movie "The Bible', being shot on location near Rome. American actor - director Animals in pairs walk up ramp to board 'Noah's Ark" on film set for the 'Victims Of Environment' Government Victims Too NOAH'S ARK' READIED John Huston is playing the role of Noah, as well as di- By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) -- Re- TORONTO (CP)--The govern-jlittle that could be done in) poy. 2 middle-aged man ment may be putting people|'homes which aren't really| gets tired of hearing: who are victims of home en-homes," but the department) "pare jt easy--you know vironment into training schools, Bernard Newman (L--Windsor- Walkerville) told the Ontario legislature Friday. Speaking in a debate on the estimates of the reform institu- tions department, Mr. Newman said government studies indi- cate most young persons sent to training schools are other- wise normal victims of home conditions, "I suggest that more should be spent looking into the home conditions and doing time|son was making "every effort." SHOW LITTLE SYMPATHY Mr. Grossman said files show \that magistrates get little sym- pathy from parents when they work with them, "Parents who neglect their children the way some people do are almost be- yond reasoning," he said. He said a suggestion by Op- position Leader Andrew Thomp- that parents of wayward children be required (o attend group sessions on approaches something with parents," Mr. Newman said. | Reform Institutions Minister} Allan Grossman said there was! to family life was sound. "We will try to expand on it in, working with the magis- trates," Mr. Grossman said. Photo-Offset Will Start In VANCOUVER (CP)--William Newspaper Edmonton The Journal has a circulation you're not as young as you used to be." "Why Arnold Vespers, you old rascal. Imagine meeting you after all these years! You've changed so -- I hardly recognized you." "Frankly, I think you're foolish to go on fighting bifo- cals. The sooner you start wearing them,. the easier it will be to adjust to them." "He used to like to go danc- ing. Now all he wants to do is sit at home and read the fine print in his life insurance policies." "TI'd love to pour you an- other martini, dear, but you know what the doctor said: One before dinner--and none after." "Maybe if you let the hair grow longer on this side, Mr. Vespers, and then comb it back the other way, the bald |Middle-Aged Man Riles At "Take-It-Easy' Advice By LINDA CRAWFORD | MONTREAL (CP) -- 'Any- one who Joves the theatre and wants to work in it is a valid candidate' for the National Theatre School, says David Pea- cock, one of the school's direc- tors who will conduct a cross- country audition tour this spring. "The tour will be a double search for talent," he explains. "With so many new theatres going up across Canada for the centennial celebrations, there is a crying need for technicians as well as actors." The National Theatre School offers a three - year acting course and a' two-year produc- tion course, with an optional third year. Actors and technic- fans work together on full-scale staging of plays. The school, founded in 1960, trains both English- and French- speaking students. "Each language group is trained in its own culture and adition," says James Dom- ville, director of. the school. "But we feel great benefit is derived when the two work side by side and come into live con- tact with each other. After all, the English and the French have the two richest traditions recting. (AP Wirephoto via cable from Rome) Cross-Canada Rally Attracts 70 Entries Applications for the next courses must reach the school (at 407 St. Lawrence Blvd., Montreal 1) by April 20. Peacock, the production course director, along with Dun- can Ross, artistic director of the English section, and Andre Muller, artistic director of the French section, will visit major Canadian cities beginning in early May. Applicants will be notified of the date and place of interviews. About 250 candi- dates are interviewed each year. Entrants will be selected on a further qualifying test. About 30 new students are accepted each year for the acting course and up to 15 for the production course. : Acting candidates must be be- tween 17 and 23 out there are no age limits for production students. High school education is required, though exceptions may be made in special cases, and other education and expe- rience is taken into considera- tion, "People interested in attend- ing the school have to be gen- uinely interested in a career," Domville says. 'Our aim is to train people for careers in the in the theatre." professional theatre and to feed Oe the basis of the interview and] in Hey rofessional theatre in Canada. ou'll find graduates in every pereorena company in Can- ada." Since the present demand for stage managers, set designers, property makers and stage di- rectors far outstrips supply, the school is stressing opportunities in these areas this year. The production course is di- vided into a technical section, teaching every agpect of stage technique and ultimately pro- ducing directors, and a design section, concentrating on set, costume and property design- ig. The school term runs from November to August with a summer term spent at Strat- ford, Ont, "We pick up the whole school lock, stock and barre] and move it to Stratford to give the stu- dents the advantage of seeing THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, April', 1965 QT Students Try To Quit USSR MOSCOW (AP)--The myster- ious death of a young Ghanaian two weeks ago has triggered new efforts by dissatisfied Af- rican students to leave the So- viet Union, informed sources said today. The students. have been pro- testing in various ways. Some have boycotted classes. A few have found the money to leave the country. A group of Kenyan students staged a sit-in demonstration last week at a railroad station in Baku, the Soviet oil city on the Caspian Sea. Diplomatic sources said stu- dent complaints cover racial, financial and educational issues. They said the death of Ghan- aian student George Daku in Baku two weeks ago was the latest incident in a series of mounting grievances. SEIZE U.S. COMPANY JAKARTA (AP)----The Ameri- can-owned National Cash Regis- ter Company offices in sia have been taken over by workers affiliated to the Nation- alist Party Labor Federation, the official news agency Antara SAVE $ $ ON. said Saturday. AUTO INSURANCE $18.00 on your auto See... atre at the festival there," Domville says. Seminars with the Stratford actors are arranged for the stu- dents, and those in the produc- tion course have practice ses- sions in the Shakespearean festival workshops. Meanwhile classes continue in a high school provided by the Stratford Board of Education. top-grade English-language the-| J ' RE j | DIAL 668-8831 If you are an Abstainer you save up to 218 DUNDAS ST. E., WHITBY RIEGER spot won't even show at all, hardly." * . . And this is a picture of Arnold and his college schoo! graduation class. Wasn't he handsome--then?" "This new cemetery we're planning will be the best in town, socially speaking, and we thought that you, as a-- uh--well, as a man of mature years, would be interested in selecting a plot now on a pur- chase-before-need basis. The saving is really quite remark- able." "If you don't like rock 'n' roll music, dad, what is your favorite tune--Silver Threads Among the Gold?" "On his last birthday Ar- nold ran out of wind trying to blow out the candles on his cake," "What in the world do you want to buy a plaid hat for? They're for younger men." "Ten years ago I might have gotten jealous if I'd found this blonde hair on your coat, Arnold. Not now." Another Decade Of Protection | Bunk House 'Has Arrived' On Songs Of Blues Singers By LESLIE MILLIN VANCOUVER (CP) Les Stork sat in one corner of a dimly-lit Vancouver basement one night in February and watched a dream come true. Cigarette smoke veiled most of the lamps, but under bright lights a blind harmonica player and a lame guitarist pumped their musie into six micro- phones for a team of techni- cians, Blues singers Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee were cut- prepared himself for the ex- pansion he considers inevitable. He has bucked the trend, by thriving while other coffee houses shut their doors, and he says he will continue. "I don't want a liquor licence, like so many of the coffee houses are going for. I don't want the boozers and hippies down here. I wanted the Bunk House, and I wanted it the way it is, and I don't even want to expand if it means giving the Bunk House up." ting a record at the Bunk House, a Vancouver coffee house, and nightspot owner| (iis Stork was the happiest man for miles. "When a coffee house has two famous entertainers recording a live performance in it," he told the audience that night, 'that coffee house has arrived." Neither the Bunk House nor LISTEN HERE: MONDAY & TUESDAY POWER, DRY GINGER ALE *" @ LIMIT 6 ar. BTLS.TO A CUSTOMERS FACIAL TISSVE © SAVE 6Fe ONLY SAVE 6ty BSk°5 KLEENEX FRESH, Canadian BUTT PORK CHOPS . , Val Warren, president of. the/of more than 132,000. Vincouver Times, announced; All of the new dailies, using today that a new newspaper|the offset printing process in-! will be in operation in Edmon-jaugurated by the Vancouver} ton within 16 months and feas-|Times for newspapers in Can-| ibility studies are under wayjada, would be owned and oper- for establishing dailies in three|ated by the communities they other Canadian cities. serve "but will be associated He said the locations for the| with each other as a trans-Can-| latter three newspapers already|ada chain," Mr. Warren said. | "have been chosen and will be) Mr. Warren's disclosures| made known later this year. {came in the wake of financial] The Edmonton Journal now/jdifficulties experienced by The is the only daily publishing in)Times which prompted a front- s |the artists recording there ar- Seen Against Stem Rust Damage :.2's«:i ; : _ | "You've got to keep pushing By BOB TRIMBEE was produced by the University|in this business," says Stork. SASKATOON (CP)--Canadian|of Saskatchewan. _ | "The Bunk House name and sine oem ae nee have| How soon sufficient supplies| atmosphere won out." j hand in ajof the new rust - resistant cca? "Fght to _ Thatcher will become available|LOST CABARET JOB wheat varieties resistant to|was not known, It was devel- Stork came to Vancouver stem rust loped at the Canada agriculture|from Toronto a year and a half Not since 1954; when damage research station at Winnipeg. |a80. In Toronto, he had worked | Sere wee sie s jas a doorman in cocktail estimated at $200,000,000 was, ACREAGES FLUCTUATE lounges, and had some coffee- é professor at Huron College here) | 1 i d st rust attacks. 4 ' i : | In a release issued by Mr,.|Stem ru is a soft wheat used in Maca- ; NW New gj mura hed night as|warren early today, he said the) Stewart 63, the first durum) ronj, | The night the Bunk House! Jack's many years in the news f date gee oa a gh fear Alberta paper, to be called| wheat produced in Canada, was} During the same periods the opened, what was left of his) broadcasting business and his ; Middl E ederal riding Of/the Edmonton Times, will be ajlicensed two years ago and suf-\pread wheat acreages averaged|°@>ital was in the till: 48 cents.| intelligent, analytical and calm i He Ct er didate for\ Community. develop ment, fi-/ficient supplies of seed to meet|93 500,000 acres from 1951 to| .BY Sleeping on the stage at) look at the day's events have ff m s the on foe idate for/nanced and operated by Ed-\Canadian demand are expected/1961, climbed to 26,900,000 in|ights, he had managed to save earned him the largest audience a @ nomination. Present repre-| montonians. 'to be available by next year. It|192' and a record 29,000,000 last}!%at much. ___| Of any newscaster in Canada. cf sentative of the riding is C. E.|------------__ i eee a eda | the year and a fraction| His ten-minute newscasts at ee Ge S20 ¢(premier. Chou En-lai arrivedagenda. It was believed Chou! pr. p, R, Knott of the Uni-/federal grand jury indicted pete . cos Ba ble OH today from Algeria for ajwould press China's reserva-|versity of Saskatchewan's crop|them Friday on charges of filing 4 Army in the Second World WarMe-day visit on a second stop|tions about any invitation t0/<cience department cautioned|false claims for income tax re- who died here Thursday of a surprise visit to the Middle Russia to attend the meeting. |that Stewart 63 and the new\funds while they were in a FRB : Warmest tribute came from/ast. er Chou last visited Egypt in De-|bread wheat now under study|Prison camp at West Jefferson. Senator C. G. (Chubby) Power, | 4 ap matte in Pang od cember, 1963. lat Winnipeg provide plant sci-|p 2 who as associat fence min-\¢ay from Albania for a visit an- wie sais entists with only a respite in who 94 asso 'rth 'the genera nounced only_the day before HAVE ¢ LOSE LINKS "the never-ending job of Finding | RoMald W. Bilskyyp.c, | QY . catching Algerian leaders by ugypt a Vv yel-| ; t | ' outs Ge oad iat Ck surprise. oped close links in recent years.|races. of gon "ck ea Chiropractor ONTARIO'S FAMILY STATION ' a man who had a 'thorough| Egyptian officials appeared Prime Minister Aly Sabry Vis! prevalent." | 100 King St. E. : understanding of the political/equally surprised Wednesday to|!ted Peking sage and was)" "New races of rust can be! 728-5156 i difficulties involved in: winning|learn that the Chinese Commu-|followed by a is, poh Egy > established faster than we now| ¥ approval for spending and sup-|nist leader would visit Cairo, ian economic delegation early| sn produce wheat varieties! ~ sone rene a SEN ' port from pacifist-minded MPs and. made hurried preparations' 'his eal when grid and aid which resist the rust. That's| : before the war began. \to receive him. papel eigaag elween| why the job never ends and is| ep osaneiss: a * Edmonton, a city of about 350,-|page editorial appeal for public 000. The Edmonton Bulletinjand advertising support. The ceased publication there in 1951.|newspaper has since announced it has received the support it Archdeacon Wins (*Htowever its ctoulation in gi NDP Nomination 45000 'Since entering the eve. |45,000 since entering the eve- ining field Sept. 5. There are two LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Ven.|other Vancouver dailies -- the Kenneth C, Bolton, Anglican|fvening Sun and morning Proy- archdeacon and an associate] ince, caused by an attack of: rust, have widespread losses . been suffered by Prairie farmers from this cause. development of Stewart 63, on a rust - resistant Thatcher) bread wheat, expected to be) licensed this spring. The hope is} that they will provide another) decade of protection against a ' ' let Scientists pin their hopes on|\ rust-resistant durum wheat, and); Stewart 63 will give Manitoba} jand southern Saskatchewan| farmers an alternative to Ram-| |sey, another rust-resistant vari-| y. The new variety' has yielded higher in tests. There have been wide swings durum wheat acreages i in Canada during the last 12 years. The 1952-61 average was 1,114,- 000 acres. This climbed to 2,170,- 000 acres in 1962, but dropped to 1,888,000 acres in 1964. Durum house experience. In Vancouver, he worked as a doorman in cocktail lounges, and had some coffee-house ex- {perience, In Vancouver, he worked as |manager in a cabaret--until he |began to plan his own place, at |which point the cabaret owner \dismissed him. | Stork was left with no money, but he had plans and per- Jack heneels RERUN acc "KEEP INFORMED..." From Us... To All Of You.:. | suasiveness. Just a REM (Cam) Millar, a Progressive! Conservative. Senators Pay | Red Leader's Cairo Visit year. In bread wheat Canada's power on the international scene is held by its high maintenance of quality. Thatcher wheat, a variety susceptible to race (type) 15B rust which caused | ' 8:00 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. capsulize and crystelize the sometimes confusing events of the day on the international, national and local scene. People who like to be well informed on what's happening in the world, are always found listen- that the Bunk House has been jopen, Stork has built up a credit rating, made steady money and MUST PAY FIRST GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)-- | ! Takes Egypt CAIRO (Reuters) -- Chinese Crerar Homage OTTAWA (CP) -- The Senate} paid tribute Friday to the late jthe 1954 disaster, still is the) You can't get a refund if you By Surprise most popular among producers.|don't pay a tax. And that's what {also expected to be high on the)RUST MOVES FASTER jgot 16 prisoners in trouble. A ing to Jack Dennett. Informed sources said his visit, expected to last less than 24 hours, would be devoted to talks with Egyptian leaders on the crisis in Viet Nam and the Israel question. The Afro-Asian conference to be held in Algiers in June was OBITUARY MRS. MANLEY C. STORMS The death of Mrs. Manley C Sterms of 521 Madison avenue occurred Friday in Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital. She was taken ill suddenly. | Th ; she was bora Aug. tts s| CENTRE 'DOE' Broxburn, Scotland and was the i: IS 'FUR' REAL daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith. She married Manley C. Storms Jan. 18, 1929. in Osh- BRANTFORD (CP) -- A awa and lived here for the last} donation toward the $1,250,- 38 years. 000 cost. of a new civic Mrs. Storms was a member t b of Westmount United Church. | Centre here poses a prob- lem for officials. It's a $10 cheque made out on caribou hide. The five-by-12 inch, She is survived by her hus- band, two daughters, Betty of Oshawa and Mrs. Jack Cam- eron (Marian) of Stromburgh; fur- ers don't know whether to cash the cheque or action if off to the highest bidder, conduct funeral service at 3.15) p.m. Monday at the Armstrong Funeral Home. Interment will be in Mount Lawn Cemetery, | | The situation in Southeast 'Asia played a prominent role in Chou's visit to Algeria. At a press conference Wed- nesday night in Algiers he con- demned U.S. intervention in 'South Viet Nam and expressed support for Communist . Viet Nam in the face of American air attacks across the north- south border. He said thre was only one solution of the problem--with- drawal of American troops and ja settlement by the Vietnamese \themselves. a reason why we are cata-| loguing the inheritance qualities) jof certain rust-resistant plants." Rust cuts off food supplies) from the head of the wheat plant. Damage can range from nil to 100 per cent, depending A Business ANNOUNCEMENT Opportunity upon when the plant is infected. | | The disease normally, enters) Canada frm the United States through southern Manitoba and) southeastern Saskatchewan and moves northwestward across| the Prairies, Normally, much of) the Prairie grain crop has ma-| tured before the wind-borne rust hits the crop. COMPANY OF ITS | 74 Celina Street FOR THE FINEST CAN YOU QUALIFY Custom and Ready Made DRAPES @ husbond and wife team. Are you OFFER ITS VALUABLE | DISTRIBUTORSHIPS IN CANADA : Business Opportunity? | | The introduction of exclusive new technological advances has revolu- | tioriized our services, creating exciting new distributorships with our | Canadien company, exceptionally desirable for a mature individual or | with a secure future? 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