Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 17, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 17, 1971 Govt. tries ti NEW YORK IP)-The govern- ment made a new attempt yes- terday to recover secret Penta- gon documents on which the New York Times based its con- troversial series of articles on the origins of the Vietnam war. The government seeks to ex- amine 47 volumes of a classified study, "History of U.S. Decision- Making on Vietnam Policy," and also a classified document en- titled "The Command and Con- trol Study of the Tonkin Gulf Incident," done by the Defense Department's Weapons Systems Evaluation Group in 1965. Federal Judge Murray Gur- fein scheduled a hearing on the government request for 10 a.m. this morning, although he had denied an earlier government plea for recovery of the docu- ments. Gurfein on Tuesday ordered the Times to halt publication of its Vietnam series pending tomorrow's hearing on a request by the attorney general's office for an injunction. In his order, Gurfein said: "At this stage of the proceed- ing, I do not direct the New York Times . . to produce the documents pending the outcome of the litigation. I do not believe that the New York Times will wilfully disregard the spirit of our restraining order." The Times series began Sun- day. It was based on the 47- volume study, made at the re- quest of former Secretary of De- fense Robert McNamara, enti- tled "History of United States Decision Making Process on Vietnam Policy." Prepared in 167-68, the report covered the period 1945-617. Gurfein ordered today's show- cause hearing after Asst. U.S. Atty. Michael Hess, conducting the civil injunction suit against the Times, said in an affidavit the documents were "important to the proper protection of the national interest.". ) regain Fifteen copies of the volu- minous Pentagon study had been disseminated with a secret or top secret classification on the contents. Hess said the government did not presently know the extent of the documents in the posses- sion of the Times. He told news- men that Gurfein's scheduling of today's hearing would make it incumbent on the Times to produce the documents in court at the time. Meanwhile, Arthut Ochs Sulz- berger, president and publisher of the Times, flew home from London yesterday. Newsmen at Kennedy airport asked him if he believed the publication of the Vietnam series by the Times had endangered national security. as the government claimed in its suit. "I do not," he replied. Sulzberger also was asked if he and the Times editorial NEW7 board would publish the series Frank again if they had it to do over. newspi "Yes, we would," said Sulz- berger, adding that he approved of the editorial board's decision. Saying the Times was pre- I- pared to fight the case to the Supreme Court if need be, Sulz- berger called the government's a suit "an abridgement of the F n- First Amendment to the Con- stitution." s ---- .__----- Adver ernmen to halt I TONIGHT at Pentago Times- 7 0 E.Mthe Tim over the Viet study . "FRUITILY BEAUTIFUL MOVIE! Mr. Metzger has never quite attained Joseph von Sternberg's feeling for dazzling decadence, but he has the master's humorlessness, and though his production of spectacle has been limited by his budgets, he is every bit as morally uplifting...preoccupied by the way nude bodies and sexual acts look when photographed sideways, in zoomy long shots, In roving close-ups...ripe with incredible color and decor and movement." -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times "OUTRAGEOUSLY KINKY MASTERPIECE. GO!'-'nyWarhol -Associated Press YORK TIMES EDITORS Laurence Hauck (left) and Max el discuss the recept court orders against the Times in the aper's city room. ress criticizes govt. tion in Times case 4 By The Associated Press se reaction to recent gov- t court action attempting the publication of a secret on report by the New York - coupled with praise for nes - has come from all e world The London Daily Mail declar- ed "the Pentagon papers reveal a president utterly deluded as to the effectiveness of military pow- er and passing this delusion en with interest to Congress and U.S. public opinion." Saigon's English language Viet- nam Daily Mirror said the Times performed a public service, add- ing that "Johnson lied at every turn in the entry into the war." The $oviet News agency Tass said the Pentagon papers "show the utter hypocrisy of American authorities who, concealing their secret plans from the U.S. public, dragged the American people into the dirty war in Southeast Asia." At home, the reaction was generally more resrained, but nearly as unanimous in its ap- plause for the Times. Sen. Frank Church (D-Idahon) called the government's action "nothing less than censorship of the press ... "All those who value freedom of the press must wonder about the motivation of this administra- tion . . . The publication could not conceivably damage security interests," he said. Sen. George McGovern cD- S.D.) said the government's court action is designed to suppress in- formation about the deception of the American people. American newspapers were also harsh in their criticism of the government. Said the Miami Herald: "We trust that the public will now bet- ter understand what the press has been talking about when it writes of 'the credibility gap.' A dissenting opinion was regis- tered by Vice-President Spirc Agnew who criticized the Times judgement and reliability. He also denied a suggestion by a reporter at a news conference that Congress and the American people were misled in 1964-65 by LBJ on how large the U.S. mili- tary air and ground combat role wnld heome in Vietnam. THE NEW RADLEY METZGER MOVIE. WITH SILVANA VENTURELLI, FRANK WOLFF, ERIKA REMBERG, PAOLO TURCO. IN EASTMAN COLOR. Distributed by XAudubonFlms Persons under not Roved X admitted SHOWN TONIGHT 7:15 P.M. 0 9:00 P.M. V'#FTH FO('IL M .l.TN "*NUN AT 1.MORIVX DOWNTOWN ANN ^Room trwcmm^vmrA 7A9-!Too I -q--_-_____-_II_"'A-%__1 Jyst like your dream, timeless.. Reflecting a heritage of lave as young as the dawn. .1 asold as time, in hand- crafted 18 Karal gold. paoob ons