Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Jul 1965, p. 11

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neni LLE LA RIT beanie appears with a rounded crown and a deep double cuff. THE NEWEST version of the perennially popular A HELMET, similar to those worn by English Bob- bies, has an elasticized chin strap and a self-trim band and. bow, 'ANN LANDERS A Wise Wife Is Well Informed INSPIRED BY Courrege's four-cornered hat is this one Teenage Toppers For Fall In New, Amusing Shapes By SUSAN BARDEN At last teen-agers are show- ing an interest in hats and mil- liners are doing everything in their power to stimulate this budding trend. TOURED THE WORLD One hat company. has had their designer tour the world for new styles and the younge: set appear to be receiving them enthusiastically. Among the attractions for back-to-school are the Tyrolean By HAL BOYLE DA NANG, Viet Nam (AP) An open letter home-- Dear friend wife: Believe me, baby, when I get back home you're going to be the one who carries 'out the garbage. It's an old South Vietnamese custom that a lot of American men over here are beginning to think makes sense. I know that there is noth- ing makes a U.S. woman madder 'than to tell her she has an easy life--that she is Dear Ann Landers: When we ; [ am as +h? 1 * moved to this apartment nobody asking too much? I've i | was the least bit friendly. Even made many sacrifices for this) boy and this is the only thing 1) the women in the laundry room| hay, | were cool when I tried to strike!"@V® €ver asked in return. Your| up a conversation. opinion is wanted.---A MOTHER) This spring a good - looking) Dear Mother: It is unfair of| widow moved across the hall. I\you to expect your son to marry| decided to give her a warmer|@ local girl so you can be| welcome than my neighbors had|friendly with his in-laws. The| given me, I baked her a wel-|boy is under no obligation to) come cake--which was my first}SUPply you with a social life. So mistake. My second mistake|knock it off, Mom, | was inviting her to have dinner| Dear Ann Landers: I am a with us before her stove was/15-year-old boy who is ashamed! connected. Now my _ husband|to be asking for your help after| thinks she is the most brilliantjall the things I've said about the| woman he has ever met. In fact|kooks who write to you. Please} he is enchanted with her. 'help me even if I don't deserve The two of them talk current)!t events while I sit there like a} 'I am not a very good dancer dummy. The neighbor knows)but I'm trying to improve. When everything that is happening in|I keep my mind on my feet I Viet Nam and the Dominicanedo all right, but a girl expects| Republic. My husband is very impressed because she can pro- nounce Dien Bien Phu and Hanoi. I say any moron can memorize what she sees in her newspaper. ; The two of them talk past me like I'm not even there. I need your help. Can you offer a so- lution? --MRS. LUMP Dear Mrs.: You are holding the solution in your hands--this newspaper . If you will spend 20 minutes some conversation when she; dances with a fellow, and this jis where the trouble comes 'in.| I lose count when I talk. Then| I get nervous and can't put to- gether a sensible sentence. I guess my problem is that} I want to be a good conversa-| tionalist and a good dancer, too,| and I can't handle both. What! subjects are best for the dance} overprivileged and under- worked. But I tell you, round- eyes, your eyes would get even rounder if you saw how South Vietnamese women live --and apparently like it. Men have only two chief la- bor-saving devices in South Viet Nam--women and water buffaloes. You can tell the women from the buffaloes because the women work harder, In the rice paddy country the men and the buffaloes feel they've done their bit when they've finished plowing. But women toil in the fields, tend | the children, do the cooking and the laundering, and take care of the chickens, ducks and pigs. The ideal wife is one who produces a good rice crop and a baby every year. CARRY BURDENS Most of the country's prod- ucts seem to be transported on women's backs. They use bamboo shoulder poles from which heavily loaded baskets are suspended fore and aft. To balance the baskets, the women walk with a peculiar rhythmic shuffle. 3 The South Vietnamese toiler floor? Thank you.--TONGUE- TIED AND PIGEON-TOED Dear Pigeon: Don't try to be! a Robert Hutchins and a Fred) a day reading. the news and the political columns in this paper you'll be on. an equal footing with your neighbor. Instead of sitting there like a dummy, get busy. When you add a few in-| formed sentences to the conver- sation, watch their faces. It should be fun Dear Ann Landers: My hus- band died when my son Dennis! was six years old. I've worked hard to educate him and I'm) happy to say he is a fine student) and will be graduating from) college next year. : I like some of the girls Dennis) takes out better than others but) I try not to show any partiality.) 1 do get quite upset, however,| when he shows special interest in a girl from out of town. Per-) haps this sounds foolish, Ann, but I want Dennis to marry a local girl so I will have the) pleasure of going about socially with her people Dennis says this is ridiculous. Will you please tell me, Ann, if| Astaire all at once. If you are} just learning to dance, forget! 'the dialogue and concentrate on} the dancing. @ New 1! |b. tub @ 6 vone metal hydro. @ Latest design power CARROT CURLS, STICKS Using a vegetable peeler, cut long, paper-thin slices from al peeled carrot. Roll and fasten! with a toothpick. Chill in ice water. Remove toothpicks just before serving. | Cut peeled carrots: lengthwise with a fluted vegetable cutter to length and thickness desired. Chill in ice water | SAVE IT FOR END Juicy ingredients,.such as to- mato wedges, should be added to a salad last, to keep it crisp.) Before You Buy 723-3343 Small Appliances REPAIR Free Pick-up and Delivery 725-8915 foil gyrator pump has .. . TOUCH-A-MATIC CONTROL Give Starr A Try! Furniture end Appliance 91 Ritson S. OPEN FRI. TO 9 P.M. Plight Of Women In Viet Nam Would Make Wife's Eye Pop | in brown sugar with spice- colored trim and chin tie. from the Alps, the four-cornered cowboy look from Paris, the Sherlock Holmes deerstalker|; jand Bobbie helmet from Eng-|; % land and the beanie. The latter jis an adaptation of the sailor's| ; watch cap. PRACTICAL FABRIC All the hats are of stitched |row-on-row acrylic fiber yarn jiailored in a needlepoint man- ner. They can be packed, sat jon, worn in the rain and the hats}: bounce right back to their orig-|' inal contours. earns her dough the hard way in the city, too: About 20. per cent of the labor force is feminine. Women work as ditch dig- gers, dock wallopers, hod car- riers, plasterers and as labor- ers on heavy construction projects. They get a daily wage of from 60 to 85 pias- tres--about 85 cents to $1.20-- depending on their skills. "The average woman gets almost twice as much done as a man in a day," said an American construction engi- neer, "Of course, I don't know whether she lasts as long."" language. Moscow Bolshoi Teacher Getting Along Fine In Canada By JEAN SHARP CP Women's Editor | in words she can turn to the| class's regular teacher, Edmon- Nadia, who had adopted Mme THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mendey, July 26, 1965 J] Zatsepina as "Auntie Kira,"' and her mother have been trying to|When her orthopedic - specialist show their visitor as much of|husband was in the country last Canada as possible in a month,|4Pril he was made an honorary '| i} ; This is not her family's first -- Ae contuct with Canada, however.' Mme. Zatsepina says her two! sons, eight and 12, are more terested in medicine and 'raphy than in dancing, the moment they're more ested in playing soccer than thing else. TORONTO (CP) -- Canada's National Ballet School has bor- rowed a teacher from the Mos- cow Bolshoi for a month and she reports she is getting along fine even though she and her students don't speak the same Another teacher acted as an interpreter in an interview in which Mme. Zatsepina said she was born in Moscow, is 40 years old ("unfortunately"), attended the Bolshoi's Moscow Choreo- graphic Academic School, and Kira Zatsepina is teaching|4anced for 22 years as a solo- character dancing to the school's advanced students and student teachers, She says there's no problem even though she speaks no English. "It's not so important to un- derstand each other in English. The language of |the dance is the same in English as in Rus- sian." The slender, brown - haired teacher is accustomed to ex- pressing herself through move- ment--teaching by example -- since she has spent a lifetime and Hungarian dances." Character dancing is the spe- cialty of the Bolshoi. Mme. Zatsepina defines it as folk dancing staged in a classical! form, Another dancer once de- scribed it as folk dances done the way everyone would do them if they could. HELP FROM BOLSHOI The Toronto school, which turns out performers for the 4 National Ballet of Canada, has) at it. : previously looked to the Bolshoi! And on those occasions when fo, help. When the Moscow; she wants to make a point in| group has performed in Tor- onto, members of the company have come to the school to teach a class or two. Mme, Zatsepina said she had heard from them that the| school's professional standards are high, After her arrival in| Toronto early in July, she) added, she found they were right. "The children are very tal- ented, hard - working and well- trained. They are exactly the! same in both schools. I am sur-} prised when they talk English) where. I think they will speak! 4 @| Russian." | She was invited here after |Betty Oliphant, the school's di-| rector, saw her working in Mos-| cow. Mme. Zatsepina is staying| with Mrs, Robert Potts, who speaks Russian and acts as her interpreter. Mrs. Potts teaches} French at the school, and her| |17-year-old daughter Nadia is a} student who also does some) dancing with the National Bal-| let company. : | | ton-born Alec Ursuliak. ist in "character." {| "I danced mazurka, Spanish| THE 9 Simcoe St. S. Oshawa Vt A SHOP Summer Clearance SALE | Children's Sportswear, Dresses, etc. This is your chance to save on Top Quality merchandise for Summer and Back to School Days 20% ofr Ladies' Sportswear, Blouses, Swimsuits, Summer Handbags PLUS MANY OTHERS ITEMS Cash in on these tremendous vacation savings, GOOD SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM SALE STARTS 9 A.M. TUESDAY ALL SALES FINAL THEATRE COAT Simonetta of Paris cre- ated this exquisite cotton acetate brocade coat exclu- sively for the Montgomery Ward fall collection. The theatre coat is cut with a slightly A-line skirt and has set-in three-quarter sleeves. Three small glitter buttons provide an added touch of elegance. face TY WIFE PRESERVER Can't find the dustpan? Make an emergency one by cutting an aluminum pie pan in half. Decide To Dance? LEARN ALL THE NEW STEPS Brush up on the old favourites ARTHUR MURRAY fronchised_ studio Most of the women outdoor workers are under 30 and wear peasant outfits -- black trousers and conical hats, Some of them are pretty. When I get home, get ready | to set another rice bowl on | the table. By the way, I'm | bringing along a bamboo shoulder pole--to make your | trips to the supermarket a little easier. FOUND FISH IN TAP NETHERTON, England (CP)| |Lancashire housewife Anne Lo- jrentz turned on a tap and out} swam two three-inch 'fish, Now jengineers are trying to find out} how they got through the reser- ivoir filter system. ey CONCEPTION AFTER ADOPTION Q. It is true thot many pr viously barren women who adopt a child have children of their own? | A. The general impression' that conception often follow adoption was recently con-| firmed by a study conducted in England. In 32 cases in which both the husband and wife were apparently normal but without children ond in which adoption wos advised;; there were 18 pregnoncies (56| per cent pregnancy rate.) This rate of conception was much higher than would ord- inarily be expected among childless couples, The English investigators concluded that adoption facilitates conception probably by releiving emotion- al stress. DISSOLVING GALLSTONES Q. Is there anything thot will dissolve gallstones, | A. No, not while the gall-| stones ore residents of the gall bladder. Prescriptions tilled with ex- pert professionel care by pharmacists who take a per-| sonal interest in you. | i) 28 King East . Oshawa PHONE 723-4621 Open Evenings till 9 P.M. Free City Wide Delivery 11% Simeoe S. 728-1681 "Do YOU Know a Better ~By Tracy Adrian | Jayn -- Modde. Dresses =» LAST = » wee or 7, DAYS EVERYTHING MUST GO! . Here Are Just A Few Prices "White Stag" Sportswear. Pedal Pushers and Blouses. Reg. up to 7.98 Colored and Assorted Blouses, (Broken Sizes Only) Reg. up to 8.98 Slim Jims, Balance of Stock. | Lounging Pyjemas and House Coats, Reg. up to 25.95 Cotton Silk -- Print Dresses, Ete. ORs Ob i 188 ee he ee Pure Silk Dresses. (Plain Co! Reg. up te 49.95 ........ Spring Coats end Suits Reg. up to 95.00 10.00, 47.50 A Few Beautiful Winter Coats Left. Reg. up te T8098 cee PRICE Ya "Long Evening Gowns" Reg. up te 100.00 25,00. 50,00 CASH SALES ONLY. for last 5 DAYS Jayn - Modde. 725-4561 DRESSES Place to Take Those Shirts?" '299 Bloor St. West We sure do lady, to us, ACADIAN CLEANERS We put the "just bought' look into your husband's shirts. We guarantee the old complaints will stop, because we know exactly the way he likes them done, and we do it. We do it fast . . . and inexpensively too. Just call us at 728-5141 and we will prove it to you. ACADIAN cLeaNners 728-5141 77 King St. E, * Across from Genosha Hotel

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