FEATURES SECTION SEE INSIDE SirF A6 :43 it FEATURES SECTION SEE INSIDE Section Two-Features Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, September 5, 1975 Pages Thirteen to Tv wenty-Four Laro: GOP'S rising star By BILL TURQUE At first glance, David Laro, the University's newest Regent, fits with consummate ease into the classic American mold ofl the up and coming young man. Son of a Jewish immigrant from Poland who fled Hitler's Europe, partner in a prestigious Flint law firm, and a solid family man, Laro would appear to be every mother's son - a credit to the community. At 33, he looks less than a decade re- moved from his picture in the 1964 Michiganensian. -> BUT BEYOND the clean-cut, Junior Achievement veener lurks a sharp, politically street- wise young turk who has played1 the patronage game and has made it work for him.7 Laro was appointed to thet Board by Governor William Milliken on June 3, replacing Regent Lawrence Lindemer, who was named by the Gover- nor in May to fill a vacancy on the state Supreme Court. Not surprisingly, this cor- porate tax lawyer has describ- ed himself as a "Milliken Re- publican," and possesses aI lengthy list of accomplish- ments within the state GOP. He headed up Governor Milli- ken's re-election efforts int Genesee County both in 19701 and 1974, and served in theI same capacity for Richard Okay, politics play a part in every appointment, but I like to think I'm modest. I didn't get the appointment because hey, I'm David Laro, and I'm a g C7reat guy and I deserve to be on the Board of Regents.' Laro Nixon in 1972. Laro has also served on the state Republican{ leadership committee, and was once a congressional district< chairman. Laro is understandably sensi-r tive to charges of blatant parti- sanship surrounding his appoint- ment. "YES, I know, people will say} that Milliken paid off a po- litical debt," he acknowledged, rather abruptly, as if he had heard the question several doz- en times before.] "Okay, politics play a part in every appointment, but I like to think I'm modest. I didn'ti get the appointment because hey, I'm David Laro, and I'm; a great guy and I deserve to1 be on the Board of Regents." Indeed, Laro did not becomel a member of the Board because he was a great guy. His selec- tion culminated a month long search for Lindemer's succes-] sor, involving more than SO candidates. "I REMEMBER talking with Larry Lindemer after he re- signed from the Regents," Laro recalled, pondering a Coke at a local bar. "He described the job to me, the duties and ev- eryything, but the one thing he emphasized is that you really have to have a fondness for the University . . . a real fond- ness." Laro's fondness became more than evident as he reflected on his years as a member of the class of '64. Checking into South Quad in the fall of 1960 after graduating from Flint Central High, he found dorm life pleas- ant enough, but lacking in sev- eral respects. "I came to school a few years too early," he said wistfully, regretting that the Quad was still an all male hall during his stint there. "THE FOOD wasn't so great, and you couldn't bring girls up to your room," he said. But the quad's visitation restrictions didn't seem to put a damper on his social life at the University. "I had a good time," he ad- mitted, breaking out into a grin. LARO rushed Zeta Beta Tau after his freshman year. By the time he was a senior, he was running the place. He said he did his best to eliminate the traditional hazing and "ra-ra stuff" that then marked Greek life on. campus. He was dis- apppointed at the frat's demise in 1967, but felt the reasons were clear enough. "I think it could be attribut- ed to a maturation in student values. With the advent of the war, there was not as much of the joie de vivre attitude." Laro's years at the Univer- sity were the dawn of the ac- tivist movement, with Ameri-' can youth stirring from the somnabulent years of Eisen- hower and the cold war. He said he felt the first rumblings of discontent. "THERE were no demonstra- tions, but there was the begin- See LARO, Page 18 E No blues fe stthis year; future of show in doubt' By TIM SCHICK It drew the big names in blues and jazz- Count Basie, Hound Dog Taylor, Ray Charles. It drew musical oddities such as Sun Ra or Detroit's own One-String Sam. But most of all it drew people, 20,000 to 30,000 a night. But the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival, which ushered in the school year since 1972, "ias gone the way of the Edsel and other famous :inancial bombs. THE THREE-DAY fest won't happen this year. - either here or in exile. Concert promoters, Rainbow Multi-Media, say the festival idea remains in limbo and there are no definite plans to revive it. Last year, after a Republican-dominated City Council refused to authorize a concert site with- in the city, promoters took the event to Windsor, Canada and ended up $130,000 in the red. ORGANIZERS blame the death of the critical- ly acclaimed festival on the University, city government, and particularly former Mayor James Stephenson. Arguing that the festival drew "undesirables" to the city, Stephenson and his council cohorts banned the blues and jazz from Ann Arbor last summer. After some hasty p.r. work, the concert re- emerged billed as the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival in Exile at the St. Clair Community College amphitheatre in Windsor. BUT A stiff crackdown by the border patrol and a "police state" atmosphere at the concert site scared off most of the potential audience, according to David Fenton, one of the promot- ers. "If it was in Ann Arbor last year, the Blues and Jazz Festival would have broken even," he said. Another promoter, Peter Andrews, added that few Ann Arbor city officials fully appreciated the significance of the event. See TOO, Page 18 Doily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Pedal pusher Pedal pushing patrolman Walter Willard talks with the arcade magazine salesman while cruising the city on a three speed bike. The bike, recently donated to the city by a local business has been credited with bringing the police and citizens closer together. Willard, however says he must carry a chain since sev eral city residents have indicated an interest in owning the bike themselves. FORMER RADICAL Cleaver: New career in fashion I PARIS (Reuter) - Eldridge Cleaver, once one of America's most militant black leaders but now an all-but-forgotten exile, has turned his revolu- tionary zeal to male trousers and come up with the J cod piece, 1975 style. Cleaver, the former Black Panther leader, writer and ex-convict who jumped parole in California sev- en years ago and went into exile, is launching his patented "Cleavers" - as the pants are called - from a garret apartment in the Paris Latin quarter. "I WANT to solve the problem of the fig leaf men- tality," the 39-year-old former revolutionary said in an interview. "Clothing is an extension of the fig leaf. It puws man's sex inside his body. My pants put sex back where it should be." Cleavers, in short, show off more or less every- thing the wearer has to offer, while still keeping him covered. "THESE PANTS will walk across the continental United States from New York to San Francisco," said their inventor, who looked smart in his own pair. "These pants will be everywhere from Europe to Ethnic fest brin fun and frolic to c For the third consecutive year, downtown Ann Ar be transformed into showcase of ethnic foods, folk danc international costumes as the Ethnic Festival swall Main St. Bringing together exhibits from more than 20 ethnic the festival gets under way today at 11 a-m. and runs tomorrow at 11 p.m. TO HANDLE the expected crowds and accommod booths chock full of culinary delicacies, jewelry, an artifacts, Main St. will be blocked from Huron to Will Nearly all the participants in the ethnic fair con the Ann Arbor area, but have preserved the traditions ancestoral lands. Among those who will be doing their thing during I two days are representatives of the Arab-American O tion whose booth will feature native foods such as bakl falafel. Also on the main stage will be a demonstration exciting Arabic Baladi Dance. Japan," he said. A leading figure in the Black Panthers movement in the 1960s, Cleaver was in fact on the scene only from December 1966, when he was paroled after serving nine years of a 14-year term for assault with intent to kill, to November 1968 when he fled to Cuba and eventually to Algeria. THERE HE spent several stormy years before be- ing granted political asylum in France. During his exile, Cleaver, the author of the best- selling "Soul on Ice," quit the Black Panthers amid cries of renegade and traitor. But he says that the movement was "born with California Governor Ron- ald Reagan and died with Reagan. "Now that Nixon and his men are out and things are moving in the right direction in the United States, I am satisfied and I do not see any need for continued agitation," he said. Cleaver, who expects to return to the United States for the Bicentennial next year, said, "I feel now !t will be possible for me to have a quiet day in court and have my case resolved." HE FLED from charges stemming from a shoot- ing incident in Oakland, California. In France, he has spent much time thinking about rreasa the design of his new pants. "The whole thing is a kind of an offshoot of a book I am writing," he said. "In my first book I wrote on the relationship existing between men and women in the American society, and in my second book I describe how people look. A lot has to do with the philosophy and ideology that go into our clothing . . . How owr clothes are cut and which narts are emuhasized or de-amphasihed, concealed or exposed.' CLEAVER said he saw clothing as an extension of the fig leaf with pants becoming a second skin. "This was the creative moment in the whole affair. "When I saw in my mind the image of a man standing with his sex inside his skin, his second skin, to me the remedy seemed obvious - to take the sex out of the body and put it where it normally really is. That meant an alteration in the structure of the pants." Cleaver said the idea came to him in Cannes three months ago when he was working on his second book. "Controversy is bound to erupt over my pants," he said. "You have a repeat of the phe- nomenon that you had when women started wearing brassieres or when the mini-skirt came along or the bikini." r $ . %% :%;: 'ty ': < ne , . , < ;c.;i' ;; ss c C::;W: 9 TVA