1955-06-16-03 |
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JA RUEITA itUaiaea lehti on to-rjaamo tskee <\'ixheeii. 1 laskuun. sanoo jotaiin 7ir. n el 'huomaa sitä. tekee virheen, tulee tekee virheenj lähe-tukkia.. • , •• .-r: aja tekee virheen, ei^; skaan antee^ui. - J A RAITTIUS leilumiehen. joka 3Qi i uta lu-heilu^ hän ei nutkaan. VIALLISTA :erta kaikkiaan kum. 3rta kun tapaan muna: on jo naimisissa, Ien nitomisissa. Aatu ilee yhä -Saksassa. mielipide- <; lup> nuorittava laitos yn Hitlerin nykyisin latuksesta. Kysymys tekisi jos uudelleen }-tilannetta vastaava . vastasi suoralta kä-isä Hitleriä vastaan. oikein varma, mitä ilmoitti äänestävänsä a.: F,3delleen tutki- Hitlerin kannatus on idulla; kuin kaupun-: istä-, joiden kesken, tiin, 10 pros. ilmoitti tavansa Adenauerin i. sosialidemokraatte-olaispuoluetta ja 27 . n oikeistosiiven pik-toululaisten. keskuu- I suoritettu kiertoky. a saksalaisesta", jol-,i stui seuraavaksi; FESTn^AL NOTES; hsy Program Includes Sports And Cultural Competitions CIXTLRAL COMPETITIONS 0.1 the Canada Day v/eekend youth i Ontario will celebrate Canada's »irthday at the 2nd Ontario Youth Festival atPalermo. . . T!ie: cultural Competitions take il2Ce Saturday af ternoon, July : 2nd. SU groups outside Toronto are elig-ibls in the finals* The finals will based on only one dance or song. 30t two as in the preliminaries. P i r s i ind Second winners . in each catc;- ;öry will receive an extra surprisei ill groups entering the competition jiUbe honoured with a certificatel Groupft planning to enter the finals Eust register by June 20th. J f , yoii jive no registration forms, just fiU 5 ali tlie possible Information aboiit our group on a sheet of paper and fnd it in to the Festival Committee n Toronto. • '.4RTICIPANTS CARDS Each Festival. .participant will be isked to register at a fee of 50c. B e - ' ides helping cover the cost of ru»- ling the Festival thia fee gives the urticipant special privileges., These iclude sleeping . accommodations bnng your own blankets),: entry into 11 Festival events and a reducedrate meals. You could estimate on a imum cost of $4.00 for the we€k-d stay at Palermo (not counting feundayj. This is worked out on the basis of a regiatration fee of 50c Plus $1.75 per day on meals. THE P R O G R AM JThnrsday EveninjT ' Registration at Camp Palermo and a F i lm or Social Friday 9.00 ajn. — Team Competitions i n VoUeyball and Basketball. 10.00 a j n . Track and Field Meet. 7.00 pm. — G a l a Concert Program. 10.30 p j n . — Weinpr Roast. . Saturday 9.00 a j n . — Team Competitions 4.00 pjn. -.^ (or later) Cultural Competition Finals. S.OO p j n . — Carnlval Dance Closing of Festival. SPORTS . 'AU volleybBll softball: and basketball teamsmu«t register before June 25th. Send them to 497 Bathurst St. Team captains must haAre their teams on the grounds at 9.00 ajn. Friday and Saturday momings. Most team competitions will take place Saiurday Teams will not be able to register once the Festival gets underway. Each person entering the Track and Field Meet must regtiter i n advance wlth the Festival Committee, 497 Bat-hm- st St. Toronto. Track and Field' entries must be o a the grounds at 10.00 a.m. Friday moming. elm lentava. Gallup-tut-insä .'(yytä suhtautua , koska niiden puit-tävallisesti esittää n ja Länsi-Saksahan oivallista demokra-csessa voidaan aanoa i nykyinen politiikka: ttavan sadon—jopa eskuudessa. i in the Cariboo! ruplaa ukseen lalaisen . tasavallan in budjetista käyte s puolet eli 5,662,000 alistuslaitosten ra-ijen lukumäärää al-ii oppikoulu avataan pselän metsatyöläis-lan. Karhumäen assa rakennuksessa, illaan peruskorjaus-itaan kouluksi, jossa valoisat ja tilavat muut asianomaiset etehuoneustot. uuria -varoja käyte-. lenhoitoon. otyöläisten työeh-tulee, niin kukaan syä sitä "läpimnr-i yhteydessä leh-lua vjiösipalkkaa" todella tärkeä i» sanottuamme, on tteivät autotyöläiset itselleen "taattua anän- varsinaisessa vat työttömiksi joo-. iöiltä vain suhteel-, lavustuksen valUon työttömyysavustuk-ivustustakin" he tti-ita vuoden kuluttua, viikon ajaksi. Mikä Uisuuden palveluk-silloinkin olemaan a "uusia" työläisiä, Ivästi palvelusaikaa 'lisäavustusta". . . luistetaan, etteivät ioitakin erikoisaloja _ saaneet mitään ia ^ kun he eivät attua korjausta Pi^- aiheuttaneisiin tfö-niihin kohtiin, mis-jen ja erimielisyj'^- ehtosopimuksen aitakaan nyt paft»»' ilin silloin void-jao utotyöläisten tyyty-län taisteluniieliD«» vaikka joutulsiB"C« ,Shhi. aUekirjoltta- "Camel£i in British Columbia? "VVho ^vcr heard of such a thing?" "Used as pack animals i n the C a - boo gold rush! Way up north i n that 1 country! Impossible!" The boy from the Cariboo, the far ntenor of northern B . C , insisted he nght, and unfolded the unbe- |:evable story. • • • ' Il started just 100 years ägo vhen government of the United States ught 70 camels from Egypt for its ny Tranfiport Service. After tra- Jelliag 1,200 miles, over mountains to California, by camel caravan, a gen-al pred;cted that soon ali mail M d be carried by camel. • San Francisco merchant, Otto •sche by name scented a fine way to l:e a big plle of money. He chart- Ired a ship and sailed across the P a - Ific to Manchuria. He brought back |»o shiploads of camels which sold lor around $450 each. This TVas good-f) usin2a5. So he chartered another up, the Dollart, and sailed to S i iriä for more. • It was just at this time that the fa-nous Pony Express aroused a whh:l excitement. By a combination of M^y, steamboat, and ponies, mail i taken from San Francisco to New ^ork, right across the continenty i n 12 m. telegrams i n . eight days. Soon Y^iT ihat the first rairoad wa5 built pght through the Rocky Mountains, San Francisco, The Pony Express ad seived its turn and gave way .to frogress. Biit vhat of the camels? The Döl-prt wa3 an ancient sailing ship. a riree-master, and the voyage acrosq p Pacific was a long and pahiful pe- Tne ship rolled and pitched and |«s€d. day after.day Week after Week fonth after month. The camels, klng f the desert, at home i n the wlde p n spaces of sänd: sunshine and P> air, were crowded into the V^iy stinking hold of a atorm-tossed FP- There one after another, they grew sick and died. When they final-ly reached San Francisco, only 20 of the original 44 camels were still alive. By now the Pony Express had come and gone; the mails were carried by rail, So who wanted camels? A few were sold to circuses and zoos. Some were displayed i n San Francifco at 50c a look. •Unexpectedly a new market for camels appeared. Up in the wilds of British Columbia a great gold rush was on. There was no Pony Express and no railway over the Rocky Cariboo Road. • Pack horses and mules were very much i n demand. And after ali camels could go for days without water, Ilve on sage bruaih and carry half a ton some 30 miles a day. So 23 of Otto Esche's camels were brought north by steamer. For about a year, the camels made regulax trips on the Cariboo road as paok animals. The rocks were hard on their feet, accustomed as they were to desert sanda, and they had to be re-shod too often. Camels shoes can still be picked up i n the Cariboo country. But what was worse. the horses and mules had never seen anything of the kind before and were terrified. They bolted at the sight of the camels whole pack trains were atampeded. They did so much damage they soon didn't have a friend on the Cariboo road. The owners were imabie even to sell th€m, and most of them were just tumed löose In the wilds, where some of them survived for 40 years. Speed Meet Postponed Because of Räin Heavy rains last veekend forc-ed Speed tb postpone its scheduled practise meet at the Beaver'Lake flcld. Desplte the bad weather a cood number of athletes tumed oat in the bopes that the räin W0Dld let up and the events could be. run off. The meet will be r un off this weekend at the Beaver Lake. field but it wai start at 10 A. M . In-stead of 11 because of an affair at the hali which will start at noen. AU district atliletes are urged to attend this meet so that relay teams can be fonned to partici-pate at the Ontario Youth Festival which will be lield i n Palermo July 1 — 2. AU athletes wishing to partict-pate i n the track and field meet at Palermo should speak to e i - ither Jorma Palomäki or Melvin Latvala. DONKEY DOCTOE? A doctor was called in to see a very testy patient. "Weil, what'6 the mat-ter?" he asked cheerfully, as he enter-ed the bedro<«n. ^'That," anapped the sick man,. "is for you to flnd out." . " I see," said .the doctor thought-fuliy. "Weil, i f you'll excuse me, m go atonsr and fetch a friend of mine — a iveterinary surgeon. He's the only fellow I know who can make a diagnosis without asking questlons." Horseless Garriages Were Known Neariy A Cenfury Aga •Although the auto is a modem In-vention, it isn't quite as modern as some people think. It is hard to. determine who built the pioneer vehicle, but a letter in an old copy of The New York Times recor'ds this: "It was in the year of 1864 that a friend of my mother, who was 11 v-ing with her family at Aubumdale, a suburb of Boston, drove a horseless carriage from Boston, a matter of 14 miles as I-recall the distance, to our home in the former place., I wa.s then a lad of nine years, y e t i distinctly remember his arrival, his coming up the road, seeing little puffs of steam vapor jetting out from the back of a regular carriage, called a box buggy, "When he came to a stop I was simply astonished to see no horse. The shafts had been removed and there did not seeni to be much me-chanlsm. No doubt there was a tank for water, with the additlon of what was needed i n automotive mechanism. |, however, recall the whip socket — no .whip but in its place a bunch of flowers!" Finnish Aclress Greefs Worid Youth Festival (Bom In'Laplaiul In the northern part öf Finland, AnneU SauU started tier film careertwo years ago. Stoe has already partlclpated In seven f ihns, oU Fhmirä. Her ambition is to make more and more fiUns. In a letter to "Festlvarv whlch is the week-ly paper pubUcizing the' Warsaw Youth Festival to be held In August she has the foUowing to say: " T h i e Festival can b e ö f the great-ef «t value in the developement of creatlve talent. Although I have never taken part in a Festival. I un-derstand that the artlstlc level of performances in the different arta Is very high. V The student chiematography semi-nar. which wm take place during the Festival greatly interests me, and it's the f hst of its U n d that I have heard of on,an international scale. It wUl •be certalnly uasful for those who make or take part in fitaxs to meet those who watch and criticize them. Like Gerard PhUIpe, whose opinioris you published i n a previous number of "Festival", I admh-e the Italian neo-reallst school ofclnema very much. Xhese fUms reach and. are understood by the greatest number of people. They are honest and serious. Finally to ase old classlcal fllms is a fine idea, for the majority of young people have just not seen them. I flnd them very modem in a ' way and I am sure that they would be o f Inter-est to other young people.'' We certainly agree, Anneli, and hope you attfnd the Festival wlth other actora, actresses, and produ-cers. together with those that are simply cinemagoers. SO TEABS IS T H E B E E t t JAVEUN ASPIRANTS MUST CHANGE TACTICS Kour as ali my friends and acquain-tances know. i do not stlck my nose into serious subjects very often, but the one set down hereunder is one of the excepUons. I t touches one öf my a3ft spots because I hate to see anyone crying in theh- beer whlle the»^ could be out.doing something about the cause of their troubles. But per-haps first.I should go over a bit of recent history. When the Olympic flame wa8 dous-ed, and the games of 1952 were but ah entry to the record books, a great hue and cry was raised In the American pre&s about the near defeat (or was it a defeat?) of the U . S. Olympic team to the Ruasians in the unofficial total points race. Many European newspapers rather maliciously Implied that the Yanks were none too happy about themselves having to practice the role of "good losers". I n their own fashlon the powers-that- be in the United States A. A. U . have started frantlcally to. push for- .ward a programme wlth the alm of retaining former glories at Melbourne In 1956. One smaU factor in this ashedule is Franklin "Bud" Held who recently tossed the spear 81.75 metres down in California, This bettered his former World record for the JaveUn throw: the: previous markhavihg been 80.41. Mr. Held — or rather the equlpment he uses r - has been the cause of much concern in Finland. Apparently our good cousins across the ocean do not take kindly to the atreamlined modern version of: their favourite athletic weapon,- especlally whcn the results achieved oTershddow any made by the old time-honoured product. Or could it be that the thoughts of Amer ricans taking over i n a predominantly Finnish sport is somewhat obnoxlous? Unless rules have radlcally changed since I read the last ast of regulations It Is stated that each contestant in a field event may use his own equlpment provided it conforms to unifor-mlty • and is approved by the judges. Also, i t is expressly stated that any other contestant may use the same equipment If he so desires! So what's ali the shouting about? Why not send one of Pindland's strongmen over to particlpate i n a few American track and field meets? |f this new typeof.javelln is as good as It'a crack-ed up to be. achieving reauits O to 16 metres betterthan the conventional type, maybe the record vould be äd-vanced to over 80 metres and taken home to its tradlttonal owner8. ' The preceding täctlc might be too drastic and expenslve, but it isn't the only one to faU back oh. i n ama-teur sport of any kind it is the cus-tom to pass on new methods and technlques to anyone interested in them. It would by no means be dlf-icult for one of the Plnnlsih sports organizatlons to write to its counter-part in the United States, asking for a couple dozen of the new Javelins to be shlpped • over —• C. C D . of course. Those concemed o n this side of the Atlantic would be honour-bound to grant the favour. If It were refused, and only then, would there be any excuse for taking up arms. — GulUver. Torstaina, kesak, 16 p,—Tbursday,lJuj» 16/1^55; 28 jouJtkuetta olympiakisojen jaifcapailol(ilpailuun Amsterdam. — 28 maat» oh II-molttonol ,|oukkiieensa olympiakisojen jalltapaHohllpaUoihIn 1056 limoitu Itansalnvällncti. Jalkaml-loUltto kesäkään 13 pM. -Näistä 24 Joukkuetta Joutuu suorittamaan karsintaottelut omissa maissaan Ja 12 voittajaa pääsee varstoat-siin olympiakisoihin. Neljä Joukkuetta pääsee kisoihin ilman karsintaotteluja. Näistä kisojen Järjeatäjämaa, AustraUa on ibnan muuta siihen o i keutettu Ja loput kolme vallttlto a r valla Ja a n » suosi InUaa. Siamia Ja Puolaa. Karsintaottehitsuoritietaan seuraavasti : Jugoslavia-Romania, Bulgaria- Britannia. Länsi-Saksa-Turkkl, Itä- Saksa^Unkarl. NeuvostolIltto-lsrael, Egypti-Etiopia USA-Meksikko, F l l i p - pitoltHKitoan Kanaantasavalta; Cam-bodla- Vletnam. Iran-Afghanlstan, Indonesia^OFVuinosa, Korea-Japani. mmmmm- ;j,j.-.-.'^.i,i.>Vi'.a;t]t,;;i . ohjaflttava tafa ; Ang. »uotsin «ö«lmi»aifti^lattV"^" f kovaJvomiasaa oleva 3*utatieJtoJa,*\*i'^V? kmn pituinen matka, Aneen ja Bsttp- f^.t n ken Välillä, avatuin perjanteta»; Sakuun W pnä. rma& m)ii.'jtikitp^;/Ufi maksanut noin'i,5'mUi. tetmirnrjöa " ollut rakenteilla l i / 2 vuotta; :Angessa sijaitsevasta kauko-abjatui-tohnistosta voi liikenteenjohtaja ^val- "'*c:f voa kaikkea Ulkennetta linjalla.VDbl-mistostaan käshi hän bolta» aseoill- ' f la olevat laitteet Ja signaaUmeriUe. , U8A:fna ovat tällaiset laitteet vu-^.' H> Skl tavaUlsla, mutta Euzoopassa «vtttr / niitä kokeilleet vain Espanja, I^nsk»(.< Uuden Järjestelyn toivotaan Iisaa- ; i , vän turvallisuutta .sekä tekevän lilr*;. ' - kenteen Joustavammaksi. Siitä ä l h e u < ' ; tuu mytis säästöä, k o ^ .linjan var-" ^ . rella olevilla asemilla ei tarvlia hetti*"* - >^ kllökuntaa. ' 1 <•<. ii---'.' KukUi Joukkue suorittaa kakisl qtie-, lua. yhden kummankin kottmaassä.'^ ; Viime kerralla ei Itä-Saksalsasmiit'," osallistua olympialaisiin, mutta ioort V ' uskotaan myöskin sen osanoton tule-van hyväksytykal. - - . ^ ^ • (?rc^nA il-5 i i i i The Pushbutton Home of the Futiire Doors that open or close at a apo-ken Word wfndows that neiver need cleahing, and " wash-day wIthout soap and water are but a few of the things to come In the atomic age. according to Cedric Gibbons. M GM set designer. ' .Eventually housekeeplng win 'be very slmple. A i r control such as we have today. plus. improvements In. the not too diatant future, wlll permit glassless "Windows," Automatic temperature control will retaln warm air toside a home, while barring cold air from wlthout. The late Enrico Permi, predicted that soon atomlc:power, would llght, heat and air conditlon entlre citles, Exterior walls of the "house of to-morrow" are ahnost non-exlstent In their stead, provldlng unlnterrupted vision are slender V-shaped metal supports the type used In bridge con-f «;uction. Robots — Paradise or Poverty? B Y L U B A ELEEN Recently I reäd a science fiction atory ahout a World where men had created robots to do a l i the physlcal labor. They were equipped with elec-tronic brains and were capable of do-ing the most -complicated tasks, even the manufacture of new robots. Most of us have read shnilar stories at one tUne or another. Are the things they .taik about possible, or are they merely the Wild dreams of w r i - ters of Xantaatic fiction? We havcn!t quIte arrlved at the robot stage yet, but scientists have produced some amazing machines, In Canada and other countries. : There Is a computing machlne ^called "Audrey" which does the .work of 4,000 Office workers. The Ford (Motor Company has a series of machines. i n its Cleveland LACK OF EXERCISE MAY CAUSE MANY AILMENTS Lack öf physical exercise may cauas or contribute to a host of allments ranging from coronary heart disease and mental disorder to simple tooth cavities, a New York doctor told the American Medical Association today. "Hypokinetic diseäse'^ — llterally motion deficiency disease — may af-fect half the American population Dr. Hans Krauasaid, if doctors don't start testing their patients for muscle' strength and flexlbillty and include exercise in their prescrii^tions. Kraus, Associate ? r o f ^ o r of Physical Medicine and RehabiUtation at New York University, preamted to the AMA convention a paper prepared with his associates Bonnie Prudden sympatia on ehdot-. ,aan autotyöUUrtf jmittäintunfju riiaan "saboteeraavi* autotyölalslä « » - n Santeri- erdrtJ» tämilttään haukkoj a _ Kansäkoor»' and Dr. K u r t Hh-schhom. "The physically inactlve individual shows signs and aymptoms of aging earlier In life," the paper said. A sur-vey made i n England "concluded that death from coronary heart diseaaa occurred with more than twice the incldence among the physically. less active.': Mortality among those stric-ken was also higher among the less actlve, Kraus said. "Other hypokinetic dlseases more prevalent i n the inactlve groups,'^ he aald, "are duodenal ulcer. cancer of the lung, appendlcitls, prostatic cancer diabetes and clrrhosis of the livcr." The physiclans had already ihade publlc the. results of Studies showlng American school children have a serious deficiency" i n muscle strength and flexlbillty a a compared with E u ropean children many of whom were othenvise less fortunate. (Kraus urged that children be got out of their baby carriages and play pens as much as posslbble that they be encouraged to actlve rather than passlve amusements. He said doctors should be chary of over-prescribing "rest" for any d i sease — i t may even interfere wlth heallng. JUST A J O K C , OPnCER An Old tried-and-true gimmlck used by A P L P l u m l K n to avold parfc- Ing tlckets stopped up. Parktog In a reKtrlcted zone for a qukk house caJl, one unIon plumt>er stucSc his usual card, "Plumber at Work", inside. Thla time, taovever, when he retumed he found a parfcing ticQcet under the wlmlshleW wlper. Written acrOM the top was the message, "Polleeman at LWoxk.", plant' whlch perform 530 cutting and drilling operations, untouched by hu-manhanda A Canadian named Osmond X e n - dall has Invented a machlne that composes music and can create the sounds of an 80-piece orchestra. These wonderful devices are part of a process known as "automation" in whlcih machines take the place of human workers. These machines combine the higheat form of me-chanlcal perfection with electronic Controls. Manx of them operate on the "feed biack" principle. of which the automatic thermostat on an oil fumace is a simple example. They are devices that can guide, percelve; calculate, correct and test to a pre-cislon no human eye can touch or meet. And they were created by the genius of man. •What a paradise these wonder-machines could. build for us here in Canada! We could eliminate ali the dirty, unpleasanfand heavy jobs that people have. to do. Our young people could be tralned to the super-skills requlred to run thea» amazing Instruments. Think of the excitement and challenge such a job would. present to a young Canadian man or woman. How much more interesting to be i n sole charge of a machlne that assem-bles a/whole TV chassis in a few se-conds, rather than to sit ali day sol-dering one Mflre in a T V -set. Such a machlne Ls now in exiatence. Automated machinea could create ali the material necessitle.<5 of life in abundance, Bveryone could have plenty of lelsure time to devote to sports, music, art, hobbies. We could have the thne and means to beautify our citles and make them into great monuments to the wonderful achleve-ments of modern society. These things could be. There ia a big BUT, We live under a system of caplta-lism, i n which ownership of. things that sustaln life is concentrated in the hands of a few monopoltsts. Profit is their code, no matter hov/ much people suffer, We have unemployment and mlsery in the mldst of abundance because the workers cannot afford to buy back the good thinga they pro-duce,. This gap Ls made immeajjurably wlder by the Introductlon of automation. In the United States, where automation l8 widesprcad, these wonde2f ui machines have foroed worker« from their Jobs, In an age of Scientific advance, «killed worker« are golng back to dirty, arduous job» becau»e they have been replaced by even more skilled machinea They are the lucky ones, Others are without any 'jobs. •Because of automation, prodiiction Is booming. In the highly-automated Steel Industry i n the U . S., production Is currently far above a year ago, a l though 1bfiW fev/n voTkert are eai' ployed. • • The Sovlet Union, which has a sociallat economy, lias been practising automation since 1946. They have the fh-st fully automatic factory i n the ;World, :manufacturing platons. M a chines cärry through every process: castlng, heat treatlng,:machlnlng, drilling, grinding, and packing, super-vised by a few highly ai^illed engineers. But in that country where the people as a .whole own the factorles; there is a shortage of workens, and automation releases more people to move on for more training and other Jobs where.they: are urgently^needed. • • •• .• • ' In Canada, automation is. not very common yet, although we can be aure that it 1^ i h the offing. When it Is introduced, it wlll be sure to ag-gravate the already severe unemployment crlsis. . In the electrical Industry In Canada, the bosses have managed to get more production wlth fewer workers through higher mechanlzatlon and speed-up. In Pebruary of 1955 with 8,000 (or 10 percent) fewer workers than the previous year, the electrical bosses were able to get 8 % more production, Many of the displaced workers are out on the streets. Think how automation will aggravate the crlsis in this Industry. Henry Ford II and the other big bosses are calling the workers "reac-tionary" because they are not accept- Ing automation with open arms, They are comparing them to the "Luddites" of the I8th century who smashed the machines that deprlved them of their Jobs. r^Torkers do not hate progrcss. They recognize that these machines could mean a wonderful life for ali of us, But they. are determined to have a share in some of the beneflts of automation. That is why the big unions in Canada and the U . S. are fight-ing for such important demanda as the guaranteed annual wage, and the 30-hour Week, with no loss In take-home pay. But the.se demands are not enough They cannot solve the cojitradlctlon together with. misery, This can only bc solved by a soclalist organlzation of society, where the beneflts from these (cientific advances go to the people as a whole, not for; the profit of a few selfish indlviduals and cor-poratlons, When the people have fought for and won such a system in Canada, automation wi]l help make thv dreams of our young people come true. GOLDEN In Nuremberg, Germany, a Juke box manufactuer has flnally done It. The manufacturer's' "Inventlon" makes it possible for the pa tr on of a German beer hali to put 20 pfen-nings <five cents) i n a Juke box to insure three mlnutca <H aiiexice. ; / TO ensure privacy, these wallslze "window8" may be blocked off by large built In screens of fine metal mesh, workIng vertlcally on the Vene-tlan blhid principle. WIth no interior or supportlng wall8 the livingroom ifi"dlvlded" from the dlning areaby: large sheets of clear luclte. fastened In folding screen form by pollshed braas. fiimilarly some of the tables and lounging chairs are a l so fabrlcated of clear lucite on met a l bases, whlle one (nine-foot) set-tee Is notable for its upholstery of woven glass fabric. (Durable attrac-tive, and washable with a damp rag.> - The future .wIllunque8tlonably see more and more u s e fof electronics around the houa3'. There are already garage doors operated by llght beams or radio control, Dark room may be Instantly flooded wlth llght by wav- Ing. a hand i n the general dlrectlon of a light panel. i\ye have extended these techniques to have many 'routine^ f unctions around the home operate simply by volce control — you teli a door to shut and it does. Garbage dlsposal will be an: unob-fitrusive adjunct to the dining area. A touch of a button and a , panel slläes back, reveallng an empty cylin-drlcal space. At top and bottom are large round terminals., Betwcen the.'i3 terminals is a beam of high frequency sound wäves. Anything tossed into the beam is instantly dlsintegrated, vanlshlng i n a cloud of smokc. Before you say'Come nowr, just remember that already dentists have used high frequcniqr :wavea to drill teeth. Ploors and floor coverlngs will bc entlrely dIfferent. from what we lmow now, wlth built-ln heating units, Rugs and carpeting will have been «"f replaced by. some synthetic m a t e r i a l , w . - combj^lfik.an the best feature»,-^ • long Jifei'«e4äty and ease of malnte-* naÄce/i'iWall» w«l be of «heet copjpeh*^'', (It.all 3P3litA»rawelIl Imägine open->'"- Ing doof».J^y,110»t beams and touchlnr - buttona and bhigo — no more gaÄage^.' A l i thafs mlsslng. to this wondeyi^jf;^ Picture l a U high frequen^r soimd wave that would dlslntegrate '^el' landlord. This could be an unobtru-X sive adj"unct tb the electronic sewage-i dlsposal system). m i LEEWAY On a crowded parkway where cani^^ were Inching along. a motorlst slonr-ed down suddenly, only to have 'his rear bumper bashed: smartly by?the;'r' car behind. ^ , The driver got out, looked over toe damage, glared at the woman d r i v - ' ' ing the car behind and' t o o k ' d f f '' agatn, « , A few mlnutes later, ,he v a s again , smacked In the rear. Again he got^- • out, whlle the contrite woman beg-., - ged his forglveness, Shaking his head'' ' the exasperated man retumed to hla^' car. ' A , few jjijtoutes , .and—blngol-rn. another bump. This time the woman Jumped out, ^ of her car and ran over to him,^ holding out a driver's llcene ;an«t'' ali,her other credentlala. ' "Look, madam," crled the vlcthn helplcssly, "never mind ali that stuff. AU I want from you ls a f i v c - ;. minute head s t a r t l " ' , " Mi A PBOBLEM "Billy, get your little brother's h^t ^ out of that mud puddle." ^ -. "1 can't. Ma, he's got It strappedtoo ä tight under his chln." • ' ' PEARL S. BUCKIN kualuisat ROMAANIUUTUUDET NYT SAATAÄNA! PEARL S. B U C K : N A I S T E N _ 474 sivua » . i i . . i ^ ^^^^^^ Rikkaan kiinalaisen kauppiaskodin muurien 7hipäi-öimä maailma on täynnä kilhkeltd tapahtumia, sillä kuusikymmeni^lsen perheen . piirissä elämä kouhuu rehevänä ja värikkäänä. Tämän plenoisyh-;, A ,teiskunnan valtiatar on viisas, lumoava rouva Wu — niitä harvinaisia ' ihmisiä, joiden viehätys perustuu älyn Ja sydämen t a 8 a p a t o o o n . Ki Tämän naisen l'lämänongelmia — j a samalla jokaisen naisen ongelmia kuvaa Buckin "Naisten piha" — romaani, Jossa välähtelee' koko maailman naisellinen viisaus ' PEARL S B U C K : Ä I T I , 274 sivua Htota sid. f2.7S Pearl Buckin " A l t i " kuUuu j>arhalmpaan, mitä tämä Nobelin p a l k i n - ^ ' non saanut kuuluisa amerikkalainen kertoja on kiinalaisesta aihe- ,: Siiristään kirjoittanut Se on romaani yksinkertaisesta, uljaasta talonpoikaisvaimosta, joka jää miehensä hylkäämänäyksto huoleh- i,.. >i himaan lapsistaan, mutta joka ylpeydessään salaa tappionsa utellall- 7 ia kyläläisiltä Ja ryhtyy hiljaiseen taisteluun elämänsä Ja lastensa : *' ulevaisuuden puolesta. F E L I X DAHN: T A I S T E L U R O O M A S TA iU sivaa Hinta sId. fZSO Felix Dahnln "Taistelu Roomasta" on mahtava kuvaus ajalta. J o i - loin kansainvaelluksen Jättlläisaalto vyöryi yli ikuisen Rooman Ja . • sen raunioille kohosi lyhyeksi kukoistuksen tuokioksi goottien maali- - ^ manvalta. Historiallisiin tapahtumiin j a henkilöihin kutoutuen. polvelevat romaanin Juonisäikeet niin jännittävinä Ja dramaattlstoa,;:'; että salapoliisiromaanien ahmijallakaan ei ole syytä valittaa tämän'^'V: klassikoji ääressä. \ ::jti-!'' Kuuluisan amerikkalaisen kirjailijan Ja sanomalehtimiehen ALBERT E. K A H N I N te03 ' ' - K U O L E M A N L E I K K I 246 •Ivoa a, l"»^ "Kuoleman leikki" on, voimakas, hehkuva tateteluklrja lasten o i - : keuksien puolesta. Siinä esitetään pelkkiä tosiasioita: Mutta sitä lukee ahmien kuin parhaita jänrtltysrohiaania, sillä Kahnilla on i h - . ir-meteltävä taito esittää kyhnät, lahjomattomat tosiasiat elävästi m u - .,v kaansatempaavasti, vaikuttavasti. Se harras vakavuus Ja Inhimilli-?.<'V nen lämpö. Jolla Kahn ajaa tässä teokessa "näiden plenlmplen^^j—; S; sota- Ja rotukilhkon,.raakojen sarjakuvien j a gangsterifilmien, mie- . i, lipideterrorln Ja poliittisen koston urheiksi Joutuneiden lasten — : ;• asiaa, ei voi Jättää välinpitämättömäksi atooatakaanrtohimiUlstftT>< Ihmistä". , Tilatkaa osoitteella: ' ' . VAPAUS PUBLISHING CO. LTD. : BOX 69 SUDBUHY. ONTARIO • li Iiii
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, June 16, 1955 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1955-06-16 |
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 | Vapaus550616 |
Description
Title | 1955-06-16-03 |
OCR text |
JA
RUEITA
itUaiaea lehti on to-rjaamo
tskee <\'ixheeii.
1 laskuun.
sanoo jotaiin 7ir.
n el 'huomaa sitä.
tekee virheen, tulee
tekee virheenj lähe-tukkia..
• , •• .-r:
aja tekee virheen, ei^;
skaan antee^ui. -
J A RAITTIUS
leilumiehen. joka 3Qi i
uta lu-heilu^ hän ei
nutkaan.
VIALLISTA
:erta kaikkiaan kum.
3rta kun tapaan muna:
on jo naimisissa,
Ien nitomisissa.
Aatu
ilee yhä
-Saksassa. mielipide- <;
lup> nuorittava laitos
yn Hitlerin nykyisin
latuksesta. Kysymys
tekisi jos uudelleen
}-tilannetta vastaava
. vastasi suoralta kä-isä
Hitleriä vastaan.
oikein varma, mitä
ilmoitti äänestävänsä
a.: F,3delleen tutki-
Hitlerin kannatus on
idulla; kuin kaupun-:
istä-, joiden kesken,
tiin, 10 pros. ilmoitti
tavansa Adenauerin
i. sosialidemokraatte-olaispuoluetta
ja 27 .
n oikeistosiiven pik-toululaisten.
keskuu-
I suoritettu kiertoky.
a saksalaisesta", jol-,i
stui seuraavaksi;
FESTn^AL NOTES;
hsy Program Includes Sports
And Cultural Competitions
CIXTLRAL COMPETITIONS
0.1 the Canada Day v/eekend youth
i Ontario will celebrate Canada's
»irthday at the 2nd Ontario Youth
Festival atPalermo. . .
T!ie: cultural Competitions take
il2Ce Saturday af ternoon, July : 2nd.
SU groups outside Toronto are elig-ibls
in the finals* The finals will
based on only one dance or song.
30t two as in the preliminaries. P i r s i
ind Second winners . in each catc;-
;öry will receive an extra surprisei
ill groups entering the competition
jiUbe honoured with a certificatel
Groupft planning to enter the finals
Eust register by June 20th. J f , yoii
jive no registration forms, just fiU
5 ali tlie possible Information aboiit
our group on a sheet of paper and
fnd it in to the Festival Committee
n Toronto. •
'.4RTICIPANTS CARDS
Each Festival. .participant will be
isked to register at a fee of 50c. B e - '
ides helping cover the cost of ru»-
ling the Festival thia fee gives the
urticipant special privileges., These
iclude sleeping . accommodations
bnng your own blankets),: entry into
11 Festival events and a reducedrate
meals. You could estimate on a
imum cost of $4.00 for the we€k-d
stay at Palermo (not counting
feundayj. This is worked out on the
basis of a regiatration fee of 50c
Plus $1.75 per day on meals.
THE P R O G R AM
JThnrsday EveninjT
' Registration at Camp Palermo and
a F i lm or Social
Friday
9.00 ajn. — Team Competitions i n
VoUeyball and Basketball.
10.00 a j n . Track and Field Meet.
7.00 pm. — G a l a Concert Program.
10.30 p j n . — Weinpr Roast. .
Saturday
9.00 a j n . — Team Competitions
4.00 pjn. -.^ (or later) Cultural Competition
Finals.
S.OO p j n . — Carnlval Dance Closing of
Festival.
SPORTS
. 'AU volleybBll softball: and basketball
teamsmu«t register before June
25th. Send them to 497 Bathurst St.
Team captains must haAre their teams
on the grounds at 9.00 ajn. Friday
and Saturday momings. Most team
competitions will take place Saiurday
Teams will not be able to register
once the Festival gets underway.
Each person entering the Track and
Field Meet must regtiter i n advance
wlth the Festival Committee, 497 Bat-hm-
st St. Toronto. Track and Field'
entries must be o a the grounds at
10.00 a.m. Friday moming.
elm
lentava. Gallup-tut-insä
.'(yytä suhtautua
, koska niiden puit-tävallisesti
esittää
n ja Länsi-Saksahan
oivallista demokra-csessa
voidaan aanoa
i nykyinen politiikka:
ttavan sadon—jopa
eskuudessa.
i in the Cariboo!
ruplaa
ukseen
lalaisen . tasavallan
in budjetista käyte
s puolet eli 5,662,000
alistuslaitosten ra-ijen
lukumäärää al-ii
oppikoulu avataan
pselän metsatyöläis-lan.
Karhumäen
assa rakennuksessa,
illaan peruskorjaus-itaan
kouluksi, jossa
valoisat ja tilavat
muut asianomaiset
etehuoneustot.
uuria -varoja käyte-.
lenhoitoon.
otyöläisten työeh-tulee,
niin kukaan
syä sitä "läpimnr-i
yhteydessä leh-lua
vjiösipalkkaa"
todella tärkeä i»
sanottuamme, on
tteivät autotyöläiset
itselleen "taattua
anän- varsinaisessa
vat työttömiksi joo-.
iöiltä vain suhteel-,
lavustuksen valUon
työttömyysavustuk-ivustustakin"
he tti-ita
vuoden kuluttua,
viikon ajaksi. Mikä
Uisuuden palveluk-silloinkin
olemaan
a "uusia" työläisiä,
Ivästi palvelusaikaa
'lisäavustusta". . .
luistetaan, etteivät
ioitakin erikoisaloja
_ saaneet mitään
ia ^ kun he eivät
attua korjausta Pi^-
aiheuttaneisiin tfö-niihin
kohtiin, mis-jen
ja erimielisyj'^-
ehtosopimuksen aitakaan
nyt paft»»'
ilin silloin void-jao
utotyöläisten tyyty-län
taisteluniieliD«»
vaikka joutulsiB"C«
,Shhi. aUekirjoltta-
"Camel£i in British Columbia? "VVho
^vcr heard of such a thing?"
"Used as pack animals i n the C a -
boo gold rush! Way up north i n that
1 country! Impossible!"
The boy from the Cariboo, the far
ntenor of northern B . C , insisted he
nght, and unfolded the unbe-
|:evable story. • • • '
Il started just 100 years ägo vhen
government of the United States
ught 70 camels from Egypt for its
ny Tranfiport Service. After tra-
Jelliag 1,200 miles, over mountains to
California, by camel caravan, a gen-al
pred;cted that soon ali mail
M d be carried by camel. •
San Francisco merchant, Otto
•sche by name scented a fine way to
l:e a big plle of money. He chart-
Ired a ship and sailed across the P a -
Ific to Manchuria. He brought back
|»o shiploads of camels which sold
lor around $450 each. This TVas good-f)
usin2a5. So he chartered another
up, the Dollart, and sailed to S i iriä
for more. •
It was just at this time that the fa-nous
Pony Express aroused a whh:l
excitement. By a combination of
M^y, steamboat, and ponies, mail
i taken from San Francisco to New
^ork, right across the continenty i n 12
m. telegrams i n . eight days. Soon
Y^iT ihat the first rairoad wa5 built
pght through the Rocky Mountains,
San Francisco, The Pony Express
ad seived its turn and gave way .to
frogress.
Biit vhat of the camels? The Döl-prt
wa3 an ancient sailing ship. a
riree-master, and the voyage acrosq
p Pacific was a long and pahiful
pe- Tne ship rolled and pitched and
|«s€d. day after.day Week after Week
fonth after month. The camels, klng
f the desert, at home i n the wlde
p n spaces of sänd: sunshine and
P> air, were crowded into the
V^iy stinking hold of a atorm-tossed
FP- There one after another, they
grew sick and died. When they final-ly
reached San Francisco, only 20 of
the original 44 camels were still alive.
By now the Pony Express had come
and gone; the mails were carried by
rail, So who wanted camels? A few
were sold to circuses and zoos. Some
were displayed i n San Francifco at
50c a look.
•Unexpectedly a new market for camels
appeared. Up in the wilds of
British Columbia a great gold rush
was on. There was no Pony Express
and no railway over the Rocky Cariboo
Road. • Pack horses and mules
were very much i n demand. And after
ali camels could go for days without
water, Ilve on sage bruaih and carry
half a ton some 30 miles a day. So 23
of Otto Esche's camels were brought
north by steamer.
For about a year, the camels made
regulax trips on the Cariboo road as
paok animals. The rocks were hard
on their feet, accustomed as they were
to desert sanda, and they had to be
re-shod too often. Camels shoes can
still be picked up i n the Cariboo country.
But what was worse. the horses
and mules had never seen anything of
the kind before and were terrified.
They bolted at the sight of the camels
whole pack trains were atampeded.
They did so much damage they soon
didn't have a friend on the Cariboo
road. The owners were imabie even
to sell th€m, and most of them were
just tumed löose In the wilds, where
some of them survived for 40 years.
Speed Meet Postponed
Because of Räin
Heavy rains last veekend forc-ed
Speed tb postpone its scheduled
practise meet at the Beaver'Lake
flcld.
Desplte the bad weather a cood
number of athletes tumed oat in
the bopes that the räin W0Dld
let up and the events could be.
run off.
The meet will be r un off this
weekend at the Beaver Lake. field
but it wai start at 10 A. M . In-stead
of 11 because of an affair at
the hali which will start at noen.
AU district atliletes are urged
to attend this meet so that relay
teams can be fonned to partici-pate
at the Ontario Youth Festival
which will be lield i n Palermo
July 1 — 2.
AU athletes wishing to partict-pate
i n the track and field meet
at Palermo should speak to e i -
ither Jorma Palomäki or Melvin
Latvala.
DONKEY DOCTOE?
A doctor was called in to see a very
testy patient. "Weil, what'6 the mat-ter?"
he asked cheerfully, as he enter-ed
the bedro<«n.
^'That," anapped the sick man,. "is
for you to flnd out." .
" I see," said .the doctor thought-fuliy.
"Weil, i f you'll excuse me, m
go atonsr and fetch a friend of mine
— a iveterinary surgeon. He's the
only fellow I know who can make a
diagnosis without asking questlons."
Horseless Garriages
Were Known Neariy
A Cenfury Aga
•Although the auto is a modem In-vention,
it isn't quite as modern as
some people think.
It is hard to. determine who built
the pioneer vehicle, but a letter in
an old copy of The New York Times
recor'ds this:
"It was in the year of 1864 that
a friend of my mother, who was 11 v-ing
with her family at Aubumdale,
a suburb of Boston, drove a horseless
carriage from Boston, a matter
of 14 miles as I-recall the distance,
to our home in the former place., I
wa.s then a lad of nine years, y e t i
distinctly remember his arrival, his
coming up the road, seeing little
puffs of steam vapor jetting out from
the back of a regular carriage, called
a box buggy,
"When he came to a stop I was
simply astonished to see no horse.
The shafts had been removed and
there did not seeni to be much me-chanlsm.
No doubt there was a
tank for water, with the additlon
of what was needed i n automotive
mechanism. |, however, recall the
whip socket — no .whip but in its
place a bunch of flowers!"
Finnish Aclress
Greefs Worid
Youth Festival
(Bom In'Laplaiul In the northern
part öf Finland, AnneU SauU started
tier film careertwo years ago. Stoe
has already partlclpated In seven
f ihns, oU Fhmirä. Her ambition is to
make more and more fiUns. In a letter
to "Festlvarv whlch is the week-ly
paper pubUcizing the' Warsaw
Youth Festival to be held In August
she has the foUowing to say:
" T h i e Festival can b e ö f the great-ef
«t value in the developement of
creatlve talent. Although I have never
taken part in a Festival. I un-derstand
that the artlstlc level of
performances in the different arta
Is very high. V
The student chiematography semi-nar.
which wm take place during the
Festival greatly interests me, and it's
the f hst of its U n d that I have heard
of on,an international scale. It wUl
•be certalnly uasful for those who
make or take part in fitaxs to meet
those who watch and criticize them.
Like Gerard PhUIpe, whose opinioris
you published i n a previous number of
"Festival", I admh-e the Italian neo-reallst
school ofclnema very much.
Xhese fUms reach and. are understood
by the greatest number of people.
They are honest and serious.
Finally to ase old classlcal fllms is
a fine idea, for the majority of young
people have just not seen them. I flnd
them very modem in a ' way and I
am sure that they would be o f Inter-est
to other young people.''
We certainly agree, Anneli, and
hope you attfnd the Festival wlth
other actora, actresses, and produ-cers.
together with those that are
simply cinemagoers.
SO TEABS IS T H E B E E t t
JAVEUN ASPIRANTS
MUST CHANGE TACTICS
Kour as ali my friends and acquain-tances
know. i do not stlck my nose
into serious subjects very often, but
the one set down hereunder is one
of the excepUons. I t touches one öf
my a3ft spots because I hate to see
anyone crying in theh- beer whlle the»^
could be out.doing something about
the cause of their troubles. But per-haps
first.I should go over a bit of
recent history.
When the Olympic flame wa8 dous-ed,
and the games of 1952 were but ah
entry to the record books, a great
hue and cry was raised In the American
pre&s about the near defeat (or
was it a defeat?) of the U . S. Olympic
team to the Ruasians in the unofficial
total points race. Many European
newspapers rather maliciously Implied
that the Yanks were none too happy
about themselves having to practice
the role of "good losers".
I n their own fashlon the powers-that-
be in the United States A. A. U .
have started frantlcally to. push for-
.ward a programme wlth the alm of
retaining former glories at Melbourne
In 1956.
One smaU factor in this ashedule is
Franklin "Bud" Held who recently
tossed the spear 81.75 metres down in
California, This bettered his former
World record for the JaveUn throw:
the: previous markhavihg been 80.41.
Mr. Held — or rather the equlpment
he uses r - has been the cause of much
concern in Finland. Apparently our
good cousins across the ocean do not
take kindly to the atreamlined modern
version of: their favourite athletic
weapon,- especlally whcn the results
achieved oTershddow any made by the
old time-honoured product. Or
could it be that the thoughts of Amer
ricans taking over i n a predominantly
Finnish sport is somewhat obnoxlous?
Unless rules have radlcally changed
since I read the last ast of regulations
It Is stated that each contestant in
a field event may use his own equlpment
provided it conforms to unifor-mlty
• and is approved by the judges.
Also, i t is expressly stated that any
other contestant may use the same
equipment If he so desires! So what's
ali the shouting about? Why not
send one of Pindland's strongmen
over to particlpate i n a few American
track and field meets? |f this new
typeof.javelln is as good as It'a crack-ed
up to be. achieving reauits O to 16
metres betterthan the conventional
type, maybe the record vould be äd-vanced
to over 80 metres and taken
home to its tradlttonal owner8. '
The preceding täctlc might be too
drastic and expenslve, but it isn't the
only one to faU back oh. i n ama-teur
sport of any kind it is the cus-tom
to pass on new methods and
technlques to anyone interested in
them. It would by no means be dlf-icult
for one of the Plnnlsih sports
organizatlons to write to its counter-part
in the United States, asking
for a couple dozen of the new Javelins
to be shlpped • over —• C. C D . of
course. Those concemed o n this side
of the Atlantic would be honour-bound
to grant the favour.
If It were refused, and only then,
would there be any excuse for taking
up arms. — GulUver.
Torstaina, kesak, 16 p,—Tbursday,lJuj» 16/1^55;
28 jouJtkuetta
olympiakisojen
jaifcapailol(ilpailuun
Amsterdam. — 28 maat» oh II-molttonol
,|oukkiieensa olympiakisojen
jalltapaHohllpaUoihIn 1056
limoitu Itansalnvällncti. Jalkaml-loUltto
kesäkään 13 pM.
-Näistä 24 Joukkuetta Joutuu suorittamaan
karsintaottelut omissa maissaan
Ja 12 voittajaa pääsee varstoat-siin
olympiakisoihin. Neljä Joukkuetta
pääsee kisoihin ilman karsintaotteluja.
Näistä kisojen Järjeatäjämaa,
AustraUa on ibnan muuta siihen o i keutettu
Ja loput kolme vallttlto a r valla
Ja a n » suosi InUaa. Siamia Ja
Puolaa.
Karsintaottehitsuoritietaan seuraavasti
: Jugoslavia-Romania, Bulgaria-
Britannia. Länsi-Saksa-Turkkl, Itä-
Saksa^Unkarl. NeuvostolIltto-lsrael,
Egypti-Etiopia USA-Meksikko, F l l i p -
pitoltHKitoan Kanaantasavalta; Cam-bodla-
Vletnam. Iran-Afghanlstan,
Indonesia^OFVuinosa, Korea-Japani.
mmmmm-
;j,j.-.-.'^.i,i.>Vi'.a;t]t,;;i .
ohjaflttava tafa ;
Ang. »uotsin «ö«lmi»aifti^lattV"^" f
kovaJvomiasaa oleva 3*utatieJtoJa,*\*i'^V?
kmn pituinen matka, Aneen ja Bsttp- f^.t n
ken Välillä, avatuin perjanteta»;
Sakuun W pnä. rma& m)ii.'jtikitp^;/Ufi
maksanut noin'i,5'mUi. tetmirnrjöa "
ollut rakenteilla l i / 2 vuotta;
:Angessa sijaitsevasta kauko-abjatui-tohnistosta
voi liikenteenjohtaja ^val- "'*c:f
voa kaikkea Ulkennetta linjalla.VDbl-mistostaan
käshi hän bolta» aseoill- ' f
la olevat laitteet Ja signaaUmeriUe. ,
U8A:fna ovat tällaiset laitteet vu-^.' H>
Skl tavaUlsla, mutta Euzoopassa «vtttr /
niitä kokeilleet vain Espanja, I^nsk»(.<
Uuden Järjestelyn toivotaan Iisaa- ; i ,
vän turvallisuutta .sekä tekevän lilr*;. ' -
kenteen Joustavammaksi. Siitä ä l h e u < ' ;
tuu mytis säästöä, k o ^ .linjan var-" ^ .
rella olevilla asemilla ei tarvlia hetti*"* - >^
kllökuntaa. ' 1
<•<. ii---'.'
KukUi Joukkue suorittaa kakisl qtie-,
lua. yhden kummankin kottmaassä.'^ ;
Viime kerralla ei Itä-Saksalsasmiit',"
osallistua olympialaisiin, mutta ioort V '
uskotaan myöskin sen osanoton tule-van
hyväksytykal. - - . ^ ^ • (?rc^nA
il-5
i i i i
The Pushbutton Home of the Futiire
Doors that open or close at a apo-ken
Word wfndows that neiver need
cleahing, and " wash-day wIthout
soap and water are but a few of the
things to come In the atomic age.
according to Cedric Gibbons. M GM
set designer.
' .Eventually housekeeplng win 'be
very slmple.
A i r control such as we have today.
plus. improvements In. the not too
diatant future, wlll permit glassless
"Windows,"
Automatic temperature control will
retaln warm air toside a home, while
barring cold air from wlthout.
The late Enrico Permi, predicted
that soon atomlc:power, would llght,
heat and air conditlon entlre citles,
Exterior walls of the "house of to-morrow"
are ahnost non-exlstent In
their stead, provldlng unlnterrupted
vision are slender V-shaped metal
supports the type used In bridge con-f
«;uction.
Robots — Paradise or Poverty?
B Y L U B A ELEEN
Recently I reäd a science fiction
atory ahout a World where men had
created robots to do a l i the physlcal
labor. They were equipped with elec-tronic
brains and were capable of do-ing
the most -complicated tasks, even
the manufacture of new robots.
Most of us have read shnilar stories
at one tUne or another. Are the
things they .taik about possible, or are
they merely the Wild dreams of w r i -
ters of Xantaatic fiction?
We havcn!t quIte arrlved at the
robot stage yet, but scientists have
produced some amazing machines, In
Canada and other countries. :
There Is a computing machlne ^called
"Audrey" which does the .work of
4,000 Office workers.
The Ford (Motor Company has a
series of machines. i n its Cleveland
LACK OF EXERCISE MAY
CAUSE MANY AILMENTS
Lack öf physical exercise may cauas
or contribute to a host of allments
ranging from coronary heart disease
and mental disorder to simple tooth
cavities, a New York doctor told the
American Medical Association today.
"Hypokinetic diseäse'^ — llterally
motion deficiency disease — may af-fect
half the American population
Dr. Hans Krauasaid, if doctors don't
start testing their patients for muscle'
strength and flexlbillty and include
exercise in their prescrii^tions.
Kraus, Associate ? r o f ^ o r of Physical
Medicine and RehabiUtation at
New York University, preamted to the
AMA convention a paper prepared
with his associates Bonnie Prudden
sympatia on ehdot-.
,aan autotyöUUrtf
jmittäintunfju riiaan
"saboteeraavi*
autotyölalslä « » -
n Santeri- erdrtJ»
tämilttään haukkoj
a _ Kansäkoor»'
and Dr. K u r t Hh-schhom.
"The physically inactlve individual
shows signs and aymptoms of aging
earlier In life," the paper said. A sur-vey
made i n England "concluded that
death from coronary heart diseaaa
occurred with more than twice the
incldence among the physically. less
active.': Mortality among those stric-ken
was also higher among the less
actlve, Kraus said.
"Other hypokinetic dlseases more
prevalent i n the inactlve groups,'^ he
aald, "are duodenal ulcer. cancer of
the lung, appendlcitls, prostatic cancer
diabetes and clrrhosis of the
livcr."
The physiclans had already ihade
publlc the. results of Studies showlng
American school children have a serious
deficiency" i n muscle strength
and flexlbillty a a compared with E u ropean
children many of whom were
othenvise less fortunate.
(Kraus urged that children be got
out of their baby carriages and play
pens as much as posslbble that they
be encouraged to actlve rather than
passlve amusements.
He said doctors should be chary of
over-prescribing "rest" for any d i sease
— i t may even interfere wlth
heallng.
JUST A J O K C , OPnCER
An Old tried-and-true gimmlck
used by A P L P l u m l K n to avold parfc-
Ing tlckets stopped up. Parktog In a
reKtrlcted zone for a qukk house caJl,
one unIon plumt>er stucSc his usual
card, "Plumber at Work", inside.
Thla time, taovever, when he retumed
he found a parfcing ticQcet under the
wlmlshleW wlper. Written acrOM the
top was the message, "Polleeman at
LWoxk.",
plant' whlch perform 530 cutting and
drilling operations, untouched by hu-manhanda
A Canadian named Osmond X e n -
dall has Invented a machlne that
composes music and can create the
sounds of an 80-piece orchestra.
These wonderful devices are part of
a process known as "automation" in
whlcih machines take the place of
human workers. These machines
combine the higheat form of me-chanlcal
perfection with electronic
Controls. Manx of them operate on
the "feed biack" principle. of which
the automatic thermostat on an oil
fumace is a simple example. They
are devices that can guide, percelve;
calculate, correct and test to a pre-cislon
no human eye can touch or
meet. And they were created by the
genius of man.
•What a paradise these wonder-machines
could. build for us here in
Canada! We could eliminate ali the
dirty, unpleasanfand heavy jobs that
people have. to do. Our young people
could be tralned to the super-skills
requlred to run thea» amazing Instruments.
Think of the excitement and
challenge such a job would. present
to a young Canadian man or woman.
How much more interesting to be i n
sole charge of a machlne that assem-bles
a/whole TV chassis in a few se-conds,
rather than to sit ali day sol-dering
one Mflre in a T V -set. Such a
machlne Ls now in exiatence.
Automated machinea could create
ali the material necessitle.<5 of life in
abundance, Bveryone could have
plenty of lelsure time to devote to
sports, music, art, hobbies. We could
have the thne and means to beautify
our citles and make them into great
monuments to the wonderful achleve-ments
of modern society. These things
could be.
There ia a big BUT,
We live under a system of caplta-lism,
i n which ownership of. things
that sustaln life is concentrated in the
hands of a few monopoltsts. Profit is
their code, no matter hov/ much people
suffer, We have unemployment
and mlsery in the mldst of abundance
because the workers cannot afford to
buy back the good thinga they pro-duce,.
This gap Ls made immeajjurably
wlder by the Introductlon of automation.
In the United States, where automation
l8 widesprcad, these wonde2f ui
machines have foroed worker« from
their Jobs, In an age of Scientific
advance, «killed worker« are golng
back to dirty, arduous job» becau»e
they have been replaced by even more
skilled machinea They are the lucky
ones, Others are without any 'jobs.
•Because of automation, prodiiction
Is booming. In the highly-automated
Steel Industry i n the U . S., production
Is currently far above a year ago, a l though
1bfiW fev/n voTkert are eai'
ployed. • •
The Sovlet Union, which has a
sociallat economy, lias been practising
automation since 1946. They have the
fh-st fully automatic factory i n the
;World, :manufacturing platons. M a chines
cärry through every process:
castlng, heat treatlng,:machlnlng, drilling,
grinding, and packing, super-vised
by a few highly ai^illed engineers.
But in that country where the people
as a .whole own the factorles; there
is a shortage of workens, and automation
releases more people to move
on for more training and other Jobs
where.they: are urgently^needed.
• • •• .• • '
In Canada, automation is. not very
common yet, although we can be aure
that it 1^ i h the offing. When it Is
introduced, it wlll be sure to ag-gravate
the already severe unemployment
crlsis. .
In the electrical Industry In Canada,
the bosses have managed to get
more production wlth fewer workers
through higher mechanlzatlon and
speed-up. In Pebruary of 1955 with
8,000 (or 10 percent) fewer workers
than the previous year, the electrical
bosses were able to get 8 % more production,
Many of the displaced
workers are out on the streets. Think
how automation will aggravate the
crlsis in this Industry.
Henry Ford II and the other big
bosses are calling the workers "reac-tionary"
because they are not accept-
Ing automation with open arms, They
are comparing them to the "Luddites"
of the I8th century who smashed
the machines that deprlved them of
their Jobs.
r^Torkers do not hate progrcss. They
recognize that these machines could
mean a wonderful life for ali of us,
But they. are determined to have a
share in some of the beneflts of automation.
That is why the big unions
in Canada and the U . S. are fight-ing
for such important demanda as
the guaranteed annual wage, and the
30-hour Week, with no loss In take-home
pay.
But the.se demands are not enough
They cannot solve the cojitradlctlon
together with. misery, This can only
bc solved by a soclalist organlzation
of society, where the beneflts from
these (cientific advances go to the
people as a whole, not for; the profit
of a few selfish indlviduals and cor-poratlons,
When the people have fought for
and won such a system in Canada,
automation wi]l help make thv dreams
of our young people come true.
GOLDEN
In Nuremberg, Germany, a Juke
box manufactuer has flnally done It.
The manufacturer's' "Inventlon"
makes it possible for the pa tr on of
a German beer hali to put 20 pfen-nings
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