, no, no, no, that's all over.&#13;
0:58:12.870 --&gt; 0:58:12.990&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:58:11.690 --&gt; 0:58:18.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So I find out later because no one's talking to me in my class, that she found out that he was going out.&#13;
0:58:18.340 --&gt; 0:58:22.810&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
He went out with me and I said, well, he told me that you two would split up.&#13;
0:58:22.890 --&gt; 0:58:23.550&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We haven't.&#13;
0:58:23.800 --&gt; 0:58:24.710&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I didn't know that.&#13;
0:58:25.180 --&gt; 0:58:28.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, that was the end of that from both sides.&#13;
0:58:29.300 --&gt; 0:58:38.250&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But I mean so there was always that kind of stuff that was going on, but he was a I mean we only ever got to the point of going out for a meal or something.&#13;
0:58:38.260 --&gt; 0:58:42.270&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And then I'm sure he he wanted to take a further, but there was no.&#13;
0:58:43.880 --&gt; 0:58:45.370&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But then my friend found out.&#13;
0:58:46.940 --&gt; 0:58:47.140&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:58:45.380 --&gt; 0:58:48.750&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And then, of course, then the whole class just turned on him, and that was that.&#13;
0:58:48.820 --&gt; 0:58:49.590&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But I mean there.&#13;
0:58:49.600 --&gt; 0:58:50.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So that kind of thing happened.&#13;
0:58:51.800 --&gt; 0:58:54.20&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But that's just the kind of thing that happened to me.&#13;
0:58:59.100 --&gt; 0:59:0.240&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
That was your experience.&#13;
0:59:0.250 --&gt; 0:59:0.390&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
0:58:54.30 --&gt; 0:59:1.50&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
There might have been other things that happened to other women, but I don't know of any of them. Yeah.&#13;
0:59:1.70 --&gt; 0:59:8.30&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And and just casual relationships like that, like they there was, there wasn't much judgment going around regarding that type of thing.&#13;
0:59:8.310 --&gt; 0:59:9.40&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Oh no mate.&#13;
0:59:8.440 --&gt; 0:59:13.810&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like if a woman went with a lot of guys like it wasn't as or, you know, not not to your knowledge.&#13;
0:59:13.130 --&gt; 0:59:15.91&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, I have to say I i.e.&#13;
0:59:15.870 --&gt; 0:59:20.380&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
My sister was going out with somebody and their first boyfriend.&#13;
0:59:20.390 --&gt; 0:59:21.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
She's still married to him.&#13;
0:59:21.750 --&gt; 0:59:22.890&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
50 some odd years later.&#13;
0:59:25.560 --&gt; 0:59:30.160&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And he used to say to me, well, you know, you should get a boyfriend.&#13;
0:59:30.170 --&gt; 0:59:31.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
And I said, well, why would I want a boyfriend?&#13;
0:59:31.870 --&gt; 0:59:33.340&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I'm meeting all these nice men.&#13;
0:59:34.310 --&gt; 0:59:36.970&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We're going out to concerts and I mean nothing ever happened.&#13;
0:59:37.810 --&gt; 0:59:39.660&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Uh, but I just didn't find.&#13;
0:59:43.830 --&gt; 0:59:44.90&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right.&#13;
0:59:39.670 --&gt; 0:59:45.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
You know, there was just nobody I wanted to spend a whole lot of time with at that point, and that was so, so.&#13;
0:59:45.310 --&gt; 0:59:49.740&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But he would, you know, that was from his perspective is that you should have one guy and only go up with one guy.&#13;
0:59:49.750 --&gt; 0:59:53.580&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Well, I didn't feel that necessity and I didn't hadn't met the right person.&#13;
0:59:53.590 --&gt; 0:59:55.840&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So, so that was different so.&#13;
0:59:59.130 --&gt; 1:0:3.300&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But most of the most of my good friends, we all dated lots of different people.&#13;
1:0:3.670 --&gt; 1:0:5.860&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We didn't sleep with them, but we dated them.&#13;
1:0:6.390 --&gt; 1:0:6.610&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Mm-hmm.&#13;
1:0:6.30 --&gt; 1:0:8.440&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Some of them may have slept with them, but I, you know, I didn't.&#13;
1:0:9.300 --&gt; 1:0:9.540&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Mm-hmm.&#13;
1:0:9.590 --&gt; 1:0:10.820&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So that was just me.&#13;
1:0:10.870 --&gt; 1:0:14.680&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But then the other thing is is I lived at home, so there was no.&#13;
1:0:14.810 --&gt; 1:0:18.380&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
That was another big, huge problem for a lot of guys, too.&#13;
1:0:19.220 --&gt; 1:0:20.270&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right, right.&#13;
1:0:20.990 --&gt; 1:0:25.770&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
And I imagine what did members of your parents generation to worry about premarital sex a lot.&#13;
1:0:26.180 --&gt; 1:0:26.400&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Ohh.&#13;
1:0:26.110 --&gt; 1:0:27.980&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Ohh yeah, they were terrified of it.&#13;
1:0:26.410 --&gt; 1:0:28.900&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Like. Yeah. Yeah.&#13;
1:0:28.30 --&gt; 1:0:29.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Absolutely terrified of it, yes.&#13;
1:0:31.30 --&gt; 1:0:31.680&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
1:0:31.730 --&gt; 1:0:35.720&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So like, it sounds like amongst the younger people, it just wasn't much of a thought.&#13;
1:0:40.920 --&gt; 1:0:42.170&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Most of, yeah.&#13;
1:0:35.730 --&gt; 1:0:42.860&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
It was just normal and OK and but the older crowd that was it was like not there was tension there probably. Umm.&#13;
1:0:42.260 --&gt; 1:0:47.290&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Most of our parents felt that it was, you know, premarital sex was just not cause.&#13;
1:0:47.360 --&gt; 1:0:53.330&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Most of my friends were Catholic or came from religious or Protestant Jewish families.&#13;
1:0:53.750 --&gt; 1:0:56.420&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
So you didn't even talk about premarital sex.&#13;
1:0:56.430 --&gt; 1:1:5.560&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But but in our generation like that, I mean, I know there were girls that that slept around, but it was no big deal.&#13;
1:1:5.570 --&gt; 1:1:6.780&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Like, I mean it wasn't.&#13;
1:1:9.330 --&gt; 1:1:9.700&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Hmm.&#13;
1:1:7.470 --&gt; 1:1:10.460&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
We didn't look down on them or think any less of them.&#13;
1:1:10.470 --&gt; 1:1:11.520&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
I mean, that was their choice.&#13;
1:1:12.900 --&gt; 1:1:13.330&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Interesting.&#13;
1:1:12.550 --&gt; 1:1:18.440&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
But that was also part of the feminist movement at the time, because that was your choice to sleep with whomever you wanted.&#13;
1:1:19.550 --&gt; 1:1:20.410&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Right, right.&#13;
1:1:20.360 --&gt; 1:1:20.520&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
1:1:20.420 --&gt; 1:1:22.820&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
So yeah, alright, I've done.&#13;
1:1:22.830 --&gt; 1:1:24.110&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
That's every question.&#13;
1:1:24.120 --&gt; 1:1:25.660&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
I'll I'll stop the recording real quick.&#13;
1:1:26.160 --&gt; 1:1:26.360&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Mm-hmm.&#13;
&#13;
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Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Pour la première question, les historiens de la culture ont soutenu que la télévision, Hollywood, la musique populaire et la culture de consommation autour de l'automobile ont créé une culture populaire nord-américaine plus intégrée.&#13;
0:0:30.50 --&gt; 0:0:37.920&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Ottawa a une institution bilingue et nous voulons mieux comprendre comment les anglophones et les francophones se sont rapprochés.&#13;
0:0:39.50 --&gt; 0:0:44.50&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Donc la première question serait qu'il y avait moins d'électronique au Canada dans les années 70.&#13;
0:0:45.700 --&gt; 0:0:46.220&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Pas du tout.&#13;
0:0:48.410 --&gt; 0:0:53.390&#13;
Philippe Alain Paradis&#13;
Alors, comment était structuré votre temps libre ou que faisaient les étudiants d'Ottawa pour s'amuser dans les années 70 ?&#13;
0:1:1.570 --&gt; 0:1:4.120&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Eh bien, nous allions au pub après l'école.&#13;
0:1:4.130 --&gt; 0:1:6.950&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Je suis sûre que c'est encore le cas aujourd'hui, mais il y avait...&#13;
0:1:14.60 --&gt; 0:1:15.870&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
On allait voir mon père, on riait.&#13;
0:1:15.880 --&gt; 0:1:21.130&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Nous allions à la bibliothèque tous les soirs et après la fermeture de la bibliothèque, parce que j'étudiais les soins infirmiers.&#13;
0:1:21.140 --&gt; 0:1:27.210&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Nous allions donc à la bibliothèque médicale, puis à l'Albion, qui n'existe plus, je crois.&#13;
0:1:27.220 --&gt; 0:1:30.830&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Il n'existe plus et nous y allions probablement presque tous les soirs.&#13;
0:1:31.120 --&gt; 0:1:32.750&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Il y avait des danses.&#13;
0:1:34.100 --&gt; 0:1:37.320&#13;
Liz Palmer&#13;
Nous avons dirigé l'école d'infirmières.&#13;
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