â€" T@@ni®, swimming, and track| In track, Australian national ,‘ the cheapest sports in Ausâ€"| willingness to travel has had a ralila, and the best organized.| great deal to do with the sucâ€"! A Visit to a municipal swimming cess of Herb Elliott, the only pool dosts sixpence; a weekend |teenager ever to break the fourâ€" ‘#ennis withâ€" free balls costs minute mile. Elliott, a star Bessâ€" than $1. It is a common|sprinter in school in Western :A ‘on a Saturday morning to'Australil, moved to Victoria in see‘ hundreds of boys and girls the east so that he could join le their homes for‘an hourJ’a training camp run by Percy E imass coaching under local Cerutty, 63. | %ennis pros. The cost is 35 cents.‘ Nineteen years old, Elliott E actual teaching is not‘ran a mile in $:59.9 in January. | , Australian coaches have|The next week, he won by 2 ; adopted the Califonia) yards in 3.58.7 against Merv Linâ€" | % game.") Darkness does not|coln (3:59), the prize pupil of | * tennis in Australia; public“!‘r\nz Stampfi, the Hungarian‘ ( are equipped with floodâ€" track coach brought to Ausâ€" | «c systems. ;trulia by the Victorian AtMletic! » In the suburbs of Sydney,| Association,. A day later, Cerutâ€"| m come on a court in ty put Elliott through a session of 30 and practice strokâ€" |of weightâ€"lifting, followed by a Ang. After an hour, lnother[bnrefoot. run over a sandy, unâ€" g:'p is ready. From 8 a.m. till dulating training track. Then| every hour on the hour,|Elliott returned to camp and,| there is a fresh squad. Junior\ with two companions. packed ::b: are formed, and regular haversacks for a 30â€"mile hike.} | end competitions are orga-;'rhe meal he took, atypical of‘ flnd. Before long the players| Australia, incleded nuts, raisins, Wwho show special promise are!cabbage leaves, bread, and a!} v for interdistrict teams. pint of milk. Neither Cerutty ‘ standouts here are chosenlnor his protégés, willing to try #or more advanced coaching by ‘anything once, find the diet or P totemmis associationg. The the training routine strange. i of these are then sent{ "Down here," Cerutty says, | the country with a manâ€"|"you get beauty. Beauty of your | and all expenses paid. soul that can give you strength.| ; the sifting process hasiYou will not get that on a cinder evolved further, the outstandâ€" |track, with the noise of the city | . in your ears and petrol fumes E Ifl]ling your nose." have kept tors busy. Tennis, : are the ch tralia, and A visit to :‘ Costs tennis sn on on a feaving the 4 the of (mass c ennis pros: W. only 21. Australia‘s f team has just defeated ;’: Africa. .Its professional ; football _ team _ went § last year‘s world round w without a loss. The counâ€" L¢ $wimmers and track stars w WiaAny of them teenâ€"agers â€" in . te year %.t‘he w 28, An mc in ket tea m Atri y fo through las ' & dressedâ€"forâ€"theâ€"cold Eskimos crowd around a lintype machine «wreeom â€"of the fairbanks (Alaska) Newsâ€"Miner to watch foreman Ir! Todd . It was the first linotype that the fascinated Eskimos, of Barrow, Alaska, had ev HIA ACTS! â€" Sexpot Sophia m broods darkly in her first leâ€"inâ€"Hollywood film, "Deâ€" Under the Elms". It‘s being ed as the first movie in th the Italian beauty comes with some real dramatic & e conclusion & Soviet on and theJ would dominate ic Games at Me!â€" but finishing third, scored a moral victory basis, in the eyes rooters. Russia won 4.9) for every 10 million peoâ€" M its population; the U.S . for each 10 million | &Vm‘l a population of | n (far less than New | mc- 15 million), won 35| u medals. We â€" were winfiérs by more than 7 to | # way we put it. h'pt the recordâ€"book edi tralia has won the Davis symbol of world dominâ€" in tennis, seven times in years, the latest triumph the work of Mervyn Rose, &I Anderson, 23, and_Ashâ€" years, analyzes this for NEWSWEEK an Australian newsâ€" If Americans consider themâ€" selves intensely competitve, as they properly do, perhaps the current difference Jlies in the tender age level at which highly organized techniques first set that intensity in motion in Ausâ€" tralia. A farmer was highly incensed on entering the new doctor‘s ofâ€" fice to be told by the nurse that he had to go into the next room and undress. . "Isnt this ridicuious?" he askâ€" ed. "All I came in here for was a throat checkup." "W hat are you ‘crabbing about?" the undressed man said. "I just came in to read the elecâ€" tric meter." "But I just want to look at my throat, cried. "I can‘t help that." the nurse said. "It‘s the doctor‘s rule." Madder than a wet hen, the farmer went into the other room where he saw another undressed man sitting. Nineteen years old, Elliott CS Were !0 continue, the hump ran a mile in $:59.9 in January.| WQUI4 soon be high enough for The next week, he won by 2 a "summit" meeting and cars as yards in 3.58.7 against Merv Linâ€"|!°W @8 some diplomats‘ opinons coln (3:59), the prize pupil of Of Other diplomats. Frq(az Stampfi, the Hungarian' ‘You can have too many ideas track coach brought to Ausâ€" about design, as becomes evident tralia by the Victorian AtMletic| When designers turn out cars Association. A day later, Cerutâ€"|M&iDly with an eye on how they ty put Elliott through a session Will look in the advertisements. of weightâ€"lifting, followed by a â€" Also®. as we remember from The answer is not, of course,, in one man like Cerutty. It lies! amid the roots of a, vigorous‘ young nation, which has emâ€" braced sports nationally â€" not with the idea of mass enjoyment | so‘ much as with the idea of winning. In track, Australian national willingness to travel has had a great deal to do with the sucâ€" cess of Herb Elliott, the only teenager ever to break the fourâ€" minute mile. Elliott, a star sprinter in school in Western Australia, moved to Victoria in the east so that he could join a training camp run by Percy Cerutty, 63. Sam Herford, who developed Murray Rose, the Olympic 400â€" meter and 1,500â€"meter champion, expresses technique in terms of percentages. "Our style is made up of 80 per cent arm action and 20 per cent leg work. With the Americans, it‘s about 65 per cént arms." Australian couches modify th¢ American swimming technique by teaching bigger, longer, slowâ€" er strokes. "Our leg work," Guthrie says, "is much smaller| than that of the Americans, so| our swimmers are not as legâ€"| bound." | _ This pattern of organization and coaching extends into swimâ€" ming. "My kids," says Frank Guthrie, one of Austr@lia‘s best swimming coaches, "come from as far as 10 miles away twice a day. They work out from 6 a.m. to 8 a.m., then return a second time between 3 and 5 in the afâ€" ternoon. Sometimes you see a worldâ€"record holder like Brian Wilkinson (butterfly) thrashing his way through & hundred kids.©‘ permanent a ’-::uh. ; manager suc as Harry Hopman, and sent around the world at the ex« pense of the Lawn Tennis Assoâ€" clation of Australia. Australian amatéurs, unlike those in the U.S., are, permitted to work for tennisâ€"equipment companies, but what makes the whole early program possible is the tremenâ€" dous national enthusiasm . for tennis. ing players are fnally chosen for state teams and against the best from uhr‘u‘h’u-. Out of the rigors of this comâ€" OH, DOCTOR! the doctor the farmer !_ Automobile makers are reportâ€" |ed concerned over the hump in |the middle of automobile floor | boards. It seems to be getting higher all the time. it full of flour and then empty it. Eithéer method will enable every drop of molasses to come out of the cup without sticking. A. Grease the cup lightly beâ€" fore measuring molasses, or dip it full of flour and then empty it. Eithéer method will enable Down With \The Hump Q. How can I make a substiâ€" tute for a pastry board? A. Try using a piece of clean white tablecloth. It is more easily cleaned than a board, and can Q. How can 1 measure moâ€" lasses and keep it from sticking to the measuring cup? Also, as we remember from preâ€"auto days, there was once a horse ("horse: a l&rge, solidâ€" hoofed, herbivorous mammal" â€" Webster) which thought it had been too simply designed. As the fable tells us, it asked to be remade according to its own specifications. When it next saw itself in the mirror of a pond it was a‘camel. hump and all. ENCC O A. Mix whiting and amimonv‘break sulphide (the latter finely P°Wâ€" | but ~ c dered) with soluble glass. It is which claimed that after hardenin®. | Roage this putty can be polished with pear . a burnishing agate. bamen a be rolled up and put éwsyf in a clean place for the next time wanted. If the recent fashion trend in cars were to continue, the hump would‘ soon be high enough for a "summit" meeting and cars as low as some diplomats‘ opinons of other diplomats. And while we‘re remembering: There was a time when there was no hump in a car floor board and no need to drive the car up a hill to get a lofty view â€"you got it from the back seat. We‘re not suggesting that design reformers go to extremes. But now that it looks as if the autoâ€" mobile is here to stay, we welâ€" come the possibility that the hump may not be. â€" From The Christian Science Monitor. It is good news that folk influâ€" ential on car design have noticed this at last, even if they haven‘t yet noticed that not everybody wants a car so low that it hasâ€"to be entered from the subway. Q. How ean I make bay rum? A. Mix one dram oil of bay, eighteen‘ounces of alcohol, eightâ€" een ounces of water. Then filter it through magnesia, Q. How can I make black putty? It doesn‘t matter how long or wide you build ‘em, there‘s the hump, irrepressible. And the lower you build the car the highâ€" er the hump becomes. A REVOLUTION HAS COME TO THE $UGAR BUSH which is taking most of the picturesqueness m‘ ?o * ‘j.":""a'h{h‘.h'â€â€˜:r“ out of the collecting of maple. sap while increasing the quantity and quality of sugar and which ‘was bolding up one hnh syrup. Secret of the success of the revelution lies in rumning polythene tubing directly| ang looked for all the world from the taps in the trees to the sugarhouse. The pressure of the flowing sap is enough to|like a traftic gop! Maurice stopâ€" draw it along a polythens pipe if the line is sealed. Gravity helps when the lines run downâ€" ped abruptly and waited for the hill. Farmers claim sap production is increased as much as 75 per cent and labor costs are|assault, but after inspecting cut more than 50 per cent with this methed of collection. When oil burners replace wood|him closely, the great ape turnâ€" burners to boil the sap, backâ€"breaking labor is cut even further. Some plastic companies are| * round and wandered away. producing complete kits for tapping trees but many farmers are making their own, buying| 4* ""’l“ 'COPlrfi!nlfld l;om ‘:‘“d the polythene tubing from local coâ€"operatives, buildingâ€"supply dealers or plastic companies. ::;:)e e\:;ile VO":‘ehif‘mo olger Some prefer the virgin white material. Others like it brightly colored so that it is easily seen "There j d P _ j against a snow background. * | . fhere is no danger unless How Can 1? ne in the 6d ply his even sean, Today, women comprise about | 23 per cent of :"»~ Canldiln’ labor force «.nd are playing & vital rol@ in current phéndmenal | industridl expansion. | The landscape is made of a surprising mixture of monotony and variety. The forests, the lakes and the desolate moorâ€" lands roll on for hours and miles, yet their monotony grows all the time more impressive. There are few of the small, feeting and delicious vistas of England which disappear before the inward eye has had time to photograph them. Instead the scene repeats itself, impresses itself with increasing intensity, and binds its spell all the time more firmly. â€" From "Green Gold and Granite," by Wendy Hall. D 00 P CC |) Passport? He hasn‘t got one. BELL FOR A BELLEâ€"Ringing the Visas? Not for Maurice. Curâ€" bell for the fashion house of rency problems? Eliminated â€" ‘Dior is the "Trapeze Line", in~-; he took_ noa m?‘n’e,v wnh him. ['roduced and first shown in;l?°:“tl;“°"“' & ll'" h“';/‘l““ i'w Paris by Yves St. Lavrent. This, *\ em up, Slalughs Mautice \ offering â€" from â€" the collection | , Mow, does he get away with features â€"a stiffened bell skir ‘!‘_ TPS answer is that he id . doesn‘t always. But most of the and jacket (with . standaway |time officials are so staggered | collar. _ Black mohair braid‘by his casual simplicity and !edgu skirt and jacket, and enâ€"| forthcoming honesty that thay |semble is topped with a natural let him go on his way. !:frow hat banded in black/ For Maurice is no ordinary \velvet. travelor _ A ~mémbar "af 400 The birds of Finland seem, too, to share this heightened human sensitivity to every caâ€" dence. The notes of a piano, softly played in a lonely counâ€" try house, will draw them found the windows to sing in concert. It is a stillness other than a mere absence of sound; it has its own quality, as positive as that of sound, and it gives to every note that breaks it a qualâ€" ity to which the noisiér West has become deafened. The Finâ€" nish language, so rich and varâ€" ied in expression, has its greatâ€" est wealth in words which deâ€" scribe minute variations _ of sound which any but the Finns would fail to hear. When the wind so_ughl in the pine trees, it is humista. When the wind soughs in the birch trees, it is kohista. Neither verb can be used in the place of the other. Roads. paths, ditches all disapâ€" pear in a vast sea of whiteness once_winter comes and snow beâ€" gins to fall. In summer the stillâ€" ness is undisturbed by whir of train or tractor; in winter it is deepened by the snow that blots out sound as well as mark of footfall. Its silence and its solitariness, too, seem to spring from eternâ€" ity. There are tens of miles of forest, lake and moorland, unâ€" broken by a single house; there is here a dimlyâ€"tracked road, there _ a _ scarcelyâ€"worn path. Where fields have been cultiâ€" vated they are not neatly rimâ€" med with hedges and fences to break the limitless landscape, but divided only by ~ditches which the eye barely. notes. The Finland of centuries past, and centuries to come, needs no reâ€"creation in the mind. It lijes there, before the eyes, yesterday, today, seemingly forever. Silent Finland made of a The French f monotony ‘cided â€" to ship forests, the |France to save _ He was captured by fierce Okande tribesmen who tied him |hand and foot and threatened jhim with death. He persuaded | them to let him treat the sick | of their villages and so successâ€" ful was his treatment that the |tribesmen _ soon _ became _ his | staunch friends. The French authorities _ deâ€" cided to ship him back to France to save him from himâ€" self. So weak that he could hardly stand. _ Maurice slipped his guards, wriggled through a emall window and dropped t6 the ground. He found his biâ€" In Fort Lamy, French Equaâ€" torial Africa, he was imprisonâ€" ed as & lunatic. No one would believe his story. At the time he was suffering from blackwaâ€" ter fever caused by neglected malaiia. A carpenter by trade, Maurâ€" ice Claude found plenty to keep him occupied among the ramâ€" shackle buildings of native vilâ€" lages, and his knowledge of medicine and first‘ aid was alâ€" ways valuable. He carried penâ€" icillin‘and sulphur drug® in his pack, but refused to use them to treat his own illness, This remarkable man wandâ€" ered through some of the wildâ€" est parts of Africa with an alâ€" most incredible disdain for his own safety and a disarming beâ€" lief in the ultimate goodness of his fellow men. Not always was this belief justified. Aio AELiEYE Neavousness Htipar: to mornow1 To be heppy end trmnaull buseznd .4 narvout 6t for a good Might‘s steep, take Sedicin tablets according to direction. SEDICIN® He asked nothing in return for his kindnessâ€"not even food or shelter. Whatever gifts were pressed upon him by grateful natives or Europeans he would dispose of to othets; whenever he was given money, he spent some on drugs and medicines for the Africans and sent the remainder home to his wife. For Maurice is no ordinary traveller. _A member of the Order of St. Francis of Assisi, he left home threé years ago to prove to himself and the world that it is possible to travel anyâ€" where with nothing more than the bare essentials of life. "It‘s all done by kindness," is Maurice‘s philosophy. His was not the hitchâ€"hiking, doâ€"itâ€"onâ€" theâ€"cheap, scrounging type of travelling that has become so widespread. i But when _ thirtyâ€"eightâ€"yearâ€" old Frenchman Maurice Claude travels abroad he always manâ€" ages to steer clear of these comâ€" ulications and pitfalls. Maurice has just returned to his home in Camblanes, France, after a 20,000â€"mile cycle tour of Africa. Keen on travel? More and more people are these days, and in recent years the outlook for the prospective globetrotter has improved considerably. _ Counâ€" tries which after the war were barred to tourists are now reâ€" placing their "Keep Out" signs with "Welcome" mats. It is still comparatively easy, however, for the traveller to get bogged down in a mire of officialdom and red tape. Passâ€" ports, visas,‘ customs and curâ€" rency regulations, inoculations, restrictions on photography â€" these are some of the aspects of overseas travel which cause frayed rempers and infuriating delays. time officials are so staggered by his casual simplicity and forthcoming honesty that thay let him go on his way. Thought Bicycle Part Of Rider LVIUVIN $1.00â€"$4.95 TABLETS Brig Sharte Onty! *®_SLEEP TOâ€"NIGHT , Back home again after his marathon cycle tour, Maurice is disillusioned. Audiences _ to whom he has lectured are preâ€" pared:to believe that he has acâ€" complished a great personal adâ€" venture but they are reluctant to accept his kindness doctrine. They say that a man who "turns the other cheek" merely douâ€" bles his doctot‘s bills. But Maurice condemns their cyniâ€" cism and sticks to his claim that kindness can accomplish almost anythingâ€"and, at least, he has gone a long way to prove it. He took advantage of his enâ€" forced retirement to send threarâ€" ening letters from jail to his koldâ€"up victims ordering them to deposit money in his savings account. The prospective vietims complained, and Damon had a further 10 months added to hiz sentence. At one small village many hundreds of miles from civiliâ€" zation he was met by members of a tribe who had never seen white men. They threw spears at him and refused to let him near their village. After much palaver they agreed to let him spend the night there. He found that they had thought him to be some strange and powerful spirit with round legs. . They believed at first that the bicycle was part of his body. It took all his powers of persuasion to convince them that he was as human as they were. at him and refused to let him| Although he began acting in near their village. After much | the theater at 18 and has wrmen; palaver they agreed to let him|for it since he was 20, his first; spend the night there. He found | experience of TV‘s dense drama | that they had thought him to| was on BBC, starring in a fou"â€" ; be some strange and powerful| hour BBC version of Ibsen‘s | spirit with round legs. They | "Peer Gyni." His only other| believed at first that the bicyclc;dramatic appearance on British | was part of his body. It tooleV was in the premiére of "The | all his powers of persuasion to| Moment of Truth." "One of the convince them that he was as principal differences was that human as they were. l there were no commercials there. | If he could find no village at In the intervals, the BBC ran| night, Maurice simply lay on a|films of swaying plam trées, apâ€"| native blanket beside his bi-[pareml_v to calm the audience." ; cycle. He had no mosquito net| His other TV specialty in Brlhin]’ for most of his trip and yet he ; was appearing on political panel!| survived exposure nightly in a shows, an activity for which ho] malarial part of Africa with the| was equipped in part by the fact| reputation of being "the white‘!hat his father, Jona Ustinov,| man‘s grave." _ He was badly| now retired, was one of Britain's‘ bitten and had severi! bouts of| {oremost political reporters. | the feverâ€"and he treated him-I Ustinov had done no acting on | self. ME V msHil BRahsst Rendal | A vegetarian, he hadâ€" little! trouble in finding food. He! found fruits in the bush which | he ate, and shared native meals , of millet and guinea corn. He drank | water _ from _ rivers, ‘ streams and native wells. Convicted of robbery. Jean Louis Damon was sentenced y a Brussels court to serve a sixâ€" month prison sentence. ‘"There is no danger unless you antagonize the â€" animals," says Maurice. "The same thing applies to humans. It was very seldom that 1 met with anyâ€" thing but friendship from the African ~ people. _ Although â€" at times they scemed astonished to see me cycling through the bush." Another â€" time, ‘r&?ninl a|nov.) Last Sunday, the tubby bend on a jungle path, he came| Briton â€" in a beard grown for face to face with a loï¬l'la his starring role in the Ustinov» which ‘was bolding up one hand | directed Broadway hit, "Remanâ€" and looked for all the world|off and Juliet" by Peter Ustinuov like a trafftic cop! Maurice stopâ€"|â€"â€" acted as chief mmin& £6+ ped abruptly and waited for the| median to Steve Allen. herâ€" _quult. but after inspecting| wise he has been an amusing eycle and lay: on the path in front of them, shamming death. Miraculously they stopped and after looking down at his moâ€" tionless body they turned and went away. into the country. He returned|arts in American American to Nigeria by another route. .z. Bundays ago, in the _ Often ‘he was attacked by |of ion_nomnflllnfl wild animals. On one Occasion | nov â€" directed, Ustinov â€" ads a herd of elephants stampeded|television version of "The towards him. He fell off his biâ€"| ment of Truth" â€" writter CUNARD‘s BIGC ie CCC rrricard BUSINESS AS USUALâ€"IN JAIL SYLVANIA â€"« CARINTHIA + IVERNIA + SAXONIA Cerner Bay & Wellington Streets, Teronte, Ont. Tel: BMpire 12911 Enjoy the luxury of crossing to Europs in ohe of these 22:000â€"ton Canardera! F.qllipï¬â€œ with stabilizers for smooth sailing, these ihoont liners were éapecially designed for the St. Lawrence River rénté ul-;u- part af the greatest rmn or feet on the Atlantic hnhg by the world‘s largest liners, "QUEE] ELIZABETH" and "QUEEN MARY". Go Canard and arrivé relazed and refreshed for your busi or vaceâ€" tion. Frequent sailings from New York and Halifar in Winter ::Mmr-l and Queboe in Summerâ€"noder® 1co0mtoditio@igradinonal derÂ¥ice and for your enjoyment. When you go Cunird ... Gettiag There is Hall The Fna! Ustinov had done no acting on U.S. TV until Robert Saudek, producer _ of â€" "Omnibus," â€" apâ€" proached him last fall to do the What does\Ustinov think of the medium that has given him such freewnéeling? "I used to find TV fairly forbidding for myself," he recalled last week, "but now I‘m rather bitten by it. It has lots of advantages. You can isolate a character. You don‘t have to think of people in the last row â€" you cany carry them right along with you. TV is halfâ€" way toward reading a book, a private thing. Therefore you can put a rather dense: content of ‘hought in TV which you couldn‘t on the stage." more s ioill ons alte in the pole Te laast. io Amoadh e bad ‘b“.'“fl‘,‘. Ustih * A,ptEs | American audienes; steries nOV = s = felevidion version of "The Mo. "m"““';mw&' Pott Minoy ~ ag ndg HHE® 2 | in â€" England, aud "LSget exectly C SLinoy â€" A s8C« P S i ui9 ‘ . :d ut%t dramatic In.huufnu‘n:r:z{ the same result."" ‘ f the season, (The fatiest. y Dr. Samue! Johnson in "Omniâ€" | ans mm bus‘s" "‘The L!!cf‘of lnrmul Jsh';- ;'u..l .-.! son," also played by Peter Ustiâ€" How 'm times in 24 hours nov.) Last Sunday, the tubby| n Briton â€" in a beard grown (of| 86e the hands of a clock at right wise he has been an amusing regular on "The Jack Pagk Fhow," an erudite panel member on "The Last Word," and a guest guesser on "What‘s My Line?" : Summerâ€"modér® .e.m-uufl«iaml bérÂ¥ice and â€"theâ€"clock sports And entertainmisst the good things of life Send only 3.98 by money erder, cheque _ : with exchange addec or cash. Parce! will be post paid. With each order you â€"receive free 2 sheets of smocking dets. LEARN T0 SMOCK Grace L. Knott 589 Church Street Dept C TORONTO 5 ONT. \ _Clock hangs, incidentally, make a right angle 44 timeg in 24 hours â€" twice every hour, ‘except just once Mflzn 2 and |3 and between 8 an&"9,, am. |and p.m. Of 28 who trid@ this (26 got it. + sA ud at. the Univerisity of Cifléinnati, ‘said "I‘d be very happy to have ‘all 32 of them men‘{:tlc next year . . . What impressés me most !is their willingness to tackle a problem experimentally . . . \ Then\they go for what mathemaâ€" blouses, . skirts and nighties babies‘ clothes, girls‘ dresses, for yourself, from this new and complete, fully â€"illustrated 100 ~page book. 32 illustrations and full instructions ferâ€" each. Noew you teo 10 full colour designs with Since the Cincinnati youths had not studied the fields of math covered by some questions, they were allowed to pick them. Most chose to answer. most o the questions, and they got most of them right. â€" How many times in 24 hours are the hands of a clock at right an'm? » Cincinnati Post a tds Priamicm â€" ut i ies ticians call ‘rigorous proof. ‘"The refrigerater fen‘t causâ€" ing you much troubleâ€"I hope." Chei six can â€" make