FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1966 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE. 11- i City Of Contrasts: Saigon Rots out still Has Cultural Identity Editor's Note: The follow ing is an installment of a series on the Vietnam war written by Howard Moffett, former editor of the Y a 1 e Daily News. Moffett is a fulltime correspondent for the Collegiate Press Service and is presently working in Saigon. SAIGON Saigon is a jad ed city. There are no inno cents here, not even little kids. Everything happens in the streets, and a ten-year-old Vietnamese girl is likely to know more about the way adults behave in the dark or under stress than a 20-year-old Ameri can college boy. Layers of dust give busy streets the same dull yellow look as the stucco walls around French villas and office buildings. For lack of private toilet facilities, many urinate or defecate in alleys and streets. A year ago piles of garbage lay rotting on Sai gon's main boulevards, and even now in some places jj t h e trucks can't cart it T away fast enough. On Tu Do (Freedom) Street, once a fashionable office and shopping district, scores of bars now cater to American GI's. The dull, in evitable pump of Nancy Sinatra or the Beatles lasts from three in the afternoon to eleven at night, when military police move through to hustle lingerers home before curfew. Inside, a young air caval ryman down from An Khe tells a sad-looking girl the same war story he told an other girl last night, and wishes he were telling it to the girl back home For her part, the bar girl tells him in broken English about her divided family maybe the same story she told last night, maybe not and wonders if he will take her home. She made more money last week than her father did last year. Prices are higher now though. Outside, teen-age boys peddle pornography and young men with motor scooters and old men with pedicabs offer a ride home, Thousands Gifts for TAI PAN by James Clowell Story of Dirk Sfruan, pirate, opium smuggler, China trader, master manipulator of men. ruthless intriguer, mighty lover... THE PASSOVER PLOT Dr. Hugh J. Schonfield Jesus, Schonfield maintains, sincerely believed himself to bo fho Messiah of Ureal and deliberately plotted his cructfication. MR. FIXER Bernard Molmud Yakov Bak, Tarist Russian Jew, is falsefy arrested for a mur der he did not commit in Kiev during a virulent period of anti-Semitism. In the long suffering that follows his refusal to 'confess,' Yakov is transformed from a little man into a big one. THE PROPHET by Cibron The famous American religious classic that has sold over 1 million copies. NAKED LUNCH by Burrough Surrealistic many-leveled vision of horrors not only of tht destruction of departed men by their drugs, but the destruc tion of oil men by their consume addictions. THE CASTLE by Franz Kafka Based en the greatly expounded text of the most recent and definitive Sermon editions of 'Das Schloss.' MARKINGS by Dag Hammerskjald The manuscript of this book was left behind to be published after his death. A remarkable record of the spiritual lite of the man whose public image is universally known and ad mired. A record thot reveals tht extent of his committment lo the Way ol the Cross. Bertrand Russell Kahlit Grbran E. E. "Doc" Smith Joan-Paul Sartre Philip Wyleo The HEROIC BOOKSTORE invites invest ed to subscribe one (1) year loans to be paid with ten (10) per cent interest. MOST PAPERBACKS FOR 2ND SEMESTER COURSES WILL BE STOCKED AT 10 OFF ANY OTHER PAPERBACK OR CLOTHBOUND TEXT WILL BE ORDERED AT 10 OFF and a "nice young girl cheap." Students dodging the draft buy forged creden tials, and money changers who often turn out to be sleight of hand artists or secret police agents prom ise double the official rate for greenbacks. The refugees and the poor live in their alleys on t h e perimeter of the middle class city. These thorough fares, some of them all of three feet wide, wind in in terminable mazes wherever there is ground to build a house. Despite the weariness, the closeness and the heat, Sai gon's culture has a spon taneity that twenty years of war has not stamped out. Delta hospitality is fam ous throughout Southeast Asia; any guest is given the best in the house. Night life is tinny, but those who frequent the city's clubs give it a pulsing rhythm of its own. Any sol dier lives close to the sur face, and the Vietnamese Infantryman tends to be more fatalistic than most. A terrorist grenade or a drunken officer's pistol shot could end it any time. Pri vate dance parties require a permit, but many young hosts and hostesses take their chances and often wind up with the police as uninvited guests. French influence is s t i 1 1 evident everywhere. Those city boys who have man aged to avoid the darft of ten affect French styles in dress, haircuts, and speech. Well - stocked French bookstores bear testimony to a large class of people who continue to enjoy litera ture for its own sake. At this moment, contoversy rages over whether to per mit the French to maintain their prestigious lycees, and whether or not to sub stitute Vietnames e or English for French as the language of instruction in the universities. The performing arts have been hit hard by the war, but every week or so a con cert or recital is announced, Sets at 15 off (by author) Albert Schweitzer Isaac Asimov Ernest Hemmingway Sir Arthur C. Doyle Paul Tillich and Vietnamese plays draw large audiences. Buddhist activity has waned considerably since Prime Minister Ky's suc cessful crackdown on t h e Struggle Movement in Hue last spring. Still the pago das are filled with saffron clad monks trying to patch up or widen further the rift in the Buddhist Unified Church. Buddhists and Con fucian funerals periodically fill the streets with color. The newspapers are still subject to government cen sorship but political discus sions in restaurants and cafes are often heated and free. Unlike the last days under Diem, students now do not hesitate to criticize the regime, and charges of corruption and-or incompe tence are regularly if quiet ly flung at some of the Di rectory's leading generals. But political discussions, even those involving the new Constituent Assembly, inevitably smack of resigna tion. South Viet Nam is at war against itself, Saigon is under siege and even the most hopeful know that as long as this goes on, and may be longer, the generals will wield effective power. READ NEBRASKAN WANT ADS Mi 432-1465 140 No. 13th St nriu ALAIN ePTIN-ttllFMN Minium ' ft kLvn rJOEY r ROSEMARY Bishop Forsyth A UNIVERSAL PICTURE eW rv off Titles Christmas VALLEY OF THE DOLLS by Jacqueline Susann The nightmare world where sex Is a weapon; where love It the smiling mask of hate and slipping youth and beauty art ever present specters of disasters. IN COLD BLOOD by Truman Capote On tht best seller list for over o year. A true account of the murder and its consequences. COLLECTED POEMS bn Dylan Thomas Contains a collection of poems sellected by the author before his death. THE MAGIC MOUNTAIN by Thomas Mann Tells tht complete story of the consciousness in tht making, a mind wrought to its final shape by creative agents that are those of nature, fate and environment which rule tht world of all. ONE OF OURS by Willa Cather The glowing story of the growth of an American farm bey te manhood. Awarded the 1921 Pulitzer priie. DEATH COMES TO THE ARCHBISHOP by Willa Cather Classic novel set In Mexico. THE BATTLE OF THE LITTLE BIG HORN by Mari Sandoi An account of the battle on which Gen. George Custer staked his lite and lost. ECSTASY AND ME by Heddy Lamar The flesh end blond autobiography of an emoiine woman who has known the heights and depths of lift. We Stock Avant Garde Books; Modern Novels; Science; Political Science; Psychology; Sports; West erns; Art; AAysteries; History; War; Classic Fiction; Music; Sociology; Poetry; Cookbooks; Science Fiction; Literary Criticism; Biograph ies; Religion; Philosophy; Drama; Architec ture; Mathematics; Humor; etc. Cease-Fire Set; U.S. Two major news stones have come out of Vietnam in past weeks. The first important development con cerned a Christmas cease fire. The truce, proposed by the neutralist countries and by Pope Paul, will halt military opeations for two 24-hour periods during Christmas and New Years. A similar truce last year was violated by the Viet Cong, and several Ameri cans were killed in sneak attacks during the supposed "cease fire." Many war observers, in cluding Dr. Peter Cheng, assistant professor of polit ical science, think that be cause of the tenuous Viet Cong line of commun ication, many of the gueril las simply failed to get word of the truce. Cheng added that the VC have agreed to the truce because many of their members are Catholic. Cheng even suggested that many of the Viet Cong fighting men requested the truce, and Hanoi had little choice but to agree. "It's a good idea, but last year a lot of guys were killed in the same kind of truce. This year we'll by ready." Even high-ranking American officers agree that Christmas in Vietnam this year will be a gun-in-one-hand, turkey-in-the-oth-er affair. The second news develop ment is the U.S. bombing in or near Hanoi. United States officials have yet to deliver an official pro nouncement concerning this new turn of American war DOORS OPEN I 12:45 NOW SHOWING TCYAC IJPDftCC ILUW nunVM JV The River J pk TECHNICOLOR F. Scott Fitzgerald William Carlos William Herman Hess Kenneth Patched "the Shadow" policy. Western news papers are depending on Radio Hanoi for details. But the Christmas truce has produced substantiation for a new political analysis of the Vietnam war. The war in Vietnam has produced theories, demon strations, and explosive po litical campaigns. Theodore Sorenson, a former Kennedy advisor refuses to say any thing about how JFK would have handled the war. The New Left claims that the United States has no Goo . e . t A, V T. It V . Mi Tl mill EXTENDS BEST WISHES FOR A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS AND AN EXTREMELY HAPPY NEW YEAR DRIVE 39 BLOCKS SOUTH ON 48TH STREET, LINCOLN, NEBR. VOLUME SALES MIDWEST'S LOWEST PRICES! 9000 DELIVERS 1966 CHEVR0LETS FULL SIZE 4-D00R FIRST PAYMENT IN FEBRUARY . $' '63 MONZA 4-SPEED $387 '62 PONTIAC AIR CONDITIONED $587 j s5M f 1966 DODGES 'j! V I ENGINE AUTOMATIC f ; POWER STEERING POWER BRAKES I',' if VINYL SEATS WHITE TIRES I FIRST PAYMENT IN FEBRUARY ON j $1987 1 1 s2187 business in Vietnam. Many of our "allies", notably France, have refused to en dorse the United States war position. To the Administra tion, the war is a United States attempt to give de mocracy to a country long ruled by dictators, to t h e Right the United States is stemming the Red Tide. The policies of that Allies (the US, Korea, Australia and South Vietnam) has produced virtually hun dreds of interpretations. But recently political analysts J T fcj v I 0 '64 RAMBLER CLASSIC $397 '66 OLDS AIR CONDITIONED WAGON $2487 1 4&&G2k POLARA 4 DOOR ' 500 HARDTOP RASKA'S LOWES Bombs have started wondering about the feelings of t h e Communist bloc toward Vietnam. ' Victor Zorza, an English analyst of the Vietnam war, maintains (in the Dec. 27th issues of Look) that the Communist bloc is almost as divided on Vietnam as the West. Zorzo's thesis is that Hanoi war leaders are di vided into "hawks" and "doves", every bit as much as the West. ("Hawk" is the term applied to a hard- 1 mm&m&BHmm . 9000 DELIVERS 1966 P0NTIAC CATALSNA CONVERTIBLE 4-SPEED - SHARP - VINYL SEATS FIRST PAYMENT IN FEBRUARY $ 2287 '65 FORD 500 SEDAN $1287 '66 DART 4-D00R $1387 9000 DELIVERS 1966 GALAXIES FACTORY AIR CONDITIONED POWER STEERING RADIO if GLASS TINTED FIRST PAYMENT IN Hanoi line, get-tough advocate, "Dove" indicates a softer position spokesman.) Certain members of the Hanoi regime, according to, Zorza beleive that "the Viet namese Communists should give up for the time being their unrealistic attempt to defeat, single-handedly, the whole power and might of the U.S." Hanoi, consequently, is looking to the United States for a softening of the U.S. war postion, Zorza contends. (This article was written before the United States bombings near Han oi.) Zorza thinks that the Christmas truce, and an other cessation of Air Force bombing, would provide the doves with concrete proof for their position. The RAND Corporation, (a "think factory" of bril liant political and economic analysts), corroborated Zor-" za's thesis. They also rec ognize the need, according to Zorza, for a softening of United States policy to sup port the doves. Zorza accuses the United States of refusal to recog nize the Communist schism. Robert J. McCloskey, a State Department spokes man, did in fact, refuse to acknowledge the validity of Zorza's thesis. 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