Page 10-Tuesday, May 13, 1980-The Michigan Daily STA TE WANTS BAN ON INDIAN NET GILL FISHING Fishing rights pit state vs. U.S. BUT AN ANGRY Michigan United Co LANSING (UPI)-The state and the U.S. Interior Eric Jankel of the Interior Department firmly Clubs Director Thomas Waahington aaid Department collided head-on yesterday over yet rejected State Natural Resource Director Howard . month ban on fishing south of Arcadia another federal revision of proposed interim Tanner's proposal for a moratorium on all commer- ficient because the tribes now make little of regulations for Indian fishing in the Great Lakes. cial Indian. fishing pending a final federal court ch in that area. U.S. District Judge Noel Fox denied the state's decision on the case. In a related development in Lansing, Mi request for a stay of his 1979 ruling affirming TANNER HAD CALLED for federal reimbur- torney General Frank Kelley said the 19t unlimited Indian fishing rights in the Michigan sement of about $2 million to Indians for financial treaty giving Indians unlimited fishing ri waters of the Great Lakes under a 19th century losses resulting from the fishing ban. not also give them the right to hunt free treaty. Jankel said any moratorium would be unfair to the regulations. STATE OFFICIALS had sought a partial stay of tribes unless it also applied to sport fishermen. He The opinion was issued in a 1978 Antr Fox's ruling, chiefly on the grounds that unregulated also said no compensation funds are available. case involving a member of the Ottawa trib gill net fishing by Indians was rapidly depleting Use of large mesh gillnets-which the DNR says fined for shooting a doe on private property many fish stocks. has caused most of the fish stock destruction-would proper license. State officials and sportsmen say since the tribes be allowed most of the year from Arcadia to the tip of The woman had claimed she was exe began their unregulated fishing, stocks of lake trout the Leelenau Peninsula, according to the federal state hunting regulations under the 1836 and whitefish have become dangerously low. plan. Washington. a nservation the three- was insuf- f their cat- chigan At- th century ights does from state im County e who was y without a mpt from Treaty of a a Hitchcock's trashy horror reconsidered (CondtnuedfromPage9) joke-it wasn't real. His movies are a dry comic celebration of film mechanics, a feat Hitchcock accom- plished without having to resort to the Gothic hyperbole of Orson Welles. For an avowed manipulator, he was on his own, pseudo-naturalistic wavelength. (Of the new directors, only Brian De' Palma makes his love for trash and the shamelessly manipulative possibilities of the medium integral to his art.) More than any other old director, Hitchcock created his own, alternative reality. It may have been horribly'simplistic next to the World As We Know It. But on its own mechanical, manipulative, stylized, cornball level, it was thrillingly complex. Though it obviously wasn't something he enjoyed talking about, most of Hit- chcock's movies are charged with a steamy erotic subtext that betrays the director's profound awareness of the erotic undercurrents in daily experien- ce. He was a great shallow director: His art was reductive not because he reduced human experience to a few simple emotions, but because he por- trayed the whole glorious range of WHAT A COMBI NATION human emotion on a marvelously sim- ple, pop level. Like the best rock and roll, he was entirely elemental-and en- tirely convincing.. And in that sense, I guess that Alfred Hitchcock achieved a sort of greatness. Some critics say that in his films, they can detect the stern moral preoc- cupations of a "serious artist." But it's sheer foolish pedantry to deny the trash-heart of Hitchcock's world. For me, Hitchcock is perhaps the single link to a tradition of American popular art to whom I relate with the same under- standing I have towards current popular artists. Because, on his own simplified level, his approach was essentially psychological, and because he pandered to basic human emotional responses rather than popular value systems, he created pop-art for the ages. Hitchcock may well have immor- talized himself in his art. To him, though, that probably just meant that he'd always have the last laugh. Man knows where he's going by where he's been. 4 PRIME RIB AND CRAB What a blend of tastes! You get our tender prime rib, cooked to your order, served along side a generous portion of succulent Alaskan king crab leg. And of course it includes a fresh green salad, bread & butter and your choice of baked potato, French fries or rice. And at a very special $8.95. COMPLETE DINNER I I I Bed Soeefo A 300 South Maple Ann Arbor, 665-1133 This is our regular Prime Rib and Alaskan King Crab dinner-at a special saving price all day on Sunday and Monday thru Thursday during our regular dinner hours. Call today for reservations. . (Continental Restaurant Systems 1980[