Pat Boone Writes Civil Rights Spiritual By JAMES BACON HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Pat Boone is becoming the compos- ing and singing voice of minor- ity peoples. First he wrote lyrics for This Land is Mine, to the theme from the movie Exodus, Berlin will spend his birth: | Now he has written words day there, with some of his jand music for a civil rights family around to help him int peldieade quietly. But he said pec galled Time Marches he wasn't particularly looking forward to it. 'I'm looking much' more forward to what I'm going to do after my birthday," he said. "The question is, ar? are you going to be a grabby old man, or. are you going to write another song?" He said his health is fine. He doesn't show his age. Recently, he said, he fin- ished seven new songs for a movie, to 'be produced by Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer and called. Say It With Music, In the same movie, he said, _; An hour-long program of the) there also will be.25 old songs, 20th anniversary of VEney including the title song, all by Jers, most of them girls, panes cole wat igs shown haw the! Irving Berlin. jtakers register records of each war-shattered communitir " Ming . : : [child's birth, education, abili-(their people have healed the ,,0"c° he first 'or 'Marie jties and--as the child grows wounds. Welcome, iv. _ 4| from Sunny Italy), Berlin has jolder--the "'bravery record." Ajhave been a program in which written the words and music \boy who has shown himself/Eisenhower and Montgomery : -- CBS Special Criticized By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) --Karly Bird, we were assured during the first commercial telecast @ week ago, is no toy. But at the moment U.S. network television seems much more fascinated) with bouncing stunts off the sat- ellite than in eohesive, well- organized programs. CBS's Saturday night special was called Victory in Europe, 20 Years After. Dwight D. Eisenhower, © su- preme commander of the Allied forces, was in a New York studio obviously eager and ready to philosophize and speak jon the great issues. Field Mar- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tussdey, Mey 11, 1965 7 OLD PATRON Feared Halt READING. England' (P)~ To Construction: © i" aoe for its oldest customer, TORONTO (CP)--A strike by|Bowsher, now 87. During his structural steelworkers that of years as a regular patron would have halted all steel con-/Retreat, Mr. Bowsher says struction in the cify and in must have sunk more than southern Ontario today has been|900 pints of beer. averted, The Structural Steel Associa- tion of Ontario and the Iron- workers Union agreed to a 40- cent-hourly package deal. Alan Mclsaac, a spokesman for the negotiating committee whose locals in Toronto,' Hamil- ton and Windsor ratified their 2; (aaa Friday night, said: | "This is a good settlement) and we are pleased with it.' The new agreement raised the wages to $3.63 plus a 13-cent| welfare and 10 - cent pension payment and a vacation pay of SONGWRITER BERLIN IS 77 NEW YORK (AP) -- Irving Berlin is 77 today and one of the people least interested in that fact is Irving Berlin. "It leaves me cold,' he said during a brief business trip to New York City from the mountain 'home in the Cat- skills where he spends much of his time. Terrified Crewmen Called For Help of the eight missing men from|dar just »rior to the collision. the U.S. Steel Corporation's|He said he saw an object on limestone carrier. the screen too large to obtain a hissing as it sank. After that|FIRST ON SCENE bearing. all 1 could hear were the ter-| Capt, May's ship, the German, He said he ran to a passage- rifying screams of the Cedar-/freighter Weissenburg, was the|way off the bridge to warn the ville crew calling for help." first to reach the scene of the|captain, Rasmus Haaland. The This was German Capt. Wer-disaster. He and his crewcaptain ordored the engine ner 0. May's remembrance of|picked 27 men out of the water.|room to reverse the propellers, the collision Friday of the Ce-|Two of those rescued later died.|Gronstol said, ringing "har darville and the Norwegian, May said his radioman heardjastern" on the engine room freighter Topdalstjord in the'a Mayday call from the Cedar-|telegraph. Straits of Mackinaw. lyille and radioed the two ships| Gronstol said he then heard Capt. May, 42, testified Sun-|he was coming. He said he or-|the helmsman repeat the order day in Cleveland, Ohio, at ajdered his crew to man lifeboats|"hard astarboard,'" turning the U.S. Coast Guard investigation|and followed a radar. signal to wheel completely to the right. into the disaster which killed|the scene. |\Together, the two manoeuvres twe Cedarville crew members| The chief mate of the Top-|would turn the ship backward in and left eight others missing /dalsfjord, Karl Fagerli, was re-\a counter-clockwise circle. |shal Viscount Montgomery was and presumed dead. jealled to testify here again Sun-| Captain Haaland did not ap-\i, winston Churchill's under- Meanwhile, officers of the|day. He was asked if, from the pear at the hearing. His doctor! round war room in London,| Topdalsfjord recounted the fog-jtime the Cedarville was first/told hearing officers Haaland ready for a chat with his:one-| bound collision at a coast guard/sighted,.the collision could have|was still confined to bed due t¢time superior. hearing here, about five miles|been averted. Fagerli said itextreme exhaustion caused by) put most of the program was from where the Cedarville lies}would not have been possible. |overwork and lack of sleep. _|qoevoted to views of some of the in 80-90 feet of freezing water,|' Jan. A. Gronstol, second of-| The hearing here is scheduled)». landmarks--St; Lo, Monte Seven professional diversificer of the Norwegian vessel,|to continue with the Topdalsf- Cassino, Coventry, Berlin and workers in the 30-degree waterjtold coast guard officials he was|jord's radio operator and chief others, attempting to locate the bodiesion the bridge watching the ra-iengineer expected to testify. Viet Cong Organizes dignation on a television inier- view show, One of his listeners was Harry Belafonte. "Harry said he liked what I said and wanted to come on my TV show. I told him the budget wouldn't support an en- tertainer of his stature. But Harry said he would do it for nothing just because he liked what I had done. "I was thrilled and told the producer about it. Soon, the agency people representing the sponsor asked me not to have | Belafonte on the show. The rea- json was that Harry was mar- ried to a white girl and his appearance on my show would hurt sales in some parts of the deep South. "Do you mean I have to go back to an entertainer the stat- ure of Harry Belafonte and tell him I can't have him on my show because he is a Negro?" MACKINAW CITY, Mich. * (AP)--"I saw the shadow of the ship go under and heard the six per cent of total earnings. sand previous wage was $3.40 jour, OSHAWA NOW PLAYING N THEATRE in. It tells the story of the Negro from Africa to Alabama-- with a catchy beat. Boone, a southerner, said he became interested in the U.S. civil rights movement when he had a half-hour television show a few years back. "On Thanksgiving," he re- jealls," I had Elia Fitzgerald |as my guest. "The next day I was bom- barded by calls and letters from my relatives in the South,|I asked. And I was told yes. and some from the North, too.| 'Then I said: 'If that's the All of them chastised me. forjcase, then you might just as; having a Negro as a guest. {well forget about me for this "I was astonished, Here on|show.' And I meant it and they the day we set aside each year|knew I meant it. to give our thanks to God, my| "Finally, the sponsor relented own relatives were bawling mejand said okay. But the payoff out. lis that Belafonte's schedule was "It seemed a very un-)so filled up that by the time he Christian thing to do." could do it, my show was off HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS | | Cradle To Grave Closeup of a war (Part It) reminders to teachers gartens, brave can hope to carry a gun exchanged reminisces and opin- at 15 or younger. Pliant young minds are im- that they are under watchful/bued with fierce hatred for the The Communist effort to take over all of Viet Nam has its roots in organizing every village and hamlet, from the cradle, to the schoolhouse, to the grave. How this is done is re- counted in the following |daily, for children who start \schooling at the ages of 4 or 5 The evidence indicates a pas- sion to spread literacy.: Young- J sters in Viet Cong service, as - capeled tally la jcoolies or lookouts, often carry * |pooklets to read and ponder in SAIGON (AP)--In South Viet/spare moments. Nam, Viet Cong gece a Boys and girls learn that ~ begin organizing at the hum-jmust work virtually from the et hut, begin indoctrinating|time they can walk. Commu- almost. at the cradle. nity life is drilled into them, The Communists who inspireoften centred about a co-oper- and lead a guerrilla revolution' ative irrigation project. A small ignore the old and concentrate|hoy may be in charge of the on the typo Page as they let)water buffalo, or the chickens cities wait and concentrate on-'or tending fishing nets villages. Bit by bit they bite off Children are taught what to more territory--they now claim|qo if government forces attack to hold two-thirds of the coun-|5» if there is a raid by planes try--and nail it down as they', helicopters, They. do not go along. panic. They haul valuables and Photographs taken from dead fooq from huts into excavations and captured guerrillas tell @liney have helped dig as shel- story of patient, yee OF ters ganization looking forward to ,, eae nage : " tron control of the population if Children are taught that the and when the Communists en-|2teatest goal is to become & ifighting guerrilla, The Viet Cong ies 4g bP cart vie |makes every effort to be a part along) of the community, to be heroes toe ealars -- witia to the children, their friends and schoolhouses, neat woode nuk brothers, The child tending buildings with thatched roofs|tte buffalo may be a guerrilla sd tidy Toms wih benches PE HOt Ze, a and blackboards, } 'war of liberation." WATCH OVER TEACHERS Villages not only have their There are picture of adultjown schools and propaganda guerrillas in black Viet Congicentres. They have Viet Cong eyes. Often, the schools are run"'imperialist" by young girls who hold sessions|American--and for the "'lack- morning and afternoon,jeys in Saigon," their namese oniforms watching over kinder-|tax collectors and census tak- SS | Block East of Liverpool Road Ph. 668-2692 HELD OVER -- 2nd WEEK The Delightful comedy hit, "JOHN GOLDFARB PLEASE COME HOME" with SHIRLEY MacLAINE -- PETER USTINOV -- ALSO -- "HOUND DOG MAN" with FABIAN (both in color) POSSOSSHCSCSSCHESES EC foreigner --the the South Viet- generals commanding government troops, When a Saigon government communique announces a Viet Cong attack on an outpost - re- pelled, for example, with 15 en- emy dead, 10 of the 15 may be teen-age boys, the barefoot kids who crept ahead of an attack to hurl grenades at outpost bunkers If a boy gets killed. he will get a good funeral later on, and perhaps even a small monu- ment over his grave with a sign saying "killed by the. imperiai- ists--we will never forget.' Next: Communist secret weapon, FEWER SEEK JOBS LONDON (AP)--The British government announced April's unemployment rate was 1.5 per cent, the lowest in four years for that month, Lists showed 341,201 people registered as un- employed. } ~|four apartments, the .attic and ions, But to try to cram both in -disorderly fashion into the same package was a mistake. for more than 900 songs, and high proportion of them are | all-time hits. From the viewer's standpoint, the most interesting segments included the camera trip around the underground apart- Pire's dark Minister {0 the park where once stood) ment where Prime Churchill lived, Worked and oc-|t est hours, and a visit he Nazi death camp of Belsen. \casionally slept during the em- Lightning Leaves | Six Homeless, | PETE RBOROUGH) (CP) --| Lightning struck two houses within blocks of each other Sunday and left six persons homeless. No one was injured. The major blaze was in a 2%4- storey duplex. Lightning hit the roof of the building and the electrie charge travelled throughout the wiring system, | starting a fire in each of the the basement. The building was owned by Dr. W. S. Fitzpatrick. No esti-| mate of damage was immedi- ately available. Just as the blaze was under control, lightning hit the home| of Mrs, Gerald Pullyblank. STARTS FRIDAY 12 BIG / > 12 HOUR , ua. \ BIG SAVINGS SPECTACULAR | Pat later mentioned his in-'the air." The unconventional love affair that began ata convention in New GLENN FORD F and | GERALDINE PAGE in | ACTION! ACTION! ACTION! More Houses Are Sold Daily Through Oe) (i. | MOLTIPLE LISTING SERVICE) Consult « member of the OSHAWA & DISTRICT REAL ESTATE BOARD CoStarring BARBARA NICHOLS PATRICIA BARRY + CHARLES DRAKE ond Serve D MOSEL Pree + b ARTIN MANULIS pvecied y DELBERT MANN | presented By WARNER BROS. Ail PLAZA "i @ FEATURE TIMES: 1:30. 3:30. 5:30 7:35-9:40 P.M, Oceans of Hot Water ANGELA LANSBURY senatncnn |p When the stronger than life itself > MARKS lust for kick Fabulous MILDRED MOREY "One of Canada's Top Performers" © ONE WEEK ONLY *@ "Outstanding May 15 Entertainment" BLUE HORSE LOUNGE Hotel Lancaster King St. W., Oshawa GOES WHERE NO MOTION PICTURE HAS EVER DARED GO BEFORE. "WHERE LOVE HAS GONE" In COLOR with SUSAN HAYWARD BETTE DAVIS MICHAEL CONNORS SHE WALKED THE THIN LINE BETWEEN ILLICIT LOVE AND DISASTER! "WALK A TIGHTROPE" --with-- DAN DURYEA PATRICIA OWENS ADULT ENTERTAINMENT DOORS OPEN BILTMORE §8 SAT. & SUNDAY, PHONE 725-5833 1:30 P.M, 6:30 P.M. lapse war MEIR) GUN MAIER ents AMAKIIN ail PRODUCTION, AAUL NEWMAN asaman who lives and loves Certified for your safety and comfort ELECTRICAL IN-CAR YOU ARE ASSURED A WARM WELCOME © O99 OOS 0000000000080 6004 AT THE ODEON DRIVE-INS HEATERS ep Each Evening from 7:30 (Including Sunday) AUDITORIUM FRIDAY 4 and 8 p.m. SATURDAY 2:30 end 8:15 p.m. Children---7 50 Aults----$1.50 500 Reserve seats Nights only--On sole at the Dominion Tire Store--48 Bond St. W, No reserves in the afternoon, Today, there's no reason to de- prive yourself of all the hot water you want, when you want it! With gas water heating you don't have to stint or "schedule" baths, laundry, or dishwashing.Gas gives you "Oceans of Hot Water," You'll always have plenty on tap, for whatever. purpose and in whatever amount you need. There's nothing more enjoyable --or more useful than "instant" hot water. There's nothing more annoying than to run "short" and have to postpone or delay baths, dishwashing or laundry. Buy a new gas water heater and have "Oceans of Hot Water," or rent for as little as $1.75 a month on your gas bill. Save money. Take advantage of the low gas rates now in effect. Enjoy all the pleasure o: modern living with gas. : 101 ~ Performers - 101 24 ~ Acts ~ 24 YOU BE THE JUDGE... was ft an net of h + an act of love? For information and personal service, call Consumers' Gas, 728-7363 (Sonsumers' (as 29 CELINA STREET ® OSHAWA MUNSHI HOMO ASAE UM i Le Omg FEATURE ATi 2:35 - 5:00 7:10-8:20 RESERVED SEATS NOW ON SALE CLAY-LISTON FIGHT TUFSDAY MAY 25th