1956-03-22-03 |
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Sudbuiy Disfrict
Skiers Göing To
Round Lake
According to the calendar
Ims just sprung ania we should be see-ing
green grass agaln sbortly. Äs f ar
SS Sudbury is concemed this seems
to be the case, Despite heavy snows
in the eafly part of March a series
cf warm days raises hopes of the
snow disappearing. in. a few weeks.
As far as the skiing season goes,
it was ali but officially closed last
ffcekend with the successful conclu-sion
of the Alerts meet and mahy
skiers have already racked away their
skiers and have tumed their thoughts
to summer sports. . ••
But the most ardent skiers have.
not put away their skis and this
weekend will be hitting northward Ih
quest of snow. The» occasion is the
Echo meet at Round Lake which wiU
be the last off icial mest of the season.
. Jehu will bevery Weil represented
at the meet as aiso will be Speed.
The main competition wlll be for the
relay trophy which Jehu regairds as
its own property having already se-cured
two wins. ;
A HOPELESS CASE FQR HYPNOTISM
B Y BOB WABD
We never wou!d have mentioned
this.
We would have been afraid to.
I f we had of. folks i n the union
vpould have declared "Old Wards'mar-bles
are rattling again.^' Indeed some
citizens would have bluntly stated
"the guy's nuts!"
But now that Bridie Murphy"s In
the news, and others are claiming
that they recall an earUer Ufe, we can
reveal the tale of the hypnotized boss.
This particular boss; under hypno-tlc
suggestion, recalled several earlier
lives. But, of course, that comes later
in the story.
It ali happened a number of years
ago. And as we said earlier wewould
never have mentioned i t at ali i f it
wasu't for ali of the news about B r i die
Murphy.
; It was at negotiation time at the
Pffft Electric Co. The boss. Nuddin*
D. (or Doing) Pffft. was up to his
usual tricks. Like, for instance saying
'no' ali the time.
Matter of f act this partlcula:r year,
Nuddin* D. was in such 'noing' form
that he was, saying 'no' to the com-mittee
even before they asked for
-inytjiing.
Nuddin' D. PfffC It mlght be said
here. wa5 a self-made mnn. And this
fact. whicb he kept telUng tbe corn-mittee
over and over, led one wag
to remark that " i f he was self-made.
it was a classical example c l uoskiUed
labor."
i o keep the record stralght It
should aisobe stated that Nuddin^O.
came right: up from the xanks » of
a long line of miUionaires^
I n any event the committee was
making about as much progress nego-tiating
with Nuddin' D. as John Vo&-
ter Dulles is currently making convln-cing
India to drink Coca Cola. >
I t was at about this time that a
movement started i n the shop to draft
Obtical J . Gladeye onto the commit»
tee. Obtical J . was ä student of hyp-nosis..
It. was even nunored In the
:!hop that with one glance he could
make Time-study Men forget that
they'd come out to time him.
.Definite'y on the record was the
fact that he had hypnotized the cafeteria
personnel into confessing Just
what went into the.meat ples they
sold. The disclosure,- i t . m i g h t be
pointed out sent the meat piesale as
PEROIVAL'S PROGRAM
Wrong Way on Right Track
B Y KELL HARRIS
... ... . . . ; . , , , ., •. .
Lloyd Percival, track and field
coach.head.of Sports College of C BC
f ame,: and of tentime outspoken eri tie
of happenings in Canadian sports, put
this on the record recenfy:
"We (Canada) are: the only major
country in .the World without at least
some sort of overall development pro-
.gram. and our record i n international
competition shows it.
" I n addition OUT standards of phy-*
sical fitness are among the lowest of
any civilized country in the World, according
to a nationwide survey. Lack
of fitness. means a tremendous i n -
crease in hypokinetic diseases ^ those
which. are caiised • by. physical iaacUvi-ty
— and Canadians are particularly
prone to this type, especially in the
• 30 to 40 age "group."
So what does Mr. Percival and his
Sports College conclude?
Priväte enterprise is the solution.
•• •• .. ^ •• •.•«. •— .»,••,•
Recently, together with sports, business
and physical. education figxires,
he announced the formation of the <
Canadian Amateur-Sports and Physical
Fitness Development .Service
backed: by a $700,000 fund from p r i väte
corporations and the GBC. and
to be operated by Sports College.
Here's what is planned to happen:
There . w i l l b e weekly national
broadcasts via CBC, a national week-ly
TV program, a monthly instruction
nev/spaper, several motion pictures,
booklets and bu!letins.
In addition, there wm be travelling
clinics, rcoaching • schools headed by
Sports College experts in physical
education; training, nutrition and so
on. Ali will be available to any group
wishing them and the take-off date
is March 1.
» * *
Says Percival With laudableenthu-siasm:"
We hope to make Canadians
the most sjjorts and fitness literate
people in the world."
Percival, who a few weeks ago
thought the armed services wouId be
the best place to develop Canadian
athletes, döesh't seiem to like the idea
of govemment-sponsored programs,
for he says: "Although programs such
as are operated i n Russia might have
an advantage. In that the people pf
the Sovlet Union can ber^imented
and subsidized, we are confident that
onr program willprovide Canadians
with as comprehensive and effective
a Service as can.be:foundanywhere
in the World.''
Which is just plain gobbledygoofc
However one may laud the äesire of
these folk. to do something about the
shamefui sports and recreation situa-t
i o n i n this country, a $700,000 pian
from private enterprise won't scratch
the surface.
How many sports fields and swim-ming
tanks wjll it build?
H3W many athlete.s w^Il it put into
serious training for the Olymplc
Games this year?
No. Mr.. Percival. You are"ön the
right track, but you are running in
the wrong; direction. It will make
Sports College a bigger name and i t
will certainly help Canadians to be-come
more fitness-minded. But it
wont buy gym tcunks or spike shoes
for athletes or pay anyone's fare to
Melbourne. f
But i f i t makes Canadians more
aware of how disgracefui the situation
really is, so that theyll put more heat
under the place that n e e d s i t u p in
Ottawa, It w i l l b e a l i tO" the good. ,
It ali those sportsminded people
that met in Toronto io launch this
new program with such fanfarewou1d
together drop a Sharp note t o M r . S t
Laiu-ent it would help provide: the
foundation that . i s needed for the
new Sports College program to ope-rate
effectively.
T h e National Federation of Labör
Youth has taken up the demand put
fonvard by several trade union and
other groups for a $10^ mlUiop. sports
and recreation pian for Canada to
begin this Olymplc year. Thafs the
ticket M r : Percival.
Howio Recosnize Heart
Attaclc and Help Victim
How can you teli if someone you'r€f
workingwith is having a heart at-tack,
and what can you do about it?
This is the question answered by
the American Heart Association in
its recent leaflet, Heart Attack. The
leaflet notes that the usual symp-toms
of a heart attack include a
sudden gasping for air, 5weating and
intense pain. Sometlmes the victim
will lose consciousness.
vAll of these signs are-likely to
spell coronary thrombosis, particularly
i f the victim i s : a man above
the age of 35. Coronary thrombosis
occtirs wihen a blood elot partially
o* entirely shuts off the supply of
blood to the heart from the coronary
artieries.
•What can the bystander do to Oielp
the victina? First of ali, call a doctor.
Heart attacks have never been known
to re^ond to first aid, and the weUr
intentioned amateur can do much
more hann than good. However, this
döesn't. mean you need stand help-lessly
by.
:" 1$. is prefectly correct to help the
patient to get into the most com-fortable
position possible, which will
be the one in which he or Ähe finds
it easlest .to breathe. Loosening' tight
clothing such as belts and shirt col-lars
wlll aiso easethe patienfs suffer.
ing in many cases. At the same time,
try to do everything possible to keep
the patient from getting , chllled-
"There they go, askmg for wage increases again when I
caö't even make ehds meet*' . - -
Remember the body, and particularly
the circulatory system, is engaged ih
a life and death.struggle to adjust to
the sudden ch'anges caused by the
heart attack, and any addltional a d -
justments required by the need to
.respond to chilling won't help,,
Many people have been told that
the first thing to do when confron-ted
by a heart attack is to reach
for the whiskey bottle. Not: so. the
leaflet points ,out.. Do not give the
patient . anything to e a t o r drink.
There are conditions under which
alcöhol is helpful to the coronary
victim, but only: a doctor can de-
•cide. when that is. The rule for tÄe
layman is: nothing to drink^ and Chat
goes for coffee, tea a nd water, as
well as for liquor.
T h e leafet alsö describes t h e p r o -
cess of recovery which the: approxi-mately
four out of ilve coronary vie*
tims who survive the first attack SO
through. The development .of c o l -
lateral circtdatlon to replace tbe
blocked-off. coronary artery and to
enable the heart to receive adequate
supplies of btood is discuss»!/ as is
the process of scar tissue. formation
over the Infested, or damaged, area
of the heart; The leaflet notes tbat
most heart attack victlms are able
to retum to productive vork, but
often adjustments i n both Job :^and
outside routlnes are required- .
low as a vDrker^ lazder on dA7 be^
fore payday. , ,
Obtical J. vas drafted onto tbe
committee. nie committee bad tried
eveiy other way to get Nuddin' D. td
move 60 what vas vrong vith taking
a 'tong look'„ as It were. at;the situation.
S t r a t ^ of the committee vas to
have Obtical J. slt across the table
from Nuddin'-D, And q.uicker than
a boss can spot a loose rate. Obtical
J. had Nuddin' D. hypnotized.
But ordlnaryhypnotlsmdid about
as much to NUddln» D. as Olor** H.
Line did to liOllabriglda.
Every suggestion put on hIm whll*
under hypnotlsm vai met tqr a "no.**
Sometlmes, inind you, they vere In a
varlety of languages.'non. neln, nilkaf
noddln', etc.' lius ObUcal told the
conmUttee proved that in spme eärr
ller life Nuddin' D. had been a boss in
other languages. EVeryoneconceded
there was merit tö this thought as it
was recalled that Nuddin'i>. nonnally
only spoke Uiree lancniages, Engli^
profane and obseene. '.
;:• ,^ '•^:''y-'\!:K::--J:'*T^^ -v'"-./-;; J V
About this. stage of events Obtical
decided to try to get Nuddin' to recall
some earlier exlstence. vperhaps,'' he
opined; "the boss mIght have been a
hiunan being at one time."
The committee agreed they had
Nuddin' to lose. So Obtical began
questionlng.
"Do you recall some earlier exlstence?"
"Yes. I see sand. It is the Sahara
Desert; A lot of menare worklng like
horses buildhig the Pyramids."
"What are you doing there?" Obtical
asked.'
"Bossing the Job and tuming down
the worker's demands for an extra
ounce of camel;milk';a dJfty/V; ;
TZils exchange of. conversatlon, of
course, wa8n't gettlng anyone ; any-where;
so Obtical changed his questionlng.
«•Do: you- recall some other exlst-ance?"
^ - *
"Yes, I see cotton. : It Is Alabama:
There are - thousands of slaves.' I'm
boss. I have a great big bull whlp."
"Can you remember whatyour
name was?" ' '
"Öiire, Simdri Legree Pttttr '
It wäs this disclosure which led to
the strlke at the Pffft Electrical
Works;'nie'ayes' had it' Iri this particular
Instance where the 'eyesVfail-ed.
But as we started to say we never
would have mentioned this matter at
aU — If It hadn't of been for ali the
new8 storles about Bridie Murphy. We
figured no one wouldever have be
Ueved It. — V. E. News
Torstaina. «jaaUslc. !22 p. — Tbmsä»y;M$a3^tiil9§$
TO THE MOOS IX S^tO ITABS
SPACE TRAVEL IS A PRACTICAL FEASIBIUTY
Only yesterday. space travel seemed j
io ina$t peop'^ a fascinating but fan-tastlc
idea.
Today the progress of rocket tech-niques
has forought «ithin the realm
of practlcal feasibillty the construc-tion
of a composite. multi-stage rocket
tbat could fly beyond the range of the
earth's power of gravity and elther
teoome an artificial satelite of our
planet or leave it altogether. *
An Interestlng pian. for an expedl-tion
to the moon was proposed recentl
y by the Soviet-sclentlst Y. S. Khleb-tsevich.
This is how he pictures such
an expsdltion.
:: With a roar of its mighty englncs,
a giant aircraft. its brond Wings out-j^
retchedk runs along the ground and
shoots into the air. Its speed rapldly
mounting. it soars higher. and higher.
and before long it sheds the broad
Wings, whlch were only needed for the
take-off. as weu as the piston engines
tuming the propellers. Only Short.
backswept winglets remain, making
COULD V T BE8I8T
Little sixryear-old; Donna : was ' a l -
most overcome with Joy on h e r b l r t h -
day' when she recelved two gifts sbe
had most ardently desired a wri8t
watch and a t>ottIe of perf ume; She
chattered about the new possesslons
all day long, wearlng lier motiier out
on the subject. Ouests were expect-ed
for dlnner and her modiiergently
admonisbed Doima In advance sajring;
"Kow. dear. evetybody: kxtovs - about
your presents and everybot^r-is happy
for you. But we must'nt go on taik-ing
abeut them a l i the tlme.^ ^
The litUe glrl heM ber pedce at tbe
table througout the greatest part of
the meal. A l uU finaly occorred i n
the conversatlon: a n d / tmable vto ^ins-train
herssHf, she burst fdrtb, rxf anyone
hears oir smells axqrtbing, it's
me!"
On The Tppic Of
Spring And Baseball
Toronto^ -—Right now Itseems a
little doubtfui if summer wiU ever
come to Toronto.: But as'theold saying
goes — if this Is Winter, can
spring be far behind?
• Anyway the baseball fans are already
comlng out of their shells, and
spring training' Is Just around the
comer. This reminds me of a story
that I read the other day. It seems
that during the second .World
years, when talent .was scarcer than
snow on the: Sahara/ Leo Durocher
had charge of Uie playing concesslon
ia Et)bets Field^ One day be heard
a knock on the clubhouse door. Open-ing
it he found a big, good looUng
horse.
'^Understand you need ball players,"
said the horse. "Can you use a $425
bitter?"
"Grab a stick," said Leo.
T h e horse trdtted to Uie bat rack.
picked up a bat and trotted> to the
piate. After five pltches, each' of
wbich wa8 slammed out of thepark,
Durocher c^xeded tbe horse. was a
alugger.
''What else can you do," he said.
"1 am a great shoztstop." '
"Get out and prove it," said Leo.
The horse moved to short and Leo
started slapping ground balls to him
and tiie animal flelded ever^r one
witb tremendous gracean ease.: • :
Great!" entbtised the msMOger.
fNow go around tbe: bases,: I wanna
see if you can nm fast enough." .
IBun?" nelghed the borsc, "If I
could run, do you tbink I: vould be
here."
PBODDING THE DEAD
Mark Tvain, onee visited tbe cele-brated
Miadame Tuasaud's Wax
Wotks In London, and was admirlng
the replica of Queen Victoria «ben lie
felt a sudden stab of pain in his pos-terioT'
He cvbeeled : around angrily
atkl foimd blöisäf face to feoe «ritfo
an open-mouttaed , British matron,
ber xmttnella stUl almed at lilm,
"Oh, Lof, ft's alive!" she sbridted,
and ran wMiy ott into tbe nigbt.
the craft look like an arrow shot high
into the Sky.; The uninow air Jet engines
now start .working imparting
even greater acceleratlon to i t s climb;}
and; when it reaches the upper, rare^
fied strata of the atmosphere, the
space craft switches bn its llquid Jet
engines and discards even the little
wiriglets. now no longer needed elther.
" There comes a polnt when the roc-/
ketship attains a speed of about 6 1/2
miles per second. At this speed : it
traye's round the earth like a new
moon,/making the fuU Joumey along
Its 'elliptical orbit in something like
eight hours. This inltial rocket is un-manned.
Its cabin houses only insr
txuments and apparatus, ali automatto
and radlo-controlled, and these
Instruments are constantly "tuned" to
thej^arth, ready to receive any order
It may send.
; I n time this order comes. When the
rocket is at the topmost point of the
elUpse, the engines are swliched on
agaln. addinganother mlle per second
to its' velocity.. This; causes a
tremendous spurt that brlngs the rocr
ket-out to its "stationary orbit", a
body moving along it in an equatorial
plahe always remalns over the same
polht of the earth's surface, for here
It performs Its revolution around. the
eartb In 24 hours. ' *
It is very convenient to have the
rocket thus stationary overhead. This
makes it eäsyto keep it under teles-copic
obse^ation and to control it by
beamed radio signals. And on this
stationary orbit the craft Is kept un-tU
It i t e been refuelled.
A similar rocket wlth a cargo of fuel
is despatched to the. stationary orbit
and, wlth radio signals controlling the
operation, the two rockets are brought
together and the fuel d uUy transfer-red.
The tanks refllled, the Jet engines
are switched on again and give
the Space shlp a fresh impetus, i n -
creasing its speed by another half a.
mlle or SO per second. Four and half
day*s travel at this speed brings the
ship to the moon's orbit. It. begins
to move Parallel to that orbit, then,
[succumblng to the moon's attraction,
stärts to fall on i t . . . I t i t going to
crash?: No, provision has been made
against that, A sensitive radio beam
follows the rocket and at a certain
point i n ; its approach to the moon's
surface It. "tums" the. craft so that
the nozzles face forward, switche& on
the engines, and the rocket makes a
smooth landing.
The flight is over. But It would
scarcely have been worth all the labor
expense and time merely to ship a few
tons of dead metal to the moon! What
km
Automatic earth-controlled tank explores the mbon's surface.:
a flight like that.contributes to science
and engineering?
• » •
Lefs continuc to watch our rocket;
Evldently the spot where it landed
was not • qiiite level, for the sllvery
ship gives a slight lurch : and: turns
over on its side. As i t does so its, body
opens down the middle and from. UiT
side it,'(Icaving: broad tracks on the
dusty surface of thc moon,'a little ba>
by tank emerges.
No instrument or symbol of war, Is
this little tank; :but a peaceable Instrument
of science tackllng:; the r l d -
dles of the unlverse. Inside, It has
RUtomatiC: Instruments for studying'
the conditions obtalning on the moon:;
the temperature, the composItlonolT:
the rocks, etc. MountedI on a re-volving
tclescoplc tripod nbove It is a
television camera' and evcrything that
comes withln the camera's "tleld of
vision'* ikseen on n: television :8Creen
by sclentlsts In their laboratory on the
earth. They are 'olso able to follow
the:;^iBi!i(Ilng»;ofa
mcnti and to direct Its movemcnts by
radio signals.'
There may be places on the moon
where a landing rocket would meet
with dlsaster, and it Is the tank'8 Job
"PICNIC"
An Interesting
B Y GWEN WIIITTAKEB
"Thafs the first, movle r v e scen
wherc the tramp gets the glrl." Soi.
said my.'husband' to' me:as we came
out of that movlewe've all heard fio
much about, Plcnlc. But don't: thlnk
I've spolled the cndlng for you :by
saying that because Picnfc: Is full: of
surprlses.
It is the Story of a young man ^oh
the burn" who comes to a smaU town
in Kansas via frcight to sec an old
friend, and of the Impact he has on
the Ilves of several people in the town.
The young man, played by William
Holden, is an ex-college boy who dld'-'
nt finish and has been drifting ever
since. TThe friend he is looklng for*
is a pai from col'ege days whose f a -
ther owns some graln elevators whe-re
he hopes to obtain work — "a Job
with a nice Office and a Secretary",
he says hopefuUy. There Js a bit of
Irony, Intended or not, i n the reply
of the boss' son who, having: worked
his way up from the bottom by spend-ing
one summer in the elevators, tells
hIm, "Oh you can't start at one of
those top Jobs right away,"
Early in the story the young
"tramp" meets a famlly i n whlch
there are two young daughters played
by 'Susan ätrasberg and K l m Noyak;
An almost immediate i mu^
tion sprlngs up: between Mndge (Klm:
Novak) and. the hero • complleated by
Government Assisfanoe Could
Develop Pofential Skiers
B Y B O N C U E B IE
Fort Artiiur-—^ We sat around the
lunch-room of the Finnish Hall,
drinkingcoffee and talking about s k i ing,
the: Olympics, the National Federation
of Labor Youth campaign for
a $10 mllllon sports and recreation
pian. These young athletes were stlll
obvloasly excited about the weekend
meet and spoke with pride of the fine
way Isku A . C. ^ had organizcd the
whole event,
With one exception. they w€re all
members of the Finnish Canadian
Amateur 'Sports Federation fFCASP)
and came from a l l over Northern O n tario.
Clubs represented at the meet
included Speed A. C. Whitefish; Jehu
A. C;; Beaver Lake; Isku A . ; C ,
Port Arthur; Elo A C . North Branch r
B^aro Tjgers A. C ; Echo A . C . Round
Lake: and Laurentlan 6ki Club
North Bay,
Elmer Ypyä was the big Winner, He
swept home to take both the 20 km.
and 10 km. cros» country events. Be-,
eause he, was iiot a member of the
FCASF tie could n o t c l a lm the cham-plonship
trophy which went to blond
sun-bumt: K a r l Palomaksi, second to
Ypyä and a standrout performer dur-ing
the meet; ; A n t t i Ranta, heavy-set,
soft-spoken young man wa3 another
Winner i n the senior men'«
event- He told; ine he read Champ
and had i i c a r d of the N F L Y campaign.
" O u r Canadian Skl team at. the
Olympics did an excellent Job i n face
of dlff Icutlies. The Federal Government
should come acros» wlth something,"
he said.
The F C A S F Meet wlth over 30 com-petltors
wa8 bigger; than the 'Dominion
Junior Finals. Helen Auranen
brought glory to; the glrls by winning
the ladies' over 16 events. She is blond
and smiles easUy and i n a : modest
way, to'd me of comlng second In the
Dominion. LadJes' finals i n Sudbuty.
Several m&aiToers ot the F C A S F com-peted
in the Dominion Finals and did
very wen.
The F C A S F meet was sanctlonedby
the Canadian Amateur Skl - Association
and the Lakehead SkiJSone, The
athletes wanted to be sure, to mentlon
the splendid cooperatlon of Mike Ou2^
zel CASA representatlve, and Mr,
Axclson, Both Mr, Guzzell and M r ;
Axelson attended a sparkjing youth
concert and assistcd; Arnold Vester-back
in presentation :of the. trophlcs,
After watchlng some of these har-dy
FInnish-Canadian skiers: pound
across tlie finish line after a grueling
20 km. run, r m n o t sure I wouId care
to try jt, But one lbing:;ls clear.;tn
young peop'ev like Antti« Helen ;an<d
K a r l , Canada has great/ undeveloped
fikjJng potentlal and the Federal - Go-;
vemment could give tbebi the breaks.
the Xacfci thftt she: Is almqst ;cngoged
to the^ gmln eleya
of the Story is set on Labor Day and
tho whole town ts off to a picnlc,
whlch provldes hotpnly.a tltle for the
Picture but aIso an excellent sctting
for a i l : sorts or ;romantlc'confUcts.:
: Another Interesting charactcr In
ipicnlc is that of a h "old maiä" school
tcachor • jjlaycd • ^ b y f t ^ ; Russell. Ttiie
to the Old fltei-eotype; ahc has several
"old maid" schoolteacher frlends,: who
s?em to travel in a pack and act very
sllly. RoÄ's boyfrlind Is, the owner of
a sma»! store, an Inofferislve and
rather be!A'lldercd sort of man, .weU
portrayed by .Arthur OConnell. In
fact, Mri::0'Coii^^
vrork In this role, 1^
fqr.: äri; Academy ;ÄwardS^
porting Actor, - • , ' '
: As the romancebetween Holden and
Novak. progresses, Roz, helped along
by the ödd nip from her boyfrjend'8
bottJe, foegins to brood more and
more about her chanccis of marrlage:
She Isn't too enthuslastic about her
escort when the day be£;ins but" by
night time She Is dowh on her knees
begglng him to marry her. I thlnk
this is very much overdone. ,
Strangely enough, unlike many
Hollywood movics, this one shotvs a
rich man'S: son In an uncompllment-ary
Jlght, On the other hand, William
Holden, a juyeriile dellnquent In his
early youth duc to parental neglect,
and a very mixed up kid In general,
is 8h6wn as ä very likcablo' sort of
fcIJow. And though Klm Novak'8
mother Is busy trying to marry her
off to the grainheir, she doc8n't care
for the idea, and says that " I don't
fcel at home wlth those people.!'
' But as I said before, there are
plcnty of surprlses i n Plcnlc. I found
It very good centertalnment wlth a
llvely and interesthig ntoty that has
good pace and a plot tbat is dlffcrent.
The acthig Is genera!'y excellent ex-cept
for that of K l m Novak who8e
acting experlence, with the exception
of two or three other fllms. lias been
confined to modelling; She appears
to Jbe doing a good deal of decp tblnk-
Ing during the fllm for she doc8n't
have much to «ay., and pnce expresses
the opinion that she yeams to bc
something more than "Just; pretty."
She doies look very pretty. but some-i
i i
of BU tbe^prppertr
In the nearby rock» tbey viii pot t i p ./
the u # l a b i e ' l KÄ
8ubsequent,automatiefocketa«Ulfff«!. ,<l
pt«mlsbj.Uje:;«p^
iiso^vdellver^;the;mä5^
poscs can be made a reality »Ithlijt.., ,;
five to ien years fnmnoW,AndiÄ^ •
Mm
^The trall;
.not-tbuqiio^ m,.
entering in the Flnnlab Orgänäeatlon"
Ofijö^nadi^^^
Festival whlch is agaln beIng beld IQ -
o § e r : i i i U i ^ ^
vouth whq once before mad? the tönff .. ,' M
ms. m
work, Tberfore It would bevery good' - , ?i | h
imeiälyet^
In post yean tbe festlvals lwve''.
taken on the charactcr of >a:yotitib"
festival
varlous
get together and bave a goodt
This year wm aIso be slmliar irtm
idänces
pianned
guests. These festivlties wUl of cotine^ .
hot be restrlctcd to those partlcipattng.
In the plays, but
Tbls would therefore
occasioh
ccntres t
celebrate
how docsn't seem llkc a real Ilve
glrl,
Another weak point öf %e fllm Is
that William Holden Jooks older than
the young man he is supppsed to be
pbrtraylng .whl<ih' jmakes.some.of bls
actlohs seem ludicrous. A newcomer
to the screen, Susan Strasberg,, is
very good; as K i m Nqyak's younger
slster who Is soi^ethlng of ä
One of -tbe; 'qtber attractioJäs'
Picnic i s ' t h a t it .gives an excellent
Oi;,:;<-;;-viv:;:iT^t!Ttr^^
memmsmm
mä
Wbcn t h e : ^ t o r isav
ambling toward hiin, be dedded
cblde
ms
gular BttMlanw-iat;^se^^
- Paiising -as:'they^-met/^^tbe• mlhl«tii#?^ '
asked. "Brdtber; wby haveh't I «eett>.%"
••yqu:to^cbur»cg
:s^5^I^aln'i;;be«i::;;thiB^
old gent'8 unfeaMi reply,' < .
m
m
plete witb community sibglng,^ lost \ v <'
:chiidien?and;E -
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Vapaus, March 22, 1956 |
| Language | fi |
| Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
| Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
| Date | 1956-03-22 |
| Type | text |
| Format | application/pdf |
| Rights | Some rights reserved |
| Identifier | Vapaus560322 |
Description
| Title | 1956-03-22-03 |
| OCR text |
Sudbuiy Disfrict
Skiers Göing To
Round Lake
According to the calendar
Ims just sprung ania we should be see-ing
green grass agaln sbortly. Äs f ar
SS Sudbury is concemed this seems
to be the case, Despite heavy snows
in the eafly part of March a series
cf warm days raises hopes of the
snow disappearing. in. a few weeks.
As far as the skiing season goes,
it was ali but officially closed last
ffcekend with the successful conclu-sion
of the Alerts meet and mahy
skiers have already racked away their
skiers and have tumed their thoughts
to summer sports. . ••
But the most ardent skiers have.
not put away their skis and this
weekend will be hitting northward Ih
quest of snow. The» occasion is the
Echo meet at Round Lake which wiU
be the last off icial mest of the season.
. Jehu will bevery Weil represented
at the meet as aiso will be Speed.
The main competition wlll be for the
relay trophy which Jehu regairds as
its own property having already se-cured
two wins. ;
A HOPELESS CASE FQR HYPNOTISM
B Y BOB WABD
We never wou!d have mentioned
this.
We would have been afraid to.
I f we had of. folks i n the union
vpould have declared "Old Wards'mar-bles
are rattling again.^' Indeed some
citizens would have bluntly stated
"the guy's nuts!"
But now that Bridie Murphy"s In
the news, and others are claiming
that they recall an earUer Ufe, we can
reveal the tale of the hypnotized boss.
This particular boss; under hypno-tlc
suggestion, recalled several earlier
lives. But, of course, that comes later
in the story.
It ali happened a number of years
ago. And as we said earlier wewould
never have mentioned i t at ali i f it
wasu't for ali of the news about B r i die
Murphy.
; It was at negotiation time at the
Pffft Electric Co. The boss. Nuddin*
D. (or Doing) Pffft. was up to his
usual tricks. Like, for instance saying
'no' ali the time.
Matter of f act this partlcula:r year,
Nuddin* D. was in such 'noing' form
that he was, saying 'no' to the com-mittee
even before they asked for
-inytjiing.
Nuddin' D. PfffC It mlght be said
here. wa5 a self-made mnn. And this
fact. whicb he kept telUng tbe corn-mittee
over and over, led one wag
to remark that " i f he was self-made.
it was a classical example c l uoskiUed
labor."
i o keep the record stralght It
should aisobe stated that Nuddin^O.
came right: up from the xanks » of
a long line of miUionaires^
I n any event the committee was
making about as much progress nego-tiating
with Nuddin' D. as John Vo&-
ter Dulles is currently making convln-cing
India to drink Coca Cola. >
I t was at about this time that a
movement started i n the shop to draft
Obtical J . Gladeye onto the commit»
tee. Obtical J . was ä student of hyp-nosis..
It. was even nunored In the
:!hop that with one glance he could
make Time-study Men forget that
they'd come out to time him.
.Definite'y on the record was the
fact that he had hypnotized the cafeteria
personnel into confessing Just
what went into the.meat ples they
sold. The disclosure,- i t . m i g h t be
pointed out sent the meat piesale as
PEROIVAL'S PROGRAM
Wrong Way on Right Track
B Y KELL HARRIS
... ... . . . ; . , , , ., •. .
Lloyd Percival, track and field
coach.head.of Sports College of C BC
f ame,: and of tentime outspoken eri tie
of happenings in Canadian sports, put
this on the record recenfy:
"We (Canada) are: the only major
country in .the World without at least
some sort of overall development pro-
.gram. and our record i n international
competition shows it.
" I n addition OUT standards of phy-*
sical fitness are among the lowest of
any civilized country in the World, according
to a nationwide survey. Lack
of fitness. means a tremendous i n -
crease in hypokinetic diseases ^ those
which. are caiised • by. physical iaacUvi-ty
— and Canadians are particularly
prone to this type, especially in the
• 30 to 40 age "group."
So what does Mr. Percival and his
Sports College conclude?
Priväte enterprise is the solution.
•• •• .. ^ •• •.•«. •— .»,••,•
Recently, together with sports, business
and physical. education figxires,
he announced the formation of the <
Canadian Amateur-Sports and Physical
Fitness Development .Service
backed: by a $700,000 fund from p r i väte
corporations and the GBC. and
to be operated by Sports College.
Here's what is planned to happen:
There . w i l l b e weekly national
broadcasts via CBC, a national week-ly
TV program, a monthly instruction
nev/spaper, several motion pictures,
booklets and bu!letins.
In addition, there wm be travelling
clinics, rcoaching • schools headed by
Sports College experts in physical
education; training, nutrition and so
on. Ali will be available to any group
wishing them and the take-off date
is March 1.
» * *
Says Percival With laudableenthu-siasm:"
We hope to make Canadians
the most sjjorts and fitness literate
people in the world."
Percival, who a few weeks ago
thought the armed services wouId be
the best place to develop Canadian
athletes, döesh't seiem to like the idea
of govemment-sponsored programs,
for he says: "Although programs such
as are operated i n Russia might have
an advantage. In that the people pf
the Sovlet Union can ber^imented
and subsidized, we are confident that
onr program willprovide Canadians
with as comprehensive and effective
a Service as can.be:foundanywhere
in the World.''
Which is just plain gobbledygoofc
However one may laud the äesire of
these folk. to do something about the
shamefui sports and recreation situa-t
i o n i n this country, a $700,000 pian
from private enterprise won't scratch
the surface.
How many sports fields and swim-ming
tanks wjll it build?
H3W many athlete.s w^Il it put into
serious training for the Olymplc
Games this year?
No. Mr.. Percival. You are"ön the
right track, but you are running in
the wrong; direction. It will make
Sports College a bigger name and i t
will certainly help Canadians to be-come
more fitness-minded. But it
wont buy gym tcunks or spike shoes
for athletes or pay anyone's fare to
Melbourne. f
But i f i t makes Canadians more
aware of how disgracefui the situation
really is, so that theyll put more heat
under the place that n e e d s i t u p in
Ottawa, It w i l l b e a l i tO" the good. ,
It ali those sportsminded people
that met in Toronto io launch this
new program with such fanfarewou1d
together drop a Sharp note t o M r . S t
Laiu-ent it would help provide: the
foundation that . i s needed for the
new Sports College program to ope-rate
effectively.
T h e National Federation of Labör
Youth has taken up the demand put
fonvard by several trade union and
other groups for a $10^ mlUiop. sports
and recreation pian for Canada to
begin this Olymplc year. Thafs the
ticket M r : Percival.
Howio Recosnize Heart
Attaclc and Help Victim
How can you teli if someone you'r€f
workingwith is having a heart at-tack,
and what can you do about it?
This is the question answered by
the American Heart Association in
its recent leaflet, Heart Attack. The
leaflet notes that the usual symp-toms
of a heart attack include a
sudden gasping for air, 5weating and
intense pain. Sometlmes the victim
will lose consciousness.
vAll of these signs are-likely to
spell coronary thrombosis, particularly
i f the victim i s : a man above
the age of 35. Coronary thrombosis
occtirs wihen a blood elot partially
o* entirely shuts off the supply of
blood to the heart from the coronary
artieries.
•What can the bystander do to Oielp
the victina? First of ali, call a doctor.
Heart attacks have never been known
to re^ond to first aid, and the weUr
intentioned amateur can do much
more hann than good. However, this
döesn't. mean you need stand help-lessly
by.
:" 1$. is prefectly correct to help the
patient to get into the most com-fortable
position possible, which will
be the one in which he or Ähe finds
it easlest .to breathe. Loosening' tight
clothing such as belts and shirt col-lars
wlll aiso easethe patienfs suffer.
ing in many cases. At the same time,
try to do everything possible to keep
the patient from getting , chllled-
"There they go, askmg for wage increases again when I
caö't even make ehds meet*' . - -
Remember the body, and particularly
the circulatory system, is engaged ih
a life and death.struggle to adjust to
the sudden ch'anges caused by the
heart attack, and any addltional a d -
justments required by the need to
.respond to chilling won't help,,
Many people have been told that
the first thing to do when confron-ted
by a heart attack is to reach
for the whiskey bottle. Not: so. the
leaflet points ,out.. Do not give the
patient . anything to e a t o r drink.
There are conditions under which
alcöhol is helpful to the coronary
victim, but only: a doctor can de-
•cide. when that is. The rule for tÄe
layman is: nothing to drink^ and Chat
goes for coffee, tea a nd water, as
well as for liquor.
T h e leafet alsö describes t h e p r o -
cess of recovery which the: approxi-mately
four out of ilve coronary vie*
tims who survive the first attack SO
through. The development .of c o l -
lateral circtdatlon to replace tbe
blocked-off. coronary artery and to
enable the heart to receive adequate
supplies of btood is discuss»!/ as is
the process of scar tissue. formation
over the Infested, or damaged, area
of the heart; The leaflet notes tbat
most heart attack victlms are able
to retum to productive vork, but
often adjustments i n both Job :^and
outside routlnes are required- .
low as a vDrker^ lazder on dA7 be^
fore payday. , ,
Obtical J. vas drafted onto tbe
committee. nie committee bad tried
eveiy other way to get Nuddin' D. td
move 60 what vas vrong vith taking
a 'tong look'„ as It were. at;the situation.
S t r a t ^ of the committee vas to
have Obtical J. slt across the table
from Nuddin'-D, And q.uicker than
a boss can spot a loose rate. Obtical
J. had Nuddin' D. hypnotized.
But ordlnaryhypnotlsmdid about
as much to NUddln» D. as Olor** H.
Line did to liOllabriglda.
Every suggestion put on hIm whll*
under hypnotlsm vai met tqr a "no.**
Sometlmes, inind you, they vere In a
varlety of languages.'non. neln, nilkaf
noddln', etc.' lius ObUcal told the
conmUttee proved that in spme eärr
ller life Nuddin' D. had been a boss in
other languages. EVeryoneconceded
there was merit tö this thought as it
was recalled that Nuddin'i>. nonnally
only spoke Uiree lancniages, Engli^
profane and obseene. '.
;:• ,^ '•^:''y-'\!:K::--J:'*T^^ -v'"-./-;; J V
About this. stage of events Obtical
decided to try to get Nuddin' to recall
some earlier exlstence. vperhaps,'' he
opined; "the boss mIght have been a
hiunan being at one time."
The committee agreed they had
Nuddin' to lose. So Obtical began
questionlng.
"Do you recall some earlier exlstence?"
"Yes. I see sand. It is the Sahara
Desert; A lot of menare worklng like
horses buildhig the Pyramids."
"What are you doing there?" Obtical
asked.'
"Bossing the Job and tuming down
the worker's demands for an extra
ounce of camel;milk';a dJfty/V; ;
TZils exchange of. conversatlon, of
course, wa8n't gettlng anyone ; any-where;
so Obtical changed his questionlng.
«•Do: you- recall some other exlst-ance?"
^ - *
"Yes, I see cotton. : It Is Alabama:
There are - thousands of slaves.' I'm
boss. I have a great big bull whlp."
"Can you remember whatyour
name was?" ' '
"Öiire, Simdri Legree Pttttr '
It wäs this disclosure which led to
the strlke at the Pffft Electrical
Works;'nie'ayes' had it' Iri this particular
Instance where the 'eyesVfail-ed.
But as we started to say we never
would have mentioned this matter at
aU — If It hadn't of been for ali the
new8 storles about Bridie Murphy. We
figured no one wouldever have be
Ueved It. — V. E. News
Torstaina. «jaaUslc. !22 p. — Tbmsä»y;M$a3^tiil9§$
TO THE MOOS IX S^tO ITABS
SPACE TRAVEL IS A PRACTICAL FEASIBIUTY
Only yesterday. space travel seemed j
io ina$t peop'^ a fascinating but fan-tastlc
idea.
Today the progress of rocket tech-niques
has forought «ithin the realm
of practlcal feasibillty the construc-tion
of a composite. multi-stage rocket
tbat could fly beyond the range of the
earth's power of gravity and elther
teoome an artificial satelite of our
planet or leave it altogether. *
An Interestlng pian. for an expedl-tion
to the moon was proposed recentl
y by the Soviet-sclentlst Y. S. Khleb-tsevich.
This is how he pictures such
an expsdltion.
:: With a roar of its mighty englncs,
a giant aircraft. its brond Wings out-j^
retchedk runs along the ground and
shoots into the air. Its speed rapldly
mounting. it soars higher. and higher.
and before long it sheds the broad
Wings, whlch were only needed for the
take-off. as weu as the piston engines
tuming the propellers. Only Short.
backswept winglets remain, making
COULD V T BE8I8T
Little sixryear-old; Donna : was ' a l -
most overcome with Joy on h e r b l r t h -
day' when she recelved two gifts sbe
had most ardently desired a wri8t
watch and a t>ottIe of perf ume; She
chattered about the new possesslons
all day long, wearlng lier motiier out
on the subject. Ouests were expect-ed
for dlnner and her modiiergently
admonisbed Doima In advance sajring;
"Kow. dear. evetybody: kxtovs - about
your presents and everybot^r-is happy
for you. But we must'nt go on taik-ing
abeut them a l i the tlme.^ ^
The litUe glrl heM ber pedce at tbe
table througout the greatest part of
the meal. A l uU finaly occorred i n
the conversatlon: a n d / tmable vto ^ins-train
herssHf, she burst fdrtb, rxf anyone
hears oir smells axqrtbing, it's
me!"
On The Tppic Of
Spring And Baseball
Toronto^ -—Right now Itseems a
little doubtfui if summer wiU ever
come to Toronto.: But as'theold saying
goes — if this Is Winter, can
spring be far behind?
• Anyway the baseball fans are already
comlng out of their shells, and
spring training' Is Just around the
comer. This reminds me of a story
that I read the other day. It seems
that during the second .World
years, when talent .was scarcer than
snow on the: Sahara/ Leo Durocher
had charge of Uie playing concesslon
ia Et)bets Field^ One day be heard
a knock on the clubhouse door. Open-ing
it he found a big, good looUng
horse.
'^Understand you need ball players,"
said the horse. "Can you use a $425
bitter?"
"Grab a stick," said Leo.
T h e horse trdtted to Uie bat rack.
picked up a bat and trotted> to the
piate. After five pltches, each' of
wbich wa8 slammed out of thepark,
Durocher c^xeded tbe horse. was a
alugger.
''What else can you do," he said.
"1 am a great shoztstop." '
"Get out and prove it," said Leo.
The horse moved to short and Leo
started slapping ground balls to him
and tiie animal flelded ever^r one
witb tremendous gracean ease.: • :
Great!" entbtised the msMOger.
fNow go around tbe: bases,: I wanna
see if you can nm fast enough." .
IBun?" nelghed the borsc, "If I
could run, do you tbink I: vould be
here."
PBODDING THE DEAD
Mark Tvain, onee visited tbe cele-brated
Miadame Tuasaud's Wax
Wotks In London, and was admirlng
the replica of Queen Victoria «ben lie
felt a sudden stab of pain in his pos-terioT'
He cvbeeled : around angrily
atkl foimd blöisäf face to feoe «ritfo
an open-mouttaed , British matron,
ber xmttnella stUl almed at lilm,
"Oh, Lof, ft's alive!" she sbridted,
and ran wMiy ott into tbe nigbt.
the craft look like an arrow shot high
into the Sky.; The uninow air Jet engines
now start .working imparting
even greater acceleratlon to i t s climb;}
and; when it reaches the upper, rare^
fied strata of the atmosphere, the
space craft switches bn its llquid Jet
engines and discards even the little
wiriglets. now no longer needed elther.
" There comes a polnt when the roc-/
ketship attains a speed of about 6 1/2
miles per second. At this speed : it
traye's round the earth like a new
moon,/making the fuU Joumey along
Its 'elliptical orbit in something like
eight hours. This inltial rocket is un-manned.
Its cabin houses only insr
txuments and apparatus, ali automatto
and radlo-controlled, and these
Instruments are constantly "tuned" to
thej^arth, ready to receive any order
It may send.
; I n time this order comes. When the
rocket is at the topmost point of the
elUpse, the engines are swliched on
agaln. addinganother mlle per second
to its' velocity.. This; causes a
tremendous spurt that brlngs the rocr
ket-out to its "stationary orbit", a
body moving along it in an equatorial
plahe always remalns over the same
polht of the earth's surface, for here
It performs Its revolution around. the
eartb In 24 hours. ' *
It is very convenient to have the
rocket thus stationary overhead. This
makes it eäsyto keep it under teles-copic
obse^ation and to control it by
beamed radio signals. And on this
stationary orbit the craft Is kept un-tU
It i t e been refuelled.
A similar rocket wlth a cargo of fuel
is despatched to the. stationary orbit
and, wlth radio signals controlling the
operation, the two rockets are brought
together and the fuel d uUy transfer-red.
The tanks refllled, the Jet engines
are switched on again and give
the Space shlp a fresh impetus, i n -
creasing its speed by another half a.
mlle or SO per second. Four and half
day*s travel at this speed brings the
ship to the moon's orbit. It. begins
to move Parallel to that orbit, then,
[succumblng to the moon's attraction,
stärts to fall on i t . . . I t i t going to
crash?: No, provision has been made
against that, A sensitive radio beam
follows the rocket and at a certain
point i n ; its approach to the moon's
surface It. "tums" the. craft so that
the nozzles face forward, switche& on
the engines, and the rocket makes a
smooth landing.
The flight is over. But It would
scarcely have been worth all the labor
expense and time merely to ship a few
tons of dead metal to the moon! What
km
Automatic earth-controlled tank explores the mbon's surface.:
a flight like that.contributes to science
and engineering?
• » •
Lefs continuc to watch our rocket;
Evldently the spot where it landed
was not • qiiite level, for the sllvery
ship gives a slight lurch : and: turns
over on its side. As i t does so its, body
opens down the middle and from. UiT
side it,'(Icaving: broad tracks on the
dusty surface of thc moon,'a little ba>
by tank emerges.
No instrument or symbol of war, Is
this little tank; :but a peaceable Instrument
of science tackllng:; the r l d -
dles of the unlverse. Inside, It has
RUtomatiC: Instruments for studying'
the conditions obtalning on the moon:;
the temperature, the composItlonolT:
the rocks, etc. MountedI on a re-volving
tclescoplc tripod nbove It is a
television camera' and evcrything that
comes withln the camera's "tleld of
vision'* ikseen on n: television :8Creen
by sclentlsts In their laboratory on the
earth. They are 'olso able to follow
the:;^iBi!i(Ilng»;ofa
mcnti and to direct Its movemcnts by
radio signals.'
There may be places on the moon
where a landing rocket would meet
with dlsaster, and it Is the tank'8 Job
"PICNIC"
An Interesting
B Y GWEN WIIITTAKEB
"Thafs the first, movle r v e scen
wherc the tramp gets the glrl." Soi.
said my.'husband' to' me:as we came
out of that movlewe've all heard fio
much about, Plcnlc. But don't: thlnk
I've spolled the cndlng for you :by
saying that because Picnfc: Is full: of
surprlses.
It is the Story of a young man ^oh
the burn" who comes to a smaU town
in Kansas via frcight to sec an old
friend, and of the Impact he has on
the Ilves of several people in the town.
The young man, played by William
Holden, is an ex-college boy who dld'-'
nt finish and has been drifting ever
since. TThe friend he is looklng for*
is a pai from col'ege days whose f a -
ther owns some graln elevators whe-re
he hopes to obtain work — "a Job
with a nice Office and a Secretary",
he says hopefuUy. There Js a bit of
Irony, Intended or not, i n the reply
of the boss' son who, having: worked
his way up from the bottom by spend-ing
one summer in the elevators, tells
hIm, "Oh you can't start at one of
those top Jobs right away,"
Early in the story the young
"tramp" meets a famlly i n whlch
there are two young daughters played
by 'Susan ätrasberg and K l m Noyak;
An almost immediate i mu^
tion sprlngs up: between Mndge (Klm:
Novak) and. the hero • complleated by
Government Assisfanoe Could
Develop Pofential Skiers
B Y B O N C U E B IE
Fort Artiiur-—^ We sat around the
lunch-room of the Finnish Hall,
drinkingcoffee and talking about s k i ing,
the: Olympics, the National Federation
of Labor Youth campaign for
a $10 mllllon sports and recreation
pian. These young athletes were stlll
obvloasly excited about the weekend
meet and spoke with pride of the fine
way Isku A . C. ^ had organizcd the
whole event,
With one exception. they w€re all
members of the Finnish Canadian
Amateur 'Sports Federation fFCASP)
and came from a l l over Northern O n tario.
Clubs represented at the meet
included Speed A. C. Whitefish; Jehu
A. C;; Beaver Lake; Isku A . ; C ,
Port Arthur; Elo A C . North Branch r
B^aro Tjgers A. C ; Echo A . C . Round
Lake: and Laurentlan 6ki Club
North Bay,
Elmer Ypyä was the big Winner, He
swept home to take both the 20 km.
and 10 km. cros» country events. Be-,
eause he, was iiot a member of the
FCASF tie could n o t c l a lm the cham-plonship
trophy which went to blond
sun-bumt: K a r l Palomaksi, second to
Ypyä and a standrout performer dur-ing
the meet; ; A n t t i Ranta, heavy-set,
soft-spoken young man wa3 another
Winner i n the senior men'«
event- He told; ine he read Champ
and had i i c a r d of the N F L Y campaign.
" O u r Canadian Skl team at. the
Olympics did an excellent Job i n face
of dlff Icutlies. The Federal Government
should come acros» wlth something,"
he said.
The F C A S F Meet wlth over 30 com-petltors
wa8 bigger; than the 'Dominion
Junior Finals. Helen Auranen
brought glory to; the glrls by winning
the ladies' over 16 events. She is blond
and smiles easUy and i n a : modest
way, to'd me of comlng second In the
Dominion. LadJes' finals i n Sudbuty.
Several m&aiToers ot the F C A S F com-peted
in the Dominion Finals and did
very wen.
The F C A S F meet was sanctlonedby
the Canadian Amateur Skl - Association
and the Lakehead SkiJSone, The
athletes wanted to be sure, to mentlon
the splendid cooperatlon of Mike Ou2^
zel CASA representatlve, and Mr,
Axclson, Both Mr, Guzzell and M r ;
Axelson attended a sparkjing youth
concert and assistcd; Arnold Vester-back
in presentation :of the. trophlcs,
After watchlng some of these har-dy
FInnish-Canadian skiers: pound
across tlie finish line after a grueling
20 km. run, r m n o t sure I wouId care
to try jt, But one lbing:;ls clear.;tn
young peop'ev like Antti« Helen ;an |
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