The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students of the University of Michigan Saturday, May 24, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 Fair 'Trade Law otae r~liI f 0 .W out ale A BILL PASSED by the State House Tuesday to repeal the Michigan Fair Trade law, now goes to the Senate for approval. The legislation, designed to relieve the Michigan retail goods consumers of the burden of artificially high prices woigld, if aoproved by the Senate and Gov. Milli- ken, remove the Resale Price Act of 1937 from the books. Originally an extension of anti-trust legislation, fair trade laws were designed to act as a hedge against the ruination of small local businesses by cost-efficient na- tional chain stores. Once in effect, however, the legislation proved to be more of a boon for manufacturers and a bother for con- sumers than a safeguard for small businesses. STATISTICAL SURVEYS show that the survival rate of independent businesses in non-fair trade law states doesn't vary sisnificantly from that in states where fair laws are in effect. Yet in states like Michigan, retail goods purchased on contract from the manufacturers will often wear a price tag up to 61 per cent higher than the identical item sold in a state with no fair trade law. Admittedly. large stores stand to reap greater bene- fits than small retailers from a repeal of the law, but only to a maroinsl extent. The largest impact of a re- peal would be felt by manufacturers, now allowed to virtually name their price under "fair trade", and con- sumers presentlv are held captive by the contrived and noncomnetitiv orice system under the 1937 law. We encourage swift passage of the fair trade repeal bill by the State Senate and subsequent approval by Cov. Milli- ken. Spring Tens News Staff JEFF SORENSEN Editor PAUL HASKINS Editorial Director An eyewitness account The Khmer Rouge Revolution By RICHARD BOYLE AS THE LAST American news- man to leave Cambodia on May 8, I witnessed the battle of Phnom Penh, interviewed hundreds of persons at the French embassy and traveled by road through Khmer Rouge territory on the last convoy out. Stories of a bloodbath, as re- ported by other news agencies, can not be verified, and there is every indication that many of the accounts are outright lies. , For example, AP reported that French women were raped and had broken bottles put in their vaginas. I spent almost two weeks in the intensive care section of the makeshift French hospital in the embassy dining room and spoke with French doctors and nurses. None of us ever saw any of the "rape" victims. This reporter and several French and other westerners informed AP in Bangkok that their reports were false. AP and UPI reporters then check- ed with Doctor Bernard Pi- quart, whom AP in Paris quot- ed as the source for the blood- bath story. He told reporters the story was "absolutely false." AN ABC REPORTER here, somewhat embarrassed about the story, said "you were right," and he could not un- derstand why AP put out the story without checking the source first. From what I saw, the Khmer Rouge were extremely lenient. For example, many "Sunday hunters," French mercenaries who enjoyed sniping at Khmer Rouge troops for pleasure, as well as some Americans with CIA and Defense Intelligence what the Cambodian. staff re- ported to me: that the Khmer Rouge troops told Phnom Penh government soldiers that they were "brothers" and that they did not want to kill them. There were eye witness accounts by Cambodian AP staffers of Khmer Rouge and Phnom Penh troops embracing on the bat- tlefield, yet when I filed this it was censored by AP. After that story was killed, AP re- ported that the Khmer. Rouge burnt down refugee huts two days before the fall of Phnom Penh, yet the Cambodian AP staffers who visited the front all day could not confirm the report. I saw the first Khmer Rouge troops to enter Phnom Penh from the north, and witnessed a fierce firefight outside the sand- bagged French embassy. The Khmer Rouge front line troops, who numbered only two hundred crack commandos, were wel- comed as liberators by students and civilians in Phnom Penh. I photographed Phnom Penh citi- zens cheering and welcoming the first Khmer Rouge troops. WITHOUT THE MASSIVE support of the citizens of Phnom Penh, who threw up hundreds of white flags and took over ar- mored cars from the Lon Nol army, the 200 Khmer Rouge commandos could never have taken Phnom Penh with so few casualties. I witnessed cycle drivers being warned by Khmer Rouge troops, shouting from sniper positions, to turn back, ,as the Khmer Rouge prepared to mount their last offensive on April 17. They avoided firing at civilians, aiming only at Lon Nol army troops holding out. Yet, there were reports by "Stories of a bloodbath, as reported by other news agencies, can not be verified, and there is every indication that many of the accounts are outright lies." "The Khmer Rouge treated me and other journalists with re- spect, although t h e y suspected that many newsmen were intelli- gence agents." return after they spent some time in the country growing rice to feed the people. Many mer- chants were obviously upset with having their shops seized and being forced to go out into the country and grow rice, but the Khmer Rouge said they had to take these drastic steps to save the country. In the past, the city of Phnom Penh which had swollen to almost two mil- lion from 600,000 because of the massive bombing of free-fire zones by the Lon Nol army, had faced near starvation. Only the airlift of rice by Americans had prevented full-scale starvation. So the Khmer Rouge decided to put people in Phnom Penh to work in the fields to avoid star- vation. C O N D I T I O N S AT THE French embassy, crammed with 1000 refugees of various na- tionalities, were very bad. There were no toilets working and the stench and swarms of flies made life miserable for us, but th Khmer Rouge tried to help. After a week they brought wa- ter and food to us, and on the convoy, they supplied potent rice wine as well as chopped up pork and other meat. The French demanded that the Khmer Rouge allow them to fly a plane in to evacuate the refugees, but the rebels nev- er trusted the French, and de- cided to organize their own con- voy to gt the refugees out. Al- though the trip was physically exhausting, much of it in open trucks through jungle trails, the Khmer Rouge tried to make the journey as easy as possi- ble. We were even billeted on the first night of the convoy at the former Lon Nol governor's house in Kompong Chhanng. The Khmer Rouge troops were friendly to us, waving as we passed, and we were never threatened. Although many of the American journalists be- came panicky, fearing they would be executed along the way, the Khmer Rouge took steps to see that we were safe and comfortable as possible. As soon as they could, they pro- vided fairly comfortable buses for the last part of the jour- ney, and even issued cigarets as a daily ration. Since I don't smoke, I gave away my rations to Khmer Rouge troops, who appreciated filter tip cigarets, being used to smoking only hand-packed tobacco rolled in leaves. AFTER TAKING A drag from a cigaret I offered, a Khmer Rouge soldier, who com- manded a combat platoon at the town of Pursat, seemed sur- prised to learn that I was an American, a citizen of the na tion he had been fighting. "You will now see what you B-52s have done," he told me. "Tell the American people nev- er to bring them back." Richard Boyle is a veteran war correspondent and th last American reporter to leave Cambodia after the Khmer Rouge victory. DAvE BLOMQUIST NOB 5MEACHUM .. JEFF RISTINE TIM SCHtCK.. DAVID WHITING . BILL TURQtUE . BETH NISSEN ....., 505 ADES.. GLEN ALLERHAND DAN BLUGERMAN ., ELAINE FLETCHER GEORGE LOBSENZ CATHY REUTTER Night Eitor Night Editor Night Edito Night Editor Editorial Page Ass't. .Ass't. maths Editor . Ass't. Night Editor Asa't. Night Editor . Ass't. Night Editor Ass't. inse Editoe As't. Sighs Editor .I . e ° ee rs e AM I - Agency connections took re- fuge in the French embassy. The Khmer Rouge, who had ag- ents inside the compound, knew their 'names and reported on their radio that known war criminals" were hiding inside the embassy. Yet they allowed them all to leave the country in safety because they wanted to avoid an international incident. One American, Douglas Sap- per, a former Green Beret, publicly boasted to me and oth- ers that he was planning to take a Swedish sub machine gun, given to him by Associat- ed Press correspondent Matt Franjola on the day the Ameri- cans left Phnom Penh, and raise the American flag at the U. S. embassy, killing as many "commies as I can." Yet Sap- per was one of the first Amer- icans to seek refuge in the em- bassy, and managed to get out on the first convoy in a truck with Sydney Schanberg of the New York Times and seven Soviet citizens. The Khmer Rouge, who knew of Sapper's threats from an Agence France Presse dispatch, let him out, as well as some journalists who ru- mored to be working for Ameri- can intelligence agencies. Sap- per is now working for Associat- ed Press. THERE HAVE BEEN other distortions in the coverage from Cambodia. Associated Press asked me to take over their bu- reau, pay Cambodian staff members and file for them as well as PNS after the hasty American departure. I reported AP and other agencies of mass executions, rape and pillaging by Khmer Rouge troops. From what I saw, the Khmer Rouge tried to avoid the slaughter of innocent civilians on the last day of the war. The Khmer Rouge treated me, and other journalists, with respect, although they suspect- ed that many newsmen were intelligence agents. I was al- lowed to photograph them free- ly and they never made any at- tempt to take my film or cam- eras although the French au- thorities did seize film belong- ing the AP CBS and other ag- encies. WHEN WE WERE running out of water, and the drippings of water from the embassy air conditioners were not sufficient, the Khmer Rouge allowed me and other journalists outside the compound to get water from an open pump near a deserted bus station. Yet the French ordered us not to go outside or fraternize with the Khmer Rouge. On on occasion two Khmer Rouge troops visited us at the journalists' compound, chatting for several hours. A French security official came up and told them to get out, although we wanted them to stay. During the traumatic days that followed their victory, I saw the Khmer Rouge force all inhabitants of Phnom Penh to leave the city, and empty all shops of their supplies. Khmer Rouge troops explained to me that they would be allowed to