Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Friday, August 17, 1973 Tennessee town battles rock fest BENTON, Tenn. P9 - This obscure east Tennessee town, snuggled deep in the -Bible belt, wants a rack festival about as much as it does hoof and mouth disease for its cattle. In these parts, where religious fundamentalism, country music and moonshine run as thick as Southern sorghum molasses, mere mention of the words "rock festival" spurs apprehension and aggravation. NORTHERN ROCK concert promoters came to this placid Great Smoky Mountains farming region about two weeks ago and announced plans for a Labor Day weekend music festival. They are predicting a crowd of more than 100,1100. Benton's population is about 800. Part of the townspeople's op- position stems from the late- July "Summer Jam" rock festi- val at Watkins Glen, N.Y., where 600,000 music fans caused that small town's worst traffic snarl ever. AROUND BENTON'S town square, everybody is talking about the festival and few are boosting it. A survey of t h e town's merchants and street peo- ple turned up no one willing to speak openly in favor of the fes- tival, young or old. But there isone man promin- ently in favor of the affair _- Polk County Judge Dennis White, who leased 500 acres of his cat- tle farm to festival promoters. "Give 'em hell, judge," whis- pered an old-timer into White's ear as they stood outside t h e courthouse. "If I owned land, I'd do whatever I wanted to with it. Half the people hollering at - - ---------- . ..... .. .... . ... ... . ....... you are the same ones who would do it themselves if they had a chance." LAST WEEK, a cross was erect- ed outside the judge's farm- house and set afire. W h it e insists he put the cross there, but offers no explanation for its being set ablaze. Local leaders have. been com- pletely beaten back in their at- tempts to stop the festival so far. But Wedneslay they gained a strong ally: Gov. Winfield Dunn, who said his administration is go- ing to do "whatever we can to discourage" the festival. "We going to use all the facil- ities of state government at our Pentagon S. Viets WASHINGTON (P)'- The Pen- tagon says its has advised the Saigon government that it will not replace any U.S.-supplied mil- itary equipment used by the South Vietnamese in support of Cambodia or Laos. But Deputy Defense Secretary William Clements said there is no provision barring South Vietnam- ese troops from using American supplies in clearing communist- held sanctuaries in Cambodia which pose a threat to Vietnam. CLEMENTS MADE the written statements in reply to questions raised by Sen. Harold Hughes (D- Iowa) during Armed Services Committee hearings last week. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan.,Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before t p.n. of the day preceding publication and by 2 pam. Friday foe Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are net accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-927# Friday, August 17 DAY CALENDAR Music School: Cinarosa's opera, "The Secret Marriage," Mendelssohn Thea- tee, 8 pm, Music School: Jerome Butera, organ, M Aud., pm. disposal to make all these people comply with the state law," he said. "I'M OPPOSED to it. I don't think there is any sense in our condoning the things that hap- pen at such festivals, the ex- change of drugs and all that sort of thing." The governor's remark came a few hours after a health officislt said festival promoters must sub- mit a detailed report to t h e state Health Department by to- day on how they will meet strinh- ent health regulations. Dist. Atty. Richarl Fisher planned to petition circuit court for an injunction to stop the fes- hazy on support of military operations tival. He said its promoters could be violating camping and sewage control statutes. "WE HAVE a deep religious heritage and we have a way of life here," said Jasper Woody, Benton's mayor, a Baptist preach- er and newspaper owner. Of the festival, he said: 'We detest it." Judge White, a bushy-haired, nustachioed man who halds a master's degree inyagranomy, looks at it differently. "Instead of condemning these pe tple as four-legged, longhaired creatures, we need to try and save them," the judge said. 1% lw- 0 Hughes asked the question Aug. 9, six days before the last U.S. combat activity in Indochina was to end under a compromise be- tween Congress and President Nixon. Clements' written answer, made public Thursday, was dated Aug. 14, one day before the cut- off. There have been reports that with the end of the bombing in Cambodia, Saigon was planning to send thousands of ethnic Cam- bodian troops from its own forc- es to help defend the Phnom Penh regime. To move them would require the use of trans- portation given to South Viet- nam by the United States IN HIS LETTER to Hughes and to Sen. Stuart Symington (D- Mo.) acting chairman of the Arm- ed Services committee, Clements recalled that in approving the 1973 military spending b ill1 , Congress had included a proviso barring use of military aid to South Vietnam- "To support Vietnamese or oth- er free world forces in actions designed to provide military sup- port and assistance to the gov- ernment of Cambodia or Laos..." The ban, sponsored by Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark.) was first aproved in 1971 and carried for- ward to cover appropriations for the current 1973 fiscal year. CLEMENTS SAID the United States has given no aid designed to assist South Vietnamese forc- es in military support of Cam- bodia or Laos. He said Saigon has been ad- vised that any supplies or equip- ment used for such support would not be replaced. Further, he said, "we regard ourselves as constrained f r o m taking any initiative to request the government of Vietnam to un- dertake such an operation." EVEN IF SOUTH Vietnam used planes and tanks provided by the United States before 1971, t h a t equipment could not be replac- ed in support of Cambodia or Laos, Clements said. But if South Vietnam is direct- ly threatened from communist- held border sanctuaries in Cam- bodia, it is a different story, Clements indicated. While he did not say so, the same interpretation presumably would apply to Laos sancuaries used by communist forces to at- tack South Vietnam. BUT SINCE most areas on both sides of the long border are ef- fectively under communist forc- es control already, it could prove difficult to determine where a threat might have originated. Nowhere in his statement did Clements attempt to explain hose the determination would be made, or by whom, as to whether the use of certain U.S.-supplied equipment by the South Vietnam- ese had violated the laws pro- viso. SZ leae The last day of publication for Sumuer Daily is FRIDAY, 24 AUGUST 1973 |||( MiRtgan resumes publication on FRIDAY, 7 SEPTEMBER 1973 Display and classified advertising deadlines will be: * Noon, Thursday, Sept. 6 for classified and 3 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 5 for display. University Towers Apartments offers Eight month leases with no rent increase * Free weekly housekeeping * Study room * Piano room * Heated Pool * Complete Laundry Facilities " Recreation room * Located 2 blocks from the Diag 1973 FALL APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED 761-2680 I 536 S. ftrest 53 S F ,.I 61-28