-MURRAY KEMPTON ~i~e £ir1iaf Daihj Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opiniops of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in al reprints. On W HAT MR. NIXON is running is less a government than a league of contending teams. Yes- terday Attorney General Mitchell's team had a record like the Orioles (59-25); Secretary of Defense Laird's like the Dodgers (49-34); Secretary of State Rogers like the Phillies (37-45); and Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Finch's like the San Diego Padres (29-59). Assistant HEW Secretary James Farmer plays for - the Padres. James 'Farmer may be the noblest playing for a losing team man of his generation I know; and if you have a friend on a team that loses two games out of three, it is a relief when your paths cross the day after a win. Farmer came to New York off a win; Gov. Mad- dox of Georgia had denounced the Administration for citing his state for racial discrimination in ts schools. Last week, Sen. Thur- mond of South Carolina was grat- ified by the Administration's tol- erance of his state's racial dis- crimination in its schools. You score the games Finch's team plays THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1969' NIGHT EDITOR: MARTIN A. HIRSCHMANI HIvers1 0 Syrd- nivriybookstore: Inthe ,stu d ents' interest THREE AND ONE-HALF years ago, a conservative, Republican-dominated Regents gave its unqualified, unadorned "no" to a proposal to establish a Univer- sity discount bookstore. Today and tomorrow, the Regents - now somewhat more liberal and Isome- what less clearly controlled by the Re- publidan party - will again take up the question. And while the personnel involved, among both the Regents and the Execu- tive officers, has changed considerably since January 1965, 6the issues involved in the bookstore proposal remain sub- stantially th$ same.' By establishing a University-sponsor- ed bookstore, the Regents can provide students with at least a four per cent discount on textbooks and. other educa- tional materials. In addition to'. this discount (which materializes because the University need not charge state sales tax on educational supplies), such a bookstore would run on a non-profit basis and books w o u 1 d therefore be still less expensive. Despite this potential saving for stu- dents already burdened by the bludgeon- ing cost of education at the University, several 'of the vice presidents have ex- pressed serious doubts about the priority which creation of a bookstore s h o u 1 d receive. They claim, with some justification, L ovel Rita? ALAS, IS nothing sacred anymore-not even a new Schwinn 10-speed racer or a nice shiny black Roll Fast bicycle? Apparently not. For the meter maids have ,started ticketing them, too. Just the other day, one of the ladies of the blue spied two bicycles standing quietly against Mark's coffee house and deftly placed the familiar violation notice in' the respective wheels of each bike. What will be next? Rumor has it that Dr. Scholl is working on a special stick- to-the-flesh ticket for illegally parked feet. Pedestrians beware. Your toes maybe next. -N.C. Suntnier Staff MARCIA ABRAMSON . .......... Co-Editor CHRIS STEELE..... ................... Co-Editor MARTIN HIRSCHMAN .. Summer Supplement Editor JIM FORRESTER ......... Summer Sports Editor LEE KIRK .........Associate Summer Sports Editor ERIC PERGEAUX ........ Photo Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Nadine Cohodas, Martin Hirsch- man, Judy Sarasohn, Daniel Zwerdling. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Alexa Canady, Laurie Harris, Judy Kahn, Scott Mixer. that the $250,000 needed to stock the bookstore could be put use on some other project. initially to better P-'e i L- L p. -\ IT IS; DIFFICULT, however, to under- stand why these vice presidents in- sist on demeaning the value of the dis- count which the bookstore would pro- vide. With the p6tential of saving stu- dents up to $15 a year, for an indeter- minate period of time, the $250,000. ini- tial investment seers well worth t h e short postponement of other capital pro-: jecs. A recent study of 11 college bookstores demonstrates' that no additional subi- sidy of the proposed University s t o r e. would be needed. Furthermore, most of - the stores sampled were earning substan- tial profits while offering a discount of the sales tax and, in some cases, addi- tional discounts. But more dismaying than this strange sense of priorities is the underlying lack of concern for the interests of students which has in the past been evidenced on the bookstore question. JN 1965, FOR :EXAMPLE, the decision on' the bookstore was obviously in- fluenced by the concern of the Regents for the possible 'losses which would be incurred by local bookstores with t h e creation of a less expensive University- run operation. This time, the Regents will be faced with documents quite similar to those available to them in 1965. The Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce, for exam- ple, has authorized a re-drafting of the same report which they issued ;in 1965. And another brief will be submitted by a group of local bookstore owners. On the other side, students have again this year expressed their overwhelming support for the creation of a bookstore. In 1965, this sentiment became manifest in the large number of signatures which were. collected on 'bookstore petitions. * This year, students voted overwhelm- ,ingly to support a $1.75 one-time tuition assessment for the creation of a book- store. Unfortunately, this would not pro- vide sufficient revenues for a full-scale operation, but couldeasily be augmented with the use of undesignated funds. IT IS CLEAR that the interest of the . students must take. precedence over the profit-motivated whining of local business. Other universities have been saving money for their students f o r years after only a minimal initial book- store allocation. The Regents have waited all too long to follow their goodexample. -MARTIN HIRSCHMAN by the reaction of Southern poli- ticians to its results; it is still playing about .330. FARMER'S LIFE always brought him a measure of disapproval from conventional people; and the measure turns out to be not much smaller when he was at a New York press conference explaining his connection with Mr. Nixon. The journalists went at him fairly hard and he bore it with the equanimity, the calm and the slightly rotund honesty we have always come upon in him. He looked, indeed, exactly las he had one day in the Kennedy Admin- istration when we saw him in Mississippi going off to Parchman and the state prison farm for the crime of being a freedom rider. Farmer seemed to feel no incon- gruity between these scenes and probably ought not to feel any: n a t i o n a 1 administrations are pretty much the same to him. Parchman under one Presideht and an Assistant Secretar'yship under another being each a kind of prison and the test in each be- ing one of pride. Upstairs in the Columbia Fac- ulty Club, he had addressed a conference of school superintend- ents and made it plain that he felt nothing unusual in common with his present warden and no real duty to him except good manners. He opened with warm expressions of support for the student uprisings. He listened to a question plainly deficient in high expectations for the Admin- istration and answered calmly: "I find a mixture. There are some people in the Administration who are concerned, some apathetic and some negative. I cannot measure the proportion 'of each of the com- ponents." .4. DOWNSTAIRS HE was asked if he already felt like a beleaguered liberal in Washington, and he an- swered that he was accustomed to being beleaguered. We will, he went on. have trouble in this country until we .order our pri- orities: he continues, unchanged, saying the same things in office he did out of it-and with no larger visible chance of having them heard. Still he goes on acting as he always did. There is no higher re- spect possible than arises when you see the man who goes out every day doing all he can for a losing team. James Farmer plays in a league where the rules are changed or 'the game is called whenever his team gets a lead, and where the umpires are either blind or biased. And play he will, and finish the season giving as much of himself on the last day as he did on the first. Jim Farmer has spent his life in leagues load- ed against him like that and he's never yet quit on the team or himself. He never will. Jim Farm- er is a man. (c) New York Post I A * . theatre ILO's By LAURIE HARRIS There were some outstanding elements in the. Junior Light Opera's premiere production of N. Richard Nash's musical Wild- cat last night. Like the leading lady, for instance. Though the show was obviously amateur in essence, filled with, a predominantly high school cast, Carolyn Fleming as Wildcat Jack- son was a source of constant en- joyment through her facial ex- pressions, strong voice, and will to put on a show. Her strong alto' voice dominated throughout the show - often unfortunately dom- inating her male lead, James Kal- liel as Joe Dynamite. However, Kalliel also has a good quality voice, that perhaps with training could product more character and style in his singing: Wildcat is the story of Wildcat Jackson who wants to strike oil and help her sister Janie "g a i n confidence over a limp in her walk. Her counterpart and op- ponent is /Joe Dynamite, who wants to make his sidekick Hank, a Mexican, happy in his home- town. Yet both of them, against the backdrop of the oil boom in New Mexico, discovers that they are looking for their own .happiness and eventually find it with each other. The love theme is very similar to Wildcat' Hey loo k it over! broken into smaller groups, and each of these when acting individ- ually were good. Almost outstand- ing were children led by Thomas Hulce. Their production number of "Tall Hope" was honest and be- lievable. Each individual character role is good, from the flighty Countess to the sincere Hank played by Nicholas Jacquez. Jacquez has a clear dynamic voice and re- acts well with the other charact- ers in the show. The Junior Light Opera has allowed people who enjoy putting on a production, to put on a show. And it is their interest and ob- vious belief that "the show must go on" that keeps the show on. There is overriding enthusiasm in what each of the performers is doing, particularly in the pro- duction numbers of "Hey Look Me Over" and "Give a Little Whis- tle." Junior Light Opera's production of Wildcat, which runs through Saturday evening in Trueblood Aud., gives high schoolers an op- portunity to become involved in the theatre over the summer months. The leads rotate between twp people, evcluding James alliel as Joe Dynamite, to afford more people the chance to perform. Hopefully this evening's cast, and particularly this evening's' Wild- cat, will equal last night's. ' Annie Get Your Gun as the theme comes individpally a song unto it- The dance number, which were between the two leads is one of self. rare, were well staged, but were competition rather than love. Yet the dramatic portions were executed largely by an untrained However, the story line is brok- not sappy as usually occurs in this chorus, causing the stage to look en by the uneven running of the type of production which shows like a melange of people. How- scenes. Each individually is well that the leads' had a good under- ever, a chorus is basically present staged, yet few flow smoothly to standing of what they were per- as a backdrop of voices singing the next. This makes the pro- forming. And there was laughter together - a feat which was not duction definitely one of h i g h as Wildcat physically defeated the captured by this group. school caliber, as each scene be- 'tough-man' oil drillers. However, the chorus itself was +1. 'Hogan's Goat * A nice drama for a summer 's night #i~ By LESLIE WAYNE Arts Editor After comparing the "grim foolish- ness" and "foolish simpleness" that had been gracing the Broadway stage in recent years, one New York critic was so moved by the o f f Broadway opening of Hogan's Goat, that he exclaimed across the top of the Sunday Times, "All is not lost." And comparing the University Players' presentation of Hogan's Goat last night to the fluff and stuff of the Broadway touring com- panies participating in last semes- ter's PTP program, it is easy to see why the notoriously nonchalant skep- ticism of the New York critic was so exuberantly broken. While the new forms of the thea- tre attempt to force the audience into the characters and literally onto the stage through nudity, contro- versial topics and techniques drawn from the politics of confrontation, Hogan's Goat adopts a much more convention approach. And it is because of its conventionality that it succeeds. At times almost bordering on a soap opera, Hogan's Goat reveals the emptiness and buried emotions of two men who vie for public office. As the program aptly describes, it is the stuirlv of the "disordered is highly linear, one situation build- ing upon the next, as tight as the neighborhood clubs of that time, all moving for the final tragic blow. Yet by skillfully working the old theatrical conventions to a sharp edge, Hogan's Goat, honestly exam- ines the blind sacrifices demanded by politics and the unknown tragedy that can result. And playwrite Wil- liam Alfred is not afraid to tastefully use the oft sneered at techniques of melodrama andssentimentality to pull the drama out from the situation. The curlish Irish dialect Alfred employs, although at times hard to follow and often overly flourished, adds tight poetic imagery and color to the stark 'play of emotions. Often the roggish Irish humor results in a strange set of homilies: -Priesthood is a marriage to a partner that is always right -There's more snots than noses in this world --And the whore's line: I'm only a mother superior to those shepards. Michael Gross as Matthew Stan- ton, the man torn between love, patience and compassion and his resentments, impatience and rage, tends to place a great deal of em- phasis on 'the later qualities to the *I