Tuesday, April 9, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Gen. Loan: Controversial Figure In War-Torn Vietnam's Police .}.^....... n ..v } , :.. ,...3? ......1:....:.....":". ,. r:., : .: ,r.:..:*.:. Y "., DAI LY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SP:.ri.-rr~rJ........t.....v......£."..{"....v.... . .......}.. ": .... . .i..: :.L :J.. J:;JL}t:"i:: a V..t.:N.::" n."rSr.rh :":. r.rta :h1". .r. . :. . :A . .:f .( > :.. . ----------------- By EDWARD T. ADAMS SAIGON (AP) - The chief of South Vietnam's national police, 0 Nguyen Ngoc Loan, is one of the c o u n t r y ' s most controversial leaders. The Viet Cong hate him, and so do others not associated with the Communist-led movement. He is a hero to the men who work under him, and to not a few ad- mirers of efficiency. To them, charges of ruthlessness are offset by. the dangers that plague the government Brig. Gen. L o a n serves. When I first came upon Loan, two months ago, he was firing at the head of a man in a plaid shirt. The general had appeared suddenly that morning near An Quang Pagoda. Saigon was reel- ing under' the onslaught of the Tet offensive. The man in the plaid shirt had just been cap- tured. Loan executed him in a split second. My first impression was the f thin-faced Loan was a cold, cal- lous killer. Since tien, I have traveled for days across the coun- try with him. He is a product of modern Vietnam and his time. 'Hitler' Tactics Many think he represents the worst in Vietnam. He has. been criticized severely by some Ameri- can and Vietnamese officials and by some Vietnamese politicians. He has been accused of using "Hitler" tactics, illegal arrests, torture and police-state methods. He usually participates per- pr sonally in the afrest of important political figures, often brandish- ing a weapon and shouting or bullying down any opposition. When. Nguyen Cao Ky maneu- vered the generals against Ngu- yen Khanh in 1965, Loan was at his side, first as deputy, then as ! chief of military intelligence. When Ky was premier, Loan was his chief weapon against rebelli- ous Buddhists. Last July, when a national as- sembly was voting whether to allow Nguyen Van Thieu and Ky to run for president and vice president, L o a n and several armed henchmen made their way to the balcony to glare at mem- bers as the vote was taken. The vote went the way Loan wanted. Not only dissident politicians and shaven-headed Buddhists fear Loan. Mop-haired students stay out of his way as well. Recently Loan was seen driving a barber around Saigon' in his jeep' When they 'spatted a long-haired "cow- boy," the jeep would come to a screeching halt and the barber would give the cowboy a forceful haircut. 'Fervent Loyalty' At the same time, Loan can be warm and generous. He demon- strates a fervent loyalty to his men and his country. During the Tet fighting Loan was repeatedly out in front, leading his police in efforts to wipe out Viet Cong who had in- vaded the capital. He was wound- ed slightly three times. "His men believe that be can walk on water and is bulletproof," -Associated Press LOAN SHOOTS Viet Cong suspect during Tet offensive. says a U.S. police adviser who has worked closely with Loan for two years. "Loan has three qualties which are needed for leadership. He is positive, efficient and realistic." Another American adviser says Loan has "done more for his men than any of the nine previous directors of the national police. He has gotten them more pay and better living conditions." The general was Vietnam's first pilot qualified to fly jets, and re- cently he- tutned down promotion to major general. "I would take the second star only if many of my men receive promotions they well deserve," Loan says. "Some of my former classmates are only majors or lieutenant colonels now and I'm a general. I think eventually they will see it my way." ' Loan was born in Hue in 1930, the !oldest of three sons in a fairly wealthy family. One brother is a medical doctor and the other is the director of a youth center. Five daughters in the family are associated w i t h medicine or pharmacology. While still in school, he was called up for military service and the career was launched that was to make him director general of the n tional police, commanding 72,000 men. Loan was first in his class at the reserve officer's academy, No one knows where the gen- eral might be going when he leaves his Saigon headquarters. He keeps in touch with his office by radio and'with secret vehicles -heavily armed-by walkie-talkie. The police general dislikes po- liticians because "all they do is talk and not take action." He be- lieves south Vietnam's army, re- gional and popular forces and civilian irregulars should be com- bined to make one fighting force. And he says he and his men feel' that much of the money spent to send U.S. .soldiers to Vietnam could be used better to equip and train properly at least three South Vietnamese divisions. "This would save more U.S. lives," he says. Pointing to a formation of combat police, Loan says: "These kids hate Communists. I never told them about the Com- munists. I don't have to, but they know what would happen to each and every one of them if they were captured. They don't even know what the war is all about, they just'want to live." Execution Publicity. As for the curbside execution and the publicity that followed, he recalls: "Many men were getting killed and wounded and I had many things on my'mind at the time. I am a military man and not a politician. The picture was just an unfortunate situation." Vietnamese officials said the victim of the execution was identified by another Viet Cong prisoner as a man named Nguyen Tan Dat alias Hoan Son, the leader of a Viet Cong sapper unit. They said he was captured near the pagoda, firing out of a second- story window at firemen trying to halt a blaze set by the Viet Cong. He killed a policeman who attempted to capture him, they said, and when seized and ques- tioned, he spat in the face of the interrogating officer. He was taken around a corner where he was met by Loan. Loan said later , he wasn't aware that AP and NBC camera- men had taken pictures of the shooting. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear only once. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. TUESDAY, APRIL 9 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"Management of Managers No. 56": Michigan Union, '8:15 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-Program for Institutional Man- agement Education - 'Leadership for Women Executives" : Statler-Hilton Inn, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Fire Officers Training Course-Regis- tration, Civil Defense Center, 8:30 a.m. School of Music Recital - Flute Students: School of Music Recital Hall, 12:30 p.m. School of Music Recital - String De- partment Students: School of Music Recital Hall, 3:45 p.m. Zoology Special Lecture: Dr. william Miltead, Dept. of Biology, University of Missouri, "The Origin of American Box Turtles", Rm. 2009 Museums, 4:00. Museum of Anthropology Lecture - Edwin N. Wilmsen, Smithsonian Insti- tution, "Some Aspects of Late Pleisto- cene Paleo-Anthropology"; 35 Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - H. Ralph McIntyre, French Horn. School .of Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. General Notices Recommendations for Departmental! Honors: Teaching departments vhshing to recommend tentative April gradu- ates fromn the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, for honors or high honors should recommend such students by forwarding a letter to the Director, Honors Council, 1210 Angell Hall, before noon, Fri., April 19. Teaching departments in the School of Education should forward letters ORGAN IZATION NOTICES USE OF TIIIS COILUMN FO)R AN- NO MEN's is aailale to officially recognized and registered student orga- nizations only. Forms are available in room1011 BAB. SPU-Resistance will sponsor a poetry reading by Denise Levertov, at Canter- bury House on April 9, 8:30 p.m. UM Scottish Country Dance Society meeting Wed., 8:00-10:30 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. Beginners welcome. In- struction given. c directly to the Office of Registration guistique du Massif Central). on Mon., and Records, Room 1513 Admin. Bldg., April 8 at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 3050 Frieze by noon, Fri., April 19. Bldg. Chairman: E. Pulgram. Foreign Visitors Placement The following are foreign visitors who can be reached through the Foreign Visitor Programs Office. 7¢4-2148. Dr. Mary Fulton. Epidemiologist, Scotland. March 30-June 30. Dr. Leon Epstein, Epidemiologist, Hebrew University, Israel, April 8- May 22. Mr. Y. Okazaki. Librarian. Business Economics. Hitotsubashi University, Japan, April 7-9. Mr. Spyros Papaspyropoulos, Execu- tive Secretary, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Athens, Greece. April 7-12. Mr. Ramlal Dahyalal Parikh, Chair- man of the Indian Experiment in In- ter-National Living; Head, Dept. of History and Political Science and Registrar, Gujarat Vidyapeth, India, April 9-11. Mr. Vojislav Colanovic, Editor, Chief of the Cultural Section, Press Serviev, News and Features Agency, Belgrade; April 11-12. Mrs. Vera Smiljanic-Colanovic, Asst. Prof., Dept. of Psychology, Faculty of Arts, Belgrade University ,April 11-12. Prof. and Mrs. Rumen Yanakier, Prof. and Head of Dept. for Management and Data Processing of Economic Informa- tion, Higher Institute of Economics, Sofia, April 15-22. Mr. Nelson H.-Young, Academic Reg- istrar, United College, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, April 17-18, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. M. Mackeen. Dept. of Islamic Studies, University of Malaya, April 20-25. Dr. and Mrs. Kroo, Prof. of Music- ology, Ference Liszt Academy; Musi- cal Editor-in-Chief and Music Critic, Hungarian Radio and TV, Budapest, May 5-9. Dr. Adam Fraczek, Psychologist, Staff Psychologica Laboratory, University of Warsaw, May 6-10. Doctoral Examinations Mary Margaret Heiser, Romance Lan- guages & Literatures. Dissertation: "A Phonological Study of the Massif Cen- tral Region in South-CentralaFrance (Based, on Pierre Nauton's Atlas lin- BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS 3200 SAB GENERAL DIVISION Thursday, April 11 Placement interviews at Genera Div- ision, Bureau of Appts., 3200 S.A.B., call 764-4760 before 4 p.m. for appoint- ments: Teachers Corps, throughout the U.S., - Men and women, all day, call 764-4760 for appts. Two types of as- signments. Teacher interns - recent' graduates or special qualified upper- classmen. 2-3 mo. preservice training at 50 participating college and univ. acquinting them with social and econ. problems of poverty, and with the communities in which they will serve: then enter a nearby university, yield- ing MA and cert. at end of 2 years. Teacher Corps team leaders - have graduate degrees and teaching exper in poverty areas. After preservice training, , which includes more background on techniques used with disadvantaged, Spanish communities, Indian reserva- tions, and migrant labor camps, they may serve as leader of team of teacher interns, work with school officials on programs, serve as liaison between the university, school and neighborhood. U.S. Civil Service Management In- tern Oral Examinations will be held April 24-26 at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3200 S.A.B. Students will be notified individually by the Civil Serv- ice Commission as to which day they are scheduled. Applications for Federal Service En- trance Examinations are due tomorrow, Wed., April 10. The test will be held in May. These are given monthly, the applications being due the previous month. Applic, avail, at Bureau, Gen- eral Division. Current Positions received by Gener- al Division, call 764-7460 for further information. Optics Technology, Palo Alto, Calif.- Two positions for field sales engineers, one in New York/New England area, other in Chicago/Midwest area. Degree in EE, Physics, Chem. or related Ylds. mn. 1 year engrg. or lab. exper. and two years in technical sales. Whio wants .to cTart all thiat stuff CALL GREENE'S for a Handi-Hamper. Fill it at your leisure-leave it for summer storage and get your garments all fresh and clean when you get back next fall. USE THAT EXTRA ROOM to give people rides, split the cost of gas and pay for your storage box that way. Storage isn't expensive, just regu- lar cost of cleaning and $4.95 for storage and insurance. MALE STUDENTS MICHIGAN UNION LIFE MEMBER- SHIPS may be picked up at the Busi- ness Office in the Union from 8-5 P.M. Monday thru Friday and 8 where Ky was a have been- close and both are air Loan became tenant in 1951, years attending classmate. They since that time force pilots. a ,second lieu- then spent 32 military schools Noon on Saturdays. All those who have attended 8 semesters thru this Winter are eligible. I.D. REQUIRED. in France. He also attended the U.S. Command and Staff College. Returning to Vietnam, Loan held various posts in the air force and took part in 1965 in the first joint Vietnamese-U.S. air raid over North Vietnam. He has gathered a personal st'aff handpicked from elite airborne, ranger and marine officers and noncommissioned officers. One man tells' jokes. Another Is an expert at cards. Another is a musician. ii II Our designer. ca me home from. London with a Beatle haircut, a cricket bat, a case of kippers, Store it with Greene's! Have it delivered when you return next-fall JUST CALL GREENE'S for one of those fabulous HandiHampers. Pack all the clothes you won't wear until fall - Clothes you would ordinarily pack up, take home, hpve cleaned, pack up again and bring back ir the fall. GE NERTION featuring: NOW, ALL YOU NEED TO DO is turn the Peter Brett John Conron Christine Dredge Doug Fiero Lemuel Johnson Thomas Nadar Richard Keller Simon Thomas Snapp John Kennedy Snyder Rosa lind Stone Justin Vitiello Daniel Wire Hmper over to Greene's. They clean the lot at regular cleaning prices and store it in a refrig- erated moth-proof vault. When you return in the fall, call Greene's again, your clothes will be taken out of the vault, returned to you freshly pressed on hangers and packed in neat poly- ethylene bags, ready for your clothes closet. Call Normandy 23-23.1 or Stop at any Greene's Plant for Information anid an idea Because as soon as he got back-in a fever of crea- tivity, he began designing the Bounder. He made it brash and dashing-like a Lon- don ankle boot. He made it rugged and supple, soft and durable-like a moccasin. And when he finally revealed the Bounder to us, it was just that-half a moccasin, half an ankle boot. With top grain leather from ankle to heel to hand-sewn toe. A buckle or twin eyelets. And smashings colours. Ingenious! We wonder what'll happen when our designer visits the Continent. More savoir faire? A new Weltanschauung? Who knows? But we know he'll be hard MAIN PLANT 516 E. Liberty St. NO 23-23-1 CAMPUS 1213 S. University NO 3-3016 WESTSI DE 1940 W. Stadium NO 2-2543 Ck nrt Str+v 0 *No~vella *Dramai * Poetry * Art i _ I