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Police Nab 15 for 'Avatar' Sales; 5 Harvard Students Among Them

Fifteen people, including five Harvard students, were arrested in Harvard Square yesterday afternoon for selling Avatar. The arrests brought to at least 49 the number of people who have been seized by Boston or Cambridge police for peddling the nine-month-old newspaper.

Those taken into custody yesterday were charged with selling obscene literature. Conviction carries a penalty of up to two years in jail and a fine of $100 to $1000.

All but two of the 15 elected to spend the night at the Central Square lock-up, although a bonding commissioner said they could pay a $3-dollar fee and leave on their own recognizance. They are scheduled to be arraigned this morning in the Third District Court of Eastern Middlesex.

Yesterday's arrests came in two round-ups. In the first, at 2:10 p.m., nine men and a young girl who police said was a juvenile were packed into a paddy wagon in front of Holyoke Center and taken to the Central Square station. The ten had been selling the paper to passers-by along Massachusetts Avenue for less than 90 minutes.

Numbing 30-degree temperatures and a brisk wind made it seem longer, however, and some vendors looked almost relieved by the time two uniformed patrolmen and two plainclothesmen arrived to take them away. They had sold about 300 papers.

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The Harvard students arrested yesterday were Jacob S. Egan '68; Lewis S. W. Crampton, a third-year graduate student; Jesse Kornbluth '68, whose anthology of articles from underground newspapers is scheduled to be published by Viking Press later this year; his brother, Richard S. Kornbluth '69; and Stephen D. Lerner '68, former executive editor of the CRIMSON.

Within two hours, arresting officers returned to the station with five more prisoners. The new arrivals were greeted with a jovial cheer from the first group, which was still being processed by police.

Meanwhile, a half dozen more disconsolate Avatar staffers waited in the lobby of the police station for bond to be set and for the prisoners to decide whether they wanted to come out.

"It was a joke the first few times they arrested somebody," said Wayne M. Hansen, who is listed on the masthead as one of the Avatar's two editors. "But now it's really beginning to tell. If we don't get support, if people from Harvard and places like that don't come out and sell papers for us, we're going to go under."

He said that Avatar would sell papers in front of Holyoke Center again this afternoon, and that if there were more arrests, staff members would stage a candle-light protest demonstration later in the evening outside the Central Square police station.

"We're going to send more and more people to sell papers until someone else does something about it [the arrests] or until we're all in jail and we can't do anything about it ourselves," he said.

The trim, soft-spoken Hansen, gazing intently from behind rimless glasses, said he would not consider eliminating from the paper's standard vocabulary the four-letter words and sexual allusions that have stirred the ire of two Cambridge mayors, the police, and Governor John Volpe.

"It's philosophically impossible," he said. "That would make me as guilty as the police are, as far as I'm concerned. We're not fighting for freedom of obscene expression. When those words occur, it's because we feel they communicate what we're trying to say."

Hansen said that Avatar has paid out more than $225 in bail since last Saturday, when nine others were arrested for selling the paper. "To us, it's a lot," he said. "We're down to the wire."

According to Hansen about 50 people, 15 of them children between the ages of three months and ten years, are supported by Avatar. They live in a small, tightly knit community on Fort Hill in Roxbury. "We have four houses and ten apartments," said Hansen. "It's a very tight thing, like a family. It works out because everybody cares enough about everybody else."

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