nvorveave THY the formation of the - PILSENER PAR VELCCERTU ULE NN Ooellil , Ud (YYYYYY | i) i) dh \ ih lh dh } tenth Ey i « Low 1o Join THE LABATT'S PILSENER PARTY Membership just comes naturally. You get yourself a bottle of Labatt's Pilsener Lager Beer, pour it into a long glass, and drink. As soon as you taste the true Pilsen flavour of Labatt's Pilsener, you become a life member of the party, ready to fight for your right to drink this delightful brew just any time at all. X x) lo OF THE LABATTS PILSENER PARTY We are dedicated to bringing enjoyment to beer lovers everywhere. We will fight for the right of Svery Canadian (over 21, of course) to sit back, put his feet up, and enjoy a glass of Labatt's Pilsener Lager Beer. We regard the bottle opener as the greatest weapon in our battle for enjoyment . .. provided it's used to open Labatt's Pilsener Lager Beer. Il VV VEVEVEY IVEY mr 4 The Labatt's Pilsener Party stands for one basic freedom --the freedom of XX) Z Sn, FUTTTOUU UU T UU AE KE AEX AXE EXER ikl \AARA UHI i Il | every Canadian to enjoy a good beer when he feels like it -- the freedom to drink Labatt's Pilsener Lager Beer. CANADIANS SE ... tear off the chains that bind you to a dull existence...join the Labatt's Pilsener Party -- AND HAVE FUN! the Labalts Pilsener Mr. Pilsener for Mr. Pilsener for Minister t tor Mr. Pilsener Mr. Pilsener for Mini IRIE Cle) ter o D_+ Ci.) arty Olate I f Fun and Games the Interior [Toast Master General f Refreshment SATURDAY, MAY 28 Challenge CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4 than any other Canadian col- umnist. He hires operatives to do his leg work and if needed can call on the city: room for a reporter to dig out material for him. A bat-. tery of lawyers is available as consultants when he ex- poses rackets ranging from TV repairmen to loan sharks. Even the Arthur Murray studios felt his wrath, But he admitted recently that he has flever yet set foot in any dance studio. All the work was done by a woman who turhed the information over to Berton who put the story: together in a column. He admits many of his columns are produced in the same manner, which means much of Berton's material goes to the reader second hand, the result of some other person's observations and deductions, not Berton's. When I talked to him a couple of weeks ago he look- ed my way once -- the rest of the time he talked into a wall mirror, never taking his eyes off himself even to say goodbye. And he won't deny he does things like this be- cause Berton enjoys Berton perhaps more than he enjoys anyone else in the world. He admits he's a big ham. "Stubborn, opinionated, ar- rogant", is the way he has been described by writers looking into the Berton story. He lives at Kleinberg, has five children whose names all start with the letter 'P' (like in Pierre) Toby Robins is sometimes known as the actress who doesn't act. She's billed as a prominent Toronto actress but is seldom seen in a dra- matic part either on Cana- dian television or on the Tor- onto stage. This year she's appearing in Spring Thaw, last year it was Two For the Seesaw at the Crest Theatre. Not a very busy two years. ~ She's now 28, married to theatre entrepreneur Bill' Freedman and has two chil- dren. And where she was once known only within the city limits of Toronto, she is now a national figure thanks to the Front Page Challenge job, a job in which she was supposed to flop. And in the early days, criticism was justified. The girl was a giggler and giggled at just about everything -- includ- ing some of the tragedies re- counted on Front Page Chal- CONTINUED ON PAGE 29