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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1963)
"Everyone tn Southern Oregoi Kedijrh Mall Tribune" Publisnii Daily except Saturday y MfcBI-OHD PRINTING CO 33 North Jil J5t.. PhJ72-6UJ ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM Bui Mr EH1C W ALLEN JR, Mne Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIHMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. SporU Editor OLIVE STARCHEB Women'! Edltoi DALE EHICKSONCirculallonJilKr An Independent Newspapel Entered as second class matter at Medlord. Oregon under Act of March 3, 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By MaU In Advance Dailv and Sunday 1 year J8 00 Dailv and Sunday moi 10 00 Dailv and Sunday 3 moi. SOU Sunday Only One year 5 "0 Single Copy (Mailed) Go By Carrier And Motor Route Dally and Sunday 1 year $21 00 Tailv and Sunday 1 wo 1.73 Sunday Only 1 mo. 50c Carrier ancVendors Copy 10c nltlrlal Paper of City of Medford Offirlal Paperof Jackson County UnlteiTPress International jull Leased Wire U. P 1 Tflephoto Neyvsplcturea "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS AdvprttFlnc Representative: NF.I.S01-T ROBERTS & ASSOC!. ATES Ol'icea In New York. CM caso Detroit. San Francisco, Los Angel'-a Seattle. Portland Denver NEWSPAMt PUlLUHItJ ASSOCIATION NATION A I EDITORIAL Member California Newpaper Publishers Association Flight o' Time Mcdford and Jackson County History from tne files of Th Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 yean aflO. 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 3. 1953 (Saturday) The electrical rate hearing on a requested 20 per cent increase in California Oregon Power company's rate changes ended Friday after reconvening for a four-day session in Mcdford; a PUC decision is expected by Nov. 1. The Grants Pass Cavemen edged the Black Tornado last night 13-12. 2(1 YEARS AGO Oct. 3, 11113 (Sunday) " City expected to share nnst-war aviation boom. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "One of the mighty nimrods invaded the rural regions yes. after the elusive deer and bagged two nounds of country-churned but ter without firing any .Ifi cali bre rations points. .10 YEARS AGO Oct. 3, IIIXI (Tuesday) CC work urged for develop ment of park on Roxy Ann. John C. Mann leads Chamber of Commerce football forum in rally at high school; funds for new equipment for team to be provided. 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 3. 123 (Wednesday) County tax levy to be mill less than last year. AFL convention at Portland asks pardon for Tom Mooney. 511 YKAHS AGO Oct. 3. IM.1 (Friday) M nn ntt until in fli'-infc Puce after swindling hotels with cod i orders. S. S Bullis trolly franchiese cancelled; declared illegal. Whal's Your I.Q.7 Nine or ten correct it mperior; seven or eight it excellent; five or tix is good. 1. Who issued Ihe Emancipa tion Proclamation'.' 2. Correct the following sen tence: "She dove gracelullv into the lake." .1 Do the Maoris inhabit' m kimi.i u i . . i Yucatan, Peru or New Zealand'.' i IN lf'1-L. Whooping liaiH'S outside ZOOS 4. What do the initials s.p. j ( there avc seven in captivity ) totaled lo. (Ivad on an armband worn by some : ualv tu mmu,v limbed, with occasional set Navv men mean' i ,' , , . , , . , i , 5 "Which state is nicknamed backs, to a high ot ,,Mll 1 '.It) 1 -('. hut this dropped "Tar Heel State'".' 6 The city once named By zantium and later Constantinople now bears what name'.' 7. Poi is a native dish of what islands" Is the circumference of the earth greater when measured ! around the poles or around the' TZes the white shell,, egg ' or the brown shelled egg eon- j tain ihe higher vitamin content? 10 Was Ann Holey n shot, , hanged, beheaded, or gui-i liini- I Answer: i. Abraham Lincoln. I 2. "She (lived . . ." 3. New Zea-! land I. 4. Shore Patrol. 5. North Carolina. (I. Istanbul. 7. Ha waiian. K. Around the equator, Both Ihe name. III. Mrheadrd. Nine Fires Noted on Stale rVofecfex Larva's SALEM (UI'I) -Nirte fires, s all man caisd, were reported Vt erifies'Aa'y on statu protected (west and rangelands. Four df fine blazes were caused by care-lnss smokers. Largest was a yi-s.T! grass fire in the Douglas district. A six-acre grass hiaze occurred in Ihe Klamath district. All were pul out, q THURSDAY. OCTOfiKR 3. i:i The Wound' Inside The mounting and worrisome statistics of juvenile delinquency are to everyone. How do we account for them .' What, if anything, can we do about them? A certain portion of "juvenile delinquency," of course, is a matter of definition. In the "good old days" some of what we now classify as crim inal or potentially criminal was laughed off as youthful "high spirits," plain "cussedness," or just mischief. We assumed the young people would grow out of it. And, usually, they did. Also, the mounting statistics can, in part, be traced to better police work and better crime reporting. V w DUT IT is a grim fact that there is a lot of crim inal activity by young people going on, and it seems to be getting worse, rather than better. Why? Each case, obviously, is different. Each has differing motivations, reasons, underlying causes. The distinguished columnist, Ralph McGill, recently pondered this. In part, he said: "Is it found somewhere in all the pilcd-up (ears of adoles cence? Was it recorded there, at the school when the class laughed at an awkward child or when the votes were counted in the election of the most popular member of the class and hearts ached that never got a vote? Is the answer there on Ihe tape of the mind which recorded that time a hesitant child, near tears, sought to tell the story of a deep and burning hurl and was brusquely told to shut up? "Is it recorded only in cruelty and neglect, brutal and callous? Or in the more subtle cruelties of never understand ing that recognition is an objective for which we all strive until the grave claims us, and that somehow, in some game, or play, or home, recognition must come or it will be at tained in some mad and reckless folly which makes all the shaken, sorrowful adulls wag their heads and ask, through tears, 'Why? Why? Why?' "Is it caused by lack of education or job training which makes a youngster feel despair and hostility toward all about him.' "No one knows ..." MO ONE does, not even, in most cases, those most directly responsible the ones who caused the hurts and fears and frustrations which led to the breakdown. What McGill is saying, it seems to us, is that all of us who deal with children parents, teach ers, uncles, aunts, friends, counselors, leaders have an exceptional responsibility anil an excep tional opportunity. "As the twig is bent, so is the tree inclined." Like all maxims, there is much truth in this. For, while it may or may not be true that "There is no such thing as a bad boy," certainly villainy is not inherited. It is learned. IT MAY be learned at home, or in the streets, or even in school. All of us learn it. But not all succumb to it. Relatively few do. And it is almost impossible to put one's finger on the weakness, the hurt, the fear which, when con fronted with temtpation or frustration or rage, causes the individual to strike out with whatever weapon may lie at hand. We need to know a whole lot more about mo tivations in young people; more about how they react, and to what; how to encourage them and guide them into fruitful when something starts turning sour. Maybe we 11 learn, nut while, perhaps we can living ouvselves to remem ber that tin? callous young punk we so despise has, somewhere deep within, a grievous wound that neither he nor anyone Whoopers En Happy with the unofficial "Whooping C'vane Kditor," we c lhat the great birds are Canadian nesting grounds ters at the Aransas National Wildlife Kefuire on. the Texas eoast. It is possible tha, the ol wild hooping t vanes about II) pev cent -loill watehevs hope so. A1UI Wlldllle agencies are issuing their 111- annual pleas to hunters and others not to shoot,01' hi,!i hwn n,ul 1,n'1 "0 !,ml we were told thai in- approv al anv aree while bird w hich miebt be flvinf isTri'."' un(l,vwr:,1,hv ""' s'll:"'.v "H'r,,''S1' f'"' 11,0 over North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas Oklahoma and Texas to Ml last year. Canadian biologists, checking the nesting grounds this summer, reported seeing at least three young birds. So it is possible that the count may be on the way up again. W'e fondly hope so, for, although we have never even seen a hooper, it occurs to us that lh 1,1 "f'.lhl' anotllev species succumbs to the torces that have killed off the carrier pigeon and a thousand other ,.;u.,.s , ,hinus. . , , , ,., ', ... , . , - , ., Sentimental.' Impractical.' roohsh, even.' Probably so, in a woi'ldo where there ave so many ,,i 1,.,,, ,';,, lln'n,. t,. ,i , !,, ,t r.,K.,.l,.,.ll,'. , ' '. i niiwevei, we on anoui tne Hooping ivane, and hope his numbers will increase until extinc tion no longer threatens the great, white, awkD ward birds. - K.A. Stfes Tax Talk Jutf Talk There's a lot of talk days, and some plan tn ax measure hoping it will britVg a sales tax. Iron't et'Vunt on c?t. $he (battge and Uubor both are opposed to a sales Lit,; so 9re a lot of, ofheVs. And it would be certain lo be rel'eiifi again prolonging Oregortv vmM&b J kV nf immediate concern? channels; how to detect it won t be soon. Mean can heal. LvA. Route South title of the an now report en route south from theii to their summer quai Qu estion total world population j U why ,llH, ,,,SMa nmi lhf may have ineveased by!whl;"" 'W to .'!:'. At least, cvane-i ' , V, - ' about vote a a sale t3S IfteAv gainst the income MEDFORD Ljjlin-American Showcase Ill uOf'w Pas- j In the Day's News By FRANK The story is loose in Wash-ihe ington that the Russians are interested in buying an addi-1 tional three million tons of American wheat. How much wheat is that? Out in the wide open spaces of the U.S.A., we think of wheat in terms of bushels. There are 33.3 bushels of wheat in a ton. So Ihe Russians want to buy about 100 million bushels ol American wheat. WHAT to do about it? I ol's mil il this wav If you had wheat running out of your ears ... if all your storage space was full of it . . . if you didn't want to go in debt for Ihe money with which to J build more storage space . . . if a lot of your land was better adapted to growing wneat man other crops ... if you had a LOT nf mnnnv immilr-H in nmim. meiil for growing wheat . . . In that event, you would he very much interested if a big wheat buyer showed up in your neighborhood, wouldn't you? That seems to be just about what has happened. TMIERE'S more to the propos- ed deal than just getting rid of the wheal of which we I have a huge surplus. The Russians, if thev buy our surplus wheat, will PAY FOR : IT IN COLD. i VE NEED to gel rid of Ihe j ' ' wheal If. for no belter reason, we I need to gel rid of it because getting rid ol our huge wheat ! Slll'tilllses wnlllrl pivp us a In! t i.... iviTrur .... ! nlusPS if we eo ,m shsi,li,in,. : wheal in nl-rler In pp! farm votes. And We also need Ihe GOLD that : ic.,ss,.i,i.s ,,, ,n. ,,, i in t ... .. 1 n,,,,,. S Ihmk W'llAT do our (aimers " of the deaV.' Secretary of Am iculture Fre man says in Washington this nun iiiiiK. ,'Mioui two out oi every three farmers I have talk ed to favor UNLOADING Ihe wheal " ,..,. . U ,i,', inswer. of course, is thai this has been a bad crop vear all over Kurone The weath- Another reason is that Russian (aimers aren't Ihe good farmers Kroih is ureim; them to PliODl'l'K M(lil WHEAT "The way to do this.' THE INCOME This is one of a series of some little-known aspects of the income tax measure on which Oregon voters will decide at a special election on Ol i:stio I am a married w ace-earner with mo children. 1 make 5.00n a c.-i How will Ihe tax WSUKK 'our taxes will go up 2 :10 a ()l I'M i Why" SH I I! Oregon has had no i.iaior lav budget deficit arises pumarily and penal budsels. ;!.! 4 per cent of the (lener.il Fund budget goes to basic school support and by law cannot be cut Elemen tary and high school enrollments increased over 7 per cent in the last biennium while collei;e enrollments increased nearh 'ri per cent over the same period, as the post-war babies con tinned their schooling Higher education claims 22 9 per cent of the budget, correctional institutions account for 8 2 per cent ami mental health winces account for : per rent Alwut ill per cent of the slate's budget goes (or education, and of Jkii less than half could he ciirunder existing laws Any cuts in tin 'milg by the (onOrm- iiuld have lo come from education moiital aftil penal mi!tX!t. Oltai. (Dtte indict, the tax .'ojnmiMHai d.l DttiriJ MtitucK Kattvts to rtkir'titos ch'. 1 drAtVrtl tit. swh tttim tm b'ih..is. in lustruti k'ctkinlo or uinw'"1!'" i)lfsno"l n P C : Can liiKaloi'y' tin hri cirt U Or, Xsl It o o No stale valaiirs i an t. c l. S''J fe WI'ft 'Wti.l'ff ') i mtmccs. nut lower sataiies ' liIS m ' MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, JENKINS has been telling them, "is for Russia to MANUFACTURE and the Russian farmers to USE, as much chemical fertiliz- er as the U.S. farmers do." TN OTHER words: Kroosh is telling his people that the way to produce the additional wheat and other crops they need is to DO AS THE AMERICANS DO. He seems to have forgotten those days when he was telling us that the communist system is so vastly better than ihe American system that "eventu ally WE WILL BURY YOU un der our superior production." A cog somewhere in the com munist system seems to have slipped. , , fommMtl CSt OflS VU 1 1 1 1 1 1 U 1 1 1 V.U 1 1 W 1 1 J lilcss Ynii. Ma'am! To the Editor: .)u:;t a word to say "Thank You" for putting nut a newspaper that we and many others feel is beyond compare. I have read many news papers and so far as yet have not found one eomparahle in anv shape or form to The Med- ford Mail Tribune, (Name on file) Medford Foolish Question? To the Editor: Just read your interesting editorial. Ml 9 lift, and w'sn to ask a question that ''vc Pul 10 five sators and 12 representatives without one "Why do the tax Yessers to eive we voters both sides of 'hls malU'r- 0r 15 ,ncl'e ""'V " "m" You say Oregon taxpayers , pay LESS per capita taxes than , c"h(,r a norma and wasning-j inn w rn s vprv mie. now. n . the national average is 03 and I ..... j... ,u:.. i Willi me autieti ui.e iiikivi inn bill, ours will jump to 102. right in the California and Washing-; (()n brackel. highest in the i USA. 1 Whv not shock us with the i .,',, ,,, ,im, n iho np,.. ! sonn. - i in all overstaffed educa- ,ional aml slal1' lli'artments J. lion by not adding the laoo new employees'' roohsh question caiise Ihe word "cut" has h.'on obliterated from the spenders' hook lemslalors it would attract bet tcr qualified candidates It would reallv be a not if Ihe aries were increased to the $20. IHNI as suggested by the gas TAX MEASURE of brief presentations Oct. 15. law affect me' month, or ?27 rill a ear. increase since lii.YS This vear'.1. from education, mental health. r rTrmminiMji-M? OREGON Sukarno Trying To Keep Best of jWorlds While Dominating Southwest Asia By PHIL NEWSOM IT I Foreign News Analyst in hot and dusty Jakarta this week Ihe price of rice had dou- bled over that of two months ago. In two hyears the cost uV miB .. ..u tripled and a month s pay or the average In- donesian could be expected to last less than two weeks None nf this a Britisn diplomat a few seemed likely to da s aB' be of great concern to Indonc- In his mind were the fire sian President Sukarno who long blackened ruins of the British ago proved himself a man of Embassy and the British worn nine lives so far as Indonesians en and children flown from In were concerned and who early donesia when Sukarno loosed proved to himself that in a rioters against British installa- lirfirli rt.irlir.lA.I tn nnn.n ihn linnC in 1 11 L' U ft 3 at nai-l n( hie role of swashbuckler has many advantages. But both the price of rice and I Sukarno himself were of con- cern to the United States. There was a mounting susni- cion tnat Sukarno intended to Matter of Fact (cl New York Herald NO EXIT HONG KONG - Among the expert China-watchers who pur-1 sue their difficult specialty here i in nong rong, a most interest ing new trend nas appeared in a ine past year, , in onei, oouois , are beginning , to be expressed ; about the future stability of the Communist re cime in China This is all the more striking, because no such doubts were to be heard among the China watchers in iubi or 10(52, when the paranoiac follies of the "great leap forward" had brought Communist China to the very brink of immediate catas trophe. Today, in contrast, there is cenerai aerppmnni ihni lifp ; n ' inn., k., . i.' , i I 1 1 ;.,InZa"!C:U- anlry has risen from the starva tion level of 1-1(10 to 1500 calories per day to the simple-misery level of liioo to 1700 calories per day. VEGETABLES are more free i diniuie, in,m me peas-1 rtiiia iiny private piois. i nere is some pork to he had. Where there used to ae almost no cook ing oil at all. the people in an average rural community may now receive as much as two ounces a month. The improvement is not im pressive. But those who have r,,e i .emeu me in an i.,iern-1 ' i . .' J K life in present-day China know how much even such a trifling improvement can mean III,,. .1....L.,- . I " : '"C The answer is inherent in the 1US0 of the improvement of Chinese living conditions. In lirinf liL-o Klalin lnf,.p him ........ .,,,. Tse-tung tried to gain re sources mr ouiuung a great m- dusinai power hase by ruthless- '' squeezing China s teeming millions of peasants. But unlike Slalui. Mao tailed in this grim nlemi)t- On the brink of catastrophe. Mao recoiled in fear. The squeeze on the peasantry was relaxed. The industrial expan sion program was junked. Pro- iluclion from ovist inu industri.-il plant was allowed to drop, or rather to plunge downwards, to a level of between ;!ll and 4(1 per cent of capacity, where it re- mains today. And since the state was taking less of the produce ol the land, the people got more 1: .- 1 man from Denver. If that hap- but cruel and remorseless, must j pens, by gum I'll throw my old unavoidably occur. And so the seven year polmarked lid into doubts are heard, simply be- j the ring cause wretchedness, stagnation. Claude M Hall and deterioration, all combined. .':mi Placer rd do not appear a very good roc Sunny Valley. Ore. ipe for stability. ' 71 r watch fiK '.'jgffi . ' WJWMi t i 71 : ' on ri. h.srlrnil' Wirt eliminate not only Dutch and British influence from Southeast Asia but U. S. influeace as well , 0f a newv inrip. j pendent nation, Sukarno has en- - . ' :,.j v, i....' ( ,hr0 ,M n ,n(iunpsia he nas been named presi(pnt for life. The Soviet union built his military machine and ,he Unjted Staes sustained w .nnnmi.aiiv ', . "Without United States help, lnc 'n('onesian economy wouid no1 'asl five minutes." remark- confrontation against formerly ; British-held Malaysia. j In his mind also were the RHikh hnSino hnn. in : over by Sukarno on the claim i it was to prevent their seizure by labor unions. By Joseph Alsop Tribune Svndlcatf: i IN OTHER words, as one of the wispsl mpn nf Ihic r-ilv ha put it. "the Chinese Communist leaders have been frightened bv tne disaster ol the great leap into accepting no-exit situa- tion. a si.irrnnni ao,-,v.,,ii,.o -Jn i. rlnii-v u.h,, ,i.hic ro i,,.i tiirnine over, and nn spriniw nrn. gram 0f current cauital outlays l0 ive ho)e of (. DroI,resS this is a "no-exit situation" in the most literal sense of the phrase. Yet this is the present situation of Communist China today. Furthermore, the doors that might provide an exit appear to be locked and barred. This year's harvest will be about the same as last year's, which was not particularly good; and there are reasons for thinking that the harvests of subsequent years . ' "... . . may grow worse rather than ncttcr. western businessmen are "oc-kinB to Peking, seeking trade opportunities created by Ihe Sino-Snviet split. But the Chi nese meanwhile are preparing tn pay for imports with exports of cheap textiles, soybeans, and canned meats! In sum. there is no margin now for investment in growth, an( re are almost no pros pects of such a margin being crealed in the future. Yet China cannot indefinitely bump along the bottom, at the present level of wretchedness. The truth is that the bottom is not vet in sight. nPHIS is true because just about x everything in China, from 'he clothes on the backs of Ihe people to the more complex weapons of the armed forces, is in more and more urgent need of replacement. Yet no replace ments are in sight. For a matter of five years. I Ihe people have been patching their garments and replacing their cloth shoes on a ration of about two yards of cotton cloth per year. Since 10511. the armed forces have been patching and cannibalizing the airplanes and tanks and other higher weapons that used to come from Russia but come no longer and are not produced in China. Transport is another area of dangerous non - replacement. Above all. there is the entire Chinese industrial plant, almost exclusively designed around Russian or Eastern satellite equipment, with no spare parts sources, let alone replacement sources, for any of the factries" machines. If there are no replacements, and if there is not even enough margin to provide replacements further deterioration, gradual C C'$ W 4j fail To the British it had the un- pleasant ring of events leading "P to Indonesian take-over of West New Guinea from the n,,.,!. Sukarno nev- has been a man to permit logic to interfere with "-;- ' n"u .5U " was noi es- Pially surprising that he de-' nouncl. independent Malaysia ; ao a oiiuai, iieo-toioniai pioi 10 rillas menacing its new borders surround 100 million Indonesians in NortJi Borneo and Sarawak, with some 10 million Malaysi- the immediate future of Malay-ans- : sia is not a particularly happy It followed also then that Su- one. Strictly Personal i By Sydney J. Ha.ris fci Field Enterprise inc. PERS0NAL PREJUDICES i To justify our dislikes, we gen- j erally say that what we dislike ls contemptible or valueless; it takes a ra, e and lal'8e charac- er to acknowledge that what he dislikes may be admirable but he is incapable of such ap preciation. People in villages are both kinder and crueller than peo ple in cities: They are kinder to those who suffer misfortune through nn fault of their own, hut crueller In those who vio late the rigid canons of the community. Each class has its own "key words" which must be decoded in order to be fully understood; for instance, when the upper class calls a man "civil," it doesn't mean merely that he is polite it means that he tacitly accepts the superiority of those born above him. All genuine progress de pends upon not more than a dmen individuals in each gen eration; and the best argu ment for democracy is that we can never tell from which segment nf society they will arise therefore, that sys tem which most encourages talent tn come to the surface is hesi, despite the clumsiness and abuses and dangers in herent in the democratic proc ess. The self-righteous person who STATKMENT OF OWNKRSIHP. MANAGKMENT AND CIHCXLATIOV ( Act of October 23. 10(12; Section 4360, Title ;ffl. United Slates Code) 1. DTTE"oFFILING. October 1. 13. 2. TITLE OF PUBLICATION. Medford Mail Tribune. 3. FREQUENCY OF ISSUE, Daily, except Saturday 4. LOCATION OF KNOWN OFFICE OF PUBLICATION. 33 N. Fir Street, Medford, Oregon, 97501. 5. LOCATION OF THE HEADQUARTERS OR GENERAL BUSI NESS OFFICES OF THE PUBLISHERS. 33 N. Fir SI.. Med ford. Oregon. 97501. 6. NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF PUBLISHER. EDITOR, AND MANAGING EDITOR: PUBLISHER, MEDFORD PRINTING COMPANY, Medford, Oregon. EDITOR, Robert W. Ruhl. Medford. Oregon. MANAGING EDITOR, Eric W. Allen Jr., Medford, Oregon. 7. OWNERS: Name Address Medford Printing Co., Inc., Medford, Oreg. Mabel W. Ruhl, Medford, Oreg. Robert W. Ruhl. Medford. Oreg. Alicia Ruhl MacArthur. Ellensburg. Wn. Francesca Laure MacArthur. Ellensburg. Wn. Anne Chandler MacArthur. Ellensburg, Wn. .John Roofe MacArthur, Ellensburg, Wn. Maria Pratt MacArthur. Ellensburg, Wn. Robert Waldo MacArthur. Ellensburg. Wn. Roxanne Simmons. Ml. Kisco. N Y. Robert Ruhl Simmons, Mt. Kisco. N Y. Thomas Sanford Simmons. Mt. Kisco. N Y. Charles H. Simmons, III. Mt. Kisco. N.Y. .lane Horner Simmons, Ml. Kisco. N.Y. H. G. Grey. Medford. Oreg. Abbie L. Ferguson. Portland. Oreg. A Lindsev. Medford. Oreg. 8. KNOWN BONDHOLDERS. MORTGAGEES. AND OTHER SE CURITY HOLDERS OWNING OR HOLDING 1 PERCENT OK MORE OF TOTAL AMOUNT OF BONDS. MORTGAGES OR OTHER SECURITIES. None. 9 Paragraphs 7 and 8 include, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or corporation for whom such trustee is acting, also the statements in the two paragraphs show the affiant's full knowl edge and belief as to the circumstances and conditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and se curities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner. Names and addresses of individuals who are stockholders of a corporation which itself is a stockholder or holder of bonds, mortgages or other securities of the publishing corporation have been included in paragraphs 7 and 8 when the interests of such individuals are equivalent to 1 percent or more of the total amount of the stock or securities of the publishnc corpo ration. 10 THIS ITEM MUST BE COMPLETED FOR ALL PUBLICA TIONS EXCEPT THOSE WHICH DO NOT CARRY ADVER TISING OTHER THAN THE PUBLISHER'S OWN AND WHICH ARE NAMED IN SECTIONS 132.531. 132.232. AND 132.233. POSTAL MANUAL (Sections 435a. 435b, and 435H nf Title 39. United States Code). A TOTAL NO. COPIES 1 Net Press Run) BnnnTRCULATT0"N 1. TO TERM SUBSCRIBERS BY MAIL. CARRIER DE LIVERY OR BY OTHER MEANS 2 SALES THROUGH AGENTS. NEWS DEAL ERS. OR OTHERWISE ("FREE MSTRIBUTION i in eluding samples) BV .MAIL. CARRIER DELIVER?. OR BY OTHER MEANS D. TOTAL NO. OFCOPIES"DlS TR1BUTED. Sum nf line BI. B2 and Cl I certify lhat the statement mar'aj in (jM1 above ana co-'Wct ars comp4, Three karno should describe as a "blessing in disguise" his action in cuttins off trade relations with Malaysia which normallsi . . . , r. takes about 27 per cent of all Indonesian evnorts In the end. he said, it would make tn? Indonesian economy stronger, With Indonesian-trained guer- is secretly proud that he does not need to ask God to forgive hls sms shouId' from Ume 1(1 time, remember to ask his neignuurs 10 "lorgive my vir tues." As Santayana once acute ly remarked, "It is easier for a libertine to become a saint than for a prig." Very often the woman whose ambition inspires a man In great deeds is Ihe same one whose limitations prevent him from enjoying (he fruits of his accomplishments. v f The barbarism that precedes civilization is never as vicious or corrupt as the barbarism that rollows it; for real bestiality, primitive societies can't com pete with those that have re lelled against the restraints of civilization. Speaking nf this, it would he wise to keep in mind Or tega's astute warning: "In history, as soon as the 'man of action' puis in an appear ance and is discussed anil pampered, it means lhat a period of reharharizatinn looms." The great fallacy that most people make is in assuming that by opposing the "wrong" they are guaranteed nf being in the "right"; but most wrongs are opposed by different kinds of wrongs, and it rarely occurs to ordinary minds that two con flicting principles can be false at the same time. Average No. Copies Each j Issue During Preceding 12 Months Single Issue Xf arrsl To Filing Dale !9,r.n7 IS.rvj.i I ,n,B 11 let 4j 0) 0 (S)