iSÍ -'í
12. OLDAL.
1Ö51 JULIüá 12, CSütöRTöK
mand. He told the N-FIyers that the police had also ordered bim to expel the softball leagub that. is composed Qf the NFIiT» the Asso-ciation of United Ukraiitían Can-adians. the United Jewish People'a Order, the Fur and Leather Work-ers and others. Since the deveIop> ment of the protest movement- he has' not dared to cany - through this treat,
George Trudeau, secretary of the expelled. hall dub, in a statement called upon the sports ^fona of Canada to. send messages of protest to George Mantha, Párka and Playgroúnds Commissiott, í^pa^ taine Park, Montreal, and to 'Már yör Camilien Houde at. the City Hall.
MONTREAL — »In view of the fact that the N-Flyers have broken no league or playground rules, be it résolved that the league recommend the immediate reinstatement of the N-Flyers*. With the adoption of this resolution, the Montreal Intermödiate Baseball League, on June 21, de-clared its opposition to the arbitrary suspension of the N-Flyers from the league by^ George Mantha, superinten-dent of the city's park and playgroúnds,
The week before George Mantha barred the N-Flyers folowing the arrest of three of the team's supporters for collecting funds at the home grounds of the team. The ar-rests were"*carried through by the notorious • anti-Sub-versíve Squad (SS) of the Montreal police départment in the apirit of >PadIock€ Üuplessis. (He couldn't i^adlock the baU field.)
•n»e ball-team ia euRiortecI by the Montreal'Kational Federation óf Labor Touth in,order to provide the oppprtuhity for youhg worlc-ing people to play baseball.
Tlie police charged the; club'a ^.upporters with aolidtlng fumda viithout a permit •— yet thfr |>rö-cedure ia foUowed by all teams to help defray expenses, includlng those of the Montreal Police Ju-venile Chibs. The police also charged the*collector8 vriíh singing the InterftaUonale and'i^th using red cans! They also üiformed the diüly prt^ that theyhad collected $250. The> totál coUection amonnted to $3.23 and that the singing of the Internationale was^ as true as the $250.
Mantha told the expelled baU players that '»the only way you can get back ÍDt<r the ,league is If Lt Boyczumof the police givés you a-cleán bllL And if ahy of your playars waht to play • for other teams. their, plajring cárds have to be approved by the police!«
Reaction to this pollce-state adict has resulted in the above ■ resolution beiag adopted by the League ^induding representatives of the teams from the Immaculate Conception. Beauhamois, VilIe £:mard. Nisie, Sault au Recollet and others.
•nie firm stand of the sports fana has also resulted in Mantha backing up on another police de-
:— drugs.
SOiútting its eyes toits^ own laws, the St: Laurent go-verüment, allied with war-makers of Washington, per-mits the éntrance of this pes-tilenoe. St. Laurent talks a-bóut the VJS, giving »moral leadership« to the world in order to cov^er up an outra-geous scandaL ^ .
Our answer to_it is an immediate han on Yank com-ics, movies- of violence and gangsters,'and the sex pulps. JV^e demand that the govem* ment act to protect Canad-ian youth from war and dope peddlers, big and small, official and unofficial, in the shape of publishers or heroin, salesmen.-
IDKALS AND PRACmCES
AyNARCOTieS ring supp-lied from U. S. .sourceö is öt perating at Crystal Béách, Ontario — here \n Canada! Already large ^Pi^ntities of heroin have been distribur
ted.;-, • ^ ';.^nV'';:
Aimed at youth it is-a dé-finite part öf the UJS. war drivé, designed to söften them up ^s caiinon-fodder, so they are ready tq blindly carry out the most wanton destruction, in the interests of those Vho make millíons out^of war.
Out of the Centre öf agfi-tation for a world war
the U.S.A,, is coming a stea-dy stream of calculated inental pqison in the f orm of dégrading comic books; gangster movies, filty sex stories the cult of violence and death. It is infect-ing Canada and the world.
Now we áre faced with the newest of Yank' exports
»One of the great^postwar cfiml-lenges tó -Ihe .United'States is the need for puttlng, our. practices in Unovivith.our Ideáls . . . Improvo-ment of raoa relatlons, títe most tíifficult job on earth, shonld be a major part of the oountry's I3cbl»-vement in this regavd. We must demonstrate t!^ productivity of our economy. Tp brlng 0iis i^nt every Negro shoold be given. a chance to put his best efforts &t productíon at .fSie bigheat leVel p<tö^bleu An^y^ bar put up against tiils la a Cfime.« — Henry R. iMCb to a luncheonof .the iUrban League on May 8, 1947. ■
o'Qa May 8.1951, the Luce pub-lications — Time, láfe, Fortune — which employ. 1,550 workers, had on Úxeir payroll ^^acüy 17 Negíoes of whom eíght were'porterai
PBESCBIPTIOH
»Desur Docior: aSte mmm qbont
I^milito ..Vtnsors. -'miű' ^iifűanó; hoicStr InipsL siw&SfB tSaroiTB nae into & atate bocdeerlng. .en^pytítt^^-' Moe7:_«asi
ftcaa,^y^ifeit« -U-.FIoiai.V... - A- >Ge.t. <mi of yQur éaagr. <*u^^ and yoú'a for fear hid«» in' iarinchJÉÜb^/ in Aont of radiosi. Ck> dovmatalra andfire the fimmce;' i£ it la ter.'or aprinkle the lawn» or lock yÓür ^nrinidbws. or évenbmah ^ur teetluc — Dr. George W. <3rane in the Portluid Or^ónian.
S M I LE
It CouUl HáKWGi
A man in a. restaurant ordered a bowl of tomato soup. After he waa sérved, 'a waiter|^notÍced that the' mán;' wasn't ^atlng It. The waiter told ^ the headwaiter, who told the manager. All; thrée öf them went over to the man.'and told him how. good the tomato soup was. The man^er finally asked, >What do you find wröng with the s(>up?« ' , . The man answered, >No 8po<m<.
EZ AZ A NAGY Vándordíj, amelyet « Kossuth Betegse-
gélyző Egylet (IMBF) vasárnapi központi Jf jusági Nagypiknikjén az az ifjúsági csoport fog elsoizbea ^Inyerni, amelyik békemunkában, sport- és kulturális teljesítményben a legjobb- lesz. \»
Melyik lesz a legjobb csoport a pickeringi Ady-nyaralón tartandó nágypifcnikíen ? I
KARI Levitt,.Toronto secretary of the National Federation of Labor Youth,' has demanded Toiy leader George Drew retract >false and lyihg statemfents he mádé about me« as reported in July ,1 Globe and Mail. Drew was re-ported as calling for the deportation öf Mrs. Levitt.
>Mr. 0rew said that I calr^ led upon Canadian youth to enjoy themselves and neg-
Ae® r® Orgcinist
TORONTO --At the age of 50, Gordon Roberte, an ac-complished organist whose capabilities include the play-ing öf the great Bach pre-ludes, toccatás and fugues, lohgs-^for the day when he may at least own a piano of his own on which to prac-tise.
Today, having studied pi-anoförte and pipe-organ for 32 years, Mr. Roberts has yet tb; find an opening for eaming a living at his art. To' date he has been forced to maintain his job as a por-ter on the CNR in ordei: to keep his family. When he has saved enough to' buy a home of his own, then he will also go after a musical instrument.
As a boy, fresh from Barbados, he worked as a ship-builder and learned from an organist-workmate. Joining the Anglican Church in Toronto, he was able to pract-ise from time to time, and later, under the direction of ShrEmest MacMillan, bcr came a masterful musician. But at 50, Canadian citizen Gordon Roberts still awaits the ttme when he will be able; economically, to foUow the vocation of his choice - the making of great mu-ffiíc.
lect their respönsibilities to the country,« Mrs; Levitt de-clared in- a press statement. >This is a deliberaté and calculated He. I called upon Canadian youth in the name of the NFLY to assume greater respoHsibilities to-wards the fight to keep Canada öutof war. I called for an end to the blöödshed in Korea. I ^spoke against con-scriptioh.
»I. demand that George Drew retract the falsé and lying. statement he made about me and teli the truth.< Mrs. Levitt said she came to Canada four years ago and is married to a World War n Canadian veterán who was decorated with the Military Medál. >I came from England where Í worked in war factories and ex-periencédsix years of war,« she said. .>Neither my hus-band nor I are going to let George Drew push us around.«
Posf Ccsrds Ho^or
IN HONOR of the Third World Youth Festival in Berlin this summer, á special festival button will be on sale in Canada in July. Greeting cards are also being printed by the National Festival Committee, .showing the festival poster. These will sell at 10 cents eacH and at a special rate of 6 cents each to groups or or-gánizations.