Plain Truth 1969 (Prelim No 08) Aug_w

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    WWour READERS SAY the-P l A U ~ l R U 1 ~a ma gali n e o f /l. nd eu tandin g

    Associate EditorsAlbert ] . Portune David Jon HillReg;ondl Edi f()fJ: U. K .: Raymond F. McNair:Aus t. : C. Wayne Cole: S. Africa: Ernest\'tlilliams: Germany; Frank Schnee: Philipp'ines:Gerald \'(T.1terhousc:Switzerland : Colin Wilkins;Latin America: Enrique Ruiz.Co,.,lrihuti,.,g Edit orJ: Gary L. Aleunder . DibarK. Ap;utian, Robert C. Bcraker, William F.Dankenbring, Charles V. Dorothy. Jack R.Ellio tt, Vern L. Farrow, Gunae Freibergs,Robert E. Genter, Paul \Y/. Kroll. Ernest L.Man ln, Gerh:trd O. Marx . L. Leroy Nef,Richa rd F. Plache, Rich ard H. Sedliacik, lynnE. Torrance, Eugene M. \'Qalter, Basil w olverton, Clint C. Zimmerman.

    James W. Robinson. CO!J)' Edit orP3.ul \'(T. Kroll, lA yout Edit orNews 8 "" r ,l l I : Gene H. Hogberg, Director;Dexter H. Faulkner. Donald D. Schroeder,,/sJisra"u; Bonnie F. Bird, Karl Karlov, PaulO . Kncdel, D avid Price. Rndnev A. Repp ,Ch arles P. Vorhes, W. R. Whikeh3.rt.PhotographtrJ: Lyle Christopherson. Howard A.Clark. Fren k Clarke. Jerry J. Gentry . Ian Henderson, John G. Kilburn. Vietor Kubik. SalamI. Maidaru, Jeremiah D. Ortil:uero.Ar t D d r l m Arthur A. Ferdig. Dhu tor;Terry ","':tr ren, .iss is lanl Director; Ted Heriot.son. Pfodu(fiolf A ssistant: Eleanor C. Bre .....ster. Donald R. Faasr, Roy Lepeska , Robert~ k G u i n n I : $ S . James A. QUIgley. WIlliam S.Schuler. Herbert A. Vierra. j r., Andrew C.Voth, Monte \'(To!vt'rton.

    Al bt'rt }. Portune, Bruil l tH Mall.lgrrCirculation Mana/{fr!: U. S.A.: John H. \'Qilson: U. Charles F. Hunting ; Canada: DeanWilson; Australia: Gene R. l-IuJ.:hes; Philip .pine s: Arthur Docken; South Africa; Mi chaelBousfield; Latin America: Lou is Gutierrez.

    August, 1969VOL. XXX tV NO .8

    Circulation: 2,023,000 CopiesPublished month Iv at 300 \,:test Green StPasadena, C1Iifocnia. 9110' : W1tford . Engla nd:and North Sydney, Austnli1 . by Amb1Sudo;Ccll eee. French t i o n published monthly atPasadena. Calltorn l.1; Dutch and Ge rman editions at ' '( atford, Engfand ; Span ish edition atRig Sandv, Texas. 1969 Ambassadnr College.Al l rights reserved .EDITORHERBERT W . ARMSTRONG

    EXECUTIVE EDITORGarn er Ted ArmstrongMANAGING EDITORHerman 1. HoehSENIOR EDITORRoderick C. lIIeredith

    YOUR SUBSCRIPTION has been paid byothers. Bulk copies for distribution not given orsold.AOORES S COMMUN1CAn ONS 10 the Editor at thenearest address below:United States: P .O . Box I l l . Pasadena. Californ ia 91109.Canada; P.O. Box 44. Sta tion A. 'vancouverI, B. C.Mhico: Instituci6n Ambassador, AparadoPostal ' '9' . Mexico 5.D. F.United Kingdom and Europe: P. O. Box I l l ,St. Albans. Herts Engl:tnd.South Africa: P.O. Box 1060. j ohannesburg,Austra lia and Southeast Asia: P.O. Box 345.North Sydney, NSW 2060 . Australia.New Zealand: P. O. Box 2709. Auckland 1.The Pbilippines: P.O. Box 2 6 O ~ Man ilaD406.Registered in Austra lia for tran sm ission by postas a book .SECO NO CLASS POSTAGE pa id a.t Pasadena. Califurnia.Entered as CLASS matter at ManilaPost Office on March 16. 1967.BE SURE TO NOT IFY us IMMEDIATELY of aoychange in your ad dress. Please include both oldand new address. JMPORTANT!

    Roger G. W.,Tacoma, \Vlash ington

    " I would like to ask you to pleasediscon tinue my subscrip tion to ThePLAIN TRUTH. I have absolut ely nocomplaints concerning your excelle ntservice and credible lack of obnoxioussales pitches. At one time I was reallyinto your thing, but I've changed manyof my values and my style of life. Istill believe in Christ but I've foundH im in an altogether different fashi on- through LSD ."

    ing . \V hen I wrote for it , my commonlaw husband was on dope. I had justborne an illegitimate daughter, alone.He was INSANE with dope . I had takenbeati ngs, worried, cried my heart out,begged God for help from someone.Much has happened since then. Icouldn' t write it all here, but we aremarrie d now; he has been working,has paid himsel f out of debt, hasbought a car and is trying to buy ahome. Both our lives were in shambles.Th e PLAIN TRUTH - he reads, savors,ponders, d iscusses. . . . He has a fourthgrade education, yet you stimulateinterest in life, social understanding,morals, ethics . T hank you."

    Mrs. C. B.,Hamilton, Oh io

    IPe tuon't say "have a nice trip,Roger," because )'011 are b"y inf?, a one-Il'd)' ticket to destruction. Bill it's yo"rli fe - and yOIl and 110 one else 1I111stIh le ;/- 01' mill it .Science"My 17-year-old boy is in high school

    and for a term pape r in his chemistryclass he studied the article in the Maynumber of the PLAIN TRUTH on DNAand life in a test tube. You can wellsurmise the reaction from his teacherwho has already insulted him beforehis classmates . The information he hadgleaned from your articles on evolutioncaused a reaction simi lar to a bombshell10 the class - he being the only one

    {Con tinued Oil page 41)

    Ken B.,Bakersfield, California

    "I would l ike to congratulate you onyour excellent article dealing with thedangers nf LSD . As a professor I havehad many experiences with studentswho have taken th e drug. I knew onestudent called Sparky who, after takinghis first trip thought he was an abortedfetus. From that day on Spark"}' hid inclosets, crates, pa ils and othe r confinedspaces thinking of th em as his mother'swomb . The doctors have told me h iscase is hopeless."

    "Your magazine, The PL AIN T RUTHhas been such great pleasure and help .About a month ago, a dear fr iend ofmine wrote me a letter which touchedme deeply. Her husband had been taking LSD and she didn't know it. Hewas on a so-cal led trip and jumped offtheir fifth floor balcony, leaving herwith two small children and anotherchild on the way. In Mar 's PLAINTRUTH, the article about LSD helpedme understand why this happened ."

    Mrs. V. E. F.,Reno, N evada

    "Thank you is all I can give exceptto tell you who you are reaching andsome effects The PLAIN TRUTH is hav-

    "1 am 19 years old and was arrestedfor sales and possession of dangerousdrugs. I served some time and was released on probation. I'm an ex-acidheadand heroin fr eak. I am now clean andtrying to get married . Since I've donewhat most of the kids today are doing,I know their trip and can honestly sayI feel sorry for them, so I can full yapp reciate what you're trying to doabout the drug problem of today. I wasone of the fortunate ones - by gettingout of the drug scene when I did . I'vebeen receiving your PLAIN TRUTH forsome time."

    LSD

    Vito V.,Brooklyn, N ew York

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    August, 1969 The PLAIN TRUTH 1

    P/Ufrom the Edi torIn This Issu e:

    Wha t our ReadersSay Inside Front Cover

    The Mode rn Romans 43

    " YANKEE GO HOMEI" . . . . . 5

    Radio log . . _. . . . . . . . . . . . 16

    3

    OUR COVERMAN ON THE l\100N - Artist'sconcept of man's fi rst moonwalk.Illu strated here are American astronauts Neil Armstrong and EdwinAldrin j r., on moonwalk , performingassigned scientific work on moon'ssurface. Note p last ic American flagplanted near landing module. Withno atmosphere on moon, flag had tobe held mechanically in position.

    Accidents Don't " Happen" -They are CausedI 29

    What Inflation is Doing toAmerica - and to You! . . . 24

    The Meaning 01Britain's Royal Investiture . . 19

    And Now -THE DOOMSDAY BUG 9

    And Now-Onto the Gala xies?

    TV l og 4 1

    Personal from the EditorOnce again the SELF was deflated .The ego was punctured. I took a newlook at myself. And what 1 now sawwas pretty humi liating. 1 called myselfa burn ed -out "hunk of junk." I fellunworthy to be cast onto a junk pile.At th is point a sou l-jarring expe rienceand a new self-appraisal resulted in atotal about-face. I had been hit a joltthat changed the direction of my life.Events and experiences of earlier

    years now played their part in shapinga new life from th is point on. Theinflated ego and self-assured ambitionhad been aroused at age 16. But asfar back as memory extends I had apassion for UNDERSTANDING .I have wr itten elsewhere of the ex

    perience, when 22, as the Idea Man"for the editorial department of thecountry's largest trade journal. In continual travel th roughout the UnitedStates, I was assigned not only tosearch out successful sales ideas andbusiness management techniques usedby business men, but also seek out thereasons for the success of the few,and the failu re of the many.On th is assignment I pioneered in

    making surveys, based on the law-ofaverage principle, sampling publicop inion , attitudes, consumer buyinghabits, facts about life - about fai lureand success - about mental states ofhappiness or depression, about life itsel fas people were living it.Now as I reflected back, I realizedthat the most "successful" people I had

    interviewed were the least happy. Bankaccounts were full but lives were empty.Now, having taken the count twice

    as a result of nationwide occurrencesnot of my mak ing - now reduced toactual economic poverty, it becameclear at last that , truly, it ISmore blessedto gh'e than to receive.Th is whole world, it became pain

    fully clear, was operating on the "GET"phi losophy. The philosophy of "I love

    T HE OTHER DAY in Paris, in con versation with two of our executives who were travellin g withme, I remin isced on the high estimateI placed on myself in earlier life - inmy twent ies.

    II I was a very important individualin my own eyes then," I mused. "Youhave no idea how far I've skiddedbackward since then."They laughed. "Well," exclaimed

    one, HI wish you'd give us the formulaof how to go backward like that."Reflecting on this bit of banter later,I decided seriously it would be profi table to write that formu la for all ourPLAIN TRUTH readers. For it is theformula for the only kind of successthat is real, and satisfying, and lasting .For as long as I was important in

    my own eyes, I was actually of no moreimportance than a paper bag filled withair. T rue, I was ambitious. I workedhard, studied hard, drove myself onrelentlessly in a determined effort toachieve what I then viewed as SUCCESS.But actually, as I know now, it wasa striving after wind - pure vanity a swelled-up self -exaltation that was likea toy balloon that will burst whenpricked with a pin.The skidding backward began with

    the flash depression of 1920 which sentnumerous big corporations, amongwhich were my main customers, to thewall. It was a nationa l flash catastropheover which I had no control. It leftme, by 1922, a deflated, near-frustratedyoung man of 30. But not for long .I said, "I'll bound back. You can'tkeep a good man down." Self -confidence returned . I began developinganother business.But by 1926, just when my new

    advertising business was beginning toaccelerate, another nationwide occurrence, not of my making - or evenmy knowledge, at the time - wipedout that business.

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    As new Cojoin with mewere added.small. But I

    2AfE, and I care noth ing about Y01l."Th e way of competition, strife, taking,acquiring, amassing - of being servedrather than serving. Actually, in economic poverty I found rest from thenerve-shatteri ng driving , d riving, striv-ing aft er that which NEVER SATIS FIEDwhen acquired ! I began to sec thatLOVE is not spelled "l-u-s-t" but rathe ris pointed in the opposite di rection LOVE is an oN/Roin/{ concern fo r theone loved.It became crystal d ear tha t there are

    two over-all philosoph ies or WAYS oflife. One is the sm.r-centered way. It issimply VANITY. It loves self on ly (which,as I had learn ed from a text on advertising psychology includes that which youcall YOURS - youc wife and fam ily,your club, your political party. yourfootball team , your country in time ofwar ) . It includes not only love andgreed toward SELf, but envy, jealousy,and even hatred tow ard others.

    I could see why so ma ny marriagesbreak up - or, at least, are unh appy.One confuses " fall ing in love" withthe sex att raction which stimulatesDESIR E- toward SELF. And when onedoes not GET what is wan ted from themate, resentment sets in . The mate isno longer part of one 's empir ical SELF.Resentment turns to bitterness, andbitterness to HATE.I began to learn , as never before, that

    LOVE for my wife meant outgo ing roncern for her welfare, her happiness. AsI worked towa rd her happiness, ourmarriage took on a NEW happiness. Andth at happy marr iage lasted fifty years unt il her death two years ago. It wasmaking m e more happy at the sametime ! Str ange ? H appiness is a funnything - or is it? The more you GIVE,the more you HAVE. But the more youtry to TAKE , the more miserable andfrustrated you become.

    It became clear. On e WAY of lifeis the SELf way - the IN-coming way- the GETTING way. The OPPOSITEWAY is the selfless way - the way ofhumil ity, gett ing rid of the SELF(which is your biggest enemy ), theway of GIVING, serving, hel ping,sha ring.In economic poverty my wife and I

    found HAPPINESS. It became so brim-

    The PLAIN TRUTHfu l it sp illed over in to pure J OY! Iwanted to SHARE this happiness withothers.In the summer of 1933 we were

    living in Oregon. I pl ann ed a seriesof lectu res in and near Eugene, Or egon ,to share th is BA SIC KNOWLEDGE of thisrigh t WAY OF LIFE with others. I waswi thout money. But a man with whomI had come in con tact, believing in thisWAY, happened to be a member of acountry school board . H e offered me theuse of a one-room country schoolhouseeight mil es west of Eugene, Oregon.There was no rent. I walked out overthe countryside, invi ting neighbors tocome to the series of lectures. T herewere only 35 seats, but attendanceaveraged 36 - an average of one stand ing th rough the lecture.

    That was a very small group ofpeople , but the response was electric.Some of those lives became happi er !A little later an invitati on came to

    lecture over radio. Th e response wasentirely unexpected . There was thenonly one station in Eugene, KORE,nwned hy Frank Hi ll . He called meinto his office, handed me a hand ful ofletters. He suggested I plan a regu larhalf -hour program - offering to contribute substantially by reducing thecost below cost of operat ion. The pr icewas $3 per half hour.

    That was the start of The WORLDTOMORROW program. It could not havestarted smaller. 111e station then bro adcast on the minimum wa ttage of 100watts. But it was a NEW KINDOF EDUCATION.

    Education as organized in this wor ldis restricted primarily to the physicalsciences, technologies, and the p rofession s - teaching how to earn a l iving,but not HOW TO LIVE. I saw the needof this broader kind of education INTHE H01LE. Without any request fromme, rad io listeners volunteered to become contributors.

    That was the star t.W orkers volu nteered toother radio stat ionsGradually. G rowth wasnever wou ld solicit or inuite contr ibutions over th e air .

    The radio program started on theair th e first week in 1934 . I managedto put together a homemade "maga-

    Augus t, 1969zine" called Th e PLAIN TRUTH, printedon a bor rowed mimeogr aph, ready byFebruary 1. This was offered , f ree, toradio listen ers.l. ittle by little it grew. In 1947

    Ambassador College was opened inPasadena - wit h fou r students and afaculty of 8. It was a new type ofcampus educatio n. W e not only beganteaching students how to earn a living- but also HOW TO LIVE.And now, af ter an other 22 years, I

    look back on a lif e that has beenfilled with happi ness - because it hasbeen devoted to SHARING this WAY toREAL SUCCESS with, first about thr eedozen, then hundreds, then th ousands,and today into the HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS of people.From that high estima te I placed on

    myself during my late teens andtwenties, seeking STATUS and a recognition of IMPORTANCE, I skidded backwar d - all the way DOWN to self -abasement in economic poverty. In finan cialpoverty I found THE WAY to tru e SUCCESS. The economic pover ty lasted a tota lof 28 years. I learned th at se tt ing one'sheart on money, or the material possessions money will buy, or on sta tus,only brings a CURSE. Financial successis seldom true success, because it issough t for its own sake.T here is a CAUSE for every effect.

    TRUE success may, and perhaps usuallyshould, include financial success. Moneyis power, bu t usua lly it is used toCAUSE curs es, not blessings and happiness. Money is good or evil depending on how it is used. I f money is theend you seek, it will wreck you in theend .Self-cen tered ness, self-seeking - th e

    GETTING, grasping way of vanity,jealousy, envy and greed is a CAUSE tha talways produces a most UNHAPPY effect.T o HUMBLE the self, to be little in

    you r own eyes, to be honestly andsincerely concerned for others - to geton the GIVING, helping, serving, sharingway - that is the WAY OF LIFE th atCA USES real Success !To have the SELF brough t down to

    that junk pile was a painful experience.But not for long. Yes, I'm glad Iskidded backward from self -esteem, egoand vanity and self -seeking.

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    And Now-On to the GALAXIES?

    Prepare for a shock! The answer is an absolute NO ! Mortalman WILL NEVER ge t outside his immedia te solar neighbor-hood - NEVER ge t out to the limits of his own galaxyor to other galaxies.

    by Garner Ted Armstron g

    NASA PhotosFIRST TWO MEN TO WALK ON MOON - American a stra na uts Neil A.Armst rong , right, cn d Edwin E. Aldr in, Jr.

    the bounds which constrain us. But, likesomeone exploring his environment whohas not ret discovered the high wall hidden by the climbing vines, mankind hasnot yet discovered the finality of his environmental confines. There is a wall be-yond which we cannot go. There is apoin t out there beyond which only impossibility lies.You doubt limits ? You disbelieve?If man is absolutely accurate in his

    measurements - light is observed totravel at the speed ( through a vacuum)of 186,281 miles each second.And that is the utte r limit. Beyond

    this, the re is nothing else where speed isconcerned. Thi s is the ultimate in speedfor physical objects - an ultimate imposed by the laws of the un iverse itself.by the laws which man did 1/01 invent,produce, nor even properly define.Nothing is known, or can come to be

    known , which is faster than the speedwith which light travels.Perhaps rou will balk at reading this

    I

    No-T respassing Signs Out ThereHeretical as it may sound - there at e

    limits upon lIS..Man is still LIMITED. SOfar, we have been operating withi n thoselimitations; but accomplishing featsof technology which arc breathtakinglyimpr essive. So much so that millionshave been caught up in a scientific spellas if captured by the magic of the stentorian voice of the traveling medicineman with his sure-cure, sure-fire snakeelix ir guaranteed to fix whatever ailsyou. To doubt now is simple heresy. Orso many believe.But man is limited.Today, we are reaching almost 10 the

    walls about us - a/most ready to touch

    as the greatest "death-defying leap" inthe history of man-made spectacularswas enacted before half a billion humanbeings.To question the final limits of man in

    space at this point is to seem irreligious,somehow. But maybe you should readon.

    What'S Th is - He resy Agains tScience?

    To doubt the ability of science todayis to conjure up visions of skept ical onlookers at Fulton's steamboat, or thepeople jeering at the dock whenColumbus waved good-by.To seriously quest ion the limits ofman's scientific conquest s is to appear

    guilty of some terrible heresy - someshocking denial of the faith.To the millions sit ting glued to their

    TV sets, watching two Americans cavor twith easy strides on the lunar surface,th is was as impressive as seeing firecome down from heaven - with yourown eyes.Milli ons said, as if with one voice, "I

    can't believe it! " "Fantastic !" "Impossible !" Words spoken almost reverently,

    T o MAK E such statements as "can' t"and "never" and "impossible"where science is concerned is toinvite immediate sneers and scoffs ofpity.With the almost completely unbeliev

    able achievements of America's Apollo11 mission - the actual IU f1:ar landingand moonwalk - the collecting ofluna r samples - mill ions are convincedNOTHING is impossible with man, now.D ream of it, speculate about it, add

    money and science, and it will cometo pass. O r so mill ions th ink.The magic formula is as simple as

    turning on a TV set - even if thosesame millions have not the slightest notion about what makes the set work. Justd ream of some completely unimaginablefeat - add enough money and enoughscientists, and wait unti l the networkstell you when the spectacle is scheduledfor viewing.

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    4 The PLAIN TRUTH August, 1969

    Wid. WorldArt ist' s conceptio n of the July Apollo 11 luna r module la nding of Armstron gand Aldri n in the "Sea of Tranquillity." Lunar module is composed of ascen tand descen t stag es. Upon lift-off from moon the de sce nt stage is leftbe hind. On ly a scent stage, housing as tronauts, left the moon , then dock edwith mother ship circl ing the moo n. Ascen t stage wa s later jet tison ed .

    - say to yourself "everything is constantly changing," or "they'll soon findsomething faster." And this, itself,proves one of the basic premises of thisarticle - that the sublime dedication,now, to science, surpasses in many casesthe near-hypnotic trances of many a savage caught up in the voodoo of a parading witch doctor.I speak not only of the dedication of

    some (though by no means all ) scientists - but mainly of the layman.People like to bel ieve scientists need

    only more time, money and ingenuity after which literally NOTH ING is impos sible. And in this is the stuff of whichreligious faith consists.But scientists are limited by the

    very laws of the universe. They arebound by laws. Science does not createor produce those laws - it often finds

    itself lacking d ear definitions for them- and scientists must operate withi n theabsolutes of powerful forces which arefar beyond science.The reason many people lind such

    limits hard to accept in this modern ageis because most people are not scientists.Many a layman has found himself inawe of fairly simple scientific experiments. How much more, then, theopen-mouthed admiration at a lunarwalk ? And a lunar walk is to be admired- don't misunderstand . The incrediblecourage, training and performance ofu.S. spacemen is impressive beyond adjectives. But there are limits, nevertheless.W hat are they?Speed is one. As already mentioned,

    there is a "light barrier" built into ouruniverse which is like a universal "speed

    limit" law. Beyond it, no additionalspeed is possible.The speed of ligh t is the final limit

    beyond this, nothing.No mater ial, man-made object (or

    any other object, for that matter) caneven approach that speed - let alonesurpass it . And this admits no speculation, or argument, or denials. This isfact. Not "scientific" fact in the sensethat man has discovered, defined orcreated such a "fact," but incontrovertible, immutable FACT of the universe. Itis simply the way th ings are.Why can' t anything reach or surpass

    the speed of ligh t ?Because of the way the un iverse itself

    is constructed . It takes an inertial pllJhto move an object. At the launch ofApollo II ( I witnessed this fabuloussight from Cape Kennedy) , the SaturnV moon vehicle was given inertial pushof up to 7.5 million pounds of thrust.

    As the spaceship accelerated, it alsogrew ever heavier (o r "more massive") .At slower speeds , with which most

    humans are familiar, the proport ion ofspeed tha t goes into mass is so tiny it isignored .

    But it is a LAW of the universe that,the high er the velocity, the large r thepercentage of the acceleration (push)that is converted into mass, and thesmaller the percentage of accelerationthat moves the object. There is a finalpoint of acceleration beyond which it isphysically impossible to accelerate and that is the speed of light.

    Th is is a FACT of the UNIVERSE not just "speculation" of science.

    Of course, the idea of pushing anymaterial object to even the remotestspeed close to ligh t is in itself in thearea of sheer fan tasy - but even if thiswould be remotely possible, there isnothing beyond.

    W hy Do Men Id ly Dream ?W ild speculations , idle dreams to the

    contrary, man WILL NOT explore hisgalaxy, or even a CORNER of it. No t now- not in 100 years - not in one billionyears - never. Not in physical, humanbodies, he won't.

    Why not ?Assuming a spaceship could (but it

    can't) be made to travel up to the speed(C ontinued 011 page 41)

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    But what's this? Now, even Americans screamanti-America n slogans.

    Here is the shocking story of the CAUSES behind the uglySIMILA RITIES of student riots around the world.by Garner Ted Armstrong

    "yANKE,GO HOME !"Th at's the cry, whether it' sin f ront of the American Em

    bassy in London or in Tokyo, Japan.Around the world - in Brit ain, in

    Europe, Cent ral and South America, invast parts of Asia - demonstrators tellAmericans to "get QuL" In the last fewmonth s, uoenty-two countries have hadstudent riots. Most of them have hadone overall genera l pattern. And that is"Yankee, Go Home !"

    Worldwide Hate-AmericaCampaign

    Why? Why such anti -Americanismaround the world today?Recent head lines from news sources

    read like these: "A Tarn ished ImageAbroad," "Pak ista n Mob Stones andLoots Yank Center - Pol ice Use Gasand Clubs to Rout Students.""A Growing Problem?" is the ques

    tion on another. "Anti-American Attacks Keep Bonn Busy." That's in WestGerman)'. one of our staunchest allies.Some others with the same somber

    theme : "Filipino Protestors Blast theUn ited States and Britain," "Anti -U.S.Tone Grows in Turkey - Once Stalwart Ally," "Sweden's Hate AmericaCampaign - WHY?"Wherever you find these riots the

    world over - college students are in theforefront.In Manila, the Ph ilippines, Filipino

    studen ts demonstrated outside theUn ited States, Briti sh and Malayan embassies, chanting , "Un ited States, gohome!" and "Malaya and Britain areThieves."T hese demonstrators were obviously

    well organized. They arr ived in chartered buses, fo r example.W hat do they riot about in Tokyo ?

    University stude nts riot about Americanoccupation of Okinawa. Or about American nuclear vessels arriving in Japaneseports, or pe rhaps the existence of theAmerican nuclear umbrella.Yet, Japan is one of our most trusted

    Or iental allies.Students Against America

    Some time ago students in Calcutta,India burned Robert McNamara ineffigy. And demonstrators at the LondonSchool of Economics became so violentthat the schoo l had to be shut down.The students were protesting the Vietnam war.In Rome, Italy, violent anti-Nixon

    riots broke out in February, 1969 . Thousands of students and Communists gathered outside the premier's offices shouting, "N ixon, go home !" and "Mao,Mao, Mao Tse-tung."Recently, Governor Rockefeller vis

    ited South and Central America as anemissary on a special mission for thenew N ixon Adm inistration .In PRACTICALLY EVERY MAJOR

    ITAL in those countries - except where

    the trip had to be cancelled be-cause of threatened riots - there weremajor or minor incidents .Several students were killed ; scores

    were wounded. American flags were destroyed. Hundreds upon hundreds werearrested. Bombs exploded . Property wasdamaged and destroyed. America got ablack eye among the local citizenry of anumber of Latin American cities. Only amanaged press preven ted a worldwidetarnished image.All over Central and South America

    ant i-Americanism is a sort of hobby.But why? Why has America become

    the world 's whipping boy, the jolly"green-back" giant ?Why All This An ti-Americanism?Wherever you find unrest, poverty

    and squalor you will find automaticjealousy - especially if you have a richneighbor. Wherever you find deprivation, poverty, a stifled economy - youwill find attacks on authority and domination. Th is will be true especially ofindustri al, agricultu ral and economicdomin ation.But why have student demonstrations

    usually taken on an anti-Americantheme ? Why this common thread ofanger at the American way of life; rebeIlion against the "establishmen t" ; blindrage at the suspected responsibility theU. S. has for many of the conditions inthe world as we find them today?Ironically, the very countries that are

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    6eage r for American aid arc also the oneswho resent us the most for OU f wealth.It set-DS nearly everything the UnitedStates does resul ts in screams of ind ignation arou nd the world, and evenat home.

    \Vhy? And whe re is it taking America ?Believe it or not, the shape of protest

    around the world reveals a certa in pattern th at hold s significance for the future of the Uni ted States of America.But even more shocking is the anti

    Americanism being shouted by studentsWITHIN the Uni ted States.Tada)', campus protest in American

    universities and colleges is far more thanjust a pass ing fad . It is being seen bylaw-enforcing officials as a serious th reatto the very fabr ic of society.Anti-Americanism on AmericanCampusesThe idea that anti-Americanism exists

    wit hin the United States seems shock ingat first. But on second thought it's quiteclear .

    Th e statements by student revolutionaries would be tantamount to treason if this nation had declared war on NorthVietnam. But it seems th ey can get awaywith such inAammatory sta tementsunder the gu ise of free dom of speech intoday's climate. Analyze any riot onAmer ican campuses. Whether at SanFranci sco State, Berkeley, or in otherlarge American universit ies - oneth read runs th rough the riots, that is"America is wro ng! America is guilty!Hate America !"It may be couched in other state

    ments. But the recurring theme IS"Down with the establishment."But what is the "es tablishmen t" ?Simply th e American way of li fe, its

    institutions, its policies, its government,its leaders. The theme of student dem oonstrations - in the Un ited States, aswell as outside - is against or "ant i" allthe above-mentioned. Therefore, bytheir very nature, th ese demonstra tionsarc ANTI-Ame rican !

    It 's about time we realized th is.Di ssension , protest, honest disagree

    ment - these, too, are part of theAme rican way of life. And th ey arcpri celess priv ileges, absolute essentials toour cont inued exist ence as a free peop le.

    Th e PLAIN TRUTHBut arson , th reats with guns, violen t

    confrontat ions with police, occupationof college build ings, bu rning the American flag, d raft cards, schoo l records, andthe injury of college officials is not honest protest, but un lawful acts of violencewhi ch are the hallma rks of revolution.Look at the pal/ems evident. How

    often do students dem onstrate againstAmerica's ENEM IES? And how often doAmeri ca's "f riends" demonstrate INSUPPORT OF Amer ican policies?

    N o Demonstrati on s FORAmerica

    Can you imagine for one momen t agroup of American stud en ts marchingdown the streets of an American cityburning Fidel Castro in effigy? N ot onlyCuban students - or refugees - butALL Americans, a cross section of Americans?W here are all the demonstrationsagainst continued Communist supp ression and domination of a nation only 90miles from ou r shores?You can't imag ine American univer

    sity students taking to the st reet in apeacef ul demonstratio n as a result of HoChi Minh ' s po licies in No rth Vietnam.O r the FACT that th e Viet Cong havebutchered thousands of people. Whereare the headlines showing such demonstrations ? You haven' t seen any .

    What about Czechoslovakia?W here were the thousands of Ame ri

    can studen t demonstrato rs when the Soviet Uni on crushed that tiny, helplessnation ? Th ey wer e out by the thousandsdemonstrating agaimt the Unite d States'po licies in Vietnam!H ow many demonst rations - mass

    demonstrations - have you seen againstth e Berl in W all ? Where are all thecounter demons tr ation s against theJapanese student demonstrations opposedto American invo lvement in Okinawa orAmerican air bases?W hat a paradox!Not only do we have anti-American

    demonstrations in foreign nations - insome cases among our allies - butAmer ica also faces riots from its OW Npeop le.A nat ion d ivided against itself canno t

    stand. When wilt th e demonstrators realize this? Do they th ink the Soviet

    August, 1969Union or Red China will give th emmore freedom of speech? 1 so, theyneed to take a look at "freedom" ofspeech in these countries.Today a who le generation is either

    strangely silen t in its comm itment TOAmerica or is rabidl), oocijerousAGAINST the United States.

    The Outspoken M inority" It's the squeaky wheel th at gets the

    grease," is an old cliche. But it explainswhy the "anti-establishment " min orityon college campuses has gott en all thepublicity. Te levision viewers have littleinterest in seeing college stud ents peacefu lly sitt ing in their chairs, listening attentively to a lecture.But a riot - that is exciting! That is

    BIG news - and the big news teams arcalways on the spot with th e latest details. So we find the demonst rato rs, therioters, the shouters always seem to ge tthe headlines.

    What about these student demonstra tors - the "New Lef tists" who have setth emselves up as judges of the UnitedStates?I t is admitted that a har d core of dis

    sidents are the leader s in incit ing otherthousands of students to demonstrate orriot.Broken up into various organizations

    - of ten competing with each othe r tothe point of shoot-outs and murder they comprise little capsule socie ties oftheir own .

    These little groups have set themselves up as th e moral judges of the nation . They claim to have the corner ontrue righteousness. "Only we," theyclaim, "can feel righteously indignantabout social in justices, about racism,about the hypocrisy of the establishment. W e have the answers to theills of the world."

    A Littl e Soc iety of ProblemsIn a recen t issue of The PLAIN

    TRUTH magazine we interviewed Mr.Phillip Abbo tt Luce, a former memberof such an organization . He had ledAme rican students to Cuba in directdefiance of the Amer ican State Department t ravel ban to Cuba .He admi tted to having secreted guns

    in N ew York City. M r. Luce soon foundou t that the organization he had joined

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    August, 1969 Th e PLAIN TRUTH 7

    Wid. Wo, Id ,.holo

    sour JFASCISI1WA " .AMERICANS pa ra de in New Yor k City, ca rry bo nners denouncing U. S.foreign po licy.

    ganizations are racist themselves! Whatsteps would the)' take to solve the moneta ry crises? And the threat of nuclearwar - how would they end that? Stopmanufacturing nuclear weapons andallow the Soviet Union to blast theUnited States off the map ?Th ese students are quite unp repared

    to replace all the institutions they wantto destroy. They are quick to d iscover"grievances," vague in offering solutions.In quest ion after question, GeneBrad ley, writ ing for the Harvard Bnsiness Reoieu-, found student revolutionaries have no plan to govern . Forexample:

    " 'But wha t wou ld you do afte r youhave torn down the Estabishme nt?'

    " '\'(fe wou ld devote resources to thecommunities, where needs exist.'" 'W hat would you do in the way of

    definable programs ?'" 'No such programs could beoffered. ' Th e students could only grope

    for answers as if thinking thr ough theprob lem-solving process for the firs ttime . 'Perhaps the ghetto residentswould star t up their own constructioncompanies to bui ld new homes.' '' (Hal'.t-ard BIIsi11eJS Rerieu-, Scpt., Oct., 1968,Gene Bradley, pp. 52, 53. "What Businessmen Need to Know About th e Student Left.")But how does one "sta rt lip" a con

    struction company? Who will finance

    1STOPU.5.AGGRSS\ON

    tary, law enforcement, and other government agenc ies. Th ey harass militaryrecruiters on campus, heckle prominentgovernment officials, even physicallythreaten the safety of visito rs at theirschools." (0 " Communism, J. EdgarHoover, page 31.)W hat could be more anti-American?The ultimate hope of the student re

    volters is th e over throw of the existingsociety. And they admit it in their writings - without fear." It has grown much larger." saidDan iel Cohn-Bcndit of the riots inFrance, "than we could have foreseen atthe start. THE AIM I S NOW THEOVE RTHRO\X OF T HE REGIME." (TheStudent Revolt, edited by HerveBourges, page 97.) The aim of American student rebels is the same. Th eywant to OVERTHRO\X' the American establishment.

    Bu t Where are Thei r Soluti ons ?These same anti-American demons trators - although incisive in seeing theobvious problems that do ex ist - donot offer practical solutions to the problems facing mankind .How would THEY end the war

    in Vietnam ? What guarantee dothey have that Communists would notthen start a war in Ma laya, Indonesia-AUSTRALIA ?How would Ihe)' solve the racial

    problem? Remember, many of these or-

    was no t what he thought it was. He hadjo ined them as an altruistic young college student expecti ng to find the answers to the prob lems of the world.But he soon found that thi s capsule

    society of demonstrators, rioters, bombplanters and shouters possesses the samecross section of social evils it so vociferously claims to be trying to correct.

    One only has to read the headlines forproof of this.Remember the shoo t-out at a leading

    university ? Two members of onc orga nization were MURDERED by members ofanother. Did }ou read about the annnaimeeling of the "SDS," a leading radicalstudent organization in June, 1969 ?I t was absolute pand emonium. For

    five days the 1,100 delegates battled insome of th e bitterest "political" infighting ever seen.T he hostility was so vocal that at one

    time the president of the organizationhad to take off his sandal and bang it onthe wooden lectern in order to restore"o rder."

    Who Will Be t he Rule r?Demonstrators are against the "estab

    lishment ." They are against laws of theland . Th ey seck to destroy the society.As one revolt leader shouted , "Studentrevolt is not enough. Revolt must bemade to sp read to workers, like it did inPari s and New York !"Speaking of these student dissidents,

    ] . Edgar Hoover, Chief of the FederalBureau of Investigation said, "Theydetest (as do the Communist s) the mil i-

    Then conside r racism.Some of the very hard-core organiza

    tion s among the black community orother minority groups in the UnitedStates are ostensibly organized to attackand combat racism,And yet, as a practical statement of

    fact, when you see inside those organizations - you cannot find any moreinflammatory, enr aged, hate-filled , violent racism than in some of those same"anti-racist" organ izations !

    On ly those who tbemselres are devoidof racism could claim to be the righteousjudges of those who still have it . Butso long as racism is the tool used tocombat racism, man will find the road toa solut ion of this problem completelyBLOCKED.

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    8it? Who will decide how many homeswill be built where ? Wh at about supplies , skilled workers, community planning ? You can be sure few studentrebels have ever thought this far!

    The Si lent MajorityBesides the hard core of "activist"

    demonstrators, there are many hundredsof thousands of students who identifywith the movement - depending on theissues involved .Hundreds of thousands of other stu

    dents, who may not identify with themovement, are nonetheless confused.

    All these students know the world hashuge stockpiles of nuclear weapons enough to kill the population of theearth many times over.They know of the population ex

    plosion and impending famine.They see a world of wars, of increas

    ing crime, of social injustice and racism,of ill health, and of mental problems.And they want solutions!Some blame America for all these

    problems. But they have no alternativesolutions to offer.

    Teens for Decency RallyI remember having gone to a Teens

    For Decency rally in Florida, near CapeKennedy, while awaiting the launch ofApollo 10.I watched a Congressman, the featured speaker, get upon the stand as thepop musicians were waiting thei r turn.All the youngsters were talking, runni ngabout , and eating pOpeOlO.

    The Congressman stood up to tellthese teen-agers how much he p p r eciated what they were doing and whatthey stood for - the meaning of their"teens for decency" rally .The first words out of his mouth were,

    "Now, kids, l DON'T HAVE ANYANSWERS, BUT .. ."And that's the whole trouble ! Our

    young people are being exposed to anumber of agonizing questions. They'rebeing told about a world that is on thebrink of nuclear insanity. They're toldabout a world filled with povetty, illiteracy, sickness and disease - with warsand the threat of more, with the continued crisis in the Midd le East, with theemergence of a United States of Europe

    Th e PLAIN TRUTHas a th ird power bloc in the world, withthe war in Vietnam.Facing such problems - and many

    more - they are being told that thereare NO POSITIVE SOLUTIONS . Many students simply bury their heads in studiesand forget the whole thing. Some aresimply confused by it all and say nothing . Others demonstrate against someissues they feel personally involved in .Thousands attack the system and blametheir own country.These latter ones lash out in any di

    rection, seizing on the opportunity ofthe moment. It might be the "People'sPark" at Berkeley, a chemical concern,ROTC - or whatever. It's as if they areindulging in a kind of academic tantrumto show their frustration over so manyhuge problems and so few solutions .Their earnest, and perhaps very sinceredesire to see a CHANGE, not only in social conditions around the world, buteven a cha11ge in human nature, is submerged beneath an emotional outburstagainst the way things are.

    "We Want a Change Here"They're demanding, in a sense, that

    the leaders of the academic institutions,the boards of regents, or their teachersin class suddenly create a modelenvironment !These student demonstrators seem to

    demand a model little world of theirown where there is no social inequalityand racism - where there is justice andequity, fairness, freedom, fun, and,significantly, no outside interferencewith their personal lives.They want relevant classes, adequate

    facili ties, plenty of fun in the sun. Inshort, they want an abundant and inter-esting life. They want life with meaningand solutions to problems .However, they simply aren't getting

    what they want. And they can't understand why.They ate demanding change, and

    they're demanding it RIGHT NOW ! Thewords they use are 'Ius," and "HERE andNOW." They want something that isgoing to make them happy, that is goingto answer all their needs - to fill a big,aching vacuum inside.The paradox is that BOTH American

    and "foreign" students - that is, students in other nations - blame the

    August, 1969American system for the problems theyface. Perhaps ALL expected that America- the world's most single powerful nation, the world's wealthiest nation, themost advanced nation - should havehad the resources and incisive ability togive to the world SOLUTIONS to theseproblems.

    There are solutions to the world's ills- believe it or not ! The problem is thatthe United States cannot g ive those solutions to the world nor can any other nation, as is evidenced by six thousandyears of human history.

    The Solution to Wo rld's Il lsThe hard-core dissidents, the new

    left, the extremi sts on the right, thealtruists, the idealists, the young disillusioned students simply cannot findsolutions to the problems they face withthe world - in the MANNER they desire.And there is a great reason WHY ! So

    lutions to the world's problems are coming to this earth - and soon. But theyare not coming in the way and from tbesource that most expect !

    If you want to know the REAL CAUSESfor the problems of the world, and howthey will be solved - then write in forour free, 96page booklet, The Wonder-f ll' World Tomorrow - Wh at It WillBe Like .Th is booklet is sent FREE, to thosewho request it, as a public service byAmbassador College.The booklet surveys the various seg

    ment s of today's society. It shows HOWand '\lC'HY each has failed to bring peace,prosperity and happiness to the world.Th is booklet also shows how the solutions to those problems ARE COMING very soon - in the wonderful world tomorrow. By the 21st century this earthwill be the utopia people dream about .And it's no idle dream. The bookletdiscusses practical solutions to each andevery world problem - from pollutionto peace and from economics to maritalproblems.And the most interesting part is the

    way in which these solutions will beeffected. Whether student, teacher,housewife, businessman - you cannotafford to be without this vital knowledge.

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    1)()()ISI)llY IIIJ(;There is - this very instant - a feverishinternational search for the ultimate " dooms-day bug." The purpose? - to wipe out wholenations overnight by disease germs andchemicals. Will man's unrestrained scientificsearch for more horrify ing weapons of massdestruction prove to be his undoing?

    by Raymond F. McNa irPorton Down, EnglandW HAT I have seen here at Porton Down has convincedme of the awful potential of modern Chemicaland Biological Wa rfare (called CBW for short ) .

    Few realise its frightening possibilities !Sensational news headlines from time to time reveal de

    tails of CBW development world-wide. Few tell the full storyBri tain - Especially Vulnerable

    Britain's hopes of developing her defensive Chemicaland-Biological-Warfare deterrent are cen tred in two establishments at Parton Down, W iltshire.

    Th e: Director of Britain's Microbiological Research Establishment at Porton Down is Dr. Gordon Smith. He is, ofcourse, quite naturally concerned about Britain's vulnerabilityin the event of an all-out chemical or biological attack.

    Dr. Smith pointed out, in an interview with PLA INT RUTH editors, that Britain's research establishment at Portonserves two functions: "T o dJJeJJ the FJk to the British peopleand Armed Forces of an attack by biological warfare and todenise means of protection against such attacks."

    According to Dr. Smith, Britain's research facilities atPorton are "p robably unmatched in Western Europe."

    A booklet publ ished by the Microbiological ResearchEstablishment at Porton Down is available to the publ icIt sums up some of the terrible fears of Britain's DefenceDepartment. Turn ing a few pages, one reads:

    "The real danger of Biological War fare (BW) is itssimp/icily, Essentially, it would entail the mass production ofdisease-producing microbes ( IiW agents) by techniques thatare well-known, together with a del ivery system which couldfor example, be a simple Jpmy device, The cloud of microbesproduced would be inha led dur ing normal breathing, causing

    Hender$on _ Ambau ador Co/lf/geCourtesy 01 Microb iologicaf Research Estab lishment ,Porio n Down, EnglandBrit ish soldi e r in gas mask an d c oti-chemiccl-wo rfc resuit demonstrates mea sures ta ken by a soldier undera ttack.

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    10

    Hende" on _ Ambouodor CollegeCourle5Yo f Cllemico l Defencef_ perimento l Edablishmen lG. N. Ga dsby, Director of theChem ical Defence Experi mentalEstab lishment at Porto n Down,heads research projects a imed atguarding aga inst chemica l wa rattack .

    disease in the people being attacked.Many nations could equip themselvesfor BW on a moderate scale u-itb ontgre1/ expense.""Simplicity.""Simple spray device.""Without great expense."No wonder tests made with a harm

    less chemical in 1957 and 1958 showedthat large areas of the British Isles couldbe completely blanketed with a cloud ofchemical agents within a few hours.And not long ago millions of TV

    viewers were shown a BBC documentarytitled A Plague 0 11 Y our Children. Itdealt with Britain's vulnerability to anall-out assault by CBW.But other nations are also spearheading CBW research.The U. S. has at least six centres

    where work is constantly going on inthe development of Chemical and Biological Warfare, at an estimated cost of$1,000,000 per day. Fort Dietrick, Md.,is appa rently the main U. S. CBWestaolishment.

    History of CBWChemical and Biological W arfare IS

    not new to mank ind. For thousands of

    Th e PLAIN TRUTHyears "man has used various CBW agentsto overcome his enemies.But . . . it is only recently that he has

    seriously considered the idea of usingCBW on a g rand scale - to erase wholepopu lations!Thousands of years ago man discov

    ered the diabo lical use of poison. Helearned to use poison to dispose ofrulers, dignitaries, or large numbers ofhis enemies by poisoning their food orwater supply. Poisoned arrows were alsoused in warfare.Millenniums ago man learned that he

    could throw the corpses of plagueinfected humans over the walls of besieged cities which he sought to overthrow - thereby causing terrible plagueto ravage the entire city. Early Americansettlers traded plague-infect ed blanketsto American Indians in times of frontierhostilities.Th ere have been virtually no limits to

    man's diabolical, inventive gen ius in therealm of destructive weapons of war.

    CBW's Awful PotentialWe can see the awful potential of

    rampant disease organisms by observingwhat did happen during the Dark Ages.Th e BLACK DEATH of 1348-50 was

    the u-orst natural disaster to befall manin the last 4000 years. This terribleplague swept over all Europe - killingat least one third of the population! Incertain areas nearly three fourths ofthe population were killed by plague!Th ree fifths of all Briton s succumbed tothe Black Death - reducing Britain'spopulation from 5.1 million in 1348 to2.1 million in 1374.Many, believing they would certainly

    fall vict ims of the Black Death, gavethemselves over to reckless abandon drunkenness, sexual orgies, violence,crime and general lawlessness. "Eat,drink and be merry, for tomorrow wedie of plague," they reasoned.But biological warfare is potentially

    much worse th an plague.Colonel Adam Mikov ich of Moscow

    Institute understands the full potential ofBiological Warfare. He said: "It is believed today that Biological War wouldhave the greatest effect of all" (Post,Jan. 30, 1965) .Proof of man's peril can be seen in

    what a deadly virus can do to animals.

    Augu st, 1969In the 1940's, Australia's exploding

    rabbit popula tion soared to about 500million! Damage to the t.:conomy was estimated to be '0 0 million annually.

    What could be done to prevent therabbits from overrunning the Australiancontinent?

    ,l lJxomatosiJ, a deadly virus diseaseamong rabbits, was int roduced into therabbit population in 1950, and withinonly a few months ninel)' percelll of therabbits had perished from this disease!

    ,l fp' omaloJiJ was introduced intoFrance in May, 1952, with similaralarming results. By the end of 1953,this deadly disease had spread th roughmuch of France, Holland, Germany,Belgium and Switzerland - killingfrom sixty to ninety percent of the rabbit popu lation of those countries.Rabbits in both Austra lia and Europe

    proved to have littl e immunity againstthis deadly infec tion.

    An Ounce of Doom!Many scient ists right now arc search

    ing for 1/eUI plagues with which to decimate the human population. And theyare diligently seeking deadlier strains ofold viru ses with which to destroy wholepopulations. Of course, these scientistsjustify their CIlW research by saying itis done for defen sive reasons.Just how lethal are these viruses ?Do you grasp the deadly potential ?

    " In theory 011e gramme of chicken embryo tissue, inoculated with the Qcfeverorganism, would be suffic ient to infectmore than one million people" (We Al lf al l D O ll '1/, Robin Clarke) .

    It has been estimated that one fourthof an ounce would be sufficient to infectcvery man, woman and child living inthe British Isles! Th at's about 55 million ! Britain is especially vulnerable tochemical or germ warfare. She is thicklycrowded and normal weather conditionsin Britain are favourable to that type ofwarfare!

    Bomlinm , which was developed during World War I I, is so deadly that itcould ll'ipe 0111all bmnen li fe in a givenarea within six hours - yet leaving thetarget area habitable immediately afterthe attack.But some diseases would have a more

    lingering effect.During Worl d War II the British

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    WOR LD WA R IIRES P IRAT OR

    Augus t, 1969By pe rmission of the a uthoritiesat the two research es ta blishmentsat Porton Down, our staff ob served and photographed thesedis plays ..an d ac tivities .

    Henderson _ Ambougdor CollegeCourle$TC.D.E.E.

    Government's Microbiological ResearchEstablishment at Porton Down conducted an experiment with deadly an-thrax - which causes hideous cancerlike growths in human beings and inanimals.The experiment was carried out onGruinard Island, just off the northwest

    coast of Scotland. The anthrax bacteriumkilled all the sheep on the island. It isnow estimated that it will be a bmtdred)'ears or more before Gruinard Islandwill be safe for man or beast to againinhabit! Such is the dangerous stuff withwhich men are toying!Few realise that far more people havedied from pestilence - from sickness

    and various plagues - th rough thecourse of human history, than have diedin actual warfare.

    It has been estimated that over20,000,000 perished from influenza injust a few months at the close of W orldWar I - and 50 times that number became il l . In the autumn of 1918, over12,500,000 died in the flu epidemicwhich swept the undernourished nationof India. And over one-half milliondied in the United States.

    Chemical W arfareNat ions have not been content to develop just biological warfare. The major

    powers are also diligently developingtheir arsenals of chemical weapons.Both America and Russia reportedlyhave impressive stockpiles of chemicalweapons - plus the means of deliveringthem upon unsuspecting enemy targets- without warning! West Germany isdefinitely known to be developingCBW.What are some of these terrifying

    chemical weapons which mankind isnow developing? Man's present chemical weaponry includes: vomit ing gasesand lachrymators (tea r gases) , chokinggases, nettle gases, blood gases, vesicants(agents causmg blisters) , G-agents,nerve gases and incapacitating agents .Man's arsenals of chemical agents can

    produce sleep, paralysis, blindness,deafness, loss of balance, vomiting,diarrhea, choking, persistent crying oruncontrollable laughter, terrib le fear,hallucinations, depression, permanentinsanity - or death!And no nation which is developing aCBW potential ever seems content with

    its present deadly, massive stockpiles ofchemical weapons. The nations arc obsessed with the diabolical impulse toever seek out deadlier chemical agents

    t\\p , E S P \ P

    - agents which will kill ever-largenumbers!

    Mind-bendin g Nerve GasesThere were about 800,000 casualtie

    from the use of deadly gases in the FirsWorld War (Ellcyclopaedia Britallllica)But gases were not used in WorldWar II. Th is does not mean that they

    were not manufactured. They were by both the Axis and Allied powers.The Germans discovered horrible

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    nerve gases in the 1930's, but didn't usethem du ring the Second World W ar forfear of retaliation. The British nati onwas well equ ipped with gas masksth roughout W orld W ar II. Britaindidn't intend to be caught unpreparedshould the Germans decide to use CBW.

    Hitler repor tedly orde red the use ofnerue gases against the All ies when theyinvaded Normand}' - but his generalsrefused to comp ly - again apparentlyou t of fear of reta liation!

    At the close of World War I I theRussians captured a German factorywhere dead ly nerve gases had been pro duced. They d ismantled the establishment and transported it to Russia.Both the U. S. and Russia have hugestockpiles of mind -bending neroe g M tJ .

    Britain develope d the terrible V-agent(a t Porton Down) which is so lethalthat i f it so much as touches th e skin,death will result. The Amer ican vers ion- the VX -agent - is p resumably evenmore deadly.

    Many remember the public outcry inMarch, 1967, when the U. S. DugwayProving Ground in weste rn Utah accidentally killed 6,000 sheep - whichwere reportedly 30 miles from the Proving G round where thi s nerve gas experimen tation was being carried out.

    An)' Defence Against CB \V?There would be little defence

    against a modern, highly soph isticatedchemical and bacteriological assault by adetermined aggressor.

    "No known precautions promise tosave more than a few people . . . 1/0cOlntr)' is really prepared for the horrorsof chemical or bioloKica/ war/a re . . ."( T IME, Sept. 6, (968) .Defences against CBW include in-

    omlations and vaccinations, ! , d ! masks.germ-proof space-type suits. germ-proofshe/tel'S. and medical treatment after exposure. But the simple truth is that ,all defences considered, any massive,well-executed attack would prove devastating .W hen an ordinary plague breaks out

    in a country, it usually strains all of thefacilities of that coun try to cope withthe victims of such natural virus outbreaks.But in the case of a planned CBW

    attack, masses of the population would

    The PLAIN TRUTHall fall sick at the same time, and therewould be few qu alified personnel left totake care of the large numbers whowould automatically succumb to thevirus infection.

    There are many dangers and "unknowns" in launching a chemical orbiologica l war. No one can predict withabsolute certainty just what the outcomeof an all-out CBW assault against anenemy would be. It could even be thatthe germs or chemical agen ts used in theassault woul d not behave as planned might even backfire upon the aggressor!Such a massive CBW assault might

    unleash viru lent plagues which wouldsweep the who le world - rampaginguncont rolled till many of the earth's inhabitants lay dead or dying . This earthmight conceivably become one giganticcemetery - reeking from the stench ofrotting flesh !

    Destroying the EconomyAnother terrifying aspect of CBW IS

    that an enemy nat ion could destroy theecollomy of a nation - before actuallyattack ing its civilians. T his could bedon e by first attacking some of the maincrops of the intended victim nation.

    In 1942 , 90 pe rcent of India's ricecrop was destroye d hy a natural stra inof rice f"ll l!I L

    And the highest award ever givento 1 U. S. civilian was awarded to awoman for developing another verydead ly type of rice-blast fungus which could, of course, be used againstrice-eating natinns like China or No rthVietn am.

    A Russian scientist has repor tedly discovered a very deadly wheat rust - atype to which America's wheat would beespecia lly susceptible.

    Th us, one can see how an enemycould great ly undermine the economy ofa nation by first destroying the maincrops through bacteriolog ical warfare.

    As a furt her example of th e effects ofthis type of warfare, consider the terrible econom ic effects which the Irishpotato fmn ine of the mid-1800's had onIreland . That particular potato faminewas caused by a peculiar potato blight orfungus which completely wiped out Ireland's potato crop !

    Previous to the famine, Irel and wasone of the most densely populated coun-

    August, 1969MICROBIOLOGICAL RESEARCH- Technicia n at Porton Down,Engla nd, works with culture . Forsafe ty reasons he works from outside of vessel.

    Keystone Pholo

    tr ies in Europe . Yet it was a countrystricken with the most unbelievable pov erty. "There never was," said the Dukeof Wellington , a native of CountyMeath . "a country in which poverty existed to the extent that exists in Ireland ." "Nearly half of the fam ilies ofthe rural population," reported the 1841census, "are living in houses of the lowest state" - windowless mud cabins ofa sing le room .

    The plight of the evicted and unemplayed was the worst. Some put roo fsover ditches, burrowed into road banks ,existed in bogholes or lived under treeroots. The majority of the populationhad little food at all except the potato.(T he diet nf one th ird of the Irish when crops were good - consisted ofpotatoes only and water. An even largerf raction of the popu lation, althoughslightly bett er off, used potatoes as thestap le of their d iets .)

    As bligh t struck, seemingly overnightpotatoes "me lte d" in the ground , turn ing the enti re foliage of the plant blackand turn ing the potato itself in to a massof rottenness . All attempts to containthis scourge failed . People died fromstarvation, typhus and other fevers.

    Contemporary accounts are heartrend ing . Th ey tell of families dying intheir cabins, shivering, filthy, half -naked,having sold their bedding and anyclothes that would fetch money forfood.

    One observe r describes chi ldren looking like little old men and women of 80years of age, wrinkled and bent, unab leto utte r a sound as they died with anunmeaning, vacant stare in their eyes.An American described how he saw

    men whose bodies were swollen to twicethei r normal size at work on the publicworks. He was shown a boy aged 12whose body was swollen to th ree timesits normal size. A body of a baby of 2was swollen to the size of an adult.Other observers report how bodies layunburied along the sides of roads and inthe cabins where they had died . The survivors had not the strength to bury the

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    .4dead. Sometimes cabins contained thedead and dying alongside onc another inbed.An Irish priest described how he

    found a "room full of dead people," aman still living lying in bed with a deadwife and two children, wh ile a starvingcat was eati ng anot he r dead infant. Anaval office r described bodies half eatenby rats as an ordinary sight. Two dogswere shot while tearing a body to pieces."Never in my life." wrote CommanderCaffyn, "have I seen such wholesalemisery.""Any beast capable of serving as food

    - horses, dogs, rats - were eaten;there were even accounts of cannibalismby the hunger-maddened."In the five years between 1846 and

    1851, it is estimated that about a mil/ionand a halj persons perished, du ring thefamine, of hunger. diseases brought onby hunger, and fever. During this pe-riod about a mi llion person s emigrated."Nearly the whole of the class of theag ricultural labourer was ext inguished,"says one book.Ireland has never fully recovered

    from the terrib le effec ts caused by thatpotato famine!

    And the cause of all thi s suffering pota to bligh t - is sti ll with us . "Everyyear since t845. in potato fieldsthroughout the northern hem isphere,the blight fungu s has been present , waiting on ly for the right weather condi tions to mul tiply with fea rfu l rapi dity ,as aga in hap pened, with exceptional severity, in 1958," says Cecil W oodhamSmith in her book, T he Great H unger.page 94.Man-directed fungus and biol ogical

    virus diseases could produ ce the resultsof the Irish pota to famin e almost overnight . Such sabotage could br ing a natio n to its knees just as easily as couldbombs or bullets. It is conceivabl e that aplague such as foot-and-mouth d isease- which recently spread like wildfirethrough Br itain's catt le. costing about150,000,000 - could be started del iberately by sabotage.

    It could prove an absolutely impossible task to trace th e agg ressor in caseof a chemical or biologi cal attack.Germs never carry a "Made in Germany " or "Made in Russia" tag.

    The PLAIN TRUTHCBW ----:. "Humane, even Benign" ?Until very recently, Chemical and

    Biologi cal Warfare was looked upon as"the worst form of military brutality ."Now CBW is being looked upon bysome as a "more humane" way of waging war! Dr. Clifford f. Rassweiler adviser to the Pentagon - was quotedas saYIng:"[Germ warfare] provides th e mosteffeclil!e way known to kiIl masses ofpeople - they [ the germs] do notmangle men 's bodies - makes war morebmnane, even BEN IGN" (Post, Jan. 3D,1965).It used to be that wars were fought

    pr imarily between armies - with comparatively [eu- cioilion casualties, butthis is not tru e of more recen t wars.In World W ar I, only 5 percent of

    those killed were civilians, but 48 percent of those killed dur ing the SecondWorld War were civilians . Some haverepor ted 84 pe rcent of those killed inthe Korean \'q ar were civil ians; andthe percent age for Vietnam may be ashigh .It is an indi sputable fact that modern

    man's most horrible weaponswhether nuclear, chemical or biological- have been deliberately designed to beused against the cirilian popu lation ofan enemy country, as well as againststrictly mil itary targets.Chemical and Biological Warfare is a

    cheap means to massive offensive capabil ity fo r the smatter nations. for th isreason biological warfare has been calledthe "poor man's hydrogen bomb ."

    Twenty-fou r years have passed sinceHi roshima and Nagasaki . And yet onlyfive or six nat ions are members of therathe r exclusive nuclear club !It takes a lot of money, expertise and

    time to develop tbermo-rmclear weap ons.Rut smalle r nations could qu ite easily

    develop a poten t CBW weapon withwhich to th reaten more powerful neighbo rs. CBW weapons could thus becomea sort of blackmail.

    Like Sit ting Du cksToday, about eight tenths of all Brit

    ons are hudd led into towns and cities;and about 60 percent of U. S. population lives in cities of 5,000 popu lation

    Augu st, 1969or more. More and more. th e people ofAmerica, Britain, Canada, Australia andSouth Africa are leaving the broadspaces of the country and arc movinginto the cities.Long ago, One claiming to be God

    Almighty ordered His servants to makethe following prediction. "When ye aregathered together within )' 0 /11' CITIES, 1will lend PESTIL ENCE [d isease epidemics] tcpon )'011; and ye shall be deliveredinto the hand of your enemy" (Lev.26 :25) .Did thi s God know ?Think of the terrible slum condi tions

    which exist today within most of ourbig cities . Plaf!. lIes could easily break out- especially if a CBW attack weremade on our big popu lation cent res.And . . . it would be very easy for awell -trained corps of enemy fifth column agents to fan out through our nations and release chemica/ and Iorbiologicdl agents which could easily pollute our u-ater suppl ies, contaminate ourfood, befoul th e very ail' we breathe .Overn ight, millions of our peop le couldbe laid low by any number of lethal viruses or chemical agen ts.Are the nat ions of th is earth about to

    bring the plagu es mentioned in theBook of Revelation upon themselves byand through the instrumentality of theiro-vn diabolical laboratory experiments ?(Note chapter 9, verses 3-6.)CBW weapons are cheap to manufac

    ture, and are comparat ively inexpens iveto del iver to enemy targets. A small nation could develop a whole arsenal ofCBW agents and deliver them with verylittl e strain on its budget.

    Will some covetous nat ion look withgreedy eyes upon the property of another nation and decide it would bewiser not to blast into oblivion the tar get nation - but merely to kill most ofthe people, then take possession of theircountry?Remember. one of the "advantages"

    of CBW is that an agg ressor nation cantake cont rol of the enemy lands cornpletely in tact after an all-out assault .Science - Man's Pse udo-Messiah!Today all nations look to SCIEN CE as

    the great saviour of mankind . To them,science is the pseudo-Messiah through

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    Many ask : "HOW does it happen thamy subscription has been prepaid ? WHYcan' t I pay my own ? HOW can youpublish a magazine of such quality withou t advertising revenue ?"Th e answer is both simple and astonishing ! Th e PLAIN TRUTH is ut terly uniqueYour prepa id subscription is only one omarry examples of that . It is a magazinof UNDERSTAND ING of today's fastchanging and in credibl e worl d condition- of chang ing social, family, and personaproblems - of the MEANI NG and PURPOSE of life,

    Others report wo rld news- describeWHATS WRONG with the wo rld. ThPLAIN TRUTH explains WHY - makeplain the CAUSES - gives the ANSW ERSand pract ica l soluti ons.Modern science and technology cameforward in ou r time as the messiah torescue soc iety from its ill s. In ten yearsscie nt if ic and technological knowledge haDOUBLED - and in the same decadhumanity'S TROUBL ES also hav e doubledCommunism stepped forward, saying"O thers ha ve explained {what's wrong in}the wo rld ; it is necessary to cha nge theworl d." ( Karl Marx.) Today after fifryears you can see for yourself the showcasof res ults - Communism vs. the "freworld" - in the divided city of BerlinScience, technology, Commun ism havproved fals e messiahs. W orld troublemult ipl y, and tod ay th ey are f righ teningPLAIN TRUTH editors, scholars, resea rchers, ana lysts, rea lize that neithethese, nor gove rnmen ts, edu cators, estab lis hed re lig ions, psychologists, nor anyother human "au thori ties" have thean swers. None knows TH E WAY toPEA CE/ None knows the PURPOSE of li feNo ne seems to poi nt ou t the true value

    from the fals e.Th erefore PLAIN TRUTH ed ito rs havda red, with out apology, to go to the onand only SOURCE that reveals thesANS\VERS. and points une rri n gly to thso lut ions tha t will be ach ie t'ed/ It is thworld 's best 5eller - the Book that Bru cBa rton said 'lOhody k"OU'S/ Approximatela th ird of i t is devoted to advance newreports, utterl y overlooked, it seems, byeducators, scientists, re ligio us organizations , governments . Yet, over a 2,500yeaspa n thes e adva nce news re ports havproved Im erri"gJy accurate !What is general ly un recognized is thathere is a PURPOSE being worked ou t he rbelow, and that th is total ly misrep resentedSou rce is in tru e fact our Maker's inst ruction book. I t revea ls the meaning andpurpose of life. It deals with world cond itions today. It is not only up-to-date aof NOW - its advance news reports labare our fu ture. There is NO OTHERsource of unde rstanding OUR T IME, and.....here we are going ! And its Autho r sayto us, "F ree ly } 'OU have received , free lygive."We make the truth PLAIN. It is pr iceless - we sim pl y cannot put a pri ce on itWe happen to be consc ientious abou t itTh a r is ou r pol icy. A com parat ive ly smalnumber of Co-workers, of their own volitio n, unsoli cited by us, have join ed with uto make such an un precedented policy workab le ! W e, and they, sincerely THANKYOU for all owin g us to serve you . I t istruly, "m ore bles sed to GIVE than treceive." Thank you for giving us thapleasur e !

    August, 1969which they hope to ach ieve un limitedmateria l benefits. And to science theylook to develop the magic weapons withwhich to protect themselves.But will the scientists develop the ul

    timate "super germ"? Will man soon beable to hurl nature itself at his foes?Will the scientists succeed in unleashingthe awful plagues of oatur e - in h itherto unknown virulency - upon humanity ?W as the apost le Paul right wheo he

    warned that men naturally give themselves over to become "inventors of EVILtbingt" ? (Rom. 1:28_ ) The horriblenuclear chemical and biological w e a p ~ons in today's national armouries!Was Lord Ritchie-Calder righ t when

    he said: "The Doomsday Bug is und erwraps!" ?We are indeed living in "perilous

    times" ( II Tim . 3 :1 ) .A Ray of Hope?

    Robin Clarke sums up today's presentperil very well in his book, We All FallD OWN ."Where does this leave us today? The

    situat ion is peri/ow . Vast sums ofmoney are being spent on weaponswhich may prove as devastating in theireffects as anything so far invented andwhich may turn out to be within financial reach of any cOlll1l ,,)' wishi ng to usethem. The prospects for internationalcontrol by inspection schemes and detection apparatus are remote."He then says that if there is a f ay of

    hope - and he admits there is on ly an"obscure one" - then he says it will bethe simple fact that the next warcouldn' t take place without the co-operation of tbe scientists.He then urges all scientists to refuse

    to have anything to do with the development of these horrifyingly destructiveweapons.He concludes by saying : "Th is is the

    scientists' dilemma. But because ofHUMAN NATURE I fear they [ the scientists) will not grasp the opportunitiesfor peace that are within their reach . . . .If they choose to usher in the realm ofbiological war/al'e they must, this time,take the respon sibility for it."Scient ists must bear their full share of

    Th e PLAIN TRUTHresponsibility for their pa rt in developing more deadly and virulent microbeswhich could unleash horrifying diseaseepidemics upon th is world ,But whe re does this leave us Will

    scientists cease their horr i fying work ?Hardly.It leaves us precisely where theworld's most noted newscaster - Jesus

    Christ - said it would leave us! Speaking of our very day, he warned : "Forthen shall be great tribulation, such aswas not since the beginning of theworld to this time, no, nor ever shall be.And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved[ alive) : but for the elect's sake thosedays shall be shortened" (Matt. 24:2 1,22) .But how ?

    T he Only SolutionMake no mistake about it - man

    does not have the solution to his everaccelerating arms-race prob lem. ButGod does !We can be very thankful that the God

    of the un iverse is about to put an end toman's hellish insanity toward his fellowman. H is government will " rebukestrong nations afar off: and they shallbeal their strords into plowshares, andthe(r spears into pruninghooks : nationshall not lift up a sword against natio n,neither shall they LEARN anymore" (M icah 4 :3 ).Mercifully, God Almighty will not let

    man destroy himself ! If God didn'tkeep His hand firmly on the controls,man would anni hilate himself.\Ve can rejoice that total disarmament

    is very near. Th e day is soon comingwhen the nations will close down all oftheir chemical and biological establishments - and their munitions factories !

    Th en all of mao's scientific effortswill be directed toward CONstruction not DEstruction . Toward sal l;l lg lives not destroying them!

    I f you would like to know how totaldisarmament and world peace will corneabout - then write for our free, illustrated book : The W onderflilW orid T o-m OITO I(! - JFhal I I If/i l l Be Like. Youhave never read anything like it.

    HOW YOUR PLAIN TRUTHSCR IPTION HAS BEEN1

    SUBPAID

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    16 Th e PLAI N TRUTH

    RA D I O LOGAugust. 1969

    MAJOR STATiONSfastWOR - Nev.. York - 7 10 kc., 11:30p.m - Sun .

    WHN - New Yo r k - I05 0 kc. 11:30p.m. Sun .WHAM -Rochester - 1180 kr., 11:30p.m . l\.lon . F r i. . 10: 30 a.m. Sun .WWVA - Wheeling, W. Va. - 1170kc. 98 .7 FM. 5 a.m. and 8: 30 p.m.Mon .-Fri . 10:30 a.m. 8:30 p.m. Sun .\'(:RKO - Boston - 680 kc., 6:30a.m. Sun . (WROR 98.5 EM. 8 a.m.Sun.)\VBAL - Baltimore - 1090 kc., 8: 30a.m. Sun .\'('RVA - Richmond - 1140 kc. 10p.m. Men -Sat. 10:30 p.m. Sun .\\.TT F - Raleigh. N. C. - cso kc.,94.7 FM. 1:30 & 10:30 p .m . Mon..Sat . 9 :30 a.m. Sun .\VBT - Charlotte, N. C. - 1110 kc.,8 p.m. Mon.-Fri.. 11:0 5 p.m. Sun .Central Slales

    WLAC - Nashvil le - 1510 kc., 5 a.m.Mon-Sat., 7 p.m. dail y. 6:30 a.m.Sun.W SM - Na shvi lle - 650 kc., 9 p.m.Sun .\VCKY - Cincinnati - 1530 kc. 5 a.m.Mon-Fri ., 5:30 a. ni. Sat . 12 midnigh t'I'ues.-Sun., 7, 9 :30 p .m. Sun .WL\V - Cincinnati -700 kc., 7 a.rn .and I I:05 p.m. Sun.WJjD- Chicago - I1 60 kc. I I a. m. Sun.W ISN - Milwaukee, \Vis. - 1130 kc.,10:30 p.m. Sun-Fr i. 9 a .m. Sun .,97 .3 FM, 8 p.m. daily.KSTP - Minneapolis-St . Paul - 1;00kc. 5 a.m. Mon- Sar. 8 a.m. Sun.KXEL - \Vate r loo - 1540 kc. 9: 30p.m. Mon-Sar., 8 p.m. Sun .KRVN - Lexington, N eb r. - 880 kc.3 p.m. Men-Sat. 10:30 a.m. Sun.KXEN - St. Louis - 1010 kc., 7:15a.m. & 12 noon Mon-Sar., 10:30 a.m.& 4 p.m. Sun.

    SoulhKRLD - Da lla s - 1080 kc., H: JOp.m. daily.\VFAA - Dallas - 820 kc., 10:45 p.m .Mon.-Sat.KTRH - Houston ,.... 740 kc., 7:30p.m. Sun.-Fri .\'(:OAI - San AOIonio -1 200 kc., 5a. m . Men-Sat. 10:05 p.m . Sun .K\'(fKH - Shrevepor t - I J30 kc.,I p .m. & 9 :30 p.m. Mon-Fei . J 1:30a.m. & I J :30 p.m . Sat . 10:30 a.m . &9:30 p.m. Sun.\'( 'NOE - N ew Or leans - 1060 kc.9 :30 a.m. Sun .KAAY -Little Rcxk - I 090 kc., 5: 15a.m. 7:30 p.m. Men-Sat. 9:3 0 a .m.7:30 p.m . Sun .\'QGUN - Atlanta - 1010 kc., II a. m.M en-Sat. 4 p.m. Sun.WA PI - Birmingham - 1070 kc. 10a.m. Sun .\VMOO - Mobi le -1550 kc., 7 a .m.Men-Sac , 10:30 a.m. Sun .W INQ - Tampa - 1010 kc. 12 noonMon.-Fri ., 12:1 0 p.m. Sat . Sun .(CSn*Asteri sk indicates new sta tio n or timechange.

    "The WORLD TOMORROW"KRMG - Tulsa - 74'0 kc. 10 a.m. Sun .XEG - 1050 kc., 9:3 0 p.m. daily.

    Mounla 'n St ate!'KOA-Denvcr-S 50 kc., 9:30 a.m. Sun .KSWS - Resw ell , N . Mex. - 1020 kc .6:30 a.m . daily.KSL - Salt Lake City - 1160 kc.,5:30 a.rn . 11:15 p.m . daily.XE LO - soo kc. 8 p.m. daily. (MST)

    We s l Co astKIRO - Seattle - 710 kc. 10:30 p.m.Mon.-Fri . 5:30 a.m. Men-Sat .KRAK - Sacramento - 1140 kc., 9 p.m.daily.*KFAX - San Francisco - 1100 kc.,12:30 p.m. Mon-Sat., 10 a.m. Sun.KFI - Los Angeles - 640 kc. 9 p.m.Sun.KGBS - Los An geles - 1020 kc. 97.0FM. 6 :05 a.m. Moo .-Sae., 10 a.m. Sun.XERB - Low er Ca lif. - 1090 kc., 7p.m. daily.LEADING l OCAl . ARf A STATIONS

    f a stWBMD - Baltimore - 750 kc., 12:30p.m. dail y.::\'(' RCP - Philadelphia - 1540 kc.,12 noon daily.WPIT - Pittsburgh - 730 kc., 101.5FM, 12 noon Mon-Fri., 1:30 p.m.Sar., I I a.m . Sun .\,\' EDO - Pi t tsbu rgh - 81 0 kc., 7:30n.m..Men-Sat .\VI (P - Ha rrisbu rg, Pol . - 580 kc., 7:30p.m. da ily.\VSAN - Allentown. Pa., - 1470 kc.,

    6:05 p.m. Mon-Fr i., 7:05 p.m. Sar.,8:30 p.m. Sun.WSCR - Scranton , Pa . - I .U O kc.12:30 6:30 p.m. da ily.\VBRE - Wilkes-Barre Pa. - 1340kc ., 98 .5 FM, 12:30 p.m. dail y.WCHS - Char leston, \V . Va. - 580kc., 7:00 p.m. da ily.\VCA \V - Charl eston, W . Va. - 680kc., 12 noon dail y.

    ~ W H Y - Hunt ington. W . Va. 1470 kc., 12:30 p.m. Mor t-Sat. 10n.m. Sun.- Richmond, Va. - 1380 kc.,7 p.m . dail y.\'(Ie YB - Bristol , Va . - 690 kc. 12:30p.m . daily.\VLOS - Asheville. N . C. - 1380 kc.,99.9 FM, 6:30 p.m. .Mon.Sa t.. 12noon Sun.\'(fPAQ - Moun t Airy, N . C. - 740 kc..l :05 p.m. Men-Sac, 9:30 a.m. Sun.wrnc - Fayetteville. N. C. - 940kc., 98. 1 FM, I p.m. daily.\XNe T - Greenvi lle. N . C. - 1070kc., 9 p.m. dai ly.\,\' VN J - N ewa rk, N . J. - 620 kc.,() a.m. Mon-Sar.\VEVD - N ew York - J330 kc., 97.9FM, 10 p.m. dail y.\VBNX - New York - 1380 kc. 9:1 5a.m. Sun. ( in Spanish) .WOKO - Albany, N . Y. 1460 kc.,6:30 p.m . daity.WIBX - Utica. N . Y. - 950 kc.,

    7:30 p.m. daily.

    \VWOL - Buffalo, N .Y. - 1120 kc.,4" p.m. Sar., 10 a.m. Sun.

    \\'I-ILD - Niagara Fall s, N .Y. - 1270kc., 98.5 EM. 12:30 p.m . Mon-Sat.,1:30 p.m. Sun.*W\VNH - Rochester, N . H. - 930kc., 7 p.m . Mon-Sat ., 9 a.m. Sun.\'7DEV-Waterbury, Vt.-550 kc., 6:30p.m. Moo.-Sar., 8 p.m. Sun.\VPOH - Port land , Me. - 14'90 kc., 9a.m. Sun.\X'CSH - Portland, Me. - 970 kc.,6:30 p.m. Men-Sat. 7:30 p.m. Sun.WCOU - Lewiston, Me. - 1240 kc.,9 :30 p.m. Sun .\X'LBZ - Bangor, Me. - 620 kc.6:30 p.m . Mon-Sat., 7:30 p.m. Sun.WRYT- Boston -9 S0 kc., 6 a.m . Mon.Fri., 12:30 p.m. Mon-Sa r., 12 noonSun .WMAS - Spring fie ld, Mass . - 14'50kc. 94 .7 FM. 6:30 p.m. Sun.

    \'(,ACE - Ch icopee. Mass. - 730 kc.12:30 p.m. da ily.\VJAR - Providence. R. I. - 920 kc.6:30 p.m. dail y.WNLC - New London. Conn. - 1510kc. 8:30 p.m. Sun .

    Cenlra lWSPD - Toledo, Oh io - 1370 kc.,9:05 p.m. Mon-Sar., 9 p.m. Sun .WEH E - Cleveland - 1300 kc. 10:30p.m . daily.WSLR - Akron . Oh io - 1350 kc., 8p.m. daily.\'(fFMJ - Youngstown, Oh io - 1390kc. 10:30 p.m. dail y.\VBNS - Co lumbus. Oh io - 1460 kc.,8:30 p.m. daily.\VBRJ - Marietta. Oh iu - 9 10 kc.12:30 p.m. dai ly.\XCLU - Cincin nati - 1320 kc ., 12noon daily .\VBCK - Ba ttle Creek. Mich . - 930kc., 7 p.m . Mon-Fri . 12:30 p.m.Sat ., Sun .WKM F - Flint. M ich. - 1470 kc.6:30 p.m. dai ly.*W BCM - Bay City. Mi ch. - 1440 kc.,6:30 p .m. dail yWDBC - Escanaba, l\-Ikh . - 680 kc.,6 a.m . Mon .-Sat.WJPD - Ishpeming, M it-h . - 1240 kc.,6:30 p.m. daily.KWKY - Des Moin es, Iowa - 1150kc. 12:30 p.m. 9 :30 p.m. daily.\VMT - Ceda r Rapids - 600 kc., II :30a.m. Sun.KMA - Shenandoah, la. - %0 kc. 8:. 0p.m. da ily.\,\' OC - Davenport , Ia. - 1420 kc. 10p.m. da ily.KGLO - Mason Ci ty, l a. - 1300 kc.6:30 p.m. Mon .-Sat. 7:30 p.m. Sun.KOZJ."l - Omaha. Nebr. - 660 kc.12:20 p.m. Men-Sat. 12:30 p.m.Sun.KMMJ - Grand Island, Nebr. - 750kc., 4 p.m. da ily.KSOO - Sioux Falls. S. Oak. - 1140kc ., 6 :45 p.m . dail y.\VNAX - Yankton. S. Dak . - 570 kc.,7:30 p.m. dail y.KFYR - Bismarck. N . Oak. - 550 kc.7 p.m. daily.

    (Colltj,mcd Ot l next page) us

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    August, 1969 The PLAIN TRUTH

    RAD .O LOG17

    KFGO - Fargo, N . Dak. - 790 kc. 7p.m. Mon-Fri., 7:10 p.m. Sat. & Sun.WEAW-Chicago-1 330 kc., 8 a.m.& 12:15 p.m. Moe-Sa r., 9 :30 a.m.Sun . (105.1 FM, 7 a.m. Mon-Sar.,8 p.m. Sun .)WJOL - Joliet, III. - 1340 kc., 9:30p.m. daily.WXCL - Peori a - 1350 kc., 7:05 p.m.daily.WITY - Danville, Ill. - 980 kc., 7p.m . daily.WWCA - Ga ry, Ind. - 1270 kc., 6 :30p.m. Mon-Sat., 4 p.m. Sun .*WSBT - South Bend - 960 kc., 9p.m. da ily.WJOB - Hammond, Ind. - 1230 kCJ7 p.m. Mon-Sat., 6:30 p.m. Sun.WI Be - Indi anapolis - 1070 kc., 9:30p.m. Sun.*WGBF - Evansville, Ind . - 1280 kc.,6 p.m. Mon-Sat., 9:30 a.m. Sun.KLIK - Jefferson City, Mo. - 950 kc.,1 p.m. daily.KFVS - Cape Girardeau, Mo. - 960kc. 7 a.m. Mon-Sat., 9: 15 a.m. &7:30 p .m. Sun.KWTO - Springfield, Mo. - 560 kc.,6:30 p.m. dai ly.KFEQ - St. Joseph, Mn. - 680 ke.. 7p.m. dail y.KUDL - Kansas City, Mo. - 1380 kc.,5:40 a.m. Mon-Sat., 8:30 a.m. & 11p.m. Sun.WIBW - Topeka, Kans. - 580 kc.,9:30 p.m. Mon-Sar., 9 a.m. Sun.KFDI - Wichita, Kans . - 1070 kc., 10p.m. Mon-Sat., 10 a.m. Sun.KFH-W i chita, Kans.-1 3 30 kc., 100.3FM, 6:30 p.m. Mon-Sar., 9:30 a.m.Sun.

    KBEA - Mission, Kans. - 1480 kc., 7p.m. daily.KGGF - Coffeyville, Kans . - 690 kc.,6 p.m. da ily.KUPK - Garden City, Kan s. - 1050kc., 97.3 FM, 12:30 p.m. Mon-Sat.,12:15 p.m. Sun.KXXX - Colby, Kans. - 790 kc.,8:30 a.m. Mon.-Sat . 11:30 a.m. Sun.*KQRS - Minneapolis - 1440 kc.,8:30 p.m. dai ly.WEBC - Du luth, Minn. - 560 kc., 6:30p.m. daily.WIBA - Madison, W is. - 1310 kc.,7:05 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 6:05 p.m. Sat.,Sun .WYLO - Milwaukee, W is - 540 kc.,12:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat., 10 a.m. Sun.WNFL - Green Bay - 1440 kc., 6:30p.m. Mon-Sar. , 5 p.m. Sun.WSAU - Wausau, W is. - 550 kc.,7 p.m. daily.WCOW-Sparta , W is.- 1290 kc., 6:30a.m. Mon-Sat., 10 a.m. Sun.

    SoulhKEES - Gladewater , Tex. - 1430 kc.,12 noon daily.KTBB - Tyler, Tex. - 600 kc., 12 noondaily.KLVI - Beaumont, Tex. - 560 kc.,6:30 p.m. daily.KTBC - Austin - 590 kc., 5:30 a.m.Mon.-Sat ., 9:30 a.m. Sun.KMAC - San Antonio - 630 kc., 7:15a.m. Mon .-Sat., 9 a.m. Sun.

    "The WORLD TOMORROW"KCTA - Corpus Christi, Tex. - 1030kc., 12:30 p.m . Mon.-Fri ., 4:30 p.m.Sat ., 2 p.m. Sun.KTLU - Rusk, Tex. - 1580 kc., 1 p.m .Sun.*KMIL - Cameron, Tex. - 1330 kc.,12:30 p.m. Men-Sat. 5:30 p.m. Sun.XEWG - El Paso - 1240 kc., 9 a.m.Sun. (in Spanish) .*KW EL - Midland, Tex. - 1600 kc.,5:30 p.m. dail y.KNIT - Abil ene, Tex. - 1280 kc.,8:15 p.m. Mon-Sat., 8 a.m. Sun.KFYO - lubbock, Tex . - 790 kc.,11:30 a.m. Mon.-Sat.KGN C - AmariJlo - 710 kc., 7 p.m.daily.KCTX - Childress, Tex. - 1500 kc.,11:30 a.m. Mon .-Fri ., 12:15 p.m. Sat.,2 p.m. Sun.KWFT - W ichita Falls - 620 kc., 8:30a.m. Mon.-Sat ., 4:30 p.m. Sun.KFMJ - Tu lsa - 1050 kc., 12 noondaily.KBYE - Okla homa Ci ty - 890 kc.,12:30 p.m. Moo.-Sae., 10:30 a.m. Sun.KSIW - Woodward, Okl a. - 14.50kc., I p.m. dail y.*KBHS - Hot Springs, Ark . - 590 kc.,6:30 p.m. daily.WWOM - New Orleans, La. - 600kc., 95.8 FM, 12:15 p.m. daily.KWAM -M emphis - 990 kc., 11 a.m.Mon .-Sat., 10 a.m. Sun.\VMQM - Memphis - 1480 kc., 12:30p.m. Men..Sat., 1 p ,m. Sun.\VHBQ - Memphis - 560 kc., 9 a.m.Sun.W FW l - Camden, Tenn. - 1220 kc.,2 p.m. Sun.\"('DEF - Chat tanooga - 1370 kc., 92.3FM, 7:30 p.m. daily.WKXV - Knox ville .- 900 kc., 12noo n dail y.WBRC - Birmingham - 960 kc., 106.9FM, 7:30 p.m. dail y.WYDE - Birmingham - 850 kc.,7 p.m. Mcn-Sar., 9:30 a.m. Sun.\VAAX- Gadsd en, Ala.-5 7 0 kc., 12:30p.m. Mon-Sat., 12 noon Sun.WCOV- Mon tgomery - 1170 kc., 6:30p.m. daily.\"('MEN - Tallahassee - 1330 kc., 8:30a.m. Mon-Sat., 10:30 a.m. Sun.\VFlA - Tampa - 970 kc., 7:05 p.m.daily.WINZ - Miami - 940 kc., 7 p.m. daily .WGBS -M iam i - 710 kc., 9 a.m. Sun.WFAB -M i ami - 990 kc., 9 a.m. Sun.( in Spanish) .W FIV - Kissimmee, Fla. - 1080 kc.,7:30 a.m. Mon-Sat., 12:30 p.m. Sun.WBIX - Jacksonville, Fla. - 1010 kc.,12:30 p.m. daily.WEAS - Savannah, Ga. - 900 kc., 12noon daily.*WMGA - Mou lt rie, Ga. - 1130 kc.,6:30 p.m. -Mon-Sat., 5:30 p.m. Sun.WCSC - Charleston, S. C. - 1390 kc.,7: 15 p.m. Mon-Sar., 6:30 p.m. Sun.WKSC - Kershaw, S. C. 1300 kc.,1:15 p.m. Sun.\V lAP - Lexington, Ky - 6:30 kc.,7 p.m. Mon -Sar., 10:30 a.m. Sun.

    WKYX - Paducah, Ky. - 570 kc.,12:30 p.m. daily.Moun laln SIal

    KASA - Phoenix - 1540 kc., 12:30 p.m.daily.KCUB - Tucson - 1290 kc., 6 a.m.Mon -Sat., 9 :30 a.m. Sun.KTUC - Tu cson - 1400 kc., 8 p .m.daily.KYUM - Yuma, Ariz. - 560 kc., 6:30a.m. Mon-Sat., 2 p.m. Sun.KClS-FlaKstaff, Ariz.- 600 kc., 12:30p.m. daily.KGGM - Albu querq ue - 610 kc., 6:30p.m. dail y.KlZ - Denver - 560 kc., 106.7 FM,7:15 p.m. dai ly.KREX - Grand Ju nction, Colo. 920 kc., 8 p.m. dail y.KTW'O - Caspe r, Wyo. - 1030 kc.,6:05 p.m. daily.*KMOR- Salt lake City -1 230 kc.,6:35 a.m. Mon-Sat., 9 a.m. Sun.KBET - Reno - 1340 kc., 6:30 p.m.daily.KIDO - Boise, Idaho - 630 kc. 7:05p.m. daily.KBOI - Boise - 670 kc., 6:30 p.m.daily.KTFI - Twin Falls, Idaho - 1270 kc.,7:05 p.m. dail y.KSEI - Pocatello, Idaho - 930 kc., 8p.m. daily.KMON - Great Fall s, Mont. - 560 kc.,6:30 p.m. Mon-Sat., 8 p.m. Sun.KOFI - Kalispell , Mont. - llSO kc.,6:30 p.m. dai ly.

    We sl CoastKHQ - Spokane - 590 kc., 8:05 p.m.da ily.KEPR - Pasco, W ash. - 610 kc., 7p.m. daily.KIMA - Yakima, Wash. - 1460 kc.,6:30 p.m. da ily.KVI - Seattle - 570 kc., 8 a.m. Sun.KBl E- Seattle- 1050 kc., 12 noon dail y.KTW - Seattle - 1250 kc., 102.5 FM,7:15 a.m . Mon-Sa t., 10 a.m. Sun.KMO - Tacoma, Wash.- 1360 kc., 8:30p.m. daily.KARl - Bellingham - 550 kc., 6:30p.m. daily.KWJj - Por tland - 1080 kc., 9 p.m.Mon-Sat., 10 p.m. Sun.*Kl IQ - Por tland - 1290 kc., 92.3FM, 7:30 a.m. Mon-Sar., 1 p.m. Sun.KEX - Por tland - 1190 kc., 9 a.m. Sun.KGAY - Salem - 1430 kc., 6:30 a.m.Mon.-Sat., 9 a.m. Sun.KUGN -Eugene- 590 kc., 7 p.m. daily.KUMA - Pendleton, Ore. - 1290 kc.,6:30 p.m. daily.KYJe - Medfoed, Ore. - 1230 kc., 6:30p.m. daily.KW IN - Ashla nd, Oce. - 580 kc.,7:30 p.m. daily.KAGO - Klamath Falls, Ore.- l i50kc., 6:30 p.m. daily.*KSAY - San Francisco - 1010 kc.,6: 15 p.m. Mon-Sat., 8:30 a.m. Sun.KFRC - San Francisco - 610 kc., 106.1FM, 7 a.m. Sun.*KKHI - San Francisco - 1550 kc.,6:15 a.m. Mon-Sat., 8 a.m. Sun.

    (Continued on next page) u S

  • 7/28/2019 Plain Truth 1969 (Prelim No 08) Aug_w

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    18 Th e PLAIN TRUTH

    RADIO L OGAugust, 1969

    KTRT - Truckee, Calif. - 1400 kc.,12:30 p.m. dail y.KFIV - Modesto - 1360 kc., 7:30p.m. dail y.KTOM- Sal inas- 1380 kc., 7 p.m. daily.KBIF - Fresno - 900 kc., 7:30 a .m.Mon-Fri., 4' p.m. Sat., 10 a.rn. Sun .KNGS - Hanford, Calif. - 620 kc.,10;30 p.m. daily.KCHJ - Delano, Calif . - 1010 kc.,. 7:30 a.m. Mon-Sat., 8 a.m. Sun.KGEE - Bakersfield - 1230 kc.