and their causes," he in the day, Dr. G. D. ron of Peterborough ected president of the e world's largest city, 83 to 5,401,717, IT stom and: udy Made APES latest Shades end [&C tTLY INSTALLED MPERY TRACKS 723-7827 1g ot Our Store" 'OUR TO Jian Rockies JULY Ist motels, Completely Ontario, Manitoba, ouble) or other departures, AITE HONE 728-7395-6 -am ITRE a JO'S DESPITE ALL the qualms and queries, Eastdale Col- legiate auditorium is as good as "sold out' for the Ballet Concert to be presented by the National Ballet of Canada on Monday night under the auspices of the Canadian Con- cert Association (Oshawa). This is great news because when such talented perform- ers as Lois Smith, Earl Kraul and Martine van Hamel, who was voted the outstanding bal- lerina in the international competitions at Sofia last year, are ready and willing to perform here, at least we should welcome them with a full house. Does this really mean that Oshawa citizens are becom- ing more culture conscious or that some of us are being dragged in by the back hair? In any case it doesn't hurt to consider what it's all about. Ballet is considered the cul- mination of all the arts. With- out the spoken word it in- volves drama by telling a story. It is a visual art in that the forms and patterns created by the dancers com- pose a picture. The marriage of dancing and music is an indissoluable one, each com- plimenting the mood and statements of the other with the showmanship demanded of any of the performing arts. IF YOU'RE STILL with me, I'd like to pass along some program notes for Monday night. You won't find these on the program but they may be helpful. The ballet 'One in Five" is a saucy bit of by- play between four clowns and a girl ,set to the sprightly music of Johann Strauss. Don't be afraid to laugh out loud during the Rondo Gio- coso; it's meant to be funny. It depicts the competition be- tween an old and young bal- lerina. Both have admirers; both want to steal the lime- light and dance with the lead- ing male dancer. All this tongue-in-cheek frolic takes Place to Rossini's wood- wind quartettes No. 6 and No. 1. "Solo" has been devised especially to exhibit the class- ical technique of Martine van Hamel. Set to music by Mozart, watch for her bra- vura (bold) style, agility and control. Remember the easier a@ .movement appears, the greater the strength and con- trol of the performer. What appears effortless is the most demanding. "Death and the Maiden" is a legend. In this simple bal- let to Franz Schubert's music you will see a beautiful girl gradually submit to the woo- ing figure ofdeath. In Concerto Barocco, two girls represent violins in an orchestra and the dance de- scribes the interplay between the violins and the orchestra, represented by the corps de ballet. The modern ballet '"Eh'." introduces all kinds of zany characters including gossips and a silly bride, set in cos- tumes of the 1920's to a piano and wood-wind composition by Francis Poulenc, It's sim- ply "a happening" to close the show. JOURNAL BY JO ALDW!NCKLE Women's Editor of The Times OSHAWA HAS TAKEN three major artistic leaps suddenly, An Art Association has been formed; an art gal- lery is about to open and the McLaughlin Library has in- stituted a rental seryif@ of paintings by established painters. The latter inaugura- tion was well attended on Tuesday evening and honor- ed by the presence of Miss Isabel McLaughlin, Bobs Co- gill Howarth and Peter How- arth and Miss Doris Mc- Carthy, president of the On- tario Society of Artists. There was quite a rush to rent pic- tures, too. The Art Gallery is the brainchild of 31 local artists who have rented premises at 7% Simcoe street south (up- stairs) which under the guid- ance and leadership of Wil- liam Caldwell, they are con- verting into a public gallery to be known as the Art Gal- lery of Oshawa. The official opening, which is planned for the weeend of June 2, promises to be both exciting and tremendously in- teresting with Jean-Paul Morissette, director of Exten- sions of the National Gallery, Ottawa, conducting the open- ing ceremonies. An Art Fair, to be made up of original works of art, painting, drawing, sculpture and poetry, is to be solicited from all local artists and will be exhibited some time dur- ing the three- to four-week period of the fair. This type of exhibition was chosen to bring to the attention of the people of Oshawa and district a good cross-section of the artistic endeavor within the community. So far the only money for the Art Gallery of Oshawa has been contributed by the group itself and two other in- terested citizens. Contribu- tions are acceptable and may be left at the Central Ontario Trust office, 19 Simcoe street north, RECENTLY RETURNED from a whirlwind trip to Lon- don, accompanying her daughter, Shirley, who star- red in Canada's Centennial Ball, Mrs. W. H. Harmer is still in a dream world. "It was the most splendid occasion I have ever seen," she said. '"'Princess Margaret was radiant in a white satin gown sprigged with embroid- ered pink carnations and top- ped by a long, pink satin eve- ning coat. Canadian enter- tainers Libby Morris, Bernie Braiden and others took us under their wing and we went sight-seeing as much as we could, It was Cup-tie Night and the streets were alive. I made a special excursion to Egham, Surrey, to see the RCAF Memorial to Lost Air- men, a. hallowed site in the rolling Downs, and I went back to my old home at Read- ing, saw the house and school and my grandparents' grave. I really haven't come down to earth, yet. England looked 60 lovely." I was "stood up" this week and it made me late for work. All right, Gary, if that's the way you feel, but let me warn you, it's dangerous to thwart the Press. Mrs. Percy Mountjoy Elected President Of Humoresque Club Mrs. Percy Mountjoy was in- stalled as president of the Hu- moresque club for the blind at its recent meeting. Other officers installed were: past - president, Mrs. Guy Forrest; vice - president, Mrs. Murray Chute; secretary, Mrs. James McConnell; treasuger and Miss Pat McConnell. 'Pill' Users Face Little Risk LONDON (AP)--The British Medical Research Council said Friday birth control pills may have been responsible for the deaths of 20 women in Britain last year. That would make a ratio of three for every 100,000 women who used oral contraceptives-- just half the risk the same women had of being killed in an auto accident, said the re- port published in the British Medical Journal. ' It concluded: '"'There can be no reasonable doubt that some types of thrombo-embolic dis- order--blocking of blood vessels Committee convenors were: social, Mrs. Sheridan Johnson; transportation. Mrs. Arthur Wakely; publicity, Laster Davis, legislation, Scott McColeman; welfare, Miss Vera _ Siblock; pianist, Miss Howard Elliott; a press reporter, Mis. James Mc- Connell. Gifts were presented to the rest; the secretary Mrs. Mc- Connell; Victor Jenkinson, chair- man of the committee for the Blind for the Lions' Club and to Lionette Mrs. William Bor- rowdale. Mrs, A. J. Parkhill, chairman of the Oshawa Advisory Board for the CNIB, conducted the election and installed the of- ficers. Mrs. §; J. Nobbin and Mr. Jenkinson looked after the ballots. A social hour was held while bingo was played and refresh- ments served by Lionettes; Mrs. Borrowdale, Mrs. Ross Otto, Mrs. Larry Kehoe, and Lions Victor Jenkinson, Larry Kehoe and Ross tto. A feature of the Christ Memorial Church Bazaar Tuesday was the display of historic dolls from CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH | i the Centennial Planning Branch, Toronto. Mrs. W. H. Meredith, left; Mrs. W. S. Wotton, who opened the. bazaar; and = Mrs. Toronto Set Canadian Boutiques Now Every Major City Has Them By MARGARET NESS TORONTO (CP) -- Bou- tiques are springing up like mushrooms across Canada. They gained their first foot- hold in Toronto four years ago, arriving from London via New York. Mostly these small shops stress way-out clothes and go in for gimmicky decor. But some have begun to realize that the age limit of their clientele can be extended up- wards into the mid-30s and over by judicious designing or merchandising. An off-beat name doesn't guarantee boutique success but it catches attention. Tor- onto has several! in this category, among them The Unicorn, Poupee Rouge, The Establishment (obviously tongue-in-cheek), Bizarre and Yum Yum. Saskatoon has the Dolls' House, for teen - agers, and Piccadilly, which is under- ground like London's_ well- known tube line. Winnipeg has The Third Step. But most owners operate under their own names. In Toronto, The Unicorn started four years ago in the Village on the fringe of the downtown area, now has a second outlet in Yorkville, just north of fashionable Bloor Street, a franchise shop in. West Vancouver, B.C., and will be in Toronto's new down- town Esplanade venture when it opens in May. DUAL ATTRACTION Bizarre also operates in the Village and in Yorkville and plans another shop on Bloor Street. The first Poupee Rouge boutique was opened three years ago on Yonge Street by red-haired Susan Kosovic, who came from Eng- land. Now there's a second on Bloor Street. Also on Bloor is another British import, Pat McDon- agh, a recent arrival who owned and ran four bou- tiques in England. Her The Establishment, opened last December, is part of a new leisurely shopping concept of a continental coffee house and corridor of small open bou- tiques. The coffee-boutique idea is also working in Ottawa where Penny Faulkner designs many Mary Quant-type clothes and sells them in a small hou- tique attached to her hus- band's coffee house. Patrick and Marike sell their own de- signs in a boutique above a private art gallery in Ottawa. The Mr. David boutique in Hamilton has been such a suc- cess that a Toronto outlet was added last fall. BOTH WON AWARDS A number of haute couture designers, such as John War- den and Mr. Gilbert in Mont- real, have opened boutiques. Here they continue to create individual clothes for their older clients, along with racks of their own mod styles at more reasonable prices for the younger set. Mr. Warden comes from Niagara Falls, Ont., and Mr. Gilbert is a native of Montreal. Both have won Union Label awards in the national collec- tions now sponsored annually by the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. Two years ago Mr. Gilbert's evening gown won the best-in- the-show award. Both now sell in the United States. Mr. Warden is even planning a men's boutique. Occasionally a boutique has a novel conception. Last No- vember Linda Holiday Scott and Hilly Postma started the Piccadilly in Saskatoon be- cause Linda found it impos- sible to buy size five clothes for herself, Like several other boutique owners, the partners now find they can attract an older clientele than teen-agers or women in their 20s. DECOR STARTLES Pat McDonagh of The Es- tablishment finds her most important customers are in their 30s. "Canadian women are eager to step into the fashion line but they don't want to appear foolish," she says. "If the clothes are sophisticated, they'll wear and love them." John Warden also finds so- phistication is the keynote. "Even my young clothes are sophisticated." Most of the gogo boutiques run to off-beat decor. John Warden's La Boutique on Crescent Street off St. Cath- erine Street in Montreal is in all-over polka dots and daisy patterns in black and white. Saskatoon's Piccadilly has a red carpet, purple drapes with red fringe and a ceiling of draped white see - through fabric. Bizarre's Village boutique sports orange petal awnings over stationary clothes racks and upturned fruit baskets dangling from the ceiling, used as circular racks. TOPS Convention Opens In Windsor WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Weighty topics that will at- tempt to prove the proof of the pudding is not in the eating will occupy more than 1,000 dele- gates who gather here today to the annual convention of 2 a .|To Improve Typing 'Gain Confidence " |home housewife. However, I'm ' |scared to death of the electric = {had used manual * |when I worked in the past. On Rented Machine By ROBERTA ROESCH Dear Roberta Roesch: I'm thinking of returning to work after years of being a stay at- typewriters that look like fright- ening monsters to me, since I typewriters | During a recent job interview I was given a typing test, and while I was taking it I found my touch was so heavy I made| several mistakes. This makes me feel rather | shaky about using this kind of | typewriter. So tell me how! other women make out when they have to switch from man- ual machines to the ones that look so streamlined and de-| manding even before they are turned on.--B. D. Dear B. D.: Most women do well because the switch is not so hard as it looks on first en- counter. As you have already discov- ered, you do have to use a lighter touch when using elec- tric machines, but practice makes the perfect readjust- DISPLAYS HISTORIC DOLLS D. T. Wilson, a leader of roundings, according to his- the Junior Auxiliary, all in tory. Other displays were period costumes, look over held of = eninnin- ane the display, showing -- the antique: dolls in their natural sur- --Oshawa suse 1 1010 | Hostess Honor _ Miss Sharon Cook Bride Of Today Miss Sharon Dianne Cook whose marrige to Mr. Dennis Richard Coker is taking place} today at St. Stephen's United| (2mm #--«7 aca re et IEE PRESEB VER Relatives and friends of the} Cover the head of an oiled bridegroom held a linen show-) er at the home of Mrs, Arthur|/™op with a plastic bag before Coker with co - hostesses Mrs.|you hang it up. Keeps the oll Wayne Coker. from drying out or staining Mrs. William Hurst held lcjoset walls, etc. miscellaneous shower at which , ment. A good way to get the |necessary practice before you jreturn to an office is to rent an electric typewriter. You can do this for a nominal fee for a short rental period. |Then as you practise regularly, you will find you can type on an electric machine as well as you did on a manual one. In my case--to give you en- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturdey, Mey 6, 1967 7]. couragement -- I made the switch over one weekend. Dear Roberta Roesch: Is the computer age making us so large that there are no longer job opportunities in a one- or- two-girl office where a secre- tary does everything? My experience in working has been in offices such as this, and I've always enjoyed working alone. But where I'm living at the present the employment op- portunities seem to be in large| Sif corporations that employ many | women. 2 | Am I bumping my _ head} against a stone wall to hope for a one-or two-girl office?--M. V. No, indeed. The one- or two-| girl office is not out of style. | Today, as always, there are | small businessmen and profes- | sional people who need and want the versatile girl or woman who can keep an office going and do everything on her own, If you keep seeking this, I'm sure you'll find a job. WAIT A LITTLE LONGER COSTA MESA, Calif. (AP)-- This is not the year to legalize" astrology in California, says Renata Shoemacker, 29 - years. old astrologist and numerolo-" gist, because "Saturn, the planet of delay, and Uranus,. the planet of action, are in opposition "' CLOSMEATSEE DSS SDISIIS: y Cutom Made or a. Ready-to-Hang DRAPERIES @ OFFICES @ INDUSTRIAL -- Since 1919 -- WARD'S Simcoe St. at Athol 725-1151 FEISS STII IIIT TITTY ° 4 3 = a 2 )=)s}=)=)2)=}=)=)=}9) pa" UL Sommemmmanaeaay COLMER | WESTERN CANADA TOL? -- $365.00. 16th, includes Calgary Stampede . TOURS | 23 days, JUNE 24th to JULY . . Vietoria . . . For Only Air conditioned Motor Coach with washroom. NO NIGHT TRAVEL. { | Includes everything but your meals. FULLY ESCORTED. | Write of Phone i COLMER TRAVEL SERVICE 14 ORCHARD | BOWMANVILLE \. VIEW BLVD. 623-3265 or 623-3093 hss ot sik a | BARBARA'S | BEAUTY SALON {0th Anniversary 25% OFF All Cold Waves During month of April--Until May 15th 73 CELINA ST., OSHAWA 725-9572 relatives and friends of the bride attended. Mrs. Ray Holland entertained relatives and friends of the bride at a pantry shower. Former co - workers of the bride held a miscellaneous show- er at the home of Miss Diane Bradd. The bridal attendants held a personal shower at the home of Miss Vicki Barker. The members of St. Stephen's United Church Women present- White Empress to Europe ed the bride with an oil paint- ing at the home of the bride's mother Mrs. John Cook. The mother of the bride en- tertained at a trousseau tea. Miss Brenda Coker greeted the guests at the door. Miss Anne Morrison, flower girl and San- dra Cook, junior bridesmaid were in charge of the guest book, Mrs. Cook received the guests in a navy and white linen sheath. Assisting was the future bride in an orange lace dress and Mrs. Arthur Coker in a turquoise and black sheer dress. The tea - table graced with a hand crocheted lace cloth made by the bride's grand- mother, Mrs. Charles Holland, was centered with a bouquet of carn- ations, snap dragons and chrys- anthemums. Serving tea were Mrs, Wayne Coker, matron of honor; Miss Vicki Barker and Miss Gail Coker, bridesmaids. WOMEN WAVE FLAGS MILAN (AP) -- Seven station mistresses started work in Ap- ril, the first women in respon- sible positions in the Italian railway system. All in their 20s and the winners of a national competition, they are on six months trial to test their ability The initials stand for Take Off Pounds Sensibly and the clubs' delegates will demon- strate in their two-days here that fun can have a large frame of reference. The convention ends Satur- day night with the crowning of the Ontario Princess, a teen- ager who has lost the most weight in a year; the crowning of a queen, the woman who has also lost the most weight in aj} year; and to conclude, a mas- sive banquet where diets are expectéd to be forgotten, for a few hours. BRUNO'S HAIR STYLING Halrstyling and shaping is our speciality. 212 King St. W., Oshawe 576-2010 compared with station masters. THERE GOES ANOTHER sharpen your appetite for the start of a six-day* floatin just for the fun of it! For the sea-golng, food-loving fun of It all. Come swing across to Europe on a great White Empress. Swim and sun and laze six days* away. Let the tang of an ocean breeze meals. See the latest movies, the tops In entertainment. And dance the nights away to the beat of a rocking-good band. The excitement of the ticker-tape send-off is just And all the way back. 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