~ .~ ** . *.*.*.**.*..~**.*. COVER STORY Keeping the peace Page 1 Many students today were only in elementary school when University President Robben Fleming led the campus through the radical years of student protests during the Vietnam war. This week's cover story looks back on how Fleming's non-traditional style held the seams of the University together while many other campuses were falling apart Cover by, Deborah Lewis. MUSIC Acoustic weekend Page 3 Folk singer/guitarist Dave Van Ronk's concert at the Ark tonight is previewed. Dave's career goes back to the early '60s when he had a profound impact on the folk music revival. Also previewed is pianist Cecile Licad's concert. Licad was winner of the Liventritt Foundation Gold Medal Award in 1981. Licad was born back when Dave Van Ronk taught a young Bob Dylan an obscure folk song called "House of the Rising Sun". FILM A Russian Big Chill Page 4 Can William Hurt recover from his debilitating war injury in The Big Chill to generate Body Heat in Gorky Park? Even with the help of the newfound and sultry actress Joanna Pacula the answer seems to be a definite "Nyet." THE LIST Happenings Pages 5-7 Your personal guide to fun times for the coming week in Ann Arbor. Film capsules, music previews, theater notes, and bar dates, all listed for you in a handy-dandy, day-by-day schedule. DISCS On a roll Page 8 Are the Rolling Stones going Undercover? Of cour- se not. Rock and roll's most conspicuous bad boys couldn't attain such anonymity if they tried, especially with the release of their new record. Ac- cordingly this grossly successful album is reviewed in a manner that promises to be more exciting than a whole year's gossip about Mick and Jerri. THEATER Return Engagement Page 9 Director Robert Altman finds his way back to Ann Arbor, this time with an Off-Broadway production under his wing. In addition to producing the one-man stage show Secret Honor: The Last Testament of Richard M. Nixon, Altman will film the movie ver- sion on campus and experiment in his favorite "laboratory"-the University. BOOKS Going luny Page 12 Former '60s radical/madman Hunter S. Thompson leaves the comfort of Rolling Stone magazine to ven- ture off into the Hawaiian wilderness. Thompson chronicles his wild adventures in an off-beat new novel, The Curse of Lono. Weekend Friday, January 13, 1984 Vol. II, Issue 12 Magazine Editors................Mare Hodges Susan Makuch Sales Manager ......................... Meg Gibson Assistant Sales Manager ............Julie Schneider Weekend is edited and managed by students on the staff of The Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan, 48109. It appears in the Friday edition of the Daily every week during the University year and is available for free at many locations around the campus and city. Weekend, (313) 763-0379 and 763-0371; Michigan Daily, 764-0552; Circulation, 764-0558; Display Adver- tising, 764-0554. Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily. 'A' days following the May 1970 killings of four students by National Guardsmen at Kent State University set off a series of violent acts that eventually closed nearly 140 schools nationwide. The day after the incident, National Guardsmen armed with bayonets broke up a 2,000-student demonstration at Ohio State University. In Austin, Texas, police fired tear gas to break up a march on the capitol by several hundred University of Texas students. Gov. Paul Laxalt called on both city and campus police to free his car from 300 demonstrators at the University of Nevada in Reno. Boston University cancelled final exams and its commencement ceremonies - at which Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass) was to have been the principal speaker - because of violence and threats. And after a night of violence in Madison, Wisconsin when hundreds of students set fires and smashed win- dows, Gov. Warren Knowles called in the national guard. But in Ann Arbor, the protests took on a more symbolic air. About 200 students walked out of the memorial service for the students killed at Kent State and went to North Hall to "liberate" the ROTC building. They turned it into strike headquar- ters and day care center, separating in- to committees and organizing activities and offices for child care,-strike plan- ning, and "the city's first community diner." Although police were eventually called in 33-hours later to remove the 20 or 30 students left in control of the building, the protest was peaceful and constructive. There were times, however, when many say Fleming's leniency went too far, most notably during the Black Ac- tion Movement strikes a few months before the Kent State incident. For 10 days beginning March 21, 1970, classes were disrupted by students who sealed off entrances to the law school, the business school and other campus buildings. Other students marched through buildings singing, chanting and banging on trash can lids with clubs. About 75 students wielding steel pipes broke several windows in the Chemistry Building and others tore through the libraries spraying materials with fire extinguishers to protest low black enrollment on cam- pus. While the administration never wan- ted to appear to bow down to student protesters' pressure, many argue that during the BAM strikes, the violence went beyond acceptable limits. "Werset black student smash the University and cause all kinds of damage, but the fact was it prevented something very much more serious," said Robert Faber, who served on city council from 1969 to 1973. "It was an outlet for emotion and an opportunity for change. The result then was there were no serious injuries and no serious damage to the University. "Although it was noisy and unpleasant, compared to other universities that went through something loosely similar to that, it was benign and harmless, and this is because it was handled well by Fleming, Harris and Police Chief William Krashy. "Fleming didn't roll over and play dead. But he didn't take the standard hardline approach to problems. He reasoned," Faber says. The violence ended after long-hours of negotiations between Fleming, BAM leaders, and the regents when Fleming agreed to some of the students deman- ds. He promished to boost black enrollment from the three to four per- i Immallow Regents meetings: Patience under pressure The Professional Theatre Program BEST OF BROADWAY presents the NATIONAL TOURING COMPANY OF -M E P- W" -OF THE EART -s phot Photofinishing for your family and your business Double your fun.. THE SECOND SET OF PRINTS IS ONLY HALF F This service is available everyday at SunI Bring in your rolls of 135, 110, 126, or dis print film for quality photofinishing. we 1315 S. University '3120Packard *"9 691 S. Maple *6 'O s. cent level in 1970 to 10 percent by 1973- 74. The goal was never met and today is one of the most glaring problems facing administrators. Outside the University, many despised the student protesters and administrators such as Fleming who allowed them the freedom to demon- strate. When students held concerts in city parks, listening to blaring music, often under the influence of alcohol or drugs, the community flew into an uproar. Residents relentlessly telephoned city hall asking why the mayor and council would permit such unruly ac- tivity. That attitude mirrored nation- wide fear of student chaos. Many people agreed with FBI Associate Director for Crime Reports C.D. De Loach, who said defiance of the law was a "malignant disease." "The lawless demonstrators, the draft card burners, the raucous exalters of the four-letter word," promote a "deadly cause" he said in the early '60s. "I refer to arrogant non-conformists, including some so-called educators who have mounted the platform at public gatherings to urge civil disobedience and defiance of authority." Deloach's comments and many like them were often leveled against Fleming, but he rebuffed the attacks and tried to make people understand the actions of the demonstrators. At speeches throughout the 70s, angry parents would ask Fleming who are the students causing unrest on campus. "I'll tell you who they are," he would reply, "They're your children." "Since when have young people ceased enjoying outraging their elders? That's always been true," Fleming says. "I tried to reach out to the parents of kids in school and say to them, 'you. mustn't draw too many conclusions about these kids, thinking that they've all gone berserk. We have a lot of problems in this period and you've got to try to understand what those problems are. "You don't want to end up alienating yourself from them just because they may look a little odd to you and because they are doing things you don't like."' At at teach-in in 1969, Fleming put himself on the line by calling the Viet- nam war a "colossal mistake" and. said those students "who burn their draft cards, go to prison, refuse to serve or simply drop out of society are not by such acts cowards or traitors. "The economic, human and spiritual costs on continuing the war seem to me unbearable," he said. Despite his bold stands, Fleming had his limits. Besides, the GEO battle, he turned down the Gay Liberation Front's request in the summer of 1970 to hold a midwestern conference on homosexuality at the University. He said such a con- ference would create negative public sentiment toward the University, and possibly endanger state funds because homosexual practices were illegal. The last two-thirds of Fleming's presidency kicked off the budget cut- ting which is the focus of current University President Harold Shapiro's administration. For Shapiro and Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs and provost, too much emphasis is put on student unrest when talking of Fleming's presidency. "He dealt very effectively with the (student activism) period, and I don't want to diminish that," Shapiro says. But he stressed the skill with which Fleming handled the budget. "I think a lot of people in some sense don't understand the full nature of his contribution because they tend to iden- tify him with the student unrest period," says Shapiro. Fleming set the foundation for today's famous-or imfamous-five- year-plan which calls for cutting and redistributing $20 million from the University's $300 million general fund budget by 1985. He initiated some of the largest tuition hikes in the past decade-25 per- cent in 1973 - actions to which current administrators have also resorted in the face of declining state support. Although there are still some protests today, they are few and far between. "We have also had crisis and conflict resolution," adds Frye, whose office was taken over last spring in a 24-hour vigil by members of the Progressive Student Network. In November, the group also staged a blockade of Engineering Prof. Thomas Senior's research lab to protest miliary research on campus. Such demon- strations mimic the methods used by student activists during the '60s. But without a central issue such as the Vietnam war or the draft which poses a direct, personal threat to students, today's protests involve a small minority. Students, like the University, are concerned with economic survival. As a result, for many the emphasis is on get- ting good grades and securing high- paying jobs. "Gene populatc the '60s," "Basi Universi and they with. TI up," add Universi Sterling educatio Today ones of today's s inclinati That apathetic prioritie "I get students People C and expr "Activ says. Flemin no more ted. His State of like a mo student' Universi students unwillini they do determi possible. Flemii budget .by Shap he unden a Univer Universi "What a Univer Universi You pun over-th ppear bl ch it in ti "So try still a done-m; essential "But if what the you are about thi person t that peri to find business "Oh st said. "B we could Mish A Play by Beth Henley PRICE Photo. c color Power Center January 12,13,14 at 8:00 p.m. January 14 at 2:00 p.m. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the Drama Critics Circle Award 994-0433 73-0770 63-6529 v PTP Ticket Office 313/764-0450 N 2 Weekend/January 13, 1984 11 . ; S