n Majorette Championship. the Midget Strutting Cham- nship for six-year-olds, Nan- Rietmuller came second. OPENED BIG MOUTH VOLVERTON, England (CP) \ Buckinghamshire bride nost had to call off the wed- g at the last minute because » couldn't shut her mouth, » yawned and her jaw stuck. 0 hours of treatment finally , it closed again, but doctors rned her not to yawn on her neymoon. F TORONTO L ;ERVATORY USIC 'MUSIC |, Principal st, Toronto & 18-3797 ENS SEPT. 5 in all music subjects ~§Special courses hildren 7c satatetntataieted = 2 JIIIIIIIIS, GOOD PLACE TO BUY 2 USED CAR! , ONT, 623-3396 si) BEATTY HAULAGE Construction inh Nad i 3s 38 2 3 FH = lei ing 725-2156 Taunton Rd., Oshawa YCLE SHOP <] atti 28-7780 semen 'TED'S AUTO | BODY Repairs Free Estimotes BODY & FENDER SPRAY PAINTING SPECIALISTS RR, No, 4 (King E.) 728-3401 W. B, BENETT PAVING ond MATERIALS LTD. * Driveways * Play Grounds x Parking Lots * Subdivisions 728-4661 COMPLETE ASPHALT 1290 iiedaldoeete Somerville SERVICE MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE A Complete Travel Service hk Tours % Cruises % Accommode- tion -- Lend Sea -- Air 723-9441 25 King St. E. Uphoistering Speciolists at reasonable prices. % Furniture Refinishing & Lien *% Custom Built Furniture Darli gton Upholstery n 102 KING ST, Ww. Bowmanville 623-7341 OSHAWA "TUNE UP CENTRE % Tune-Up & Carburetor %& General \ Electrical 'pairs Free Pick-up & Delivery 222 King W. 728-6817 4 Awards are nothing new fo Martin Weatherall; his accordion playing has brought him more than 350 medals, awards and certi- ficates, including, in 1961, the national sight reading championship for accordion players. Mr. Weatherall, ge- neral manager of the Cana- ACCORDION PLAYER HAS WON 350 MEDALS, AWARDS dian Conservatory of Music in south - eastern Ontario, recently won the Harry G. Stanley Merit Award which is presented to Canadians for 'exceptional contribu- tions to music', The award was presented at the Cana- dian Conservatory of Music Festival in Sarnia, where emeuuunmennn ii il HALIFAX (CP)--Halifax may become Canada's next haven for hippies. Thomas Simms of the Ontario. Institute for Studies in Education predicts there will be a sizable colony of the bearded, guitar-strumming youths and their mini-skirted girls here in a year or two. Mr. Simms, whose special interest is developmental psy- chology, says there are already 50 "full-time" hippies here. That's a comparatively large number when you con- sider, he says, that Toronto's Yorkville district--the hippie capital--has only 250 full-time hippie residents. A hippie is defined as a unt nett emer ett HALIFAX NEXT "non-competitive" being who has come to realize that liv- ing according to society's rules dooms him to conform- ity. He disdains violence and can often be identified by his uniform--war surplus khakis --although he resorts to that clothing as much for eco- nomic reasons as any. Mr. Simms says the hippie almost always comes from middle- or upper middle-class families and carries a lot of "respectability" with him. Attracted to non-conformity among the poorer classes, he brings his "middle-class sen- sitivity' to the environment of relative poverty. Creation of a hippie village is relatively simple. It begins with a few hippies moving into apartments above stores in a second-class business dis- trict. Mr. Simms has a somewhat higher. regard for Halifax hip- pies because they shun some of the uglier trappings of their counterparts in Toronto and New York. "Halifax hippies aren't hung up on drugs as they are in Toronto and New York and, surprisingly enough, there is a lack of the long- haired greasers in Halifax." Greasers?) They're border- line delinquents who merely sonnei A IMT NA emer nNg 25 out of 40 Oshawa stu- dents, who entered, finish- ed in the top three in their categories. Harry G. Stan- ley is president of OAHU publishing company and di- rector of the International music League. --Oshawa Times Photo ON THE TOWN The versatile Varga Brothers and the lovely Dianne Merrit will be the big attraction in Harry's Hideaway at the Hotel Genosha all next week. The group of four men and one woman vocalist concentrate largely on rock and roll and rhythm and blues sounds but can also do some country and western music. The lead sing- er, Dianne Merrit has a record coming out on Sept. 5, and the group has cut an album and two 45's with her. SPRUCE VILLA INN Danny Coughlin and his New Canadians have kept business brisk at the Spruce Villa Inn this week and will finish their engagement tonight. They have been assisted in putting across their wide repertoire of songs, music and comedy by the pop- ular Montreal dancer Denise Charron. Next week the popular Kitty Lanier returns to the Spruce Villa with a sparkling revue for a limited engagement be- tween her major commitments in leading Toronto nightclubs. HOTEL LANCASTER The Blue Horse Lounge will present starting Monday, for a return engagement the "Blue Chips" trio with Al Derie play- blanc, lead guitar and Rose LaFrance. They were so well received at the Blue Horse Lounge last January and on other occasions that it is upon the public's re- quest that this last engagement has been arranged. They have recently completed a success- ful tour of Western Canada and the Northwest Territories. CADILLAC HOTEL A group of three Oshawa boys "The Sceptres" will play for one week starting, Monday, in the Coronet Lounge. Their rep- ertoire includes rock and roll, rythym, blues and also west- ern. Leader, Cy Sawyer, lead guitar, rythym guitar, Brian Boyle, drum, Jack Bourke. MC and vocalist, Johny Jay. They are presently playing at Rouge Valley Inn, Olympic Room. CENTRAL HOTEL The one man act of Allen Di Blasio has been held over for a second week and patrons of the Gold Rush Lounge wili have another opportunity to see the man known as "The One Man Show". Di Blasio does pantomines, plays the piano, and general- ly acts like a human dynamo as he presents his revolutionary ing base fiddle, Leonard Le- act. May's Hollywood Return Causes No Particular Stir By BOB THOMAS | HOLLYWOOD (AP) --Seven| years ago, Swedish actress May Britt married Negro entertainer Sammy Davis Jr., thus writing an apparent end to her promis- ing career in films. Today she.is back in Holly- wood to act in a television film, and her return to public per- forming has caused no par- ticular stir. "I think people have gotten used to it," she commented. "Also I think that people's atti- tude toward mixed marriages may have changed in seven years, "And I'd like to think that the example of Sammy and me may have contributed to a more mature attitude." The climate was different when she married Davis. May-- pronounced My--Britt had been one of 20th Century-Fox's new stars. After five years under contract to Carlo Ponti in Italy, the willowy Swede had come to America to star in Murder, Inc., The Young Lions--the only film she recalls with pleasure--The Hunters and The Blue Angel-- "T still don't know why they re- the next option, which was the studio's privilege." The actress retired to be Mrs. Sammy Davis Jr. and mother of Mark, now 7, Tracy, 6, and she received three or four act- ing offers. "But that may have partly been because most people be- lieved I wasn't interested in acting again," she said. "And I wasn't particularly. "I am not one of those frus- trated housewives. I think car- ing for a husband and children is a lifetime job, and a chal- lenging one. Also, I was mar- ried to a man who had to travel a great deal. Someone had to stay home and care for the chil- dren." Recently Davis's agent brought her an offer of a star- ring role with Van Heflin and Horst Bucholz in a drama for the new Danny Thomas anthol- ogy on NBC. She _ telephoned Davis, touring in Europe, and @ gave his approval. She believes that her hiring for a television drama reflects a more mature climate in race matters. 'I'm sure the producer must know that the sponsor will not protest," she said. made it." Everyone agreed in Holly- wood that her marriage to Davis made her unhirable for movies. "Oh, no one came right out and said it," she remarked. "But I had a out, and I could tell what was going on. "My contract was dropped at IZZA Phone 723-0241 er 728-0192 Jeff, 2. In the years following | = + SUNDAY THE TOP TEN | | REGENT - Held over by pop-|The Fastest Guitar Alive, {n} ular demand for another week,|color, starring Roy Orbison, | The Dirty Dozen, one of the most America's hottest singing star.| looked for pictures of the year.|On the same program the true Starring Lee Marvin, Ernest|story of the immortal Hank Wil-|; Borgnine, Robert Ryan, Telly liams with George Hamilton por-; Savalas, Clint Walker, Charles|traying Hank Williams. Shown| Webb, who for: almost two dec-| NBC serena HIPPIE HAVEN? look like hippies but are just plain filthy. To the outsider looking at the hippie and his way of life he appears to be a loser, Mr. Simms says, but the fact i8 he considers himself a winner because he lives by his own set of standards. He usually has a job involv- ing some sort of creativity. Here it often includes the theatre. If you expect to find him hanging out in a coffeehouse you may be disappointed. He regards coffeehouses as "'like two years ago"--out of date --and expensive for his nor- | mally small income. a a SHOW TIMES AT MOVIES |Four Jobs In Same Show Held By Dragnet's Webb HOLLYWOOD (A P )--J ack{1960, but bounced back on the} a mid-year screens as SUIS A THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, September 2, 1967 23 names--and our writers fill it out." "We take no licence with police work and we're not an expose show," Webb said. right." speech I'd written in a show--it was about a policeman's life. We got more than 15,000 letters asking for a copy of it, so I guess we're doing something "Last season I did a little * CANADIAN OPERA O'KEEFE CENTRE FRONT & YONGE COMPANY CENTENNIAL SEASON SEPTEMBER 15 TO OCTOBER 14 EM. 3-6633 LOUIS RIEL Set. 23,2 MADAMA BUTTERFLY = 5" 2,7, IL TROVATORE The Luck of Ginger Coffey BARBER OF SEVILLE Oct. 3, 7, Oct. 2 Sept. 20, Sept. 16, 21, 27, Sept. 15, 19 Sept. 18, 22, 30 (Met.) Oct. 5, 10, 14 (Mat.), 9, 13 25, 29 MON. TO THURS. EVES. 8:15 P.M, $6.00 $5.00 $4.00 $2.75 FRI. & SAT. EVES. 8:15 P.M. $6.75 $6.00 $4.50 $3.25 SATURDAY MATINEES 2 P.M. $4.75 $3.75 $2.75 $2.00 BOX OFFICE OPEN 11 A.M. to 6 P.M. DAILY CLOSED SEPTEMBER 2nd & 3rd & 4th | | TALES OF HOFFMANN oot 7a cor _ Bronson and Jim Brown, Their|Saturday continuous from violence brought them together|p.m. and Sunday continuous; for a mission that would set)from 2 p.m. Starting on Thurs- them apart from all other war|day, Hot Rods to Hell, starring heroes. Based on the exciting)Dana Andrews and Jeanne Ibest seller about the deadliest/Crain. The motorcycle gangs commando unit of the Second|take a back seat when these World War. Showed daily at 1:30) young animals clear the road 4:05, 6:50 and 9:30 p.m. Last|for excitment. In color. On the complete show at 9:20 p.m. same program, Carry on Cow-) lboy, with Sidney James and PLAZA - Now playing Sean|Kenneth Williams, an English Connery as James Bond in, You|comedy western. Also in color. Only Live Twice. The biggest|Shown weekdays at 7 p.m. Sat-; Bond of all set in the beautifuljurday continuous from 1 ».m.| scenery of Japan and Tokyo.|and Sunday continuous from! ili | FOR TEEN-AGERS |on'ine'set or ine SPEC TRE.|---- | The following is this week's hit parade as chosen by Osh- awa and district teen - agers and supplied by the Disc Shop launch pad, the most expen- sive set ever filmed. S.P.E.C.- T.R.E. captures a Russian and U.S. satellite and tries to start Major Rules at the Oshawa Shopping Cen- tre. 1. Corn Flakes and Ice Cream --Lords of London |3-15 "5:99, 7:30 and 9:40 p.m. 2. Ode to Billie Jo --Bobby Gentry |5:20, 7:30 and 9:40 p.m. Last 3. Reflections --Diana Ross and Supremes 4. To Sir With Love 5. Heroes and Villains --Beach Boys 6. It's the Little Things --Sonny and Cher |would make Shakespeare's, The 7. ¥Fakin' It --Simon and Garfunkey 8. There is a Mountain --Donovan 9. Come Grow Up --Bobby Vee 10. 'All You Need is Love --Beatles EXPANDED SCHEDULE BOSTON (AP)--The National Hockey League's Boston Bruins Saturday night announced a 37- home game schedule, starting with Detroit Red Wings at Bos- ton Garden Oct. 11. The Bruins will meet the five old NHL teams--Detroit, Chicago, Mont- real, New York and Toronto--in five games at home, instead of seven as in the past. Each of the six new clubs brought in by expansion this year will make two appearances at the garden. First will be Los Angeles Kings on Thursday, Oct. 26. SEPT. 3rd. , MID-NITE y _DANCE-IN THE L GUESS ' WHO | | Dancing -- 12 a.m. -- 3 a.m. Admission $2.00 --Lulu |the Shrew. Ever sjnce |Burtons Svmcalayif tozether Back When You) boisterousness. Shown daily at] 6 . Never point a gun at any- thing you do not want to) 7. Never climb a tree or| or jump a ditch) with a loaded gun; never) a third world war. James Bond jis sent to Japan to iind out |where the enemy headquarters \are, Adult entertainment. Shown Monday to Saturday at 1:10, |Shown on Sunday at 1:30, 3:25, Safe Shooting | 1. Treat every gun with the| respect due a loaded gun. 2. Watch that muzzle! Car-| ry your gun safety; keep safety on until ready to ades of radio and television as replacement last season. crewcut, sober-faced Sgt. Joe|Unchanged in format and view- Friday has created the image point--"We're on the side of the of a good, hard-working police law and order and our police- officer, is a member of a smaljijmen are, for the most part, Hollywood. group: the quadru-|good guys"--the show jumped ple hyphenates. right back to a comfortable A hyphenate, in current mov- high spot in the Nielsen Jist. ie-TV jargon, is a man- with' Webb, 47, often inserts short, more than one job in a show. pro-police opinions into the But where most hyphenates|series, deploring uncontrolled can merely put writer-director! gun buying or appealing for cit- or producr-director after their|izen's co-operation. , Webb is Dragnet's, "We have no access to the - producer - creater -|Los Angeles police files,'"' Webb director--and he has a hand in|explained, "but we do have an turning out the final scripts and\arrangement so that when casting his shows as well. there is a case we can use, the Dragnet had been retired tojinvestigating officer writes it profitable syndication reruns in'up in three pages--without Osunwn THORNTON. RD. AT HIGHWAY 401 a TONITE - MON. - TUES. i < os ALL HELM BREAKS LOOSE 'DRIVE-IN THEATRE 7, MURDERERS ROW with DEAN MARTIN as MATT HELM THE SILENCERS SCHOOL SUPPLIES! | 1.50 per person -- groups of 50-150 | complete show at 9:25 p.m. ' shoot. ODEON - Playing now for é another week, The Taming of the use, take down or have actions open; guns should be carried in cases to shooting area. jin films, it seemed inevitable} 4, \that sooner or later Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton you pull trigger; identifying game you hunt. Re sure barrel of obstructions, |Taming of the Shrew. They| 5, have, and it is a handsome, lusty, busty romp and an en- gaging one - but exhausting be- cause it never lets up in its and that the gun you carry. 8 p.m. with special matinees on Saturday and Sunday after- noon at 2 p.m. There will also be a special matinee on Monday Sept. 4 at 2 p.m, For shoot; avoid all horse-play fence, Max Von Sydow and Richard a flat, hard surface or water; Harris in James Michener's, Hawaii. In color. | your backstop is adequate. 9. Store guns and ammu- nition separately, beyond reach of children. Avoid alcoholic beverag- before or during shotting. MARKS - Now playing, two! of the best western and cvun-| try music films to come out} 10. of Hollywood for quite a while, | WANTED | "Social Groups and Clubs" '$ PLAN YOUR FALL & WINTER PARTY NOW! OLD-FASHIONED HAY RIDE WITH MODERN AND OLD TIME DANCING Includes --- Corn on Cob -- Hot Dogs Donuts -- Coffee --- Teo ¢ We are accepting bookings ""NOW" for this unusual setting. COME OUT AND HAVE A NITE OF FUN (Ten minutes from downtown Oshawa) CALL ANYTIME 655-3821 EID DDD DH DI: Based on the pit | best-se ii uu. AN RESERVED SEATS ON SALE AT BOX OFFICE OR BY PHONE (COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS ELORET WHE BURTON ZEFIREL Met. Wed., Set. and Sun. 2 P.M. Eves. One Showing et 8 P.M. Bex Office Open Daily 12-9 P.M. For Choice Rese 725-5833 ; , A : otlly TRANIGOLON PRRVISIOR on t AA ROYAL FILMS INTERNATIONAL /FAL PRODUCTION ODEON), 39 KING ST. OSHAWA rved Seats Call ~ 725-5562 and his New TORNADOS playing the NASHVILLE SOUND | featuring the lovely MARIE HARRISON "Oshawo's Friendliest Dance" RUDY VELTAI | KENNEDY LOPEZ MEEXEA AOBEAT ELLY a YAN SAVALAS WALKER WERDER ADULT ENTERTAINMENT FEATURE TODAY: 1:30 = 4:05 ~ 6:50 - 9:30 BEGINNING SEPT. 8th CLUB DISCOTHEQUE MEMBERSHIP $1.00 DOWNSTAIRS AT THE 4 GEORGIAN ton HOTEL For The Over 21 set YOUR HOST MAX COTTRELL DANCE to the Discs of GRAHAM JACKSON And For Those That Like It Live. "THE JAGG" | Every Friday Night Ohi te TAM ADMISSION 1.00 REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE Unload guns when not in| Ee sure of target before know) features of is clear you have ammunition on-| ly of the proper size for| youll {#1 SIMCOE ST, S. reservations the box office will pull a gun toward be open daily from 12 to 9 ».m. self by the muzzle. Coming soon Julie Andrews,| 8. Never shoot a bullet at) at target practice be sure) Loose Leaf Refills 260 Pak OSHAWA | Ann Margret STELLA STEVENS ELLER A HORROR and COMEDY BEGINS SUNDAY ar #:00 p.m. "AND CONTINUES ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT yy YOULL aT THE SILENCERS = 2 Your, YOU'L SHage HUDDER WHEN YOU GO TO MURDER ROW =3 You + 4 YOU'LL THE HUMAN DUPLICATORS ERS -- L GASP! SHIVER! IN THE SIXTH RECORD-BREAKING WEEK! Sn a a a OSHAWA LOVES "SIR" SIDNEY POITIER as the teacher who learns the ABC's from London's turned-on teens! i! i 2 montis | TIMES -- 1:30 - 3:20 - 5:25 - 7:30-9:30 PLAZA THEATRE CADILLAC HOTEL presents "THE SCEPTRES" Rock and Roll, Rythm and Blues and Western Music PLUS MARIDEE EXOTIC DANCER "THE DRESDEN DOLL" : Direct from The Latin Quarter seeveese e086 eoerwres CASTLE OF EVIL fom = 5 YOU'LL TREMBLE AT THE SIGHT OF THE Blood Beast Of Outer Space ADMISSION ADULTS 1.50 FOR ALL 5 FEATURES YOUR CAR 13 YOUR RESERVED SEAT» CHILDREN under 12 FREE! The~irty hi Dozen" . ALSO ON THE SAME PROGRAM "HORSE WITH A FLYING TAIL" THIS SUNDAY, SEPT. 3rd OUR GIANT GALA HOLIDAY SHOW COME EARLY AND SEE ALL FOUR FEATURES FOR THE ONE ADMISSION BOX OFFICE OPENS at 7 P.M. SHOW STARTS AT DUSK