1956-02-16-03 |
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SJiBBr CBEE1P8G OB GOOEY VALENTINE JJy BOB \\'ARD We see by tb» calendar that St. ValenUne s Day ,and Pancake ^äaycame flap o» tlje saaie day this year. * Mayife äts partiöilar cmndden^ coindded before; but if faas we didn^t notijpe it. i{owever, roaybe it's batter tiiisvvray ausc it'g?«s M tö the iiappy thougbt , began to stlf in'o»r little red (excuse it please) head. We^inig^ just as wel| come right out with it; or by the tirai we^ • the end of tiie colmnn our idea wfll l>e as old and outdated as ay's timestudy rate.^^ >^ man will teli ydu at is sure: old and outdated; particularly so if ifs a rats that a emotktt can'Iive with. ' - But to get to,our happy thought. 'Gadzooks, gadzooks, said >Ttle Crooks,'What it Is?"' To which we icplied: ",WeU, Myrtle, why not make this year^s \)p oi Valentines.out^f pancake 'mix, Pray, ivhy not?" Thittk of-äie thing fcr a moment'— rationally.as the industrial itons officer put^ it when he introduces an idea designed to make company richer — and the worker poorer; but wi£er, mmd you. Just pause imd cons!der — rationally. Imagineopeiungyour Valentine m^ fmding, instead of customary frflly-.type, bne cozing with sentiment, a beadtifully led and scroU-ded pancake cozing with synip. Novr grant you €be little poeni on the Pancake Valentine might just a litäe bli^rred; but after lickjng away the syrup, we'd still i able to make out a happy, ssntrmsntal thought which might go.. - A SUCCESSFPL MEETIXG Sisu Plans För A n Even Busier Vear ' ' - IVhen I look into yöux eyes / ^Afy heart begim to stir up ^ - ' . You'U jind out hozo I go for you, When you lick ojf-the syrup. I Then, of ODurse, when we lick the syrup off, thi^re would be some pet thought like "Fläp dead, Jack." Of course, another vronderful thing about a Pancake Valentine |t's practical. v . - Take the usuarValentine-typecard. W'hat can we do with them er Febhiary 14th bgtomes, say February ISth? But \fith the Pancake variety We could read 'em and eat. Take a Pancake Valentine which might read: '' f J love you,George, I think you're sweet ' i love your smile and your size itvclve feet Somefolk may say Pm just a dumb lummock ,\ , 1 : But I^hnCtv the ivay to your heart; it's via the stotnach. ,. Sp afte^ you get this and read it up, - Dc9ftioss it aivay, you can then eat it up. My love for you cannot squelch ' You'll think of me, each time you belch. ' • » * We'll 'havc'to admit that a card-which flowed with ali Ihe^e: H.Hhoöghts and sypiq>, too —- would be a big advance over the • dqx yalentine. After ali, vrho could digest ali that fancy lace puti)n:thesedges? \ : - - ^1 ' ^ '^'^ • Another • äspect of a Pancake Valentine is it's someöring we Id make ourselves. . - I •Thereiwe'd be before the big day whipping up a big batter of K.^:,And while we're^^m this big blob of blob-bish looking B> ali; kinds of svveet and goo-ey thoughts wouid flap through our pinhfeminding us of true love. - -Ofther sweet thoughts wouId be conjured np as we flapp^d our |icakeValentines into the air; waftch,them flip — then mjss the^pan.; Finally we succeed in getting our Pancake Valentine whomped out. |n we have to work out the verse. Like: ' ' "fVe aimosi flipped Our little ltd, Ohi' yes, Hortense, indeed we did; The batter turried out far too lumpy And this sure made us .mighty grumpy; But the rhytmng job was much, much loorse, But please darling take us for batter or verse. ' Veli admit that this doesn't even begin to scrape the bö.ttom |ihe pan iiisof ar as the Pancake Valentine idea is concerned. . i ; - • We don't •know whether anyoneelse will consider the idea^ 'has Iit — the type of suggestion that a company might be villing to for if it tumed up in a Suggestion Box — say. But it Uckled our fancy. LOne thing for sure ttte syrup on the Pancake Valentine couldn't |any möre g o o ^ than the verses contained in the nsual Valentine Vit^ti ^oing to try the Pancake Version on our own Missus 'VaocoaTcr, C. — As ivas -an-nounced some time ago in Club News; the Sisu P.C.Y.C. held its Ist annual masting on Tuesday, Jan; 31st to öie Clinton HalL The meeting was opened by Jeanette IiOwei cliainnan of the out-going exe-; cutive. who also cliaixed< the mfceting until Arnle Lind and K. Ww Juvoijen. were elpcted for the positiona of chairman and Secretary: respectively. Jeanette.IjOwe, in her report of tlie outgoing executive. recommended that the executive hold its meetings prior to and on the same date aa;the regu-lar club - meetings. This was con-sidered more practical than tying up; ^the}executive every Week. I^^^^ motion: • tliis recommendation jMissed. (Henry; Lahti -next gavei a :brief re-port onv the youth activities around that the ;WeWer\sCornHrs'site^^^^a^ soon be glven' up' bjr: the local ,P^^ branchlbeeaUse oZ the f act tliat % k never used. The meeting felt ^very keenly on this qiiestton and; <declded to send a iresoIuHon to Uie Vancouyo;: Branch opposing any m6v6 that niiglit^ take the Webster's Comers HäU iBtwäy from th'e 'B.C. Finnish Community; In jthe opinion of Sisu we shp^iäd develop the :site räther thän gi^JÄ; away. Before movingavay frofif ;t|t^; subject the clubr^also / eip^essed Itä viningness to do what ewr-poaiblc; towards keeping the site. The club after ;TevIewirig work in the Scandinavian"'Central^Cfcm^ mittee, wliich was hot a small task; wa8<'decided^ to continue in the S.C.C. In-, 'dependenOy^ ; Two:' delegatw. were the Hall prior to the forraation of th6 Sisu Club. i Even though the young people Md taken a very active part ta many- events, he potated out, the lack: of real .formal. organization liad been a great htaderänce to the "tade-; pendent activities of the younger people".. Evidently many serious at-tempts had been.made to Vorganlze", but until Sisu PCYC had been foimd. ed none of these attempts hadibeeh successful. Dagmar Nissilä, Organizer r of th^; outrgotog executive, reported on Sisu^ since. its fcrmation. Memberfihip. in the club has doubledfrem its orlgtaal figure • and now stands at. 16. The report also' mentioned some of -the accomplishments of the club. as; well as some of the weaknesses. Kdsel Nissilä, secretary-treasurer of the out-gotag executive, to =the finanji; cial report stated that the club's ca^: amounted to $4.42. This will certaihly have tobe corrected^ta-very^Short order;— seemed to be the (^inionof the club.': The auditor's. report was read and accepted , after whljdi the Qut-gomg executive was released from financial responsibUity. . The electlonof ia liew execuHvl^; followed. The results were: ' . ^ Chairman; Jeanetto Ldwe>^(retuined to officeV; Secretary-treasurer, Edsel Nissilä; (retumed to offIce); 'Organizer, -Dagmar • Nissilä; (retumed to Office); Amie Llhd and Etoo Suon-peip. i' - ' The . elections" were • followed by a coffee break for ; which ftwe;-should; thank Aili Lahti very much. One of the important potots of the meeting was the readtogariddiscus-; sion : of the draf t constitution which the out-gotog executive had: placed; before the^meeting for final approvaL' The discussion on many potots .was very good and to my opinion- itwas one of the best educationals 'that I haveever heard, This repoi1»r try to write another artlcle on ^ the constitution because it was Just too much to try /and put it toto ttos one; Beit sufficientito say faere that aftor a few changes and: additions the constitution was accepted. > The next guestion to receive the attention of'the meettog was the re-t lationship' between the youth and the hali. It was decided that Sisu\shouM send; three people toto a Jotot com-' mittee vwlth: the iidUlt organization; Here tbey could consider how every-; '^«'Z ^us o„ . ! « .«hand W r e »ot »«ring a pan^e h Jack m the middle of our puss as it were, youJll know.that, Amy -T . . .. fcght it was.a sweet idea.^ "^Ve wonder what the Postal Airthorities thmk?- ' • ^ dected, Mary-Ann Luhtala and Hemy Lahti v/Pinaliy. it was resolved that regular meetiogs would conttoue to be held on every second Tuesday at 7J0p.m. : >'And- that is ali •• for now, except to aay that Sisu had a vei^ wonderful meeUng and that if the same spirit prevails throughout the year, and there is no reason it should not, when Sisu meets agato it may have many more achievements .to-^ claim than many.' of our eastem brothers expect. iSils year we are very happy to have liad'"a goodly share" of the "Club News" columns, But please do not misunderstand me ~- we out here are a rtrlendly people- and would never think of disturbing the "status quo." — H. GOODW]iLL BETWEEN NATIONS FRIENPSHIi^ pitEVAILED AT WiNtER 0tYMPICS « Baron de Coubertto, >who revlved the • Olympic Games to 1892 to pro-' moto' goodwilI between nations^ can; rest' to peace. The VZfth Wtoter Games were run off to:an atmosphere; bfcordiality that was to the spirit'of last summer's "summlt" conference to Geneva. ' ' *^ Perhaps.lhe,best :acample of^t^ frlendly attitudewaa; to 'tie found; in the hockey- gäme between Canada and^ Bussia. Late::to the match, w l ^ ;the action hot and heavy anä ^tempera slightly frayed;' Kltohener 'broke :away^ from a Soviet: gangto^ attack:' The^- be'ifee' went_rlght'to on goal but Bhot over the net toto'the crowd.' Trytog to avold crashing the boards, he lell lieavily to thelce;-'Puchkov; theRus^; sian 'goäUe,';promptly; hefped- him ;to his feet^ shook his hand and the festivities conttoued. '— < Besides-the f rlendly sphrlt, the 19.56 Games were remarkable;to pther. res-j pects. The Soviet UziioEi; ln.its ^itki crack' at alptoe: competltion^,; finlsh^^ on top in the unbfficial team sttod4 tog with 121 potots. ^ " ; There, were many upsets.» RU^ia^ won the OlympIc and World t|tlesfii»' hockey. <:TDronto'sNorrisBowdenä^ Frances Dafoe, favdr^^^to win the pairs-figure rfaittog, were'nosed'oul by an Austrian^ coiiple. -;NorwSay; which won ttiC;; last pljrmpics: wlth' 125»^ ipotots;.and seveu.-gold'^^^ f inished' to: seventh^^-piaee ;With ''only 47 potots. The contrlbut^n of ;> ^he Austrlan team'was highlightod.by the brlUlant performance of-Toni Sailer who won three^gold medals and was the indi-vidual Star bf tlie games!' Toni led tHe field to the.giant slalom, th^ downlull: race, and the speclal slalom. Canada's best goodwiU ambassadors. (• • • •.:;A!l;to ali, the Canadian toam made a flh(f'r showing, winning 16 potots to Itoisb;to löth position. But we can and must do much better in future Öl^pics. PRETTY GOOD : :vThe;ktodergarten:teacher was try- ' tog ^''^teach her class. how to count money. Placing a half dollar^on the deu^ jShe said sharply, ^ "What .is öiat?',. Ä small voice from the back row.' •Tälls." •V A lil[tle girl was explalnlng to her youijg^ brother that It wa5 wrong to woriq on Sundays. "WJ»)j, about policemen?" asked ''the;boS^^They,hayp,to voxk on sundays! pon't they go to heaven?", ""Of cpurse not," she replled. "TheyTepot needed there." The fCASF m Port Arthur, Önt^ Hello skl en^!^ thusiastsi Thla is your skiing^ rqiort«r again. After a few days of warm balmy weather, spring lever: almost set to and suddenly I reallzed I have to writo another new8 east from the land of the big snow. Last Sunday the Elo Skl meet went over very: well to splte-^of a 'snow storm durtog the m^t Allan Lam-patoen of; Elo 8howlng very good form came to first in the 8 kllometer event with a time ofi 20.47.; Altogether ntoe skiers were on the trail. For a more detailed reiiort of this meet read the Ftonish sports seotion to laat Satur-day's paper. On February löth the Btom Tigera are hosts tp the skiers and' they are arrangtog for a ten kilometer run for ali classes 17 years and older. There will be no upper age limlt. For the women skiers and girlsunderlif there will be a 2.5 kilometer race. The small fry wlll compete to^a one kilometer event. I faope to see a good ,gang on the trail next Sunday. This wiUbe ; the laat meet before the FCASF championshlp meet;r 60 the results of this' meet wiU give some indlcatlon30f the condition our skiers willbe to for the big event/; Of course I cannot let everypne to on the sec-rets. we have to atore for vlslting skiers. We have to have a few darfc horses for the race. But I can say that .we have some Juniors^inpretty' good form no^r. so that. the cham-pionships wona be easy^to take away from here. ' ^ ^ Paavo has been wbrking with aU hia energy ;jvhipptog up a program f ot a bang-up ' ooncert to' wtod .up the championship meet on March > 4th. The gymgroup has been jiehdtogiand twisting on ali fOrms of apparatus and Tm sure' we wlll see some results of this;hard work to the concert.', sb once more X VlU im^lte^you one and aU to a t i e h d l ^ FCMBF^j^ ohämpionshlpi] haeet^? to);'!^^ So-long for now; X have a date'wlth a pair of skisagaln. >->'A1. ' ' ' Vancouver*s Association of United Ukrainian Canadi^ns "Kdbzar Dance Group" toured many B.C, centres, in honour of Champ's 5th blrthdayand to raise>fiinds-,tO'»vt^ "'/.A keep the paper roUing for the sixth.year. ; ' * v , L.f^;,i ^ *' ^ ' i •Il - . ^_ ,J,-^.fs^>5'^*^?fi||;,fe^^^^^ The Vancouver Youth Singers also paijticlpated in 4he , . J\ B.C. tour to win new triends and supporters for CvLtioäz^Sihi % - < H only Independent youth paper. The .drive for $10^000 v,-,iL ' ends Märeh 18th. ' ' - . r . - " 'k APFLYING SCIENCE TO SKIING Wil| jPlaslic SMis Repbe^ i i l B i i i i l i ^ » ^ Science can have W big cffcct upon spokrt' 'Golf wäs revolutfonlzcd^by tho Introductlon of the-rubber-corcd'bati 'whtch'could be hit'twlce as far aa the Old Vblld "gutty." ' ;< ^ Now'^ British'Scientist has'8Hown that 1 the'' speedsot' skiers • c(to bö greatlyincreasedlychänklng tho dc: slgn of the sKi.' < . " - ' And this ali arlsos, surprlsingly enough.^froma.stildy öf tho frictlon l)etween' slidtog 'ihetal ;sur/acös,'. ^ 1'' ''Dr. Bojvxien, FRB, ia ä dlstln^ulshcd Wörker,bn fjrlctlon. Infactt herVas electeä to FellowshIp of the Royal TRADE FLOITBISHING IN TIBET Trucks Replace Yaks On Roads Winding Across Rpof; Of W6r\d It is «liite t^fc^tofthe: wp|*te«'^^ of science ~,'and ^ihe.'ventatiUty j»f v. ' » Dr. B6wden -^[^t^fie-shouUl jpiretnatT> "H tvro papers aJongslde^eäch^otÄer.in " . Although; the Canadian team didn't wto as manyr potots'aa -4|i 1992/: our showing was spi^ead amon^ more .events.' Lucille ^eeler, of Qt. JFovite, Quebec, earfied a placeamong: the world's top womeh iUers hy cpmtog to sixth in thejr' ffiant slalom^ and a , . good third to the dbwnhIU. The men one concemed ' could best Aelp to skiers dldn't wto any potots, "iut Clarence Servold^ of C^mrose^ Alta. turned In the best Ume&teit xe^orä&l by a North American in the°SÖ-kilo- •toefej^vbi^^ The United Statä awept'the shigles matotato the halivand at:the same time best benefit>fro"m It. The three The problem of not having good facilities for summer activites was figures skating '-wf<thout too m^&;b raised to conjunction with the report fri m Spin^er uOldOrlgih liss Leonara Starr. ä resident of pnatkeC Ont, dlslikes the word pster^ to regard to ani munarried pan. She says the term makea her Pd<9' vtaen she setrit on the vot-iists. 6he sudesta the word or "gentIewoman''... "Sptos^ ahevsays;V ^'labels a woman as fcttkingr from: another century." v pas-Starr Is light . . 1 Its orlgin Is from about 185 years ago when prrlght tovented hia machtoe for ptag y a m s : ; ; These machtoes cshiefly operated bjr unmanled ten. and as spinners they were FH to the trade as "sptost^rs." ketfae term cameto applyto an batried wc«ien. pree yeais ago -UOss Starr wrote Prime iMinister St. Laurent sug-pig: a change to description, and r^lied that, the matter wouId be pd toto. There bas been no k i ^ stoce — [e are toclined to thiiik that PMter" and "gentleman" ahould be' pnated bawi the ftaHots.^ Pexhaps lor male and F for female would IboOi 8en9 onucqoalify. . ON THE SCREErf The African Lion By GWEN WH1TTAKEB ' '< Walt Disney, long famous for his ähimated cartoons, has to recent years brought.to the screen the toti-mate lives of-the anlmals of desert and prairie. In The African taon he has done fhe same wlth those crca-tures'whlch inhabit tlie "plalns of Afiica. ' Häving enjoyed The Living XTesert and The Vanishing Prairie very mufch, I Idöked forward to;seeing this latest movie to the series. But somdiow X found it disappotottog and not so exdting as the two previous ones. It may be that with the third oM'thls type of movie begins to palL How-ever I donot thtok this was the^only reason for I found the pace rather slow to some parts. miere is also a sameness to the narrative style whlcfa becomes monotonous whcn used too oftm pressions the vlewer getsis thathere,^ as with ali .wlld animals, the struggle for food is almost a full time .Job and a hazardous one. Even fOr the mighfy lion it is not:soeasy« and to'kiusan-other.' animal for food requirear; con-*: siderable strategy. : And while'spytog on i Oie lion: famUyiwe; discover that trouble,' r wtontog the first two sttöts to 4x>tti the men's and ''women's events., Canada's Carol PachI, of Montreal, came sixth bfhtodTenle^ Albright and 8howedpromlse'bf ^better thingsTto:come;when she gäins;ffl^ experienc^. The most popular performeia ät the Games wereToronto!s Carol Wagner and: Bob :PaUl .who; yron a sixtb?^ ! to the paira.' Th'e young teenagers captivated the'aodUence ;wlth\t]ieb' chartn: ätid IjmSbltog 'enthuslasm>' and cext T'to ithe hocki^ cont]ngeiit> */efe the f emale äppareptly^ does most>bf the_^ hunttog whilerthe. mOTe impresr, iiye-Jo&king^^^^ only gets up when it is time'to eat. ; One of the most toteresttog scenes to the moi^e shows;a chieetah, a ihem-: ber of the cat family, streaking aäfots the plato and almost making a blur on the screen asitchäses some hids-less graztog animal it haa diosen for ite prey. >Tixis.ama3^^ leave; Bannister: or^l^ndy far; f>e^ for^ it cain: run. at. a iqieed bf W fmilea perbour or one and one-thirdtmlle» permtoute. Kerörtheless The African Lion is 4 At' one potot wc «uddenly hear a fttin a VCiy"ffP£ :tom^ 1n»<ll^^ »hftniTrfrt» « r f « A ' . a t i . f .*«nÄ««««r^^ 8hown of life and deäö» amonfe such varied spedes as lions, *aboons and fnasaxOB., One of the «tamgert Im-ibodf thumjrfng tuOse. and follöwtog'a' h''uge elephänt rwhO! is also coiious; <we see that thisnoise Js hetog jgiäde by a xhiaoeexos^ Uzpped- i a : qolcksand By ALAN WINNINGTON - The:followtog Is. the acventh to a series of articles-by British cor-. respondent Alan)Wtontofton «ho ; In earller artlcles haa ezplataed' many BSpecta of Tibetan life and the effect that the new road from China has had to,: the develop-ment of ,Tibet. neara, waterhiiJIe. pnable to eseape, the wretclied;bcast:l8 "Bangtog its ftead on the ground to rage ahd^frustra^ tion, SeverfA - other' änimäls ^sattier round, watoh the'"^8cene wlth some toterest for a time, and then. leave him to his fate. ^J, ' ' ' Very - toteresting to }Ui, > thoiigh, bardly to tiie rhtoo> is the'narrator's explanatlon this is a finssil in the making and that fhe^fossils of i:iant ; Eighteen cents to the dollar off tca and an average of 14 cents to the dollar for ottiernecessities.: This is :wliat the new« roads mean to the peopIe>of Lhasa. Tibet Iisa vast plateau, averaging 16,000 feet above sea level/surrounded and crossed by still higher mountato ranges. / Some huge convulslon of the ^rth threw it up and the whoIe area is still changtog. Across i,700 mlles of this plateaiJ, over 16 of its major mountato ranges an 12 big;; rivers along perpendicular rock preciplces^ mountains of sllding sand, over hiddenwater8,8wamp8 and glaciers, tti^ Chtoese People's Liberation Army andits Ttoetan helpers drove the road tp Ltiasa by Uie end of 1654 and now is pushtog it to the Indian border. v''Fightto9:the mountains and wea-ther was: liard enough/' Lang Ming-teh, told me; ^but f Ighting antiquated ideas wa8''even härder." Ohinese engineers, tralned^^i» the Wc8t, held ujr thclr bands and said that such aroäd simply could not be built. ^ . There were no facts to go on, they said. There was no data. Nothing was luiown of;: soil C^ Loflrr; land people could .not work in such prehistorfc beasts were df ten made to thia way^when they were trapped' and OiOr txoes impressed to'^il whlch later tumed to «stone. ' These are oxily a few ot the sights to be seen to Tbe Afrlcaii Lkm wlik:h is fihned to tet^mJeoIor/ It Ja a^Very infOrmatlve animal documentaryi>jire^ Kented to an totereattopTinanner and having^ita lull abaxe of action and striklng three or four bIows wlth the sledgehammer. ' • ' Tibet liad no .aurplus food and ali the People'8 Llberaubn Aimy'8 needs had to be carried £c^W inland Ohlna; AnlyyakBcouldfdo the Job^and; then only with the support of the Tibetan nobllity who ottrned' t h ^ and the serfs, who herd-them. Unllke the Kuomtotang and tiie Ghtoese empfr-: ora, who used forced transport, the People'8 Liberation :Army patd Weil for every load carried. iTibetens h^lped the road and the road helped them. - Attracted by ,tbe high wage8; even some monks worked on the road — after t>orrowlng dif-fefent clothes. ' V/ork. on the road never stops along its whoIe length. 1^ouw matotonance vorkers are stationed to cosy bungaIows ali along the road at six-mlle' totervals. .three timcs a' year Instcad of once, and my prof its .are steadier ^because prlces are äown and salcsare up." As we chdtted, he sat with bis Icgs crossed under him, taking enormous pinches'of snuff'mixcd wlth tocense ash, whiieiie offered mc buttercd tea and '1llorton'8iSjycets of Dls^lnctlon'? brought by' yak from Tndia. "X can go to Indla when I like and get rupees for fofeign tradc simply by golng to: the PcopIe'fi Bank here," thls^ clvillän-looklng^monk went on. "And lt'8 not only a mattorof spccd now — we don't have to bothcr abo^it ban. dits. More mcrchantij and.goods: are golng tolndlajthan bcforc as.wcll as Inland, and this "is ^nly the begln-nlng." ^Mot)k-merch;Jht ClUlmba^was rcaUy^^ saytog how theVew roads and tradlng; pollcy of the Chincsc govcmmc^t have made markcts for stagnant Tibetanproductsand raised purchasr ing powcr for manufacturcd göods. Whcn everythlng went by yak at eight milcs daily, the cmphasls ,was. on lightness and high; profits because of the 8low turnover. ; Wool, and even the cofttlyvmusk, werc not worthwhlIe because/ of low prices offered in the We«fc,. Now the' emphasi? is exactly rcvcrsed, - Stato buying companies arc ^ paying top prlces; for .wooi; and three <,tfmes the previous' prlcc, f or musk.: And by selling commoditiesv to • mcrchants rarified air and there was not.enough manpower ;toy Tlbet. 'Nobody..!ever;i»uilt a road at this hetebt," ther said "It will take a ccntury." ^ But the 5.People'8 Liberation Army men whd'/didttoe Job could see for themselve«',that there had to be a Along these two mlracle hlghway8 which the Chinese' modestly describe as "not yet up to Westem standards," thousands of trucks are running wlth Chtocse-made goods and te&Jn exchange for Tibetan wooI,m.usk and herds. Tibetan merchants who used to trade only wlth the capitallst world — by yak-^'now f tod it better to hlre a truok and trade with thcrl^omeland. . ,Now you can often see a truck- or two parked near a road matotenance »f"'"» V W . . J U W S U W C O W station, wlth a yak hair tent pitehed ^^^^^^ provldto^ cheap,. fast nearby and a young Tibetan potter-big with the englne wblle aomeone else blows a yak dung fire with yak skto bellows to make tea^ witb.yak butter. ' > , f A monk named Cham6a,' chlef^ monk-merchant otK&nzemoaasteryif told me about his trade aa we sat among the images, butter lamps and Iron; njoney chests to his Lbasa room. He wa8 dressed to ordinary; clothes and on a scttee by his side were ele-ments of his calling — a leather road if Tibet was to make any social ^ ^ an. abacus , for counttog advance and>j»)t remato a baclnvard region '--^;ävtemptation to imperlalist totrlgue. ' • , Tbey Went to wörit on ropcs, faang-ing over TAvii^ you slck tolookdmnx;- UntU thejro^ was biillt they could not transport , air ccmipressors, so mopey, and a rosary. Oie trades to Tibetan wool, musk, saffron and a strange Tibetan medical speclality called *worm^graa8/ be, cause half of tfae creature^ is a wonn and the ottier half is a vegetcfble. "I buy tea and Shangbai«manu-facturcd goods," he told me: "to 'two mä every blasttog Jiole had to be driUed | weeks now witb five trudu I can do to^the gr8iiife"ty hanmier and cbisel. what used to take me two snoiitlis At first tiiey:w^e exbaosted after wlthS00yak8. r tum my eapltal oirer transport there is .now. every .^Inccn-tlve \o • break wlth: the, centuries^old bablt of• maximum profIt on a mtol-. mum turnover. ~ iAlready some merchants are ^actlng. as tea agents for stato companie^. This enables them - to buy tea cheaply on agreement: to scll at a fIxed: prIce and a fIxcd profIfc .Thc»o pollcJcs are working, • Stato buyers in'Chambo last year bought. threectifnes as much of local Products a» to the previous year, while exporfas.,to ,]^dia aJ90. rose to the comparable periodi Xnilie iint paper He wrote,aboti^''^ wH8t""happen8Vwhen you^jruö^aäet^tt" ' ^ together at higher speeila'tlianfebgl*^^ :M neers normälly use. 'In' thX^itÄbndit ^" ?3v the theory^wä8 develo^^d Ut' äeslgn-^v |i mrfMt-runntog «kte; ' 1 ' \ ' § ' What was the llnH?> - " tn normal engtodcrtog^rm^tab^mäyT ~ {| slide over each other,at ^eeds^yp toa^^ M 70 miles' an hqu»'.' If, yoU Jxutjxt^f^ ' i l the speed to^oyer 3,000mJIe» an.luiva:,ti. tl^e ^tylc of Blldtaff chatijgea ftom "flÄfii/, T' U form' — Where the metal makes^^ancl ^ - JM break» little < tvelded'rldge8-^'*into"ttr^^' ;iijeW'ionfe:i||^^ The reslstance tb'!eiÄdIng fepto-dö^l^'1 J to very low valucsi As' Öio ^ffl^^to ^ - ' | rub agalnst each other they'get bol^if^.-- , l^Isproducesathtolayej^ltmi^^ x | metal which acts es a lubricant^vif^^^ ^' a etoel ball Is^rubbtog on copper of^ / .^,r> coUrse thia lubrlcant only appeaftla^^;' | a tömperature "of 1,083"degtreeö ceStl-^s ^ i Can this reaUy help te*'pn«^i«ej,;^ .m fastcr skis? • On Bnow! ' > 'i ^ | Long ago, a'ploneer of scienee, 'Os^t < " | bome Reynolds, euggested' tSiat we ' ^ ' S could sUdb along |ce on.slt^tes, m_ casily because a fllm of watef.wa8 formcd under the blp.des. The p^^f^l sure mcltcd^thc Ice. '\ ' ^ieti^'. '->~ # n this thcon^ wcre true; It-sbouM^ / follow thatas you dropped^^fetÄii^^ f i peraturc of the, ice It wouId he mbre^, 'v|| dlfflcuit to melt it by pressure^^andS ^^1 sUdtog should become more difficullU'' This was trled and found to, ^'txvfi,.^ ' ^1 But pr.'BoWden poliitedout tbafe-^ .< , - V| the bcat ^>roduced iri slidlng^vbdld'. '«^ also melt ice and produce watery M lubrlcapt.' Zn^ sllding on snow'lt ^Mts <p just a matter of one solld <the'6kl>" on another solld <the 8now^. ^ . From the VbM( onmetaiait seemed Ilkely thatmelted ice was belnglprd^ ' duccd. This was the link ibetween!' the two Itoes of «work at such <Uf f er^Bi^lt r \ tcm^eratures. , 7 ' And it shoUld become easler ti) sIMe^l If you used a. good heat insulatbrHkSe? wood iaste^ of metaL Because VUb^V. an^lnsulator the heat prbducc^vould;: not leak away 8o quickly. n-^^, ' J^l Finally, as you went faster it'staoiddi , | become much easler to slide beca^e^' more heat was produced^to nielt the/^^/^^vffl snow or ice. - '•''Jr.r On putting'those theorleS to t|ie^, test they wcre älap vindlcated.' ^ ^There was one'iurtherxcfInemcnt„^' ,^ One faU-ly iWEW'?pla8tlc;'called|Äi^ ' V " I tetrafluörethylMe — .we,can'caJl''iri' ' \' PTFE — Is a partlculariy gbbd SUderJf and Is not wetted by, water,:Jiai%^ -'^^fM skis out.lt cut the timesof d^spenta - ' ' " ' -.iti 'la-^f^ VEEY FEW A Hollywood producer recelved a Story cntltle,d,.!Thc OptJrolsL" He called his. etofftogether 'and; said:' ''Öentle^.cn. jbl«'titre'mii*t'l>c chang-ed' to sbmetbingalmpler.' We know wbat an optlmlst is, but hbw many <qttier;pepple {cnQW it's an «fy^doctor? advance ^ ,'t,j..'i:.>. « ' ^ ^ J i i^ Weil, for öiemomcnl Itv^tovmÄ^ an entertalntog^ disdbvcnrliirb^^*''- helj» tö 8bow a'little-bf^^iclf^» nieSod.'.; ' inM^^^^fi M l
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, February 16, 1956 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1956-02-16 |
Type | text |
Format | application/pdf |
Rights | Some rights reserved |
Identifier | Vapaus560216 |
Description
Title | 1956-02-16-03 |
OCR text |
SJiBBr CBEE1P8G OB
GOOEY VALENTINE
JJy BOB \\'ARD
We see by tb» calendar that St. ValenUne s Day ,and Pancake
^äaycame flap o» tlje saaie day this year. *
Mayife äts partiöilar cmndden^ coindded before; but if
faas we didn^t notijpe it. i{owever, roaybe it's batter tiiisvvray
ausc it'g?«s M tö the iiappy thougbt
, began to stlf in'o»r little red (excuse it please) head.
We^inig^ just as wel| come right out with it; or by the tirai we^
• the end of tiie colmnn our idea wfll l>e as old and outdated as
ay's timestudy rate.^^ >^ man will teli ydu
at is sure: old and outdated; particularly so if ifs a rats that a
emotktt can'Iive with. ' -
But to get to,our happy thought. 'Gadzooks, gadzooks, said
>Ttle Crooks,'What it Is?"'
To which we icplied: ",WeU, Myrtle, why not make this year^s
\)p oi Valentines.out^f pancake 'mix, Pray, ivhy not?"
Thittk of-äie thing fcr a moment'— rationally.as the industrial
itons officer put^ it when he introduces an idea designed to make
company richer — and the worker poorer; but wi£er, mmd you.
Just pause imd cons!der — rationally.
Imagineopeiungyour Valentine m^ fmding, instead of
customary frflly-.type, bne cozing with sentiment, a beadtifully
led and scroU-ded pancake cozing with synip.
Novr grant you €be little poeni on the Pancake Valentine might
just a litäe bli^rred; but after lickjng away the syrup, we'd still
i able to make out a happy, ssntrmsntal thought which might go.. -
A SUCCESSFPL MEETIXG
Sisu Plans För A n Even Busier Vear
' ' - IVhen I look into yöux eyes /
^Afy heart begim to stir up ^
- ' . You'U jind out hozo I go for you,
When you lick ojf-the syrup.
I Then, of ODurse, when we lick the syrup off, thi^re would be some
pet thought like "Fläp dead, Jack."
Of course, another vronderful thing about a Pancake Valentine
|t's practical. v . -
Take the usuarValentine-typecard. W'hat can we do with them
er Febhiary 14th bgtomes, say February ISth?
But \fith the Pancake variety We could read 'em and eat.
Take a Pancake Valentine which might read: ''
f
J love you,George, I think you're sweet
' i love your smile and your size itvclve feet
Somefolk may say Pm just a dumb lummock
,\ , 1 : But I^hnCtv the ivay to your heart; it's via the stotnach.
,. Sp afte^ you get this and read it up,
- Dc9ftioss it aivay, you can then eat it up.
My love for you cannot squelch
' You'll think of me, each time you belch.
' • » *
We'll 'havc'to admit that a card-which flowed with ali Ihe^e:
H.Hhoöghts and sypiq>, too —- would be a big advance over the •
dqx yalentine. After ali, vrho could digest ali that fancy lace
puti)n:thesedges? \ : - - ^1 ' ^ '^'^
• Another • äspect of a Pancake Valentine is it's someöring we
Id make ourselves. . -
I •Thereiwe'd be before the big day whipping up a big batter of
K.^:,And while we're^^m this big blob of blob-bish looking
B> ali; kinds of svveet and goo-ey thoughts wouid flap through our
pinhfeminding us of true love.
- -Ofther sweet thoughts wouId be conjured np as we flapp^d our
|icakeValentines into the air; waftch,them flip — then mjss the^pan.;
Finally we succeed in getting our Pancake Valentine whomped out.
|n we have to work out the verse. Like:
' ' "fVe aimosi flipped Our little ltd,
Ohi' yes, Hortense, indeed we did;
The batter turried out far too lumpy
And this sure made us .mighty grumpy;
But the rhytmng job was much, much loorse,
But please darling take us for batter or verse. '
Veli admit that this doesn't even begin to scrape the bö.ttom
|ihe pan iiisof ar as the Pancake Valentine idea is concerned. . i ; - •
We don't •know whether anyoneelse will consider the idea^ 'has
Iit — the type of suggestion that a company might be villing to
for if it tumed up in a Suggestion Box — say.
But it Uckled our fancy.
LOne thing for sure ttte syrup on the Pancake Valentine couldn't
|any möre g o o ^ than the verses contained in the nsual Valentine
Vit^ti ^oing to try the Pancake Version on our own Missus
'VaocoaTcr, C. — As ivas -an-nounced
some time ago in Club News;
the Sisu P.C.Y.C. held its Ist annual
masting on Tuesday, Jan; 31st to öie
Clinton HalL
The meeting was opened by Jeanette
IiOwei cliainnan of the out-going exe-;
cutive. who also cliaixed< the mfceting
until Arnle Lind and K. Ww Juvoijen.
were elpcted for the positiona of
chairman and Secretary: respectively.
Jeanette.IjOwe, in her report of tlie
outgoing executive. recommended that
the executive hold its meetings prior
to and on the same date aa;the regu-lar
club - meetings. This was con-sidered
more practical than tying up;
^the}executive every Week. I^^^^
motion: • tliis recommendation
jMissed.
(Henry; Lahti -next gavei a :brief re-port
onv the youth activities around
that the ;WeWer\sCornHrs'site^^^^a^
soon be glven' up' bjr: the local ,P^^
branchlbeeaUse oZ the f act tliat % k
never used. The meeting felt ^very
keenly on this qiiestton and; "
on another solld |
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