Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Sep 1966, p. 12

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2 ats PRS CEE YN IK ELC NEILL CIT EP RMN PM Mig Cae BGR ore erg he Gey prem oee rep NE A A lack of time often problems between the wife and child, she said, The home is the place for bed and - breakfast and instead of school dropouts, there are "home dropouts," In business Tuesday, Harry Wilson of Palermo was elected president of the Guelph- -|area's organization. Time Is Becoming Basic Commodity GUELPH (CP) -- Women at- tome * Federated Women's Ins of Ontario convention at the University of Guelph Fagen lb told to. use all convenient time - sa' 12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, September 22, 1966 Ma ANN LANDERS Father Has Earned . His Right To Travel Russian Efficiency Means Accomplishing Impossible at a time, together with all the formidable paper chores con- nected with each, yet never misses a detail or loses her good humor. A broadly similar situation obtains at the visa control of- Ontario agricul- fice, where foreigners register/ture department, told about 250 and where both they and Rus-|women attending the meeting sians have to be cleared for'that time is the basic place where foreigners go for permission to travel within the Soviet Union, __ HANDLES PASSPORTS In the business sectlag of the building, passports aré stacked at random on windowsills and The girls behind the counter|desks. You wonder whether seem literally swamped with|their owners will ever see them work, Yet they manage, incred-| again. ibly, to it done--and with| The handsome, blonde woman comm ble dispatch. of about 40 who deals with for- Every transaction involves ajeigners is besieged by appli- frightening amount of paper|cants of various kinds who come work, done on the spot by the|into her tiny office from two girl concerned. Papers fly back! different doorways. She is also and forth from one teller to an-| besieged by unending telephone other. Each desk is carpeted|calls, and by all manner of with documents of various de-|special problems, interruptions, scriptions, all in different stages|appeals, pleas and arguments, of processing. Yet she maintains her equilib- The customers, to a man,| rium, and even her civility, and wear @ look of apprehension, as| tle anxious lineup outside her though they might never see| door steadily dwindles, daylight again. Some actually) Such scenes are also enacted look as though they have been|at public offices throughout sitting or standing in the bank| Moscow. for years, though appearances| Russi By JOHN BEST MOSCOW (CP)--Efficiency: in the Soviet Union has a quality all its own. i pated -- a ig 4 ey! residents here are constantly amazed at the agility and resourcefulness of various civil servants trying to do a job under adverse | circumstances. foreign trade bank where m foreigners deal, Anytime you walk in there, you see a great amo: crowd of people on the floor, represen most of the races and a many of the nationalities under the sun. find myself dreaming about him four times a week. in my| ferme dreams I am very relaxed with Ron (pretend name) and he is very relaxed with me. When I see Ron in person I can't help but be real friendly which surprises him a little, He doesn't realize that I have got- way: "I've worked my guts)ten to know him quite college. Now my job is} Don't tell me I'm wacky, Just and I'm going to have &5/tell me how I can get Ron to as I can in the years|ask me out.--Night Romance left to me." Dear Night: One-way dream- an wants to take a long|ing doesn't do much for a re- maybe two months. His/jationship. Now if you could get too frail to travel, but} Ron to dream about you, that is encouraging him to g0/ would help. and enjoy himself. She wants to} One disadvantage of being a stay one month with one daugh-|gir) is that you have to wait ter, then one month with another| until a fellow asks you out. So daughter. don't crowd him, honey, Re- The children are up in arms,!member there is strength in- They say their father is a self-| difference. ish old man, that he sould stay at home with his wife and forget about hold it up in his second d the way to use it is im- portant," Miss McKercher said. "Don't apologize for the short- PH, 723-4611 cuts you take." pat SPECIAL! LADIES' Dear Ann Landers; Our won- derful 24-year-old son returned from 15 months overseas duty to find his wife six months are used to confu- 'hat do you say?--Interested rty Dear Party: So he could work but he won't? Well, a 75-year-old man who has put 11 kids through 't have to work college shoul if he doesn't want to, I think those 11 college grad- wates ought to pitch in and make a gift of the trip to their dad. And welcome mother into their homes. Mother sounds like a grand son and I hope he writes her et and lots of postcards from along the way. And if he goes jots abroad I hope he gets to Greece. It's the greatest. Dear Ann Landers; I'm a 15- year-old girl who is very much attracted to a boy who is 17. The funny part of it is, I don't know this boy very well but I pregnant. write to him, figuring that when he came home he would throw her out and that would be the end of it. Well, he for- gave her and now they are moving to another city "to start over." Am I wrong to feel that our son has forsaken his father and me and rejected his religious training as well as his respect for decency? -- Heartbroken Mother Dear Mother: I certainly do not condone the woman's be- havior, but I admire your son's forgiving heart. You deserve credit for raising a remarkably charitable young man. I wish them well--- and I wish you could. THE STARS SAY Friday should be an_ ex- tremely pleasant day, Espe- cially favored are; romance, travel, outdoor activities, social interests and personal relation- ships generally, There's also in- dication of some good news of an wnexpected visitor from afar. FOR THE BIRTHDAY ¥ tomorrow is your birthday, your horoscope indicates that, as of now, pressures of the past =--in both your personal and business life--should feel, more encouraged than you have in some time to expand your inter- ests. This you can do, if you operate conservatively, Next month will be excellent for career projects, with further boosts promised in January, April, June and August of next _ Regarding finances; Look good breaks between late November and mid-February; also in June, August and Sep- tember of 1967. It will be important, to avoid extrava- gance or risky speculation -- especially during the coming October. Those who have marriage in mind will find late December Mothers - To - Be Ask For Better Designed Steering LONDON (AP)--An official of a society for mothers-to-be says automobile manufactur- ers should design cars with pregnant drivers in mind. "I think the manufacturers should do something about the low position of steering wheels in most modern cars," says Mrs, Stella Malhotra, 38. Mrs. Malhotra is secretary of her local branch of the As- sociation for the Improvement of Maternity Services. The national secretary of the association, Mrs. Sonia Willington agrees, saying "The woman of today must drive the family car--expect- ant or not. There are children to take to school, shopping to be done and scores of other jobs. Perhaps the answer is adjustable steering wheels." Officials of motoring organ- izations and those concerned with accident prevention ap- plied the brake to the whole idea of pregnant women driv- ing cars. A spokesman for propitious; also April, May or August. If you avoid a tendency to be dictatorial in close circles in early March and (or) early June, you should find both do- mestic and social interests highly enjoyable during the year ahead A child born on this day will be versatile and highly prin- cipled, but may allow unpleas- ant experiences to embitter him. HOUSEHOLD HINT For a new taste, use hickory- flavored catsup when mixing hamburger and meat loaves. the Royal Society for the Pre- vention of Accidents said: | "It would be unwise for a lady in that condition to drive at all." | An automobile association | spokesman commented: - | "I believe doctors would ad- | vise against pregnant women driving cars."' Said a spokesman for the Royal Automobile Club: "Don't let them drive." | Mrs, Willington had the last | word: "Rot! Pregnant women We knew about it but didn't THREE MEMBERS of a hospital auxiliary from Prince Edward Island pose in Ottawa Tuesday after presenting their Centennial pageant, shown last fall in the west and now on a tour By MARILYN ARGUE OTTAWA (CP) -- Actors say stardom results from being in the right place at the right time. For a group of Prince Ed- ward Island women now tour- ing Ontario in a historical pag- eant they produced and wrote themselves, the right place was Charlottetown and the right time was 1964, the island's cen- tennial. The group, members of a hos- eration in costumes authentic to the year their province or terri- tory joined the country. The P.E.I. centennial commit- tee footed the $5,000 cost of gowns custom-fitted by a Tor- onto theatrical costumer. The show-- it is in Toronto, Ont, today -- was a hit at centennial banquets and festi- Vals in P.E.I. and at one per- formance was spotted by mem- bers of the national centennial committee. They sponsored a western tour iast fall and the current Ontario tour and ar- ranged a two-week engagement next summer. at Expo 67 in Montreal. SUBJECT IS NEW "I think they were interested because it's a subject which hadn't been touched before," says Mrs. Frank MacKinnon, A grey-haired green - eyed Dub- liner who came to Canada at 16, she plays P.E.I.'s Mrs. John Hamilton Gray in the show. "Lots of research has been done on the Fathers of Confed- eration, but little is known about their wives." The women spent two years researching the pageant, using local libraries and the Dominion i must drive cars," and provincial archives for in- .|Etienne Cartier. > in Ontario, and destined for a two-week engagement at Expo 67 next year in Mont- real, Mrs. Charles Bentley (left) plays Mrs. Georges E. Cartier, in an 1867 bati gown; Mrs. Tom DuBois, PE] Centennial Pageant Presents Wives Of Confederation Fathers formation on their subjects, and pictures of dresses, hair styles and period accessories. The group is a_ seasoned troupe now, to the point of cas- ually changing into costumes before: milling cameramen shooting backstage footage for a documentary on the show. "T've worn this dress more than any party dress I've ever owned,"' says Mrs. Charles F. Bently, a fragile blue - eyed blonde who plays Mrs, George Chale bane 2 eee eta A andi hooped into her scarlet velvet and white satin 1867 ball gown about 50 times from Newfound- land to British Columbia. GOWN REFLECTS UNION Mrs. Tom D. DeBlois, who models a white satin and lace wedding dress as the second Mrs, John A. Macdonald, says that besides giving the tradi- tional fashion show finale, her gown symbolizes the marriage of the provinces. Sir John A. took his second bride the Janu- ary before the Confederation conference, "We think we're lucky he didn't wait till 1868 to be mar- ried," Mrs. DeBlois says. The two youngest members of the company are Anne Irwin, 16, playing Miss Charlottetown Confederation Conference, and Barbara Moreside, 17, a blonde 1966 majorette. Ontario IODE chapters are handling tickets and publicity for the Maritimers as a pre- centennial project. portrays Mrs. John A, Mac- donald in an 1867 wedding dress; and Mrs, J. H, Shaw portrays Mrs, George Brown, in an 1867 yachting suit, ---€CP Wirephoto Class Is Barrier To Psychiatric Aid OTTAWA (CP) -- Psychia- trists don't talk the same lan- guage as their lower - class patients, says a Winnipeg so- ciologist. And therapists are sometimes hindered in their attempts to help these patients because of disgust or impatience with lower-class attitudes. Writing in Canadian Nurse, Kenneth Davidson, a professor at United College, says lower- class patients do not seek psychiatric aid soon enough and tend to stay in hospital longer with less benefit. Usa auatacs aac GUoeS as showing that many therapists were repelled by the crude, vul- gar language and outbursts of violence displayed by lower- class patients. "They complained about the short attention span, the stupid- ity and the dullness of these patients." As a result there was no an Amavizan stude Bn AMASMCan Susy in this situation can be mis- leading. : There are no organized queues. If you're not used to pushing and shoving, you may find that a later arrival gets sion; with them it's a way of life, and they have long since learned to live with it, Foreigners tend to agonize over it. But that doesn't stop them from acquiring respect waited on ahead of you. Customers argue with the girls, and sometimes the girls argue among themselves, But somehow they keep that fluid, faceless non-lineup of nervous | people moving, There's one girl there -- a blonde of perhaps about 35-- who must rank among the smoothest human machines that communism or any other system ever turned out. She handles two or three customers reality situation of the lower classes is threatening, harsh and in many ways hopeless," Making the mental hospital a Pleasant middle-class situation might not be in the best inter- ests of the lower-class patient, Prof. Davidson says, "It may engender attitudes of retreat and dependence. More- ever, to force middle-class de- corum would be to increase the burden of guilt that psychiatrists for those who bring order out of the confusion--who daily ac- complish the impossible. DOLLARS ON Bata SUPREME 88's MEN'S DESSERT BOOTS MEN'S DRESS SHOES 6.88 are trying to remove." Prof. Davidson says mental | health treatment should be re-| lated to the patient's social background. je mtneeta 2! 5 Su0UIG UE | givén to ways in which the pa-| tient can understand and solve | the realities that frustrated him | in his environment." | Then, on discharge, he would | be able "to deal more effec- tively with the problems he will have to face as a result of his lower-class position," ' NURSES' OXFORDS 4.8 CHILDREN'S CASUALS 3.88 Ledies' STACKED HEBLS ik 5.58 | Bata | SHOE STORE kkk Oshewe Sho Centre and 15 Simeoe St, Nerth WINTER COATS Fur Trim and Plain Collars Well Known Makers Suede Fur Fabric -- Plain Simotta -- Ski Jackets 10 PER CENT DISCOUNT Off Regular Price Some Coats Reduced Up To 30% Off OFFER GOOD ONLY UNTIL OCTOBER 15th, 1966 Veoshitt's 33 KING EAST LADIES' WEAR OSHAWA @ Open All Day Wedne: @ Fridoy Nights till 9 oa ibe ata a rapport between patient and therapist, reducing the effec- tiveness of treatment. Another study showed. that lower-class persons were slow to recognize signs of mental ill- ness, The disease thus became firmly entrenched before treat- ment was undertaken, requiring a longer time to effect a cure. Some: lower - class patients were forced to remain in hos- pital because their families didn't want them back. They could not be released when par- tially cured because they could not afford private psychiatric help. Other patients didn't want to leave hospital because "the The show opened in Ottawa Monday night and moved to Picton Tuesday, Peterborough, Wednesday. The rest of the itineary after Toronto: Hamil- ton, Sept. 23; Niagara Falls, Sept. 26; 'London, Sept. 27; Chatham, Sept. 28, Windsor, Sept. 29. Patricia. Juch PIANO CLASSICAL-POPULAR-THEORY Ssuawa™' DIAL 725-4587 OSHAWA 2nd. Annwersary HEIDI MODERN HAIR STYLING 367 WILSON RD. 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