Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Aug 1965, p. 11

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"we mene New Battles With Church . VICTORIA (CP) --- Mother Cecilia Mary believes her dis- pute with the Roman Catholic Church over running an animal shelter will lie quiet for a few months, "But it will flare up again," she said in an interview Fri- y. Mother Cecilia, 76, believe the dispute has reached an im- passe--the church ordering the nuns to leave the shelter and the nuns refusing. 'aced with a church edict to return to a normal religious life or become a lay person, Sister' Cecilia said: "T can't do anything else but carry on at the shelter." She didndt 'think there was any time limit" to the edict-- "the Roman Catholic Church moves very slowly." The English-born nun who has been running the Good Shep- herd Shelter about five years has already weathered one church dealinde. That was last May 4 when the shelter was ordered aban- doned, "They (the church) have no authority to close the shelter," said- Mother Cecilia, 'They! don't own the property, | "I'm not terribly worried about it either." She termed the edict as "just a threat I think." Women Respond To Save Child 'EDMONTON (CP) --Women) responded Friday to an urgent) appeal by an Edmonton mother whose 10-month old baby is suf- fering from a severe allergy to cow's milk. The sick baby requires about 30 ounces daily of women's} breast milk and this amount) has been guaranteed by 35 donors throughout the city. | The woman's husband makes a daily pickup along a route of donors to collect the precious liquid which is being stockpited in a donated deep-freeze. The average pickup amounts to four ounces or less. Abortion: 'Top' Family-Planner, GENEVA (AP) -- Abortion-- legal and illegal--is still the most widely used method of family planning throughout the world, a conference on popula-| tion control was told Friday, Summing up conclusions of the five-day meeting, Professor! Ronald Freedman, director of population studies at the Uni- versity of Michigan, said many women who would prefer to use other methods of birth control are forced, "out of despera- tion,"' to resort to abortion. "Despite safeguards set up by| various governments," he said,| "there are indications that! many women have. very fre- quent induced abortions." The conference of nearly 200/ experts from 36 countries in- cluding Canada, urged that large-scale family planning pro-| grams in developed and under- developed countries sponsor modern contraceptive methods) as an alternative to abortion, | The conference recommended} the so-called interuterine loop,| a female contraceptive device| which can he left-in-place---fer an indefinite period, as the best! method of birth control at pres- ent available to halt the pop-| ulation explosion in underdevel- oped countries, | fan D5 ROE RO RLEANS EAI O ALAIN PO A BULLFIGHTER hair- stylist uses a model to demonstrate something of BULLFIGHTING TO BARBERING GEORGETOWN, Ont, (CP) It's a mixture of horses and hair styles, That's the agenda for 22 hair designers from Canada, Mexico and the United States attending special classes in hair styling at a ranch near this town 20 miles west of | Toronto. A Toronto school of hair style designing is sponsoring the classes which include lec- tures in the helmet hair style and the fringe look. The school started Aug, 23 and will conclude Monday. Guest lecturer is Raphael, 30-year-old stylist from Lon- don and former bullfighter, At the age of 15, he left the bull ring with an impressive record of 42 kills and turned to the finer art of hair styling. | Raphael conducts demon- strations each day in different methods of cutting and shap- ing hair, with special empha- sis on the popular V-cut, con- sidere dto be his trademark. And the horses? i The delegates take a ride each day, but only after classes andslectures are com- pleted, Church Groups Have New Role HAMILTON (CP) -<People {don't want to be told what to|Franc, Que., and Cecile Fortin believe, the United Church con- ference for women was told Fri- day. Dr. Sara Little of Richmond,|§ Va., a professor of Christian education, said '"'church groups will have to become where you can wrestle with your belief and help one an- other with problems," Helen Milton of Toronto, writer-andeidtor of Angiican Church material, said people must be allowed to question. "We must retain the basic be- liefs, yet make changes,"' she said, 3,000 MILES PARTS LOVERS SO THEY MARRY VIA PHO LONDON, Ont. (CP)--It's not asual to start shouting at your bride until after the wed- ding ceremony, Nor is the bride usually 3,000 miles away during the service, But that was the situ- ation here today as Shuja Butt married Parveen Butt, Shuja, 29-year-old biology teacher at Sacred Heart High School in nearby Walkerton, participated in the ceremony via telephone from his home here to his parents' home in Lahore, Pakistan, where the minister, 23-year-old bride and relatives were on hand. According to Moslem law he had only to say "I do" three times to complete his legal end of the marriage, He said he did, but the conversa- tion was in Pakistani and al- most all his friends listening in here could understand was a series of shouted "'hellos." The call went to Montreal, then by cable to London, and from there by radio to Kar- achi, and finally to Lahore. "It sounded like they were in the next room," said Shuja, after the service. "Why were you shouting, then?" someone asked. "IT don't know, I guess I was excited and it was a long way away," he said, His bride is a cousin,-and | now that she is Mrs. Butt, she will move into her in-law's home, Shuja hopes she can get a passport and come to Canada early in the new year, but if complications arise, he plans to return to Pakistan next June, "This is a long-time dream that is being fulfilled today," said the groom, as he put- tered about with his camera while nervously filling in time until the phone call. was made. He has been away from Pakistan for five years, first holidaying in Europe, then getting his bachelor of science degree at the Univer- sity of Western Ontario and getting establishedasa ANN LANDERS PGE ENGEL OE CET GOR ELIG. oh ak Dentists Defended Dear Readers: Recently 1 printed a letter from a mother son had developed a severe toothache during the night. The following morning she called six dentists but was unable to get an appointment for her-boy. She wrote: 'I was not asking By Many Mothers his office and leave a suffering who was fairly steaming. Her a the waiting room: --| Dentists from many places suggested that such a deplor- able lack of professional ethics [f" be reported by letter to a den-| tal association, stating names, dates and details, FRIELING is Moog te med. my dentists, The vast majority of{ EEE NE ENCES THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondoy, August 30, 1965 J critical letters came from the smaller. towns, : I decided to run my own | vey and learn, firsthand, what| me today? goes on with the den! , in my ned Can you possibly see| chapter and verse on the | sults, ' "Been up ail Wigit with a terrible! 'Tomorrow 1 shall" give you ad myself, telephoned. 30 Chicago) s dentists whose names we se-| | lected at random, from the yel- low pages of the telephone book. | s The plea went something like' TRY IT! IT'S this: "I just moved to Chicago) from Wisconsin and I don't) know anyone here. I work in | the Loop as a salesperson, I've peso "Hto intimidate the young Cana- places) is now considered by others in his profession to be one of the world's top hair styl- ists, (CP) each art at a hair stylists' seminar in oronto, Raphael, once a bullfighter in Spain, Laity Oblate Mission Girls | Teach The Women Of Laos | By ELIZABETH TROTT | VIENTIANE, Laos (CP) "You've come at a good time,' jsaid Keith MacLellan of Ot- tawa when I dropped into the Indochina truce commission of- fice to inquire about Canadians working in Laos. , | | 'I'm just on my way to visit a group of Canadians who are doing a remarkable job here," the commissioner said, 'Would you care to come along?" With other commission offi- cers we drove along the muddy streets of Viertiane as far as the car could go, then threaded our way on foot down narrow alleys until we came to the two-storey jbuilding that houses the Institut |Oblates Missionaires de Marie |Immaculee The Roman Catholic lay insti- tute, founded by Rev. Louis Marie Parent, OMI, of Trois- Rivieres, Que., in 1952, has been operating in Laos for eight the novice at least a year to acquire a working knowledge of he language and for the first year the newcomers live, work and study together in the Vien-| tiane headquarters. Without heat, light or running water, the roomy structure. at least has the merit of airiness --the breezes blow freely through the thin bamboo walls, Here, too, there is plenty of jcompanionship of the kind they will miss in later months. When ready, the women are sent out, alone or in pairs, to outlying posts, There they not only carry on their work of teaching and caring for the sick but also train young Laotian girls to do similar work in the mountain villages to which they! alone have access. "We teach these Laotian girls) as much as we can so that they will be able to teach the Laotian) women themselves,"' said Miss} years. |Trudeau, "We also have a Two days before our visit a|special course for midwives." | rocket had exploded 20 yards| There are 12 women in Direc- away, killing five persons, Nojtor Trudeau's band, First to ar- one knew what agency was re- sponsible, or who the target {was, But if it had been intended Foley of Portneuf, Que., who has been in charge of a lonely station at Nong Pene for four) years, Others include Carmen Chap delaine and Anne Bedard, both) of Sherbrooke, Que, Elise Belanger of Anse Pleureuse,' Que., Bernadette Letendre of Megantic, Que., Jeannine Mar! eau of Annonciation, Que., and Therese Senecal and Carmelle Gendron of St. Johns. Two are.at Paksane, one at Kung Sadok and two in the mountains. Following the fivefold rule of} the Oblates, they teach primary} school, household management, act as social workers, instruct) their young charges in religion) and look after the sick. ae ae dians it failed | There were four young women 'at the headquarters when we |got there--Annette Trudeau of St. Johns, Que., the director; Jeanne Rousson of Timmins, Ont.; Emilie Lafontaine of Bois of Shawinigan, Que. | All were dressed in a discreet version of Laotian costume-- 4 white blouses, loose Skirts, They went barefoot wore their hair drawn The fair-haired director ex- plained that they emphasize 'simplicity of dress so as not to {attract the wrong kind of atten- tion | She added that, although the jorder accepts women as young as 18, it does not consider it jwise to send any one under 25 \to arduous service in a country such as Laos, More than a dozen Lao chil- dren were gathered around a table, including a 10-year-old carrying a baby sister on her hip, It was explained that one of the functions of the institute is DANCE jto teach the women of Laos, or not only reading, writing and TWIRL }matters of religion, but also bet- ter household management and Register Thursday, Sept, 9 hygiene, Some of the members are 4 P.M, -- 7 P.M, Seturday, Sept. 11 damestic science graduates, 10 A.M, -- 2 P.M. jothers are nurses who dispense FOR FALL TERM }medicine and on occasion serve as midwives or dentists and DANCE ACADEMY even perform minor surgical operations, | Oshawa Shopping Centre lay missionaries can operate 725-6122 more effectively than nuns, Because of the customs of Director Trudeau said it ee the tribulations of their work, preferring to talk with faces aglow of the rewards--the trust and affection of the young. Every five years they may return home for a visit, then} they come back to the heat, the! flies, the humidity and to the! weleame of the -Laotians who have come to trust them, the people, it is difficult for a priest to talk to women or chil- dren, Only a woman has access j|here and she must be a woman regarded by the Laotians more| or leSs as one of themselves.) For this reason, it is felt that! teacher in' Newfoundland and | later in Walkerton, Shuja also is a lawyer and | sai¢ he hopes to "get more into law" here before return- ing home. Back from Vacation Staff All Refreshed Ready to give you the Best in CLEANING and SERVICE RINKERS CLEANERS "The Best In Town" PHONE 725-1191 FASHIONS SINCE 1867 rive in Vientiane was Yolande|~--~ for charity, We are in average circumstances and are in the habit of paying our bills on time. All I wanted was some- one to relieve my son of the I offered to print an explana- tion from dentists or anyone else! who might have something) \a.m, 1s ony gaa SampOe ARS Oe oaice at once and he would) avalanche began, | One of the best responses! came from a commander in the dental corps of the U.S. Navy. He wrote: "While I cannot condone such unethical action by the civilian members of my profession, I would like to say that approxi- mately 999 out of 1,000 so-called dental emergencies occur in teeth so badly broken down, due to neglect, that such a situation can scarcely be called an emer-| gency. "A person who is in pain should go, in person, to the den- tist's office and be prepared to wait. If a patient cancels or is late, the dentist would be in- clined to work in the emergency patient or take him at the close| lof the day. It is inconceivable to me that any dentist, worthy, of a degree, would walk out of| Canada Weaver Lacking Drama TORONTO (CP) Drama and excitement are missing from the designs of Canadian) weavers, despite their high) level of technical skill, Harriet) Tidball, a weaving judge, said) Friday. | She is one of three judges) choosing a 25-piece travelling exhibit of weaving--the first to be. held in Ontario, Mrs.* Tidball, who judges weaving throughout the U,S., said she had never judged so large a number of outstanding pieces, but "there is an obvious) need for more design study." | The exhibit will begin its tour at the Burlington conference of} handweavers and spinners Oct. 15 and 16. Mrs, Tidball singled out two) entries--a drapery fabric by) Jean Docton of Chelsea, Que.,| and a double-face fabric by Mrs. Herbert Peachell of} Guelph--as outstanding pieces. HOUSEHOLD HINT Always vacuum chenille, shag or throw rugs before washing { ito remove excess lint, y have littie-to say about @ They worked until midnight re- A La Crosse, Wis., reader| wrote: "'O City Mother lives in| the wrong town. She should! come to La Crosse. Very early | on a Sunday morning, I fell and. broke the cap off a front tooth,| It was not only painful but dis-' figuring. I called Dr. R. at 7:30 He told me to go to his meet me there, When I arrived. he was ready to go to work." | Wichita, Kan.; "As a mother} who has had 100 per cent co- operation from two dentists I) feel I should speak out in re- sponse to 0, City Mother, "One evening several months ago our 12-year-old son fell at play and knocked out four front) teeth, I called my dentist and) he left an important conference} to round up a specialist. 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