Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Oct 1965, p. 16

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a ae a eee dame te | BEAUMONT FROM GENERAL MOTORS Beaumont has been re- styled for 1966 and offers a brand-new roofline and different rear-window treat- ment in this Custom sport coupe with sport option. The rear window is recessed and at a different angle than ~ body lines at the rear. windshield is also lowe' more dramatic in this mod- el. All new for '66 is the four-door sport sedan in the Beaumont Custom series. Both models offer new ex- terior styling, new interiors and new ornamentation. There is a sport option for both the Custom sport coupe and the Custom convertible and it includes Strato-bucket seats, centre floor console with four-speed transmission or Powerglide, electric clock,wheel tri mdiscs and luxurious interiors. There are nine models in two ser- fes of Beaumont for 1966. Hit Scored In London By Toronto Symphony By CAROL KENNEDY LONDON (CP)--Canada pro- duced one of the surprise hits of the first Commonwealth Arts Festival, which ended Saturday, with the Toronto Symphony ac- claimed -hy London as one of world class. The orchestra gave the last concert of the festival here Fri- day to an enraptured audience in the Thames-side Royal Festi- val Hall. Sunday Times critic Felix Aprahamian says the orches- tra's two London concerts "brought an unexpected element toa Gemety festival--orchestral virtuosity of the great interna- tional class." Aprahamian gives lavish praise to the conducting of 29- year-old Seiji Ozawa--who less than eight years ago was dish- washing on a Japanese freigh- ter--and says he has the poten- tial of a "super-Karajan." Von}: Karajan is recognized as one of the world's greatest conductors. performance by Montreal's The- atre du Nouveau Monde. PLEASED AUDIENCE The national folk-dance troupe Les Feux-Follets, though doing less than roaring trade at the box-office, apparently enhantedc their audiences and at least one performance received a stand- ing ovation. First assessments of the fes- tival in box-office terms were along the lines of what the or- ganizers expected, with audi- ences averaging half-capacity in each of the four cities taking part. Nevertheless, there was wide] acceptance of the view that! something of lasting value was achieved, Director General Hunter, announcing plans to hold a repeat every three years if .other Commonwealth coun- tries are prepared to play host. noted that the festival had got! off to a good start by being held) in London--artistic mecca for Commonwealth companies anx- ENVY TORONTO Ozawa's results with the orch- estra after only one week's re- hearsal, says the Sunday Times, "gives one cause to envy Tor- onto, for this is the kind of per- sonality that can build up a regular faithful public." A few days earlier, festival Director - General Ian Hunter said the festival had established the reputation of the Toronto Symphony as an orchestra of "world stature." "I hope it won't be long be- fere they are back again," he told reporters. He added that the Royal Win- nipeg Ballet could have played| to good audiences in London for) much longer than the four nights allotted, but then it would mot have been seen elsewhere in Britain. Canada's other major contri- butions to the festival have OSHAWA -|ious to test their efforts against |world standards. This, Hunter recalled, was one of the great attractions when. the Edinburgh Festival began, and he hoped the Com- monwealth counterpart ~ would| also become an "international yardstick." John Akar, director of the bare-bosomed Sierra Leone dance troupe, said that for his tiny country the festival had been a "unique opportunity to see other cultures." > ee ee aa OTTAWA (CP) -- A chicago, doctor has questioned the)' moral right of the medical pro- fession te proleng life either against a patient's will or in hopeless cases. Dr. Walter C. Alvarez, who writes a syndicated newspaper column. was one of several speakers Saturday during a one day symposium on iatrogenic illness sponsored by the Ottawa Academy of Medicine. Iatrogenic {llness was de- scribed as "disease or condi- tion" induced in a patient as a side effect of the doctor's treat- ment which may. be medical, surgical or drug induced, Dr. Alvarez said that in the days when he was an intern, pneumonia was "the old man's friend."" Many of the old people sha MD Questions The Right To Prolong Citizens' Life who were Syin gin his wards t~ Ain an. 'were giad to dic and some told me I would do them no kindness if T struggled to keep them alive." Pneumonia was no longer the old man's friend because "we doctors usually cure it with an-| tibiotics," "I have known decerebrate and eomatose human vege- tables to be kept alive with strenuous treatment for from seven to 11 years. I wonder, is that good medicine?" Dr. Alvarez said he was not advocating the killing of any- one, but he asked if the profes: sion must struggle to prolong the process of dying, in the case of an idiot, or that of a man or woman who is almost certain to be gone in six weeks. MOSCOW (AP) -- Dimitry Polyansky, newly-named first deputy premier of the Soviet Union, survived the fall of his political sponsor, Nikita Khrush- chev, and continued his climb in the Kremlin hierarchy. Now only 47, Polyansky has moved swiftly to the spot he now holds just one rung below Premier Alexei Kosygin, He has done this although, until a jyear ago, Westerners usheved it was Khrushchev pulling him up the ladder. As had Kosygin, Leonid Brez- hnevy, Communist party first secretary, and others, Polyan- sky justified survival after the fall of Khrushchev by saying many of his 'policies had been sound and they. were right to follow them at the time. On the other hand, they condemned Khrushchey &nd explained his ouster by saying he applied these policies personally, errat- ically and impractically. | DON'T FORGET Che Rih Room Continental French. Buffet Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL DRIVE-IN THEATRE y+ 723-4972 NOW PLAYING @° 6 OH CHRES promt 0 @ 2 been warmly received in Lon- don. Princess Margaret and the! Earl of Snowdon attended a! BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 7:00 FIRST SHOW AT DUSK ADULT ENTERTAINMENT Dimitry Polyansky Is Made Ast. Deputy Premier US.S.R. Polyansky fears nuclear war. In 1960 he made a trip to the United States during which he mixed and talked freely. In Charleston, W. Va. Polyan- sky told this reporter he survivors of a new world war in which the great powers used their nuclear weapos. He showed respect for the accom- plishments of U.S, industry but not the slightest doubt of the superiority of. communism. He championed "peaceful coexist- ence. Polyansky is the essence of the '"'new Soviet man." He was born Noy. 7, 1917, the date of the start of the Communist revolution. doubted there would be any}. Implementation Study Urged MONTREAL (CP) -- A 4oint meeting of two Quebec medical groups has called for a provin- cial commission to deal with the implementation of a Quebec medical care plan. The Federation of General practitioners' and. the Federa- tion of Medical Specialists in Quebec held a 'special confer- ence Saturday to study prob- Héms related to a medicare Dr. Raymond Robillard, presi- dent of the specialists' group. "If present conditions per- sist in this relationship they can only lead to a cenfrenta- tion such as those which have already taken place in chewan and Belgium." FOUND CHINESE HERB Ginseng, a widely-used Chi- nese cure-all, was first found in Canada in 1679 and now is ex- ported to Asia regularly. plan. 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