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Show - t!..:L. Someone's giving away our "seaets"for free. . , ..., r - ,, .; p5 .. I . k C.Patl: , 0 i. . ' ''''':-1;,,;,- t 4t,..- CI . , 4!ill -- . ) 4 f ,. . . t r1 t ol 'So 111 , 6,1 0,-- 6 . ,l'i . ';,- - . 0 el va .,,...: & clARK (C4- - CCATS We do more for you. Cg ed LEAFLET 4:sitero c n ,l'illi.:,:i . ..... . -- IN A ', o,i 4 , 4. :! - '1 , N ' ' ,, '''''--. ", 4 a - ,,..,,, :, it.- -- ;.,,,,,e, 4., . ,... r.--,- , oc:A4,Z7 tird 400 rl i .. A i - ki) amsuilIMI I .! t FRO , : .: - ihs- A escape from Saigon and long ordeal on crowded ship and in camp. in after 4,... ,.e 4.' V niques you can trylike narrow seams and programmed stitching. Or how to maintain a straight topstitching line. Pick up your free copy available at Coats & Clark retailers only. And while you're at itbuy the Dual Duty Plus thread you need, in any color under the rainbow. Qiifid Duty Plue the carefree thread for carefree sewing. r 4 - Pham Ductu and family in San Lorenzo, Cal., where a church took them - fine-tailor- e7e . :,,.0 . Which thread for the soft fabric look? Or for the look? Or for quilted fabrics? Or for machine embroidery? It's all in this free Coats & Clark booklet "Secrets for Successful Sewing!' Along with sewing ideas and tech- - ci: . i 1 101; 1 'Secrets for Successful Sewing': co . ",, , 1, ,,' Your Coats &Clark retailer has your free copy of cr, , ! A ....Li - ', - ,,. .., ' 't . I Arnie - ,,,y.4,1 a 11 0 -- -: - - I1 , C0 14I i'I all . P"-'-------P- - 1A,.0..'''I' 1 If o a fI , ill , -- A 441 . . . k;. 0 1. , , ....0., - Allot ',kik . 13 ,,,.... ,..-- .., --- .,....40, : , . ,B ' ':-- vo . . .. ,...... , .' ''')"',91,t, - : .ma..),,04. --- - ,.- - ' .. , , ,i, .,. t'Z''' .4 sito ,,,14.., ''.., ....... (111P1 . .41.....7". )r ,c.f..xot.!., , 0 Om) Now" : .. . ..4 - '.....13t ,,,,,,12,-,- I. .... ' . . 1,,,,,--- , It 0,;, ,,, ,f.t or..,?;,7,';-,-f--;'::',.- ..;. -- C1411 to:, 4. " ,, .,,,,,,,,--,- ,,,,-;1- - .. . t;',".,4 -- . ..,.;.,, , ,:,,, r,,,. - , .4 , - tr,i71,.......; I-- 1 BOAT FIORE CONTVUED Si's life in Vietnam was relatively easy compared to that of Vietnamese who held ranking military or civil service posts under the old Saigon regime. Nguyen Quoc Hung, 42, a former army captain and accountant now in San Lorenzo, was imprisoned in a camp north of Saigon. months pvpn He lived in a cell with many other prisoners with only three feet of space per man and two meager meals a day. Twice a week he was subjected to political harangues, and five days a week the prisoners held group "discussions" to recant past mistakes and sing the praises of the new regime. After his release, Hung was restricted for a year to a 300-foarea beyond his home. His wife supported the family with a low-levcivil service job, and they used up their life savings and "sold almost everything we had" to buy food. In the past year, the government stepped up pressure on him to "volunteer" to emigrate to the "new economic areas"jungle regions where many have been forced to eke out a subsistence living. Hung's children faced a grim future. -They do not allow the children of former civil servants and officers to go to school beyond the ninth grade," says Hung, whose eldest son is 14 "At 16, he has an obligation to do hard labor for one to three years At 18, he must do military duty " job-hunti- Hung also became suspicous of friends and never invited them home for fear they'd discover the shortwave radio he used to listen to BBC and Voice of America broadcasts. Nightly, he heard news of boat escapes. After two ab,)rtive attempts, he and his teenage son finally made it out in October in one boat, but his wife and two youngest sons missed a second boat. He arrived in the U.S. in January. Counts himself lucky Despite his longing for his family, Hung counts himself lucky to be here. "Many people die on the way to freedom," he says with tears in his eyes. His face brightens as he begins to talk about his new life in San Lorenzo, where he shares an apartment with his who younger brother and sister-in-lacame in 1975. There was the excitement of his son's first day at school along with the impending birth of his brother's first child and the possibility of finding work as an accountant. "If I can't get a job as an accountant," he says, "maybe I'll learn to be a mechanicI was always skillful at fixing my car." The boat people and other fleeing Indochinese, like millions of immigrants before them, are simply looking for a safe home where they can prove themselves. Mui, the fisherman's wife in San Diego, says imploringly, "If we find any job, we'll do it, whether it's sweeping the floors, washing dishes or washing carsanything is all right. "The U.S. is the freedom country," she says. "I will die here." w |