Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 6, 1970 Pag TN TEMIHGN AL ,1 FOSTER RESENTMENT: Army post hires, Vienms ao r. :"r : rrdr a s . . . a s s . . a a s . . . . . . . . . . . . " " " " " " i DAILY OFFICIAL' BULLETIN, Long Binh Army Post, S. Vi-1 etnam (DNS) - At six-thirty in the morning, in front of the labor -gates of the largest U.S. Army installation in S. Viet- nam, thousands of Vietnamese workers queue up to enter the post for the new work day. The chattering of men and women of all ages is all but drowned out by the raucous noise of Lam- bretta "buses" and military ve- hicles bringing the laborers from the Saigon suburbs. It is one of the, lesser-known facts of the Vietnamese war that the U.S. Army hires tens of thousands of war refugees, dis- abled veterans, and other Viet- namese civilians to do the heavy labor and menial chores on the military installations. On Long Binh Post, thenum- her of Vietnamese nationals em- ployed i equivalent to almost three-folths of the number of U.S. military men garrisoned there. The Vietnamese dig dit- ches, wash uniforms, wait on tables in the mess halls and clubs, operate telephone switch- boards, empty garbage pails, ex- terminate roaches, and sell ca- merls and stereo equipment in the post exchanges.' By Vietnamese standards, they are well compensated for their labor. A mess hall wait- ress earns eight- thousand pias- ters a month, almost twice that earned by an unmarried private in the Vietnamese army. For her pay, the waitress must ,,work from six a.m. until 7:30 p.m. six days a week. At the market rate this monthly salary is worth above $20.00. Though the Vietnamese labor- ers are paid more working for the Ainericans, the U.S. Army is getting a real bargain. The Ar- my h'ires maids to sweep rooms, make beds, polish jungle boots, and wash and neatly press jun- gle fatique uniforms for each GI daily. For this service, the GI contributes about $12 a month. The -GI encounters Vietna- mese laborers and white-collar workers everywhere. He is cus- omarily awakened in the morn- ing by his "mama-san" as she comes to collect the day's laun- dry. He goes to breakfast, where. food prepared with the aid o Vietnamese KP's is served by Vietnamese on the chow line. If he is an officer, he gets table service by attractively - clad young women. At work, if he has an office job, he will be aided by Vietna- mese clerks, typists, stenogra- phers, and telephone operators. If he is involved in maintenance, or construction, he will super- vise gangs of Vietnamese work- ers who are brought in on a daily-hire basis, or he, will re- quest assistance from one of the civilian contractors, who hire their own Vietnamese labor. Most of the Vietnamese work- ers, including ditch-diggers and garbage "meiy" are women, for the simple reason that most young Vietnamese men j are fighting either for the Saigon government or for the NLF. They range in age from adoles- cents to elderly grandmothers, and few escape heavy labor. Vietnamese men who work on the p6st are usually too old to fight or they are disabled veter- ans who have been discharged from the Army. However, their disability must not 'be severe pnough to prevent them from performing ordinary tasks. The U.S. Army has no rehabilitation program; for .handicapped Viet- namese workers. The daily contact between the GI's and- the, Vietnamese work- ers:fosters some mutual under- standing between the two groups. Indeed, some friendships and even marriages develop be- tween Vietnamese and GI's..But generally, ,a great deal of re- sentment develops between the Americans and their Vietnamese employees. The reasons are many: Viet- namese usually seek jobs on the Army base only out of economic necessity. They consider the Americans foreigners on their soil, and this aggravates the ten- sions which normally'develop in an employee-employer ;relation- ship. f The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A. Bldg., before- 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2. p.m. Friday for Saturday \and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. student-organiza- tion notices are 'not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Day Calendar Cinema Guild: Weekend directed by Jean-Luc 'Godard: Architect, Aud. 7' and 9:05 p.m. P~lacement Servie General Division Ann Arbor area jobs listed, nationwide on file at*32Q0 SAB. } Marketing Manpower' Development, sales reps. for highly respected pro- duct - srvice., direct sales exper., pre- fer systems sales. National Assessment of Educ. Pro- gress, admiln.- asst. for analysis dept., prefer degree, 1-2 yrs. programming exper. State of Mich,, civil service, dead- ORGANIZATION NOTI CES Free University Steering Committee Meeting, 'first" one - if you're inter- ested, you're invited. 2nd fI. Michigan Union (UAC Offices) Sunday, Sept. 6, 7:00. The Ageless Science of Yoga. In- struction in the yoga exercises as taught by qualifteq instructors. Spon- sored by the Selt-Realization Fellow- ship. Call Linda after 6:00 p.m. at 761-9825. Search Committee for a Women's Or- ganization Advocate in the Office of Student Organizations forming Sun- day 1:00, 3rd floor SAB. All interested are welcome., * * * * Christian Science Organization fall picnic, Sunday, Sept. 6th.' Meet in front of SAB at 4:00 p.m. TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL NEJAC TV RENTALS '662-5671 line for filing Sept. 21. Mortgage serv. Change and Sociocom are in: leads, analyst 12, 4 yrs exper. in acct.; finance, directories, and organizations working or loans. Economic analyst 10-14, bach- toward non-standard type jobs in soc. elor's deg. plus 2-5 yrs. exper. Level sci., health, housing, manpower, educ., requires MA. etc. Southfield, asst. traffic engr., degree Opportunities Overseas booklet' of in C.E. or cert. as Engr.-in-Training; AID announces Int'l. Dev. Intern exper. desir4ble. Progs. Further info.and booklets at career "Mich. Educ. Assoc. student programs planing, 3200 SAB, call 764-6338. intern, part-ti meto travel in S.E. New Issues of Vocations for Social Mich. --) DRUG HELP 24 HR. CRISIS PHONE-761 HELP BUMMERS, DRUG INFO:, REFERRALS 24 HR. WALK-IN HELP AT NEW LOCATION-900 LINCOLN Da ly Ctassifieds Get Results Phone 764-0558 Advetisng Career? k,.;" , The University of Michigan 'onl offers classroom exposure to advertising offers you EXPERIENCE in sellig and servicing local advertisers, layout, design and copy wrtng and promotins. Stop by 420 Manr t. M*"r-F-r - --"4:i.;, '-4.M.,ands .your career & LA] LABOR DAY SALE-Sunday & Monday; ANGEL SALE Continues Thru Sat., Sept. 12 UD 4 AY EVERY RECORD JN OR HUGE All $6.98 List All $5.98 List All $19 35PE $ A PER LP PER LP U 4 I I Sunday * Monday 4n We've moved ! 'I 1 COALLSTATE Nw- j~.. 1 Ioz- M64M6 V.,.-. ( O SB-3610-Klemperer Conduct Wagner. Philharmonia Orches tra. (2 discs) Q SDL-3633-Mussorgsky: Bor Godounov. Christoff, Paris Con servatoire Orchestra; Cluytens (4 discs) QSB-3634 - Mahler: Symphon No. 2 ("Resurrection"). Sch warzkopf, Philharmonia Orches tra and Chorus; Klenperer. ( discs) Q SBL-3643 - Puccini: La Bo heme. 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