SOUGHT AFTER YET jbe that's because I'm such a Producers clamor for her character myself. I did Craig's| - services--even in movie ver-| Wife when I w ' sions of stage hits that were|was a 2 Bis Pie eg would have been frightened to| Danish star, is a seript in it- dramatic monuments to legiti-| Her career never took the death if it had happened," she} self. mate stars. sexpot route although, as The|****: | "I was a bachelor girl for a Roz' first Hollywood contract|Late, Late Show on TV willl Actors long ago quit trying tojlong time. One of my friends at MGM goes back to the days|attest, it could have. That's steal scenes from her. Recently,|said it was because I talked too Dick Beymer tried it in| much. Then I got a crush on ° ° Halifax Group Takes Box Office Draw | ) | ite Of A Ma} Or Drama A W ards In Spite fee drop of\when her stablemat probably because Roz always] Young 3 ergs | er stablemates w ways|-.. ~ : | HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- If age|22°--°F playing aged character! Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford, had too much 'of the lady i Five Finger Exercise. |Cary Grant. He showed up for By JAMES BACON By CHISHOLM MacDONALD \"warm and likeable' audience;dian Association = binge 3 and energy were interchange- parts," she says. And her cur-|Greta Garbo and the late Jean|her. | I wouldn't do that, sonny,"\a date one night and brought WINNIPEG (CP)--The iJ ecik iene tie a sponsor for this year's|apJe, Roz Russell would makejrent record proves it. Harlow. But Roz endured. She kids about the fact that|2¢vised Roz. "I'm the produc-jalong his agent, Freddie. Be- elling Players of Halifax took| But the play a "fraudy con-| Meher in de week Vida 'Tuesday Weld look like Dame| At the moment, there is no, She never demanded that she she never was chased around er's girl friend." And she is./fore long I married Freddie-- major awards in the Dominion|coction'" set in modern Paris, oe or 'Toronto was na | May Whitty. |busier actress nor bigger box be the central love interest. | @ desk by a producer. |Fred Brisson, her husband, pro-|and Cary was best man. Drama Festival. was described by Mr. Berry, a/Peene of Toronto was namé office draw -- save Elizabeth! duced both the play and the) The marriage, made in 1941 The Halifax group, one of\New York-born actor now liv-|President of the DDF, succeed-| That may be why Roz is one)». 19, ; ic a "As an actress in love with|NO STOLEN SCENES movie. land blessed with son, Lance, in eight to compete, was awarded|ing in Paris himself, as falling|ing Roy A. Stewart of reygree oc the few feminine stars of her] she rebhonsc -- 9 among co _Drofession, I have always| "It used to hurt my tealings| And how she married Brisson,|1943, is one of Hollywood's most the Festival Trophy for its pres-|a little short of its necessary It also was announced thatiera who give their birthdate inj --___ ee 'welcomed character roles. May- when I was younger--although'son of Carl Brisson, the late' durable. entation of John Osborne's|"'sparkling dialogue and bubbl- next year's finals be in|the studio biographies--June 4, three-act play Look Back inling wit." Kitchener. -- ole é Anger. The award, including a) [e Theatre de Maintenant"s : But actresses = a a cash prize of $1,000, was for the|presentation of Marc Camolet- . jeconomic reason. Few over best presentation of a_ full- rg Sosins Boeing received) Kingston Man sell tickets. length play, in either English Or|kinder words and drew the ad-| Male stars are box office to| \60, even as romantic leading) Le Trophee Louis Jouvet, for|qy Festival, the trophy for the Heads Jaycees men, But, girls, it's much the best director, also went tOjhest French in the finals, ex-) .. « : : ltougher for your side. the Nova Scotia team. It was| cluding the major DDF award.|_ 5T- CATHARINES (CP) --| And that makes Miss Rus-| \Val Swain, 29-year-old Kingston sej'5 comments significant. French. |judicator's choice for Le Plaque) merited equally by Evelyn Gar- ikea The Festival Plaque for the)j,yyer, was elected president of THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Mey 22, 1962 ]] will bary and Michael Sinelnikoff. best presentation in English, the 'Ontario Junior Chamber of Award prexentayons were! iso excluding the major. DDF commerce made Saturday night, the finallrina) award, went to the Lon-| vo otion sz night of the six-day pageant vention Sat which drew entries from eight} ; Seal eh se Canadian zones from Halifax aged gira m Caries PY Lethbridge, all winners of re- : gional festivals earlier in the/ NAMED TOP INDIVIDUALS year. The 1,400-seat Playhouse The-| proyp included the Henry Os- atre had a near-capacity crowd | borne and the Nella Jefferis for the closing night's activities challenge trophies. The first, for which followed the final entry| the best male performance, from the Richmond Hill, Ont. went to Paul Harding who Curtain Club and an afternoon payed the part of Christopher performance by Le Theatre de|1.nerwood, The latter, for the Maintenant de Quebec best female performance, was EARN COMPLIMENT won by Charlotte Ronson who The central Ontario group, al-acted as Natalia Landaouer. though not sharing in any of Organized in 1932, the DDF the awards for its presentation|has held competitions annually of Sacha Guity's Don't Listen,|since 1933, except for a seven- Ladies, was complimented by)|year intermission due to the adjudicator John Berry for its Second World War. The Cana- The conv Operation tem ing threats don Little Theatre for its Pres-\r ioyq Delaney of Niagara Falls. committee to.study whether the j of the Canadian chamber of Other awards to the London Cosimerca¢ a Jaycee project. The campaign lauds the advantages of private enterprise as an economic sys- and refers to the "grow- communism." Jap Newspaper *:." Drops Episode Walt Kelly, be dropped. The de- cision to skip the series until the | current sequence ends was made because of the newspa-| per's policy not to use carica-| tures of heads of state "if they, are in bad taste," Shiba <2id.| Another character in the se-| quence is a bearded, Spanish-| speaking goat resembling Fidel Castro. : Kelly, at his home in New of socialism andjyork, said he was not angered by the cancellation. "T"m just glad they read it as far as they have," he said, understand their posi- tion, they are so near Vladivo- stok."' at the annual con- urday. He succeeds ention established a Freedom campaign should be adopted as In Toronto, The Globe and Mail eliminated the Pogo se- quence on the Russian-speaking LOW PRICES NOW IN EFFECT AT ONTARIO Motor Sales ON OVER 130 BEST CAR Murrow Outlines Hope For Future TORONTO (CP) -- Edward R. Murrow said Saturday that democracy's best hope for the future lies in a new emphasis on humanity and co-operation in government, The director of the United States Information Agency told Canadian newspapermen that democracy must face its pres- ent challenge with a readiness to change. "Being in opposition is not enough if your society has nothing of merit to offer in its own name," he said. Mr. Murrow addressed the 13th annual National Newspa- per Awards dinner at which eight Canadians were honored for their 1961 work in report- *ing, photography, sportswriting, editorial writing and political cartooning. The former broadcaster and _ television journalist said that) while history might see the; ' present time as a troubled age, it also contains the seeds of 'near revolutionary' develop- ments. Hope for the future lies both in changing concepts of govern- ment and in the swift develop- ment of science, he said. The maturity of the modern state is measured by the wel- fare of its citizens, he said. THINK OF INDIVIDUAL "There is now cencern for the} individual, Personal freedoms) must be protected. Individual security must be provided. Eco-| nomic growth must be guaran- teed." In external affairs, govern- ments are shifting from mere self-protection to a sense of re- sponsibility for other nations. Such external responsibility is the basis of the Western alli- ance and its dedication to the idea that "the state exists for) man, not man for the state.'| The United States and Can-| ada are bound by an awareness that 'we want to live in pretty) much the same kind of world and that a major part of the responsibility for maintaining and improving that world rests upon both of us." Noting that the U.S, and Can ada have differences, Mr. Mur- row suggested the two countries agree agreeably." BENNY ON VIOLIN Jack Benny is guest violin soloist with the Chicago Sym- phony in a music festival con- cert July 29. In Pogo Strip TOKY from its cemic page and TOKYO (AP) --A Japanese|P8 base epi newspaper is eliminating tem- carried a box aye that Pogo lanwabily ie ee iwill be back when Walt Kelly |porarily the American comic -eturns to the Okefenokee folk." |strip Pogo after the Soviet em- returns to the sgaactues : jbassy pointed out that a Rus-, A spokesman for the news-| |sian-talking pig in the strips/paper said of the Russian se- current episode bears striking| quence: We just didn't think it resemblance to Premier/funny enough. Newsp apermen presented Khrushchev. Lately, the newspaper has with cash awards at the ban- Editor Kimpei Shiba of the been running old Pogo strips, | quet included Jack Jarvie of the English-language Evening News| not previously published in Tor- Brantford Expositor for feature said Sunday the embassy didjonto, in place of the Russian photography not request that the strip, byisequence. b d Years ago Adams distilled 29 great whiskies, each with its own distinctive characteristics, and then aged them in special oak casks. Now, Adams has married these 29 rare whiskies to create the superb flavour of Adams Private Stock. This custom blend is presented in its crystal decanter at a popular price. Adams Private Stock CUSTOM BLENDED CANADIAN RYE WHISKY Thomas Adams Distillers Ltd. Toronto will be in to address June 18th! LESTER B. PEARSON GRASS PARK, BROOKLIN ON WEDNESDAY, MAY 23rd, AT 10.30 A.M., Liberal Platforms and Policies... get the facts that you, the voter, need before you cast your vote on HEAR NORMAN CAFIK SPEAK NIGHTLY, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, RIGHT AFTER THE 7 P.M. NEWS. Mr. Cafik will be broadcasting every evening from 7:05 to 7:15 p.m., to speak on Liberal Policies, Cur- rent Problems, and other matters vital to Ontario Riding Voters. all thinking people. Come and hear the The Wise Old Owl Suggests You Take A Good Look At The Excellent Car Buys Now On Ontario Motor Sales Huge Lot... You'll Find Just The Car For You! 1959 Chevrolet 4-door sedan with smart 2-tone finish. Really sharp! $1495 1957 Oldsmobile 4-door Holiday Hardtop with automatic transmission. Smart 2-tone finish $1275 1955 Pontiac 2-door hardtop with V8 engine, automatic transmission and radio. 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