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E-NEWS IS THE ClauS at, and; lebrated Australia, for pic.4 ' \dowij lands. De- al ways s of a ,; climes jbscrved, frequent w at the tradif tmas is, will be, cape — d siory, paint- 1 UN- Ihe hill- nite, tha now or ce, the streams ed mag- favorite and fav- iose who* among L modern.* gs and nd'' of a ire-\ ion (or 1th of. intings\ \t!y as- seem fleet the century: • whole paint- to de- sonie- winter, ot es- .. and . one ~ rs of k Av-< HE -Is ex- land- painting? h the win- s etch \xpanses cozy . (he ideal ealher ~ '.'inter •-•1 his - ecords ceri in 1535, 1634. luenced tra-' Pie-' — a ' with ch to' hillsides the trast ter- The,\ ,d in to MAS- \ters' after- and k of • rom por- moun- fiis ulli- and. the of Fans •s m rtion, otigti'\ erts' and ork \ a v- * ork mm- my, De-, aft, of' and !!y. ADV A M F V VA -> SL\D / \Y DLfLMBr R 24 I The Other Crosby Brother Jic>: Kc^p Bobbing Along In Musical hielu PUa.\ . 1 T\ L'J \1 1111 MOMFM HI ll \ 1 U J a L \ I o BOY SCOUTS FROM BROCKVILLi: VIM J HKKi: M-ni>er s oi Bo« obverse the opei-t o -s of the local .HK.^ „nd '.J e^Jun.jj lLi 0 .-. 1,.L 0 O V-rc *f* m I eigfir-t Scout Troop No. 2 of the Ontario c l\ v. Hi ther lradms uoie gt.esis of donsburg bo\s plan t-> r--iav the visit at Biockw l<_ >. n L( n r n t i u na wn*' ?lnr^ m >- o i i t r, i- i. r> i\ TI i T . n-i . ,\ . T • IT- J m i ° J f Between engaeemen le Troop i\o. 3 at the Baptist (nine I hete nn Tuesd-.\ ••ugh* If''- can e to dr\ i.Iack \\ ood Pholn h aona-entH d GOP Pushes For Control Of House By CARL P. LEUBSDORF Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON 1 AP i - R •- publicans are showing ino'. 1 than usual interest in next No- vember's election for Ihe Hou-c of Representatives for two rea- sons. First, control ol the Hcw-e may be within [heir grasp fm the first time since ihe 19>1 election. Second, the 1968 pn~- denlial election might wind up being settled by the House. Republicans now hold 18? V 435 House seats and need more for control. They have $•• their sights mainly on 34 ma 1 - gina: Democratic seats won 1» less than 55 per cent in 1966. Even if they fail to win Hou-> control, however. Republican *N>uld pick up enough seats to .lee! a Republican president splinter party candidates sipin I otf enough votes io prevent <..- ther of the major nomine*.* from winning a majority of elec- toral votes. If no candidate gets a major- ty of electoral votes—in ti: .- case 270 of a total 53ft—the elee- lion would be thrown into the House. This last happened in 1824 but appears a long-shot possibility again in 1968. Former Alabama Gov. George C, Wallace, already pre- paring his presidential cam- paign, is considered likely to win some Southern states, possi- bly including Alabama. Missis- sippi, l^ouisiana and Georgia. .In addition, an antiwar, civil- rights candidate such as Dr, .Martin Luther King might drain off normally Democratic votes in the big states, especially from Negroes Although President Johnson carried all but five states in 1964. Republicans have forged a comeback and now hold gover- norships in 26 of the 50 stales with a total of 302 electoral votes. The 24 Democratic-held states include the four with con- siderable Wallace strength. If the presidential election goes into the House, each state has one vote so that whichever party controls the state's dele- gation gets its votes. Evenly di- vided slates, plus the District of Columbia which has no congres- sional delegation, would pre- sumably be unable to vole. Democrats now control 29 delegations, Republicans 18 and three—Illinois, Montana and Oregon—are evenly split. Republicans would only need to pick up one seat in the three evenly split states and in four others—Kentucky. N e v a d a. .Pennsylvania and Tennessee—i to take control of seven more delegations and deadlock the two parties at 25-25 in the House. In 11 other states, Republi- cans need one seat to deadlock the delegation and two to cap- ture it—Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Maine, Maryland. Ha- waii, Massachusetts, New Mexi- co, Oklahoma, Rhode Island and Virginia. A gain of two seats in just one of these states, when added to the one-seat gains in the other seven, would give the GOP con- trol of 28 state delegations- enough to elect a president— with only nine more seats than they now hold. Of these 18 states, Republi- cans have the added advantage of holding 12 governorships. This is why House GOP Lead-: er Gerald R. Ford told last week's Republican Governors Association meeting in Palm Beach, Fla.. that ''the odds on our picking up eight more state delegations are not as bad as tuey look.\ Christmas i i T.OB CROSBY gets set to strike up the band whfl ' ' Miicer gives him an introduction. Try though f i Imb will alwavs he the No •> Crnsb'-' ( \.\AD1 V.N AM) AMFRIf \\ SCOUT LEADERS—Lead- ers of Boy Scout Troop 2 ot Biockville were guests ot Troop 3 at the Baptist Church here on Tuesday night. They are seen exchanging flags. From left to right, Char- les Woodman. Senior Patrol Leader of Troop 3; Richard Byrd, Asst. Scoutmaster of Troop 2, Brockville, is pre- senting the Canadian flag to David Aitcheson, Oswegat- chie District Commissioner; next Richard Hubsch, Scout- master ot Troop 3, giv.es an A'tiei-wii dag to Ihomi Beckett of the Brockville troop and receives a Canadian centennial flag in return. Standing at the right is Herbert Saunders, Troop Leader from Brockville. The Canadian flag presented to Mr. Aitcheson will be displayed at the St. Lawrence County Boy Scout encampment. (Jack Wood Photo) Now The Nudie Western By DICK KLEINER NEA Hollywood Correspondent Hollywood - iNEA) - 'A Man Called Gannon\' Is, on the surface, another Western. Bui in its way it's blazing a trail What il has that no other Wes- tern has had is a couple of nude love scenes. It was inevitable, I suppose, that the current trend toward nudity would mosey over into the Western field. The only thing left is cartoons; maybe somebody will remake \Snow White\ with sweet little Miss White cavorting naked with Dopey. But back to \Gannon.\ Judi West, the cookie of \The For- tune Cookie.\ drew the as- signment of making wild, passionate, unclothed love in this one. There are two such scenes—one with Tony Fran- ciosa, one with Michael Sar- razin. They were shot in one day, one following the other. Tony and Mike were full of praise for Judi. It is embarrassing, to say the least, for a girl to go through a day like that. But she managed, they said, with good spirits. And she didn't even catch cold. Sarrazin is the young Cana- dian who scored so heavily in \The Flim-Flam Man\ with George C. Scott. In \Gannon he has something of the same sort of relationship with Fran- ciosa he had with Scott — a youth, idolizing an older man. \I've been playing that same kind of role for 10 years now,' says Sarrazin, who is 27 years old. \1 think it's lime for a change — I'm ready to play my own age.\ And, also, after doing sev- eral Westerns and Western- types, he would also like to And it is why next year's House election Is likely (o get more than the usual attention from strategists of b\'h narlies. [change to a contemporary I story. He thinks he'd like to do a movie in Europe. \I like Westerns,\ he says, \but I have no feeling for horses. I don't actively dis- like them, but I don't like them, either. I feel for horses like I feel for that wall over there—no feeling.\ Sarrazin's name, if you've been wondering, is French. He says there are a lot of Sar- razins in Canada, and manv of them claim descent from Michel Sarrazzin, who came lo Canada with Champlain in 1602 and was the first pharmai iM in Canada, Directing \Gannon\ is an- other of Hollywood's brigtu young directors. James Gold stone. Like so many of the^e new hopes, he came out of tele- vision. \This is the age of the young director,\ Goldstone says. \And there's a reason for if. Young directors understand young audiences, and 60 per cent ot. the tickets to movies are: bought by people in the 18-25 age bracket. I think I under- stand how they think and feel, and what Ihey want to see.\ Goldstone also has a unique, but logical, theory that the young television-trained direc- tors are almost better equipped lhan the old, movies-only di- rectors. \We have more experience than the old-time movie di- ; rector,\ he says. \It's funny, : but true. In the seven years I directed on TV, I've direct- ed more feet of film than the old-time directors who have worked on features for 30 years. I've worked with more actors, handled more differ- ent scenes, been up against more problems.\ But he never did a scene for television like the ones with Judi West in \A Man Called Gannon.\ \L1 ^ jit la O c a bci a tccer V a v who, 1 ha\e cone w.tn the help of some great players has giv- en me something to be proud of. Otherwise, I've just drifted! along.\ Bob has made an album for RCA Victor which will be re- leased in May, He hopes for | one best, but has no illusions about the recording industry. \Thev put out a record and if :•'. -V' fV- HT-ks toTget .1 It it is a nit t s sood fo»- foar weeks ther, fo r - u e ne P >s \ ' I > I \L Ro we I ha\e 1 l b t H pair ->f lorg i n le-wear a SO each this year to fulfill a stipu- lation in the will of a former Roswell resident, Gus Winter died nine years ago and left $105,000, part of it in trust with the stipulation that each Christ- mas some of the money be used f — t to buy long underwear for cold | tip riff 111 Ancestors y and needy old men, r>G n F. \ WOUiQ U> J ..K e DIM' tern'' ' 'he depar'mer 118 ,\ji ... By SANTOSH K. EASAK \ C\l( ITT A y ;l d,a \P , rre Hindu. >.H\ .^n-u ••% .h ADULT WESTERNS cant get nimh more adult than (IIIT one, a Iimersal film called \ .Man Called Gannon ' Here Tony Franciosa and Judi West snuggle HI the sack in one of the hotter scenes. U.S. Tour Scheduled By Royal Philharmonic LONDON (AP) - The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra will make a 22 city concert tour of the United Slates in January. The unexpected death of Si- Malcolm Sargent in October will not affect the tour. Sir Malcolm was scheduled to con- duct several of the concerts. Antal Dorati was able to make changes in his schedule and step in. Other conductors who will appear with Ihe or- chestra are Vaclav Neumann, conductor of the Gewandhaus Orchestra of Leipzig, and Charles Groves, musical direc- tor of the Royal Liverpool Phil- harmonic Orchestra. The orchestra was founded in 1946 by the late Sir Thomas Beecham. It has visited the United States before, in 1950 and 1963. On this tour it will play in Rochester, N.Y.; Beth- lehem, Pa.; Washington, D.C.; East Lansing, Mich.; Lafayette, Ind.; Bloomington, Ind.; Ur- bana, 111.; Des Moines. Iowa: Ames, Iowa: Waverly, Iowa; Minneapolis, Ann Arbor, Mich.; JHunlinglon. W. Va.; Pittsburgh: jMontclair, N.J.; Philadelphia; New York; University Park. IPa.: Syracuse, N.Y,; Montreal; Burlington, VI,, and Troy, N.Y. \ICCA A DOili J3 > tail agu .11 i Oakland Cahf was named president and chief e\ecutive ol- [ticer of the lte-year-old firm on j Mon/day, succeeding Lammoit dat ~|Pomt Oopeland, who becomes I chairman of the board. To do it. McCoy overcame a I tradition of family leadership, in I what is one of Hie world's larg- est privalely-owned producers , of chemicals, chemical products and synthetics. He is only the second non-Du Pont to head the firm. His father, John W. McCoy, was a longtime Du Pont execu- tive who retired in 1948 as a vice president. He died in 1961. When McCoy joined Du Pont as a production worker in line Spruance plant in Richmond, Va.. he already had earned a bachelors' degree from Che Uni- versity of Virginia and a mas- ters' from the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology. While gathering wide experi- ence through work in various departments and divisions in She United Slates and overseas, McCoy was building a reputa-, official ars of Ih- 1%7 sp*sir adoptee a -eso'ut >n Thuisrlai praising Santa Ci^us ana urging him to pav a visit to all mem-: bers of the General Assembly: on Christmas Eve, j MIAMI, Fla. lAP' - A red-; suited and bearded helper of! Santa Clatis Jack I. Lytic. 67. has iosi 28 pounds since last Christmas, At the Christmas!called party for Key Biscayne commu- nity' nursery school children Thursday, Santa's \Ho-Ho-Ho\ was echoed by a teacher's screech. \My breeches fell down.\ said the Santa. \I guess I Ho-Ho- Hoed too loud. The kids thought it was part of the act.\ WASHINGTON (API - Mir- eilli Costa. 24, told police Thurs- da-v of a gunman who ap- proached her teller's compart- ment at American Security and Trust Co. and politely asked her tion as a quiel, restrained exec- utive •k I'll nn ' d \ \' , • i . d <\\ the di\ ->f t e c\e-nTv Hindus col'eci on the bank? of nearby :i\eib. Those i\hj can possibly do so go to the holy Ganges River, They take a ceremonial bath and then. re>- mnining partially submerged in the water are led in prayer by a priest. Offerings of rice and flowers are cast on the water Locally the ceremony ;.; \Mahalaya.\ The' date usually in October, is decided by Hindu astrologers. The ceremony also marks the beginning of a season of more than a dozen Hindu festivals which continue until the end of the following February. FORGOT VALUABLES BUDAPEST (AP) - The Bu- dapest Lost and Found Deparlr ment of the Hungarian Rail- roads reported 1,500 valuable objects were found in trains. \Top prize of forgetfulness\ should go to the newlyweds who forgot all their weddipg presents in the train compart- ment, the report said.