PRODUCTS MANAGER LES SAMUEL SHOWS SYSTEM TO HON. MICHAEL STARR IN AJAX PLANT -- Oshawa Times Photo Miss Diane Nicholson, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs, Floyd Nich- olson entertained a number of her friends at her birthday |party, Monday afternoon. Mosport Plans Program For Saturday, August 5 [uss w ORONQ -- This Sunday after-|Valley Car Club is actually two|weekend under canvas in what "re: Mr. and Mrs. John For- noon at 2:30 the Orono band will/clubs in one and annually con- may be termed as play a band concert at the ducts two meetings in Kitchener weather conditions for camping. and Mrs. Roy Forrester, Elaine Orono Park. The concert willland two in Brantford. Commenc-| The boys were accompanied and Nancy, Mrs. Ione E. For- be an hour in duration with ali:g in 1958 and each year since by their leaders, Orville Chat- t M ' : a full band expected in attendance. then, they have organized a re-/terton, Russell Major, Willis ester, Mr. Warren Forrester, The repetoire will include a|lay race, a long distance event, Barraball, Mrs. M. Keast and Oshawa; Mrs. A. Roark, Ontar- number of band concert Seles. (a) Harewood, This year the Mrs. K. Adams. |io,, California and Mrs. George fons along with the popular Grand Valley Car Club has aj poo 00 pi naer eroem and|Chidley of Denver, Col. Jarchos and modern tunes oljmembersiip of neatly 160, larg |showers the boys prepared their] Dr. and Mrs. Keith Taylor This concert will be the first] Mosport Park, site of the up- meals, studied camping, played and daughter from Brampton | : games and fished in the pond|Visited with Mr. and Mrs. M, at the park for a number of coming sports car races on which is stocked with trout. |Chatterton years and is expected to create|August 5th, was officially open- rr 1 Stoc 2 hi ; gl "lf ; ; considerable interest for musicled on June 24th, when Canada's oe ig returned to Orono| Mrs. O. Cowan is a patient in lovers, first international race was held. °" Sunday. the Bowmanville Memorial Hos- The Durham 4-H Sheep Club|Such famous drivers as Stirling LOCAL HORSES pital. will hold their 1961 Achievement|Moss of England, Joakim Bon-| Local horses from Orono are Mrs. G. M. Linton is visiting Day on Monday, July 24th. The|nier of Sweden and Olivier periodically seeing action at the her sister in New Jersey. show will be in the Orono Arena|Gendebien of Belgium, par-|Woodbine Trots in Toronto these, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Billings starting at 7:30 p.m. The judge|ticipated. A paid attendance of days. During the past week Or-|spent the weekend with Mr, and|duestion. With each student in|vantages in language instruc- for the evening is Mr. Ralph/more than 31,000 saw the pro- ono horses have registered wins/Mrs. Lawrence Allin of Osh- Glaspell of Tyrone. {gram on opening day. at the track and have also been|awa, at their cottage near Car- The club has twelve members| The Orono playground super-|close contenders. narvan. this year and there should hii Mary Lynn Ba'ley, has| war Gerald Robi A 7 : Mr. G nson drove] Rev and Mrs. A 3 strong competition for top hon- made arrangement to have in- pic horse, Bracelet, to a win last|family of In ace an ors. structions given in tennis at the weak in 'a time of 2.03.2. This fri i : 3 , 03.2. is|friends in Orono, Tuesday o The club is sponsored by the|Park on Wednesday, July 26th.| was Bracelet's first win at the|their way to their summer ey Durham County Junior Farmers The instructions will commence woodbine this v Ita and under the direction of the at 2:00 o'clock with Mr. Carman pears ne ig Sear: vere 3p oh at The Like of Bass, Ontario Department of Agricul-|Cornish being the instructor. placings for this horse beforelon a eid Ii. Cecil Jones are ture. Many of the older children have (p. season closes. Ontario Hip through horthern been asking for instructions in : BIG PROGRAM tennis at the park. Arrange. ,!iash Riddell, owned and Congratulations to Mr. and Another big program of sports| ments are now complete for driven by Mr. Jack Reid, took Mrs. Boyd Wood on the birth of a first place win on Saturday|a daughter, Monday, in the car racing will be held at Mos-| 51h lessons. : j ] port Park, the nation's newest! "mennis rackets and balls will night in a time of 2:07.3. An- Memorial Hospital, Bowman- auto racing circuit 7 miles north pe nrovided by the Orono Am- Other horse from the Reid sta-|yille, of Orono, on Saturday after aieyr Athletic Association and ble, Hollywood Richard, came in| ny 40g ys, Ross Gilbart noon, August 5th, it was an-leveryone is welcome to try the|SocPMd place on Thursday night ung family 'are holidaying in nounced by C. A. Bunting, Presi-|oome during this period or any of last week and third on Tues- Eastern Canada. te dent. day day night of this week, Mr. and Mrs, 2d Gras The program of 10 races is| [f the venture proves success. A number of local race fans|m,... 20d Mrs. Ed Graham and being organized by the Grand gy other classes will no doubt attended the race in Montreal oy and Michael Fagan are Valley Car Club of which Oliver|pe held and possibly a tourna- over the weckend when a crowd|, 0 EE Week at a cot- Crubine, Brantford, is president.| ment played. of over 17,000 were In ation Ate, Feature event will be a The Orono Public School 2c 10 see a new (Canadian "Grand National" race of 30|grounds are presently being re. "cord Set by Adios Butler. laps around the tricky 2.4 mile rods and ii 7 ging ke le so the new record at Error In Bottle kidney-shaped circuit. The top Tennant. A parking area is be- ne ve Missy Dudley at Kil . 44 winners in races 4, 5, 6, 7ling gravelled at the north side 2 lime of Lid. ; 1 Is Young Girl and 8" during the: afternoon williof the school "and the' playing Junior. West made' his dehiut, ; 3 be among the participants inifield is being sonsiderably ex. On Monday evening at the Wood- MANIWAET, Que. (CP) -- A the feature. tended to the east. This work|Pine as a driver. He drove Can-|12-year-old girl died in hospital First race of the day is sched-|is expected to give more rqom N¢'S Pride to fifth place in the Sunday of poisoning after dink- uled for 11:00 a.m. and the at the school for games for the '3C®: ing oil of wintergreen Saturday "Grand National" is booked to|various age groups. PERSONALS-- night in mistake for medicine. get underway at 4:15 p.m. En-| rast Friday afternoon the Mrs. K. Gamsby is visiting °canne Beaudoin, daughter of trants will have an opportunity Orono Cub Pack numbering|with Mr. and Mrs. John H, Mr. and Mrs. Maxime Beau- bri keiday. August 1h, to prac around eighteen loaded their|Bovd, Brian and Terry, Orillia. doin ;had broken her eyeglasses ise on the track from 12:00 gear into trucks and cars to| Misses Lyda and Mary Nor-|a few days earlier while on a noon until 7 p.m. travel to the park at Garden|mart of Philadelphia are visiting visit to Ott Sh Founded in 1955, the Grand Hill, Here the Cubs spent the with Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Sissons. |i emely a i e Bay x : duds -- vision withou |glasses and lifted the wrong bottle from the family medicine | cabinet. Maniwaki is 60 mlies north of | |Ottawa. _ (usual method of playing record- adverse rester,. David and Ronnie, Mr.| By PHILIP SIMPSON AJAX (Staff) -- The outstand- ing results of a $25,000 experi- ment in a sew method of teach ing French at a Toronto secon- dary school has blasted off a $10 million business boom in Ontario. Stark Flectronic Sales Co. of Ajax can be well attributed to triggerirng off the boom as they were the first company to in- stall their Electronic Language Laboratory in a Canadian sec- ondary school. The company's "Lingua Trainer" introduced last Sep- tember into the curiculum of Toronto's Northern Secondary School on an experiemntal basis, has resulted in another two orders for the Language Laboratory in other schools. Last month the Toronto Board of Education accepted a Stark Electronic tender for the two systems for a total of $40,600.00. They will be installed in the Collegiate Institutes of Harbord and Jarvis. In addition, another order has been secured from West Hill Collegiate. The com- pany is now building the three| systesm. It is evident that many more| secondary schools will adopt the| new language teaching device, judging by recent interest on| the subject throughout North] America | BIG BUSINESS Therefore, Stark Electronics used in front so that the room|photographers from Hamilton have commenced construction/can be used for examination|called at the home of Mrs. | of a 7000 square foot addition to the Ajax plant, to house a full scale operation for the pro- duction of the Lingua Trainer. The production of the educa-| tion machines in the United| States is already a $100 million industry and at present a total of 450 colleges and secondary schools are using some form .of the language laboratory. This new type of language in- struction is an offspring of the |ings in the classroom, which to the present has been the main] oral aid in foreign language teaching. However, the oppor- tunity for effective drill and {practice is grossly limited be- |cause it ie difficult for the stu- dent to compare his pronuncia- tion with that of the recorded voice. Through the use of tape re- corders, one for each student, the language laboratory offers an exceiient solution. By re- {cording his own voice on tape, |the student can objectively com- pare his own pronunciation and | voice of the instructor. Immed- |iate comparison is possible and {the pupil can hear at once {Where he is wrong, and blot out| {the error from becoming fixed, {in his mind. | By means of earphones and a microphone, the student is able {to listen to the instructor's re- {corded voice, and then repeat what he has heard or respond {immediately to the particular {possession of his own unit, |everyone receives the benefit of | "personal" practice, unaffect- | "Lingua Trainer" Starts Big Boom In Machines | ed by the efforts of other class members. OWN RECORDER The Language Laboratory prevents the individual student from being "lost in the crowd" and certain forms of "class- room shyness" are eliminated. While each student works indi- vidually, everyone is working simultaneously and continuous- ly. At any time the teacher can listen in on any single student, individually coaching and cor- recting erors. While each student has his own tape recorder, it is not lo- cated at his desk. Instead all recorders are housed in a cab- inet which stands at the front of the room. The student handles, neither the recorder nor the tape. The recorders use tape cartridges which are inserted in separate slots in the cabinet -- one for each student. The only equipment at the student position, besides the earphone - microphone unit is the volume control and the re- cord-listen switch. With the headset in place and the vol-| ume switch adjusted, the stu- dent has only the record listen switch to operate. Both his hands are free for writing notes. | Each student sits in a three-| sided booth. On two sides the | partitions are of acoustic mat-| showed erial, while a glass panel is| purposes. The students can| watch the teacher and see any notes that he may write on the chalkboad. The instructors console, plac-| ed on the counter at the front| of the room, contains the con- trols for the entire laboratory.| An on-off switch turns on the power for the system and ac tivates the students' head- phones and microphones so that| when they talk they hear their| own voices through the head- phones. On the console is a '"'channel selector" for each student posi- tion in the laboratory. Each has four positions corresponding to master tapes in the cabinet to which the student can be con- nected. Thus, the student can listen to one of four lessons, de-| pending on which the teacher selects for him, record his voice, play back and talk to the teacher when necessary. In this HAMILTON (CP)--Three men|vate boat owners were: Karl spent four hours in the choppy|Reis, 26, Hans Brockhaus, waters of Lake Ontario Sunday/and Eric Kisila, all of Hamil fighting for their lives after they ton. Apart from shock they suf- had been tossed out of theirifered painful sunburn. 24, can instruct several classes at once -- even in as many dif- ferent languages. Although a great asset in oral language instruction, the Lan- guage Laboratory is considered only as an aid. Pupils use it about one third of the time al- lotted for language classes. The remaining two thirds are devot- ed to the black-board and chalk- talking grammatical sessions. While Toronto has been one of the first school boards in Canada to use the Lingua Train- er at the secondary school level, there are already a number of Canadian universities current. ly operating such units CHILL-PACKED {st-RUN THRILLERS ! Half Men . THE CURSE OF THE n COLOR . Helf Wolf WEREWOLF Most Shocking Suspense - Thriller of the Year! THE SHADOW BOTH FEATURES ADULT ENTERTAINMENT Aw, In its pioneer role .. tro ducing the system to Canadian secondary schools, Stark Elec- tronics of Ajax is playing a vital part in the advancement of the nation's educational standard. Kidnap Scare Called Joke KITCHENER (CP) -- Police said Sunday an attempt to kid- nap a four-months-old baby girl from her Preston home near here Thursday was a joke and a misunderstanding. They said investigation the misunderstanding arose when three canvassing Kilian Zoll and "jokingly" said] they were there to kidnap the| baby, Celia Siska. Mrs. Zoll, the baby's grand- FEATURE AT: 2:00, HIS BIGGEST, BROADEST, HELEN TRAUBEL . nope WOLIDRY LYNN ROSS irre Technicolor' Zoe I and HARRY JAMES and his band » 4:00, 5:45 7:45, 9:50 Sven Sars BUDDY LESTER od introducing PAT STANLEY - 'Geonce rary AN Conaelionex mother, didn't take it as a joke and the cameramen fled. Hamilton police picked the men up Saturday for question- ing and later released them. Council Fights | U.K. Mob Rule SMETHWICK England (Reu- ters) -- More than 650 tenants in a housing development here Sunday threatened to withhold rents unless the town council re- verses its decision to give an apartment to a Pakistani fam- ily. Sardar Mohammed and his wife and three children would be the first non - whites in the way some students can be given advanced material to be cov-| ered at their own rate of speed, | while at the same time other| students are progressing more who slowly. ! The instructor' equipment also includes headphones, mi- crophone, volume controls and the intercom switch which al- lows him to converse with in- dividual students without dis- tracting others. DIFFERENT TAPES In addition to its many ad- struction, the Lingua Trainer is so equipped that, by using dif- ferent master tapes, the teacher \IN PICKERING | Little Theatre Starts Drive | By DONALD G. CORSSLEY PICKERING -- Don Clarke, {business manager for Pickering Township Little Theatre, an- {nounced plans this week for a | subscription drive for the three- |year-old group's season presen- |tations. Noting the success of |Oshawa Little Theatre in |mustering memberships, Don |is confident that a two-play sub- scription for $2 will attract play- goers in this area. Since its founding in 1958 by | Pickering Tewnship Recreation | Committee, the little theatre {group has produced five plays. | The last two were Miranda, by Peter Blackmore and The Ten der Trap, penned by Max Shul- man and Robert Paul Smith. Last season, Don's wife, Norma, won the best diction |award at the Orono Drama Fes- tival for the group's first entry in such a competition. This year Pickering Township Little The- atre will enter a one-act play for judging. The township group, with 25] active members, has learned| much about putting on plays in| the last three years. For one| Old Landmark _ Is Disappearing MRS. L. GALLOWAY-SONLEY| Uxbridge -- In Uxburdge this! week, one of the old landmarks s being demolished. In May of 1883 the wooden structures which lined this section of the north side of Brock street were gutted by fire. Starting in the i old market building, spreading| east through several shop id Among them were Nix's Har-| ness Shop, McGratten's tin- smith shop and Bascom House building which was built over a stream. From this stream the : water was piped into the fire- hall and used for fire protection for the town. bon | The sad part is the fact that | for a person's entertainment |time," says Don Clarke. have to develop new merchan- dising methods, membership plan, to compete effectively." thing, Wednesday night per- formances will be cancelled be- cause of their poor audience history, and plays will run from Thursdays to Saturdays. 600 - apartment development. THORNTON RD. AT HIGHWAY 401. . .PHONE 723-4972 TONIGHT! BOX-OFFICE OPEN 8:00 SHOW STARTS 9:20 TWO TERRIFIC COMEDIES TONY Y DEANY JANET CURTIS © MARTIN - LEIGH Who waa thot Lody ? /\_ AN ANSAICOEOROL SONEY MODUCTION \re2ee/ DREN under 12 FREE! ALWAYS A COLOR CARTOON Colombia Pictures Provests A Raoet J. Lovy Production Brigitte Bardot "Babette Goes To War" OMENASOOPE © [astman COLOR The chairman of the petition committee, Norman Butler-- lives next door to the] apartment allocated to the Pak- istanis -- said 'there is no per- sonal objection to Mr. Mo- hammed. It is simply that these people have different ways of life." | After a meeting of the Labor party group which controls the town council, Chairman Ernest Lowry said: "This family is being re- housed in the normal way and we will not submit to mob rule." HEADS UNIVERSITY WATERLOO (CP) Rev. John Villaume of New York has been appointed president of Wa- terloo Lutheran University, it was announced Sunday. The uni- versity, formed one year ago, incorporates Waterloo Univer- sity College and Waterloo Luth- eran Seminary of the Evangel- ical Lutheran Church of Canada. Dr. Villaume has been director of social welfare of the National Council of Churches for nine] years. | | RAY MILLAND- ANTHONY QUINN- DEBRA PAGET | The Rivers Edge BENEDICT BOGEAUS Production CINEMASCOPE colon by bE Luxe 20m coxmusrrox Under the season's subscriber system, playgoers will have in- formation about a forthcoming production from four to six weeks ahead of time. Residents in this area will receive a let-| ter and application form for| Notice !| membership in Pickering Town-| ship Little Theatre. This entitles| members to be active -- acting, | designing, prompting, and other} associated work -- or audience] members. ! This latter facet is important, | because an audience helps a| play succeed if it has the pos-| sibilities of success. Audiences at the last little theatre produc-| tion, The Tender Trap, were] disappointing in size. If this kind of attendance is the norm, directors begin to wonder whether the effort is worth the return in interest. The main problem is to en- courage people to give up tele- vision for an evening and re- sume normal human relations. "There's a lot of competition "We such as the ARTHUR MURRAY SCHOOL OF DANCING will be CLOSED VACATION THIS WEEK ONLY REOPENING MONDAY, JULY 31 through two floors, damaging the water works, as it landed. (No doubt a bucket brigade yas then formed to fight the ire.) | LAST OCCUPANTS [ The buildings which are being demolished now, were erected in 1884 to 85, after the fire dis- aster. When completed they housed a print shop, the news- paper being The Guardian, edit- ed by a Mr. Pemberton. Also a ec-| ond floor. Se The last shopkeepers in this| building were Sheir Electric and | Implements, and Langstaf {| Plumbing. Mr. A. Bell is in charge of! THRILLS AND SPILLS UNDER THE BIG |r-----FREE]! "10 years experience taught me a lot about HEARING AIDS ... t this time | bought a ZENITH Extended Range'* Mr. Wally Carison, Cartoonist Chicago, Illinois After comparing with many other hearing aids, Mr. Carlson bought the Zenith "Extended Range" for these reasons: * He hears sounds he had missed for years. * His hearing is far better --more real. Gone are those tinny, hollow scratching sounds. * Background noise and clatter no longer annoy him. e Zenith's "Living Sound"® makes everything easier to recognize. Follow his lead; see and compare the new Zenith "Extended Range" Hearing Aid. It's at your Zenith dealer's...he's in the Yellow Pages under Hearing Aids. *A statement by one of thousands ef Hearing Aid users wha have bought a Zenith to replace instruments unsotisfoctory to them, (SRAVARNECER Yo UR nk HEARING AIDS Zenith Radio Corp. of Canada, Ltd., Dept CAGE 1470 The Queensway, Toronto 18, Ontario Please send me complete information on the new Zenith "Extended Range' Hearing Ald. NAME cre PROVINCE me me em mn ea AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR ZENITH HEARING AID ROY L. WHITTINGTON (ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES) 5 BOND ST. WEST RA 5-5633 ZENITH HEARING AIDS are available ot IMPERIAL OPTICAL CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT Iv ae corsair, the wooden structure atop the tearing the buildings down, and Hn LR "hapa d hall caught fire. The alarm bell several of the older honor boys BEING DEM was in this structure which col-|from St. John's Training School NG DEMOLISHED lapsed. The bell crashed|are helping. CO., LTD. "UXBRIDGE LANDMARK IS 11 ONTARIO ST. RA 8-6239