Page Ten THE SUMMER DAILY Friday, June 1, 1973 French Foreign Legion: Romantic image fades By MORT ROSENBLUM Associated Press Writer PAPEETE, Tahiti - T h e Beau Geste generation wouldn't believe it the French Foreign Legion in hammocks and sar- ongs, building roads in the South Seas without a camel in sight. The legion just isn't the same old last resort for romantics and misfits spoiling for a fight. Here, the main task is helping build fa- cilities to test the nuclear wea- pons to put their style of battle out of fashion. THE TAHITI contingent, offic- ers here say, is one of the six remaining legion regiments. On- ly a unit in French Somaliland POTTER'S 0 GUILD = J une 3 9 A.M.-3 P.M. 201 Hill Street Ann Arbor and another farther down the east coast of Africa in Mada- gascar are based outside - of France. And camels went out years agog "Yes, there are men who miss a good scrap," said Lt. Col. Hen- ri Riou, a 26-year veteran and the top legion officer here. "To- day we are motorized, modern- ized. There is no more folklore." IN TAHITI and in neighboring Polynesian islands, about 600 le- gionnaires work with 300 regular army men in a mixed construc- tion unit. Their 5th Regiment standard, strung with ribbons from Indochina in 1880 and lat- er North Africa skirmishes, hangs in the office of their com- mander - a career army engin- eer. The legion left Indochina al- most twa, decades ago, and in- dependence in North Africa end- ed France's role there. "We don't want war again, but if it's necessary, we'll be in the first row . . ." said Riou, second in command. "If someone said tomorrow we're going back to In- dochina, even as tourists, every man. would volunteer." HE SHRUGGED a G a l l i c -shrug and added: "But if there's no war, we've got other things to do." The old movies don' t show it, but the le- gion's mission has always been to build as well as fight. The le- gion cut roads all over France's now dwindling empire. Legionnaires in Polynesia, be- sides building bomb test installa- tions, have put up an enormous sports stadium in Papette along with other public works projects. THE MIXED unit here erects and guards facilities used in the French nuclear tests on remote islands of Polynesia. They oper- ate on at least 10 different is- lands. When they first arrived a dec- ade ago, some Polynesians de- cided to keep the legionnaires away from their women. That was the last fighting the legion did here, and it didn't last long. Now most men spend their lei- sure hours under the palms fish- ing, swimming and reminiscing about chasing guerrillas across deserts. Their favorite bartender downtown is still trying to find a way to fight in Vietnam. AS ALWAYS since the legion was formed in 1831, only the of- ficers can be Frenchmen. Le- gionnaires here have dozens of nationalities and background and, Riau says, the changed role around- the world hasn't hurt re- cruitment. Some of the men ease right in- to relaxed island life, and dozens have retired early to settle down here with their girlfriends and wives. Tahitian families consid- er legionnaires good catches since they build a good house and " NEAR NORMAL Snw . r " AOW WA - AROVE .*. "r. *r " " NEAR * NORMAL $FO - MCH BOV r - "-Mc BV .,"- ABOVE rNEant, rom NATIO)VA WEAT RSERWICE NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP presents MARLON BRANDO IN Also JANE FONDA, ROBERT REDFORD, E.G. MARSHALL and JAMES FOX Directed by ARTHUR PENN (Little Big Man, The Miracle Worker) Produced by SAM SPIEGEL (Bridge Over the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia) TON ITE MODERN LANGUAGES BLDG.-AUD. 4 7:15 & 9:30 P.M. $1.25 Also "PRIME CUT" with the Academy Award winners Gene Hackman (French Connection) & Lee Marvin. Aud. 3, 8:a0 &0 9:30. Double Feature $2.00 pay the bills.QU E ' "Men like to come here, but QUEEN'S COURIER: this isn't the most sought-after post," said Riou. "Most want to g go to Djibouti Som aliland. TheretSsai f thXgo nU'tw p s satisfy the legionnaire's two pus- li e x h u t n sions - fighting and construct- By GREGORY JENSEN ing."LONDON (UPI) - Wing Commander H. R. Allen dipped a toe into RIOU, with obvious nostalgia the world -of James Bond and found it wholly exhausting. playing over his severe features, Allen was anything but a spy. But he protected more state secrets or me, I remember most than Ian Fleming's hero ever knew, and a pretty tiring business it was. Indochina. It wasn't just the war it was the discovery of the EVERY COUNTRY has diplomatic couriers, but England's royal Orient, contact with the people, messenger corps goes back almost a thousand years. Its members seeing how they believe in their simply deliver diplomatic correspondence safely, despite the other way. Every soldier who has side's James Bonds. been to Indochina is marked by Allen says the glamorous touches of a fictional spy's career hap- it. pen only rarely in reality. Every precaution is taken to avoid them. "Also, leaving Algeria, almost the father of the legion, meant ON TRAINS in Communist countries, for instance, Queen's Mes- so much to us . . .'sengers munch sandwiches or cook on portable stoves in their oam- COL. ALFRED BALTZEN- partments rather than risk poison or dope in the dining car. In China JER, the army man who com- they always travel in pairs. mands the mixed regiment, says Even so, Allen says, there can be incidents like the one in Sofia, he finds the legion admirably Bulgaria. There "a rare beauty" in "an ankle-length evening dress suited to its new role here.x, of shining satin with a slit in the side of her skirt runningup to the ceptional' is very,tvery import- level of her navel" did her persuasive best to seduce Allen. He con- ant." sidered the possible hidden cameras and declined. The dangers a messenger faces come more from risky flying than from foreign agents licensed to kill. But even without thrills the job NEXT WEEK sounds like a dream for luxury-loving adventurers. FREE INSTRUCTIONS OUTSIDE EUROPE the 50-odd Queen's Messengers - mostly re- P BILLIARDS tired military officers-always fly first class. They are chauffered to POCKET and from every plane, "always the first aboard and the last to leave," US.- P plied wit champagne, caviar, fine hotels, VIP treatment. But often a messenger's journey is one slogging grind. Allen gives M~ic nUnion details of one 23-day trip from London to Peking and Ulan Bator, Mon- ICIg9Of golia, and back; with "precious little rest" en route. He tells of hair-raising landings at Katmandu, everything going wrong, trips to remote Africa, the unglamorous side of a ride on the Orient Express. ; 'a , s , } t : W ':"1 e' 1 '. ..h ?., zi -VALUABLE COUPON- on every large or extra large pizza with one item or more Friday, Saturday, Sunday-June 1-3, 1973 with this coupon LIBERTY at DIVISION Open 11:30 acm. daily FREE DELIVERY 769w8030. ._ y' yq ''. A 'f' . } M 4 Y3. S : .:y. __YY. BUT THE REAL BACK-BREAKER, Allen says, is travel itself, "hardly bearable even in first-class seats." He was a Queen's Messenger for 18 months. He took a year to recover. DEMO SALE on quality Name-Brand Components Up to 20-35% Off SALE LIMITED 2 WEEKS Superex headphones JVC Akair Shure Altec Maxwell Cerrvin Vega Pickering Concod KLH Dynaco Sony Garrard Ultalinear Hitachi Warfdale Yamaha to 336be . STATE 336 S. STAT E 7 .v . f- n. ... r r" . r r r s w r r w r r t w. r ...r v r r d,