
AADL Talks To: Rick Ayers, Former U-M Student Activist and Member of the SDS and Weather Underground

In this episode, AADL Talks To Rick Ayers. Rick is faculty emeritus at the University of San Francisco where he was an associate professor of education focusing on English language arts and teacher education. In the late 1960s, Rick followed his older brothers to the University of Michigan and was soon radicalized by the civil rights and anti-war movements, participating in protests and demonstrations with the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and the Weather Underground. Rick traces his fascinating journey as a draft dodger working with deserters in Canada through his decision to enlist in the U.S. Army where he would eventually go AWOL and live as a fugitive for seven years. Rick also shares his memories of the vibrant campus film culture and the people -- including girlfriend Gilda Radner -- who shaped his student experience at the university, and he reflects on the legacy of the 1960s protests in light of today’s political environment.


AADL Talks To: Fred LaBour, former writer for The Michigan Daily and member of the musical group Riders in the Sky

In this episode, AADL Talks to "Too Slim" Fred LaBour. Fred is a member of Riders in the Sky, an American Country and Western music and comedy quartet that has performed together since 1977. From '67 to '71, Fred was an undergraduate at the University of Michigan where he covered sports and wrote music reviews for The Michigan Daily. Fred discusses the campus culture that shaped his career and he walks us through a day in the life of a too-slim "wise ass" English major whose satirical review of the Beatles’ "Abbey Road" album propelled the “Paul McCartney is Dead” urban legend that took the country by storm.
Read Fred's October 14, 1969 "Paul is Dead" article in The Michigan Daily.
Check out Riders in the Sky in the AADL catalog. The group is also featured on the following CDs: Toy Story Favorites, Toy Story 2, Disney Pixar All Time Favorites, and Woody's Roundup.

Crowd in Line to See Experimental Films Photographer: Duane Scheel

Year:
1967
Ann Arbor News, January 26, 1967
Caption:
'Experiment'-Minded: Students and others crowd a hallway in the University's College of Architecture and Design Building to see last night's Cinema Guild showing of experimental "off-beat" films. Ann Arbor police stopped last week's show and seized the film "Flaming Creatures" on the grounds it is obscene. No such move took place last night. The furor resulted in a great increase in business for the Cinema Guild--four instead of the usual two showing were required to take care of the crowds. This photo was taken a few minutes prior to the 7 p.m. show which already had a "full house."
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Grown-up film festival still coltish

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Most Films Shown Here Get Detroit Police Checks

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ACLU Protests 'Hasty' Censure

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Battle Of Words Rages After Police Seize Film

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