Thursday, May 6, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PaeSee Local anti-war rally draws 250 On-eampus activity light as spring term begins By CHRIS PARKS More than 250 Ann Arbor residents braved the cool and rainy weather last night to attend a Family Peace Fair at City Hall. The rally contrasted with the gereral lack of observ- ance of a moratorium day in the city yesterday. This was partly attributed to the absence of local anti-war leaders, who were still attending the demonstrations in Washington. Further, activity on campus was limited and class attendance appeared normal for the first day of the spring half-term. It appeared that many students were already home on summer vacation and that s o m e were in Washington. protests held The, fair, sponsored by the Interfaith Council for Peace, (Continued from Page 1) featured several speakers, a pro- gram of protest music, and sev- consin campus where several of eral booths dispensing anti-war the dormitories were gassed. materials, cookies, peanuts, and At noon yesterday between "balloons for peace." 1500 and 2000 demonstrators Among the speakers was a marched around the campus oc- Vietnam veteran who told the casionally attempting to block crowd, comprised mainly of mid- streets and throwing rocks at dle-aged adults and small chil- police. Police again used tear dren, "It is up to you.to end the gas and observers reported the war." entire campus area filled with He urged the crowd to write the gas. ,fheir, congressmen saying the In San Francisco demonstra- letters only needed to contain tions, designed to disrupt the op- three words--"Stop the War." erations of such companies as The crowd seemed generally Standard Oil and the Bank of enthusiastic despite the weath- America erupted into violence. er, responding to the speakers At 11 a.m. a crowd of about and singing protest songs. 700, which had gathered in front At 7 p.m. the crowd fell silent of'teSadr i opn for a two minute period of si- Bldg. marched to the headquar- lence called for people to "re- ters of the Bank of America. flect on what the war is doing There they were joined by about to all of us." 500 others and police on horse- By about 8 p~m., the occa- bakmvditocereon sional rain became steady and back moved In to clear demon- numbers of the protesters, many strators from the streets. There of whom had small children, were several instances of fight- headed for home. 'l ing between police and the dem- Yesterday was also proclaim- onstrators reported. SAN FRANCISCO police yesterday take anti-war demonstrators into custody during a downtown protest rally, as a cable car moves along in the background. 1,200 more protesters arrested in Washington (Continued from Page 1) posting copies of the People's Peace Treaty on doors of federal buildings. The march to D.C. prtoon, where Rennie Davis, one of the leaders of the Washington pro- test, was held earlier this week, is to show "solidarity with the prisoners." According to the group meet- ing last night, the march will be "the last of this week's actions in Washington." "We've carried out te first Snational implementation of the People's Peace Treaty," Davis said, speaking to the meeting about the week's activities. Davis said, however, that peo- ple should remain in Washington to plan the "second national iuP- plementation of the treaty." The non-violent demonstration at the Capitol began as 50 Viet- nam veterans led about 1,000 peo- ple from the East Mall to the steps of the Capitol House wing. The marchers, joined by other groups, found the door-almost never closed while Congress is in session-§ecurely locked. Capitol Police Chief James Powell told the marchers to stop as they neared the white marble building, but then allowed thern to proceed. Several congressmen came to the scene and told Pow- ell they had invited the pro- ttesters to meet with them. The lawmakers, who later ad- dressed the crowd, included Reps. Bella Abzug (D.-N.Y.), Parren Mitchell (D-M.D.), Ronald Del- lums (D-Calif.) and John Ran- gell (D-N.Y.). The crowd swarmed up the 4steps and rallied to urge Con- gress to end the Indochina War and ratify the People's Peace Treaty. Powell told the demonstrators they were violating the law and were under arrest. The message was inaudible to many of the Iprotesters, although most ap- parently intended to be arrested. Police moved in and separated the group on the steps from over 1,000 friendly onlookers, many of whom shouted and clapped with the demonstrators. Draft cards and discharge papers were burned and veter- ans turned in medals as police began removing demonstrators one-by-one from the Capitol steps and putting them into buses. Most demonstrators w e nt peacefully, flashing signs and clenched fists. A few, however, went limp and were dragged by police to the buses. Police arrested everyone in the area, sparing only C o n- gressmen, Congressional aides, and accredited reporters. Del- lums, furious at the police, said the mass arrest "showed the absurdity of this fascist sys- tem." Abzug and Dellums lashed out at police for apprehending peo- ple without giving them what they described as adequate time to disperse. "The warning was inaudible," Delums said as the demonstrators were taken away. "None of the Congressmen heard a single word." Earlier, about 1,500 p e o p 1e gathered in Lafayette P a r k across from the White House in a rally organized by a group called Federal Employes f or Peace. The demonstration was among the first by government- al employes to express opposi- tion to official policy. Police surrounded the park, refusing to allow additional hundreds of people to attend the rally and stating that the group's parade permit officially allowed only 500 people to as- semble. Other speakers included re- presentatives of the Federal Employes for Peace, the Na- tional Welfare Rights Organiza- tion, the Harrisburg Conspirat- ors and an official of the United Steelworkers Union. Williams urged the crowd to march to the Capitol and about one third of the demonstrators began marching down Pennsyl- vania Ave. Police stopped traffic for the protesters, led by Wil- lims in singing as they walked on the sidewalk. At the capitol, the marchers separated, some of the federal employes going to the House and Senate Office Buildings to talk to Congressmen, and others joining the rally on the Capitol steps. The Capitol rally began ear- lier as about 300 people gath- ered before noon on the East Mall to plan the afternoon's activities at the Capitol building. The group listened to speak- ers talk about their experiences in jail, chanted slogans and dis- cussed strategies. The crowd grew larger as the afternoon continued. Lead- ers of the People's Coalition for Peace and Justice (PCPJ) warn- ed the group that they faced ar- rest if they went to the Capitol. In other actions, about 40 people blocked traffic at Ward Circle, near American Univer- sity. The group was quickly broken up by D.C. police. Police closed parts of Constitution Ave. briefly because of the Capi- tol protest. Contributors to this article include Daily reporters Lindsay Chaney, Anita Crone, Linda Dreeben, Tammy Jacobs, Art Lerner, Jim MeFerson, Jonathan Miiier, W. E. Schrock, Paul Travis, and Lynn weiner. Later in the afternoon the crowd broke up, with scattered groups of about one hundred each swarming around the city's financial district. Leaflets passed out earlier in the day suggested the demonstrators "disrup their favorite war profiteer". In College Park, Maryland, hundreds of students blocking a highway adjacent to the Univer- sity of Maryland campus were dispersed when the state police attacked with tear gas. Incidents of rock throving con- tinued through last night as Maryland governor Marvin Man- del called up the National Guard and declared a state of emer- gency. A rally in New York's Central Park, attended by some 2,000 students broke up after an hour when fist fighting erupted be- tween blacks and whites attend- ing the protest. addresses rally ed "Set the Date-Free the POWS Day" in Ann Arbor by Mayor Robert Harris. Harris said the day was designed to urge Ann Arbor citizens to write their congressmen to call for the setting of an immediate date for U.S. withdrawal from Indochina. Police arrest demonstrators at Capitol