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February 02, 1978 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1978-02-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Pai

ge 12-Thursday, February 2, 1978-The Michigan Daily
\ w v
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Minority
festival
begins.
tonight
By ELISA ISAACSON
Tonight is the kickoff for the fifth
annual Black Arts and Cultural
Festival presented at East Quad by
Abeng, an association of minority
students.
A jazz concert, a karate demon-
stration, a talent show, plenty of
partying and much more will be
condensed into a two-and-a-half day
renaissance of black culture.
THE EVENT should enjoy a.
heavier attendance than in past
years. While the festival had pre-
viouslybeen populated almost exclu-
sively by East Quaddies, a wide-
spread publicity campaign has
sought to entice not only University
students, but also people from the'
entire Ann Arbor community.
Abeng was founded in 1970 and is
sponsored by the Coalition for the
Use of Learning Skills (CULS) and-
the Residenitial College.
Abeng offers minority and aca-
demic counseling and provides infor-
mation on events affecting minori-
ties.
DAVID JACKSON, publicity chair-
man for the festival, says it is
"basically a chance for us to get
something together and then sit back
and relax and enjoy it. It's a way of
expressing ourselves and an oppor-
tunity for people to enjoy them-
selves."
Other events include a gospel choir
concert, a fashion show, an art
exhibit and a poetry reading.
Kiddie lit
and porn:
the key to
success
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A loop-
hole in a new anti-pornography law is
allowing adult bookstore owners to
carry on as usual by adding innocent
books like Trip to Toyland to shelves
that also carry racier reading such
as Bicentennial Bondage and Red
Hot Wives.
The state law that became effec-
tive Jan. 1 makes illegal the opera-
tion of more than one type of sex-
related business in a single building.
Legislators had hoped that if they
could end the practice among adult
businesses of offering a multiplicity
of sex-related material in one store,
this in turn would eliminate the profit
from adult businesses.
BUT THE LAW defines an adult
book store as one that has a "prepon-
derance" of adult books - and
therein lies the loophole.
At Hart's Adult Bookstore in
Raleigh, for example, all the old
favorites like Action Wives and
Group Case Histories can still be
found. But now they are outnum-
bered by copies of Dickens' Great
Expectations and the Girl Scout

Handbook.
"It's a loophole, there's no doubt
about it," said Lt. K. Johnson, head
of the Raleigh vice squad. "The
stores are cutting the porn down to 49
per cent, with the rest being Girl
Scout books, magazines 10 years old,
comic books - things like that."
WAKE COUNTY District Attorney
J. Randolph Riley agreed that by
stocking more general interest than
adult publications, the bookstores
appear to be "complying with the
letter, if not the intent of the law."
Riley said he asked Raleigh police
to check local adult bookstores and
report their findings, and they re-
ported no violations of the new law.
Though some of the stores continued
to offer coin-operated movies or
sex-related devices, they could not be
classified as adult bookstores be-
cause of the loophole.
How is the bookstores' clientele
responding to their new line of
literature?
Said one manager about his new
titles: "They don't have to sell; they
just have to sit there."
A MIDDLE EAST
Dr. Puilo pStedderd
U.S. State Department
Director, Neor East

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