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14 MAE. TMBUNE, Mi6W, 0 ;, UenJar, July 7, 193S
Prognosticafors See Korea Boom
(Seoul (UPD Korean
fortune tellers are polishing
up their crystal balls and get
ting set for a business boom
election time is approach
ing. Aspiring politicians are pre
paring for their campaigns,
and this almost always in
cludes a visit with a praction
er of the occult.
Fe self-respecting politic
ians would think of heading
into a campaign without. con
sulting a favorite seer and
getting a sounding on the
political winds and an in
sight into the future.
Seoul's Qnost famous prog-
Court Upholds
Contempt Ruling
Olympk. Wash. (UPI)
contempt ruling against the
State Game commission for
failing to move the Game de
partment's main office from
Seattle to Olympia was up
held today by the State Su
preme court.
The decision shut the door
on further consideration of
the issue before the Supreme
court.
The opinionosaid that the
means by which the six-member
commission can purge it
self jpf contempt was exclu
sive) within tht jurisdiction
of)the Thurston County Su
perior court.
Superior Judge Charles T.
Wright, who found the com
mission and the Game depart
ment in contempt for main
taining the department's of
fice in Seattle, has given com
missioners until Aug. 15 to
carry out a moving plan that
Jould prge tht contempt.
The Supreme court upheld
Wright with virtually no dis
cussion of the matter. It re
peated a 1954 order com
menting that state agencies
maintain their principal of
fices and records at the seat
of government.
nosticator Paik Woon Hak,
says at least 150 members of
the 302-seat ROK national as
sembly have visited him al
ready, seeking some good
signs for nationwide assemb
ly elections in the spring.
A Korean politician usually
has a sort of personal pro
phet, but just in case the fav
orite is gazing with bloodshot
eyes into a clouded crystal
ball on any given day the
politician will take several
other soundings..
Cost Varies ,
"Two crystal balls are bet
ter than one," one politician
said, "especially if the first
happens to give a dark pic
ture. We can all make mis
takes, you know."
The cost of the consulta
tions varies with each custom
er. Generally, the seer sticks
each politician according to
his . means, but regular- cus
tomers get a rate.
Paik said that of the more
than 20,000 persons who have
visited him during the past
year, seeking his advice and
predictions, almost 10 per
cent were politicians.
They .came from through
out the nation and held or
sought offices ranging from
ward positions to the highest
political posts.
Some amateur seers, who
think to make any easy dol
lar, try to attract business
during boom periods, such as
now, but the police crack
down on those who aren't
year-round professionals.
COLLEGE FUND 1
Aurora, N.Y.-(UPI) Wells
College has set a five-million-dollar
goal for its 100th an
niversary in 1968. President
Louis J- Long said part of
the campaign will be a $2,500,
000 endowment fund.
ALL HEADS
Ipswich, Eng. (UPI) A
notice in a shop here reads:
"Small heads, tall heads, big
heads, pig heads, thin heads,
fat heads we have crash
helmets for - all shapes and
sizes."
'xi
-- wmg, J
CONFER French Premier Charles de Gaulle and U. S. Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles (right) pictured as they conferred at the Hotel Matignon in Paris in a "get
acquainted" meeting. The meeting was marked by reported French demands for ac
ceptance as a nuclear power.
Priest's Catalog Lists All Saints To Be Canonized
Vatican City (UPI) Fath
er Broderick, an American
Jesuit priest, recently com
pleted a catalogue of all the
saints canonized by the popes.
Father Broderick's work is
an interesting and exhaustive
statistical study. He confined
his research to this field for
it would be extremely diffi
cult, if not impossible, to find
out exactly how many saints
there have been since the
start of the Christian Era.
7.000 Saints
From ancient religious and
historical documents, the Jes
uit Bollaridists Catalogue lists
about 7,000 saints, and the
Roman Martyrology Book in
cludes about 5,000. But most
of these saints were martyrs
who died defending the faith
during the first three centur
ies of the Christian Era, and
the names and details of many
of them are unknown.
According to Father Broder
ick, 283 saints were regularly
elevated to 'sainthood by the
popes. All of them were sub
ject to the rigid canonical in
quiries which were imposed
in the 8th Century A.D.
Information on only the
first of all these saints re
mains relatively obscure be
cause of a lack of documenta
tion at the time. His name
was Ulrich, an archbishop of
Augsburg, Germany, in the
8th Century. He was canon
ized by Pope John XV in 993.
Except for the 9th Century
there have been saints in
every century since then.
Two 11-Year-Olds
There were four saints in
the 8th Century, none in the
9th, seven in the 10th, 17 in
the 11th, 20 in the 12th, 28 in
the 13th, 13 in the 14th, 19 in
the 15th, 76 in the 16th, 43 in
the 17th, 19 in the 18th, 33 in
the 19th, and four up to now
in the present century.
The nation with the highest
number of saints is Italy with
95. France is second with 55.
Spain follows with 38, Austria
has 22 and Switzerland 22.
Japan has 20 saints, all of
them martyrs.
Pope Pius IX elevated the
greatest number of saints, 52,
followed by Pius XI with 33
and Pius XII with 32.
Of the 283 saints listed by
Father Broderick, 56 were
women. The little country girl
martyr, Santa Maria Goretti,
and a Japanese boy, Saint
Ibaraquia, were the youngest
saints. Both were 11 years old
when they died.
Saint Alessio Falconieri of
Italy was the oldest. He died
at the age of 110.
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Life Expectancy
Rates on Rise,
Booklet Shows
Washington (UPI) Life
no longer begins at 40. It
starts at 65.
The increased longevity of
today is discussed in a book
let recently published by the
Department of Health, Edu
cation and Welfare.
It concludes that the 50-year-old
has an even chance
of living to 75. Another 13
years, it says, may be expect
ed for the person 65. Those
already 75 have good reason
to expect another eight years
of life. i
The department reports
that even these life expect
ancy rates are on the rise.
The booklet, entitled "The
Older Person in the Home,"
states that increased longevi
ty creates certain unique situ
ations in the "three genera
tion family."
It notes that there now are
over 14 million people in the
United States who are 65 or
more and at least five million
over 75. Approximately three
million of these older people
live with married children or
close relatives.
The booklet points out that
these older people can "play
an active and constructive
role in the life of their fami
lies and community. We need
their judgment, their experi
ence, their stability."
Three Sections
. The booklet is divided into
three sections. Part I deals
with the general pattern of
three-generation living. It dis
cusses room arrangements,
accident prevention, clothing,
meal planning and ways to
revitalize the older person
with a hobby or by member
ship in one of the clubs which
cater to older people.
Part II discusses special
methods of caring for the se
riously handicapped with ex
cellent suggestions for sick
room facilities and entertain
ment. Even the "difficult" pa
tient is covered with a com
mentary from the director of
one of the nation's "most suc
cessful" private homes for the
aged. His answer to dealing
with the "difficult" patient
was "understanding and re
spect, and a real interest in
each one as an individual."
Part III deals with the sit
uation which often arises of
having to place the older per
son in a home for the aged.
What' to look for in such an
establishment and how to
find the one most suitable for
the individual are discussed.
Finally, it is up to each
member of the family to
make the home a happy one
for the old folks. This can
"spell the difference between
loneliness and ' fulfillment
between frustration and inde
pendence" for the elderly.
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Mental Health
Problem Vital
St. Paul (UPI) The prob
lem of good mental health
for America's againg popula
tion is a vital one, and young
er people can solve it, accord
ing to the Minnesota State
Medical Association.
The group pointed out that
the number of older persons
in mental institutions is very
high and -increasing at an
alarming rate. Contributing to
this "widespread breakdown,"
the organization said,' is "the
strain of living in a society
that tends to make second
class citizens of the aged by
shunting them aside enough
to .develop dangerous stresses
and tensions which lead to
mental illness."
Taboos imposed by young
er persons on their elders
such as social bans against
having fun and wearing gay
clothing are resented by
healthy, well-adjusted senior
citizens, according to the as
sociation.. "Reaching a ripe old age
is no longer a rare experi
ence or a mark of distinc
tion," the medical group said.
"No longer is there the old
fashioned family homestead
in which grandparents played
a prominent part. Older peo
ple today live in a far differ
ent world from that of then
childhood. They have witness
ed the coming of industrial
ization, urbanization and mo
bility and they must try to
succeed in this fast-moving
and often hostile world."
Younger people can help
the aged make a comeback,
the association said, by pro
viding job counseling, encour
aging self-employment, bring
ing them back into conimu
nity life and trying to re
strengthen family family ties
between generations.
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