of life: 4 in censorship The theatre made absurd By JIM HECK ONLY TWO DAYS have passed, and this week has already gone wrong. The situation caused by Sunday's production of Dionysus in 69 is an absurdity. Granted, we are now dealing with an issue of greater signifi- cance than nudity alone - the freedom of ex- pression. Nevertheless,, the focus is on nude bodies. It seems ludricrous, philosophically, to try to justify a ban on nudity. It seems even more per- plexing to attempt to understand why laws for- bid nudity. To argue that "indecent exposure" causes disorder; that nude people promote pro- miscuity is a tenuous argument: one never ade- quately tested and based on dubious Hobbesian assumptions. The real problem of nudity be- comes a moral one and, obviously, morals vary from community to community. Recent Supreme Court decisions have upheld this as a valid point of law. The morals of a university community would seem to allow for artistic expression in its freest form. It is tragic that the views of Ann Arbor's conservative city fathers should be forc- ed upon the University for they severely restrict the opportunity for artistic expression in this "community t within a community." FURTHERMORE, THAT ACTION was taken against "Dionysus" and not against the Living Theatre is absurd. When the Living Theatre ap- peared here, a dozen nude bodies ran in the union fov more than three hours within the view of omnipresent policement. Nothing happened. It is equally absurd that UAC officers were not honest or informed about the circumstances sur- rounding the play. Either knowingly or unwit- tingly. UAC president Dan McCreath told the two governing bodies of UAC-who eventually sanctioned the play-that it was normally not performed in the nude. This piece of misinforma- tion secured the play's production here. Most absurd, however, are charges that t h e Daily's "sensationalism" caused the controversy. Sensationalism may be able to exploit an issue, even one not worthy of discussion. However, the events that have followed clearly show the issue is not one created sensational by journalistic manuevering alone. In this case the publicity developed an issue because the issue, itself, was high flammable. THE PUBLICITY CAUSED immediate polari- zation. That polarization delineated the prob- lem. An issue of major relevance has emerged. But the situation must not be judged in a context of art;' it is political. Dionysus in 69 no longer will be a play but a tool used to gauge the temper of the Ann Arbor community. And if the artists are successful in their defense, "Dionysus" may, like Ulysses, prove a precedent- setting case for free expression in the theatre. Director Richard Schechner agrees the issue is whether freedom of expression is valid in society today. And - everyone from the ACLU's Lawrence Michigan Daily Photographs Berlin to the student who stripped during a news conference at the union are committing them- selves on behalf of freedot, not Dionysus. In a way it is sad that an art work such as Dionysus in 69 once was, must sacrifice some of its integrity to become a political tool. But it would be even more unfortunate were this tool unable to succeed in accomplishing its end. A'happening gone to. battle By HENRY GRIX PROBABLY, down deep, the Performance Group is prouder of Sunday's production of Dionysus in 69 than it has been of most of its performances lately. "We want to, like, have it happen," William Finley, the group's Dionysus said of the impending legal hassle as he huddled in the basement of Canterbury House early yesterday morning with a handful of cast members and about 50 hangers- on. The "happening" happened here at the conven- ience of the group and to the woe of University Activities Center officers. In an earnest and pro- fessed effort "to bring culture to Ann Arbor," the Creative Arts Festival's committee invited a group whose devotion to serious artistic endeavor ex- ceeded their own. Richard Schechner's stated in- tention was to prove that culture can exist "west of the Hudson River and east of San Francisco." But Schechner chose Ann Arbor for cultural warfare and the performance was artistic stra- tagem. "You have to pick your battles," Schech-. ner explains. THE WHOLE tragedy of UAC and the Perform- ance Group is'the clumsiness of both in the face of adversity. Floundering in misunderstandings and confusions from the first, neither group has displayed the competence to endure a legal battle. UAC has managed to steer clear of a legal battle; next year, the actors mnay follow suit. Schechner conceives of the whole event in stri- dent, dramatic terms. "Euripides psyched out the Ann Arbor police over 2500 years ago. The play was about what was happening," he said ex- uberantly at the Canterbury House meeting. HOWEVER, WHEN it came to actually con- fronting the law, Schechner fribbled. He con- ceived of a new fad to market sweatshirts imn- printed with photographs of one's own "private parts" prohibited from public display by Michigan statute 28.567 (1). Gesturing, thinking in bold, broad terms, the director plots how to out-act the police. And he made Mary Barkey laugh. She pleaded guilty to end the Cinema Guild Flaming Creatures case about a year ago. Sunday night she had recalled how the legal machinery had virtually conspired against her case and how protest bad become use- less. One only hopes that by a year from now the Dionysus case will not have encountered a similar fate. 2ioysusemn, and 'LP The paradox of obscenity, ONE OF THE best passages of Kurt Von- negut's God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater describes Senator Rosewater's bout with pornography. The Hoosier Republican had introduced legislation which de- fined obscenity as "any picture or phono- graph record or any written matter call- ing attention to reproductive organs, bodily discharges, or bodily hair." The Rosewater Law, as it was called upon enactment, provided penalties of up to $50,000 and ten years in prison, "with- out hope cif parole." Later, cooing over his triumph, the Senator boasted "other people say, 'Oh, how can you recognize it, how can you tell is from art and all that?' I've written the key into law! The difference between pornography and art is bodily hair!" , No law journal article, however care- fully researched, could better capture the a b s u r d i t y of attempting to define the obscene. Objective standards for obscenity are inherently unattainable, and the existing legal criteria are am- biguous and ludicrously unfair. UNDER SUPREME COURT standards, a work of literature must be judged by the impression it conveys in its entirety rather than by selected passages. To be obscene, its dominant theme must ap- peal to the prurient interests and totally lack redeeming social value. ,t The problem with these criteria is in applying them. Prurient interest thresh- holds, and ideas of redeeming social value, vary widely from man to man. And the problem is not solved by appealing to "contempory community standards." For there are no collective standards, only myriad individual ones. Since the evidence linking artistic, expression with conduct injurious to oth- ers is inconclusive, no utilitarian argu- ment can be made for legislating any ob- scenity standards. Insdeed, the le'g a 1 proviso which in spirit comes closest to covering obscenity situations is the First Amendment's protection of free speech, even speech of which the majority dis- approves. THE MEMBERS of the Performance Group who put on Dionysus in 69 Sunday night are charged not with ob- scenity but with indecent exposure. This charge allows the prosecution to consider the nude scenes as is'olated incidents rather than integral parts of the entire play. The defense will undoubtedly argue that the verdict should be decided by applying the Supreme Court's criteria for of Dionysus, would like to' see the case go to the Supreme Court. So would we. Not because we would like to see the Court's standards for ob- scenity extended to the theatre, but be- cause we would like to see them com- pletely abolished. No play imaginable is better conceived to underscore the ab- surdity of obscenity standards than Dionysus. Taken as a whole, it manifest- ly does not appeal to prurient interests and has clear social value. Few plays could be more explicit yet continue to attract audiences. Thy play thus is a paradox. It clears the Court's obscenity criteria while de- picting action which only a few years ago would everywhere have been considered obscene. While it is unlikely that t h e Court will ever overthrow all obscenity statutes, only a case like Dionysus could ever drag it logically to that brink. ()F THOSE WHO have played unfortun- ate roles in this affair,. University President Robben W., Fleming is espec- ially culpable." Certainly no one would denyhis contention that "theUniversity is not a sanctuary," and "therefore the law applies on campus as well as in the community." Yet surely Fleming would agree that whether the law applies at all in this case must be determined in the courts. And the University, by. a consideration of its own best interests, should be assisting the arrested players in their litigation. Until the notion of contemporary community standards is finally deleted from the statute books, the University must insist that it is a separate com- munity, not subject to the standards of any other community. To stifle experimentation is to destroy learning. A class of students had been as- signed to view Flaming Creatures two years ago. Admittedly both Dionysus and Flaming C eatures were open to the pub- lic, but the audiences were composed overwhelmingly of students and faculty. IF ACADEMIC freedom is at stake, so are future artistic experiments spon- sored by student groups. Motion pictures as explicit as Flaming Creatures have run at local commercial houses without police interference. Plays havinghn u d e scenes have been performed. The au-. thorities seem to pick weak opponents -student groups like Cinema Guild and University Activities Center and obscure off-Off-Broadway companies like the Performance Group. Perhaps clear Uni- versity determination to intercede on behalf of pushovers would deter police 4i Apollo v. Dionysus: Plastic America's trial By DAVID DUBOFF WHEN THE CAST of Dionysus in 69 leaves today, they will be leaving us- with an ultimatum: either the students on this campus can let the issue die, as we permitted the Flaming Creatures issue to die two years ago, or we can use the police censorship that occurred to educate ourselves about the realities of this community. Director Richard Schechner makes the point-and, in. view of the sensationalism that the performance has received around the state; it is a point that cannot be too heavily stressed-that the central issue is not the simple question of nakedness, but of freedom of expres- sion. The court case will have to be fought on first amend- ment grounds, demanding the right to use nudity as a means of artistic expression. Indeed, if the case can be fought and won on these grounds, a significant legal precedent will have been established in the area of public censorship. BUT, IF WE LEARNED anything from the Flaming Creatures case, it is that the basic question underlying censorship will not-and cannot-be brought out in court: that is, questions of artistic integrity, of the right 6f the artist to be free from fear of police harassment, of the right of anyone-artist and agitator-to express a political position without fear of restraint. As I sat in court Monday morning, remembering the last time I was in that same courtroom on charges of tresspassing in the County Bldg., it struck me that this case is an example of political repression in its clearest form. Art and politics go hand in hand: the struggle to maximize human creativity and self-expression is a political struggle. The sickness of our society lies in its inability to tolerate free expression because it leads to breakdown of "order" and "discipline." WHAT'S SO BEAUTIFUL about this case is that it points up so clearly the dehumanization of American values. By what stretch of the imagination can exposure of one's "private parts" be considered "indecent?" Can a society that denies the basic principles of human decency everyday through the use of tanks, bombs, na- palm and other weapons, the sole purposes of which are to destroy human life, possibly claim to be concerned with "decency?" It would seem that the "indecent ex- posure" committed in this case was the exposure of the "guardians of the public trust" as the most flagrant violators of that trust. The PerformancejGroup is talking about a different kind of decency-decency arising from artistic integrity, from the importance for a human being to do and say what he must. The sensationalism in the press, which has concentrated almost solely on the question of "taste" in the performance, has failed to recognize the important place played by that need for integrity. NORMAN O. BROWN, in "Life Against Death," writes about Western Man's cumulative repression, guilt and aggression that places violence above life. He con- trasts Apollo. "the god of form, of plastic form in art, of rational form in thought, of civilized form in life" with Dionysus ". . . not life kept at a distance and seen through a veil but life complete and immediate . . . The Dionysian is no longer an artist, he has become a work of art." It is plastic America, "civilized" America, that is really on trial in this case. 4 p Letters to the Editor Responsibility THE FOLLOWING statement was issued yesterday by Rich- ard Schechner, director of the Performance Group. "We were distressed and anger- ed by seeing the picture which The Daily printed in its extra edition. The picture, as the editors know, does not reflect the true perform- ance; it violates an agreement made between the Performance Daily. Daily, policy does not permit them to enter into such agreements. Krasny's last hurrah To the Editor: I SINCERELY applaud the ac- tions of Police Chief Krasny and his force of Ann Arbor police- men Sunday night. Their raid on the performance of Dionysus in 69 clearly went a long way in up- holding the moral standards of