ARTS The Michigan Daily Friday, March 13, 1992 Trippin' down memory lane with SinclaI by Mark Binelli Tonight, the Michigan Theater will be showing Ten For Two, a docu- mentary of the John Sinclair Free- dom Rally which was held in Crisler Arena on December 10, 1972. Sinclair, a leading counter- culture figure at the time, was serv- ing a 10-year prison sentence for possession of two joints. The rally - which featured speeches and per- furmances by such notables as John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Stevie Wonder, Bob Seger, Allen Ginsberg, Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen, and Phil Ochs - led to the release of the political pris- oner, and remains one of the high- lights of Ann Arbor's rich history. Recently, I met with Sinclair and Event Producer Peter Andrews, who will both be on hand to speak at tonight's screening, along with the film's director, Steve Gebhardt, who is currently working on a sequel. MB: Were you getting a lot of media coverage before the bust? JS: The newspapers then were even farther removed from non-main- stream reality than they-are today, so ... there wasn't a lot of coverage, and what coverage there was, was ridiculous and sensational. But as part of this, I was characterized as things like "King of the Hippies." Remember that? PA: Mmm-hmm. JS: As if hippies had a king ... I was an advocate for marijuana legaliza- tion, and we organized cultural events like free concerts. We had a love-in in Detroit. PA: Oh, it was a great love-in. I haven't thought about that in years. Was it Belle Isle? JS: Yeah, Belle Isle. MB: Belle Isle? Wow. JS: But that was one of the things that made the paper - weirdos, weird clothes ... That was the kind of coverage you would get, so I was in the papers as the - I don't know - the vocal guy who represented all the terrible things that went wrong with our society. And then I became a political activist on top of all this, so that really put it all into one ball of wax, and they kind of got the idea that if they get this guy off the set, then everything would recede ... MB: So you think they'd been trying to set you up for a while before? JS: Oh, yeah. Yeah, I was definitely entrapped. The case I went to prison on, originally I was charged with giving two joints to an undercover policewoman. And I was - I gave her two joints, you know? Let's face it (laughs). But at that time, the law called for 20 to life, for giving the two joints ... And just before the trial, when they saw that we were ready to go to trial on that ... they thought, 'This will really dramatize the is.. sue.' And we'd have a chance of winning. So the day before the trial, they dropped the 20 to life charge and just tried me on possession. MB: So that was the ten ... JS: Yeah, then I got a nine-and-a- half to ten year sentence. And they wouldn't give me an appeal bond ... Actually, they declared that I was a danger to society, and that's why they couldn't give me a bond ... MB: Reefer madness. JS: Yeah. Even though it was two joints and plus I was mounting a constitutional challenge (to have marijuana declassified as a narcotic), which was originally successful. So, to me, the appeal bond was even more grievous than the possession. I mean, at least I possessed the two joints. You know, I never denied that I possessed them. I possessed at least two joints every day (laughs) ... MB: What was the initial reaction? Was it covered throughout the coun- try by the media? Was there an out- rage? JS: We used to have a thing called the underground press. You ever hear of that? It's so remote now, his- torically. But every major city and every major college campus in the country had an underground paper ... I'd been writing for the under- ground press basically since it star- ted, because it kind of grew out of the underground poetry and litera- ture which I was part of ... So in the underground press, it was a cause celebre ... "Free John Sinclair" be- came quite a well-known slogan. And of course, I was part of a group of people that was by then known as the White Panther party. And it was agitating constantly, probably in a (pause) very irritating way, to those who weren't praised ... PA: I'm sure the mayor might have ... it might have had a little effect (laughs). MB: What was that? PA: Oh, those were quite radical days ... (an Ann Arbor underground paper) had a little thing of the mayor giving himself head. JS: No, with his dick in his hand. PA: Was the dick in his hand? I thought it was in his mouth? ... Oh, man, they were pissed. MB: That'd do it. JS: My other favorite was when they got Sheriff Harvey's wallet. PA: Sheriff Harvey was this very, what would you call him? JS: Porker. PA: He was this real porker sheriff. And he was gonna ride all these hip- pies out of town. He once rode the Grateful Dead to the edge of the county after they performed in West Park on an American flag they used as a rug. Harvey lost it completely, and escorted them to the outskirts and said, 'Get out of the county and never come back.' JS: Somehow, he lost his wallet in a bar somewhere. And they brought it to the Argus. And they took all the stuff and photographed it and ran a big spread of all the stuff in his wal- let ... PA: One time, when the hippies or the radicals or whatever took over South University street - JS: That was hippies. MB: They took it over? PA: Yeah, just took it over. Sorta said, 'We're here.' JS: Had a street party. PA: Had a big street party. Motor- cycle guys were doing wheelies up and down the street. That's where the English press got 'fucking in the streets.' 'They're actually fucking in i Page8 n r # a f s6 'f # 4 1 " r l i d f f F L {# f t 4 The low point of the John Sinclair Freedom Rally? Definitely Allen Ginsberg singing. Ugh. Freda people NOW. the streets.' Actually, it was a blowjob, but ... They took over the streets, and Harvey said, 'We can't have this. Take the streets back.' So he got all his cops, man, at the end of the street, and he had a broken arm at the time, so he was in a cast. And he came charging in, and everybody was just going, 'Is this guy nuts?' He had this big military sweep, from South U and Washtenaw, swept the street, bashing everybody they could.... JS: I was in Boston at the time ... I JS: The great thing about the movie is that it's like a real slice of left- wing cultural radical life ... This re- ally presents the way it was for us, which you really don't see drama- tized. You know, The Big Chill and things like that, that kind of charac- terized the mainstream student, which was pretty far removed from actual radicalism ... One of the Big Chill characters might stop at the fringe of a rally ... PA: They wouldn't go out to one of our park program concerts. We had park program concerts that averaged 'So, to me, the appeal bond was even more grievous than the possession. I mean, at least I possessed the two joints. You know, I never denied that I possessed them. I possessed at least two joints every day (laughs) ... - John Sinclair called in to check and they said, 'Man, there's a riot on South U. Har- vey, pigs, helicopters, blah blah blah. PA: It was basically a police riot. There were uo riots until Harvey ... MB: Now there's a big controversy because they just deputized - PA: Right. Good. It's about time somebody got a little excited. Some of the circumstances are the same. Republican eras, and lower-middle- class is getting squashed more and more ... That's why we're showing this movie. Because young people are interested in it.. Former Daily Editor-in-chiet ennie uavis (no relation to current ua Editor-in-chief Matt Rennie) made a fiery speech at the rally. ,. _ _- 1 BBQ Ribs Beef Back Ribs, slow cooked ' with a spicy Red Sauce.' Meat so tender, it just falls off the bone. All You Can Eat 74 $5.75 served with Fries & Slaw about three to five thousand people every Sunday at one of the parks in the city. And they sort of agreed to it, because they thought they could keep the lid on things, keep the kids happy ... Just one quick side story. I used to take one of the more radical members of John's group with me to the meeting with the citizen's city administrator. JS: Good cop, bad cop. PA: Good guy, bad guy we'd play. And, you know, I was one of the guys around town doing concerts at the University ... I would tap Skip Taub under the table with my foot, which was the sign, 'Go into a radi- cal rage.' And he would start, 'Power to the people,' just going on this guy, rattling this guy. JS: Now, do you wanna deal with him ... PA: Yeah, I seemed reasonable. I'd stand up and say, 'Skip, Skip. Please calm down. This is going too far. This isn't the appropriate place for this stuff.' And I'd say, 'Whew. OK. Now that we got that over, what do you think about this proposal here .' To see how all of this has re- turned now, now if you're not a stu- dent at the University of Michigan, you're not allowed in the Michigan Union. JS: Come on! MB: Yeah, you have to show ID JS: Come on! PA: You have to show ID to get into the facilities. All this is coming around again. If there was a Vietnam going on, you people would be get- ting pretty radical. JS: If Desert Storm had turned into a monsoon, and lasted a couple, three years, those yellow ribbons would've turned ... That's one thing about the Right Wing: They'll never stop. MB: It's true. JS: The left kinda has to organize around the shit as it comes and goes, but the right, they never stop, they're always trying to push their agenda ...4 PA: Let me give you some back-_ ground on this thing. John's in jail.. And Leni Sinclair, John's wife (at_ the time), got a call at two in the morning.. JS: Lennon had decided to stay in the United States. And thenthey be- a came enamored of the movement, and they left the Beatles, and he * wanted to do something that was meaningful beyond the pop world . MB: And you were in Jackson? JS: Yeah. MB: And part of this is maximum security? JS: I spent a year in Marquette, which is a maximum security insti- tution, but I got run out of there for, organizing. MB: For organizing? JS: Yeah. MB: What were you doing? JS: Well, I was working with these, Black prisoners, so we could have a strike. We wanted Black Studies courses (laughs) ... PA: Didn't they pull you out of your, cell in the middle of the night? JS: Yeah ... So when I got to Jackson, they kept me locked up in,_ Administrative Segregation. So I was never with the main population. Whew. What an experience. PA: I, as Events Director, recom- mended that the event be moved to a smaller facility, because, until the Lennons came on board, it didn't' look like it was gonna be successful. JS: Commander Cody was the biggest. PA: Cody wasn't even confirmed. Nobody was confirmed. Nobody re- ally wanted to do it, because it didn't look like it would be a big deal. was in Crisler Arena, and I was say_ ing, 'Man, take it to the Power Center or something.' I sort of left town to get away from the pressure .; 'of it. I came back and Leni said,. 'Hey, we gotta go to New York andZ talk to John Lennon and Yoko Ono'T They're gonna perform at John's 4 show.' I said, 'Right. I'm gonna go* See SiNCLAIR, Page 10*. FRIDAYS 5:00 p.m.-Midnight Make Ashley's your spot on State! 338 South State (at William) Ann Arbor " 996-9191 Power Center Make your move... 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