Page 1253 - 1970S

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Personal
from
Tensions Between Nations Tightening. Personal
Meetings W ith Leaders of Several Nations
I
N THIS MOST RECENT
trip around the
world
1
had important personal meet–
ings with heads of state and other leaders of the
governments of Korea, Japan, India, Ceylon, Israel and
Belgium. Instead of gains for
PEACE,
I find danger signals are
threatening al! around the world.
Tensions are tightening between certain key nations. Anti–
America feeling is now gaining new momentum in new and
unexpected places around the world.
On this trip, as on previous round-the-world trips the past
three years, 1 have discussed their problems with the leaders of
severa! governments. The problems these heads of state face
leave me appalled. They seem beyond human ability to solve.
And we simply have not much more time to find
THE WAY
to
world
PEACE !
Any one of a number of leaders of nations could,
in an emotional moment of supreme crisis, lose his head and
set off the
NUCLEAR
World War III tbat could erase all humanity
from this earth!
In the May number I told our readers of important meetings
in Korea and Japan - especially the historie meeting with Prime
Minister Eisaku Sato, and meetings with eight of the possibly
ten most powerful men in the Japanese government. From Tokyo
we flew on to New Delhi, capital of India. In New Delhi, it
was nice to meet again with Dr. Nagendra Singh and his wife.
We have been guests in their borne a number of times, and in
addition have met Dr. Singh in Geneva when he was attending
a United Nations meeting there as India's representative. Also
we met them in New York and flew them as our guests to
California. They were house-guests at my home in Pasadena, and
(Contin11ed on page 45)
PLAIN TRUTH June 1972
In
This /ssue
What Our Readers Say
. . . . . . . . . .
lnside Front Cover
Personal from the Editor
The Truth About lreland
3
Advance News .. . ..
. .. ....
12
Three Steps to Fami/y
Financia/ Success
. . . . . . . .
J
3
Does God Exist?
. . . . . . . . . .
17
Rad~
Log
. .... . ..... ... .
22
Can
We
Learn to Feed
the World in Time?
... . ..
23
How to Build Leadership
. . . .
28
So You're a Housewife
. . . . .
31
Wh at You Can Do
. . . . . . . .
38
Why the Vast Difference
Between Animal Brain and
Human Mind?
. . . . . . . . . .
39
Emll Hetb -
Plt~il1
1"TIIIIJ
ABOUT OUR COVER
I ndian peasant woman winnows her
dce harvest in the wind. New
methods of production and harvest
are replaciog andent farm practices
of the "Third Wodd." New strains
of wheat and rice developed by the
"green revolution" have increased
yields thre·efold in nlany arcas. For
the first time, once starving nat ions
are becoming agriculturally self–
sufficienr. India. and Pakistan are
norable examples. Even with bumper
crops from these "miracle" grains,
feeding the world is stiU a giant
problem. More food does not neces–
sarily mean better nutri tion. In sorne
instances protein intake has actua lly
decreased due to the low protein
content of the new grains. Distribu–
rion of giant h arvests is another
problem which ovedoads already
limi ted transportation systems.