PAGE TENi THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1966 PAGE TE~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1966 Troops Find Surprise Entering 'Deserted' By PETER ARNETT LINH HOI, Viet Nam (IP)-This is the way life goes in a village caught in the vortex of war. Artillery shells burst among the flimsy thatched huts of Linh Hoi. Napalm seared through co- conut trees and corn. Far below the splintering shrap- nel, in a deep earth bunker, the sounds of a newborn baby's first cries briefly drowned out the ho- locaust 'overhead. The aged village midwives cere- monially dug a hole for the pla- centa, nodding to each other wisely. This baby would like long. Wasn't a child's life span meas- ured by the depth that his pla- centa is buried? And they already were 30 feet below ground. Good Spirits The hours moved on. In normal times, the good spirits might well take note and coax the newborn; child to manhood through the barriers of disease and malnutri-I tion that kill half the peasantl Vietnamese before puberty. But these were not normal] times. War had become part of the disease of Viet Nam. Within 24 hours the sleeping baby awak- ened and choked on smoke seep- ing down in the bunker. The mid- wives, the neighbors and the vis-; itors who had crowded into the bunker when the artillery and aircraft first came over, swarmed out into the bright light above. Surprise Men of the U.S. 1st Cavalry Division Airmobile had swept through the village once without locating a soul. Now they were systematically burning the houses to the ground. They were amazed as hundreds of women, children and old men poured from the ground. The mother and her baby. stayed below. Much later that day Lt. Jasper Campesi of Chicago, leading his platoon around the edge of Linh Hoi, saw the pair. The mother, probably 18 years old, was "kinda holding herself in," said Campesi. An old man, a conical straw hat perched on his head, was ten- derly clutching the naked baby. Its tiny fists were clenched in- stinctively over its eyes to close out the light. Ambulance Campesi beckoned to one of his men. They put the young mother in a string hammock and tied it under a long bamboo pole. They placed the baby on her stomach, threw a mat over the pole to shut out the sun, and moved off across the paddy-fields to where the helicopters were coming. It was a crude but effective ambu- lance. By the time Campesi arrived, the helicopters had stopped com- ing in. There were just too many people to evacuate, and there was no question that they were all The mother was pulling at Viet Cong sympathizers. So why Campesi's trouser leg. The fear move them? Linh Hoi was in one had left her eyes. There seemed of the tiny valleys streaking into to be arrogance there now, the foothills along the central sharpened by what looked like Vietnamese coast. Leave the peo- scorn at the bickering and inde- ple where they were: that was cision of the troops. She pointed, the decision. back at her smoldering village, Medical Attention, and pattedthe bamboo pole be-I "But we can't leave here," said Mside her." Campesi, looking down at the "Take Me Back" mother lying on the dry paddy- "Take me back" she was say- field dike. "Her belly looks split ing. The little old man had open. She needs medical atten- picked up the pink-skinned baby tion." and was walking away. Campesi Another officer commented, and another soldier hoisted the Antesfcr cmmne'Pole, with the mother slung un- "Are you kidding? These people pernwth the hers are tough, they don't need our derneath, to their shoulders. help. I bet she could get up right The fate of the baby was nowj now and walk back to her vil- in the hands of the spirits. lage." Just a few hundred yards The troops started taking sides, away, a young man was dying, but the argument was resolved punctured by shell fragments and simply enough. The radio failed bullets probably in the battle and they couldn't get more heli- earlier that day. A member of the copters anyway. local Viet Cong militia force, now _-i he was home with his family to die. igOPENING RECEPTION FOR THE ARTIST knee. The man's mother wailed at 1 the American troops and pointed I 1Tf dA M SA Y to the sky.L1A "Take my son and make him well," she was saying, but it was all too late. Carried out to the Forsythe Gallery 201 Nickels Arcade open paddyfield, the young man Weekdays 10-4 Saturday 10-1 diedl The Americans offered to bury him. The wife and mother de-_ _ ® clined. They told an interpreter, "Just let us take him across the river to bury him at the pagoda. He was born here, he has died here. So let us have him. Campesi shook his head.- ' SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2 at 4 P.M. "This place gets me down, let's move on," he called to his pla- 1429 H ill Street toon. "Being justified by faith, we GALA OPENING have peace with God." H I LLEL MEMBERSHIP MEETING Romans 10:17 Free Bagels, Cream Cheese CHURCH OF CHRIST Coffee, etc. etc. * BUSINESS SUIWEY RESULTS: Economists Foresee Recession by 1970 His wife wept uncontrollably on the earth floor beside his crudel bed. Two young children were in her arms, another child at her 530 West Stadium r' I, WASHINGTON (P)-Most in-- dustry economists expect a reces- sion by 1970 and some believe it will at least start in 1967, a sur- vey of the National Association of Business Economists indicated yesterday. The association members also agreed generally that industry's booming outlays for new plant and equipment will stop rising next summer. A drop in such outlays was the reason most fre- quently given for a recession. Modest Effect However, another survey re- leased at the association's annual conference here indicated that President Johnson's plan to sus- pend the seven per cent invest- ment credit would have only a modest effect on such capital in- vestment. The latter study, made by the National Industrial Conference DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 6) SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: 212 SAB-? U.S. Civil Service Examination for Of.. fiee and Science Assistant-Form 5000- AB can be obtained from 212 SAB, Low- er Level. Must be filed by Oct. 21 for the Nov. 26 test: next filing is Dec. 9 for the Jan. 7 test and the final filing is Jan. 9 for the Feb. 4 test. Board, indicated also that most of the impact would be delayedc until the second half of 1967. By# that time, the board said, the cutback from present plansZ "would not appear to exceed three per cent."1 Most business spokesmen have urged Congress to reject the pro- posed suspension on grounds that3 its delayed-action impact might come when the economy needed stimulation, not restraint. The board survey, representing1 replies from 522 pf the country's 1,000 largest manufacturers, in- dicated that the corporate funds appropriated for investment would be cut back about 1.2 per cent from the levels previously planned for the final quarter of this year. The cutback a year hence would amount to 2.8 per cent. Many companies believe that any material impact will be de- layed past the suspension period, the board reported. Johnson has proposed only a 16-month sus- pension, ending Dec. 31, 1967. Seventy-two per cent of the economists who took part in the association survey of the business outlook foresaw a recession be- tween now and 1970. About half of this group ex- pected the decline to begin in 1967, the association said. The summer quarter was most fre- quently chosen as the , starting time. The association said its survey represented replies from about 200 member economists, out of a possible 300. The association has nearly 1,000 members, but gets a response from only one econo- mist in each corporation. Results Results of the survey were re- ported by Charles B. Reeder of the Du Pont Co., vice president of the economists group. They in- dicated the business expansion would continue in 1967 "but at a somewhat slower pace than in 1966 or 1965," he said. "A major factor in next year's expected growth will be rising de- fense expenditures, while business capital spending is forecast to peak at about midyear," Reeder said. "The most important economic problem facing the country in 1967 will be control of inflation! while maintaining growth and' avoiding a recession," he added. Reeder said the poll was com- pleted just after Johnson's re- quest for suspension of the tax credit. If Congress approves it, he said, the economists' forecasts for plant and equipment spending may be on the high side. The forecasts indicated that capital outlays will total $66 bil- lion in 1967. This would be up nine per cent from this year's total of about $61 billion. - - - The Volkswagen Fastback Sedan. It doesn't look like a Volkswagen at all. But it's not just the shape that's dif- ferent. The Fastback has the strongest, fastest engine we've ever put in the back of a VW. 65 horsepower and it'll do 84 mph. And the engine in back is only 16 inches high. So there's room for a 10.2- cubic-foot luggage compartment over it. (And there's still a 6.5-cubic-foot trunk up front.) The Fastback has self-adjust- ing disc brakes on the front wheels. A tinted rear window to keep the inside cool. Two front bucket seats that adjust to 49 positions (with room for three peo- ple in back) . 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