Tuesday, July 10, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Nine' PLAYBOY THREATENED? Nation feels porno ruing efects By United tress International preme Court's ruling letting heat is on. Adult bookstores in squad detectives confiscated law against obscene pub Authorities across the country states set their own guidelines on many areas may soon carry only thousands of hard - core, X-rated which went into effect J are raiding blue movies, confis- obscenity. "soft" porn and the near total movies from a film company in Colorado, the Denver Ci cating hard-core sex books, and' nudity in girlie magazines could the largest porn raid since the cil plans to consider a passing new antipornography A UPI survey showed that for disappear. court ruling. In Boston, which raphy ordinance that wot laws in response to the Su- purveyors of pornography, the once banned almost anything sex- it illegal to promote or already has been taken from ally graphic, the federal and obscene materials outs ara hlocal government government au- privacy of the home. the stands in many towns, has thorities announced a coordinat- r /;"/,u said it will make "editorial ad- ed drive againstsmut merchant ity cases h e beenthre Sin Idaho has passed a new state puu~nrugcy iusure issus, asigi h lgn ft lications uly 1. In ty Coun- pornog- uld make possess side the obscen- , result- photography in suture issues, as a result of the ruling. The high court ruled last month that cities and states could decide what should be banned as obscene based on "average p e r s o n s applying commun- ity standards." The new devision threw out the older "rule-of- thumb" that material must be "utterly without redeeming social value" to be judged obscene. In some states such as Texas in accordance and Colorado, existing laws, made in accordance with the old "social value" rule, rendered crackdowns impossible pending a change in the laws. Because of the vagueness of the "commun- ity standards" ruling, many au- thorities were cracking down on obvious hard-core pornography but were hesitant to move against borderline cases. IN NEW YORK CITY, vice 1g il g GLJN1 LLW U1 theatres, and in Passaic, N.J., police raided three theaters, seizing three x-rated films and arresting five persons including Georgina Spelvin, star of the "Devil and Miss Jones." They were charged with "uttering or exposing to the view of others obscene or indecent pictures." IN AUSTIN, TEX., all sex film houses have either closed down or switched to "soft" X-rated movies. In Albermarle County, Va., the sheriff gave bookstore owners until today to remove Playboy and' Penthouse maga- zines from their shelves. . - - 7 Warren Burger AP Photo Abernathy resigns The Rev. Ralph Abernathy announced yesterday he plans to step down from his post as president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). Abernathy headed SCLC for five years, since the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in April 1968. "The financial income at SCLC has been on a steady decline for the last several years," he told a news conference in Atlanta. "I am unable to proceed any further without adequate staff." U.S. uses kisses, French get T-shirts PARIS (UPI) - Paris looks like an American college campus this summer. The big fashion sensation for both males and females on the streets of Paris as well as on the Riviera beaches is American T-Shirts emblazoned with--could this be France?-the names of U. S. Univer-- sities. THE ACADEMIC T-SHIRT craze marks the third consecutive year that French summer fashions have been stolen from the young of the United States. Last summer the French dressed like cowboys in faded blue jeans, the raggedier the better (still in style). The year before, the big uni- n-sex summer fad was American GI uniforms and insignia (now M C ic icn out of style). CENTER FOR AFRO-AMERICAN AND AFRICAN STUDIES SUMMER, 1973, CAAS COURSE OFFERINGS AND SCHEDULING KEY: Division No./Course No./Class No./Credit Hrs./TITLE/Prerequisites/Class Type/Day & Time/ Location/Instructor. NOTE: To qet Department stomp for Late Registration see: Carol Clemons, Center for Afro-American 0' African Studies, 1100 South University, Ann Arbor Bank Building, 2nd Floor. *311/206/201/4/INTRODUCTION TO AFRICAN HISTORY AND CULTURES Il/Freshmen & sopho- mores; upperclassmen may enroll with permission of instructor/Lec/TTh 9-11/715 Haven St./Enyia. An interdisciplinary introduction to the history and cultures of Africa. Historical and contemporary developmentsnA sfrica will be examined against the background of world history and world sffairs. 311/303/201/2/RACIAL AND CULTURAL CONTACTS/SOCIOLOGY/See Catalog/Lec/MTWTH 11/ 447 M.H./Moore. Analysis of the implications of racial differences, the factors affecting prejudice and discriminstio, the str"ctural aspects of arosp conflicts, and the possibilities of chan0" isAmerica and in other societies. 311/401/201/3/HISTORY OF AFRO-AMERICAN MUSIC 11/400 or permssion of instructor/Lec/ MTW 2 P.M./206 B.M.T./Stewart. Continuation of Afro - American Studies 400. (Only undergrad credit can be given.) 311/410/+/Arr/SUPERVISED READING AND RESEARCH/Per. Instr./Ind./Arr/Arr/S t a f f. Arrange- ments may be made for adequately prepared students to undertake individual study under the direc- tion of a member of the staff. The student, in electing, should name the staff member with whom the work has been arranged. (+) You must obtain FROM THE DEPARTMENT the instructor's name and class number and enter them on your election card. 311/465/201/4/DYNAMICS OF AFRO-AMERICAN MUSIC/Per. Instr, 400-401/Lec/MTWTH 1 PM/ 206 B.M.T./Stewart. The student will be presented with the maior developments in Afro-American music. He will then study their causes, effects, political and sociological implications. This will not be a complete historical survey; yet the student will become familiar with much of the important music. *Afro-American Studies (206) is an additional course, not in Summer Time Schedule. THE BLACKt STUDIESABSTRACT Harold Cruse: Walter Rodney: Henry Davis: "the most often heard ".. . scholarship-"'The Black Studies justification for emanating from the Abstract' will be 'Black Studies"' was capitalist epicentre scholarly, angry and the Black Studies grew up with special aggressive.t should be related to characteristics, "programs for social beyond ... limitations change." Page 1 of bourgeois intellectual _________________ endeavour." Page 2 jobless DETROIT (UPI) - Michigan's unemployment rate hit a high for the year in June with 8.5 per cent of the state's labor force unable to find work, the Michi- gan Employment Security Com- mission (MESC) said yesterday. The June jobless total of 323,800 was the result of the "normal seasonal gain of new job seekers- mainly students seeking summer jobs and recent graduates search- ing for permanent employment," said MESC Director S. Martin Taylor. T H E STATE unemployment rate was nearly double the 4.8 per cent national average for June, the first time in three years the national jobless rate has fallen below five per cent. Taylor noted that although the unemployment rate jump signi- ficantly, the number of persons employed increased for the sixth straight month with 17,000 more people employed in June than in May. THIS SEASON a secretary hurries to work on the subway in jeans and a U.S.-made green T- shirt imprinted "University of Texas." A French television camera- man photographing U. S. presi- dential adviser Henry Kissinger's last visit to Paris was wearing white trousers, a white T-shirt with navy blue letters spelling "University of Vermont" and a white jacket with that univer- sity's badge. Parisians from children of five to men of 25 to chic ladies of So are sporting yellow shirts labeled "University of Indiana" or navy blue shirts proclaiming "Univer- sity of Wisconsin." O N E BOUTIQUE, T h e American Store, which special- izes in blue jeans and other Americana, is selling 150 of the university T-shirts a week. A U.S. importer recently rushed into The American Shop to ask Sagnier where he could buy French T-Shirts saying "University of Paris". He was crushed to hear that European universities do not have such customs, Sagnier said. Published by CAAS of The University of Michigan Ann Arbor compus Copies may be obtained from Administrative Office 1100 South University 764-5513, 14, 17 Students-.50 Non-students-$1.00