Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Sep 1967, p. 14

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14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdoy, September 14, 1967 CIFT OF PEARLS AN OLD MUSLIM legend has it that pearls -- those luscious gems of the sea-- are the tears of remorse shed by Eve after the "fall" and that therefore pearls stand for tears, But the modern woman dis- agrees. To her the gift of pearls is a delightful and flattering expression of the beauty and joy of a man's love. The pin, a necessity of every woman's ward- robe, is in textured gold and feathers out from one pearl accented by three dia monds. The ring is delicate- ly textured gold cups two pearls and two brilliant dia- monds and, fashions, the double strand of rounds illustrated are held securely 'round her j|and French editions of the book) wrist by a sapphire clasp with a diamond center. --By Tracy Adrian {established in 1960 for students) | | | CHILD GUIDANCE Prepares Child By GARRY C. MYERS, PhD , word method often called the} look-and-say method. The pri-! mer may have fewer than half} a hundred different words used) over and over again. The first) reader may have no more than! two. or three hundred different} words. In recent years, this! @. Our boy, Most children in the: United/times, beeng bringing little| States are taught to read by the|things home in his pocket after| he has been playing with them| at a friend's house. What! should we do? | When you see him with| such go with him to the friend's house and have him return it. Be vigilant in order to appre-| with a terry towel before wash- thend his taking such things or] ing crystal or delicate china Teaching Sounds, Letters For Grade | four, has, at) | | of Communism Act Arrest, Spies, Intrique Confine By Ann Hellmuth Canadian Press Staff Writer Five years ago British-born Helen Joseph became the first person in South Africa to be placed under house arrest. She is still confined to her tiny home in suburban Johannesburg but she hopes her days of loneliness and tension are numbered. On Oct. 13 the original five-year house arrest order served on her by South Afri- can security police is sched- uled to expire. . If it is not renewed, Mrs. Joseph will be free for the first time in five years to have friends visit her at home and to leave her house in the evenings, on weekends and on holidays. In letters to friends in Can- ada she says she fears the order may be renewed and that she will have to face another five years of isola- tion. 'Mrs. Joseph was never = | charged or tried. She was banned under the Suppression which permits the government to MAKE BOOK PROJECT MONCTON (CP)--The New Brunswick Home Economics} Association has published aj French edition of their book of for bare-arm |New Brunswick recipes as a || Helen Joseph In South Africa restrict the activities of per- sons without court charges. About 700 persons have been banned under the act and the list grows steadily. The restrictions, usually effective for five years, range from confinement within a magisterial district to 24- hour-a-day house arrest. The savageness of restric- tions imposed on Mrs, Joseph in 1962 shocked many throughout the world. WATCHED BY POLICE The terms of the order were harsh and explicit. Mrs. Joseph could not leave her home in the evenings, on weekends and on holidays. She was not allowed to receive visitors, communicate with another banned person, leave the magisterial district of Johannesburg, attend gath- erings of more than three people or have anything she wrote or said published. To add to her problems she was also ordered to report to the police every lunch hour from Monday to Saturday. Constant checks by security police 'ensured Mrs. Joseph obeyed the orders. Her neighbors shunned her and some of them even pro- vided 'their children with bin- oculars so her movements could be checked and report- ed to the police. At no time of the day or night, was she safe from the prying eyes of police and vol- unteer spies. She would wake in the night to find policemen standing outside her windows shining flashlights into her bedroom. OBJECT OF ABUSE | As she lived alone, the prohlems of isolation were immense. She had to reorgan- ize her life to ensure that dur- ing her hours of confinement she would never need to leave her home for eyen a pack of cigarettes. Hours of confinement are 6:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. week- days and 2:30 p.m. Saturday to 6:30 a.m, Monday. She must spend all holidays at home alone. On weekends the curious would drive slowly past her single-storey home, some shoutin g abuse, others encouragement if they spot ted her working in her gar- den, But apart from the threat- ening phone calls and obscene letters there were hundreds of messages of sym- pathy from all parts of the world, particularly Canada and the United States. Once she forgot to report to the police and was arrested and given a 12-month sen- tence. The bulk of the sen- tence was suspended but she did spend a weekend in prison. During the months of har- assment and loneliness Mrs. Joseph found time to write a book on her experiences. She was afraid the manuscript centennial project. Proceeds! from the sale of the English} are being used to finance the! association's scholarship fund,| entering third-year studies in a course leading to a bachelor of; science degree in home eco-! nomics. THE CAREER SCHOOL OF HAIRDRESSING Day and Evening Classes Are pleased to announce the opening of a New Branch Location. in OSHAWA at:-- 145 KING ST. WEST PHONE 576-3558 pointments, Models are welcome. @ GOVERNMENT LICENSED @ we are now taking ap- 4 would be discovered by secu- rity police during their fre- quent raids, so she hid it with friends until it was finally smuggled out of the country. CAN'T OWN COPY Tomorrow's Sun was published last year but she cannot own a copy of the book as it is banned in South Africa. One of the biggest blows during her five years of house arrest came in 1966 when the government served her with yet another restriction order. This prevented her from working in a building which housed a trade union office. This meant she had to give up her job as secretary of the Transvaal Clothing Industry Medical Aid Society which had its offices in the same building as a trade union. For months she was out of work. No employer wanted to take the risk of government censure by giving her a job. The holder of an honors BA degree in English from Lon- don University and a_post- graduate diploma in social studies from Johannesburg's University of the Witwaters- rand, she now works as & sales girl in a city book shop. Born in Sussex, England Mrs. Joseph went to South Africa in 1931 and during the war became involved in a number of social welfare schemes. Horrified by the plight of the country's non white population she joined the Labor party and later helped td form the multi-ra- cial Congress of Democrats. CHARGED WITH TREASON In 1956 she was arrested with 155 others and charged with high treason, a capital offence in South Africa, The trial lasted four years and Mrs, Joseph was held in prigon for five months during the state of emergency declared after the 1960 Sharpeville massacre. During the trial Mrs. Joseph's hair turned grey and she said afterwards: "Noth- ing holds any fear for me any more--not after being on trial for high treason." Shortly before her house arrest order, Mrs, Joseph tra- velled 7,000 miles through South Africa on a mission for the Human Rights Welfare For all your drapery needs see Botty Haydl INTERIOR DECORATOR 15 King Street East CUSTOM MADE DRAPES Phone 725-2686 Committee. She traced. Afri- cans banished from their homes in the reserves because of their opposition to the Bantu Authorities Act. When she published details of the plight of the Africans, often homeless, without clothes, food or any means of HELD FISH-IN NARBONNE, France (AP)... Fishermen at this western Med. iterranean port dumped 25 tons" of sardines into the sea rather than sell them at an unsatis. , factory .price. But first gave to charity all of their catch that could be used in hospitals and public institutions. --__ support, forced to eke out a living in banished areas, Mrs. Joseph knew the South Afri- can government would not be long in seeking some means to silence her. Once asked why she remains in South Africa, Mrs. Joseph, a tall, woman, said: "I know I must remain here. And when the time comes ... and I know it will come ... when this country is free, I want be Bon here, to be part of it, to ksow I have earned my place in a | | | | i | well-dressed | By Calling 576-1411 before buying or selling. T obligation to you. Phone 376-1411 For appraisals of your property end i © serve your real estate needs and without Pleose call J. J. WILKINSON tt, 100 King St. E. Miss Elizabeth Monchesky, daughter of Mrs. Ted Monchesky, Oshawa and the late Mr. Monchesky and John Muha, son of Mr. ond Mrs, Andrew Muha of Oshawa, were married Saturday, August 26th et the Holy Cross Church, Following a Bermuda honeymoon they now reside at 1140 Mary Street North. ig iS WIFE PRESERVER Lining the sink or dishpan 4 eae io eee steeroemn formisting him effectively when! guards against chips, scratches, ' with some emphasis on letters |¢ 1 bout to do so. breakage. a and sounds making up words. No matter by what method) your child will be taught at] school to learn to read, there) are some things you parents! might safely and usefully do) with him at home. | } Before or after your child/ ) enters Grade 1 call to his atten-/ tion a few signs on the street or in stores or on food packages. | Then, a good exercise for him at home is the following: Make a few large placards with the names of familiar pieces of furniture about the house. Print large and plainly the name on each placard. Then lay this placard on the piece of furniture it names, or FOR THE FINEST 74 CELINA STREET "Free Customer Parking While Shopping et Our Store" Custom and Ready Made DRAPES in the latest Shades ond fobrics . . . 90@ . « Mé& Dry Goods & Draperies EXPERTLY INSTALLED DRAPERY TRACKS 723-7827 attach it thereto. Have only two -- KING WEST GARDEN @ Landscope Contractors @ Nursery Stock @ Patios Built 843 KING ST. W. CENTRE (Prop. Herb Lamers) @ Garden Maintenance @ Designing @ Fertilizer © For All Your Garden Supplies 728-9429 or three of these placards exposed at first. Add others gradually. EAGER TO LEARN Call to your child's attention these placards. He will be eager to learn them. Given sev- eral of these placards later, he will like to attach them to the appropriate objects. 1 doubt whether this proce- dure should continue for many days or weeks. But it should help the youngster master a few familiar words and thus get the hang of reading. It will equip him with a few words he can read. Nor could this exer- cise do him harm, if at school he begins there by breaking familiar words into letters and sounds or by building words from letters "and sounds. It should be useful to him no mat- ter how he is taught to read at school. Here is another good home exercise for the child before or after entering the first grade: Draw or find goups of pic- tures cut from old magazines all of which begin with the same letter and sound, -- bex, bag, boy; can, coat, cow, car; pan, pen, pig, pin. Show him these pictures in each group and have him say their name. He might like to name others which begin with the same sound. At first, present only the pic- tures in each group. Later print under each picture its name. As he says the name of each pic: ture in the group, call to his attention its name under it. After. some practice call to his attention the letter (consant which begins each word of each group. Warning: Don't say this beginning sound separately. Just say the whole word. About the worst thing we could do would be to say buh for b, kuh for ¢ or puh for p. BNJOY THE BEST OF AUTUMN An unhurried Fall vacation » Golf * at your door « All weather tennis courts « Shuffleboard » Magnifi- cent autumn scenery « Relief from hay fever « Modern comfortable ac- comodation « Wonderful meals « Special golf week rates « Open all year fannia HOTEL Kingsway P.0., Lake of Bays ' regular price. ' GIGANTIC SALE OF Gerhard Heintzman Mahogany PIANOS Act now -- don't miss these savings ! SALE STARTS 9 A.M. THIS THURSDAY-FRIDAY & SATURDAY Open till 9 P.M. Thurs. & Fri., Sat. till 6 P.M. 79 SIMCOE ST. N.. Ontario, Tel. 705-635-2221 'aeemmanniainniies 4 We're bulging at the seams with MAHOGANY Pianos and we need the space -- they must be sold immediately. 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A TransAir D¢ about 40 territoria their families and new territorial car A second aircraft port government fi essentials, Commissioner § son, 44, one-tim labor leader and | in the territorial p says his staff shou work Tuesday mor The move fulf Development Min January promise territorial govern in the North by fre It also indicates prepared to foll some of the man dations of the adv sion on the develo ernment in the ter Mr. Laing, who commission's advi Yellowknife as t capital, has said over more and n bility from federa' hands as the terri ment shows an ab it. For now, the t ernment will conc Mackenzie district ern part of the te: ing the Arctic under Ottawa-bas civil servants. US. Cun Most Fe KANSAS Cr currency is the feited in the ¥ secret service a International A: Police Chiefs Tue Robert Snow s ing operators, ar duplicating credit tickets, trave stocks and bond licences, coin and case, food-ma stamps. "With a came knowledge and a just about anybor a counterfeiter," About 3,000 la officials are atte day conference. Leonard G. Li of the Hamilton, expected to bec Canadian electec the organization first vice-preside: Other Canadia been president o' tion are D. Colb Toronto, in 1944~ J. Dickson, als who was presid Both are decease Many Stu Deprived TORONTO Smith, New Der candidate for Di Oct. 17 provinciz Tuesday night will be deprived cause of the "Election law voter must be re her poll on the issued," he said "The writs ha as the students f locations a school. They wil istered at their | but voting day v university locati GETA CHAI e Does dozen chores. e Perfectly bi handling. Rugged die ' up 10 harde Get a free den STAN'S §$ & REN 223 KING OSHAW, TeL:

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