1955-12-29-03 |
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vaasm ö ^ o t om avio- Isten täällä ja ^ « l i » suloinen Ja^ * stuu Isotona «TM nenetkililoiliin? myt toistaise&sL . tähden? " a naimisiin toi>" OBIUIJ8 t'tänne vanki. ' mattomuus. aJhdollista? Te-" iemänkymmeQen ja muista oloi?- ^ eva ammatUjilrl iläiset aina joh-^ i t . Tästä kerto-tti, että hän toi-, 5ä'. tavallisena l i on vain jäsenen-, valtuudet tässä ollessaan. Edel-lejärjestö. tuihin, kuuluu 2 n käsittävä vuo-määräytyy työn: losien; perusteel-a : työläinen saa alla. imme tilan: jollia m omat koneet, a, 8 traktoria Ja tilaller-rakenne-iää kaksikerrok-ea: kanalaa. .100 = Uötä, paloposte-i 100 hehtaarin a on tähän tar-ilj, ruplaa, retki-livat tyytyväisiä smäänsä ja niinv la Luz-nimiselle.: se onkin jb-eri linen. - muntausta, joka'' nen 'ja sen naa-jröirmuidenkani' ötahdoUe.' Prfe-' sdUstama suun-linja, on luonut' lomen ja kaik-malden entistä styöJe - kansojen"" 'stävyyden hen- "Paasikiven Iin-, osinunäisen ker-< sraaiden Neuvos- , Neuvoston ta-rauhan ja ysta-se yksimielisesti. Lvomuksen, että I vuonna 1956 tentti J . K . Paa-erusteella ehdo-' en Suomessa ei läljon teolllsuuk-nerikkalalsmieli-vallttavat,. vaan liian monta suu-; laatalouden u i n - , n& CARE:n uu- • Siinä sanotaan oi, että suomen paljon puuteol* [uh puutavarain sanoi, siDoinon^ •uksissa: Suonien, äinen ansatisee li on maksettava ta: «e saisi pob-; Istelemään.. »meissä: tarvitaan, sla" Ja' nimen-^- a- teolUsuuksiex en ketjittämistä. lepSä Illan p a i - , yarassa"; kUten, lissd aivan olkdÄ^ i i i i VaOcoBve». Seeing as htm <3» fidden cold sna.p i » t!iis apea jjas ^yen me indooEB, ii Ss «aJy-litöng {jjat I should put ms; time t o «ane' jse by getting off sn' "axtide fo d u b 5^s. Jusfcwlie»it t v l U t e n a a e d i i t ^other^matter: considering tSiat tbe {anperatore outside ts almost €±»ougb to freeze ivaiter, i t is Ihardly advisable io venture out to the m a i l tKUc acnxss Ibestreiet. Somepessimistsiiavejgone even so far as to forecast ä eiaavr I fall before New \ Yeai^s,- b u t tbe sane I Citizen will put no faith^ In such -fOÖIT I isn .{alk. But, '<»me waat' may, I jnust bear i t the best we can. Only yesterdayi.Kenjy /emaiked to |nie that the wind;was a w t o l ' ' c^ At the -time we were taking our^xe^ ^jlar f our laps around the^track. and I jnust admit that i n a couple of spots ae cinders actuallyj^peared hard underfoot. It was uncomfortable sit-^ ting on the grass for any period longer than half an Jiour. , W i t h öiese^ con-ditions, i t is. no wonder.: that we a U i - letes find it difficult to keep in.con-dition a l i year around.; On my vay home from the park I passed one of this city's • golf courses, and there <toe jffects of 'the;weatiher: were most no-tjceable. Only six golf ers .wer€ wait-jms their t um to tee of f! Activitieg atvpresent show'the usual I year end lull. With ttie Yule season, I and exams just faced by the jroung-jsters, the Clinton Hall has taken on I a less boisterous - air. However, big öiings are being plaimed for the com-ling year; among not t h e least :of |v?luch' wiU: be the • annual>,meeting I of the Sisu P . C . Y . C . ; T h i s w i l l : b e h e ld <m m s d a y stfSbt J a s u s s y 3l6t» S8@6. I b a t i ^ u l d te a n easy <l»te t o r o «nanbeg, beeanse If yoa 1oolc^'8t a caTffnlftr ym v JU »otice i t iB-tbe last day o f t l » SQODf]!. etatCing time i r i l l be 7 pjm, abaip: aJtbov&i Cbat last woni is hanOly oecessary. As eveybne vest o f Fort A r t b u r k n o v s . aU events are staxted pxecisdy o n tbe Ijme ep-polnted TbiR: xrumsoozi seaion v m be vpon us vfhea 43ie'date for the"axäiual meeting l o l l s anmnd^ but irrieigaxdless we bcq^ie f o r a ftdl tnrn outrof mem-bers;: Tbe d o b xules are not so tstrict as to pttihibit;:new: members from making their. debut at the annual meeting; SO Jo&trememberifyouliave been tiilidlng of Joinhig; t h e weIcomei mat w i l l lie out o n January Slst' the same as a t any other meeting. Obser-vers, are also vrelcome. and w& hope for a good.TQ»resentation. It ,will be realized;' of course,: that :Ours : i s . a young club ^and the members not yet thorougfiiy versed i n the art o f par-liamentary procedure. Owing:to this fact, discussion v ^ be limited to members: othenvlte our regular eight holusof sleep would suffer even more than i t wllL 1Because<everyone.has .been>on their> best bebaviour so far. the .possibility of something more besides coffee and "korppu" being served as refreämient is highly likely. (Most important of aU,'-Che first.cons-titution will beofficially voted upon at this aimual meeting. And a' Happy New Year to a l i my friends—on both sides of the Rockies. — Gulliver. The case of the Mining Ear By BOB WABD We see by the papers wihere; orders I have gone out to a l i branches of the Canadian Army decreeing -that 'Der fence Iifinister Ralph' Campney'spic-ture Tvhich shows two ears has to be taken down from 'ali offlces, messes; Icanteens, or elsewihere.' In Its place, according to the De- I partment of National Defence;direc-tive, there is to be 'liung a new «port- I rait' -vvhich 'shows one ieax only.' This advice has gone : out - to - some 25 branches of the Imands, • a l i .ari heads of branches, jicp^^heads ^of hranchesi deputy hejid$' of|b: fA s h^ Täe directive states i n part (2)t I The approved portrait is three quarter face, that is, i t shows one^ear |<mly,". As one taxpayei; we ithought. whe» I ve read the new5 item that .we ^äiould straightaway write V to: the-i^Def ence Dept. and -register .OUT; iindignation; at 'one ear only'f of the Defence OMin-r to being displayedivin .'«lluofficesj I messes, canteens,.c or elsewhere.' How, we pondered,; would- anyone I hiow just whose ear i t was that was [being displayed? And if they did know whose e a r I It was, what reaction would a por^' trait ,of the (Defence !M3nister's ear produce i n the 'offices, messes, can 1 teens,' and particularly, fel3ewhi6re.' WouIdn't this .create-the Impresr laon that someone was listening s^ll the time? And wouldn't this i n t um cause a lot of folk to Just stop t a i k' mg? And particularly so. when no one could realliy teli Just whose ear- [tt was that was:listening.in, Coz after a l i , ears are ears. When I ears are attached to a face thevway I they sliould be we' can usually r e - ccgnize the face i f we know it.* P a r t i cularly if it's a timestudy man, the bos3, someone we owe: money to,: or; il we're: lucky enough, someone who |owes money to tis; But an ear ali by itself makes i t I mighty hard to recognize Just whom It belongs to. iLike' the fellow 'said, r n i e face is familiar; but I-can't |remember the handles." A later issue o f the papers helped I «3 a bit with this ear dilemma. : Por these showed two pictures of the I Defsnce l-linister. One picture is a »rt pf a dead-on shOt which shows the Ministcr has two ears sticking out on either side of h i s heäd" to hpld his I Jlasses on. ^ ' The second portrait is the one I»hich 'shows one ear- oiily,'. .iBut actually the Dept. of National Defcn- I ce letter was somewhat wrong: coz Öiepicture really ähows the f a c e of |thea3efence Minister, -But. his face tumed sideways-SO that we only I ' o n e ear.' And this makes i t *look Uke-his giasses hang on Just 'one jear,' ' Of course, this 'ear Is a n cptlcal Ulusfon, because toe really does 'Jjave I '^o ears as shown ta the first p l c - '»e, and not just 'pne eär only* as In I 'he letter and the second Dicture. ' Now it's pretty hard for us o r d l - citizens to flgure out Just wh^ *e Ehould be put to aU the' cxtra I JJense of hanging the Defence M i n - ,8ter~hls portrait, that Is ~ i a - aU elflccs, messes, cantcens, and clsc- [»hcre,' ^ t should be a pprty.costl^^Itcm "> we taxpayer. A n d f o r the- l ^ e ; of I "S we can't figure out vrtiy the De-i^ nce.Minister^s 'one'ear"oniy' jkar- I m toprovem^t PYCT l * e one showing •two ears.' But as i n most cases involving the taxpapers': money ~ it's'only oxir money anyway.:'- • <Now grant you it might be that the/ Defence Minister reckons that his one 'ear; is more photogenic than fother one; or. for that ma^tier than both of 'jem together. Ihat,. of cojurse, is his earogative. , And i f be was spending hds own money no one'would give a, drum if he fäncled a picture :.8höwing one eär. ör one v i t h ear muffs on. But when one, reckons the number lÄia ;|itf^.^he|aas tg;'«piisiänitl^af. ojatrte» tb)ey) «oo Uike W iar-^bötter: iong dfctance; or any other oombi-nation of' iHiotograidxio possibiUtiest v< I n such''av8itdatibn'i'we: couldbe spendiiig! moreiimoney onMpoIitioians'' pictures than«the raverage c i t i z e n h a i to squander on< luxuries reach.year;^ * r • A thbiight, foir/What'it's'wörth, is that niäyJiap "the • Öefence'''Minister feels that'the *o'ne-'car;oidy'^ picture will mäke hfia^inemoirable;' histori<ial-l y speaängl ^ 'we do" seeih to • recall from the history t h a t we remember that 'Horatio iNeison always looked through his spy glass wlth: h i s blind eye T h e n Napoleon always Kept his left hand tucked inside his shirt. This, we read somewhere/ was because he had an Itcäiy spot on h i s right side. Otherj hlstorical figures seem to like to 1)0 snapped on a horse, or with ä dog. And'we a;!;ways f ancied these pictures because anhnals are so dam photogenic. .One' angle worth noting about the Defence Minister's ycn i n , portraits is that the ear he favors is his lef t ear. !Wlhether this has any poStical overtones or not is something. v h i ch •.4 most likely now being conjectured i n «he high cpuncils of a l i the opposition parties. • ?össibly the Defence-Minister has startcd a n ear-a, which some day wUl be referred to as 'leftearism.' But regardless of the outcome of th^ whole matter politically; n o r no matter where the Minlster's 'one ear b n i y portrait: is hung, of* one thing we can be sure, for sure - i^eTl be paying for i t ali i n our taxes next year! A FASTEB METHOD A taad was crceping 6k)wly through the Montreal ruäi-hourtraffic^^^^ a Öie passenger vfas i n a hurry. "Please," he said. to the drivcr, 'can't you gq any fastcr?" "Sure I can," the cabby replied, "But I ain't allowed to leave the taxi." • VERY SIURDY The moming after llttle V l c k l^ birthdayr hcr mothcr called to her fäther: 'You know that imhreakable toy.yott ga??e"VIcki for h c r blrth-doy ycsterday?" "gurc," tiie fathcr "said. A ' dailc suspiclon dutched him. "Tfou dont mean she's broken i t already?" "Ny,** the mother sald. " B u t shets broken aU her toys witb It." FOjBCE OF BABIT Ofaud: "Clarence Is so romantic. Ejverjilme be epcaks to ^xe he says. Mädge: Tbere'8 toOaog vety l o^ mantic «boat t h a t W a bus coo- Ten Canadian Olympicskiers left Montrears Dorval Airport yesterday on the first leg of their journey to Cortina, Italy, scene of the 1956 Olympic Games. The*team will go to St. Anton, Austria, for 10 days training prior to the Olympic meet. Members of the teani will have an opportunity to participate in several^ to sharpen up for the Olympic championship events. Ali members öftheteam except jumper Jacques Charland have been training at St. Jovite, Que. The Canadian ski team :includes;theServoldbr6thers(above) from Camrose, Alta., Clarence (right) last year'^ Canadian-crossTCOiihtry championwiir be entered in the cross-country events while Irwin will be entered in the tombined Nordic event (jumping and cröss^country). A CÖRRiESP<>M)gOT WRITES^F^ TIBET Crossing th€'Roof of the World' I' ' B y ALAN'WINNINGTON I am the first British, correspond-ä i t to come here along the new motor roads across the» roof of the World, to drive itito Iihasa5-'i^ro«^\:iheI eästj to visit a l i Tibefs maln'^itfes:'"" ' • . Until these roads-rhighest i n the .World —-'werecompleted last year, there vere no wheeled vehlcles. A traveller walked or rode on horse- •t>ack. The trip I am making would haAre. t a k e n ; a year or. more. :. .'Now it is possible to get most of the way to; I^hasa by public transport-^ 'plane, rail and bus that covers 800 miles and crosses eight. major moun-tain ranges to Chamdo. But for convenience I am using a Sovlet jeep that can manage even these mountains mostly i n top gear. . A "small"/ and dangerous moimtain pass — oniy twice as high as B en Nevis — has to be crossed, before the real climb on to. the Tibetan plateau begins. : Halfwayi itp is Kanting. very much a frontier town, where Hans and T i - betans live side by side and speak both languages. Long-haired 'Tit>etan clan lairds andhunters stroU around with8words across their waists and rifles on their backs. From the moment that you leaye IKanting and its earthquakes, and cross the iDzala Pass at about 14,000 feet. the Tibetian Plateau begins; The real Tibetan grasslands start after passing the first state farm.es-tablished i n Tibet by the'Pteople's Army; and another: mountain .range where only the hairy, lumbering T ir betan. yakr-cousinv tdi the buffalo-rr; can really survive, work and give wool and milk. From tliat polnt the 'routc only dips once below 10,000 feet for a' fQ,W m i l e s . T h e . : jeep piurs along.. the smooth road at 30 miles an bourfrom one plain 6urro'unded by mountains, through little passes : to the next plain, hour after liour. Tibet is (high, but southerly: i ts border is o n l y . 300 miles north of 8weltering CalcUtta. It has a di-! versity of scene and cllmate thatpror bably cannot be matched. A l i the beauty. spotS' ofr the >worId, Britain's Lake District, 8witzerland, Arizona and the 43erman forests, the Bocky Mountains—have their coun-terj^ rts far more liberally displayed in Tibet. •fivery;,tum of the jroad offers some ecealCi marvel.'' Among -. the v endlezs blUowing peäks disappearing into i n - jrlsSble distances, with here and there austere ^ants coyered i n per-petual i snow, the TibeUui lanäKape !areTWhIter, the Sky bluer;-the barley-'of three years and impk laconlcally, uarolls vlatas one after another that.«rould be fSeunous tourlst Tes9rt5,anywhere cise and po doubt w i l l be ber^tme day. •< -Bfit^ the c:9«<b» at VasMt»^ h d ^ t . corn yellower2 the rivers greener than anywhere on the lowIands. I n this rare air. anfl unflltered sunshlne, a li colors'^are- heightened and'^ made trttnsijarent,. ; 'y --^ As the road* clhnbs,. the seasons change aiid trees t um from summer green :£o.auinmn-%eilow,-theh Jt'a-win-, :terbaxehess&Tt%n'ininu1tcs later the^ are no trees,' and soon no fIowcrs:' then no grass, and finally perpetual snow. At intervals there are a few herds-meh with tlieir tents, o r mercbants v W i t h pack animals i n long caravans, taking advantage of the - new road. Lorries pass. and .wave-rÄll;carrying the siga "'Safety First." On top of Chula Mountain we pass the Cliengtu-Ohambo bus, and later a group of Tibetans waitiiig for it at a road maintenance station. Tiny, but important: Ohamdo, the first real Tibetan town -on the road, is reacheid fay crossing 50 miles of plateauat 15,000 feet and there great jnountains. After the last mountato pass there is aU)almost sheer drc^ of 4.300 feet to, the city. I t is a hairpin road to end ali hairpins. F r om the top you can see the road winding like a drop-ped rope to wliat appears to be the valley. : Driving down an hour i n low gear you think you have reached the böt-t o m . T h e n . you t um a comer and find that the road: goes on spinning down another; sheer drop far below to the Mekong River and Chamdo. ; O n ; t h e way.down' there is plehty of: time to examine the: little town, spread.out foelow like « n air-photo. Dominating i t is the monastery rwith its golden roofs. The rest of the town is either crumbling abode houses or new white oncs built sincc the l i b - eration. > > <Whitepredominate8. There are the <FeopIe's hospital, state d^artment and vfaolesale Stores, bank/municipa! Office, hotel and veterinary station. €%amdo was t h e ' first major Tibetan c i t y t o b e l i b e r a t e d after the defeat of the Kuo^iintang; I t Is the capital o f one oif TIbe(*5'thrce r^ibmr, and has i t s own P ^ l i ' ^ lEZepresen-tative Confercnce.^ ' ~ * . : Here there Is n o Industry and only a few hiefficlent bandicraf ts. Plougbshares veigh one or two pounds and, d i g only four hiches deep; an ear o f b a r l ^ has flve or «ix g r a l n s r y a k hidcs tae tlm>wn 'away; wfaile yak d u n g l s prized and sold as fuel; butter Is burned In the mbnasterles, whlle Imported cooCJng oil Is' eold on the stieeta. MOnks are evei^nvbere; rleh monks in me, wlne-red clotbi poor monks JA tattered robes t h a f m a y once have beea jHbe^^aine «olor; inlajit monks 'playing-kites'and get ting cuffed by irate mothers. . ' One Tibetan' In four is b om to be a jnbnkand'Ihe/tstarts :-:hl&^celibate careÄ: very young. ' , ' ' : r InjTibet, the custom when slck;iwa5 •tO; TOy a-monk to pray, But .nov.the coi^dors' afid -jvards pf 'bhamdb'«j modem: hospital ; are filied : ivifch Tibetansi. many of,whom' are themT selves monks. The - hospital (has • trealed 300,000 patlents since i t started in 19S2,:but the veterinary station has found i t harder to convince the deeply: reli-gious herdsmen that they should have theif*^ cattle inoculated against epid-emlcs: Chamdo's''mobile vet teams Brundage Objed Of Ridicule Avery Brundage of Chicago, presl-dent of the International i Olympic Committeo, was ridiculed as "tatcr-nationaliports bore n:o 1" because of •his 'i^ea that;less national stress be placed on the Olympic Qames. Peter Wilson, sport columnist f o r T h e liondon Daily Mirroncbargcd Brundage's .views atemmed, from a fear thje United States wm not win the 1956 Olympics at Melbourne. Brundage wrote a letter r^c^ling that the' Olympic rules descfibe the games as a competitlon: among indi-^ viduals.- and "must not become a competitlon among nations." Brundage was e&pecially opposed to the unofficialteam point standhigs that are computed during the games. "Mr. Brundage is that man who lets HIS consclence be the athletes of the world's guide," V^ilson wrote. "If he is not kicking up a row in Melbourne about the preparation for the games, he i s likely .to be mtxed up i n some witch-hunt about the expenses of a hop,, step.and jumper, In Oshkosh, Wis." As to Brundage's plea the Olympics 'must not become a competitlon among nations." ..Wilson scoffed: "Poppycock,; tarradiddle and gobbr ledcgook!" ' L i t t l e Luxembourg was proud and rightly proud of winnlng the 5,000 meters, one of: the prcstlge eventSj at Helsinki i n 1952," Wiison wrote. "If this were not Chrlstmas week and I were not trying desperately— but I fear unsuccessfully—to be kind to Mr. Brundage and other fine feathered friends; I should point out 'that this sUdden, touching concern about not:worryingwhlch> nation docs ahcady iriöciilatcd 25,000 cattlel ' A glf|t U) the distfflct by the cferitral govemmehtlast year of 60_,OOÖ iroA fam^ tools 'häs stimulated' irtterest, and the new B^te deparfcmeijt/Btore: is crowded ,wlth,p'easants looking a f such'hew' implements. B (East Germany are drawing: attöntioi^r too. ' - , , B u t the biggest progress i n this teglon has been:the: reduction of ifor/» ojd transport, Pormerly the common ipeople had to drop^ whatcver they were dolng and ]prövihe' 'tränsiiort .^vithout päy ^or. food)' wJienever, or-' dered by of f icials nobles or mdnas j terles, After liberatlon, the People's Rcp-resentative Confcrence declded that the local and central. govemments would pay for a l i transport, though forced labor stiU remahis the right of the nobles and the monastcries. Now i n Chamdo there are film shows, modem dancing and new books. Torstaina, joulitii&lruiiiiimn 92191 np , --T^l'TiuhriistMdb^ayivr föWe e;i^40, '4m0«(»t^ V w The MMtNMgU Kriim \VheD 6ugar B a y Ilcrtiinspn hung vp b's gloves o n Dtecember 18. 10S2 and announced that henceforth he wouId make a living as a hoofer, tm ring fans belicvcd that he'd stick to his decision. and they ^ete right. ^ A year ago Sugar h i t the comeback trail, and found the gohig plenty tougfa. "They never come badc". clucked the experts. .With two wins and a loss under h& belt, Robinson was g l v e n a ahot at the tltle^heldby one C a r l CBobo^; Olson^ who had rccently iried: to step up into the lighthcavywcight'ranks and had his brains bclted out by ancient A r d i i e Moore." What effect d i d this kayo by Moore have on ^Bobo? And did he train f o r the Robinson bout, or'was he more coiicemed about his: mixed-up home life? These questions are Important because Olson looked pretty bad the other night when Sugar Ray droppcd him for the full count i n two. ^ i The middlcweight division is a fairly new one i n boxing, for i t was not recognized until 1884, when the first title bout i n the 16Q-pound class was held i n Toronto.;ContestantS:for theworld title were the. orlgtnal Jack Dempsey. 'The Nonparcil,^' and George Pulljames.' They used heavy driving: glovesinstead of bare fisls, whlch were then i n vogue, and Dempsey stopped Ful'James i n the 22nd stanza. I n 1891 Dempsey-lost the title to Bob Fltzsimmonus 1h a eavage 13- rounder at New Orleans. F i t z , who became heavyweight champsix years later wh'en' he kayoed: J i m '^Corbett, was much too good för Dempsey, but the latter refused to qUit.' • I i n thd champ, and you*ve got to'knock me out.", ho said after being knocked down hält a dozen thnes. F i t z obllged. The next great middlcweight Champion. (Fitzäimmons soon out-grew the diviJsionf)was Stanley Keto* hell. 'a. rugged chaiacter yiho could lick his weight In wildcat8, but couldnt stop a bullet whioh a jealous farmhand pumped into h im during *(eahi; Xn the {tearing Tventies llgbtenr like Bäny Greb, "liger *low«rft<iijar"'' Mickey Walker added cblor to t h eA rolddleweight acene. but aftef their-^C^r day was done a long parade of'«cc-|';*''^ ondraters passed the title f r om händ''4''%^> to hand until Sugar SUQi\B<«blhsonJlfT£ v^'' holder of the wdter'ärawn>bee«ne s ' ^ - '' double Jake. ble t i t l c h o l d e r l q r ' i m c d d n g . ^^ The IMute "Aie M Ho^e best i n the unoffiplali pojmts, tahles seems. tp .90i;>e ;rather|QddIyjfrQ|n ^ n 'head, are comlng up in Icss than 12 months," he concluded, >l ; i r < LONG D»pP, . , A drunk staggqrcd t9wards the Uft shaft, opcned the ^atcsand stepped hito lyhat ^hc' thought -»iisthe lift. But lt;'wasn't.''Picklng"(hlmsrtf up afti^r fälling three flight^ he shouted up the shatt; •( M , ' . •Idiot. I said *Up'J" DID IT PUBPOSELY ' Insurance iMan: (Have you eyer ha^ any accidents? - Cowboy: No. A rattlesnaJce bit me once though. Insurance Man: Don't you call that an accident? iCovvboon: Accident? No he 4 k l i t on purpose. Toronto.—On PWday a n d Saturitoyf >J -i .^^ January I3th and I4tb ät Bathtirst;; ,{ St.; United Chutch the m&y-A&^TSpZi are Introdudng '•TheÖ<»od,HopB'y,by;5c> Herman Heijermans. l l i l a ^ p l a y Jre-:?^,: \;V veals the crimlnal negllgenee of Äutt».^^ S h i i v i n g Laws i n lOOO/throiigh'tStet^r'4^3 personal Story of the high epM^;y:~f, brave, strong ' and hbnestly vulgar v .V fisher folk of a sipaU Dutch fi8htt]gA\4^'v Heijcrmans wrote from Ufct v^tiä^^"^''- compasslonate undmtandlng 8nä^^^4^^ , ^ Impact OI his art was such' that l e b ^ "^^i^ than ten years after "The Geod H O p ^ .,4 , f was first pi^uced legidatlonT' ytsdr • ^' passed romedying, möst of the «buses' set forth In '.'The Good Hope*'.' VTtOr^f ter Bnlay isdUrecUng. , f^v^ . x " ;" "Whew I told my wife this saaom-:; jiing that 1 häd declded äealnst ma*:-; _,'-^'(j ing a trtp^ to Honolulu,''6eca«5eJöt,j^'vK^^ the cxpense", said the Ijuabänd, VÄhö*"^. "Oosh". cxclsdmed^öie second h u i B K ' ^ ^ ' 'f band "how did jrou reivive llier?"v,u y^-^y^i "Ea«ar enough I cat « n her' n e w , ' 4 ^mmmmmmmm^ QOOD ENOUGH . . . l Second f grate''6tudent: ' , ^ a i i I go : ; to^the*storc .and/buy; aomef l)Ubblii"\ 'f^^^i ,,Tpach?r: "Glve mc,t|wee ii^njj,*»;': The llttlo boy pondered a moment; >,: '^f; then said: " I want »ome, they'<5fU i t ; ' \^ and rve'«ot the peiiny." - ' O U R €lVEm tANG^AOE '-f il "Dad hov.icanr.^uhafStfcAf ^lAie^"^ they. havo;'no5 legs^T,' ^ked/^ertMii. ''';Don't. acSc, aw(kwaxd: muatiiom/*. declared hls father. - ' • ^ "•'Ouns baven*t got a n y ' l e g s ' h i v e f v L "Then whafd,the uae o f , ttipir^; , - W having. brocches?" - \ < ^» '*^t^ New Methods of Treating Heart Ailments Prcgress i n medical science comes i n varled forms and under widely differing circumstances,: Sometimes, as i n tlie ;case of the. polio vaccine, progress appears i n the form of; a dramatic, ' apparcntly sudden,. dis-covery. In such cases ;wegenerally, ^though far from accuralely credit the finding to one man, a Scientific hero like Jonas Salk. More often; however, progress comes by sIow; painstakhig steps, steps..taken by majjy men In many: laboratories. £Uch *s the case with the contiyuing progress against disease» pf the heaxt and blood vcssels, a group of ailments whidh account for over onc-half of a l i deaths i n the United States today. IThe recent meeting i n New Orleans of the American Heart Association af forded ah opportunity .for many different scientists to report on their progress during the i m t year. It is not a sensatlonal or dramatic report but i t is an encouraging one. SUb-stantial galns have been made In treatment: techniqucs, i n cardiovas-cular Buigcry: and i n the disoovery of new dnigs to treat 'liardening of the ""arterics bWod clots; heart a t - taeis, high b!s>od prcscure and other d r o i l a t o t y 'ailments. For example a team of resec^rchers at Baylor -.University, Houston, re-! ported their: expcriences: wlth; a new drug to lower btood prcssure., T h e drug, known as mecamylaminci appears to be more :depfendable'tlian previously iknown agents reducing blood pressure'. Like earlier drugs, it works by tAocking of f nerve Im-pulses that tend to constrict blood vcssels ' and elevate blood pressurc. «owever, because It is oompletely absoi«ed by the system,unlike other blood prcssure drugs which are only partlally abeorbed> mecamylamine has a more conslstent^ effect: and Its do* sagcs can be regulated more exactly. Risks of over or undcrdosage äre therefore greatly reduced. Another gain i n the fight against circulat<>ry ailments was reported by a Bosf<?n Scientist. Dr. Mario Stefanini told the A H A : meeting that an enzyme derived trom streptocoocl. the same germs that are responsible for SO many iOncsses, has proved to be an effectlve weapon against some fomis of blood clots. The Boston physlcians iised the enzyme — fstrepr. tokinass - streptodomase" — against blood clots i n the legs, abdomen and eye and In ^nostcase the elot» were dissolved, and the danger of a serioua heart attack or "strctoj" iMsened or eliminated. Use of adrendl hormones. like cor-t'. soi^e, has been found to be a means of combating cases of- shock follow- Ing a heart attaok. This dlscovedy by a V/aahlngton, D,0. speclali«t may save a number of Itves i n cases where patlents after «urvlvlng a heart attaok suffer f rom acute shock, a somc-tUncs fatalcompllcation. (New surgical technlques are also being developed. For example, one nejxHTt wa« made on foehalf of a gnoup of Minneapolis siirgeonswho in the past year and one-4mlf ha/vc operated o n children with heart de-fects, n s l n g a «ystem knowon as "crofis-ciroulatton". This tcchniipie Involves 1 connccMng: the clrculaiory systcm of a child with that of an adult, usually one of the parents, so that the chlld's blood Is shunted away from its heart and lungs. . As a rcsult, the suigeon Is able to mend the heart dcfect wlthoui iblood obstructtng his rvision and his hands. .Of the 43 children opera» ted on, approximately two-thhd8 aur-vtved andare Uving noy/ witb normal or ncar normal bearts. Before the PRETTY O9OD kindergarten tea<dier a;wa»- tryliig to teaclL her cla» tumTta count money. Placing a half dolljar. on the deek, she «aid Oaxifly, ;'.What la that?/' . ' ' 1,.,,^. A small voice from the^baclc n m f ' . HB-?' "Talls." «»: development of this technlque, mäst,^ perhaps a l i , o f t h e c M l d t e n ,would . ,^ have been doomed to earlydeatb.' /'<r^ "Pq Another reccnt davelo^ent, graft^ ' i : 4 Ing «f artehes, waa reportedCon, bsr * a team of Nev/ Yofk «irgeoas; Tbia ' ^ tcchnique invoives the replacement oi" v diseas-ed blood -vessel eections by sec- ' tiohs o f healthy blood vessel o r b^^pd^," ' vessel 'eubstitutes. The New Yorit doctors revlewed 150 cases i n w h i ih such transplants had been used, ^ '^^U, dn ahmost all-cases, tiie result» yn/K" - ' exccllcnfc. ' : ' * ''f*' Men and women who had been" ' - ^ ' -J unable to walk because of hardened ; leg arteries were restored to,jwnna]. healthy actlvlty. Many Umhs/^ete ' saved fromamputation flnd< maoy^ men and'Women fromtJIvc» v O f r l n - . validism b y this technigue whlch-Ist now being appUed i n many medical, centers throughout the cotmtiy., \ is This Is only a samjriing^ p f ' t t i e '• gahift that wejte rqjorted i n tJje car-',^^;7< diavascular field by doctonf i n Houa»'] ' ^ ton, Boston, WdShIngton, iMInneapO-; ^"^ ^ r«, New York — aU viroilclng apäxt,*/ and yet aU tiroriclng 'together vJitJi^^ T each other and with oöHeegaeS^^b'^-;;: J Chicago. Denver, aa. weU- ^a f i t l t *^ flclcntists'^'to many otlH»r comrtrie*'4'"'ri?>i, of the World. The goaireyentua^^- • ^ ( j g i M ^ j d ^ ^ a ^ I f If w 1
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, December 29, 1955 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1955-12-29 |
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 | Vapaus551229 |
Description
Title | 1955-12-29-03 |
OCR text |
vaasm
ö ^ o t om avio-
Isten täällä ja ^
« l i » suloinen Ja^ *
stuu Isotona
«TM
nenetkililoiliin?
myt toistaise&sL
. tähden? "
a naimisiin toi>"
OBIUIJ8
t'tänne vanki. '
mattomuus.
aJhdollista? Te-"
iemänkymmeQen
ja muista oloi?- ^
eva ammatUjilrl
iläiset aina joh-^
i t . Tästä kerto-tti,
että hän toi-,
5ä'. tavallisena l i on
vain jäsenen-,
valtuudet tässä
ollessaan. Edel-lejärjestö.
tuihin, kuuluu 2
n käsittävä vuo-määräytyy
työn:
losien; perusteel-a
: työläinen saa
alla.
imme tilan: jollia
m omat koneet,
a, 8 traktoria Ja
tilaller-rakenne-iää
kaksikerrok-ea:
kanalaa. .100 =
Uötä, paloposte-i
100 hehtaarin
a on tähän tar-ilj,
ruplaa, retki-livat
tyytyväisiä
smäänsä ja niinv
la Luz-nimiselle.:
se onkin jb-eri
linen. -
muntausta, joka''
nen 'ja sen naa-jröirmuidenkani'
ötahdoUe.' Prfe-'
sdUstama suun-linja,
on luonut'
lomen ja kaik-malden
entistä
styöJe - kansojen""
'stävyyden hen-
"Paasikiven Iin-,
osinunäisen ker-<
sraaiden Neuvos- ,
Neuvoston ta-rauhan
ja ysta-se
yksimielisesti.
Lvomuksen, että
I vuonna 1956
tentti J . K . Paa-erusteella
ehdo-'
en Suomessa ei
läljon teolllsuuk-nerikkalalsmieli-vallttavat,.
vaan
liian monta suu-;
laatalouden u i n - ,
n& CARE:n uu-
• Siinä sanotaan
oi, että suomen
paljon puuteol*
[uh puutavarain
sanoi, siDoinon^
•uksissa: Suonien,
äinen ansatisee
li on maksettava
ta: «e saisi pob-;
Istelemään..
»meissä: tarvitaan,
sla" Ja' nimen-^-
a- teolUsuuksiex
en ketjittämistä.
lepSä Illan p a i - ,
yarassa"; kUten,
lissd aivan olkdÄ^
i i i i
VaOcoBve». Seeing as htm <3»
fidden cold sna.p i » t!iis apea jjas
^yen me indooEB, ii Ss «aJy-litöng
{jjat I should put ms; time t o «ane'
jse by getting off sn' "axtide fo d u b
5^s. Jusfcwlie»it t v l U t e n a a e d i i t
^other^matter: considering tSiat tbe
{anperatore outside ts almost €±»ougb
to freeze ivaiter, i t is Ihardly advisable
io venture out to the m a i l tKUc acnxss
Ibestreiet. Somepessimistsiiavejgone
even so far as to forecast ä eiaavr
I fall before New \ Yeai^s,- b u t tbe sane
I Citizen will put no faith^ In such -fOÖIT
I isn .{alk. But, '<»me waat' may,
I jnust bear i t the best we can.
Only yesterdayi.Kenjy /emaiked to
|nie that the wind;was a w t o l ' ' c^
At the -time we were taking our^xe^
^jlar f our laps around the^track. and
I jnust admit that i n a couple of spots
ae cinders actuallyj^peared hard
underfoot. It was uncomfortable sit-^
ting on the grass for any period longer
than half an Jiour. , W i t h öiese^ con-ditions,
i t is. no wonder.: that we a U i -
letes find it difficult to keep in.con-dition
a l i year around.; On my vay
home from the park I passed one of
this city's • golf courses, and there |
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