The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November I, 1979-Page3 Communists to march in Greensboro today GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)-Nearly, 1,000 police and National Guardsmen moved into this normally placid city yesterday in advance of a funeral procession for five persons slain at an anti-Ku Klux Klan rally. Communist demonstrators, planning to parade their dead comrades through the streets today, said they would be armed despite police demands that they keep their guns at home. "WE WILL guarantee the security and armed defense of the march. . . if we are attacked we will respond," said Nelson Johnson, a member of the Communist Workers Party, organizers of the procession and the earlier demonstration that turned violent. Col. Kenneth Newbold, commander of the 500 National Guardsmen, mostly from the furniture town of Hickory, said his troops would carry unloaded rifles but officers would distribute am- munition if he gave the order. Police expect at least 2,000 persons for the 2.5-mile march which will start in downtown Greensboro at 1 p.m. A police spokesman said yesterday his department had received no reports of any planned attempts to disrupt the march. POSTERS DISTRIBUTED by march organizers urged sympathizers to "turn the country upside down to beat back the new wave of KKK, Nazi, and FBI at- tacks." Five members of the leftist group-four white men and a black woman-djed after gunmen opened fire on a crowd at a "Death to the Klan" rally Nov. 3. Fourteen white men, many claiming to be Klansmen or Nazis, were arrested after the shooting and police said they were looking for at least one other suspect. In Greensboro, as in other Southern cities, the "whites only" signs have long since disappeared and residents take pride in the racial progress that has been made here since the civil rights sit ins and demonstrations of the 1960s. And now they say it is leftist radicals and right-wingers-and not their neighbors-who are responsible for the violence and bloodshed that has given the city unwanted notoriety. "THIS ISN'T like Greensboro-these people just happened to get together here," one man said. "Personally, I think both sides are crazy." The people in Greensboro say the disturbance did not arise from any racial unrest in the city, which claims a reputation for progress in racial af- fairs. The city began taking down its "whites only" signs in 1956. The first sit-ins of the 1960s occurred here and helped lead to peaceful integration. A racial disturbance in 1969 left one high school student dead and several policemen injured, but since then the textile manufacturing city has been quiet. Unlike other North Carolina cities, such as neighboring Winston Salem, until the rally there had been no visible Klan activity in recent months. NEED A SECOND CHANCE? If you want to continue your education, no matter what your age, study money can be yours. Interested? Ask the financial aid admin- istrator at the school you plan to attend, or write to Box 84, Washington, D.C. 20044 for a free booklet. APPLYYOURSELF-TODAY. Education after high school can be the key to a better life. s' I s United States Office of Education Daily Photo by TOM MIRGA iA TRIO Or ANTI-KLAN protesters braved temperatures in the low-thirties -,yesterday to attend a rally at Detroit's Kennedy Square protesting the kill- -ing of five compatriots in Greensboro, N.C. last weekend. Rally organizers !jfaimed a victory Friday after persuading Detroit Mayor Coleman Young ?,,not to arrest the demonstrators. Anti-Ku Klux Klan protes non-violent demon'Sstratio (Continued from Page .1) the city last year," Rhinesmith said. viglence," Ann Arbor Spartacus Youth "He's not worried about getting rid of Lgague (SYL) member Irene the Klan." Rjnjnesmith said, "He was worried "WHEN WE went to talk to Young's abopt seeing a mass mobilization of mouthpiece (spokesman James wo.ers.in his city." The SYL member Graham) yesterday," group organizer 1a4. said to her understanding the Frank Hicks told the crowd, "he said utice Department played an influen- we who oppose the Klan have no more tial' role in getting Young to change his rights than the KKK killers, that we'd minad about allowing the protest to oc- be treated the same and would both be cur. arrested. Well, we said if he treated us "He made sure the Nazis got protec- like that, he'd really catch hell. tion when they opened a bookstore in "It was the auto workers, who forced ters n in stage Detroit >sEf . SUNDAY FIm MS Cinema II-Strombori, 7 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. yCinema II-The Decameron, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hlall. Mediatrics-Bride of Frankenstein, 7, 9 p.m., Assembly Hall, Mich. Union. Cinema Guild-Foolish Wives, 7, 9:15p.m., Old Arch. Aud. PERFORMANCES, Musical Society-Dresden State Symphony, 8:30 p.m.. Hill Aud. PTP-"Broadway," Houseman's Acting Company, 2 p.m.,.Power Cen- ter. UAC-'Robin Goodfellow," Theatre Production, 2 p.m., Kuenzel Room, Mich. Union. U Club-"Brunch on the Terrace," featuring Nancy Waring, flute, and Rochelle Martinez-Mouilleseau, harp, 11:15 a.m, to 1:30 p.m., first floor, Mich. Union. Ark-Clannad, Irish instrumental group, 1p.m., 1421 Hill. MEETINGS ' Hiking Club-I:30 p.m., meet at Rackham N.W. entry on E. Huron. Law School-Midwest Regional Conference on Women and the Law, Hutchins Hall, Law School, 763-4158. MISCELLANEOUS Concerned Citizens for Cambodia-rally at Kennedy Square in Detroit, bus leaving from Michigan Union, 1 p.m.. Recreational Sports-Family Sunday Funday: Folkdance:Workshop, NCRB,,2:300.m. Art Museum-Gallery talk, Cydna Mercer, Edgar Degas' Sculpture "Little Dancer of Fourteen Years," 3 p.m., University of Michigan Art ,Museum. Hillel-Lox and bagel brunch, 11,a.m.; Israeli dancing, 1p.m.; Deli, 6:30 p.m. ; International Jewish Students Deli, 6:30 p.m.; 1429 Hill. AAPEX-Ann Arbor Stamp Club Exhibition, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Ann Ar- bor Armory, 223 East Ann. MONDAY FILMS Cinema Guild-Yesterday, Today: The Netsili Eskimo, 8 p.m., Old Ar- :h. Aud. PERFORMANCES School of Music-Collegium Musicum Concert/Demonstration, 8 p.m., ,Stearns. MEETI NGS Michigan Journal of Economics- 4:30 pm., third floor, Econ. Bldg. SPEAKERS Center for Near East and North African Studies-Ben Hoffiz, "The Land a the Pharoahs as Seen by an American Student: A Slide Show," noon, ;ommons, Lane Hall. Resource .Policy and Management Program-Greg Daneke, "The ;overty of Energy Planning"; Jean Shorette' "What Belongs on the Coast? Visual Simulation in Resource Policy"; noon, 2032 Dana. Anatomy-Dr. David McClay, Duke University, "'n the Mechanisms of 'Cell Recognition," 12:10 p.m., 5732 Med:.Sci. I. Humanities-Victoria Winkler, "Metaphor in the Rhetorical Tradition: -'heEvolution of a Theory," 3:10 p.m., 1047 E. Eng. Mech. Eng. and App. Mech.-Dr. Viggo Tvergaard, Technical Univ. of Denmark, "On the Burst Strength and Necking Behaviour of Rotating >Disks," 4 p.m., 229W. Eng. Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies -Prof Nemai Sadham :Bose, Jadavpur. Univ., Calcutta, "Racial Discrimination and Indian ;Nationalism;" 4 p.m., 200 Lane Hall. Macromolecular Res. Center-Prof. U.S. Nandi, Bangalore, India, "Metal Complexes as Anti-Tumor Drugs," 4p 1m,3005 Chem Judaic Stud./Near East Stud.-Yitzhak Ben Nir, "Contemporary Tren- tids in Israeli Literature and Cinema," 4 p.m., 3050 Frieze. Young to back down," the organizer continued. "We've got the power to shut this town down, but we need leaders who aren't afraid to do away with the bosses' racist system once and for all." "The people in power want us to play dead, roll over and ignore the Klan," speaker Charles DuBois said. "Let me tell you, the Klan's been around for over one hundred years, and the only way of getting rid of these guys is massive mobilization." BOTH DUBOIS and Hicks are-mem- 'bers of UAW Local 600, which represen- ts the entire Ford Motor Co. Rouge Plant. 'The members organized a petition drive last month demanding that two white foremen who wore KKK- type robes in the plant be fired for their actions. In two days, DuBois, Hicks, and others gathered-over 1;000 signatures; and deposited them with UAW officials. *gbe. foremen were later transferred to Ford's Wixom and Wayne assembly plants. "Detroit is going down the tubes," DuBois said. "Chrysler is going under and they're going to put you out on the street. Well, the next time they come around to lay us off, I say we sit down and let the workers take the plant." JANE MARGOLIS, a Com- munications Workers of America (CWA) Local 9410 executive board member who came to the rally from San Francisco, explained the relation- ship between the Klan, labor, and politics in an interview after her speech to the crowd. "Workers and blacks cannot rely on the Democratic Party for protection," * she said, "We have to have mass labor and black mobilization to smash the KKK. Due to the shape of the economy, the big corporations are pitting white and black workers against each other. Added to that, the unions no longer work for economic security and jobs for aill. A strong worker's movement is what's needed to combat that." Margolis, who said she was dragged off the stage at this year's CWA conven- tion for making anti-Carter statements, claimed the government "is trying to characterize us as extremists" and equate the group with the KKK. "BUT ONCE labor and blacks unite with fierce determination," she said, "the murderous Ku Klux Klan's days are over," "I've covered a lot of stories and a lot of strikes," Worker's Vanguard repor- ter Mark Laughton told the crowd, "but I had never seen anything like the Greensboro massacre. Laughton covered last week's shooting for the Vanguard, a Spartacus League publication, last week. The reporter said he spoke to eyewit- nesses of the killings and their version of the events that led up to the shootings differed from those reported by the police and the national media. "THE PRESS said the demonstrators provoked the KKK, that they got what they deserved," he said. "But the car doors flew open, the Klan flew out, got their guns, pistols and lead pipes and methodically killed the demonstrators. There's a word for what happened that day; cold-blooded murder." BLUE JAZZ NOTE y ,} y I I Back to Blue Note's Great lOAlbum Feature Series of Unreleased Jazz. Classics