A BOARD FOR THE BORED? The Brookside Park Neigh- borhood Association are not only interested in the children of their own area, but of those in the entire community when they recently donated a "'beat board" to the Simcoe Hall Boys' Club. The "Board" will be used in the gymnasium program, and for the Gymnas- tic Group which meets each Saturday afternoon. The pho- to shows Douglas Whiting, age 14, doing a somersau!t off the "board" while Per- nard Muzeen, a staff member at the Boys' Club kneeling left assists him in the break- fall. Looking on are the two Brookside Park Association who made presentation B. f Cook, left, treasurer, and R president. members of the W. Barr, right, LBJ's Foreign Affairs Policy Soon To Be Seen By ARCH MacKENZIE WASHINGTON (CP) -- How will President Johnson conduct himself in. foreign affairs as president in his own right? Some answers should come shortly. This most political president, with a sharp nose for domestic scents, has foreign- policy decisions to ponder around the world, Johnson has just ended his post-election: work - holiday on the peaceful banks of the Pe- dernales River and his first in- ternational item is South Viet Nam today. That by itself would depress even Wilson and Charles de Gaulle. INHERITED POLICIES Johnson inherited and has continued policies of the. late president Kennedy _ includ- ing some bad bruises and wounds; From what he has said, he does not want to rock any boats, even though some critics con- tend that some of these boats including Viet Nam are sinking. In Viet Nam, for example, the president now has public .pres- sure being exerted on him-- through the findings by public most men -- Johnson already|opinion polis--to do something knows the subject well--but he also has on his mind such mat? ters as Soviet Russia's intran- sigence about helping. finance the United Nations, NATO's of more decisive nature. He launches another round of talks today about the chaotic situation with Maxwell D. Tay- lor, American ambassador in the shed much more light on the kind of international man that Johnson is. Wilson's visit is tied closely} to the strains within NATO, the} pressures on West Germany, the pressures from France and the fact that Britain remains in a shaky economic position. One thing on the whole Brit- ish position' seems certain to| draw: the president's quick un- derstanding. That is the fact} that Willson, has just a thin par-| liamentary edge and that the Labor supporters include about 60 left-wing. members of Parlia- ment who could not be more opposed to many things that Johnson would like to see done. That is the sort of political situation that the president as a prudent politician can appre- Monday By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP)--One some- times becomes bored with tele- vision and starts thinking of it as an endless stream of silly situation comedies and. melo- dramatic soap operas occasion- ally interrupted by a routine variety show. The next time such dour re- flections occupy this viewer's mind, I shall recall Monday night's programs. For one hour early in the eve- ning we were treated to an en- chanting concert by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, enlivened by the comments of Conductor Leonard Bernstein, A short time later, Andy Wil- liams turned up on his own pro- gram with delightful Julie An- drews in tow and there followed a happy 60 minutes of tuneful music and gentle good humor. Finally there was an hour's appreciation of Sir Winston Churehill, as a statesman but primarily as a Sunday painter. It included absolutely stunning color photography of the British countryside, interiors of Churchill's great house, Chart- well, and the Riviera seacoast. HAD PROBLEMS For all that glorious photog- raphy, The Other World of Winston Churchill had its prob- ACHTUNG! Der Pass HOLLYWOOD (AP)--"Ach- tung! Head 'em off at der crossroads."' "Thees town eesn't enough for both of us, erre,"' "Ven you call me dot, Lud- wig--smile."' This isthe kind of dialogue that may be emerging from European films as continental movie makers continue ex- ploiting their discovery of the western. Once considered Hollywood's exclusive prop- erty, it has been taken over by producers from Tokyo to Prague Australian-born Ron Ran- dell has returned from Eu- rope with a report on the horse operas. He should know. He was in one--a Viennese production filmed in Yugo- slavia and Berlin! "It's true," he told a re- porter. "The film was called Hot Like the Wind and I was the only one from Hollywood beeg Pi- Was A Good TV Night subject and the program never seemed able to go in any one direction for long. Thus at times there would be fine quotations by the old war- rior on the joys of painting, fol- lowed by reverent but not really important or interesting anec- dotes about him. Heart of the program was films of his paintings that ex- plained his interest better than rather pointless stories by Merle Oberon and Viscount Montgomery. "To be really happy and really safe," Churchill. wrote in the slim volume from which much of the material was taken, "one ought to have at least two or three hobbies, and they must all be real. It is no use starting late in life to say, 'I will take an interest in this or that.' For almost 50 years he found that 'just to paint is great fun."' And in the closeups of his re- actions to sun and shade, sea and snow, Venetian brides, Greek temples, English daffo- dils, that pleasure showed. Recommended tonight: That Was The Week That Was, NBC, 9:30-10 EST; Viet Nam, it's a. Mad War, NBC, 10- lems. Churchill at 90 is a large --news special with Chet Huntley narrating, Head 'em Off At 'Max Mix street. The company built it with an Italian firm which was going to make a couple of westerns after we finished. "Later a German company came in on the production, so Sa AOS WR GOR SO St SUN BD A BADE HR RAEN AEE I at CE a r PRICES EFFECTIVE DEC. 2,3,4,&5 FRESH LEAN WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES we shot the interiors in Ber- lin, mostly of the ranch house. Our director was Rolf Olsen, a Viennese who had also shot a western in the Canary Islands. ef "Westerns are now being | made in Italy, Spain, Yugo- | slavia, Sweden, Czechoslo- | vakia, Bulgaria, and, I under- | stand, in Russia. The Euro- | peans are actually paying more .attention to the western | than Hollywood, where they seldom make the big westerns | any more." | What's more, he_ believes the Europeans are doing a good job of it. "They seem to be going | back to theoriginal sources for their authenticity,' Ron remarked. "Here in Hollly- | wood, the same old directors | PORK SHOULDER 29: FRESH LEAN Pork Butt Roast 39: FRESH TASTY AND WELL TRIMMED Pork Butt Chops 49: BURNS WIENERS LIBBY FRurr Cocktail 2 MAPLE Lear Mincemea; YORK SASPBERRY on WBERRY Pure Jams 15-07, ms 49. 2-LB, 24.07, 1-LB, 45° SEEDLESS RAISINS ciate in a second. seem to do the westerns, and PKG. they use the same old props. | Sure, maybe the Colt .45s over there say 'Made in Italy' on them, but they're patterned after the real article, not a modern version, as in Holly- wood. Australian "t 534 in the cast. The rest were German and Swiss. . « "It was made for an Aus- trian. company called Stad- halle, and we shot the ex- teriors in two places in Yugo- slavia. One was a ranch and the other was a_ western strains, the impending visit Of|saicon, while he has personally Prime Minister Harold Wilson) advised against expecting any and the unlikelihood that The} major decisions to be forthcom- Congo will get better before it/ing at least some subtle gets much worse. ,.|changes are envisaged against On his record, _Johnson's!, background of stern warnings strength so far has been on the|1, heware from Russia and page ag matters, where his ca-| China, reer centred. : But if his forte is to "reason" a ee Won _-- MAY SHED LIGHT Perhaps the Johnson recep- tion of Prime Minister Wilson-- the president's first of a foreign leader since the election--will BURNS SHAMROCK RINDLESS SLICED SIDE BACON BURNS SMALL LINK PURE PORK SAUSAGE LONELY DOGS UNWANTED NEW LISKEARD, Ont. (CP) Mayor J. L. Taylor says he is fed up with dogs. roaming the streets of the town. He said be- tween 30° and 40 children take their dogs to school with them, then the animals wander at large during school hours. One animal control officer has to look after three towns, New Liskeard, Cobalt and Hailey- bury, | 1-LB, PKG. PKG, 69° 1-LB, PKG. 49° CHIQUITA BRAND 5 c tripods, utility begs, films, , filters, slide projectors, movies, : 4 9 ror 39° oe » many ideal gifts. SIZE 25° 24's FULLY AUTOMATIC 3 ron 29° EUMIG P8 NOVA LARGE 29° * to be proven that this cuts any tee with Red China, Russia or SOLVE GI Journalists Concerned Over Paper Tax LONDON (CP)--The National Union of Journalists has ex- pressed concern to James Cal- laghan, chancellor of the ex- chequer, over the effect on the British newspaper industry of the 15-per-cent surcharge of newsprint. The union urges that particu- lar attention should be paid to newsprint, much of which comes from Canada, when the general surcharge is reviewed, it was learned today. * The Newspaper Proprietors' | "We Service What We Sell Society already has made simi-) ~ OURSELVES" lar representations to the gov- | ernment. | H. J. Bradley, union general secretary, said in a letter to Callaghan: "This is the raw ma- terial of the newspaper indus- try and my council views with concern the imposition of a tax on. it for the first time in our history... ." PRODUCE OF U.S.A. CANADA NO. 1 GRADE | CORN ON THE COB ftinn KERNELS PRODUCE OF U.S.A. CANADA NO. 1. GRADE CALIFORNIA CELERY caroen raesu PRODUCE OF U.S.A, CANADA NO. 1 GRADE FRESH CUCUMBERS ;;vovsire PRODUCE OF U.S.A. 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