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The Two Worlds of Quemoy
Eighty thousand Nation
alist army troops carry
out m ''• tor y excrc ' ses jE&jM Kll | 4
V an d stand guard in un JUL
,¥ dbA derground fortifications I H «'* ‘
to withstand Communist
»’ l jO* rockets and ground-to-
F®* ’ 7 JJr ground missi Ie s. Reds
V fire at Quemoy on alter-
Hilf a nate days. SSB
cL i
B| BLffijEgk J »
r T 1 Lying less than two
Although the citizens of mi | es from the Com .
Quemoy live within eye- munis t Chinese coast,
sight of the Communist 57 900 civilians live un-
Chmese mainland, they j er the muzzles of Red
devote themselves to » artillery on Quemoy,
peaceful pursuits like N a tiona list China's
fishing and farming. wf largest offshore island.
Fish catches have in- JU; BU $ < While a military world
creased from 772 tons J % ; KI exists underground, life
in 1958 to 3,000 tons
last year. Corn yields PW v- ’ ’ ' J ; I peaceful pursuits. New
were up to 2,500 tons J we || s an d irrigation
last year from 105 tons , \ projects have caused an
just ten years ago. . HKJCXWW- .« \ agricultural boom.
N. Viet Doctor
Defects To South
By HELEN GIBSON
SAIGON (UPD—The North
Vietnamese doctor, who had
spent a year with his regiment
i fighting the allies near Saigon
: before he defected, spoke softly
but bitterly about the state of
1 his country.
“Many things came up in my
j mind to make me come to the
j South Vietnamese government,”
he said. ‘‘l thought about my
family’s standard of living
1 compared to what it used to be; I
! that the people work so hard
but have almost no enjoyment;
that we are given ownership
papers to everything, but in fact
we own nothing.”
Dr. Le Cong Hung, dressed in
I civilian clothes, simply walked
' away from the Dong Ngai
. : nt one evening a few
months ago when it was
fighting the allies on the
| outskirts of Saigon.
He hid in a printer's shop.
. until 5:30 the next morning. !
“I found an ARVN (South
, Vietnamese) lieutenant and said
II come from Hanoi and want to
, turn mysel in and they
wouldn’t believe me,” said the
doctor. “Then finally they took
me to headquarters. I talked to
the major. I was encouraged.
He didn't look like the sort of j
rascal I had expected the
j ARVN officers to be.”
The 38-year-old doctor with
if/
,/s
““"'J®
RED FOLEY DIES- Red Foley
(above), 58, famed country
and western singer, was
found dead in a motel room
In Fort Wayne, Ind., where
he was appearing with the
Grand Ol’ Opry. He appar
ently died of natural causes.
His daughter is married to
singer Pat Boone. Foley was
the singer of the first gospel
song to sell 1 million copies
—"Peace in the Valley.”
ROCKET DELAYED
TANEGASHIMA. Japan
(UPD—Bad weathsr and fisher
men who lingered near the
launching pad Wednesday
forced the Japan space agency
to put off testing a dummy
space rocket.
QUADRUPLETS BORN
STOCKHOLM (UPD—Female
quadruplets were born Wednes
day to Mr. and Mrs. Jan
Samuelsson In Stockholm. The
girls weighed between 32 and 39
ounces and there was no report
on their condition. The mother
[ was reported doing fine.
the mobile, intelligent face
leaned forward and thumped
the table in front if him and
said:
Disillusioned with Communism
“I did not understand commu
nism any more, you see. I
didn’t want to follow blindly
what the party told me, to
follow the ridiculous slogans.
When the party tells us to go,
we go. They say fight, we
fight.”
Hung's wife and two children
are still in the north. He left
them 18 months ago when he
was suddenly told by the army
that he would be going south—
within the next six hours, for an
indefinite period of time. After
pleading, he managed to get
four days off in which to see his
family, scattered in all parts of
the country.
His wife had to work in a dye
factory, and the children were
sent to live with a grandmother,
because neither parent liked
having the children brought up
by the government-run factory
nursery.
Hung looked tired and sad
when he spoke of the country he
had left behind.
A worker cannot leave a
factory, a farmer cannot leave
his land, he said, without
permission. Even shifting from
one factory to another to do the
same job needed a permit.
Travel Difficult
A visit to one’s family in
another province required a
batch of papers and there was
serious trouble for everyone, if
a stranger walked into a village
and was not reported.
“I have a niece who wants to
go to the University of Hanoi,”
he said. “The city corporation
says it is her duty to work there
as a secretary. So she is a
secretary.”
In the cities only 20 per cent
of the students can go on to
higher education, and only 15
per cent in the rural areas, it
was learned from another
defector.
But Hung said many intellec
tuals in Noirth Vietnam felt the
sama bitterness as he did—
writers who can only write
along approved lines, painters
whose art is shaped by the
party.
“People still think, though,”
said Hung. “They are not
robots. They know that Asian
communism has been mortified
by Mao, and It Is not suitable
for today any more.”
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Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1968 Griffin Daily News
RAY CROMLEY
I*?
Student Activists Copies
Os Parents, Study Finds
By RAY CROMLEY
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHTMGTON (NEA)
Work by a ministerial research student at the University of
Chicago suggests that there may not be a Generation Gap
after all.
The student activists he studied don’t seem to be rebelling
against their parents’ views. They seem to be copying them.
In Rev. Lamar Thomas’ study, in fact, they seem more
closely and rigidly associated with their parents’ views than
do average nonactivist students.
A main factor contributing to student activism, according
to Thomas, is dedication by the student’s parents to political
causes—open or closed occupancy, civil rights, poverty.
The liberal students Thomas studied all turned out to have
liberal parents. The conservatives all had conservative par
ents. He found no instance in his sample in which a student
had changed from liberal to conservative or conservative to
liberal.
Eighty per cent of the students said they preferred the
same party as their parents. Nineteen per cent were inde
pendents. Only one had shifted to another political party.
Except for the activist students whose views “were just
about identical with those of their parents,” the conservative
students tended to be a little less conservative than their par
ents and the liberals a little less liberal than their fathers and
mothers.
There seems, in this sampling, a greater tendency for chil
dren of liberal parents to become activists. This activism
meets with approval from their parents. In fact, the liberal
parents in general said they would like to see their youngsters
even more active than they are, even if it took some time
from study.
Thomas said that previous studies had shown that most ac
tivist students came from homes where parents had some
college education.
This reporter has no way of knowing whether the Thomas
study is valid. It was based on a very limited sample. But it
does raise some very interesting questions.
Are then the student riots, demonstrations and marches by
and large backed by most of the parents of the rioters, dem
onstrators and marchers? Are students doing what most of
their parents would like to do themselves? This is a sobering
thought.
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