PAGE t HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Sunday, January 20, 1963 Family Homss ;i f t" , V 1 DESIGN 323 Houm 1,167 Jo. ft. 21,440 Cu. n. This Ranch Style Home Is Different If you've been looking (or1 something a little different in a ranch style with three bedrooms and attached garage, study the layout of this design. Entry hall is well planned, since you do not walk immedi- ately into living room and there is a door just off the entry lead' ing to attached garage. Entry also allows direct traf fic to kitchen and to basement stairs, providing excellent traf fic circulation. Today's family interests has turned to outdoor living in the privacy of back yards. This liv-j ing room is an example of the new trend to turn your back oni the street. Fireplace is planned to rear with windows on either, side and combined dining area also at rear, is very convenient to the kitchen. There is a built .in China cabinet in dining area. " ff you wish a third bedroom, the study is well adapted for an other sleeping area since it con tains wardrobe space and can be enclosed by ceiling hung draw drapes or a folding door. This! living and study area is very flexible especially if you plan on entertaining a great many friends. The study can be opened up to add to the length of the living room. Two front bedrooms have dou ble closets and corner windows. They are located near the bath Twin linen closets are planned Just outside th hath. Plans call1 i A , , . ivy a uasemeui. lavviury loo. Exterior of this home is pleas ant because it is not the usual straight type of ranch design, but instead L-shaped. The com bination of brick veneer and white wood siding are suggested by designers. I This plan conforms to general FHA. VA and Building Code re quirementa. You can obtain build ing plans with specifications and material list see order coupon, .ntf- -....... .. . .. -rtjuWrT ,.-. .,,.tfsft, .,; - ' i tt f i.. n. &ttmMt'tiimiY rffi" - '-r . , iL , J M-r.i-r .- linA bimiiLLI tiff' J, mm-F k r.wl 3 Iff, !'i n IB lit I 1ID lit fl I-' BUILDING PLANS PLAN BOOKS ORDER FORM Herald and News Plan Dept. FAMILY HOMES 2900 Alpha St., Lansing, Mich. I want Items checked: Design No: 4 sets of Building Plans 4 Specifications, with Material List $29.75 1 set of Building Plans & Specifications, with Material List 17.M Family Homes Plan Book, postpaid 71 Enclosed find $ for items checked, NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE Hope For Happy Relations With South Editor's Note: Latin American i well-bred boys won't choose an revolutions bring to mind a pic- army career. Another 10 years and ture of tanks in the street and a our armed forces will be run bv dictator fleeing with half the the sons of non-commissioned treasury. Vie probably have not seen the last of such revolts, but Ward Cannrl has found some rev olutlons in Latin America that are largely unnoticed but far more profound. NEA's "At Large" cor respondent has Just completed reporting tour that took him from San Juan, Puerto Rico, to Sanll ago, Chile. This special report sums up his impressions of a con tinent in turmoil. oflicers. Argentina's story is typical. The Test Reveals Capacity For Individual Success Astronaut's Happy Home Investigated HOUSTON 11'PH - The Na tional Aeronautics and Space Ad ministration likes its space-prob ing adventurers, the astronauts to be down to earth in their home lives. Thai's why. when screening ap plicants, psychiatrists at the Aero spare School of Medicine in San Antonio ask more than 800 ques tions, many aimed at the candi date s domestic affairs. There are J5 questions that can be answered yes or no. Some questions arc asked more than once sometimes In different phrasing. Some are double checks against others. So far, all the astronauts are married men. The psychiatrists also are interested in the space men s wives. Here are some of the questions picked at random: Did you like school? What worries you? Do you panic if closed up In a small room? Do you often feel guilty or in adequate? Do you occasionally cry Are you much more orderly precise and perfeclionistic than rrost other people? Iloes criticism upset you Do you have spells of uncon trollahle laughing? Do you bruise easily? Are you sometimes dissatis fied with your relationship with your wife? Do you have frequent finan cial worries? Do you ever seem to confuse your thoughts with someone else's thoughts, as if someone might be putting things into your mind or evrn saying tilings to you? Are you considered a touchy person? Are you troubled ith hiccups: Have you ever had any su rcnulurai experiences? NEW YORK UPI - Perhaps you have heard it said that gifted persons are born, not made "Not so," says W. Clement Stone, who regards himself as a self-made man. Stone, president of the Combined Insurance Company of America of Chicago, civic leader, philan thropist and author, has written a new book attempting to prove that anyone can make a million dollars if he really sets his mind to it. In his book, "The Success Sys tem That Never Kails." Stone asks his readers to take a test to determine their potentials. Here is an abbreviated version of the test: 1. Do you use a dictionary to look up every word you read and do not understand? J. Do you believe you are meet ing or solving your problems as well as possible? 3. Do you find you adapt vour self satisfactorily to your environ ment? 4. Do you think you could or should learn to adjust better to persons, places, situations and things? 5. Do you generally approach new situations and problems with a positive mental attitude? 8. Do you try to solve problems by applying what you have learned through experience? 7. Do you understand the mean ing of the term "know-how?" 8. Do you understand that Intel ligenre is capacity, not knowledge or skill, but the ability to develop a skill? 9. Are you aware that intelli gence is not a guarantee of success? 10. Do you have the ability to! assimilate and retain the informa tion that Is made available to you? 11. Do you have a fertile imag ination? 12. Are you aware that an Im agination can be developed? 13. Can you recognize when you have offended someone? 14. Do you do something about it when you have offended an other? 15. Do you engage in wholesome self-criticism in an effort to im prove yourself? 16. Do you have self-confidence? 17. Are you strongly motivated to try to succeed in what you are doing? IB. Everyone has some special ability or capacity for a delinite kind of work. Have you found yours? 19. Are you aware of particular activities for which you have a natural liking? 20. Have you ever tried to in vent or originate anything? If you have written "yes" after, every qviestion. you are a giftedl person, in Stone's scorcbook. If you answered "yes" to only half, the questions, go to work on the areas in which the replies were "no." If the "noes" outnumbered! the "yesses." It is time for complete scK-rcevaluation, Stone savs. By HARD CANNEL Newspaper Enterprise Assn. SANTIAGO. Chile tNEAi-If the U.S. has any real hope for future friendship and alliance in this in cendiary hemisphere, it lies in more and bigger Latin American revolutions. This is not the fearful paradox it seems. A tour of the Caribbean and South America in the wake of the Cuban quarantine leaves this reporter convinced that; Those who want change by any means far outnumber those who don't. Despite Cuba's diminished pres lige. only the left appears to be making significant gains with its campaign for change. But if the coming social and ceo nomical upheaval is sweeping enough, as the signs indicate, it; will overtake the political extremes on both the left and right. The real dancer is the tempta tion to halt or turn back the cnor- mous multiple revolutions which already sizzle and hiss across national borders, political parties, religious allegiances and even. family tics. Unless this turmoil runs its full course, the U.S. will continue to live just before the dawn ofl that desperate morning when we awake to find our Latin Ameri can neighborhood turned angrily and strategically against us. Probably- the most devastating revolution building today is among Latin women, learning after 400 years that they hold tremendous political power. It would shock their grandmoth ers to see them today, for ex ample, on the dusty Dominican Republic campaign trail asking President-elect Juan Bosch what he means to do about more schools and teachers. Or in the cafes of remote Cuzco, Peru, arguing land reform with their husbands. Or in the smoke-filled meeting rooms of Santiago's Crillon Hotel, helping organize a new political party. Not so apparent to the naked eye, but equally deep, Is the up heaval in Latin American armed forces. In Argentina, for example, one hears citizen after citizen des pair of the depression, unemploy ment and crisis that plagues the government. "But," the critique usually ends, "we must wait to see what the army intends to do about it." Traditionally, the final, authori tarian voice in Latin governments. Acfors In Home Movies Advised To Be Nafural (EDITOR'S NOTE: In the to! lowing column, authpr and am ateur photography expert Bob Knight advises home movie makers to he natural and avoid play-acting.) By BOB KNIGHT WrlltfB For I'PI I have a young friend who thought home movies were sup posed to he real motion pictures with a script, a plot and a cast of amateur actors. Each summer, on his vacation he wrote, directed ard shot a lit tie play built around his four boys and their friends, and slanted to ward the locale of the 5 car's va cation site. The last such nw ie he made was In New York's Adirondack Mountains. Among its characters, naturally enough, were pint-sized Injuns and voyageurs and a vil- lianous trapper. The kids played the parts. The young mother had no part In it, at either end of the camera. The cast had themselves a ball throughout the making of the film. The autltor-cameraman-di-rector almost had a nervous breakdown. The picture itself was downright corny. Even the youth ful particijaiit ccm to concur, and hoot derisively at themselves when the epic is screened. They feel, for one thing, that they were far more convincing Indians than they turned out to be in the movie Last year this family rented It self a sailboat for a cruise along the Maine coast. I asked my friend about his movie-making plans. Movies? he replied "This year? We're all going to he too darn busy sailing the boat to make any moues." Although the youthful mother of the clan didn't know any more about movie making lhan about sailing. I managed a few words with her belore Ihev shoved off. Relore the next week was over she had back the roll of movies shed shot between sun-up and sundown. And when the husband- author, director, cameraman saw them, he Hipped! Kor there thev all were, mak ing the trip all over again. There was no hamming ... no grimac ing. The lines were cast olf. The father started the kicker. The hoys sprang to set the sails. The boat heeled snd its bow knifed through easy swells. They pic nicked on a rocky 'iore. They made their home harbor before a hatkdiop of flaming clouds. young officers of the new armies have come up from poverty and injustice with a strong feeling that change is necessary. "If their sense of justice is as strong as their memories," a Bra zilian army man says, "great progress can be made. No so strangely, the Latin American Catholic Church has been caught up in these turmoils of revolution. Far from holding a solid position, churchmen are divided in their opinions of how to meet an uncertain and pos sibly unrecognizable future. In Venezuela, for example, the church has a soft, moderate voice In Colombia a modern welfare point of view. In Peru, it is a church nearly unchanged by cur rent events. In neighboring Chile, it is a church that has just given up three of its enormous land holdings to peasants in an ob vious move away from the past and toward land reform. In large part, of course, such revolutions are part of this age But considerable force has also come from the tremendous wave of migration to our hemisphere from Europe since the end of World War II, bringing with it new skills and new middle class! stability a revolution in reverse. In Caracas today, for example, one person in four is an immi grant. In Buenos Aires, t h ei chances are that the average cit izen's parents were Italian or Spanish. In Holambra, a model farmingi settlement of Dutch set up by the Intergovernmental Committee for European Migration, upwards of 200 visitors come monthly from all over the Latin .hemisphere to learn how they can bring the same kind of success to their areas. In Brazil's northeast, where periodic famines threaten both1 JSSS .ill II A , I IBS THE ARMY Venezuelan soldiers fought and died to save the legitimate government of Romulo Betancourt life and stability, ICEM is work-jtion birth control, for example, ing with the government on land and land reform. I from a revolt in 1962. 'fat -& i&teZrw. reclamation studies. In Venezue la's interior, where a bottle of milk s twice as expensive as a bottle of petroleum, organizations like ICEM have been summoned to survey the land's needs and help bring Europeans who will not only teach local people new meth ods but will also settle and be come citizens. Ferment and change like this have spread into other, more con servative forces in the Latin American community. Magazines, especially those aimed at women, are running articles nowadays on topics once Radio and TV stations are com neting in a wildly growing field. Chile has twice as many radio stations as her population war rants. In newspapers, too, change is obvious. In Ecuador, journalists. have made complete national lit eracy their private crusade. In Sao Paulo, a young American businessman complained to this eporter that bachelorhood w asn t so easy: "These local girls read the pa pers and know more about world events than I do." At the crux of this turmoil considered too explosive to men- among women, in church, army nrTS' $ a Jf t,' If. the armed forces in the hemis phere are themselves in revolu tion. In Argentina today one also hears: "What are we coming to when ?AV1 J THE WOMEN Ecuadorean wives, mothers and daughters dominated a 1962 protest against Communist riots in Guayaquil. Fall Of European Royalty Described In Book Club Selection For February The Fall of the Dynasties," the Book-of-the-Month Club Selection for Kehruary, describes the col lapse of an era of kings and em perors a panoply of royalty which had endured lor hundreds of years, yet which suddenly van. ished. Readers who enjoyed The Guns of August," a club selec tion a year ago. will find Edmond Taylor's carefully researched and elegantly phrased book equally absorbing. Mr. Taylor's account begins with the assassination of the Aus trian Archduke at Sarajevo in 1914. and ends, as Gilbert Highet points out in his report in t h e Book-of-the-Month I'luh News. with the drunken hysteria of the brittle peace years, the early 'Ms." "Revolutions theie have been before, and will be again," Mr. Highet says. "But when the great regal and imperial dynasties of Europe fell, it was as though age old mountains had dissolved into dust, and the raging seas had rushed into the protected plains. The Habsbiirgs. the Romanovs, the Hohcnzollcrns. the Osmanlis had dominated (our hundred mil lion human beings lor decades, (or generations, for centuries. Sud denly, with a few quick months, they were gone." Krancis Joseph. Austrian Em peror and King of Hungary, as cended the throne in 1848. long before most of the World War I generation was even horn. H I s personal life was impoverished son. the romantic and rebellious Rudolph, died under mysterious circumstances, presumably in a suicide pact with his young mis tress; his nephew and heir appar ent was assassinated at Saraje vo. In public life Francis Joseph was conscientious, unimaginative, a more or less benevolent despot. Still, approaching senility in 1914. he had the prescience to foresee the chaos that would inevitably follow Austria's ultimatum to Serbia. In Russia, the vague and vacil lating Nicholas It, Czar of all the secret files of the German For eign Office 'captured by Amcri can forces after the second war' and other documents hitherto in accessible to scholars to explain and clarify many questions that have long appeared insoluble. The assassination of the Arch duke Francis Ferdinand at Sara jevo in 1914 is one of these. The murder has long been accepted as a trivial political incident, the act of a fiery anarchist in league w ith a group of undisciplined stu dents. Actually, as Mr. Taylor shows, the 19-vcar-old assassin. Russias. the Anointed of Cod. paid j'riio ",m'P- " y 8 less heed to the political unrest in PPPCt- Behind the scenes, moving his vast country than to his piouslhim and h,s accomplices, w e r e and ambitious Czarina, who her- powcriui anc Dangerous men: me: self was under the infuence of almasler 0 duplicity, the Serbian Macniaveiii Apis ; as wen as certain wily conspirators in the Russian Foreign Ministry. Edmond Taylor, a native of St. Louis, first gave evidence of his interest in European affairs in the early IftiOs, when he arrived in Pans to work on the Paris edi tion of the Chicago Tribune. At the age of 23 he was made the Tribune's chief correspondent In Pans, but broke with the paper in 1IM0. when, confronted with the facts of World War 11, he was no longer able to aicept or to ac- sinister mvstic. Rasputin. Abdul Ham.d II. last of the Os- manli sovereigns. Sultan of Tur key, Caliph of Islam. Shadow of God on Earth, descendant of the terrible Mohammed II who took Constantinople, was a little man, mousy in temperament as in stat ure, a prisoner by habit and in clination of his own harem. He as soon to scuttle into luxurious obscurity while Kemal Ataturk slopped forward to begin the task of rebuilding the Turkish nation. Loude.-t and brashest of the Eur opean dynasts was an emperor with a withered arm and an artili dally bristled mustache. Wilhelm II of Germany. His sahre rat tling and boasting over t h e years had built up a public im age of a sovereign whuh was to by a series of tragedies His fa-! prove disastrously misleading to vorite brother, Maximilian, al- the German people. I'nder a tough, braggart shell lurked a lowed himself to be lured into the fragi-comic Mexican Empire spon sored by Napoleon 111 and paid for it with his life. Krancis Joseph's beautiful, willful wile Eli.-abeth was asNiMiutoil; hi 0 n I y commodate the strongly anti-British policy of the late Col. Robert Rutherford McCormick. Freed from daily journalism, Mr. Tavlor set to work on his first book. "The Strategy of Ter ror." an account of how German spies and their French dupes, un dermining the will of the French people to resist, had helped to bring about the fall of France in 1940. When the United States entered the war, Mr. Tayloi joined the Office of Strategic Services, and worked with Allied intelligence in England and North Africa and later in India and Southeast Asia. Sensing in this latter area the forces of the new nationalism that would bring the colonial era to an end, he put his observations into a second book. "Richer bv Asia " Todav be is again living in Paris, with his wife and their two children, and serves as Euro pean correspondent of The Re porter magazine. Healthy SEPTIC TANKS asspoois AND DRAINS cNiMiot Tcmm ! IUIHI iHlltlll Ut StrTONIC K.guforly weak, timorous creature whose mm i-k -- A O power collapsed like a punctured ,..., c.i balloon as the Allies swept to vie- lt ,1 4 1 tory in 11:8 .... a,..., Hrr Mr. Tavlor has diawn on thc DIALCET j V.Vlg tM medtra wiy j JW t bathe MM N press and land use stands the Latin American farmer. Largely, he is remote, isolated, living as1 he did 400 years ago. But he is awakening slowly to the realiza lion that he wants change and has the strength to seize it. "But is he being reached?" asks an official at the U.N.'s Eco nomic Commission for Latin America lECLA) in Santiago. "Certainly not by the newspa pers he can't read. Possibly by the radio. But chances are he doesn't have one. Probably not by his local parish priest who is doubtless worried that his own status is in jeopardy and is re sisting change. It has become the major battle of this hemispheric revolution to get and hold the allegiance of the rural citizen. To this end, the catch-phrase of "land-reform" has become the the campaign slogan of both left and right. To this end, the Peace Corps in Peru, for example, has been at work on a school lunch pro gram in what appears to be a successful effort at increasing rural school attendance. To this end, government plan ners and politicians alike have fi nally begun to recognize the power that lies with local rural leaders the farmers, storekeepers, chauf feurs, beauticians, grandmothers who hold Latin America's real leadership. Puerto Rico's Family Planning Association, which relies heavily on such local leaders to spread the facts of birth control through out the island commonwealth, is cited widely throughout South America as an example to follow in getting things done. 'Whoever convinces those lead ers tirst, an tXLA sociologist says, "wins the race. And the hemisphere." NEW BOOKS Bv United Press International The Man Who Played God, by Robert St. John (Doubleday $5 951: This novel concerns one man's altempt to ransom Hungar ian Jews held by the Nazis during World War II. Andor Horvath's compassion for his fellow Jews and eagerness to save them from exlermination co-existed with his Best Sellers (Compiled by Publishers' Weekly) Fiction A Shade of Difference Allen Drury. Seven Davs In May Fletcher Knebcl and Charles W. Bailey II. Fall-Safe Eugene Burdick and Harvey Wheeler. The Thin Red Line James Jones. Ship of Fools Kathcrine Anne Porter. Genius Patrick Dennis. Dearly Beloved Anne Morrow Lindbergh. One Hundred Dollar Misunder standing Robert Cover. Where Love Has Gone Harold Robbins. The Prize Irving Wallace. Younghlood Hawke Herman Wouk. Nonfictlon Silent Spring Rachel Carson. Travels with Charley John Steinbeck. O Ye Jigs & Juleps! Virginia Cary Hudson. The Rothschilds Frederick Mor ton. Letters from the Earth Mark Twain. Edited by Vernard de Voto. Final Verdict Adela Rogers St. Johns. My Life la Court Louis Nizer. The Points of My Compass E. B. White. Sex and the Single Girl-Helen Gurley Brown. The Blue Nile Alan Moorehcad. Happiness Is a Warm Puppv Charles M. Schulz. The Pyramid Climbers Vance Packard. Who's In Charge Here? Ger ald Gardner. political ambition. He risked his life many times to negotiate their freedom, but he also was seldom unaware of how he wanted to ap pear in their eyes to emerge as their savior and post-war leader in a Jewish free state. Horvath actually saved (ewer than 2.0(10 out of tens of thousands, but this was a major achievement, for those times. He mot Nazi arro gance with arrogance: on occa sion he dined and drank with top ranking Nazi officers, in the be lief that this was the best and. perhaps, the only way to gain his ends. He won the adulation of his people, only to lose it when ac cused of collaboration. The author leaves no doubt Horvath was in nocent of collaboration but guilty of poor judgment. It would be unfair to reveal the denouement, for this is also a great suspense story. Georgia Wlnthrop, by Sloan Wil son 1 Harper & Row, $4.95 1: The tweed-coated second cousin of The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit, George Winthrop is vice president of a fictional New England college. Fortunate in his wife and children and possessing all the marks of material success, he nevertheless lacks the maturity which would give his life signi ficance. Winthrop embarks on an emotional journey which threatens his 45 years of tidy but sterile existence. His guide is Charlotte, the nymphean 17-year-old daugh ter of an alcoholic playwright who heads the college drama depart ment. During the course of a brief but tortured romance she teaches him the passion and compassion which lead to his eventual coming of age. Even more fully than in his previous novels, Wilson reveals himself as a master storv-teller. mumm R. KIMES Plumbmf A Mtrnf 2720 So. 6rh St. TV 4-8620 OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT! Up to 5 Monthi to Pay I N Carrying Chergttl THeSMiHWIN-WlUIAMS Co 1229 I. Mai . TU 4-7704 RUGS AND HOST PROCESS New Method CLEANERS 14$ lialtnad Ph. 4-4471 RUG CLIANIN8 WAU-TO-WAll CAIPIT CL1ANIN8 PURNITUM CLEANING 1 TINTING Gold Bond Stamps, Too!