Tuesday, August 27, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pecs Five Tuesday, August 27, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY IT ~i I ip INTERNATIONAL PRESENTATIONS, 1968-1968 City police walk thin line to enforce law on U campus SAVE UP TO 50% b y purchasing se ries subscriptions NOW if t. Choral Union Series Hill.Audi torturn CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ... . ISTVAN KERTESZ, Conductor GARY GRAFFMAN, Pianist ........... BAVARIAN ORCHESTRA OF MUNICH . RAFAEL KUBELIK, Conductor B IRGIT N I LSSON, Soprano.... ... . . YEHUDI MENUHIN, Violinist, and HEPHZIBAH MENUHIN, Pianist GREGG SMITH SINGERS......... HAGUE PHILHARMONIC.... WILLEM VAN OTTERLOO, Conductor "CARMEN" (Goldovsky Opera Company) RUDOLF SERKIN, Pianist.. MOSCOW STATE SYMPHONY......... EVGENI SVETLANOV, Conductor Saturday, October 5 .......Monday, October 14 . .. ....Saturday, October 26 ... Thursday, November 14 (2:30) Sunday, November . (2:30) Sunday, January Friday, January 24 12 24 48:00) Saturday, February 15 ..............Wednesday, March ..... . ............Thursday, March 5 13 By JILL CRABTREE - "It comes down to this. At 2 a.m., is Sigma Alpha Mu some kind of bastion of free expression, or just another loud party at 800 Lincoln?" In a somewhat over-simplified way this student has gotten to the heart of the University-police re- lations problem: how to enforce city and state laws on the au- tonomous University campus. Last year the basis for Univer- sity-police conflict became ap- parent when Ann Arbor police seized a Cinema Guild film, "Flaming Creatures," because it had been deemed anti-social in a New York trial. LESS RESTRICTION The seizure of the film could be legitimatized in the community because the film was considered "anti-social." University autono- my, however, implies for many a reduction of legal restrictionsto encourage intellectual expression and experimentation. Should police act as enforcing agents for University regulations, give the University more liberal laws, or should they behave as if the University and its students were just like any other buildings and people in Ann Arbor, no more and no less? In the case of street crimes, the guidelines are clear-cut. Crimes on all streets and side- walks, including the campus area, are investigated by Ann Arbor po- lice without hesitancy, whether they involve a Daily reporter stopped for "suspicious loitering" while playing hide-and-seek at 4 a.m. or one of the six cases of rape reported to the police last year. Students, often walking late at night, benefit from police patrol ling. Ann Arbor Police Chief Wal- ter E. Krasny has recently beefed up his campus night patrol to in- clude six men. Ann Arbor police are aided in their protective policing efforts by the University's Sanford Security property protection police, known in irreverent student circles as the POLICING CAMPUS Sanford Security, under priv vate contract with the University, is not directly charged with po- licing the campus for ,violent crime, but Krasny and University Security Director Rolland Gains- ley agree that their presence is a deterrent. They do not have full police rights, but do have normal rights to citizen arrest and de- tention. Their main job is to police the classrooms and office bulidings on campus. They keep a lookout for thefts of objects ranging from television sets to "one billfold a week" from Barbour-Waterman Gymnasium. Students generally favor such police efforts to protect their lives and property. But police efforts to control drinking and marijuana traffic on campus are less popular and often from the bases for autonomy arguments. LESS POPULAR Crimes in these areas and con- sequent police crackdowns are on the rise. Students, however, find it dif- ficult to complain,the Ann Arbor police are interfering with Uni- versity autonomy because Chief Krasny does not claim to use Ann Arbor police to enforce University regulations. Instead, his attitude on Uni- versity regulations is completely "laissez faire." Arrests for drink- ing or possession of marijuana are based on defiance of city or state laws. FIVE CONVICTIONS While there . has been little change in the amount of drinking done on campus, both Krasny and Washtenaw County Prosecutor William F. Delhey note a sub- stantial increase in the amount of marijuana being used in re- cent years. ''Where two years ago we got p e rh ap s five convictions on charges of possession or dispens- ing of marijuana in a year, the number has recently gone up to 50 and 60," Krasny says. The campus drug market now reaches intonearly all segments of University life. Last year rum- ors circulated of pot parties in the uncompleted wing of Bursley Hall, and West Quad Director William McKaytcited six cases of suspected marijuana use in the building, but had no specific evi- dence. ' Richard Hughes, assistant di- rector of University housing, says thatihis staff reportseall1drug violations known to them to the police. McKay, however, referred three of his six students to the University Bureau of Psychiatric Services. SGC REGULATIONS At the present time, even though Ann Arbor plice are authorized by agreement with the Regents to police University off- street parking facilities, they do not report cars without Univer- sity-required stickers to Univer- sity authorities, Krasny says. They also do not report stu- dent 'violations of city traffic ordinances to the University. Cooperation does exist between the city and the University on parking and traffic problems, but it appears in the area of setting up city regulations them~selves rather than in enforcement poli- cies. At present the entire issue is under discussion because of srie- cial problems caused by SGC abolishment of student vehicle restrictions and fear on the part of' city officials that this will cause an influx of automobiles into the already over-loadedAnn Arbor streets. GRADUAL CHANGE One example of the severity of the traffic regulation problem is the 45 minute meters literary cof- lege students must use for 50 minute classes in Angell Hall. Efficient meter maids can make parking a severe financial hard- ship. Marijuana, automobiles and drinking are ever-present prob- lems in a university town, and policies for dealing with them are usually well-established, with change coming only gradually. Much more flexible issues are those which come up less fre- quently - issues such as how to handle student demonstrations, or 'whether to interfere in the show- ing of a film such as "Flaming Creatures" (a controversy which eventually resulted in the con- the Cinema Guild board on charges of "being disorderly in a public place by showing an ob- scene motion picture.") Still another area where po- lice must decide where their au- thority lies is in city and Uni- versity vehicle regulations. Uni- versity students are not exempt from the blue-clad meter maids who patrol Ann Arbor streets with distressing regularity, nor from University, traffic regulations. Some measure of stable policy has developed in relation to stu- dent demonstrations. Police are usually present from the outset at demonstrations which have ad- vance publicity, but normally do not take action unless a violent outbreak occurs or University of- ficials sign a complaint against SGC tries to allow for student autos dei ionstrators' presence in a Uni- versity building. "If the University says it is all right for students to be in a build- ing, it is all right with us. We are not bouncers," Krasny says. "There are city ordinances cov- ering the blocking of corridors and passageways which can be invoked, if necessary. In such cases the police, the city attorney, if he is present, and University officials usually confer and de- cide together what crimes should be charged and what arrests should be made." The issues of academic free- dom Evoked by the "Flaming Creatures" case are still not pre- cisely defined, and are likely to flare with equal intensity the next time such an incident occurs. SEASON TICETS: $30.00-$25.00-$20.00-$15.00-$12.00 SINGLE CONCERTS (counter sale begins September 10): $6.00-$5.50-$5.00.$4.00-$3.00-$2.00 Dance Series 0i4l Auditorim NATIONAL BALLET (from Washington, D.C.)..... ..............Friday, Ocipber ROMANIAN FOLK BALLET....................... .Thursday, October 11 24 MAZOWSZE DANCE COMPANY (from Poland). ................. Monday, November 18 ALVIN Al LEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATRE .... .................Saturday, February 8, BALLET FOLKLORICO OF MEXICO.............. ............Wednesday, February 26 SEASON TICKETS: $15.00-$12.5 0-$10.0O-$7.50-$6.00 SINGLE CONCERTS (counter sate begins' September 10) : $6.00-$5.50-$5.00-$4.0 0-$3:00-$2.00 Chamber Arts Series By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN Last fall Student Government Council started abolishing Uni- versity regulations which pertain- ed only to students. They abolish- ed freshman women's curfews and slowly but surely got around to the University's driving regu- lations and abolished them, too. SGC abolition of curfew came in November, well after the Re- gents had made it clear they were not honoring Council action in the area of non-academic conduct regulations. But soon, faced with the possi- bility of massive student action over dormitory regulations; the Regents approved many of SGC's rule changes. However, the con- troversy over driving regulations remains unsettled as we go to press. ABOLISH RULES The driving rules abolished by SGC include those which barred students with less than 70 credits from driving in Ann Arbor and those which ,required, students who 'do bring cars to campus to register them for a $3 fee. Most students did not know how to react when. SOC took action on driving regulations and many up- perclassmen continued to register their cars. But a few did not and the ad- ministration attempted to clamp down on these offenders. In the past, the proper approach for administrators was to bring cases of this sort before Student Traffic Court, a branch of Joint Judiciary Council. But, since September JJC had refused to enforce regulations not made by SGC. FEW ALTERNATIVES This left ',administrators with' few alternatives. They could have tried to get the student's schools and colleges to put them on pro- bation or expel them, but the fa- culties had indicated they would not discipline students so harshly for such trivial non-academic of- fenses. The Student Vehicle Bureau tried to circumvent this trouble- some problem by making failure to register a vehicle an adminis- trative matter. In December, the bureau sent letters to about 50' upperclassmen who had not reg-' istered their cars, informing them of a late registration fee of $5 in addition to the original fee.- If the fee was not paid, the let- ter said, the credits of the student would be withheld in a manner similar to the hold credits issued tC students with University library fines., The effect of these letters was to split up the students and make them individually fight the Uni- versity. With no statistics avail- able, we can only assume that faced with the possibility of not getting credlt4 for a full term's work, ther50 students probably paid the fees. But the problem was hardly at an end.For one thing, the proce- dure did not 'apply; to students with under 70-hours. Administra- tors could not assess late registra- tion fees on students who were not supposed to have cars on campus in the first~ place. In addition, there was a good deal of pressure from students, and increasing sympathy from faculty members to abolish the system of restrictions. AEGENTAL REQUEST In February, both the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs and the Student Re- lations Committee investigated the advisability of abolishing, dri- ving regulations at the request of the Reents. They each issued re- ports calling for the end of these restrictions. At their February meeting, the Regents. accepted these reports but decided that since the issue involved traffic conditions in the entire city, government officials should be consulted, too. In the interim, the Regents postponed the decision on driving regulations and scheduled an op- en hearing on the issue: The hearing was held the day before the March 9peeting and initially appeared to Ihave gained the sympathy of several Regents. JOINT COMMITTEE However, on the following day the Regents announced that.the immediate abolition of; student vehicle regulations was "detri- mental to the health and safety ' of members of the community,* and asked the city to form a joint committee with the University to study the problem. While the committee has not yet issued its report, it is expected to recommend the elimination of section 8.06 of the Regents bylaws which is the basis for the present restrictions. The timing of the el'mination of restrictions is in question, however. The committee includes facul- ty members like Prof. Leonard Greenbaum of the engineering English department, who consid- ers the present rules discrimin- atory because it makes students suffer in order to improve the traffic situation in Ann Arbor and, hopefully, he will be able to in- fluence the committee. However, other members of the committee are concerned with the effects on traffic in Ant Arbor and may ask for a staggered eli- mination of the rules, or perhaps even maintaining them. , Hill Auditorium MADRIGALISTI DI VENEZIA . .............,.... . MELOS ENSEMBLE, from London ................. JANET BAKER, English Mezzo-Soprano ............... MUSIC FROM MARLBORO .............;. .... .,.,.... ISRAEL CHAMBER ORCHESTRA ...... ........ . COLOGNE CHAMBER ORCHESTRA.. ,... . . ORCHESTRA MICHELANGELO DI FIRENZE ........... . Sunday, October 20 Thursday, November 7 . Sunday, January Saturday, February Monday, February Saturday, February .... Sunday, March 5 1 10 22 23 U SEASON TICKETS: $20.00-$15.00-$10.00 SINGLE CONCERTS (counter sale begins September 10): $5.00-$4.0 0-$2.0 0 Christmas Music Hit Auditorium "MESSIAH" (Handel)--Three performances: December 6 and 7, 8:30; and December 8, 2:30 UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNiO N AND SOLOISTS MEMBERS OF THE INTERLOCHEN ARTS ACADEMY ORCHESTRA LESTER McCOY, Conductor TEXTBOOKS UP TO O3FF IJLIICH'S ANN ARBOR'S FRIEND,LY BOOKSTORE TICKETS: $3.00-$2.00.$1.50.$1.00 (Counter sale begins October 10) 76th Ann Arbor May Festival Hill Auditorium April24, 25, 26, 27-Five Concerts THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA AT ALL PERFORMANCES EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor; THOR J OHNSON, Guest Conductor THE UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION; SOLOISTS, BOTH VOCAL AND INSTRUMENTAL Orders tor series tickets accepted beginning D ecember 1 GE NTHE S WWWM! Subscribe Now