4 “Page 4 The Herald, Thuraday, July 17, 1960" A} General Office- 6356357 ||. ‘Cireulation. 635.4357 | Terrace, -B.C. Authorized Registration num | postage ‘guaranteed. _ PUBLISHER-CalvinMcCarthy 'EDITOR- Greg Middieton 40. ‘|. -- .CIRCULATION.- TERR | Published every. weekday ‘at ve as second ‘class mail, sp ber 1201. Postage pald in cash, return; f° “> Publiahad by - Sterling Publishers - ace-esdesr | XN - NOTICE OF COPYRIGHT. pen The Heratd retains full, complete and sole a - any axivertisement produced. and-or any editorial ‘or’ J. : “photographic content published In the Herald... - Reproduction is not permitted without mn permission of the Publisher. n, Comes oe + copyrig the written: | (LETTERS TO. Dear Editor: a _T eannot agree more with your editorial on the in- . Tamous male stripper in your July 10 issue. You say the. show was disgusting and ihe hollering girls. watching were no ladies, but slavering beasts living in the gutter. Our mayor remarked, “It Is sick,” -° Straight forward language, bute it ever true! ° respect I can agree: with the .women’s libbers, - Tothe management of the ' Bavarian ‘Inn, who told the reporter it was quiy the first of a series of nude shows, 1 vould like to say that instead - of promoting their. business, they are doing ita lot of - harm and. this might be the . beginning .of folding up. and bankruptcy. -. : People with a measure of’ _ THE EDITOR.) patronize trodden place for a night cut. dining. I myself cancelled a - planned visit with my wife for a dinner of goulash and. steak, There are better and more decent places in-town to go to for enjoyment from - ‘now on. Many people, lam: . sure, will join us in. this. hoyeott. 7 stripping happe! basement ma ference 'as far as‘ the prin; ns -in the ¢iple ls concerned. We don’t - want a Younge Street of a © Sunset strip in. Terrace. Let. immature young. - people grow up and let-us ‘ . keep this town clean. someone can make a decent living only by taking off their und ts indecently, then rotten and stinking with our so-called civilization, _ ~. Clown troupe 7 goes to church MANCHESTER, Conn.’ AP) — Shirley Stager takes ~ Auptratia and Great Britain, ” - She said her clowning is closely related, to religious 22 Kalum- Street, “|. self-respect will no longer ~*~ such a down- .' att, The fact,that the. - there is something, really" Homburg . f wena yo , wal weg Foot yol 3 HOURS: _, COMMERCIAL: a ee EVENING VIEWERS. THS 1S RRBITN-VENUS.,. BRINGING UNINTERRUPTED a \ A By Y 4 . lye de , i. + fre op a\ LR ~ AN a ar . , . * one . ~~ nena “a , ae seaups heen i “eitecen ove Parsee . 7 a “we av dtee ‘ , we i sal eeee rinse ve kes no dit. -| : - ", a pbabdng US arg ' Pr CE ae religion so seriously that re : lh -idanpe ica ston ams tare! aint eres urch. “Dance has been part of Wtih painted face, silly. costume, goofy hat and floppy feet, Mra. Stager leads .a troupe ‘of clowns | called Fools for Christ. They. ‘ throw confetti at the con- gregation and fill the church with. balloons. When she’s not clowning in . -church, she takes her fellow "fools to cavort in front of audiences at nursing homes and schools. SS The three unpaid fools bring a message from, the Bible oo “Jn order to get across the message of God's love, we often have to become fools in man's eyes,” said Mrs. °. Stager. “It's a very ald concept.” “The word clown is related to a word that means ser- . vant, the lowest form: of* servant, and this -is co-" rected to Christ’s preaching of equality." She said, 4 Bible: ‘An be the last.” Mrs. Stager; 45, is part of a- religious “clowning revival that began about 10 years oting from the ago in some Protestant . circles in the United States. -“In’ medieval times, the clown ‘was, often, ridiculing the organized ¢hurch so they opened up the church to have clowns incorporated into the church,” shesaid. °° After more than 15 years ‘ gaered dance: group, Mrs. Stager stepped naturally into . her rofe as a religious clown. . Religious dance, remains important to her,‘and she is. an officer of the | Sacred Dance Guild, which has more than. 40 members in the United States, Canada, the first shall . . of public performances in 8° _ and to . worship almost since. the beginning. Youll find: in the Bible, numerous times we rejoice meAns dance, though most of-us don’t know it.- “Ia my church, when Iwas growing up, "dancing was frowned on.* There was. something wrong, with it, but ‘that's not true: .- “Catholic priests are in- corporating it into services, ‘and they're‘a little closer to it, actually, “because the Mass .: is. filled with movement, prescribed. movement,” she sald in a recent interview. -.: Despite;"2ome. veltement opposition, “religious clowning — like’ sacred dance — |s beginning to gain ‘wider acceptance. “We've reached the point ‘now where. we're being _ asked to be ‘consultants for other people who want to. begin to use clowns,” The performances “~ sometimes presented without warning to .chur-. “cligoers ‘surprised by their ministers’ Innovation —- are pantomimes of Bible stories. “There's a sermon that is a spoof of sermons,” said Mrs. Stager. “The minister. keeps preaching the sermon | until one:of the clowns falls asleep, which makes the. _minister take notice. _."So he leafs ‘through the. “Bible until he “finds the simple truth that God is love to represent this he takes confetti from inside the Bible and throws it, and this wakes up the clown’... “At the end we release bal Joons atid urge the audience to toss them around togethel , in the joy of God's love.” | TODAY IN HISTORY «ODAY IN HISTORY July 17, 1980 By The Canadian Press - Britain's Royal Family adopted the name Windsor.63 years ago today. in 1917 — giving up all German titles and the ‘pynastic ames of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha acquired through. the marriage of Queen Victdria and Prince Albert, King George V proclainiéd that his family should be knownhe the House and Family of Windsor. . mz —B ‘ruled Egyptonly eight years, sodespised? is: ; - Nobody really knows., . Some - experts . have " suggested he was a foreign ee uéurper. while, others tured Fort Michilimackinac, te be was the loser in Mich. - ‘a palace power struggle with 1841 — The first issue of a rival branch of the family. Punch. magazine was ~"'Ra Dedef was the off- published. spring of one of Cheogs'* 1940 — U-S: Preskdent queens but before he finished Rooseveltwas nominated for building — his pyramid ant ny tad third term: . Bomething happened and his by the Democratic con- ynemary got based and Iie vention, . %» frame rubbed out,’ said “1M6.— Gen, Mithallovie Bothmer, who has led &x- was executed’ by the peditlons to Egypt since the Yugoslav government for 10608... een . treason, 2 '..Ra Dedef's mummy has, in never been found and the 25- ’ ‘ eC a ' ng. 675... metre-deep burial chamber are told to .rejoice, and — . ABU RAWWASH (AP) —- ‘Ona barren desert plateau ‘lie the shattered remains of a pyramid built 4,500 years - ‘ago as a final resting place” for one of the ‘most hated, ruler ih Egyptian history} gon and successor of the © greatest pyramid-buildet’ of them ‘all, the Cheops, who erected his royal tomb. 1¢ kilometres to the south at Giza. - “With ‘atieffort made: no- where else in Egypt, every block of ‘Gasing stone and _ temple statuary belonging to Ra Dedef was broken into tiny -bits,”.. said: - Bernard Bothmer,. curator of Fi ‘ His name’ was Ra Dedel, ; ‘site ig been a military. preserve for. Pharaoh “the last quarter-century of Middle East hostilities. Nestled in the ruins are - erater-like holes” used, as’ antiaircraft - gun :. em: placements and .a. radar station stands, guard on the western edge of the site. The army appears to have broken camp and Egyptian: officials say the site should pyramid. Egyptian art at.the Brooklyn be open io visitors by year's’ Museunt in: NewYork. * “Hundreds of men must « have worked 10. years to obliterate hia memory,'"said . Bothmer,. «pointing . to baseball-sized chunks of red _ granite and quartz rock that “Hitter the hard sandy ground at Abu Rawwash. © "Nobody would have done that unless they really hated . non his side of the family ‘from the royal necropolis in-Giza, where “Ra. Dedef's father, brother and nephew built the - an . ‘three great pyramids. "Tt might have worked except that Ra Dedef, whose name in ancient hieroglyphs . means “stability of the sum,’ . buried the famous Cheops and Jeft his name insctibed on a royal funeral boat tuearthed next to the great pyramid in Giza in 1954. Why was Ra Dedef, who ans “8 end. 2 _So'determined were the ancients to make RaDedefa _ |. son that they scrat- his name and those of ©” Even 80, few tourists are likely to make the journey to the lonely,’ barren hills 15 kilometres north of down- ‘means “father of mah in . pads .. drive vehicle to.climb up the .” rocky plateau. Another’ is. abou es ich equal to'the smallest of the _ thaf. Abu. Rawwash, || ~ colloguial Egyptian, has:“a S-peputation. as, a” breeding _ ground. for snakes and ’ “stor pions. roe .Zahi. Hawwas, antiquities — for Giza, said the . already had’ funded .an expedition to. begin this fall to excavate Ra — “inspector for | , government ‘-Dedef’s valley temple at the end of a 124-kllometre-long causeway leading from ‘the desert valley: up to the “NO one F atie hatred. ; 4 ~ . ene gt ghkagp ll vind? than . aan Bont. oy . ae Tate the dng.” ; ; _ Had Ra Dedef's opponents allowed him: to finish his “a * bout 70 metres high, nearly, pyramid it would have been three pyramids of Giza. -, ~ All that-remains of Ra De- ““def’s pyramid; however, are "afew limestone blocks and d ‘raised foundation about 14 ‘metres high. The burial pit is open to the. sky and easily accessible. along’. a -passageway cut in’ the limestone bedrock: . “With-a erane,. the rubble “dould: be: .cleared in. two seasons of work,’’ said Both- _ mer, adding the effort would systematic excayatlon at. this site so hobody..knows- Pe _‘beally’ What- Is here, You . “could find anything, in- ‘cluding the sarcophagus: of _ |. be worthwhile | even if has ever made a .. a coffin .was-not found, since the question’ of what the great mysteries that re- mains in ancient EB histary.”” Loo : ' 4 ~ on oo we, an New Brunswick's Premier. | ghould bé pay - Commons Iny 1 contr isame stores -- but are cua a workers ys rule, a ne hap- - ned td Ra Dadef is “one of. gypian. : OTTAWA — You've heard of regionalization;, . problems of thé count ( flor’ against another... setting one section 4g Shite all, arid OAS.” West; 1 | situation, too dered. out. loud- why . Ing Mexic more’#han twice -as: much for olf.as it pays. Alberra, a EN, lt's tor tuation created far aly by ‘made-in- - awa policies. = - uy Apes rnd. Bs In “Ottawa . the ‘federal: who has won And, as you: know, boffins. not only make policy. They. make trouble. | ; > Regionalism involv seem ‘to satisfy them. - _ They -preak If down . districts. = er om Not with “olf In this case, but with Un - ployment Insurance rules. we ieee P The problem emerged the other day .In the. olving the majority of the MPa * | a ing provinces doesn’t: to ridings vand, even Liberals and Conservatives -altke;: an _-constituents In New Brunswick. o "ee But It applies to MPs -- and people ~. toa greater or lesser extent'in most ot er sectlons of . the country. a ' it’ hinges on the . time, requirement: .for : ‘Unemployment Insurance:.quatification: 10: weeks in areas of depresslorand ‘14° Weeks: - where .conditions-‘may“be tnoré Brdrnising. | Robert Howle, Conservative for York:,.. Sunbury, dealt with It ahd Inyglvedujnsthe crazy. Ictlans.of, tha Fr nai reguintions, : a: majority of the province's parliamentarians and: those of thelr constituents who may be drawing: ° Unemployment Insurance. ; . “In the Doaktown area of Central New. . Brunswick,’ he related, “many epople are busy i in the woods, yards and mills working: with ” _others whose kids go to the same schools, who _ worship In the same churches and shop In the... ‘treated differently by the. . on one side eye " of the. a ‘ ra community urider'generally the same economic: - conditions have the 14-week rule to meet. |=... “This Is crazy.” a - es say “In Madawaska,” he continued, “a work-" force of women travels across the county line to® Restigouche to-pick potatoes. Some even go far as Ontarlo to harvest tomatoes. Tecan. “But the Madawaska women have to meet the;.~ 14-week rule while those In Restigouche come: _ under, the 10-week requirement. oe TTRea Is madness.” eM Mr. Howle called for ruies drawn to economic. ;. realitieg and necessities rather than to arbitrary: and inflexible administrative rules. | |S y....5 Fred McCain, Conservative MP for Carleton Charloote then welghed In with his tales :o bureaucratic boobery. rent lie Federal work funds for his rinding, largely — _ rural, were determined, he sald, by allocation of... programs for Fredericton arid Saint John. ...- . There have been times in the last.10 years. "he related, “when Saint John: has been con: «. sidered almost overemployed, resulting-in. the’ ': denial io my riding, right next door, of Itsproper share of assistance.”. | eee sree Then he told of two men, working side by.side. : One ‘living. In Community A and eligible. for. -; Unemployment Insurance, the other Ives 10::. miles away in Community B and discovers he. Is: underqualified in work-time for jobless benefits. - it was, he protested, “absolutely inequitable, — unfair,” a.cause of friction and responsible: {In ~ - large part for the dislike and distrust -- even the. fear. and loathIrig -- much of the public has -for::: - the faceless civil service snug and uncaring-in ~ Its Ottawa cocoon. i, Se UIC. “The ' gs Se Tate