j Idir4ian Ba se ist-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS Or THE UNIVERSrrY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Ar PeF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ,ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staf writers or the editors. This ustib e noted in all rehrints. I 'r ," 'URDAY, MAY 4, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SUTIN 'U' Press Policy Change Warrants Criticism "arV'. j( 'W .Th.t" 1k.'" a. ,Y Yo, yi WpTO LAST YEAR the University Press had been publishing scholarly books, designing and marketing them attractively, winning prizes and acclaim, and losing money. The University fully expected to subsidize it and no one was visibly upset. Last year the financial administrators of the press decided to make a profit and changed all past policy. They made a mistake. If the press could maintain high content quality and high sales level, and at the same time make a profit, there would be no problem. However, the press found out that it can't do that: it made a profit last year by reducing operating expenses which in turn reduced sales volume. In this situation sales varies inversely with profit. A university press has a public responsibility to publish a maximum number of high quality books for a maximum number of people. Pro- fits are not a proper aim; such presses are deliberately labelled non-profit. MOST OF THE reduction in operating costs was in promotion. The press published more titles last year than the year before, but by spending less on advertising and related activities it sold 15 per cent fewer books. The press is no longer expanding as it has in recent years. Sales volume is the measuring- stick of a press'growth, not profit or number of titles, simply because the works it publishes have little value unless they are read by as many who could benefit as possible. The press bias refused to admit a mistake. The administrators claim that it was becoming too large to be manageable and that the cut- back keeps it at a proper size., The situation has become more and more confused by an interesting assortment of per- sonalities, ,accusations, charges and counter- charges, denials, contradictions, threats and secrecy. To call the situation unhealthy is to understate the problem. HIGK UNIVERSITY officials have issued 'statements that reflect the role of a uni- versity press and very obviously refute the- policy change. Regent Eugene B. Power of Ann Arbor em-' phasizes that "the Regents: want the press to grow and expand." He adds that the role of a university press is to publish scholarly works "whether profitable or not." Alexander Ruthven, University president from 1929 to 1950, writes in his memoirs, which will be released June 3 in a University Press edition, that "liberal financial support of a press should be considered legitimate uni- versity expense. A university, press. which is compelled to operate as a money-making de- partment even to the extent of being self- supporting should be given some other name than 'university'." Although the press made a profit for the first time last year, it is impossible to tell whether the trend will continue. Past losses have been caused by large initial investments in growing press that should begin to pay off. Recent profits include money that would nor- mally be reinvested in the press and could cause losses in coming years. ON THE SURFACE everything seems reason- able enough until one starts to ask ques- tions. When, faced with additional charges, various officials continually act as if there was more to the situation, which they are hiding.' The past director of the lress who led it through the expansion period resigned last year, at leat partially because control had been taken out of his hands and a "retrench- ment" policy had been forced upon him. The principal sales representative began complaining about the policy change and had his contract terminated. Impartial -observers reported that he had done an "excellent" sales job. A new director was appointed who is ruling with a'nervous hand. He refuses to release pub- lic financial information about the press or explain his reasons for refusal. AFTER MUCH HAGGLING back ani forth, thepress finally released complete finan- cial figures that support most of the retrench- ment arguments. There is a limited retrench- ment policy for the. sake of profit-although administrators alternately admit it and deny it. Why the policy has been changed is a ques- tion no one will answer. However it is evident that various University officials are watching the press very closely. The administrators are new and must be given a chance to prove themselves, Regent Power has explained. Whether or not their time runs out depends on what happens in the next few months. The proper emphasis of the University Press is quite apparent. It is unnecessary to echo the sentiments of Regent Power and former. President Ruthven. The press must reverse itself quickly before a few heads, already visibly sweating, begin to roll. By refusing to explain itself, the press has. opened its policies to much warranted criticism. It has filing cabinets full of criticism, which it has so far ignored. The University has the responsibility to publically investigate the policy change at the press and once and for all correct a badly confused situation that does not appear to be improving. -RICHARD KELLER SIMON "I Keep Hearing Bells. First They Peal, And Then They Toll." ATHLETIC NEEDS Field House Se tup Unsuitable SIDELINE ON SGC: Direct Vote Endeavors To Revitalize Interest Evangelists . . THOSE OPPOSED tions argue ver a part of The Colle be singularly abhor of misled fraternit Those supporting i soundly: initiations Life. And this life m --in spite of the c complainers-as a v issue is obviously we Since no one is the only justificati initiations is that upon their followers befell them. Sour- not have the right t ments of The Coll One quite oftens the protectors of of the downtrodden, man's inhumanityt superficial college a: NO DOUBT a wo ther to rail aE duck -walking, mud tree-tearing which which are instead But I am not be plainers have anot membership to an hurt among those le full force or theirI dents who are tapp( those who are not t However, those wl initiations should be invective. Not onlyi thereby justifyingi complaining-but in The College Life by suffered by initiat status quo: honora: tinuing their initiat plainers can babble ISwo$niiatio:Two Views Law and Order ... ) to men's honorary initia- A SIZABLE CROWD looked on yesterday, y soundly: initiations are drooling in anticipation, as 20 all-but- ge Life. And this life mustn red-in spite of the claims naked knaves clung to a tree to receive a y men-as a false image. thorough coating of wet red mud at the hands nitiations also argue very of a group of somewhat flabby braves. The are a part of The College occasion was the tapping ritual for the noblest nust be singularly respected honorary of. them all, Michigamua.- wlaims of neurotic, chronic The braves showed no mercy toward the worthwhile institution. The. initiates, grabbing them in a tight headlock v-defined. aand subjecting them to worse treatment. Nor oeededhur-or contnn did they hesitate to make sure their audience ionntiae wishctinfict was wide awake by letting a little mud or initiates wish to inflict smoke come that way. ' the same indignities which grapers who complain do Ask any member of the Tribe and he will to assert their value judge- undoubtedly tell you that it is an honor to ege Life on others. be desecrated as these young bucks were. But hears invectives voiced by a far better statement was provided by their humanity, the guardians faculty adviser, Walter Rea, assistant to the the great crusaders against vice-president for student affairs. He announc- to man, the uncoverers of ed to the mud-soaked initiates, "It's not what antics. you have already done but what you should be doing." What the braves should have beenj )nderful selflessness drives doing is cleaning up the unsightly mess they gainst indignities such as left on University property. -slinging and limb-from A O are not felt by them bu CCORDING TO REA, University authorities suferedn by the, are not in favor o64such rowdy goings-on. ing completely fair; com- But he has a ready explanation for the prepon- Cher issue. By restricting derant lack of attention to the situation on honored few, feelings are their part. He says that if officials were to ft out. And now comes the clamp down, the complaint might arise that two solid argunents: stu- the offenders are, after all, university stu- ed do not want to be and dents, and they should be left to discover the apped do want to be. error of their ways on their own. In effect, ho wish to complain about either we have rowdyism where there should allowed to continue their exist instead a truly meaningful and prideful do they receive pleasure- ceremony or we succumb to "in loco parentis." the harmless practice of Surely this attitude is quite, the wrong one their own way they add to for any University official to take. No univer- amplifying the indignities sity can exist without a basic system of au- es. I am defending the thority, but the student body must display a ries are justified in con- true sense of responsibility for it as well. The ion procedures, and com- fact that this responsibility is not yet at on if they wish, hand is evident from the way things got out -MICHAEL SATTINGER of hand yesterday. Replacing a few onlookers' muddy garments is not the answer. The point is that those people supposedly in charge should not be content to excuse the braves' J more maicioius actions arnd let themn Rn with (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of a series of nine articles on the editorial and sports pages analyzing the most pressing problems of the University's athletic plant.) By DAVID GOOD Acting Sports Editor LIKE JACK BENNY, Yost Field House is 39 years old. But un- like Benny, the comedian-violinist who can stay 39 as long as he wants, the field house is getting older; it will reach its fortieth birthday later this month. When it was constructed in 1922-23, this was the first and finest sports building of its kind in the country. Conveived by the man whose name it bears, former Athletic Director Fielding H. Yost, the field house was the only build- ing capable of holding competition in virtually any intercollegiate contest, including football practice in bad weather. "This was a visionary thing in its time," explained former Michi- gan football coach Bennie Ooster- baan, who won nine varsity letters in football, baseball and basket- ball during the infant years of the field house. "People came from all over the world to see it. Other schools came and learned from it," he said. TODAY, as those close to the situation must admit, people come and laugh at it. After' the Ohio State University basketball game here last February, one of the Detroit dailies called it "drafty old Yost Field House" and added a picture of the record crowd of 9775 with this cutline: "There was hardly room for the bats that live in the girders of Yost Field House." Those who disparage Yost Field House were disappointed when a fire to a wrestling mat failed to destroy the building last winter. Instead, the blaze merely neces- sitated a spray paint job courtesy of the insurance company-an im- provement that bespoke an in- tention of permanence. Even today, however, despite the fact that the roof leaks so badly that insiders call the field house "Mo'ton Stadium" ("when it rains, it pours"), the building is ex- tremely well constructed, as Oos- terbaan pointed out, and has been kept up nicely. At any rate, the general opinion seems to be that it would cost more to raze the building than the $400,000-odd that it cost to construct it. SO YOST FIELD HOUSE, now the oldest of its kind in the country, is definitely here to stay and, as a sports arena, it is en- tirely serviceable for many pur- poses-but not for basketball and track, the two major sports car- r ed on within its walls.' Coach Dave Strack is slow to complain about the basketball fa- cilities, but anticipating one of the best teams in Wolverine his- tory, he makes it no secret that he would like his team to play in more modern surroundings. The major problem is that the f,eating capacity is inadequate. Even in accommodating a, crowd upon girders overhanging the sec- ond deck; 4) Or, if they are lucky and happen to be reporters, scrambling up the rickety staircase to the press box and trying to find a seat there. * * * THERE'S NO . TELLING how many prospective basketball play- ers have considered enrolling at the University but turned else- wherewhen introducedto their new home-a place that was so dark and dingy 15 years ago that an entire new battery of lights had to be installed to make the court playable. If Yost Field House is an un- happy place for holding a basket- ball game, it is a house of horrors for trying to runoff a track meet. .Although it was supposedly con- structed to be able to facilitate a conference track meet, the field house never has hosted a Big Ten meet and never will. Coach Don Canham has been calling for help so long he has given up hope. "Nobody wants to watch a track meet here and I don't blame them," he commented. "First, we can't get any good gate attractions here because nobody wants to run in the place. Second, you can't even see an entire race here, no matter where you sit." * * * MICHIGAN'S indoor track runs around the basketball court and underneath the upper stands, which overhang the backstretch and homestretch. Unless a viewer chooses a seat on the lower bleachers set up in front of the backstretch, he misses about half the race. But the fact that those bleachers remain erect for meets means that even of- ficials and competitors at ground level miss whatever goes on along the backstretch. From the com- petitor's point of view, the cinder track surface is more than ade- quate and few distance men ever complain of the conditions they face in the field house. It is another matter for sprint- ers, however. The track runs the. customary' 220 yards but is more elongated than most others in order to keep within the limits of the building. This means that the turns ap- proximate hairpin proportions; ask the intramural sprinters who in- variably fall all over themselves trying to make it safely into the next straightway. s , . IT GOES without saying that the infield, with the portable bas- ketball floor left up, is crowded enough so that competitors almost have to watch so that they're not speared by a charging pole vaulter or hit by an errant throw from a shotputter. But there are still a few who love Yost. Charlie Aquino, the senior track captain from Nor- walk, Conn., says "This old place has atmosphere if nothing else." But to tell the truth, it loses for track and basketball. By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM WHILE PRESSING to material- ize the rather nebulous con- cept of student-faculty govern- ment, Student Government Coun- cil has also come to the realiza- tion that the ideal of student gov- ernment itself has never really been fulfilled on this campus. The fulfillment of student gov- ernment's potential wil ultimately rely on the relationships between students and their government rather than on the relationships which can be constructed between their government and the faculty. It was with the idea of making the student body more directly concerned with its government that SGC unanimously passed two measures Wednesday night. First, it approved an election- changes motion which calls for the campus-wide election of the Council president and executive vice-president on one slate. They are currently elected by the Coun- cil itself.' Second, it passed a motion which will put the election- changes motion to a campus ref- erendum in the fall. If the refer- endum upholds the motion, it can then be sent to the Regents for formal adoption into the SGC constitution. * * * THE REASONING behind the proposed election chanes was best expressed by Council member Sherry Miller, who chaired the committee which originated the motion. She explained that rather than leaving the selection to Coun- cil the direct participation of stu- dents, in the selection of their president will restore campus- wide prestige to both president and Council. Ironically, this point drew no opposition. It is not that it is fallacious but simply that the question of whom should elect the Council president had been the crux of earlier discussion on elec- tion changes held several weeks ago. Perhaps the lack 'of opposition was due to the fact that the same election changes were embodied in an alternate motion that Coun- cil was simultaneously consider- ing. This alternate proposal differed in a minor point of calling for the president to be replaced as presiding officer of the Council CINEMA GUILD: Old Greats In Comedy ' T'LL CURL your toes, buckle your whiskers, palpitate your heart, electrify your hair and, most importantly, tickle your tummy. See cascades of tirades put on when the world was younger, when comedy was produced by sight, not sound, when wit was a foreign word to ears punch-drunk with doubled up laughter. The Cinema Guild's offering to- night and tomorrow night of "Days of Thrills and Laughter" will brighten the May day, lighten the heavy heart, cheer the sick sneer, soften the hard disposition and excite the dull mind. Nothing like it has the town since the last silent was shown in some long forgotten theatre. See what real laughter is. See what pleasures your dormant belly bas missed. Relish yourself rolling in the aisles to the beat of our hero bouncing down a hill on his bottom. Let your belly rip, let your belly roar and then, after you are loosened up, get ready for the taut, suspenseful adventures of the damsel in distress. * * * . BE SURE to watch'"out for the custard pies, loose lions, wailing babies, careening, wildly-running automobiles and assorted other debris that by no means clutters up the screen. See Douglas Fair- banks out-shoot and out-ride the big bad injuns and get the girl. See our muscular hero perform his gymnastic feats with the bal- ance of a gazelle, the swiftness of a jaguar and the elan of Tarzan. See Laurel before he knew Hardy, Chaplin when he knew the revolving door of success, Sennett when he presented his Kops and bathing beauties and Turpin be- fore he got his eyes straightened out. And the gals are there also. Ruth Rolland (ohhhhh!) and Pearl White (that was a woman). There are no holds barred, no punches pulled and I'm wagering that nothing will ever top those days again. The recent "Harold Lloyd's World of Comedy" had better chase scenes and suspenseful a v~ g vn efrnriv, ,.lrb.cnnp~ c f by one of the regular Council members; he then would be free to implement policy. The motion eventually passed kept him as pre- siding officer. Council members chose to deal with these refinements, taking for granted that since both, proposals favored the campus-wide election procedure, this procedure was ac- ceptable. THE QUESTION of the proce- dure's validity remains undiscus- sed. Members seem fairly confi- dent Wednesday night that the referendum will uphold their changes, but the real doubts were expressed later as to what kind of president-vice-president slate the campus will elect. More im- portantly, the doubts were about the kind of criteria the student body will be using. , While doubts remain, Council has at least for the present turned its faculty-student government eyes onto the effort to ,achieve student government also. It can only be hoped that in so doing, it has not created an officer election system which, if passed by referendum and Regents, will produce high school popularity contest presidents. LIPPMANN: Obstacles To Change By WALTER LIPPMANN AS WE LOOK at the revolutions in Argentina, Peru and Guate- mala, the elections in Chile, the tension in Venezuela and the enormous problems of Brazil, we come face to face with a very dis- turbing question. Can orderly and reasonably -progressive govern- ments endure through the long period of time which must elapse before the promises of the Alliance for Progress bear fruit? The alliance is committed to a radical reform in the social order of Latin America. We must not underestimate how difficult and how unusual is such a commit- ,ient. The governments of Latin America are in the midst of these difficulties. If they improve the standard of living too slowly, they are threatened from the left; i, they proceed rapidly, they are threatened from ,the right. If the radical reform is to suc- ceed, it meansthat in each coun- try there must be a government which holds the confidence of the masses on the left and does not arouse the irreconcilable opposi- tion of the upper classes on the right. THE CRUX of the problem is in its very nature a long and slow process, a matter of long years withbmeager results to show in the beginning. The main talking point of the revolutionists of the Castro type is the disappointing and uninspiring gradualism of re- form. And at the'same timeA, the main talking point of the big landlords, the rich conservatives and the military dictators of the rebellious right is that the re- formers will be captured by the revolutionists. To many of the most benighted among them, all reformers are revolutionists. While it is possible to speed up reform somewhat, it is unavoid- ably a slow and proasic business. It takes more than 10 years to educate and train a professional and managerial class. It takes a, good many years to reform ag- riculture so yas to liberate the country from dependence on one or two crops. Furthermore, the development of Latin America will require the negotiation of complex world-wide commodity agreements and trad- ing opportunities. It. will require, also, big measures to relieve the pressure upon the world's mone- tary reserves and so to overcome the deflationary lack of 'liquidity which is today so big a cause of instability in the non-Communist world. SPEAKING ROUGHLY, the slowness and complexity of reform is the real problem, and the prob- lem would still be there, would still as a matter of fact .be there in Cuba itself, if Castro took up residence in Russia. The problem that has to be solv- ed is how orderly and progressive governments can earn the patience of the masses by instituting in stallments of the necessary' re- forms, and yet not be denounced as Communists and ousted by the reactionaries. (c) 1963, The Washington Post Co. Identity MY CONCLUSION is that it is useless-nay, harmful-to try to be anything; that is, to strive for a definite identity. A preocupa- tion with identity can°lead to 4 I GARGOYLE:, Synthesis of Vulgarity, yand Humor AFTER AN ISSUE last November which everyone, including its edi- tor John Dobbertin, called "very unfunny," Gargoyle hit the cam- pus again yesterday with the publication of the second issue of the year. The Gargoyle is better in May than it was in November. It hit such lows last winter that an improvement in the spring seemed inevi- table. There are few who would deny the value of a campus humor maga- zine and many who would support such a publication on principle. The humor magazine is a fixture of the American campus scene and ex- pected, particularly at a university of this size. There are momentary outbursts of laughter in the current issue of Gargoyle and the opportunity for a few good-hearted chuckles, but the standard evocation of those who hide themselves behind the blue cover is a long, weary groan. * * * * IN A COLLEGE humor magazine, one almost expects articles, car- toons and captions bordering on the off-color. But the off-color, in. the case of this Garg, more often tends to be disgusting than funny. When one is composing, it is far easier to be somewhat funny if the subject is obscene; real cleverness comes when a college writer is able to give humorous treatment to subjects that are not just naturally laughed at. Garg would find its job more difficult-and its success greater-if it were not so out and out blatant and obvious and if it made a larger attempt to cultivate the subtleties and nuances of good humor. College audiences are increasingly mature and sophisticated: the rah-rah dayg are no more and humor mags seem not to be awake to the new trends. Admittedly, with a potential readership of 26,000 the Garg has a big bill to fill and a violation of the stereotype of the ribald, below-the- belt college mag might leave some segment of the campus dissatisfied.- But the clever spoof of Undergraduate Library socializing, "Have Some Madeira, m'dear," is effectively understated and an example of more I