--friday inorning Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Selling sex for profit -- and no fun by daniel zwerdling I 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: LYNN WEINER The future of 'U' housing UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATORS often need to be confronted with a crisis before they decide to stop talking and start correcting it. However, in questions concerning housing - f r o m Solstis to Tent City - their characteristic obstin- ancy has been unusually great. Last fall over a hundred freshmen were forced to sleep in dormitory dining rooms at West Quad after the Office of Univer- sity Housing discovered it had over-ac- cepted applicants for residence hall spaces. W h e n rooms proved to be un- available, dozens of students were com- pelled to inhabit a dining room in Mark- ley Hall until rooms could be found, in other dormitories, singles were converted into doubles and doubles into triples to provide room for the victims of the foul- up. This year the dormitory overcrowding was less acute. However, last September's crisis seems to have had no long range ef- fects. In the past twelve months, the Uni- versity has failed to present any plans for low-cost housing near Central Campus. Apparently the administration had hoped it could muddle through the com- plaints about a lack of low-cost housing without deviating from pushing its tra- ditional barrack-styled residence halls on a student community which is becoming increasingly alienated to the style of liv- ing that dormitories offer. TENT CITY succeeded in dramatizing some of these problems. By occupying part of the Diag, the campers called at- tention to the lack of reasonably priced apartments near Central Campus. Now that the seriousness of the housing prob- lem has been shown, new pressure must be put on the Regents to g i v e housing construction plans far higher priority than they have received in recent years. At their September meeting, the Re- gents asked students to prepare detailed plans for new housing units. Hopefully the University will be willing to listen to the recommendations from committees it creates rather than using the establish- ment of a committee to deflate the pres- sure for change. The housing question cannot be wished away - like certain sections of the proposed by-laws which have been ignored for over a year. WHAT IS NEEDED is for the housing office to work in conjunction with students to develop plans for low-cost, apartment-type dwellings which the Uni- versity community - including non-aca- demic employes - so desperately needs. Tentative proposals for new construction c o u 1 d be presented to the Regents as early as next month through the Univer- sity Committee on Communications or the Committee on Resource Allocation. A second issue the Regents should con- sider is the viability of maintaining the Residence Halls as a financially self-sus- taining operation. Currently, all housing expenses plus any funds for new con- struction must be drawn from a budget based soley on the income the University receives from housing fees. Traditionally, the Office of University.Housing has been able to generate few surplus funds for new construction despite the high rates charged for living in its buildings. The little money available has been used for repairs and the construction of Residen- tial College facilities in East Quad (which are only partially related to housing.) It seems evident at this point, and es- pecially in light of the rising costs of the housing operation - maintenance and kitchen workers will be negotiating a new contract this winter - that the Regents will have to contribute funds for housing simply to keep the rates within reason. The University must face up to the re- sponsibility it has dodged so long. The housing shortage is such an urgent prob- lem that it must not be buried in com- mittees or ignored any longer. -PAT MAHONEY PORNOGRAPHY has come a long way from the noon throbbing sex shops on New York's 42nd Ave. Now Ann Arbor has its own: the Fourth Avenue Adult Nees, imported from* the sick urban sprawl to set up dig- nified shop in the 1967 All-Amer- ica City, around the corner from the Pretzel Bell and only a min- ute's walk from City Hall. Why not have a pornography shop in a quiet, intellectual college town? People here like sex, too. Since it opened in June, Adult News has been straight forward and honest, not like a certain store at State and Packard which hides its warts in shadowy isles. "We are Ann Arbor's largest erotic bookstore," proclaims the ads, "featuring an unspeakably com- plete line of paperback books, magazines, newspapers, records, cards, still photos of local models, and 8-mm color and black and white movies, plus a marvelous selection of 'novelties.'" To get inside the door for the smallest peek (the windows are draped with passion red curtains) you have to pay a 50 cent deposit. deductible from any purchase. I dropped by the shop the other day after an appointment at the County Building and found an assortment of the longest and most varied dildos in southern Michi- gan. Six sizes to choose from, ranging from The Destroyer, a- two-foot whopper at $14.95, to Jack the Giant Killer, five inches long and only $5.95. They come in two styles, stiff wire core and flexible. Manager Dana Craw- ford estimates he sells about one a day. For $25 one also can buy two models of artifical yagina, a hotwater inflatible or a foam rub- ber cold. The rest of the merchandise runs the gammut from under- ground sex papers like Kiss and Screw to shelves of passion books, a homosexual rack which covers an entire wall, some scientific looking how to do it sex manuals (Crawford says these are big sell- ers), and little color books of sex more graphic than most of us will ever have fortune to see. Some of the covers have tiny white dots pasted over a crucial square milli- meter on the photo, seemingly -Daily--Jim Judkis admission simply because they're so damn funny," Crawford says. One of his favorites is "Dog Days, by Buster Hymen." "the aesthetic level is lower than it should be in most of our books," complains Crawford, al- though he adds that some do take time and money and put out a really beautiful product. "NOW IN DENMARK, everyl thing is superior: the scenes are staged better, the color process is infinitely better, and they have a flair for drama, for real sen- suality," he says. The American merchandise Adult News sells doesn't ome close. A typical maga- zine I saw, called "Teenager" (but marked 'For Entertainment of Adults Only') pictured a hippie drummer pounding away at his drums, apparently oblivious to a young girl bearing her oreasts next to him. The magazine's best story looked like "Doing It On the Rocks." Denmark is the best. All the reg- ular newsstands on the Vester- brogade, Copenhagen's main shop- ping avenue, sell good pornography along side the Herald Tribune, and almost anywhere you can buy a photo book for two krone from a little automat just as you would buy a sandwich in Horn and Har- dart. No one is afraid to pause and browse, not old ladies, smartly dressed housewives, students nor businessmen. Ann Arbor has a long way to catch up. One morning this sum- mer as I drove down a pastoral country road in Denmark, I stop- ped at a tidy white frame house with a beautiful tulip garden and a small sign that said "Sex Shop." A bottle' of milk and a oound of butter were still sitting on the stoop from the early morning de- livery. When I walked in, a bell tinkled and the proprietess emerged from a back room where I could hear bacon sizzling. She was a prudish, serious looking woman whom I suspect District Judge Sanford Elden could be proud to have for a wife. After looking around for a few minutes, I thanked her and left. She smiled, picked up the milk and butter, and went back to the kitchen to make breakfast for her family. i because publishers suffer fits of false modesty. That way, actually, you can't reap the real fruits until you buy a book and open it up. PIONEERING IN Ann Arbor's erotic wilderness isn't easy. Since Adult News opened, it has strug- gled patiently against police harassment. This summer county assistant prosecutor Casper Kast filed suit against the owner for selling obscene, lassivious, lewd and disgusting merchandise and won a conviction in circuit court. Adult News has taken the case to the state court of appeals. Shortly 'after taking over shop, manager Crawford was slapped with a $40 fine for not registering under an assumed name. It's a de- tail of business one often forgets, but law enforcement officials can't remember too many times they've hauled someone to court for it. While I was browsing in the store, some city employes leaped from a truck which had pulled up outside the windows, and be- gan measuring the Adult News red and yellow blacklight painted sign. They wanted to see if it was big enough to violate the city sign ordinance. And police wander in occasionally, just to check up on business. I asked Crawl ord if they pay the 50 cent deposit. "You must be kidding," he said. What's a nice boy like Dana Crawford doing in a business like this? "I'm in it to make money," he says. "It's a business like any other' business, only no other busi- ness ever gets hassled the way we get hassled." That's too bad, because the mechanics of starting a sex busi- ness are easy as apple pie. "You" simply rent a store, put up a plat- form for the display counter, put up racks for books, paint the win- dows and open the store," Craw- ford confides. All the stock comes from a warehouse in Duran, Mich- igan, seat of the Sceen Distrib- utors pornography empire which owns Adult News and 50 other shops like it. Sceen prides itself on bringing sex to towns like Saginaw, Flint and Jackson, where a few years ago you would be hard pressed to find a copy of Catcher in the Rye. SINCE OPENING, 'Ann Arbor's Adult News has been drifting along doing- a "satisfactory to good" business. Most of the clien- tele says Crawford, are men be- tween 35 and 55, evenly split be- tween white collar and blue .ollar w'orkers, and including a 16t of transients like salesmen. "White collar workers usually spend more and go for more exotic items like dildos and vibrators," observes Crawford. "Blue collar workers are more satisfied with the good old trade.% "We get a handful of women every day. And every now and then we get a little old lady who asks me for a Reader's Digest." Students look around but seldom buy, says Crawford. "On Friday and Saturday nights we get a lot of dates, girls giggle and shriek, and the guys strut around. I turn up the stereo real loud." Crawford doesn't go much for- the products he sells; he says the best stuff in the store is the titles to some of the books. "For anyone with any amount of intelligence, the titles are worth the price of LETTERS TO THE EDITOR UA W demands: Feasible changes Dorm security problem UNIVERSITY DORMITORIES have a security problem, but there are con- flicting ideas about where the negligence lies. Administrators feel 'the trouble stems from students failure to be conscious of security. -Students on the other hand think that the administration's casual attitude has led to the lack of security in the halls. These conflicting beliefs are composed partly of rumor and partly of truth, but if there is to be an effective security system in the dorms, then the truth must be sep- arated from rumor. Last year after a series of raids at South Quad, a committee of resident directors drew up a report for revamping the entire dorm security system. Most of the pro- posals in the committee's report dealt with ways to make the security systems in the dorms more effective. The position of Night Security Supervisor grew out of this committee's proposals. Also 14 men were hired primarily to provide night se- curity for the dorms. The office of Uni- versity Housing deemed this force ade- quate for the protection of the ten resi- dence halls. These men were hired two Domino SEVERAL YEARS ago the State Univer- sity of California at Berkeley became the campus center of unrest. The chan- cellor of the university in those troubled times was Martin Meyerson. Two short years ago Meyerson trans- ferred himself from Berkeley to the State University of New York at Buffalo. Last spring that campus closed down for over a month due to police and student riots over black demands. Now Meyerson has relocated himself again and upped his stature. He is presi- dent of the University of Pennsylvania. Until this time that campus has been relatively quiet. Has J. Edgar picked up his trail? -MAYNARD weeks before the begining-of the fall term and received only three days of training before starting on their jobs. Whether this security force is adequate is questionable, but the actions of some students in dormitories are also question- able. TAKE BURSLEY Hall for an example. One of the main problems in Bursley is the propping open of back doors with such articles as rocks, sticks and anything else that will keep the door open. This is done mainly for the convenience of stu- dents, (probably so they won't have to go to the front entrance when coming in from the parking lot). While students may enter and leave the building with less trouble, opening the back doors may also tempt a thug or burglar to come inside. Another favorite student pasttime is disconnecting the buzzer alarm system in Bursley. This mechanism was installed to apprehend anyone illegally passing through the men's wing to the women's wing. Students who findq this an incon- venience turn it off. While this removes the handicap, it also hampers attempts to keep unwanted strangers out of dorm halls. By failing to lock their doors and challenge suspicious strangers, students cause security problems for themselves, However there are some questions that University Housing must answer. Why is there only one security man for large residence halls such as Bursley, Markley and South Quad? The latter, because of its size, location and the heavy resident, non-resident, and non-student traffic, is a prime security problem. ETAS THE Housing Office considered in- sgfl1)no onerating electronic buzzer cTetPrr in F01 residence halls? The only system now working is in Bursley. Also, why has the University waited so long to ePperiment with programs like the door Irov cvetmV mirrently onenrtod in Mosher .Tordi Qn snd the ard key system planned for Markley? Why is there no security orotection at such a large complex as Vera Baits Houses? PCme q+rifiPq have been tnken toward .4%.- .. .s "& " ,v 'a 'l ..". To the Editor: MR. CHANEY'S editorial (Sept. 18) is ignorant of working condi- tions inside auto plants and naive about the power of the UAW to influence GM in "progressive" di- rections. First, it may be impossible to make work in auto plants a n y - thing but boring and monotonous. Both the rank and file and the UAW leadership realize this. Given the inevitable boredom, better working conditions are achieved by longer breaks during the shift, less arbitrary authority for t h e foremen, elimination of manda- tory overtime, more holidays, and the 30 and Out demand. Most of these 'provide the one possible improvement: more time away from the line. As for t h e "greed" of wage demands, the auto worker may rationalize his bore- dom with the amount of money he makes. But these people are also con- sumers. Few see any alternative to this life style. They need to buy cars, homes, appliances, food and clothing for their families and oc- casionally have the extra burden. of sending a child or two to col- lege. Due to inflation all t h e s e things cost more. A larger wage is needed for their economic sur- vival. To call that greed is a cal- lous and oversimplified answer. And would any resultant inflation be due to UAW wage demands or GM reluctance to reduce its mar- gin of profit? SECOND, THE UAW limits its demands to what is feasible, given its limited power. Would a UAW strike for a non-polluting engine or a safe car be an effective wea- pon? That type of a strike would probably bring howls of laugh- ter from amused GM officials. The UAW doesn't have that much power relative to Ford, Chrysler, and GM. The power to force those changes lies with the federal gov- ernment. But for the UAW to squander its power over issues on which it has perpherial influence, as Mr. Chaney suggests, would be "to not think at all." -Mark H. Haarz, LSA '70 Sept. 22 Glass recycling To the Editor: YOUR SEPT. 18 edition con- tained a story on the new glass re- cycling center, and while you not- ed our successful beginning y o u failed to mention our location. People who want to =recycle their glass and help to make the recyc- ling center a permanent commun- ity service should go to 221 Felch. behind the Ann Arbor Construc- tion Co., Tuesday through Satur- day. -Russell Linden Enact Ecology Center,;Inc. Supporting Denton To the Editor: I WISH TO enter my support of Peter Denton in his request that he be judged by his, peers, Rather than taking disciplinary action we should thank him for having the courage to stand up and cause the tumult necessary to effect the difficult changes need- ed 'in our society. --Mark M. Green Asst. Prof. of Chemistry The Editorial Page of The Michigan Daily is open to any- one who wishes to submit articles. Generally speaking, all articles should be less than 1,000 words. 0 "I didn't think the hijackers would blow up those jets either.. .." - halancuis4 teactijiPs Newark flash! Baby Hughey goes to jail? nadine cohodas IT'S TOO BAD Lincoln Steffens isn't alive to write a new chapter for his eyeopening "Shame of the Cities" of 1904. The new section would have to be called "The Extortion of Newark" starring eight-year mayor and former U.S. congressman of seven terms, Hugh J. Addonizio, the'corpulent, balding ruler of the New Jersey city who was sentenced Tuesday to 10 years in prison, and fined $25,000 for conspiracy and extortion. And after revealing the sordid details of the Ad- donizio case, Steffens would have to acknowledge that after 66 years, there's really nothing new in big city corruption or in public reaction to it. Addonizio, as anyone who briefly studies Steffens' work will learn, has acted in a fine tradition of municipal graft. He and three cohorts, former City Director of Public Works Anthony LaMonte, Joseph Biancone and Ralph Vicaro (who received a stiffer sentence) were all convicted of sharing the proceeds of extorted kickbacks totaling $1 5 million from contractorso n city water office When I am out of this one, and I shall get out of this office all there is in it for Samuel H. Ash- bridge." The mayor certainly gave it the old college try by' pursuing activities - admittedly more dastardly than Addonizio' s- which included the attempted silencing of a public newspaper through threats and intimidation of persons involved in its publishing; the importation from New York of the White Slavery system of prostitution, the growth of speakeasies and corruption of the local school systems to help elections. The last item took the form of "voluntary contribu- tions" by teachers to The Machine to insure better salaries and in some cases just to get hired. And, as Steffens notes, in Philadelphia during this period it be- came clear that teachers were chosen not on fitness' but for political reasons. Ashbridge was luckier than Addonizio, however. For Steffens says that after his narasitic term amayor. he not generalizations, but each statement can be abundant- ly proved by numerous instances." AND TUESDAY IN TRENTON Judge Barlow declared in part: "It is impossible to estimate the impact . . . of these criminal acts upon the decent citizens of N e w a r k and indeed of this state, in terms of their frustration, despair and disillusionment. How can we calculate the cynicism engendered in our citizens . . . how does one measure the erosion of - confidence in our system of government and the diminished respect for our laws, oc- casioned by those men? These very men who, as govern- iment officials. inveighed against crime in the streets, while they pursued their own criminal activities in the corridors of city hall?" Furthermore, Barlow contended,'the "enormity" of Addonizio's guilt could "scarcely be exaggerated" because "an intricate conspiracy of this magnitude couldnever * *