E "' 4 .1~ 49~ St * -4 4 Page Fourteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Tuesday, April 9, 1968 Tuesday, April 9, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE ..,... ,/ .- , Professor as Authc The Wolverine Muse often taps faculty to write te Bring your book to class and the writer may autograph it after his lecture. The land is rich in gold and folk lore, more wild. than the men who seek to tame it. And who is to say whether the Yukon is any less "real" than some big city ? By ERIC BURTON, DAN SHARE and ED ZIFKIN The muggy Michigan summer of 1967 was all but unbearable - and a summer of construction work ap-' peared more in the nature of op- pression than of vacation. We chose to leave all this for a different world -not a fantasy world-away from city smoke and traffic jams. We left in a Bronco, Ford's version of the jeep, for the Canadian Yukon, a part of North America where even if it is 95 desgrees, there's a cool breeze to sweep from a river valley across a mountain ridge. The Yukon is open and its air is pure. Driving for tens of miles we found only moose and sheep play- ing along ridges whose tops cut the clouds. The Yukon calls upon man's sense of harmony with nature, even . though it is a giant and rugged land which challenges human capacities. We drove to the Yukon through the Black Hills, through Yellow- stone Park and the Tetons, along the continental divide through Banff, past Calgary and the Alcan Highway. We finally stopped in Yukon, in a 'small valley five miles from the Yukon Border.- That's where Ole built his place, a small log cabin surrounded by dogtooth peaks. Ole Medby is a sour- dough. He came from Norway at 19 and has made and spent several for- tunes in gold taken from Yukon soil. Last summer, he put us Up. Ole is a Yukon man: his "national poet" is Robert Service, who wrote, There are strange things done in the midnight sun By the men who moil for gold. And the Northern Lights have seen queer sights That would make your blood run cold. Service, like Ole and the tens of thou- sands of others who came to conquer a last frontier, knew the Yukon's power and mystery. Those who streamed into the Klondike early in the century search- ing for gold have left-the area un- changed. To be sure, there are a few rotting cabins by the side of the dirt road which acts as a super-highway in the Yukon, and an occasional sourdough lives among the ruins of the long dead mining camps. But the Yukon, and a large part of Alaska, remain wilderness. Most of the Yukon's citizens live in the cities and in the southern portion of the province: 90 per cent live south of Daw- son City. The cities have modern con- veniences like plumbing. But the out- lying districts remain all but unchanged, The territory, in fact, is the same as it was 40 years ago, when one day, Mon- treal Mike killed a Mountie and proceed- ed to lead the famed Royal Canadian Mounted Police on a fruitless chase through the wilderness. Even though it, was the dead of winter, when tracking in the snow is easiest, Montreal Mike eluded the Mounties - and is rumored to be at large in the Northwest today. Dawson City was once the largest pop- ulation center west of the Missouri River. Its atmosphere is still electric: An oc- casional gold-bearing miner still rambles into town, and one expects Klondike Kate to come strolling out of the Flora Dora Saloon to meet him. Klondike Kate was typical of the op- portunists who invaded the North after the El Dorado strike of '96. In the first years of the 20th century she built a reputation as Queen of the North. She was a beautiful woman and as such quickly became queen of Dawson Mtty prostitutes. A But Klondike Kate committed the North's greatest crime: she swindled a miner out of his poke. She married an old miner up on Sixty Mile Creek. A few months later, she took his gold and left for Oregon, The miners have known such exploita- tion since the first gold strike -- and those who have stayed on know it today. Jimmy Carmacks, an Indian who was in on the first strike in 1896, was totally cut from the wealth by his partners; the few miners working today are now being edged out of wealth by large corpora- tions. The corporations have been apply- ing their vast resources to securing min- eral rights in the Yukon, one of the world's richest areas. When; in a few years, -sources of valuable metals begin to dry up and it becomes profitable to lay rails in theNorth to provide an ac- cessible market, the corporations will have a "gold mine" in such minerals as mercury. iron, asbestos, nickel and what may, prove to be the world's largest oil reserve. But the corporations haven't been dealing kindly with the miners. They are content to wait for the miners to become desperate for money and either pay them a pittance for their mineral rights - or just wait for them to leave. The cor- porations then can file claims without cost. An, unfortunate Indian who first discovered oil in the Yukon, for example, was unable to get the Tequired $100 to work his claim - and lost it to a large corporation which received the benefits of his discovery for nothing. Big business, then, is absorbing the already-stagnating frontier empire of the sourdough. Commercialization in the service of the tourist industry attempts vainly to re- capture the fading romance of the gold rush days. "Yukon Bud'' Fisher, a grizzly looking old timer with a massive white beard, seen on Yukon travel posters, is actually paid by the provincial govern- ment as a publicity asset - and with the money he earns spends his winters in California. Real sourdoughs such . as Indian George, Windy John, Jimmy Lynch, and Ole Medby are holdovers from a dying breed. Their lives are deeply interwoven with the wilderness about them and By SHARON FITZHHENRY University professors often write textbooks. Their efforts are often very good and perhaps just as often not so good. In this sense, the ef- forts of University professors are much like those of their students. Textbook writing calls upon many skills. Authors must first be able to write well, for no matter how many drawings, charts and mathematical ratiocinations they niay include in their work, authors are tradition- ally required to add at least a few pages of explanatory text. Authors, furthermore, must know what they are writing about. When a professor writes a text he denies himself the advantages of lectur- ing: his Viennese p'ccent, his slap- stick monologue, his sarcastic at- tack on his colleagues, his soft blue eyes may get him through a lecture but will not protect him from fudg- ing in his textbook. The student reading a professor's text, in fact, seeks facts and explan- ations beyond the scope of his reg- ular course lecture. Often he does not want to read a text written and forced on him by ,his professor or some comparable prof. in another multiversity. Thus, it is with some hostility that the student opens his text. Moreover, the student finds-him- self at a disadvantage in reading a text. He cannot go up to the writer as he would to a lecturer to ques- tion points. Texts, then, must be simple, or more specifically, self- explanatory, if students are to prof- itably use them. Not only must the text cover the principles of a sub- ject, it mhust also answer all pos- sible questions and criticisms read- ers might raise. Textbook writing, then, is no simple business. Texts must be lucid and informative, neither too spe- cialized or too general, neither ar- -rogant nor mawkish and must an- ticipate possible challenges and refutations. Despite the demands, University professors write and have published a plethora of textbooks each year. There are books about India and about psychological sta- tistics; books concerning linguistics, and French and German. Some of the texts written here are used throughout the country: Newcomb's book on social psychology, Organ- ski's discussions of political science, Claude's books of the same topic, White's works on anthropology. And some of the books written here are used here, there perhaps being no great demand for them elsewhere. This is either because the subject of the book is too complicated or too exclusive for popular university use, -or because the book is a bad book, the latter reason being the most plausible. The following are reviews of by no m e a n s representative University texts. In commenting on them, I hope to show some of the styles and organizational- patterns which may make or break any university textbook. Introduction to Logic; second edi- tion; Irving M. Copi; Macmillan Company; New York; 1961; 512 pages. Professor Copi's book is divided into -three sections, the first of which (on language) lays ' the foundation for the presentation of the other two (on de- duction and on induction). The text is enjoyable reading mainly because the examples and logical problems the author introduces as exercises are meaningful to the average reader. Disregarding the exercises, the text it- self is a good introduction to logic and the various complicated principles as- sociated with it. The style is dry, with the usual academic turns of phrase such as: "if we focus our attention" ' or "the preceding" - and of course, the old teaching favorite "a treatment of this Lackner Doyle; (Cornell); Addison- Wesley Publishing Company Inc.: Reading, Mass.; 1966; 703 pages. McKeachie's book is a fairly compre- hensive although somewhat -simplified review of psychology. The writing has the usual textbook dryness, and the or- ganization is not particularly- imagin- ative. The book is illustrated with graphs and a linitted number of colored plates. There are two short appendixes; the first of which opens with the rather hopeful title, "Why do we need Statistics?" The text itself seems to progress through the introduction ad infinitum, to rhetorical questions addressed to the reader and answered, in theory at least, by the authors. Samples include What is Psychology? How is central nervous system activity modulated by external factors? What is inherited? What are the sources of frustration? and even, What factors contribute to compliance? from throp which deviat mode skull three thena a dist below answe say, cento small. that t anoth differ The ample, i gists do Zoolog Centu Profe gins mu natural a swee what iti how it d, This in comp an, either p woodcut tures of The t of scier topics si Nature" Mal Rel Life", "( uity of All of t or anotl Elliott ough. r interspe more un unable ample, I Profe mixture text isf morous is carefi fat laye more ve tours ar lying m case in tionalize followin male 'w rangeme part." Latin, E. Sw Gerda 'Michig 487 p Sweet' the stud phere. 'I of gram plores th lar synt guage. T individu by eight sentially notes t necessar several : correctly stand sc and, in cial mat a helpfu Sweet' linguisti briefly o kawa. book. T ceptively The t sideratio various of the p Author Elliott of the and fan point, however, lies beyond the scope of the present book." However Copi has made his subject interesting, which should be after all, the primary concern of most college text- books, or so they would have us' believe. I've found student reactions to the book have been generally apathetic, al- though teaching fellows have objected to the text as being too concerned with minute classifications. All the same, readers will not suppress a chuckle as they read the following argument. No athletes are bookworms' Carol is a bookworm. Therefore Carol is not an athlete. "None but the brave deserve the fair. Only soldiers are brave. Therefore the fair are deserved only by the soldiers. Psychology; Wilbert James Me- Keachie; (U of M) and Charlotte -uaiy-ichard Lee Zoology Department Fitzhenry McKeachie's discussions of the vari- ous topics are good at least insofar as he is careful to include a variety of research data and reports,, with which and on which he patterns his observations and conclusions. In addition he is good at citing examples for points which are difficult. Here's an example: While workmen are excavating on Packard Street, they stumble across a skull. Professor Gulch of the An-X thropology Department of the near- by university happens to be passing by at the moment and takes pos- session of the skull. It would be a feather in Gulch's cap if he could say that it was not a skull belong- ing to a modern man. But, being ain honest scholar, Gulch has to decide/ whether or not it really is different from modern skulls. Therefore he measures it and finds that it is just 40 centimeters around the brow. "Let us find out what the chances are that it might be a small skull which differs from. other skulls only by the amount of random variation we might expect in human skulls," he says. So saying, Gulch draws SHARON FITZHENRY, a freshman Daily staffer, has worked in publishing houses in New York and Germany. Gold in the pan