Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 21 Aug 1961, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

! @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, August 21, 1961 1 Festival Rated Best In Series VANCOUVER (CP) -- Finan- "| cially and artistically, the fourth 'Bicultural Split Problem Arises |Canadian turn to Canada this fall, | theatre now Is as flourishing as Since his arrival in Rome a that of Paris." year ago, he has attended the But the Italian theatre? great festivals of Salzburg, "Marvellous!" says the young Venice and Dubrovnik. stage designer. ; Last January, he interrupted Among others, 1've seen the his work in Europe to return to {roupe of Morelli Stoppa in La COULD BE PRINCESS Vancouver International Festi- val must go down as the most successful since the display of the arts began here in 1958, says the man who puts the big show together. Its success augers well for the future, too, said Nicholas Gold- schmidt, artistic and managing director of the festival, as the four-week arts program ended officially Saturday night with the sold - out performance of! singer Harry Belafonte. When receipts are totalled, the gross will reach more than y > $600:000. With grants expected not given in a blunt yes or no. to equal last year's $150,000 to- The 'separatist issue in Quebec tal added, the show's over-all|Was only lightly touched upon. gross will be more than $750,-| Possibly the reason is that po- 000. litical scientists and university teachers who came here from Quebec to examine French Can- ada with their English-speaking | counterparts see little inspira By RICHARD DAIGNAULT [ter of Canada is a fact and Ca-| Canadian Press Staff Writer nadians may as well get to work] SACKVILLE, N.B. (CP) -- Is|on that principle and do the best | French Canada pulling away [job possible. That summed up from English Canada? That was feelings on nearly all the par. the basic, unspoken question! ticipants, that came up day after day at a| Behind this conclusion were three - day seminar on Frenchithe thousands of words read Canada organized by the Sum-|from papers prepared in Eng- mer Institute of Mount Allison (lish by predominantly French- TE academic atmos. {speaking guest speakers, » academic . adi phere of Mount Allison the ques- rene edn demonds " for tion could never be quite be put 4 es a8 into words and the answer was| joni {o their own education fa- cilities, separate from present non sectarian schools, were couched in polite but firm words. ANALYZES SITUATION A military tattoo grossed $290,000 as it played to crowds that went higher than 20,000 at Empire Stadium. Up to the be- ginning of last week, the arts program had grossed $292,000, ed by Cisuge Ryan, national 1c 0 secretary of L'Action Catholi {tion or sense in a Quebec re-|canadienne, and Dr. Leon Dion. public. director of political science at not including $20,500 taken in|. but ohe essane Tame fash Laval University in Quebec City, Victoria during an appearance | !"8 t ough t e soft 30 en nd | Mr. Ryan gave a graphic pic- there of the Red Army chorus, [CUsSIons: French-uanacians a0 iyure of what is happening in the |Acadians of the Maritimes are X Appearance of the Red Army |oV the Ry i Arbon 8 are {structure of Quebec society and how the Roman Catholic singers and dancers, who made : their first trip to North Amer-1°f nationalism. Church's relations with laymen ica to participate in the festival,|GIVES SUMMARY are being modified rapidly. brought the largest crowds of| The man who came closest to, Dr. Dion, who said separatism ithe arts program, drawing making a forthright capsule may come to the fore of Que- {about 23,000 persons to the Fo-|summary of the situation was bec nationalism within the pre- {rum for four performances and Davidson Dunton, president of sent decade, urged advocates of |another 6,000 to the arena in Carleton University in Ottawa. |a bicultural Canada to come up | Victoria. He said the bicultural charac- with something more emotion- | : gle Sirmng "ham some educa | THEATRE GUIDE Captain Tells Of Shipwreck Paolo Cardinal Giobbe, 81, a HALIFAX (CP) -- Caplain member of the Vatican Curia, Jules Jourdain, 34-year-old cap- ,- o d cardi {ain of the survey ship North "2 een appointed cardinal Star IV, told Sunday how his| patron of the 90-year-old Order vessel struck a reef in the wa-'of the Knights of Malta IR t On. The Double." HEADS MALTA KNIGHTS {Regent -- "On e Double. VATICAN CITY re | Shown daily at 2.00, 3.55, 5.55, ATICAN CITY (Reuters) 7.55, 9.55 p.m. Last complete show at 9.55 p.m. Plaza "Exodus." Shown daily at 12.45 4.25, 8.20 p.m. Last complete show at 8.20 a French-speaking group with a| The varied aspects of French {Quebec nationalism were anal-| Canada af the request of Mont- [ocandiera. Visconti, the direc. In Italy jrals theztye 2 Nowe tor, is . Serrifie." By Therese Vaillancourt settings for Pirandello"s A Cha- TONIGHT Canadian Press Correspondent cun sa Verite and Aeschylus' THRU ROME (CP)--Robert Prevost Les Choephores. WEDNESDAY ! is one expatriate Canadian in . no hurry to return to his native SAW GREEK DRAMA He was back in Italy again BOX-OFFICE OPEN 8:00 SHOW STARTS 8:45 country. The young Montrealer is a in March after revisiting Spain| stage and costume designer, and Portugal and attending per- whose work has been seen on formances of ancient Greek stages in Montreal, Stratford, drama in Sicily. Ont., and on Canadian tele "I'm going to Scandinavia vision. He chose Italy as a field soon," said Prevost, "especially of study when he was awarded to see the productions of Ing- a travel grant by the Canada mar Bergman and his Malmo Arts Council last year. theatre group. The school Berg-| Italy is still his favorite coun- man founded a year ago inter-! try, despite numerous side trips ests me very much.' to France, Spain, Austria and He won't go to this year's Greece to attend famous theatre Salzburg festival, however, festivals. "I'd rather go to England for "I like working in Canada, the Stratford - on - Avon and] but I prefer to live in Italy." Glyndebourne festivals," he] said Prevost, who plans to re- said. "They tell me the London TECHNICOLOR® wom WARNER Broa. PLUS BATTLE THRILLS! RAGING SPECTACLE OF IMPERIAL ROME ! | #¢ THE REVOLT OF THE AGES! ADULT ENTERTAINMENT nie eet Sow Taine CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE ALWAYS A COLOR CARTOON OSHAWA IVE-IN HWY.401 RA.3.4972 Catherine South, 24, of Brampton, Ont., defeated four other girls at milking Satur- day to enter semi-final of in Toronto. Seven other semi- Dairy Princess competition al | finalists have yet to be chosen. Canadian National Exhibition Guilty Verdict For Spade Cooley twice --(CP Wirephoto) he said, "rockets went off in my brain. My head literally was on fire." z Anita Aros, one - time violin- ist in his band, testified that she accepted proposals of marriage from Cooley but didn't mean it because she thought the Brock, Whithy -- "Under Ten Drive-In -- 'The Dark at the ters of James Bay last week and p.m. was lost Captain Jourdain arrived in |Halifax with his crew to report to the owners, William Suma- rah Jr., and his brother, George. The ship was lost on rocks near Grey Goose Island in James Bay, some 25 miles from Fort George, last Monday night All 31 on board escaped. The 179-foot former ocean fug was on a 120-day charter to the Flags," 6.55 and 10.00 p.m. "That Kind of Woman" £30 p.m. Last compleie show at 8.30 p.m. Top of the Stairs." "All The Young Men." Box office opens BE WISE LET THE at 8.00 p.m. Show starts at 8.45 government for survey work in Hudson Bay. On board were 18 crew members and 13 survey- ason of insanity, Proposals were "just a gag." A jury Saturday convicted) The jury meets again Tues- Mrs. Dorothy Davis, a regis- $pade Cooley, 50, former band day to determine whether tered nurse and long time : : leader known as "the king of Cooley was sane at the time of Cooley family friend, testified; PERPIGNAM, France (AP) ors. od dite. western swing," of murdering the slaying. If Cooley is ad-|/that seven or eight years ago|Gen. Jean Gilles, who com- Captain Jour wd said t vg ip his wife, Ella Mae by beating juged sane, the jury must de-| Mrs. Cooley told her on four or manded F rench airborne troops ran up on a hig ) Piimacie and stomping her last April 3. cide whether his penalty will be five occasions that she had had | at Suez in 1956, died of a heart rock in an area of fairly deep The jury had deliberated 21life imprisonment or death inlan affair with Roy Rogers. attack Thursday. He was 57. water. hours before bringing a first-the gas chamber. m ERAN pw degree conviction. Sex, violence and bitter jea- DIDNT BELIEVE X that sh Cooley took the verdict with- lousy figured in testimony at the dian't beli av 3a e Sha she eut show of emotion. He was|trial of the musician - turned or eee ! 21 ogerss seated when the verdict was an-|real estate man. Ella Mae, 37, aie, ac d eid ale vans, nounced. blonde ex -vocalist in his band, | © * PC ye hy I Roy He had pleaded innocent and was slain at their ranch home in| Ai witlicsses her Hed! suburban Willow Springs. [Cooley beat his wife frequently | h to force her to admit romantic| BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP) innocent by re GENERAL DIES OSHAWA TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS PAY YOUR "BACK-TO-SCHOOL" EXPENSES. DAUGHTER WATCHED Cooley's daughter, Melody, 14, testified she saw him drag her mother's partly - nude form from a shower, slam her head against the floor, stomp on her[in the storm cellar of a shack and burn her with cigarettes. [Dear Pack Sade Creek: Sula, Cooley testified he struck his{}e got his nick name of Spade wife after she fold him she Cooley many vears later in a| WAGNER-MOORE-ROLAND planned to join a free love cult. [Poker game when he held five wilh J. CARROL NAISH ; Ss aid she told him of initia-|SPade flushes in a row ) incidents that never acutally oc- |curred. Cooley was born Donnell Clyde Baby Growt Unaffected By Protein By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS tion rites and "I must have hurt her terribly. I had a hazy recol- of Republic Pictures with a fid- starring ROBERT TERRY GILBERT MO In 1934 he arrived at the gale | Topics this week: Mother's lection it was an animal, not!dle and six cents. He begged milk and how fast babies Ella Mae" cowboy star Rogers for a job! grow, ocean - horne seeds When she described the cult,|and became Roger's stand-in. | from the tropics and night . joo Portuguese Win Phase Of Terror Editor's note: Harold K. Milks, Associated Press chief of bureau for Spain and Portugal, is making a tour of troubled Portuguese Af- rica. He reports in the fol- lowing dispatch on the sta. tus of the Angola rebellion, By HAROLD K. MILKS "THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE YEAR ...RIPS THE HEART!" NATURE'S DIET BOSLEY CROWTHER, NEW YORK TIMES You apparently can't boost the growth rate of a baby by increasing the amount of pro tein in the milk it receives Scientists have found that infants on mother's milk grow just about 'as fast as those on formulas of cows' milk which have twice or three times the amount of protein Nature conservatively has limited the amount of protein in mother's milk of most ani- mals, scientists say. This ben- tits the mother whose body does not have to deprive itself of nutrients to feed the off spring. And other studies have shown the limited amount of protein leads to a healthier offspring as well One interesting sidelight: Elephant's milk has about the same protein content as hu- Congo border. But the rebel Ne- gror bands opeate freely in the| gro bands operate freely in the| forests and jungles, emerging at! intervals to destroy, burn and kill Critics of Portuguese rule of this province, with its 250,000 4,500,000 Negroes, sav Portu-| LUANDA (AP) -- A tour guese confidence is misplaced. embattled northern Angola sup-| 'Portuguese reform s have ports the claim of Portuguese been too few and too slow in settlers and officials that they coming' declared a foreign have won the first phase of what missionary. "I don't think they they call the terrorist war. can halt this wave, But I shud- They have largely balked ef- der to think what can happen forts of warring tribesmen to here if the Portuguese are| drive them from their homes forced out, because their policies It's the same old stery every year. isn't it? Scheel bells for your OTTO PREMINGER PRESENTS PAUL NEWMAN /EVA MARIE SAINT RALPH RICHARDSON /PETER LAWFORD LEE J.COBB SAL MINEO JOHN DEREK children mean school bills for you. This year, make it easier on the family budget -- use result -- getting Oshawa Times Classified Ads to bring you the extra cash you need. man milk. And there are indi- cations that the growth ale of the elephant in early life is similar to that of man. FAR FROM HOME New Zealand farmers living near Ninety-Mile Beach found large numbers of tropical fruits and seeds washed ashore during the winter of 1956, carried there by the meandering ocean currents. Scientists who received some of the seeds raised the resulting plants in green houses. One of the plants now ix a 12-foot vine But the seeds would not have fared very well if they hadn't had human help. Some of them were well rotted when they finally came to shore. Others probably would never have survived on the exposed sand dunes of Ninety - Mile Beach TO SEE IN THE DARK Automobile drivers should be tested for night vision, says an Indiana University optometrist. There isn't the proper ap paratus to do such testing as yet, says Dr. Ingeborg Schmidt. But she is convinced that bad night vision may be responsible for many car acci- dents. Drivers are more likely to make errors in judging dis- tance and speed at night. For instance, two objects will ap- pear farther apart in dim ligh than in daylight From five to 10 per cent of all drivers have inadequate aight vision, Dr. Schmidt says. and farms. over the years have neglected But it appears a second phase to produce educated Negroes of the rebellion--economic attri- Who might take over." tion in this strategic West Afri- op 1 PRI RY can area--may bleed white both WORSE THAN LONGO? Angola snd sPoriuguese Angola shared this fear. One planter still defending his coffee plantation with the help of troops and volunteers said "They are trying to destroy us economically by burning our plantations, halting our mining| available here operations and driving away Portuguese officials say our workers through threats of claims of opposition spokesman mutilation and murder." that thousands of tribesmen A RL ANS have been slain by air and THINK CAN WIN ground atiacks are vastly ex. The Portuguese are confident 3.00 ated they can also win phase two, nn but admit it may be a long op eration costly in both lives and| money. Foreign and Portuguese in vestors seem to share this con- fidence. Financial sources herg report no suspension of projects aimed at developing the indus trial potential of the huge ter ritory These include =a $45,000,000 credit hy the Krupp interests of West Germany for developing rail and port facilities exploit- | ing rich iron ore deposits | MAY COST HEAVILY Qualified sources in/ Luanda estimate Angola and' Portugal must spend from $75,000,000 to $100,000,000 a year to maintain the struggle to keep Angola Portuguese, not counting losses! from farms, mines and facto- ries long in "It would be a hundred times worse than The Congo," he said A solid estimate of the num ber of killed and wounded in the five-month-old war is not hg % FEATURE: 2:00 - 3:55 5:55-7:55 Portuguese iroops are stead 3 ily extending their hold on towns, villages and highways| | stretching northward te the' Apmission prices: JILL HAWORTH MATINEE EVENING 75¢ $1.00 $1.10 EXODUS SCREENPLAY BY DALTON TRUMBO + BASED ON THE NOVEL BY LEON URIS » MUSIC BY ERNEST GOLD » PHOTOGRAPHED IN SUPER PANAVISION 70, TECHNICOLORS BY SAM LEAVITT A UNITED ARTISTS RELEASE » PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY OTTO PREMINGER 3 SHOWINGS DAILY 12:45 -4:25-8:20 P.M. PLATA INE PROOF ADULTS LOGES 85¢ CHILDREN 50c ANYTIME that Classified Ad Do Get Result FREE LIST SUSPENDED Chase away your troubles with MR. FUN ON THE RUN! ON THE Boys' Sports Jacket, size 16 -- other outgrown bays' clothin Diol 72 Baby Carriage trim, eonvertible. 72 -- pink and whi Best offer Tedoy co-slarrng WILFRID MARGARET FOE WHITE: RUTHERFORD MISS DIANA DORS Amsertment af Girly' Clothing, just like new, very reasons phone 72m "CRAZY TOWN" COLOR CARTOON nena "STOWAWAYS" FEATURETTE IN COLOR POSITIVE Oshawa Times Look around your home. Make a list of the worthwhile articles you families are looking for musical instruments, typewriters, bicycles, desks, encyclopedias and much more, Of course, things like furniture, s you have your s! costs only .627 like new, 9 16-18 Show your family how really wise you are. Teach them this easy te, chrome Telephons rize 10.12 bis. Tele- THE OSHAWA TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS Where wise families find cash for "Back - To - School" expenses 86 KING ST.E. 8am.-5 p.m. Mon. - Fri. - Sal. 8-12 Phone 723-3492 aren't using any more. With the school year about to start -- other appliances, tools and good clothing are always in demand. When 5 p.m. for a helpful Ad Writer. It's inexpensive, a 25 word line ad formula -- Your no longer used items -- plus a fast working Oshawa Times Classified Ad -- equal the extra money you need for those "back to school" bills. Do it today. list, just dial 723-3492 anytime between 8 a.m. and 2¢ per day on the special 6 day rate,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy