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Sivu 4 Torstaina, Ibkak. 13 p. ;-^TbU)^sdayvpct.J3,195:5 ' BY BOB WABD j &wnething v/e'd c&re io print; Hdwever, thJs bJt of housebold; fiweet taJk got us to thJnkJng about j j why it was thai IlurrJcahes are naujed ; We were Just fiitting tiiere peac€» f ulJy mlndJng our buslnfess when our wife aU at once sayis: ••«^•^J^"'"- V • - ^after^^omen.- „ -.• --: .v| : • Onethought we dJd:>me Oh the Bub- ) ^ , ,^ ; ' ject came, at VEB r&xnt Women'6- . J ? ; Confer^nce; v A slogan contained in ^ f c i^J Humcane^Haze , then i 's.their,aih reportib the«»n^^^^ Why'V fihe asked/ -do weathemen I ^^^^^^^^ - !^ havelo tacd: a female näme onto gales j^y^e thls has «omething to 4o ' and huiTJcanes. with naming hurricanes af ter women. .. • "Possibly", we .ventured,: bebäuse öi Maybe the man who names them "LIke now what?" the missus de- ..manded;-'; ''Well% we replie^ "here we were Just sittlng here wlth our bare face hangiiig out iilie and minding our own business and ali at once Hurrlcane Ämy started to blow in from the Irpn- Ing board." . We realized almost as soon as we'd uttered this utterance that we ahoiUd-n* t Utter have done it. V "And I suppose;" said herself, "that lÄen never suddenly blow up.; How a^bout (this naorning when the klds me-rely asked how you v/ere feellng. Why you blew up liite äneight-ulcerexecu^ ttve wlth a twp-ulcer sa.lary. And ho^ ; atout tohight —- blowing your cprk ^ p l y because the Jcids; had their pet tärtles in yourslippers?" fey tliis tlme her^eU-^^^ flatirbn, ••, "Thia was intended to iSress home her point as it were. But wllätever the reaspn we were pressed into silence. ^ i''Men," she sald;.''Meh • - If hurricanes reallyneieded nämes they should <iail thon by nien's names^ After ali tiiey're windy make ä lot of howI; and who is it that breaks up hoines? Men.. thäfs who." "Now Just a minute Amy," we finally said,. "you eah't go aroUnd talking a^utnienlike that," Herself gavei Uis a look Uke a tinie? study 'expert' sizing up a Job ..,. a cutting look. "And why not?!' she äsked. ;''Well"vwe said very weakly, "men are the best opposite sex that women have aren't they?" Amy's answer to this one is not was once a boss in a shop vvhich em-ployed women. ;•• And maybe these womfen got orga-nlzcd,;--.'^';,-. And maybe they got really mad about/speedup, rate-cutting. working conditions and the ge:heral uri-equal v/ay In wiiich women in industfy are treated.,;', 'v'...; And inaybe^.then, they really blew up and swooped dowh pn the boss and demänded their rlghts. : Then after it wäs ali. oyer ärid the women had won their point, as. orgar hlzed.w6rneriusuaUydo. the boss maybe said to his asspclaites "thpse womeh came down on me like a hurrlcane." We might add toö, the UE's Wo-men's ConferenceJnapped a big pro-gram of action. And ; that the wo-men and men at the Conference in-tend to see thatifs carried out. • Sb it is most, likely that within the next period of •time well be hearing of action breäking out in" njany UE shops as sister UE along with her brother; members gets going on the union demands. :It might not exactly be a Hurricane. Bjjt If we Judged the temper and sen-timent Of delegates to the Conference it will certäihly raise a few factory roofs.:' So to ali you fpremen and bosstypes who think that UE's womeri members are going tb keep ph taking speedup, rate-cutting, poor wprking cbhditions and oftime ä lot of abuse this small Word of Tvarnlng. The warning sig-nals are upi Sister -UE Is on the hiäroii! Better run for cover! — UE • News: :;" l i i m m: •m •M mm:my ;> The folIowihg sports questions and answers .were reprinted from , k recent Issue of Sports College •'•••News. •; • • .• Jkly team is, going to take part in a totirnameht in which it^ four games durihg the day. i Wliat can be done between, games that will help pljayers recover from their effort and p^eparetiierrifpr their next game? We recomme.nd that after every game the: athletes be given a large iglass pf orange Juice in whlch is mixed two br three teaspoonfuls of ; höney. This willstart the recovery prbcfess ' quicCcIy and effectively, A gOodwalk after eyery g^me in the fresh air for lä or 20 minutes is an-otäier good recovery aid. jAthletes who show signs of wear"can lie dpwn:,with their legs propped up at right angles sb that the fatigued blood can be more easily dispersed from the legs. Ice packs;over the heart area .for 20 minute periods af ter games and aisobelore games also will be helpful. , jStrong clear tea (five bags to the piht of water) sweetehed with honey and with the Juice of twö lembns per piht is an excellent: recovery agent. This also can tae used during ariy rest periods in the actual competition. Some atliletes do npt like the taste of £his concoctiön biit this can Usually be overcome by maklng the. tea less .strpng.' • :•••• • * • •. ' • My cöach Is trying to sell me on!a new way of kicking the bäll, but I don't seem to. be able to get nearly the distance with it. I think. he's f ight but I just can't seem to get the knäck. What should I do? J .Knute Rbckne, great coach of fab-ulous Notre Dame föotbail teams in tiie twenties, Was asked a similar ques-tion durihg a cllnlc. Here's his answer. ; "When a new idea ör system is tried the athlete usually feels awkward and loses some of his skill at first and also some, öf his ihterest: He should re-member that af ter this temporary period of Impaired skill is pässed a new peaikof efficiency \yill be reached." liemember that i t takesttime to ac-quire any new skill Just how lohg depends on the attention and effoft you give to:its practicp and tlie cprifi-dence you have in your cbach. We suggest that you keep wbrking ät this :iew: skill .remlnding yourself that you will kick farther thah ever before once you have mastered it. . The . cJgarette Industrj', already st^gering under the weight. of re-' ports'strongly indicating ,ia. relatibn-fihip b2tween smoking and iung can- ;cer, may have to brace itself. for the ; second. half of a : medical: pne-t w o ' p u n c h . - ^ - i Indications that the punch may be thrown ,.%.rjn;v/ere given recentiy vvith the publicatibn in Geriatrics, a medical Journal devoted largeiy: to .the problems .of -the aging, a report indicating a possible tie-in • betwe'en •cigarette: .smoking and cbrohary heärt disease. The repbrt .was written on tiie basis of a study "performed by a team headed by Dr. J. .W. Gof-man, professor of, Medical Physics at; the Donner Laboratories of the University, otqalifornia. Discovery that smoking may cause cico-onary heart) disease ' yybuid,;, if cönfirmed, be a much mbre serlous indictmeht Pf tiie habit than the discovery: bf a cigÄrette '—icancerre-latioriship. Cprpnary. heart. disease is the most common of the heärt and blöod .'vessel diseases which, as a group,: cause more thah half of ali U.S, deatlis. Coronary disease alorie accourited for 370,000.dea,ths,in 1953(' the iäst year for .which'figures. are, available)' pr nearly oneyquarter of ali U.S. fatalities. , .; The Gofman. report shows. that among saveral hundred .patients studied, the: perspns :who smoked cigarettes sbowed 'higher blcod levels of the fatty substance known as choleströl and of .certain other sub-stances iknown as lipoprotein. The significance of this is tliat medical science has long noted. that persöns suffering. from; coronaiy heart disease have higiaer blood levels öf these maiterials. In fact, the basic rnanifestation of coronary artery disease is the coating aiid rbughening of • artery walls by cholesterol de-posits. VThis ieads to narrbwing of artery passages and a tendency^ pf the heart muscle tö.enlarge to cbm-jjensate toT reduced blood. supply, and of blood clots lodgihg in key blood vesselsleading to heart ättacks. The increased level pf these subs- > tances Ieads • Gofrn2,n and his asso-ciates tp the conclusion that cigarette snioxers will Ehow a 40 per cent increase in death rate from coronary disease bver non/smpkers (including for this purpose cigar and pipe .^mcCcers, and prbbably thpse smoking less tiian a half a pack daily.) How-ever, it should be emphasized that this 40 per cent figure is strictly a " prediction, not something based bn äi^y clinical br statistical study of smoking habits of persons who die from coronary disease.: - Howe(ver, evenas a prediction the Gofman .report represents a long jump to a conclusion. FPr example, it seems, alaipst: to ignore the fact that while there is a suspicion of a reiationship between increased cholesterol and lipoprotein i e v e l s a i iä coronary heart disease, Science is by no msahs satisfied that these ^subs-tances causs the disease. . A GREAT PtJVY AND A H •In äddition, the. Gofman report i döes not deal v,-ith: the diet of the ' j p?opie;jnvolved. -Much research hasj I gbne ixito djscovering whether choles-' ! terol. levels, in' particular, may not Ibe;: greaily raised-by. 'eating ;fätty ' rich • diets. Nor is' .the .qUestioh of heredity; possibly a cause • of a tendency tp coronary artery disease { : m e n t i o n e d . - ; • , ; ; • ; • ' • Perhaps most ^iniportant, .the Gofman: report dpes npt e-ven 'begin to. ahä\ver: the questipn, '.'Isn't .it possible that,the same nervous ten-, sibns" •. that. cause one to , be prone to coronai-y heart disease are - likely: to cause one to be a heavier sthoker?": In other woräs, a man who has a rough tune ma.king a living for his family,-or a mari vi^ho is ovenvorked.- may smöke ä;lbt to ease some of the, nervousness that stems from his prbb-lems. The neirirousness also may set of f some scill undiscovered mechfr hism. which ralses blopd pressure and leads to coronary heart disease. In that case, smoking wculd: not be a cause, but rather ariother result of. the same caiise which is .Ipading to the;. hea,rt condition.' r I could also be argued that,. if this is:true, smoking might hy, easing tension actually lessen. the chahces of coronary arteiy' disease, high blood pressure,.; etc. • Another factor which Gofman fails to explain.. is that in the cases he studied, the levels of both cholesterol: and lippproteins are falssd much more in sintiokers in their 20s than ih läter years. Since coronary heart disease is much more likely in 40, 50 and 60, this would tend to mihimize the possibility of a; direct" tie-iri.; Hovveveir, despite ali of these reser- .vations, there is nP doubt that re-search now being conducted bn the possible reiationship between; heart disease and cigarettes is important to lus äll. And'; there is. plenty • of reaspn for the big tobacco men to : be nervous aboUt, iviiat ,this reseärch will reveal. The Alouettes' Harold Patterson (left) and Sam Etchever-ry (right), the greätest passing-<:atching combination in Canadian football, expiäin to GBCconimehtator Larry 0'Brien their f ambus passingattaick. Patterson and Etche-verry were named Canadian f ootbäirs 1954 "Pairöf the Yeär". P'i3rien is a top name in sports also; he is in charge of GBCs Sportspage bn the Trans-Canda network aprogräm of ihterviews and sports news, :with on-the-spotreports from cömnientatorsacross the country. Be-sides his radio duties, 0'Brien is a well-kno^yn mag^ writer and has äcolumn in the Montreal Star. SPY STORY EXPOSED $25Blll We^Kiy Dances At The eiinioh Hall imm. m-. mm « i l » ' • f ' i fe m. m. mj} . iiii • f I "There is power, power, • Irt a. baind of ,working meri." : A hew and welcpme note was struck oni;CBC.when these words of Joe Hiil's sorig came over the air waveS Saturday, Oct. 1. "We shall Not Be Moved'V was a dramatic two-hour presehtatlon of the fraane-up, trial and death of Joe Hill based on a play by Barrie •Stavis, ;The Man Who Never Died; No Story cpuld reveal more unmis-taikably the nature of the strugggle whioh the w'öiiking cläss constantly wages, and the OBCs presentatiön left ho doubt that the events in Utah 40 yeai-s agp were not exceptio- ^•rial,/ ; ' , As IWW Organizer, Joe Hlirwork-ed and travelled ali over the United States talking Union wherever he went. And the songs he wröte "Pie in the Sky", "Hold the Fort" and many others — lifted the hearts of workers then as they do stlll. Finally the "copper bpsses" plotted to get him, and :'they arrested him oa a trmnped-up murder charge. The trial proceedings had the now famUiar elements. The biased judge, the venornous prosecutor, the i n - competent defeiise counsel — ali played their parts., But ^ e dron- Ing of the court to its appointed end was broken by the moving voice of, Joe Hill. who declared that he would defend himself. The ,Wobbly leader was a man of strength hpnesty and courage. He was Innocent. But he was condemn-ed to death. Protests poured in to the Goyernor bf Utah from every quarter — labor unions, the President of the United States, the Swedish goVernment (Hill :was a Swedish oiti-zeh). , In spite of this, Joe Hill was executed. Tens of thousands of peopie attended' his funeral, where they sang his song and steadfastly declared their bellef in his innocence. The program drew no parallels with triäls of tpday. but the llke-ness could hardly be missed. Spe-cially poignant was the role bf Elizabeth Flynn, aclose friehd tb Joe H i l l aiid the öriginal öf his song "The Rebel Girl". Today the same class perseöution has imprisbned Eli-r zabeth Gurley Flynn under the Smith Act for her part in the fight ifpr the rights. of the Ameriean pepple. as Joe Hill was in 1915. For the exceilence of this program ali concerned must be cdngratulated; Ed McNamara as Joe Hill and Mona OHearri as Elizabeth Flynn; brilllant-ly headed a fine east. John Reeves the producer, deser\-es: Special app-lause. He stj-udk , ä new vein for Canadian radio to ,wcrk,: and it is a rich one. Fine, performances were rendered by Lilpyd Bocimei-, Robert Christie, the närrators William Need-les , and David Gardner, baritone soloist Bruce Webb and mahy others. Honest, cvital radio prPgrams Pf this kind will mäke the GBC. mean- Ingful in the life öf: the Canadian peopie. sPmething that ali Canadians w.äl fight to prese^e.' \Ve're keeping \ our ears open for similar ' programs :on Canadia,n themes. And if, you think as we do, why npt let us and the CBC knoW: about it? , V . V A young man who had just received his degree from college rushed but Prid said. "Here I am, .World; I have 'my. B. A." And the World replied: "Sit :down, son, and I'll teach you the rest of the alphabet." Vancouver. — For soine time,nbw many. peopie have been äsking why there isn't; a regUla,r dance at .the Clinton Hall —. a; real liyely dp with gopd ''Old country" music • äs well as the modern stuff the younger pePple seem to enjpy sP miich. It ^as a yery good question. Ärid now finally after much thought ärid deliberatioh — and also a bit of practicai. wor'k. the "johtokunta" häs come up with. än answer. And in the opinion of: this writer it is. a good answer. . Beginning Saturday, October 15th,. there; will be a dance every. week at the Clintpri 'Hall. The music will be iively and weprpmisethat^ there will b e . ä Ipt: o f variety, The or-chestra, ''The; Revelliers" has made a • yery good name for itself in the Vancouver Scandinavian cömmunity änid has promised that nowhere in :yancbuverwill there be; better, music to tickle your toes.. . That's the latest wprd from the "johtbkunta". • : Of coure. there is only. one thing to; say: Welcome one and ali to the weekly dances .at the;. Clinton Hall aiid be sure to bring a friend or two with you. Music from 9. to 12 and the ad-missoin is only 50 cents!—- HL. UNDERSTANDING An American visitor:, was rather perturbed because. his stpries öf the woriders (k his, country made; iittle impression on his English friends: He could nnt.seem to brihg ; home to them the , gigantic size of his state or; för; that matter, the superior speed of American transport. : • "YoU khow," he said at last, "you can get into a train in the state of Texas at dawn,: and 24 hpurs later itlouUl still be in Texas." "Ah yes," politely murmured one of his friends. '•WeH-e got some pretty siow trains in this country, too." Have you händled äny $25 bills lately? Not any more than you've been usirig $3 or $9 bils. T : , But hp\v much veräcityattaches to a charäcter who says •he's beeri hand-ling $25 bills? Weil. there is such ä person and his '/confessions" äre being spread out f br riewspa;per and ma,- gazine readers ali Over; the country. The man's name is Viadimlr Petrov. A fomier third Secretary of the Sovleit Embassy in Australia, he deserted lils goverhmerit and decided ,to become rich the eäsy-moderh wa^. No he, didn't accept any $25 bUls, he waJs paid in pounds sterling. ' ; : ; It was put mosit cogently by, Peter Fryer in the London Daily Woiker: "The piimp' pf Petrov's: mem-ory wäs primed by the Australian Government with hard cash. They paid hfni £4,000. Nevvspaper* paid hiin more. • . ; : : "The more he was paid the inore he remembered. Eventually he be-gan remembering tUngs about Burgess and lÄaciLeaii. That was ever the way of infonners." Where do the $25 bills come in? We'll give you Fryer^ account, written before the British White Paper on Burgess: and MacLeah was issued. "Every line, every syllable of the promised Wiiite Paper should be judged against the charäcter of Petroy and of the farce oif a RbyaK Australian) Gömmissibn he starred in. . "For what was tliis Royal Commission? A fräufi deiiberately staged by the Tory Government of Menzles on the eve of a General Electipn it was scared of losing, . "Eiglit weeks before this electipn wäs due Petrov deserted from the So-viet Embasy in Canberra. Tvvelve days •Ifs .lucky that the Russians whö came to study agricultural methods in North America were able to meet a few :working Canadian fanhers during their tour of this country, Otherwise they would refurh to the USSR bonvinced that Canadiaris were either boprs pr bumblers^ Federal and provtncial officials; vied with each other to make a hash, of the visit by the Russians, who experienced more hostility than courtesy except when they were riieetirig the farmers .themselves. The ;visitors by-passed Toronto, whose official glad-handexs are usually ready to welcöme ariy person with the slightest claim to fame pr notoriety, because they wished to escape insult.;. Altogether it was a fine show of pettiness and ineptitude.—^ Saturday Night. before the electiori the spy-scäre Corii-mlssion ppened in a blaze öf publicity. "Menzies got his victory T — ä narröiv .yictpry on a minörity vote. "Who had appointed the CommiSr sipn? Why, who but Merizies, Who insisted ori the right to select them personally and to reject 'unsuitable' nominees? ' : "What could he expected bf such a Coriunissipn? Shariiless bias. Thebar-ring of Dr. Evatt, Australian Labor leader. A grbss scandal such as the ätteridarice of the Commision judges at, a party giveri-by the, Öommission's Secretary, ai whichnorie other than Petrov and his wife were guests bf honor. •^ _ "And this same hand-picked Coinmissibh . . . had to confess in it's report that it had failed to ' f ind ariything against Communists. or Sovietöficials Ulat could ständ np ih a cohrt pf law. "It declared that "ta view of the rules of admlssibillty of eviderice in the court of Iaw it would ap- Vpear that prosecution bf none of the persons whose acts were cnn-sidered would be warrahted." "Despite the braggadocio of his ear-lier statemehts, Petrov gäve eviderice for five whble days vi^thout mentipn-i r ^ the name of a single Australian invoived in any skind of ^ionage. " N o r didhe bring forward one single act tb support his allegation that es-pionäge was being conducted from the Sbviet Embassy. "Petrov told the Commissibn vthat he met Madame Ollier, a member of the Prerich diploriiatic staff at a töwn called Coomä ori a certain date and discussed espionage matters with her, "ItwasproTed.that Madame Ollier booked ta at a hotel hundreds of mlles away on that very, day, and had ali her meals there. " I t wa5proyed that Petroy did iiot . go to Cooma at ali because of ä car crash ta which he was tavblv- •.•••ed.- ;.:'•;;••:.-•- ;vV "Petrov alleged that L, L, Sharkejj, general: secretäry of the AustraUan Communist Party, received 25,000 U. S. doliärs from a Soyiet joumalist at 8 p.m. ori the night of .October 16,1953. It was proved —- and the Aus- ] traliah Secret police, who had the meettag uhder observation, ad-mitted it. — that Sharkey was at that day and hoor attendlng a meeting of his Party's central ;:, comnJttee. ^ V •Tetrov told a wild story about this money betag in five and; twenty-five dollar bllls, which he connted on a bench ta Sydney ä t 5 o'clock ip the momiiig." Our British colleague had to explain to his readers that there is no such thing as a $25 bill. But there is such a thing as the elastic memory of Infor-mers when they i-eceive cash. ^ There is the fact of an attempt to whlp up an espionage scafe and an atmosphere of hysteria because the Geneva at-: mosphere has become so; pfevalent. And the .strongest comment ori Pet-rov's "revelatlons" come from Dr. Evatt the right wing leader of the Australian Lahor Party who called them a forgery comparable to the.in-fampus Zhioviev letter whlch wa5 also used to beat a Labor Party In an elec-tlon, that tlme In Britain. Hell-Fire BV JOSEPH SOUTH . Billy Graham the eyarigeJist, jsroa^ roing distarit pästures- in ;£earch for the ,,sheep that have gone asträy. Scarcely ä day passes tvitbout roea-tiön of his serisätional preachmeat in GJasgoR', iri London, in Paris and else-where (Toronto this month). He is curreritiy one bf our blggest expprts arid the European newspapers have respönded vigorously. l have rievei* heard him preäch, but I recall. a predecessor of his, Billy Sunday. As a youngster I remember sitting under the big tent and cornif-ing the numbers • who went up the savvdustträil tb receive theshepherd'fi benedictibn. Some were neighbburs whb häd wrestled long arid eamestly with Joiin Barleycpm and these seem-ed to firid pärticiUar solace in the pas-tor's wbfds. i recall joining lustily in the singing that exhorted us to "Brighten the Corner Where you Are;' I was too young myself tp feel the need: for salvatipri for like a.11 ypung my arriiour of innocence was so strorig I felt no need for a 'meeting ät the sunimit.^'.,'•'.•.•• Besides havirig a wörking-class father, I was told, sternly. that Billy Sunday believed trade unibns were the. deyirs work, a seritiment that did riot endear him to men who were working 12 hpurs a day. They found it im-possible to see eye to'eye with thepas-r tor on the matter.of salvatiöri. And before my time the hell-fh-e and brinistone feviyals of pwight,L. Moödy and Ira b . Sarikey sWept the riatibn; And nPw there is BUly. , As i say I have riot heard his dispen-satibn but I-föliov? the riewspapers and the big mägäzines, like U. S, News arid World Report, Newsweek and others Who have trailed him with the ardour that Variety foltovvs a smash Broadway hit.. They keep a careful box-score detailirig the: sizes bf his audiences. the numbers who; come up the.aisle tö b^ sayed. ,The impression I g:et'is biie of ädmiration. Graham is not only eloquent, he is the master of a superb organization, with shpwmanship to equäl. : His chorus of a thousand inspires awe, änd ä formbr crooner who sings hymns in solö, begets a soothing inthnacy. Then the riiaster himself appears boyishy vvinspriie,. älluringly infbrmal, "Arigel Gabriel in gabardinb," a Paris news-paper said. : '• : ' It is kignlflcant that äll; the European commentatbrs observe that ÄUy döes npt attract wprkingmen. There are riiariytpthers but not the folk of laJbor, The Loridon Daily Herald which reflects mubh of British working-class öentiment, said: ,'*Whatever wrestling Billy Graham häs. döne with Satan, there are no claw marks;,. Hejspeäks with ari; arr6gant..huriiility which is terrifying, If you do not ägree, you do not disägree with Billy Graham. Yoii disagree with God." ' '•: The New Stätesmari ;arid Nation wrote everi more irrevereritly, "Heaven is being promised agairi by a figure whö: might eäsUy häye ä five-yeär contfact with MGM." The American; the paper says has tränsformed Cocp- Cöla arid cornflakes into the sacrä-mental bread arid wine. Which brings me to reflect deeply wheri I read that the Queen Mother and the royal f amily came to heär him preach. And you worider why \Vins-tori Churchill spoke SO wärmly to Billy bringirig coals to Newcastie with his advice: '.'Young man, whät we must häye is a return to God." ; The young eyangelist later tpld the Löndbn Daily News gratefully. " T h ^ two great leaders (Churchill and E i senhower) believe that the höpe of thö World today is a^u-itual awäkening. Sir Winston saicrthat we haye three or f our yeärs It is not lörig.;. Needless to say Billy Grahäni's right to preach is indisputable. But equally axiomatic is the light to examine his preachments and to express one's opi-riiöns of them. Biliy the reports Indi-cate, argiies that man is, Inherently ä sinner, he. is born a sinner and he \vill die a sinner unless he turns to God. There is rio rieed to seek the causes of w0rdly evil in the world it-seifr- v- ,•;••,.•;•.'" y: -'••.y So when the cprrespbndent of the British Rbynold's News, brgan of the eight-ririlion strbng cboperative mbve-ment there äsked Billy: "Whät do you think should bedpne about the H - bombs,'. the evängellsfs reply was prompt:"The problem," he said, "is not the H-bomb, "The problem is Sin." This Day aiijAge ' In Eastern Nigeria, a British. co-löny, traffick in women is stlll prac-tised. A govemment comanittee has even__recommended that somethlrig like a nmximum price be fixed for women so that they can be sold on credit. Not SO long ago the Assocla-t ed Press repbrted that the followlng ädyertisement had. appeared" in one df the Nigerian newspapers: "For Sale — a pretty coloured gU-J, 18 yrs, height 1.65 m. . . . One-third pf the price down, the rest in 18 months." ' . TheoJogy is hoi Blliy^ def Jnitiori; the news and it s who does riot stai the : vjew6 I ha Churcbmen: Pr< J(Bwish; Metbödist himself, haye den: of the H-bonib. a seem to regard äs But BlJly Grahi seem sträogely sppuse thermonuc Buspect it is in th the reäsons few his röof-raising ei are the bulk of n abolish the iristru] the worId's childr I ä m l e d t b w on not ai strong af f hii Sunday of my y( Labor, änd the B day who reveres r • WON'T HURT Diner: "Or, waiter, there's a in my soup." Walter: "Don't worry, sir, won't drinkvtoo much." fly It on nyt kirja suuri \ Agatha Christie: Idän pikäju Somaani — 210 si Plorerice Barclay: Rukoij Romaani — 304 si Seidbn Truss: Kadonnut : Romaani — 230 si Öerta Ruck: V Kevättä ]£ Romaani — 206 si Mika Waltari: Jättiläiset ( 327 sivua,: h ICrlstmann Gudm Myrskyi Romaani — 317 si Kristmanri Gudm Kaiikair Romaani — 288 si Katri Ingman: Rohkeat Romaani -^234 si Katrilngman: Virra: Romaani — 246 si Esti Helriiö: Romaani — 212 si Esti Heiniö: Ojan Romaani.— 216 si Elsa Heporauta: Suu Romaani — 336 si Elsa Heporauta; Saaren Romaani 267 si Ronald Fangeri: Kaksir Romaani — 402 si Toivo Pekkanen: Kauppiai Romaani — 370 si Toivo Pekkanen: ^^^^^^^ T^^ Romaani — 269 si Toivo Pekkanen: Ne menn Romaani — 366 si Tyjme Maija Säin Elämä Rpmaairii,-- 241 si Tyyrie Maija Sain Kolmen i Romaani — 176 si Hans Fallada; Oli meiUäkii Romaani — 586 si Hans Fallada: Lapsuud( Romaani —340 si Ernst Wiechert: UskoUine Romaani — 266 si Ernst Wiechert: : Majur Kertomus —268 si Jo van Anuners-K Naam Romaani —• 313 si Martti Merenmaa Laiva or Rimaani 2i27 si' R. C. Sherriff: Vihreä Romaani — 318 si' Artturi Lelnorien: Keväästä Romaani— 328 sii Artturi Leinonen: Romaani — 268 sii Tilatkaa* VAP PUBUSHI» Box
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, October 13, 1955 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1955-10-13 |
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 | Vapaus551013 |
Description
Title | 1955-10-13-06 |
OCR text |
Sivu 4 Torstaina, Ibkak. 13 p. ;-^TbU)^sdayvpct.J3,195:5 '
BY BOB WABD j &wnething v/e'd c&re io print;
Hdwever, thJs bJt of housebold;
fiweet taJk got us to thJnkJng about j
j why it was thai IlurrJcahes are naujed ;
We were Just fiitting tiiere peac€»
f ulJy mlndJng our buslnfess when our
wife aU at once sayis:
••«^•^J^"'"- V • - ^after^^omen.- „ -.• --: .v|
: • Onethought we dJd:>me Oh the Bub- )
^ , ,^ ; ' ject came, at VEB r&xnt Women'6-
. J ? ; Confer^nce; v A slogan contained in
^ f c i^J Humcane^Haze , then i 's.their,aih reportib the«»n^^^^
Why'V fihe asked/ -do weathemen I ^^^^^^^^ - !^
havelo tacd: a female näme onto gales j^y^e thls has «omething to 4o '
and huiTJcanes. with naming hurricanes af ter women.
.. • "Possibly", we .ventured,: bebäuse öi Maybe the man who names them
"LIke now what?" the missus de-
..manded;-';
''Well% we replie^ "here we were
Just sittlng here wlth our bare face
hangiiig out iilie and minding our own
business and ali at once Hurrlcane
Ämy started to blow in from the Irpn-
Ing board." .
We realized almost as soon as we'd
uttered this utterance that we ahoiUd-n*
t Utter have done it.
V "And I suppose;" said herself, "that
lÄen never suddenly blow up.; How
a^bout (this naorning when the klds me-rely
asked how you v/ere feellng. Why
you blew up liite äneight-ulcerexecu^
ttve wlth a twp-ulcer sa.lary. And ho^
; atout tohight —- blowing your cprk
^ p l y because the Jcids; had their pet
tärtles in yourslippers?"
fey tliis tlme her^eU-^^^
flatirbn, ••, "Thia was intended to
iSress home her point as it were. But
wllätever the reaspn we were pressed
into silence.
^ i''Men," she sald;.''Meh • - If hurricanes
reallyneieded nämes they should
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