Tuesday, June 5, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Nine 'Red Menace' worries old Minutemen boss By IARGARET P. RICHARDS NORBORNE, Mo. (UPI) - Robert Bolivar DePugh is a man with a cause-anti - com- munism - that three years in a federal prison have done little to temper. "I think there is more danger from communism now than there used to be," the former head of the right - wing Minute-men or- ganization told an interviewer. that serves as plant and office for Biolab, Inc., his veterinary pharmaceutical concern.. FELLOW townspeople describ- ed DePugh as "a kind of loner," but said they are glad to have him back in town. They said he probably would take no substan- tial part in community affairs because "he never did before." R e s .i d e n t s questioned believed no one but DePugh was "I think there is more danger from com- munism now than there used to be." --Robert Bolivar DePugh former Minuteman leader Face of war A young boy clings to his father at a village near Loc Ninh - the Viet Cong stronghold in South Vietnam. The boy's silver jewelry marks him as a member of a mountain tribe which is racially distinct from the Vietnamese. Western newsmen recently visited the area for the first time. fe It'Sadifficu e in wartime Phnom Penh PHLNOM PENH, Cambodia 6P) - A Swedish diplomat fills his bathtub every night at Phnom Penh's leading hotel to make sure he'll have water for shaving and washing in the morning. An American diplomat's wife uses a flashlight to scan antiques in bathtub every night in Phnom Penh's leading hotel to make sure Cambodian shopgirls giggle. GAS STATIONS are open three days a week on a staggered basis, with each car allowed up to three gallons. The lines around the sta- tions are so long it can take almost a day to get to the front of the line. Phnom Penh's teeming refugee population and its poor are least affected by the periodic lack of water and electricity and chronic gasoline shortages. They can't afford cars, air conditioners, electric lights or running water anyway. It is the middle class and wealthy Cambodians and Westerners who are suffering. Many can't sleep because the night air is just too hot and stagnant without air conditioning. SOME CAN'T wash or cook because the tap is dry. Others nave to walk or take bicycle-powered taxis because their gas tank is empty. There is a thriving black market in gasoline, run by women who wait in line with colored plastic jugs, then sell to wealthy Cam- bodians and Westerners. When air conditioning shuts off, some people have tried moving beds to porches or opening windows, but mosquitos can be worse than the heat indoors. THIS IS wartime Phnom Penh in June 1973. 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THE 0 R G A N I Z A T I 0 N has been without leadership since DePugh and his second in command, Walter Patrick Pey- son, were apprehended July 12, 1961, near Truth or Conse- quences, N. M., where authori- ties seized an arsenal of wea- pons at a house allegedily used by the Minutemen. The two had gone under- ground after nine Minutemen were indicted in Seattle in April, 1968, on charges of conspiring to rob three banks. DePugh never was brought to trial on the charge but was sentenced to four years in 1970 for bond jumping and nine concurrent 10-year terms for federal gun- law violations. DePugh, 50, appeared relax- ed, happy and friendly as he sat behind his desk in an inner room of the green house-like structure ever a Minuteman in Norborne. DePugh worries about the fact that he talks freely with reporters regarding potentially sensitive matters in relation to his status as a parolee. But he talks anyway because "I put principles ahead of the mater- ial values of life." He revealed no plans for con- tact with Minutemen except for a mailing last he intends to use for the sale of a book he has written on prison reform. THE WATERGATE a f f a i r, however, does give him some ideas. He thinks it has opened the way for third-party politics once again in the United States "Sixty days ago I would have said the possibility of a third party that could challenge the Democrats or Republicans was zero. But now, millions of peo- ple must be, turned off by both major parties." DePugh sees poetic justice for some of those involved in Watergate. "JOHN MITCHEll, f o r i e r attorney general, boasted four years ago that he would destroy the Minutemen, so there's a kind of poetic justice in his present predicament." His book on prison reform is an outgrowth of DePugh's years in the Atlanta penitentiary. He said prison reform "isn't my field," but that it would be help- ful for someone "who has been on the inside" to record his views and experiences. 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