A ROLLING BUSINESS Virgil Dooley, twice U.S. speed skating champion converts his talent into pro- fit with speedier gas sta- Latest Stratford Play Has The Critics Divided STRATFORD (CP) -- Critics| were sharply divided in their|Gallic acting' on the part of|compelling moments of theatre appraisal of the opening per- formance of August Strind- berg's The Dance of Tuesday night, the fifth and last! play to be staged at the Shakes-| us how big acting can get with-| out emptiness, how voices and) The play, a psychological) bodies can be used with bra- drama on the eternal triangle} vado and how rapier sharp in- and the battle of the sexes, also|telligence can keep an evening received a mixed reaction from! of fencing always: exciting." pearean Festival this season. the audience. Some were caught up in the) called it a 'virtuoso perform. pointed acting of the three prin-| ance," He said the actors had cipal characters as portrayedjbrought the characters as by Jean Gascon, Denise Pelle-| vividly to life in English as they) although the play was a 'great tier and Jean-Louis Roux. The/had done last. year in Montreal | shocker' in 1900 its effect now director was M. B. Gascon, All| in French. are members of Le Theatre du Nouveau Monde of Montreal. ento Globe and Mail called| tion service. Of the eight people who work at Dool- ey's station in Detroit on- ly one doesn't skate, "We the performance "splendiferous| Mr. Gascon as the Captain,) Miss Pelletier as his wife Alice DECLINE OF AN EMPIRE 11 Moscow used to issue di- rectives to other East Ev- ronean Communist govern. ments, Now it consults with them. The changing rela- tionship is explored by John Best, Canadian Press cor- respondent in Moscow, who has just completed a tour of the Communist bloc. By JOHN BEST Canadian Press Staff Writer "The. Romanians..have--be- come very difficult to talk to; far more difficult than the Russians. And as for the Chi- nese, there's no talking to them at all," These off-hand remarks by a Prague editor speak vol- umes about the strains and conflicts now tugging at the wobbly edifice of the world Communist movement. Attempts to paper over the fissures seem to grow more feeble and less convincing every time a new crisis comes along. To try to maintain a sem- blance of unity, the Soviet Un- jon has substituted "consulta- tion'"' with its East European allies for the hard-line direc- tives that it used to throw at them The Soviet Communist -Party boss, Leonid Brezhnev, takes off for Prague or War- saw or Bucharest at the drop | of a hat to tak things over, East European Communist | leaders appreciate this, The Czechs, for instance, are said to be delighted that Brezhnev | comes to talk to them, Such visits, begun in Nikita Khrushchev's time, are elo- quent symptoms of Eastern Europe's increasingly success- ful demand to be heard on matters affecting its interests, | THREATS ABANDONED Gone are the days when East European leaders were arbitrarily summoned to Mos- can wait on cars three mi- nutes faster," said one em- ployee. 'And people want service in a hurry." "The cast managed some but also wound up with some cow to have the Kremlin line laid down to them, to be fol- lowed on pain of dire personal consequences. Sometimes the "new Jook" fn Kremlin inter-party diplo- macy has the appearance of an abdication of Russia's claim to leadership in the world Communist movement. Noi so often now do you see references in official state- ments to "the world move- ment-of-Communist and work ers' parties, led by the glor- ious Communist party of the Soviet Union," Instead, the emphasis is on the sovereign equality of all Communist parties. There can be no 'father' party and "son" party, say the Roman- fans. And other Kast Euro- pean Communist parties, less assertive than the Romanians, have come to take the same attitude, Russia's it has gone Whereas in Stalinist or early Khrushchev times it might Soviet Union," Instead, the emphasis is on the sovereign equality of all Communist parties. There can be no 'father' . party and trouble is that not have hesitated to put Ro- | mania in its place by force of ious Communist party of the ferent states, It could ill-afford to sacri fice its strong and coveted | position of influence in the un- | "third world' of by a supposed committed Africa and Asia action against ally. Another. fundamental diffi- culty for Russia is the very nationalism which she cham. pions in areas of the world a where it suits her purposes to | champion it in order to em- barrass "colonialist" powers such as Britain. Marxist theoreticians long cherished the notion that na- tionalism would dissolve when respectable, } rash | ludicrous ones."' Death} and Mr, Roux as Kurt Journal, said the play received) Beacon-Herald, said the charac- Herbert Whittaker of the Tor-|"an extremely uneven perform: terization was "superb." ance." David Whatmough, Vancouver Sun, said 'with long tracts of the play performed with inter- mittent bouts of seriousness and burlesque and a final scene as almost total farce, the action became 'confusingly jerky and vast numbers of lines altogether incomprehensible," Bernard Jackson, Hamilton Spectator, noted persistent ap- plause by the audience but said The three performers "show John Irwin, Montreal Star, is 'somewhat diluted." Ottawa; Mollie Graham, Stratford} But Frank Daley, "The three principles . . have a rapport and similarity of thought and feeling which give They live and love from spinout to crackup "HUNTERS OF THE DEEP" IN TECHNICOLOR U.S.S.R. Heeds Demands Made By Bloc Members it came up against the Ir- resistible vitality of a world revolutionary movement sup- ported by the masses of the people. Instead, nationalism has lived on to wreck the unity of the historical process that was supposed to destroy it. "Communist parties," some- ore has said, 'can never be completely de-nationalized." STILL COMMUNISTS It may be argued that, even so, they remain Communist and fundamentally opposed to Western capitalism and that when the time is ripe-when the West is off its guard-- they might quickly rediscover their old cohesion and close ranks to attain the age-old vision of communism's world triumph, This argument may be built on a false premise. For com- munism changes even in the Soviet Union. In Yugoslavia it has evolved into something that no longer even looks like communism. Talking to offi- cials in Yugoslavia is more like talking to officials in the West than those in Moscow. The discussion is devoid of i. iene content, The Lg s' on a pragmatic, business-like basis, And more important, the people who run the country say that's the way it should be. It's getting to be like that in Czechoslovakia, too. Pretty soon you won't be able to tell the players in the East-West struggle without a program, In other words, when the time comes to close ranks, the Communist team may not even be playing together any-. more, NATIONALISM FIRST The question arises whether a man is a Czech, a Pole or a Romanian first or a Com-: munist first, From all that's been hap- pening in Eastern Europe in the last 10 years you'd have to say patriotism or national -- wins out over doc- rine. Good Communists, of | course, see the issue quite differently. In Warsaw, I THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thundey, July 27, 1966 9] asked a high government offi- cial: "Do you believe that na- tional feelings and interest will al ideal He lost no time in replying: "I believe that in Communist ideology there is room for the play of national fateresis.** A senior official in Belgrade said almost exactly the same . 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Enter today, THIS WEEK'S WINNER! MRS. D. LLOYD 211 Gliddon Ave. Oshawa PADDY'S MARKET Furniture & Appliences USED WASHER PARTS & REPAIRS probave Complete 'Line of Beatty-ThoreCroa ley Appliances, Speed Gusen. HAMPTON 263-2241 | Bowman & Gibson LIMITED REAL ESTATE GENERAL INSURANCE Shaw Festival Production | the performance a special qual- ity all its own," | Gets First-Night Raves NIAGARA - ON-THE-LAKE,|Superman, had its final per- Ont. (CP)--The cast of George) formance last Saturday, and the) Bernard Sh house at the Court House The-| atre Tuesday night, received re- peated curtain calls from the audience and plaudits from the, critics. s Misalliance,|third play, which premiered before a fulljopens Aug. 9. The Apple Cart,| Misalliance, called by Shaw "a debate in one sitting,' was directed by actor Barry Morse, the festival's artistic director. | For Mrs. E. H. Lampard of} The production is the second)the St, Catharines Standard, the} of three plays by the Irish play- wright to be presented at the fifth annual Shaw Festival dur- ing its two-month season The first production, Man and Lost Girl Sought In -- New York NEW YORK (CP)--Peter J. Chumak, 20, of Toronto, is roaming the streets of New York in search of a girl, Not just any girl, but a spe cial friend,» Olga Iwaszenko, 16, of Rochester, N.Y., who dis- appeared from the sight of family and friends June 29. That was the day Chumak put her on an early - morning bus) in Buffalo. The bus was bound for Rochester--and also New York City. Chumak is staying at a hotel in Manhattan's colorful Green-| wich Village district while he looks for her. He says he'll stay until he finds her or until it's time to resume his studies at the University of Toronto "The last time 1 saw her | had taken her to the 'village' in| Toronto and that seemed to have a hold on her The young student, who says he writes poetry, recalls that he met Olga when she and her par- ents spent their vacation in a} Northern Ontario summer re- sort " i JULY 24th ' f "HOP |', PARK" i You @ CANADIANS srding A AND LUKE 73: | APOSTLES FOR YOUNG ect from Yorkville's Famous rph nvr Electra Re | Admission $).25 Casual Dress if | | GZ show stealer was Paxton Whilte-| head, as Lord Summerhays "He stole the show in Man and Superman and he's done it again," Mrs. Lampard said She said the company is de-| veloping a superb Shavian style and cited Susan Clark for her portrayal of Hypatia as having "acquired the right style for Shaw." 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