1956-01-26-03 |
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\mm's 'mmmm rnuit BY GEOBGEBABE lt's 9raannz fcosr *c3je psople havet b:e fcnaci of always putäng tbeir |f; ot i a tlieir mouUx »Ijsnever to^ 3en it. UsuaJJy. tSiis type Js Xougd laai^ng- tbe: smaii but vocal grcmp i&TPn to- tfie sporting fratemity as •bsägsTs". (A nice naaie fdr bareau> crst).' ' • George Dudlsy secretaiy-manager cf the Canadian Jtoatear Bockey sociaticn, iihas l i i t - i f i » headlines agaim 'And tilisi time'he picked an Bven*wealcer'Tinib^ to crawl out oni Just before our ucckey entry^in the. rater Games, the Kitchener-Water- Datctenen. t c o i of f lor Eaxaps, Ioscow Jladio broadeast a pöst^oljra-; j)ic invitation to the: TJS. knd Ca-adian teams. ; C:ach: Bobby Bauer. 3Ught i t was a' vofkd-arful idea. h f s sooiething :we*:vs:lcoked fonvard lo for a long tiine, eversince wewere elected to representCaxiada.Tlt wold a .pleasureto play in.Moscow.'^i v -ilr. 'Dudley didn tiagree. Without [)othering;to chec^ on: the - ar^ lertts f CT the proprsed game: inv Dy-- [jamo Stadium, cur George refusad gtant permission for the trip. He iowed his "ocncem" for the welfare; Caiiadian hockey by demanding lcash'on ithei l!ne" before he would }t anyteam play i n the Soviet Union. Pa t Boehmer, the ;Öut£hmen's ma-lager, €xp'sed -Dudley's sanctimoni-ias attitude. Boehmer pointed out lat if the teaai should go to-Mos- 3w (ani a few letters t3-Dudley. .0 CAHA,. aiight •hsip; h im change lis mind), any revenue from the le I wculd go. tq the • Association's teasury. «o«rgeacy meetlng^of tit» C A H A exe-- cutive vhlcSi confirmed bis-vefe>.iBut ac»' a -ns» jj:i£ aas taSsen. T t e "real* reaeon »by the Dut-chies coulän*£ go tp the Sovjet Union »as that -tlme w3uJäa't pennit". Ilxat cld chsstnat about «öcilng to sähedules, vas tade agaia I t se«ns that > the a^HA^s originalljy is ex-ceeded on y by Its "interest" tn hockey. - Once. c>:re. the facts were slightly distorted. The , K -W s .d9n't have to resume. their isague play u n t i l about JPeb. 12. T h a t ^ i v e s th«n at least a »:eek (the Olyaipic Games end öhthe .fifth». ta play. one or ;two .games in MJ:SCOWV and fly back to Canada to complste their schedule. • * » _ - A n d speaking of money, — VMr. pudley seems to ha ve forgötten tiiat the Czech govemment is paying the shot for flying cur boys from England to Prague and on to Italy: Also it wcn't cost the CAHA a pehny for •:ur; team's stay: i n Czechodovakia. I on!y Jiope that the. siup"us from ths $25.000 Geoi;g'e Dudley Says i t wiU east to send the team to Italy, wiU bö^ used to take care of any l:ss i n tlie_players' wages. . What a sporting gesture that would be, eh George? TBE m 'MODEBN OLYmUD Ölympic Games A Boost For BrötherJiood D i d t h i s dISclosuredismay Ge:rgle? tertalnly rioe: ;'He m called an Here's a tip on how to tnake • a loi; of money, Mr. Dudley. '\Wjy not spon-sor a cross-Canada tour by the:So- •viet tsam — this year i Don^t^Tvotry ab|DUt the play-offsTheyni take däre of themsel ves.. And just think: Since the S.>-viet gcvermnent subsidizes its aöUetes, youU: onljr have to give the team its "bare expenses". You'll inake a k i l l i n j and at the same^ time let 4he Canadian fans see some exiciting hockey.' Isn't; tlvat what yöu Want, George? BT STEVE HCBDOCK -> ' ' ^ Today marks the dawn of the X V I t h Olympiad öf: the modern era; Olympiads are four periods o i time msasured from 1896, «hen the Ölympic Games were revived i n Athens: Tire Games celebrate the Olympiad. They are the revivalof a; celebration that extendad unbroken tbrougb 1,200 years cf Greek liistory untU' i t fcU: before the edlct of Eänperor TUed-' dosus of Rome i n 394 A . D. — • Olyoiplads are counted even though the Games ars not held. ^Fcr :exam-ple, there :were no games In the VIth Olympiad. whlch cpened i n 1916. nor i n the X H t h Olympiad of 194P'or the- X l l l t h . Olympaid of 1944. • In each case war was the reassn. This year's Olymplc : competition .:p2nsupwith Winter Games In Cor-tina d'Ampezzo, Italy, thls montta, with 35 coimtries -^1 a new high — sending a recordnumber of 1,615 äth-letes and officlals, for the 6now and ice camival. The USSR w i l l be i n for the first time leading 'with-145 per-sons, follpwed by the UB wlt|i 126.' / The sutormier Games, .for the fIrst time in history, wiU be celebrated in the Southern Hemlspbere. I n «tefer-enefeto tiie '^ioverted? seasons In that portion of; äis glohe, the dates ^ipriU be •l«,v. 22 thxough Dee 8. I t v i i i be tbe fizst thne l l i e Gameshavetoeen heM i n these months. I n Australia theytettu^preparlng to;say ^^ehome" t o t h e atbletes-ot 80: natioiu and to the ttaouii^te of visitois yrho :wUl cmne?to seC: chein perform. The charter of the Olymplc Games declares: "The. Olymplc Games are . heJd evexy :fow' years;and aseemble,ama' teurs of ali • nationa In fair and «jual competition underi-condiUonar^^ are t3 b? as near perfect as possible. ••No dlscriÄtaation Is , a!lowed against any country or-: person; on grouuds of color, xeligion;:or'politic8". This means athletes from the (People's: iRepubUc ;o China w l l l ' be compeUng agalhst:'those of ?tfae; U8.^ Britain, iFrance; Italy ami the other nations.. >. It means i athletes of , the Soviet Union, Hungary, JE»oland and Czechcsk^akia, vwill be matching' strides\: and feats' of strength -viöi those of Sweden^ Australiai. Cahada,)< Germany > and "^scores of olher cöun-crles, . " . ' : The late Baron Pierre de Ccubertin; the man most responsible för .the'mo-dem revival of the Olymplc 'Games; •flioped and believed" peace would be turthered by the Gämes. says BlU Henrj' in his history of the event ' > • • • ' ^-jniere are thoser who attempt to argus the other way x6 say international games provoke strlfe rather than pr.mote understandlng ^ B o b Mathias, the US two-time Olympic Champion i n the decathlön «nswered that one i n a 1954 press conference i n San Francisco. "Maybe among offlcials," he said, Vbut n:t among athletes themselves In my case, i have more respect for the Russian people now, af ter ming-l l n g with and competing against their athletes at Helsinki.' l^don'tcondone Russian politics, but - I da . admlre i h e i r athletes, what I saw of them," ;> C3Ubertln's .Olymplc credo, xepsat-ed: again and agatnduring. the years when the Games yarecelsbrated, has recelved elaborate. confirmatlon In the Vords and acts of athlstes like Mathias. •The imprrtant thing 4n life", said Coubertin; "is not the -vlctory but the .struggls; the essential thing is ;not to hove conquered. but to have fought; "»elL: To spread these precepts la to develop a more ivaliant, more strong more scrupulous and more generous humanity." • F ; r 1.200' years, desplte constant threats of Invasion and Intemal d l f - ferences that culminated In the Pe- Icponnesian W&r, the Olympic Games of aneient Orcece were held cvery four years without intemiption. They even survived for^ a tkne^ the Icss' of: Greek independence to the leglons of Rome. ^ : Greece Is linked to^ each modern Games by: means of the Olymplc torch. The Olymplc flame, llghted In^ Greece. is carrled to the Games city and brought r into the' stadium by a runner as part of the^penlng cere-mony. The flame'is used to light the torch at the stadium^ whlch bums thtough-; .cut theOatties. Beside It flles the Olymplc f lag with its f ive Interloäcing; rings blueyellov, black,'green and red -r- symbollzlng the f Ive contlnents of the earth. When ttie ctosing ieremonles wui be held Peb: 6 i n mountalnous, par-tina, a $poke5man for the lnterna> tlonal Olymplc 'Commlttee wili call upon "the youth of every country" to assemble feur years hence for the X V I I Olympiad. He will conclude with these word8: ^ ' "May they dlsplay cheerfulnesa and concord &z that the Olympic torch may be carrled on with evcr greater engerness, courage and hondr for the gocd ! <f • humanlty • throughout the ages." j ' . ' Torstaina, tammik. 2€ p, « - Tiiursäny, Zm, 26, 1956 ^ «^vil;^, UmumSG ISIEATOICAL YirOBiC Thorbugh PlanninglCQi^^^ Eliminate M a n y Otastac)^!^ y ••1 *> ii-" '\ >•* Vt Hockey rivalrybetv?;een Toronto and Montreal was forgötten as Mayor Nan-i than Phillips presehtis; a pair of cuf f links to Maurice Richard to "«fficially: honor his 500th goal- in N H L hockey. Mr. Phillips said he vsranted to honor ^ the Montreal idol and demonstrate the go'odwill between the two hockey, capi-^ ; tals in Canada. To the Rocket he said: "It was once felt that you belonged tbv^ Montreal. But as a greät spoftsman you belong to ali of Canada." " - u rn4€ MÄNY SPLENDOilEb HAGGIS •n- By BOB WABD We^eard- a wliile back that at least |ne mdustry . in one coimtry. gäve a leriougjrebuff to USA know-ho\^r mo-lernlzatipn, speedrup and fancy inarr letmg' techniques. ^ , ' I Tne Story concerris a small industry In .^SirScotland,-whichspecialized. i n IheTnanufacture ofvthat great Scot-lish national dish, Haggis. I The,way .the':story: came to us.was jhatan;American f i r m t r i e d to buy pto Hiram McBagpipe Haggis Co; I Now;.it should,be noted,hereuthat jhe McBagplpe Haggis Co., had been In thafcfanmy's oontrolshusethedays \i Rabbie Bums. It was claixned ty the f i rm that- their recipe for ^the pasgis:: was based on the one Bums FTote his fE?3ious Addrees to A Hag-; pisaiJ-ut. ^ . ^. I ItBndghtalsovbe noted that: \the licBägpipe Haggis Co. also, prided: pself on .the fact that their prödu^ kas made exactly the same .'»ay as it bad always been made. I So: •We^ can .Weil imagine l i i e reac-pon of-Hhäm -McBagpipe when fas approacheäby a n American firm' h t h the idea of automating hfe'facr; jory. speedingnp^ Production, anäcai!- p n g *on an ^ exkensiye advertlsfng kmpaigru • V"! '" I "Wliy'V the American' feusinesm jeportedly told oi H i r & i , "with our aiow-how,' we*d put the sheep :in'one ad of?the/ factoiy and haggis xpotdd ome out the other. Alreadypackaged aind you." < < >- - A proposal vras made-that a smart Idvertisingicamjpaign would be work-, I d cut. Ons of the ideas put fonrard fas to engage a'male quartet wJJd; f o u l d b e c a l l r f the'^ColdCnbr.Tlxey ••ould appear regularly on T V and |ng commEsrcials such.as: "Baa^.baa, Uack Sbeq» •4tetk*t y e O i e doDuay^ We n o t o n l y g o t aD y*;e)r\wool:/. Bot J H t e B a g p ^ col y e ^ fominy." ^4 . ' B a s e d . on American advertising know-hDW, i t was also suggested thät the company :could.-advertise that "theirs was the only Haggis _that jcon-tained Lanolin.". One of the'^8lö'gans suggested was ."our is the only Haggis that contains Formula O." When Old Hiram asked. what Forr mula: O stood for. he was told*^ Oat-meal. "But", said Hiram. "a'Haggis has the oatmeal i n it." . \ . iSo the American told him."so what, SO long as the public doesn't know wbat It is." , ^ When Hiram still acted atubbom and refused to ber taken i n by.what he termed-'American knowhpo,". other approäches were taken. I t w a s pointed out to, h im that the f i im could make Haggisfaurgers.;W stands could be set up-all oyer the 'country/ he was told and the Hsiggis-btirger could be sold with cokes;;;.-*:: "Why", said the 'boss-type, "we could makeHaggisbigger than Pizza.': • Our source:told us. that HiramvMc- Bagpipe merely Ecratched h i s l i e a d at Ui l s ' World; • »haking T,^' pronoxmcement and said "Piece a' Tvhat?" Now there arefaomeskeptics .'who wm.claim, tliat-we Just m^de ali of fliis up. , , But fre didn't. We got the Information firsthand from Robert Burns, Robbie; most' Torontonians: know, itands at the comer of • Carlton : and Sherbomne St. , " It being near.Bums* blrtliday.'Jan-uary 25tli, ws ambled overrthere re-cehtly and i t wasi from :Bums h i m - .sclf that we leamed of the plot to «peedup the Haggis'works- . . •TTe köx." Rab said to us, " O l d HI-, yam McBagpipe was no' going tiJ'^ along wi' them. Even wfaen Itiey told hhn to putriup a sign saying " At McBagpipe'8, Haggis is oor Creafest Prodiict-, : " Y o n Hiram," Burns laughed; ^ohl he's the canny one.^' f',What do you mean^^Rabf^ -we asked. "Well,^l8d, there .theyjwerfe"^trylng toget h im to mass produce the Haggis. And they were telling h im hoo mud» money ;he'd be mflking. w i ' this Hag-gisburgers , and a'.. So OldH i r am hit on a 'richt guid Idea." , , " A n d what was that?''; wef again. queried the bard. " H e told them that there:-are som? things i n life that just dinnae need ciianging and modemizing. He said that the songs, the history of peopIe's struggle, the art,'aye,'and"the national dishes, that none of these'need-ed to be diluted doon to f i t au^mated ideas." "Ye Vavi'n wlia mak'' manMnd your care And dish tbem 6nt t b ^ bOI o* taxt, ' ^/nld': gcotlind waats O M sIdnklDg , ware'that Janps in Itvgtts;' But if ye wisb her gratf a* prsyer, , Gie her a Haggfs!"' : " Y c l k e n l a d " , ^ Robert Burns went on, •'if I was to write agaIn ;I thlnk Td add a verse t o , 'A Man' s ,a Man for a' t h a t ' and rd «ay "that 'A Haggis is s t i l l a Haggis tm 9!'^paaX. ;"Aye, a young lassie Uie other day 9ra5wa!king along Carlton :j3t,singlhg one ,o' they modem songs, and Td change tiiat, too. " / 'It~;was a' aboot love; but Td instead say 'Haggis is a Meny Splen-dored Pudding." Bdms was still langhing away to ;iiimselfwhen,we said ."goodbye. and a happy birthday.** ' • . GLOSSARY ;•' skfnldns'—fhln soiip>~ fnftatfoiL - jaaps-«plasbe* aboai. , ' |aggieaH-wooden dialics «ffh , handlf.'^ Ä - , > i - ' ' VJS.Jfem, Lifffojuhla Preparations Are Underway .^*i'^^:<:ii v: Ehrerybody wll recalL that thb h<"io|r of - organizing n e x t . ; 8ummer'sl I>iittor: Jifhlat wa5 g^en to the.Alertfa A. C. I ^ s - respomibiltyhäs^: 1^^ beeti forgottsnfandr^a. great 4^^iOf -prepar^tocynrork;.-;has^a!ready /been' dpne foy conunittee ihat waB set ;up at the turn'of theyear. ' ' , < ' One of the • majof tasks already ^ acr^ compli£ihed is the compiling of ^the mass gym prograiifune v^hlch Was done by Elvi and Jack i Hymander. ThTs. year^S programme is quite ryth-mic, simple vand Short and it sh^buld be easy to leam. - , Although the: gym :^movements are. somewbat shorter than in ' previous years the over-all time wil! be: much the same, as the mass gym dlsplay w i l l start out '.with a cblourfui march and a ;simple. programme i o r the childrto. It might; be noted that the background muaic wlU he a tango instead of the usual waltz, There are many features that will probably be welcomed by gymnasts. Rehear/sals: w l ^ : be: started i n Sud-bury: today and ali Alerts members as weUv;asvgymnasts from other: loc^l clubs are urged - to take part.:' S l v i and Jack Hymander ;will oe i n charge of the rehearsals ahd: Of course the: gym 'classes w i l l n o t -be restricted to re-hearsing the .mass :gymiprogramme;'. The mass; gym programmes • ^will be seht to other centres witliin a few days and arrangements are being made to have th6 Hymanders visit Soiith Porcppine.. Toronto and the Soo; AU these e^ntres are urged to get gym practlses undenvay immedt-ately, so that evetything wlll be set for the Hymanders when th6y aiTlve. RULERS OF TIBET. Pilai, Panchen Lamas See New Life for Tibet . By ALAN IVINNINGTON Irhe foUowlng is fourth io a ^..serles of artlcle^ by British cor- >rt»iwnrtf,ntr Alan.WInnIngton nrhov Is••oml^entIy vfslting'Tibet. He iä one ,of tbe f irst westem«news-papennen to visit TIbet «Ince the complete liberatlon of China. . « " h a s never been easy to meet either o f the two God-rulers of Tibet; rew vpeople : have been, recelved by them poth. A few daysago I had tea TvIth !the Dalai Lama and now I have met and lunched with the Panohen Lama. I had:advance ceremonial training: how to present a sllk scarr on my wrlsts and receive one on my neck. I must not offer my hand, Bince these Living 'Buddbas do not often. shake hands, and so, on, ' 'Zn facjf it was not 80 formal. After passlng fttie : gigantic monk guards, with thelrgreat padded shoiilders, the atmosphere was very cordlal. The Dalai Lama received me with a broad smile and gripped my hand powerfully when I presented the whlte scarf. We sat a f the same level in cosy armchairs,,and had English-type tea and cakes, which the Dalai passed round. , His face is shrcwd and mobile with two deepJlimples on his cheeks when he smiles. HLs Holiness sat among the gorgeous brocade•hangings and palnted cai-v- Ing that coverfed every. Inch of his reception room, wearlng hom-rimmed spectaclea and chatting easlly on any subjectthat came up. Selling the Moon Would you like to buy a piece of the mcon? If you don't think it'6 a iioa;c apply to Mr Robert Ooles, fomuier and presidsnt: of the mterplanetary Development CotpOrattonAddress: Glen Cove, Lsng ItOand, N e » York. The company haa aheadyfoimd 4,500 buyers, , : I n retum for.- one doUar M r . Coles. w i l ' seU you,a deed for a.one-^cre plot. A n d you w-:n't have^to Scour the planet to flnd your, prcperty. .Coles gives Its exact locatbm: the land lies In theCopernicusorater Jn'the moon's oortheast- quadrantV ^ . - > Ths biQrer also recelve» the htint- Ing, : f l s h i i ^ . andvwInter-flportii' rights near his plot. I n additlon, he is ^ - Ven a brochure^descriUng the beau-tles of ::the moon; and a:map that enables the purchäser:to f i nd a n d ad-inlre his Ibnar estate thrptigh a tele-scops. The buyer/tJien. niight feel tiuite assured that lie bad m a d e a Tranderfid acqulsitSon, — if it were noiict one.'seiiousTdefeet::Interpla^ aetarr Development Corporation does jnct, s» fiar, praviae^ tk^ncportatton totbemoon. . <• < >, We hav^ not Jmrented^dU U i l s : . i t: has been the taik of the World press. Mr. Coles, formerchairman of a plahetarlum i n New York, is reported to have filed wlth the City Clerk at Glenn CovCi Lcng Island, a c l a l o i for thfe entlre-moon. Ke , explained to the perplexed officlal that he liad • mad2 a, tang study of the'' moon^and that he Intended to go there soon as a member o i a n Intcrpianetary. expe-dlUon. ::lfo one had d a l m e d iand rights on the moon before, so he wa» dong-so now. B-Jt i t appears that another lunar raaltor had got in l>efore him, Mr. Harry • H a l l , FiJrida, came forward and declared Ulat he had filed his ciaL-n long before Coles and was ssn-ing •p'ots :at::a much eheaper rate. That Coles and Hall "have; decidcd to grab the moqn and ^ Sell i t plece-meal — aud have even found: buyers in- the United States — is? of course ludicrous ;atJd sÄacks cf lunacy. But the <nadnwB «s in the very air they breathe, :.'ihey live in a country where. there is a tendency m upper quarters to r ^ a r d : any foreign terri-tory af :falr spolls;' I f two entcrpri- ^ng luniticj(''ä]re applying the rule to AaoiheTyrpfatiitfiti» hardiy surprl- «ing. "I hope you wlll teli the wortd clearly what Tlbet is really Uke." he' said; and .stressed that authors; • es-pecially British aUthors,'had In.thle past gtven 'a- faise«pltture' of -Tlbetf.' As we walked, an offlelal clad in gold silk. and/gilt hat,popped in occasionally and took a flashlight piclure or a few feet of fllm. "Our economfc position Is growlng stronger", the .Dalai Lamasaid, re-ferrlng to his "vislts to Ohlna'8 Industrial .centres. "Many things we could not make. before we - can manur facture now." I^sked what he thought thls meant for Tibet, and he answered: "We wUl oome to lead a happy soclalist life with the people of the whole country." The palai and Panchen Lama* are the hlghest of Tibefs 1,000 Llvlng BiiddRas, wbose soals are said - at death- to pass Into 'another-body so that they can retum to earth to help mankind, 6oth are equal In rellgious affalrs, w'ith the Dalai Jiav- Jng a leäding position in worldly affalrs. The PancKen* Lama, over slx" feet tali, met me wlth the sime firm grlp. He spoke exfefellent Chlnese In af deep volce, and talked freely on any questions. On; bls rlght wrist:was a^ slmple rosary twined over a gold wrlst j watch, I t was clear; from ttjeir constant referenc^s that both the young God-rulers had been deeplylmpressed dur- Jng their m a n y meetlngs wlth Mao; Tse-tung/ The Panchen spoke of the "personal guidance" he had recelved: from Chairman"Mao Tse-tung. He said that what he and the Dalai had seen in their tours of China "has Instilled in us greater confldence that we can build |i new Tibet," After chatting for an hour, *c went to lunch, served wlth exqulsite; gold and sllverjjutlery^ and toasted to peace a n d friendriiip betwcen the Tibetan and British people inr Orange Juice, for no liquor is allowed near the Great Lamas. Cigarette» * c r c passed aftier lunch, but I said I had glven up smoking. * A h l You and I iielong' to the same sept," said the Paiu*en. .He and the Dalai are leaders of the Ypllow öect, who may not marry, smoke or drink. It is hard to belleve that these two sedate andstudious men are so young. Tfie Dalai is 20 and ^Oie Panchen 19. But still i t was possible to recognlze the two Jövlal young. men I met at a reception In Peking last year. After leavlng the Panchen Ilooked over the vast ^ashllunpo; monastery where he Ilves; I n his b e d r o o m , ! ^^ with gods like a chapel, ttras a p l l - grim touching w i th his forehead*eveiy place wblch the Livlng Buddha mlght have toucbed. , , > I n the austere, glaBS-walled i b c d - room there is one touch of xno^emlty. By the side of the Panchen'8 naxTpvr, hard bunk stands a tabl« tvlth a. tele-pbone on it. '. _ > Toronto. —^ T h e eharacter wlth the; "GuUlverr-bandle f rom Vancouver, B . C . knows what he is taUtlng ahout. In an effort-.to.establish honest(Srlti-, eism about: our cultural activities, ^In the hope such critlcism wiU help.to improve same,' we xan;;oniy^w^ heartedly agree w7th' GuUiver and possibly stress some. of the points fur-' ,'therv' " ^ ' Theatrlcal work Is not easy — set-tlngthe^ stae;e.ready: for Production, and the^ a r t of prop*er make-up — ;not jnecessarily In that brder ' are the blggest- obstacles ; to rovercome not to menilon the actlng itself. True/ our: activities Centrelaroundamateur groups, but when . a production is 8taged«> Bwr^^ a percentage: of the gate should go ioward financlng the; different pha^es of the undertaking. A l i work pertaining to our stage belng voluntary, and free, surely. we can put aside a sum from eachvperformanco to buy, new aiid <nore equipment, props, make-u^.etc. These wlU only Increase i n making for a better per-formance and the paying audlence wlU get an added thrUI from. seeing these improvcments on the stage, not tosay how much easlei- tt wiU be,for the east. The uhruly state of affalrs that we have wltnessed back-stage at' most of thehalls weiiave vlslted Is disgusting; Thls Is not castlng reflections on the persons In charge nearly as much as on the east takUig part i n such pcr-formances. We have seen people throv things helter-skelterwlth: a passing remark that-the "puyuston-holtajat" ftii Soviel Medicine Has Made Many Important Advances Great Interest has been aroused-by detalls of "spectacular progress" now b e i i ^ made in/medicine «ken by A. N. Bakulev, pre5ident''of the Academy of (Medical Sglencc i n a spsech »to the Suprem» ^ovlet. He said/there had bBen'"indlspu-; table siiccesses" i n bcmbuttiing tuf-berculcsls, especlaliy tubercularvmer nlRgitls. , ' ' ' Increased ting many serlou« dlseases,^ S:viet scientl&ts had develtiped,new medlctnes siich as highly effectlve antlblottcs, Sovlet surgeons had a l so worked out a new method for the 'fiurgical tfeatment cf heart dls?asc-& and dlseascs of ^ the yegetative ser- , vous system, and 'made notabie re-ssarch In the il-^atment of hlgh blood pressurc. " • ' , • . ' Britain has asked the Soviet Union -for a supply.cf tlie antibiotlc albo-mycin effeptlv^ against many germs whlch reslst pen cillln, Metttbers öf the staff of the'Medical Researeh Council dlscussed albo-mycln wlth Saj^ct doctors on a vlslt te Britain. • . ' ' The drug — discovered i n the Sovlet Union* four years ago — l^as prcved pärtlcularly effectlve i n the treatment of pneumonia.- The British Medical: Journal said rcccntly that «:me of its propertles were unl-que an dpleaded for the opportnity of using i t in Britain, ' 1 will tpke tare of them?. It a x m J d - ^ ' ' * \ ? | be hard uf or everyone - to: co-operate * a little making the jobeasier for a l i There are hiterested people ^1» our t midst who V o u l d be.vexy^happjr^in-d^ ed to attend, i f , i t \^>re posslhlM***'^ have a clinlc>wi^ per- \ sonnel to flhbw hbw"besi to appiy^^il^ malct-up.' 'A" crew* to suffidently operate stage changes i s a'';must: anttr , youngerpeople wouldjtake ah;$»t*res6 lA this phasp bf, the,work Itf^giveit^ ? an bpportunlty to leam..' ' ' j j We do not help'our own eaiue bf. In thev^midst of, a;;performance, hav-^ "f ing someone blckerlng or remarkiner ' v on the acting abllity of others: OraHt-' ed. in 'amateur theatrical ^ueh: as ours, A the bestcholces.arerriot;alwaysvayan-j '• A able and' when someone who^ llkea ^] being on the stage, is willing,' t b ^ ;It's time: we ali-got'together and dld^ ' our level. best' to > encottrage ^^itbfftt^ ^ along. pelleve us, v?e can clteaeveiral'^ - Instances where'tbi8 has happehed;' the net r ^ u l t ' belng hurt feellhga H^a ^ an inferlör. portrayai from l a j * of pipal>^%' per encoiuragementj -HonestycrlUcJatt. ^ never did . anybbdy any -harm^, ^tx% please l e a v e i t tili the'flnbl curtaln haa been d)'awn;; A good poltf^^ould'" be for the east io get'''tögetii]ii|eftfcp the play and theh slncerely inuU over , the weakne8sc3; and'also to give c r e ^ t j where credit is due. \^ - w i * Very rccently, one, dlrectbt vtat^ quotedas saying he,was n i t p t «hd approaches a person'only^^^^ pear, in a certain play. ;|lnd|cr;j sgme"^, ^ circumstances, that once i^noJ^lhotli^, to let the Indlvldual äcnoV whethfer \ the time he can «ay.^yp!s!pe '»oV Wiiile iome dlr^tors. for ^pereopal ^ ' reasons, do not ask a ^erfalnJ party to täke a roie\frpm. hini;t;i5:at not * also true that for the fÄmfilrtasops'' Boihe person, cahnot obllge the direo-tor?' This same dlrect^iil|||v]i^; ältt> ' quoted as saying whfen'tfte?flupplyjrtf/ "roolihenkilöltä" y/aä hmltedMn one^/ i l 13 community, we' should endeavour «to ~ • • • ..ii;?:^_;i;,_v.--jtfT/--v. • • • ' .import-:ööÄ^i)^|oi|||^ P e r 6 o n a l l y | w 6 ^ i h i ^ ; j | ^^ talent, ih , our city j^o^iih' ^toÄ„ -....,.,„.,,.„.. have eomevof' the morc^putstand^rlgji ;actors|an^pctf^^ :ycaM-jagdi''a:ivshow^"was|s^^ h^re- The.us6.of>adloacti.v^ i8o'topc8.hadj*ithli>a8t,ofraJ)0»t t w i i i j ( | : ^ d uriej^ ^J^^ jcreased the opppftunltles for trea- dare ^ay ninety-flvö percent of tlnfOji^^, ^ *1 ^^eretMtt-agera, < JuBtat^piätlöÄ 'fl They sfcbula|ge|i?^ another ^rtilshlHiMIP^ be done ö|ci||gind^|^ have hnprovcd. — *[ankus, ; ' »1 ' f ' Can a Wrestler Beat ä Boxer' Slnce'hands were weapons glvcn to the 'earli.?ct man, it- can be aesumed that boxlng and-vrestllng are the two i)14est sports i n cx'stence. In the beginning both ^activltles werc com-blncd, but later the two became separate sports, Evervslnce tben the questlon has been raised from tlme to time — could a wrestler whlp a boxer In a mbced toout? Fiercc argu-ments have resulted, but the problem remains unsolved. It would seem that ali one had to do was to match a boxer aga.nst a wreitler, This ha<i been tried, how ; ever, on several. occasions, wito i n - cönclusive resuits, If the v/restler was a slow movlng typey oppoted to .a: fast, ha^d-hlttlng boxer,, he. was knocked out i n the flrst rounil; ,In casej where the'- boxer falled to land and the wre8tler managed to get to cloje quartcr.*», the' boxer found- hb shoulder^ plnned to the mat. Recently a «ports magazine aslccd tfce questlon: " I n a free-for-aU be-tween Rocky 'Marciano,heavyweight box^ig chapion, and Lou Tijcsz, wre3tling'0liampion, wfco would win?" Among tbe cxperts questJoned were Marciano:^nd; Tbesz; They said: :.; a t o r c I a n o : ' T d bat his braini out throwlng puhches frcm the opcning bcll. ThMZ has no defeme against piledrivlngpunches. And l've broien a few holds myself. I'd velcome thfe ihance ' to . prove that I can llck . TheKBi ' ; i w o a i d win. A wre3tler Is' hetter - eqospp^' fol* raugriiand-tumble fighting., 1 «aivsuch a match 20 years ,a^oJt>Btweea 'Ray Steelc and Kiazt^h LK^in^y. SteeI<|||Ä the Klngtlsh^in 32'eecoödj, T-Anyof^^ , dozen wre3tle:s cöuld lIcfeMarc^ The iZ,' you, -wlll notäcs,' reoal?^t,a fight between a top wre3tl3r and a medlocie baxer, He could have men* tloncd the tlme Hob:Pli?.3lmmorismet a wfestler and ffettened hlni for the count In 10 secondi,' "f^f^^M ^ In plcklDg Marclano ovdif Thesz, a New York publlcitymaniiamed B.11 Huttort remafjied that years ago he witne;sjjd a mateli betwcen a boxer -and a wrestler-judo artist. ."The vfrestler got the boxer: down;- but the boxer delivcred the knociout ii.tmct^ vf:-/.U sprawjeä on his1iM^:'jd^.siid/ ! - AnotbervBpörta fan-answered tliis^ way: "Tiie ^pr^sspt jfio» ot piofes-. slonal .wra5,tler«.;W haxpj: cn.^t^^^ arent really y/restlers.' Thsy 'do too much^clownirig — not cn!j|ghiS^es^^ ling, ' Marclano' 'would, raiir«Jer •'Bsy^ of them, Including J/m Th&Äli jäaty the oldtlmers i:ke Jimmy LondoÄ and Zbysbko would tear Marctono japart-''., There is no doubt that inodern wre2t!ing, which has bscom^ stricöy eiiow buslnets • and ' exhibitionfimr doesnt produc;? many rejiiyivr/MMe».* Even a man llkejDougHepbiiiim^ äminimum of; training, is ;f^^^^^ a etar performcr becsime^^^^i- hJsI welghtlifting fame;' Coui||ii^(AiAf' Jast more than a'few isecondi, against a fighter llke^^äi-ciano?. ;iiii3dbu'i^fr«'' ft> < ful •A-:<A--^i^.^;:J:''i>'^v^^'^^ ? On " ' ~ that i i i 'mi i 'MM
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, January 26, 1956 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1956-01-26 |
Type | text |
Format | application/pdf |
Rights | Some rights reserved |
Identifier | Vapaus560126 |
Description
Title | 1956-01-26-03 |
OCR text |
\mm's 'mmmm rnuit BY GEOBGEBABE
lt's 9raannz fcosr *c3je psople havet
b:e fcnaci of always putäng tbeir
|f; ot i a tlieir mouUx »Ijsnever to^
3en it. UsuaJJy. tSiis type Js Xougd
laai^ng- tbe: smaii but vocal grcmp
i&TPn to- tfie sporting fratemity as
•bsägsTs". (A nice naaie fdr bareau>
crst).' ' •
George Dudlsy secretaiy-manager
cf the Canadian Jtoatear Bockey
sociaticn, iihas l i i t - i f i » headlines
agaim 'And tilisi time'he picked an
Bven*wealcer'Tinib^ to crawl out oni
Just before our ucckey entry^in the.
rater Games, the Kitchener-Water-
Datctenen. t c o i of f lor Eaxaps,
Ioscow Jladio broadeast a pöst^oljra-;
j)ic invitation to the: TJS. knd Ca-adian
teams. ; C:ach: Bobby Bauer.
3Ught i t was a' vofkd-arful idea.
h f s sooiething :we*:vs:lcoked fonvard
lo for a long tiine, eversince wewere
elected to representCaxiada.Tlt wold
a .pleasureto play in.Moscow.'^i v
-ilr. 'Dudley didn tiagree. Without
[)othering;to chec^ on: the - ar^
lertts f CT the proprsed game: inv Dy--
[jamo Stadium, cur George refusad
gtant permission for the trip. He
iowed his "ocncem" for the welfare;
Caiiadian hockey by demanding
lcash'on ithei l!ne" before he would
}t anyteam play i n the Soviet Union.
Pa t Boehmer, the ;Öut£hmen's ma-lager,
€xp'sed -Dudley's sanctimoni-ias
attitude. Boehmer pointed out
lat if the teaai should go to-Mos-
3w (ani a few letters t3-Dudley.
.0 CAHA,. aiight •hsip; h im change
lis mind), any revenue from the
le I wculd go. tq the • Association's
teasury.
«o«rgeacy meetlng^of tit» C A H A exe--
cutive vhlcSi confirmed bis-vefe>.iBut
ac»' a -ns» jj:i£ aas taSsen.
T t e "real* reaeon »by the Dut-chies
coulän*£ go tp the Sovjet Union
»as that -tlme w3uJäa't pennit".
Ilxat cld chsstnat about «öcilng to
sähedules, vas tade agaia I t se«ns
that > the a^HA^s originalljy is ex-ceeded
on y by Its "interest" tn hockey.
-
Once. c>:re. the facts were slightly
distorted. The , K -W s .d9n't have to
resume. their isague play u n t i l about
JPeb. 12. T h a t ^ i v e s th«n at least a
»:eek (the Olyaipic Games end öhthe
.fifth». ta play. one or ;two .games in
MJ:SCOWV and fly back to Canada to
complste their schedule.
• * » _
- A n d speaking of money, — VMr.
pudley seems to ha ve forgötten tiiat
the Czech govemment is paying the
shot for flying cur boys from England
to Prague and on to Italy: Also
it wcn't cost the CAHA a pehny for
•:ur; team's stay: i n Czechodovakia. I
on!y Jiope that the. siup"us from ths
$25.000 Geoi;g'e Dudley Says i t wiU east
to send the team to Italy, wiU bö^ used
to take care of any l:ss i n tlie_players'
wages. . What a sporting gesture that
would be, eh George?
TBE m 'MODEBN OLYmUD
Ölympic Games A Boost For BrötherJiood
D i d t h i s dISclosuredismay Ge:rgle?
tertalnly rioe: ;'He m called an
Here's a tip on how to tnake • a loi;
of money, Mr. Dudley. '\Wjy not spon-sor
a cross-Canada tour by the:So-
•viet tsam — this year i Don^t^Tvotry
ab|DUt the play-offsTheyni take däre
of themsel ves.. And just think: Since
the S.>-viet gcvermnent subsidizes its
aöUetes, youU: onljr have to give the
team its "bare expenses". You'll inake
a k i l l i n j and at the same^ time let
4he Canadian fans see some exiciting
hockey.' Isn't; tlvat what yöu Want,
George?
BT STEVE HCBDOCK ->
' ' ^
Today marks the dawn of the
X V I t h Olympiad öf: the modern era;
Olympiads are four periods o i time
msasured from 1896, «hen the Ölympic
Games were revived i n Athens:
Tire Games celebrate the Olympiad.
They are the revivalof a; celebration
that extendad unbroken tbrougb 1,200
years cf Greek liistory untU' i t fcU:
before the edlct of Eänperor TUed-'
dosus of Rome i n 394 A . D. — •
Olyoiplads are counted even though
the Games ars not held. ^Fcr :exam-ple,
there :were no games In the VIth
Olympiad. whlch cpened i n 1916. nor
i n the X H t h Olympiad of 194P'or the-
X l l l t h . Olympaid of 1944.
• In each case war was the reassn.
This year's Olymplc : competition
.:p2nsupwith Winter Games In Cor-tina
d'Ampezzo, Italy, thls montta,
with 35 coimtries -^1 a new high —
sending a recordnumber of 1,615 äth-letes
and officlals, for the 6now and
ice camival. The USSR w i l l be i n for
the first time leading 'with-145 per-sons,
follpwed by the UB wlt|i 126.'
/ The sutormier Games, .for the fIrst
time in history, wiU be celebrated in
the Southern Hemlspbere. I n «tefer-enefeto
tiie '^ioverted? seasons In that
portion of; äis glohe, the dates ^ipriU be
•l«,v. 22 thxough Dee 8. I t v i i i be tbe
fizst thne l l i e Gameshavetoeen heM
i n these months.
I n Australia theytettu^preparlng
to;say ^^ehome" t o t h e atbletes-ot
80: natioiu and to the ttaouii^te of
visitois yrho :wUl cmne?to seC: chein
perform.
The charter of the Olymplc Games
declares:
"The. Olymplc Games are . heJd
evexy :fow' years;and aseemble,ama'
teurs of ali • nationa In fair and «jual
competition underi-condiUonar^^
are t3 b? as near perfect as possible.
••No dlscriÄtaation Is , a!lowed
against any country or-: person; on
grouuds of color, xeligion;:or'politic8".
This means athletes from the
(People's: iRepubUc ;o China w l l l ' be
compeUng agalhst:'those of ?tfae; U8.^
Britain, iFrance; Italy ami the other
nations.. >. It means i athletes of , the
Soviet Union, Hungary, JE»oland and
Czechcsk^akia, vwill be matching'
strides\: and feats' of strength -viöi
those of Sweden^ Australiai. Cahada,)<
Germany > and "^scores of olher cöun-crles,
. " . ' :
The late Baron Pierre de Ccubertin;
the man most responsible för .the'mo-dem
revival of the Olymplc 'Games;
•flioped and believed" peace would be
turthered by the Gämes. says BlU
Henrj' in his history of the event
' > • • • '
^-jniere are thoser who attempt to
argus the other way x6 say international
games provoke strlfe rather
than pr.mote understandlng
^ B o b Mathias, the US two-time
Olympic Champion i n the decathlön
«nswered that one i n a 1954 press
conference i n San Francisco.
"Maybe among offlcials," he said,
Vbut n:t among athletes themselves
In my case, i have more respect for
the Russian people now, af ter ming-l
l n g with and competing against their
athletes at Helsinki.' l^don'tcondone
Russian politics, but - I da . admlre
i h e i r athletes, what I saw of them,"
;> C3Ubertln's .Olymplc credo, xepsat-ed:
again and agatnduring. the years
when the Games yarecelsbrated, has
recelved elaborate. confirmatlon In
the Vords and acts of athlstes like
Mathias.
•The imprrtant thing 4n life", said
Coubertin; "is not the -vlctory but the
.struggls; the essential thing is ;not
to hove conquered. but to have fought;
"»elL: To spread these precepts la to
develop a more ivaliant, more strong
more scrupulous and more generous
humanity."
• F ; r 1.200' years, desplte constant
threats of Invasion and Intemal d l f -
ferences that culminated In the Pe-
Icponnesian W&r, the Olympic Games
of aneient Orcece were held cvery
four years without intemiption. They
even survived for^ a tkne^ the Icss' of:
Greek independence to the leglons of
Rome. ^
: Greece Is linked to^ each modern
Games by: means of the Olymplc
torch. The Olymplc flame, llghted In^
Greece. is carrled to the Games city
and brought r into the' stadium by a
runner as part of the^penlng cere-mony.
The flame'is used to light the torch
at the stadium^ whlch bums thtough-;
.cut theOatties. Beside It flles the
Olymplc f lag with its f ive Interloäcing;
rings blueyellov, black,'green and
red -r- symbollzlng the f Ive contlnents
of the earth.
When ttie ctosing ieremonles wui
be held Peb: 6 i n mountalnous, par-tina,
a $poke5man for the lnterna>
tlonal Olymplc 'Commlttee wili call
upon "the youth of every country" to
assemble feur years hence for the
X V I I Olympiad. He will conclude
with these word8: ^ '
"May they dlsplay cheerfulnesa and
concord &z that the Olympic torch
may be carrled on with evcr greater
engerness, courage and hondr for the
gocd ! |
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