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mm m* • | . i k f " - S i y u 6 ' Torstaina, kosäk. 23 p. — iThursday, June 23, 1960 EI OLE SYYTÄ PELKOON, lii?!. lii V \ Jto.;yWorthmore-'oU -villnkoirfvnsa ^ — Rouva, en peljännyt sen pure- ' kanssa kaupassa. Vieressh sois<)va vnn nihuin. muttn kuh se nosti toi-mies näytti pelkäävän kun kolut sen UknJ.tlknnsn ylbs, pelkäsin etta haisteli hänen-housunlnhkeltann. sk' potkaisee. PARHAIN ONNITTELUIN , XECUTtl'S BÄKERY LTD , '1 .1', . l v ..j ' Valmisitsnniit maukasla- letpäii ja pikkuleipää ' ; ' ~ ^Sudbiuy^^a y l i 50 vuotta ••vä • ' 34 Fir Lane ja Ostokeskuksessa —. BETTY ANNE MYYMÄLÄT 114V'2 DuxHam St. ja 24 Elm Sl. West Canada-päivän tervehdyksemme! MORRISON PiUMBING & HEATING (SUDBURY) LIMITED P U T K I T U S : J A P E L T I T Y Ö N E X P E R T IT L Ä M M I T Y S L A I T E S P E S I A L I S T I T 164 Elgin St. South Puh. OS. 4-0797 Sudbury CANADA-PÄIVAN TERVEHDYS! DAVID Ä. BOWLES INSURANCE Yleisien vakuutuksien toimisto . PUPIELIN OS. 3-9519 67 ELM ST. E., HUONE 301 S U D B U R Y \ .. , TERVEHDYKSEMME Parent Plumhing, Keating & Electric LIMITED ' PUTKITUS-, LÄMMITYS J A SÄHKÖTYÖUIKE ' 110 Durham Street S. ' Sudbury rCANADA-PÄIVÄN TERVEHDYS Sudburyn piirinjtunnetuimmalta rakennusyhtiöltä SULKEUÖUMME SUOSIOONNE ÄCME BUILDING & CONSTRUCTION L I M I T E D Insinöörit ja urakoitsijat Liike-, asunto- Ja tehdasrakennusalalla ' KUSTANNUSARVIOT VAPAASTI VAHITTAISMAKSUEPIDOT JÄRJESTETÄÄN , 289 Cedar St. Puh. OS. 3-1771 Sudbury Mm iti:-- MM Calypso, Spanish D F Toronto. — The Yritys vuosijuhla was held under bright, sunny skies-at Tarmola onSunday after-noon June 12th. Our hard work-ing enteitainme'nt: committee-con-sisting of Ricky, Diane, Chuck, Jake and Irma had spent consider-able time and effort on this show and the resuUs vvere very satisfy-ing. ; Highlights of •^the ssparkling and fajt movlng program proved to be a calypsoidance performed by the Yrtys mens' and womens' dance group under the directTon of Dolo-iTS Niskanen; who'also;p a brilliant solo dance, and a Spanish, tambouriiie dance by the Yritys wonien directed by Elsie Jokinen. A good crowd was on hand for the program which began with an opcnlng march onto the dance pavilionby; the participants: -Then Eric Männistö made a brief wel-come specch in \vhich he outlined somo Qf the clubs' past activities as \vell as pieparations for the .coniing Music and Sporls Festival which wiM be heid in South;Porcu-pine. The Finnish choir "Finlandia", under Ty Lcmberg^s direc-tioM sang Ihrec fine Finnish songs^ and tlicii the vcry\young Yritys giiis under Nancy Tcrvola's Icader-ship performed a hoop dance. Paul Hietala, a good young accordionist provided the musical" accoinpani-meiit for the iioop dance and foi the opening maich. Thiec olher young girls gavc sterlmg solo poifoimanccs these were'tap dance routines'by'Janet and Susan Hill and a Fire 'Dance by Ilona Luoma. , f* The Yritys mens gym group put on an excellent display of mat work. for which they received a very big hand, and this also was the concludingnumberofthe program. Henry Huhtanen acted as master of ceremonies for the after-noon and did a very capable and efficient job. Henry is equally conversant: in'Finnish and English which is a definite necessity for this type of job. At the conciusion of the regular program three;presentations-took place. r Aatu ilkonen; donated a. 50. metre tapemeasure to Yritys which was gratefully accepted by Wilbert Böhm, our chairman. Wilbert also presented Heleh Tarvainen with a medal of merit from the FCASF in recognition for-ali ;the outstanding vvork she has done. The final presentation, also made; by-Wilbert, was the giving of the Arne Ritan Frophy 'and the individual vtrophies to the vvinning'Swedish relayteam :roin last year's Music and Sports Festival The Ylitys relay team was victoiious m that event, but apparenlly the individual trophies wercn't avai'able at the time, so the presentation, was' held off until our annual event. The Yritys montlilymembership neeting w:is held shortly after the concert cnded. The Finnish Or- ^ani/.ation had purchased a Iawn inower for Taimola_and the meet-nig unanimoiisly endorsed; the mo< of Yritys Vuosijuhla Editorial: tion that Yritys pay half the cost of the machine.^ It was planned to take a child-ren's gym group to South Porcu-pine for the festival if arrange-ments cöuld be made regarding chaperons. ^Transportation to the festival and the financing of the trip were also discussed. The feel-ingTs that a bus will be chartered' for the trip and that some of the expense money will be raised by such projects as raffles andsocials. — E. M. Boöks^ Race prejudice It is unnecessary to document the evil manifestations of race; pre-judice; 4hese are ali common know-edge. What we must understand is that prejudice of any kind is the result of ignorance, and it is knowledge that will wipe out the seeds of ignorance before they flower into the: weeds: of prejudice. Books will^ help with the eradica-tion process; in thera is a potent, permanent source of knowledge, Raymond Firth has written Uuman Types in which he dis-cusses the development of racial ^roups, the inter-relation of en-vironment and culture, and the responses that certain> societies have made in solving their .social and economic problems. In the Chapter on. racial traits and: mental differences there are several en-lightening statements: "A race is a group .'of peopIewho.have certain heritable physical characteristics.in common; a _na|j.on a group of peopIewith certain; social charac-ferislics m common." (p. 22) " . - . there; is: no direct evidence what-: ever for the existence of 'pure' racial populations."(p;23):"Purity of race is a concept of political propaganda;; fiot a Scientific descrip-r tion of human groups today." (p. 24). There is no such thing, th6n, as a pure race, and the claim to superiority: on that hasis is pure; hokum. The next step is to undestand why certain societies; live the way they live; then we will better understand why we live the way we live. People find themselves ih a particular environment; they must, exist within that environment. Thafs where it ali begins. The Eskimo finds himself in the most inhöspitable environment- on earth; to exist he must learn how to feed and shelter himself so that he can withstand the climate which regu-lates evcrything he does. It is not surprismg that the:Eskimo has not produced a great; body vof literature; or music; he is too absorbed with the' necesijities, of living, never mind the frills. When we turn to societies who are not preoccupied wholly with life's necessities, then; we find a more developed pattern of social customs. A Polynesian can not only give gifts, but his. social codebarshim from partaking (Coiitinued on Page 7> DISARMAMENT, INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS GATHER MOMENTUM During the past several weeks a large number of Corn- , mittees on peace; neutrality, disarmanaent and independenee i have sprung up across this grcat nation of ours. It seems as if a great awakening, a renaissance so to speak, is taking ; placc. Wo are beginning to articulate agaih, to come out of ourvsheli of;smug:eomplance'ncy.;WoiTien^t active Jeadorship in sqme of these committees, and that is , as-it should:be; rWhilemany of these comnnittees stress;some- \vhat different aims-it is plain that they ali are intercon-nected and" interdependent. Wc now knovv Ihat the nuclear . arms race that has been going on since the end of World War II can only lead to man's greatest folly, that inevitably il can only load. to the destruction of civiljzation :on HiStory shows that \var has ahvays been the end result of every armaments race. But this prescnt armaments race is unlike anything \vc have ever experienced before. We knovv that if war should now break out^ through accidental or othor means, it will immediately develop into a world-wide holocaust. We in Canada would immediately be in the very middle of it, in the front Iines, owing to our strategic location. We know too, that should this impossible arnns race continuo unabalcd, it vvill never again be necessary to pian and organi/.c such festivals as the one we pian to hold at South PorCupine this summer. Therefore, the people in our, organizations and the rcaders of this section must whole- . heartedly .support and lake an active part in the work of ali these bona fidc commiltecs and help in the cstablishmcnt cf such commiltecs in cvcry city, ,lown and villagc in Can-väH'afii §:|'J-l^^ One of the first Canadian casuallies of the Alomic Agc \_\yas the bnllianl Winnipcg-born nuclear physicist Dr. Louis Slolin. Hc was cngagcd in running a nuclear cxperiment_ on May 21, 1946 at Lo.s Alamas, New Mexico, when the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atom bombs we'rc assembled, vi^hen he was accidcntall-y expo.scd to a Ipthal dosc of that terrible._ mvisibic killcr, nuclear radialion. He suffcrcd horribly for nine days before he dicd. Accidenls do happen from time to time in every line of endoavour, but th-e-least wc can now do is to resolvc nevec to perrnjt any more Hiröshimas or Nagasakis to take-placo. ' PARHAIN TERVEHDYKSIN! GEO.BABn AUTOKORIEN JA -LASIEN KOIl,TAUSMESTARIT Puh. OS. 3-8457 145 Lorne St. S. Sudbury CANADA-PÄIVÄN TERVEHDYS! JOHNNY'S GARAGE E X P E R T I T A U T O P E L T I - . - L A S I E N J A J A A H D Y T T Ä J I E N K O R J A U K S E S SA 333 Antwerp Avo. OS. 4-0116 Sudbury, PARHAIN TERVEHDYKSIN SAMUEL S. SPEIGEL & CO. Hallituksen lupakirjalla toimivat tilintarkastajat 289 CEDARSREET ' SUDBURY ' tms PARHAAT TERVEHDYKSET CANADA-PÄIVÄN JOHDOSTA toivottaa::. < Virvokejuoihien pullotta ja •Mmm liiiäSiiÄiitS ^ iSSLORNEtSTREET.S.r BREWERIES LTD. PUHELIN OS 5-7561 SUDBURY!\ TERVEHDYKSEMME CANADA-PÄIVÄN JOHDOSTA DEtONGCHAMP CARTAGE CO. LIMITED PAKKAUSTA JA SÄILYTYSTÄ RAHTI- JA MUUTTO A JOA 1 T, ,^^20 Lorne Street , I?uh. OS. 5-5611^ Sudbury Ci TERVEHDYKSEMME MII:LER> mmm & INCH LAKIMIEHET: G. M. Miller. Q.C., K, E. MaU, Vf.A. Inch} D.Mulllgan, H; Anvinenja J. A. Jerome-, ^'^^ 7 DURHAM STREET S. SUDBURY 'M m M f. 4 ,5? PARHAIN TERVEHDYKSIN'/ • ^^•-•-•^i:•,•v^:;^:^;-Jvr^^•^,;.•^-•^•ri^'^•-^^ JAMES CHRISTAKOS Ruokaiaryikkeita, lihaa ja hedelmiä ERIKOISUUTENA MONENLAISET RASVASILLIT 410 Elgin St. S. Sudbury TERVEHDYKSEMME BOTTLING WORKS LTD. Tunnetun 'TEPSI-COLA" ja uuden suositun "TEEM" sekä muiden maukkaiden virvokejuomien pullottaja PUHELIN OS. 4-4571 , . •-•\,} 252 R^GENT ST. S. SUDBURY I i II j » PARHAAT TERVEHDYKSET SUOMALAISILLE ASIAKKAILLEMME CANADA-PXIVÄN JOHDOSTA! mm Hom JA RESTAURANT Erikoisuutenamme «laukkaat italialaiset-, merenherkku- ^a "Steak"-ateriat Puh'. OS. 4-4203 ja OS. 5-5213 1145 Copper Cliff Rd. Sudbury TERVEHDYKSEMME^ Canada-päivän judosta i. (1 233 LARCH STREET SUDBURY i iii 1
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, June 23, 1960 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1960-06-23 |
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 | Vapaus600623 |
Description
Title | 1960-06-23-06 |
OCR text | mm m* • | . i k f " - S i y u 6 ' Torstaina, kosäk. 23 p. — iThursday, June 23, 1960 EI OLE SYYTÄ PELKOON, lii?!. lii V \ Jto.;yWorthmore-'oU -villnkoirfvnsa ^ — Rouva, en peljännyt sen pure- ' kanssa kaupassa. Vieressh sois<)va vnn nihuin. muttn kuh se nosti toi-mies näytti pelkäävän kun kolut sen UknJ.tlknnsn ylbs, pelkäsin etta haisteli hänen-housunlnhkeltann. sk' potkaisee. PARHAIN ONNITTELUIN , XECUTtl'S BÄKERY LTD , '1 .1', . l v ..j ' Valmisitsnniit maukasla- letpäii ja pikkuleipää ' ; ' ~ ^Sudbiuy^^a y l i 50 vuotta ••vä • ' 34 Fir Lane ja Ostokeskuksessa —. BETTY ANNE MYYMÄLÄT 114V'2 DuxHam St. ja 24 Elm Sl. West Canada-päivän tervehdyksemme! MORRISON PiUMBING & HEATING (SUDBURY) LIMITED P U T K I T U S : J A P E L T I T Y Ö N E X P E R T IT L Ä M M I T Y S L A I T E S P E S I A L I S T I T 164 Elgin St. South Puh. OS. 4-0797 Sudbury CANADA-PÄIVAN TERVEHDYS! DAVID Ä. BOWLES INSURANCE Yleisien vakuutuksien toimisto . PUPIELIN OS. 3-9519 67 ELM ST. E., HUONE 301 S U D B U R Y \ .. , TERVEHDYKSEMME Parent Plumhing, Keating & Electric LIMITED ' PUTKITUS-, LÄMMITYS J A SÄHKÖTYÖUIKE ' 110 Durham Street S. ' Sudbury rCANADA-PÄIVÄN TERVEHDYS Sudburyn piirinjtunnetuimmalta rakennusyhtiöltä SULKEUÖUMME SUOSIOONNE ÄCME BUILDING & CONSTRUCTION L I M I T E D Insinöörit ja urakoitsijat Liike-, asunto- Ja tehdasrakennusalalla ' KUSTANNUSARVIOT VAPAASTI VAHITTAISMAKSUEPIDOT JÄRJESTETÄÄN , 289 Cedar St. Puh. OS. 3-1771 Sudbury Mm iti:-- MM Calypso, Spanish D F Toronto. — The Yritys vuosijuhla was held under bright, sunny skies-at Tarmola onSunday after-noon June 12th. Our hard work-ing enteitainme'nt: committee-con-sisting of Ricky, Diane, Chuck, Jake and Irma had spent consider-able time and effort on this show and the resuUs vvere very satisfy-ing. ; Highlights of •^the ssparkling and fajt movlng program proved to be a calypsoidance performed by the Yrtys mens' and womens' dance group under the directTon of Dolo-iTS Niskanen; who'also;p a brilliant solo dance, and a Spanish, tambouriiie dance by the Yritys wonien directed by Elsie Jokinen. A good crowd was on hand for the program which began with an opcnlng march onto the dance pavilionby; the participants: -Then Eric Männistö made a brief wel-come specch in \vhich he outlined somo Qf the clubs' past activities as \vell as pieparations for the .coniing Music and Sporls Festival which wiM be heid in South;Porcu-pine. The Finnish choir "Finlandia", under Ty Lcmberg^s direc-tioM sang Ihrec fine Finnish songs^ and tlicii the vcry\young Yritys giiis under Nancy Tcrvola's Icader-ship performed a hoop dance. Paul Hietala, a good young accordionist provided the musical" accoinpani-meiit for the iioop dance and foi the opening maich. Thiec olher young girls gavc sterlmg solo poifoimanccs these were'tap dance routines'by'Janet and Susan Hill and a Fire 'Dance by Ilona Luoma. , f* The Yritys mens gym group put on an excellent display of mat work. for which they received a very big hand, and this also was the concludingnumberofthe program. Henry Huhtanen acted as master of ceremonies for the after-noon and did a very capable and efficient job. Henry is equally conversant: in'Finnish and English which is a definite necessity for this type of job. At the conciusion of the regular program three;presentations-took place. r Aatu ilkonen; donated a. 50. metre tapemeasure to Yritys which was gratefully accepted by Wilbert Böhm, our chairman. Wilbert also presented Heleh Tarvainen with a medal of merit from the FCASF in recognition for-ali ;the outstanding vvork she has done. The final presentation, also made; by-Wilbert, was the giving of the Arne Ritan Frophy 'and the individual vtrophies to the vvinning'Swedish relayteam :roin last year's Music and Sports Festival The Ylitys relay team was victoiious m that event, but apparenlly the individual trophies wercn't avai'able at the time, so the presentation, was' held off until our annual event. The Yritys montlilymembership neeting w:is held shortly after the concert cnded. The Finnish Or- ^ani/.ation had purchased a Iawn inower for Taimola_and the meet-nig unanimoiisly endorsed; the mo< of Yritys Vuosijuhla Editorial: tion that Yritys pay half the cost of the machine.^ It was planned to take a child-ren's gym group to South Porcu-pine for the festival if arrange-ments cöuld be made regarding chaperons. ^Transportation to the festival and the financing of the trip were also discussed. The feel-ingTs that a bus will be chartered' for the trip and that some of the expense money will be raised by such projects as raffles andsocials. — E. M. Boöks^ Race prejudice It is unnecessary to document the evil manifestations of race; pre-judice; 4hese are ali common know-edge. What we must understand is that prejudice of any kind is the result of ignorance, and it is knowledge that will wipe out the seeds of ignorance before they flower into the: weeds: of prejudice. Books will^ help with the eradica-tion process; in thera is a potent, permanent source of knowledge, Raymond Firth has written Uuman Types in which he dis-cusses the development of racial ^roups, the inter-relation of en-vironment and culture, and the responses that certain> societies have made in solving their .social and economic problems. In the Chapter on. racial traits and: mental differences there are several en-lightening statements: "A race is a group .'of peopIewho.have certain heritable physical characteristics.in common; a _na|j.on a group of peopIewith certain; social charac-ferislics m common." (p. 22) " . - . there; is: no direct evidence what-: ever for the existence of 'pure' racial populations."(p;23):"Purity of race is a concept of political propaganda;; fiot a Scientific descrip-r tion of human groups today." (p. 24). There is no such thing, th6n, as a pure race, and the claim to superiority: on that hasis is pure; hokum. The next step is to undestand why certain societies; live the way they live; then we will better understand why we live the way we live. People find themselves ih a particular environment; they must, exist within that environment. Thafs where it ali begins. The Eskimo finds himself in the most inhöspitable environment- on earth; to exist he must learn how to feed and shelter himself so that he can withstand the climate which regu-lates evcrything he does. It is not surprismg that the:Eskimo has not produced a great; body vof literature; or music; he is too absorbed with the' necesijities, of living, never mind the frills. When we turn to societies who are not preoccupied wholly with life's necessities, then; we find a more developed pattern of social customs. A Polynesian can not only give gifts, but his. social codebarshim from partaking (Coiitinued on Page 7> DISARMAMENT, INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS GATHER MOMENTUM During the past several weeks a large number of Corn- , mittees on peace; neutrality, disarmanaent and independenee i have sprung up across this grcat nation of ours. It seems as if a great awakening, a renaissance so to speak, is taking ; placc. Wo are beginning to articulate agaih, to come out of ourvsheli of;smug:eomplance'ncy.;WoiTien^t active Jeadorship in sqme of these committees, and that is , as-it should:be; rWhilemany of these comnnittees stress;some- \vhat different aims-it is plain that they ali are intercon-nected and" interdependent. Wc now knovv Ihat the nuclear . arms race that has been going on since the end of World War II can only lead to man's greatest folly, that inevitably il can only load. to the destruction of civiljzation :on HiStory shows that \var has ahvays been the end result of every armaments race. But this prescnt armaments race is unlike anything \vc have ever experienced before. We knovv that if war should now break out^ through accidental or othor means, it will immediately develop into a world-wide holocaust. We in Canada would immediately be in the very middle of it, in the front Iines, owing to our strategic location. We know too, that should this impossible arnns race continuo unabalcd, it vvill never again be necessary to pian and organi/.c such festivals as the one we pian to hold at South PorCupine this summer. Therefore, the people in our, organizations and the rcaders of this section must whole- . heartedly .support and lake an active part in the work of ali these bona fidc commiltecs and help in the cstablishmcnt cf such commiltecs in cvcry city, ,lown and villagc in Can-väH'afii §:|'J-l^^ One of the first Canadian casuallies of the Alomic Agc \_\yas the bnllianl Winnipcg-born nuclear physicist Dr. Louis Slolin. Hc was cngagcd in running a nuclear cxperiment_ on May 21, 1946 at Lo.s Alamas, New Mexico, when the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atom bombs we'rc assembled, vi^hen he was accidcntall-y expo.scd to a Ipthal dosc of that terrible._ mvisibic killcr, nuclear radialion. He suffcrcd horribly for nine days before he dicd. Accidenls do happen from time to time in every line of endoavour, but th-e-least wc can now do is to resolvc nevec to perrnjt any more Hiröshimas or Nagasakis to take-placo. ' PARHAIN TERVEHDYKSIN! GEO.BABn AUTOKORIEN JA -LASIEN KOIl,TAUSMESTARIT Puh. OS. 3-8457 145 Lorne St. S. Sudbury CANADA-PÄIVÄN TERVEHDYS! JOHNNY'S GARAGE E X P E R T I T A U T O P E L T I - . - L A S I E N J A J A A H D Y T T Ä J I E N K O R J A U K S E S SA 333 Antwerp Avo. OS. 4-0116 Sudbury, PARHAIN TERVEHDYKSIN SAMUEL S. SPEIGEL & CO. Hallituksen lupakirjalla toimivat tilintarkastajat 289 CEDARSREET ' SUDBURY ' tms PARHAAT TERVEHDYKSET CANADA-PÄIVÄN JOHDOSTA toivottaa::. < Virvokejuoihien pullotta ja •Mmm liiiäSiiÄiitS ^ iSSLORNEtSTREET.S.r BREWERIES LTD. PUHELIN OS 5-7561 SUDBURY!\ TERVEHDYKSEMME CANADA-PÄIVÄN JOHDOSTA DEtONGCHAMP CARTAGE CO. LIMITED PAKKAUSTA JA SÄILYTYSTÄ RAHTI- JA MUUTTO A JOA 1 T, ,^^20 Lorne Street , I?uh. OS. 5-5611^ Sudbury Ci TERVEHDYKSEMME MII:LER> mmm & INCH LAKIMIEHET: G. M. Miller. Q.C., K, E. MaU, Vf.A. Inch} D.Mulllgan, H; Anvinenja J. A. Jerome-, ^'^^ 7 DURHAM STREET S. SUDBURY 'M m M f. 4 ,5? PARHAIN TERVEHDYKSIN'/ • ^^•-•-•^i:•,•v^:;^:^;-Jvr^^•^,;.•^-•^•ri^'^•-^^ JAMES CHRISTAKOS Ruokaiaryikkeita, lihaa ja hedelmiä ERIKOISUUTENA MONENLAISET RASVASILLIT 410 Elgin St. S. Sudbury TERVEHDYKSEMME BOTTLING WORKS LTD. Tunnetun 'TEPSI-COLA" ja uuden suositun "TEEM" sekä muiden maukkaiden virvokejuomien pullottaja PUHELIN OS. 4-4571 , . •-•\,} 252 R^GENT ST. S. SUDBURY I i II j » PARHAAT TERVEHDYKSET SUOMALAISILLE ASIAKKAILLEMME CANADA-PXIVÄN JOHDOSTA! mm Hom JA RESTAURANT Erikoisuutenamme «laukkaat italialaiset-, merenherkku- ^a "Steak"-ateriat Puh'. OS. 4-4203 ja OS. 5-5213 1145 Copper Cliff Rd. Sudbury TERVEHDYKSEMME^ Canada-päivän judosta i. (1 233 LARCH STREET SUDBURY i iii 1 |
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