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- NATION, Page 25American NotesFREEDOMSThou Shalt Not Read
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- By any measure, Michael Sebetich seemed like an upstanding
- citizen. But this week the 48-year-old ecology professor at New
- Jersey's William Paterson College will stand trial on charges
- of disorderly conduct. His crime? Reading a copy of the New York
- Times at a city council meeting in Hawthorne, N.J. In October,
- Sebetich learned that a spectator had been ordered to stop
- reading at a meeting chaired by councilman Stanley Domalewski.
- Says Sebetich: "It upset me very much that anyone could take
- away that freedom from a U.S. citizen." He proceeded to wage a
- silent protest by attending a council meeting and reading the
- Times in the back of the room. After a warning from Domalewski,
- Sebetich was carried out by two policemen and arrested. Although
- 900 citizens of Hawthorne have protested the arrest, Domalewski
- is unbowed. "It's not appropriate to flagrantly read a
- newspaper and snap the pages at a meeting," he says. What's next
- -- locking up people for yawning when an official makes a boring
- speech?
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