TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TFIREE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 196~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Defecting Viet Cong Reveals ReasonsI EDITOR'S NOTE: Reporters in Viet Nam seldom get to interview a Viet Cong defector before he is handed on to higher authorities for intelligence debriefings. Hugh Mul- ligan, hunting for stories nearnthe Cambodian border," talked for near- ly an hour with a North Vietna- mese officer. By HUGH A. MULLIGAN Associated Press News Analyst GIA NGHIA, South Viet Nam- Dang Van Trong, a Viet Cong second lieutenant, came out of the jungles on a steaming hot day recently with a few dried beans clutched in his hand. For him the war was over. He had had it. Lt. Trong had been walking for three months and four days. An infiltrator from North Viet Nam, he left a staging area above the 17th Parallel with a platoon of 28 men. Only 18 were left. Ten had died in the past week, four of starvation. That, in statistical form, was Trong's story. How much he held back or how much he invented can only be ascertained by trained intelligence teams. Trong said his orders were to get his men to Zone D, a vast jungle area 100 miles wide and 60 miles deep. Government troops have penetrated only its fringes. The Viet Cong is suspected to be staging a massive troop buildup there with fresh units infiltrated from the North. But Trong, a North Vietnamese regular, never got there. Instead, he slipped away from his men in the dense jungles of Quang Duc Province, somehow made his way to Route 14, walked into the nearest Montagnard vil- lage, and gave himself up. The Montagnards passed Trong onto Gia Nghia, the province cap- ital, where he was treated kindly while waiting to be shipped on to corps headquarters at Pleiku for extensive questioning. Although he never heard of the expression, Trong was treated as a "chieu hoi"-received with open arms, which is what the program means in Vietnamese. The gov- ernment's chieu hoi is designed to encourage defectors. Why had he decided to defect? Trong said he was hungry and tired and disenchanted. He said he had been led to believe at least four-fifths of the people of South Viet Nam were friendly to the Communist cause. But he found himself walking for weeks with- out being allowed to talk with anyone, friendly or unfriendly. Some observers of the war doubt there is such a thing as the so-called Ho Chi Minh Trail, the series of trails through Laos and Cambodia for infiltrating men and supplies into South Viet Nam. Trong had never heard it called by that name, but he said he crossed the border into Laos three miles above the 17th Parallel, walked south through Laos and Cambodia, then crossed into South Viet Nam in Darlac Province. There his real troubles began. His 28-man platoon was part of a force of more than 400 being infiltrated at that time, he .said. He never saw any of the others, because each platoon moves sep- arately through the jungles, and is passed from station to station. The stations, Trong said, were always two days apart. Each sta- tion knew where the unit was heading next, and so directed them, but never knew where they came from. The lieutenant found such security procedures strange in a country where he had been led to believe the Communists were overwhelmingly popular. Air Force and Navy bombers have been pounding the jungles with air strikes for months to pre- vent mass Communist infiltrations. The jungles abound in fresh' fruits and wild edible plants, but the lieutenant's platoon found themselves slowly starving - to death. After a lifetime of eating rice, the jungle food made them sick. Malaria and dysentery killed siv of his men. Trong used to hoard his few handfuls of beans and dry rice to keep his men from trying to jump him and steal his fast dwindling supplies. The few beans he had when he walked out on Route 14 were all the food he had left. The platoon was under orders' never to fight. Their assignment was to get to Zone D and avoid contact with the enemy before getting there. They never dared shoot a deer or kill a lizard or snake to eat, lest government' forces find their campfire or dis- cover a carcass. The lieutenant had gone north to join the Communist cause after the armistice with the French in 1954, but he said he was now 32, wiser and weary of war. He spoke in an abstract way, as if it no longer concerned him, about the island of Hainon in the Gulf of Tonkin. He had .been told that 200,000 Chinese troops were waiting there to join the war. No one had told him that the U.S. 7th Fleet was in the gulf waiting for that possibility. He spoke of a Hanoi' factory where machine guns and mortars were stamped with Chinese mark- ings as they came off the assem- bly line, so that people in the South would get the idea that China was supporting the war in a big way. Finally, he spoke of the jungles where his friends had died and his cause had vanished, and he said he never wanted to see those dense rain forests again. NEWMAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION CATHOLIC VOICES SERI ES SENATOR PHILIP HART "A CHRISTIAN VIEW OF POLITICS" Friday, Oct. 22-Angell Hall 8:00 P.M.-Aud. A ... ........... P i Indonesia 4CommuniQ' Mobilizes 4t Purge World Ne'ws Roundup UAC Presents MOVIES on THE LATE PETER HOWARD called "TheBest Friend America Has" Leading proponent of MORAL REARMAMENT 7:15 P.M. 3rd floor Tonight Conference Rm., Union SINGAPORE M) - Indonesia's army imposed a military ban on the Communist party in Jakarta, said a broadcast yesterday from the capital. But President Su- karno was reported resisting mil- itary pressure to dissolve the par- ty. A Jakarta broadcast said a number of parties and organiza- tions linked to the Communist party also were placed under the ban and the powerful, Commu- nist-dominated trade union -feder- ation, Sobsi, was outlawed, pre- sumably throughout Indonesia. The Indonesian army continued its crackdown on Communists be- lieved involved in the Sept. 30- Oct. 1 coup attempt against Su- karno despite the president's ap- peal to the military to desist. A dispatch from Jakarta report- ed the arrest of the suspended Communist director of the govern- ment-run Jakarta radio, Sukir- man. Also reported arrested were Sat- ya Graha, chief editor of the Na- tionalist party paper Suluh In- donesia, suspended by the army, and four staff members of the of- ficial news agency Antara. Mobs were reported systemat- ically burning and sacking Com- munist offices in other parts of the country. Gen. Hadikasumo Speaks The ban on the Communist par- ty in Jakarta was announced in the name of Gen. Umar Hadika- sumo, commanding officer in the 'capital area. He ordered offi- cials of the party and of the oth- er banned organizations to re- port to the army or police within five days. Hadikasumo said these officials were involved in the coup attempt. He gave no hint of the fate of the Communist party in the rest of the country. Groups Banned Also placed under the military bane were Permuda Rakjat, the Communist party youth wing, and Gerwani, the party women's branch. The newly appointed army chief, Maj. Gen. Suharto, in his first order of the day released yester- day, called on all army units "to continue to liquidate remnants of the counter revolutionary Sept. 30 movement." This is a reference to the Communists that the ar- my is accusing of having partici- pated in the coup attempt. Red China Charges Violence Also, Communist China charg- ed yesterday that Indonesian troops shot their way into the Chinese embassy in Jakarta Sat- urday, looted part- of the build- ing and beat a Chinese diplomat. This was the first Peking report of protests in Indonesia against alleged Communist Chinese sup- port for the Oct. 1 attempt to overthrow President Sukarno. The Chinese account said about 40 Indonesian soldiers invaded the embassy about 6 p.m. and pound- ed on the door to the office of at- tache Li Chingtang with rifle butts, demanding that he open up for a search. The armed unit forc- ed Chinese diplomatic officials to submit to being searched and in- terrogated. The Chinese report said the officer in command of the soldiers "openly declared that they were sent by the headquar- ters of the Jakarta military dis- trict and acted on government or- ders." Issues Warning Dispatches from Jakarta dur- ing the weekend said the new In- donesian military command had issued a warning against any more anti-Communist rioting and de- struction of Chinese property. A mob attacked and burned a Chi- nese-run university in Jakarta Thursday. The Chinese blast placed heavy pressure on Sukarno to persuade his military leaders to call off their crackdown on Communist elements blamed for the power grab. Sukarno in speeches yester- day warned against disunity and renewed his attack against im- perialism. He made no mention of the attempted coup and the tone of his speeches indicated he still did not support the army's ac- tions against the Communists. Some Indonesian newspapers have named D. N. Aidit, leader of the Indonesian Communist party, as the mastermind of the coup at- tempt. Aidit is said to have con- tacts in Peking. Peking's New China News Agency said 31 per- sons were arrested in Palembang, southern Sumatra, and offices of the Indonesian Communist party were attacked by an angry crowd in Banda Atieh, northern Suma- tra. By The Associated Press SALISBURY, Rhodesia-Prime Minister Ian Smith rejected yes- terday a proposal that a British Commonwealth mission try to settle the intensifying conflict over white Rhodesian moves for independence. Britain's Prime Minister Harold Wilson then urgently appealed in a message to Smith's white minor- ity government to avoid taking "any irrevocable step." The An- glican primate of Britain, the Archbishop of Canterbury, sent a separate appeal to Smith "in tht name of our common Christian faith." Smith, at a news conference, said Wilson's proposed Common- wealth mission was impractical, but added that the Cabinet had hot reached a decision on a uni- lateral declaration of indepen- peared today to be stepping up their campaign to seize effective control of South Viet Nam's rice bowl - the sweltering Mekong River delta. * * * MILAN, Italy-Milan's Linate Airport is closed for two weeks for the installation of antifog equip- ment that is supposed to convert fog into snow. All flights are be- ing diverted to the city's other airport, Malpensa. I 1A We cordially invite the Michigan students to attend ad tea at our home on South University, dence. * * * MILWAUKEE, Wis-An eccle- siastical controversy bubbled with- in a civil rights crisis yesterday as Roman Catholic priests and nuns publicly supported a boycott to protest alleged recial imbalance in Milwaukee's public schools. * * * SAIGON-Viet Cong guerrillas, operating in battalion strength and attacking with mortars, ap- Oct. 20, from 4:00-6:00 P.M. International students areparticularly encouraged to attend. President and Mrs. Hatcher III PRESIDENT REACTS TO PROTESTS: Officials Say Marches Adverse to U.S.-- Prestige Is Dimished by Such Actions WASHINGTON (P) - President Johnson, federal officials and a dozen senators voiced concern yes- terday that antiwar and antidraft demonstrations across the country may undermine peace efforts in Southeast Asia. At the Capitol, Sen. Thomas H. Burns Draft Card; Youth, To Be Tried MANCHESTER, N.H. (P)-David J. Miller, 22, a college graduate who says the draft is immoral, was arrested yesterday as the- first person charged under the new fed- eral law banning draft card de- struction. Six FBI agents arrested Miller, of Syracuse, N.Y., when he stopped. at a service station for repair of a flat tire that had stalled a "peace crusade" he and five other members of a Catholic worker or- ganization planned in New Eng- land. Miller, a ban-the-bomb pin on the laped of his coat, said he didn't want counsel. He will rep- resent himself at a preliminary removal hearing Friday before Bouruqe. Miller was arrested on a war- rant issued by U.S. Commissioner Earl Bishop in New York City. The FBI identified Miller as a man who burned what he said was his draft card Friday before hun- dreds of spectators and demon- strators near the armed forces in- duction station on Whitehall Street in New York City. - - Kuchel, assistant Republican lead- er from California, declared that protesters who burn draft cards and fake illnesses to escape mili- tary service are "sowing the seeds of treason." President Johnson, recuperating at Bethesda Naval Hospital, ex- pressed concern that weekend demonstrations in a score of American cities might cause Pe- king and Hanoi to miscalculate American unity and determina- tion. Ball Fears Misinterpretation And Undersecretary of State George W. Ball said Communists might misinterpret the American public's support of U.S. policies in Viet Nam and this might lead "to a prolongation of the war." White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers told newsmen at Beth- esda hospital the President en- dorsed a Justice Department in- vestigation of whether Commun- ists are involved in the parades and picketing. The President was described as WOMEN "FACE"ARMS "LEGS TIS IHAIRLINES CORRECTED " BEARDS NEWEST SHORTWAVE * CHESTS " BACKS DIAL-0-MATIC METHOD CLEARED Painless (try us) " Years of Experience " Physician's References 357-0373 ANN L. KORSON " R.E. " 17000 W. 8 MILE " SOUTH4FIELD " NEAR NORTHLAND SHOPPING CENTER "concerned that the actions of a few would be interpreted as the opinion of the many by our ad- versaries abroad." Undermining President In the Senate, Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) said he was shocked to see pictures of protesters put- ting a cigarette lighter to their draft cards. "These people are undermining what the President is trying to do, to bring about a negotiated settlement in Viet Nam," Mans- field asserted. "They are furnish- ing fodder to Hanoi and Peking. They are showing a sense of utter irresponsibility." Kuchel said a California group has passed out a "dirty, contempt- ible little sheet" with instructions on how to evade the draft. OCTOBER PROMOTIONS FALL BOY-STYLE WOOL DRESSES WOOL SUITS 1 1 1 1 $14.99 $24.99 Reg. $20 and $30 Reg. $35 and $40 / / 1 rmmmmmmmmmmmmmiwmmsmmwwwsrwwwswwwwwwmmummwmmsw/mmmmmmmmrammmmwaummmmmmmsmmmmmmmmmmmwmmmmmmmmm / I FALL SKIRTS WOOL HERRINGBONE I ' CULOTTES $8.88 to $10.99 Reg. $12 to $18 $ w ..- .w ...w .......w .......... w.... m:Reg. $13 1 1 r __ u VA .I . r . \ , 1A(\immmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmummmmmmlumn p 1 11 k..0m u UJ y i. YV V .JL. 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