Secretaries' Habits Lambasted By Ann Landers: Any who works as a jam knows more about per- habits of secretaries than most accomplished psychol- in the world. I hope you print my letter and maybe wise some of them up. work in a beautiful, modern ce building where the com- has spent a fortone on the best furniture and equip- Some secretaries are enough to make $500 a but they don't know that a wastebasket was built to hold peper. It was never meant to a garbage pail. You'd be ked at the secretaries who w orange peelings, half- fi coffee cups and soggy tea bags into the wastebaskets. Of course they leak through and ke a terrible mess. For good miparure they dump in shavings the pencil sharpener. @ find sugar spilled on the top desks and it just stays there ht along with the blobs of cOffee cream, cookie crumbs hunks of chewing gum stick any old place. just found three pairs of old s under a desk, and a good hmere sweater, rolled up in avball like it was a rag. 'Every evening I turn off elec- tile typewriters and photo copy chines which were left on. I lug electric coffee makers nd defrost small refrigerators. if my job to-do these things but it's against my na- ture to let things burn out and et ruined. "Women are always yelling abput how messy men are, but = Cleaner so help me I'd rather clean up Thanks for letting me get this off my chest. I feel better al- ready.--Minnie Dear Minnie: I'll bet you a soggy tea bag that this column is going up on hundreds of of- fice bulletin boards all over the country. And do you: know who will post it? The men! Dear Ann Landers: I am a 14-year-old girl who needs ad- vice. My mother's older sister never married, Aunt Bonnie. is nice looking, wears expensive clothes and holds down a good job. Aunt Bonnie comes over about twice a week for dinner. Lately she has been getting me alone and running down my father. She says she could have married several men who were a lot better looking and richer than dad. She also says my mother could have done better if she hadn't grabbed the first thing that came down the pike. I don't know why my aunt in- sists on running dad down. He is a wonderful person and he and mom seem very happy. I don't like to hear these things but I don't know how to shut my aunt up. Please help me.--Wish I Had Earplugs Dear Wish: Aunt Bonnie is ashamed of her single status so she is trying to belittle your mother's marriage. Tell her you don't think it's very nice of a guest to come into a home and talk about people who offer her hospitality. That ought to settle her hash. * * The forthcoming marriage *of Miss Jean Craig Russell Mr. Kenneth Wesley Bkerratt is announced today "by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas ©. Russell, parents of the bride-to-be. The ceremony TO MARRY IN MAY is to take place May 7 in Northminster United Church. Miss Russell's fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs.: Henry Skerratt of Utica, Ontario. Two Doctors 'Ross' In One House No Fuss At York University RONTO (CP) -- Dr. Janet is one general practitioner hasn't time for obstetrical cases. 'Bhe's too busy combining her dijties as wife of a university president with other medical a to wait for ies who won't keep to a tithetable. | #I don't ignore them com-| pletely,"' she says. "I start look-| ing after them once they are} born." 'The social and family life of Janet Ross has become compli- > at since her husband, Dr. ray Ross, was named pres- ident of Toronto's York Univer- sity (Monday - morning telephone conversations between his so0- , secretary and her medical s@tretary g0 something like this *My Dr. Ross wants your Dr. Ross to attend these functions this week... . / Also my Dr. Lod won't be home for dinner sday and Thursday nights.' pital Womens Toronto. The university atmosphere is nothing new for her. Her father, the late Col. W. R. Lang, was a professor of chemistry at the University of Toronto, where he founded the Canadian Officers' Training Corps and for Sick Children and} College Hospital in} 45th Wedding A Married in Workington, Cum- berland, England, Mr. and Mrs. John S. Fearon, celebrated their 45th wedding anniversary with a family get-together at their home on McMillan Drive. The couple came to Canada in 1928 and made their first home in Whitby. Mr. Fearon was employed at the Ontario Hospital and is now retired after 28 years' service. Mrs. MR. AND MRS. JOHN S. FEARON Family Honors Couple Marking nniversary Fearon is still employed at On- tario Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Fearon have made their home in Oshawa for the past ten years. They have one daughter, Mrs. G. E. Kin- nee (Edith) and two grandchil- dren, Bonnie and Heather. Mr. Fearon has been a mem- ber of the Masonic Order for fifty years. He is a member of Composite Lodge, Whitby. At Dr. Cannon H Mrs. John Fortin, vice-presi- dent, presided at the annual meeting of the Dr. C. F. Cannon Home and School Association. Annual reports were read by various chairmen and from the secretary. The Junior Choir, under the direction of Mrs. Ena Brooks, sang "Song of Music Makers" and '"'Where Go the Boats." Mrs. Kathleen Quick accompanied them on the piano. Mr. G. A. Korry, principal and chairman of the nominating committee, presented the follow- ing slate of officerts for 1966-67: past president, Mrs, George Ellis; president, Mrs. John For- tin; vice-presidents, Mrs. Ernest Sheppardson, Mrs. George} Brabin; recording secretary,| Mrs. John Egan; corresponding Oshawa Rock And Mineral Club| Plans Banquet was professor of military stud- ies. Dr. Ross believes that women doctors no longer need to dis- guise their femininity. WOMAN FIRST "The old picture of the early female doctor with her mannish clothes and her mannish hairdo way ini order to compete with men doctors. All that has com- pletely changed. The medical woman is now a woman first and a doctor afterwards." Dr. Ross shares her office with two other doctors, a man and a woman, and takes her turn being "'on call' to patients The April meeting of the Osh- awa Rock and Mineral Club was |held at the Civic Auditorium, |Thornton's road south, on | Thursday. A large number of |members and guests were pres- | ent. | The meeting was presided jover by the club's vice-presi- is gone. They had to look that|dent, Mr. Hugh Gannon. It was) +aitiwgnced that 'the ciud"s an | nual banquet would be held on Saturday, June 18. Mrs. J. F. G. Dutrizac won the bulletin- |naming contest which was spon- |} sored by the club. | A nominating committee was | set up to present a slate of offi- cers for the coming year. Mrs. |Harvey Brown and Mr. John Junior Choir Entertains Parents And S Meeting secretary, Mrs, Ralph Imeson; treasurer, Mrs. Alex Tocher; chairman, Mrs. Victor Hulatt, Mrs. Ernest Pattman, Mrs. Lawrence Barteaux, Mrs. Ron- ald Bint, Mrs. Gyles Harrison, Mrs. Stuart Burgess; and prin- cipal, Mr. G. A. Korry. The new executive will be installed at the October meeting. Miss. Marie Ford gave a com- prehensive explanation of the concepts of physical education. Another name for physical edu- cation was movement explora- tion. Methods of teaching were limitation; method of presenta- tion was when the activity was limited by the teacher. Direct situation in which the teacher chooses the activity and con- trols it and chose the apparatus used. Indirect situation where the activity and apparatus was chosen by the child. Aims of physical education} and improvement in skill. Char- acteristics found in primary children were full of energy; jed: Anne Nurse; [Women 12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdoy, April 12, 1966 Works Full Time On Project That Doesn't Officially Exist By MARILYN ARGUE OTTAWA (CP) Heather Sim works five days a week on a project that docs not yet of- ficially exist. The 22-year-old blonde is a research assistant for the Com- pany of Young Canadians, yet to be approved by Parliament. The CYC, organized to fight poverty and its attendant social problems like illiteracy and dis- ease, now operates under the authority of the Privy Council. Heather is one of the pro- jected Company's interim staff of 13, now working from offices over a downtown jewery store. She has been involved with com- munity development before the CYC existed, not as an organ- izer but working in the field. One project was in a farming community in Germany, another centred on an industrial area in France. "T worked in a zipper factory in Rouen, attaching the ends to 3,000 zippers a day. I didn't learn much French there--most of it I picked up in Germany where I had a French room- mate." She returned here to study sociology at Carleton Univer- sity, where she served on the executive of the Canadian Uni- versities Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, and later the Student Union for Peace Ac- tion. OPEN TO NEW IDEAS Two summers ago she met high school students from across Canada when the Centennial Commission hired her to plan tours of the capital for visiting teen-agers. And iast summer she went to the eastern Arctic, doing re- search for a planned radio pro- gram for Indians and Eskimos. The broadcast, to be done in the two native languages and English, would be modelled on! Farm Radio Forum, developed) by Heather's father, R. A Sim,| now of the CBC Northern Serv-| ice. | Heather says the CYC hopes) to have 250 volunteers in the! | Conducts Oshaw Miss Pauline Dibb was in Oshawa recently examining for the Royal Academy of Ballet, London, England, and the fol- lowing were the results: Grade III Highly Com- mended; Hilary Hagerman, Ellen Latimer; Commended: Arlene Munro, Rema Nestere-/| ezyk; Pass Plus: Kathy Kiraly.| Grade II -- Highly Commend- ed: Jillian Entwistle; Pass Plus: Jan Fleming, Dale Pol- lard; Recommended: Lyn Ross. Grade I -- Highly Commend- Commended: Martha Easden, Mary Lou Hus- band, Susan McKelvie; Pass: Pamela Campbell. Wendy Kess-! | field by the end of this sum- mer. Plans for training pro- grams this summer and actual field pwork are being left fairly fluid. The organization aims to en- courage. people living in de- pressed areas of the -world to help themselves. "The Company will be auton- omous, which is a revolution- ary idea for a government agency, and the policy-making body will be elected by the vol- unteers themselves. "So until the governing body has actually been elected, we want to leave it as open to new ideas as possible. We don't want to define it in case this definition might become virtu- ally impossible to change later." Volunteers -- the only quali- fication is a minimum age of 18--will be screened, tested for skills and interviewed before the final 250 are selected for training. In the field, they will get room and board, plus a few dollars a day pocket money. "We will only place volunteers with groups that request them,"' says blue - eyed Heather. "'Some requests have come in already. We hope that the emphasis will} be less on social work than on} community organization." | The difference is that the so-| cial worker helps the individual adjust to the society he. finds around him. The community or- ganizer tries to help him find out what he wants to change in| his surroundings, and then lets! him go about changing it him- self. | "The decision te act should! come from the people, not from the volunteer. It's a different decision if they make it them- selves."' Just before she joined the Company in January, Heather travelled with a friend by bus through the southern United) States. She says the experience gave her a fresh perspective on social problems here. | "In the South you could feel an atmosphere of violence--a | thin, bard violence that doesn't give any emotional release. Royal Academy Ballet Examiner | a Examinations | ler; Recommended: Joyce Nel- son. Primary Honors: Kathy Howard, Michelle Humphries; Highly Commended: Elizabeth Alderton, Susan Deline, Moira Harvey, Joel Reynolds; Com- mended: Susan Hadju; Pass Plus: Mary Hawbolt, Debbie Riehl, Donna Whorms; Pass: Merna Quernel, Albert Ulrich. The Royal Academy Grades | are set up as Junior and Senior, | so it takes two years in a| grade. If a student does it in one' year, they have accel- erated. As the Grade III stu- dents have spent a year in Primary, it is more like a Grade VII examination. eager to learn; easily fatigued; large muscles better developed; janxious to do things; learns ieee individualistic. | The Grade 2 class of Mrs. |Marie Tomlinson gave a demon- stration to the audience thereby |giving the parents a_ better knowledge of physical education. SOCIAL NOTICE FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Craig | Russell, Oshawa, announce the forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Jean Craig, to Ken- jneth Wesley Skerratt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Skerratt, Utica, Ontario. The ceremony is |to take place at Northminster best by active participation and| | | | | | THE STARS SAY By ESTRELLITA FOR TOMORROW Originality and a spirit of enterprise will pay off now, so if you've had some ideas you've wanted to act upon, but have hesitated, this will be the time to try them out. Be realistic about such undertakings, how- ever. Don't let enthusiasms cause you to overreach your limitations. FOR THE BIRTHDAY If tomorrow is your birthday, a bright year awaits you if you have made the most of gener- ous planetary influences which have governed your occupa- tional and financial interests since the Ist of February--and will continue to do so. This is no time to let up in effort since, on April 20 you will enter an excellent 344 week period-which will enable you to increase your monetary interests. Next good cycles on the fiscal score: The last two weeks in July, the weeks between Sept. 15 and Oct. and from Oct. 29 through Nov. 15. Consolidate gains then and wait until Feb. 1, 1967, for any further expansion of mone- tary interests. A truly excellent cycle, beginning then, will last for at least two months. Just two admonitions, however: Do not speculate in November and January, and do avoid extrava- gance during the first and last weeks of August. Most propitious periods for advancing job interests: The first 17 days of July, all of Sep- tember (but don't venture into new fields then), the first week of October, mid-November, late December and all of next March. June, August and next February will be remarkably generous to creative workers, although the entire year ahead promises to be generally good. Domestic and social interests will be governed by fine aspects for most of the next 12 months, but do try to avoid friction with family and friends in late June, during the second week of Sep- tember, in mid - October and mid-December. Most propitious periods for romance: May, Au- CELEBRATES 85th BIRTHDAY With two of her great- grandchildren, Alex and Tommy Ferries, Mrs. James Collett, Fairleigh avenue, makes a wish over the cake and candles. Friends, relatives and neighbors helped Mrs. Col- AT LAST A REPLY RYHOPE, England (CP) -- Louise P:rooks, 40, has received an apology from a Durham gust and next January; for tra- vel: Mid-June, the last two weeks in August, early Septem- ber, and the weeks between Dec. 15 and Jan. 15. A child born on this day will be endowed with a fine mind, artistic leanings and, paradoxi- cally, excellent business acu- men, Showers 0 for the Savings Bride in THE FINEST SILVERPLATE Here is your opportunity to buy a complete service or add to your present collection in any of these four lovely COMMUNITY patterns. Take advantage of this special offer now, with its beautiful serving pieces. 38 Piece Service for 8 $6 95 (Silverware only) Regular open stock value $94.50 SAVE $2455 Service consists of: 8 Teaspoons 8 Dessert Spoons 18 Forks = 8 Kalves PLUS lett celebrate her 85th birth- day, visiting her from Lind- say, Whitby, Manilla and Oshawa. Mrs. Collett has three daughters and one : son; 13 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren. drugstore for being late in an- swering her application for a job. She asked for the job in 1948. Manager Ted Bennett, now retired, explained he had rather a backlog of clerical work at the time. Milk's a Must Top any snack off with @ cool refreshing glass of milk and it tastes much better. Milk just naturally brings out the best In food. Also Intro- duces the family to good nutrition without thelr ever suspecting It! Great With Cake Any cake fans in the house? Try this broiled topping for them next time you whip up a mix. Cut 15 large marsh- mallows in half and arrange over the top of an 8-inch square cake, hot from the oven. Spread with a mixture of % cup brown sugar and % cup soft butter. Sprinkle with % cup chopped peanuts and broil a few minutes, until the marshmallows are melted. Tops With Cheese Prefer something not so sweet. Team up your glass of milk with some good Cana- dian cheddar cheese at snack time. Serve cheddar just "as is' with bread or crisp crackers and frult, or bake it Into a hot bubbly treat. Team With Biscuits For puffy cheese biscuits hot from the oven, start with an 8-ounce package of refrigera- tor biscuits. Arrange in @ but- tered 8-inch round cake pan. For the topping, combine 1 beaten egg, 1 tablespoon nik and '& cup snredded Canadian cheddar cheese. Pour over biscuits, sprinkle with nutmeg and bake in @ 450°F oven until golden, ébout 15 minutes. Perfect with milk and a little orange marmalade | Charm the Children Brighten a rainy day for the children with mugs of milk and gay plaid doughnuts. Start with plain cake dough- nuts and crisscross with two $e medical Dt. Ross doesn't one night out of every three. | réally mind. Being in on the) her | deyelopment of a new univer-| University, I Ge ,.| Pratt were selected. | United Church on Saturday,) {er contributions to York) 'The program for the evening|May 7, 1966 at 4:00 p.m. she says, are on the| was for each member to polish i ENGAGEMENT 2 TABLESPOONS 1 COLD MEAT FORK 1 GRAVY LADLE. When Can I Find My sity has 'been a wonderful ex- level. Freshmen perience, she says. formal balls and sports meets] of "Besides, the two Ross chil-|are some of the students' events! dgen no longer require much time from their parents. Susan, ahome economics graduate of Acadia University, her father's alma mater in Wolfville, N.S., isedoing postgraduate work and| ert, an arts and science student at Mount Allison Uni- es. Sackville, N.B., is con- ring a medica] career. Dipn't PRACTICE fanet Ross graduated from the University of Toronto in 1938. She was married in 1940. er husband's doctorate is an) atademic one. ™ We met at a social workers' ference when he was pro- m director of the national CA," she says. "Dr. Ross did not try to con- tiiue her medical practice ile her children were small, WE che did keep up her medical rests. She was for three sear director of the division of ternal and child hygiene for the National Welfare Council, @id she worked in out-patient well-baby clinics. She also research at the Babies' Hos- at Columbia University in York while her husband taking an advanced degree at the university. "Before returning to private practice 13 years ago, Dr. Ross interned for a year at the Hos- }social teas,' a piece of rock to make a piece| jewellery. Mountings for jthe Rosses attend. As the wife jof the president, Dr. Ross must jalso attend other of'icial events and entertain a great deal. Small parties are held at their off-campus house, larger ones at one of their clubs or at the university. A president's resi- |dence is still to be built at the | university. Dr. Ross spent some time last year in what she calls "henfests" with women under- graduates at the university. Sex jwas a frequent topic, but Dr. |Ross doesn't think university |students should be criticized for discussing sex openly. "Perhaps women were more reticent about open discussion of the topic when I was in col- jlege, but sex is a subject that |now is universally discussed by all generations." Sensible Way to Relieve Diarrhea Many people hope a sudden attack of Diarrhea will quickly subside, So they do nothing. Others preter to take a fast- acting, dependable remedy right at the start, like Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry, It relieves nausea, cramps and diarrhea --gently restores intestinal balance. Family-proven for over 115 years, For those sudden attacks that can strike at home, on trips or vacation, keep Dr, FOWLER'S Extract of Wild |Strawberry on hand. o-10 brooches were available. This was under the supervision of Mr. Conrad Lariviere at whose home the cabochons' were roughed out While members sanded away, everyone had a great opportun- itv to get acquainted with each other Mr. and Mrs. John Borovsky, Oshawa, wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, | Irene Anne, to Joseph Edward} Hopkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. | M. E. Hopkins of Erinsville, | Ontario. The wedding is to take | place on Saturday, May 7, 1966 lat 11:00 a.m. in St. George's 'Greek Catholic Church. 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At Informal Parties Set out tall glasses of cold milk for the teenagers along with a Giant Hot Dog Loef ... they'll do the rest! Cut a French loaf into %-inch thick slices and make into sand- wiches, filling with a mixture of 2 cups shredded Canadian cheddar cheese, % cup mayonnaise, a dash of Wor- cestershire sauce and a little dry mustard. Put sandwiches together to form a loaf again on a long piece of foil; gather foil up around the base to hold the "loaf" together. Cut weiners in half length- wise and slip one into each sandwich. Bake on a cookie sheet in a 375°F oven 20 to 25 minutes. Prepared by the Home Economists of THE CANADIAN DAIRY: FOODS SERVICE BUREAU 30 Eglinton Ave. E., Toronto 12, Om. (2) Apr.