Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 21, 1968 _aToTEMCIA ~L StraSpebr2,16 The barricades at Lincoln By BILL FREELAND College Press Service NEW YORK - Members of New York 'City's "cultural revo- lutionaries" carried their battle against bourgeois culture and dictatorial standards of taste in art, music and film to the opening of the Lincoln Center Film Festival this week. About 100 demonstrators fil- led the Center fountain with soapsuds, booed Mayor Lind- say's arrival and staged a short guerrilla theatre piece in the Center plaza to challenge the, "legitimacy of Lincoln Center" as patron and demagogue of the arts in America. The protest was organized by Newsreel, a group of radical documentary film - makers whose specialties are movies about meetings, protests, and such Happenings as last spring's dumping of garbage at Lincoln Center by East Village hippies. The first announcement of the plan to disrupt the Film Festival came in July amidst classically revolutionary sur- roundings - a loft in a run- down warehouse on the Lower East Side. The meeting attend- ed by about 59 was called to form a coalition of radical groups to support the action. The coalition came to hi- clude, in addition to Newsreel, segments of the Columbia Lib- eration School, and a number of political, theatre, and media groups. The predicted ground- swell of interest 'and plethora of meetings, however, never really materialized. One reason for this failure was the diffi- culty the group had winning broad-based agreement on the subtle, often intricate ideolog- ical foundations of the protest. The main points underlying the action were so clear, though, that even Variety, the show business weekly, conceded there was a "well-thought-out, if often weirdo, reasoning be- hind it." Perhaps most significant is the fact that the event marks the first clear-cut public con- nection the American Left has made between the more corn- mon themes of racial and eco- nomic repression and the role played in all of this by "high culture," Lincoln Center, to the pro- test organizers, is a, symbolic representation of that culture because, to them, its objectives are aligned with the values of the' "ruling elite" which has also created the Pentagon and the New York Stock Exchange -and for the same reasons: "the suppression of the mass- es." "Lincoln Center is the cul- tural manifestation of United States imperialism," a Newsreel statement charges. As such it serves to reinforce and dictate the "separateness, superiority and inaccessibility of the upper classes" and to define culture for the public by calling itself "New York City's Cultural Cen- ter." The Center's policy sponsor- ing of free performances for the "culturally deprived" is tagged "paternalism" by News- reel. No one is deprived of cul- ture, the group says - lower classes are just taught to de- spise their own and to aspire to "elitist values" by such ex- posure. In the same way as it func- tions to divide classes, the statement continues, the Cen- ter tends to separate art from the audience. "The spirit of Lincoln Center," the protesters say, "has been to isolate and deify 'High Culture' . . It makes it a special event, dis- tinct from the rest of social phenomena." 'The alternative to this dich- otomy, according to f a Libera- Center tion School proposal, is the de- velopment of a dialectic art- one in which the artist does not work alone making objects to be placed on pedestals, but in which creator and appreciator are joined in the process, of building a better society. Some judged Tuesday's dem- onstration against the Festival, which will run through Sep- tember 24, a failure because so few, participated and because no disruptive action was taken inside the theatre. Many thought Lincoln Center was a poor target to make the point, because (unlike many other fes- tivals with similar programs) it did not award prizes and many of its films were excellent ones, made by "underground" film makers around the world. Robert Kramer of Newsreel, however, said he thought it successful because it "at least raised the question of Lincoln Center's legitimacy." ARMY OCCUPATION: Mexican students battle police $3 MILLION APPROPRIATION: Regents approve funds fdor ast Quad CG plan a retains MSU financial positions MEXICO CITY A"i-About 3,000.; students, some hurling rocks and firebombs, battled with 1.000 riot policemen outside a polytechnic school yesterday in a new out- burst of the violence harassing Mexico City as it prepares for the opening of the Olympic Games Oct. 11, There was some gunfire and po- lice used tear gas in attemoting to bring the crowd under control. One police truck was set on fire, and several persons were reported injured. Hundreds of students were holed up in buildings of the Zacateco school in the northern sector of the city. The outburst came after gun- men speeding by in two cars sprayed the College of Mexico with machine-gun bullets in the dark- ness before dawn yesterday. Officials reported the college, a small institution in downtown Mexico City, was unoccupied at the time and there were no cas- ualties, but they reported $25,000 worthsof damage to the building's walls, windows and furniture. The attack came at 3 a.m., fol- lowing a night of hit and run clashes between striking students of the University of Mexico and other schools and riot police. The students were protesting army occupation of the University of Mexico, near Olympic Stadium and Olympic Village. The university remained under control of the army. It had been' occupied by striking students since late July until the army took over its suburban campus Wednes- day night. Students since July 29 have been protesting army occupation of various preparatory schools in the wake of rioting. They also are pressing for de- mands which include firing of police officials, and disabanding of the corps of riot police. The count of those arrested has risen to 736, among them a num- ber of university professors. Interior Minister Luis Ech- everria said the university campus would be returned to university authorities as soon as they asked for it. (Continued from page one) * Legal action was authorized by the Regents to seek elimina- tion of a discriminatory clause in a $1,500,000 bequest to the Univer- sity. The money will rot become im- mediately available to the Uni- versity, as the bequest provides first for a life income! to a bene- ficiary. Upon expiration of this estate the money is to be used for scholarships. The clause the Regents seek to strike states these scholarships must be given to "male students of the Caucasian race." Legal proc'eedings to remove the clause will be instituted in the District of Columbia. The Regents also requested legal counsel to study other funds which may con- tain discriminatory provisions. Specific mention was made in the meeting of the Barbour Funds. 0 Vice President for Research measure. He said many federal sponsoring agencies, notably the National Science Foundation, had leveled off their budgets in an- A. Geoffrey Norman reported a j ticipation of having to meet partI "distinct decrease" in the growth rate of academic research at the University. He' said total expendi- tures on research for the year 1967-68 amounted to $62,107,019. This figure represents a 5 percent increase over the previous year, but the increase is substantially smaller than the average 14 per- cent growth rate established in re- cent years. Norman attributed the decrease in part to the $6 billion cut in fed- eral research expenditures at- tached to the 10 per cent surtax ashtenaw budget: Deficit, tax hike of this cut. In other action the Regents for- mally approved the construction of a cooperative housing facility on North Campus by the Inter- Cooperative Council (ICC). ICC had applied to the Department of Housing and Urban Development, College Housing Program for a $1,240,000 loan to construct the facility. The regulations of the College Housing Program permit loans to student cooperatives only if the college or university signs for the loan, or if the governing boC'y of the institution formally approves in states where co-signing is pre- vented by law. Since Michigan law does forbid such co-signing, Re- gental approval of the ICC project was required. NATIONAL SENERAL CORPRTO FOX EASTERN THEATRESin FOH viLIEE 375No.MAPLE RD.-769-1300 HELD OVER .Mon.-Fri.-7:00, 9:00 Sat.-Sun.-1 :45, 3:30, 5:15, 7:00, 9.00 2Qth CefnturFoxtpresents DEBORAH KERR DAVID NIVEN PevdenctPi A KAHN-HARPER PRODUCTION -Color by De Luxe STARTS WEDNESDAY "PETULIA" (Continued from page one) quit his job or drop his immed- iate family's holdings in the Philip Jesse Co., which owns the I.B.M. building. May then took a sabbatical with pay for three months. At their July meeting the trustees voted to continue May's' leave of absence without pay until yesterday so he would have a chance to abandon his business holdings. -In his letter to Hannah, May quoted from Kelley's opinion the phrase, "It would be unfair to penalize Mr. May for his p a s t conduct; nevertheless, I do not be- lieve the situation involving the I.B.M. Corporation . . . should1 continue." May said his wife, formerly a major stockholder in the Philip Jesse Co. "has divested ownership of all stock in the building corpor- ation and has resigned as an offi- cer of the corporation." Responding to a suggestion by Stevens that he be demoted. to an inferior position, May said, "I do not feel that I can accept a position of lesser responsibility." Harlan called the board's ac- tion a "whitewash" of May. "He used the university and its pres- tige in a way that smacks of the worst kind of arogance." Harlan vowed to continue his fight against May. Hannah praised May as having "superb business judgement . . he's as competent as any business officer in any university." Mays' title has been Vice Pres- ident in charge of Finance, and Treasurer for MSU for 21 years. Hannah credits him with playing a key role in the university's de- velopment over the past two de- cades. "There was never any sugges- tion or allegation suspecting h i s personal character," Hannah add- ed. - The trustees' vote caine after editorials this week in both the Detroit Free Press and the De- troit News urging May's dismis- sal. ,_ ._ __ I THERE ARE 45 FRATERNITIES 4 ON THE U OF M CAMPUS (Continued from page one) All insurance coverages of the county employes will be doubled to $4,000 and broader medical in- surance will be available. The WMC cut almost $20,000 from the Social Services budget and raised the sheriff's budget almost $200,000. The social services budget was cut from $611,840 to $431,280. The sheriff's budget was raised to $930,359 - the largest depart- mental budget. Only two new items appear on this year's budget: $230,000 for new road development and $30,- 000 for the Washtenaw C ou n t y Citizens Committee for Economic Opportunity. Other areas of large allocation include the Health Department and the courts. WMC chairman Fred Lunde said the budget will be present- ed the supervisors on the under- standing that it must cut $1.3.to $1.5 million from departmental re- quests to stay within expenditures. Lunde said the supervisors' de- cision to drop the project to re- model the N. Main St. building for county offices permitted the general pay raise and improved fringe benefits. CINEMAI "SHOP ON MAIN 'STREET" DIRECTED BY KADAR, with IDA KAMINSKA Made in Czechoslovakia Received an ACADEMY AWARD as the BEST FOREIGN FILM 7-9 P.M. SAT., SEPT. 21 AUD. A 75c ID req. -Associated Press Standing on the corner... Waiting for Francine to go by were 15,000 members of the Wall Street set. But the executives waited in vain, for busty Francine Gottfried (43-25-37) to pass on her regular lunchtime rout. 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