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QUUN-Oct. 30-Nov. 1 3, f 970-5 BERKELEY BATTLEGROUND Scrawled warning on side of building in that California area spotlights prevailing state of tension. New battles over People's Park threaten. -FREEP Photo Hard hats yippies land heavies in D WASHINGTON (CUP-CPS) Less than 15,000 rural fundamentalists and anti-communist Americans gathered here Saturday, Oct, 3 to march for victory in Vietnam. Organized by New Jersey radio evangelist and God-magnate Carl Mclntyre, the rally contrasted sharply with another gathering Saturday . . . the second half of a celebration of life called by the Youth International Party to celebrate the non-appearance of South Vietnamese vice-president Nguyen Cao Ky. Ky had been scheduled to speak on and off at the rally, but cancelled his trip to the U.S. because of pressure by American government officials. He said he would not attend because "my presence may lead to unrest and violence, which will cause you and the American people much inconvenience." Less than a thousand freaks circulated between the victory rally and the Saturday celebration, a rock-concert-cum-rpolitical-rap, near Georgetown, Washington's hip district. Freaks lounged lazily, passing joints and doing the usual, as several rock bands played and speakers told the crowd about new events in the revolution. Most notably among the speakers was Big Man, member of the Black Panther Party, New Haven Chapter, and a sister from the Party, which will be holding the final sessions of the People's Revolutionary Constitutional Convention here in November, The afternoon was peaceful, especially compared to the opening round of the celebration of life in Georgetown, the night before. Police arrested nearly 350 youths during a three hour period as more than 50 windows in the luxury shop area were trashed Friday night. The evening started peacefully, but escalated quickly as police refused to let the Yippies dance and sing in the Georgetown streets. The major thoroughfares were cleared twice by police without the use of tear gas here (the ruling class lives in Georgetown). No action occurred Saturday night; largely because about 1,500 police were stationed in units every twenty feet on the major streets, and Jn larger units with riot equipment on the side streets. On Saturday afternoon a number of arrests were made during the right-wing rally as constructionwork-ers wearing their hardhats attacked freaks who had been periodically chanting "One, two three four, we don't want your fucking war" and brandishing Viet Cong flags. Armed with assorted clubs and sign posts ripped from the various patriotic and Christian messages they carried, the hardhats, supported by a legion of tight-lipped and middle-aged flag bearers, attacked the freaks. Under banners and signs like "Pray to keep Vietnam out of the hands of atheists and communists" or "Jesus conquers sin: communism is a sin," the bible-carrying "American eagles" as Mclntyre called them, listened intently to a whole array of right-wing speakers including Christian crusader Billy James Hargis, Dr. Corbet Mack of the American Baptist Association, and retired U.S. army major general Thomas A, Lane. They also heard a short speech written by the absent Ky read by a Vietnamese embassy official. The speech, unlike most of the day's, did not criticize Nixon's war policy. The keynote address was delivered by John Rarick, a Democrat from Louisiana, the only government official on the platform. "Our country started losing wars when our leaders started getting into wars for peace rather than wars for freedom," Rarick told the audience. About 30 people from the Toronto group, the Edmund Burke Society, carried signs proclaiming "Trudeau loves Mao," "Canadians Demand Victory in Vietnam" and "U.S.-Canadian Solidarity." Paul Fromm, one of the leaders of the EBS, told people in Toronto before the group left for Washington, that the EBS also planned to go to the Canadian consulate in Washington to protest Canadian non-involvement in Vietnam. Fromm also said "Industrial magnates are purposefully subverting the war effort in order to fill their own pockets."