OPINION A Page 4 Saturday, March 26, 1983 The Michigan Daily 7 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Film writing students big on Vol. XCIII, No. 138 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, M{ 48109 nuclear arms, teddy bears 6 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Mayoral malfeasance IN THE continuing controversy over the expansion of Ann Arbor airport expansion project, Mayor Louis Belcher has charged Democrats with erecting a political smokescreen before the April elections. But, when the haze is cleared, the trail of wrongdoing and misrepresentation leads right to the mayor's office. The City Council had rejected plans for a longer runway three times over a five year period. In spite of this, the mayor, a long time supporter of the expansion, took it upon himself to con- tact the Michigan Aeronautics Com- mission. He told the commision that the make up of the Council had changed and that the city was set to go ahead, according to the MAC director. The mayor didn't bother to inform his own Republican caucus or the-rest of Council that his actions had already set in motion the funding for the plan. On Jan. 24, 1983, the Council again rejected the plan to build the runway, but this time asked for answers to various questions about the plan. In ]February, the mayor signed a "preap- plication" which states on it "the document has been duly authorized by the governing body (city council) of the applicant." Clearly the mayor had no such authorization, but he signed the document anyway without so much as telling Council. By the time Ann Arbor's state legislators got wind of the fiasco in early February, more than $3.6 million dollars had been appropriated for the project that Council had rejected a total of four times. Belcher has tried to pass the whole thing off as a Democratic attempt to manufacture an issue just before the elections. But this pale excuse does not explain his failure to tell the com- mission that the proposal had been voted down by Council, his misrepresentation of Council's wishes in going forward with the funding process, or his failure to tell the Coun- cil just what he was up to. The issue isn't "backdoor politics" by the Democrats as Belcher hasn charged, but power politics by the mayor. With Detroit Metro airport less than 30 miles away the Council has recognized the mayor's pet project for what it is, a multi-million dollar boon- doggle. By Pamela Douglas LOS ANGELES - As a teacher of screen writing at two institutions which feed the Hollywood production mill - UCLA and the University of Southern California (USC) - for the past five years, I've been privy to the fears and fantasies of hundreds of young filmmakers. This term the scripts have been different. My students, mostly 19 to 21 years old, are obsessed with the day after a nuclear war. Of 60 assigned papers turned in recently, 20 per- cent focused on a character who is among the last human beings alive in a dead world. Oddly, these same young people have taken up a peculiar hobby: They are collecting ted- dy bears. In fact, students at USC tell me the fad is sweeping the undergraduate dorms, and that the most prized stuffed animals aren't slick or sophisticated. Students want the cuddly kind that comforts babies. NEITHER FADS, nor clumps of subjects in student papers, are unusual. In the late '70s I could always count on at least five rape scrip- ts per term written by female students. The expected growing-up traumas, breaking away from mom or dad in favor of love or career, would yield maybe 15. And the ever- predictable space adventures continue to produce their quota. Every student generation has its own style, reflected in preoccupations which fill its writings. The era of campus protest, during which students identified in their scripts with a character who was oppressed or who fought for 'a moral cause, finally yielded, around 1980, to a "supply-side" character: the all- Wasserman powerful hero or a lone individual striving toward a purely private goal. But these recent scripts on the end of the world are new - and eerie. They describe emerging from a bomb shelter to search for friends;rthey describe the first murder after the war; they describe death and utter isolation. And not one, in my experience, of- fers a glimmer of hope, of a solution, even of strength to cope. THESE STUDENTS are not revolutionaries. On the campuses where I teach, only the ethnic minorities concern themselves with international events, or often with serious national issues. The majority of young people in my classes are white, from upper-middle-class families in the west. They were born in the '60s and don't remember (or don't understand) the anti-war movement. One might expect them to relate to the Nuclear Freeze Initiative, which had its start in California, but they don't. They don't see the point. Instead they collect teddy bears. At USC, undergraduate women keep as many as 20 on their beds. They're happy to tell you about their favorites: "This is the one my dad got me when I was 16." or, "'he's my favorite because he hugs me back.". A 19-year-old given to preppie clothes con- fided about her "original bear," which she'd kept since infancy. "If I throw him out of bed, I ask him if he's hurt." Even those in now- fashionable punk garb cling to teddies. A 20- year-old with dyed-black, slicked-back ducktail hair laughed, "When no one else is around, I talk to my teddy bears." No male students confess to hugging teddy bears. But they have their equivalent in' prose: Young men are writing stories from children's viewpoints in record numbers. Five this term are about little boys under 9 years old. That just hasn't happened in my classes before. Outwardly, these students continue to play the career-bound university game. But why bother, I asked a 21-year-old philosophy major, if he believes the world is about to end? "Why not?" he answered. "Taking film courses is fun. I don't think we have much of a future, not really. What else would I do?" The mood on campus, whatever the conven- tional wisdom, is not one of apathy. That, means not caring. These kids do care, but. they feel exceptionally powerless to influence their futures. The mood, rather, is one of retreat back to a time of safety, to childhood,., to teddy bears. One A-student, who wrote of wandering through underground tunnels beneath Washington in search of another living soul after the apocalypse, held onto a soft, round- eyed bear as she talked to me. "He's my- security blanket," she admitted. For an in- stant, a smile warmed her face, perhaps from some remembered peace. Douglas teaches screen UCLA and USC. She wrote for the Pacific News Service. writing at this article Saving Social Security HE CAVALRY has come to the rescue again. This time, the cavalry, otherwise known as the 98th Congress, has passed a long-term Social Security bailout plan aimed at solving the benefit system's chronic money problems. Though the bailout is welcome, Social Security will not be out of danger until this plan proves it can work. The last long-term rescue mission, which came only five years ago, failed miserably. Admittedly, the last plan suffered because of the dismal economy, but any such plan must be able to weather good and bad times. Fortunately, this nteasure apparently starts with a better chance of success, given recent signals that an economic recovery may be beginning. This intiative has some features that iake its chances for success a little miore favorable. Besides raising the Social Security tax rate over a period of years, the measure raises the retir- ement age by two years by the year 2027. This will encourage older people to continue working longer, con- sidering that people are healthier and living longer. The plan also cuts benefits for those earning more than $6,600 per year and brings federal employees into the system for the first time. All this is supposed to raise $165 billion for the Social Security trust funds and keep it from collapsing. The system's success, though, hinges on the economy .and em- ployment. The principles of the syst- em from its inception included the premise that many more people will contribute to it than will receive benefits. Thus, the more people em- ployed, the healthier the system remains. That is why the cavalry has come to the rescue in such grand style. First, they passed a jobs bill that, though it won't solve unemployment, will put people to work. And now, they have taken steps that will probably save Social Security. MA. MoNE - CtICs HAS SOWN MOE CAUTION THAN1\ LEADER~tP.I "OW' Do '101 DFER FROMA THE RS 1 12 &O T' LK'TO ASK YOU TI{F QMM~T1q \NE'VE PUT "To0ALL -CR CAN DDTE - "Uh n 6 - " ,. WHAT tDIt @-LCNN SAY fi~03 G ( J SLY d v 2S z to 4+ k-- i d vz s M CO cP ... 4 h S t 111- Iffy j 1r I . (00 ,_. 1 t!T AL w "T V M Y y L J Ljahw 0 LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Sportswriter shows poor taste j. N" W.E-C L To the Daily: At the risk of allowing too much publicity, I would like to call at- tention to the article written by Mr. Larry Freed on March 12, appropriately entitled "Freedian Slips" ("Entertainment at Crisler...Basketball enough"). The article seemed intended to be a critique of the pre-game and halftime shows presented by Mr. Eric Becher and the University basketball band, featuring vocalists Pam Wallace and Ty Cool. It was Ty Cool who received hte brunt of the article's tasteless and ludricrous jabs. Mr. Freed attacked not only the presen- tation and choice of material, but also Ty's clothing, appearance, and even his name. Freed asked how he could be expected to believe that Ty's parents were really named Mr. and Mrs. Cool. cross between Howdy Doody and Richie Cunningham. Producing my driver's license, I introduced myself as Ty's brother, Bill Cool, the proud son of Mr. and Mrs. William Cool. He, along with a number of his associates who had quickly come to his rescue, explained that he was merely trying to point out that this type of show was inap- propriate for a Michigan basket- ball game - a statement he could have effectively made in one paragraph. He then admitted that the article may have been a bit too "toungue-in-cheek." I suggested that it seemed as if his tongue was stuck somewhere else. I pointed out that Ty and Pam were asked by the band to per- form as a favor. They both graciously accepted, spending a good number of hours in preparation, for which they many feel that kudos are in order for Mr. Becher and his band. I would like to also address coach Bill Frieder, who was overheard supplying his own con- temptuous cracks against the shows. If he were to exhibit as much creativity and command as much excellence from his team as Mr. Becher does with his band, his team might not have finished so poorly in the Big Ten. In fact, considering that his team won the two games at which Ty. and Pam performed, he might want to solicit them to perform for every home game next season. If Larry Freed would spend a little more time researching his subject matter and injecting a> higher level of taste in his writing style, he might one day grow up-. to be a fine reporter, - William Cool II March 22 q qTI. if To the Daily: Isn't it bad enough already that there is not adequate library study space at this University? Then Why, praytell, do some people insist on ruining for others what limited space there is with unruly manners, constant socializing, loud personal help but get is that these people do not need to study (They never do anything but go from table to table conversing with each other, perhaps allowing a few moments in between to gaze at the title page of the book they brought with them), which leads one to ask; Why are they here? Rudeness at the library U Aj