1955-07-07-03 |
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i ei minulla ole ollut co, 1 lopetin koulun. ietysti n i i tä kertoja, jolloia lyt johonkin pitääksgai • * • assahtanutta miestä talon ratentamiseasa Yi ti naulan kerrallaan nau-' piti osan nauloista mntta • menemään. • änä heität mensmaän nifai loja? • roska lalissa on kanta 135; ä. ^ ' sinä. huliu. Nehän orat 1 seinää varten. presid. ihlassa 1 ja kulttuurisen kansia-toteuttaminen kaikkien ille, jotta ylläpidettäisiin ihimillistä edistystä. • järjeiO-elma. taloudellin«i n alistaminen, uhkausten n käyttäminen valtioiden ihteissa" ovat sitävastoin cijöitä ja synnyttävät olo^ tilanteita, jotka valmis-raä sodalle. iteet, jotka ovat yhteisiä hmisille kautta maailman autta maailman rautfan-at ilmaisuma. ovat epäi-ikreettisia tekijöitä. Niininen täytyy olla kaikkien ääi-ana, Jotka näkevät sen UUSI sota merkitsisi. : keskmaisen kunnioituksen • rauhan periaatteille jot-oittaneet. sitä työtä, joka tämän kansainvälisen ko-miseen ja joiden myös on muorana sen tulevassa ila on kunnia esittää tälle Maailman Rauhanko-lidaarisuuteni ja toivoni ön saavuttavan kohokoh-anisuuden asian tyydyt-jna. in yliopiston oittaa maan Kiinan,; ,—. Columbia yliopiston ;en suhteiden professon-iffer sanoi taalla heinät ssaan puheessa, että Yh-ulisi tunnustaa Kiinan alta ja kannattaa sille kan antamista YKisaa. myöskin olevansa sitä :iinan kanssa tulisi sopia ' toisten saarien kysymjfk-enmielLsyydet saattavat n, jolla ei tulla nutaan arä pääkal- .ruotta talia. — 54-vuotias An-jrtti meni sairaalaan ja inen päastaa otettaisiin "Olen viuneaikolna por. paankipua" valitti han. issaan todettun olevan cä ^veitsen terän pala r t arvelee jaancen sinne en olleen tappelun su- •uoksi kiinni suta, että todella. niin liuonosti lily Press sanoo — että ninallainen lehti naJtö ilmalla. Qon tässä yliteydessä Kai-shckin "ballitns" lyös tilastotietoja, Ja tävia kuin ne ehkä itä ilmenee, että yksi Lbko Taiwanin (For-npoikaislosla on nyt ja Joutuu turvauto-hin, mistä kiskotaan nnattoman korkeato Ja monet talonpojat suuressa velassa, elää minkäänlaista laita ovat niin "onnelli-vat vielä paikallisilU ilta lainan. Joutuvat laan 50 pros. Ja jopa enttia korkoa. Niin nne. että keskivarak oJUta jää velkojen J» ksun Jälkeeii vain « idösta omaa käyttöä i siitä pitää hän« enlaista veroa. !«• dot ovat luonnolliscstt Lvälehden toimittajani kuten sanottu, kaii-limpia ovat näkevät, mutta tod-nasta - h psivat. Jahka ne oni 1 niitä toistetaan kyl-iti. näiden nakevte» n a lU katsoen, h " - 1955 valtavan snnri inadalafaista-hoo-in kansallisesta W lknperä»tään be*^ ja iiskonnpnfefa*» a J . kieltäytyy vää sokeata. Käniäkoor»-, The mtjr vonng Canadlans «ho be leaviiv shortly for the Fifth Worid. Touth Festival in WaKaw «m have an exceptional opportnnlty to meet youth of over a 100 lands according to recent announcements of the International Preparatory Conunlttee. The foUowing will give an idea of the compositlon of the Chinese dele-gation whlch wiU include more than 600 partlcipants: China! Who WDuldn't like to see that beautiful country, its centuries Old culture, vonderful songs, dances and theatre, the goodnatured smiling faces of the people. For Festival par-ticipants i t will almost come true, for suddenly they will find themselves Viesti Athiefes Add Inferesf To Beaver Lake Meet -Next Sumray ar tue seaver Lake fieid sports enthuslasts wlll sse what will almost amoimt to a .prevlew of Lijttojuhlas. The occasion is a sports meet being aponsored by Speed A . C. of Whitefish and i t promises to be an exciting af f air. Even the local ath-letes can make the competitions hot in ali the events but i n addition to the local clubs' participating, word häs been received from the Viesti A . C. in South Porcupine that the club vcill be represented .by a strong con-tingent of athletes.' . That of course maana that there should be some very close competi-tion in the under 21 class 100 and 200 metre events between the • two top sprintera of the Liitto Roy Ranta and transported to Ohina, appiaudihg their cultural programmes, cheering theu: athletes and ;.mixing with : the young people of Chijia. 'How: cbmie? Why when they meet the Chinese delegatibn of course, and just to shqw what we mean lefs take a look at how it is made up. They are aotively preparihg for the Vth Festival spixrred ön by the AU-China Federation pf Öemocratic Youth. the Central Committee of the China New Dempcratic Youth Leaguc, AU-Chinä Students Federation, A l i - China Athletic Pederatiori, the Musi-ciäns Association and öther interested organisations. . The delegation ; of more thän 600 is now being formed and vi^ill include young representatives of different natiohallties i h China, leading wörkers, studeints, etc.: Ali the artists will form a grand youth ensemblei and there wiil also be ä sports tearti as part of the delegation.; Among the items of the splendid programme they will present arie music and dance, the PekUig Opera, acrobatics, etc. : . , Mäny of these are specially..written, composed arid produced for the Festival; chösen during music aiod dance competitions. . nmmm Meet the Chinese Delegation To the World Youth Festival Tauno Saari. , The Viesti grcup wlll also make i t hot in other events as the club reporta it \vill send "a whole carload of athletes". Among them .we"can probably fxpect to see Pentti Pentila who wi> be giving the boys a few pointers in the hammer thro\v. . < The program calls for 5-events in the open, boys under 21 and under 17 classes compoa?d of the following • events:,. . • ,• '. • 100 m., 200.11., shotput. discus and bröadjump. The women's open and girls under 16 classes will compete-in a 3-event composed of: 60 m., ahotput and broadjump. Other events will include an 800 m. run and a 4.xl00 m. relay as well as a 60 m. race for children under 12. Additional events will be added to accommodate the visiting athletes. MUTILATED Wagg: 'Say! More than one person has been guilty of . mutUating the books I lent them, but my latest ex-perience caps the climax." ^ Wigg: "What was it?" Wagg: •'! lent Blank my dictionary-last Week and yesterday he returned it vvithout a vord." : China's youth art: ensemble to the coming World Youth and Students Festival i n Warsaw has drawn up Its programme. The ensemble v i i i com-prise 365 members. Also included are folk dances of the Miao people i n Southwe8t China, the Harvest Dance of the T a i people i n Yunnan Province. the Frlendship Dance of the Tibetans, the dances of the Uighurs In Sinkiang Province. Dances of the Han nationallty Include the traditional sword, silk and dragon dances and "lo Peasant Girls on a Spring Excursion." The ensemble's chorus wiU present "Safeguard Peace with Frlendship." specially composed for the Festival. Other songs include "Roar. Yellovr River," part of the Yellow River can-tata by the fomous composer, the late Hsien Hsing-hai, songs of the boat-men of Szechvan, the herdsmen of Inner Mongolia, and folk songs from other parts of the coimtry. Weil known songs from the Soviet Union and Poland are a popular fea ture of their repertoire and they are bringmg their very best films. China's biggest ever sports delega tion to an international event wUl be coming for the l i n d Youth Sports Meet. 180 stiong, they are In inten sive training for men's and women's track and field, basket-ball, volley ball, table-tennis, swlmming, gymnas ties, football and weight-lifting. An exhibition showing theh: life and their determination to defend pieace is being prepared by the Chinese youth. Enthusiasm is the keynote ö: the participation i n competitions for musical compositions and the International Fine Arts Competition, F i - gures to date show that 140 entrles have been chosen from the first elimi nation stage. to take part i n these two competitions. Some thirty oil paintlng, wood carv-ings, water colours and sculptures will be completed. Melitchik, a young student at the Central Music Institutle Foolish or not, the " H ö l m ö l ä i s e t" A r e a Part of Finnish Folk-lore Anyone accquainted with Finland and with a smattering of the language a bound sooner or later to hear stor-les of the Hölmöläiset — the Foolish • Folk. Nobcdy is quite sure from where these storiesoriginate, so i t is usual to class them under the con- .venientheading-of folk-lore. MOTt Finns know the Hölmöläiset either from their school-books or from "Maamme Kirja'', Book of Our Land. Written in 1875 by Z. Topelius, faaious poet and teller of children's tales, this book also contains an intro-duction tö the Foolish Folk. "Somewhere in this länd is a village by the name of Hölmölä, and there liVe the Höhnöläiset. the inhabitanta of Holmolä. These Hölmöläiset are very careful people and consider ,well before undertaking anything, SO that no harm may come through too much haste. Concerning them are told . . . many . . : clever undertakings..." Holmolä, according to Pietari Han-nikainen ("Valvoja" 1899 p. 1748 ). is it village in the jjarish of Ruokolahti. so.Tie iifteen odd miles from the present Eastern frontier and not far from Imatra. Hannikainen made the firat literary mention of the Höhnöläiset in iiis play "The Conjuror^' (Silmänkääntäjä 1845), in which the charac-ters are "foolish folk"; Whether it was he who fu-st connected the vUlage >ith tl:e Word hölmö (fool, simpleton) or whether he got the idea from somewhere else does not appear to be certam. , Professor E . N . Eetälä; i n a veiry informative article published i n the Journal "Virittäjä" for • 1912. telia us that the first. written coUectioh p f Hölmöläiset stories Is to be found in a little Huvi K i r j a or amusement book .^hich he: says, vvas translated into Finnish from German. - The original .author was a German poet. Gustav Benjamin Schwab, and the Hölmöläi-ast, stories in the Huvi-Kirja come from that author's."Die Sohildbur-ger". The translator may have ta-ken the name of Höhnöläiset from Hannikainen's play, as a suitable equiivalent for the German. This suggescs that the -Hölmöläiset may have both foreign and literary blood. Neverbheless aiis. any F i n n and he'll teli you that the PoolLsh Folk belong to the legends of the Finnish folk. The stories are very Finish In that they deal with matter, of f act, e very day events like the " K a l e v a l a " they contain little of the.fantasy and fairy World SO prominent i n Nordic tales. Perhaps the ljest-known story is the following, here translated falrly-frecr ly from Topelius',version. It is called. THE HÖLMÖLÄISET BUILD A COTTAGE ' The «ölraöläiset built themselves a cottage and made it so solidly that they forgot to leave a wlndow.in the Wall. When the cottage was ready they found it rather dark and con.si-dered for a long time how to get the däyllght in. In the end they had a good idea: they would fetch i n the light with a sack. So they opened out the aick to the sunshine, tied it up carefully and carried it into the cottage. Here they opened the sack but to everyone's surprise the cottage was no lighter than before. While they were standing amazed at this unexpectied dissapointment, Matti hs«>pened to pass by and hear of their trouble, Weil said Matti give me a hundred marics and I I I bring the light i n for you. The Höimölälast ,were dellghted to get daylight sp cheäp and at oncfe pald the prlce stipulated. Then Matti cut a hole i n the wall, and at once the sunshine poured Into the cottage. So pleased wei-e the Hölmöläiset at this discovery that they decided to cut out the whole Wall, They got enough daylight now. but at the same time the cottage f eli down. Matti of ten appears In these stories, He asems: to represent the ordlnary. common-sensical Finnish "man-in the field" (for these tales a l i deal with nu-al or forest events). Sometimes; however. the Foolish Folk have to ma-nage without Mattl's asslstance, aa i n. THE HÖLMÖLÄISET GO HUXTING . One day the Hölmöläiset set out to hunt the bear, When they reached the bear's den the first thing they did was to sit down and eat a hearty breakfast. After this they held counr cil, and decided that ^Pekka should crawl into the den firat to bring the bear out. For safety's sake they fas-tened a rope to his leg. If there should be any trouble Pekka wäs to kick. and his comrades would puli him out. So it was agreed. Pekka crawled into the den, and when he was well Inside the bear blt his head off. Pekka'a legs quivered.a little. and that was the end of him. Outside, his comrades discussed the mat£er nieanwliile: "He kicked just now. I'ts certalnly none too pleasant inside there." Then they pulled Pekka out, and Pekka was headleru. "Yes, really headless!'' sald the Hölmöläiset, and they held coun-cil as to what this might mean. One of thenj was of the opinion that it was not entirely certain whether Pekr ka had had any head when he crawl-ed into the den. "WeH" said a second "P' can teli you about that; I notlced di^tinctly how his beardi anoved when he was eating peas for breakfaist." (The foregoing article by Philip Blnham was orlglnally publisCied in the 'Finlandia PIctorial.") of the Mongolian national minorlty In China, has revised his own composl^ Uon: " A Sun Whlch W1U Never Set Is Rislhg Over the Plains"; composed orlglnally for soloists it wm now be sung by a choir and presented at the Festival. Young workers from Peking. Shanghai and Ohto-te-Chen are maklng embroidered and china glfts. Just some of* the many that are b^big made throughout China for the delegation to take to the FestlvaL HOW T i l E Y A B E P R E P A R I NG FÖR WARSAW The young people of Chtaa are working assiduously on their pror gramme, and a host of actlvitles are und6r. way. A national festival of music and dahce began i n P d d n g on February lOtli and lasted two months. It aimed to encourage cultural and leisure actlvitles among the popula-tion and to bring out and develop young talent and provlde new and interesting themes for participation In the Festival. , The 801 amateur artists whocom-peted belonged to 10 dif ferent natlo-nallties and Included worker8 and students from 8 citles, peasants from 13 provinces and rallway workers from dif ferent parts of the country. It was preceded by similar events on a local scale wlth more than 30,000 people taking part. The majorlty of the 3.500 peices performed by these amateur artists were folk songs and dances. Many were also composed by the artlst themselves. LAKEHEAD FESTIVAL TO BE ANNUAL EVENT A concert at the Finnish Labour Temple. 3 U Bay St.i Port Arthur, last Sundsy, wound up the F i r s t North- «restem Ontario Youth Festival. Over one hundred young people participat-ed In the three-day pelebration which was in honour of Canada's fiSth tirthday. On Friday, the 24th. a (Midsummer Night dance was held at the Isku Park. Saturday a n evening of one-act plays was presented in Fort WilUam and the ybung actors and actresses most of whom had no previous acting experlence^ were high-ly commended on their performancea About thirty young athletes compe-ted Sunday for Festival prizes and showed sklll In their accompllsh-ments. The highllght of the festival was the presentation of a mass gym-nastics display and pyramids in which fifty yo^ung people took part. On opening the 'afternoon sports Wally Sloboda festival committee chairman introduced Mr. George Wardrope M P P who congratulated the young people on their Initiatlve and assured them the Ontario govemment was ;100 percent behlnd such celebra-tions In honour of Canada. He pald a glowing trlbute to Paavo Voutilainen, aports and gym instructor, for his devoted efforts in training and developing healthy minds and bodies In the young people Mr. Wardrope was followed by brief greetings from representatives of organizations spon-sorlng the festival. Then sporta par-ticipants and spectators unanimously adopted a resolution afflrming that the sphit of friendly sports competi-tlon symbolized their wlsh for "a C a nada free from war and firm In f r l - endahip with ali peace-loving people of the World." and endorsed the World Appeal Agalnst Preparatlons for Atomlc War with greetings to the World Assembly for Peace then being held In Helsinki. Finland. Greetings were received from young people in Toronto and WInnipeg. A speclal greeting arrlved firom Jacques Denis president of the 90 mlllion strong World Federation of Democratic Youth, The maas choir c f forty young peo^ ple opened the .Sunday concert wlth th&singing of "O'Canada". Tbe choir sane 'International Youth Song*^ and "Making Hay". Other song groups contrlbuting to the program vere the "Folk singej:s" and the A . U . C C . Youth Choir. A.vocal solo was glven by Elizabeth Werbowetskl accom-panled by Sonja Donolovitch. A n out-standlng feature was the acrobatic adagio by A l l i Kaah^la and Paavo Voutilainen. Pyramids and free, mo- ,vementQ were done by K a m Tlgers and men^s calisthenics by: the Isku P,!o and Tigera Athletic Clubs. Diane Baturniuk of the Co-op Cultural Group performed a tJallet on polnts. This group also presented "Puttlng on the Style" and "MIstress Bond" w i ^ Miroslav Papich, Gwen 'nirower, Margaret Hämäläinen and Diane B a - turnlak. A group. ballet waa done by Adeline Arynlok. Betty Kohut. VIrgir nia, Dzatko and Joyce Scobak. A n original poem was reclted by Carlne McMaster. Joan Walengo played two classical piano selectlons. Oroup dances also enjoyed by the audlence were the Slovak dance '^Karlcky" and a square dance. Pat Dejonkere, Grace Bradord and Catherine Trebendls gavb instrumentoi numbers. Directors were Wally Sloboda. Don Currie, Anhe Domifiiy. Anne Nazarec and Paavo Vuotilainen. William Trylinski was master of ceremonles. T h e festival was an outstanding success from beginnhig to end, bring- Ing together over one hundred young people i n sports. drama. song. dance and music. The festival wlll become an annual event and next year should prove to be an even greater celebra-tion of youth for a Greater Canada. .• - ' •- •'• •'• .' Torstaina, helnSk. 7 p/— Tbursday, JuJy 7,1055 T SOUTHERN NEIGHBOURS BY BOB WARD The Ward's 'neigl^bor to the south' is a mighty swell guy. . The boundary between us and our nelghbour is undefended and has been that way ali the time we've lived In our present home. Our neighbor and us taik back and forth over this 'undefended boundary'. We exchange ideas, gardenUi« hints and the time of day. T h i s Fall we are golng to'exchange some plants and perennials. Our mlssus. and our nelghbor's wife qxchange reclpes, magazines, and chat about the problems of ralslng children. In this regard our neighbor'8 wife feels that. the pocket size books on child psychology aren't as good as the weightier cloth <bound books. The way she feels is that the heavier books make a greater "impression" on the children; and partlcularly so when applled to the seat of leamlng. I n the Fall our nelghbor gives pears and apples from his trees to our kids. We give them stuff from the Ward back-acher. So you might say that there. is con-siderable north-south trade between the nelghbor and oursehres. And we imagine that' most neighbors have similar good relations. installations i n the Ward back yard. Radar |vould have to be installed to protect our northern frontier agalnst possible attacks o n his apple trees by bugs from Macintosh Reds (if you'll excuse the expression.) "Ward," he would say to us one day. "we have to defend ourselves from the menace of Red-cheeked children who are likely to attack me through your backyard and I'm going to have to set up Defense Headquar-ters i n your house." And if we, as a Citizen, were to follow the policy of 'our' boys who defend 'our way of life' up. i n Ottawa, we'd say, "Why. sure nelghbor, you Just take over our house if you want to coz we know there is no greater menace ,to us and,'our way of hfe' than the threat of being attackeä by an army of Red-clieeked children." We were thinking about our good nelghbor to the south recently. We had Just read two newspaper reports^ one by Lester B. Pearson, theother by C D . Hovfei on why Canada should give more and more to USA (Canada's nelghbor to the south) and get less in return. And we got to wonderlng how the attitude of government would apply if It was adopted by our nelghbor i n our community. The way we figiured It out is that, based on Canadlan-USA 'good nelghbor' policy^ we'd sell him our 8traw-berrles for five cents a quart, then he'd sell us back the j am for *1,00 a ar, We'd pick our onions, hand them over the 'boundary' to h im and then buy the pickles at a fabulous price. We would harvest the Ward corn (and that requlres some harvesting we're told) and our 'nelghbor to the south' voiiid can i t and s e l l i t back to us. To ''defend' his own property and, of course, the Interest he l i ad In ours, our nelghbor would want to establish ifAZY HERB by KALLAS BUTOADDVS JNSURED./ Facts are though that at this community level — at a level where the grasping, power-hungry, taking over, greedy wishes of a nelghbor wouldbe SO obvious he just wouldn't get away wlth it. We'd teli him"Now look here you, we're golng to can our.own strawber-ries and everything else that we grow. We aren't golng to let you get away with this kind of nonsense." As to having a nelghbor set up traps. snares, radar, gun installations, antl-Red-cheeked • kid<i interceptors, etc., we'd teli him togo and drop down a big sewer. ., And, indeed, If any. Citizen in our community was to establish \ h e kind of 'good nelghbor' relations which Howe, Pearson. St. Laurent, etc. fol-low in Canada'8 dealings with USA, the community would have such a person committcd to a mental institution. Yet this is precisely what 'our' (jov-emment is doing; Canadian iron orc Is sold to USA for as low as $1.00 a ton and then sold back to us In f i n - Ished Steel and other metal products* at sky-high • prices, Puipwood, ilu-, mlnums nickel, a.*>estos, and ali of our other natural re.sources are taken at bargain basement prices and sold b?ck to us ä t the hlghe«t price possible. Like the chap v/ho splt agalnst the wind vve get thlngs back alrlght — but rlght in the eye, : .Government goes even further. Canadian geologists search out our mineral wealth, then government turns it over to USA big shots, USA armed forces are ali over Canada, USA "experts" invade evcry:a8pcct of Canadian life. Basing ourselves on experienccs wlth our 'neighbor to the south' in our community, the carryings-on at a national level Just arc'n't nelghborly. In our community we wouldn't let .•juch a thing go on. It's hlgh time that. Canadiana everyv/here told 'our neighbor to the j south', and the polltlclans v/ho .<?i»p-port him, that we've had enough, Lefs buikl our own country. Sure, it'5 grcat to be "good neighbors", but let'» get our nelghborly relations on a level where Canada 1» consldered first. Coiripefifions To Provide Training For Aflilefes The Old saylng goes that competi-tlon is the best .training for athletes. Without going into the proa and cons on the que.stion, this seems to be the guiding factor in the Sudbury Dls-trict as far as the perlod leading up •to the Lilttojuhlas is concemed. A number of meets have already been held and-aeveral more are coming up before the big-weckend when ali sports minded people will be hcod- Ing for South Porcupine.^ . . The Speed iponsored meet at Beaver Lake this weekend wlll be follow-ed by an Alerts sponsored affair the followlng weokend. July 17 i n Sudbury, • • , The events for this meet Include a 5-ovent for both open and under 21 boy's classes composed of the follow-ing events: 100 m., shotput, Javelln hlgh jump and hop. atep and Jump, • The children under 14 will be able to test their abllities in a 60 m. race, iPlaas are already being formulated to have an cxtcnsive training meet on the final weekend before the Liltto- Juhla.s. More w i l l b e said about It as the time draws closer. THE L I T E K A B Y GENIUS The professor of F.ngllsh and the Instructor of Engineering were dinlng together in the Paculty Cafeteria. During the course of the meal, the fcrmer apoke: "I had a rather peculiar aaswer in class today. I asked who wrote the Merchant of Venice and a young freshman replled, "Pleaa3 sir, it wa8- n't me!" " H a , ha," laughed the Engineering Instructor, "and I suppose the little rascal did It ali the time," , THE HAND OP FATE She's a suiclde blonde her own hand. dyed by Hebinki NeetiOQ Places &eat HOI» In Big Four Neeting The foUMring. Appesl lo «he Publle opinion of ali NaUons «as adopted by the IVorId Assembly > for Feace. «hlch UM ia IlelsfnU, Finland; from June 22—29, 1955. For the first time i n ten years. in a divided worId. and thanks to the efforts of public opinion, the heads of the Four GreatPowers are going to meet. O n them rests heavlly the responslblllty of unlversal hope. Their first duty wlll be to overcome their mutuai distrust. The •World Assembly for Peace, whlch has brought together Uierep-resentatives of 68 countrles, has es-tablished wlth certalnty that in spite' of deep differences. In^ splte of diver-slty of opinion^ agreement: can be; reached on Important points and that negotlatlon can at this very moment solve a great number of problems, It la World opinion whl(Jh has now risen agalnst the policy of force, agalnst milltary blocs. the arma-ments race, and agalnst the terrl-fylngdanger of atomlc war. The Ge-neva Agreements. the end of the war in Indo-Chlna, the Bandung Confe-rence, the' neutrallty of Austria, the Belgrade Declaratlon, bhese are ali the fruits of tihis - awakening of opinion which has been cxpressed In the attitude of govemments. On the problem of. dlsarmament and of atomlc weapons, which up t i l i now has reached deadlock because of stubbom opposition, the: points of vlew have come so close together that agreement is now only a questlon of goodwill. On the problem of .security, the princlples odopted by the Bandung Conference have proved that throughout a continent peaceful. c6l-laboratlon between countrles of dif ferent systems can be based on Ideas such as those whlch were proclaimed by China and India. The Helsinki Assembly has shown that, if it takes public opinion Into account,: the Big Four Conference must mark tlie first stage of a Eu-- ropean structure guaranteeing security to ali the States of Europe and settlng them on the path of close economlc and cultural co-operation. This structure is bound up with the reunlflcallon of a Germany saved from the. rebirth of militarism and remalning outside any militajy coall-tlon. In: the same spirlt, the B i g Four Conference must prepare by negotlatlon for the evacuatlon of forclgn troops from the Chinese Island of Taiwan (Formosa), I t must «ee to the strict implementatlon of' the A g reements on Indo-China concluded in Geneva. It must allaw the United Natlons Organlzation to acqulre unl-versality by welcoming the Chinese Beople's Republic, But forces «tm exist that favour the cold wair and set themselves agalnst the bringlng together- of .the Four Powers, The Helsinki As.sembly ap-peals to the opinion of a l i the natlons of the v/orld to oppose th^se forces and to support the ncgfotlators. The work of peace can ät last be achlcved If the forces of peace^whlch set themselves the same objectivea — i i i i i i i i l ^ s VaisjDvan [(fsoilii Heinäkuun ^7 p n ä , J^tee «u^ic^ Citystä Canadan' nuortson ,edtf«»M V MaaUman tNuorlson Festlvkallla2wn'"; sovaan. Puolaan. Ryhmässä on.ylJjW^ ; nuorta — metsämiehiä, kaivosmiehiä; farmaria, soittajia, tanssljplta. t|U. tellljolta, opettajia, .lölraänboltajla, sekä opiskelijoita. He edustavat fcult-' tuuri-, urheilu-, työväen-, Ja uskon^%! noUisia Järjestöjä. Nämä Ca^^ätkn nuoret edustajat tulevat rtapaanoun tuhansia muita nuoria, Jotka'multaa^/^^^^^^^" vat Varsovaa kohti lukuisista maista. ||l Siellä he tulevat laulamaan naura-maan, tam«}Lmaan. sekä keskustele-,, maan kokemuksistaan Ja^ennen^kälk-"'^^ kea osallistumaan valtavaan mielen osoitukseen kansojen keskeiset^t^i^^p- '!,< han ja ystävyyden puolesta,' -^-j ;/S^ Canadan nuoret edustajat eäua&- vat melkein kaikkia, maakuntia, Ja{?||l lukuWa kansallisia Järjestöjä Jaaief-dän Joukossaan on myöskin nuo|ri;<:^W':% .-j nadan suomalaisten edustaja. , > ' Vahnlstavan komitean s l l i t c ^ r lÖ Marg O-Kell selosti.' e t t ä canadalalset edustajat harjoittelevat kuvaelmaa.^':il joka esitetään .VarasvassavkohnessB suuressa tilaisuudessa. , Uselimnat ryhmän-Jäsenistä myöskin e s i l n t ^ ät f esti vaallasa kansamväUsissä komfer^ teissä muiden maiden Johtavien taiteilijoiden kansa. ' Canadalalset^ J ä r jestävät festivaaleilla näytteitä ^^ca-nadalalslsta käsitöistä, postimer^eis-.- td a2kä canadalaisen nuorison däälää-kuvaavan näytteen. ' Festivaalin Jälkeen nuoret cdustalat tulevat >. vierailemaan ^melmmissa muissa maissa. - .. ? ;l mm -•1 Walesiii «kaivosmiehet atomipommeja vastaaitj, Cardiff. — Kaivostyöläisten vuotuisessa kesäjuhlatilaisuudessa hyväk-syttlln yksimielisesti päätöslauselma; ' jossa vaaditaan: atomiaseiden k i i t ä mistä, sekä K i i n a n KansantaQ3ivalIan; palkan YK:s3a luovuttamista. ^tUe. Edelleen päätöttlauselmassa vaaditaan Britannian l^allltusia seuraqmaah rauhanpolitiikkaa. ' ' 4'* in particular.' the movements. for; m peace. and the great. political-torga^ ^nlzatlon^: w'hose Insplratlon^Js pihTto-?- .'^'^ tlan of scciallst •— unite their efforts;: to dissipate distrusit and wln peace, \ l atcp by step, the contradlctI6«s^ inli the World can bc resolved ond'tbe' , hopes of the peoples crowncdi;wfth. ? rvlctory. I i K U O L L U T WALTER mim kuoli 7G - vuoden ikäisenä Jonlii-kuussa 1054 Vancouverin General sairaalassa, lyhyen 'sairauden jälkeen. Hän tuli danadaan noin 50 V M U ta sitten ja harjoitti yli 40 vuotta lohenkalastusta British Colombian läiislrannlkolla: Port:: Essinfton« B. C. oli hänen vakituinen asnlhV paikkansa, mistä hän siirtyi Vall-couveriin vuotta ennen koolcr maansa. WaUer Niemellä oli homoristlnefli Ja hilpeä luonne. Ystävät Ja tu^^^ vat muistavat AValteria kuimon miehenä ja kaverina — kqnnoa Saari Järveläisenä. !j VANHAT YSTÄVÄT^,, KIITOS Lausumme parhaat kiitokset kaikesta hyvästä mikä tuli osaksemme*' yllätyslltana kodissamme, heinäkuun 2 päivänä, 1955, . Kiitoksemme sukulaisille Ja ystäville. Jotka n i i n runsaslukuisina olitte, läsnä, kun myöskin kaikille Jotka ottivat osaa. Ystävyytenne säilyy kauniina muistona HAZEL JA ARVO KAUPPI ' Watcrs Township Ontatlo., Tämän vuoden laiva, on uusi HOME L I N J A N L I P P U L A I VA SS. noin i20,000 tonnia P I K A P A L V E L U S QUEBECISTA ENGLANTIIN JA R A N S K A A N Tämä Home Linjan UUSI LOISTAVA lippulaiva suo-; ritti neitsytmatkansa Quebecista huhtikuun 23 päivänä t,e Havreen Ja Southamptönilh, liikennöiden nyt sään-hölllsesti tällä reitillä. Matka ;Quebecistä Le Havreen, Ranskaan, tällä Ipistolalvalla kestää vain 6 päivää. Tehkää paikkatllauksenne osoitteella: Loppu kesän Ja syys- ;• kauden kulkuvuorot ';v ^Quebecista:','vi^;f:^-i;;.: • Elokuun 3 p. • Elölcuun 20 ;^ ;' • Syyskuun 6 p. ; • ; S)nr8kuun:23 p. • , Lokakuun 9 p;; S ? Lokakuuni 26 p^;^; Marraskuun ;i2 p^';; Marraskuun 29 p^ 5 P . O . B O X 69 SUDBURY, ONT. Käytt^kää hyväksenne; »äästökaudea htotojfa^^^^^^^ ,, ;.^:;K•.^^;.:.-,:^,^;:;^::,.'•:v•>^^^
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, July 7, 1955 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1955-07-07 |
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 | Vapaus550707 |
Description
Title | 1955-07-07-03 |
OCR text |
i ei minulla ole ollut co,
1 lopetin koulun.
ietysti n i i tä kertoja, jolloia
lyt johonkin pitääksgai
• * •
assahtanutta miestä
talon ratentamiseasa Yi
ti naulan kerrallaan nau-'
piti osan nauloista mntta
• menemään. •
änä heität mensmaän nifai
loja? •
roska lalissa on kanta 135;
ä. ^
' sinä. huliu. Nehän orat
1 seinää varten.
presid.
ihlassa
1 ja kulttuurisen kansia-toteuttaminen
kaikkien
ille, jotta ylläpidettäisiin
ihimillistä edistystä. •
järjeiO-elma. taloudellin«i
n alistaminen, uhkausten
n käyttäminen valtioiden
ihteissa" ovat sitävastoin
cijöitä ja synnyttävät olo^
tilanteita, jotka valmis-raä
sodalle.
iteet, jotka ovat yhteisiä
hmisille kautta maailman
autta maailman rautfan-at
ilmaisuma. ovat epäi-ikreettisia
tekijöitä. Niininen
täytyy olla kaikkien
ääi-ana, Jotka näkevät sen
UUSI sota merkitsisi. :
keskmaisen kunnioituksen •
rauhan periaatteille jot-oittaneet.
sitä työtä, joka
tämän kansainvälisen ko-miseen
ja joiden myös on
muorana sen tulevassa
ila on kunnia esittää tälle
Maailman Rauhanko-lidaarisuuteni
ja toivoni
ön saavuttavan kohokoh-anisuuden
asian tyydyt-jna.
in yliopiston
oittaa
maan Kiinan,;
,—. Columbia yliopiston
;en suhteiden professon-iffer
sanoi taalla heinät
ssaan puheessa, että Yh-ulisi
tunnustaa Kiinan
alta ja kannattaa sille
kan antamista YKisaa.
myöskin olevansa sitä
:iinan kanssa tulisi sopia '
toisten saarien kysymjfk-enmielLsyydet
saattavat
n, jolla ei tulla nutaan
arä pääkal-
.ruotta
talia. — 54-vuotias An-jrtti
meni sairaalaan ja
inen päastaa otettaisiin
"Olen viuneaikolna por.
paankipua" valitti han.
issaan todettun olevan
cä ^veitsen terän pala
r t arvelee jaancen sinne
en olleen tappelun su-
•uoksi kiinni suta, että
todella. niin liuonosti
lily Press sanoo — että
ninallainen lehti naJtö
ilmalla.
Qon tässä yliteydessä
Kai-shckin "ballitns"
lyös tilastotietoja, Ja
tävia kuin ne ehkä
itä ilmenee, että yksi
Lbko Taiwanin (For-npoikaislosla
on nyt
ja Joutuu turvauto-hin,
mistä kiskotaan
nnattoman korkeato
Ja monet talonpojat
suuressa velassa, elää
minkäänlaista laita
ovat niin "onnelli-vat
vielä paikallisilU
ilta lainan. Joutuvat
laan 50 pros. Ja jopa
enttia korkoa. Niin
nne. että keskivarak
oJUta jää velkojen J»
ksun Jälkeeii vain «
idösta omaa käyttöä
i siitä pitää hän«
enlaista veroa. !«•
dot ovat luonnolliscstt
Lvälehden toimittajani
kuten sanottu, kaii-limpia
ovat
näkevät, mutta tod-nasta
- h
psivat. Jahka ne oni
1 niitä toistetaan kyl-iti.
näiden nakevte»
n a lU katsoen, h " -
1955 valtavan snnri
inadalafaista-hoo-in
kansallisesta W
lknperä»tään be*^
ja iiskonnpnfefa*»
a J . kieltäytyy
vää sokeata.
Käniäkoor»-,
The mtjr vonng Canadlans «ho
be leaviiv shortly for the
Fifth Worid. Touth Festival in
WaKaw «m have an exceptional
opportnnlty to meet youth of over
a 100 lands according to recent
announcements of the International
Preparatory Conunlttee. The
foUowing will give an idea of the
compositlon of the Chinese dele-gation
whlch wiU include more
than 600 partlcipants:
China! Who WDuldn't like to see
that beautiful country, its centuries
Old culture, vonderful songs, dances
and theatre, the goodnatured smiling
faces of the people. For Festival par-ticipants
i t will almost come true, for
suddenly they will find themselves
Viesti Athiefes
Add Inferesf To
Beaver Lake Meet
-Next Sumray ar tue seaver Lake
fieid sports enthuslasts wlll sse what
will almost amoimt to a .prevlew of
Lijttojuhlas. The occasion is a sports
meet being aponsored by Speed A . C.
of Whitefish and i t promises to be an
exciting af f air. Even the local ath-letes
can make the competitions hot
in ali the events but i n addition to
the local clubs' participating, word
häs been received from the Viesti A .
C. in South Porcupine that the club
vcill be represented .by a strong con-tingent
of athletes.'
. That of course maana that there
should be some very close competi-tion
in the under 21 class 100 and 200
metre events between the • two top
sprintera of the Liitto Roy Ranta and transported to Ohina, appiaudihg
their cultural programmes, cheering
theu: athletes and ;.mixing with : the
young people of Chijia.
'How: cbmie? Why when they meet
the Chinese delegatibn of course, and
just to shqw what we mean lefs take
a look at how it is made up.
They are aotively preparihg for the
Vth Festival spixrred ön by the AU-China
Federation pf Öemocratic
Youth. the Central Committee of the
China New Dempcratic Youth Leaguc,
AU-Chinä Students Federation, A l i -
China Athletic Pederatiori, the Musi-ciäns
Association and öther interested
organisations. . The delegation ; of
more thän 600 is now being formed
and vi^ill include young representatives
of different natiohallties i h China,
leading wörkers, studeints, etc.: Ali
the artists will form a grand youth
ensemblei and there wiil also be ä
sports tearti as part of the delegation.;
Among the items of the splendid
programme they will present arie
music and dance, the PekUig Opera,
acrobatics, etc. : . ,
Mäny of these are specially..written,
composed arid produced for the Festival;
chösen during music aiod dance
competitions. .
nmmm
Meet the Chinese Delegation
To the World Youth Festival
Tauno Saari.
, The Viesti grcup wlll also make i t
hot in other events as the club reporta
it \vill send "a whole carload of athletes".
Among them .we"can probably
fxpect to see Pentti Pentila who wi>
be giving the boys a few pointers in
the hammer thro\v. .
< The program calls for 5-events in
the open, boys under 21 and under 17
classes compoa?d of the following
• events:,. . • ,• '. •
100 m., 200.11., shotput. discus and
bröadjump. The women's open and
girls under 16 classes will compete-in
a 3-event composed of: 60 m., ahotput
and broadjump.
Other events will include an 800 m.
run and a 4.xl00 m. relay as well as
a 60 m. race for children under 12.
Additional events will be added to
accommodate the visiting athletes.
MUTILATED
Wagg: 'Say! More than one person
has been guilty of . mutUating the
books I lent them, but my latest ex-perience
caps the climax." ^
Wigg: "What was it?"
Wagg: •'! lent Blank my dictionary-last
Week and yesterday he returned
it vvithout a vord." :
China's youth art: ensemble to the
coming World Youth and Students
Festival i n Warsaw has drawn up Its
programme. The ensemble v i i i com-prise
365 members.
Also included are folk dances of
the Miao people i n Southwe8t China,
the Harvest Dance of the T a i people
i n Yunnan Province. the Frlendship
Dance of the Tibetans, the dances of
the Uighurs In Sinkiang Province.
Dances of the Han nationallty Include
the traditional sword, silk and dragon
dances and "lo Peasant Girls on a
Spring Excursion."
The ensemble's chorus wiU present
"Safeguard Peace with Frlendship."
specially composed for the Festival.
Other songs include "Roar. Yellovr
River," part of the Yellow River can-tata
by the fomous composer, the late
Hsien Hsing-hai, songs of the boat-men
of Szechvan, the herdsmen of
Inner Mongolia, and folk songs from
other parts of the coimtry.
Weil known songs from the Soviet
Union and Poland are a popular fea
ture of their repertoire and they are
bringmg their very best films.
China's biggest ever sports delega
tion to an international event wUl be
coming for the l i n d Youth Sports
Meet. 180 stiong, they are In inten
sive training for men's and women's
track and field, basket-ball, volley
ball, table-tennis, swlmming, gymnas
ties, football and weight-lifting.
An exhibition showing theh: life and
their determination to defend pieace
is being prepared by the Chinese
youth. Enthusiasm is the keynote ö:
the participation i n competitions for
musical compositions and the International
Fine Arts Competition, F i -
gures to date show that 140 entrles
have been chosen from the first elimi
nation stage. to take part i n these two
competitions.
Some thirty oil paintlng, wood carv-ings,
water colours and sculptures will
be completed. Melitchik, a young
student at the Central Music Institutle
Foolish or not, the " H ö l m ö l ä i s e t"
A r e a Part of Finnish Folk-lore
Anyone accquainted with Finland
and with a smattering of the language
a bound sooner or later to hear stor-les
of the Hölmöläiset — the Foolish
• Folk. Nobcdy is quite sure from
where these storiesoriginate, so i t is
usual to class them under the con-
.venientheading-of folk-lore.
MOTt Finns know the Hölmöläiset
either from their school-books or
from "Maamme Kirja'', Book of Our
Land. Written in 1875 by Z. Topelius,
faaious poet and teller of children's
tales, this book also contains an intro-duction
tö the Foolish Folk.
"Somewhere in this länd is a village
by the name of Hölmölä, and there
liVe the Höhnöläiset. the inhabitanta
of Holmolä. These Hölmöläiset are
very careful people and consider ,well
before undertaking anything, SO that
no harm may come through too much
haste. Concerning them are told . . .
many . . : clever undertakings..."
Holmolä, according to Pietari Han-nikainen
("Valvoja" 1899 p. 1748 ). is
it village in the jjarish of Ruokolahti.
so.Tie iifteen odd miles from the present
Eastern frontier and not far from
Imatra. Hannikainen made the firat
literary mention of the Höhnöläiset in
iiis play "The Conjuror^' (Silmänkääntäjä
1845), in which the charac-ters
are "foolish folk"; Whether it
was he who fu-st connected the vUlage
>ith tl:e Word hölmö (fool, simpleton)
or whether he got the idea from
somewhere else does not appear to be
certam. ,
Professor E . N . Eetälä; i n a veiry
informative article published i n the
Journal "Virittäjä" for • 1912. telia us
that the first. written coUectioh p f
Hölmöläiset stories Is to be found in
a little Huvi K i r j a or amusement book
.^hich he: says, vvas translated into
Finnish from German. - The original
.author was a German poet. Gustav
Benjamin Schwab, and the Hölmöläi-ast,
stories in the Huvi-Kirja come
from that author's."Die Sohildbur-ger".
The translator may have ta-ken
the name of Höhnöläiset from
Hannikainen's play, as a suitable
equiivalent for the German. This
suggescs that the -Hölmöläiset may
have both foreign and literary blood.
Neverbheless aiis. any F i n n and he'll
teli you that the PoolLsh Folk belong
to the legends of the Finnish folk.
The stories are very Finish In that
they deal with matter, of f act, e very
day events like the " K a l e v a l a " they
contain little of the.fantasy and fairy
World SO prominent i n Nordic tales.
Perhaps the ljest-known story is the
following, here translated falrly-frecr
ly from Topelius',version. It is called.
THE HÖLMÖLÄISET BUILD A
COTTAGE '
The «ölraöläiset built themselves
a cottage and made it so solidly that
they forgot to leave a wlndow.in the
Wall. When the cottage was ready
they found it rather dark and con.si-dered
for a long time how to get the
däyllght in. In the end they had a
good idea: they would fetch i n the
light with a sack. So they opened out
the aick to the sunshine, tied it
up carefully and carried it into the
cottage. Here they opened the sack
but to everyone's surprise the cottage
was no lighter than before. While
they were standing amazed at this
unexpectied dissapointment, Matti
hs«>pened to pass by and hear of their
trouble, Weil said Matti give me a
hundred marics and I I I bring the light
i n for you. The Höimölälast ,were
dellghted to get daylight sp cheäp
and at oncfe pald the prlce stipulated.
Then Matti cut a hole i n the wall,
and at once the sunshine poured Into
the cottage. So pleased wei-e the
Hölmöläiset at this discovery that
they decided to cut out the whole
Wall, They got enough daylight now.
but at the same time the cottage f eli
down.
Matti of ten appears In these stories,
He asems: to represent the ordlnary.
common-sensical Finnish "man-in the
field" (for these tales a l i deal with
nu-al or forest events). Sometimes;
however. the Foolish Folk have to ma-nage
without Mattl's asslstance, aa i n.
THE HÖLMÖLÄISET
GO HUXTING .
One day the Hölmöläiset set out to
hunt the bear, When they reached
the bear's den the first thing they did
was to sit down and eat a hearty
breakfast. After this they held counr
cil, and decided that ^Pekka should
crawl into the den firat to bring the
bear out. For safety's sake they fas-tened
a rope to his leg. If there should
be any trouble Pekka wäs to kick. and
his comrades would puli him out. So
it was agreed. Pekka crawled into the
den, and when he was well Inside the
bear blt his head off. Pekka'a legs
quivered.a little. and that was the
end of him. Outside, his comrades
discussed the mat£er nieanwliile: "He
kicked just now. I'ts certalnly none
too pleasant inside there." Then they
pulled Pekka out, and Pekka was
headleru. "Yes, really headless!'' sald
the Hölmöläiset, and they held coun-cil
as to what this might mean. One
of thenj was of the opinion that it
was not entirely certain whether Pekr
ka had had any head when he crawl-ed
into the den. "WeH" said a second
"P' can teli you about that; I notlced
di^tinctly how his beardi anoved when
he was eating peas for breakfaist."
(The foregoing article by Philip
Blnham was orlglnally publisCied in
the 'Finlandia PIctorial.")
of the Mongolian national minorlty In
China, has revised his own composl^
Uon: " A Sun Whlch W1U Never Set
Is Rislhg Over the Plains"; composed
orlglnally for soloists it wm now be
sung by a choir and presented at the
Festival.
Young workers from Peking. Shanghai
and Ohto-te-Chen are maklng
embroidered and china glfts. Just
some of* the many that are b^big
made throughout China for the delegation
to take to the FestlvaL
HOW T i l E Y A B E P R E P A R I NG
FÖR WARSAW
The young people of Chtaa are
working assiduously on their pror
gramme, and a host of actlvitles are
und6r. way. A national festival of
music and dahce began i n P d d n g on
February lOtli and lasted two months.
It aimed to encourage cultural and
leisure actlvitles among the popula-tion
and to bring out and develop
young talent and provlde new and
interesting themes for participation In
the Festival. ,
The 801 amateur artists whocom-peted
belonged to 10 dif ferent natlo-nallties
and Included worker8 and
students from 8 citles, peasants from
13 provinces and rallway workers from
dif ferent parts of the country. It was
preceded by similar events on a local
scale wlth more than 30,000 people
taking part. The majorlty of the
3.500 peices performed by these amateur
artists were folk songs and
dances. Many were also composed by
the artlst themselves.
LAKEHEAD FESTIVAL
TO BE ANNUAL EVENT
A concert at the Finnish Labour
Temple. 3 U Bay St.i Port Arthur, last
Sundsy, wound up the F i r s t North-
«restem Ontario Youth Festival. Over
one hundred young people participat-ed
In the three-day pelebration which
was in honour of Canada's fiSth
tirthday. On Friday, the 24th. a
(Midsummer Night dance was held at
the Isku Park. Saturday a n evening
of one-act plays was presented in
Fort WilUam and the ybung actors
and actresses most of whom had no
previous acting experlence^ were high-ly
commended on their performancea
About thirty young athletes compe-ted
Sunday for Festival prizes and
showed sklll In their accompllsh-ments.
The highllght of the festival
was the presentation of a mass gym-nastics
display and pyramids in which
fifty yo^ung people took part.
On opening the 'afternoon sports
Wally Sloboda festival committee
chairman introduced Mr. George
Wardrope M P P who congratulated the
young people on their Initiatlve and
assured them the Ontario govemment
was ;100 percent behlnd such celebra-tions
In honour of Canada. He pald
a glowing trlbute to Paavo Voutilainen,
aports and gym instructor, for
his devoted efforts in training and
developing healthy minds and bodies
In the young people Mr. Wardrope
was followed by brief greetings from
representatives of organizations spon-sorlng
the festival. Then sporta par-ticipants
and spectators unanimously
adopted a resolution afflrming that
the sphit of friendly sports competi-tlon
symbolized their wlsh for "a C a nada
free from war and firm In f r l -
endahip with ali peace-loving people
of the World." and endorsed the
World Appeal Agalnst Preparatlons
for Atomlc War with greetings to the
World Assembly for Peace then being
held In Helsinki. Finland. Greetings
were received from young people in
Toronto and WInnipeg. A speclal
greeting arrlved firom Jacques Denis
president of the 90 mlllion strong
World Federation of Democratic
Youth,
The maas choir c f forty young peo^
ple opened the .Sunday concert wlth
th&singing of "O'Canada". Tbe choir
sane 'International Youth Song*^ and
"Making Hay". Other song groups
contrlbuting to the program vere the
"Folk singej:s" and the A . U . C C .
Youth Choir. A.vocal solo was glven
by Elizabeth Werbowetskl accom-panled
by Sonja Donolovitch. A n out-standlng
feature was the acrobatic
adagio by A l l i Kaah^la and Paavo
Voutilainen. Pyramids and free, mo-
,vementQ were done by K a m Tlgers
and men^s calisthenics by: the Isku
P,!o and Tigera Athletic Clubs. Diane
Baturniuk of the Co-op Cultural
Group performed a tJallet on polnts.
This group also presented "Puttlng
on the Style" and "MIstress Bond"
w i ^ Miroslav Papich, Gwen 'nirower,
Margaret Hämäläinen and Diane B a -
turnlak. A group. ballet waa done by
Adeline Arynlok. Betty Kohut. VIrgir
nia, Dzatko and Joyce Scobak. A n
original poem was reclted by Carlne
McMaster. Joan Walengo played
two classical piano selectlons. Oroup
dances also enjoyed by the audlence
were the Slovak dance '^Karlcky" and
a square dance. Pat Dejonkere, Grace
Bradord and Catherine Trebendls
gavb instrumentoi numbers. Directors
were Wally Sloboda. Don Currie, Anhe
Domifiiy. Anne Nazarec and Paavo
Vuotilainen. William Trylinski was
master of ceremonles.
T h e festival was an outstanding
success from beginnhig to end, bring-
Ing together over one hundred young
people i n sports. drama. song. dance
and music. The festival wlll become
an annual event and next year should
prove to be an even greater celebra-tion
of youth for a Greater Canada.
.• - ' •- •'• •'• .'
Torstaina, helnSk. 7 p/— Tbursday, JuJy 7,1055
T SOUTHERN NEIGHBOURS
BY BOB WARD
The Ward's 'neigl^bor to the south'
is a mighty swell guy. .
The boundary between us and our
nelghbour is undefended and has
been that way ali the time we've lived
In our present home.
Our neighbor and us taik back and
forth over this 'undefended boundary'.
We exchange ideas, gardenUi«
hints and the time of day.
T h i s Fall we are golng to'exchange
some plants and perennials.
Our mlssus. and our nelghbor's wife
qxchange reclpes, magazines, and chat
about the problems of ralslng children.
In this regard our neighbor'8
wife feels that. the pocket size books
on child psychology aren't as good as
the weightier cloth |
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