1955-03-31-03 |
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J A -
T Ä T Ä
t v
Nä-tteiö. k u i a tuoUa ätn,
K u i a , missä? "•"
lai
air
i i .
te-
14
öitään
m-na.
vat
as-i
k -
to-l
a -
l i i -
m-us-
•al-y
h -
l an
i i in
l an
, - Tuo tuolla p j i a n n •.jerfe,,^. a *
j o l i meldaR kanssamnie .<:3n,aj;3 7 * ^
I /talla k o u l u i s a . • " •
— Tuo. j o l l a on parta. z^H
n» häntä enää? - 'f
— A U puhu joutavia, ex nir---
:uo:-caUan:ine ollut kenellaiaän
taa. • .• *^
— E i i ö o l e Iiuniniallista: että p i 'J
k5'set osaavat lentaa Suomeen £^1
tistäaaakka i l m a n karttaa ja koaiT)!-
s i a ? •••••
— Minusta olisi ihmeeU:sem;jai
jos niillä olisi sellaiset. *^
Eräs ohiolainen ilmoitti polUsii:.
että hänen autonsa oli .varastKtJI
sillä a i k a a k u n iiän oli ravintola^'
P o l i i s i r y h t y i etsimään autoa ja IÖTJ
: s en himasta.. paikasta minne OIEC
t a j a oli jättänyt sen^ Omistaja t
k u i t e n k a a n s n s i n tuntenur sitä.io^
k a sade oli huuhdellut ssn puhtaat
Kaivosvoitot kohosivat
lähes 4.5 miljoonalla
M o n t r e a l . — Canadan johtava
j y n , s u i k i n , hopean j a kemiaUae,
lannotteiden ; tuottaja Consolidatsä
M m i n g and . ^ m e l t i n g Ck). sai r i jj
vuoden touninnastaan puhtaaksi TO;.
t o k s i $24,659.964 e h lähes 4.5 m^fr
n a a d o l l a r i a enemmän kuin edellise!»!
A-uodelta, todetaan täällä julkaL^tiis-s
a yhtiön tilikertomuksessa. Yhtiön
palveluksessa oli vuoden lopulla jj
7,600 henkilöä eli noin 300 vähemmi^
k u i n e d e l l i i on vuoden lopulla.
Yhtiön- osake-enemmistön omistaa
C a n a d i a n P a c i f i c Railway Co
l l o -
ko-letä
,ks-eksi
k a -
tto-lan.
i?al-o
l i
•ne-i
g in
i r v i .
n an
ielä
hei-
3 i n -
uip-
Ima
l o in
uun
ve-k
un
ksla
i h in
t u l o k s i i n , ei voi nata ilmentää te
yhdellä s a n a l l a : .halkaisevia. Täajia
.netken 10 p a r h a a n tilastossa eri ma^
k o i l l a on valtava venaläistulva, aH
tilastoon m a h t u u aina runsaat puojei
venäläisiä, jonka lusaksi aivan rajcO-|
l a on tungeksimassa toinen mokoni
K u v a a v a n a esimerkkina voidaan m5:.i
n i t a 10,000 metrin luistelu.- joia
tä.hän mennessä ollut ja on yhä injJ
läkin h e i k o i n Neuvostoliiton lajeisui
E n n e n taman kauden alkua oli Stu-i
men Pentti Lammi o kaikkien aikoja
tilastossa kuudes, nyt han on pudo>
nut neljänneksitoista. Edejle onkii-vennyt
A l m a A t a n tuloksillaan vjji
venäläistä . j a yksi — tshekkiläineii!
5,000 metrillä venäläiset saavat a
p a r h a a n joukkoon 13 omaa nnestäii
Se on j o t a i n haikailevaa! .
T a l l a hetkellä Neuvostoliitto hallti-i
see. Melkoisella varmuudella voidaa
sanoa, että A l m a Atankaan tulaissi
eivät, elä ikuisesti. J o s l am loydetääsi
vielä parempi paikka,, on kenties joi
löydetty. . I t a l i a l a i s e t ovat nimittä!!
saavuttaneet Misunna-nim-.sessä p-kassa
. tasoonsa nafcdsn loistavia ai-koja.
• . • • I
Thi.^ f o u r s f t m a — compriscd of captain Mike Nykoluk. at left; vice- president Frank Buckland, manaser Stafford Smythc and coach
T u r k B r o d a — have something to cheer about, for the trophy they are holding is emblematic of junior hockey suprcmacy in Ontario.
The Toronto IVIarlboroswon the John Ross Robertson trophy in a 2-1 dectsion over the St. Catharines Tepees at Maple Leaf Gardcns
i n Torcnto, u h i c h gave them the best-of-seven scries 4-2. It wäs the Marlhoros' «rst OlIA junior " A " title in 23 years.
|Whst is the Woricl Made of?
rruu VIELÄ
LÄUKSESTA
199 uutta tilausta;
1 kesfken kova kilpa
^mmenen uutta t i l a u s t a tarkoittaen se sili
rskuukauden a i k a n a saanut kaikkiaan IS!
ineiden p a i k k a k u n t i e n l i s l a l l c nousi tanäii
i j a Port .Arthurin välillä on kehittynjl
melua pitämätiä tiukaniafnen kilpa rapioil-i
r t h u r i l a i s i l l a olevan vähän etumatkaa,
r a s t i : •
1 j a Tyyne S i i l m a n 2, kaikki Port .4rtlu-ta
t i l a n i t a osuuden ollessa 20. Walter K«-
tudburysta. mistä o n t u l l u t 38 uutta tibnsU,
1 uusi tilaus j a osuus tuli täyteen. Otti
usta j a o-aus t u l i täyteen. Helga Piesanoj
nostaen paikkakuntansa tuloksen n t l ^ |
uukauden viimeinen päivä, n i i n lopnllis*j
a ennenkuin vasta noin v i i k on kuluttu» kB«j
saapuu k o n t t o r i i n vihnepäivina hant
By J O H N S T A C H EL
From timc immcmorial mon have
•ondcrcd about whut the vvorld was
ade. of. Ancicnt mvths told how.
reryihmgin the , vvorld had been
ftaped from- pnmoval clay by some
od: cr had been formed in the
omb of some godrle.ss. Tliales, the
ir.st of the ancient Greck philoso-!
(h.ers, looked upon water at the cs-lenco
of a l i thmgö. D u r i n g the middl.e
iges earth, air, fire and v.^ater vvei^e.
lonsidered the four basic elements,
rom v.'hich cverything clse was built
in. , 'z'^' • •
With the rise and development of
nodern Scientific physics since the
.7th Century, i t was m e v i t a b l e that
he question of, the. constitution of
natter would be attacked on a scien-ific
basis. E a r l y m the 19th Century,
argely as a result.. of Chemical ex-,
lenments, the • atomic theory, o r i -
Inally proposed as a philosophic spe-ilation
m ancient. Greece, was re-,
med. Every ohjeet was found to be
lomposed of some combination of tmy
articles (today known to be only a
tew tnllionths of . a n mch in; d i a -,
meter) called atoms. There are only
1 limited number of different kinds
Df atoms, and a group of closely re-lated
kmds corresponds to each Chemical
element, of w h i c h 98 are known
» far.These atoms were t h o u g h t of
\i. IS prefectly hard, unchangeable, par-ticles,
incapablc of. any division or
change vvithin themselves. A U change
was thought to be caused by the
movement ahd combination of thesc
atoms. •. .
By the. cnd of tho 19lh Century,
expenments had £hown that thls
conccption of the atom was w o n g.
Tjie atom is = composcd of stil]
smaller parts, and undergoes ali
manner of divisions and changcs
w i t h i n itself; It was foxmd t h a t the
atom could be divided into two m a in
parts, a heavy nucleu£ and a group
of light partlcles named electrons
v h i c h - revolve around the -nucleus
something like the planets revolvp
around the sun. T h e electrons vere
»found to bear negative electric char-ges,
balanced by a positive electric
charge on the nucleus of any p a r t i -
cular atom. •
B u t most scientists s t i l l refuse to
draw the lesson that nature was
teaching them. If the" a t om was not
mdlvisible, and unchangeable, täiey
reasoned, then the particles that
make up the atom must be Indivis-ible
a n d unchangeable. So they start-ed
a search for the particles w h l ch
make up the atom. S i n c e at that timc
they knew of no change undergone by
electrons, they thought electrons f i t t -
c d the b i l l perfectly. The nucleus,
howevcr, v a s known to change, in
radioactive substances for examplc,
50 they started to look for the p a r t i c les
that made up the nucleus. They
found that ali n u c l e i : contained two
types of particles, w h i c h tliey named
protons and neutrons. The proton
was almost 2,000 times hcavier than
t h e electron, although still mfini-.
teslmally light, and had a positive
electric. charge; the neutron weighcd
about the same as a proton, but car-r
i e d no electric charge.
About 1935 many physicists again
thought they were nearing the cnd
of the road m thcir study of. the
nature of matter. A l i t h ^ häd to:do
was study the protons, the neutrons
and the electrons and they would u n -
derstand everything. But again, nature,
taught them the same lesson.
The existence'of the negative electron
was found to be inscparable f r om the
existence of a similar positively
charged particle, named the positron;
and both Avere found to unite • a nd
t r a n s f o rm themselves into a totally
different kind of matter, called r a -
diation. Now, most scientists unfor-tunately
could not.get the idea out of
t h e i r heads that matter could only
be little hard unchangeable balls,
s u c h as they had first conceived the
a t om and later the sub-atomic p a r t i cles
to be. So wlien a tran.sformalion
of this k i n d of matter into a r a d i c a lr
l y different kind, rcsembling hcat and
lipht, was found Ihcy started to speak
about the "destruction of matter.
Thi.s is nonscn.sc, of coursc. Wha
these c.Kpcrimcuts shoucd was tha
matter could not bc conccivcd of t;
any one unchangjng and. unchange
able form. It must bc taken ane
studied as it i i ' , not Ic^islatcd for.
As if this was not cnough, a studj
of very high energy nuclear. explo-sions,
by means of co-smic rays ane
the new atom-smashers, has bcer
t u r n i n g up onc new type of particle
after another, a l i of wh|ch transform
themselves into othcr typcs w i l h be-wildering
sTieed and variety. It hae
become a stale joke already tliQt
some confcrence on physics was very
d u l l because no new particle was a n -
nounced there.
These newer particles have been
divided into two rough groups. The
first.. c a l l ed mesons, range i n weight
betweon electron and the proton.
The second. called hyperons. are
thase which are hcavier than the
proton, but less t h a n t^ice as heavy,
There may wcll be others s t i l l hcavier
w a i t i n g to be discovered.
L e f s take a look at onc or two
of these new particles, almo.st all
of them. found since the war, to
see some of t h e i r d l z z y i n g properties.
The pi-mcson for example, wejghs
about 276 times as much as an elect
r o n . and aftcr an avcragc life span
of a fcw hundrcdmilllonths of a second
i t t r a n s f o r m s itself into a, mu-=
meson and a particle of radiation
How "Neuiral"
Is The Press?
ifc ;o so-i-alicil 'frec-prcss" abit* !
l o . u i Ui a neutra'"' nuiniicr m any f
quc.sc:o:i dfalTTie \vith labor? j
AVhy d;d virtualh- ovory ncvvypapcr !
m C;ii:ad:i takc t.*nc sido of the Ford 1
Co. i i u n n - H ; c recent strikc of LTA\V-.|
C I O mtinbcrs? And why is the piess j
alw;i\A 011 the side of the coinpanics 1
duriiKi .vivv labor disputc? i
Aion:;: \\i\h the fact that the ncw's- j
pape;- niaustry :^ lUelf big bu.sincss. j
and i h : i i . ih<; papcrs deruc mucii oi
th«ir rcvcnuc froni biR money ad-veriiicrs.
another hnk betweon pi'cs«
and business inteicsis has rcccutly
been underlmed.
The Midlaiul Prcc Prcs^^i Herald
recently notcd the f o l l o v i n g facts:
" N i i i e t y - f i v c pcrcent of cdilors of
Canadian wccklios, tvvice \vcekly and
thrce timcs \vcekly ntnvspapcrs have
served onc or moro terms as a president
of the local Chamber of Corn-merce
or Board of'Trade."
Sii(.'.n an npprcniiccslnp, it w i ll
readily bc .sccn. hardly cquips these
editors to be cither "'ncuirar* or
• unbiascd" on any question having to
Jo wit:3i the wclfarc of the workcrs
3S opposcd to the profit m t c r c s l of
the cornpaiiics.
%'aiicou»'er ''Kakarat**
Tou£:Ii Opposition
A atij-ouvcr. — AB tblh letUr
Jr4%'c,> llif .sunny farific roast. l o -
i\jty, MarrJi 2Jt.i. is an C K C f p t i o D.
MC liad a f alrly heavy f ali of « e t
Miou) thrrr mnaios ooly 5 days
4>r prriiaration itrfore Ihe *^KJI-kurat"
pui o n their flTKt conceri
in the rutturJi compelitlon in
uhicli tliry arc cnsaced.
On Marcli^20th the vL'ranaur-taJat"
displaycd tlirlr (alents
bpth as arlists and orcanlEcrs
%vlicn thry hrld their first affalr.
The conrert. «versone sermed to
acrcr, M-a.s first ela.vi and the
'•Kakarat" wUI have lo co some
to bcat it.
Ver>- soon wc'll Ict you linoiv
how tliings ATcnt. — HL.
Torstaina, niaalisk. 31 p. — Thursday, March 31,1955 Sivu
WORLD YOUTHFESTIVAi.
OF SPECIAL INTEREST :
%'aoroBvcr. — ' As cvcryone has unr tion to Uie problcms of m a n k i n d .,
doubtcdly already hcard, plans have
bccn made to scnd Finnish-Canadian
dclcgatcs to Europc thls eummcr to
participatc i n the Fiflh AVorId Youth
Festival In W»rsaw and In Uic World
Pcacc Congrcss Jn Helsinki. .
TJic Importancc of thesc gathcrlngs
i n rclatlon to the question of pcnep^'iTälso very Important. And that
and (ricndshlp cannot bc ovcr-cmpliasizcd;
To have thousands of
people from all nations gatlicr in
U i i s m a n n e r cannot but help to b u i ld
the fceling t h a t war8 offer no solu-
LAKEHEAD ACTIVITIES
INCLUDE CHAMP DRIVE
A N D L O S I N G O UT
IMoLlier: '\Vhat are you doing In
he pantry, T o m m y ? " .
Tommy: "Pighting temptation,
mother."
"1 said 'Play as you ncvcr playcd
) e f o i e"
. ' Y c s . but —" •
'Not as. thtnigh you'vc novcr playcd
j e f o i c ' !"
slmilar to the one the electron nnd
l o s i t r o n transform tlicmsclvcs iiitoj
called a ph^oton. The. mu-mcson,
veifrmng 210 timcs an electron.
loe.sn't •.-:lick around long cilher. AI-er.
a fow niillionth.s of a second it
•-urns i n t o . a n electron and a pair of
Jhotons. T h i s Icaves thc: electron frcc
LO go around looking for a positron to
oonibinc witih; AVhile the pliotons can
•undor .suitablc conditions). iran.s-
;orm ilifmsclvcs back i n t o electrons
.and positrons.
.Bcwildcred? So are thc physi-c
k t s . , T l i e abovc is just sample of
Che l o n g li-ft of known transforma-tions.
with nnw oncs turning up r c -
rularly. Physici.sts know that lliis
array of transformations conlain.s
thc an.swcrs to many problcms that
have bccn pu/zlniK Uicin, sucli a.s
what h o l d s thc nuclcu.s loKcthvr iti
the fir.st placc, but .so l a r « o one
has found a • t h e o r y to unify and
simphfy oilr understanding of thc
behavior of thoso d c m e n t a r y particles..
a.s they aie called. - •
Qut onc t h i n g should be clcar
by now. No. conccption o f ' . m a l l er
which regard.s i t ns made up of u l -
l i m a t e unlLs, fixcd, unchiingcablc and
mdivi.sablc and unrclaled to cach
other Is evcr going to gct anywhcre in
unravelling thc Story of the clcmcn-tary
particles. Only by viov/ing them
a.s i n constant motion, and change,
b o t h w i t h i n and w!thout, and m le-latlonship
with ali the ol/hcr.s, can
v/o advancc. Wc mu.st bc prcparcd to
examme, as .wrnc pioneor.s are, thc;
nUernal E t r u c t u r e of thesc particles,
to sec the iicw v. o i l d s cach of them
c m t a i n s .
Port Arthur, -r- Spring's In the air,
anu cvcn thc Lakchead has acqulrcd
that gay utinasphcre whlch comcs
w:th sprnig. Why. I don't know; onc
look outside and you .would swear
t h a i i f s mld-January. B u t cold as
u IS you can't escapc the fact tlmt
s p r i n g is hcrc, v h i c h means morc ac-t
i v i t i c s for all t l i c clubs and organl-zations.
O f coursc. thia docsn't mcan
that the \vintcr has been idlcd away
cithcr. AU the youth groups have
bccn participatlng i n various actlvl*
ties since f a l l . AfclUetlc clubs I s k u , E lo
and thc K a m Tlgers, instructcd by
Paavo Voutilainen, (have carrlcd on
g ym classcs wcekly, and partlclpated
m scvcral conccrts throughout. the
vvinlcr.
: O n the othcr hand, Uic Lakchead
Champion committee has sccn a sucr
ccisful w m t c r . . T h c fund drlvc which
took place in January and Fcbruary
kcpt us hopping, but wc camc
through with honours and rcached
our Boal. Now, the sub drive Is on,
and nnturally we'd Ukc to acc thls
as successful as the fund drlvc. Af
ter a l l . what Is morc Important than
jiromotlng the c i r c u l a t l on of a papcr
such as Champion, cspcctally Into thc
homcs of young peöple. Vfherc clse
can they galn such Information and
knowIcdgc as In the pagcs of C h a m pion,
whlcli truly Is the volce of
young Canada. W e urgc evcry youth
group to bccomc "Champion cons-clous"
and to pass It on to thclr
frlends.
•Riesc y c a r l y drlves for funds and
subs mlght involvc a. l l t t l c extra
•work, but thcrc'5 also fun a n d plea-sure
Involved too. Herc, In the L a k c head,
we are p l a n n l n g a big cvcnt to
closc of f thc drivcs w l t h a bang. T h ls
Mvlll be i n thc f o rm of a spaghetti sup-per.
served f r om 6.30 tlU 8 P. tM., f o l -
lowcd by a floor 8how, and a n cvcn-i
n g of danclng. T h i s affalr vvlU be
h e l d In the Y o u t h Centre, 316A Bay
Street, on A p r l l 9th.
•VVc hope you"ll a l l make a «iiccial
cffort to bc thcTc to support C h a m pion
and, of coursc. partako In a
'vcry plcasant c v e n l n g . — A & A.
What's Brewin'
BY BOB WARO
7/ compciUioft's thc "spicr oj tijc"
Plcasc IcU mc, I ctUrcat
IlV/v is it that öin businrss finni
Just ncvcr do compctc?
The Confessions of a Professional Informer
liselle
e, Joo
n i n -
I b a l la
. että
tupen
i, ^/,ei
i s t i en
iLsten
l u n l s -
sanah
e i h i n ,
Ijöitä.
jraval-
1 a n -
ä. •. •
i, että
: e t t i in
i e r i -
i l s m in
Inaali
hdykr
että
t u k ea
k o m -
istieto
In a r -
I t a -
nteen,
enää
o m i n avuin ja omin voimm valla^^
pysyä: Italian porvarit tarntser^
kuulemma 'riittävästi apua" Atlantt^
tältä puolen vallassa pysyäkseen.
Tämä sellaisenaan lyö yhteen
den uutistietojen kanssa., joissa M
r o t a a n p o l i i t t i s t en huomicitsijain olej
v a n sitä mieltä, että Nennin jcötH
m l l l a sosialisteilla ja Tcgliatin;J*1
t a m i l i a kommunisteilla °"
s u u r i kannatus, että asiain Dyl||
sellään ollessa on hyvin niabdollig
että ne - v o i t t a v a t h a l l i t u s a i^
vuonna 1958 pidettäivissä Italia^ 3 ^
sissä vaaleissa! • i^iy
M u t t a Jos Scelballa on taito?^
kaupustella; I t a l i a n öljyxesiirsseji^
kansansa muita perihtöoikeuk^^
dysvaftalaisille ..rahamiehille
mielessä, että saisi ulkomaista «m
t u s t a horjuvan poliittisen a^^m
t u e k s i , : n i i n siitä saattaa m " * ^]
"[ realtzc (h« (orcrt. BBlH BL amT^B
that used will rm- [g Hl M wKL
play «very Doastblr HH BKt HL HL__
»npoDaKa:.i«t me for . H B B BKB ||B| XH^^ B BM
rKoiinting tncsc *ct« nV HH| Hj ^^^^ 1^^*
of ir.ice. bul my ron- Bj ^UH •H —^Hl
•cirnrrcnd Ihe f^tvity WB \ flB^H lii ^1 I H IH—
of ihe»* time» rcnuirc H | \ M B B B • H H H ^h^V ^BBB
titMt thf irurh loU " H \ M Mi • H H ^VP^ H M M
B. HARVEY MATUSOW
Inlrr.<luction by
A L H E K T E K A HN
hänen käsiinsä sellainen, ase.
p o r v a r i s t o n vaalitappio tulee
toman varmaksi. iifel
; J a jos I t a l i a n porvarit ja
amerikkalaiset . taustamlehensT^in
kuuttautuvat siitä, että ScelbasU^
o l e enää "käyttökelpoiseksi
Washlngtonto-matkans3 i^^^L
s i l l o i n saattaa käydä niin, että h * ^
hallituskautensa päättyy hyvin r
tämän vlerailumatkansa päättyr
j ä l k e e n . J . Känsäkoura.
. The former aid to Senator Joseph B. McCarthy, Is cnrrenUy
rflting a remarkable poUtlcal confession wbich msy caose major
pplosions. For the anthor of this confession, Harvey M»tosow,
p l o i l y explains Iiow he made a business of b w i n r false iHtaeas
how the American goremment made his bnsincM s profitable
P * . courtesy of the American taxpayer.'' (From the eotnrnn by
Ptew»rt Alsop.) ,
" I n a l i of the Utcrature dealinfT
w i l h t h e dark annaLs of cspion-age,
poUtical intrigue, and a n t i -
democratic con.spiracy, I know of
- n o more significant and remarka
b l e worJ< t h a n t h i s book. F A L S E
W I T N E S S , b y l i a r v e y Matusow.
F o r thLs reason if for none othcr,
I think t h c reader should bc
acquaintcd w i t h the facts bchind
t h e actual w r i t i n g and publica-
. t i o n of thc book . . . " (From t hc
Introduction by Albert K. Kahn)
I t SS an astomshmg xcmmcntary
o n thc tkmes wc hvc in that tho
namcs of so many Professional i n former:!
i n the U n i t e d States arc not
unfamUiar to Canadians. One of the
reasons being that thc daily paper?; .
have been highlighting .thcir lying
testimony bcfpre the M c C a r t h y committee
and othcr anti-democratic
bodtcs since tlic .start of thc CokI:
\.,,war. •]
T h e namc of Harvey Matusov/ i.s
also quite: f a m i l i a r . He Js^ kriov/n
as Joseph. M c C a r t h y o ''youth cxpert,'' '
a n d an ace witncss for Roy Cohn
wh06C "."peciäT talents". were a-od
; i h thc t r i a l of E t h c i and J u l i u s Rosenberg.
;Now MatU5ow has h l t the
• headiurics again. This timc he has
w r i t t c h a book, F A L 3 E >VITNE3'5,
w h l c h accordins to coIunrjii.st S{t-wart
' Alsop of the N T Y . ; H e r a l d - Tribune,
"may c a i i ^ i ^ l i t i c a l cxplobionä", Rc:it
assurcd t i i i s book will not bc made
V a selectlon bf the Boo' i!:-of-the-Month
Club, as «'as V/hittakcr Chamber*?
book "Ä T T N E S O . The reasons fcr
thiä are manifestly clcar.
F A L S E ynm^ESS details the s c a n -
daknis confessions of a professlonal
Informer. Por reasons best known
to hlmself. 2ylatusow tfells ihe Story
of tbe material w l t c h - b i m t s are made.
H e tel];» thc stoiy o i how l i e bccamc
:i prof(,-s.sionai informer for the F B I ;
• how he carned thousands of dollar.s
bcanna; fal.sc v.'Unes.-:; how he v/a.s
h d p e d by U.S. govc-nment officials^
to make his business a profitable onc..
— at the cxpcnss of the pcoplc.
Matuvnv v.a.s no yrdinai-v ''two- •
I i t informer". Hc made t h c " b i s -
t i j n c " . Hc supphcd cvidencc agaiast
proKrcssivc organizationa His cvi-
(Jencc cmvicted the 13. Communist
Icadcr.^;m thc U.S.A. l l c ^£;upplled
tvidcnce agaiast 150 peisoas. His
bald statcnicnt that he pensonally
know 10,000 Communi-sts m Ncv/
Y o r k City v,'a.s takcn at f ace valun
by the cöurts. The bigger the Iic,
ihq . morc he -«as . p a i d , the mors
v a J u a b l e h c bccamc to thc F B I . He
, le.stilicd against Owen Lattimorc,'
;fxpert on Pär F.astern Affafr.s,'
agaih-st trade uniori Icadcr.s and
c l h e n , . This is v-hat he rcVcalcd:
''Icllmaxcd my testimony Wjth
thc dramatic as.serlion that pwen
l.attiroore*.s boofcs were u-sed a»
the offlcial Communist party
gaiilc on Asia;. Once again, I told
a complctc faLsebood . I dldn't
care wliat happened to LatUmore.
I cared about ivliatvraNgoing to
happen to me. .My onfounded
»ttacks on Lattimorc ju»t placed
me in the role of cxpert of ex-,
perts. I had reached Ihe top «f
the ladder, I..attimorc wa« later
.. • ' i n d f c t e d . " ,•
fMatu,^o•.^' has already Hgncd a f l i -
; d i v i t s i n which hc admSls f a k c tef,t;-
Vmony./.' ,••'
A.5 one rcads this do^iuncnted book,
for Malusow quotes from files and
record-i which he k ^ t of meetings
a n d reports of conversattons one I»
i m p e l l e d to ask the questUm about
'<\U)!t2 forcos ni; tJif United States
! iiat jiroducc • .Maluf;ow.v and l l i c po-
;K!cal climalc- :n the U.SA. that
flfvate i n f o r m c r s t o t!:c .staturc of
l i i i t i o n a l heroc.s. Wc aro icmindcd
oi the Gorman Nazi.s who maoc
nritional ii»-rop:-. oJ dirjcnoraui.s and
.prrvtTt-s, be.st cxcinpIiJicd by Van der
Lijbbt and lP/;-.st Wo.s.s(;J.
F A L S E V/ITKK.S.S rJp.s apa.-t a
o . - n e r of 'the curtain and bnn^.s to
l:i:hi the dct^radalrjn and c'j,TUi»tion
tnc p o l i l i c a l . l J f c in thc U.S.A. —
tnc mcnace oi .McCartnyuim a n d the
.'•oijrcc of th(; v/ir/;h-hunt.
To pruvcnt |K;.'>;jie from 'carmn:,'
And just bcforc anyonc bcals us
to it wc i n i g h l say tliat tlicrc'.s mprc
truth than poctry to that thar' poetry
But w'hat we rcally had in the
back of our little r t d <lf you'll ex-cusc
thc cxprcsslon) hcnd was that
wc .''CC by thc papcrs that there Is
some Jikcllhood Diat Canadian B r c -
wcrics mlght bc charged with violat-
Ing the Combincs Act.
In case i f s .sUpped our minds thls
is t l i c same.Act which rcccntiy found
C G E . Canada Wlrc, Northern, P l i l l -
lip.s, ct. a i ; guilty of .prlcc f i x i n g , I n -
dccd, it is thc same act, It Is Indecd,
that also found rubber companlcs,
glass companlcs and many othcr up-holdcrs
of "our way of life" gullty
of vlolatlon.
.•Which jast gOc« to show us that
as Loncsomc GcOTge Gobel would
«ay, '•You just cah't hardly get any
compclitlon anymorc."
Thi-i sltuation, wc mlght say, Is
preLty dlsilluslonmg to thosc of us
who wcrc rai-sed on thc phllosophy
of Horatlo AlKcr. Horatlo. .thosc of
UH who can rccall wJll rccall, r c a l ly
p i f a c h c d good, Old compctltion as
ix-allv bcinK thc spicc of life.
Hr. as morc and more companlcs
.•;how morc and m o r c shps •twlxt
c o m p c t i t i i and thc fix. a» It wcrc.
d!.sillu.sionmcnt, llkc thc dcad rot, sets
;n; Then i l is that we iuiA wonder
if wc cati kcep on t r u s t l n g the slogans
and spec'chc«:f>r big tausincBS Intcrcelv
But to get back to Canadian
Brcwerlcst
Nov,' E. P l u n k c t t Taylor, who Is
the presldent of thc BrcwerlC6, clalms
tJicrc jast ian't any body to govcrn^
ment statcmcnts about anyChing being
rolten in the statc of fcrmcn-t.
aiioM And wc niuit a l l bccr thls In
tiu truth. t ; i . PM-.,. l c . r f u l «'^ ' ...e WP go hr^i-pmg to any half-
. , : . . u l l s OI Mat;..oW. rcrvclation. Irc . hockcd concluslons: •
. i u J y criRs\v ''..!atu~ov/.vv,'is,;.sc'nt.:into!
t f - . ' - ; P 3 I by the Co;n)nunist..s.. and to 1
B u l il'h morc or Icss alc-arming
, , • . . vvhen fjiie wn'jidcrB that E , P. pwn»
inukc h c r o c . of ^h. C.mrnunist«^by|^:^^^^^,._^^^^^ 3^^..
j;:iturc pf thc hysf.Tia i n tl^r; U.ÖA.
.: AIvSK \vrrNBSS' r<'vcaLi }JOw 1 h t
;!;cjir tactic in dtr/t-lopf^^J and ho;//
brands,'
And •/.Jion y/c gp our f a vorUe
,, , , r,» V. .1. . , v> pub f o r a no^^gin of our favorJtc brc*r
the black fortes .of McCarthy^-srn re- , ' . . - . • „ _„
•., , . f i.v.y '/'O can Jiavc our choicc of any onc
: , , of a do//;n or r/j branfis tarc'A'cd by
.,.'.'i;jrcc«, jucluding-ofhcsal agcncics. , , • ,
: -ITic wit<;h-h.;nt and Vhn ]^>v rW ; y o i r:know wiip . „ '/•
rur:^,, i . B i , Bu.;novJ in thc. U n i t . d ^ l ^ " ^ - ' ^ ^ ' '.^d'^'^n,a U. aU pomrs
.;-:ites today: T h i . '•bu.:n..>V' h a . ah | l i i . sunc m c b- . U l c - . t h c .amt;
• ;,;;nu«irta>c of SiöO.OOO.OfXj; and a j'-^^'-'•-••.•'nd
p:>vroll'covcrin:^ lW,r/>0 cmpif/yflfis. . : . ^
n only rcTlccU :how thc CJ.s: mono- ! N'-''*' «'^«-^ wa« all of tnl« ' frcc
f - i v Jntcrestv. l e a r t b e pöopJe. Albert | W « v i t : o n " rourtd and : abi/ut that
E. k a h n ha;i w r i t t - n a pov/crful i n - ' '»^ ' f r c c e„terprhcr«:' keep on
l;^xluction to tho bvo^. i n - p a r t : c x - ! telling UK thcrc )». onc .would cxpcct
•pl«;iiS«2 h';v/ t l u ^ b v / i : cam'-'t/> bei t h a t . t h : n g ^ wculd bc dlffert-nt. One
•Jijtteh •• woul'J cxpcct th&t '•frcc competition"
' F A I ^ K w n - i E 3 3 p;v;ni»0!,;to be-^j^^^tikl rcsult |n a price war, or onc
vo.-ne a b-st-.-.ci;-;.-. It is avalJablc , brand of bcer puttSng out a larger
U'jm the ..Midtow,'i Book .St^jre, 7W \^iVA<t, or /iome other such cf.»mpctl-
• .-.Bathurst; Street. .Toronto 4, Ontario. tipuÄ i^pc cf thlng. Such aA morcl
T.n? reguiar prlce of the cio.th bourid | " b r r r r r p s " per bottle.,
edition is «3 50 and is available io\ But no «!r, they Just <lon'tdo thosc
B r j k Union, members at a specSal i.ki.id of things. A n d J w h e n one con-reducÄlon.
i jsiders that the same presldent pops
up to prcslde at the confcrence» of
most of the brnnd nnmcs then if»
.sort of understandablc. It mJght be
tcrmcd a brcw-rocracy. Coz nbout tlic
hardcst person In thc World to corn-,
pote with. wc reckon, Is oursclf.
Now mlnd you wc know of wliat
we speak whcn wc make thls asscr-tlon
and scvcral tImcs wc have t r l cd
to competc wlth ourBClf. Ncvcr «uc-ccssfully,
we mlght add, as our a l t cr
ego would alway8 try to chCat.
• •, '. • • •.
In any cvcnt If we all walt Hkc
s t o u t : feIlows the governmcnt mlght
onc day druft a frothy documcnf
bcerlng on the matter. At s u c h a timc
Canadian Brcwcrlc8 and Its various
«ud-sldlarles wouId bc 'alcd bcforc
thc authorltics and, wc Imaglnc,
plcnty of cvldcncc could Ijc brouc;h(
up. Maybc. that fcllow Porter, who
has to do wlth justicc and such stuff,
wni bc In on the case.
Onc prcdlctlon we don't mlnd
making Is that If. such a case cvcr
docs come up wc'll bcb t h a t no matter
what labcl is put on the charge,
how the prosccutor botllcs up the
witncsBC8, nor how thc cvldcncc
bung» up thc B r c w l n g Companlcs, E.
P. wlll s t i l l have a kcg to stand 011.
Now wofxlcn you Just know that he
would?
"W}icn I arftcd the bosfi for a ralsc,
hc wa.s just Ukc a lanib."
"What did he .say?" :
" B a a ! " " '
t h a t respcct the festival a n d c o n gn
w l l l be great displays. of j n a n k in
hope and. ncccssity to live In pcj
and will dcstroy many of the 1
that thc war-makcrs have bccn (C4
mg the pcoplc.
T h c othcr aspcct of thcsc^ eve
the wondcrfuI cxperience that t
F l n n l s h - C a n a d l a n s w i l l have by p
t i c i p a t i n g i n them.
A s onc who was lucky cnough
taite p a n in the Bucharcst festt
flr.st of all I want to plctJge tha
w i l l do my best to publlcizc thc fc
vai and help 1 n t he formation o
C a n a d i a n dclcgatlon. I vould
urgc the readers of Club News
f a m l l l a r l z c themselves wlth fcst
plans. because the f c s t l v a b have
come the most Important cvcnt
the youth of the World. They \
been strong manifestations of
unlvcrsal deslrc of youth for pc
frlendshlp and a happy life. for 1
The Vancouver branch of the 1
nLsh Organizatlon and the youi
gcncratlon have started a unlted
fort to ralEc our quota of the fi
neccssa ry to scnd i h c s c dclegi
The first money ralslng affate wl]
a dancc on A p r l l 8th at the CUi
H a l l . Tlckcts nrc now on sale a
ccnts cach. T h l s wlll be onc of
blggcst danccs of the ycar, 50 c
and en Joy yoursclf and at thc .s
timc support a good causc. — H l
"Yritys To Combim
Gymna^tics With
Indoor Jump Me(
T o r o n t o .— Some timc ago It
announced in thc Vapaus thi
F C A S F mcn's gymuiustlc compct
would bc held In Sudbury ovci
Eastcr weckend at the same t in
thc Y o u t h Drama Festival.
Thesc plans have s l n c c bccn ch
cd and thc gymnastic compel
w i l l bc comblncd with the h
Jump champlonshlp wliich wl
held In Toronto Saturday. A p r ll
T h l s year thc gymn.istlc con
Ilon w l l l not bc a champlonshlp 1
but It is hopcd that cnough in
w l l l be aroused to make thls in
annual champlonshlp cvcnt. 'A,
tallr, of the compctltion are not
able. but it i.s undcrstood tha
p r o s r am wlll IncJudc high bar
ralJcl bars and mat work.-
T h e indoor Jump champjonshl
includc high Jump. broad Jumi
hop, step and jump In t h c thrce
dasses opcn, undcr 21 and und
Champiotmhip mcdats w'ill bc ;
dcd to wlnncr5 oi cach cvcnt
cJa.ssc» and In addltlon thrc
champlonshlp mcdaLs will bc
dcd t o .wlnncrs In the threc ch
T l i c Cathoilc clcrgy of Quebec rc-fuscd
Absolutien to any F r e n c h C a n a d
i a n who In any way asslstcd thc
Invadlng American troops of 1775—76.
DEFINITIONS
P a r k h i g Mctcr — the pausc
dcpresKcs.
Avcragc F a m i l y U n l t a huf
a wlfc and a finance company.
Supcrsonic Spccd — a t c rm u
dcscribc the rate of fast-flying o
l i k e jet airplancs, rockct shipt
two-wcek vacatlons,
C h u b b l n c s s — s u r p l u s gone to
Squash — a vcgctablc nam
honor of our ktds' chissrooms.
Afi.scnil)Iy Line —• an Indoo
track.
S a l a r y ~ a sum of money cor
ly paid we.'ikly.
l'ow.cr.Trust ~ an electric r
A pokcr gamc wajt i n progn
ccntly. An Engll.shinan .said: "
a j)?)und."
.SJioutcd thc American "I'I1
t o n ! "
".Mister, will you plca.se watt
package for mc?"
\'V4y dcar Madam. I ' in a M cn
P a r l i a i n c n l . "
" T h a f s all right. l ' l l trusl yo
KAKSI KUULUISAA ROMAANI
•
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Z . T O P E L I U S ;
VÄLSKÄRIN KERTOMUKS
3 O S AA
I Olia.: 811 lilvua ~ II f;aa; «2'J .sivua _ III o«a: «38 »iv
Hinta yhteonsä sidottuna $6.50
Topeliuksen Iklvieliättiivä hlst/^rialljncn romaani kahc
.vun kohtaloista ja Ihmeellisestä kuninkaanw)rmukse.sta
"monen miespolven ajan ollut nuorlM^mmc r a k k a i n t a lue
Se on teos, joka enemmän kuin mikään toinen on sas
11^ entisyyden teot, karBimyk;;ct, toiveet j a pettymykset »yväl
kansakunnan tietoisuuteen..
A N A T O L E F R A . N C E : .
PUNAINEN LILJA
;305 sivua — Hinta sid. $2.25
Tämän kiihkeän rakkau;jrorhaanin tapahtumat liikkuva^
vuaslsadan lopun P a r i i s i n ylhäJ;/in loisteliaissa salongeiss
»a kauniit naiset kuluttavat aikaansa korkea-arvoisten
splttcnsa r i n n a l l a haaveillen rakastajistaan.
' H L A l ^ C A A O S O I T T E E L L A:
YAPAUSPUBLSH
GOMPANYLIMIT
BOX 69, SUDBURY, ONT
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Vapaus, March 31, 1955 |
| Language | fi |
| Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
| Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
| Date | 1955-03-31 |
| 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 | Vapaus550331 |
Description
| Title | 1955-03-31-03 |
| OCR text |
J A -
T Ä T Ä
t v
Nä-tteiö. k u i a tuoUa ätn,
K u i a , missä? "•"
lai
air
i i .
te-
14
öitään
m-na.
vat
as-i
k -
to-l
a -
l i i -
m-us-
•al-y
h -
l an
i i in
l an
, - Tuo tuolla p j i a n n •.jerfe,,^. a *
j o l i meldaR kanssamnie .<:3n,aj;3 7 * ^
I /talla k o u l u i s a . • " •
— Tuo. j o l l a on parta. z^H
n» häntä enää? - 'f
— A U puhu joutavia, ex nir---
:uo:-caUan:ine ollut kenellaiaän
taa. • .• *^
— E i i ö o l e Iiuniniallista: että p i 'J
k5'set osaavat lentaa Suomeen £^1
tistäaaakka i l m a n karttaa ja koaiT)!-
s i a ? •••••
— Minusta olisi ihmeeU:sem;jai
jos niillä olisi sellaiset. *^
Eräs ohiolainen ilmoitti polUsii:.
että hänen autonsa oli .varastKtJI
sillä a i k a a k u n iiän oli ravintola^'
P o l i i s i r y h t y i etsimään autoa ja IÖTJ
: s en himasta.. paikasta minne OIEC
t a j a oli jättänyt sen^ Omistaja t
k u i t e n k a a n s n s i n tuntenur sitä.io^
k a sade oli huuhdellut ssn puhtaat
Kaivosvoitot kohosivat
lähes 4.5 miljoonalla
M o n t r e a l . — Canadan johtava
j y n , s u i k i n , hopean j a kemiaUae,
lannotteiden ; tuottaja Consolidatsä
M m i n g and . ^ m e l t i n g Ck). sai r i jj
vuoden touninnastaan puhtaaksi TO;.
t o k s i $24,659.964 e h lähes 4.5 m^fr
n a a d o l l a r i a enemmän kuin edellise!»!
A-uodelta, todetaan täällä julkaL^tiis-s
a yhtiön tilikertomuksessa. Yhtiön
palveluksessa oli vuoden lopulla jj
7,600 henkilöä eli noin 300 vähemmi^
k u i n e d e l l i i on vuoden lopulla.
Yhtiön- osake-enemmistön omistaa
C a n a d i a n P a c i f i c Railway Co
l l o -
ko-letä
,ks-eksi
k a -
tto-lan.
i?al-o
l i
•ne-i
g in
i r v i .
n an
ielä
hei-
3 i n -
uip-
Ima
l o in
uun
ve-k
un
ksla
i h in
t u l o k s i i n , ei voi nata ilmentää te
yhdellä s a n a l l a : .halkaisevia. Täajia
.netken 10 p a r h a a n tilastossa eri ma^
k o i l l a on valtava venaläistulva, aH
tilastoon m a h t u u aina runsaat puojei
venäläisiä, jonka lusaksi aivan rajcO-|
l a on tungeksimassa toinen mokoni
K u v a a v a n a esimerkkina voidaan m5:.i
n i t a 10,000 metrin luistelu.- joia
tä.hän mennessä ollut ja on yhä injJ
läkin h e i k o i n Neuvostoliiton lajeisui
E n n e n taman kauden alkua oli Stu-i
men Pentti Lammi o kaikkien aikoja
tilastossa kuudes, nyt han on pudo>
nut neljänneksitoista. Edejle onkii-vennyt
A l m a A t a n tuloksillaan vjji
venäläistä . j a yksi — tshekkiläineii!
5,000 metrillä venäläiset saavat a
p a r h a a n joukkoon 13 omaa nnestäii
Se on j o t a i n haikailevaa! .
T a l l a hetkellä Neuvostoliitto hallti-i
see. Melkoisella varmuudella voidaa
sanoa, että A l m a Atankaan tulaissi
eivät, elä ikuisesti. J o s l am loydetääsi
vielä parempi paikka,, on kenties joi
löydetty. . I t a l i a l a i s e t ovat nimittä!!
saavuttaneet Misunna-nim-.sessä p-kassa
. tasoonsa nafcdsn loistavia ai-koja.
• . • • I
Thi.^ f o u r s f t m a — compriscd of captain Mike Nykoluk. at left; vice- president Frank Buckland, manaser Stafford Smythc and coach
T u r k B r o d a — have something to cheer about, for the trophy they are holding is emblematic of junior hockey suprcmacy in Ontario.
The Toronto IVIarlboroswon the John Ross Robertson trophy in a 2-1 dectsion over the St. Catharines Tepees at Maple Leaf Gardcns
i n Torcnto, u h i c h gave them the best-of-seven scries 4-2. It wäs the Marlhoros' «rst OlIA junior " A " title in 23 years.
|Whst is the Woricl Made of?
rruu VIELÄ
LÄUKSESTA
199 uutta tilausta;
1 kesfken kova kilpa
^mmenen uutta t i l a u s t a tarkoittaen se sili
rskuukauden a i k a n a saanut kaikkiaan IS!
ineiden p a i k k a k u n t i e n l i s l a l l c nousi tanäii
i j a Port .Arthurin välillä on kehittynjl
melua pitämätiä tiukaniafnen kilpa rapioil-i
r t h u r i l a i s i l l a olevan vähän etumatkaa,
r a s t i : •
1 j a Tyyne S i i l m a n 2, kaikki Port .4rtlu-ta
t i l a n i t a osuuden ollessa 20. Walter K«-
tudburysta. mistä o n t u l l u t 38 uutta tibnsU,
1 uusi tilaus j a osuus tuli täyteen. Otti
usta j a o-aus t u l i täyteen. Helga Piesanoj
nostaen paikkakuntansa tuloksen n t l ^ |
uukauden viimeinen päivä, n i i n lopnllis*j
a ennenkuin vasta noin v i i k on kuluttu» kB«j
saapuu k o n t t o r i i n vihnepäivina hant
By J O H N S T A C H EL
From timc immcmorial mon have
•ondcrcd about whut the vvorld was
ade. of. Ancicnt mvths told how.
reryihmgin the , vvorld had been
ftaped from- pnmoval clay by some
od: cr had been formed in the
omb of some godrle.ss. Tliales, the
ir.st of the ancient Greck philoso-!
(h.ers, looked upon water at the cs-lenco
of a l i thmgö. D u r i n g the middl.e
iges earth, air, fire and v.^ater vvei^e.
lonsidered the four basic elements,
rom v.'hich cverything clse was built
in. , 'z'^' • •
With the rise and development of
nodern Scientific physics since the
.7th Century, i t was m e v i t a b l e that
he question of, the. constitution of
natter would be attacked on a scien-ific
basis. E a r l y m the 19th Century,
argely as a result.. of Chemical ex-,
lenments, the • atomic theory, o r i -
Inally proposed as a philosophic spe-ilation
m ancient. Greece, was re-,
med. Every ohjeet was found to be
lomposed of some combination of tmy
articles (today known to be only a
tew tnllionths of . a n mch in; d i a -,
meter) called atoms. There are only
1 limited number of different kinds
Df atoms, and a group of closely re-lated
kmds corresponds to each Chemical
element, of w h i c h 98 are known
» far.These atoms were t h o u g h t of
\i. IS prefectly hard, unchangeable, par-ticles,
incapablc of. any division or
change vvithin themselves. A U change
was thought to be caused by the
movement ahd combination of thesc
atoms. •. .
By the. cnd of tho 19lh Century,
expenments had £hown that thls
conccption of the atom was w o n g.
Tjie atom is = composcd of stil]
smaller parts, and undergoes ali
manner of divisions and changcs
w i t h i n itself; It was foxmd t h a t the
atom could be divided into two m a in
parts, a heavy nucleu£ and a group
of light partlcles named electrons
v h i c h - revolve around the -nucleus
something like the planets revolvp
around the sun. T h e electrons vere
»found to bear negative electric char-ges,
balanced by a positive electric
charge on the nucleus of any p a r t i -
cular atom. •
B u t most scientists s t i l l refuse to
draw the lesson that nature was
teaching them. If the" a t om was not
mdlvisible, and unchangeable, täiey
reasoned, then the particles that
make up the atom must be Indivis-ible
a n d unchangeable. So they start-ed
a search for the particles w h l ch
make up the atom. S i n c e at that timc
they knew of no change undergone by
electrons, they thought electrons f i t t -
c d the b i l l perfectly. The nucleus,
howevcr, v a s known to change, in
radioactive substances for examplc,
50 they started to look for the p a r t i c les
that made up the nucleus. They
found that ali n u c l e i : contained two
types of particles, w h i c h tliey named
protons and neutrons. The proton
was almost 2,000 times hcavier than
t h e electron, although still mfini-.
teslmally light, and had a positive
electric. charge; the neutron weighcd
about the same as a proton, but car-r
i e d no electric charge.
About 1935 many physicists again
thought they were nearing the cnd
of the road m thcir study of. the
nature of matter. A l i t h ^ häd to:do
was study the protons, the neutrons
and the electrons and they would u n -
derstand everything. But again, nature,
taught them the same lesson.
The existence'of the negative electron
was found to be inscparable f r om the
existence of a similar positively
charged particle, named the positron;
and both Avere found to unite • a nd
t r a n s f o rm themselves into a totally
different kind of matter, called r a -
diation. Now, most scientists unfor-tunately
could not.get the idea out of
t h e i r heads that matter could only
be little hard unchangeable balls,
s u c h as they had first conceived the
a t om and later the sub-atomic p a r t i cles
to be. So wlien a tran.sformalion
of this k i n d of matter into a r a d i c a lr
l y different kind, rcsembling hcat and
lipht, was found Ihcy started to speak
about the "destruction of matter.
Thi.s is nonscn.sc, of coursc. Wha
these c.Kpcrimcuts shoucd was tha
matter could not bc conccivcd of t;
any one unchangjng and. unchange
able form. It must bc taken ane
studied as it i i ' , not Ic^islatcd for.
As if this was not cnough, a studj
of very high energy nuclear. explo-sions,
by means of co-smic rays ane
the new atom-smashers, has bcer
t u r n i n g up onc new type of particle
after another, a l i of wh|ch transform
themselves into othcr typcs w i l h be-wildering
sTieed and variety. It hae
become a stale joke already tliQt
some confcrence on physics was very
d u l l because no new particle was a n -
nounced there.
These newer particles have been
divided into two rough groups. The
first.. c a l l ed mesons, range i n weight
betweon electron and the proton.
The second. called hyperons. are
thase which are hcavier than the
proton, but less t h a n t^ice as heavy,
There may wcll be others s t i l l hcavier
w a i t i n g to be discovered.
L e f s take a look at onc or two
of these new particles, almo.st all
of them. found since the war, to
see some of t h e i r d l z z y i n g properties.
The pi-mcson for example, wejghs
about 276 times as much as an elect
r o n . and aftcr an avcragc life span
of a fcw hundrcdmilllonths of a second
i t t r a n s f o r m s itself into a, mu-=
meson and a particle of radiation
How "Neuiral"
Is The Press?
ifc ;o so-i-alicil 'frec-prcss" abit* !
l o . u i Ui a neutra'"' nuiniicr m any f
quc.sc:o:i dfalTTie \vith labor? j
AVhy d;d virtualh- ovory ncvvypapcr !
m C;ii:ad:i takc t.*nc sido of the Ford 1
Co. i i u n n - H ; c recent strikc of LTA\V-.|
C I O mtinbcrs? And why is the piess j
alw;i\A 011 the side of the coinpanics 1
duriiKi .vivv labor disputc? i
Aion:;: \\i\h the fact that the ncw's- j
pape;- niaustry :^ lUelf big bu.sincss. j
and i h : i i . ih<; papcrs deruc mucii oi
th«ir rcvcnuc froni biR money ad-veriiicrs.
another hnk betweon pi'cs«
and business inteicsis has rcccutly
been underlmed.
The Midlaiul Prcc Prcs^^i Herald
recently notcd the f o l l o v i n g facts:
" N i i i e t y - f i v c pcrcent of cdilors of
Canadian wccklios, tvvice \vcekly and
thrce timcs \vcekly ntnvspapcrs have
served onc or moro terms as a president
of the local Chamber of Corn-merce
or Board of'Trade."
Sii(.'.n an npprcniiccslnp, it w i ll
readily bc .sccn. hardly cquips these
editors to be cither "'ncuirar* or
• unbiascd" on any question having to
Jo wit:3i the wclfarc of the workcrs
3S opposcd to the profit m t c r c s l of
the cornpaiiics.
%'aiicou»'er ''Kakarat**
Tou£:Ii Opposition
A atij-ouvcr. — AB tblh letUr
Jr4%'c,> llif .sunny farific roast. l o -
i\jty, MarrJi 2Jt.i. is an C K C f p t i o D.
MC liad a f alrly heavy f ali of « e t
Miou) thrrr mnaios ooly 5 days
4>r prriiaration itrfore Ihe *^KJI-kurat"
pui o n their flTKt conceri
in the rutturJi compelitlon in
uhicli tliry arc cnsaced.
On Marcli^20th the vL'ranaur-taJat"
displaycd tlirlr (alents
bpth as arlists and orcanlEcrs
%vlicn thry hrld their first affalr.
The conrert. «versone sermed to
acrcr, M-a.s first ela.vi and the
'•Kakarat" wUI have lo co some
to bcat it.
Ver>- soon wc'll Ict you linoiv
how tliings ATcnt. — HL.
Torstaina, niaalisk. 31 p. — Thursday, March 31,1955 Sivu
WORLD YOUTHFESTIVAi.
OF SPECIAL INTEREST :
%'aoroBvcr. — ' As cvcryone has unr tion to Uie problcms of m a n k i n d .,
doubtcdly already hcard, plans have
bccn made to scnd Finnish-Canadian
dclcgatcs to Europc thls eummcr to
participatc i n the Fiflh AVorId Youth
Festival In W»rsaw and In Uic World
Pcacc Congrcss Jn Helsinki. .
TJic Importancc of thesc gathcrlngs
i n rclatlon to the question of pcnep^'iTälso very Important. And that
and (ricndshlp cannot bc ovcr-cmpliasizcd;
To have thousands of
people from all nations gatlicr in
U i i s m a n n e r cannot but help to b u i ld
the fceling t h a t war8 offer no solu-
LAKEHEAD ACTIVITIES
INCLUDE CHAMP DRIVE
A N D L O S I N G O UT
IMoLlier: '\Vhat are you doing In
he pantry, T o m m y ? " .
Tommy: "Pighting temptation,
mother."
"1 said 'Play as you ncvcr playcd
) e f o i e"
. ' Y c s . but —" •
'Not as. thtnigh you'vc novcr playcd
j e f o i c ' !"
slmilar to the one the electron nnd
l o s i t r o n transform tlicmsclvcs iiitoj
called a ph^oton. The. mu-mcson,
veifrmng 210 timcs an electron.
loe.sn't •.-:lick around long cilher. AI-er.
a fow niillionth.s of a second it
•-urns i n t o . a n electron and a pair of
Jhotons. T h i s Icaves thc: electron frcc
LO go around looking for a positron to
oonibinc witih; AVhile the pliotons can
•undor .suitablc conditions). iran.s-
;orm ilifmsclvcs back i n t o electrons
.and positrons.
.Bcwildcred? So are thc physi-c
k t s . , T l i e abovc is just sample of
Che l o n g li-ft of known transforma-tions.
with nnw oncs turning up r c -
rularly. Physici.sts know that lliis
array of transformations conlain.s
thc an.swcrs to many problcms that
have bccn pu/zlniK Uicin, sucli a.s
what h o l d s thc nuclcu.s loKcthvr iti
the fir.st placc, but .so l a r « o one
has found a • t h e o r y to unify and
simphfy oilr understanding of thc
behavior of thoso d c m e n t a r y particles..
a.s they aie called. - •
Qut onc t h i n g should be clcar
by now. No. conccption o f ' . m a l l er
which regard.s i t ns made up of u l -
l i m a t e unlLs, fixcd, unchiingcablc and
mdivi.sablc and unrclaled to cach
other Is evcr going to gct anywhcre in
unravelling thc Story of the clcmcn-tary
particles. Only by viov/ing them
a.s i n constant motion, and change,
b o t h w i t h i n and w!thout, and m le-latlonship
with ali the ol/hcr.s, can
v/o advancc. Wc mu.st bc prcparcd to
examme, as .wrnc pioneor.s are, thc;
nUernal E t r u c t u r e of thesc particles,
to sec the iicw v. o i l d s cach of them
c m t a i n s .
Port Arthur, -r- Spring's In the air,
anu cvcn thc Lakchead has acqulrcd
that gay utinasphcre whlch comcs
w:th sprnig. Why. I don't know; onc
look outside and you .would swear
t h a i i f s mld-January. B u t cold as
u IS you can't escapc the fact tlmt
s p r i n g is hcrc, v h i c h means morc ac-t
i v i t i c s for all t l i c clubs and organl-zations.
O f coursc. thia docsn't mcan
that the \vintcr has been idlcd away
cithcr. AU the youth groups have
bccn participatlng i n various actlvl*
ties since f a l l . AfclUetlc clubs I s k u , E lo
and thc K a m Tlgers, instructcd by
Paavo Voutilainen, (have carrlcd on
g ym classcs wcekly, and partlclpated
m scvcral conccrts throughout. the
vvinlcr.
: O n the othcr hand, Uic Lakchead
Champion committee has sccn a sucr
ccisful w m t c r . . T h c fund drlvc which
took place in January and Fcbruary
kcpt us hopping, but wc camc
through with honours and rcached
our Boal. Now, the sub drive Is on,
and nnturally we'd Ukc to acc thls
as successful as the fund drlvc. Af
ter a l l . what Is morc Important than
jiromotlng the c i r c u l a t l on of a papcr
such as Champion, cspcctally Into thc
homcs of young peöple. Vfherc clse
can they galn such Information and
knowIcdgc as In the pagcs of C h a m pion,
whlcli truly Is the volce of
young Canada. W e urgc evcry youth
group to bccomc "Champion cons-clous"
and to pass It on to thclr
frlends.
•Riesc y c a r l y drlves for funds and
subs mlght involvc a. l l t t l c extra
•work, but thcrc'5 also fun a n d plea-sure
Involved too. Herc, In the L a k c head,
we are p l a n n l n g a big cvcnt to
closc of f thc drivcs w l t h a bang. T h ls
Mvlll be i n thc f o rm of a spaghetti sup-per.
served f r om 6.30 tlU 8 P. tM., f o l -
lowcd by a floor 8how, and a n cvcn-i
n g of danclng. T h i s affalr vvlU be
h e l d In the Y o u t h Centre, 316A Bay
Street, on A p r l l 9th.
•VVc hope you"ll a l l make a «iiccial
cffort to bc thcTc to support C h a m pion
and, of coursc. partako In a
'vcry plcasant c v e n l n g . — A & A.
What's Brewin'
BY BOB WARO
7/ compciUioft's thc "spicr oj tijc"
Plcasc IcU mc, I ctUrcat
IlV/v is it that öin businrss finni
Just ncvcr do compctc?
The Confessions of a Professional Informer
liselle
e, Joo
n i n -
I b a l la
. että
tupen
i, ^/,ei
i s t i en
iLsten
l u n l s -
sanah
e i h i n ,
Ijöitä.
jraval-
1 a n -
ä. •. •
i, että
: e t t i in
i e r i -
i l s m in
Inaali
hdykr
että
t u k ea
k o m -
istieto
In a r -
I t a -
nteen,
enää
o m i n avuin ja omin voimm valla^^
pysyä: Italian porvarit tarntser^
kuulemma 'riittävästi apua" Atlantt^
tältä puolen vallassa pysyäkseen.
Tämä sellaisenaan lyö yhteen
den uutistietojen kanssa., joissa M
r o t a a n p o l i i t t i s t en huomicitsijain olej
v a n sitä mieltä, että Nennin jcötH
m l l l a sosialisteilla ja Tcgliatin;J*1
t a m i l i a kommunisteilla °"
s u u r i kannatus, että asiain Dyl||
sellään ollessa on hyvin niabdollig
että ne - v o i t t a v a t h a l l i t u s a i^
vuonna 1958 pidettäivissä Italia^ 3 ^
sissä vaaleissa! • i^iy
M u t t a Jos Scelballa on taito?^
kaupustella; I t a l i a n öljyxesiirsseji^
kansansa muita perihtöoikeuk^^
dysvaftalaisille ..rahamiehille
mielessä, että saisi ulkomaista «m
t u s t a horjuvan poliittisen a^^m
t u e k s i , : n i i n siitä saattaa m " * ^]
"[ realtzc (h« (orcrt. BBlH BL amT^B
that used will rm- [g Hl M wKL
play «very Doastblr HH BKt HL HL__
»npoDaKa:.i«t me for . H B B BKB ||B| XH^^ B BM
rKoiinting tncsc *ct« nV HH| Hj ^^^^ 1^^*
of ir.ice. bul my ron- Bj ^UH •H —^Hl
•cirnrrcnd Ihe f^tvity WB \ flB^H lii ^1 I H IH—
of ihe»* time» rcnuirc H | \ M B B B • H H H ^h^V ^BBB
titMt thf irurh loU " H \ M Mi • H H ^VP^ H M M
B. HARVEY MATUSOW
Inlrr. |
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