A 4:1ARLETY-01,
AEIRCULATION.AS
No. 3460.
PERTH, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1970.
(Registered at the G.P.O., Perth for transmission by post as a Newspaper.)
Price 8c.
4111111111MMI
MORE RELIEF NEEDED IN QUAKE -HIT PERU
through the ruins of what they once called home. Reconstruction will be a herculean operation. It is estimated that the total relief coming sti l l a great need for emeris massive Peru: There IMA, L into Peru is meeting gency programmes in earthquake devastated Peru — espe- about one-tenth of what is needed. cially in the Sierra mountain ranges. It was first thought The government's airlift forts since May 31 have funds are being held that there would be too programme has been the not been enough. The throughout the nation, many supplies for the situation is not easing, with active support from transportmeans of only distribution system to ing supplies into these re- but growing. The trag- the rich, the middle class, and university cope with. mote, but densely popu- edy is virtually total. However, the tragedy students. However, the problem lated areas. reversed itself. The effectiveness of has had unifying effect The victims themselves has these airdrops are a lit- on the Peruvian peo- are beginning clean-up There is now no forepicking seeable end to the need operations, ple. tle uncertain. methodically for relief. Massive aid from othCollection supplies and slowly, er nations, including the United States, have been open with r eceived arms. It is hoped that the ex pected additional U.S. helicopters will increase and speed up the transJunior Recruit Chris 15-year-old boys from all Lyons, is anxious to hear portation of relief supANTIGUA, Guatemala: Thirty-five bishops from six Cen- topher Corcoran, Mount over Australia will be from Catholic families plies for the hundreds Gravatt, Queensland, taking their places in who would be prepared of thousands trapped in tral American nations, deploring the constant violations of passed out of HMAS early July. to act as sponsors to the Callejon de Huaylas fundamental rights in their area, have urged prompt and LEEUWIN at Fremantle The Naval Chaplain at some of these boys for range. unrestricted compliance with the United Nations Declaration last week after 12 LEEUWIN, Father F occasional weekends months' naval training, PROBLEM o f Human Rights. and, has now joined Whether or not govHMAS SYDNEY, a useless war, so that they The bishops, assemblernment and voluntary Border War troop-transport ship, for GENEVA, Switzerland.—Pope Paul VI has salutagencies have enough ed here for the 15th genThe meeting was to ponder with heavy confood and other relief eral assembly of the have been held in mid- science the sad conse- sea training. ed the retiring head of the International Labour Our picture shows the supplies to fill the air- Conference of Central 1969, but was postponed quences of their deeds, Organisation, David A. Morse, for his work over craft and helicopters is American Bishops, also by the border war be- and turn their aims and 16-year-old recruit receiv the past 22 years, particularly in strengthening ties i ng one of two trophies denounced all forms of tween El Salvador and energies to the service still another problem. between the ILO and the Vatican. of peace an dof the from the Minister for News coming from violence. Honduras. D. J. Kil the Navy, Mr. good." common Morse, an American, abr't 1.000 ILO specialthe Catholic Relief SerThey had received In reference to this len, MP. was succeeded this ists active in 90 counvices headquarters in armed conand other conference of At a Note: many reports of "frightChris won his trophies month by Wilfred Jenks tries in vocational trainNew York that (U.S.) elsewhere, the flicts foreign ministers of Cen- for soccer and basket of Great Britain. fully disfigured bodies" ing, management devel$125,000 worth of blan tral America (June 5), ball. areas, bishops stated: found in their opment, promotion of kets, antibiotics and a The ILO won the Nobel "We make a most ve- El Salvador and Honand that the numbers of The day before his oo-3perativ3s and small variety of desperately Peace Prize in 1969 for such incidents were in- hement appeal to those duras agreed to set up a passing-out, he became a industries, social securneeded vaccine will be creasing. who now take up arms demilitarised zone. Non- Catholic and received improving the social and ity, worker education, flown by economic welfare of chartered in opposing forces, to combatant nations in the Sacraments of Bap administration plane, was heaven sent. workers around the labour Egotism those who already have the area are to police tism, Penance and Euand occupational health Even more well reworld. side either for the first charist and safety fields. decried t h e dirtied their hands with 1.8 miles on They ceived was the news that blood in fratricidal and of the border). Under Morse, ILO had time. Of Morse's work as the C.R.S. was sending "growing economic egomoved away from its director-general, Pope privileged tism" of the nine and hundred '750 tons of canned food One by the fastest ship avail- classes, who, they said, ty recruits passed out of earlier emphasis on set- Paul said it was "patient international and effective endeavour "seem to be insensitive HMAS LEEUWIN with ting up able. labour standards to dir- in the &nice of the of those to the needs 216 The Junta de AssistenChris Corcoran, and ect assistance. world of work and thus cia Nacional, the gov- who have not had the At present, there are of mankind at large." in opportunities same ernment's co-ordinating tives and attitudes. Inagency, is calling for life." evitably, Maori self-conmore stocks of preThey condemn represfidence further declines.'' cooked food while the means of reC.R.S., on the other sion as a Fr. Arbuckle shows economic advanhand, is sending teams taining the Maori is plagued that to appealed tages, and of U.S. and German WELLINGTON, N.Z.: A 350-page re- by problems of bad armed forces, police, the peace corps volunteers indebtedness, officers to port by a Marist priest-anthropologist in- housing, out of Casma and into and security themselves to dicates that the Church in New Zealand poor education achieverestrict the mountain villages ment, unsatisfactory vothat are propWith foodstocks, stoves services problems arising out of increasis facing achievement, cational juristheir within and other cooking and erly lower health standards tension. racial ed diction. eating utensils. — all of which lead to The division here is between 200,000 native Maoris They feared that their frustration. of European persons background. and 2,600,000 DISEASE find might countries While the report was As the villages dig out, themselves in the same Father G. W. Arbuckle, the problems of the being prepared, the first and the days pass, hun- situation as some coun- who was commissioned Maori's sense. signs that these frustrager and the threat of dis- tries on the continent, by the Wellington archThe root of the prob- tions were heading toease increase. It is win- suppressing fundamental diocese — which, with lem is that the Maoris' wards racial violence apter in Peru, and there human rights and liber- Auckland, contains most sense of identity has peared with the developare reports of near- ties on the pretext that it of New Zealand's Maoris been seriously disturbed ment of a "brown powfreezing conditions in was the only way to in- — to report on the situ- because of the pressures er" movement. the mountains. roof, bread, ation, states: a sure on them from the domFor many Catholics, "The Church must inant white culture of It is feared that the health, and education the report has come as citizen. every for the many villagers who concern itself with the the Europeans. a shock. Most of them ident human developsense of total "Their walk out of the mounThey called upon govhave had little contact tains over treacherous ernment officials, law- ment of the Maori. To ity, of belonging, of sewith the Maoris, and selterrain will die before makers, judges, busi- expect Maoris to be in- curity is shattered. They they reach their destin- nessmen, parents, tea- spired by the teachings feel lost and distressed, dom at Church level. "Cars have been my life for a long time. Because of its wider ation — either from chers, and youth to be- of Christ when their like young children who My 17 years experience in all phases of the hunger, injuries or from come strong forces in basic needs as human be- leave the warmth and implications, the report motor business means I can give you the right home is expected to be studied Physical exhaustion. the liberation of man." ings are ignored is to familiarity of their closely by the Governsort of advice about buying a good quality misread the Gospels." time. first the for Relief teams travelling sections ment. There are used car at the price you want to pay. Arbuckle anniFr. suggests 20th the Noting "Pakehas (Europeans), to villages in the disaswhich will undoubtPhone me on 61 6736, or call and see me ter stricken northeastern versary of the Declara- that diocesan priests, lacking the necessary in it tion of Human Rights, rather than just mission- understanding and sym- edly embarass the Govpersonally." area of Peru must bring the bishops applauded aries, go to work among pathy, too frequently ernment, and which run their own food supplies its insistence on job op- the Maoris. condemn Maoris for counter to the official and bedding. He says that the re- their apparent laziness, line that all is being portuities, better salarTremors are still felt ies, health, education, re- sources the Church emtheir "happy-go-lucky" at- done that should be throughout the night. spect for all men, appli- ployes in caring for the titude to life, their de- done. Drinkable water is cation of justice, due Maori are too small to linquency, their prolongThe Maori population Completely cut off, but process of law, freedom cope adequately with the ed "senseless" gather- is increasing twice as government USED CAR trucks are of opinion and expres- complexity and immens- ings. fast as that of the Pakecarrying SPECIALISTS water into the sion and the right to the ity of the challenge exist"Indiscriminate con- ha, so that the racial coastal towns of Casma truth, free association, ing, and that both parish demnation in its turn tensions now emerging 495 Victoria Albany Highway, Park Tel: 61 6736 and Chimbote. and the integrity and clergy and laity are in- only increases Maori may unless increase Peter Atkinson Donovan John The monumental ef- dignity of the family. aware of suspicion of Pakeha mo- there is change of heart. sufficiently
Violation Of Human Rights
Naval Recruit's Bi Week I.L.O. HEAD RETIRES
Race Problems Emerging In New Zealand
'Cars arenot justmybusiness theyaremylife'
rinovan motors