1961-07-20 — Page 10

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CHINA MAIL

Courses at University GOVT OFFERING BURSARIES FOR SOCIAL STUDIES

three

The Government is offering 19 bursaries totalling $79,800 for social stu-

dies at the University of Hongkong during the next academic year. The University offers two Oke Goverment Is offering certificate course, and four two- «courses in social studies, a one-

one-year bursaries at year bursaries (Recond yeary ut diploma $12,000 for the diploma course, ! $16,800.for the certißente course, post-graduate your

four two-year bursaries (Arsti -course, and a two-year eert-

In addition, there are two fleate course. For these courses, years valued at $10,000 for the

four-yeur bursaries (second year) valued At $8,400 r degree course followed by diploma course, and six four- year bursaries (first year) valued at $25,200 piso for a degree course followed by diploma course..

Old man fails

in

escape bid

A

*

of

Applicants for the one-your diploina course must be graduates of the University Hongkong or of other recognised universities. Candidates for the спитье от

A 55-year-old man was given the choice of two two-year certificate

the tour-year degree plus

Matriculation requirements of the University.

charges preferred against him at North Kow-diploma course must satisfy the loon Court this morning.

The charges were: resizing: Prosecuting, Inspector G. M. orsest and escaping from Jegal į Dorman said that the defen- custody.

dant was arrested while smote- the hut. in the drug inside Defendant "struggled violently" with policemen, and eventually "scaped down the hil

Le Mlog, of 2 Fat Tong-road! enose to plead guilty to resisting:

Brest and was sentenced to 30 day's haprkanmeist

Ife was sent to fall for six months thore when he admitted moking heroin inside a hut ar - Shy Kip Mei Village on July

เช

However, he collapsed after rome distance and wasS Tc- arrested. He had 14 previous convictions, the court was told.

The world's

thinnest watch

Thin as a coin, and no larger, the Vacheron & Constantin "Extra Flac** contains the 120 parts of an intricate precision mechanism.

To technical mastery is here added the quiet beauty of a designer's dream

come true.

With this model, Vacheron & Constantin pay tribute to the 200- year tradition that has allowed them to become the world's oldest watch- making establishment and yet to re- main a pioneer in contemporary design and styling.

Presented on the occasion of the Vacheron & Constantin bicentenary.

The "Extra Fiat"

comes in a de luxe kather wallet,

VACHERON

CONSTANTIN

IN GENEVA SINCE 1733

SELECTION BOARD

Com-

All applicants will be inter- viewed by the selection mittee of the Board of

Sucial Studios. The criteria for selec- tion are

ackdemic bused on achievement, intellectual ability, knowledge of both English and Chinese, physical finess and personal suitability for social work.

The ability to speak several dialects and previous experience In scoil work will be consider. ed additional assets. Candidates are expected to have sufficient background knowledge of the biologien and social selenees, during their middle school or undergraduate studies,

Applications for bursaries rhould reach the Registrar of the University of Hongkong not Ister than Aug. 7.

Salvation Army schools hold prizegiving

Mrs T. G. N. Pearce pre- sented prizes to children of the Salvation Army Combined Schools at the Macpherson Stadium in Kowloon this morning.

Students of the Kwong Ming, Kwong Y}, Kwong Chak

and Kwong Ylu School received certinentes and prizes for exa- infnation results and good pro- Kress throughout the year. Headmasters of the schools gave their annual reports and the children provided

ment in

dances.

action

entertain-

pud säuos

E.

Welcomert by Col. F Jewkes, Omeer Commanding the Salvation Army and Brig. H. Carter. Mrs Pearce spoke to the chlidren and told them that people In many parts of the world were impresscxi by the work done by the Salvation Armry.

They looked after men in battle and poor people sleeping un the streets just as they were looking after roofton schools for children living in resettlement and squatter areas.

The ceremony included hymus, prayers of thanksgiving and Bible reading led by Mr Fong Yin-chiu and students.

Art school puts: works

on display

Ratablished 1845

THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1961.

PICTORIAL PARADE

Queen Ingrid and 17-year-old Princess Benedikto (left) of Denmark paid a royal visit to a girl scout camp in Stenstrup, in the Danish countryside. For the princess it was hor first public appearance in a girl scout uniform. The Queen handed our prizes to the girls for competitions they had won, and sow the girl scouts make a scout specialty "Sno-Breed"—a sort of twist bread made by twisting dough around a stick and baking it in the glows of a camp fire.

Mr Kosaka, the Japanese Foreign Minister, and his wife standing between Mme Ohno, the Japanese Ambassador's wife, and Lord Home, ot reception at the Japanese Embassy in London,

WORE TOO MUCH

ON A WARM DAY

And lands in jail

Land sold

at auction

House for $530,000.

The land is situated

g

A 400,000 sq ft lot for the ship breaking and rolling mili Industry was sold at a public auction this morning to East Asiale Wire. Rope and Cable Company Ltd of 80, Jardine A young unemployed man who broke into the

office of the Deputy Command Secretariate Wail, near Rerinles Mill, at Tlu in Victoria Barracks and stole some articles, Junk Bay. Its upset price was was jailed for 12 months by Mr K. A. S. Phil- $320,000, lips at Central Magistracy this morning. The 23-year-old man,

In Leb said tau was later Yin, of 110 Lockhart-road, laken to the scene of the crime second four, pleaded guilty to where the pallece found a win- office-breaking and committing dow of the Deputy Command a felony, and assaulting a pollet, Secretarias opened and a pane

of glass broken.

Mon.

Lau

Lau atole four table fans, the Lau admitted that had smash- property of the War Deport- ed the gloss to gala entry. The ment, one woollen cardigan al police recovered three other an umbrella, to the total value stolen SADN hidden in scone of $139.

near-by bushes.

Lau, who had previous roll- victions for unlawful possession, larceny and attempted larceny, was ordered to be placed under police supervision for two years on his release from prison.

FINE DAY

Detective Inspector Jone- yuen læc, prosecuting, said that 61 8.15 pm on Sunday, a police- span is · Kennedy-rund Anw

time,

The policeman, Chau Chok- kwan, who arrested Lau, was commended by the magistrate.

Interview on

Hemingway

Assistant

While on Life, James was

The tenth exhibition of the Lau walking towards him. Lau

Hangkong Fino Arts was wearing a woollen cardigan, "Rediffusion Byline" tomorrow School opened this mom- and was carrying an electric night will feature'a special in- ing at St John's Cathedral table fan la his right hand and

terview on Ernest Hemingway. an open umbrella in the other. Hail.

Interviewed will be Sidney L. Ar the wenther was fine at James, publisher of Sports A wide range of studies may that

it aroused the lustrated magazine and be mes, ranging from work in suspicion of the policemen who forner

Managing pencil by the primary studente, questioned "fim. Lau could not Editor of Life. to water colours and commer- give a satisfactory answer. clal art by the more advanced, When Laut was told he would responsible for the publication The school gives a two-year be taken to the police station, In Wie of Hemingway's luat training course in art, and has he admitted the burglary and great short novel, "The Old about 100 students of bols akril the policeman for A Man and the Bea". In Lo ROBER Whose age range he chance saying he find lost money interview, he tells how he al- tween 20 and 80. There are, in gambling.

mnt stumblest On the novel's The policeman arrested him. existences, however, older and younger

and how students,

While waiting for transport,| opernted with The school head is Mr Chan | Tau tried to escape by pushing piepiring the novel Itoi-ying.

the policeman to the ground but inngazkie

"writes faction news"""

NEW

HAYO WARVE

Lady Sheaffer

ONE

'SKRIPAKIT' FOUNTAIN PEN Dale R

VÕITED PAPER 00,676.

WORD THAT A HOSPITAL IS AFRAID TO. USE

London.

Sister Florence of Ward D3 told a High Court judge of the way women in

From the Filos

25

years AGO

July 1936

new colours to the six

hospital HM. The King presented talked about their battalions of the Brigade operations-and the of Guards at a colourful impossibility of keep- and Impressive ceremony in ing anything a secret. Hyde Park yesterday. Ad- dressing the Parade the For that reason the doctors at King, after a moving re-

her hospital, Selly Ook. Birmingham, nover tolked to ference to his father, the their patients about intimate late King George, spoke matters in the wards.

briefly of the "awful weight Sister Florence--Miss Florence

Davis, of Franklyn-road, of war, with all its horrors, Kings Norton, Birmingham and yet comradeships, dur- was giving evidence during ing. the struggle of twenty the second day's caring of an years ago."

action against ກ surgeon

because a sterilisation opera- His Majesty continued tion which he carried out i was not successful.

with the memorable words:

Miss Davis, plunip and bespot-, "All humanity cries out for tacled, said that in the ward peace and the assurance of the beds wern so close to

gether that the patient "In perce."

one

'bed could hear what was being said to the patient] in the next.

And she added that at the hospital they had a "frightful lot of trouble" over religious

differences.

'Interferenco'

"One never breathes the word sterlisation," It was very distressing for Catholic people. There might be a Catholic patient in bed next to a non- Catholle.

"We hud to keep silence

or

there was trouble. It still go on. People write letters, and we even had interfer- ence from priests. "A Catholic nurse would refuse

even to admit a patient she knew she was going to be sterilised."

The action is being brought by 42-year-old Mrs Johannah Waters, mother of six chile dren, of Quinton-road West, Birmingham.

She claims damages against Mr - Lindsay Morgan Park, of Selly Oak Hospital, who denies her nilegations negilgence and breach contract,

As the procession made ita way back towards Bucking- 'ham Palace a man sought to break through the cheering crowds lining the route. Ac- counts are conflicting, but it appears that a woman and a policeman seized hold of - him, and as they scuffed with him a revolver fell to the ground. It was a five- chamber weapon loaded' in four chambers.

Another account says that something was thrown at the King and struck the side of the horse. A policeman took charge of the missle.

The King was quite un- perturbed by the incident; and carried out his

pro gramme for the day.

The man in question, George Andrew Mahon, a

of cripple, later appeared at

of Bow-street, where a detec- tive stated that he declared

After her sixth child. MIS

Waters was advised to have that he only did it as a pro- a sterilisation operation for test. He had no wish to hurt her health's

It was the King and "It was John carried out by Mr Park, but Simon's fault," The accused

was remanded.

sake.

a few months later she be-

'came pregnant again.

She had a stil-born child

in

September 1957. One month later she had a second sterilisation operation which was successful.

In evidence, MrePark said that?

Dr C. T. Wang, (former Chinese

Foreign Minister,

the risk of failure in such now on a visit to America on operations was something like his way to Germany) in an one to three per cent. But exclusive interview said: doctors always envisaged a "The conflict between possible failure and were not Japanese militarists and my surprised by subsequent people appears to be inevit

pregnancies.

able, and may break out He said that it Mrs Waters

had gone back to see him any time now, and would not after the first operation he he confined to the North would have told her that he| China azca," United Press re- could not guarantee that she ports from New York, would not become pregnant again.

Miss Rose Heilbron, QC., for Mrs Waters. suggested that sterilisation was

VITY

serious step for most women to take,

*

EN

INGLAND'S "Quads"

were

christened on Sunday, June 28 and so District Office South New Terri- Mr Park replied: think most great was the interest taken

The sale Was held at the

tories Adroinistration.

REPLIES

י

Humanitarian: No signature er proper address. Letters should be typewritten.----Ed.

POP by GoG

WELL, ANYWAY, YOU SHOWED HIM UP FOR WHAT HE IS - A BULLY

·WITH A BEAUTIFUL

PUNCH!

of them welcome 11," Mr Justice Havers: "Do you in their reception into the

really mean that?"

church of St Neots Mr Park: "It is a welcome (Hants), an Eynesbury rellet to most women. When Church, that hundreds of she came to me Mrs Waters had accepted her fate and persons were unable to get was seeking it."

into the building.

FOR THE INNER MAN

IN OUTER SPACE /

Hemingway In

ho

for the

C1

Axcerpts!

arlsberg

pent him

JOIDER niso reads

Printed and published by Trarnce Gunoon Newlands Pearch | The exhibition will remain he was re-arrested), for and on behalf of South China Morning Post Limited at 1-2 open until Saturday, Inclusive,' ↑ The polleeman suffered alight| from private letters Wenham Street, City of Victoria in the Colony of Hongkong. from 10 am to 7 p

Injuries na « result of the tali.

Dej HemingwRY,

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