I page three 4IP tx~~I F~ &liy NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Sunday, April 5, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three i rFFf LII / ~.1~ 4 CINMABUILD SAT. & SUN.-April 4 & 5 Aexan der Nevsky Dir. SERGEI EISENSTEIN (1938) Operatic and mythic monument to the Rus- sian people and their historic heroes. Award- ed the Order of Lenin in 1939 with Nikolai Cherkassov. Music by Prokiev. 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75c AUDITORIUM March to back Viet war held WASHINGTON () - Thous- ands of' demonstrators, carrying placards, Bibles, and flags, march- ed down Pennsylvania Avenue yesterday in a "March for Vic- tory" in a response to last fall's anti-war demonstrations. A park police official estimated the crowd at 40,000 midway in the march, but Washington Police Chief Jerry Wilson later put the figure at 10,000 to 15,000. Rev. Carl McIntire, who led' the march, claimed 50,000 took part.' The attendance fell short of the 100,000 some organizers had pre- dicted and the some 250,000 who marched here last Nov. 15 to pro- test American involvement in Vietnam. Waving banners and flags and singing hymns and patriotic scngs, the demonstrators gave the air of a religious revival to their march. "We're going to turn it around for God," McIntire, a fundamen- talist radio preacher from New Jersey, declared as he led off the parade. "A people with the intelligence, the skills, the financial resources and the organizational ability to place astronauts on the moon -- not once but repeatedly - is sure- ly capable of achieving military victory over a minor, backward, disorganized, fourth-rate dictat- orship," Rep. John R. Rarick (D- La), told the crowd. As the march neared the rally- irg point at the Washington Mon- ument, songs rose from the ranks, including, hymns and such mar- tial and patriotic airs as "Ameri- ca" and "Battle Hymn of the Re- public." A loudspeaker at the marshalling a r e a blared "Stars and Stripes Forever." One large group carried Confederate flags and sang "Dixie" Park police moved quietly be- tween a knot of peace movement young people wearing flowers and peace insignia, but there was no disturbance. Only a few spectators lined the parade route along the deserted row of federal office buildings. Skies were gray throughout the day and rain began to sprinkle late in the rally. "The war in Vietnam is being fought and will be won or lost right here in Washington, D.C.," Rarick said. "The enemy has known this from the very first day, and he has conducted him- self accordingly." Messages of congratulations were read from Sens. Strom Thur- mond, (R-S.C.), and Barry Gold- water (R-Ariz.). A message also was read from Mayor Henry Loeb of Memphis, Tenn., who said he had proclaimed Saturday "Peace With Victory Day" in Memphis. -Associated Press In tribute to King A striking sanitation worker kneels at the grave of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in honor of the second anniversary of King's death. King was killed two years ago in Memphis, Tenn. while sup- porting a sanitation worker's strike here. The picket sign "I am a man" were first used in the Memphis strike. See The News Today. JUDGE RULES: Reporter. released from jury order to reveal information the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service AMERICAN SOURCES released details yesterday of the Viet Cong takeover of South Vietnamese Fire Base Schroeder, one of the worst setbacks of the Vietnamese army in months. The base, one of the first U.S. Army bases to be handed over to the South Vietnamese army, was invaded by Viet Cong forces last Wednesday, but the extent of the damage was not made known until this weekend. Saigon authorities said 24 soldiers and 12 of the soldiers' de- pendents were killed, and more than 60 persons were wounded. The one American infantry captain left at the base was also killed. Numer- ous trucks and artillery pieces were destroyed. U.S. advisors say they fear the action represents the beginning of attempts by the Viet Cong to undermine trust in the South Viet- namese army. Schroeder was a fire base in the northern Mekong Delta estab- lished by the U.S. Army in 1967. It was handed over to the Vietnamese in August, 1969, when some of the first U.S. troops we're sent home. * * * THE SENATE will vote tomorrow on a proposal to send the nomination of G. Harrold Carswell for the Supreme Court back to the Senate Judiciary Committee. If the recommittal vote fails, the Senate will vote on the con- troversial nomination Wednesday. The outcome of the vote is uncer- tain, though. the Republican leadership maintains it counts enough votes to defeat the recommittal motion. Critics of the nomination say Carswell is a mediocre judge with an anti-civil rights bias. Nixon has responded with an endorsement of the nomination by several federal judges. ABOUT 50,000 CHICAGO AREA TRUCK )RIVERS appeared ready to strike yesterday as a result of a breakoff in negotiations between truck operators and union representatives. The Chicago drivers are asking for a $1.70 an hour pay hike over three years and 12 more a week in pay benefits, while union manage- ment is sticking to its proposed 71-cent-an-hour increase over 39 months. A tentative national truckers agreement reached last Thursday offers a $1.10 increase. A mail vote will determine whether union members accept the proposal. The Chicago talks are separate from the national negotiations, and officials of Chicago unions criticized the settlement. Talks between the Chicago drivers and union management ended abruptly Tuesday after a brief session. Since then both sides have met with federal mediators. A plea Friday by Frank E. Fitssimmons, acting national Teamsters president, asking the Chicago unions not to strike and accept the national settlement had little effect on the truckers. A union official said a decision will probably be made tomorrow on whether the strike is to be called. * * * THE REV. MARTIN LUTHER KING SR. led a silent prayer today at the Atlanta, Ga. grave of his son, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., on the second anniversary of the younger King's as- sassination. Several hundred persons were present at the ceremony, most of them striking sanitation workers, their families and supporters. The strikers were to march downtown after a speech by the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, King's successor as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. No official ceremonies were scheduled in Atlanta, King's birth- place. In Memphis, where King was slain on April 4, 1968, civil rights leaders planned a mass march as "a rededication to the ideals of Dr. King and a commitment to the principles of nonviolence." * * * THE APOLLO 13 ASTRONAUTS rehearsed yesterday for their trip to the moon as the launch team prepared to start the countdown for man's third lunar landing expedition. The countdown starts at 10 p.m. EST today, with a liftoff of the Saturn 5 rocket planned for 2:13 p.m. next Saturday. The second Apollo 13 moon walk, slated to last four to five hours April 16, will be a long field trip in one of the moon's most rugged areas, the highlands of Fra Mauro on the eastern edge of the Ocean of Storms. SAN FRANCISCO (P) - A fed- eral judge has ruled that the gov- ernment must prove "overriding national interests" are at stake before it can require a reporter to disclose "confidential associa- tions" to a grand jury investigat- ing the Black Panthers. In making the ruling Friday, Judge Afonso J. Zirpoli said, however, that a reporter who was subpeoned to appear before the jury, Earl Caldwell of the New York Times, must appear before the grand jury as a "public duty which every person within t h e jurisdiction of the government is bound to perform." Zirpoli said the 21/2-hour hear- ing in U.S. District Court on mo- tions to quash t w o subpoenas served on Caldwell presented "is- sues that go to the very core of the First Amendment." At the beginning of the hearing, government attorneys agreed with Zirpoli's suggestion that they withdraw a subpoena issued in February requiring that Caldwell appear with notes and recordings of interviews with Black Panther le=ders. A later subpoena ordered only that the black reporter ap- pear for questioning. But Zirpoli said Caldwell "need n o t reveal confidential associa- tions that impringe upon the ef- fective exercise of the First Amendment right to gather news for dissemination to the public through the press . . . until such time as a compelling and over- riding national interest which cannot be alternatively served has been established to the satisfac- tion of the court." Judge Zirpoli said Caldwell was entitled to a protective order spelling out his right to .keep si- lent on confidential information., Zirpoli asked attorneys for Cald- well and the Times to draft an order for the judge's approval that carried out the effect of his de- cision. The judge stayed his order peniding appeal to the 9th Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals, pro- vided notice of appeal is filed within 20 days. U.S. Atty. James Browning Jr. said the government has not yet decided whether to appeal to higher courts. That decision would be made by the solicitor general, he said. Attorneys for Caldwell and The Times said they also will study the feasibility of an appeal. In New York, A. M. Rosenthal, Times managing editor, said Caldwell told him by phone that "he feels very happy about the whole thing. He feels the decision is a good one and, I'm sure, so do we." Zirpoli said the subpeonas in. volved "issues of significant mag nitude t h e resolution of which may well be determinative of the scope of the journalist's privilege in sensitive areas of freedom of speech, press and association not heretofore fully explored and de- cided by the Supreme Court of the United States." Zirpoli continued: "When the exercise of the grand jury power of testimonial compulsion, so nec- essary to the effective functioning of the court, may impringe on or repress First Amendment rights of freedom of speech, press and association, such power shall not be exercised until there has been a clear showing of a compelling and overriding national interest." The Associated Press, Newsweek magazine, and t h e Columbia Broadcasting System and five of its newscasters, acting as friends of the court, filed briefs in support of the move to quash the subpoe- nas. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail i ii Graduating Seniors . Graduation - Announcements\ ' ARE ON SALE AT THE Information Desk-L.S.A. Building 111 DOUBLE FEATURE-SUN., MON. AND TUES. Don't make the some mistake again-if you failed to see this film during its record-breakine run last fall. "Total Insanity . . . Provokes Uncontrollable Laughter." -Mich. Daily "Unorthodox and Brilliant" -Newsday "As if Lenny Bruce had written a script for the Marx Bros." -WPAT Mimsey Farmer as Estelle, is a totally amoral person who shoots heroin, cavorts in the nude, lies, steals, makes love to girls, and destroys every man who falls in love with her." -N.Y. Times DO RESEARCH FOR SENATOR PHILIP A. HART k" CONTACT RODNEY N. SMITH Director of Research 555 E. William, 18K Ann Arbor, Michigan (313) 769-7650 r.4 S.W ~ r i a