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Show Barbed Wirc, Guns Guard UJS. Envoy The Salt Lake Tribane, Sunday, May 24, 1964 Tight Security a Facet of Lodges Job over a weekly meeting of the I HE ALSO MAKES trips into week, into the guerrilla-infeste- d the coast to Hue, Danang and By Roy Essoyan ' I U-once side about missions southern delta a beads here. of and (the area country up along other points. Associated Press Writer SAIGON, VIET NAM, May 23 U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge lives and works behind barbed wire and travels to and from work surrounded by tight security. t HE MAKES no secret of his dislike far the security measures but has, nevertheless, taken to carrying a gun on occasion. The ambassador, a possibility for the 1961 Republican presidential nomination, has come and to accept the facts of hie around possible sudden death him in this steaming city. I S. Streets thrwgh which be sometimes drives sr walks have been racked with increasing freqnency by bomba and greaadea. r be came here nine months ago he frequently sent security men into tailspins by taking off unannounced for long, d strolls through the crowded streets of Saigon or a visit to the zoo. He does Jhat no more. When shirt-sleeve- AuoeUted ' AiMctaM Fim Wlrephete Mm Ia 1937, a long way from top of heap. hea Wlrephols Red Chinas Mao leading world revolntioa advocate, now aims fire at Soviet leader, plan to conquer. Tse-tun- g, Tse-tung- ... Chinas Mao Believes Firmly In His Doctrine of Violence Lodge has taken to carrying a gun with him occasionally in c the last few months, but only y when rumors of violence that An armed guard watches for rebel fire as helicopter carries constantly sweep this Jittery UJS. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge to visit American warship city reach what he considers . potentially dangerous LODGE USUALLY goes to and successfu massacres became common on Maos work and travels home in shirtboth the red and the white struggle against the Kuominand tie Kuomintang ride. What com- tang further served to convince sleeves. He dons a coat office but passion he may have retained him that there was no substi- in his tute for violence; he came to considers a coat an unnecessary must surely have been Thirty-eigMay 23 years ago, Mao Tze-tun-g wiped wrote: A revolution is not the away by the execution of his same as inviting people to din- brother and sister and of his ner, or writing an essay, or second wife. painting a picture, or doing A FOLLOWER of Lenin, fancy needlework. own life had been emIT CANNOT, he continued, whose "be anything so refined, so calm bittered by the czarist execuand gentle, so mild, kind, cour- tion of his young brother, Mao teous, restrained and magnani- learned from.the Bolshevik revmous. A revolution is an up- olutionary that any means, from rising, an act of violence where- terror to torture to murder, by one class overthrows an- were justified to achieve other. When Mao wrote this in 1926, at the age of 33, his antagonists were the rich landlords of his native Hunan Province, his friends, the poor peasants whose cause he made his own. ht Greeks React TODAY, ' however. AT 71, having de- feated landlords, capitalists and the Kuomintang of Generalissik mo Chiang in his own land, Mao preaches revolution for the world, advocates bloodletting on an international scale to wipe out capitalism and replace it with communism. His chief adversary in this great and frightening project is not the United States, the bankers and governments of the West, but one of the giants of communism itself Nikita Khrushchev. Kai-she- To Foreign Land Buyers C New York Time Service ATHENS, May 23 Foreign businessmen, investing massively in' Greeces sunshine and blue seas, are buying large tracts of land here for tourist develop- - ment THE GREEK government, fearing these foreign purchases focused on Greece's islands and her 9,400-mil-e long indented coastline may pose long-tereconomic and security problems, is planning to stem the trend. Pressure by organizations and newspapers, asking the government to stop what they call is Greeces massive sell-ou- t however, believe that it solved all questions. t When the writer first interviewed Mao in the cave city of Yenan 19 years ago, he was struck by his easy air of authority, the respect which even older men accorded him. DRESSED carelessly in worn, patched cottons, his tennis shoes tied loosely on his feet, Mao was a mixture of Chinese courteousness and informality, of peasant humor and seriousness. He spoke softly but with surgical precision, looking straight into the eyes. IN THOSE days, Mao was a man of many facets: devoted father in love with his pretty, young wife; political leader engrossed in party discussions; military strategist mapping campaigns against the Kuomintang, and witty host who could reply, when asked by his American guest why the fare was so lavish: We are communist, but we also are Chinese and like good food. Besides, nothing is too good for' a guest. Outwardly, Mao gave no hint of the storms and hatreds which boiled inside of him. He rarely lost his temper in public. in Saigons formality baking heat I frea Wtrepho a lifejacket, also has mad trips to areas outside Saigon where soldiers are fighting.' off Viet. Nam. Lodge, who wear Great Guns-Yo-ure bert, have got together about 600 pieces from countries aH over the world. " THE GUNS AND other items come from Britain, France, Belgium, Germany, United States, India, Turkey, Spain, Yugoslavia, Russia and Italy. Long guns used in the battles of the American West are there for the cus-- . tomers to see. Theyre six-felong, and, , commented Warren: You needed to be men in those days to handle a rifle like that Matchlock . . . flintlock . . Warren talks about his guns as a mother talks about her children. , " ld ms OLDEST GUN dates back to the Albert Junior, a skilled craftsman, , is capable of overhauling every gun father and son buy at sales. Hes a member of the Muzzle Loading Society of Great Britain. And hes fired here, said nearly every gun weve ' ""got his father. ? But the pubs not just got guns. It 16th Century. ot two-stor- tree-shade- d THE SOVIET premier dispbelief that utes Maos long-hel- d the only sure road to communism is ova the bodies of the men and women who oppose it In the nuclear age, Khrushchev argues that communism must won through peaceful means, En-la- i. THE SIDEWALK in front of As chairman of the Comusing violence sparingly, not as mounting. the inain weapon. undisthe he the munist is American embassay is party, THE MASSIVE purchases of No. 1 man of China. In blocked by wooden barricades, By now, all the world knows land puted by foreign nationals is worthat . Mao stands for violence apparent robust health, forced teh entrance is flanked by Vietrying those entrusted with as and revolution. many men of his age are to namese and barbed wire Greece national security. be careful of his diet, he lives and tire police is guarded by lobby Tears ago be hid down the A Greek newspaper made pub- in an ancient yellow-tile- d build- U-Marines. celebrated dictum that po- lic a secret report submitted by in Pekings forbidden city. litical power grows out of the public security minister to ing Lodge does not seem to nothe barrel of a gun. the prime minister two years HIS CHIEF preoccupation is tice the paraphernalia of prothe hazards in- blocking out the tactics and tection around him as he strides In 1937 he said, Revolutions ago, stressing " volved. strategy of what he regards as into the embassy every mornf and revolutionary wars are inhis greatest battle the struggle ing and afternoon. evitable in a class society THE SECURITY report urged to overthrow Khrushchev and and in their absence the people the government to He b known to consider the proclaim all his doctrine of peaceful coexistcannot win political power. a necessary eviL precautions Greek islands and coast as pro- ence. hibited zones for real estate Endowed with the enduring And he carries the gun in A year later he added: Politics b bloodless war while transaction, just as present laws patience of the Chinese peasant. times of tension because, an aide war is the politics of blood- forbkUforeigners to own proper- Mad is convinced that in time said, he feds a gun in the hands ty along, the frontier areas of he will win this fight as he did of an intended victim can, with shed. Greece aS well as the Islands that against another obdurate luck, throw an attacker on the All this Is published doctrine of Corfu and the Dodecanese. foe Chiang defensive and divert his aim. for all to see. More obscure, GUNS, bodyguards and barbed however, are the personal reasons which impel Mao an inwire are not toe only things tellectual of considerable per(hat make Lodges job (Efferent sonal charm, a poet, classical Iran that of American ambassadors in other posts. scholar and historian to rest such a deep and terrible faifh His main job is not observing in the most destructive of man's and reporting, as it b with most qualities. SAIGON, VIET NAM, May of 4M pounds of rice for each ambassadors. He administers a South Vietnamese of Sooth Viet Nams 15 mil- giant UJS, military and ecoTHE ANSWERS can only be 23 (UPI) nomic assistance program in fanners their spring lion people. begin guessed at Psychologists may South Viet Nam a program plowing this month, at the find some clues in his Vietnamese fanners could produearly costing more than 1 million childhood. When be was 10, his start of the annual monsoon ce-even more rice if they dollars a day. teacher often beat him severely season. even , by present wanted to, Confu-ciafor failing to learn the n They have kept this counla addition fa exeenting admethods. classics. ministration policy. Lodge, aa try well fed throughout the The rich delta region can toe top American her b Psychologists may find more civil war. signposts in his unhappy home to help fonrabte B. grow two crops a year with life. A severe father frequently Despite constant fighting in simple irrigation, but most farmthe counnchest of the lost his temper and threshed part reports helped ers prefer to grow a single crop His the Mekong Delta-Sout- h try him. when the paddies are naturally harden UK. policy against the Viet Nam still produces an an- flooded during the monsoon sea- dictatorial regime of President WHILE STILL a boy, the nual rice surplus for export Ngo Kinh Diem, who was overson. young Mao had his first taste of Last year was particularly thrown and slain in a coup violence when, during a famine good, with exports of 320,000 AMERICAN agricultural ex- detat last November. in Changsha, the government tons. perts here also believe that ITS A BIG, active, interestNOBODY KNOWS exactly how the rice crop could be boosted dealt with an uprising by executing the ringleaders and plac- much rice this country produces, by 25 per cent in only four or ing and challenging job, Lodge It places demands on ing their heads' on spikes. but educated guesses put it at five years if- enough fertilizer says. This incident he said everything you have. abouf five million tons a year. were put into the soO. , made a profound and lasting Processing turns this into a About 50,000 tons of fertilizer Lodge frequently calls on Maj. impression on him. bran, rice flour and three mil- are being provided by the United Gen. Nguyen Khanh, the new Prime Minister of Later, as a communist, the lion tons of polished rice which States this year in addition to rust which had begun to cor- is the Vietnamese staff of life. that which normally is imported South Viet Nam, and other top rode Maos soul deepened as Vietnamese. Ha also presides. That- - means aa average on a commercial basis. ;4 Covered With em at This Pul) Ry John Farrow Associated Press Writer ' . - Fanatics, Lodge feds, are the LONDON, May 23 Step up for a drink main danger he faces in his at The Cricketers and youre right in the daily rounds about Saigon. firing fine. You eai protect yourself ANTIQUE GUNS DRIP from the ceilagainst fanatics, aa aide said ing. They pack the walls. Turn around recently.and pistols, long guns, blunderbusses, If a man is fanatic enough lances, spears, daggers and bayonets to kill and be killed theres pre- face you. landlord cious little you can do about Albert Warren, it Lodge himself practically of the pub In the London subnever speaks on the record for urb of Croydon, reckons his little hostelry is unique. publication. CA. security men here have I doubt H theres one to match our display anywhere in the wo rid, done what little they eaa about he said. protecting the ambassador from taaatkw. And so do the people who Cock to the The six-fowalls of Lodges little inn It holds 100 at the most from y miles around. residence, a pleasant airy Try to get In the door cokmial home built 50 on a Saturday night or Sunday and years ago, are topped by barbed youll be lucky. wire. The house is on a quiet, Warren and his son, Al street that is partly blocked at both ends by more barbed wire. POLICE GUARD the gates of his residence and both ends of the block. Lodges slim, hand-san- e wBe, Emily, has added a protective touch of her own, an octagonal Chinese good luck symbol nailed over the front . door. , MAO RULES over China toLodge drives to work with an day like some nebulous red armed Vietnamese bodyguard in Buddha, floating above the po- the seat in front of him. Neither y life the car nor Its windows are bullet-litical cares of which he entrusts to President proof fort security aides have Liu Shao-ch- i and Premier Chou ordered bullet-proglass. jri k No Theyre Not Loaded long By John Roderick Associated Press Writer TOKYO, So far he baa net been attacked. His two predecessors were targets of terrorists, has bayonets tracing the weapons lution over the last 300 years. - evo- - Warren has a sword stick that looks like an ordinary walking cane. But its ; a stick with deadly power. Its a gua V though nobody would ever know. Just .think, mused Albert Senior, the damage you could do with a stick ' gun like that ' You could walk up to somebody, shoot em, then, look around and ask: Who did it? , ' THEN ALBERT toned out his latest decorative' Turk acquisition pair lsh pistols thaf once belonged to a noble; man. Theyre about 200 years old. But that wasnt the end of it alL Albert could have continued pulling antiques out from all over the place even down to one of the original boomerangs and an Irish shillelagh. Oh, by the way, you can still get a drink at The Cricketers. Its a friendly pub despite the artillery. ''in wave-lengt- of hs color excitement! day-to-da- of S. GLENWOOD STRIPED RUGS machine washable;' .21x36 Inches 1.99 later, t X 30x54 Inches 2.99 4.99 598 1 Blended colon! Accented colors! Exciting colon! Be daring; vitalize , and dramatize jhe icheme of any room in your house?. You'll love it. 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