l Page 2.. The Herald; Monday, January 17, 1963. = = Published: cvery’ ‘weekday at Mio ‘Katurn ‘Strid, "Terrace, » B. Cc. “nied Sterling. ‘Publishers. Ltd. malt. Registra eg Bo _ averting Sales: : o Be _ . Nick Walton. ray "sports: Staff Writer Phetegraster: mo ee Keith Alford. “Don Schafter’ t hos Receptidn-Clissified:. ope Carolyn Gibson wT " Circulation: | . Marla Taylor NOTICE OF ‘COPYRIGHT The Heraldretalns full, complete and sole copyright . Inany advertisament produced and-or any editorial: or photographic content published in the Herald. Reproduction Is not permitted without the written parmission of the Publisher. Crime increases VANCOUVER (CP) — Twice as rmany* ‘ibanks and firkancial institutions in Vancouvér wetehéld upllast year than in 1981 and beefed-up tecurity and ‘crime prevention‘ "programs are partly to ‘blame; ‘says police chitef Bob Stewart: te bide Eo “J don’t mind admitting! that odererbene: Bide effects of increased security for bank tellers: is att rIntifease: In. hold. ups,” says Stewart. : : Police figures show that by the end of Novernber, i982, 166 banks and financial institutions: had been held UP, . ‘nore than double the 1981 figure of 80. (‘Bank tellers are holding less money atthe wicket and so the crook is now having te hit four or five institutions'to get ag much cash he used to get at one bank," says Stewart: “By hitting so many places to make it worthwhile the thief ; is-increasing his chances of getting caught.’” - Robbers runa greater chance of getting caught because they often: repeat the offence over a short period of time — ~ using an caver on the major part of the outside of the etimes several times in one day. Thati increases tension ald often leads: to silly mistakes, he says.. . ut the other side of the coin. is that more ‘tellers: are at and an armed AUBSG? Goi Ge UR Ay jumpy by the Af e he holds up bis third or.fourth bank of the day. Tellers aré trained to hand’ over the money and do °¢ ing to that would annoy the robber,"” says Stewart. “As ta be as they stick, to those” instructions. they should be - olay. ” Aod the figures bear out Stewart’ ‘8 opinion: Despite the - save half the energy used in a conventional house, "iB . said. “They. offer: more privacy than a conventional house-- huge increase in armed holdups no tellers were shot in Vancouver last year... Be rise in other kinds of robberies. also. has: police. con- ed y Dee. 1, last year, theie stood. al 2,191 — 40 per cent - mbre than the Dec, 1,.1961-total of. 1565, =... Btewart says it's difficult to accurately account for the intrease but he identifies a couple of major factors... f’Our climate attracts ‘driffers and that must effect ihe bery figures, And we also get our fair share of criminals o come here because rtheys ayy: wanted. ‘in other jurisdictions. ‘Time and time again’ we tind people we pick up are . wanted across the’ country, on similar offences.;” ‘Warrants’ issued. elsewhere sanction a return of the ; sijspect ¢ only if he’s picked within a relatively short distance of where the crime was conbhitted. Stewsft days crooks get to how far the warrant stretches and travel farther to ™ being sent back if inex are caught. Gh ae sonspiracy revealed EDMONTON (CP) — The elderly must become pflitically active to change discriminatory attitudes toward - olf people, say advocates in. the field of aging. - There's a conspiracy against people who are growing ; ' old in our society and that’s why we need political action,” | said Don Aitken, a board member of the Alberta Council on Aging. The political ‘action committee of the Alberta Geron-. tological Nurges Association recently sponsored a panel _cmeeting to discuss probleme older péople encounter and "offered suggestions on how the political ; process could be: - weed to overcome some obstacles, said, “They are subject to usury and are victims of crime not!” only by .con men,.: burglars, muggers, : thieves and timized by their own families...” - - Helena Reeves, a volunteer at the Society for the | and Sem!-Retired, said society often does not recognize that businessmen, but also by society, and. often they’ re "] older people are capable of Making meaningful con- | “tributions to the community. - “Try not to see older people as ceramic figures = = try to see older people ax people,” she sald. ‘Don't let them slip. ‘into the frailties group too soon — we must stimulate people. to do as much as they can for as long as. they can.” ; Diana Melntyre, executive director of the Edmonton and ‘Rural Auxiliary Hospital Districi 24, said since women live eight years longer than men on the average, they face many : of the problems of older people. mo “The picture of older women in Canadian society is nat a pleasant picture," she sald, “Often, this: (person. ds Poor, _ Widowed, usually alone.” Mcintyre said the “tittle old lady" Slereotype of older” women means their concerhs‘are often net taken seriously — by politicians, Othérs are afraid to complain or unsure how. . to make a complaint. Such issues as‘ pension reform, economic. security and : medical eare critically need to be examined by govern- “ment, she said; “T thik we need action loensure thal what's happening to older women in our soclety today doesn't happen . tomorrow. ar . i _ “LONDON AP), neo i 0k. Bl \_heendubbed Superdad by the British news media and has “Seniors need protection from alserimination,”” Aitken . a ne wo -with 20 kids? \ it isn'teagy,! edimlta John fended off critics of bis: mate supported, prolif c existence n.” Joined ‘an: vearller. miéirrigge { to one-ot } byl an an extre: chil i They all Canadian) tomove Knight's-wite ¢ and thelr to children. into: a. nodern house in Doublebois. ..: wey » That left: Mrs, , Martines | ‘and the’ reat af the family is a, —-9301NAN UNUSUALLY CANDID MOOD, THE: IZ INDEED A CROCK AND THAT THE PEOPLE SHOULD BLOW IT To SMITHEREENS: MINISTER A ‘AGREED THAT. THE STEM But, IN THE MEANTIME, HE was STILLINC CHARGE. BACK TO. you KNOWLTON.” " EDMONTON (CP) — Energy efficiency and privacy ‘are’ ; : only two.of the advantages of earth-sheltered housing, says’ S.K.. Boga. who teaches a course on the subject a vat. the. University of ‘Alberta. ; ‘ Basically, earth-sheltered houses are built underground, walls and over the roof. ‘Boga, chief civil en for Syncrude. Canada Lid, n became in ted... in prinsh d ausing while [a top aie firm 5 sit oy in yy id structures.” such ‘Houses, used i in China for more » than ‘2,000 years, . . have recently been accepted. for the. first time in, North America in the state of Minnesoti, he said, | “These ‘Kinds of houses are.very energy efficient’ and can, and also reduce noise. Acoustically they’ re one of the pe beat - types af houses you could have.”*’ “T didn't want an ordinary) home, something that you ‘find » in books:’” Maduke _ said he would have; 10, reservations aboitt... "building another similar house.° ~~ *. “2 feel. excellent about it. and have. had no , maser problems,” he said. OTTAWA (CP) _ Hugh " MacLennan; father cof. the ; Canadian novel, is seen as an author with an international — _ Message for all men, for all time, in a new documentary: to - '- be broadcast.on CBC television Wednesday... -For example, the theme, of his most famous work, Two : *- Solitudes, can be easily expanded to the world stage.. In his words: “If two old cultures like the French and the English can’t work together within a single national home , - without destroying each other, what chance have all the | - others got in what has threatened to became a aingle-world ; society?” The hour-long CBC: TV National Film Board: co- production on the 75-year-old author's life and work shows _ him new in retirement at North Hatley, que., quietly. ad: ; mitting he may yet write one more book, - _. But he adds — with-a characteristic wry smile — he may have reached his age of “anecdotage.”. "MacLennan, winner of five. Governor General awards for literature, came ‘to prominence with’ his’. 1941, “book Solitudes in -1945.- had difficulty finding a publisher. Interested in Canede and things Canadian. °. He had to atart by writing about Consida, aid bo; ‘he anys, Halifax became the real hero of his first book; about the explosion that rocked and nearly destroyed thet city when - rhe : VANCOUVER (CP) ~. Catholic charities and community services in. the Vancouver area will not take any, more - money-from the United Way because they say anotlier recipient of United Way funds appears to support abortion. -. » Catholic organizations won't accept United Way funding. . in- 1063 because the Planned:Parenthood organization also. ” receives funding from the agency, said Archbishop James F: Carney in a letter read to church congregations Sunday. Planned Parenthood, which ‘provides birth - control counsélling, was recently granted membership ‘in- the agency and is supposed to receive funding from the recently completed 1962 ‘United Way campaign. - In the letter, which went out’ all members of the Areh- diocese: of Vancouver, Catney stated that. the Catholle . “ organizations belleve that Planned Parénthood “supports - *- ankd promotes the use of the so-called emergency measures ‘ When he began to write, Canadian yeaders “depended on English and American authors, and his New York agent. Earth-sheltered housing studied An earth-sheltered school being ‘built. in Cooking. Lake, ~ Alta.; 30 kilometres southeast of Edmonton, will use its roof : ‘as a playgéound. | Dan Malone, | director’ of facilities and technology for the ’. Sherwood Park Catholic School: Board, ‘said the school, . lt “ - situated between two hills, will have two. advantages Over nd are appearing in the Journal's, Jan. 18 issue, ae _.Conventional schools. , Studies show it will use only! half a5 much’ energy and land. - js saved for other uses, Burk as the playground, he said. pai eprriyepricace a are more durable talinn be houses are: also more durable and “should last forever, not 60 or. 80 years like a conventional. ‘house, " he said, The houses also have advantages in. areas with extreme . * climatic conditions. “These homes would be ideal to protect people from the- elements, such as éxcessive ‘heal or- strong: winds," Boga said: "They're good in colder climates too because the | ‘earth banks heat in the summer making i it available for use in the winter.” ; , Financially there is little difference between bisitding an earth-sheltered house:and: a conventipnal. one, he added, “What: ‘you'd really be saving: on: ‘in ‘an:earth-sheltered ' house are exterior. maintenance ¢ costs hecauiee of the, earth ; cover. " tr two ‘warships blew up in the harbor in: “December, 1917. ' The second novel, about English’ and French cultures trying to live together in Quebec; brought him fame. at first. But in.the 1960s, with the rise of nationalism in Quebec, he 7 -was the subject of viclent protests. aniong young French- Canadian radicals who saw him as a defender of English " ‘culture. That is past. ‘His latest: — ‘ scending national boundaries? “The film, written and directed by Robert ‘Dunean: viviay’ - portrays young MacLennan’s Scottish Presbyterian, home _ in.Cape Breton, his sojourn’ at Oxford University as a - Rhodes Scholar and hia return to Canada at ale 2, in a vain * ‘ Barometer. Rising. and. galned- national fame with Tah . h for & bob... He’ iaught Latin and Greek at Lower Canada College, the only Carjadian on staff and hired because the school thought he was: British, and later became a brofesser at McGill. University. as The film includes passages his ‘viluings read against ae picture background showing ihe sweep o£ Canada, from the 2 oe Pacific coast to the far North and to his birthplace, th the mining. community of Glace Bay, NS. ae Catholics prefer: separate way | - tof birth control.’ - Proof of this; the- ‘letter says, is found: in. Planned. ‘iterature - which said) that: “‘emergency. measures are available if-you know oF {ospest that your . Parenthood | _miéthods (of birth conirol) have fail . yrs , Intra-uterine devices (IUD's) and: the “morhing-after- suggested by : the. Planned | ‘Parenthood: ‘organization, . ‘Camey's letter q : pill” areidéntified ag the emergency methods ‘stated. The Catholic Physician’ 5 Guild and Physicians tor Life : have stated that both birth contro! methods will abort newly conceived human Hife, the letter continued. Although the Catholic charities and érganizstions will not accept any funding from the United Way as of Jan: 1, they have nol formally - ‘Withdrawn from the. “organizations, ‘Camey sald in his Teter. ‘ district: housing ‘committee’ spent’ &30,000 pounds: ($37, 900" "signalled decay. | ub Local: ‘newapapers carried rimitive stone coltag a6 Bodmin b Moor, where, the oe ; Py ‘Western 3 Morning News; “7 _.: ployment cheque in early ‘January because he charges ‘lit ._. oFtowa -reporters (&200. pounds , ($887) : a: session fo * . terviews, That, he said, “cuts down the hassle and pai ‘bills at-the same time.” . : folksongs, provided he and his wife also write ‘an: Bees. a “clerical post several years ago: . . houses twice a week to share his attentions with his year. _— "old wife and -his mistress, 41. 0 _-Caraden District Council, told The Associated Press: ina: ‘ telephone interview. . Womien who answered a questionnaire in the Ladies Home‘ -” Journal rated their sexual relationships a8 satlalying 7 "thelr marriages as happy. - 83,000 women replied, The results were released Sunday’ _ Pittsburgh, concluded: the survey was_35;,79 per cent- af them sald they." ‘were. MacLennan offers. global views # perhaps last ~ book, "Voices in- Tine ; published in 1980, is about mankind's survival in: a world : thrown. back into the Dark Ages by. nucledr war. "And it has prompted a reassessment of his’ earlier work: -’ De théy not all contain, messages for the’ world,’ _tran- : ’ ather in. ‘the: market tdun of Doubtebol Cornwall; in rand . “pome suggesting the Knights: undergo sterilization: “But Knight and the local welfare. counell are, i ore f ways to support my. family.” "AS proof, he'said, he did not: claim hiss He's also had-an offer, to record his ‘guitar-eagmpanie column on sex problems. : oe " “We don’t have any; but r mn taking the ofter,” he was o vo quoted by the Plymouth newspaper as saying. ©. * on Knight has not had a paid job since le quit a govern ve . Spe “! ‘f Pr. . “Pm not. lazy though," he said in. ‘ihe. ‘newspaper. in- : terview. The burly, bearded patriarch jogst between his two | Before the December move, he said, he ‘spent most of his : time chopping firewood and carrying water from backyard. eprings‘sirice neither of his family's. two-bedroom ; atone: cottages liad running water or electricity.:" ‘“The Knights are. just ‘as- -entitled to support as: other i needing familles,” Tony Maycock, a housing offiter. forthe « cary 0} Woden, _ “Moving them was perfectly routine. Without adequate: sewerage thelr cottage was unquestionably unfit for Numa . habitation. ", : ; a “Survey released. - NEW YORK (AP) — _ Eighty, per cent of 63,000 marrh ahd : The survey also found that 47 per; cent: of the wives ‘sild, - they make love three to five times a week, and 75 per. cent” feel they stil have romance in their marriages. wp Twenty-one per cent of the participants said they. have . . ~ had an extramarital affair and one-fourth of the wives lived, ; with their spouses before marrying them, 00 s23)- ‘~The survey also showed that 17 per cent said they. were virgins when they ‘married and 70 per. cont sald they’ were. sexually active before the age of 20. Lolaes ‘A six-page survey ran in a ‘June issue of the magatine;. bisgey ie: “Among other findings: "i > — Ninety-five per” ‘cent sald they sorietimes iii” lovemaking. - - ‘— Sixty-five per cent. rated thériselves ‘OB “good” a excellent’? lovers and 83. ‘per cent said they. ‘wished they. had more hime | tomaketove. =. _ Fourty: four per cert said they ‘ischedule” lovemaking by making a date with, their husbands. a an - a Eighteen per cent said they occasionally make’ love: in. a. - car and-21 per cent said they sometimes make Tove Olt, doors, : . aja —_ Threequartere of. the wives said they ‘make love with: the lights on and 93 per cent said they enjoy looking at erolic:.. material with théir husbands to increase their excitéments:: The study, analyzed by Ellen Frank of the University of “The vast majority - of ‘our’ respondents see a healthy, active sex life as a natural and important’ part of being. married:”- | ws The magazine said-the average age of those responding’ to. - married for the first time;, the average length of ‘their, ‘marriages was 12 years; 66 per cent! ‘said. they. have . children; 68 per cent'said they work outside the home: 56 per cent said i they attended or Braduated from college, cede LD = “That s the last time we'll _use this ‘hospital! af bey 1, } Tie — er - , ee a MBER Sdn creche. - “et dae iy cena ‘Text mea Welcome. ° is Veub Aykioe ee : , ; othe on rald ie ames iteendorer te, A L.letters:ta- thetaditor: ‘of ‘eral public infecees Will be ‘printed. a should be submitted’ 49 ; hours : int advance of desired publication date, We” -do, however; retain the right to refuse to" ’ _ print letters on grounds of possible libel” orbadtaste, We may also edit letters for’. “style and ‘length. = All letters, to. be. considered - for’ publication must.” be’. ‘signed: It |s impossible to ( _ submitted“ within. 24. hours ce Seat a £. ” Publication date. ; on Ue