HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1959-03-05, Page 6RONIECES
7,61INGERFAR24
Modern Eliqtopt:e
lPe Roberta tee
How Wait Disney
Got His Start
BECAUSE IT'S THERE — Mountain climber Claude Kogan runs
her hand lovingly over Asia at her home in Nice, France.
She's getting ready" to lead an 11-woman expedition to scale
one of the world's most forbidding peaks — Himalayan Mt.
Cho-Oyu, 26,867 feet high. Hailed as the "highest woman in
world," she is only five feet, one inch tall.
Q. Is it all right to Aise one's
own knife to take butter from
the butter dish, or one's own
wet coffee spoon to take sugar
from the bowl?
A. No, If the serving utensil
is missing from either of these
serving dishes, end your hostess
hasn't noticed it, be sure to use
a CLEAN knife or spoon, and
then ask later—when you need
that particular utensil for the
next course—to have it replaced.
Q. Please suggest a letter I
might write to a friend who was
kind enough to write to me in
my recent bereavement.
A. "Dear Margaret, Your sweet
letter gave me great comfort.
Thank you so much foe writing.
I shall call you as soon as I feel
able. Lovingly, Susan."
Q. Should the napkin be held
above the edge of the table when
unfolding it?
A. No; the napkin should be
unfolded in the lap.
Q. When is the title "2nd" used
after a man's name?
A. John Jones, 2nd, is usually
the nephew or cousin of a man
of the same name. The number
can be written either "2nd" or
"II," and is used with the title
"Mr.," as "Mr. John Jones, IL"
Is Your Child. Safe On A School Bus? Gift-Worthy Set
Once it was Mickey Mouse,
then• it was Donald Puck. After
that came Snow White, Pinot'.
chic, .Durnbo, Bambi, Pavy Croc-
kett . Now Walt Disney,
creator of fabulous, screen char,
acters, has started another erase
with his recently released "The
Sign of Zorro",
Following the example 04 the
swashbu ckling h er o,
youngsters have been carving
Z's all over the place! There has
also been a brisk sale in Zorro
merchandise, such as masks, pis-
tols, suits, hats.
Today, Walt Disney's name is
is a household word all over
the world, but, like many
geniuses, he has had to battle
through grinding poverty, mis-
ery and failure,
At nine years old he was get-
ting up at 3.30 a.m. to deliver
newspapers, often in blizzards
or pouring rain, and hi's grand-
father would whip him if he
missed a customer.
And when he went to Holly-
wood at 21, "a nobody from
Kansas City," he didn't own a
complete suit of clothes, says his
daughter, Diane Disney Miller
in her fascinating biography,
"Walt Disney", as told to Pete
Martin.
Delightfully illustrated, this
book lets you peep over Disney's
shoulder as he creates some of
his most famous and •lovable
characters. -How did Mickey
Mouse come to life, for instance?
Several stories have been told
about Disney having had a
mouse which lived on his desk
fused to function so the plight
of that family was worse than
most. This morning ice was the
Main problem. One man driving
home couldn't make the turn
into his own driveway, sa there
he was, straddled aeross the road
on the ice. A..t had the same
trouble with our driveway last.
Friday when he and the family
came in after shopping — for
us as well as themselves. They
*also brought us a gorgeous bou-
quet of red carnations ... for our
anniversarY,
But it takes more than bad
driving conditions to keep some
people away, One evening last
week we were surprised — and
pleased — to receive a brief visit
from two readers of this column.
One has recently come to live
in the village. The other was
visiting, They phoned first to
see if we would be home, (We
were not likely to be anywhere
else — not in a freezing drizzle,)
So along they came and we had
a very nice little get-together.
Earlier in the week I had, as
I expected I would, received
several requests for more infor-
mation about a hearing-aid.
Those letters I have answered
personally. So that means I am
in closer touch with a few more
readers of this column.
Would you lik etc hear about
an experiment I tried the other
day that saved us six or seven
dollars? My warming-pad spark=
ed one morning when I was
straightening the cord. Was just
on the point of phoning the
drugstore to send up a new one
when I changed my mind. De-
cided first to see if I could
discover what was wrong, with
the • old one — probably a short
circut somewhere. So I took the
switch apart, saw the wires were
burnt, stripped back the rubber
coating, twisted the fine wires
tightly together, wound them
around the two little screws, put
the switch together. And it
worked . . . just like that!
Then I gave my sewing-
machine the once-over. It had
done a lot of sewing for me late-
ly, sounded like a tractor — and
sometimes bucked like one. So
I got out the instruction book,
took off the front plate and
thoroughly cleaned and oiled the
whole works. Now it purrs like a
kitten. As I worked I remem-
bered that as a girl in my 'teens
I used to take my mother's sew-
ing machine apart in just that
same way. And for some reason
, she was always quite content to
let me do it, but would never
touch it herself. I have known
women, Daughter among them,
have their sewing machine seize
up entirely through lint and lack
of oil. It pays to find out how
to do these things for yourself.
And it's fun, too,
One day's difference and this
eolumn is out of date. I had it
practically written for this week
but later events made it seem
so out of date I tore it up, I'm
telling you, this winter you can't
tell in the morning what is like-
ly to happen before the day is
over, Each twenty-four hour per-
iod brings something new in the
way of meather, And Saturday
was no exception,
During the morning we were
busy with ordinary work. Then
the thermometer started to climb
and Partner decided he had bet-
ter do a little more work on the
ditches — just in case. On and
off for the last few days he
had been chipping away at the
ice so there would be runways
for the water if, and when, a
thaw should come. We got a
thaw all right. The sump-pump
worked like mad but that didn't
stop water seeping in at the foot
of the basement wall. A narrow,
shallow ditch in the cement floor
was supposed to take care of
just such an emergency but it
wasn't deep enough. So Partner
kept sweepinntlreevater along
the ditch to prevent it overflow-
ing, After supper it was even
warmer so Partner went out to
the ditches again while I car-
ried on with the broom eswish-
ing downstairs.
And as i f we hadn't enough
water to contend with the toilet
took that afternoon to plug up
and overflow — for the first time
since we came here. Bob hap-
pened to be here at the time so
he went off to the hardware for
a plunger and looked after that
little job for us. After the floor
was mopped up we resumed
operations with the outside flood-
ing. Partner and I both worked
until midnight, at which time I
went to bed but Partner stayed
up until two o'clock. Then he
came to bed as I said I would
go down in an hour or two and
make sure the water situation
wasn't completely out of hand.
But I was so tired I slept until
five! By that time Partner was
downstairs himself. Fortunately
it had started to freeze again so
flooding was no longer a threat
— that is, for the time being.
This morning there is more ice
than ever — all ready to thaw
again once it gets the chance. We
will enoy the respite while we
can.
Of course we were not alone in
Our troubles. Neighbours here
and there were out running
ditches, trying to divert water
away from their basements. In
one house the sump-pump re-
Mammoth Map
Takes Five Years
maintained be a system which is
hardly being used in Canada at
all, The solution lies in orgatitg-
ing school bus safety patrols., In
Wisconsin, for eNhznple, a two--
man safety patrol is assigned, to
each bus. The patrelment are
senior Students selected •because
of their maturity, intelligence
eloa donclei nsifat ittluhe se
front
piriat rs touloidi eentnht ei sa ebstpti ays oluenS;
f
helps the children in, then sees
them safely across the highway
when they alight. The inside man
makes sure that every passenger
takes Ms assigned seat and he
maintains order while the bus
is in motion. A Wisconsin school
official wrote me, "The young-
sters serving in the safety pa-
trols have, justified our faith in
them, We have no disciplinary
Problems on our buses."
There is still another way of
Promoting school bus safety:
traffic legislation. Most provinces
have laws making it obligatory
for motorists to stop behind a
school conveyance when it stops
to take on or drop off children
New Brunswick has gone a step
further: motorists meeting or
overtaking a standing school bus
are required to come to a halt,
thus allowing the youngsters to
cross the highway safely, But
many authorities, like Walter
Reynolds, commissioner of high-
way safety, Department of
Transport,' Ontario, are opposed
;;,,,to stopping oncoming traffic ,"It's
over-protecting the child," he ar•
gues. "He might get hurt when
he has to cross a highway on his
own." Another danger is that a
motorist from another province,
unfamiliar with local laws, might
unwittingly run down an unwary
youngster.
As a further protective meas-
ure, most school buses are paint-
ed a bright "school bus" 'yellow
as a caution to the motorist. It
has undoubtedly already saved
many lives. It will save even
more as the public gets used to
the color and respects the ordi-
nance to coma to a halt behind
the school bus. Unfortunately,
the ,effectiveness of "school bus"
yellow has been watered down
for a number of reasons Com-
mercial bus companies who use
some of their regular vehicles
for school transportation for a
few hours daily refuse to paint
-them in what they consider a \
garish color. Again, in recent
years, thousands of buses and
trucks have blossomed forth in
a wide variety of bright shades
and hues, thus making the yel-
low school bus less conspicuous
A. P. Lawrence, manager of the
Alberta Safety League, believes
that "we should •go to work im-
mediately to find ways of snak-
ing our school buses even more
distinctive than they are now."
Never before have we• spent so
much on ,the education of our
children. Never before has there
been so much discussion about
our schools. Millions of words
are being written ' and spoken
yearly about teachers' salaries
and qualifications, curricula con-
tent -and methods of instruction.
Courses have been introduced to
improve the physical and mental
health of our youngsters. But a
more fundamental problem—how
to safely convey 400,000 children
to and from their classrooms so
they can enjoy the fruits of our
spending and planning—is only
now beginning to attract the
widespread attention of educa-
tors, •safety authorities and par-
. ents. — By 'SIDNEY KATZ in
Imperial Oil Review.
Pure Flattery
HIGH FASHION -- Julie London
models the very latest thing in
evening gowns — ,for her. The
Hollywood actress has worn the
"old look" in several of her
pictures. What's more, she pre-
fers the '89 fashions over the
ones of '59. The gowns were
really glamorous then, she says.
Delight a friend with an attrac-
tive pineapple' and shell-stitch
doily.
Two sizes — larger as center-
piece, smaller' as place mat or
doily. Pattern 877 includes direc-
tions for Is and 22-inch doilies in
No. 30 cotton.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted', use
postal note' fbr safety) for this
'pattern to• LAURA WHEELER,
Box 1, 123' Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PAT-
TERN NUMBER, your NAME
and ADDRESS,
' Send for a. copy of 1959 Laura
'Wheeler Needlecraft Book. It has
lovely •designs to order: embroi-
dery, Crochet, knitting, weaving,
quilting, toys.. In the book, a spe-
cial surprise to make a little girl
happy -- a cut-out doll, clothes
to color. Send' 25 cents for this
book.
a boy of 18
will be as
It never occurs to
that souse day he
dumb as his father.
operators have been forced out
of business by price-cutting com-
petitors, In one province for ex-
ample, one operator, after years
of satisfac:tory service, failed to
get a renewal of his contract be-
cause an - inexperienced new-
comer had underbid him a few
cents a mile. Another contractor,
who had driven children to
school for over 10 years with-
out a single accident, .lost his
contract because he 'was $50
e above the successful -bidder,
Obviously, the one-year ten-
der system is in need of revision.
Safety, rather than price, should
be the main consideration in
granting contracts. And perhaps
the contract period should bee' ex-
tended to five years, on condition
that the operator.continue to pro-
vide competent drivers and, main-
tain his vehicles in good shape,
But low-bidding operators, too
poor' to acquire good equipment
and maintain it, are not the only
guilty •ones. W. Arch Bryce of
the Canadian Highway Safety
Conference • says, "Many rural
school boards buy school buses
as cheaply as possible. Some of
them are so ramshackle that par-
ents shouldn't permit their chil-
dren to ride in them."
Just as important a safety fac-
tor as the mechanical condition
of the school bus is the behavior
of the students as they drive to
and from their classes. The aver-
age family man finds that he
can't drive properly if he's dis-
tracted by his two or three chil-
dren squabbling in the back seat
of his car. Imagine, then, the
plight of the bus driver who's
harrassed by 50 or 60 noisy, ac-
tive children., He's a likely can-
didate for an accident.
I recently spoke to a safety
official who spent a few weeks
travelling several school bus
routes. On most of the trips, the
children were orderly and well-
behaved. But he described •one
trip which was different. Under
the watchful eye of a teacher,
the students waited quietly for
the bus doors to open. Once in-
side, all hell broke loose. They
fought, for their favorite seats.
They shouted, whistled, sang.
Caps, gloves, books went sailing
through the air. A half dozen
students roamed around, occa-
sionally engaging their friends
in wrestling matches. They ig-
nored the driver's pleas to keep
quiet,. An eight-year-old boy
shoved' open the emergency door
at the rear of the bus and might
have gone sailing out onto the
highway had not an older stri-
dent grabbed him.
Not long ago, near North Bay,
a driver was forced' to stop his
bus because he was being blind-
ed by flying objects hurled by
his passengers. He refused to
continue. until the horseplay
ceased. It is too much to expect
that such drivers, subject to this
kind of an ordeal, will be cap-
able of delivering their passen-
gers to their destinations with-
out a mishap. There are no sta-
tistics available to show how
many school bus accidents have
been caused by frayed nerves,
Yet order and quiet can be
A superbly shaped sheath—the
most elegant way to be noticed
by day, at dinner, or on a date.
Muble-breasted buttoning curves
st sleek midriff — hip pockets
give long-waisted look.
Printed Pattern 4556: Misses'
sizes 10, 12, 14, id, 18. Size id
takes 4 yards 39-inch fabric,
Printed directions on each pat-
tern part. Basler, accurate.
Send FIFTY CEN•TS (500)
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postai note for safety) for this
pattern, Please print plainly
SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
HIJIB GER.
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
BoX 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
1'r:iron to. On t,
Work will begin soon on the
construction of what will be one
of the most wonderful maps
ever made, a mammoth map of
an area where the foot of man
has not yet trodden—the visible
surface of the moon,
So complicated is this task,
that it will take nearly , five
years to complete.
The work will be carried out
by experts in the astronomy de-
partment at Manchester Uni-
versity. The United States Air
Force is giving $80,000 to help
pay for the map's construction.
Maps always make news. The
history of map-making goes
back into the dim ages. There's
a definite record of a crude map
of the world being brought on
to the stage as long ago as 423
B.C., during a performance of
the Greek poet Aristophane
comedy, "The Clouds'.
Few people realize when con-
sulting a map of Britain that
the first modern map was begun
'from the top of St. Paul's Cath-
edral, in London, more than 170
years ago.
The instrument used by these
map-makers had to be hauled
up to the dome and is still in
existence at the Ordnance Sur-
vey Office, Southampton.
Way back in 1851, when
Britain's first great international
exhibition was h e 1 d, map-
makers set up an immense globe
in Leicester Square, London.
It was 30 feet in diameter.
Continents and oceans were
depicted not on the outside of
the globe but on its inner sur-
face, Visitors entered by 'a door
at the South Pole and climbed
a circular stairway to the North
Pole.
The biggest astronomical Map
is the giant sky atlas of 1,758
sections completed at Palomar
laboratories, in CalKoenia.
Astronomers worked On the
Project for 'More than eight
years. This unique atlas reveals
Stars, galaxies a n d systems
Stretching far out into sPace and.
all the sections together' cover
an area the size of a tennis
court.
(Continued From Last Week)
As 'for the actual training, the
North Carolina motor vehicles
branch, which has chalked up an
impressive record for safe school,
transportation, suggests a pro-
gram including both classroom
work and actual bus driving. If
necessary, the program should
go on for as long as 12 weeks.
These authorities. strongly advo-
cate that the training program
should be undertaken on a state-
wide (or provinceswide) basis
"Training programs left in the
hands of local or regional school
boards usually don't work," they
say. "They usually don't realize
the need for ' training, ' they
haven't got enough money for
proper training and finally, they
don't have qualified instructors."
North. Carolina, with 35 full-time
instructors who do nothing but
train and supervise school bus
operators, has demonstrated that
its program actually works.
But no matter how competent
and well-trained the driver, he
can't provide safe transportation
if his vehicle is in poor mechani-
cal condition. Unfortunately,
many school buses are of sub-
standard quality; many locali-
tes lack a regular and systematic
program of maintenance and in-
spection. In Nova Scotia, which
is better 'than most provinces,
every bus is carefully scrutinized
every six weeks. In Ontario, un-
der a law that went into effect
last summer, every school bus
must be inspected by alicensed
mechanic at the beginning of
each school year. In Alberta ve-
hicles are inspected, every six
months; in British Columbia,
once a 'year. A Saskatchewan ed-
ucator told me, "Only six of our
56 local school units*have a reg-
ular program of maintenance and
inspection."
Mechanical defects have al-
ready been responsible 'for many
accidents. In Saskatchewan, a
damaged exhaust system in one
vehicle allowed deadly carbon
monoxide fumes to escape, sick-
ening several young passengeirs.
The accident might have claimed
several lives. A school bus car-
eered off Highway 8, near Hamil-
ton and jammed into a tree, in-
juring one child; the steering
mechanism- had jammed. When
I asised safety authorities across
Canada to list defects found in
school conveyances, they cited
badly worn tires; deterioreted
brake linings, smashed head-
lights, broken windshield wipers;
rusted emergency doors which
wouldn't open, arid flimsy, make-
shift plywood cabooses built on'
light trucks. Comments C. J.
Kenway, secretary, Alberta High-
way Traffic Board, "Poorly main-
tained, makeshift vehicles may
appear economical but they're
' expensive ih the long run in
terms of crippled bodies and loss
of lives."
How can the, presence of so
many sub-standard vehicles be
explained? Many safety officials,
like Fred' .811is of the Ontario
Safety League, 'argue that the
"tender system," used' in many
parts of Canada, is to blame.'
Many school boardS, instead of
running their own transportation
service, call for tenders from
private operators in an effort to
save Money, school boards sonic-
times let their contracts net to
the most reliable bidder but to
the lOWest one. "They hire tratia-,
pertetion at 6 pride where it's
impossible to provide Sound Vea
hides and good quality inainten,
ariee," a Saskatchewan educator
declares.
This is not too difficult to Un-
derstand. A good school bus Coats
$12,000 Or more: Expert mecheri-
id earn high *ages and so de
good drivers. Since school trans-
portation edirtraieta last for only
one year this discourages can,
tractors froth Making heavy in,
vestinehts. Many competent bus- ISSUE 10— 1030'
"Next time, honey, Vli Cali
titular Hunt You for it life
guard."
when he was drawing advertis-
ing cartoons in .Kansas City.
"Unlike most of the stories
that have been printed that one
is true," says Disney. "I do have
a special feeling for mice. Mice
gathered in my waste-basket
when I worked late at night. I
lifted them out and kept them
in little cages on my desk. One,
of them was my paaticular
friend. Then, before I left Kan
gas City, I carefully carried him
out into a field and let hire go."
The idea of using a mouse as
chief character in a new cartoon
series came to Disney after he'd
been racking his brain all
through a train journey to
Hollywood.
"I think I've got ,something,"
he told his wife Lilly. "It's a
-mouse. I'll call him Mortimer
Mouse. I like that, don't you?"
But Lilly shook her head. "I
like the mouse idea," she said,
"but Mortimer sounds wrong.
Too sissY."
"All right,' said isney. "How
about Mickey? Mickey Mouse?"
One fact about Mickey that
many bilk may not know IS that
when the talkies came Disney
became his lebiee, and has re-
mained Se ever since.
The resemblance between Mic-
key and his creator has been
noted by at least one student of
animated cartoons. "He has the
sable soulful,, eyes, the p,oirited
f
'
ace and thd same gift for
pantornittie," he Sayi.
FIRES AFTERMATH — Sheet covered, 'Charred bodies rest on the
floor of the Central Fire Stollen in Ashland,• ky., following a
fire brought death to 11 perSariA:•
Q. Is the bride supposed to do
the cutting of the wedding Cake?
A. Only the first piece. Theri
pleh guest can cut• his own piece,
or some friend can be asked to
perform this task,