Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Nov 1961, p. 24

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ANNOUNCES A NEW CONCEPT IN VACUUM CLEANERS SAVE $15-00 SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER -- ONLY $6 95 Small Deposit $1.75 Per Week NEW DISPOS.- ABLE Sanitized® DUST BAG Extra large, with new Double-Com- partment design. Holds more, Sani- tized® for lasting freshness, 10-DAY HOME TRIAL MONEY BACK GUARANTEE EUREKA PRINCESS CLEANER IS AVAILABLE FROM THE FOLLOWING DEALERS: PRICE INCLUDES DELUXE 8-PC. SET OF CLEANING ACCESSORIES 2) ARR veeaeta, SSN EVERY CLEANER FEATURE YOU WANT! e Giant Sanitized® Dust Bag Vinyl Bumpers e Suction Adjuster e New Flip Top eHandy Toe Switch Blower Attachment Unbreakable Nylon Hose ¢ Ball Bearing Wheels e Cord-Holder Handle e All Steel Construction LESS BULK We trimmed the bulk to give you a slim-size cleaner that stores in the smallest corner of your closet. LIGHTER WEIGHT It's the lightest Eureka ever. Weighs only 12% lbs, We cut out the excess pounds to make it easy to roll, light to carry. FULL POWER Husky, heavy-duty motor is over 1H.P, strong. Provides powerful suction for faster, better, far easier cleaning. t NEW MOBILITY Rolls easily over rugs, floors,thresh- olds. Won't tip. Snugs into tight places without nicking. NEW FLIP-TOP LID New hinged top flips wide open for easy bag changes. Special catch seals tight, releases fast. bid to lure 24 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, November 23. 1047 Used As Federico Fellini, the director and co-author of the controver- sial film spectacle, "La Dolce Vita', soon in Oshawa, has ex- plained that his purpose in making the picture was to neither criticize nor denounce, but to "put a thermometer to a wick world that evidently has a fever." Tho film, how- over, although it deals with a sick society ,opens and closes on a note of symbolic hope. Roberto Rossellini, founder of Italian neo-realistic films, and = = Fellini's acknowledged teacher, sadly commented: "The night | saw 'La Dolce Vita' was for me one of the most sorrowful in my life~a night when I saw my dearest pupil take a completely mis- taken road." Tennessee Wil- liams, on the other hand, has called the picture a plece, and Martin American movie agrees with him Churchmen, all over world, also are divided in their opinion of "La Dolce Vita." While the Vatican placed it on the "excluded list', other high ranking prelates disagree with the ruling. Padre Angelo Arpa 'HISTORIC TOWN | GETS RESTORED BARKERVILLE, B.C. Most commu? ities | proud of their modern | homes, but not this town where the few new houses exist are to be moved be- hind a cemetery The reason is that the British Columbia govern- ment is restoring the his- toric north-centva" town to what it was in the gold rush days of 1862 to 1885 It's spending $175,000 to refurbish 110 buildings in time for the Barkerville centennial next vear, But a dozen modern houses have no place in such a setting and residents have agreed to have their homes moved to a place that will sce then sepa- rated from the town proper by the graveyard. Ritt, the director, -- STAR REVELS IN ROME vr Sylvia, a. beautiful Holly- | troianni) a merry chase dur- wood star (Anita Ekberg) | ing a wild night in the Eter- | leads Rome newspaperman | nal City, which she is visiting Marcello (Marcello | for a movie assignment. School Graduate Faces Problem HALIFAX (CP)--Perhaps the |toughest decision Canada's high |}school student must take before | graduation is whether to go on |to university or get a job. Trying to help these J7- Mas One of the flesh hunters, who| travel thousands of miles each year seeking recruits in high} schools and _ universities, is| Cmdr. G. L, Amyot. and; Taking a moment out from| 18 - year . olds make up theirjhis safari, hunter Amyot of-| minds are the promoters offered the following navy view. aster-| rr |must be a man without myths'. the; higher education, industry and) point on youth the armed services who, with! 'Since the ceiling (on the Grade x (from G pamphlet, poster and panel/navy's comolement) was raised Education leve! is th discussion, extol the benefits to|by about 1,800 in September we) We note. be accumulated in their res-jhave doubled the intake to 260) "The pective fields. a month. One of the remarkable] many cases Representing the navy in its| things is the youth--the aver-| stacks up pre bright young men|age age is 18 Men of 23 and 24/age brackets,' and women ct high academic] are rarely seen in recruiting of-| Alan T. Love. backgrouna into the service are/fices. Another change is thejofficer for the Maritimes. "To- the "flesh hunters," the navy's|improved academic standard. | day's young fad hz jargon for its recruiting offic-|In the last few years the aver-| ers. navy jmind and is often more mature age school grade has risen to|than in past years." 18 year-old -- and in as a keener|ing Movie Camera Mirror Jesuit Professor of Theology at the University of Genoa, ex- presses the opinion that Fellini hhas not only reached the pin- nacle of his career, but has created a cinematographic fres- co like that of a Dante or Michelangelo. Soon, with the film moving to the Regent Theatre, Oshawa and district audiences will have a chance to decide for them- selves whether Fellini has created "the greatest modern parable on the sadness of sin", as one churchman put it, or only "a vulgar and grotesque satire", as another one main- tains, Or they may feel, as Fel- lini does, that "this is a film which, in spite of showing mor- at decay, gives the viewer a eeling of being set free . . free from the 'myths of our time, for the man of tomorrow Whether this creates myths or destroys them, one thing is certain, "La Dolce Vita" will not jeave the viewer indiffer- lent, | Road Problem Seen For U.K. LONDON (CP) -- British mo- jtorists are due for a specia) jheadache if Britain joins the European Common Market-- jespecially if the country is jlinked to the Continent by a |channel tunnel or bridge. For then a long-shirked ques- tion is bound to arise: How jmuch longer can Britons keep jleft on the road while all Eu- |rope except Sweden drives on jthe right? The government is already anticipating the problems that would be involved in a change. |Transport Minister Marples re- jcently announced that all new {motorways and trunk roads jare being designed to carry jtraffic on either side, "in case \this country decides to change jover to the right." | But the cost of altering the existing set-up would be enor- jmous. Road signs, cambers and jgradients, traffic circles, auto- |mobile design--all would need |changing. | Buses that now have their rade VIII.|passenger entry on the left e first point|would have to be provided with \right-hand doors. The total bill would amount its "his first job--|to an estimated £30,000,000. tiy well with other! adds Lt.-Cmdr. Nor can the problems be jcounted only in terms of cash. recruiting|Every British driver and pe- destrian would need re-educat- in the new rule of the Blind Lawyer Knows Clients By Voices TORONT:' (CP) -- Oharles Stewart McCormack is a 32- year-old lawyer who knows his clients only by the sound of their voices. He's totally blind, Yet in two years of practice he cannot cecall turning down a' case bevause of this handicap, and he ha: confidently tackled real estate, company law, civil' litigation and divorce suits as well as criminal cases. He readily admits there are problems in being a sightless lawyer but he seems to have solved most of them. During a five - week conspir- acy tria} here in which he was defence laywer, he used a braille stylus and desk slate to record notes at longhand speed, He makes the Braille impres- sions from right to 'left on a Sheet of vaper, then turns it '|over to read by touch from the underside "In any research I do in con- nection with a case, friends or employees read law reports or transcripts aloud to me and I make notes in braille," he said. "But the facts I obtain per- sonally from my client, and there is no breach of confid- ence." In the corspiracy trial, Mr. McCormack coped with 170 wit- nesses and more than 200 ex- hibits, mos' of them documents. "That sort of trial presents as many prob'ems as any lawyer is likely to come up against." As for the documents, he says: "Most of them are read into the record, and I have found my colleagues particu larly helpful in court, even when they represent 'he other side." He doesn't regard it as im- portant to be able to see the witnesses. "In many cases you can tell from the tone of a witness's voice whether he is unsure of what he's saying and I have the satisfaction of knowing the judge and jury are watching him and they are the ones who must decide whether he's tel- ling the truth." The young lawyer lost most of his. sigh' after being struck in the eye by a baseball at nine and became totally blind after an unsuccessful operation six years later From the Ontario School for the Blind at Brantford he went to McMaster University in Hamilton, then got his law de- gree from Osgoode Hall in Tor- onto : He's active in other fields as well as law--as a member of the Canadian Blind Golfers' As- sociation aud the Canadian Na- tional Institute for the Blind chess club here. He plays bridge with cards marked in Braille and is interested in road -- a huge. psychological hurdle. sports, an eager listener to iene and football broadcasts. EATON'S in OSHAWA medium, large. SEE THEM NOW ON DISPLAY AT... FRANK MEAGHER APPLIANCES 92 SIMCOE ST. N. 725-4711 The sportman's NOW ON SALE AT ..:. HOME APPLIANCES (OSHAWA) 90 SIMCOE ST. S. The Slacks CENTRE FOR YOUR CURLING NEEDS The Beret .. . Good quality felt complete with pompon. Navy blue in sizes small, Each 4.50 DEPT, 228 The Sweater ..... choice ! DEPT. 228 Bulky-knit "'Orlon"; moth - resistant. Button front, shayl collar. White background. Sizes to fit 36 to 44, Each 32.50 Specially designed curling pants. Tailored from combed cotton twill, bonded to scott foam. Cushion knee on both legs; reinforced ankle drag strips; four pockets; regular belt loops; zipper closure. New shades of charcoal, loden.and antelope. Waist sizes 30 to 44, Each 15.95 LIMITED 728-5332 IN WHITBY SEE BUTT RADIO & APPLIANCE 118 BROCK ST. SOUTH WHITBY MO 8-3707 FURNITURE & APPLIANCES 491 RITSON RD. S. 723-3343 DEPT, 429 AVAILABLE AT... STARR Ken Watson Curling Boots :.. Top grain leather in black or brown with shearling (sheepskin) lining, foam crepe soles. Leather slide pad also included. Sizes 6 to 12. Pair 17.95 DEPT. 237 88 KING ST. WEST PHONE 725-4543 EATON'S MALL LEVEL PHONE 725-7373

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy