Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Aug 1966, p. 13

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AP WORLD SPOTLIGHT LILTING STRAINS OF WALTZ, BY DAY Comedy Series! By CYNTHIA LOWRY | HOLLYWOOD (AP)--When al ily, Affair replaces reruns of! THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, August 22, 1966 handful of situations suitable for a series. Its real parent is My/|chores. Three Sons, the long-playing se- ries on the same network. On Old Theme t= are at best only a double | relative helping out with household and child - Keith is committed to only work days on the new Thunder Over Asia, Louder, More Ominous. comedy series called Fam-| In this one we had Fred sian a rest of the cast will Murray playing a widower withjon, filling out the rest of This week The AP World, Spotlight looks at the chang- ing structure of leadership and the line China's of action that might be ex- pected from it, It also re- ports on Quemoy, the Na- tionalist island off China's coast and the change of the witch doctor in South rica. Af- NEW YORK (AP)--Thunder sver Asia grows louder and more ominous. The Chinese army high command, purged of dissident elements, appears to be gaining control over the country's 700,000,000 population. This emerging leadership by its own account still struggling to resolve deep internal con- flicts, evidently wants to estab- lish a new world organization, directed by Peking and exclud- ing Soviet participation. If that were all that was in- volved in the changes it would be serious enough, given the current leadership's insistence on violence as the only road to Communist power in underde- veloped countries. But the (ovo cma nt wai Discard 'Western Ways Peking Teen-agers Order The east-west boulevard, bi- the city and running made their demands|through Heavenly Peace square, By VERGIL BERGER | PEKING (Reuters) -- Crowds} of teen-agers virtually took con- trol of Peking's shopping streets Sunday, ordering shopkeepers, restaurant managers and hair- dressers to rid themselves of "western ways." In the latest development in the so-called cultural revolution sweeping China; the teen-agers told shopkeepers to stop selling such items as curios and cos- metics and clothes cut-in west- ern styles. Hairdressers were told to stop immediately giving "Hong Kong trims." Restaurants were told to serve cheaper, simpler meals, suitable for workers and farmers. In some cases, management and staff were threatened. The teen-agers, organized as the Red Guards of the cultural revolution, were clearly acting with the approval of govern- ment authorities. The Red Guards, who earlier during the weekend tore down neon signs outside scores of Pe- king's large shops and renamed some of the capital's avenues, Sunday gave managements time) from 48 hours to|/hand bookstores and foreign- language bookstores were 'closed Sunday, but some were jexpected to reopen soon. The teen-agers renamed many ts rf one week to rid their establish-| Youth Orchestra 0 Opens Season | over old on street signs. s Window s Washing works we com- s y t - percent r/ avg Well STRATFORD, Ont. (CP)--The National Youth Orchestra,| under the direction of Walter) Susskind, Sunday held its first concert of the 1966 season be-| fore a capacity audience in the) Stratford Festival Theatre. The program included three Wein by Berg and Dvorak's Symphony No. 7 in D Minor. Soprano soloist Mary Sim- mons of Toronto sang the Der Wein number. The orchestra also played Ca- nadian composer Pierre Mer- cure's Trittyque. The 103 - member orchestra comes from points in Canada as widely separated as Victoria and Halifax Their next concert will be in Montreal, after which they make a tour of the British Isles and Europe. They return for their third Canadian concert in ments cies." They public in big colored posters on|had its name walls and windows of the shops!Long Peace to East Is Red. restaurants. shops and restaurants are state- and owned. AFFECTS PUBLIC This is the latest development in a political and cultural UP- | ciree changes in China also could have meaning some day for Viet Nam. At this time, China, enmeshed in a power struggle, seems. un- likely to want to risk deeper in- volvement in the Vietnamese conflict, But with the sort of leadership. now emerging, the time conceivably could come when China might be more will- ing to gamble. Marshal Lin Piao, reputedly a believer in the "human sea" warfare tactics tested in the Korean conflict, obviously is now a man of considerable au- thority. He may have more real power than Mao Tse-tung, who seems more and more these days a leader whose words and presence are simply a useful de- vice for the winning side in the power struggle. Marshal Lin has a reputation for hating all foreigners, in- cluding Russians, Of all the Peking Politburo members only Lin--apart from Mao--was singled out for praise in a central eommittee commu- nique issued after what Peking described as a 12-day meeting of "bourgeois tenden-, jsecting All Peking} |INSULT SOVIETS The road leading to the im- |posing, White-domed Soviet Em-} bassy, formerly called Street of Growing Prestige, was reduvved tof Struggle Aginst Revis- early this month.. It extolled Lin's leadership in the purge as "a brilliant example for the whole party and the whole na- tion."" Such praise usually is re- served for Mao. QUEMOY (AP) -- By night there's the rumble of artillery. By day, the lilting strains of a Viennese waltz. Such are the sounds of war on this Chinese Nationalist outpost off China. Eight years ago the Commu- nists launched an all-out bom- bardment to subdue the island. After 44 days they gave up the offensive. Today the Nationalists sit con- fidently on this stronghold, con- vinced its defences are stronger than ever. A U.S. team of ad- visers--closer to Chinese lines than any other American mili- tary unit--provide evidence of U.S. pledges to heip the Nation- alists in, defence. On most odd-numbered days, after dark, Communist shore batteries start a harmless shell- ing. BLARE MUSIC During the day the Commu- si. NAGASE | Special | changed from here this week. About 200 ince. _nists train joudspeakers on ,Que- "moy, less than a mile and a half across the water from the nearest Red installations. Be- tween propaganda appeals the Communist disc jockeys play Viennese waltzes and Chinese folk songs. The Communists usually fire less than 100 shells on any one night at. Quemoy and Matsu, and they use propaganda'shells that burst above the ground and scatter leaflets. The Nationalists wage their own propaganda war. In the aft- ernoon, when winds blow to- ward the mainland, they turn on loudspeakers The winds also carry propa. ganda balloons with leaflets, shirts, toothbrushes and tooth- paste, soap, towels, medicines for people on the mainland. JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- South Africa's old-time. witch doctors and medicine men are losing most of their clients these days. Competition is tough. A mod- ern generation of sophisticated jungle practitioners, using hifa- qnnmnnit SNE LL 1 a the age-old primitive methods of tribal witchery. Far from being a dying trade, witch doctors and muti - men (medicine) of both sexes are in- creasing in numbers, It is be- coming a lucrative business and many a small fortune is being made, Modern day witch doctors in southern Africa have mostly dis- carded the tribal mumbo-jumbo usually associated with their jungle counterparts. Today they tend to keep surgery hours, ar- range private consultations and visit their important patients in plush new automobiles. For the up and coming young- sters who wants to make a ca- reer of witch doctoring--there's even a "learn now-pay later' correspondence course. "Far from regarding the witch doctor and muti-man as an evil influence and fraud, most of them today perform a worthwhile service to the black community," said Dr, Peter Becker, an expert on African tribal folklore. Hazel on CBS soon, it may| seem iamiiiar. Where have we seen before) the swinging bachelor with his | manservant who suddenly be- comes a foster parent: Sure, Bachelor Father. | _The basic situation of Family | Affair is the swinging bachelor | and his manservant who ac-| quire three wards. But where| Bachelor Father had John For-| sythe as the gay blade and Sam-| mee Tong as his Chinese house- | man, the new series has Brian' Keith as the man-about-town) and Sebastian Cabot as his gen-| tleman's gentleman. But this surface resemblance | may be misleading. After all three sons, plus an elderly male | stories, FINISH HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME g @ Grades 6 te 10 Course prepores you for many government spon- sored trade courses. © Up to Grode 12 equivalent course for job improvement, © Senior matriculation course prepares you to write provie ized certificate, Mail Coupon Today CANADIAN ACADEMY P.O. BOX 356 HAMILTON, ONT. MOO ic 0 'db bd 0060 inbbceeen PAB 5.065 ecccrvessvincess PRONG... s.0.0:0:0040:060.6 -AGGeoe< Bod Lawl ~~ Scholastic Standard Asked PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- A{"whatever happens to Grade 13,| lresolution calling for a special|we want to make sure that at] \committee to maintain scholas-|least five years of secondary tic standards after the abolition|schooling are maintained." of Gradé 13 departmental ex-| In aminations in 1968 will be pre-|council will be asked'to author- sented to the Ontario Secondary|jze a joint committee with the School Headmasters Association|Qntario department of educa- school have registered for the three-|school students must spend on day annual meeting of the asso-|each subject in a year. ciation which represents 550 sef-| At ondary school heads in the prov-|rules that at least eight periods | DRINKS MOUNT UP s : s B d T M a dians s t $1,074,312,000 ody To Maintain -- |, csnacian sen sos: GRANLEY COMPANY Presents _ CARY GRANT "SAMANTHA EGGAR JIM HUTTON SOL C, SIEGEL PRODUCTION another resolution, jtion to consider abolishing the principals|set number of periods all high present, the department PANAVISION® TECHNICOLOR® | ja week be devote Onglish. Ree 30 reusn amma A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE mums heaval that has been in Por | gress now for three 'months. It) involves a larger part of the) public here than previous sack-| ings of senior Communisty party vionism, Scores of colored banners) have been put up along the! street bearing such slogans as be as many standards An Ontario Teachers' Feder-| Mandatory allotments for other ation brief earlier this year ex-|subjects are also in effect. pressed concern that there may| The council will also be asked Plus aS|to discuss a proposal allowing| "THE LITTLE ONES" officials and intellectuals. " aur The weekend demonstrations Soviet revisionists." were apparently following liter- n 1 ally the advice of editorials and|where foreign embassies were) manifestos to sweep. away all| bes traditional things. ii teen-agers tions from Mao Tse-tung's writ-| , ings in unison at the tops of|turesque lane in the southern Villagers of this Worcestershire their voices as their leaders |part of the city, which for years} community have to listen to the wooden jhas been the centre of north| radio whether they own a fa- signboards of shops with old-| China's antique and curio trade,jrio or not. A newly-installed fashioned or traditional names.|green posters proclaimed "we|transmitter's signals are picked give a final warning to bour. | up by telephones, stoves and electric hot-plates. the demolished The shops were given new, rev-| , olutionary names such as East|geois elements Wind Store and Workers-Peas-| ants-Soldiers department store. Most the streets, neon or \"Prestige for whom? Not for 'The former Legation Street ieged during the Boxer rising} n 1900 has been named Anti-| read quota-|Imperialist Struggle street. In Liulichang, a narrow, pic- abolished. council; in this street." schools when the exams are|school boards to advertise for) E. H. Brohman of Petrolia, any Ont., first vice-president of the/year. It is aimed at ending the| said Sunday CAPTIVE AUDIENCE WYCHBOLD, England (CP)-- them} school) interview the and time during |teachers BAY RIDGES 7 ee that crush of interviewing that takes 668-2692 ------------="}place each spring in Toronto CHILDREN UNDER 12 YRS. FREE art A Division of the S. S. Kresge Company th ~K NOW OPEN! TODAY antique shops, second- capital's best known painting new names TORONTO (CP) --Two high} school girls from suburban Richmond Hill became com-| mercial window. washers as a} publicity gag three years ago. |= FEATURE AT... 1:30 3:25 - 5:30 - 7:30 - 9:35 There stars sel topether and marke weally bey Grimes hagipen to-comedty' | @ TWO LOUNGES CENTENNIAL LOUNGE CAROUSEL LOUNGE Patsi Higgs, 21, and Carol | Shelton, 19, like the job so much | they've returned to it every! summer since. They say the pay is so good they don't like to discuss it for fear of making men in the business jealous. They wear blue cotton zip- pered jump suits and carry water pails, chamois, sponges and squeegees as tools of the DEADLY... DANGEROUS... THE GAME IS... BLINDFOLD! ay mart CAMERA on eee 4 10 br ee ao Toronto Sept. 18. 2ND BIG HIT APACHE GOLD 4 LEX BARKER FUNNIEST MOVIE EVER TO BREAK STONE FAMILY FUN WEEK -- KIDDIES UNDER 12 FREE DON'T MISS IT -- THE STONE IS ?~"'!NG ON BOX OFFICE end OSHAWA Biaahaee PH. 723-4972 DRIVE-IN re Gly held over 2nd week COLUMBIA: PICTURES ant CARL FOREMAN peome OQ FREE \'; SAM JAFFE ane PAUL RADIN vA PANA/SION® COLUMBIACOLOR ay Feature Times: WEEKDAYS 7:30 and 9:40 SATURDAY CONTINUOUS FROM 1 P.M. ROCK H BLINDFOLD' wis: oo AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL presents pcrer FONDA. wancy SINATRA SUNDAY CONTINUOUS FROM 2 P.M. THE NEW ODEON THEATRE 39 KING ST. E. PHONE 725-5833 THE WILD ANGELS ~PANAVISION:.PATHECOLOR Saves DERN pane LADD aecte cititth conn FT chime This Picture is recommended for Adults. Ps = = -- ce UDSON - CLAUDIA CARDINALE HELD OVER Their credo is violence... Their God is hate ... The most terrifying film of our time! MON., TUES. AND WED. TIMES 1:30 3:30 - 5:30 7:35 ~ 9:40 L.C.S. 9:20 | @ RESTAURANT CONFEDERATION ROOM | @ ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY MON. TO SAT. RITA LION with the DAVE EDWARDS TRIO @ ROOMS | Air Conditioned - TV - Broadloom | @ SWIMMING POOLS For Facilities for 20 to 300 Banquets @ Meetings @ Weddings PHONE 723-5271 Information and Reservations AT 40 slide Be BETWEEN OSHAWA AND WHITBY | ON HIGHWAY NO. 2 : DEPT. 620, 120, 127, 126, 35mm OU NEED NEVER BUY ANOTHER ALM! SIMPLY LEAVE YOUR NEXT FILM BLACK -&- WHITE OR COLOUR K mart's CAMERA DEPART- MENT FOR DEVELOPING & | D Fs PRINTING. YOU WILL GET A FREE , hee 9 ROLL OF THE SAME SIZE. eeeeeee @ FAST, EFFICIENT SERVICE ! FINEST QUALITY PRINTS ! SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! eeeeee8ee 2G ]| FREE! SAME SIZE OF Kame FILM WITH EACH ORDER! THIS WEEK ONLY UNIVERSAL SLIDE TRAYS capacity fits most projectors ee FREE FILM OFFER! Te CAMERA DEPT. FREE ROLL | OF FILMI | as & BLACK -&- WHITE OR COLOUR} | FOREACH ROLL LEFT FOR & DEVELOPING & PRINTING "4 USF IE IT BL

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