a OLDAL
KANADAI MAG.~
John Diefenbaker has a strong mandate from the Canadianpeople.lt is based on the promises he made. -—He ásked "túa fellow Canadians" to riiare hia" vtoion of: a
greater Canada". ' ' ' ^ ^
—- He promiaed publlc worka to end unemployment, and "»« «ay aíter the decUon said: '1 Blncerdy beUeve that we ahaU be able now. to tum back the tlde of unemployment
— He promiscd an early beginning on thfr South Saakatchewan River dam, access bighways to the north, a natlonal oU poUcy.
— He promlsed new policies to ^oöurage the procesain^ In Can-ada of ráw materlals now exported, and he promlsed a atudy of the problem of U.S. control over Canadian aubeldiarles, dramatlxed the blocklng of the aale of — 1,000 cars by Ford of Canada to People's
Chína. ■ -_He promiaed to divert a good part of Canadian buying from
the U.S. to Brttain.
— He promiaed Canadiana a new old age security plan, over and above present penalona.
_ Tó farmers and íiahermen he prötnlsed protection and help.
He would consider drficiency paymehta ftom the fcderal treaauiy which would bolater farm income. without Increasing food prlcea.
— He promiaed to extcnd the period of suppleraentary unemployment inaurance beneflta beyond May 15, "if necesaaiy". Since the election he aaya thia question wíll be dectded, "having regard to con-ditiona then", meaning the Houae of Commona meets.
— Although UtUe waa aaid in the election itaelf, Diefenbaker has oasociated himself for yeara wlth the demand for a Bili of Righta.
Now the election is over and the time to fuHUl the prorolsea haa come. Dieftíibaker has the majority for whlch he aaked and more, and hia fellow Canadiana will now hold hím to accoimt.
"So long Of I am
"So long' as I am prlme mlnls-ter no on« wlll be allowed to aof-fer In thia natlon,"
Prime Mlniater Diefenbaker, Charlottetown, February 27.
• • • "Toronto Police have referredto
the welfare department the pUght of a Toronto family which came to Ught today when a man with three children one a hronth-old baby waa found aitting in River-dale Park. Béside him, dreaaed in Bun auits, were two ahivering boys, three and two years of age. They wcre the family of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Charles Munro, who were evicted from thelr Bertmount Ave. hame.
• « •
•*A family of nine. forclbly evicted from their Wyatt St, home .. today are jammed Into five small rooma on the thlrd floor of a Church St. atore-büilding — rcn-tal is $80 a month.
Toronto Daily Star, AprU 3, W58,
SPUTNIK II BURNS UP
OLD ^^BUMS^^
THE mX>ND Soviet aputnik which WM bnmched into the orbit on November S, 1B67 cntered the thicker laytrs ot the atmosphere in the noming of April 14, dis-intcgrated and bumt away, a TASS anaouncamMit d«clared.
**ni« infbrmation on hand ahowa that Ita fragmenta were diapcrsed akmg a Una running in the south-oaatam direction over the I^esser AnUUM» BraxU and the AtlanUc Ooean. During Ita exiatence Sput-zük n completed nearly 2,S70 re-vohitlona around the globe and tmvelled more than 100 nülUon ki-
By lan Allan
THE OLD Bum atoriea are being viewed with favour again by newa-paper editora. The lateat Tve reád comea from New York and con-cema a Biun who has becn charg-ed with.banking $1,000.00 a month while drawing unemployment inaurance.
This adds up. Diuring the Dirty Thirties no editor worth hia salt would go to preas without carry-ing at leaat one atory about an Old Bum being found dead with aeveral thouaand dollars aewn into the linlng of his táttered suit. It made tia Young Bums of those times look üke ingratea because we were not paying^ our íare for riding the box cars.
According to the'stories carried during that depressicm the. Old Bums alwaya livcd In dire pover-ty; and it waa not untll they were found emaciated and dead that the diacovery was made that they were poscessed of aeveral trunks füled with flfty cent piecea. Nic-kela, dimes and quarters were toa-aed into the ciothea cloaet.
So many Old Bímvs were aup-poaed to have died rich during the Thirties that it made thinga tough for the honest Old Bimia who were really atarving to death. Afterall. who wanta to glve a handout to a
A SCE!NE from the Molseyev FoIk BaBet, wfaose tretneadous socoesa at flid MetropoUtan Opera House In New. York Wiü be foUowed by performaacea at the Montreal Forum on May 5, 6, 1, and 8» and at Torontóba Maple I>af Gardens on May 9 and. 10.
NO LONGER
"UNPINISHED
SYMPHONY"
The paper 'Tátcratura I Zhizn" reports that Prof. S. S. Bogatyrov of the Moscow Conservatory during the past one and a half years completed the arrangement . and editing of Tchaikovsky'fr Unftnlsh-cd symphony in E fiat Major, the manuscript of which was disco-vered in the USSR. The symphony waa broadcast.on April öth. Thou-sands of listeners, the papers writes, recognixed their favourlte composer. Now another new symphony had been added to hia sym-phonics and this is a matter of great joy.
lometres", the announcemcnt said The sputnik repeatedly passed over all the main faihabited local-itlea of the carth which waa en-sured by the Wg angle of ita'oiblt which waa aet at 65 degreea to the earth'a equatorial pláne. Thia made tho aputnik obscrvable on practi-cally all Inhabitcd párta of the globe. The aise of tho aputnik per-mitted all the p<^>ulatlon of the earth to acc it with the unalded cye.
man who may look as though he'a hungry but who is actually sec-reting a forttme in Standard Oil atock In hia left ahoe.
There'a a difference this dep-ression: any Old Bum who dies of atarvation can be sure of a coro-ner's verdict that he died because he was priced out of thia world. There are plenty of Old Bums around all right, but most of them will dle^ln silk pyjamas. After all, if s no aecret that the world's best Old Bums have their obituaries written for the financial pages.
They are the ones who are try-ing to make Bvana out of the rest
of US.
1 NEWS BRIEFS FROM HUNGARY
A savings bank iox'newlywedxwhetelpatisup^^t^^^
can^be obtaineát bas been sét up in tíungary by tbe NatíonsJ
Savings Bank, It will grant Joans on marriage and for buying
Jurniture, building apartments and,travelexpenses,
• • •
A West Indies jazz group called the "Hot Shots" which ar-rived in Budapest from London ^ve^ forty performances in fiv« Hungárián towns xtecently; ^
n 9 • .
Hungárián scientists have been invited to take part in sci^ entiiic conferences. in London,. Paris, Romé and Vienna tiiis yaar, ■ .
ZoXtíűx Kodály, the conaposer, is ,writing the foreword to a book about Hungárián muacrbeingrpublis^ Music Publishera, London. The fhm^^^^^r^ to publish in
Brítain works of leadiág Hungáriaua^^^h^
An eure at the ÉJsnjace Farm at pebrecen,^^é^ Hua^ gary, gave binh to scxtupíets in FebruarytThis was believei to be a world record. One of the lambs, which weighed uüáet 2 1/4 Ibs. died shoTtly after birth,
'-'* ' ■ * ..'* '
Centenarian, Mrs. József Laki of Peatcozsébet, Hmigary^ can still thread a needle without glasses, sews and goes shopp-ing. She never goes by street-car because she says they are "too slow" -—she walks.
'*' •
Hungary is to make smalUsize electrically-operated iroa lungs for children. Weighingjust over 1 cwt., they will be fitted . with an alarm beJl which will warn of a breakdown. The lungs will be exported to Germany, the Soviet Union and other couttt-ries, say Press reports, '
There are now 13,000 doctors "in Hungary, one for every 750 of the population, reports the newspaper Népszabadság.
A }ury consisting of famous cbefs last month made incog-nito visits to thirty-six Budapest xestaurants to judge a special menu competition.
The menüs aré based on centuries-oJd traditional Hungárián recipes and were being of féred twice a week during tbe period of the competition. The contest was organized by tbe Catering' Industry Trust.
The recipes were coJlected after an appealto the public to search their drawers and rnemories for évery old cookery in-structions.
♦*MALCHIK FROM THE SOUTH"
VAN CLIBURN, 23 yeaí--old, six foot 4 native from Texas Is the. winner of the Tohaikovaky International Piano and Violin Pestival held recently in Moscow!
The '*Malchik (litUe boy) from tho South", as the Sovieta have dubbed him, won over 49 contest-anta.
A gradua^e of the Julliard School of Muaic, Mr. Clibum's trip to Moscow was financed by the Mary B, Rockefeller Foundation.
Said to have "a formldable U-lent, combining great technical skiű with robxist and crowd-appeal-ing emotional style", aix of the
Tbe International Bowling Association IN HONOUR OF WORLD YOUTH COLONIAL DAY
preaents
"CAiARET INTERNATiONALE"
Friday, April aSlh. at 8:30 P.M. 280 Qo«en St. West
BUFFET - FUX>R SHOW - NöVELTT DANCES - DOOR PRIZE Móric by iflke Ijocaa and Ua Fcm-nettM Admisslon |1.00
MmAL DQJVERY
By ALSMITH
Soviet jurors openly admired his talent and training and took part credit as the young planist's teach-er was Rosina Lhevinne, a gradu-ate of the Moscow Conservatory who left Russia before 1917.
Dlmitri Shostakovich, chairman of the organlzing committee for the Tchalkovsky Pestival referred to Mr. Clibum as a phenomenally skllled musician with brilliant un-duplicated individuality and con-tlnued by saying that "Musical circles ín the United States have a right to'be proud of the bright successes of their yoimg country-man, cspcclally since until now mtisical successes of that country resulted not from cfforts of Ame-ricana but oí famous pcrformera of European countriea. We, for our part, are extremely happy that tWa outatanding artlat eamed hU flrst Wide and cntirely dcservcd recognition among ua here in Moscow,"
Mr. CUbum wiU rccclve a gold medál and a prixe of 25.000 rublca br tho equivalcnt of ^.500.00.
Second place co-winners In the competition were 18 year-old Um SW-kun from Oüna and Lcv Vla-aenko, 29 year^ld naUve of Georgia, i;.S.SJl. Thim placc wa.1 lakén by Naura Bhtarkham, U.S.S.R: Fourth, HMuard Miansarov. U.S.a R: flíth, Mllena MoUova. rta: aixth. Nadia Gcdda-nova of Francé: uevcnth, Toloakl Malsuu-ra of Japán: and oigth, Danid PoUack, 23 year-old American firom lióa Angelctf.
Mr. CUbum wlU likcly »cccpt « number of Soviet engagcmcntó ana rccording, offera bcíor* r«t«"^"* to New York tA appear with Lco-mud B«m«teta, and tho N«fW York Philhannonk on Octobar 19 to per-form RachawudnoCfa Thlrd PUm'^ Concerto,