Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jan 1966, p. 12

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

y» BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- He geems, as he pads wispily down ' g studio street, as if a sudden cut of wind might carry him away. But when he sits down in his office and talks about the devo- tion of his life--the movie busi- ness--the ancient eyes take on a glow, and the voice speaks foreefully. This is Adolph Zukor, 93 to- day and still keeping daily of- fice hours at Paramount Studios which he founded. The Hungarian-born ex-furrier was one of the major architects of the movie industry. He began with a penny arcade in 1903, la- ter helped create the star sys- tem and tieatre chains and the big-studio operation. Some of the Zukor innovations have faded with changing indus- try patterns. Studios no longer Theatre Dovn But Not Out... TORONTO (CP) -- Peter Mann, artistic director of The Playhouse, a Toronto theatre which closed after one produc- tion, said Wednesday the thea- tre may be open again in six weeks, His father, realtor David Mann, who financed the thea- tre converted from a movie house at a cost of $500,000, had said earlier it would reopen in the fall. The Playhouse, a gift to his son, opened Nov. 2 with the broadway musical She Loves Me, under Peter's direc- tion. The show ran nearly seven weeks. The senior Mr. Mann es- timated the production lost nearly $40,000. '"'We didn't have a show to follow our first one," he said. control assemblages of stars. Film companies divested their theatre chains on government orders, And the Hollywood stu- dios now are virtually clusters of independent producers. Zukor has witnessed many changes in the film world but he was never more confident. SAYS BUSINESS GOOD "I think the picture business is in better condition now than it has been for the last five years," he remarked. "'T V had its vogue, when the novelty of having entertainment in the home was so enticing that peo- ple didn't care what they looked at. "But it has always been true in show business that when you feed the public the same thing over and over again, no matter how good it is,-the diet gets stale. "Now people are willing to pay money to go out and see movies, And fortunately the pro- ducers are making more good Pictures than ever before." Zukor speaks not from hecr- say. He sees many films, Parz- mount's and competitors', and/| watches a great deal of televis- ion as well. Now chairman of the board emeritus of Para- mount Pictures, he spends every business day in his New York office from 1 to 4 p.m. "I like to talk to people at studios, from producers to the backlot workers, and give them the benefit of my experience, for what it is worth," he said. VERSATILE POLICEMAN MONTREAL (CP)--Sergeant Leo Bieganowski, 37, is setting up a new system of tracing car thieves for the Montreal police department. Born in Po- land, he writes poetry, com- poses songs, prospects for minerals, and writes English, French and Polish. On the beat, he found 10 stolen cars a week. Salmon Running Shorter B.C. Fisherman Worried By DOUG MARTIN VANCOUVER (CP) -- Faced with a drop in the lucrative salmon run, British Columbia fishermen look to 1966 as some- thing less than a happy new year. It will be a bad year for the Fraser River's annual run of sockeye salmon, the fishermen's one big cash crop. "There haven't been predic- tions of runs on other rivers, but indications are that there 'won't be anything big enough to offset the drop on the Fraser run," Homer Stevens, secretary treasurer of the B.C. Fisher- men's Union said in an inter- view. The Fraser catch is expected to drop to 750,000 sockeye--from previous catches of up to 4,000,- 000. The forecast was made after a study by the Interna- tional Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commission. "The drop in halibut catches accompanied by a continued decline in catches of halibut and perhaps herring, Mr. Stev- ens said. "The irop in halibut catches @re a result of overfishing in the Bering Sea," he said. "In 1963--the year the Japa- nese were first allowed to fish the Bering Sea--Canadians took 4,000,000 pounds. In 1964, our pounds and in 1965 the catch was only 200,000 pounds." Mr. Stevens said a noticeable decline also occurred in the summer herring catch between 1964 and 1965. "Catches dropped from 90,000 tons in 1964 to 60,000 in 1965," he said. One bright spot in the B.C. fishing industry is an increased demand for cod, sole and rock fish to be ground and used in fish sticks and fish blocks, "Our fishermen are just starting to make use of the ground fish potential," Mr. Stevens said. "Last year was the best on tecord for catches for ground fish stock and we expect an increase in 1966. One company, B.C. Packers, Ltd., has just built a $3,000,000 plant primarily for processing ground fish." However, Mr. Stevens and some industry spokesmen fear the industry could be wiped out before it is developed. They say restrictions are needed to prevent depletion of stock on the B.C. coast by huge deep-sea fishing flotillas from Russia and Japan, Fishermen had a taste of the Russian invasion last fall when a fleet of trawlers, tankers and factory shins anchored in Queen Charlotte Sound and proceeded catches pere under 1,000,000 to drag for bottom fish. TRIO OF INSURRECTIONS Poverty Calls The Coup, Not Peking, By PETER BUCKLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer Poverty, not China, is appar- ently at the root of three re- markably similar military re- volts that have erupted in France's former African colon- eS in the last month. The expulsion of China's rep- resentatives from Dahomey and the Central African Republic and the anti-Chinese tone of statements coming from the new military regime in Upper Volta are regarded by some Western observers as a smoke- screen. There is little doubt that, after an initial surge of fellowship, China has fallen into a bad odor) in much of Africa. But the| Chinese were not believed to hhave been particularly active in the three former French colon- ies where military men have taken over. And the former civilian rulers were all regarded as moderates, unlikely to join such other for-| mer territories as Mali and) Guinea in close flirtation with) the Communists What all three countries have in common is small populations, backward economies. and few prospects for quick improve-} ment. | CAN'T CHANGE FACTS | A military takeover is not likely to change the unpleasant facts. The best.it might do is provide firmer guidance for the |nicians, teachers and other ex- jperts have been countries involved and reduce corruption and nepotism. The new military regimes in; Dahomey, the Central African! Republic | and risen Volta | Te obey a4! Seares -suaaes peace Tat Ail guy esman For African had been in power since 1960, when France gave full independ- ence to 12 former territories in that part of Africa south of the Sahare. There is nothing so far to in- dicate that the military leaders in the three countries were in collusion. However, they may have been inspired by the for- mer Belgian Congo where Gen. Joseph Mobutu took over the government from its quarrelling civilian rulers. PARIS COOL The military takeover in the three countries has not been given a warm reception in Paris France, with a bigger per- capita foreign aid bill than any jother country, has pumped an estimated $1,700,000,000 into its former central and west African territories since 1960. In addi- tion, thousands of French tech- induced to spend time helping the new na- tions. Emerging from a cabinet ses-|-- sion in Paris this..week, Infor- mation Minister Alain Peyrefitte told reporters the government had noted the two latest revolts with "anxiety." And he added that such take- over is "of a nature to affect the French policy of aid and co- operation, which can only find its significance and its effects in order and legality."' The statement was taken as| |@ warning not only to the three countries concerned, but also to the military in other former | French territories to think $4, 000, 000 es Stay Alive ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP)--The U.S. public health service' has granted Washington University $4,000,000 te help find a way for life to remain on the earth's sur- jece, "The problem is serious," said Dr. Barry Commoner, chairman of the Washington University botany department. "We're not going to be able to live effectively in our environ- ment if we do not do something about our present levels of ig- norance." | 2s = T 1355. = a | 4 ai t LICENSED SEA-GOING BIRD erin a _® re os = LONDON (Reuters)---Globe- trotting Beatrice, who as crew member 001 on a Nor- wegian cargo ship became the fitst pigeon licensed to go to sea, has deserted.. When the 3,600-ton Norwe- sian vessel Bruno docked here Wednesday, chief steward In- gar Heierdahli, reported she had jumped ship a few miles out from Tenerife, in the Canary Islands. She joined the ship in Ant- werp, Belgium, as mascot, and dined in the crew mess on peas, meat and fish, She sailed to New York, anh TIC ids booed avon CATH Si 2re ow Seeesane Brazil, -Lonaon, then back across the Atlantic to the St. Lawrence River. In New York, immigration Officials noted that no live- animal had been listed on the ship's register. So Norwegian health offi- cials declared Beatrice offi- cially able to go to sea. She was duly marked down on the crew register as a sailor with the code number 001. One ofie occasion the crew tried to set her free in Lon- don's Trafalgar Square. But she was back on board at sailing time. 'Spawn-Ground |F WE BEES en" a VUE S5252055 LONDON versity historian warned today of the 'possibility of a new Hit- ler or Stalin emerging from the "uprooted, classless, faceless hordes" of the big European and American cities. The appearance of such "'monsters" was pretty certain, Prof. Hugh Seton-Watson said in the first issue of a new maga- zine, Journal of Contemporary History. New Seton-Watson, profess or of Russian history at London University, also predicted that new African dictatorships may one day resemble the Third Reich more than Russia' or China. Commoner heads the first re- search and training centre es- tablished under a new public health service program. His job is to find out just how zeriously man has contaminated his en- vironment, and what can be done about it. Commoner said problems which could make the earth un- suitable to support life if left unchecked include: use of in- secticides and other new syn- thetic chemicals, increasing ur- banization, overpopulation, ra- dioactivity from nuclear testing and other 'sources. "We already are beginning to/ juse of the environment," Com-} |moner said. deaths in London and water) water is available. West Farmers Rid East Ones SASKATOON (CP) drought relief fund for Eastern | Ontario sponsored by the Na- tional Farmers' Union has reached about $10,000 in gifts from Prairie farmers, NFU President Roy Atkinson saia Wednesday. The bulk of donations have come from Saskatchewan farm- ers, he said, although Alberta and Manitoba have contributed. The fund was to help low- income farmers feed their live- stock. The union will distribute the fund through a series of local committees in Ontario, Mr. At- kinson said. Heart Failure Killed Whooper WASHINGTON (AP)--An au- topsy report showed today that} heart failure from advanced age and possibly the stresses of hurricane Betsy caused the death of Josephine, matriarch |~ of the whooping crane flock at New Orleans' Audubon Park 00, The Fish and Wildlife Service said in announcing this that Jo- sephine was about 28 when she died last September. She was the mother of four of the six whoopers at the zoo, crane flock besides the wild population of 44 now wintering at the Aransas national wildlife refuge in Texas. Audubon is the only place whoopers have been jhatched and reared in cativity. Zambian 'Lift LEOPOLDVILLE (CP)--Ca nadian officials here say they believe Canada's part in be extended beyond the original commitment of one month. The decision will depend on across The Congo to Zambia and Zambia's petroleum needs. Fifty-one RCAF ground crew arrived by Yukon transport Wednesday after a 27-hour trip from Ottawa. This brings the RCAF total here to 106 men to operate four Hercules trans- ports between Leopoldville and Ndola and Lusaka in Zambia.; The RCAF is flights daily, carrying a total of} 316 barrels of oil a day. The | Canadian lift supplies 10 per] cent of Zambia's oil needs. | Education Mentor | Of Presbyterians TORONTO (CP) -- Rev. R. Malcolm Ransom of West- mount, Que., has been ap-| pointed full - time director of | missionary education for the Presbyterian Church in Can-} ada, ~ A graduate of McGill Univer-| sity and Princeton Theological! Seminary, he was a missionary | in China until forced ta with- draw in 1950 after four years. He held a pastorate at Fort Erie, Ont., until he was ap-} pointed assistant secretary for overseas missions in 1958. He| will be succeeded in this Capa- | city by Rev. C. Rodger Talbot of t Preston, Ont. FRIDAY THE ROGUES PLUS aad JACKSON Dencing 9 p.m. til 1 Admission $1.75 7) he CEH sheer twice Seiore attempting a coup. shortages in New York, where|around television, plenty of fresh--but polluted--| been made clear what the head Just What Does Oz Nelson Do? -By CYNTHIA LOWRY | NEW YORK (AP) -- Ozzie, hezd of the Nelson clan, didn't have much more than a walk-on in his ABC show Wednesday night. It was a bit of nonsense involving his son Rick, Rick's | wife and life in what Hollywood feel the effects of unrestricted obviously believes is a college). fraiernity house. However, the thought oc- He gives as examples smogicurred that in all the years| Ozzie and Harriet have been it has never | aA of the house does for a living. --!Most TV heroes have visible if lsometimes. vaguely defined | means of support. | The father of My Three Sons lis an engineer. Donna Reed's TV husband is a doctor and so are, of course, Kildare, Casey) the only existing whooping) May Be Longer thre Zambian oil airlift will have to river barge movement of oil making three|s jand The Fugitive. Perry Mason is a lawyer and so are O'Brien of The Trials of O'Brien, and Oliver of Green Acres and Paul Bryan of Run Fer Hour Life, and Dave of My | Mother, the Car. Rob Petrie of The Dick Van Dyke Show is a comedy writer. There are astronauts--Lost in Space and I, Dream of Jeannie --a teacher in Please Don't Eat the Daisies, a congressman in The Farmer's Daughter and even a Madison Avenue adver- tising fellow in Bewitched. |LOSTS OF COPS There are lots of cops, secret jagents, sheriffs, marshals and lall branches of the military ex- |cept the coast guard. There are even two multi-millionaires. But there just doesn't seem to ibe any shows in which the stars lare salary - drawing working people. Sure, there's Hazel os- |tensibly a domestic but really a combination board chairman and mother who cooks and 38 Failures In Business OTTAWA (CP)--There were 38 business failures in the fi- nance industries involving lia- | bilities worth $165,114,000 during the third quarter of 1965, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported. today. i ! serves but is rarely caught wax- ing a floor. It has been a long time since TV served us up a hard-work- ing blue collar fellow in the lead of a series. The last, if memory serves, were a couple of com- edy carpenters in I'm Dickens . « He's Fenster which didn't last long. The last successful He said white communities in Africa and Asia provided sim- ilar scapegoats to the Jews in Nazi Germany. Beware The: 'Groot Man' PRETORIA (Reuters) -- The trial of 13 South African pris- oners was adjourned today after one of the Negro prisoners com- plained that the prison. "groot man" (boss) said he would pun- |working men heroes were Wil- mooners. Nowadays, you're likely to see the working stiff on TV is in the commer- cials. Why? Probably because TV entertainment is primarily es- cape--and looking at a man line or jouncing along in a truck} |doesn't offer much escape. Radioactivity Level Lower OTTAWA (CP) -- Radioactiv- ity due to fallout in the air, precipitation and milk de- health department's radiation protection division reported to- day. September levels were well below those of a year earlier and also below the year's peak August. To Br. Guiana LONDON (Reuters) -- The Queen and Prince Philip will at- tend a race meeting and open a national park in British Guiana at the start of their five week Caribbean tour next month, it was announced Wednesday. The royal tour starts Feb. 4 and includes visits to Trinidad, Tobago, Grenada, St. Vincent, Barbados, St. Lucia, Dominica, Montserrat, Antigua, St. Kitts, Tortola, The Turks and Caicos Islands, The Bahamas and Ja- maica. The royal couple will arrive March 3 in Jamaica, where they will stay until March 6 when they fly back to Britain. working on a factory production | creased last September, the|" fallout period between May and| ish them for talking too much| in court. |liam Bendix in The Life of Riley; The 13 are charged with be- ithe road to becoming the most and Jackie Gleason's Honey-|longing to the banned Pan- Afri-| powerful tycoon in Hollywood."'| jcanist Congress and conducting the only places |a¢tivities on its . behalf inside |the silent version of Ben Hur, |the jail. The witness, Ephriam Ma- jbuso, 36, said the groot a told them he would ish (Reuters)--A uni-| ~ ar ne WA RS HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- At an age when most people are out to pasture, Francis X. Bushman has a whole new career in teen- age movies. The 82 - year - old star just completed Bikini Party in a Haunted House for American- International, "In my next picture I will co- star with Fabian," says the still handsome oldster. "It's a great life. Bring on those girls] with the bikinis." Asked to what he owes his| stil handsome appearance, Bushman answered: "Excess." : Bushman is about to start on his 70th year in show business. Just 50 years ago he was crowned king of the movies. Then, for 25 years, he couldn't get a job in Hollywood because of a blackballing by the late} Louis B. Mayer. Tronically, it was Bushman movie business. ASKED TO STAR who launched Mayer in the that a man could be that power- ful, but he was. For the next 25 years I worked only on the stage or radio. : rn hb Pm getting fan letters pat : ™ buDUy-~oUAELs. IZZA telephone 728-0192 EPI'S Thea, Gas Gi aigut aa piay, « new butler oral by Bush- man refused to let Mayer eome backstage. "I was there receiving people and Louie at that time was one of my dearest friends. Later, he told me, amid obscenities, that I would never work in Holly- wood again. "People today can't believe "THEY ARE HERE AGAIN" BLUE HORSE LOUNGE The Popular and Entertaining "RAMBLERS THREE" TOPS IN COUNTRY, WESTERN AND BLUE GRASS MUSIC Be sure to hear this well liked group who have been a big favourite. ENTERTAINMENT AT ITS BEST HOTEL LANCASTER "The Friendly Spot' "He was a movie distributor) in-Boston and he wanted to pro- dice movies. He came to me begging, saying that if I would agree to star in his first movie, ithe banks would give him a jloan. "T did. And Mayer started on| | Bushman played Messal in |the movie that started Metro- |Goldwyn- Mayer into becoming Saturday and Sunday for taibing| too much in court. Several of the accused com- plained in court that they had been tortured by electric mas- sage and placed in strait-jack- ets. Col. W. Bezidenhout, the nied the allegations. SCHOLARSHIPS GIVEN Australia has made the first 48 awards under the Churchill memorial scholarship program. an the biggest studio in town. | 2 GREAT SHOWS FRANK SINATRA | in jail's commanding officer, de-| the new, spacious VINTAGE ROOM & DINING ROOM at the beautiful | "VON RYAN'S EXPRESS' PLUS "DEAR BRIGETTE" aM, ce" ore | | BILTMORE Queen, Consort (Miccnsa 723-2843 ADULT ENTERTAINMENT SHOW TIMES -- 2:00 - 4:30 ~ 6:50 - 9:10 ~ LCS 9:00 These figures were up sharply from 20 failures and liabilities of $2,852,000 in the same three- month period of 1964 and con- tributed to the higher level of financial losses for the year. Altogether there were 735 bu- |siness failures recorded under "|federal and provincial bank- ruptcy and winding-up acts dur- ing July, August and Septem-| ber last year While the total number was} down from 787 in the corre-| sponding 1964 quarter, the lia-| bilities in default rose sharply) to $227,819,000 from $47,414,000 a year earlier. | In the first nine months of 1965 there were 2,516 failures with liabilities totalling $338,- 882,000, compared with 2,591 failures and liabilities of $150,- 761,000 in the first nine months of 1964. SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE OLD TIME and MODERN Dance to RUDY VELTRI Held take on anyone, FEATURE TODAY AT... 1:30 « 3:30 - 5:35 - 7:40 - 9:40 AND HIS RED BARN NEW TORNADOS Toronto's Most Versatile Group i | | GET THIS WEEK - Featuring: AS USUAL THE MORTICIANS PLUS 50c Members @ A GO-GO-DANCERS 75¢ Non-Members DRESS: -- Shirt and Tie U.A.W. TEEN DANCE Gala Opening WITH 'J.B. and the PLAYBOYS Sat., Jan. Sth haga 4 P.M. Memberships 25¢ -- Admission 50¢ NO jeons Positively CinamnscoPE FLAMING ARROW COLOR Visit Our New Dining Room Special Businessmen's Luncheons Daily LOCATION Champlain & Thornton Roads Phone 723-4693 porgian MOTOR: HOTEL Featuring the fabulous JERRY MANN COMEDY and MUSIC First in @ series of great entertainers te appear nightly. 1 GOLD RUSH LOUNGE and DINING LOUNGE Central Hotel KING ST. W., OSHAWA The Leading Ladies RHYTHM AND BLUES THE WAY YOU LIKE THEM OSHAWA'S FINEST Starring py UX BARKER * HERBERT LOM * GOTZ GEORGE © PIERRE BRICE Yes onthe novel by FARL MY pies abasepaeee' Directed by HARALD REINL TODAY @ Entertainment Nighily ai 9 P.M. @ MATINEE SATURDAY 4 P.M, - 6.P.M, $AM LOCHRAN, Manager MORK .] =

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy