1955-06-02-03 |
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_ - 0 8 t Deptof Uads ääfSoatJ*'* telee tuhanria kansalaisia aaringonkylKi/fj :ien järvien vilpoisille rannoille. Ylläoleva 't-puistosta Erie iär^en rannalta. Ontario' % staan ja lokcmattomlsta järvistään. 'm A N-LIITON »JUHLIA vietti toliiton stävyy-danjäl-nuksen voksis-eakou-uskun-i d e t t i in »äivälle likkiai-tt. Neu-en k i i - raken-e tule-feuvos-ja yh-kans- 'astus-caavaa opet- Länsl-e tais- 1 tais-oteut- .i .että . i-au-tettai-n rau-itomi.- ;uhoa-a rau- ;a me itomi- 1 kek-stiista. lekko-tusko-ihtois-ilmal-teistyötä auhan ja kummankin maaa:- hyvinvoinnin ja kukoistukajn hyvät.; si. . • - Varsovassa pidsttiin tämän sjpl.'' muksen 10-vuotispäivälle bmistetts^ juhlaistunto.' . Neuvostoliiton ja Puolan lipuuia to-ristettuun Puolan (eätteriin kokoon-' J tui puolue- ja yhteiskunnallistenJär-, jestöjen edustajia, Varsovan tuotat^ tblaitosten työläi:f.ä, tieteen, kulttuu-i rln ja taiteen.edustajia. Puolan—Nen-I vostcliiton ystävyysseuran aktivisteja. J Tilaisuudessa olivat läsnä B. Bieratii, A. Zawadsky, K., Rokossovsky j a ' Puolan yhtenäisen työväenpuolueen johtajia ; ja hallituksen jäseniä aeiä, Neuvostoliiton kommunistisen. puo- • lueen keskuskomitean ensimmäisen^ sihteerin N.. S;. Hrushtshovin johtama; Neuvostoliiton hallitusvaltuuskunta. Puolan yhtenäisen työväenpuolueen; I keskuskomitean enrllnimainen sihteeri B. Bieioit . teki tilaisuudessa setoa Puolan^—Neuvostoliiton . ystävyyden, keskinäisavun ja sodanjälkeisen yhteistoimintasopimuksen kjTnmenen-nestä vuosipäivästä. Sitten annettiin puheenvuoro N. a Hrurritshoville. Kckous tervehti M-, nen puhettaan voimakkain. suosionosoituksin. • . his «inninff posler for the V World butli Festival which will take place I Warsaw AugTist l—U, ivasdesigTied a PoUiJi girl and took second prize the pcster compeiition. ' nemm Hungarian Ruriners Set Recprd Breaking Pace at L o n d o n M e et Three men running in a single race last weekend ali snattered the famous four-minute^mile barrier, the great athletic achievement which until re-cently had .defied distance runners sinceorganized sport beean. , They were Laslo Tabori of Hungary and Britain's Chris Chataway and Brian Hewson. .Tabori. a .24-year-old army man. won a trmendous struggle • in heavy conditions m 3 minutes, 59 seconds Cat — one second of f the world record set by John Landy, of-,JVustra-lia last year. Chataway was second and Hewson third — both clocked in 3.59,8. ON HEAVY TRACK The dramatic fmish electnfied the crowd of 25,000 at an international track meet at London's White City Stadium, the annual British Games. The track was heavy and the tem-perature was about 50 degrees but there was appreciable wind: Tabori finished five yards ähead of Chataway and Hewson in track and field's fifth, sixth and seventh four-minute miles, • Dr. Roger; Bannister of Britain ran the first four-minute miie May 6. 1954, at Oxford. His time was 3.59,4. John Landy of Australia lo\vered the record to 5.58,0 in Finland i n June; Bannister and Landy met in "the mile of the century" in Vancouver in the British. Empire Games and ests Indicate |ew Canadians ^hysicaiiy FIf [••Physically ilhterute" is the des-rjption taggcd on Canadians - m a fcoriö College survey which.concedes bat the ga]s aro in better shape than \e men. '•To take the. word of the average Bnadian himself," said Lloyd Per-val. spcrIs College director who a n - bu.nced the survey fmds I^riday..' he jost^ cenainly feels that he is not | bothxan four-minute miles. Bannis-i- ter won. • iThe college I S a non-profit organ- "Nukkekauppiasta" filmataan Suoniessa Helsinki. — Suomen Filmiteollisuus', filmaa parhaillaan .VValcntm Chorei-lin käsikii-joituksen mukaan valmis-: .tettävaa elokuvaa "Nukkekauppiaa". Filmin ensi-ilta tulee olemaan kesäl-. lä Berliinissä pidettävissä kansainvälisissä filmifestivaaleissa. Haile lemes- ;a. T i - ilaisen illinen ukaan jolloin piaan. palat- SITÄ JA T Ä TÄ • — r Haluaiain panna- veljeni kuole-manilmoituksen lehteenne. Kuinla paljon sellainen maksaa? ^ Viisikymmentä senttiä t-jum^ta. • •— Hyvä jumala! Veljeni oli kuuden jalan j a kahden tuumani pituinea, HANHEN MUNIA "Munia ei voi saada'ilman kano-, ja", sanoi puhuja: korostaakseen a£iaa.: . " M i n u n isäni saa", huusi eräs pfr, | jannulikka. ' • ; | ' "Yritäpäs selttää poikaseni", aanä puhuja. "Hän: pitää hanhia". [Etion dedicated. 10 raising Cana-, an sLandards of physical fitness hd sports : effeciency. The survey •vered a samplmg- group of some-jOiO persons. . . jlt tapped average persons — avoidr |g tramed athletes — in - the; age | G . T : 13 10 59. iTne fmdmgä: Only 13.2 per cent of f n a d i a n males and 27.2 .per • cent I t.ne femaJes could pass simple tests. I p-^i-ys-cal fitness.-. |.Mc.s: able \vsre those in the 20- SO-year age'bracket and the least ; "n-ere the youths. ISeventy-nine per cent of the 50,- lo..^.aid they ."dragged" ythrough |cst days and noticed ' bad periods enersy lack." Only 38 per cent jamed they cculd run a mile and 26 f: C3nt .said i t "nearly kills me" to Jn for a s t r e e t car. ' . „. • O n l y one in - six of the • people ud.ed. have even a minimum de- 'ee of pnysical fitness," Percival lid/ ^••••^^.-••••^•••r---, Of thase \vho completed the ques- 3n.-.aire m rural areas, 72 per cent liscd tne physical requirements; rapared to 7.1 per cent for city feäersi • ^ PÄany \vere not sure wh€ther ex- :.se -v.-as gocd for them or harm-and fio.me apparently thought it M a source of heart trouble. Others hi exerci.se is not necessary for, Iness.- •• . '; • FAVORITE WAS OUT The extraordinary event was even more remarkable in that the favoriteV Sandor Iharos of Hungary. •ttithdrew frome the race because, he -«as air-sick FViday flying to London. Tabon is considered Hungary's No. 2 miler. His best pre\1ous mile was m 4.05 2. About 300 yards from the tape Tabori tried to take Ihe-lead but Hewäon and Chataway held h im off. He tried once ^nore on the last turn and this time began edging ahead. He forged fonvard over : the last yards to finish with a coipfortable five-yard lead. . D r . Bannister was in the stands and £aw the race. He was the first to congratulate the three new four-minute milers. NEW RECORD F O R HIAROS Two days later Sandor Iharos, a slim. Hungarian army lieutenant, slashed seven full seconds off the .World tv/o-mlle record. He started track and field experts wondering how many more marks v/CTe within his reach. The 25-yeariold Iharois came home in a startlmg 8 minutes 33 4 seconds before a wildly cheering British Games' crowd of 50.000. The listed World mark is 8.40,4 set i n 1952 by Belgium's Gaston Reiff. Af ter winning the mile Tabori said he. thought Iharos — who scratched because of air sickness on the trip the day before from Budapest v.'ould have won the mile in a second or two faster. Iharos looked capable of doing a 3.56 mile with ease. ; Britam.s Ken Wood, a 4.04.8 miler running his third twö-mile race, stuck valiantly with the smooth-run-ning Iharos and. finished second, also in the record-smashing time of 8.34.8. Wood's best previous two miles was 9.19. When Tabori dropped out of the race with a stich i n his side at the end of a mile and a half i n 6.31 A Iharos took over. So strong was the flve-feet 11-Inch Iharos he actually sped the seventh 440-yard lap in an astounding 59.6 seconds and did the last 880 yards in 2.02,2. ^ood, a 24-year-old Yorkshire clerk. said later he tried'*?*to keep up w i th Iharos as ' l o n g as I eould but I am afraid he was too strong for me." :'. MANY RECORDS THBEATENED Iharos lowered. iReif f's worki 3,000 metre record two weeks ago by 3.2 seconds to 7:55.6. He next plans to beat Reiffs 2,000-metre mark of 5.Q7 in a race in Brussells, June 15, He also plans to run the mile in the Hungary-Britaln meet in London. Aug. 12—!13. Iharos said he t h o u g l^ a few seconds could be taken off the 3.58 World mark set last June by Austrnlla's John Landy. His Record Mile Is Unchailenged PJodding along the trall from Cun-niixgham Tower toward SuUah..con- «ervation officer ^oe Bertiielot hadn*t a «'Prrj- In a l i the «-orld. B\en when a big cow moose stepped out of the bush in front of him, Joe dldn't fret. He'd seen moose that close befo-o-ore ond they h8dD't b-b>bothered him; : But when a big bull moose appear-ed on the trall bchlnd him, Joe—now the unwelcome third party in a mooä-^land . love trlangle—wasn't so •sure. , The big buU moose glared a t Joe and pawed the ground. Joe felt quite uneasy. The halr on the big bull moose*s neck stood up Itke a brlstle brush. Joe felt real bad. The big bull aioose_ shook his great rack of ant-lers and froth flew from his mouth. Joe declded he should get away from that place. But Joe was sort of hemmed In. There was the cow moose In front of him, the big bull moaa behind him. swamps on both sides of the trall that left no chance for a quick geta- :way with a heavy pack, and no size-able tree handy to cllmb. Joe loaded his shotgun, aimed at the Sky; and let go a couple of blasts. That was enoi>gh for the cow moose, she hlt the bush wlth a rush. Joe Iit' out down the trall past where she'd been standlng. headed for Suitan and safety. The big bull moose? Weil, Joe doesn't know just how It reacted; he 'dldn't look back to see . . . But Joe set a bush record for the mlle run with a full pack t (From the Department of Lands and Forests Magazine "Sylva".) Torstaina, kesäk. 2 p. — Thursday, Jtjne 2,1955 The Story of Ambrosia Tbe loUoalnjF i> « n «rcAunt of Che iouicinary fiootb American rrpublic « f AmbnMls, done «fler tbe manner of Time JDSffaiifle'» . artlrJes on «urb cODRtries. Life «'as good last week i n tiny. banana-growing Ambrosia and for big, genlal. toad-faced Presldent Juan X. (for nothlng) Bussard the day be-gan wlth the customary tour of his domaln. As tolling pean:it5 i n the banana groves warmly cheered him" on hl» way (some exhlbiting cnide. plctur» esque signs . readlng ' ^ e Want Bread"), presldent Bussard wheel-cd his goId»plated iMercedes-Benz through the luah countryside. Flfteen thousand armed guards. thelr hond-some uniforms' agleam, lined the route, occaslonally. bayonettlng over-zealous admlrers of "The Boss." of great and good frierid PrancJsco ^Fraiico..' M' : - \ \ v ' - ' - After many a triaJiknd trouble andt personoi sacrifice (he tvas fprced to order thie executlbiv of his. mother and four bt-others In last }rear's at-tempt to bverlhrow the goifernment), Bussard had found hlma;lf at long last wlth a steady economy. JNe^vr cohtfacts with a U ^ J banana company assured hlxn not only pf a 50-50 jprofit ciiti btit hnd cleared the way f or tlie loan of tw6 squadrohs of UJ3. jet fighters to protect the country from; ihvaslon attd ihternal .sQuabbles.-.-':;'.-,^;:':': A man öf slmpIe. backoountry tastea whose impbrtatioh of U.iS. Jazz bands and chainpagne bäths are looked upon by hlä subjccts as harraless personal wh ims, Presidetit : Biissard mies llttle Ambroja wlth ä; hard-flsted style of command that has Weil mlght strong man Bussard eamed him the respect of the con-smlle (see cover) as he observed progresa on every side. In the capital Itself several new skyscrapers offered testlmony to the combinatlon of A m brosian democracy *and American know-how. iNearly completed was the glant new 40rstorey Oensors bulldlng to house his vlgilant watchdogs of the nation'9 press. Beyond It loomed the bulk of the new Political Prisoners' building where 125.000 enemies of the state attest to Presldent Bussard's fearless war agalnst aubvereives. In the city's main plaza stood the solid marble statue of "Uberty," glft EVERYONE ABOUT TH • B y L E N A ENDICOTT IS TALKING • FESTIVAL cesänä !ttä se inska- Uisesti iuuden sti, 4- 1 kan-atoryn , alka-itkalle siltä, i mai-urlsti-siihen, i n ka- , eikä kq t u - rla. eli tnska-iaitsee aarien ee hy-sialls-i " k a - mak- Jta — iritaan il kun rterai-aatta-iröista I kat-nähdä tte; ja irdcsta n pa-irähän syvemmin,, n i in mitä pahaa siinä (ö vaikka "kapitalistitkin" vierailevat sosialistisessa maaUmanosassa? Neuvostoliitossa ön vieraillut tuhansia ihmisiä eri puolilta maailmaa jaöffi-vasti j a . vaikka näiden vierailijaa, joukossa on ollut kommunistejzto; niin suurin osa heistä on seiväs^ ollut ei-kommunisteja. Totta kuitS!- kin lienee, että valtavan,,suuri eneiB-mistö Neuvostoliitossa vieraiDeöy. ihmisistä oh ollut työläisiä, farmareita ja muita pikkuelajiä. Jos NeuviB^, töliitossa kävijäin jou<koon tulee il« entistä enemmän mjos kapitaliste. - ja siellä on vieraillut suun maa» kapitalisteja, suuriakin seUaisla -- niin se on vain hyväksi. . • Me. emme esimerkiksi naltisi muuta kuin hyvää sima, J« valtain hallitus julistaisi maailm»^ että kapitalistien ja heita I^a^^' vieri politiikkojen Iisaksi YhdysvaJKB-;. hih voi tulla vierailulle mjos kofflo^ nistit j a heidän kannattajansa-j^ että amerikkalaiset kommunlsBu^ saisivat oikeuden matkustaa e n ^ Iille maailmaa, kuten saavat ina»»^, taa yhdysvaltalaiset porvarit, taen.;-etteivät he' mene sosiahsi»^; maallmanosaan. V Niin, muuttuuv maailma.: B k ^ : kuten Aleksis: K i v i sanoi, Yhdysvallat vapauden ja a " j*°^V| syyden'kehto, minne "oikeaoppiset" 1^"»" k:n"rmikäll on puhe ihnilsteD p o ^ ^ sista katsomuksista » " ^ J g jj tämä kunniatila siirtymässä \^_^A jänkklen sotapolitiikaUe - tahdissa soslalistlseUe niaallin«o*^ |Vvomeu's G ym Classes jMoved tto iS^ön Puisto In order to take advantage of jUie .sunny \veather which is ex-jliccted to arrive one of these days jand to provide feed for the do-jmcsticated mosquitoes at Työn jPuiito it has been decided to jtransfer the women's gym classes |to Tjon Puisto from today-on. JThe clai.ses uill be held there jrefularly on Thursday night at r-30, except on rainy days when (»he Hall u i U b e utiUzed. Tne bi?ffer girls from the junior jor ihildren-s group are invited to jjoin m the rehearsals and learn [ihe rna<« eym for the Liittojuhlas. When Stan Linkovich, 24-ycar old leader of the Russian Canadian Youth Organization returned to Toronto from his cross-country tour, he undertook to be the Organizer oi t.hö" Ontario Youth Festival! for a Greater Canada. Stan know3 a thmg or two about suchevents! In 1953, he at-tended the .World Youth Festival in Bucharest, and on his recent Canadian tour, he held discussions with youth in Saskatchev/an, Alberta, B r i tish Columbia, Manitoba . and Port Arthur, concerning plans for their festlvals. He played a prominent role m last year's Ontario Festival which was attended by more than 10,000 people. Now, with only six weeks to go before once again celebrating Canada's birthday (this time, her 88th) i n even grander style, we asked Stan how things were shaping up. "Everyone'stalking about the Festival and planning. for it", he said. •'The Hungarian Ady Club,.for insr tance, is prepanng a Wedding Dance making costumes, scenery sets and a l i — for the dance competitions." The Russian Canadian dancers are busily perf ecting the:r Moldovian Dance, while news has come from the Hamilton Slovak-Hungarian Club of dance rehearsals there in antici-pation of keen competition. Accord-ing to Stan this f ield i ^ receiving the greatest response so far. ; . Singing and drama, how6veri are not lagging- Among others,. the Association of United Ukrainian Cana-aians and the Drama group of the National Federation, of Labor Youth have dramatic presentations under-way. And the "Doh. rah, me's' are sounding in many halls as songsters get . i n tri.m. •. . • A l i these eager youth will compete in pre-Festival Regional Competitions. 'In Toronto the date is set for Saturday, June 18", Stan told tis and went on to teli of similar events to take place in Windsor, Hamilton and possibly Sudbury, Niagara Dis-trict, Brantford, Leaihington and London. The International Sports League had a fine turnout last week for volley ball practice (both boys and girls) which. seems to assure plenty of competition for the title of top volley ball team, one of the host of .sports planned. . . Entries are coming in steadlly for the Amateur Ai-Ls Competition, the deadline for which has been extended to June 20. "The organizations and clubs are begmning to work hard toward win-ning the honored place of "Festival Queen" for their popular "Stars", said. Stan. ' We'd like to have everyone turn in the money they've ralsed so far that. we may know who's lead-mg", he added. . Stan looks on the festival as a gocd invigoratmg diet for a youth organization. " "AIl this activity i n preparation and the festival itself affords the opportunlty to ali youth organizations takir.g part, to grow in numbers to find new and varied activities, and to develop unity with each other around the central theme of Canada." For ali who attend i t . t h e Ontario Youth Festival will inspire greater mteresl in Canadian traditions and neroes. and snow that youth too must contribuie to a better. kirid of Canada. G i r l s Recommended To Train I n a recent issue, "Research Guide," published by Sports College, took a survey on the questlon of women tralning as hard aa men. iThey found that many people are opposed to It. while the authoritles are In favor. We reprint below • excerpts from thelr very interestlng artlcle: It Is recognized by physlologists that the female of the species has about half the endurance potential of her masculine counterpart' How-ever, this does not mean that she should not work hard — only that her regree of endurance as compared to the degree poa^Ible In man; Is limited. Por instance/' a femlnlne athlete coiild never develop the endurance that would make her capable of running the mile as fast as a tralned : m a a But. she is capable of rurmlng a mile and If she trains hard she w i l l be able to improve her performance without 111 effects. In other words, wlthln her range öf capabllity, a femlnlne athlete Is subject to the same physlologlcal laws as a man. There appears to be no medical or phya.ologlcal reason why a femlnlne athlete should not work as vlgor-ously as a man. Her tralning w l l l pro-duce the same general results and there will be no side effects common only to her. Opinlons coUected from medical and surglcal authoritles Indicate that it is the general impression that well tralned. femlnlne athletea (ballet dancers, for example) are l>etter than. normal surglcal rlsks. recover faster and have less trouble In chlld-blrth. There is apparently no reason why hard tralning wlll develop any condltlon that would have a detrimental effect. . A study of a large group of intematlonally famous women ath-letes slnce 1928 showed that more than 90% of them are now happlly married. Most of them have three of four chlldren. This is a much higher .rate of marriage than that of the average non-athletic glrl. I t Is the reactlon of moat of the husbands of these athletes that Visa Meeting Sunday, June 5, at Wanup Hall : Many important club matters will be discuseed at the Visa membership meeting w h l c h l u is been called for next Sunday. 1 P.M. at the new Wannp HalL A l i Old and new memberv are urged to attend as a iiew exe-cutive should be formed for this year and the whole qaestion of partieipatfon i n tbe LUttojuhlas and Btuuier activities generalJy wiU be ap for discusslon. i i ! " ! •-^'t jear the Ontario Yoath Festiral attracted over 10,000 people to aee classes for both men and women and Is being tvonsoredby tbe J'aIfrmo over tbe Canada Day weekend. The Festival is teinff held I apaln this year wilb a vast caltaral and sports program and yoath In » » parts of the province are preparing to participate. The sports eveniÄ , • e a track and field meet i r i th a e<>od variety of evento i n severU, pfaoto iaclod shotrs tbe ma in parade to Uie atfaletlegroonds a i Us t >«ir^^^ AthleticClub, AIl F C A 6 F cins are nrged to se n d atbletcs to psrtidpatc In the competitions. Othen who do not participate fn atbletles wUl ffnd many other attractfon whieh iHII make it an enjoyaUe wecfcend, Ovr Arnold Vesterback Seeks Elecfion In Fort William Weil known young Finnish-Ca- ,.Ba4ian Arnold Vesterback is running as a Labor-Progressive can-didate in the Ontario elections in the Fort William riding. At a recent election meeting he con-demncd Fremier Frosfs promise . of providing I75,00f new jobs as . being Just another of his empty pre-eiection promlses. For three years, the Frost govern-ment dld nothlng about the unem-ployment sltuation. Then early this year, wlth the election i n mlnd, Frost told the Provlnce that $3.750.000 would be glven to the municipalitles for works and relief. This amounts tp about $1800 for each unemployed worker. Mr. Vesterback charged that whlle Frost deceltfullypromlsed 175,- 000 new jobs, he did not ear-mark money for projects that would actually provide jobs. Nothing was'£aid about low-rent housing projects, set-tmg up a marketing . departmeht to send trade delegatlons. to the Com-monwealth, Europe and Asla, open-ing up the Northland, or larger grants for School and hospltal construction. Mr. .Vesterback said, "If ali the nloney In the budget were spent in one year, .whlch it isn't, and if there was no räin, at be.st it would provide about lO.COO new jobs. Since most of these new jobs would be on high-way ; construction one week's raln could wlpe out ali the nev/ Job.s In Mr. Fro.st'5 budget." '•The only way to create perma-nent jobs l,s to Industrialize the pro-vince. iWe ehould build a steel i n - dastry at the Lakehc-ad to proccss one mlllion tons of Steep Rock iron ore annually, as a beginning", Ve:;r terback declared. "We have the ore, the potential hydro-power, the technlcal know-h" v/ and the money and the man-power — what are we waltlng for?" he asked. The only road-block Jn the way of developlng our rlch na-tural resources in Ontario for our people. Is the Frost govemment po- Jicv of exportlng thfem Ih the raw lorm to fted U.S. industry. •Do you knov;" asked Mr. Vester-back, "that for every Canadian v/ho d;gä a ton'of Iron ore, ten America ns get jobs proccs«Ing j t . " Every ton of ore mlned adds at best only about ten dollars to the national product, but when lt'« proce.-?sed Jnto finnished good.^ it adds. at least 80 to SfO dollars Ih yalue- 'By export-in? our ore jn ra'iV form,' O.^tarlo lo.-.es 70 to 80 dollars in value" he said. , He emphasizcd that, "the h!ghv/ay «.a.idal wäs rotten ftnough, but the biggest scandal of ali Is the whole-sale sell-out of our natural wealth to UJ5. big businefts," He pledgcd to contlnue to fight for a steel In-du-^ try and the ali-Canadian gas plpe- Une as a publlcly-owned entcrprise to supply cheap fuel for Onterlo's Industries and homes. these girls make excellent wlves. due to thelr energy. good health. and fitness and their understandlng of sports whloh makes them both good companions and excellent mothers. Apparently, tralning tn competitlve sport teaches the average glrl many lessons that she would not. learn otherwise and which are a great advantage to her. in later life as a wlfe and mother. , One öf the things that men (and many women) overlook is the physical • requlrement of housekeeplng. When the true facts of this activity are known, less tlmc wlll probably be spent woro'lng about the poor. girls who are Vorking hard on the athletic field. The amount of energy spent by a woman oii housework depends, of cöurse, on tlie slze of her famlly; the size of the houfc a n d what help she has from labor-savlng devlces and hired help: lAccordlng tö, Dr. Peter Karpo-vitch, one of the world'H leadlng physiologlsts, It has been found that the average woman uses a n average of 1.600 calorles per day on her housework, This ranges from a little over 800 calorles on a Ught day to well over 4,0CO on a heavy day, such au washday. In other word8, on a heavy day. the average woman uses up more energy than elther a hockey or football player does In a com^ petltlve game. An Investlgatlon of many femlnlne athletes who have worked very hard for a number of years Indlcates no 111 effects of any knld. To the con-trary. It Is Interestlng to notc that femlnlne athletes who t r a in hard appear to ,have more energy and personallty Chan the non-athletic type. Excess energy Is always a factor In general personallty. and It ia de-veloped through hard; proper tralning. . It is the opinion of Sports College that the femlnlne athlete should reallze.that It Is just as Important for her to work hard If «he Is to develop athletic excellence as i t Is for her masculine counterpart. There are no known reasons why she should not — from the vIewpolnt of any resultlng detrimental effects, elther prei(2nt or future. In tralning. the femlnlne athlete should observe a l i the same prhi-clple » as suggested for the masculine athlete. There Is, apparently, a great need for a change In altltude on this que.?tIon. At this time, the popular opinion seems to be that tralning procedures for the femlnlpe athlete should, in prii«:iple, be llghter and easler ihan thok*sugge«ted for men. LAST WORD •WIfe. readlng her husband'« for-tunc/ on a welght card: '"You are dy-namlc, a Icader of men, and admlred by women for ypur good looks arid Btrength of character; l t ' s got your I welght wrong, too," BEFORE AND A F T ER A wöjnan who had just returned from Egypt waK telling some acquolntances, about a bazaar she^vlsited in one of the side Btreets of Calro, As a «ipeclal attractlon, the proprietor wa8 exhlbiting at one end of the room "The Skull of Cleopatra^ Beslde it was a smaller skull. and this one plqued the American'* curloslty. She asked the proprietor whose skuU that wa8, "That is Cleopatra'a too,", he explalned mlldly. " « ( a chlld." slderable American colony. His credo is appleple simple.. "We must give the people the govemment that is suited for them." said he last week. " A n election by vote in Ambrosia would lead to chaon and a victory for MoscoW which has long eyed our banana rcserves v l th envy. iThere must be a leader un-hampered by the need to wln publlc fiupport. We cannot afford that luxury i n Ambrosia." WIthi his well-equlpped. well-pald army (the new offlcers' mess has I l swlmmlng poolq four polo ficlds and two l8-hole golf courses) Bussard iu well prcpared to put down the occaslonal revolt of partyllne unlons In the banana flelds. To do-gooders who protest that the banana workers are modestly pald (60 cents a day for a 12-hour work- Ing day) "The Chlef" has a charoc-terlstlc reply: ''The fIgures are mis-leadlng, Inqplred by forelgn agcnts. The workers are allowed to take home a l i the bananaa they caneat." • • • •. •.•»•• AmbrosIa's plans for the future are bold. Peasant-owned land Is beIng quletly. expropriated for the extenslon of the UJS. banana compa-ny's holdlngs on the sound business prlnclple that wIthout American capital and know-how the country's economy could well alter. Says shrewd Presldent Buqmrd: "We are learnlng slowly, but steadlly; th6 lessons of free enterprise," •Soclaily life Is pleosant In Ambrosia, Presldent Bussard's frlendsand ad-visors. aided by new and generous ]awa whlch Increase Icgltimate graft from 30 to 78 per cent, live In lux-urlous country homes, fly their alrplanes. goaslp at the nev co club on the capital's outsklrts, tn lovcut Dior gowns (see Gobelln tapestrles. Bevres vasei Tiffany clocks add sumptuous t e:t Occaslonally this select gro thinned by the qtilet dlsappearai one of " T l » Boss' Circle bfaij who has revealed ambltions.for er. Soys hard-headed, humor-. Presldent Bussard : " O n e bad h can ruin the bunch.' In a World whlch of ten secmj tlie to U.6. mtereots little Am stood last Week as a shlnlng ex of a good nelghbor who wlll go the line. Said klndly John Foster I last Week awarded Ambrosla's < ed Star of Merlt. •*We area't w about Ambrosia." ' From Jack Scotfs column 1 Town" in the Vancouver 1 Foronfon kuulumi Toronto.— CSJ:n Toronton ton varsinainen kuukauslkokoi detään kesäkuun 6 pnä^ siis me taina, kello kahdeksan ; illalla.: kaa jäseniksi: pyrkijät j a 'Vatih senet oikein joukolla kokoukseei kos on nyt järjestetty siten ett Ie pitkäksi istuminen, mutta 8l jokainen -tilaisuuden kuulla tukset juoksevista asioista ja vaikuttaa niihin: ; Osa koki ajasta käytetään huviin ja n toon., Viimeksi: pidetty kokous mainiosti j a saapttvilla .oIIeet^ tyytyväUlä. Miellyttävää oli dan maisemien, jokien j a järvh keminen. L P P m SUOMALAISEN K L U B I N KESÄJUHLA L P P : n ' suomalaisen klubin \ nen kesäjuhla vietetään Taro kesäkuun 11 pnä. Lauantai' on juhlatanssit Hyvällä soitolU saksi on pääsylipulla tilaisuus kolme arvokasta lahjavolttoa.; Sunnuntaina on monenlaish rapclejä yleisön käytettävissä ii scstasesta aamusta alkaen.: P i Jälkeen esitetään monipuolinen vokas ohjelma, josta yksitylsk Bcmmln myöhemmin. — J , , CANADAN MAANTIET • • Ottawa. Canadassa oli • \ lopulla 'kailcklaan 517.809 mail kcnteello avattua maantietä^ tllla taikka sementillä päällyj oli O mailla- jokaisesta sadasta lista. "Now that we have voled oUrseives our usual saiary increases, w e ' vote to reject any demands of.the union for higher wageii and impra menta to the penslon pian." KÄYTÄNNÖN KIRJOJA AUTOILIJOILLE MIKÄ AUTOSSA VIKANA? AUTON TARKASTUS J A VIANETSINTÄ Suom. Pentti O. Savolainen 3 « SIVCA — Runsaasti kuvitettu — HINTA SID,$4.0( iAuton koneistoon tulleiden vikojen korjaaminen on uselmmlter verraten helppoa ja vähän aikaa vaativaa, kunhan ensin vain löydetään vika. Hyvän a utomlehen on oltava selvillä niistä periaatteista joiden mukaan vikojen etsiminen on suoritettava. Johdonmukaista tutkimusmenetelmää käyttäen hänen on ensin määriteltävä, miki! on autossa Vikana, ja vasta sitten ryhdyttävä sitä korjaamaan, Teoi MIKÄ AUTOSSA VIKANA? opettaa juuri tuon tutkimusmenetelmän, JoJta johtaa ehdottoman oikeaan ratkaisuun. Käytännön kädikirja autoilijoille j a autokorjaamoissa työskente- Jeville. : ::[r'r: AUTOJEN SÄHKÖVARUSTEET AAIMATTIKIIUA, JOLLAISTA E I AIKAISEMMIN OLE O L L UT :__JCIrJ, Pentti O, Savolainen , 428 SIVUA — 309 kuvaa toi kuväryhmää — HINTA SID. $5.0( Autoaähk^alaa pidetään yleisesti autoalan vaikeimpana. Tämä ei olekaan Ihme ottaen huomioon, ettei ole-lalnkäan ollut saatavlsa* alan submenkleltetä ammattlojiplkirjaa. Tämän puutteen poistamiseksi on dipl. Ins. Pentti O, Savolainen, joka on aikaisemmin kb-- Jolttanut mm, ammattlopplkirjan "Dieselmoottorit ja niiden huolto" iaatlnUt laajan ja perusteellisen esityksen autojen sähkövarusteista K i r j a antaa perustiedot yleisen sähkötekniikan perusteista, erilaisten autosähkövarusteldcn periaatteellisesta rakenteesta, toimintatavasta, vlkamahdolllsuukslsta, niiden etslmismenctelmlstä js korjaustavolsta. TILATKAA OSOITTEELLA: VAPAUS PUBLISHING CO. LTD. OOX 69 "SUOBUBY. ONT.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, June 2, 1955 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1955-06-02 |
Type | text |
Format | application/pdf |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | Vapaus550602 |
Description
Title | 1955-06-02-03 |
OCR text |
_ - 0 8 t Deptof Uads ääfSoatJ*'*
telee tuhanria kansalaisia aaringonkylKi/fj
:ien järvien vilpoisille rannoille. Ylläoleva 't-puistosta
Erie iär^en rannalta. Ontario' %
staan ja lokcmattomlsta järvistään. 'm
A N-LIITON
»JUHLIA
vietti
toliiton
stävyy-danjäl-nuksen
voksis-eakou-uskun-i
d e t t i in
»äivälle
likkiai-tt.
Neu-en
k i i -
raken-e
tule-feuvos-ja
yh-kans-
'astus-caavaa
opet-
Länsl-e
tais-
1 tais-oteut-
.i .että
. i-au-tettai-n
rau-itomi.-
;uhoa-a
rau-
;a me
itomi-
1 kek-stiista.
lekko-tusko-ihtois-ilmal-teistyötä
auhan ja kummankin maaa:-
hyvinvoinnin ja kukoistukajn hyvät.;
si. . •
- Varsovassa pidsttiin tämän sjpl.''
muksen 10-vuotispäivälle bmistetts^
juhlaistunto.'
. Neuvostoliiton ja Puolan lipuuia to-ristettuun
Puolan (eätteriin kokoon-' J
tui puolue- ja yhteiskunnallistenJär-,
jestöjen edustajia, Varsovan tuotat^
tblaitosten työläi:f.ä, tieteen, kulttuu-i
rln ja taiteen.edustajia. Puolan—Nen-I
vostcliiton ystävyysseuran aktivisteja. J
Tilaisuudessa olivat läsnä B. Bieratii,
A. Zawadsky, K., Rokossovsky j a '
Puolan yhtenäisen työväenpuolueen
johtajia ; ja hallituksen jäseniä aeiä,
Neuvostoliiton kommunistisen. puo- •
lueen keskuskomitean ensimmäisen^
sihteerin N.. S;. Hrushtshovin johtama;
Neuvostoliiton hallitusvaltuuskunta.
Puolan yhtenäisen työväenpuolueen; I
keskuskomitean enrllnimainen sihteeri
B. Bieioit . teki tilaisuudessa setoa
Puolan^—Neuvostoliiton . ystävyyden,
keskinäisavun ja sodanjälkeisen yhteistoimintasopimuksen
kjTnmenen-nestä
vuosipäivästä.
Sitten annettiin puheenvuoro N. a
Hrurritshoville. Kckous tervehti M-,
nen puhettaan voimakkain. suosionosoituksin.
• .
his «inninff posler for the V World
butli Festival which will take place
I Warsaw AugTist l—U, ivasdesigTied
a PoUiJi girl and took second prize
the pcster compeiition. '
nemm
Hungarian Ruriners Set Recprd
Breaking Pace at L o n d o n M e et
Three men running in a single race
last weekend ali snattered the famous
four-minute^mile barrier, the great
athletic achievement which until re-cently
had .defied distance runners
sinceorganized sport beean.
, They were Laslo Tabori of Hungary
and Britain's Chris Chataway and
Brian Hewson.
.Tabori. a .24-year-old army man.
won a trmendous struggle • in heavy
conditions m 3 minutes, 59 seconds
Cat — one second of f the world
record set by John Landy, of-,JVustra-lia
last year.
Chataway was second and Hewson
third — both clocked in 3.59,8.
ON HEAVY TRACK
The dramatic fmish electnfied the
crowd of 25,000 at an international
track meet at London's White City
Stadium, the annual British Games.
The track was heavy and the tem-perature
was about 50 degrees but
there was appreciable wind:
Tabori finished five yards ähead
of Chataway and Hewson in track
and field's fifth, sixth and seventh
four-minute miles, •
Dr. Roger; Bannister of Britain ran
the first four-minute miie May 6.
1954, at Oxford. His time was 3.59,4.
John Landy of Australia lo\vered the
record to 5.58,0 in Finland i n June;
Bannister and Landy met in "the
mile of the century" in Vancouver
in the British. Empire Games and
ests Indicate
|ew Canadians
^hysicaiiy FIf
[••Physically ilhterute" is the des-rjption
taggcd on Canadians - m a
fcoriö College survey which.concedes
bat the ga]s aro in better shape than
\e men.
'•To take the. word of the average
Bnadian himself," said Lloyd Per-val.
spcrIs College director who a n -
bu.nced the survey fmds I^riday..' he
jost^ cenainly feels that he is not | bothxan four-minute miles. Bannis-i-
ter won. •
iThe college I S a non-profit organ-
"Nukkekauppiasta"
filmataan Suoniessa
Helsinki. — Suomen Filmiteollisuus',
filmaa parhaillaan .VValcntm Chorei-lin
käsikii-joituksen mukaan valmis-:
.tettävaa elokuvaa "Nukkekauppiaa".
Filmin ensi-ilta tulee olemaan kesäl-.
lä Berliinissä pidettävissä kansainvälisissä
filmifestivaaleissa.
Haile
lemes-
;a. T i -
ilaisen
illinen
ukaan
jolloin
piaan.
palat-
SITÄ
JA
T Ä TÄ
• — r Haluaiain panna- veljeni kuole-manilmoituksen
lehteenne. Kuinla
paljon sellainen maksaa?
^ Viisikymmentä senttiä t-jum^ta.
• •— Hyvä jumala! Veljeni oli kuuden
jalan j a kahden tuumani pituinea,
HANHEN MUNIA
"Munia ei voi saada'ilman kano-,
ja", sanoi puhuja: korostaakseen
a£iaa.: .
" M i n u n isäni saa", huusi eräs pfr, |
jannulikka. ' • ; |
' "Yritäpäs selttää poikaseni", aanä
puhuja.
"Hän: pitää hanhia".
[Etion dedicated. 10 raising Cana-,
an sLandards of physical fitness
hd sports : effeciency. The survey
•vered a samplmg- group of some-jOiO
persons. . .
jlt tapped average persons — avoidr
|g tramed athletes — in - the; age
| G . T : 13 10 59.
iTne fmdmgä: Only 13.2 per cent of
f n a d i a n males and 27.2 .per • cent
I t.ne femaJes could pass simple tests.
I p-^i-ys-cal fitness.-.
|.Mc.s: able \vsre those in the 20-
SO-year age'bracket and the least
; "n-ere the youths.
ISeventy-nine per cent of the 50,-
lo..^.aid they ."dragged" ythrough
|cst days and noticed ' bad periods
enersy lack." Only 38 per cent
jamed they cculd run a mile and 26
f: C3nt .said i t "nearly kills me" to
Jn for a s t r e e t car. ' . „.
• O n l y one in - six of the • people
ud.ed. have even a minimum de-
'ee of pnysical fitness," Percival
lid/ ^••••^^.-••••^•••r---,
Of thase \vho completed the ques-
3n.-.aire m rural areas, 72 per cent
liscd tne physical requirements;
rapared to 7.1 per cent for city
feäersi • ^
PÄany \vere not sure wh€ther ex-
:.se -v.-as gocd for them or harm-and
fio.me apparently thought it
M a source of heart trouble. Others
hi exerci.se is not necessary for,
Iness.- •• . '; •
FAVORITE WAS OUT
The extraordinary event was even
more remarkable in that the favoriteV
Sandor Iharos of Hungary. •ttithdrew
frome the race because, he -«as air-sick
FViday flying to London.
Tabon is considered Hungary's No.
2 miler. His best pre\1ous mile was
m 4.05 2.
About 300 yards from the tape
Tabori tried to take Ihe-lead but
Hewäon and Chataway held h im off.
He tried once ^nore on the last turn
and this time began edging ahead.
He forged fonvard over : the last
yards to finish with a coipfortable
five-yard lead.
. D r . Bannister was in the stands
and £aw the race. He was the first
to congratulate the three new four-minute
milers.
NEW RECORD F O R HIAROS
Two days later Sandor Iharos, a
slim. Hungarian army lieutenant,
slashed seven full seconds off the
.World tv/o-mlle record. He started
track and field experts wondering
how many more marks v/CTe within
his reach.
The 25-yeariold Iharois came home
in a startlmg 8 minutes 33 4 seconds
before a wildly cheering British
Games' crowd of 50.000. The listed
World mark is 8.40,4 set i n 1952 by
Belgium's Gaston Reiff.
Af ter winning the mile Tabori said
he. thought Iharos — who scratched
because of air sickness on the trip
the day before from Budapest
v.'ould have won the mile in a second
or two faster. Iharos looked capable
of doing a 3.56 mile with ease.
; Britam.s Ken Wood, a 4.04.8 miler
running his third twö-mile race,
stuck valiantly with the smooth-run-ning
Iharos and. finished second, also
in the record-smashing time of 8.34.8.
Wood's best previous two miles was
9.19.
When Tabori dropped out of the
race with a stich i n his side at the
end of a mile and a half i n 6.31 A
Iharos took over.
So strong was the flve-feet 11-Inch
Iharos he actually sped the seventh
440-yard lap in an astounding 59.6
seconds and did the last 880 yards in
2.02,2. ^ood, a 24-year-old Yorkshire
clerk. said later he tried'*?*to
keep up w i th Iharos as ' l o n g as I
eould but I am afraid he was too
strong for me." :'.
MANY RECORDS THBEATENED
Iharos lowered. iReif f's worki 3,000
metre record two weeks ago by 3.2
seconds to 7:55.6. He next plans to
beat Reiffs 2,000-metre mark of 5.Q7
in a race in Brussells, June 15,
He also plans to run the mile in
the Hungary-Britaln meet in London.
Aug. 12—!13. Iharos said he t h o u g l^
a few seconds could be taken off
the 3.58 World mark set last June
by Austrnlla's John Landy.
His Record Mile
Is Unchailenged
PJodding along the trall from Cun-niixgham
Tower toward SuUah..con-
«ervation officer ^oe Bertiielot hadn*t
a «'Prrj- In a l i the «-orld. B\en when
a big cow moose stepped out of the
bush in front of him, Joe dldn't fret.
He'd seen moose that close befo-o-ore
ond they h8dD't b-b>bothered him;
: But when a big bull moose appear-ed
on the trall bchlnd him, Joe—now
the unwelcome third party in a
mooä-^land . love trlangle—wasn't so
•sure. ,
The big buU moose glared a t Joe
and pawed the ground. Joe felt quite
uneasy. The halr on the big bull
moose*s neck stood up Itke a brlstle
brush. Joe felt real bad. The big bull
aioose_ shook his great rack of ant-lers
and froth flew from his mouth.
Joe declded he should get away from
that place.
But Joe was sort of hemmed In.
There was the cow moose In front
of him, the big bull moaa behind him.
swamps on both sides of the trall
that left no chance for a quick geta-
:way with a heavy pack, and no size-able
tree handy to cllmb.
Joe loaded his shotgun, aimed at
the Sky; and let go a couple of blasts.
That was enoi>gh for the cow moose,
she hlt the bush wlth a rush. Joe
Iit' out down the trall past where
she'd been standlng. headed for Suitan
and safety. The big bull moose?
Weil, Joe doesn't know just how
It reacted; he 'dldn't look back to
see . . .
But Joe set a bush record for the
mlle run with a full pack t
(From the Department of Lands
and Forests Magazine "Sylva".)
Torstaina, kesäk. 2 p. — Thursday, Jtjne 2,1955
The Story of Ambrosia
Tbe loUoalnjF i> « n «rcAunt of
Che iouicinary fiootb American
rrpublic « f AmbnMls, done «fler
tbe manner of Time JDSffaiifle'»
. artlrJes on «urb cODRtries.
Life «'as good last week i n tiny.
banana-growing Ambrosia and for
big, genlal. toad-faced Presldent Juan
X. (for nothlng) Bussard the day be-gan
wlth the customary tour of his
domaln.
As tolling pean:it5 i n the banana
groves warmly cheered him" on hl»
way (some exhlbiting cnide. plctur»
esque signs . readlng ' ^ e Want
Bread"), presldent Bussard wheel-cd
his goId»plated iMercedes-Benz
through the luah countryside. Flfteen
thousand armed guards. thelr hond-some
uniforms' agleam, lined the
route, occaslonally. bayonettlng over-zealous
admlrers of "The Boss."
of great and good frierid PrancJsco
^Fraiico..' M' : - \ \ v ' - ' -
After many a triaJiknd trouble andt
personoi sacrifice (he tvas fprced to
order thie executlbiv of his. mother
and four bt-others In last }rear's at-tempt
to bverlhrow the goifernment),
Bussard had found hlma;lf at long
last wlth a steady economy.
JNe^vr cohtfacts with a U ^ J banana
company assured hlxn not only pf a
50-50 jprofit ciiti btit hnd cleared the
way f or tlie loan of tw6 squadrohs
of UJ3. jet fighters to protect the
country from; ihvaslon attd ihternal
.sQuabbles.-.-':;'.-,^;:':':
A man öf slmpIe. backoountry
tastea whose impbrtatioh of U.iS. Jazz
bands and chainpagne bäths are looked
upon by hlä subjccts as harraless
personal wh ims, Presidetit : Biissard
mies llttle Ambroja wlth ä; hard-flsted
style of command that has
Weil mlght strong man Bussard eamed him the respect of the con-smlle
(see cover) as he observed
progresa on every side. In the capital
Itself several new skyscrapers offered
testlmony to the combinatlon of A m brosian
democracy *and American
know-how.
iNearly completed was the glant new
40rstorey Oensors bulldlng to house
his vlgilant watchdogs of the nation'9
press.
Beyond It loomed the bulk of the
new Political Prisoners' building
where 125.000 enemies of the state
attest to Presldent Bussard's fearless
war agalnst aubvereives.
In the city's main plaza stood the
solid marble statue of "Uberty," glft
EVERYONE
ABOUT TH
• B y L E N A ENDICOTT
IS TALKING
• FESTIVAL
cesänä
!ttä se
inska-
Uisesti
iuuden
sti, 4-
1 kan-atoryn
, alka-itkalle
siltä,
i mai-urlsti-siihen,
i n ka-
, eikä
kq t u -
rla. eli
tnska-iaitsee
aarien
ee hy-sialls-i
" k a -
mak-
Jta —
iritaan
il kun
rterai-aatta-iröista
I kat-nähdä
tte; ja
irdcsta
n pa-irähän
syvemmin,, n i in mitä pahaa siinä (ö
vaikka "kapitalistitkin" vierailevat
sosialistisessa maaUmanosassa? Neuvostoliitossa
ön vieraillut tuhansia ihmisiä
eri puolilta maailmaa jaöffi-vasti
j a . vaikka näiden vierailijaa,
joukossa on ollut kommunistejzto;
niin suurin osa heistä on seiväs^
ollut ei-kommunisteja. Totta kuitS!-
kin lienee, että valtavan,,suuri eneiB-mistö
Neuvostoliitossa vieraiDeöy.
ihmisistä oh ollut työläisiä, farmareita
ja muita pikkuelajiä. Jos NeuviB^,
töliitossa kävijäin jou |
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