Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 3, 1972 A DOUBLE FEATURE-2 movies for the price of one-see both as late as 7:40 "'J.W. COOP' is engrossing and beautifully ful- filled . . . and it isn't a rodeo movie. Robertson's portrayal is a figure of near-tragic stature, a figure embodying, perhaps, the dichotomy of contemporary American life. In its originality and its integrity, 'J.W. COOP' offers the hope that it needn't al- ways be the same old Hollywood." -Judith Crist New York Magazine "EXPLODES WITH ENERGY AND DRAMA!". -Cue Magazine "Full of feeling for rootless American lives." -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times "PULSES WITH STRONG, HONEST FEELING!" -Richard Schickel, LIFE COLUMBIAPICTURES Presndt ROBERTSON as liz t' r "'GUMSHOE' is a d a r n good tough mystery. A pri- vate eye caper that tips its hat and bows low to Bogie." -Judith Crist New York Magazine "INTELLIGENT AND ENTERTAINING" -Crowdaddy "Sharp, entertainingly off- beat, and successfully nos- talgic. Clever, dandy tribute to the world of pictures like 'THE MALTESE FALCON."' -Cue Magazine sts siaaoiesi AMEMORAL ENTERPRISESFLM S ALBERT PG Diamond (Continued from Page 2) ed lyrics by Dylan and Young, seemed slow, dragged out long- er than necessary, at times in- appropriately jazzed - up . . but perhaps this was only part of her style. Outstanding in her back-up band was the pianist, whose musical contributions made the entire set worth listening to. Pine Knob Music Theatre, lo- cated on the site of the simi- larly named ski resort, is a fair- ly recent addition to the Michi- gan cultural scene. Built in less than two months, the bright orange metal structure pro- vides a vibrant contrast to its rustic surroundings. Comfort- ably seating 10,000 - half on' the lawn and half in seats - 'Woolf' (Continued from Page 2) of place, seeming sometimes like awkward intrusion into the elec- tric exchanges of George a n d Martha, instead of serving as a foil to them. Honey should be 26 and act 14. Instead Montagna looks 14 and acts 5. Director Donald Boros u s es some strange blocking, often placing his actors with their backs to the audience. Though his purpose may have been to fully utilize the stage's poten- tial, he used the arrangement once too often. Michigan Repertory '72 will be presenting Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf until August 5 and A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum from August 8-12. All performances are at the Power Center. Tickets from $2.00 to $3.00. in concert the theatre is a nice outdoor retreat from city auditoriums. Neil Diamond and Jackie De- Shannon will be appearing there for the remainder of the week. Richie Havens, Sha-Na-Na, qnd The Fabulous Rhinestones will appear in concert at the PIne Knob Music Theatre in Clark- ston on Monday, August 7 at 7:00 p.m. Sha-Na-Na, 12 performers who banded together to preserve "Good Old Hock and Roil" of the 50's, appear in slicked back DA haircuts, gold lame suits, un- dershirts and jeans. Both Sha- Na-Na and Richie Havens per- formed at Woodstock. Tickets priced at $7.00 and $5.00 for reserved seats and $3.00 for unreserved lawn seats are on sale at the Fisher Theatre Box Office, all J. L. Hudson stores, and Pine Knob. No tick- ets will be sold at Pine Knob on the day of the concert. thru Clashe'd "Gumshoe"-6:15 "J.W. COOP"-7:40 "Gumshoe"-9:35 FIFTWAVENUE AT LIBERTY' DOWN7 b1NN AN ARBOR . INFORlSAATION;7' 4) -4,700;:: -PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT POSTmomELL TO HESU In recent weeks the Ann Arbor SUN has been running a series of articles pretending to expose my real policies and past. The truth is that the SUN has distorted my platform and printed out- right lies about me. After talking with David Fenton, Minister of Information, Rainbow People's Party, I have concluded that the SUN is aware of the true situa- tion, that the lies and distortions were deliberate, and that the.y have no inten- tion of setting things straight. I have taken this ad in The Michigan Daily to present my views about the Sheriff's Office, to maake my commitments openly nd in writing so that voters can decide for themselves. One of the few accurate claims made by the SUN was the statement that I want to professionalize the Sheriff's De- partment I would like to clear up what this means: I do not intend to train deputies like secret agents. I do not intend to buy more riot control gear. I do not intend to use or tolerate excessive force or unreason- able searches. Professionalism means sheriff's depu- ties who know the law and how to en- force the law, and who know how to respect the dignity and civil rights of citizens in the process. Professionalism means deputies who will be prosecuted when they break the law. I do not believe that any law en- forcement officer can say that he will not enforce some -laws. The sheriff is required by law .to enforce all laws to the best of his .ability. He must not set himself above the law by not doing this. Since there is no way that the sheriff can arrest every person who violates every law, he has to decide which laws are most important and concentrate on those. He may never arrest anyone for violatina the bad or unimportant laws, but he can't sav that he won't enforce them. As sheriff. I would assign highest priority to crimes of violence and other crimes that threaten the safety of the public, such as drunk and reckless driv- ing-also theft. Lowest priority would be minor traffic violations and posses- sion of maruona. The present mari- iuano laws are bad laws: I believe mari- juana should be lenalized and controlled in the. 'nme wo" as alcohol. Anyone who has seen Doug Harvey in action will agree that the sheriff has too much oower and needs to be controlled more by the community. I would like to see the county create a Citizens Advisory Board to investinate complaints about the conduct of the Sheriff's Department and its members. This board should have on it the sheriff, a representative of the deouties union, and members of the pub- lic. There should be enough citizens on the board so the sheriff doesn't control it. The county cannot make. such a board legally binding on the sheriff, but I would agree to carry out any disciplinary measures that the board recommended. Relations with the cormunity depend on conditions within the sheriff's de- partment. Right now it is run like the army, with stress on spit and polish, and no tolerance for dissent or long hair or different life-styles inside or outside the department. I would change this by relaxing the military atnosphere, by demanding that the deputies be polite and respectful to all people. Deputies who will not or can- not do this are not what I consider pro- fessional, and I will not keep them in the department. Only when the deputies can show this respect for people inside and outside the department who are different from themselves will we be able to attract the sort of qualified people who can relate to the black and youth communities. It is not enough to hire young and black middle class people. Right now the peo- ple we need would not want to work 'for Sheriff Harvey, and he would not hire them. Under Sheriff Harvey, the deputies union has not gotten beyond the point of providing some job security for its men. I favor a real union which would bargain collectively for wages and work- inq conditions, handle grievances, and not allow its men to cross picket lines while off duty to perform scab labor. (Harvey and some of his men have served as scab security guards at CPHA during the strike there by the UAW). Under Sheriff Harvey's control the county liol has been like a dungeon from the dark ages. Prisoners have not been orotected from each other, with the re- sult that there have been several gang rapes and many beatings and other in- dignities that prisoners, especially those who ore black or who have long hair, have suffered at the hands of deputies. As sheriff, I will ensure the safety of prisoners from each other and from any abuses bi my deputies. There is no way to make the present ail into a good jail: the state, which tolerates a prison as bad as Jackson State, has ordered the county to build a new one because the present one is be- vond hope. 1, would try to insure that the new ioil has adequate medical, recreational, and library (including le- gal) facilities. I would like to set up rehabilitative services in the jail, par- ticularly in the area of drug problems. Money and people are available to set up a proaram along the lines of Ozone or Drua Help in the jail. Doug Harvey has victimized and brutalized many people over the years. His brand of corrupt,' violent, and in- tolerant law enforcement has alienated many people and caused them to favor revolutionary politics. I have been fired twice by Harvey, unjustly, and black- listed from other police departments by him. He has done this by circulating a charge filed against me by my wife's former husband. The charge was that I pistol-whipped him. The truth is that he attacked her with a beer bottle, and I subdued him without a pistol. Both my wife (who was legally separated from him at the time) and I were injured more than he was, and he was convicted of assault and battery in Pontiac. This is a matter of public record, but Harvey still circulates the charges. I suspect that he has circulated this to the SUN and I would not be surprised to see them re- peating Harvey's version of the story. I have tried to take legal action enainst Harvey for this distortion and for the many acts of corruption and violence that I have learned about, but with no success. I believe that the sys- tem of law enforcement can be made to work justly by people who are com- mitted to it and who are willing to be bound by the laws. This is my commit- ment. I propose to be bound by the law and to enforce the. law with the priorities I listed above. In distorting my platform and print- ing other lies about me, the Ann Arbor SUN is helping to re-elect Harvey, whether this is their intention or not. !n the July 21 issue there is mention of previously secret "police reports, copies of which are in the possession of the SUN." These are all reports made by deputies to Doug Harvey, and released be him for use by the SUN in its July 21st issue. The SUN claims in its July 21st issue that when I was a deputy, I was a "madman with an itchy trigger finger." To prove this they offer a highly dis- torted version of an incident which oc- curred several years ago. They say that another deputy and I chased down a speeding auto and arrested the occu- pants, one of whom was an "anti-war brother," named Delbert Dunn, a Navy deserter. They claim that when Dunn tried to flee, I started a shooting spree which endangered the lives of Dunn and three others, and damaged several build- inas. The truth is that Dunn and his com- banion were first spotted speeding away from an auto dealer we were staking out. We had reason to believe they had stolen the car. We stopped them as they were walking away from the car. When asked, they denied that it was theirs. When we found keys that fit the car on them, there were grounds for arrest. The SUN neglects to mention that they were taken into custody on suspicion of auto theft (a felony)f, and implies they were arrested only for de- sertion and reckless driving. When Dunn and his companion were being transferred to another car, Dunn knocked down a deputy and ran. I fired several warning shots into the air. Roy Couch, my partner, proceeded to fire at Dunn, emptying his revolver at him os he fled. The SUN neglects to mention this important fact because the truth does not serve their purpose. The truth is that Roy Couch is one of Doug Harvey's campaign managers and he is supplying the SUN with propaganda against me because he knows it will help re-elect Harvey. Couch and the SUN seem to think people will believe any- thing: they say that as I was supposedly "chasing Dunn through some bushes on foot" shooting at him, I radioed to other units to "shoot the Bastard." This is lust ohysically impossible as I couldn't be running through the bush es and be in the car at the same time. It is possible that the SUN is waging their smear campaign against me out of gratitude for favors Harold Moon - a bailbondsmn- has done the Rainbow People in the past, as David Fenton told me. Their feeling of debt to him must be very strong for them to resort to their current tactics. It is also possible that they would like to see Doug Harvey stay in office for four more years of discrimination against minorities and young people; for more brutality and beating of heads. I am well aware that many p e o p I e become revolutionaries through this sort of contact with police and that Harvey would be helping to recruit revolutionaries. I would not do this as sheriff; I would not help the revolutionary movement in this way. The people who would be victimized by Harvey would not thank the SUN for helping Harvey stay in office. It is also possible that the SUN is attacking me in preparation for a four- Darty race involving the Human Rights Party. This is what they tell the HRP. However, the HRP would have to at least quadruple the vote it got last spring in order to win a county-wide election. If they fail to achieve this huge increase in voter strength, they would really cause Harvey to win the election. In any case, the SUN has not been honest with their readers: they have not told them the truth about me, and they have not told the truth about why they are backing Harold Moon. The whale concept of free elections is undermined when any part of the press takes it upon itself to misinform the public. I believe that elections only work when the people have the facts, and that a paper which withholds facts and doles out lies on aerverting the democratic system of government. FRED POSTILL Democratic Candidate for Sheriff