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The Sydney Morning Herald from Sydney, New South Wales, Australia • Page 16

Location:
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Th Sydney Mornnq Harald. Tuesday, Jan 9, 1973 14 SECTION The human touch towards migrants 'BETTER TO BE A BOY IjOOB TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1973 migrant hostels and housing settlements throughout the country. But he has some criticism to make of the wall of indifference and apathy to migrants and their problems that separates them from so much of the community. "The average Australian's only contact with the migrant community is with the chap who works on the next bench at the factory," he said. "Once the whistle blows he hurries back home to his little suburban plot and rarely gives him another thought.

The amount of human contact is negligible." Employers are often to blame, too. Research has shown very clearly that migrants' children integrate very easily into Australian school life but once they finish their education it's a different story. Feelings of equality fade as they encounter discrimination by prospective employers and too often this drives the young people back into their own communities, possibly for ever. "Migrants with problems find it impossible to be good citizens," Sir John said. "Our organisation deals not only with fundamental needs like getting employment and housing for new arrivals but also with human situations, like deserted wives and broken marriages.

We have a team of voluntary counsellors who cover fourteen different languages and some of the problems they have to deal with are amazing." settlement than actual intake of migrants. Sir John said he was right behind the new Minister and his plans for migrant citizenship and settlement, but made it clear the most important thing of all was to educate old Australians in ways and means of helping integration come about. The Good Neighbour Council was formed 16 years ago by the Federal Government with the aim of welcoming new arrivals to Australia, and helping them settle smoothly and rapidly into the community. Sir John, a sprightly 74, is proud of the team of voluntary workers who carry on the work of integration in The most important part of Australian migration policy should be to get migrants accepted by the community, Sir John MacCaulcy laid yesterday. Telling migrants how to behave is one thing, but getting them accepted is another," he said.

Sir John is president of the Good Neighbour Council of New South Wales. He was discussing a statement made last week by the Minister for Immigration, Mr Grassby, who said that from now on his Department will concentrate more on citizenship and When the heat Is en you have to dress sensibly though you don't hove to go to the same lengths as our model (below), who spent an hour or so cooling off in an lea-making plant. But it helps if you wear the right clothes such as this bare halter dress. It comes in pastel and little white spots, pink and green too. Fewer girls receive higher DISCRIMINATION IS NO LAUGH TO SEKAI education Pakistan victory looms as Aust batsmen collapse By PHIL WILKINS Pakistan are poised for a victory over Australia in the third cricket Test at the SCG which will almost rank with Old Rowley's famous 100-1 win in the 1940 Melbourne Cup.

Pace bowlers Salim Altaf (4-33) and Sarfraz Nawaz (3-29) shattered Australia in their second innings yesterday to have Ian Chappell's side 7-94, only 68 runs ahead with three wickets standing. partly be due to the fact that there is no tradition of speech in Australia, as in Europe, and perhaps we have too much passive learning or teacher-dominated teaching in our system." He suggested that since external examinations were essentially written, teachers had to give more emphasis to the use of the pen than of the tongue. The HART (Halt AU Racist Tours) poster on the wall behind her shouts the message: "If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem." It sums up Sekai Holland's attitude to racism. For ber there are no fence-sitters, no degrees. "You are either pregnant or not.

You can't be half pregnant It is the same with racism," she says simply. The tall, black Rhode-sian woman is curled up on a couch in her Bondi Crusade will go on, she promises but resigned after two years in the post. In 1964 she came to Australia under the Colombo Flan. "On my first day here, coming from the airport, I saw white men digging trenches for the first time. I had a lump in my throat.

"Now when I see a white man digging I say to myself: 'Good on you, mate. I wish they could see this in South Africa and Whites had dominated so many parts of the world for so long they could no longer see the advantages of other cultures, many of which they had bulldozed out of existence. "They have come to believe that it is a crime if any other standards but their own are applied." The intolerant monologue between whites and blacks was the basic cause of the racial troubles that beset the world, she said. Jim says he has still to make up his mind about her Australian husband, going to Rhodesia. "After our activities here it would be like stepping in the path of a car travelling at 60 miles an hour," he said.

And did Sekai intend to take out Australian citizenship? "No. But I'll be happy to be a citizen of Zimbabwe. "But that will be after the revolution." Junction home. Back issues of the magazine "Ebony" are on a table near her, soul records are stacked by the hi-fi. The poster-plastered wall traces her crusade against racial discrimination a crusade that has made her something of a celebrity.

The posters embrace the anti-apartheid movement in general, the campaign against the Springbok Rugby tour in particular, and the Aboriginal rights movement She was last in the news when, with several friends, she applied to the Corporate Affairs Commission for registration as the Rhodesia Information Centre in opposition to the existing centre. The application was turned down, but Sekai has not conceded defeat. "We'll take the matter to court if necessary," she said. Sekai (her name means "laughter and is apt, for laughter comes to her as naturally as bubbles to champagne) was the first of sue children bora to Mr and Mrs M. M.

Hove, teachers at Wadilove, a small Methodist mission near Salisbury. When she was seven her father became the first of two African Members of Parliament in the Wclensky Government. He was later appointed the Rhodesian High Commissioner in Lagos, Nigeria, -itiH--" --lS 'I A real discrimination against girls exists in Australian education, according to the Chancellor of the University of Sydney, Mr H. D. Black.

He said last week that the discrimination appeared to operate in the later stages of secondary education and most certainly in tertiary education. And it seemrd to be stronger in Australia than in other Western countries, he said. He was addressing a gathering of about 250 high school principals at their annual conference at Narrabeen. Mr Black quoted research figures showing a lower enrolment rate in the higher years of secondary education and tertiary institutions for girls than for boys. He added yesterday that it was an economic and educational advantage to be born a boy, and these advantages tended to reinforce each other.

The problem, which he thought was partly caused by the attitudes of parents, was one the schools should face up to, he said. He also predicted an increased financial investment in education in the next few yeais. and said that if this did become available, pan of it should be diverted to minimising or eliminating the differential treatment of boys and girls. "However, I don't want a special sum actually set aside for women. I would rather see it used to widen opportunity and provide inducements for women," he said.

He criticised the "false circular economic argument" which said that since there were relatively narrower employment opportunities for girls, investment in their further education was unwarranted. Mr Black said another problem in education in Australia was that some young people did not seem to be very articulate when thev left school. Thev were not able to put their thought into words as well as their counterparts in, sav. North America or Great Britain. "I feel that this could Women writers wanted The Society of Women Writers (Australia) is making a drive for new members.

With its 50th anniversary coming up in 1975, it hopes also to attract some of the foundation members back to its meetings. The society is a very active and friendly group, with members or associate members in four States at the moment there is none in Tasmania or South Australia. Any woman interested in writing is welcome to join as an associate, even if she has had no work published. The president, Mrs Hilarie Lindsay, said thev are very keen to encourage Aboriginal women to write. "We want to get them writing before they become too integrated." So far they have had one novel and a collection of poems sent in, both from country NSW.

This year the NSW Government has allocated a grant of $375 to help their workshop activities. The society runs a permanent writers' workshop by correspondence, which is particularly helpful for country women and those who cannot get to meetings. Members send in manuscripts and the society's tutors return them with criticism and suggestions. Test scores THIKD TEST AUSTRALIA PAKISTAN At the SCG AUSTRALIA First Innings 334 PAKISTAN First Innings (resumption 4-250) SADIQ MOHAMMAD Chappell Lillee 30 NASIM-LiL-GHANI Rcdpath Cbapptll 64 ZAHEER ABBAS Marsh Massie 14 MAJID KHAN Massie 0 MUSHTAQ MOHAMMAD Walker Chappell 121 ASIF IQBAL Marsh Chappell 65 INTIKHAB ALAM Marsh Massi 9 WASIM BARI Chappell I SALIM ALTAF Marsh Walker 12 SARFRAZ NAWAZ Chappell 12 ASIF MASOOD no 1 Sundries 31 TOTAL 360 Fall: 1-56 (Sadiq Mohammad) 2-79 (Abbas) 3-83 (Khan) 4-131 (Ghani) 5-270 (Iqbal) 6-279 (Alam) 7-280 (Bari) 8-336 (Altaf) 9-349 (Mushtaq Mohammad) 10-360 (Nawaz). BOWLING OMR Lillee ..10 2 34 1 Walters 9 25 0 Massie 28 6 123 3 Watkins 6 1 21 0 Walker ..16 2 65 1 I Chappell 11 0 0 Chappell 18.6 5 61 5 Baiting time: 420 minutes.

Overs: 88.6, Sundries: Bvcs 12 Leg Bves 10 Wides 6 (Watkins 3 Massie 2 Walker 1) No balls 3 (Walker 3). AUSTRALIA Second Innings I REDPATH Ghani Nawaz 18 STACKPOLE Alam Altaf 9 I CHAPPELL Bari Nawaz 27 EDWARDS Ibw Altaf 3 WALTERS lbw Altaf 6 CHAPPELL Ibw Nawaz 6 MARSH Abbas Altaf 0 WALKER not out 15 Sundries 10 Seven wickets for 94 Fall: 1-29 (Stackpole) 2-31 (Redpath) 3-34 (Edwards) 4-44 (Wallers) 5-70 (G Chappell) 6-73 (Marsh) 7-94 (I Chappell). BOWLING Masood .3 0 15 0 Nawaz 6.2 2 29 3 Altaf ..8 1 33 4 Iqbal .1 0 7 0 Batting time: 116 minutes. Overs: 18.2. Attendance: 6,319.

Day's takings: $4,080.20. Sundries: Byes 5, leg byes 1, no balls 4 (Nawaz 3 Masood 1). Fourth day's play begins at 11 am tomorrow. The casual way to stay cool mad for the eighth-wicket when it sjemed the chunky little right-hander would be deprived of a century. Sadiq Mohammad, the youngest of the four Test-cricketing brothers, did it in Melbourne and now the family has made 19 of Pakistan's 41 centuries in all Tests.

Hanif made 12 Test hundreds, Wazir, the eldest, two. Mushtaq four and Sadiq one. Mushtaq's 121 runs contained some superb cover drives, the innings taking just under five hours with 14 boundaries. He eventually tried to roll medium-pacer Greg Chappell awav and lifted a simple catch to Max Walker forward of square leg. Chappell, who was giv-en the new ball yesterday with Bob Massie In the absence of speedster Dennis Lillee, was to finish with the fine analysis of 5-61 from 18.6 overs.

Lillee was still sore last night and is not expected to bowl tomorrow in Pakistan's second innings although a decision will be made just before the game resumes. Australia's second innings began inoffensively enough until with the score at 29, Stackpole (91 made a book which he would like to forget and skied a catch to Alam. Redpaih (18) went five minutes later, second slip Zaheer Abbas kicking up the catch with his thigh to Nasim-ul-Ghani as he fell backwards. IX-SW1NGER Altaf gave Edwards a yorker and umpire Collins granted the first of his two Ibw decisions. Wallers being the other recipient as Altaf trapped him with an in-swinger.

Australia were 4-44 and Altaf had 3-6 in 17 deliveries, and the Chappells were together to repeat their brilliant Lord's stand. Nawaz ended that dream with an in-swinger which umpire Brooks, a most fastidious judge for such decisions, ruled caught Greg Chappell (6) in front of his wicket. Rodney Marsh (0) made a slash at Altaf and stood for a long time after the ball looped slowly into the slips for a simple catch by Abbas, and left disappointed as if he had been struck on the forearm. When Ian Chappell was out to Bari's marvellous catch two minutes before stumps from the vigorous Nawaz, Australia's "inevitable" win seemed to have become a certain loss. Australia's last hore of paining a 3-0 whitewash in the scries died with the final ball of the dav as nimble little uicketkeeper Wasim Bari hurled himself for a superb catch from Ian Chappell in front of first slip.

The Australian captain top-scored in the innings with 27 and later paid the tourists a compliment for their "bloody sood piece of cricket." "Thev bowled well and held their catches. Now 1 know how Rav lllinc-worth felt alter the Lord's Test." he said, a reference to Australia's win after bcinc in an almost hopeless sitvv.tion before Giee Chappells century. There can be no centurv from Ores when the fourth dav of the Test begins tomorrow for he was one of three Australians dismissed lcp-before-wickct in the innings, brave decisions bv two scrupulously fair umpires in Jack Collins and Tom Brooks. The Pakistanis were quietly jubilant last night. The tourists' defeat in the Adelaide Test by an innings and 114 runs and the following week's loss in the Melbourne Test bv 92 runs were the furthest things from their minds.

AGGRESIVE Neither captain blamed the overnight rain for Australia's collapse. Inti-khab Alam claiming that if anything the pitch was easier for batting on than in the first two days. The long and the short of the Pakistanis' bewildering performance was the seam bowling of the 6ft Jin Nawaz and his 5ft 8in partner Altaf. Altaf dismissed Keith Stackpole (9). Ross Edwards (3), Doug Walters (6) and Rodnev Marsh (0) from eight overs of constantly skilful and aggressive fast-medium deliveries.

A splendidly competitive cricketer, the 28-year-old Altaf is appearing in onlv his ninth Test but he swung the ball nicely in both directions and cut the ball dangerously from the grassy wicket. Altaf took three wickets in Australia's first innings but with his pace bowling colleagues. Nawaz and Asif Masood, did not exert the same pressure bv delivering the ball wide of the stumps on too many occasions. Australia made 334 and Pakistan replied yesterday bv scoring 360. Mushtaq Mohammad hitting his first century against Australia in a career of 28 Tests.

Once again, Altaf was to the fore for he shared a 56-run stand with Moham Sekai Holland "there are no degrees of and if you feel your legs are too white to bare then bronze them with a fake tan. If you can go bra-less then do so, because getting rid of that structured layer of synthetic round your bosom makes an enormous difference when the heat's on. Otherwise try and find a cotton bra it will probably be fairly functional and unglamorous, but you'll feel better for it. Try to do without a girdle, and if you've got too many bulges then wear a long, loose dress that hides them. Choose your shoes carefully.

Sandals are best, but do make sure they're big enough, because feet can swell considerably in the heat. Leather shoes are best because plastic makes your feet perspire. I'm always amazed that after surviving numerous heatwaves so many Australian women are hopeless at dressing sensibly in hot weather. They seem to stick to the rules of European dressing rather than adjust to their own hot environment, and half tbe time their clothes are more suited to a spring day in London's Kensington High Street than a sweating Sydney summer. In this last heatwave I've seen women wilting rapidly in the city because their dresses are too tight and made of synthetic fabric, and they are still wearing nylon pantihose or stockings, and probably a full-length nylon slip and girdle plus white gloves.

So it's for these suffering women that IN MY FASHION, by PAULA GOODYER I've compiled the following ideas for beating the heat. Break as many fashion rules as you like for the sake of comfort. Dress as casually as possible, particularly if you sweat freely when your hair gets damp and your make-up glides off, leaving you with face bare of all but a mirror shine, you'll look better in something that's not too dressy. Wear the minimum of clothing. Unless you're wearing a see-through dress I can't see any reason for wearing a slip.

Discard pantihose or stockings LONDON, Monday. Anti-pomographv campaigner Mary Whitehouse has attacked a sex education television series to be broadcast to English schools later this year. Mris Whitehouse said her National Viewers and Listeners' Association was asking the Independent Broadcasting Authority, the controlling body, to vet the Granada series contraceptives and unwanted pregnancy, thus conditioning young people to believe that these are the only alternatives. "Unless the programs make clear the verv great advantages to health and character of pre-marital chastity, they will be withholding facts which are essential." (AAP-Reutcr) Program protest 'The Facts are These," before it is broadcast. Mrs Whitehouse said she believed from press statements "the programs will apparently present a loaded option just between FRONTIERS OF SCIENCE CROSSWORD PUZZLEl Ozone Warning Part 2 Jail, $1,100 fines for labourer, 18 No 7387 AND SOLUTION TO 7386 David James Lovegrove (fined $100).

Driving dangerously (fined $400, disqualified from holding a licence for three years). Driving without a licence (fined $100). Swearing and using unseemly words (fined $100). OZONE (Q IS MOLECULE fTSffS. I fy 'X THIS.

INDU6TRV HiS. GROWN OP THE SAS OXV6EN MfffiXsJxv I ift UP BECAUSE OF THE "lee atoms Vi I rfi'-l' rewsinessocozoneto INSTEAD OF THE NORMAL Si JL) VA i LOSE ITS EXTRA. ATOM. TWO, AND IS FORMED 1 IT WITH ykS? 1 Slhl3 AJ UNDESIRABLE SUBSTANCES oxysenCqi) is tWarffliJ rL-s Cm' 1 1 and become ordinary SUBJECTED TO SILENT H'Tt Tl I h' OXYGEnT ELECTRIC DISCHAR.ee, THIS NORMALLY OCCURS AT LOWER ALTTTTUDES il ffet yt 1 ONLY IN THE UPPER. OZONE IS CREATED ONLY -i- Ttl fWK ATMOSPHERE, WHERE THE BY ACCIDENT AROUND RESULTING LAYER OF ELECTRIC ARC-WELDINS JC OZONE ABSORBS MUCH OP OPERATIONS OR BY A.N THE LETHAL ULTRAVIOLET INCREASING VARIETY OF I rj TEB RADIATION FROM THE SUN.

OZONE GENERATORS. rJJ THE POnS By Jim Russell HeStilS'foilfcYfJArfSS? YBOTDti'T 1HATS EIGHT, luimjrrr amV 5amdi ec ROOM I YOU SM BUT I DOWT EEC SA6S VO0UETHE WITHOUT ANT SAMPLES SIR HAVE NO YOU WERE A To SELL.0JHAT.T3ELL1. I RefiT WHERE ARE. BASS T2AVELUM6 SEUL SBAlMS 17 fPAVeLUUG f2-, Youe bags? salesman Tr 'J Salesman! IfiW i IS yfp' arrcst (fined Constable C. Resisting $200).

Assaulting A Blacktown youth who stole a keg of beer, assaulted another youth and a policeman, drove dangerously without a licence and resisted arrest was fined $1,100 yesterday, sent to jail for six months and disqualified from driving for three years. Toli Placho, 18. labourer, of Harold Street, Blacktown. appeared before Mr P. Howard.

SM. in Blacktown Court of Petty Sessions. The seven charges he faced, with the penalties imposed, were: Stealing a nine-gallon beer keg with cooling equipment valued at $93 (six months jail). Unlawfully assaulting G. Verhagen (fined Pakistan send batsmen home ber 17 after the guests had left.

Detective Cullcn said he had gone to Placho's home the morning after the party and had then taken Placho to Blacktown police station and charged him with stealing the keg. Sergeant C. Evans, Blacktown, told the court that earlv on the night of January 4 Placho had been with four other youths, and had punched David Love-grove in the eye and on the nose. Lovegrove had been treated at Blacktown Hospital for his injuries. Sergeant Evans said he and Constable Verhagen had then driven to the Bedford Road area of Blacktown where Lovegrove had been assaulted.

They had seen Placho in a sports car. He had refused to stop and had driven off at 55 miles an hour. Fifteen minutes later the police had managed to catch up with Placho, who had sworn "in a very loud tone." Placho had then left the sports car and had fled along lanes, over fences and across backyards. SZOO). Placho, who pleaded guilty to all the charges, was given 16 months to pay the fines.

Detective T. Cullcn, Blacktown, told the court that Placho had admitted having taken the keg and equipment from a private Christmas party at a Blacktown hall on Dccem- Solution and now puult tomorrow. DOWN 1. For woman's work Diana gets some helpers. (7) rrtt Draft resister wants job back 2.

Powerful stable hand? (9, 6) i w- 1 1 rriri 1 i I I 3. An American jerk! (4) 4. By tlie letterbox- port 1 IWTCijrn TA it didate for Hotham against the former Customs Minis. is starting badly. (4, 2, 3.

4) 5. Rip dressed by dangerous pests. (3. 7) 6. Firm friend for 2-down? (6, 9) ter.

Mr Chipp, in the Fed Pakistani batsmen Saecd Ahmed and Mohammed llyas will fly home from Australia today and miss the tour of New Zealand. Ahmed, 35, and llyas, 26, will be replaced for the nine-game tour of New Zealand by two young players, Azmat Rana and Wasim Raja. Ahmed is a former Pakistan Test captain and veteran of 41 Tests and llyas a dashing opening batsman with the experience of 10 Tests. Ahmed made 50 as opener in the first innings of the Melbourne Test yesterday week and was dropped four days later for the third Test now being played at the SCO. No mention of injury was made at the time by Pakistan's captain, In-tikhab Alam.

eral elections. ACROSS 1 and 8. She sings of the dirty but well paddock. (5. 11) 4.

No worm for this dead step! (4, 5) 8. See 1. 10. Singular form of the next answer in party. (3) 11.

Takes laps to get in range. (4) 12. Don't touch the loathsome with the fenders! (5-5) 14. Most reasonable football association but I get the others. (7) 15.

They suggest that it's 100 in the Indiesl (7) 16. Ask for frost and make it 1 -across. (7) 17. Tough guy who confuses arm with hand. (4, 3) Pakistan vrickctkeeper Wasim Bari hurls himself for Ian i Woeful bi Constable Verhagen had eventually caught Placho and had told him he was under arrest, but Placho had escaped after a The Director of Primary Education in Victoria, Mr R.

F. Rowe, said today struggle. MELBOURNE, Monday. The Victorian Department of Education has not yet replied to a request from former draft resister Barry Johnston for reinstatement as a teacher. Mr Johnston, 23, was dismissed in September for being absent without leave.

He went into hiding for months, and then campaigned as the Labor can 7. Concerned with the histories of eating? (7) 9. No Pom, but he makes a Pom firm, apparently. that Mr Johnstons apph Constable Verhagen had finally arrested Placho in a cation would be processed through routine channels V. private garden.

with dozens of others. But yesterday it was revealed that Ahmed had complained of a backstrain and had made himself unavailable for the Test on the night of the team selection. It is known that the Pakistani team tour selection committee was not satisfied with Ahmed's explanation for his withdrawal. llyas has not played since he was struck by a bouncer on the forehead early in December by the Rockhampton left-arm pace bowler Denis Schul-ler in the match in Roma against Queensland Country. OPENER The tourists' team selection committee, manager of the side Wing Com-mander M.

E. Z. Ghazali. captain Intikhab Alam and vice-captain Asif Iqbal, decided to send the players home. Their recommendation was considered as accepted by the Pakistani Board of Control president, Mr A.

H. Kardar, the former Oxford blue who played Test cricket for India and later for Pakistan, who is visiting Australia. Azmat Rana is a left-hand opening batsman and Wasim Raja a hard-hitting left-hand middle-order batsman and right-arm leg-break bowler. 13. How the footballer Placho had finally been He said it was usual to nanacuned, taken to Black' may make contact? (3 2.

5) town notice station and consider the circumstances L'lL ARNFR Al By BILL O'REILLY Pakistan is ready to chalk up a well-earned win in the final Test of their Australian tour. charged. 16. Designed for swollen- I iy -w vguu I I I I I I of such cases. Placho had punched beaded baldies? (7) II II PAPPV, MOfLL PPOD'LV AH HAIN'T GOT OKIE TMFT'n I Constable Verhagen sev-era! times on the head, and 18.

Broken thing that is Il 1 T-T, r-rTr'i BEGITTIW'A I YET. LOOKS LIKE. AWPUI" worn by sleepers. (7 HAWKINS I I COME AH Tr VZ. I OFfTER AMY VO'LL HAVE ME OM Constable Verhagen had 19.

21. One way to complain WAS THE DAUGHTER HAN'T DAY NOW- ORE HANDS FO' YO' A HuSBIKl about the meat. (4) OFTHE FIRST MARRIED At-VJ TH'RESTO' YORE KAAYOR OF A AHGQTA tI nad to receive medical attention. Sergeant Evans said Placho had almost caused 20. I6'xtI DOGPATCH iCi I 1, 7 fZl-Ts A plan Big Bob's got something for an optimist.

(5. 5) Report from the fringe? (4) Crook state to be in! (3) How completely is the sword sheathed? (2, 2, a number of accidents by 6NMteT I CKERS piNrjsBcflKBKHc driving on the wrong sid; of the road, driving at high speed across intersections 23, Australia's batsmen floundered helplessly in their second innings. They never showed the least determination to get their heads down and surrendered to the bowling of Salim Altaf and Sarfraz Nawaz. As in the first innings, Salim. just about the busiest and most determined all-rounder I have seen, showed quite clearly that be knew much more about using the favours Sydney's pitch offered than any other bowler in the game.

There could be some sort of limp excuse for Australia's disappointing batting surrender. One might say that bowling which can be directed away off the pitch at will, with in added capacity to move either way in the air, demands much more courageous concentration than a lineup of batsmen already chosen for a pleasant tour was able to summon up. Salim literally "sold the and making other traffic pull up suddenly to avoid collisions. Placho told Mr Howard he had no excuse and Pag 31 this week in The National Times Australia' only quality national weekly newspaper 3. 4) 24.

Made the sign, the saying and the tune. 3, 3, 3) 25. He may receive a divider of property. (5) could not explain why he had committed any of the otlcnces. SAEED AHMED.

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