OPINION The new nation of SlowlyLand This two-state solution could prove that all falafel actually tastes the same SEE PAGE 5 ARTS A film experience worth having Soderbergh's "The Girlfriend Experience" services its viewers well SEE PAGE 10 SPOR TS A double dose of champions Best friends Ofili and Gall win big at NCAA Championships SEE PAGE 11 Vol. CX1X, No. 141 1 2009' The Michigan Daily michigandaily.con N EW S ................................. 2 OPINION ............................ 4 CLASSIFIED ....................... 6 ARTS ............. ................. 9 SPORTS ............................ 11 Weekly Summer Edition ART FAIR Art fair funding falls short Directors cut perks for artists, prepare for smaller fair By TORREY JOSEPH ARMSTRONG For the Daily Organizers of the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair are working to repair a hole in the fair's budget, which was estimated on Friday to be about $35,000. The fair, now in its 50th year and the longest-running of Ann Arbor's four annual art fairs, has lost some corporate sponsorship, while independent artists have been renting fewer booths out of caution, fair officials said. Before Friday, the budget hole was origi- nally thought to be $65,000. Shary Brown, executive direc- tor of the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair, said national corporations that previously sponsored the fair, like Maybelline and Ninten- do Wii Fit, are not producing as many new products, so market- ing tours are not taking place. The sfate's economy has also deterred corporate presence at the fair, which is scheduled for July 15-18. "They're leery of Michigan, and they're trying to be cautious," said Brown, in reference to the corporations. The event is expected to fea- ture 147 artists, a drop from last See STREET FAIR, Page 8 During Shaman Drum Bookshop's liquidation sale, employee Sue Sielicki cashes out Niccola Parravano, who has been a patron since the bookshop's opening nearly 30 years ago. Shaman Drum to close Local bookstore couldn't compete with online options ByLARA ZADE Managing News Editor After 29 years of business, local bookstore Shaman Drum Book- shop will officially close its doors on June 30 after suffering from fi- nancial hardship in the past year. In a written statement posted on the shop's website Tuesday, Owner Karl Pohrt wrote that after consult- ing with his accountant and busi- ness manager, it was clear to him that the bookstore was no longer a "sustainable business," despite a "first rate staff, a fiercely loyal core of customers, a very decent land- lord and (his) own commitment to the community of arts and letters in Ann Arbor." "The hardest thing about this is losing the comrades that I've worked with over the years," Pohrt said in an interview Friday. He also wrote that Ann Arbor "continues to be an excellent book town" and that remaining indepen- dent bookstores need residents' support. Pohrt wrote in an open letter printed in The Ann Arbor Chron- icle on Feb. 17 that Shaman Drum started losing money in September due to "customers migrating to the Internet coupled with the fright- ening economic crisis." In a Feb. 19 Michigan Daily ar- ticle, Pohrt said that those two rea- sons, along with the falling popu- larity of books, "foretell the fate of the already suffering independent booksellers." Pohrt said in the same article that textbook sales in particular have been declining at Shaman Drum as more students buy their books online through such outlets as the UBook program, which is an online book exchange that en- courages professors to post their required reading lists on CTools. Students can then buy, sell and trade books online through an inte- grated exchange system at cheaper prices. "I don't think this is a bad policy, See SHAMAN DRUM, Page 8