_1_3’-_.".'!ie Guardian. Charlottetown. Wed. Feb. 19. 1964. Many British Boys’ Schools Reveal Low Academic Record 1 3)‘ ROD CURRIE LONDON tCPt--Many of Brit. ain‘s most re it own e d boys’ 5('ll'illl§ score low niai'ks in an tie "top Z)" so-called schools—actually fee- private schools are than most free state grammer schools. says the re- port. published Sunday. a year and then only accepts sons of the elite. were shown to have 8 loner pass rec- ord than those in most state schools. The survey, conducted by so- ciologist .lohn Wakeford of the non-profit Advisory Centre for Erhiration. (‘m'ei'ed loll "public" schools. 64 grammar schools and 45 direct grant schools- schools basically independeni but also receiving government grants to provide some free place: (‘if schools studied the Ample- forih Roman Catholic school. which charges £399 I$l.l97> a year. rated best among board- in: schools with 53 of e\'ei'y 100 students passes. Eton. alnia uiater of aliuust all members of the present cab- inet. placed Stst. Hari-nu. Sir Winston Church's old school. vias -lllth CHANCES BICTTER But one thing ccrtaiii. the boys who go to the "best" pub- Iic schools stand a far better chance of getting into Oxford or Cambridge. The report sa_v.I a boy with t'"t‘l'£’L’l old school tie and acailentic qiialifications has chance in four of entering of the country's two most famous uiiiversities. A boy from I grammar school with the oo-e 333-? on?” gaining top A-level. psame educational qualifications has one chance in 1). in another phase of the re- port. Wakeford says there is ‘a ‘rules designed to limit boys‘ as- ,sociations as far as possible to ‘those within the school commu- lnity. He reports boys are rebelling against compulsory church at- tendance. censorship of private mail and strict rules on dress »d'\m to associate with gir . I "I-lomosexiiality is a declining lproblem." Wakeford r e p o rt 3 "partly because boys them- ‘selves disapprove of it more than the masters do and partly because the seniors now are ‘turning their attention to girls." But this trend. he says. pre- sents new problems of discipline because the "traditional reason- ing" that “girls lead to sex and ‘ sex is wrong" still persists. l.0Nil)ON tAPt~'1‘he teen-age- editors of the Eton College ma- gazine swung an upper cut at the noble art of self-defence Monday. calling for boxing to .be banned at their blue-blooded ‘academy. Editors David Jessel. ill. and Hon. William Waldegreve. I7. son of an earl. announced in the Eton (‘hronir-Ie: "We hope that boxing will be- ‘come an obsolete aa galley ‘ slaveii or the chain gang." I The editors said they wanted - the sport banned on medical. grounds and because "the po- tentially sadistic minority in :any community" had been ob- served lurking in school boxing audiences. . As an alternative. “an alto- lgenher more satisfactory and ef- ’fective method" learning self-defence. they suggested the school take up judo. Young Separatist Gives View On Montreal Arms Theft T(iR(i\"l‘0 n(iPt -— A young Quebec separatist convicted of setting fire to an armory said lricre he believes the perpetrators of last month's huge arms theft in Montreal have bank robbery on minrls as it means of financing reioliition The separatist. C-ra. e. 24.. made the comment dtiri. a discussion of terrorism in Quebec on the (‘TV Televi- sion \‘otwork‘s Pierre Berton Show. Traitscript of grant has made available adiante oi the broadcast. Grasse. \Pt‘\'llll.Z a two- year suspended sentence for I1"Il1ll’1E set fire to the (‘raig Street .\rniorv in Montreal last Auciist. refused to say whether he knous any of the people in- (in) de .0_ in \"‘l\f‘fI In the raid on this Ar- 'llf‘!‘_\ of [es l-‘iisiliers .\lorit- Royal Jan 30 ‘I am still on parole for two years do at this time could be very dan=_'ei'oii:- r me. because I m "‘*»‘ "at four yr-vars." he said. \. ‘amt \\'l1 e i h e r lie sym- D>"1"/.Nl with the armory raid- ew». he said '‘I sympathize with them but I wouldn't sympathiu-. if they committed terrorist acts such as killing people or plac- in: bombs where they might endanger a life." .\Y10fi_\‘l1)0ll.< phone calls to po- lice and newspapers have de- scribed the armory raiders as ,memhei's of a new group called le (‘otuite Rcvoliitionnaire de tQiiebec Revolutionary Committee‘ Asked what he thinks they ' to do. do Grasse. . "The main thing right. on. I believe. is to get some ‘ money and the only way to get. some mone_v is to take it from where it i.s— banks." “Thais the theory that has their ' and whatever I say or‘ been expressed." Berton said. “They want these guns to hold up banks for it large reserve fund so they can effect a revo- . Iution. is this what is going n"" “Ye.I." replied do Grasse. ' he Grasse appeared on tile. program with Richard I-‘litter. 19. a former elevator operator and one of the members of Ie Front de Liberation Quebecots. which waged a campaign of bombings in Montreal between March 7 and May it last year. Rizier has _iiist been released good behavior from Flor- after serving four . ii six-months sen- tence for planting a bomb at an RCA? technical services building. De Grasse. a SP('l’PI.'<ll'_V at the linivei‘sitv of Montreal’: ltlcole Polytei-liiiiqiie. belonged to a group that called itself the .lun- ior FLQ he G-rasse said he believes there must be innocent victims‘ ‘in a revolution. Berton: "So you believe that Isometimes. any means even if .it involves the death of innocent people. is the proper way achieve something that you be- lieve." De (lrasse: "Yes . . . when it is important enough. when it involves the life and freedom of people. I believe even if you eliminate 100 persons it doesn't matter." Grasse and Bizier both on deaux prison mont said they believe the French- speaking people of Quebec are free. "We are colonized ways." Bizier said. , federal government in that they have a majority of English- speaking people; secondly. eco- nom' 3 by the Americans:, and thirdly. by the Catholic Church." in three "Bv the From Case Of BY ALAN KENNEDY - SRINAGAR tAPt -— This jit- ' Kashmir is re- and India is single hai‘r-—Mo|- vanished Dec. tip this snowy -.was spilled on the Indian side ‘ er which India and Pak- rtlstan have fought and argued Iince 1947. "' Pakistan quickly accused In- ‘a of mistreating its Moslem the cease-fire line in Kash- , mlr. ov ‘ -"politician: it sponsored in Karli- diown to be widely India-Pakistan ve won’ mir were h . By worsening lotions. than 0 war . * All of this over I brown-hair . a little glass tube. kept in a - I ha; in a silver casket. it from its xi 2 led Natlona bounty Coun- oliarpa anlnat India on breathing easier for the room-, ent. ate. Riots broke out and blood: 1 trouble people timed with Pakistan's. Kashmir Capital Recovering ’ Prophet's Hair (able to support either claim. ‘ The hair. which many Mos- lems believe has supernatural protective powers. mysteriously reappeared Jan. 4. ‘ Tension has eased in the; EKESIITTIIT valley. though. fresh ‘trouble has been reported Jammu province in connection _with the disappearance of small . iidols from a Hindu temple. e two areas form .lammu- One reason for mob was repressive nature ‘state government. Bali lam Mohammed began his rule .by jailing the state prime min- ister. Sheik Mohammed Abdul-‘ lah. an extremely popular fig-‘ ure known as the Lion of Kuh- mlr. Abdullah favored a plebiscite‘ on Kashmir’: future. India op- poses thin. Still a popular hero. he is in prison charged with plotting to throw the state of Paldstan—a charge he denies. Indian olflciala privately ad- mit Bobbi’: 10 year: in or were marked by corruption and mlsrule. Their plea in that the arm conalltutlon gavendhlm a a mo . Faced with mounting critic- liim in New Delhi. Baliiilil re- Ilgned last September. but stayed on u the power behind , the new state cabinet headed by 3119- sham: Uddun. ammed Sayeed Muoodi. leader of the all-party Kashmir oorunittee said. following recov- of In : movement will continue. 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