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...havoc created by the electronic "pilot fish" that, as the North Vietnamese know by now, often precede the B-52s: EB-66 Destroyers and EA-6B Intruders, whose bulges, pods and blisters house those gadgets designed to confuse ground radar, as well as needle-nosed F-105 "wild weasels," whose special radiation-seeking missiles lock onto and streak toward active enemy radar installations. Then, after the pilot fish, came the sharks: 17 B-52s. The B-52s dropped their 30-ton bomb loads into the darkness over Haiphong from 30,000 feet. The explosions destroyed a petroleum tank farm near...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: The Harrowing War in the Air | 5/1/1972 | See Source »

High scores: Steiner (BJ) - 9, Dake and Landry (C). 9 ea...

Author: By John L. Powers, | Title: Crimson Hoopsters Race to 23-2 Win After Loss of Bok Changes Momentum | 3/6/1972 | See Source »

...Buon Drai Si, near Route 14 north of Banmethuot, 3,200 Montagnards relocated in May 1970 were promised by the District Chief that they would be able to farm all the land west of the Ea De River. But Vietnamese immediately began farming the land. At Buon Nie Ea Sah, where 2800 people were relocated in December 1969 and January 1970, farmers from the nearby Vietnamese village of Halan have continued to push west of the relocation sites to occupy the land promised to the Montagnards...

Author: By Ron Moreau and D. GARETH Porter, S | Title: Saigon: Moving the People Out | 3/26/1971 | See Source »

People in Buon Nie Ea Sah say that the Province Chief met with the village Chiefs of Halan and Nie Ea Sah last September and promised the Montagnards all the land on their side of Route 14, but the Vietnamese refused to leave the land, and nothing has been heard from the Province Chief since then...

Author: By Ron Moreau and D. GARETH Porter, S | Title: Saigon: Moving the People Out | 3/26/1971 | See Source »

...land squeeze is forcing relocated Montagnards to choose between cultivating parcels of land too small to support them, trying to walk long distances to find more land, or looking for employment elsewhere. At Buon Nie Ea Sar, a local resident said that the people have an average of one-half to one hectare per family, and that most families were not getting enough to eat. At Buon Kli B, Montagnard farmers report having to walk as far as ten kilometers to find land...

Author: By Ron Moreau and D. GARETH Porter, S | Title: Saigon: Moving the People Out | 3/26/1971 | See Source »

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