OPINION Page 4 Friday, March 20, 1981 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCI, No. 137 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, M1 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board The While exiting fro week's Ann Arbor two fellow patron behind me. "Well, film is dead." "Ain't it the tr panion. I regret to say merit. The questi Apari By Christop m Winners' Night at last Film Festival, f overheard s commiserating gloomily "said one, "The American uth," lamented his com- their observations have on is, does it constitute a A vote against PIRGIM is a vote for democracy declining state of the arts r g bher Potter HERE ARE TIMES when it's ;r tough to be a Regent. Like this morning, when the University's gover- ning powers have the weight of " freedom on their shoulders and must vote either for or against democracy. ' At least that's what supporters of the 'Public Interest Research Group in 'Michigan told the Regents yesterday. A vote against PIRGIM is a vote again- st democracy, they solemnly warned the Regents. Actually, a vote against PIRGIM is a - vote for democracy, or at least majority rule. The Regents will vote today on a PIRGIM proposal to change the group's method of collecting funds. Currently., if you want to support PIR- GIM you check off a box on your registration form at CRISP and the University assesses you $2 on your tuition bill. If the Regents approve PIRGIM's new negative check-off plan, you will automatically be billed $2. If you don't want' to support the group, you will have to actively in- dicate your opposition, probably on a form that will be enclosed with your tuition bill The issue, then, comes down to the burden of responsibility: Should it be PIRGIM's obligation to solicit funds or studen's olig w,&arefuse them? Clearly,- the bnurdefn should fall upon I PIRGIM. The Urji rsity has no place ; compelling students to support a special interest group, or even providing a convenient collection ser- vice for it (through tuition bills). The Spartacus Youth League or the People ; United for a Human Future get no such special treatment; neither should PIRGIM. " PIRGIM supporters argue they represent all students and conduct ac- tivities in the public interest and should therefore be entitled to Univer- sity help in collecting funds. Certainly PIRGIM is a fine organization - as State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Ar- bor) outlined to the Regents yesterday it has worked for such beneficial legislation as the Bottle Bill, the Freedom of Information Act, the Truth in Lending Act, and tenants's rights bills. But PIRGIM has also taken a num- ber of political stances - such as op- position to nuclear power and selective service registration - as part of its "public interest" work. We happen to oppose these issues also, but it is by no means certain that all University students share similar sentiments. It is hardly fair, then, to bill all students $2 to support PIRGIM: PIRGIM supporters have gathered 7,000 student signatures on petitions this week purporting to show support 'for the negative check-off plan. However, there is good reason to question whether all 7,000 of those students fully understood the issue. PIRGIM workers badgered students to sign the petitions much as they badger students at CRISP, with slidk talk about the attributes and not much mention of the drawbacks. If students don't always understand what they are being asked to support at CRISP - that's the argument PIRGIM gives against having to collect funds at registration - then there is an equal chance that they didn't understand what they were signing on petitions. Eleven years ago, PIRGIM collected an impressive 16,000 petition signatures favoring establishment of the CRISP check-off support system and the University complied, reasoning ghat any group with such widespread support deserves Univer- sity assistance in fund collecting. Today, only one-fourth of University students support PIRGIM with a donation - a significant erosion. If the Regents are really voting on democracy, as PIRGIM advocates maintain, then they must acknowledge the will of the vast majority of students who do not choose to support PIRGIM and refuse the negative check-off plan. case of murder or collaborative suicide? PERHAPS THE MERE threat of President Reagan's merry hatchet men chopping up the face of American arts is as debilitating as the future reality. What in the world became of the Film Festival we used to cheer, jeer, and openly adore? A dreary, austere imposter lurked for six days last week in the cavernous recesses of the Michigan Theatre. Though it billed itself as the 19th edition of a rite that has gradually attained national and even world prominence, its vital credentials had clearly been filched. This was a festival without a soul. Where were the traditionally gauche. acoutrements and decorations? Where was Pat Olesco? Where were the crazy cinema-Dadaist lobby collages which used to practically lunge at theatergoers as they strolled past? Where was the seasonal cadre of drifters, dreamers, and grand eccentrics, who would ceremoniously come out of the woodwork at festival time, do their thing, then drift just as mysteriously off into the night? THIS YEAR'S FILM Festical seemed shorn of such trademarks, its rituals and per- sonality dulled by an unspoken sense of doom which even several hun dred red, white, and black baloons faired to conceal. One never remotely sensed the spontaneous, manic energy which would normally build throughout the week. Even when normally massive crowds - depressingly absent the first four days - finally did materialize, the sensation seemed comparable to waiting in line at a bus station. Perhaps this tire of anonymity was inevitable in a sudden era of belt-tightening and Jelly Bellies; perhaps it was inescapable that imagination and style would falter along with shrinking bank accounts. The new economics, which hung over this festival like a guillotine, had long since begun to wither our most expensive of all the arts. 1981 MARKED SOME-fifty fewer movie en- tries than last year; those that remained displayed a quantum reduction in abstract experimentation, in free-flung expressions of personal vision. It's a matter of bald economics - documentaries sell, dancing geometric spheres don't. Freedom is impor- tant, but so's food on the table every night. Things seem certain to get much worse before they get better. The Reagan economic gurus want to cleave in half all federal sub- sidies for the arts - eventually they'd like to lop off the other half as well. Though the debate over the nature of this support has raged for years - politicians complain that most funding recipients are too elitist for public accessability, while those within the arts accuse the funding of being too lowbrow- oriented - the fact is that government sub- sidies account for a relatively small portion of arts collateral. Washington's primary function is sym- bolic: Its grants serve as ideal prototypes for private benefactors, exemplifying where to donate as well as if to donate at all. WERE THE NEW administration to cast the arts adrift, the spiralling effect would be philosophically catastrophic. If the gover- nment doesn't give a damn, why should anybody else? If we're about to enter an age bereft of such basics as food stamps and rent subsidies,; why should a private patron regard the art of the motion picture as anything but a self- indulgent frill in an era of hardship? Indeed, the day may soon be at hand when even the most talented novice filmmaker will find himself without a benefactor either in the federal or philanthropic sphere. Such deprivation would bring few tears to the Reagan crowd, whose anti-intellectual in- clinations ("I may not know art, but I know what I like") was surely an influencing factor in its proposed cultural disengagement. Even so, federal subsidization is a less than clear-cut liberal-conservative issue. The Soviet Union lavishes support upon its artists and poets (as does an adoring public), yet retains an iron control over content; the American artist has freedom of expression, but lacks both a mass following and a regular paycheck. In essence; he becomes as much a slave to standard tastes as does his under-the- thumb eastern counterpart; his freedom is increasingly the freedom to conform or star- ve. Maybe we're in the initial stages of a tran- sfdrmation into a spartan society - no non- sense, no extravagance, certainly no film festivals.Such a society would have no use for the iconoclast -- yet some day, amidst all the drudgery and sterility, some of us may mour- nfully recall that it was iconoclasts that made America work in the first place. Christopher Potter is a Daily staff mem- bet. His column appears every Friday. 40 al 0 r Higgins OF COORSI 'M $EN$51IVE TO THE BLACK LVNG IS0E -- \\ N i I'M SENNTIVE TO ALL CIVIL, RIGH1TS )M$UM .\ 4 a0 . ;.. . / . - ." No surprises in Regents' minority recruitment report LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Faculty salary cut idea clarified O NCE AGAIN, the University's minority recruitment report showed that black enrollment on the Ann Arbor campus has declined. Once again, Regents and administrators shook their heads and bemoaned the decline. Once again students told the Regents something must be done about the problem. And like any other year, nobody had any answers., The University' system of minority recruitment is fragmented at best. Each school and college has its owne recruitment program. Support programs for minority students at the University are scattered across the campus. In addition to University programs such as the Opportunity Program and the Office of Minority Student Services, many schools and colleges have their own counseling and support systems. Add to that the coun- tless minority counseling programs in the dorms. and the frustrating shown; minority attrition decreased significantly in 1980. But if administrators mean what they say about minority recruitment, they must establis'h it as a top priority. At a time when potential budget cuts loom in every sphere of the University, administrators must not forget their commitment to minority students. A key to dealing both with a problematic budget and declining black enrollment lies in centralization. A central system of recruiting and support would be financially feasible_ and would help cut through the jumble of support systems. Administrators are not the only ones who must deal with this problem. Before students rush to put blame on the University, they must also be willing to come up with concrete proposals. All facets of the University must work to unravel the complex problem of minority recruitment. To the Daily: I am writing to correct a misunderstanding conveyed by your front-page article of March 13 on the recent open forum, "Where's the University Going?" As one of the speakers at the forum, I was cited as suggesting - among other things - that "the 'University could. . . save money by reducing the fraction of the faculty guaranteed permanent positions." Such a proposal makes little sense, and I did not advocate it. Apparently your reporter misunderstood a different proposal that I did make, as one of several possible ways to save money without sacrificing the all- important goal of diversity in programs, points of view, faculty, and students at this University. seek to earn income f I suggested that each tenured hal sources (e.g. res faculty member and ad- ts, or visiting profe ministrator be guaranteed (from alternatively, one cot general fund revenues) a frac- free time to pursue tional appointment of less than research, writing, 100 percent over their full education. careers. Thus, if the fraction The basic principle were 90 percent, each person cut hours, rather than affected would take one their rate of pay), whe obligatory semester of unpaid to be made. leave eveFy five years..-Thomas Weis, During this semester one could March 14 The draft is slavery fl e s u n s 0 rom exter- arch gran- ssorships); ld use the one's own and self- here is to people (or n cuts have kopf New window problems To the Daily: Did you ever wonder how much fun it would be to smash window panes? Being a resident of East Quad, ,I can tell you that the University's window installation crew had a great time installing new "energy efficient" windows in my dorm during the first two weeks of last month. Before I continue, I must in- form you that I support the in- stallation of the windows. However, I do not agree with the procedure that was used. Their procedure was to work carelessness, the temperature in the dorm had become the tem perature of the outdoors, causing discomfort to many students. After viewing these problems you might think everything is now "peaches and cream.'" However, last week, while playing frisbee outside in the courtyard of the dorm, I stepped on a piece of glass, which cut my 'foot. I discovered that during the window installation the workers had used hammers to knock out the glass of the old window To the Daily: A draft of men discriminates. against women? The Daily's recent editorial to this effect is totally off the wall. Did gassing Jews discriminate against Aryans? Did enslaving blacks discriminate against whites? The draft is slavery - the draft is what brought you Vietnam; it is what enables the government to carry out interventionist wars without the consent of the people. standing of what the draft is, might be an aid in preventing fur- ther criminal assault on the Third World and on our own people. A recent political cartoon shows male pigs penned outside "Uncle Sar's Sausage Factory," while female pigs ask, "What's wrong with us? We're just as good as males! We should serve too!" The feminist movement's progress is also impeded by the