Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Sep 1966, p. 14

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ANN LANDERS Teacher Will Step In It Parents Inadequate sins Peorentes briidine and ce es pip =! ° E in the home. Parents know children better than the knows them--especially ere are 30 to 35 students aa ze 32 over our children they never had? ; " Teachers la gr -... about sex, Freud, politics an "morals. Our children are con- enough without having two sets of authorities to guide : : e : 2 g % them--one at home and one atl) ome for school. Please advise teachers to stick to their jobs--teaching and ding students, and to lay off the psychiatry and so - called "eharacter molding." -- Time For a Change Dear Time: You sound like a parent who is havin, trouble with her children--and I'm not surprised. The size of that chip on your shoulder indicates there must be some wood higher up. You are right when you say teachers have enough to do without doubling as wailing walls, leaning posts and substi- tute parents--and the fact is they don't go looking for these added responsibilities. They in- herit them by default, my friend. Many children who can't com- municate with their parents find a sympathetic ear at school. And thank heaven for it, mother. You should be grateful. Dear Ann Landers: I am male, under 30, with a three- year-old motherless son. My wife died last year. Her folks took the boy with the under- standing that I would take him back when and if I remarried. Several months ago I became interested in a woman I will call Constance. I told her all about adjustment should be han-|se has decided she "would s these eggheads the the boy and she said she would love to raise him. Two weeks ago we became engaged, Fase aieht Mmaetaana Sows aengene wewnane never be comfortable with an- other woman's child. I love my son and want him with me. I also love this woman. Do you think I could be happy with her under these conditions?-- Michigander Dear Gander: No--and it's too bad you picked such a goose. But consider yourself for- tunate that she was honest, If you marry the woman, you'd surely grow to resent her be- cause she refused to make a a son, I say keep looking, fella, There's somebody out there who wants you both. Dear Ann Landers: Why did you try to deceive that wife into believing that those unexplained a States today is iced. PANT COSTUMES ARE IN Pants costumes in the fall fashion news include this brushed gold evening coat and pants in vinyl by Phi- lippe Tournaye for Modelia. (CP Photo). lipstick stains on her husband's shirt collar might have been made by a woman who acci- dentally fell against him in an elevator? I've been riding office elevators for over 30 years and I've never seen it happen--even once. My husband carried on an affair with a woman for over seven years. She used to plant listpck stains on the back of his collar and other odd places where I'd be sure to see them but he wouldn't. She slipped combs and- hairpins into his pockets. I never once mentioned my "discoveries" and finally my husband broke off with her. He is dead now and I am thankful I stayed with him. He told me many times how grateful he was that I had the good sense he lacked.--No Regrets Dear No: What you did re- quired more than good sense. It also called for courage and dis- cipline. These three graces are a winning combination. By ROBERTA ROESCH How can an 18-year-old high school senior find opportunities for after-school and weekend work when all the employers she contacts say they want ex- perienced help? This is a question that comes to me at this time every year from parents and students alike, as evidenced by the fol- lowing letter. "I have never worked in the past,"' writes this young reader, "But it is necessary for me to work this year in order to put money aside for college ex- penses for next year. "I made the rounds after school began," she went on to say, "but my job hunt is at a standstill because of this 'ex- perience' angle." Frankly, serious about if you are really wanting after- Experience Angle Overcome By Job - Hunting Perseverance angle and refuse to let this stop you. Granted, some employers do want experience, but in some cases (naturally not in every case, though) you can wear down resistance if you show sufficient interest and am- bition. Employers know that many of the part-time jobs can be handled by bright, energetic inexperienced people. So, if you show an interest and make yourself available at the time an employer has a need you can often climb over and experience obstacle. Make repeat visits to the places you have contacted be- fore. Ask if an opening has occurred and indicate that your visit is tied to your interest in |the work. On one or two occa- sions, you may be fortunate enough to find that some of the places that presented no oppor- are apt to employ part-time help. When you have knocked on the store doors, go to in- surance companies, newspaper offices, printing firms and other offices that might have use for after-school or Saturday cleri- cal help. Hospitals and nursing homes are other possibilities. SEEK OPPORTUNITY While you are about it, seek out opportunities for waitresses, car hops, cashiers or check-out personnel. Since many of these jobs are available to the energetic per- son, locate them by: watching "want ads" daily and following them up immediately; visiting your employment agency; let- ting your school guidance office know you want to work, since high schools often receive job listings from employers; riding around your area to spot likely places of employment; re searching the pages of your classified telephone directory for additional ideas; and mak- ing sure that everyone you know is aware that you want to work. LIKE ff ICED SAVES FUEL TOO partment has helpful advice for ALL LIKE PLAY More than 40 per cent of the) EDMONTON (CP) -- Carol-/home bakers, Dough can be] Chimpanzee mothers play tea consumed in the Unitedjann Rees of the University of] made to rise in a cold gas oven| with their babies just as human Alberta home economics de-|by putting it over the pilot light.|mothers do. _ f : at ZELLER'S OSHAWA SHOPPING ZELLER'S: SPECIAL PURCHASE SLEEPERS Terry stretch sleepers two-wey = that grows with your Regular 1.99 "ONLY 1.67 BABY LOUNGE Versatile baby lounge for travelling, shopping, feed- ing, complete with safety ties, nursery print foam Celi sssissvsav OWE GIRLS' Pile Fabric, infants white Sturdy desk set, also folding desk and chair hard maple con- struction, deep container under lift up top. Reguler 14.99 On JUST SAY Charge-lt AT ZELLER'S NO DOWN PAYMENT 1.25 WEEKLY BUYS UP TO 100,00 GIRLS' gurrs long wear. Pink only, Reguler 3.99 school work you can't give up till you have a spot at which tunities on the first round have Convicted Abortionist Will Force Finally, keep your student job 2 YEARS TO PAY ON only. Test Case Before Supreme Court By DAVE PIKE NEW YORK (CP) -- Dr. X has committed 25,000 murders. Or he has saved 25,000 women. It depends on how you iook at it, for Dr. X is an abortion- ist -- in the eyes of law-abiding convicted Cc those 25,000 abortions with nine years and two months in prison. His name is Nathan H, Rap- paport -- a qualified gynecolo- gist who performed his first abortion on a kitchen table at the start of the Depression be- cause he needed the $25 fee. Now he is trying to get the abortion laws of the United States wiped off the books--a formidable undertaking that has exhausted others. The U.S. has no federal abor- tion law. Every state makes its own, and in most the prevailing law condemns abortions as il- legal except when necessary to save the life of the mother. Several states permit them to preserve a mother's health. Six states permit abortions to save the life of an unborn child. PENALTIES ARE STIFF The penalties for illegal abor- tions range from one to 14 years in prison, plus fines, Latest statistics place the number of legal, hospital-per- formed abortions at 8,000 an- 'nually, Every year in the U.S., at least hundreds -- of. thousands, and possibly millions, of women are forced to launch a frantic search. Does her girl friend, her pharmacist, her taxi driver know where she can find an abortionist? She is forced to degrade her- self because, in most instances, she cannot pass the rigid quali- fications of wary hospital boards, or she is not affluent enough to "buy" the medical evidence favoring a legal abor- tion or to fly to countries, such as Japan, where she can have one on demand. STATISTICS VARY ~The statistics committee of the Planned Parenthood Con- ference on Abortion has stated that "a plausible estimate of the frequency of induced abor- tions in the United States could de as low as 200,000 or as high as 1,200,000 per year... ." The popularly accepted fig- ure for abortion mortality is _3,000 annually, but it could be as low as 300, says a commit- tee member. Dr. Rappaport, a pioneer in| the planned parenthood move- ment, has always believed that abortions, competéntly per- formed, are a woman's right. "The abortion laws, after all, were made by men," he ob- served recently. "They never asked the women what they thought about it. "Abortion is not a morals problem; not a dialogue for philosophers, theologians, legal- ists or law makers; not a matter for coercive criminal legisla- tion." Dr. Rappaport, assisted by similar - minded individuals and groups, is setting up the Dr. Nathan H. Rappaport Research Foundation to abolish the laws of abortion. In return for room and board, ~lazreé that "any woman. on de- cuit. Topic: Abortions. Objec- to report at that time. Here are some suggestions to keep you-from giving up: Begin by changing your atti- tude about the "experience" tive: A defence fund. PLAN COURT FIGHT The fund will be used to take the case of an accused abor- tionist to the U.S. Supreme Court in the hone that it will mand, should have the right to an abortion, giving no reason or excuse to anyone." "If we're licked?" he mused. "Well, we'll have tried," On the day he was inter- viewed, in a depressing, sickly- green + colored hotel room, he had "three bucks between me and starvation." He lives on social security cheques. 'But I feel like the champion of the common man -- ah, woman." He was paroled from his lat- est prison term last May. Dr. Rappaport's body is be- impulse, but do us and consistent means to attain your goals, Neither scatter en- ergies nor overtax yourself. Fatigue could lead to needless errors, FOR THE BIRTHDAY If tomorrow is your birthday, your horoscope indicates that you can make excellent gains, both jobwise and financially, during the next year. But you will have to take practical and vigorous action on matters with which you are familiar. Don't launch into uncharted THE STARS SAY By ESTRELLITA FOR TOMORROW pra ctical ginning to feel the strain of his 66 years, but his mind is quick, his wit sharp and caustic and his enthusiasm boundless. He has, in his time, paid up- wards of $10,000 a shot in bribes to policemen, judges and ex- tortionists to stay in business, but he has always operated in- dependently of underworld abor- tion rings. He has operated from plush suites of offices in Miami and New York, often handling cases referred to him by respected colleagues and public officials He has aborted the poor for free and milked the rich for thousands who needed a_ favor. in fees. SPENT LARGE SUMS This will be especially impor- tant between now and Dec. 20, when speculation or risky en- terprises of any kind could prove disastrous, A good period, beginning on Dec. 21, however, will continue into mid-Febru- ary, when rewards for previous efforts should prove highly grat- ifying. Next. good cycles for monetary interests: The entire month of June (if you avoid extravagance), next August and September; for job and-or busi- ness matters: The latter half of April, mid-May, July and Sep- tember. Domestic and social interests will be under auspicious influ- ences for most of the 12 months ahead, but do try to avoid friction in close circles "Sure, I made a lot of money --I was worth $150,000 to $200,- 000 when they first arrested me -- but a lot of it went on my patients, on graft, on my legal costs, and more than once I put some deserving young person through school." For 38 years, he has been Dr. X -- the pseudonym under which his book, The Abortion- ist, was published in 1962. "What the hell am I afraid of?" he said last May, "'I can't get a job as a doctor, I'm an} outcast -- why not drop the | mask?" | He currently is writing a) book, Man's Inhumanity to Woman, which at least one ma-| jor publisher is interested in. Has he stopped performing) abortions? | | "Yes. I can help more this| | way. | "But I'm not ashamed of} anything I've done," concluded | Dr. Rappaport, who considers | his convictions as "a mark of pride." opis # Canadian Port ONDON WINERY LIMITED he'll set out on the lecture cir- during early March and early June. Best cycles for romance: The (an all-around good period for all Virgoans!), April, May and August; February and the weeks be- tween late May and early Sep- tember. The first six months of 1967 profitable to creative workers, with March month. latter half of December best for travel: Next should prove especially an outstanding $$ $$ DOLLARS ON Bata SUPREME 88's MEN'S DESSERT BOOTS 5.88 MEN'S DRESS SHOES 6.88 NURSES' OXFORDS 4.88 CHILDREN'S CASUALS 88 Ledies' STACKED HEELS 88 Bata SHOE STORE kik Oshowe Shi Centre end 15 a i 7 something on the second, While you are making your repeat visits, establish new con- tacts, too. Leave no shop door unopened, for example, since many of the stores in your area hunt on the go instead of at a standstill by reminding yourself daily that many tenacious, per- severing students will get part- time work this year. It might as well be you. ALL PURCHASES ee. Only AND DOWNTOWN SIMCOE STREET Yrs a neal thull ! When you lwe at The All NEW... PRINCESS ANN -- APARTMENTS 1221 Simcoe St. N: Here in The Princess Anne one can and does appreciate living in true comfort. All apartments are designed to -- give the maximum of beauty and convenience one expects of truly fine accommodation. Our tenants are always our first consideration and we have endeavored to provide the finest facilities, including: HEATED INDOOR POOL, SAUNA STEAM BATH, SHELTERED SUNDECK WITH ~ SURROUNDING FLOWER BOXES, F.M. MUSIC, CONTROLLED ENTRANCE BY INTERCOM ENGLISH DECOR LOBBY, HIGH SPEED ELEVATORS, PRESSURIZED CORRIDORS WITH CUSTOM CRAFTED CARPETING, PAID UTILITIES, SPACIOUS LIVING QUARTERS WITH HUGE BALCONIES. RENTAL OFFICE OPEN DAILY 1221 SIMCOE ST. N. 2 P.M. to 9 P.M. PHONE 725-9934

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