I Thursday, May 24, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page N i ne LOC NINH The VC capital. of S. Vietnam By NEAL ULEVICH Associated Press Photographer LOC NINH, Vietnam - The town nestles amid rubber trees just one hour's helicopter ride from Saigon. its streets are mud- dy like any other South Vietnam- ese town in the monsoon season. Barefooted children wave and point at the foreigners pasingtsy. But here the similarities with the rest of the country end. Loc Ninh is in effect the Viet Cong capital of South Vietnam. The flags painted on doors have the yellow star against a background of red and blue. THE SOLDIERS guarding t h e old French airstrip that ends at a now-empty plantation swim- ming pool wear pith helmets and baggy green uniofrms and care- lessly carry Communist-made AK47s rifles as they amble along. The vehicles are made in China, the ambulances are Russian, and the motorcycles - a fix- ture now in Vietnamese rural life - are high-powered models driv- en across the nearby border from Cambodia. But in comparison with the rest of South Vietnam, the cars are few, and bicycles and foot seem the chief means of transport. Loc Ninh fell into Communist hands in the 1972 offensive. Sai- gon forces were routed from the area overnight and never re- gained a foothold in the town they had held steadily up to that time. Now the nearest Saigon troops are about 10 miles away. THREE WESTERN newsmen, the first to enter the forbidden town since it fell to the Com- munists, were invited by the Viet Cong to watch an investigation by the International Commission of Control and Supervision into alleged raids on the area along the Cambodian border by United States and South Vietnamese air- craft. The peacekeepers flew in two helicopters to Loc Ninh yester- day morning. A waving Viet Cong flag sig- naled where to land. About 20 men, all in uniform, stepped out from grass huts under the ruber trees and invited the delegation to sip tea in one of the shelters,. A MVOTORCADE of Chinea- made vehicles brought the invest- igating team to a wooden villa at one time owned by the director of the Loc Ninh plantation. A por- trait of Ho Chi Minh smiled down on the district chairman of the Viet Cong, Pham Tran Thang, in an upstairs meeting room. Thang politely refused the re- quest of the senior Canadian de- legate, Col. James Morrow of Montreal, to allow South Viet- namese liaison officers to ac- company the peacekeepers on- their mission. The motorcade then rolled nine miles north to the ruins of the village of Hoa Lu, past several Saigon armored personnel car- riers destroyed last year in the offensive and now stripped of their engines. Young men in floppy hats were cutting old rub- ber trees and dragging them to the roadside to feed a sawmill. A SINGLE wrecked truck, ho- ed by shrapnel and rusted, lad at the roadside. The Viet Cong produced a man they said was the driver who told the delegation a jet strafed and destroyed his vehicle in mid May. He could net identify the type of aircraft ur nationality. The Viet Cong then showed some alleged bomb craters, and escorted the group to a village where witnesses claimed jet straf- ing vibration had broken three table glasses. One woman, vs- ibly upset, said the jets h a d strafed and destroyed her thatch hut. In each instance, Viet Conyg officials pressed the delegation for on-the-spot judgments. They asked, "Doesn't this prove ag- gression?" The delegation v a s noncommital. On the way back to Bien Hta the helicopters flew low over a checkerboard of rubber tree and paddyfields. The peasani:s work- ing in the fields didn't ok t up. Progress cited in six-day peace talks fly The Associated Press assistant secretary of state,v Henry Kissinger said yesterday submiting agreed proposals in Paris he and Hanoi's Le Duc Thieu in Saigon and hinted t Tho have made "significant pro- neither the United States n gress" in six days of talks to Hanoi would allow possible obj make the iVetnam peace agree- tions from Thieu to prevent c ment work better. clusion of the new agreement liefore departure for Wash- the next session. ington to report to President Nix- Sullivan flew to Saigon Tu on, Kisinger told newsmen he day night after attending I and Tho will meet again on June singer-Tho meetings for a to 6 to complete their new accord of more than 30 hours and seve designed to stop cease-fire vio- meetings at expert level, incl lations. ing a 12-hour session Sunday. Kissinger conferred with' KISSINGER'S chief aide in the for almost seven hours Wedn cease-fire talks, William Sullivan, day, making a total of more tl was in Saigon to report to Presi- 31 hours of intensive talks a dent Nguyen Van Thieu on the the North Vietnamese lea Paris sessions. so,, i-1 to hat for jjec- on- at nes- Kis- otal ral ud- deh Eder N11c iay 1. DETAILS of the proposals the two men worke dout were not disclosed. A display of cordiality on both sides marked all sessions of the latest round of talks between the two peace negotiators. Kissinger read from a prepared statement when talking with newsmen at Orly airport "to make sure that I keep to what we have agreed." HE SAID the purpose of t h e talks was "to bring about a strict implementation of the Paris agreement." "The meetings were conducted in a constructive and positive manner," he added. "Significant progress was, made." Kissinger said he and T o intend to conclude their discus- sions during the meetings start- ing June 6. nIs siner3 Kissinger, smiling and visibly relaxed, read a prepared state- ment which he said he had clear- ed in advance with Tho. "He will confirm what I am saying," Kisinger declared. HE SAID Sullivan, a deputy PITH-HELMETED Viet Cong officers discuss, with members of the International Commission of Control, their allegations that American jets are strafing Communist-held areas of Vietnam. JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. SALE Vanity Fair "Pechglo" Briefs May 21st through June 2nd IWO A limited time to save on three comfortable styles of luxuriously soft rayon nylon briefs, in white. Brief, also in pink, sizes 4 7 Reg. 1.75 each now 3 pr. 4.50 Bikini, also in pink, sizes 4 7 Rey. 1.50 each now 3 pr. $4 Trunk, sizes 6 7. Reg. 2.50 each now 3 pr. 6.35 Trunk, sizes 8 9. 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