THE GUARDLAN fununed vu1voek-do)IaolIIltul3PrluI:om'oot.l)iIr- inttowtn. .l.l..b!'I'1u ted. can uni haven Prince IIIAM Island Ulo I Dow" Editor, Frank Walker ' Hunger. In A. Burnett cl oliicel at Sununerlido. llnuullll and Alhorton. Author ind as Second Clan Hall by the Post 08100 Dcpu-uncut. Ottawa. )1 Curler: Charlottetown. summon-sidh 115.0! per annnm. Ibo UIIuIiI'iP.I'..l.I.00. 0t.berProvtuuoaIU.I.A.l11.0v - par auun. "The strongest memory in weeks than the weakest ink! THLVI-SDAY. DEC. 3.. llbl Soviet "Cultural Freedom" One requisite for harmonious dealings between nations or among groups of nations is free exchange of news and general read- ing matter. For many years now this has been lacking in the Soviet Union's relations with the West. News reports from behind? the Iron Curtain have been subjected to such strict censorship and, in many cases, to outright mutilation, that they have been of very little value to Western readers; thel export of newspapers and periodicals has been banned altogether. However, accord- ing to a recent report from Moscow this, state of affairs is to end shortly. After .lallllal'y lst, the report says, publishers will lie able to send their productions abroad ulthout official let or hindrance, in the in- tcrcst of ”cultural freedom." This. of course, may be just one more pmpaganda device linked with the new turn in Soviet diplomacy which, for one reason: or another, is trying to persuade the rest of the world that their particular brand of which at the same time helps a few estab- lish for themselves a reputation as actors. When drama comes into its own, the plays will be chosen by the "English professorsl for their literary and humanistic value, and' will consequently be graded. ”For example, we should probably have:. in High School-a comedy; in Freshmen-l a play from Shakespeare, Jonson, Wilde,- etc.: for Sophomore men-a Greek or Latin! play, or a translation from the French or! from modern language; for Philosophy stu-I dents-a contemporary play, with a phil-J osophical aspect: e.g., a work of Eliot, Clau-1 del, Shaw, Ibsen. etc." i "Thus. a student who has spent six yearsl at S. D. U. will leave with a certain, knowledge of world drama, and of its evolu-i tion and its literary styles, rather than withi memories of a few attempts at reproducingl treal-life events on a stage. i "It is our firm contention that drama, considered as light entertainment, is, now- adays, a stupid and time wasting sport, since we can get, for a few dollars, any kind and any number of movies which will serve the purpose, viz: that of resting tired heads after a good week's work. To put it more clearly, there should be no resemblance whatsoever between college drama and par- ish drama. The former should be a chal- lenge; the text should offer difficulties; the subjects of the plays should be at least worth discussing; the plays themselves should possess style; their staging should be conceived as a creative effort towards artistry, ingenuity and originality. Not an archaeological replica of the past." I 7 II ' r 4.. 3 . K ililllilil ohms. cl. . .25: it 4 Man Of Discrimination Page4' i'1'h'aGuI.rdiuI' What is Time? Whenco does it come? Whither does it go? There is no one in the world wise enough to answer these questions or I. thousand others that have to do with 'rirne. There are. of course. many things we know about it. We know that it. comes and goes with -lightning speed and that one mis- apent momelt of it can never be taken back for more profitable in- vestment. Like all other things of worthm tangible and intangible-Time loan be used wisely or wasted profits- ately. It was Gladstone who wrote: "Believe me when I any that lit of time will pay you with I ury beyond your most hopeful dreams, and that waste of it will make you dwlndle in both intellectual and nloralstature beyond your most gloomy reckoning." "Dost thou love life?" asked Benjamin Frank-' lin, "then do not squander time for that is the stuff life is made of." Everybody would subscribe to these sentiments; and then go on to waste time as if it were an in- exhaustible reservoir. The idle per- son makes a business of tlme-wasi- lng: but the busy person often in- dulges in the same pastime. If there were any way for any of us to com- pute the time we have thrown away, with nothing to show for it, from the day we first became con- scious of the passing hours until now, the result would be terrifying. I I 0 Another thing we know about Time is that, the younger one is, the more slowly does time seem to travel. Perhaps this is Nature's way of prolonging the good days of il NOTES BY THE WAY childhood: although, strangely enough it is the young who have the most impatience with time's The Passing 'Scene - "33""! , to think of other times. other years, other eras, u having been more interesting, more romantic, more heroic, more alive. than the present hour: or to imagine than the days to come will bring in the glory and" ulstro of which we dream The pools and philosophers, who have come a bit nearer than other people to an understanding of Time because intangibles mean more ul them. always have condemned this fashion. "One of the illusions of life". (laid Emerson. ”is , that the present hour is not the decisive hour. Write it on your heart that today is the best day." at. Paul put the same thought in nnot.l1er'way: "Now is the accepted time; now is the day of salvation.” C 0 I Time brings changes; and it is well that it does. How dreary hi. would be if it were sustained entire- ly on sameness and the status quol Yet we know that some of the in- spiring thlngs in life do not change. Over them Time has no dominion. The faith-given twitter of s bud on a snow-covered bough. the frag. rance of the grass, the thicket. and the fruit-tree wild, the ecstasy of young life, the bright indefinable h0De-I 01' youth: and above all, per- haps, that something in the heart of man that makes him look up. ward and onward and share, as Cardinal Newman put it, than "divine feelings, kindred with the skies." ' What Keats said of the night. lngale could very well be applied to all the unchanging and unchangg. able things of the spirit which, in some measure. all may experience. though none can define: "No hungry generations tread the: down: ”c()-existence" can be made to work with? After making his point that culture is , ' V , ed Th ' . 1 g y ' t k , passing. Childlens summers seem The voice I hear this passing nlghb benefit to all concern . 816 is my one never something that (an be a en in easy H" M." u . h m mm : A 0” h d "I r h h h m be d h t almost endless; and the years sep- was heard . Y - ' - j - 3 - , , ,- j cw , II II oma gran I110 C W 0 EDS C W 300 EHOUK O '1' L ' t t 1 i H35 1" iihuh Soviet authonnes can Shmx d0SpS' the iultel goes on to Suggest that ziminreyresl.":'iiI:mgu::ii:: conlessed to poisoning four hus- provide us with an entirely new Xgningggoazyguopii5aiLa:,?,(:,el,:u(; In HSEJIT. days by empemr imd language of short-clipped talk sol we can all get. into the act. -Salnt' John Telegraph-.lournal. Ioennrlly endorse the opinion of correspondents DISTURBING EXCERPT ldands is depicted as "unt.roubled." Not even troubled by the monotony! -Chatham Daily News. him to be an excellent example of what is meant by Eternity. But no sooner has youth gone by than perhaps the audience too ought to be pre-l pared in the classroom. At any rate, hel concludes, ”drama is the main means by! that the move has a .brighter and more re- assuring significance; that is by removing, l The Age Old Story . . . . l all barl-101-5 to lmP01-tatlofl of leading mat-i ' - p S”, g on Tuesday your paper ".5 mm, m,,.,,, the variety Attention i. .;,,,w,, ,0 the M, Time begins to take swift wings. for from the Vvestmbarrlers which, UP l0 Whlffh 3 9011929 m3.V 9-V91'Cl59 8 Cultural 171' carried a news item which was of commercial lists the average that doctors treat man! ieit arms yea?;iYFrdr:v:tehavS!te':)bIi1lfs u')ttl'rx';l;:mi: , , - - ,- . . - - , 'vel; distu'b t , m t, ' ' -, , , -' --3 ' W , v ,' - mm mm mmmamed mm rmeme m a commummv. one dam may :.":..::.: :::r.:. mm mm, we m ,-3; --,t;,;,r;- --mm conscious as o t e pass ng of Time. 0 a oelna write; The” look at a 54.000 convertible and aircsted on the open window door suggestion that he might be in- frame and in most instances. too, icrested in the finance company's those of young people who seem perhaps wake up and find that intercol-l legiate relations are no longer restricted to. speech made to a teachers' group in Ontario by Dr. L. P. Patters'on, President of the Canadian Teach- rigidity. So far they have given no sign that they are in favour of this two-way, things saith the Amen. um nub- ful and true witness, the beginning of the creation of God; I know And we have no adequate concep- tion of our earthly life until we think of it and live in it as a part lV8”i('- Fm” ih9V dov no (me in the Vvest Sports: but extend 7'”50 to the 5115-” 975' F9d"3"i0n- "A5 PEN Of NW” arallgements for n 5"(l lo'-in before to like to rest a little while driv- , i . . V - u g ' ” i , . '. of forever. Now la-eternity, and thy works. th I. th u.rt W111 pay mu;-h attemlon to their talk about T::d:'?f:g:Elfei;:le;1bl';Tff :Il(l)10gl;t next. payday. -Edmonton Joulnalling. it is an rapt saying that if Wm be wmormw and next, day, cold nor hot:AI wdiiid tho:e1;he:1' I . Cnnmh m you want to ta e your arm home through the endlesa yum... The urban drift in the last half century has deprived of their way to practice as well as preach democracy to help -Port cold or hot. EDITORIAL NOTES leave it in the car. cultural freedom. Arthur News-Chronicle. For the very old. I am inclined to think, Time has no meaning at all. resist . - On January 3rd the Post Office williu" msliugm M C”"""”'?i5m i”"ii”ie,C””"”7V5"1" "0" ”m-' '" "W" They (.1 1 g in Fifty Years A'Grow'ng make available to the public income Taxii:L;rtiififsiil1'iinder the mm MC-pit "5 iiouriignpcggile ltlt)illJ':3iVn1:i2ilvciiS A Guelph m"t"'m """'""' whthat li:iipeiiecilT ntfillrty? Xfiiieroirii R f 'i i d ' d h ' l l iforms T 1 and T 2 Somehow the Christ ' "' is ” t-s”be””9 ”””3h" W” " iisfeslplgess elelied W Pubic 0”” iioilyaliigdtliilrsoktiieliliig iiiied vs-3il'iifi;lV””'” mm I.” win" 1”" y”'"' e 7 ' ' 'n an e n in aiour - ' ' l - '1 . . 2 ' - . (aha a s gloul R 3 pg . & WW. 9 of that De a gtment re more man? from whom. because of the even 1,, rural consmuenmet we and Gwen the knobs on the radioldggtergand they are right. It was as Repair. To An Milka force between 1901 and 1951 is pictured in mas - g 10 5 I 1 g 3' tuofnledrgcefhce seems to enloy on could do in our provincial and mum, panel. Such a petty than 3 y. . . endearing than those with which it starts "3 P” 0 Hnadlan teachers, one ;e,.e,,,1 lpglslatures mm more could be nlmost mdicmus H it were A quite common exmmion not APPLIANCES has a right! to expect a certain lanloullt, of scholarship and intel- lectual integrit.,x, could nlase such ,a statement. "McCarthyism". no a survey of five sets of census returns pub- lishcd by the Dominion Bureau of Statis- tics. The figures, impressive as they are, ' lld rtainl be more so if the last threel ' . ' - ' ' - ' ""””3' M" de”"'3d- "3" "M 1" um ce y s ' , V Tun shipments of artlllcly equipment mnmued as anything om” than NPRYS Of l7h9Yl0m9Yl31 tZF0Wth C0U1d hale : Will be sent to the Portuguese and Italian A method of conducting an in- hccn included. ' larmles by the Canadian Army in January X:,,L,i:a:,O0':.'e C19,:T"";"",.e:;0ff5m; ,mcn whose hands have been cal- lnused by the plow. -The Rural Scene. 1107- (OF the M” '-m”' me” "mlwithslandlng, there isn't plenty of ma”! Oi themrrlf" '00 nlan-"'99" time for anything. The full span of curririlz in the Royal City every life is as a speck on the rim of the One of the things to he guarded da-V' wh-V 0" 9”-th would .3 9575'"; evenings horizon, the twinkling of against in the future is the entel'-,5-'e3k mm 3 Ct" L0 5”” W” klwb5- la star in the heavens, the going talnment ol visitors, dlstingulshedlime mi"! 91095 "Oi make ""59 Y?” forth of it watch in the night. the or undlstingulslled, without cityllli happelled Mid ll hRl1D9n5 "9? flight of a frightened bird through count-ll Y('CEiVil1R a detailed report d3.V- mGu91Ph M5TCur3- a window. The historian, who deals the year. SALES & SERVICE MOTORS Rewinding and Repairs What they Show is 11 largely agricul-1 under Canada's program of mutual aid to educator-could fllppantly equate on what is done and for whom it' Th K emmem M New gmuhiin time 35d?! STIODKEGDGF d8-His in his ELECTRICAL 1 ..1 ' 0 be' t nsferred ' lo a - - , , Colmmunlsm and McCarthyism is a lis don and why it is done. The 9 "V 1. t .goods (an understanding it no bet- md Bron my mg m In NATO .The ma.tPna1s' Spa” Pails for chllltnlz Indication of his complete iidca theat the mavor can spend me.WR1es aver?” W "9 W-Hz H h9M'lfl'J is careful to point out that the Repairs many-sided industrial one. In 1951, how-l guns, will be shipped from Halifax about lack of understandlllg of either, nl,,,x,,,.,.,. Si mung, as he mu.sHst.ep in decldng formally to abolish ,,,,,,Od5 w,,e,.ed by known cmmag IUCUCMBE. t00. l-hill: he is D00 11 V61'.V ents-rtallllng whom he pleasesithe dwm D('"3”.V ill that A”5”31i'.tions are only as yesterday, or per- ever. agricultural still provided the greatest mid.Janua1-y, number of male jobs, but its 12 per cent' r 4' ' increase ln fifty years was small indeed in relation to the fourfold and fivefold in-5 creases in a number of other classifications.l Since the last census, indeed, agriculture hasi lost its primacy. i lan state. The leader of the opposi-l ham the yen, belong in Palmer Electric rilimu ma sou relation to the movements of the universe. or-even the movements of life on this planet. For some reason, it is the fashion lcompetcnt judge or critic of cul- rent social developments, and that when he tells his fellow schoolmen -Islinuld no longer be accepted by the. , . g . . ISOVEFIIIHR body. -T0I'0"W 5””'imn Iii ilhileslatiiie g:tl(ii':m(ini'ieiYiOuiie: 1 tan 0 c - , v . Natives Of African Uganda regard milk that ”teaching to-day is bet.el' lilfilli Now that they've named an or- stated that Austrillia has l'ec('nt'v . . . . , . . it used to be" one can take his EHl1lZ.lllDll 'riulllR.R0" icr short. seen "all alarming increase in as a til”-V H.)-Va1'beVela-9-9' the National Geo" words in the same veil: as those of; -.e think things have reached the crime and the government's action graphic Society says. Milkmaids chospn ata fnotballcoach ElVilTg his team anlstage whe.e thzs modern name-jwlll contribute nothing toward re- am mmv me mm by mm mm. .:l;?"il:l:”s..:":;:2.me .3222 :0::.:”:i:r:. - , s i . V r gl ' . . .y Th 1 1 h f I p d 2 1,2 Europeans seldom are permitted to see the an attack on Senator M5"-aI'tlly usinot get used to all these, in time',l e ma e it our orce nclease ,i I milkim-1.s' and the milk must always be no longer mandatoly for liberals in but we nevertheless lloual. that ue times in the half-century, while the num-l home to the royal house with great cereg,9”b”i" mac”-l can ever look at. HumRRO (Hu- . I am Sir, etc.. iman Resources Research Ofilcei t hi" M! employed females increased five, mony. JOHN ELDON GREEN without being reminded of a slowl Charlottetown. yawn ending in a roaring grunt; After January 1 next year the lcanacllan nickel will be llictiei. Fm 'the past three years the five-cent coill has been made of steel. The change to the original mr-ial is due to "improvement in the inter- His Honour Lieut.-Gov. T. W. L. PROWSE will receive at times. in the field of clerical occupations . . .. , tllc cmplovment of females increased about h . ., .. . . . . T - T " -C ":0;nY:,a1:0?.F”1i(i::liigixiolilyaslgiitignltlirlyvihatawiillirffid . . 2' t" c iThe numerical increase however i C lmma Gemgma Rossem” Brmshi V H. B I. 't A day howt either that or versions that Emmi 101' ll 005 ClR'"Vi ('0vLRNMENT HOUSE Q:'q"lrln:l-gm to 314 600 mm i2 600 Tmgi poet, died this date 1894. Her first record-l 3 J: "lg t i:a,Ud'e5 ' ' A 21.95:? :rbac:rr;e.C;ndsyc an park 1;; ON SATURDAY, JANUARY 1, 1955 - . ' - V ' v 5 n.V lily 0!! com l . t ' ' ed poem ii as mmpieied at -the 339 oft Whooping cranes are in danger or happened to great ntlmbers or Ilusclous doughnuts. a pencil, or a from 3:15 pm. to 5:15 RM. total labour force in 1951 was 5,l89,0()(). l The number of males engaged in manu- facturing rose 3 U2 times to 779.000 from. twelve. She wrote many exquisite lyrical vanishing altogether from the ak.v-lhnrmlrss bird life and lllrlccd bi;-:i'rchocclate bar. It dnesllt mattel pieces rnany of then, touched with Sadnesspwlhs between their breedingilife helpful to man, since the whether it is of steel, nickel. ol g Each gentleman should provide himself with two . ' t . grounds lll ballads and 47,1100-51C.eitt'i1ltC. man took n'"" this contln- wood. Purchasing power ill what and all highly imaginative. visiting cards. She is regal'd- winter refuge on the Texas coastfent from the Indians. we want. -Landon Free Press IIsyoti"tit" 22?'m?" Constrifsio: (fgowez 83:)?” ed as one of the greatest mystical poets.iE;?ne,i',n8m;l:t ”' 1”” '”W”e””Y l5 . - ' L, E, PROWSE, V” 9” '""r””' m Sp ms ' l H 't ' hi th . h - f ' -' l i A , ' -. t Private Se retar . mm m W00 from we Clerical. ail .92.”.-.3.” ..?2?..f”"” '" M5116 ..32”::...l:.”::' ..xl.:0P.F':::...cl:2;i SAFETY NOTICE ” i work increased five times and commercel 1 ' L'::dg:f:;ldt5h:hEI:ll:e1ot!tlgfexrmrilgii and finance more than four times to 393,- h ' " ' spliigig ozrithghlom fllghtmcanadn, DEAR CITIZEN: 800 from 91800. Personal service went Now t at this Province has entered into th 9 1 kW ” "EV; "turned are so ixt . . . - ' ' V. . ' . y Canadians lost their lives in motor accidents up four times to 187,600 from 47,800 and. an agreement with the Ffderai G0V8mm9"llinethinVi0I'l:oxnd1;0?1?:iz?:scfiiactigi",just duriiiii: last year's Christmas and New Year weekendsl The Honourubl. minim: more than doubled to 55,800 from, for the assistance bf disabled persons, all uhzgzlngilcfgngr” l::"i':io;1:"':g An important cause of this tragic death toll has been; ALEXANDER W, MATHESONI Q.c.' ggggm, 1 but one Province have indicated they will my. hatched 335,, ,,,,,,,me,.' bu, npj the large number of holiday revellers who have persisted premier of Prince Edwud wand As already observed, these figures arei take part. Thel-e.ma,V be valid criticisms ::';f';:'t;' 5;;'3::”,'; :”l"fV'e”';:fi,;”a-I '" i" ggmng behind the wheels of tihe” gaastggteg 0Yei."i"dui5Ii' mm. thyme years out of date, The past of this age as being backward in religion palrents after the southward fligieiltl. E,iff,ZiE0:fcS2?Zf;aEfge:lsff,:,3:fe,.el3lg; ixsjllzggisbvei Wm "WW9 ht M5 ”9””””' lhrno years have seen the process of ln- and Culture. Th.” am other mea5”re,S' howi lngt :i”liiii:egI:e.surifi:tucl)l:i!lv'lrc:;e1igogjlli the past several years-that anything which can be done to 13 CRESTWOOD pR1vE dllstrialization and diversification carried on ever, show a high degree of practical re- the passenger Pigeon whose flocks prevent people from driving while under the influence of ' r at a greater par, than ever before, 11 is no ligion and civilization. :':vaf:n"l':fK ”;aL':1elm:"5-oglnfsigrirlulydc liquor will help to reduce holiday fatalities. ON SATURDAY! JANUARY 1! 1950- ' . r A ' figure of speech when other countries speak . , , flight in the North American sklesy. I would therefore ur e ou to heed the followjn from 3:15 P. M. to 5:15 P.M. It lent pleasant to rec it h l ' g y g of Canada as a young giant. We are grow- The Strengthening of local government " W " h” safety tips: .ing at a m.”V astonishing rate" There have in the combined Leeward and Windward 1- Avoid as much as possible using your own car to 599" Selhacksv "f Cm"'Se- F0f'"da”0”5' how" Islands would seem to be a step towards ( attend holiday parties. It's safer to travel by taxi "33 won” ever, were well and truly laid and now our making them a Province in the proposed A3 or on foot, especially if you expect to drink 31. P l'9g?""'9-5 "3" be devemped at 3" EV" mmiei confederation of the -British West Indies. ?l !a -c0h0hc.beVerages' MAYOR J. DAV.” SMART. D.S.O.. ,E.D- fapld 1'3l9- Unlike Canada, which faced the problem of 2. If lt:(i1C0hOiiC Ibeveragesnare served orconsumed at Wm hold M. peopnng a vast territory, the West Indies . ho ay parties, let this be with care and modera- , college Dramatic; , will have to solve one of over-population in Th I d :tm:f':1IlsL'l m mm tion" I . YEAR'S RECIFHON "Drama in . cone 6 is "e e .1 1 many of the islands. It is essential, there- 9 'g,,.' ' ” "V ”" 9 ' 3. Make that final drink at holiday l-ties-the "one - ' ' M The it c ssarly cu - tom that mainland areas such as British s,,,,,,,,,,,,,, tn. ,,,,,,,1,,, .,,,.m,, for the road'-strong, hot coffee nstead of some- i tttral, and culture is never nice, easy, enter- H d be . 1 ded ' far away, . thing "stronger". It is a medically established fact c'TY fjAu' talning, fashionable, pleaslng-at-ftrst-slght.'' 0" umS' "m U ' Wm" gig: "W ”" '-h""d"- "'9'" that coffee has a sobering effect when taken after 11,15 is the arresting point made by the new . . 0 ' 1 mm mm" In "mu aemncmw allcl;)l:1olI.p Ityma brgotnstltiber tygugompletelyg, but it ON JANUARY 1st, 1955 ' , , . - , i w e . ou' e A-d-den ,Arsenau" in an article on the st Tvio 39.8” ago Dr. Paul Armand-D9lme' The vines in wind-wept spaces black coffee than with A Eng! alcohdliguigeserigrgnft ' "mu 3:00 P'm' ufswo p'm ptmstans University Dramatic Society, pub- who lives In France End Who Was annoyed rank and roll .15 too Often gh last alcoholic dunk that span. the . J A clerk fished in the rrent issue of the Red and by the rabbits in his garden, imported from 7"" n,'.”n';".',':,”r:l "” i" ”" fun and leads to danger. ' .' N' any , i White. Ttliaotlouwho have witnessed, and en. Australia a small quantity of the virus And cold ponds hurl:y down the 4. ggevergm anyone whouliplaeifairs htondbe in tire ctatepto . toyed Sp . dramatic performances in that causes myxomatosis. He injected a L"'""'”' V9 m CV9" W "8 5 I 031 0 It”? 1'18 W .- - inclined to take issue on this pair of rabbits with his virus and let them with 3.33"? of Wm" mm ""5 mleelhe A: :1 haosg"?e..,:?ogiFhtggn:lo grur nuiwho M 0 A -. ' .but.rile,writer has so much of inter- go. The fatal disease spread through the 7'" ";;"" W" ”' t"'"'"' M" taxicab 5: and passengeg-not non-drlnixiilg ?KIt1.t1e.ltln A - ' A i ' ' . . RI-Hi subject that it is well rabbit populations of France, Belgium and .3...-mm hold mu gm. ' ' ' 5 . 1 i- further. West Germany, and in some parts of Eng- mP'"" 'gl""4 tM,M".'- 5' E 3,2?" h3Veit?1:e'f":m3ed'bp”rk 3”" C”! At Wu” . m .. -V ' ' ' i Father Al-aenault, land the farmers have no rabbits to worry mm arming hie. man” dizisves 531. ironic; aAle1d.v?amoryohl::ed:1ver, 153? "ii u V ,. - m of the teaching abo t at all. But what they have lost. in 5' Vhghlhznmfdm" """' W" he is an old friend, not to go over 1) miles an hour ,. .,;, W . , . . as long as this tract un- rabbits they have gained in rats. and. to cum crowding ml; the HI-llnel in town and 35 miles an hqur on 'tl'lq hlshww ' "in 3:60 p. Practice. drama make matters worse, the foxes in these . Am ,',';','fu;;?.":'m. mum 0, 6. Stay alive in "55". g , 1 - - -- giiilif, , " g . jg QKOIM rm. . have almost lost their natural fear the world. , , J. . - lg Mylfga: V m it 333- . m-nAl1rll-0.16901. " l- l -. -. .. ., -