Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 27, 1970 Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 27, 1970 AM CURIOUS': fudge enjoins movie Conference I (Continued from Page 1) e obscenity charges incorrect hile penalizing him in the mean- hile. He also argued that the com- aint was defective in that it did ot meet the Supreme Court's finition of obscenity. The Su- eme Court requires that mate- al have a dominant theme which a whole appeals to purient, ste, is of an offensive naturent e community, and is utterly ithout redeeming social value. He said the complaint stated at only parts of the film. and t the film as a whole were ob- ene. Lastly, he pointed out the merits the film, citing themes con- rning civil rights, Zen Buddism, e x u a 1 relationships, 'and the owth and development of a >ung girl. 1uildings nashed at He said the sexual scenes were handled in a way that was sub- ordinate to the themes of the film and not of a purient nature. In addition, he pointed out that the film is being shown in major cities all over the U.S. and refered to the evaluations of several film critics. He concluded by asking that the case be summarily dis- missed. Delhey's comments were short. He countered that neither the first nor the fourteenth amendments were applicable to cases concern- ing pornography, that the com- plaint was not defective according to state statute, and that counsel had therefore not shown cause. Ellmann said the appeal con- cerning the restraining order will be filed next week. He hopes to obtain from the judge an invali- dating order which will be appli- cable to other nearby Michigan communities as well. The some action was attempted in Wayne County last month but failed. There the officiating judge ordered the city of Highland Park not to issue an injunction but re- fused to make the rule binding to other areas. Robert Goodrich, owner of the Savoy theatre in Grand Rapids, says he will show the film there if it is ruled that it may be shown in Ann Arbor. Goodrich had sched- uled the film for showing last Oc- tober, but shortly before it began running was served with a sum- mons notifying him he would be subject to prosecution under the state law. He decided not to show the film when the Wayne County Judge re- fused to make the expanded re- straining order prohibiting the in- junctions. The Grand Rapids pro- secutor has taken no further ac- tion against the theater. The Ann Arbor complaint was first made by a private citizen to Police Chef Walter Krasny. who was told to refer it to the county prosecutor's office according to the procedure set by City Council some months ago. Ager said a trial will be set within one day after the defense files an answering statement to the injunction order. not open to radicalis (Continued from Page 1) vitation had been withdrawn Wednesday night. Some members of Radical Col- lege expressed a desire as early as Tuesday to attend the confer- ence in some capacity or other. Negotiations between R o b e r t Adams, Director and Professor of International Business, and in- terested college members con- tinued on a verbal level through Wednesday morning. Wednesday afternoon Adams sent Sahlins a letter inviting him and Psychology Prof. Richard Mann to attend the conference as observers. The letter also said, "If, after you have observed the seminar, you have any comments relevant and germane to the dis- cussion you will be given an op- portunity in the final discussion period to make your comments. This of course is predicated on the assumption that the Seminar is not disrupted." . Mann and Sahlins sent a reply in which they told Adams they could not attend the whole semi- nar. They said they had discussed this withthim the previousdeven- ing on the telephone and had asked him then if he would allow six other faculty andstaff mem- bers to rotate two at a time in periods when Mann and Sahlins could not attend. Further their replay said, "In accord with the telephone con- versation mentioned, we hope that these members of the group shall be acknowledged as attend- ing on a scholarly basis, with the privilege of posing questions 'of clarification (without intending interruption of the business of the conference), as well as designating one of their number to comment during the final session in the manner you describe." However, Mann received a tele- gram from Adams Wednesday saying that "alternate representa- tion suggested by you was never agreed to by me and is entirely unacceptable.", The invitation was then withdrawn. Curfew in Santa Barbara fails to stop third night of violence (Continued from Page 1) : example of what could happen to called for swift action to end "wanton lawlessness." Students said reasons for the trouble ranged from the Vietnam war to high student rents, from conviction of the Chicago 7 to "rape of the environment," from alleged police harassment to po- litical repression. Kunstler just a few hours ear- lier had addressed a student rally. He said he did not consider vio- lence "a good tactic," but advised students to fill the streets so they could be seen. "To the streets," shouted some in the crowd. He said the trial "was to set an you if you become involved in the social movement . . . If resistance is not heeded, then it can lead to revolution. I hope the government is listening. Fill the streets so they can see you . .. Power to t h e people." Some in the crowd raised clenched fists a n d cried, "right on." The throng at Isla Vista, sev- eral miles west of this scenic city of 75,000, so outnumbered sheriff's deputies that officers did not at- tempt a confrontation at first. An initial attempt at burning a Bank of America branch, by shoving a flaming barrel full of gasoline-soaked paper through a Day Calendar broken window, was frustrated by several fraternity men who ex- Astronomy Colloquium: C. T: Bolt "The Calibration of Spectral Classl tinguished the blaze. A second try cation Criteria" P & A Colloq. R succeeded, gutting the structure, 4:00 p.m. Firemen, also outnumbered, took deputies' advice and did not re- Placement 5cr nc spond. At 2 a.m., after a helicopter GENERAL DIVISION warned the thinning crowd to dis- 3200 S.A.B. perse, a force of 250 officers with Summer Intern Prog. in Washi shields and batons swept the main Iton. D.C., sponsored by U of M. Po street and the demonstration end- tions avail in Congressional offices a agencies; interviews held at Placem ed. Services today and Mar. 3, ask for M Damon. No prior appts. Thirty-five young persons were1 Late announcement of Interview: arrested on a variety of charges, MARCH 11: mostly for failure to disperse. Barton-Aschman Assoc., Inc., M More than a score of police were and PhD in all degrees related to 1 treated for injuries, mostly from ban and Regional Planning, call 7 rocks thrown from rooftops. 1363 for appts. on, Lfi- Irk., )ng- osi- and lent Ars. d.A. Ur- 63- 0 Assembly asks recruiting forum, hits moratorium Buffalo (Continued from Page 1) nesday. At least 11 persons were injured and 16 arrested. Wednesday's violence erupted as university officials and black stu- dent representatives met to dis- cuss a dispute between b l a c k basketball players and university athletic officials. The black players quit the squad earlier this season, complaining' that whites got preferential treat- ment. Officials said however, b l a c k groups were not involved in the1 campus turmoil. A short-lived student occupa- tion by Syracuse University stu- dents in Syracuse, N.Y., ended peacefully yesterday after admin- istration officials warned that ap- propriate action would be taken against protesters. About 50 stu- dents had taken over the Student Government Building to show sup- port of the administration and to protest a building takeover by others a week ago. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27 (Continued from Page 1) to the matter of a moratorium and suspension of recruiting. Engineering Prof. Maurice Sin- nott was one of the most vocal critics, as he questioned whether SRC had explored all other pos- sible means of discussion and whether it had contacted all Uni- versity units. Sinnott also referred to statements by Graduate As- sembly and others which opposed a halt in recruiting. "Has the committee looked at this?" he asked repeatedly. Prof. John Young of the engi- neering placement office said he wanted to see discussion on the recruiting issue, but that a mora- torium was "inappropriate and premature." Referring to the re- cent recruiter incident at the West Engineering Bldg, Young said, "We can do better than to provide a field day for radicals to promote more of the same." Engineering school dean Gordon VanWylen told Assembly, "We at the engineering school are con- vinced it is not necessary to have a moratorium of classes and a su- spension of recruiting. There are other, more effective methods for dealing with the problem." VanWylen mentioned commit- tees within the engineering school, as well as a forum without suspen- sion of classes and recruiting as possible alternatives for discus- sion. Radical College member Barry Bluestone, Grad., said that As- sembly had "missed the point. It's a question of priorities and many of these priorities are wrong," he said., "It seems that SRC has asked to discuss where this university is in 1970 and where it is going to be in 1980," Bluestone added. In other business, Assembly elected mathematics Prof. Wifred Kaplan, engineering Prof. R a y- mond Pearson and law Prof. Theo- dore St. Antoine to University Council, thednew campus-wide governing body. Assembly also selected a panel of four from which Student Gov- ernment Council will pick two to serve on the Committee on Com- munications. The four are English Prof. Marvin Felheim, engineer- ing Prof. Ralph Loomis, geology Prof. Henry Pollack and business administration Prof. Meyer Ryder. Assembly will, in turn, select two students from a panel presented to it by SGC. Sheriff James Webster said he considered calling t h e National Guard, and asked the FBI to in- vestigate the possibility of invok- ing the antiriot law against Kun- stler on grounds of crossing state lines to incite a riot. The situa- tion "escalated after Kunstler's speech," the sheriff said. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE 212 SAB, Lower Level Interviews at SPS: FEBRUARY 27: JYC Camps, Phila., Pa.. Soc. Wk.! camps, sr. couns, WSI for boating. spec.-arts & crafts canoeing, and campcraft. Good Humor, Det., big money, open- ings for men and women. CAMPUS PIZZA No. 2 7 DAYS A WEEK 4820042 5 P.M.-2 A.M. FOOT-LONG HOME BAKED BUN - HAM, SALAMI, LET- CL TUCE AND TOMATO - ITALIAN CHEESE WITH OUR OUR DRESSING -$1.00 FOOT-LONG HOME BAKED BUN WITH A GENEROUS HOPORTION OF CHOICE BEEF -$1.29 "THESE ARE SUBMARI NE SANDWICHES ASK FOR THEM WHEN YOU WANT PIZZA" FREE FAST DELIVERY RADIO DISPATCHED * I- ______________________________________________ cinema Futz: EDITOR'S NOTE: - The two reviews of movies in today's paper have already left the ; Ann Arbor area. However, 1 they still have bearing on the overall perspective of film. By NEAL GABLER First of all: F u t z is dreadfully bad. On s e c o n d thought it is worse than that. Bad usually connotes boredom or embarrassment, but Futz is downright disgusting. I seldom consider leaving a theater in the middle of a feature; this time I was sorely tempted.f It is so weak in so many places that trying to catalogue 1 its problems is like trying to list what's wrong with the Nixon Administration. Where can I begin? I guess the worst thing is director Tom O'Horgan's con- A merely intolerable flick fusion about what a movie is. Sure, Futz is projected on a screen, but film is more than technology; it is a distinctive way of approaching material. When the La Mama Troupe speak a highly affected, and what's more, unintelligble dia- lect; when the camera wanders about like an abandoned or- phan; when the story spurts like water from a faulty faucet rather than flows-is the result a movie? It is understandable that this could be a success on the stage where affected per- formances are necessary to reach the back row, where there is no bother with camera positions and where the story is neatly divided into acts. But no one ever took the trouble to adapt it to the screen. I get the impression that O'Horgan, well known as a stage innovator, wanted to carve him- self the same niche in cinema. He has failed miserably; his divided loyalty to stage and screen undermines the enter- prise. In trying to merge the "new" theater (which is ten years behind cinema) with the "new" cinema as he sees it (which is ten years behind where it is), he delivers a muta- tion half-way between Marat- Sade and Andy Warhol. Let's face it. A performer clutching his genitals may make it on off- broadway, but in the movies it's passe. Structurally, Futz gives us that old reliable of the avant garde, a performance within a performance. The Troupe ap- pears on an outdoor stage be- fore an audience. A chorus gives a running commentary on the action. Occasionally, they go "on location" to recreate a scene from the saga. The play they perform concerns farmer Clyde Futz. Clyde loves his livestock but he goes Dr. Doolittle and St. Francis one better - he has sexual relations with his sow Amanda. While I'm still a little uncertain about the details Futz's sodomy so unnerves one man that the deranged fellow goes off and commits murder. The townsfolk are outraged. Futz must be stopped. They stop him. There is a moral to this mad- ness, especially timely, if not especially profound, in light of last week's activities in Chicago. Personal liberty is dying. No longer can a man do what he pleases even if he doesn't harm anyone else. That goes for marching in Chicago as well as screwing a pig, and believe me, there is no pun intended. When the sheriff in Futz says, "There will be justice," we all know what he means; Judge Hoffman said the same thing. It is a pity that a truthful message cannot make a good film., Futz isn't Intolerance; it is merely intolerable. And yet I believe that something might have been salvaged . . . if they had only known the difference between a film and a stage play. Anyway, even if you do go to see it, my conscience is clear. SPAGHETTI DINNER SUNDAY, MARCH 1 2 p.m.-7 p.m. ANN ARBOR COMMUNITY CENTER Adults $2.00, children $1.00 CLONLARA SCHOOL BENEFIT (A Summerhill Theory School) A deal iaMax' By NEAL GABLER Comedy usually relies either on a witty script or a brilliant characterization and, on rare occasions, it gets both. Lamenta- bly, recent American humor is too unsubtle to succeed in either category. Maybe it's our slap- stick tradition, but our comedies lack the cutting jibes of a sharp script and the comic nuances of a polished performance. As a result, our comic films are often amusing but seldom funny. Viva Max is only par- tially able to avoid the Amer- ican pitfall. Novelist and play- wright Elliot Baker has penned a screenplay that is slightly above situation comedy but far below belly-laugh humor. It is one of those "clever" ideas you can almost hear k n o c k i n g RoTAers to*play here The Roy Ayers Quartet will be appearing at the Michigan Union Ballroom Saturday, Feb- uary 28, 1970 for a matinee performance from 5 p.m. - 7 p.m. sponsored by the Black Student's Union.' Roy Ayers is a youngb1 a c k j azz vibist who is making his debut as a "leader" of his own group currently playing at Bak- ers' Keyboard Lounge in De- troit until March 1, 1970. around in the author's head as you watch the film. "I've got it! A group of Mexican soldiers, under the leadership of a crazy general, recapture the Alamo. All sorts of international com- plications. Why, it's another Dr. Strangelove, almost." Believe me, it isn't even an- other The Russians Are Coming. What it is, is a tour de force for Peter Ustinov who milks enough from the role of Gen- eral Maximilian Rodrigues de Santos to start his own dairy. You don't need me to tell you just how great Ustinov is. I flip- ped when, in my youth, I saw him bellowing "Tempestuous Fire" as Nero in Quo Vadis? Fantastic! Since then, I've seen him cringe, whine, snivel and twitch his petulant way through Spartacus, Billy Budd, Topkapi and many others. This time, unfortunately, Us- tinov has to carry the burden alone. Viva Max is a film of stereotypes, and it takes a cer- tain knack to flesh them out and make them funny. Ustinov is a master of this art. Jonathan Winters, in his brief role as a National Guard general, also carries on admirably. So does John Astin, playing de 'Santos' aide. But when a stereotype fails, it is a big enough bomb to escalate the arms' race. A chief difficulty here is that, with few exceptions, the roles aren't particularly fun- ny and neither are the perform- ers. Pamela Tiffin, as a student w4 Corporation rol dynamic nents. If you are eer, physicist or e're f inding plenty of SPACE for our products IV RUN FOR THE SUN FROM APRIL 29 TO MAY 6 ad stayi ACAPULCO or the BAHAMAS either one is ONLY $189 and includes -1 *4 At Lord we cont environn an engin i 7 days and nights on the beach at the Hotel Acapulco. A welcome in cocktail party. Moonlight cruise includ- ing free parties, floor shows, s a iIi ng, swim- muing, riding, fishing. 7daysand nightsatthe Freeport Inn Free h a pp y hours with rock bands every night. Free services to beach- es and casinos. Scuba diving, snorkling, fishing chemist and have interest in surface chemistry, adhesive technology or vibration/shock and noise control systems we want to see you. We need professionals who desire mobility and diversification. 0 i I i We will be on Campus to talk about your career on: MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1970 at the CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1970 at the COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING i .l --- I M, iN r