Ptage2-Suriday, Mdrch 25, 1979-The MichiganDaily' The Michigan Daily-Sunday, M R AMRLINGS/keith riehburg TELEVI SION/julie rovner PBS: Playingnetwork ga IT WAS LIKE a case of deja vu. I had seen it before on television, back when I was too young to realize the significance: The students on one side, with their signs and placards, chanting for the U.S. to come home from foreign soil; on the other side, the helmeted police, all in riot gear and looking even more menacing in their uniformity. There was the scuffle, billy clubs flying, students lying on pavement, whisked away in the backs of police cars. That was ten years ago. The cause then was a war in a tiny country in Southeast Asia-a war that split this country into two warring factions, brought down a president, and laid the foundation for our present foreign policies of retrenchment. And it started on college campuses, just like' here, with scenes just like this. The issue this time is more com- plex-the University investments in certain companies, which in turn do business that help support the minority regime in South Africa.. The crowds are also smaller now, though not necessarily less vocal. The success of causes is measured not in numbers but in intensity. At one point the crowd begins singing "We shall overcome," -immediately conjuring up images of Selma, Mem- phis, and Resurrection City. I have of- ten heard older students of the sixties lament the "good old days" of sit-ins and boycotts, and I have often longed for just a glimpse into the times I came too late to see. Someone in the crowd has passed out lyrics to the folk songs of protest. "All We Are Saying Is Give Divestment A Chance," and "Which Side Are You On." Someone asks if anybody in the audience is carrying a guitar. Shades of Bob Dylan and Joan Baez. I cannot sing along with the rest-my journalistic objectivity precludes ac- tive participation. But I can observe, with awe and envy, this one brief glim- pse into the sixties. I remain neutral, calling on all my will power to refrain from shouting out with the crowd, for a cause in which I really believe. One enters to inform the protesters of their legal rights. They will probably be ordered to vacate the premises. The police will move in. The protesters will try to sit on their hands-passive disobedience. The police will probably remove them by force. Shades of Chicago, 1968. The hours pass. The tension mounts. The rumors begin: The police are mobilizing outside the building for a major assault. someone talked to someone who talked to someone who saw the police carrying in cannisters of tear gas. sSomeone else saw an automatic rifle. Shades of Kent State. At last the police enter, armed not with tear gas or automatic rifles, but with a court injunction. The officer. reads the court order to the crowd, and has trouble pronouncing some of the words-"apart-te-heid.' His business is law enforcement, not public speaking. He read, the court order in a monotone, oblivious to the snickers and hisses around him. It's just like in the movies. HE COURT has decided that the protesters can stay-but business as usual will proceed behind closed doors. Public Not Invited. Press Only. The waiting game is over. Victory?. Or defeat? The protesters debate among them- selves. Shall the protest continue? Should they all go home? What was won here today and what, if anything, was lost? The leader speaks up-he keeps a clear head in the confusion. "Brothers and Sisters, what is this defeatist at- titude?" he asks. "This is not a defeat! This is a victory!" The protest. has kept the administration from carrying on with business as usual. That, he tells them, is the victory. I feel both the excitement of the moment, and the frustration of the anti- climax. It was all done too soon for one who had missed the turbulent 1960s. I had waited all this time for the confron- tation that never was. But at the same time,-it was the most excitement I had seen through in an otherwise uneventful college life. I came in a time when everyone was telling me that student unrest is dead. If the protest here was any indication, then someone forggt to tell the students. They file out of the building and wind down from the day of unrest with an ad lib march across campus. Their num- bers seem to grow as they march and chant in unison. "one, Two, Three, Four! Kick Apartheid Out The Door!" "One, Two, Three, Foyr! We Don't Want Your Dirty War!." Shades of deja vu. They file through the Literary College building, to the surprise of star- tled secretaries and cashiers counting the University's intake from another day of operation. There is a distinct look of amusement on some of their faces, as if they are saying, "Oh, look at See RAM BLINGS, Page 8 THERE'S BEEN a lot of talk recently about the prospects for so-called "quality programming." Even Freddie Silverman, mentor of such notably far-reaching shows as Laverne and Shirley and The Love Boat, has joined the commercial net- work bandwagon to push for shows that don't insult a viewer's intelligence. Only now, there seems to be a new factor with which to contend: While the debates go on behind the closes doors of CBS, NBC, and ABC, the folks over at PBS, erstwhile champions of shows that wouldn't last a half hour - on a major network, are spending their time figuring out how to be more like the networks from which PSA was sup- posed to differ. As the tube's best alternative to Star- sky and Hutch or Three's Company, PBS has long been known for its forays into, new types of programming. Of course, most of the highlights on the. PSB/schedule--Master Piece Theatre, say, or Monty Python's Flying Cir- cus-are imported from Britain. But as the nation's PBS stations are becoming more settled, they .are putting in- creasing time and money into domestically-produced programming. Julie Rovner is a Daily managing editor. Much of these shows fit the stereotype mold df highbrow elitist ap- peal. This is not entirely unreasonable. Highbrow elitists should have something to watch, too. Besides, they give much of the money that helps keep PBS going. But if PBS prides itself on being alternative television, then living up to that label means taking chances with innovative ideas. Is PBS really taking that angle seriously? What hap- pens when a different sort of show doesn't garner wide appeal, even though it gets rave reviews? In essence, PBS is faced with the same nagging question the commercial networks: which is more important, quality or ratings? A good case in point is the untimely death of New York's WNET's We In- terrupt This Week, one of,the first en- tirely PBS-produced comedy shows. Describing WITW to someone. who hasn't seen it is a tall order, as is trying to explain why the show didn't catch on outside a cult following that developed on the east coast. At its simplest, itis a quiz show, with two teams answering current events questions from the previous week. At the end of the show, the team with the most points is designated the winner.. Complicatingwthings is the fact that points are awarded not only for producing the right answer, but, as an-, nouncer and guiding light Ned Sherrin glibly pronounces at the beginning of every show, "for lying in a creative or inventive manner." All points going to each team are awarded by Sherrin, who assures 'the audience that all of his decisions will be "capricious, ar- bitrary, and final." T HE TEAMS are comprised mostly media heavies, and very few people who would be recognized on the street by the average person. This is perhaps another reason why tke show wasn't successful. The home team con- sisted of Richard Reeves of Esquire magazine, Washington socialite and sometime author Barbara Howar, and National Lampoon's Jeff Greenfield, who was the team's best point man. Members of the visiting team included everyone from screenwriter Peter Stone to NBC anchorperson Jessica Savitch.1 Most of the questions were hopelessly obscure, dealing with some of the week's most determinedly incon- sequential events (e.g., the name of a man who was in some kind of legal trouble because he refused to tear down his outhouse). Panelists admitted that the only useful preparation for the show was to read the week's Washington Posts and New York Times' from cover to cover. 4, sunddY magazine i1ICiiESTdE! PUZZLE A. Pioneer English canal- builder(1716.1772) 195 B. Resembling on automaton 5 C. Possible site, near LakeRudolph in Ethiopia. for the down of man - (2 words) 4 D. Danish physicist (1885-1952) credited with synthesizing quantum and atomic theory (Fl-am)4 (Fullname) -0 E. Thin and brittle bread made from _ the cereal avena sativo 16 F. Eng. naturalist (1823-1913) who independent of Darwin, proposed theory of evolution by natural selection 122 G. German physicist (1887-1961) who developed the fundamental - equation of quantum theory 14 H. Brit. moth. and physicist for whom the absolute scale of - temperature is named 80 1. Inspire or possess with a _ foolish possion 8 J. Wizard of Menlo Park (1847-1931) -- (Full name) 1 K. German physicist (1901 1977) best known for his Uncertainty Principle 2 99 108 150 178 185 45 59 i164 139 173 26 13 62 77 91 101 189 138 17 28 37 58 63 129 89 120 162 54 60 152 167 174 i56 97 147 182 165 186 i L.Austrian physicist (1838-1916)-who gave his name to the ratio of the speed of a body to the speed of sound in the surroundir atmosphere (Full name) M. Ancient Roman conduit for flowing water N. Athenian philosopher (470-399 B.C.) famous for his "method" 0. Founder of modern astronomy (1473-1543) P. Turn inside out or cause to protrude by eversion Q. Untrue; without basis in tact (3 words) R. Discuss; deal with:"handle S. Gorge in Tonzania where Leakey made his discoveries T. Printer (14601527) famous for his editions of the classics U. Russian chemist (1834-1907) who created the periodic table V.Diplom tsyc official ervirng an embassy in a technical capacity W. Formerly known as the Germon Ocean (2 words) .g - 3 88 125 49 102 191 146 70 157 10 43 53 75 86 135 104 181 22 177 47 114 161 169 190 76 9 111 98 21 31 69 79 38 55 180 6 29 51 90 103 133 158 166 179 46 134 23 67 123 128 110 142 187 197 7 144 8 93 136 39 106 33 96 159 66 115 141 19 163 95 116 121 81 131 188 112 30 82 12 42 57 64 71 112 25 126 137 32 50 148 160 BY S TEPHEN J. POZSGAI Copyright 1977 INSTRUCTIONS Guess the words defined at the left and write them in over their numbered dashes. Then, transfer each letter to the cor- responding numbered square in the grid above. The letters printed in the upper-right-hand corners of theasquares indi- cate from what clue-word a particular square's letter comes from. The grid, when filled in, should read as a quotation from a published work. The darkened squares are the spaces between words. Some words may carry over to the next line. Meanwhile, the first letter of each guessed word at the left, reading down, forms an acrostic, giving the author's name ang the title of the work from which the quote is extracted. As words and phrases begin to form in* the - grid, you can work back and forth from clues to grid until the puzzle is complete. Answer to the previous puzzle Confronted with the liv- ing substance of farming- the complex/y even mys- teriously interrelated lives on which it depends, from the microorganisms in the soil to the human consum- ers-the agriculture special- ist can think only of turn- ing it into a machine. (Wendell) Berry (The) Unsettling of America foiai (Continued from Page 3) delays of six to eight months on some of his forty requests for files from Detroit and Washington D.C. FBI offices. Agency officials attribute the delays to the strain of processing the tens of thousands of file requests that have poured in since FOIA's passage in 1966. That torrent increased when amen- dments tightening up loopholes in the law were passed in 1974 and 1976. The FBI, which was exempt from file requests until the 1974 amendment was passed, received 36,000 FOIA the state's Privacy Act requests for infor- mation in the last two years, according to Special Agent Eric Williams. CIA Deputy Chief of Information and Privace Staff Charles Savige said that agency received more than 4000 requests last year. Soon after the amendments passed a nation-wide network concerned with in- telligence abuses and what could be done about them began to form. Groups like FOIA Inc., the Center for National Security Studies in Washington D.C., Ralph Nader's FOIA Clearinghouse, and the campaign for Political Rights (formerly the Campaign to Stop Gover- nment Spying) added to intelligence agency woes by studying and inter- preting files-and by encouraging people to ask for files of their own. To some, the delays are minor an- noyances that must be endured in order to receive valuable information. Dave White, news director of Detroit radio station WJR, received 1330 pages of FBI documents relating to the 1967 riots in Detroit in August 1978-seven mon- ths after his station had filed its request. But White- was philosophical about the time lag. "Well, I feel it's a long time, but bet- ter late than never," he said. "I don't think you can expect, in an organization of the size and scope of the Bureau, or any other federal agency, to go in there and have them just snatch out all of their files and dump them on your desk. They're going to fly-speck your request. They're always going to look at things that they think don't pertain directly to what you asked for," added White. "And that's something we're going to have to live with." - But Bellant doesn't buy huge backlogs as a reason for long delays. Bellant, as well as Steffens and Berlet, explained that the FBI and other in- telligence agencies were avoiding prompt processing by refusing to hire enough personnel to handle the enor- mous number of requests. Diane Sinclair, who helped John Marks research his. book on CIA attem- pts at mind control, The Search for the Manchurian Candidate, feels the CIA may have purposefully delayed releasing information in order to keep it out of Mark's book. They knew we were working on a book deadline, and I guess the idea was if they could stall us long enough then we wouldn't have that material to put in our book, which, in fact, we didn't," she said. BI AND CIA officials attribute the processing backlog to other causes. Savige, who said the CIA had the equivalent of more than 116 full- time staff members processing requests last year, said delays were caused by the agency's decentralized filing system. Savige explained the CIA has 23 different departmentalized in- dexes instead of one centralized file so that "only those with a real need to know" have access to information. Because these filing systems have to be searched each time a request is processed, Savige said, responses can take quite a while. Ultimately, however, the patient and persistent petitioner can wait out agen- cy delay tactics. More distressing are massive editing of documents and the refusal to release large amounts of in- formation that is often encountered. Recipients of FOIA material say it is not inknown to find documents that have been entirely obliterated except for the name of the individual who has made the request. Names of persons who work for the intelligence agency are always censored for privacy reasons. And opponents of the editing procedure claim other information is sometimes arbitrarily left out. Occasionally, information an in- telligence group hoped to keep secret will slip out. Detroit attorney Neal Bush explained that in small political groups infiltrated by the FBI, it is often possible to determine from the infor- mation made public which member of the group is the informant. According to Berlet, one intelligence group used a magic marker that could be seen through when held up to a light. But af- ter a short while, he said, that mistake was remedied. Observers become almost uniformly more emotional when they describe in- telligence agency justifications for holding back information. The FOIA and its amendments list nine narrowly drawn exemptions under which an in- telligence group can refuse to turn over information. The exemptions range from national security to trade secrets to "geological and geophysical infor- mation and data," but the national security rationale is the most widely used. Many people who follow FOIA feel the exemptions are abused by in- telligence agencies. 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