1955-07-21-03 |
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KXIBETIJi
i antoi jo merkkihuudoaBaan
ian asemalle, kun meiS
a juotosi pilettiluukulleja^
Vntakaa minulle •
[inne haluatte?
o tännepä tietenkin.
KIUKKUINEN VAABI *»l
isoisä on tänään'kic '
uinka voit sen tietää?
Iän lähti aamulla kyntahiä
illa Ja on nyt aJeUut kokoi
rän edestakaisin pellolla'
itta sita että aura jäi
ille. sukupolvissa. päästiin. ^'
»Idaan täydellä syyliä *n»
" " a n e i t a siitk. että Oaaa.'
i ei vielä ole joutunut WK>
»ttamaan seUaisla määrä ^
aktiivisia säteitä kuin minn
isenl", t r i Pilkington UrJolt'
"mutta jokainen uusi vtty.
fiikoe lisää totaalista vaanj, 1
sitä voida olla kevytinldisoBi
lioimatta.-
radioaktiivisuus nousisi |B"
Ulsen rajan, emme enäämll-Vl
l a n pystyisi panemaan asäi^.^
Ikealla tavalla kphdaDeti.^
aivan paikallaan lopetti»^
t ja tässä vaiheessa. Vastoi
myöhään voisimme havalUj
eemme merkin ylitse.
>elkkä pommien kokeilu kn<"
sa erämaissa saattaa Joliiu<
i.t siihen, ; jota mnntamat
tuntijat kolkosti kntsnnl
llseksi itsemurhaksi», loprt-;
rt Pilkington.
i. Selvisi kuitenkin, että se ail
linen lepopaikka, jollft, ÄO
skin löytyy vertaista",'
iskunnan jäsen, insinööri V*|
tröm oh käynyt Venäjällä (
lankumousta, ja osasi
allin aivan vapaasti kafl
ä vam halusin", tertoi-imme
esim. professori Hali
;sa koko Moskovan kene
imatta siihen huomiota". Oi>|
:orosti, etta neuvostoiliiiiliy|
:niikan suhteen saavuttan«t|
tcmia- tuloksia. Luonne!hdll>l
alta kannalta katsoen useitil
joilla valtuuskunta kävH
mitti Moskovan metroa 'tot|
1 luokan laitokseksi".:
iskunta naki Neuvostolutmil
sj'ventynyt, rauhanon
i. ja Joka on uskollmen kflbl
n rauhalle. Stockholm TkKJ
antaa paakirjoituksetsutl
ien lausunnon parlameuffi-j
untien vaihtamisesta. Koäe-J
1 Ruotnm parlamenttlvaltuaj
' Neuvostohiton-matkaa -läUl
ttä valtuuskunta sai kobl
El aikana nahda kunnioitct-l
lotsin ulkopolnttata asennel-l
ta tuloksia, joihin se on pitj
m rauhan oloissa pääs^. |
lanyletaen mielipide oaW'|
a todennut, etta kansalnriJ
mne on Neuvostoliiton tä-j
Ien ansiosta jonkun venol
ut. Puhuessaan kesäkuun ttj
Moskovassa Neuvostollitt
n ystävyysjuhlassa InMl
teri Javaharlal Ndffll
kiittää neuvostchalliöiöl
ionista .viimeaikaisista. wt
itä, jotka ovat lievenläB?!
ällSTä jännlttyneisyTttäjJ
meet panokseksi rauhan JlJ
;Ilaisim toimenpiteisun kinj
ostoliiton korkeimman.
istoriallinen julistus. jod»l
linen tulee. vielä tuottanuoj
yleisan rauhan hyraksl..j
iomUta —joka muuten 1
h mainostaa itseään.^«"j
na päivälehtena" .r-3»s»l
h, että oletkos hiljaa ^ii^j
Qukavampaa kum saluaW-|
lUiksefc Itämerellä •••4; •1
la tuntuu elävän sillä tali*|
ilkeästi se aika, JoUo»;»-!
yhteistoimin Natcf-Satöj
idenalaisverkkoja SufflHö-ikki.
Ah. sa aika entti»
ussa on tällä kerralla>3-
mutta. ^.[
a on Porkkala. Ja nliiS»
distössä vaadittu monin»''
•rtelevin sanonnoin, ffif^J
i selväkielisesti, että Pi»»-|
;en vuokrasopimus on J«*j
enime on, ettei Porkki»
sesta olisi mllloinkaflD
M ryhtyä keskustelenaJ^I
Suomen porvarillinen;.'?'!
vähemmän kiihkeästi s ^ l
takunnan itärajaa
isitykseen yhtyy 0^^*41
sijärkinen porvamHnenpi
hiljaisuudessa tietenknt
evan lisäksi tJ7d3«ffl<Jl
I i n että kiviseltä » a ^
elle siemenelle, j o t c n^
vät hyvät humala! I»?^
suuntaus on " « « " ^
ti Ja sitä e i a i n a i n i B ^
iaikoja ihailevat P<*"r
tamaan, - Juato Pf»J
irst Visit Of
S Alhietes To
loviet Union
• the first time since the Second
I war, an American sports t ^m
litlif ters) vislted the Soviet
and met with S#viet teams in
tition.,;. •„
the competition the .Ameri-broke
three records.: Tommy
Of Sacramento/topped hts own
mark In the two-handa press.
it was 340 pound Paul Anderson
I Toccoa, Georgia who gained the
atest admiratlon from the Soviet
litJifting enthusiasts. Anderson
; considered one of the strong-men
m the world, recelved a
aendöus ovation when he brdke
records.
Jthough the American team made
! ahovving they were edged by the
et strong men who won four
to the American's three. .
olkming the weightlif ters an A m -
chess team visited the TJSSB.
Reeves, manager of the U . S.
er board strategists praised the
ts for their ho£pitality and stat-
\: "I would like to utter t i .prayer
Russians and Americans for
inext 10,000 years meet i n combat
I greater than chess." >.
VIESTI A.C. IS HOST
=young mother was examining a,
r •vnth some doubts. ' Isn't it rather
plicatcd for a child?" she asked
clerk.
|"It's an Educational toy, madam",
ansvvered. " I f s designed to adjust
le child to life in the modern world.
Dy way he puts it together is
3g."
By the time m o s t T c a d c r s recelvc
this issue of .the paper only a week
will remain before the Annual Sports
Festival of the iXJASP wm bebfflclal-ly
opened i n South Porcupine under
the sponsorship of the Viesti A t h -
letic Club.
AU reports recelved from South
Porcupine indicate that members and
supporters of the Viesti A. C. have
done a good Job in preparing for this
important annual event. South Porcupine
has alwaysbeen noted for its
cxceUent track and Ideal weäther'
conditions, whicli have -helped pro-duce
a numbcr of the records of the
POASP. Again this year the track
will be In excellent shape and- the
breaklng o f existing records v i i i dep-end
entlrely on the athletes them-selves.
In fact the whole success of the
Festival v i i i depend on the, partici-pating
athletes as well as the entire
membership of the FCASF. The Viesti
A. C. can only see to it that ali
facilities are in tip-top Shape and
that ali aspects of the festival arc
well organized.
. The success of the festival will be
determined by the number öf partici-pating
athletes and spectators and of
course the preformance of the athletes
w i l l b e the key factor m draw-ing
snectatbrs.
Most clubs have already imad«
plans to send large contingcnts of
athletes to South Porcupine and a
great number of sports enthusiasts
will undoubtedly journey to South
Porcupine to follow the competitions.
Sports will not be the only att-ractlon
at^ t h e festival. In addition
to determining the champiohshlps for
the year a number of gay danc^ wlll
be held and the nreekend wlll be
climaxed by a colourful concert
which will feature some of the bcst
talent the Finnish-Canadian com-munity
has to offer.
On August Ist. Immedlately fol-loving
the conclusion of the festival,
the PCASP will hold its annual
convention^ Ali clubs have elected
theh- delegates to this important meet-
Ing and a great deal of time has been
devoted by clubs in discussing the i s -
sues that must be dcclded at the con-vention.
The purpose of any convention is to
examine and improve the activities
of the crganization. It is hoped that
this wiir also be true of the FCASF
convention. Constructlve criticlsm is
an important means of Improvement
and there is no doubt that the com-ing
convention wlll accomplish its
purposes. •
Old acquamtances will be xeneved
in South Porcupine on the July 30—
31 weekend.
ONE AT A TIME
The doctor .was intervlewing the
last patient i n his office when a wo-man
rushed i n crying: "Doctor! Doctor!
Come quickly. Mly husband haä
just swallowed amouse!"
"Get back to him," sald the doctor.
"and try vaving a piece of cheese a-bout
in front pf his mouth. ril be
there shortly."
Five minutes later the doctor rea-ched
the house. A man was llying ön
the coach with his mouth wide open,
while a hysterical woman was waving
a hernng in front of his mouth.
"You foolish woman," he oried "I
told you cheese."
" I know that," she said, "but Fve
got to get the cat out firat."
lportswriters Are Ignoring
"he Needs of Canadian Sports
By CHARLES LAW
'm of six years ago leading C a n -
lian sportswriters scoffed at ama-m
sports as outmoded i n the
dern; day of commerciallsmi The
ateur status" that athletes stlll
to gain admisslon in a
iber of sportingi competitions was
[subject for jokes and journalistic
that was five or six years ago,
lore the outstanding successes
by Soviet, Hungarian and
fioslovakian athletes. Prevlously
had been good "cold war" policy
idisregard the athletic feats report-lin
the lands of socialism. After ali,
ii't the youth behind the "Iron
starving robots ready to
te any opportunity to escape
peir miserable lot?
. . * , • * ^ • •»
[Today the same sportswriting fra-ity
IS the staunch defender of
pure • amateurism. They howl
[lat Zatopek. Iharos and Kucs owe
^eir sticcess to a breach' of the
flympic code. "State amateurism";
jiey accuse.
[Elmer Ferguson of Montreal s p e j^
'the threat of Russia's govern-
^ental mass development and sub-jsation
of athletes." Athleticism has
le " a State concern, as ivell as
instrument of propaganda";
Bobbie Rosenfeld of the To-i>
nto Globe. The Russians have made
-Olympics a "dogflght", says MUt
Dunnell of the Toronto Star,
• * •
This campaign was to have cul-minated
in an "investigation" of
amateurism in the Soviet Union by
the International Olympic' Commit-tee.
A motion to tixat effect was pre-sented
at the recently concluded lOC
meeting in l»aris, and only falled Jo
be considered immedlately because
it came too late. : V
The Impression beingleft.among
<ihe Canadian people is that the
"secret of success" of Soviet sports
lies i n ^ome form of disguised pro-fessionalism.
To debunk this careful-ly
developed "theory" requires an ex-amination
of both the athletics de-
TClopment program under socialism
and the motives underlylng the at-tack
agalnst it.
The olympic code on amateurism
decrees that no athlete or team may
receive money for their playing, that
jio Special ind;icements. cash prizes
or ofcher material rewards be grant-ed
to athletes. The Soviet sports
authoritles abide by. this definition.
But, charges our press, Soviet
players get regular Job-pay when
playing or travelllng to take part in
competitions. Doesn't this make the
12 milllon Soviet athletes profes-sionals?
1
• * •
The fact Is none of thesc young
people make a profession out of
sports. They have been trained for
THERE-S ONE IN EVERY OUTFIT b y ? AILAS
CiONMA*
OtSflrtAlE-QSCAl?
?0t5NTWAr(T THE.
UNION TOTELLHIM
^^0W TO TH\NKo^,
T H E GiAsf
many occupations: as a wQrker i n an
auto factory. as a tractordriver on a
coUective farm, or ' a musiclan In
some large orchesra. 'Their partlci-pation
In one of the 28 big sports so-cietles
in the U.S.S.R. is done i n their
spare time,- with no renumeratlon
whatsoever.
The Soviet athlete, however, does
have unprecedcnted opportunity to
participate in the sport of his choos-
Ing. He Is provided with adequate
equlpment, proper facilities and ex-pert
coaching. If he shows exceptionr-ai
ability, there are no financial
problems to hold h im back from de-veloping
into a champion.
»• • •*;•./
In Canada, as in most western coun-trles,
there are three categories of
athletes., Wc have our amateurs.
young Canadians who have or can
get the money to obtain the neces-sary
trainlng and coaöhing to reach
international standards—such are
Barbara Ann Scott, the figure skater.
and Ernestine Russell, the gymnast.
We often hear of scions of ricih American
famllies sucfti as Frank Stran-ahan
and Budgc Patty who travel
from one Tvorld meet to anothcr.
The second category-includcs the
out and out Professional. The vast
majörity of our hockey players (and
players in othör sports open to com-mercialization)
must rclinqulSh a college
education or a trades training —-
as in the case of Hugh Bolton and
Danny Lewicki — if they wlsh to
excel m their sport.
The remainder are thpse who. re--
tain their amateur statu-j only because
they are able to derive some
supplemenfary Income whlch Ls i n -
direcMy rclated to their athletic
ability. Bob Bedard competes in
varicus tennis toumamcnts bccayse
the city of Shcrbrooke has given lilni
financial assistancc. Many athletes
play college football because an
athletic .scholarship goes along wieh
It.
Because our govemment and the
men vho control our sports organl-zatlons
see fit to cxcludc a natlonally
fiponsored and flnanced sports program.
Canada-s talentcd youth must
contlnually flounder In the dilemma
of choosing betveen sports and a
skilled vocation.
Rather than admit that the program
of a mass, democratlc sport is one
to be emulated. tfaese men take the
hypocritical line of casting doubt*
on Soviet amateurism. If they were
rcally Intent on imprtwing Canada's
prestige ai the 1956 and future Olympics,
they would moan Ies» about the
"subversiveness" of «tate «ubsidics,
and concentrate on «tttog aslde the
funds necessary to develop a toealthy,
athletlcalJy incllned Canadian youth
wlthout profeodonallzlng them.
UBC Rowers Praise
US and Russian
Teams at Henley
There's a strong possibUty that
Canada's University of British Columbia
eight who defcated Russia
in the Henley Royal Regatta, \yill
make a bid for the 1956 Olympics at
Melbourne.
This was revealed by team manager.
G. Nells Stacey when the UBC crew
arrived at Dorval 'from London fol-lowing
their Invitation appcarance at
Henley. •
They edged out Russia only to lose
by a mere 20 feet to the University of
Pennsylvania for the Grand Chal-lenge
Cup.
They were full of praise for both
the Penn and Russian crews. Stacey
said the Vancouver boys "rowed their
best possible raccagäinst the Penn
crew but that the U.S. eight were Just
that muchbetter than xts — 20 feet
better to be exact." said Stacey wlth
a smile.
Manager Stacey and ali members
of the erew enriphasized how well they
were treated by Henley officials and
the splrit of sportsmanship that. ex-
Isted between them and the Russian
crew. •••
Stacey said "the Russian oarsmen
and OUT boys fraternized like brothers
even though only two Russians spoke
a little English and none of my boys
spoke a word of Russian. :
"They.used an interpreter and ve
got along fine. They're a flne bunch
of fellows and they werc keenly i n -
terested in our training Schedule, v
"We were Invited to the Russian
Embassy i n London and they ali went
out of their way to be nicc to us
There was never trouble of any kind,
politlcal or obherwise.
A YOUNG POLISH POfT
MET CANÄDA'S YOUTH
(MirkolaJ Hostn-oroii-iiky is onr
«f the tiro youo£ IViles irho 4ranc.
CSIuciaUy from IVarsav lo at-
.Cend the II Ontario V«ulh Frsti-v
»l hcld at Ibe l'krainlan siun-
.mer camp near ralcrrao. The fol-fouinc
account of MikslaJ n-as
f^Tlltcn by Ciiampion editor Lib-by
Fine.)
" I bPlicve that the young people I
have met rcprescnt the nuthcntlc
youth of Canada," MlckoJaj Rostwor
rovsky. one of the Pollsh dclrgatc?
to the Ontario Youth Festival ,told
mc.
With some time for sightseeing, a
good part of his \vcpk m Canada was
spent in warm dlscussions around the
sports field, at the wiener roast, a nd
oa the Palcrmo camp grounds gen-erall.
v. shakmg hands and meeting
people. He winced and sympathetJcal-l
y shook his head as an asplring
young poet told him, ' You can't earn
a living. writing poetry in- Canada."
He was surprLscd whcn a young
archcologist told him. 'I work In an
Office. There isn't much of a, field
for archeologists in Canada."
To the 29 pear-old editor of a Roman
Catholic ncwspaper who has
EVERY ANGLE
Johnny: IVe addedthese numbers
ten times.
Teacher: Good l>oy.
Johhny: And hereare the ten anq-wers.
UNPENETRABLE
Overheard. My spn has a good head
on his shoulders. (No neck. mlnd you
just a good, solid head.
A Rousing Send-Off
For Warsaw Bound
Canadian Youth
Toronto's Union Stationwa5 the
scene of a rousing send-off for the
Canadian delegates to the Flfth
World Youth Peatival last Saturday.
300 friendirand relatlvcs of the young
people sang and.; cheered as the 40
youth boarded the train. Their fInal
destlnation is Warsaw, Poland, where
for" two weeks, July 31—August 15,
they will join in the festival wlth
30,000 other youth from 110 countrics.
The group will be enlarged by 15 morc
who are already In Europo.
The festival, dedlcated to peace
and fnendship and good relatlons
among youth of the world wlll offer
500 national concerts, the 2nd World
friendly sports games of olympic ca-llbre
and the opportunity for meeting
and mlxing with other youth of
Eant and West,
As part of a display on Canadian
life the group u'taiklng a minlature
totem pole carvcd by Jimmy John of
British Columbia, a Nootka indian,
one of Canada's foremost indlan ar-.
tlstif,'vho made it for the purpo.se
of .sending to Warsaw, The Canadians
wlll also exhlblt a n authentlc indlan
peace pipe from Quebec, their sym-bol
of the meaning of the festival and
i f s toirit.
Moore-Rocky Bout Recalls
Corbeffs Comeback Httempt
By LESTER RODNEY
W l t h . the big new5 that Archlc
Moore, f Inally has his crack at Rocky
Marclano's heavyweight title slgned
sealed and to be delivered at Yankee
Stadium the nlght of Sept. 20, there
will be a steady rLsc of taik about the
fight. There ls something about a big
hcavywelght title flght, and this one
has its fasclnatlng angles, so . . .
'With the focus on the heavyweiBhts,
this seems like a good time to run
back briefly over some of the more
excltlng heavyveight. title fights of
history. We' l l . go • back around the
fabled tum of the century and WDrk
our way up to date, stopplng at the
big ones. W e i l start t o d a y w i t h the
attempt of James J . Corbett, second
heavywclght champ in history, to
wln back the big bauble.
^ Gentleman J im the orlglnal "Fancy
Dan" of the rlng waB the first dhamp
to try to regain his lost laurcls. J im
a former 8an Francisco bank clerk,
had battcred the great John L. S u l -
livan into oblivion i n 1892 to bccomc
Mic second world'6 champ under the
Marquls De . Quecensbury rulea. Hc
lost it in turn little Ruby Bob F l l z -
simmons i n 1897 and P i l z was de-posed
by J im Jeffrics i n 1899.
Corbett made his first comeback
try at the agc of 35, Jeffrles, who ha-v
more than a fcw suppoters the
greatest of them ali, wa8 a tcrrlfic
hitter and was installcd as a 2-1 Ia-vorite
over the faded Gentleman Jim;
Betting was heavy that hc would wln
by a K O hisidc of 10 rounds.
They fo'ught on May 11, 1900 in the
Old Seaslde Athletic Club of Coney
Island, before a crowd Of 8,000. I t was
a Kultry nlght (they teli me—I waKn't
around just yct).
The stlll «pccdy Corbett" put the- «immons had cracked Jeffriefi face
crowd.ln an uproar and danccd ali
around the heavlcr ijfeffric», jabbing
his head off and plllng up a huge
lead on points. At the 22nd round
(it -was a 25-rcunder), it looked as
though Corbett wa8 In, The only
thing that could sanre Jeffrles v/tm a
knockout. In the 23rd, aA Corbett^
seemed to get just a bit carelcss, or
«nayfoe a bit tircd, Jeffrles let fly two
eucoessive left hooks that landed
mtibb the -tvay Joe Louis' etpeedy,
Oaoit, but eurshing hooks landed on
Conn, and ^^bctt went do>wn and
out. and out.
n i E END OF GENTLEMAN. .IIM
Havlng defeat .snatchcd from him
that way rankled in Corbett for three
years. and at the agc of 38 h e trled
again, tnccting Jeffrics at Mcchanic's
Pavlllon in San Francisco; A giand
compctitor, it was obvlous that hc
v/as just a h o l l o w shcll of the man
Wiio had once dazzlcd t h e great John
L,. and he was floorcd In the second.
Displaylng s o m e of his old «pccd, hc
k c p t going tili the sixth, when he
went down for f he count of ninc. The
end camc in the tcnth. A b l ow to the
solar plcxus sent Jim down fornlnc—
hc was up and down again and up
agsin out on hlR fcut, It wa6 .-itoppnd.
The next comeback attempt found
Jeffrics defcnding fhc t i t l e for the
third tlmc. It was "Ruby Bob Fltz-simmons,
at the age of 40, trymg to
rcfjain the title, and the m u c h ncccl-ed
dough- that v/cnt w i t h It.
Fltz wa5 k n o w a.s a fJStic ' frnak" |
because hc W3s so .smalJ. Hc wa,';j
ncver rcally morc t h a n an ov(;r^rown !
middlcweight>He had w()n t h e crown 1
from Corbett in 18»7. o n g l n a t i i i f j tho j
V/jlar ploxus" p u n c l i * lie was 45
p-iunds lighfx!r t h a n Jeffrics and h;wl
r x f n Corbett zfi dnv/n m hifi a l t c m p -
i c d camcback.
The fight W3K. heifi In 1302 Jn 3
circus tcnt at Valenciii .strcnt in
Frisco It wa5 a drnrnatic BCttin^;. A
h J K h wind rlppr-d tho icnl camuJi
and ^had it fJapping in placra, and
da-it clouds swcpt acroKÄ the ring, TJic
floor of the rm»j v/fts RO builfc that
cvery time the hcavicr Jcffriw took
a jstcp It gavc a fev/Inches,
,OLD FITZ A VSIOS MAN
Thirty second» after the first
round startcd the light l l p p e d FiU-alicady
ivritten three vojumes of
poetry, this was pccullar* and o\'er
and over hc had cause to say, "It is
not SO in Poland. Vouth hove cvery
cpportunity In my country."
Mlckolaj'5 f»rst poem a protcsi
agalnst war,: was writtcn tvben be
was 16. -During the war he lived on
the outskirts of Warsaw i n s £maU
to\vn, iUegally pursulng his Studies;
and teachiug those younger : than
himself,; ''The fascists didn't aJlow
dhildren to go to schooI longcr 4han
for seven years — after ttiat cvcry-f
one pcrformed slavc labor. So- we
studicd illcsally.'lt wasn't hard to do.
The cntlre nation fought agalnst the
Nazis,*and so It wasn't hard tohide
our school."
Mickolaj is a mcmber of the Peace
Assembly, a group of progresstve
Catholic laymcn and priests, "We bc-licvc
we can be loyal to o i » Church,
to our Popc, and a t the same time
pursuc social justlcc. I bclicve there
IS nn obligation for evcry Christian
to work for peace and social justlce,
and many Cathollcs i n my country
fcel the same way."
(When in Toronto, he visited that
clty's largest Roman Catholic ohuroh,
whic!h he thoue^t was rater small in
comparison to those i n Poland. .
He asked. me if the Canadian people
wanted peace. TOhen I assurcd him
thicy do, he spoke of the rcaction of
Pollsh youth to the rearmament of
West€m Germany. *nve know that
tihls wlll provoke'war, and wc know
also what war ls like, West Oermon
spokcrinen have Indlcated they vant
our castern tcrrltory, and we have
heard that once before. The Pollsh
youth are buildlng socialism. for they
bclieve that is the best way they can
work for peace.
" I am not agalnst Germans," he
cxplalned. "I have fricnds In both
East and West Germany, but I am
opposed to a new German army,"
• • •
The Palermo festival'wa5 the thlrd
International youth gatherlng Mlcko^
laj has attended. The. Buoharest
World Youth Festival twoyear'8 ago
was the first, whlch wa8 followcd In
1954 by the rally i n Berlin of E u -
' ropcan Youth agalnst German Rearmament.
Of his vlslt to Canada, he'said, "I
am enchanted with your country—the
people and .the countryside, the
technlcal adivances «nadc by your
cltlcs, and above all, your splendld
youth. T regret only that. my. vlslt
must be so ^ o r t . " * ,
Some say the wind blowlng in
through the tom canvas spraycd • It
over the rlngslders. Before that round
cnded Jeffrles' glove wa8 soaked from
wlping his face, Later he sald :• "I
took a terrlfic slaughtcrlng—it vas
a classtc, no fooling." Jeffries. a
boilermaker by trade, 'wa8 awful
tough. ,
In the next round the champion
came out 5lowly and bulled Into Pltz-simmons
without trying to box; He
taackcd the llghter öhallenger into a
corncr. Fitzslmmons landed six timcs
on the big, blood soaked Jeffrics wlth
a left. Jeffrles fclnted his guard
down, Fitzslmmons movcd In; and
starlcd a rlght, It ncver got there,
That terrlfic t(hort left that savcd
the däy agalmst Corbett thuddcd
solldly into Fityi' body around the
11 vcr. The gallant little forty-year-old
gladiator went down, rollcd over on
the canvas, trled to get. up and
couldn't. But what a flght hc liad
put up.
. (Next wcck wc'll teli aboutlhe at-tcmptcd
comeback of Jeffrics, dc-fendcd
the tltlc succcssfully three
timcs and was hlm-self beiten whch
hc trled to take It back from the
great Jaok Johnson, the first Negro
hcav.ywelght champion.»
Torstaina, heinSJc 21 p. tliurgjby, JuJy^l, 1955
The first National SpartalUode In PeopIe's Ccecfaoslovakia ^was ncently:^^-^^^^
concluded, with no less than 300,000 actlve athletes participatlng.-^vUlghv^r^r;;
point was a parade of 100,000 cheering young men and women athletes:-^^^^
from ali over the country. Before the war there wer« only 128 athletic
clubs. But under people's rule this number has Increased Vt 2,320. ,
Pictured above Is one of the partlcipants. ' -
^Canadian Theatre
Group To Perform
At Warsaw Festival
Oanada's award-winning; theatre
company wlllpartlcIpato i n the PIfth
World Festival' of Youth and Studcnts
for Peace and Frlendship at Warsaw
opcning on July 31. Theatre du
Nouveau Mondp; .currently appcoring
i n the Featlva^ of Dramatlc' Arts in
Paris, win procccd to Poland to pro-duce
three of Mollere's playq at the
When he Baw breathtaklng Niagara
Falls, one of the Seven-Wondcrs of
the World.-he aald, " A l l my life I
will rcmcmber this."
And hc .repc?ited this ihought aa
wc bade each "other gbodbyo.. Slicntly
I echoed this, for i n the three days
i n whloh 'I acted as the guldo.of tlils
Intenscly slncero young man, I fclt
that I had met the authentlc youth of
Poland.
Youth Festival. Malcolm iNIxon, head
of the program sectlon of the ilnterr:
national Preparatory. Committee. «A*
nounced at a recent press confercnlce
In War6aw. '
This wlll be only one of the maiiy
higbllghts at the great international
gathcrlng of World youth, where xe-presentatlves
of over 80 countrics are:
expected to take part.
"For a program of excltlng, Inter^st-
Ing and high quality cvents. the VUih
Festival wlll exceed anythlng aiHA
before/' -Mr. Nixon «ald: Tlicre%til
be 400 national programs presehtfid'
by groups irom 40 countrics and-, 80
international programs partJplT ^
pants from 60'COuntries.
More than 50 Canadian youth delegates
are esqjected to be prcsent.^^'»"
i i i
•s
A hl/«tory professor In on American
college brought a popy of his cxW
to be mUneogaraphed. His secretiry
Jookcd it over and sald, "but professmr,
this is the same exam you gayc last
«eme«?ter,"
"I know." eald the professor, "buj;i
had to change thoian8wer8 again."
K U O L L U T
HyvJim surulla ilmoitan cttil rakas mV^enl Ja isäni
NIILO NESTORI HEINO
vaipui kuolon uneen kotonaan Long Lakella, heinäkuun 2 pnä 1955.;
Hän oli syntynyt Kokemäellä, Turun Ja Porin läänissä, Snomesss,
lokakuun Z6 päivänä lOOQ.
Lähinnä suremaan Jäi minä, hänen vainunsa, yksi poUutKauk^^
helneen. Murdflckville, Que., äiti, 3 veljeä Ja yksi slsko Suomessa sekä 1
laaja tuttavapiiri täällä ja Suomessa.
Ilautauj (oimlteltlin Sudburyssa heinäkuun 6 pnä 1935, P a ^ Lawq
hautausmaahan. *
MIks' loppui Slnlm cW'tie,
niin dkklä arvaamatlai;
Mlks* otettiin sinut pois,
en antanut ols.
Jäi kaipaus vain.
Vaimosi Mary.
Nuku isä, yllmc untasi rauhaisaa;
ei surumme lepoasi häiritä saa,; ;^j..
Mc ikävöiden sinua kaipaanune.
Ja aina rakkaudella muistamme.
Poikasi Kauko perhehieen.' *
K I I T O S
Tahdomme lausua «ydämclllsct kiitoksemme ystäville ja tuttavlUe.v,
jotka niin suurilukuisina saavuitte saattamaan Niiloa hänen viimeisellä
matikallaan. Kiitos kauniista kukkalaitteista ja surusanomlstar K i i t o sr
kantajille j a pastori Korhoselle puheesta sokä. kaikille jotka ottivat /
osaa suruumme,
OMAISET
opcn. For 8 rcunds he cut, slaÄhed and
choppcd the cfnamp as the crowd
roarcd In amazemcnt. Ifs «eldom |
v..'ittcn, 'but Fitz' 40-year-o!d fury |
v,85 mostly the despcratc fury of a
man without rnoncy, Fitz, Incidental-ly
spoke ät a mceiing-'at the old
?.:adlson Square Garden wllh old
Bill Haywood fcr the Paterton strik-ers
who were being framed. Hc was
a bl^cksmlth Ijefore tunilng flghter.
In the eight he landed a hard
blow over Jeffrle'» left eye and the
blood poured over both of them.
Tämän vuoden l a i v a , on uusi H O M E L I N J A N L I P P U L A I VA
noin
26,000 tonnia S. s. "HOMERIC
P I K A P A L V E L U S Q U E B E C I S T A E N G L A N T I I N JA
R A N S K A A N
Tämä Home Linjan UUSI LOISTAVA lippulaiva, suo'-
rittl neitsytmatkansa Quebecista huhtikuun 23 päivänä
Le Havcecn ja Southamptoniin, liikennöiden nyt iMh<
nölllscstl tällä reitillä. Matka Quebecista Le Havreen.
Ranskaan, tällä lolstolalvalla kestää vain 6 päivää.
Tehkää palkkatllauksenne osoitteella:
liM VAPAUS TRAVEL AGENCY
l i l l l l i V P . O . B O X 6 9 SUDBURY.ONT.
Loppu kesän ja syyskauden
kulkuvuorot
Quebecista:
• Elokuun 3 p.
• Elokuun 20 p.
• Syyskuun 6 p*
• Syyskuun 23 p.
• Lokakuun 9 p.
o Lokakuun 26' p . '
• Marraskuun 12 p.
• Marraskuun 29 p .
.... j
Käyttäkää hyväksenne
8ääst(&audea hintoja.'
a
nm
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Vapaus, July 21, 1955 |
| Language | fi |
| Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
| Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
| Date | 1955-07-21 |
| 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 | Vapaus550721 |
Description
| Title | 1955-07-21-03 |
| OCR text |
f
KXIBETIJi
i antoi jo merkkihuudoaBaan
ian asemalle, kun meiS
a juotosi pilettiluukulleja^
Vntakaa minulle •
[inne haluatte?
o tännepä tietenkin.
KIUKKUINEN VAABI *»l
isoisä on tänään'kic '
uinka voit sen tietää?
Iän lähti aamulla kyntahiä
illa Ja on nyt aJeUut kokoi
rän edestakaisin pellolla'
itta sita että aura jäi
ille. sukupolvissa. päästiin. ^'
»Idaan täydellä syyliä *n»
" " a n e i t a siitk. että Oaaa.'
i ei vielä ole joutunut WK>
»ttamaan seUaisla määrä ^
aktiivisia säteitä kuin minn
isenl", t r i Pilkington UrJolt'
"mutta jokainen uusi vtty.
fiikoe lisää totaalista vaanj, 1
sitä voida olla kevytinldisoBi
lioimatta.-
radioaktiivisuus nousisi |B"
Ulsen rajan, emme enäämll-Vl
l a n pystyisi panemaan asäi^.^
Ikealla tavalla kphdaDeti.^
aivan paikallaan lopetti»^
t ja tässä vaiheessa. Vastoi
myöhään voisimme havalUj
eemme merkin ylitse.
>elkkä pommien kokeilu kn<"
sa erämaissa saattaa Joliiu<
i.t siihen, ; jota mnntamat
tuntijat kolkosti kntsnnl
llseksi itsemurhaksi», loprt-;
rt Pilkington.
i. Selvisi kuitenkin, että se ail
linen lepopaikka, jollft, ÄO
skin löytyy vertaista",'
iskunnan jäsen, insinööri V*|
tröm oh käynyt Venäjällä (
lankumousta, ja osasi
allin aivan vapaasti kafl
ä vam halusin", tertoi-imme
esim. professori Hali
;sa koko Moskovan kene
imatta siihen huomiota". Oi>|
:orosti, etta neuvostoiliiiiliy|
:niikan suhteen saavuttan«t|
tcmia- tuloksia. Luonne!hdll>l
alta kannalta katsoen useitil
joilla valtuuskunta kävH
mitti Moskovan metroa 'tot|
1 luokan laitokseksi".:
iskunta naki Neuvostolutmil
sj'ventynyt, rauhanon
i. ja Joka on uskollmen kflbl
n rauhalle. Stockholm TkKJ
antaa paakirjoituksetsutl
ien lausunnon parlameuffi-j
untien vaihtamisesta. Koäe-J
1 Ruotnm parlamenttlvaltuaj
' Neuvostohiton-matkaa -läUl
ttä valtuuskunta sai kobl
El aikana nahda kunnioitct-l
lotsin ulkopolnttata asennel-l
ta tuloksia, joihin se on pitj
m rauhan oloissa pääs^. |
lanyletaen mielipide oaW'|
a todennut, etta kansalnriJ
mne on Neuvostoliiton tä-j
Ien ansiosta jonkun venol
ut. Puhuessaan kesäkuun ttj
Moskovassa Neuvostollitt
n ystävyysjuhlassa InMl
teri Javaharlal Ndffll
kiittää neuvostchalliöiöl
ionista .viimeaikaisista. wt
itä, jotka ovat lievenläB?!
ällSTä jännlttyneisyTttäjJ
meet panokseksi rauhan JlJ
;Ilaisim toimenpiteisun kinj
ostoliiton korkeimman.
istoriallinen julistus. jod»l
linen tulee. vielä tuottanuoj
yleisan rauhan hyraksl..j
iomUta —joka muuten 1
h mainostaa itseään.^«"j
na päivälehtena" .r-3»s»l
h, että oletkos hiljaa ^ii^j
Qukavampaa kum saluaW-|
lUiksefc Itämerellä •••4; •1
la tuntuu elävän sillä tali*|
ilkeästi se aika, JoUo»;»-!
yhteistoimin Natcf-Satöj
idenalaisverkkoja SufflHö-ikki.
Ah. sa aika entti»
ussa on tällä kerralla>3-
mutta. ^.[
a on Porkkala. Ja nliiS»
distössä vaadittu monin»''
•rtelevin sanonnoin, ffif^J
i selväkielisesti, että Pi»»-|
;en vuokrasopimus on J«*j
enime on, ettei Porkki»
sesta olisi mllloinkaflD
M ryhtyä keskustelenaJ^I
Suomen porvarillinen;.'?'!
vähemmän kiihkeästi s ^ l
takunnan itärajaa
isitykseen yhtyy 0^^*41
sijärkinen porvamHnenpi
hiljaisuudessa tietenknt
evan lisäksi tJ7d3«ffl |
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