Page 4-Saturday, October 28, 1978-The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor; MI 48109 Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Monarch of north makes comeback Vol. LXXXIX, No. 45 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan C"anham' s t HENS THE Michigan Marching Band couldn't perform in the comecoming Day parade due to a chedule conflict, Parade Chairwoman 1athy Van Wagen turned to high ,cools to find a suitable replacement. 'ut there were no takers. The reason is hat many high school bands are ycotting the University because of thletic Director Don Canham's 'ihdling of band day this year. Traditionally, a home football game as designated "Band Day". Every jichigan high school marching band as invited to participate in the half- ihLe show. They were given their seats ree. One band was chosen as the best, nd everyone generally had a good ime. The band members got a thrill of performing in front of 100,000 ans, and the fans enjoyed the change n the usual halftime activities. .This year, however, Mr. Canham ecided to change the format of Band ay. First, Mr. Canham changed the name of Band Day to "Bandayrama." ext, he decided to hold Bandayrama *n Michigan Stadium as usual, but on he day of an away game. The bands erformed before a small crowd omprised mainly of parents. Instead f "playing to thousands of cheering fans; their music this year fell on empty seats. Mr. Canham justified this action on purely capitalistic grounds - there was too great a demand for titkets, he said, to give several thousand away to high school band niembers. But the effrontery did not stip there. Mr. Canham charged the prents $1 to watch their children perform. 'We fully support the boycott by high school bands. The athletic department has ceased to be a part of, the University. It is basically an i6dependent corporation, and Mr. Canham is its mogul. Band Day was always a refreshing break from the Usual corporate atmosphere at the stadium, but now Mr. Canham in his zejl to increase revenue has denied us arl the high school students even that plWasure. Has money become more iniportant than serving the orpmunity? In our quest for a national chm pionship, must we ignore public sdrvice? Viand Day was originated as a means a bringing people into the stadium back in the pre-Canham days when the gjnes weren't always sold out. Now tit the demand for tickets is so great, 'st we sell short these bands that h 4ed us before for a few extra bucks? this is just one example of injustice etrated by the myopic, money-- oranted leadership of the athletic de artment. The recent increase in s1 ent basketball season tickets from $1 to $26 is outrageous. Even tuition g business doesn't increase that much that fast. However, the reason is apparent: it is a seller's market. A few years ago, basketball games were sparsely attended. Then, with the addition of Rickey Green and Phil Hubbard, plus consecutive trips to the NCAA tournatment, ticket demand increased dramatically. For the past two years, nearly every game has been a sellout. So, with perfect business logic, the athletic department decides to hike ticket prices over 100 per cent for students - when demand increases and supply remains constant, price rises. More tragic still, is the fact that in both football and basketball, students frequently sit in the end zone or high up behind the basket while those willing and able to pay higher prices, watch the action from choice seats. In both sports, one-fourth of the good seats are left for students, one-fourth for faculty, and one-half for alums and the public. The Daily has always insisted that students deserve seats between the 20- yard-lines in football, and a larger proportion of the good seats in basketball, but our cries have gone unanswered. Such policies are in effect at Indiana, Illinois and Northwestern, and to a lesser degree even at Ohio State. The implication is clear: Mr. Canham's sports department is not run for the students. His primary concern is money, and that means pleasing the t public which pays higher ticket prices. Even the battle over the line versus lottery method of distributing tickets would be eliminated if the department simply cared enough about students to allocate a reasonable number of good seats for them. After all, isn't the University supposed to be for the students? If this kind of action is what it takes to earn high rankings, then it is time to restructure our priorities. EDITORIAL STAFF Editors-in-chief By Michael Harris HANCOCK, NH. - On a sunny morning in early October, the driver of a Volkawagen bus was startled by the appearance of a massive, dark hulk in front of the vehicle as it rolled north along Interstate 93. A resounding crash broke the monotony of the highway drone, as the bus rammed headlong into the flanks of a young bull moose. New Hampshire Fish and Game officials were radioed to the scene, and media representatives rushed to telephones and typewriters to chronicle this emergenge of the moose from the obscurity of 19th century history smack into the middle of latter 20th century life. More moose sightings in Hancock, Canterbury and Merrimack have confirmed the fact: The monarch of the northern woods has returned home. Of course, the moose of today will find the traditional haunts quite changed since the last of the solitary creatures virtually disappeared from New Hampshire more than 75 years ago. "Moose don't do very well in competition with cars," -said Henry Laramie, Fish and Game's superintendent of game management. These citizens of the secluded forest don't do well among the activities of civilization, either. IT IS PRIMARILY a change in mankind's use of the land that is responsible for the reappearance of the moose. A century of wide spread farming and aggressive, clear-cut logging of even the North's most inaccessible forest lands destroyed the habitat that had sheltered the creatures for centuries before the arrival of the white man. Wanton killing for skins and sport in the closing days of the 19th century finished the job. Today the reversion of open farm land to forest is nearly complete, with mature woodlands now covering 86 per cent of New Hampshire, once again providing food, shelter and the necessary isolation from man. In the dark spruce forests and grassy swamps of northern New England, moose were originally more numerous than deer. They were ideally suited to the habitat and survived quite well in harsh winter weather. By developing effective defenses against wolves, bears, and other predators, the moose earned itselfa niche as one of the dominant life -forms in the ecology of the forest primeval. THE MOOSE has demonstrated an uncanny knack to survive. Its early ancestors flourished as long as a million years ago, and fossil remains indicate an extensive range that stretched across Europe and North America as far south as South Carolina, through the hills on Pennsylvania to the Illinois plains and westward to Oklahoma and the Pacific Northwest. As might be expected, the recent return of the moose has generated pressure from sportsmen to open the hunting season once again. A bill to do just that was submitted to the 1977 legislature, but met quick defeat in the House Fish and Game Committee. "The official position of the Fish and Game Department was in support of the moose hunting bill," said Laramie. Asked for his personal opinion, Laramie revealed that he "didn't think we would have a moose hunting season." "I saw what happened when we opened up the season on the elk in New Hampshire," Laramie recalled. "The number killed during the hunting season was not excessive, but opening a hunting season on an animal seems to open up some sort of psychological door in people's minds, and then they start taking the animals out of season." The legislature authorized New Hampshire's only elk hunt in 1941, and 46 of r L O r Nr yaL.EL the large deer-like creatures were shot during the two-day season. Sightings were reported annually during the years foollowing the hunt, but by the early 1950s elk had disappeared from New Hampshire's woodlands. "We already had a problem with a lot of moose being killed illegally," Laramie continued."Ithink we could kill perhaps20 moose a year without hurting the present population, but opening a season would cause much more killing. I certainly don't think it should be done for the money involved, although I am sure the money is making it very tempting to do just that." REPORTS OF MOOSE sightings indicate a surge in the population since 1969, although Laramie suggests that the size of the herd has been "creeping up steadily" since 1950, when the department estimatedathe New Hampshire moose population at between 25 and 30 - perilously close to extinction. Laramie's best estimate of the current moose population is 200 to 500. This population boom is mirrored in other. New England states, notably Maine, which now estimates a moose herd numbering in the thousands. There are also small but growing herds in Washington, Oregon, North Dakota, Minnesota, Idaho, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Vermont. All these states have resisted pressures to open an unrestricted hunting season on the animal, and most states have no season at all. "The current surge in the moose population may be due to a number of factors," said laramie. "A reduction in the deer herd caused by the series of severe winters we've had in the past few years have encouraged the reurn of the moose, not because these two animals are in direct competition, but because the deer carries a parasitic 'brain worm' that is not harmful to the deer but is fatal to- the moose.rThe increase in beaver is also an influence. Beaver ponds provide a good habitat for the moose and encourage the growth of aquatic vegetation that the moose feeds on. STANDING TALLER than a large horse and weighing up to 1,400 pounds, the full- grown bull moose is one of nature's majestic splendors. Ghostly silent as he moves through the still forest, the imposing beast can also be reckless during mating season and downright belligerent when attacked. "The return of the moose presents us with a unique opportunity," said Meade Cadot, director of the harrisville Center for Environmental Education in Hancock. "A large native creature that had nearly disappeared from New Hampshire's forests has returned. Now it is up to us to see to it that the moose receives the protection it needs." The return of the moose is a fragile phenomenon, and thecurrent rate of population increase should not be expected to last forever. As is the case with other large species, innate mechanisms governing reproduction will not allow a population explosion greater than can be supported by conditions in the local habitat. Second, forward-looking management of the re- emerging moose herd will be required to protect this wildlife heritage of generations yet unborn. Michael Harris is a New England-based freelancer specializing in environmental coverage. This article was written for Pacific News Service. D>AVIDGOODMAN GREGG KRUPA Managing Editors M. EILEEN DALEY KEN PARSIGITAN IAN OBERDORFFIR Editorial Director RENE BECKER Magazine Editors LIZ SLOWIK SUE WARNER STAFF WRITERS: Michael Arkush, Carol Azzizian, Richard Berke, Leonard Bernstein, Brian Blanchard, Ron Benshoter, Mitch Cantor, Donna DeBrodt, Eleonora di liscia, Marianee Egri, Dan Ezekiel, Josh Gamson, Ron Gifford, Sue Hollman, Elisa Isaacson, Carol Koletsky, Paula Laxhinsky, Marty Levine, Adrienne Lyons, Chester Moeski, Mark Parrent, Judy Rakow- sky, Martha Retallick, Keith Richburg, Kevin Roseborough; Julie Rovner, Beth Rosenberg, Dennis Sabo, Amy Saltzman, Steve Shaer, John Sinkevics, R.J. Smith, Pauline Toole, Jon Vogle, Jeffrey Wolff, Shelley Wolson, Howard WitI Letters to the Daily e . ,- >k , , . ' t, e.C; . . u*NVNl N& A CW 04 V h W- ibto-~ EE r"-(,&NOOS)... t I To the Daily: As a graduate student who has been at the "U" for seven years and as an avid basketball fan who has followed Michigan b-ball sin- ce the days of Pomey, Russell, Darden, Tregoning, and Buntin I would like to express my extreme disappointment and utter disgust at the ticket department's choice of a lottery scheme for dispersing b-ball tickets. A less. equitable system could not have been chosen. A lottery system is very inequitable because those studen- ts who really care about basket- ball, who participate in the games, support the team through thick and thin, and actually cheer at the games are unable to do anything about the seats they will ontain. There is a difference bet- ween those persons who are really "into basketball" and those who simply want to go to a few games, if the team is doing well, as anyone who went to last year's games and saw all the"no- shows" at the supposedly sold-out games knows all too well. Though om m yargue that there are no Pricing could be used to differen- tiate prime seats from other seats by charging $3 per game for the prime seats and $2 per game otherwise. This would allow the "die-hards" to differentiate themselves from the casual ob- servers. Such a pricing system was indirectly used this year as ticket prices were raised from $1 per game to $2 per game. The result was that only 3700 ticket applications had been sold as of Sunday whereas 5300 were sold last year. Obviously. some students want to see b-ball more than others. Priority arrangements are designed to ensure that students will gradually receive better seats and should be retained. Though there are some problems with "trafficking in senior I.D.s" it is a problem without any easy solutions under any distribution system. Queuing systems should be established or authorized by the ticket department and run by responsible individuals with reasonable check-in requiremen- ts and adeauate disclosure. Lines superior to any "chance" system where students who wish to ob- tain better seats are unable to do so. Messrs. Renfrew and Canham should "get their act together", the students deserve far better than what they are being offered. -Patrick J. Wilkie Editor's note: A letter yesterday falsely accused the Daily; below Managing Editor Ken Parsigian explains the discrepancy. Schlomo Mandes' letter yesterday stated that the quarrel over basketball ticket policy last year "was intensified when the Daily, after condemning the previous year's line assumed the number one spot." This is completely false, and stems from a case of confused identity between my brother, Jeff Parsigian, and myself, Ken Parsigian. Last year, five days before tickets were to go on sale, my brother called me and told me that he had already started a line with his friends. I asked if there were any other persons in line, and he said no. After all, he said, all.he' cared about was getting the best seats. I thought, however, that everyone should know there was a line started already, so I telephoned Ticket Director Allan Renfrew and asked if he was going to honor the line. When he said yes, I printed the information in the Daily so every student would know about it, and would have a chance to get into line. This was in accordance with the Daily's editorial position which stated that one of the main problems with the ticket distribution system was that no one knew when the lines were starting. Late that night, my brother telephoned me and asked if I could help him out the next day by taking someone's spot in line. Since I wasn't busy, I helped my brother out by waiting in line. f f?' "wo orr 0 fl