841. Reference : MM-1-18-94

Kathin for the year 2503 BE [religious ceremony of presenting robes to the Buddhist monks – translator].

| November 3, 1960. Morning in the day of Kathin. No assistance was requested from residents in the preparation. | Punch card

842. Reference : MM-1-18-95

Yao wedding

| November 10, 11, and 17, 1960. The youngest brother of KhamsEn was going to marry a Yao girl from the mountainous area. 6,000 baht was spent for the organization of the wedding. Traditionally the Yao people, as hosts, would reward their guests for attending the event, and every guest was offered a pork leg, costing 10 baht. | Punch card

843. Reference : MM-1-18-96

School

| November 16, 1960. Most parents wanted their children to attend school ahead of the proper age. But the school did not have the capacity to receive a large number of students. Because the parents were willing to donate benches, the school also agreed to accept children who had not yet reached the minimum age to attend. | Punch card

844. Reference : MM-1-18-97

Inter-village relations

| November 23, 1960. Tungqop was a moderate village. Most people were relatively poor, and they did not own land for cultivation. Most of the fields in the area were rented by people from Ban Phead. | Punch card

845. Reference : MM-1-18-98

Land tax

| December 15, 1960. Most people would provide the size of their land holdings as less than the actual tenure because they were afraid of additional tax charges. | Punch card

846. Reference : MM-1-18-99

Resignation

| December 28, 1960. Sombun resigned from the position of village assistant headman. Moerman restrained. | Punch card

847. Reference : MM-1-18-100

Words that indicate status

| December 11, 1968. Thawee compared children to ‘people who are bare assed,’ and the officials called Thawee a ‘brother.’ | Punch card

848. Reference : MM-1-18-101

Housewarming of Myang

| A housewarming was held at Myang's house. The family was a big family because Myang had many wives, and their children were a major help for the workload, instead of hiring workers. | Punch card

849. Reference : MM-1-18-102

Land holdings

| Seng, Wan and Kew, siblings, were in possession of land. They helped each other to cultivate some of the land, and they redistributed the produce equally. However, some of the land was deserted. | Punch card

850. Reference : MM-1-18-103

boy cha'ta

| Bajchata, or a piece of paper representing destiny of a newborn child. | Punch card