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The Oshawa Times, 31 May 1961, p. 23

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Medical authorities are dig- Anniversary By MRS. SYDNEY BURGESS COURTICE Courtice United Church is holding anni-| versary services June 4. The morning service will be at 10 Courtice U.C. Psychology Of Tattoos By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS| named Eilmer made the first Topics this week: Tat. successful flight recorded in {am. Evening service at 7 p.m. |{Rev. Bazil E. Long of Orono |will be guest speaker at both |services. Mr. Frank Walter will be the organist. The music at the morning service will be ren- DOUBLES CHAMPION? | twins to Mrs. James Richard- | tive pounds. In addition to | sons have three other chil- dered by the children of the Sun- day School. Special music has |been arranged for the evening service with the senior choir in charge. On Wednesday, June 7, an an- niversary luncheon will be held| at the church, commencing at| 12 noon Saturday evening the Cour- tice CGIT held its annual moth- er and daughter banquet at the church. The girls under the di- rection of their leaders prepar- ed and served a most delightful luncheon to the mothers and la- dies of the WA. Mliss Carol Rob- lertson proposed the toast to the {Church and the Rev. H. Stain- {ton responded. Mrs. K. Ellis lacting for the Sunday School teachers proposed the toast to ithe CGIT on behalf of the |group. tooed sailors, man's first at- tempts to fly and the secrets of waves. WHAT'S IN A TATTOO? An informal poll at a US.. .Navy base asked the question: What kind of a person is the sailor who wears tattoos? Opinions included: ""Emo- tionally immature; proving he ic a tough guy; attempting to gain some indelible evidence rough - and - tumble mascu- line group . . impulsive . . . over-aggressive . . lower intelligence . . ." maladjusted than other, but telligence. less well-adjusted than men of his identification with a | . mixed up . . . | "In tests, psychologists found | sailors «with more than 'one tattoo were more personally | little different in average in- | Men wanting tattoos were | who didn't want tattoos. There | was little difference between | men with one tattoo and those | only a one-time fling with with none, raising the possi- | bility that a single tattoo is | English language history. He built a set of wings, climbed a high tower and jumped into the arms of a favoring wind. Eilmer glided more than 600 feet, then crash-landed. break: ing both legs and became THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Moy 31, 1961 23 lamed for life, says Dr. Lynn White, University of California historian. The first flight recorded in history was made by Ibn Fir- nas, a Moslem doctor in Spain about 875 AD, Dr. White says. He covered his body with feathers, used wings, and also crash-landed. Like a child running in the dark, a wave rolls in rhythm toward the shore, until it catches its feet, trips, breaks into surf and sprawls forward | on the beach. But it is born at sea, as wind whips the water into short-crested, choppy waves, say University of Chicago re- searchers who are probing the secrets of waves in a spe- cially-built 72-foot tank. These abbreviated wavelets, generated by the wind, merge into the rolling swells of the ocean. Then the length of the wave shortens as it rises higher. As it heads toward land, it breaks when the wave "stubs its toe" on the beach tom. Summertime... And The Dancin' Is Easy! FRIDAY ... THE TOP RECORDS Plus -- Jazz for Dancing PAT RICCIO 4 SATURDAY "ee PAT RICCIO With His Recording Orchestra 2.00 Person -- Dancing 9-12 And His Quintet 1.00 Person--Dancing 9-1 a.m. Reservations -- RA 3-2143 ging into the record book to | son, 36, of Mitchell Bay, N.S., the other twins ranging in age | dren. hi 5 iit determine whether the birth | is a Canadian record Both | ooo 40 five the Richard: , --(CP Wirephoto) |r Jane Dn ee tance |complish. Mrs. H. Vetzal, presi-|Mrs. O. Robertson on behalf of sociation met in the church/part in the form of a poem 'evening. of a fourth consecutive set of ! boys, each weighed more than | X Giles -- |the Woman's Association thank-| More than 900 years ago, i W.A. Attends |dent of the WA, replied to the the mothers thanked the girls basement Wed. afternoon. Mrs.| passing psychological impor- | Robert Burns Ghost Still Haunts Dumiries Jubilee Pavilion JULIE HAD EVERYTHING BUT A SENSE OF SHAME! ing them for the help and in-| 8 British Benedictine monk | spiration given to the girls in| | the work they are trying to ac- which was greatly appreciated. | May Meetin ay ee g toast Miss Margaret Esta-|and the two leaders, Mrs. C. COLUMBUS The M ay/brooks gave the toast to the|Penfound and Mrs. G. Esta- meeting of the Women's As-{mothers, this was offered in brooks for a most enjoyable DUMFRIES (CP) -- Nearly 165 years after the death of Robert Burns, the poet's soub goes marching on through the lowlands of Scotland There is scarcely a place where the poet's presence is not felt--in the towns and villages he visited, the paths he walked and the taverns in which he quenched his thirst. Residents are quick to point out a tavern in which Burns wrote a poem or a window pane on which he had scratched with a diamond a couple of verses. They claim that no one can visit the rooms preserved in memory of the Scottish bard without experiencing the won- derful influence of the poet. The people of communities such as Dumfries have done much to preserve this influence. They have built a mausoleum, jgreat grandson, Fergusson said erected but tourists can easily J, McKenzie, president wel-| {retrace the steps the poet took from his house to his favorite family in./tavern, the Globe Inn, a few cludes a daughter, Mrs. W. G./minutes' walk away. : McGuire. of Ottawa and a son,| Burns lived four months in Fit. Lt. R. E. Sabourin of Cold|the Globe Inn before moving Lake Alta. 5 th andr do into his house. The poet's sit- n the U.S. the searc 2 : : . ' cated Bonnie Jean and Edward ling room in the inn 1s 'pre. Hutchinson, children of Bar- served. He spent "many a jolly clay Westropp Burns Hutchin- hour there, for 'it was his son of San Marina, Calif. Bon- favorite tavern." nie Jean and Edward are great-| mye chair he sat in is also great-great grandchildren of the d ea : poet. preserved and visitors can see Burns, although born in Ayr-/two verses of poetry, inscribed shire County to the northwest, in Burns' own writing, on a spent his mature years farming pane of glass in a room up- and later working as an excise... officer in the Dumfries district." "°° ; The entire life pf the town of In the Burns house, his study 27.000 appears to fevolve around adjoins the bedroom, in which Burns but towns and villages he died July 21, 1796, and it {in an interview. TWO IN U.S. Mrs. Sabourin's comed all present and read a poem. A hymn was sung and a prayer followed. Mrs. George Scott assisted by| Miss B. Smith took the worship| service and the topic was "In-| dividual Life" | Mrs. M. Ding presided for) the program. Mrs. E. Croxall| at the piano accompanied Mrs. | G. Cook, Brooklin, who sang| "My Task'. Mrs. Bruce Ormis-| ton gave a reading. Mrs. J.| McKenzie introduced the guest] speaker, Mrs. J. McKinney, Brooklin who gave an illus-| trated travelogue of their trip} to Bermuda and Trinidad. The meeting closed with the Theme song and the Myzpah| Benediction after which lunch ADULT " THE RELEASED THRY UNITED ARTIVS FEATURE TIMES: 1:50 - 3:45 - was served. 5:40 - 7:40, LAST SHOW 9:20 STILL LIVING in the surrounding lowlands re- was in this study that he wroter HONG KONG (AP)--Roman No man could forget her... no woman forgive her! CR Ay GINA LOLLOBRIGIDA ANTHONY FRANCIOSA \ ERNEST BORGNINE converted into a museum the fuse to take a back seat and house in which he died and have equal pride in their his- Catholic sources report a Ger-| man priest, Father Peter| about 100 of his published kept up his favorite tavern-- which still does a thriving trade. LIST DESCENDANTS ! The most recent contribution] ' Necti in (stands in the. town's main ny street. to the Burns col on a parchment on which will be inscribed the complete list of | the poet's direct living descen-! dants--none of whom now are in Scotland. With the exception of one family--now living in England--| toric link with the poet. songs. A statue in white marble was| His signature, roughly erected in his memory in 1882 scratched with a diamond, can --86 years after the poet died uy yo coon on a window in the f 37--and here at the age © {house occupied by his widow, | Bonnie Jean Armour. until her The contour of the town, death in 1834. made a royal burgh by William en the Lion in 1186, has ch d Huengsberg, 51, is still living in| Red China. This raises to two] the number of foreign - born| priests known to be there.| Bishop James E. Walsh, 69, of! Cumberland, Md., is serving a 20-year sentence on a spy! charge. Queen little since Burns walked through its streets. New buildings have been the ramaining known survivors who can trace their ancestry to! Burns make their homes in Canada or the United States. The search for the poet's de-| scendants was undertaken about | five years ago by Tom Me-| Plan Clubhouse, Curling Rink BOWMANVILLE -- At the Crorie, curator of the Burns annual meeting of the share- House in Dumfries. It was holders of Southview Golf and] completed shortly before Mc: Country Club, the officers were Crorie's recent death. «instructed to go ahead with ar-| The curator was assisted by rangements to erect a clubhouse | Robert Fergusson, editor of the and curling rink. It is expected Dumfries and Galloway Stand- the construction of the new fa- ard, who raised the first clue cilities will make it possible to about the poet's Canadian de-|start expansion of the nine-hole scendants through a Vancouver |20lf course to 18 holes. They contact. expect to start the curling rink, The investigation traced Mrs. about June 5 and the building] Robina Dennis of Ladner, B.C.,|completed in October with curl- and Mrs. D. M. B. Sabourin of ing to commence by Nov. 1. The Vancouver, daughters of Robert curling stones have been or- Burns Hutchinson, the poet's dered. EA ---- The Greatest Spy Story of the Desert War JAMES ROBERTSON JUSTICE FOXHOLE IN CAIRO FIRST OSHAWA SHOWINGS ! omoseow "3 BLONDES IN HIS LIFE" Plus "BUT NOT FOR ME" DANCE FRIDAY TO NIGHT CLUB ENTERTAINER KARL MURPHY and THE WILLOWS DIRECT FROM A TWO MONTH RUN AT LE COQ D'OR -- TORONTO THE "NEW" ADMISSION RED BARN 1.00 THE MOTION PICTURE GIANT OF 1960 BY THE AUTHOR OF 'GIANT' nooner WARNER BROS. bis TECHNICOLOR® DORIS DAY - RONALD REAGAN GINGER ROGERS "STORM WARNING" ADULT ENTERTAINMENT BURTON [RYAN JONES YER Enter L930 {8 Theatres I'WENTIETH ANNIVERSARY Cowles? / ITY DRIVE-IN : orn ar 800 TONIGHT ! 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