Sunday, March 23, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Don Canham:Michigan's athletic king builds his dyr pasty (Continued from Page 1) conference decided the violation was, in fact, serious, McNease's new athletic director at the University of Idaho could be contacted and advised of his in- volvement in the incident. Reed was apparently convinced by Canham's argument to offer a proposal to the athletic directors at the December meeting which cleared Michigan of any blame whatsoever for the incident. The di- rectors approved the proposal. Canham could now breathe a sigh of relief; he had kept Michigan's reputation intact and avoided the possibility of a damaging probation. CANHAM HAS ALSO focused efforts on re- arranging old personnel and hiring new, more dyna- mic personalities. Last July he moved up Dave Strack from basketball coach to the newly-created position of athletic business manager.. Later when trying to replace Strack, he broke , sharply. with an old Crisler tradition which had emphasized a separation between college and profes- sional athletes. Canham went immediately to the- pro ranks and. offered Strack's post to K. C. Jones and Earl Lloyd, both retired NBA players. But when bothJones and Lloyd turned down the offers, he settled on Strack's assistant, John Orr. Orr, who is a personal friend of the manager of the Hawaii Christmas Tournament, is expected to conclude arrangements for a Michigan invitation to Hawaii soon. Orr and Canham are also planning a holiday tournament for the All-Events Bldg. in 1970. Both tournaments would be recruiting bonanzas. Orr's new assistant is Fred Snowden, the first black coach in Wolverine basketball history. THE NEXT MOVE was to find a new football coach. At the conclusion of the 1967 season, after alumni groups had' exerted much pressure, the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics issued a "win or else" ultimatum to Elliott. Indications were that Elliott wouldn't win in 1968; and the board wanted a new coach. But Elliott guided his team to a phenomenal 8-2 record and a near Rose Bowl bid. On the wings of his excellent season, Elliott asked Canham for a new long-term contract. Canham denied the request but offered Elliott his choice of either a short-term contract or the associate athletic director post. Elliott accepted the associate post, stating, "I didn't want to give up my job but I realized that this other job might not come around again." The posi- tion had been vacant since the athletic reorganiza- tion by the Regents in January, 1968. ACCORDING TO CANHAM, he and Elliott nar- rowed down the list of possible coaching successors from 19 to four by the first of December. Their number one choice was Bo Schembechler of Miami University, the 'cradle of football coaching'. Canham secured both the board's approval and Schembechler's acceptance. Once again a power switch had been engineered- quietly, and without any sign of conflict. The Can- ham method of decision-making was now firmly, established: well-planned changes made quickly and effectively. Both of the incidents related above-the Pryor- McNease case and the Elliott-Schembechler switch- are examples of Canham's judicious use of power. In both cases, he made the necessary changes with regard for the reputation involved, and without a hint of the "powter-play" tactics characteristic of most athletic administrations. THERE HAVE BEEN a few cases, however, when this was not entirely true. The release of assistant football coaches Bill Dodd and Dennis Fitzgerald were made under less judicious circumstances. In these particular cases, the Board in Control had been voicing specific complaints against the coaches. Both have subsequently acquired positions at different schools. But in all cases Canham's main motive appears to have been the building of a new image for Mich- igan sports. That he has so far succeeded is beyond doubt. Any assessment of Canham's first year as athletic director would be incomplete without a list of his accomplishments in the problem areas of intramurals and club sports, the black athlete and community involvement. Club sports representatives precipitated a con- frontation with Canham last summer when they protested the black-topping of Wine's Field for use by the band. CANHAM ENGINEERED an agreement that al- lowed both groups to use the field. Since he has kept his doors opened to sports people, he has avoided further crises. Canham's administration is the first to recruit black coaches. He has hired three so far. He assigned one of the three, assistant football coach Louis Lee, to work with academic counselor Hank Fonde. "Lee has a special rapport with both black and white athletes," says Canham. "He is a valuable as- sistant to Fonde in our counseling program. Fonde was appointed to the full-time post of academic counselor when Elliott resigned. He had been an assistant coach throughout Elliott's ten- year career as head football coach. "In the past," Canham notes, "Each of the coaches had to handle counseling for the players on LEE'S APPOINTMENT, along with the hiring of Snowden in basketball and Ken Burnley in track, reflects Canham's concern for the black athlete at Michigan. Finally, in his much-publicized summer "clinic" series, Canham has begun a program which could have favorable, far-reaching ramifications in the civil rights struggles going on now. The program represents constructive involvement by the University in community improvement, and, entails the development of basic athletic skills among youngsters who otherwise might not receive adequate Mother Sun gives birth to Argus training. Indications are that other schools across the country will soon be following Michigan's ex- ample. CANHAM INTENDS to expand the clinic program this summer, adding three to four new spots and "busing in kids from the inner-city" to increase participation by black youngsters. This will not only be good public relations; it will lay a long-term foundation for better recruiting from the ghetto. Currently, Canham is using Elliott's appeal to solicit funds from alumni for new buildings on the athletic campus. Future projects include the enlarge- ment of Yost Fieldhouse into an all-events building; the artificial-turfing of the football stadium; the privately-financed construction of a new intramural facility for students and faculty; an indoor tennis building on Ferry Field; a fence and scoreboard for the baseball stadium; improved tennis courts for women at Palmer Field; and removal of the old Ferry Field stands for increased intramural and intercollegiate usage. The last of these projects has already taken place. WHETHER OR NOT CANHAM succeeds in all of his future projects, he has already established himself at the pinnacle of power in Michigan ath- letics. He says that he doesn'tJave any other am- bitions at the moment. "I like this job, and nobody will ever have to ask me to retire from it. If, in five years, things aren't going the way I wait them to, I'll resign. I'm not interested in anything more than Michigan athletics right now." Copyright, 1969, The Michigan Daily (Continued from Page 4) were more easily solicited than expected. Some three months later, Jan. 24, The Argus, once a 100-eyed mythological mon- ster, appeared. The 20-member Argus staff is a myriad conglomerate of Kel- ley friends or chance acquaint- ances who just like Kelley's openended style. "We have workers, hippies, fascists and a police informer as well as stu- dents." The typist is the most pro- fessional, getting $60 a week. Kelley, as publisher, editor and editorial editor, draws no salary. He makes his money as a newsboy, hawking copies at10c each. Even so he sometimes turns public relations man, giv- ing away free copies on the Diag to celebrate the first warm day of spring on St. Patrick's Day. With a press run of 11,000 copies, Kelley's 24-page offset offspring has distribution points set up all over the state. MANY OF The Argus articles have been cluttered with four- letter monosyllables of the vernacular. Language generated one crisis when obscene words scorching Hudson's Department Store ran in an MC-5 ad. An angered Hudson's repre- sentative threatened to cancel the entire line of Elektra rec- ords, which includes the Doors, Judy Collins and Paul Butter- field as well as the MC-5. And then the president of Elektra flew to Ann Arbor, warning Kelley to clear Elektra ads through his office next time. John, Sinclair, MC-5 manager and white panther minister of information, had written the ad. "I just asked him to pay the bill," Kelley shrugs. "I don't really think there'll 'be a next time for Elektra." KELLEY DOES expect there will be many next times for the Argus despite what he calls "haarssment" by County offic- ials. ' County Prosecutor William Delhey said Friday he is in- vestigating The Argus follow- ing claims by Ann Arbor H i g h School and Ann Arbor police of- ficials that The Argus is por- nographic. "My own evaluation of the Argus is that it is pornographic and on that basis we should pursue it," says W. Scott Wes- terman, Superintendent of Schools. "We simply can't tol- erate this kind of (obscene) ma-r terial on our premises." Editor Kelley is not terribly worried by this new challenge. "We welcome the opportunity for more people to examine The Argus," he says. And besides, "Our legal coun- sel has, assured us that we are completely protected by , t h e first amendment and recent Su- preme Court rulings." KELLEY does not be- lieve the University should sub- sidize a newspaper like his as a second voice on campus. "Nat- urally I'll take bread anyway I can get it," he admits. "But it's journalistically decadent to have any connection with the Uni- versity." In setting up priorities on student news, Kelley emphasizes p o li c e repression, especially keyed to drug raids whose evi- dence, he believes, is often con- trived by search - and - find teams. / "The police go around in this city, just like in every city, har- rassing the blacks and busting kids on .trumped - up dope charges," he says, "and The Daily refuses to recognize this. Kelley estimates that 20,000 people in'Ann Arbor periodically use drugs. "Even the Ann Arbor police have tried it," he adds. But until The Argus reportor- ial staff acquires some investi- gative expertise, Kelley has to be content with LNS accounts of drug arrests. INSTEAD, The Argus concen- trates on the most straightfor- ward genre of personal jour- nalism: the interview. And its three-issue wing span has cov- ered "youth culture' persons like Julian Beck, Judy Collins, Tim Buckley, Richard Schnech- er, Carl Ogelsby, Cynthia Plast- er-Caster (who does plaster molds of rock stars' phalluses) and Joni Mitchell. Kelley has interviews coming tAp with Allen Ginsberg, Jerry Hubin, Tim Leary, Paul Kras- ner, Abbie Hoffman, Leslie Fied- ler and Fug poet Ed Saunders- taped at the LEMAR (Legalize MARijuana) Conference in Buf- falo last month. The MC-5 have helped Kelley out financially by playing a benefit in the Union Ballroom (at $2 per). And Sinclair, who is listed in the staff box, writes a column. "Radio should be done as a conscious educational tool, a weapon of cultural revolution," he wrote, "to turn people on and to change them with energy and information so they can change their world." "Energy a n d information" have thus become Kelley's call words for The Argus. But whether he can transform them into wavelengths which can sound out change has yet to be suitably aired. Next week MSU News and obscenity Don Canham i""""" II~~~1 ISRAEL TRAVELOGUE ISRAEL TRAVELOGUE Movie: .ISRAEL--An Adventure PLUS: most recent information on all summer programs PLUS: tips from recent visitors MONDAY, MARCH 24, 4:10-5:00 P.M. ugi multipurpose room E tAVELOGUE LAST TWO CLINICS FREE GERMAN MEASLES VACCINE For Women Students Tuesday, March 25-6:15-9:30 P.M. Wednesday, March 26-6:15-9:30 P.M IMMUNIZATION ROOM, HEALTH SERVICE Information at Health Service and SAB No Appointment Necessary ISRAEL TRAVELOGUE ISRAEL TR U + A KENNEDY LANDSLIDE That's what we need in 1972. By then Senator Kennedy will have served ten years in the United States Senate. His growth has been phenomenal - growth in knowledge, in stature, in his search for ex- cellence as his brothers searched before him. 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