Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 May 1966, p. 28

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SHOW TIMES AT MOVIES MARKS -- On Saturday and| For movie fans who enjoy Sunday 'Tarzan and the Valley real down to earth spy stories, of Gold" with Nancy Kovak the book the world could not and a second feature "Frank-| put down is now a motion enstein Conquers the World," | picture. Richard Burton. Claire staiimy Nick Agams. Bovn of | Bloom and Oskar Werner ia these pictures are in color. "The Spy Who Came In From The Cold" starting next Wed- nesday. Feature shown daily at 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, and 9:35. Last complete show at 9:25 p.m. PLAZA -- Continuing until | Wednesday of next week, that most talked about western '"'The Rare Breed" with James Stewart, Maureen O'Hara and Brian Keith. Thursday a murder mystery "Study in Terror', with John Neville on the same bill for western fans "Ride Beyond Vengeance"with Chuck Connors | Both of these features are in color and are Adult Entertain- ment. Showtime is Thursday and 'Friday at 7.00 p.m. Saturday continuous from 1.00 p.m. and JUDY DALLIMORE is a shy 19 - year -old blonde who is also one of Canada's top sprinters. Last year the award for Ottawa's out - standing athlete joined her collection (above) This sum mer she hopes to go to the British Empire Games in Jamaica (CP Photo) Track Trophies Galore-- Collected By Fragile Blonde By MARILYN ARGUE OTTAWA (CP)--Judy Dalli- More is the kind of fragile btonde that boys leap to open doors for because she looks as though she really couldn't manage by herself. A demure 19, she's got a pink - and - white complexion and sweet, shy charm that would make a Southern belle @trangie on her julep. She's also one of the top young sprinters in Canada. She likes nothing better than going to a track meet and shooting for a Canadian rec- erd in the 50 yards indoors or = 100 or 220 yards out- rs. Last year she won the award for Ottawa's outstand- ing athlete, that trophy join- ing her growing collection in the Dallimore basement play- room. She also has a drawer full of medals from track meets in Montreal, Toronto, Halifax and Vancouver. *T used to worry about be- ing a 'female athiete'," she admits, '"'but now I feel it doesn't matter what people think as long as you enjoy what you're doing. Anyway, the uniforms are pretty cute -- some of them look more*like bathin RELAY TEAM WON Girls outnumber boys in the track club Judy belongs to-- the Ottawa Uplands Harriers "J think that's because we had some pretty good girls-- our retay team is the Cana- dian champion--and that at- tracted more." getting z suits," She started running at 16, after she's done well in high school meets and a teacher encouraged her to go on. Now she practises two nights a week with the other club members in a hangar at RCAF Uplands Station. "It's like a circus with the shot put and discus and broad jump and running all going all at once." Most other nights she and sister Barb, 17, go up to the local high school and jog around the corridors for two hours' 'for stamina." The rest of the family are Strictly spectators, but inter- ested. Scott, 9, concentrates on hockey, but Judy says "he's my strongest sup- porter." Mr. Dallimore is the, girls' chauffeur and treasurer ° of the track club Travelling to track meets; such as the one in Vancouver, Judy's home - town until she, was 14, is exciting, but "you never get to see much of the city when you're there for a meet. You have to rest and relax," EXPENSES MOUNT Although travel expenses and hotel bills are often paid by the host club, expenses do mount up. "Track shoes are $25, for instance, and then there are things like sweat suits--doesn't that sound aw- ful?'* There will be no expenses for the family if Judy goes to the British Empire Games in Jamaica in August, as she + hopes to do. She doesn't know about the Olympics in Mexice City in 1968--"It's a long time from now and there are a lot of good people coming up." Right now she's concentrat- ing on her Grade 12 studies and planning to work next year, then go to the University of Guelph to qualify as a rec- reation director. One thing Judy like about track and field competition is "the fine people you get to know across the country; peo- ple like Bruce Kidd and Bill Crothers -- they're well-edu- cated, nice boys. That's the kind of figure I think young people should admire." IT'S HERE! The GO-GO Sportcycle YAMAHA RO-DON SPORTS TAUNTON RD, E. (just east of 5 pointe) 723-8711 @ SALES @ SERVICE @ RENTALS DISCOVER THE SWINGING WORLD Sunday continuous from 2.00 p.m. REGENT -- Now playing and continuing through next Tuesday, one of the most tender and hauntingly beautiful love stories to grace the screen in| a decade. Starring Shelley} academy award win-| Winters, ner in "Patch of Blue", and 'co-starring Sidney Poitier and Elizabeth Hartman. Shown at 1:30, 3:30, 5:35, 7:25, and 9:45 p.m. Showtimes 1:30, 3:30, 5:35, 7:45 and 9:55. Last complete show at 9:30 p.m. Coming Thursday -- Dear Martin plays the part of Matt Helm pleasure loving playboy- photographer with a sense of humor and a flair for fighting in '"'The Silencers" Co-starring Stella Stevens and Chyd Char- lisse. Adult Entertainment and | in technicolor. | This feature shown at 1:20, 3:20, 5:20, 7:30 and 9:40. Last | complete show at 9:20. Smooth Latin From Marhattan | In New Career As Comic Villain HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- For years Cesar Romero played suave leading men. Handsome lovers in white tie and tails. And, as he puts it, '"playboys, heavies, gigolos and lounge liz- ards."' Now he was hardly recogniz- able in pasty white makeup, clown's painted grin and wild thatch of green wig. This was romantic Romero as, sounds, The Joker of Batman, Cast and crew of that televi- sion hit are making a movie ver- sion. Over lunch the smooth Latin from Manhattan said of his new career as comic yvil- lain: "T love it. It's a kooky, way- | out character, the easiest I ever | played. I can be as hammy as I like and do all the things we were told not to do: Mug, over- act, accentuate. It's fun because you're not tied down, inhibited."' As Batman's fiendish but never - quite - successful adver- sary in the film, Romero has a grand time staging a kidnap- ping, flying by umbrella like Mary Poppins and wielding a disintegrator that turns humans te powder. WORRIES EASED "And I don't have te worry about circles under the ayes or whether my hair is combed," he noted. Romero, 3®, six-foot-three and 200 pounds, has been in pictures 32 years. "This town," he said, x 'thas been very good to me." He was born in New York City to a Cuban mother and Spanish father. As a boy vaudee ville fan, hanging around stage doors, he knew that show busie ness was for him. After a tura as a $17.50-a-week bank clerk he teamed up with a girl dance# and appeared in supper clubs, He became a stage dancer ia musicals along with a youtla named George Munphy, now U.S. senator from California, who later in Hollywood gave Re mero his nickname--Butch. ROY'S BACK! Road Service Licensed Mechanic ' Complete line of Atlas Producte Free Pick-Up and Delivery Your impertei §ESSO deester ROY ALLAN'S ESSO SERVICE 268 Bloor W. 726-3293 The Cadillac Hotel Eddy Wood Trio DANCING... Entertainment Nightly and Sat. Afternoon Matinee Watch fer Tom Denion and THE IMPACTS THE CADILLAC HOTEL

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