Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVFRSITY OF MICHiGAN . ~ UNDFt AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Opinions Are Free' 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR. MICH. -utb Will Preaail NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual oinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all retrints. f i " f r,- i , - - i ?J rr r' - t URSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: PAT O'DONOHUE Registration Consternation "The University administration should be raked over the coals in The Daily as long as it takes to get an apology and a promise that this never happens again.. ." HE UNIVERSITY'S registration pro- cedures-or perhaps the. lack of them-prompted Prof. Nicholas Kaz- arinoff of the mathematics department to make this statement. Kazarinoff, who is also a counselor in the literary college, is not alone in his criticism of the three-day registration hassle which virtually every University stu- dent faced this week. . The usual sarcastic comments mut- tered among students about the length of lines and the number of adminis- trative mistakes. were bitter and un- forgiving. Faculty members, particular- ly counselors, were equally outraged as students related horror tales of five hour ordeals in Waterman Gym, often coming after extensive waits in coun- selling lines and the turtle-paced pro- cessional into the gym. Why was this registration worse than a,ny other?' For one thing the University issued new identification cards to every stu- dent. Seven digit numbers on blue plastic were abandoned for 10 dig- Its-social security number plus a check digit-on yellow plastic. Undoubtedly the changeover will ultimately facili- tate University record-keeping, but the aggravation which administrative inef- ficiency caused during the transition will not soon be forgotten. Students, who had not pre-registered were required to pick up their new ID cards in the Administration Building, but the problem was there. With lines winding up five flights of stairs and coiling in front of the elevators, the unfortunates were directed to Room 102, although most of the ID cards could actually be found around the corner in Room 514. Signs scribbled as directives and has- tily taped, outside 102 were more con- fusing: "Check with your school first," "Check in Room 514 first," "Rackham, A&D, Engineering .. ." The sheer idio- cy of the situation was the fact that these signs were downstairs and not immediately visible to students. enter- ing the Administration Building. Long waits were unrewarded in Room 102 while 514 held the yellow tickets of all students previously registered during the Winter or Spring semesters. N0 EXCUSE is adequate for ,this fiasco. The University has been planning the changeover for months and knew well in advance the vast numbers of students who would be forced to seek their cards in- the Ad- ministration Building. A multiversity which has not yet realized that small rooms in the basement of a building cannot handle' thousands of students is in sad shape. Administrators too in- considerate to plan ahead deserve every headache resulting from irate stu- dents and registration mistakes. However, recounting the trials and tribulations of a registration nearly over (although one official estimates that "several thousand" will register late) is fruitless. Rumors that 5000 new ID cards were printed up using the students' college entrance examina- tion board scores rather than their social security numbers are less em- barrassing if left unverified. The greatest concern is next semes- ter's registration, and the one after that, and the one after that. . . . Ac- cording to Dr. Ernest Zimmerman, ad- ministrative assistant in the Office of Academic Affairs, registration lines were no longer this year than in the past and a 45 minute wait in line "is not unreasonable in good weather." Zimmerman also notes, however, that the administration cannot always anticipate registration problems and that areas of, difficulty originate in the counseling offices and the individ- ual departments as well. Kazarinoff points out "that lines at counseling of- fices are very long because there are not enough counselors. Further, coun- selors should receive greater recogni- tion, both financially and with in- creased respect for the importance of uae role. "The primary function' of a university is to serve the students," said Kazarinoff. Insufficient, counsel- ing facilities are no service. PRE - REGISTRATION is another problem in the overall registration scheme. While it theoretically eases the load in scheduling' and course planning, many students are unable to make up their minds as to what cours- es they want to take six months later. Thus the lines to see counselors, the premium on drop-add slips, and the push to get into the few sections re- opened during registration for courses closed during pre-registration. Zimmerman points out that students could be assured of a place in any course and that registration could be, handled efficiently using a summer mailing. But such a revised system would take the "flexibility" out of cur- rent procedures. Drops and adds would have to be fewer and students would not be able to choose the time at which they were to take a class. UNDERSTANDABLY, registering 35,- 000 students can be a real ordeal. But, it is painfully obvious that the University's registration procedure is not a paradigm of efficiency. If the most bureaucratic of all agencies-the U.S. Army-were to induct soldiers te finesse that the University registers students, escalation in Viet- nam would be out of the question. 4 l - ? L L NOW." E. 9R "Yes, but what do you think caused the riots,?" 4P6.-/i:w IlkM ix I a~ I 4 i L t N" HO Lli> STI a... .) FEW SUMMERS in memory have had the explosive significance of these past several months. As the smoke settles in American cities, the sands drift over deserted tanks in the Sinai Peninsula, and the Monsoon season begins again in Vietnam, it seems a strangely different world than the one we viewed at the end of the winter term. It was a busy summer for newsmen. munitions-makers, fire fighters, and government officials. Uncle Sam sunk deeper into the Asian quagmire as the bombing of North Vietnam was expanded and another 50,000 men were sent across the Pacific. Meanwhile, the U.S. maintained an official "neutrality" in the six-day Arab- Israeli war. And as Americans sighed relief that Uncle Sam averted involvement in another world trouble spot, the nation was rocked by the bloodiest series of internal disorders since the Civil War. The misery and destruction wrought by the three wars was accompanied by a sense of awareness. A record number of Amer- icans expressed disenchantment over the war in Vietnam, which was becoming costlier in men (over 12,000 dead so far) and money (about $30 billion per year). And the chorus of disapproval gained surprising new voices such as Bishop Fulton J. Sheen' and Sen. Frank Lausche of Ohio. It was that other war, the disorder in America's beleaguered urban centers, that provided an opportunity for many to reappraise the nation's aims and values. Th word "priorities" became in- 1~- "I Don't Unidershand F- Why Can't They Behave As If They had Good Educations, Good Housig And Good Jobs?" WI u.~-j ' r & 4 i L is i { y THE "Well, I say we can't finance both the great proletarian cultural revolution and the Vietnam war at the same tine . . ? SUMMER OF THE THREE WARS ceasingly important, and people began to wonder if we should spend so much money around the globe when our own 'society was ripping apart along an ugly color line,. And the third war, the brutal Arab-Israeli clash, made us aware that perhaps the United States and the Soviet Union don't have all the power they thought they did in 'controlling smaller nations. And it demonstrated that wars, as conclusive as they may be upon the battlefield, do not resolve issues that transcend the barbed wire borders. The powder keg is still in the Middle East; its fuse appears to have been only dampened till the arms and the proper timing reappear. With all these world-shaking events, many of us will still remember the summer by its sunshine-or lack 'of; .the golf and the tennis and the swimming; the books we read (who didn't read "Valley of the Dolls"?) and the books we meant to read but never quite got to. And, of course, it was a summer of hard work so you could return to school (only to find your earnings cleverly wasted away with another painful tuition increase). On the personal level, it might have been just another eventful summer. But in Saigon and Hanoi, in Newark and Detroit, in Cairo and Jerusalem, the memories of this summer will not be quickly erased. -ROBERT KLIVANS Editorial Director --MEREDITH EIKER Managing Editor The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and ollegiate Press Service. Summer subscription rate: $2.00 per term by carrier $2.50 by mail); $4.00 mor entire summer ($4,50 by nal). Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. 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