BOARD OF EDUCATION: CONFLICT OF INTEREST See editorial page fltreigan a iiy COLD ligh--18 Low- -6 20 per cent chance of snow Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No.93 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1967 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES ClosedDoor Visits To ,Be Reinstated Police Seize Cinema Guild Film; By JOYCE WINSLOW "Regarding the second issue on S o u t h Q u a d'* s controversial whether or not the faculty com- closed-door visiting hour policy mittee ought to be consulted," Or- appears headed for a quiet rein- lin said, "we felt it should. statement later in the week. Not Consulted Prof. Louis Orlin of the Near "We had not been consulted on Eastern history and literature de- the visiting, hour policy," Orlin partment and spokesman for the said. "We learned that the policy Residence Hall faculty advisory was in effect from an Ann Arbor c o m plicated comtesaid yesterday that he News article.. 'jI~II ~ U will present a petition advocating "Feldkamp did send us a memo reinstatement of the policy to before the article appeared, but Residence Hall Director John he put the memo inside a book-Issues Feldkamp by the end of the week. let, Standards for Students.' All Feldkamp, who makes the final lt SadrsfrSuet. l decision, told The Daily that he of us had read that booklet al- has been frthis policy fro th ready, so naturally when I opened t S..Jtalke the envelope and saw that, I just beginning." ifiled it. I had no idea there was Reviewed1 New Poliev I JIF ~stors MVarch on City vcvacwcu i cw rVaavy "South Quad'shvisiting hour policy was reviewed," Orlin ex- plained, "because we felt the new program was a change in policy 'and not just a variant on the old policy. The issue was a double one: first, whether the new policy was an educationalbenefit for residence h a 11 s, and second, whether the faculty committee ought to be consulted." "Regarding the first issuen" Or- lin said, "none of us are actually ini favor of a closed-door policy,, but we are willing to try it pro- ~%viding the built-in guarantees are honored. We want to stress the importance of student responsi- bility in this decision to reinstate the new visiting hour policy. "There have to be penalties for violators. Only student discipline will make the program work. We S hope that students will receive this liberalization of visiting hour policy as an educational privilege rather than as a long over-due right." 1 i i 1 s l i NEI SACRAMENTO, Calif.-Gov versity of California regents' mee favor of tuition." He said Tues legislation to impose tuition fees the regents do the same for the Reagan strongly condemned ministration for holding up fina students. The move was promp per cent cutback in finances to "precipitate and unwarranted." Assembly Speaker Jesse Unri meeting with Reagan, said he we 4000 Cal. students opposing tuiti the regents meeting. EAST LANSING-An estima from Michigan State University hepatitis, reports Dr. James Feu Center. Feurig said nine cases ha since the start of the term. He this by no means represents an e The State Health Departme break of the disease throughout flamation of the liver, often is ac a feeling of distress and cramps. GRAD STUDENT COUNCIL last night. John De Lamater, the announced the results:. Roy Ashn executive vice-president; Kirk C ident; Ed Bloomberg, treasure] secretary; and Claiborne Gilbert night's elections marked the first two vice-presidents. The post o added as an extension of the offi De Lamater. UNIVERSITY REGENTS w meeting at 2 p.m. tomorrow in t istration Building. THE YOUNG DEMOCRATI central committee recently pass Johnson Administration to "sup Nations) Secretary-General U T Nam and to accept U Thant's there. The resolution also urged immediate initiative" on prisoner long-range plans for keeping ba and send no further troops to Tha U Thant's three-point progrv bombings of North Viet Nam, mu of the conflict in the South and tional Liberation Front as well a: Viet Nam. THE NEW PLAY PROJECT activities of the Professional The a grant of $25,000 from the Nat annimearm,+ nov mp frnm reimne a memo inside." Prosecution Board The faculty committee has not To See Film Today; been consulted on major issues for at least five years due to changes Delay in Ruling Seen in administration and administra- tive structure. By HARVEY WASSERMAN Originally, the committee of Editorial Director five was appointed by the Regentsl Lieutenant Eugene Staudenmei- as the only organizational chan- er told students at Ann Arbor City nel to express faculty opinion on Hall last night that he confiscated residence hall policies. The com- the film "Flaming Creatures" on mittee hasbeen in astate of sus- powers granted him "by a state pension for some time, due to hazyA law against obscenity. CWhen structure, pressed further on the specific law, "We met in token ways," Orlin he said "you can check with the said. "None of us felt we were i h county prosecutor's office in the participating in vital decisions morning." We were invited to meetings de- Staudenmeier entered the Cine- signed to inform us rather than ma Guild auditorium last night to be asked in advance about a with another man, probably a policy, county prosecutor named Thomas Shea. ter viewn bout 2 mm-ign "We feel we have a vested in- utes. of threigSabutrmio- CLIMBING INTO A SQUAD CAR, Lt. Eugene Staudenmeier fright) terest in the residence halls and utestad eio fiscated from Cinema Guild last night under his coat. The film so deredit coiscprate H satiTdss e feltwe wuldasset te vaue fgiveshoingwAnew uhgwsra.a mmberofnhe CnemsGuideb the board in our willingness toae did not a have agn warrant, but ui-n eatd heSasctings iny co in a with the county prosecutor's office. - - housing director, we felt we should He would not identify his com- I A L V A E STUDIEN IT PROQBLEM1!S: reintroduce ourselves." panion. The law he was probably refer- ring to can be found in Michigan Statutes annotated Section 28.5 75D 's . g d(1)xswhich in part states "Any per- flj son who knowingly sells, lends, t s - T e w d Lebn pse Wtdn gives away, shows ... any obscene,h. lewd, lascivious, filthy or inde- Uetasadistic or masochistic l admision roedres fr newofwy a isdtemercnCvl - W SANWIRE mto picture film . , shall be SIis t ' u W EEguilty oquestiosthaaroseS ekinitde-u t bLegal Precedents the ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~h qcol.H al h cin C u esstontrsme ipre-y __________________ fTense were two-fold: Te ure ur lin By RON KLEMPNER a g a i n s t incumbent Republican Reagan will attend the Uni- United States vs. Ulysses (1930) A. Jerome Dupont, '67L, is ask- ting today "to express myself in held that a book must be judged ing the Ann Arbor voters for a municipal elections. day that he would not ask for in its entirety and could not be job on City Council after he grad- The ward encompasses students at the state colleges unless the ruled as obscene on the basis of uates his spring. Dupont is run- living in the central campus area tUniversity of California. a few passages which of them- ning for the second ward council and the middle class homes in Ann the college and university ad- selves might be objectionable. seat on the Democratic ticket Arbor Hills. Dupont views over- -eadmnsdionprosedur tescrnte Ernest Goodman a Detroit - y ad amiiong pcedures fncern lawyer with the American Civil te b Ragn' anoncd 0 Liberties Union said "The Supreme _g strigensrulsrrquirngevalutio Ure S mA JS.tu.dhesentsmymke the schools. He calls the action Court has set down some prettyn trn s tmen tg ub, who will attend the regents of the entireproduction. As long uld receive a petition signed bya as there is redeeming social value nnsJabb on at a nes conference before in the work as a whole, one can- TP recoih ,n selhrof e n - S oonobcenteas nt find itabscne onthe bhal-sis o oneos h lnt ljnosadsnossatg of a few questionable parts." 2n Goodman also mentioned te Literary college students wererdoflficially on Feb. 6, Shaw said. ted 35 students have withdrawn possibility that aidefense might be urged yesterday to make appoint- Current seniors (students who this term because of infectiousI built on 'whether or not a city, ments to see their counselors be- now have 85 or more hours of rig, director of the MSU Health I official had the right to act on tween Jan. 23 and Feb. 6 to dis- credit) will have the first oppor- ve been diagnosed at the center this own in interrupting a filmi cuss general academic and voca- tunity to schedule appointments said although there is concern, :without a warrant or an official, tional plans. with their counselors, beginning pidemic on the campus. eiwfrhn. Counselors have in o r~ e timef Jan, 19. Other students may make nt aidit ad o rpors o anPreiou Cofisatiflsavailable during this period to seeI appointments starting Feb. 1. students before the pre-registda- Shaw pointed out that the pass- the state. The disease, an in-itin rush begins, said James W. fail option will be available for companied by an upset stomach, had confiscated films previously in h h J the same manner without chal-i Shaout, chairman of the unior-a lenge on this ground,I Senior Counselors. The plan to 1juiran seosstti xtuenee iad htchre make the time period available with the summer term this year. .held elections for new officers could be brought on the level eith- wa omltdb h ieayTh pinwsaalbet rd retrin prsidnt f te cuncl 'r o a isdmeaor r afelnycollege's Student Steering Coin- uating seniors this term who sign- reairl, presidentGrethecn ci rothiseeaoo flny mittee. ed up for it during the registration - .(See FILM, Page 2) Advance classification will open' period earlier this month. -Daily-Ion Horwitz ) of the Ann Arbor police holds a print of "Flaming Creatures" con- ciety was forced to substitute "Great Dictator" for their 9 p.m. ard talks (right) to some of the 100 students who sat-in at City Ring, Student1 ncil Seat Victory coming the apathy of students to planning and leadership in attack- participation in city politics as ing the problems of the commun- the major obstacle to winning his ity. Issues needing consideration bid. are transportation, the housing He feels that the ward is one in market, and parks and recrea- which a student on the Demo- tional facilities. cratic ticket could potentially out- ! Transportation: Dupont not- draw a conservative Republican. ed that some recent city measures, His immediate goal is combat- such as the facelifting given Main ting what he sees as city's attempt Street, have worsened rather than to keep students off the registra- alleviated the public transporta- tion rolls, despite the fact that Lion situation. He favors investi- many of them have been residents gating the feasibility of increas- ingmass transit systems in Ann years. Arbor, specifically in the down- "To get these people on the vot- town andcentral campus area. ing polls, I usually have to accom- Housing: Dupont said that lpany them myself to the city's zoning changes are needed to per,- time consuming, and even if they mitan increased population den- all wanted to go through the pro- sity in the central campus area. cess, it's hard to find the time to Some efforts must be made to take them all down there." increase the availability of rentals Registration will be suspended near the campus," he said. next week for the primary and i Recreation: In order to in- will open again in four weeks. Du- crease recreational facilities, Du- pont is unopposed for the candi- pont proposed that consideration dacy in the second ward. He said be given to construction of a sum- that when the polls re-open the mer area camp on the model of Democratic party will have a ma- Camp Dearborn. "The closest rec- jor campaign underway to register reational area tohthehcity is 20 students in the ward. miles away, and the children who Dupont cited the need for coun- need it most are the ones who can cil to apply more imagination, least afford to travel that far." Show Halted; Charge Film Is "Obscene IncensedI Audience Blocks Officer's Exit But Violenice Avoidled By CLARENCE FANTO Managing Editor and ROGER -RAPOPORT The Ann Arbor police halted the showing of "Flaming Creatures" at Cinema Guild last night and seized the film on grounds that it was "obscene." About 100 students subsequently marched to the city hall in ten- degree weather and staged a sit- in at the police station lobby to protest. The case is scheduled to go be- fore the county prosecutor today, and he may bring formal charges against Cinema Guild. Capacity Crowds Lieut. Eugene Staudenmeier, chief of the Anil Arbor Police DetectivessBureau .eviewed the movie during the 7 o'clock per- formance as part of a capacity crowd of 300 in the Architecture Auditorium. He left the ador- a tium about 8 P.m after the vivid depiction of a rape scene, entered the second floor projection booth and seized the film. Staudenmeier said he took the film, which had been playing about 20 minutes because a "mis- demeanor had beey committed be- fore a police officer." The police officer was reported- ly acting on a formal complaint filed earier this week by adAr- chitecture School professor who contended the film was obscene. The profensor had never seen the movie. The incensed audience blocked Staudenneier's exit from the pro- jection booth for a short time. r Don't Be Afraid' When the way cleared Stauden- meier hesitated before setting out into the hostile crowd. "in not leaving until you get all those people out of the way." he told CinemanGuild officials. "Oh, comeon," Assistant to the Vice-President for University Re- lations Jack Hamilton told Stau- denme-er. "You know-sticks and stones." Staudenmeier rushed down the staircase to a chorus of boos and insults from the crowd. There was no violence, although~ a compact police squad car was kicked by several persons in the crowd as it drove away. March on City Hall Then crowd which gathered in the police station lobby of City H{all demanded an explanation for the ;confiscation of the film. "I declared it was obscene be- causedof my previous experience," said Staudenmeier. About 10 students sat-in for I about four hours at the police de- partent lobby. The students had all gone home by early this morn- ing. 'Your Responsibility' University Vice-President for Student Affairs Richard L. Cut- ler had told Cinema Guild leaders Tuesday afternoon, "You know you're responsible for anything that happens tomorrow and the University Isn't." The Cinema Guild ordered "Flaming Creatures" from New York City, according to chairman Ellen Frank, '68. The film has been banned in New York City and in Amsterdam. The film was delivered from New York by freight to avoid pos- sible difficulty with federal postal regulations, Miss Frank said. When the film arrived, it was screened by the Cinema Guild ad- visory board, which decided the film had "redeeming social value" and considerable artistic merit, she said. 'Not Dehumanization' "I've seen it and it's good," said Miss Frank. "My definition of pornography is not dehumaniza- +4n~ + - + n. - ,.,.a i + hisfilm 1 1 1 t 5 1 f 3 i 3rant, administrative vice-pres- r; Mary Mansnerus, recording t, corresponding secretary. Last t time that the GSC has elected 3f executive vice-president was ce of the president, according to 'ill hold their monthly public he Regents Rm. of the Admin- C CLUBS of Michigan's state ed a resolution calling on the port all initiatives by (United' hant to cease hostilities in Viet three-point program" for peace that the United States "take exchanges. state that it has no ses or troops in Southeast Asia iland.' am includes a halt in American tual and reciprocal de-escalation d peace talks involving the Na- s the U.S. and North and South T, one of the most successful atre Program, has just received lonal Council on the Arts. The 'il chairman Roier Stevens in DETROIT CONFERENCE: Stokely, Ai ky Push Black Power By THOMAS R. COPI run on the basis of power and self- son for organizing is to attain Special To The Daily interest." power," Alinsky said. "And when A central issue in the quest for we organize a Negro ghetto, we DETROIT-"The questien is not black power, Carmichael said, is don't come out with pastel pow- whether we should be violent, but that of "definition." "To be de- er," he said. whether we have enough might to fined is to be contained. As long "We must forget about human- take what we want," Stokely Car- as we can be defined by white itarianism and other such noble michael said here yesterday. th America we shall be contained by motivations," Alinsky said. "If we stage here at the Central Meth- it," he said. are concerned about living in a ostg hrch wthe rcal orgaer '"White America is forcing its free society, we must enfranchise Sduult Church with racial org szedefinition 'black is bad' onto the the Negro," he added, "because Saul Alinsky, said that he does black people," Carmichael contin- the disenfranchisement of any not condemn violence as a tactic. ued. He said that the black peo- group will cause a power vacuum "Everything this country has was ple are not rebelling against the which will result in the downfall ab tained through ece f definitions that have been im- of our system." ereomw wiliiaetoepressed upon them. Alinsky went on to attack. the er reforms, we will imitate those pesduo hm "welfare colonialism" which he of our oppressors," Carmichael Alinsky, somewhat of a folk- said is practiced in the U.S. "The said. hero among community organizers, said; is actic ed teUS"Te The chairman of the militant said that black power is simply ghettoes are regarded as colonies Student Nonviolent Coordinating black people organizing to have andtimals," he said. The people in Committee went on to say that the power to act as full-fledged animrals hestad.n, peopl i black power, which he seeks, may American citizens. It is black peo- power, Alinsky mainteeptheoa in the ghet be defined as: 'ple organizing politically to devel- troep the eole n the ghets- toes Th coonil mntaitywantsI - "Developing a milieu where op their own power base, outside I to prevent riots and other trouble both political parties. he said. . - , - ,+ ...a o .