2A Typ, OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, October 23, 1965 THE TIMES SPORTSCOPE Saturday, Oct, 23 HOCKEY -- OHA Junior "A" League -- London Nationals vs Oshawa Generals, at Civic Aud-| itorium, 7.15 p.m. FOOTBALL -- Ontario Jun- for Conference Playoffs -- Osb- awa Hawkeyes vs Weston Invic- tus; --at~--_ Westen--__Colll Grounds, 11.00 a.m; Sunday, Oct, 24 HOCKEY -- OHA Junior "A"' League -- Oshawa Generals vs 'Toronto Marlboros, at Maple Leaf Gardens, 2.00 p.m. UAW League -- (Schedule Double- header) at Civic Auditorium, starting at 10.00 a.m. OHA Jun- for "B" Lakeshore League -- Oshawa "Crushmen" ys King- ston, at Kingston Memorial Centre 7.15 p.m. LACROSSE -- Ohawa Minor Lacrosse Association's Annual Banquet (Presentation of Tro- phies, Crests, Awards, etc.) at Kinsmen Centre, 2.00 p.m, Monday, Oct. 25 HOCKEY -- OHA Junior "B" Metro League -- St. Michael's College vs Whitby Lasco Steel- ers, at Whitby Arena, 8.00 p.m. GM Office League -- at Civic Auditorium, 6.00 p.m. "City League," at Civic Auditorium, 8.30 p.m. : Tuesday, Oct. 26 No Games Scheduled. Wednesday, Oct. 27 SKATING -- Public skating, at Civic Auditorim, 8.00 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 28 FIGURE SKATING --~ Gsi- awa Figure Skating Club, at Civic Auditorium, 6.00 p.m. to 10.00 p.m, Friday, Oct. 29 HOCKEY -- OHA Junior "B" Takechare Teacue -- Trenton vs Oshawa "Crushmen," at Civic Auditorium, 8.00 p.m. OHA Junior "B" Metro League -- Whitby Lasco Steelers vs St. Michael's College, at St. Michael's Arena, 8.00 p.m. CURLING -- Oshawa Curling Club Official Opening of 1965-66 season, at 7.00 p.m, Saturday, Oct. 30 HOCKEY -- Ohawa Protes- tant Church League, at Civic Auditorium, 7.00 a.m. to 12.00 noon. Oshawa NHL Tyke League, at Civic Auditorium, 12.00 noon to 2.00 p.m. City League," at Civic Auditorium, 4.30 p.m. to 6.00 pm. OHA Junior 'A' League -- Peter- borough "Petes" vs Oshawa Generals, at Civic Auditorium, 7.15 p.m. SOCCER -- Oshawa and Dis- trict. Assoc. Annual] Banquet and presentation of trophies, at Dnipro Hall, 6.00 p.m, RUGGER -- Ontario Rugger Football Union -- Oshawa Vik- ings vs Ajax, at Ajax, 2.30 p.m. * SERVE RIVERS OF BEER London has more than 7,000 pubs, some of them centuries to 10.00 p.m. old. Two Hectic Days Per Week Skelton Work Schedule © HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Red Skelton, now in his 15th consec- utive season as the star of a television variety hour, appears to have one of the world's easi- est, high-paying jobs--an offi- cial work week of two days. The 52-year-old comedian ar- rives at CBS' Hollywood head- quarters early Tuesday, fre- hearses, confers with writers, revises and improvises_ end- lessly for two hectic days, con- cluding with the taping of his show before an audience Wed- mesday night. The minute the show is over, Skelton goes directly to his dressing room, gets into sports clothes, and soon is in his car travelling_the 125 miles back to the Skelton home in Palm Springs. Skelton, his wife Georgia and their daughter, Valentina, 17, spend most of the time at their desert home. Skelton uses his ether residence, a spacious hill- top house in Bel-Air, only on his two nights in Los Angeles. His car is equipped with a tape recorder _and- Skelton, while driving, wears a micro- phone around his neck. Sometimes he "writes," dic- tating short stories or outlining plot ideas. "JT must have written about 800 of these stories," Skelton said. On other days, he spends his hours at the wheel composing music--and lyrics to go with them. "Sometimes I try to set down my impressions of people in terms of music," Skelton con- tinued. 'I felt that Greer Gar- son was a concerto of classical simplicity. Patrice Munsel was sparkling music." He sings -- or, more often, whistles--tunes into the micro- phone, and they are later trans- cribed. Some of his work has been so impressive that four of his songs will be used in a forthcoming motion picture and others will be the basis of a record album. The comedian, famous for his pantomime skills, is the son of a circus clown who died shortly before Red was born. Red sur- prised his friends--as well as serious critics of art--by his skill at painting. He attempted only pictures of clowns. "I don't paint clowns any more," he said. "Somehow, I've gotten away from that." He -sees- nothing remarkable in his broad interests in the cre- ative areas, and thinks they are all closely related -- comedy, pantomime, prose, poetry, mu- sic, paintings. 'It is all just communicating with people," he reflected: 'You just use different approaches." Canada Well Represented At Commonwealth Exhibit LONDON (CP)--"So much in eommon--so many contrasts." With this slogan, the third and largest Commonwealth in Books exhibition went on show in London's Marlborough House, elegant red-brick home of the Commonwealth prime min- isters' conferences. Canada is well represented among the 1,000 books on show, covering almost every aspect of life in the diverse family of na- tions, but concentratipg heavily on history, natural history and imaginative literature. Among Canadian writers prominently displayed are nov- elists Mordecai Richler, Mar- garet Laurence and Hugh Mac- Lennan; poets E. J. Pratt and Raymond Seuster; humorist Stephen Leacock and the peren- nial Mazo de la Roche. Opening the exhibition, Ar- nold Smith, the Canadian-born Commonwealth secretary - gen- eral, said the tragic hostilities and. tensions which had come to the surface in recent weeks made what the Commonwealth stood for all the more import- ant, even though they made Commonwealth relations all the more difficult. Without the Commonwealth link, the Toronto-born diplomat said, the problems would be "even worse." After three weeks in the capi- tal, the exhibition, organized by Britain's National Book League, will be split up into sections to tour schools and libraries around the country. LIBRARY NEWS AND REVIEWS go aan The following reviews were written by Mrs. M. Buttars, reference Librarian of the McLaughlin Public Library.) Canadian Writers -- Ecrivains Canadiens -- A_ biographical Dictionary edited. by Guy Syl- vestre, Brandon Conron, Carl F. Klinck. 'One of the most frustrating searches in many libraries is for information on contempo- rary Canadian writers. Like an oasis in the desert, a small, compact book appeared last year with the dual title Cana- dian Writers -- Ecrivains Cana- diens, It is an alphabetical dic- tionary, dealing concisely with about 300 authors and their works, the articles on the French-Canadian writers being written in French. This volume, dedicated to the memory and purpose of Dr. Lorne Pierce, brings up to date his 1927 outline of Canadian Literature which death prevent- ed him from revising. There are still some Canadian writers missing from its pages, such as Scott Young, but de- spite these shortcomings, it is a valuable addition to our Cana- dian literary reference section. Encyclopedias -- The encyclo- pedias are perhaps the most pop- ular of the library's reference books. Many people are also interested in the purchase of a set for home use, but are often puzzled about making a proper choice. The library is often called upon to give advice in this mat- ter. Since numerous factors enter into the choosing of an encyclopedia, a librarian often feels hesitant to give too defi- nite an answer on the subject. _.For_a comparative analysis of various encyclopedias, the| library has the Hart Chart as well as a pamphlet entitled General Encyclopedias in print which the public may study. Also, we would suggest a per- sonal examination of our en- cyclopedias which may be found in the Reference and Youth Rooms as well as in the Boys' and Grils' Library. Excluding our one volume encyclopedias; we have the following sets: Chambers' En- cyclopedia, a good British one, but better for libraries than for homes; Encyclopedia Ameri- cana, 30 volumes, excellent on scientific and American arti- cles; the ever popular and well known Encyclopedia Britanni- ca; The World Book, reason- ably priced and suitable for upper elementary grades, High School students and home use. The ten-volume Encyclopedia Canadiana is specifically on Canadian subjects, an excellent source book for Canadian his- tory. A new 1965 Collier's En- cyclopedia is now in the Youth Room, This set is always in the recommended High School lists. The Boys' and Girls' Depart- ment also has Compton's Pic- tured Encyclopedia, somewhat similar to the World Book En- cyclopedia in age suitability and price; as well as the well known Britannica Junior Ency- clopedia and Book of Knowledge for young readers. In the Reference Room there is also the ten-volume Austra- For 'The Perils By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -- Televi- sion producers searching for es- tablished books and old feature movies suitable for adaptation into series have come up with some almost esoteric selections. One company is preparing to shoot a pilot program based on The Perils of Pauline, a serial in the days when a movVie's sound track gras the theatre's piano player, and the heroine often was literally hanging from a cliff at the end of an epi- sode. Another company plans to do something based on the Tom Swift books, beloved by a gen- eration of boys. ' One studio failed to sell a pi- lot for a series about Frank Merriwell, a hard - cover all- American boy who pre - dated Jack Armstrong. ABC is modernizing Little Red Riding Hood as a special to be broadcast soon. It will re- tell the story from the stand- point of the wolf. And NBC is planning something contempo- rary for Jack and-the Bean- stalk. The wedding of The Farmer's Daughter, originaaly scheduled for Novy. 1, has been postponed Otio Schwariz GUNSMITH 5 aa Introducing Germony's Finest Merkel Simpson-Suhl SHOTGUNS Specializing in CUSTOM WORK Franchelse Dealer for * REMINGTON * WINCHESTER * HUSQ-VARNA * AMMO * SCOPES * ACCESSORIES * REPAIRS 167 Simcoe S. Oshewe Television Comeback Talked Of Pauline' five days on ABC network or- ders. The Inger Stevens series will switch places with the third epi- sode of Peyton Place after the Oct. 25 show. The extra Peyton Place epi- sode has made a disappointing showing in the Nielsen ratings. The shift comes after a lot of money and effort has gone into publicizing the episode in which the Farmer's Daughter and her Congressman finally get mar- ried -- including arranging for Perle Mesta to throw a "wed- ding reception" in Washington, to be attended by assorted capi- tal big-wigs on the night the broadcast was originally sched- uled. The party, ABC says, will go on as scheduled. PLAY SOCCER FOR MOVIE The Giadiators, an Italian Los Angeles soccer team, will ap- pear as an litalian village team in the film What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? ~ Search Ends For Data On Canadians Who Write lian Encyclopedia, which be- cause of its specialization is more suited to libraries and educational institutions. New nonawe FICTION Along that coast, __by John Peter The Lost City, by John Gunther Marcus, by Laurence Chinn The Powder Barrel, by William Haggard The Tree of Heaven, by Ernest Raymond GENERAL Fred Allen's Letters, edited by Joe McCarthy A Gift of Prophecy, by Ruth Montgomery Is Paris Burning? _ by Larry Collins My Twelve Years with John F. Kennedy, by Evelyn Lincoln This Game of Politics, by Pierre Sevigny NEWS There is a special UNICEF display, featuring dolls from many countries of the world, in the main lobby, MOTOR CITY Auto Wreckers K. Sumersford Ltd. Box 1472 Bowmanville, Ont. HERE Now! Used Auto Parts Motor City Building 728-4675 Hwy. 401 BURNS C.D.T.A. SCHOOL OF DANCING G @ BALLET Oshawa @ TAP - e@ BATON * @ TEENAGE JAZZ @ LADIES "KEEP FIT" CLASSES K. of C. 728-7902 Bidgs. 184 Bond boll psec. @ YOUR COLOR TV STORE @ PARKWAY TELEVISION FULL YEAR PARTS end SERVICE WARRANTY ELECTROHOME AN ALL-CANADIAN COMPANY STEREO - TELEVISION 918 SIMCOE ST. 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