The Michigan Daily - Sunday, September 23, 1984 - Page 3 1 filler sclwlarship honors laywright By SEAN JACKSON A University student could be $1,000 richer this year thanks to a new creative writing scholarship honoring playwright Arthur Miller, a 1938 University graduate. Miller, whose works include Death of a Salesman and The Crucible, started his career as a playwright by winning a Hopwood writing award while studying at the University. THE MILLER scholarship is spon- sored by a University alumni group from New York and will be given to a sophomore or junior showing outstan- ding writing ability. The award will be based solely on the recommendations of University professors. Written work will not be used in determining the win- ner. ~ Doris Rubenstein, former treasurer of the University Club of New York, initiated the award. The idea for the scholarship came at a dinner where Rubenstein heard Miller speak about the importance of giving scholarships to students. After approaching Miller with the idea, the club began searching for ways to finance the prize. The club con- tributed $1,000 on its own, while ap- psaling to alumni and associates of Miller for the rest. His publisher and agent both made "substantial con- tributions," Rubenstein said. THOUGH THE scholarship is available every year, a winner does not have to be chosen. According to the of- ficial rules for the award, "if no writer is deemed worthy . . . by the faculty panel, the award will be accrued and presented the next year or when a wor- thy candidate is selected." ;English Department Chairman John Knott, is pleased with the award. "It will help honor Arthur Miller, one of the most distinguished graduates of the University ... and will help to en- courage students in their writing," Knott said. :According to English Prof. Emeritus Kenneth Rowe, Miller did not begin at the University with a career as a playwright in mind. "His first work was written during his springvacation as a lark," Rowe said. Yet, the manuscript was good enough to capture a Hopwood award for Miller" Winners will also receive an authographed copy of Miller's Death of a Salesman. Poor seating discourages wheelchair-bound 'M' fans By ALLISON ZOUSMER Although 105,000 people piled into the stands at Michigan Stadium yesterday to watch the Wolverines defeat Wiscon- sin, some loyal fans grudgingly stayed home. The fans are handicapped persons who say that arrangements made for them at the games by the University Athletic Department are inadequate and possibly harmful. ACCORDING to one wheelchair-bound fan, Michelle Cousino of the Center for Independent Living, the arrangements made for wheelchair users "are very dangerous and (we) can't see much since we're seated on the field against a retaining wall." At a game earlier in the season, Cousino said she almost collided with a player. "I saw a football player coming towards me, and if I hadn't moved, he would now be a permanent part of my body," she said. "It was such a bad experience that I didn't go back." Just trying to watch the game can be frustrating for disabled spectators. In a recent article in the Detroit Free Press, disabled reporter Jim Neubacher said handicapped people have a view that includes "the jersey numbers of the U-M players not on the field, a plethora of coaches, trainers, and ballboys . . . cheerleaders, members of the marching band, a ream of photographers, and occasional hangers-on who seem to merely wander about." TO COUSINO, the attitude of the Athletic Department is one of the major reasons for the conditions. "They act as if they're doing us a favor." Jim Kubaiko of the University's Disabled Student Services agrees with Cousino. He says he doesn't know of "any student in a wheelchair who goes to the games." "(Disabled) students are concerned about not being able to sit with the fans. And if the players get into a rumble, (the disabled) could get hurt." DESPITE the dissatisfaction, the athletic department says it hasn't heard a great deal of outcry over the seating arrangements. "The seats are not the best," said Assistant Athletic Direc- tor Will Perry. "But (the department) has done everything we could. We have not had many complaints." Perry said the problems are hard to solve because the stadium is almost 60 years old. People have got to understand that the stadium was built in the 1920's and not with handicapped people in mind," he said. Virginia Nordby, the University's director of Affirmative Action, says the administration is aware of the problem. "The University has an accessibility committee that has examined the issue and is acting upon it," Nordby said. U.S. threatens to leave UNESCO Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Summer ends? Mark Williams, 13, from Windsor enjoys the warm weather in front of the Art Museum yesterday on the first day of Fall. U-Ce 1kw mark (Continued from Page 1) At the time, the private bookstores in town sold textbooks at regular price with no discounting. Those who par- ticipated in 1969 may have envisioned 40 percent discounts, but in reality, prices around town for textbooks drop- ped to the present day level of 5 percent below list price. "The sit-in was about textbooks, but those who ran the store at first saw it as a discount for all items. The goal of the store has always been to offer a broad range of student supplies at reasonable prices," said Webster, who also was Student Government Council treasurer for the 1967-68 school year. Faced with more student uprising and increasing pressure from the entire community the regents approved on October 17, 1969 a plan to sponsor a bookstore by using a $5.00 fee assessed on each student's tuition. THE ORIGINAL plan to run the store provided for a Board of Directors which included students, faculty, employees and a University appointee. The seven students appointed by MSA to the board regulate the allocation of surplus funds back into the store. Keeping the store non-profit and student-run has always -APPENINGS- Sunday Hi hlight he University Club sponsors dinner and the film Foul Play starting at 7 p.m. The cost is $4.99. Films AAFC/Cinema Guild/Cinema 2-Berlin Alexanderplatz, parts 10, 11 & 12, 2 p.m., part 13 and epilogue, 7:30 p.m., Angell Aud. A. AAFC/Cinema Guild/Cinema 2-Berlin Alexanderplatz, parts 10, 11 & 12,2 p.m., part 13 and epilogue, 7:30 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Performances Performance Network-Play, North Country Opera, 6:30 p.m., Perfor- mance Network, 408 W. Washington St. Ark-The Louisiana Aces, 8 p.m., 637 S. Main St. School of Music-Organ Recital, Kenneth Brown III, 8 p.m., Hill Aud. Miscellaneous City of Ann Arbor-Dedication of Gallup Park Livery, 3 p.m., Gallup Park. U-M Theater-"Dark Skies over Michigan," 2 & 3 p.m., U-M Exhibit Museum Planetarium Theater. AAUW-Book sale, 12 p.m., Arborland Mall. Outdoor recreation Program-Bike/camping tour to Waterloo Recreation Area, 8:30 a.m., North Campus Recreation Building. Monday Highlight Organist Anthony Williams gives a recital, 8 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Films AAFC/Cinema Guild/Cinema 2-Berlin Alexanderplatz, 7 p.m., Lorch Hall. Performances School of Music-Organ recital, Anthony Williams, 8 p.m., Hill Aud. Speakers Center for Near East and African Studies-Edna Coffin, "Problems in Translation: Modern Hebrew Poetry," noon, Lane Hall Commons. Computing Center-"How to use the Xerox 9700 Page Printer," and Forest Hartman, "The PAGEPR Program," 3:30 p.m., 177 Business Ad- ministration Building. Anthropology department-Phillip Tobias, "Recent South African Con- tributions to Human Evolutionary Studies," 4:10 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheater. Chemistry department-David Curtis, "Metal-Metal Triple Bonds: A - (narh Tn~ fr..nm ritrinci to F fa nl ol :rn.im 11 d n mi rnnmn 19M)lf s anniversary been a priority, U-Cellar officials said. Originally the store opened up shop on the first floor of the Michigan Union. Its predecessor, The University Store, held its operation in the Student Ac- tivities Building before the sit-in, but sold no textbooks. The U-Cellar became a hit among the community and a thorn in the side of the private bookstores in town like Ulrich's and Follett's. In 1969 Ann Arbor had more than its share of bookstores, but all were privately owned with overheads which forced them to keep the price of books and student supplies at list price. After the U-Cellar emerged, there was a trend to bigger stores and operations like Wahr's, Slater's and Overbeck's bookstores couldn't handle the high pressure of selling college textbooks, and closed their stores in Ann Arbor. "SINCE THERE was no discounting of textbooks before 1969, the U-Cellar forced the other stores in town to be competitive," said Weinberg. "Before 1969 the local bookstores could charge whatever they wanted for all school supplies, but the U-Cellar now has the purpose of maintaining com- petitive prices." One year later the store moved to the basement of the Union, but the store was always expanding so in 1972 the U- Cellar began renting the Union Ballroom for book rushes. The flowering of the store included the opening of the North Campus U-Cellar in 1974 which geared its merchandise to the art and architecture students who spent their days on North Campus. THE LATE 70's brought labor trouble to the store as employees griped about lack of control over the operations. Ac- cording to Weinberg the U-Cellar ex- perienced "some growing pains" as the store took shape as a commercial bookstore while still holding on to its basic tenets of being student-run and non-profit. In 1979 the employees joined the In- dustrial Workers of the World union. Relations between the workers and management soon stabilized, and the current detente between students, University, and management has allowed the store to prosper. "The atmosphere of Woodstock, the Ann Arbor Blues Festival, and man landing on the moon all had an impact on the founding of the U-Cellar in the fall of 1969," said Weinberg. "There was lots of fear on campus back then due to the co-ed murders. The sit-ins became an effective means for the students to feel they could somehow change the world in which they lived." WEINBERG DOUBTED that any mass student movement could start today simply over the issue of lowering student textbook costs. The U-Cellar of today little resembles the original store. The U-Cellar now utilizes computerized inventory systems and offers a wide range of sophisticated goods like computers and calculators. But it seems the U-Cellar is destined to always be shrouded in controversy. The store left its home in the basement of the Union in 1982 after a dispute with Union officials over rent hikes and restrictions on merchandise sales. At that time Union director Frank Cianciola said the move was good because it would allow the Union-run stores to flourish, but now the Union is PARIS (AP)-The Executive Board of UNESCO begins three weeks of meetings here Wednesday that are likely to determine whether the United States goes through with its decision to withdraw from the organization. The U.S. plan has presented the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization with its biggest crisis in 38 years of existence. BRITAIN, WEST GERMANY, Den- mark and the Netherlands are reviewing their own continued par- ticipation in the organization. They, too, are expected to base their decisions on the outcome of the meetings. The 51- nation governing board will consider wide-ranging changes drawn up by UNESCO's 161 member states and Director General Amadou Mahtar M'Bow of Senegal, a central figure in the controversy. M'Bow, who has headed the organization for 10 years, has been the target of charges of large-scale inef- ficiency, mismanagement and corrup- tion at the Paris-based Secretariat. M'Bow told a French radio station Friday that threats, pressure or "acts that can only be called criminal" would not force-him to resign because he had been unanimously elected,, and no member state could get him removed. BUT SOME WESTERN delegates have suggested that M'Bow's departure might be the only step that could keep the organization from taking what they believe would be a radical turn if the United States and other Western nations leave. M'Bow's comments Friday followed disclosure in Washington of a draft report by the U.S. General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, that was critical of UNESCO's management, budgetary growth, fiscal practices and program duplication. Dileep Padgaonkar, a UNESCO spokesman, called leaking of the report "psychological warfare." THE SOVIET UNION has supported A4NN - 5th Rvenue at UbefrtY St : **::::761-9700 s . DAILY MATINEES some Western demands for modifications, but has sharply criticized the U.S. decision to pull out. The Reagan administration announ- ced last December it intended to with- draw from membership at the end of 1984 unless substantial changes were made in UNESCO's operations. In August, members of a U.S. gover- nment advisory commission on UNESCO released a report saying the administration's intention to withdraw was not well founded and might have been politically motivated. The report added that "U.N. bashing is a popular pastime, this is an election year and- UNESCO is a tempting and vulnerable target." THE UNITED STATES, which provides one quarter of UNESCO's $374.4 million two-year budget, conten- ds that UNESCO has become too politicized, opposes traditional Western concepts such as a free press, and does ($46 FORCIIDOEM CITY I (lv 0 ( not exercise fiscal restraint. UNESCO's response is that inter- national organizations are political by nature, that there is no plan to involve governments more closely in con- trolling the press, and that the member states decide what the agency does and how much it spends. All the Western members have said that if the United States pulls out, the organization must cut its spending by 25 percent to match the loss of Washington's contribution and not try to make up the shortfall by "increases in contributions, borrowing or delays in returning member states' accumulated surpluses." If the United States remains a mem- ber, the Western nations said they want UNESCO spending frozen at current levels after adjusting for inflation in its next two-year budget, which will cover the years 1986 and 1987. OX 5 Kt V\ 6w d 'f Toy l ENDS THURS.I ONE CANNOT LIVE WITHOUT LOVE! JOHN HUSTON'S FINNEY L SUN. 1:20, 3:20, 5:25, 7:30, 9:40 MON. 1:00, 7:30, 9:40 'l°at(z T C YtQ- W vt "A VERY GREAT FILM." -Judith Crirt. WOR-TV "A MARVELOUS MOVIE..." -Dino LAM. KNBC Channd 4 New. Thaw ILI EATERIES & COMMONS