Here was the news... Just too much damn media? Sunday morning, 11:00 - Another peaceful breakfast has been shattered by that hulking brute of a news carrier. He takes pride in his ability to hurl a newspaper the size of a six-year- old child from his speeding car and SMACK! into the front door. Next week, I plan to wait on the porch and throw something back at him, maybe a rock, or a crowbar. But now the newspaper is here, and I am wondering once again: what sort of people need a newspaper this big? This country is full of news junkies - people who buy two or three newspapers a day, watch cNN at every chance and salivate over Peter Jennings. They are constantly trying to keep in touch with the world, as if the Day of Reckoning is about to happen and complete information about your fellow human is required to get past the Pearly Gates. I used to think I understood what the planet was up to, until I met some serious news freaks. My great-aunt nearly lost her mind while visiting me in Dublin. The entire daily news came to about. three-quarters of an hour ("where's the national news?"), and she found the newspapers too boring. She spent days scouring the city for People magazine, and eventually settled for a week-old copy of usA Today. When I visited her in the Bronx last year, she sat me down in front of the Tv and said "Watch this for a bit, this is real news." There was almost two hours of national and local news. I was stunned. It was like watching the Death Wish series back to back - string of brutal beatings and killings with garbled family stories in between. I knew that New York was not representative of the whole country, and I felt sure that I could find a paper or channel that gave me the news I wanted. I started with cNN, the first truly context-free news organization. It was even more stressful that the New York news. Watching CNN requires chess-like concentration. If you go to the bathroom, you miss half the day's news and have to wait another fifteen minutes to see it again. I found myself listening for the "over to you, Fred," so I could tell when one story was ending and another starting. There were lots of pretty colors on the screen, and a realistic looking newsroom in the background, but I can't watch news that has stock market quotations floating around the bottom of the screen. Television news is information about important people from important people. Witness the trio of Jennings, Brokaw and Rather. Devotees of the big three dudes tell me that they have an important job to do, lending credibility to the news. As far as I can make out, they get paid phenomenal salaries for standing around happening places looking like Humphrey Bogart and telling us what they think about the world. This is a fun job - like getting paid to kick Sam Donaldson in the teeth. Noting my frustration, a friend advised me to watch ABC's Nightline, with Ted Koppel, promising me a more in-depth approach to the news. So, last week I watched him chair a discussion in South Africa, which globally conscious ABC called "A Town Meeting." Ted has been watching too many James Bond movies - his eyebrows have a life of their own, he can't resist a glib comment, and he appears to think that he has a monopoly on human intelligence. Then again, maybe he does. Maybe I'm just being too harsh. After all, I did turn on Saturday Night Live one evening, and thought Dennis Miller was doing a real news show. I've since discovered Bill Bonds, who is much funnier. And he's serious. But, it's time to rein in this particular tangent and get back to the point. I decided that television was simply not the place to find the news. That left the printed word, and the radio. But the radio is for highly amplified music, not news. So that left the newspapers. Intellectual sophistication apparently comes from carrying the New York Times around campus, so I decided to give that a try. Jesus! Does anyone really read that newspaper? Even with a dictionary? I tell you solemnly, no news is that boring. I bet all those people with the Times tucked under their arms really don't read about Bolivia's peasants or the background pieces on politics in faraway places. They just read the movie reviews and the sports page, and hope they find a copy of usA Today in the bathroom. Newspapers love to divide the past up into neat ten year chunks called decades. Mercifully, the "Life in the Eighties" stories are finished, but you can be sure the zealous hacks at Time-Life are already compiling their nineties stories, and worrying about what the first decade of the next century will be called. The Firsties? The Oneties? It seems trivial, but this question will cause grief for many in the business. The other sort of context newspapers provide for their readers is the "slice-of-life" story, and once in a while one of these will come along which has wire editors drooling into their Styrofoam coffee cups. The vastly unimportant opening of McDonalds in Moscow was a recent example. This story made front pages across the nation. They are killing one another in Beirut, Belfast, El Salvador and Washington D.C. - but hey, didja hear that the Ruskies have to pay half a day's wages for a Big Mac and fries? Freakin' incredible, huh? That really slapped the suffering of the faceless masses into context. The advantage of the print media is that they can develop a story more fully than television will allow. So, while television can only tell you that Donald Trump is getting divorced, and maybe show a brief interview with Liz Smith, the newspapers can tell you what sort of sex he is having, and what color underwear he buys. I couldn't give a flying fuck if Donald Trump was found having sex with a bevy of grizzly bears on the White House lawn, but some people really care. The cult of personality and all that. It has been said that people get the news they deserve. Now that the Soviet Union is undergoing a revolution of sorts, Tass (the Soviet news agency) has taken to reporting UFOs. It has also reported strange creatures roaming the countryside with advanced weaponry, although some claim that this is simply Pat Buchanan, who has finally gone off the deep end. I suppose we should be grateful that we can at least choose what we read and watch. Maybe news will be the trivial pursuit of the nineties - whoever knows the most facts wins. If you can learn to have a shorter attention span, the endless stream of gibberish that passes as news does quite nicely. You just begin to understand the world in a different way. If you shove enough disconnected blathering into a newspaper, it begins to look substantial. There was a "Factoid" break on CNN Headline News recently. It said "A Pizza Hut poll showed that 13% of office employees admitted to firing rubber bands in the office." Ponder this. There is a deeper meaning somewhere. by Ronan G. Lynch Media treated WCBN unfairly To the editor: This is in response to Phil Cohen's article "The Ten Percent Solution" in the Feb. 16th edition of Weekend Magazine. Regarding the publication Ten Percent, which purports to represent the interests of the Gay community of Ypsilanti/Ann Arbor, editor Steve Culver misrepresents WCBN its executive staff, and the Gay Radio Collective. In the premier issue, Mr Culver alleges that WCBN tried to cover up anti-gay incidents which occurred on Dec. 8th and 12th by not reporting the incidents to the proper "authorities" at the University of Michigan. It is our contention, however, that WCBN was not given a fair chance to respond to such allegations. It is true that WCBN launched an internal investigation into the matter and decided not to reveal facts pertaining to the incidents immediately, but we had very good reasons for conducting our affairs in this manner. It is NOT true that WCBN didn't report the incidents; they were reported to the office of Affirmative Action on January 16th, Ten Percent published its article on January 17th. Ten Percent editor Steve Culver refused to withhold publication of the article in spite of the report to the Affirmative Action office, and to this day has not offered WCBN's executive staff a chance to officially rebut his damaging assertions. WCBN and the Gay Radio Collective feel that Steve Culver is an opportunist and lacks in journalistic ethics. That an incident occurred in the radio station, was investigated by the people involved, was resolved to the satisfaction of all involved, and reported in a timely manner (little more than 1 month) is unprecedented in a bureaucratic institution such as the University of Michigan. That a student organization could empower themselves and handle their own affairs is an action that deserves applause, not condemnation. In the past, wCBN has been victimized by certain individuals"actions, and then threatened with extinction by the administration because of these actions which were essentially beyond the control of the radio station's staff. To this day, the "student radio station at the University of Michigan" is known in the national press as the "one that aired racial jokes." wCBN does not wish to be known as "the homophobic station" as well., Even the Daily misrepresented this latest incident by not reporting all of the facts. On the front page of the Feb. 1st edition of the Daily is an article about Ten Percent which includes the face page of the publication and a headline which reads "Anti-gay acts at wCBN go unreported." Students who read only the headlines would get the impression that wCBN is anti-gay. Nothing could be further from the truth, in fact, wCBN is proud to have the Gay Radio Collective's program "Closets are for Clothes," probably the only show of its kind in the state of Michigan. There is still a chance for the Daily to redeem itself by doing a follow-up piece detailing the incidents that occurred, or by giving wCBN some press coverage which emphasizes our high quality programming. For instance, from Feb. 22nd- 25th, wCBN is airing some special programming which celebrates African-American contributions to the culture of America, called "Listen to the Color of Your Dreams." Luis A. Vazquez Public Affairs Director, WCBN FM Ten Percent article questioned To the editor: The Gay Radio Collective is writing in response to what we feel was inaccurate and damaging coverage of the incidents at wCBN 88.3 FM in the January cover story of Ten Percent. These are the facts about what occurred: On December 8, 1989 the "Closets are for Clothes" desk in Annex A at wCBN was vandalized. A note was posted in the lobby by a member of the collective asking the perpetrator to call her and discuss the incident. WCBN was notified, and began its own investigation. On December 12, the note was found on the desk with an offensive response. Two wCBN staffers saw a member of wCBN leaving Annex A just after the note was left. Brad Heavner, station manager, contacted the person. On December 22 (the last day of finals), Heavner met with the person. This person admitted guilt, and agreed to the demands that he resign from wCBN, turn in his keys, and write a letter of apology to the collective. The radio collective had its next meeting on January 7 (due to the holiday break), and was given the note of apology. The guilty party had not yet turned his keys in to the key office, because the University was not officially open until January 11. Discussion of reporting the incident to the Office of Affirmative Action for statistical purposes began during this week. It was agreed that there was no need to report it for disciplinary reasons, since wCBN had handled the matter. On Friday January 12, members of the collective talked to the author of this article. He was told that the incident was going to be reported on Tuesday January 16 (the first day possible to report it, since Monday was MLK Day). The author, a now-former member of the collective, was also told repeatedly that the collective and wCBN did not want these incidents made public, for fear of misrepresentation. Our fears were realized with the publication of Ten Percent on Tuesday, January 16. The collective was unable to talk to Jimmy Myers at the Office of Affirmative Action until S Iet1erbox Thursd, that he reportec that no necessa of the n Collecti receipt that the returnee Board o docume Rumors already earlier c The(c stress th coerced inciden editor o that it w Further tried to day and that He commei that the inciden mishan< questio inciden contact 4122. sketchpad f.zinn Weekend Magazine welcome readers (especially if they are s two on this page). Letters shoul the Doily offices on disk, on p( via MTS-UB to "Weekend Mac Please make sure a name and accompanies each submission with the salutation "To the editc be edited for space. Iif I I THE GREAT WALL____ ___ RESTAURANT Specializing in DINNERS & LUNCHES SzechuanHunan CARRY-OUTS zHRated Ann Arbor's best new restau- and Cantonese rant of 1988 and best oriental res- taurant of 1989 by The Michigan Daily Weekend Magazine. 747-7006 Monday -Sunday 11 am-11 pm 1220 S. UNIVERSIT " AT S. FOREST ANN ARBOR ' " .... i 1 / NEXT TO CITY PARKING STRUCTURE FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P.M. Day. Does anyone else find it particularly disturbing that each fall we at the University of Michigan are forced to celebrate our.arch-rivals on Columbus Day? Anyone who's ever been to Columbus knows there is nothing there worth commemorating. Of course, we get our just dues from the Buckeyes every time (Ann) Arbor Day roles around. Veteran's Day, I like. We can keep Veteran's Day. Who could find offense with those who sacrifice life and limb to make sure our pets have all their shots? Thanksgiving and Christmas/ Chanukah have become so commercial, I can only wonder how soon it will be before the government starts selling official sponsorships to corporations for these holidays. Just picture it on calendars everywhere: Firestone presents Thanksgiving, A Del Monte Christmas, or Manischevitz Chanukah? Then, of course, there's Get As Drunk As Possible And Act Like I'm Having The Absolute Best Time of My Life, Even Though I'd Really Rather Just Be In Bed Watching Dick Clark Live From Times Square On TV Eve, which is followed by I Wish I Had Stayed Home And Watched Dick Clark Live From Times Square On TV Rather Than Getting As Drunk As Possible And Acting Like I Was Having The Absolute Best Time of My Life Last Night, Who's Playing In The Cotton Bowl Day. Last, there is Valentine's Day. Anyone who has ever had to go through this day without a Valentine (come on; we all have at one time or another) will agree that no other holiday can quite match this one for making someone feel miserable, depressed, lonely, unwanted, and basically like common pond scum. Or is that what holidays are for? So there it is, enough reasons to eliminate most every holiday from the year. There are any number of equally offensive holidays I've omitted for space reasons (i.e., St. Patrick's Day, Sweetest Day, Passover, Secretaries' Day, and Cashmir Pulaski's Birthday - we actually used to get a day off of school for that one). Sure, the ramifications of such a bold move as eliminating all holidays would be great at first.= The greeting card industry would go into a tailspin, but I'm sure Hallmark could convert all those factories to defense plants at a minor cost. We'd have to do without Charlie Brown Specials, days off from school, getting presents, family reunions, and barbeques with the neighbors, but then again we'd do without Osmond Family bills, fa with the ThejI Appliar Waterb the effe but I'm with ne discoun So stc any forr Thanks that fire late you offendir Oh, a only 30: Christr Ntu "GfiNmh SIG s cGOWA PL#*,ib COng. l~E$ -mom U 12 WEEKEND Fsbruuv 23, iflO WEEKEND i $ 6 # t 4 ! FeiNMary 23 1990