4e Srihitn ai . Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 1 1 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1973 Arresting the Constitution cxdG - 1H& WAG fH6N) Z 60T FOO 9W17-H SC- I5S' AIJ2UO C3 4' PO&bVTIO ;MIU60 "(H AWX Rf'JAHRPW AV IC 1~ A i VVO CA M PU S V(C)LI~l)C. -N);f UietkJ l cF rk LOITt- CAMPUS VOLET fAtJP U PSE 131 I3O P WITH BY MY L-AI. 7)-T Jl W( PceRt2 OTH M~& SETERV1 EIGHTY-ONE PEOPLE were arrested Friday for disregarding an injunction that was a clear infringement upon their Constitutionally-guaranteed freedoms of speech, press and assembly. The injunction, handed down last week by Oakland County Circuit Court Judge William Hampton, enjoined A&P lettuce boycott picketers from picketing within 50 feet of the store, and from using more than two picketers at a time. The de- cision also forbade them to mention A&P in any of their literature. In the injunction, the court cited as a basis for the decision the picketers "en- gaging in threatening, intimidating, men- acing, assaulting, coercing, impeding and harassing activities." IRONICALLY, NONE of the A&P cus- tomers purportedly endangered by the notoriously non-violent picketers ever saw fit to file an affadavit backing these allegations. The boycott leaflets themselves are hardly libelous or inflammatory; they simply state a fact even A&P will con- cede: the store sells non-UFW lettuce and grapes. It appears then, that the store's cus- tomers were threatened only with infor- mation, which they could choose to ac- cept or ignore. Hampton's injunction was therefore a blatant abridgement of First Amendment rights. Unfortunately, labor laws of recent decades - aimed more at protecting the economic status quo rather than lifting the down-trodden or protecting certain rights - have almost totally obscured these rights. Hampton is not totally to.blame for this decision; it is unfortunate that he has a good deal of precedent to fall back on. SINCE THE TAFT-HARTLEY Act of 1947, secondary boycotts have been restricted, and since the Steel Foundries case of 1921, legal precedent has been es- tablished to regulate the size and loca- tion of picket lines as well. The latitude allowed these laws and the strength of these precedents has been determined on a case-by-case basis, often relying on the wisdom of the judge alone. Last week, they were interpreted in the strictest sense, unjustly trampling on the rights of the picketers, but doubtless appealing to the conservative commun- ity of Pontiac. As Friday's arrests have shown, how- ever, the decision did not apply only to Oakland County, although Hampton Sports Staff DAN BORUS Sports Editor FRANK LONGO Managing Sports Editor BOB McGINN..............Executive Sports Editor CHUCK BLOOM ...............Associate Sports Editor JOEL GREER .................Associate Sports Editor RICH STUCK .............. Contributing Sports Editor BOB HEUER .............Contributing Sports Editor claimed that the ruling would not affect A&P picketers elsewhere. IGNORING THE QUESTIONABLE con- . stitutionality of the ruling, Hamp- ton's decision may, perhaps, be accept- able to the Pontiac community. But guar- antees of constitutional liberties cannot be based on community standards. But picketers learned Friday in cities across that state that the decision can be applied in all Michigan counties, includ- ing communities sympathetic to the boy- cott The economic basis for the injunction is clear. The document cites the loss of patrons and prospective patrons, grave and serious injury to (A&P's) valuable name, reputation and good will." The paramount issue, is, of course, whether protecting the profits of a pri- vate business should supercede the rights of the individual. We commend the arrested picketers for their stand in their latest, inadver- tent cause - that of defending our ever- diminishing civil liberties. Nixon's candor THE WHITE HOUSE calls it Operation Candor. The target is the American people and the object, far-fetched as it may seem, is to restore Richard Nixon's shattered credibility. It may well consti- tute Nixon's goal-line stand to retain the Presidency. However, rather than lend credence to his claim, "I'm not a crook,". the Presi- dent's latest counterattack has only dem- onstrated how short of ammunition he really is. Nixon kicked off this campaign by as- suring the Republican Governor's Con- ference that there would be "no new sur- prises" about Watergate. Then key re- corded conversations suddenly ceased to exist, due of course to technical difficul- ties and Rose Mary Wood's unique stretching ability. Understandably, the President's credibility was hardly resus- citated. But now Operation Candor informs us that Nixon paid only $1,667 in federal in- come taxes for a two-year period during his first term. Even if this small sumf can be explained away through legal loopholes, it only increases public mis- trust of Nixon. If this is indeed the best Operation Candor can do to state the President's case, it appears that the truth, not Con- gressional Democrats or the liberal press, is Nixon's worst enemy. TODAY'S STAFF: News: Ted Evanoff, Chip Sinclair, Charlie Stein, Sue Stephenson, Rolfe Tessem Editorial Page: Cindy Hill, Eric S c h o c h, Chuck Wilbur Arts Page: Diane Levick Photo Technician: David Margolick AUl? UP56T '8Lr W(TH WAT15AT5 AkI2 UPS Ty FOP P C- LOI-UCH 1$ A R EAW? EC BUCAL)C OF 71C AAB5 M aJV cW1sRs IM TU -rmO'f) US~IT THAUTM MTA E10J to-2t Q I38 4% b-hen-$ -11 111 B n Making the great escape from reality By JOAN HOLDEN SAN FRANCISCANS who decide t h e y can't take city life, and can afford to choose, retreat across the Golden G a t e Bridge to still-sylvan Marin County. Scen- ic, affluent, ecology-minded, Marin is said to be the pleasantest place to live in Cali- fornia. But if that is not good enough, north of the county's tasteful tract homes lies a world still more pleasant, safer, and more picturesque than Marin itself. Just off busy Highway 101, a walled and turreted medieval town, ablaze with ban- ners and bordering an oak forest, rises from a gigantic parking lot. This is the Renais- sance Pleasure Faire, northern kingdom of an expanding empire of fantasy presid- ed over by a California couple, who are making a good thing of their discovery that Americans nowadays will pay good monev to pretend they are in another time and place. $3.75 ENTITLES you to step (along with 30,000 others on an average summer week- end) into a past that never was. Inside, you are free to wander through a busy market square and along a winding lane lined with some 200 booths and stalls, and half a dozen outdoor stages, where histor- ically appropriate entertainment goes on almost constantly. Hawkers and strolling players wind their ways through the crowd. Craftsmen cry out their wares, and the scent of charcoal- broiled meat mingles with the fragrance of the forest. Severaltimes daily, Queen Elizabeth I passes through in a royal pro- cession, with drums and bagpipes. A husband and wife team, Ron and Phyllis Patterson, claim to have originated the "theme event", or fantasy fair, a Cali- fornia phenomenon that, if not exactly sweeping, is certainly creeping across the country. What started as a one-weekend benefit in Los Angeles in 1963 has not only swelled to a full-time business in Cali- fornia, but inspired dozens of similar events from coast to coast. THE FANTASY fair is really a refine- ment on a long-time national pastime, make-believe. Somewhere between Disney- land and the grade-school carnival, the Renaissance Pleasure Faire offers the best of both. The illusion is of professional qual- ity, abut everyone gets to join in the fun. It is a winning combination. People in- terviewed at the Faire said it was more fun than Disneyland, friendlier than the out- side world, less "plastic" than contempor- ary life. "When we created the Faire, we created a place we really wanted to be," says Phy- llis Patterson. It turned out lots of other people want to be there too. "We're in a depression now," says one Faire staffer. "People want to celebrate something - anything." The modern world is banished - within reason. Next door to "The Keepe" and "The Prattlers Stage", a sign advertises "Change, Checks Cashed, and Credit Card Sales." But you may not use your credit card to buy a hamburger, or anything nade of plastic. Also kept out are political leafle any illusion to contemporaryi Faire entertainers. So, for tha is any allusion to the darker si Renaissance. This is a Renaissa out war, intrigue, or plague, an unlikely in a 16th century mark without poor people. Few are to among the nearly all-white Faire Ron Patterson's assistant, ,Kar blatt, was frank about the limit Faire's accuracy. "We leave out, light of, the horrors. People ar to pay to see someone's hand c picking pockets." "IF THE RENAISSANCE was "People interviewed at the Faire said it was more fun Disneyland, friendlier than the outside world, less 'p than contemporary life" CRAFT GOODS sold must all be kinds known in the Renaissance. Faire-goers may guzzle beer, wine, lemonade or mead, and stuff themselves with Meat Pyes, Beef Rybbes, Artichokes, and Cream Puffes. Eating is one form of participation Faire- goers enter into avidly. Another is costum- ing. Many (especially older) patrons draw the line at playing dress-up, and others turn up in whatever exotic garb they have ly- ing around the house. But thousands buy, rent, or sew Renaissance costumes. Every year the Faire receives complaints about people who don't wear costumes from peo- ple who do, and feel their illusion is being spoiled. "Dressing up is the best part of the Faire," insisted a middle-aged attorney in a velvet cloak and tights. Most guests act shy when entreated by a hearty rogue or buxom lass to try rope climbing or ar- chery, "Knocke the Blocke", or "Drench a Wench." FAIRE HUMOR is bawdy, necklines are low, and boisterous sex is evidently a sell- ing point with some customers. "He's very conservative,"- one woman said of her be- wigged husband, "but he likes to come here and ogle the girls". However, any couple who headed for the trees with thoughts of participation would quickly run up again the "perimeter guards", a ring of bikers in doublets who sit quietly on the hillside encircling the Faire, to keep the festivities within bounds and gate crash- ers out. like this," said a youth dresse Walter Raleigh who was explai he comes back every weekenld, have been." "My dedication," says Phyllis "is to teaching history." Phyllis teacher, and Ron a graphic ar they put on the first Renaissan ure Faire in Los Angeles' bohemi Canyon in 1963. The event was a benefit for KPFK, the city's stru tener-sponsored radio station. An instant success, the Fair an annual event, stretched from end to four, and in 1967 opened County season. That year, thel and KPFK argued over money, Pattersons incorporated as Them which has since produced the Fe Making a private venture of that started as a benefit has e Pattersons, besides money, a b among some California artists a men. KPFK points out that the1 launched on the station's publicit labor of its volunteers. HOW MUCH money the Patter making is a subject much debat Faire world. The peasants - ve unpaid performers - point out th Events takes the entire gate proce attendance sometimes reaching day), holds the beer and demonac sions, and gets a stall fee fro people plus 15 per cent of their sal are low - $2.50 an hour for mos .tters, and a day for most performers (two days a issues by week) - and considerable use is made of t matter, "volunteers": high school students who work de of the in exchange for admission and "buskers" ance with- who perform for what they can collect. d -- most Paid retainers, who tend to be loyal, etplace -- claim most of the money goes back into the be found Faires. A third of the net income goes to goers. fund the Renaissance Centre, a Patterson- en Rosen- organized non-profit foundation which gives s of the out grants for the furtherance of Renais- , or make sance arts and crafts, and is currently buy- en't going ing land on which to build an Olde Eng- ut off for lish Village, Faire fans who want to stay in the n't really Renaissance year around, and long for a return of its class distinctions, may join the Centre as Yeomen, Landed Gentry, Knights, Lords and Ladies, or Of Blood 2 than Royal and Intimates of Her Majestie, de- lastic' pending on the size of their contributions. A GOLD MINE of culture and fantasy, and a gold mine pure and simple, the Ren- :si:": >;< aissance cannot be staked out by a single claimant, but the Pattersons are trying. d as Sir A small college in Oregon, an elementary ning why school in Lake Tahoe, and dozens of other "It should groups, including KPFK, who have put on Renaissance fairs, have heard from Theme Patterson, Events' lawyers. The corporation has ap- s was a plied for copyright on the terms "Ren- tist when aissance Pleasure Faire", "Renaissance ice Pleas- Faire", and "Pleasure Faire" (including an Laurel modern spellings). staged as So far, the Pattersons are way ahead of iggling lis- the competition. The Renaissance Pleasure Faire runs for six weeks in Los Angeles, e became six weeks in Marin County. (The market one week- town collapses and fits into vans.) No soon- its Marin er is the Marin Faire set up than work Pattersons begins on the Great Dickens Christmas Fair and the and Pickwick Comic Annual, now in its ie Events, third year. A recreation of 19th century aires. London in a San Francisco warehouse, the an event Dickens Fair is open from Thanksgiving arned the through New Years'. This year, the Old ad name San Francisco Waterfront Fair and Nau- nd crafts- tical Exposition stretched Theme Events' Faire was fantasy season to nearly six months. y and the DESPITE - OR PERHAPS because of- ,sons a t e thickening Marin smog and the soaring cost ed in the of living, Faire attendance rises handsome- ndors and ly every year. Whatever the squabbles over zat Theme who owns history, the only current trend eeds (with that looks likely to slow Americans' flight 17,000 a into the past is the gasoline shortage. de conces- m crafts- Joan holden is a staff writer for Pa- es. Wages cific News Service -- Copyright, Pacific t jobs, $20 Neivs Service, 1973. ,4 0 0 r OSSARY D DIC..Ai I etter To The Daily: MR. HOFFMAN must be a mor- on. Else why does he act like one? His major claim is that any af- firmative action program is racist according to the "dictionary de- finition" of racism. Rubbish. Racism, when ascribed to in- dividuals, refers to a prevailing belief of the inferiority (intellect- ual, moral or other) of an individ- ual on account of his race. Insti- tutional racism, on the other hand -a notion too new to be found in dictionaries - refers to the sys- tematic institutionalized exclusion on one racial grouping from the benefits available to other group- ings of that society. Institutional racism is usually founded on pre- judice and initiated through dis- crimination, but it can persist with- out either. A single institution, like the Uni- versity, is itself racist when and only when its practices and poli- cies are such so as to contribute to the racism prevalent in the society of which it is a part. Programs aimed at combating racism can never themselves be racist. Discrimination on the basis of race is not necessarily racist, much more depends on the intent and forseeable social consequenc- es of the act or policy. 0s Affirmative action defended jobs, $20 Pveie'sSer vice 1 973. and provide them with opportuni- ties which, but for the program, would have been effectively denied to them. But even should such programs give benefits to a "less- than-qualified" minority person, it will do so only as compensation for prior deprivations and as a means for the prevention of sim- ilar injustices in the future. Who, if only aided with a proper under- standing of the purpose of such a program, would ever oppose it? There are some black persons who have the potential to greatly benefit from the University exper- ience, but who will be judged "un- qualified" only because the cri- teria of evaluation are biased against them or because they have been denied the opportunity to ac- quire the skills which would make them appear to be "qualified". What, Mr. Hoffman, with your finely tuned sense of social justice do you propose to do about that! The most distressing aspect of Mr. Hoffman's opinion is that it prevailed on SGC. Those who strug- gled against racism in the lae six- ties though that they had opened the eyes of white America - at least young white America - to the reality of institutional racism. In particular, that institutional rac- ism was something much more AoPn-~rnntnA *1than nar14 niiwnt NCAA rules To The Daily: AS AN athletically minded medi- cal student seeking something be- sides the endless hours of medi- cal studies I had hopes of joining Michigan's track team. In check- ing the Big Ten and NCAA rules I found out, as I sadly expected, that the holding of a baccaulaureate de- gree makes one ineligible for in- tercollegiate athletics. Having graduated from Michigan State in three years and never com- peting in intercollegiate sports I feel badly that I shall never be able to do so. Unfriendly and dis- couraging treatment by a MSU track coach made me foolishly for- get my hopes of collegiate compe- tition. Still wishing to compete, I don't understand the logic of this rule that makes a degree holder ineli- gible. Had I not graduated early I would still have a year of eligibil- ity left. But moreover, I c a n; t understand why achieved educa- tional status is a criteria. W h y aren't four years of eligibility al- lowed irregardless of this status as long as one is a full time student? Obviously, age is no factor since anyone may participate as loig as he or she is a full time under- principles To The Daily: I HAD THE pleasure of seeing and listening on TV among others, to the Socialist Labor Party Car:- didates for Mayor of New York City (John Emanuel) and Governor of New Jersey (Robert Clement) in the recent election. No mat- ter how many votes they receiv- ed, they presented the program of the Socialist Labor Party to +he best of their ability and upheld the noble principles of socialism as advanced by the Socialist Labor Party. As the noted writer, George El- iot, wrote: "Any coward can fight a battle when he's sure cr winning; but give me the man who has pluck to' fight when he's sure of losing. That's my way, sir; and there are many victories worse than a defeat. -Nathan Pressman Ellenville, New York Nov. 28 j MPEACHA6LE oveCA 1 4