Making a business of ' ' athletics By ANDREW CHAPMAN Goings-on at the University's Department of Intercollegiate Athletics are making some people very unhappy.- Criticism-at least from those who feel free to speak on the record-has been escalating, and the reasons for this apparent new surge of discontent are complicated at best. THE ATTACK seems to boil down to these three complaints:, * The department is too large and obsessed with profits. " The department may be forcing the Univer- sity to compromise its academic standards. *'The University faculty has lost control of the athletic department's operations. "The athletic department is run for itself, by itself," said Loren Barritt, professor of Athletics and A Academics 'r educational psychology. Similar sentiments were echoed in many parts of the University community. FIRST, CRITICS claimed that the depar- tment's financial separation from the rest of the University might allow athletic ad- ministrators to forget that they are working at an educational institution. Barritt, a long-time antagonist of the athletic department, said that if the University faculty had its way, the Michigan sports complex would not be operated as a business. Skyrocketing revenues and the ardent desire for winning teams have obscured the original goals of intercollegiate athletics, said Thomas Potter, a third-year law student and a member of the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics from 1978-80. SAYS HOWARD Wikel, a University alum- nus and patron of the athletic department: "Winning leads to a vicious cycle." To keep the department solvent, Wikel said, the Michigan football stadium must be filled every game. And to keep it filled, the Wolverines have to win, he continued. That kind of pattern can lead to problems, Wikel admitted. So people watch the department-with its $10.5 million budget-and find fault. PSYCHOLOGY PROF. Donald Brown, a member of the faculty's governing board, the Senate Advisory Committee on University Af- fairs, questioned whether the athletic depar- tment should have complete control over the money it generates. Brown suggested that some of the money could go to the recreational sports department to boost the University's sagging intramural sports program. "It would be nice if a very careful examination of funds generated by the athletic department could be done," he added. TO HIS CRITICS, Athletic Director Don Canham replied: "If you're going to have in- tercollegiate athletics, and you're going to have the money to do it, you either get money from the general fund-like most schools do- or you can go out and get it. There's no magic wand, you've got to go out and get it." University President Harold Shapiro said he believes the "business" metaphor, when used in conjunction with the athletic department, is misused. "Nobody in this world would go into inter- collegiate athletics for money," Shapiro said. "No one who runs a business would stand for academic requirements." BUT CANHAM is, by nearly all admissions, the consummate business man. No one faults See MAKING, Page 9 Ninety-Two Years CLOUDS of Mostly cloudy and mild Edtloraia/Freedom with a high near 65. Chance Sdrof rain later in the day. Vol. XCII, No. 156 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, April 16, 1982 Ten Cents Fourteen Pages CULS rep resigns, protests co mnuttee policies. By JIM SPARKS A student member of the Executive Committee of the Coalition for the Use of Learning Skills (CULS) resigned yesterday, claiming that the coalition is overly secretive and is not dedicated to aiding all minority students on campus. "I am disheartened," Debra Cisneros wrote in her letter of resignation, "with the direction that the committee is going in and with the attitudes and opinions among some of the committee members." She said the public was being kept in the dark about the com- mittee's activities. "I DON'T THINK they want the students to be aware of what's going on," Cisneros said in an interview last night. She said the committee is now keeping two sets of minutes, one to use for committee records and the other, a synopsis to give to the LSA Student Government and to the CULS staff. John Russ, director of CULS, said the two sets of minutes are kept primarily for purposes of clarity and to avoid put- .ting unresolved issues or personality conflicts into the public arena. "The objective of the executive committee of the Coalition for the Use of Learning Skills is to clarify the im- portant issues, and we share as much relevant information as we can with the staff of CULS and the college," he said. Cisneros said the controversy over the minutes arose because information about the coalition's plans to recruit 100 freshperson members each year had been made public. "A COMMENT was made that the See CULS, Page 8 Regents face 250 protestors By GEORGE ADAMS More than 250 students packed a special meeting of the University Regents yesterday to criticize the ad- ministration for its plans:to "redirect" the University by eliminating some programs and beefing up others. The students, many of whom were participants in a group called the "April 15 Coalition," said they were angry that administrators were moving ahead with retrenchment plans without considering adequately the opinions of students. BECAUSE THE coalition persuaded so many students to speak before the Regents' usual monthly meeting yesterday, the Regents had to- extend the time set aside for public comments during the meeting from 30 minutes to one-and-one-half hours. Also because so many students showed up at the meeting, the Regents moved from their usual meeting chambers in the ad- ministration building to a large meeting room in the Michigan Union. Theistudents gathered on the plaza outside the administration building in the afternoon yesterday. And, as more and more students. assembled, the mood remained light but defiant. Some of the students carried signs protesting the administration and some played guitars and banjos, singing songs to the high-spirited crowd. BUT, DESPITE the festivities, the tone of the students' messages was .See MORE, Page 5 Regents hi'ke. Health S rvc By LOU FINTOR Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline) questioned the status of a study which is The Universityns Regents yesterday designed to set grounds for exemption approved a $2 icrease i the man- from the mandatory fee. datory student health service fee, Roach also expressed dissatisfaction raing it to $49 e sudent pebor ) with the way the budget was presented, RaideentoDean heake(D-asArb and cautioned Health Service ad- said he opposes the hike because it ministrators to present "an actual" duplicates coverage for students who budgtnt yes have healthinuacpoces budget next year. TvHEMANDATRYepdoes not ROACH initially suggested post- TH E MANDA TORY fee does not poning the rate increase until the study cover costs of hospitalization, long- results were complete, but later agteed her lines, or spepolcies, Baker said, to approve the hike so long as ad- ministrators "give us an actual" already cover these services as well as budget. those offered by the University Health Service. See REGENTS, Page 5 UNIVERSITY REGENT Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing) studies a meeting agenda (above) before more than 250 students packed the Anderson Room of the Michigan Union to protest the University's policies of retrenchment, military resear- ch, and minority affairs. Phony flyer declares curfew to curb crime Bursley murder suspect Kelly may be given 'relaxing' drug By HALLE CZECHOWSKI "Due to the alarming increase in the numbertofacts of criminal sexual abuse in the past month," flyers across campus tell passersby, "the Department of Safety and Security, in conjunction with the Regents of the University of Michigan have decided to institute a curfew - midnight to 6 a.m. - for all men." University security officials said yesterday they were not amused by the flyers, which began popping up all over campus late Wednesday night. THEY ARE a hoax, assured Walt Stevens, director of the University's Department of Safety. Security of- ficials are ripping them down, he said. The signs bear the University Safety Policy Committee logo and, if iot for a poor job with white-out on the original, they would be fairly convin- cing. "We believe this (curfew). policy will protect women from rape and will increase the safety of women on cam- pus," the flyer states. ,L "I believed it," said Marco'Loren- zetti, -a freshperson in the School of Art. "I was just going to ignore it." According to Harold McMillin, a See PHONY, Page 2 By SCOTT STUCKAL Psychiatrists examining Leo Kelly, the 22-year-old former University student charged with the shooting deaths last year of two Bursley dorm residents, say Kelly is not cooperating with them and have suggested that they be allowed to give Kelly "a relaxing agent." Kelly, whose trial is set for May 24 in Washtenaw Circuit Court, is being examined by state forensic psychiatrists to determine his mental state at the time of the shooting. IN A LETTER to presiding Judge Ross Campbell, state psychiatrists suggested administering sodium ber- vital to allow him to remember the events surrounding the shooting of Ed- ward Siwik and Douglas McGreaham, prosecutor Lynwood Noah revealed last week. William Waterman, Kelly's attorney, has said he opposes administering the drug to his client, and has pledged to appeal any order to administer "a mind altering drug" to Kelly. "We consider it an intrusion of our client's basic rights," Waterman said. "Our client is unable to recall the even- ts. It's a natural psychological reaction to these traumatic events." William Meyer, director of the foren- sic psychiatry department at Ypsilanti State Mental Hospital, said sodium bervital is not a memory drug, but a "relaxing agent . . . for dealing with loss of memory" when talking. Meyer refused to comment specifically on the Kelly case, but said that sodium ber- vital can be used in conjunction with other treatments like hypnosis to help jog the memory of subjects. When Kelly's trial on two counts of first degree murder begins, Waterman said he plans to show that Kelly's "fear of failure and (academic) stress caused this." "Not :everybody is able to handle" classroom pressure, Waterman said. Waterman ... against drugging Kelly E TODAY Overcrowded dorm conditions TWENTY-EIGHT members of South Quad's Gom- berg House discovered something of the true meaning of togetherless Wednesday night after they were trapped for 45 minutes in one of the dormitory elevators. It seems that the residents stuffed aL..,. 1_... aL... ... a.. - n---- -I +-{or i+ltn Training for... whatever One officer called it a training film, but his.superiors on the Virginia Beach, Va. police department disagreed. Police Chief Charles Wall said it was bad judgement to show a portion of the film Deep Throat during an evening roll call. "In this state," Wall pontificated, "that film has been banned as pornographic, and the officers who viewed the film knew that. I think it was poor judgement on their Clean as a whistle There's more squawking than usual going on at the Chester park Laundromat in Duluth, Minnesota - and not because the spin-dry cycles are broken or management refuses to accept Canadian quarters. The owner, Phil Lun- dberg, has turned the laundromat into a veritable bird haven. Lundberg keeps more than 75 cages lining the walls. "You have to make money to survive," Lundberg admits. "But I also try to make the business a little bit unique." He Also on this date: -1932 - The Michigan Cooperative House was founded heralding the humble beginnings of the University's Inter- Cooperative Council and a nation-wide cooperative living movement. s 1944 - In an unprecedented move to safeguard the secrets of the coming Allied invasion, Britain forbade neutral diplomats to leave the British Isles and places a drastic censorship on all diplomatic communications to and from the nation. " 1.971- A Daily repsorter and free-lance photographer .I . I