[1 Av4 Two ~aii Section Two XXXV. No. 6 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1924. PRICE, FIVE CENT; JRVEYING THE TI KET DISTRIB UTIO T92T 4- -____________________________________ ___ 'he Problem Faced By The Athletic Association wSome Cheating Methods Found By Distributing Officials System Now Used To Allot The Seats 4stWisconsin Game Allotment s The Situation As Seen From The Student's Point Of View { The T4Y Tq By Murcion Mable There has been a steadily growing mble of discontent lately on the! .mpus with regard to the manner in hich football tickets are distrib- ed. For' years these complaints havel :en an annual occurrence. Every 11, students declare that they have it received their due in the mat- r of seats, either that they have not ceived enough or that the seats hich they have been allotd are no And as long as tickets are distrib- uted, there will be these complaints, a great many of them groundless, a great many of them justified. It is inevitable, so long as human beings are distributing the tickets, that mis- takes will be made. The dissatisfac- tion, however, has grown to such huge proportions this year that some notice must be made of the way in which the tickets are given out; to whom they go, how the actual distri- bution is undertaken, whether the proper safeguards against unscrupu- lous persons are taken, and so forth. The average person is not familiar with the immensity of the task which confronts the Athletic association. Theirs is the task of distributing with a minimum of fuss and confusion and a minimum of error a quantity of tickets running up into the hundreds of thousands. Few prsons realize how much trouble even one mistake can make. The issuing of so much I as one duplicate ticket can easily throw a whole section of the "stand Into 'confusion during the rush of seating before a big game, Itis safe to say that the method of distribution used by the Athletic as- sociation is practically fool-proof and mistake-proof. The system was not originated here; but under the man- agement of Harry A. Tillotson, busi- ness manager of the Athletic associa- tion, it has been brought to a high. state of perfection. For the big games, the association handles some- times as many as forty-five thousand tickets and applications; yet the num- ber of mistakes made is trifling, and, the number of persons who manage to cheat the association in some way or other is negligible.- Most of the trouble arising in the distribution, strange to say, is the fault of the owners of the tickets themselves. Either in an attempt to fool or cheat the association, or through some personal mistake, the holders of tickets are often able to throw the ticket office into tempor- ary panic. This very possibility of confusion, through error or trickery, has taught the ticket distributors to keep a watchful eye open for all sorts of un- usual complaints; and they have d- veloped to an astonishing degree the ability to foil the would-be trickster's plans. The knack +f catching these, irregularities is not easy thing to de- velop, either. The variety of plans by which ticket holders try to ob- tain more than is their due is almost too great to estimate. Every year hopeful new crooks come forward with age-old plans. The association is on the watch for these, and usually gets them. But there also comes every year a new group of 'new and often highly elab- orate plans, the brain children of those who would make two tickets grow where one before had been. These are the plans which make the complaint clerk lie awake nights, his brow all wrinkled and furrowed with worry. Some of the plans are devil- ishly clever. Last year two Women from a near- by city presented themselves at the ticket office just before one of the big games. There were tears in their eyes. "We've forgotten and left our tick- ets at home!" they cried. "They're miles from here, and we've come all the way just to see the game. Can't you give us duplicates?" ' Nov this sort of request is an 01' story 11 the Athletic association. Be- fore every game at least a dozen peo- ple come to the window with this complaint., Sometimes they mean what they say; sometimes they don't. Nevertheless, the officials have learned how to deal with this par- a4.., ... -Aln to the surprise of the two women,1 they were occupied by two men! The women turned to H-arry; Harry turned to the two men. "Where'd you get your two tick- ets?" asked the redoubtable Harry. The two men produced their tickets, rwhich were bonafide beyond the shadow of a doubt. But, following a rule long established, Harry ordered them out of the seats and into the office, for a further quizzing. There, it was found that the two men had obtained their tickets in Detroit, from a man they both knew. The man who had sold them the tickets, it de- veloped, had bought them from still~ another man, who had lived in the same house with the two women, and presumably found the two tickets after they had left for Ann Arbor, appropriating them for his own gain. A particular hoary trick, used by students in an attemput to secure the best'seats possible, is to declare on their application blanks that they are seniors. In the' rush of distribution it is, of course, impossible to check up on the campus rating of every ap- plicant, and for years the association bad to trust entirely to the appli- cant's honesty. The abuse grew, how-, ever, until some measure had to be taken. The association finally adopt- ed the practice of stamping booklets, when they were given out at registra- tion time, with certain symbols to represent the class of the students that occasionally a student who is! to whom they were issued. When also employed by the University in applications came in it was a simple some capacity or other, manages to matter to check up and find out ; procure one booklet as a member ofI after the tickets office. whether the applicant were telling the University staff, and another as a the truth about his campus age or I student. These cases are so rare, not. however, that they cause little But th'e students quickly learned trouble. the meaning of these various sym- A method by which two persons bols, and even before the season had may obtain access to the reserved finished, coupons bearing home made ticket (a method which, incidentally, or doctored symbols began to flood i seat sections on one reserved seat the distributing office, then located in was not detected by Athletic associa- the Press building. The result was tion officials) wag demonstrated last that the plan of stamping the book- year by two students at one of the lets with these symbols had to be big games. The two students pre- abandoned. sented tickets at the door, one of Now a new system has been de- them for a reserved seat and the vised. The class of the applicant is other for general admission. The identified by a small punch, made in student having the reserved seat a certain corner of the coupon book-, ticket, however, held it so close to let at the time of registration. If the end that the ticket taker was able the incoming student is a freshman, to tear off only a small stub. his booklet is punched in the lower, left hand corner; if he is a sopho- j Then, when he got inside the gate, more, it is punched in the upper left he tore the remaining ticket into two hand corner, and so forth. This plan fair sized stubs. These he held in is practically fool proof, Zs the pres- such a way that the usher assumed ence of more than one punch on the they were the stubs for two adjacent booklet is proof in itself that it has seats. Thus were two able to squeeze been tampered with. into an excellent position for viewing Another method of fooling the asso- the game, on only one reserved seat ciation arises through the fact that ticket. every member of the faculty or perm- Another incident, not important in anent University employe is entitled 'itself, shows admirably how difficult to a coupon book upon payment of ! it is for the Athletic association to the required fee. Thus it happens j check up on the holders of tickets Two years ago a student living in a rooming house applied for and ob- tained two tickets. He planned to attend, one of the big games with a young lady of his acquaintance. The tickets had been in his possession for 'several days, when suddenly in some unaccountable manner they disap- peared. He was desperate. Finally, two days before the game, he chanced to run across a man who had two tickets in his possession and who was willing to sell them-at a price. The student purchased the tickets from the man, only to find when he got home that, they were the very same tickets he had so unaccountably lost! He never saw the man again who had sold them to him. The ability of the Athletic associa- tion to distribute tickets accurately, however, and the problems with which they have to deal do not inter- est the student directly. Sometimes, in fact, when an upperclassman re- ceives a ticket to one of the impor- tant games and finds that the Ath- letic association has reserved space on the West stand for his express use, he is apt to wish that the distribution system were a little more fallible. The policy which underlies the dis- tribution of tickets to various classes of people is something which can and does come in for a great deal of crit- have once left the icism. Many people believe that the manner in which certain choice sec- tions are doled out is fundamentally wrong. The policy of the association has. been from time immemorial first to, reserve certain of the best sections for the players, followers of the op- posing team, the "M" club, the# Presi- dent's party, and complimentary tick- ets. The remaining seats (approxi- mately four-fifths of the total) are then divided equally between stud- ents and alumni. Theoretically this scheme is admirable. On paper it looks as fair as any plan which could possibly be devised. Yet, when the scheme comes actually to be put into practice, the student is unable, even if he wishes, to bring his, father and mother to see the big games! Mani- festly any scheme which leaves the student so thoroughly out in the cold is ready for the scrap heap. On causal thought, to be pure, it would seem that the alumni are entitled to as many tickets as the student body. And they are-after the student body has got all it needs. But until the students have been given a reasonable number, the alum- ni have no right to an equal share. A football team is composed of elev- en individuals, chosen to represent. Michigan in a game with representa- tives of another student body. To assume that alumni, whose interest _ Coach Yost Gives The Athletic Association's Side) Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Upholds Present System as Most Practical to Meet the Situation (Note: The following communica- tion was received after the leading[ article for this page had been set inI type. This will account for certain -repetitions which may be found. It is hoped, however, that the publica-i tion of the Athletic association's point' of view may help to clear up a prob-I lem which is of interest to all! studehts.) Wisconsin Rooters......... 2,500 Faculty ............. . ......2,000' Press Club Convention, "M" Club and Coinplimentary. 2,000 Students................17,250 Alumni . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...17,250 41,000 The question arises as to the allot- ment for students and alumni. Is it Each year the Board in Control of right that the: 55,000 -alumni and for- Athletics reviews the problem of mer students have as many as the football ticket distribution to the end 9,000 present students? Should they. that they may be alloted to the vari- have more or less? The Board in ous groups entitled to them in as fair Control, which is made up of repre- and equitable a manner as possible. sentatives of the three principal This is no small task, and so long as groups-faculty, alumni and students the demand continues to exceed our -agreed that an equitable .distribu- supply it is inevitable that there be tion would be to grant the same num-- some disappointed persons. ber to alumni and students and to For the past several years there give members of the faculty the same have been 36,000 seats in the stadium. privileges as are offered to students. This year 5,000 additional seats are j Then there is another question. being built at the east end, raising What are we going to do with the the total to 41,000. After the visiting citizens of the state who pay the team, "M" men, guests, and faculty taxes to support our State University? are taken care of, the remaining seats Is it fair to deny them the privilege are divided evenly between students of attending the games? and alumni. For the Wisconsin game, Under the coupon system every the distribution is as follows: student and faculty member who wishes it is assured a seat for his or her own, personal use. This comes first. Then the question-What is the most fair and equitable distribution of other seats to coupon holders? Nine thousand students will use 9,0001 seats leaving 8,250 of the students al- lotment to sell. If the first 4,125 students to- apply were permitted to gets two tickets in addition to he one they would use for themselves, the supply would be exhausted and the oher 4,875 students could not get1 any. To avoid this and to permit every student an equal right to invite one guest, the Board in Control agreed toj sell to each student only one ticket. This policy of restricted sale has been in force for several years, but not until this year has it been necessary to decrease the extra tickets to one. This is the result both of increased numbers of students and increased demand per student. The opportunity of any student or member of the University staff to buy seats-their location and num- ber per applicant-is not in the least affected by the number of tickets. each alumnus is allowed to purchase. In other words, if the first applicant among the alumni had been allowed to buy all the seats available for this group, namely 17,250, the only ones prejudiced would have been the rest of the alumni; the four ticket limit in the case of the alumni left the num- ber of tickets available for students just where it was. The various allotments are distrib- uted as follows: Visiting team: Beginning in the middle of north stand and extending in one direction to include numbe' required-for Wisconsin 2,500. "M" Club: Between 20 and 35 yard lines at one end of South Stand. Faculty: Various allotments be- tween 5 and 40 yard lines. Complimentary: Each member of, the varsity squad is permitted two, ocomplimentary tickets and is per- mitted to purchase two additional tickets for each year of var- sity service. Also, a limited number of University and State officials are given complimentary tickets. These are between the 20 and 50 yard lines. All other seats: Each section in the stadium, not accounted for above, is divided equally between students and alumni, 17,250 seats going to each. There never has been any secret as to ticket allotments or divisions of space in the stands. Blue-prints in the office are available for inspection by anyone interested. In addition to these 41,000 seats there will be about 2,000 box seats that can be purchased in blocks of four by anyone who wishes them. In distributing tickets the desires of students, faculty and alumni must all be' considered and a system em- ployed that will be fair to all. These varied interests have been carefully considered by the Board in Control and the above plan adopted. The Board is composed of representatives of each of these bodies in order that the viewpoint of each may be ob- tained. There are four faculty mem- bers elected by the faculty senate, three alumni members appointed by the Regents, three student members elected by the student body, and the Director of Athletics, ex-officio, Sec-, retary. MIELDING H. YOST, Director. in the University is all in the pas have priority over the student bo which the team is picked is to reasc from a false premise. Any fair mini ed alumnus will agree that the stu ent body should come first in t matter of tickets to football game The Athletic association- has stea fastly refused to look at the matt from this point of view, and, fro all indications, is going to continue it present policy until football become a historical cumiosity. A recent ed toral in the Daily sums up t trouble in a paragraph: The tendency to neglect the student body reflects the spirit in college and university athletics which is most criticized by edu- cational leaders. Too much thought is given to the commer- cial aspect; too little attention is paid to the promotion of the only worthwhile feature of such con- tests - a spontaneous student spirit occasioned by a real feel- Ing for the team and school. Tihis can never come while foot- ball games are promoted in such a way as to enlarge their possi- bilities as a spectacle of purely public interest. When interviewed concerning tli recent and most intolerable of all t restrictions yet imposed-the limitE tion to one extra ticket for the Wbi consin and Iowa games-Harry Ti lotson, the business manager, wl has charge of all ticket handling, pre sented figures which purport to ho' Just where the tickets are on$ These are his figures for the Wiscor sin game: A total of 2,500 tickets will go t Madison for Wisconsin rooters;57 tickets:,for the use otf*"plyers°an members of thhe football squad; total of 2,000 tickets for the use the faculty; a total of 1,950 ticket to be set aside for the "M" club, lb President's party, and for compi: mentaries. This gives 7,024, to 6 subtracted from the entire number; seats avaIlable, 42,242. The remainder, which is 35,218, divided equally, giving the alum body and the student body each 17 609 tickets. A number of glaring inconsistenchi may be noted in these figures. Fir and foremost is the fact that M Tillotson has not accounted for t fact that thousands upon thousan of persons who have never been coin nected with the University in any c pacity hold tickets for the Wisconsi game. This includes all sorts< local storekeepers, business me and professional men. It also i cludes a very fair chunk of the m a population of Detroit. Another inconsistency is the fa< that in his figures he declares thm the faculty block is .a thing apa: from the student allotment. This in direct contradiction to a sil handed out at registration whit states that the faculty tickets copi from those sections reserved for ti student body. This discrepancy,,to be sure, is vu a small one when compared ti tI total number of tickets availab But if a small discrepancy is visib what may be hidden? One seat of the trouble is the ma ner in which the alumni block more than 17,000 tickets is distrib: ted. Under the present system, eve; alumnus is entitled to four tickets s long as the alumni share holds ot This first-come-first-served plan r suits In a great flood of applicatio on September 1, the first day wh4 they are received. Is there anythii wrong with this plan, aside from tJ fact that the Athletic assoiatit loads . upon itself an unnecessa burden all at one time? Yes. B cause workers in the. association a so completely swamped that th make 4o attempt to check over app cations and see whether they are a tually from alumni. It is well kno that anyone who wishes to do so m receive the maximum of four tickE simply by applying as an alumni His application will be filled witho any investigation whatsoever. Perhaps it is in this that the who trouble lies. The Athletic associati -says the demand by alumni is enormous that it is literally fore ] to give over a block as big asIt 1 l n nr ,,.. r.Fr. b.7 . a. - o Old Books Take Rise In Price As Supply Dwindles le to From 50 cents to $30, for two cop- by a few large stores backed by s of the same edition of Pliny's Let- wealthy men of the cities. Book sales rs is but one of the tremendous in- England as well have taken the up- bounds in price taken by old books in the European book market. Six hun- dred per cent increase, and all in the space of twenty-five years,-less than1 one thirty-second of the age of the book. Librarian William W. Bishop, who has recently returned from spending his sabbatical year in Europe reports a great scarcity of valuable old works and prices all out of proportion to their old standards. Mr. Bishop has been buying old editions since 1899, and in that year found a copy of Pliny's Letters published in 1508 by l Aldus in a shop near Naples. The price was two and one-half francs,- slightly less than 50 cents. A year l ago, while abroad buying books for. the University library, he found an- other copy of the same edition in Venice. The price was 600 francs," or nearly $30. The demand for old books by 1i-1 braries all over the world is becom- ing more and more large. Buyers for libraries in South Africa. Austral- ward trend in prices, and for practic- ally the same reason. In central Europe, chiefly in Ger-, many and Austria, the depreciated currency resulting from the world war has caused book companies to sell their wares outside of their own countries. Large firms in Germany have established stores under other names in Switzerland where the stable! Swiss money is received for them. No -duty on books makes the task of "book-running" comparatively simple, and valuable old editions are carried across the borders in motor cars to fill the orders as they are taken. Small stocks are maintained at thel Swiss shops, and as a result, the' prices. are higher than they would normally be.- One firm in Vienna has established a subsidiary, store in Lucerne, oper- ating under the same namin as the parent company, and the preoeeds, in gold, are helping to swell the depre- ciated coinage of Austria. The purchasing of old books in works is alarmingly small. Medicalf journals are in great demand among! these new buyers, with but few oft those works to be had. Libraries all over the world have been buying and - holding medical journals and the sci-I entific treatises of early times for ] the last half-century-the trade in an-1 tique literature nears its naturalE close. The buying of old and valuableh books consists of more than thei simple asking and paying for them.1 Many years are often spent in the1 search for one book alone. Last yearI Mr. Bishop came to the end of a nine year hunt when he found, within two months, three sets of an old German encyclopedia. The work, published in 64 volumes, is especially valuable as it contains important biographies to be found nowhere else. The volumes were compiled by Zedlar in 1725-35, and during the nine years since Mr. Bishop became librarian of the Uni- versity, lie has' searched for the en- cyclopedia without even seeing a copy. Last year he was offered a set by a German book dealer for $1,000. Considering this price high, he quiring where the rest of the set was,r he was told that a man had arrangedf to buy the set, but could not pay forE it all at the time. He had left thef last two volumes as a pledge, but " had never returned for them. Mr.I Bishop had the books called in, and4 bought the entire set for the Univer- sity. Much sought-after books are fre- quently found in out-of-the-way places-even fairly common works sometimes leave the listed market en- tirely and must be sought out among ; the smaller shops of the continent.1 Six books which Mr. Bishop had listed with book dealers all over Europe for four years he finally found all to- gether on the same shelf in a little shop in Naples. It scarcely pays the book dealers to publish complete lists of stock, 'as the demand for some works is small, and as a result indi- vidual search is often necessary to find a desired book. Libraries the world over have so bought up the supply of old books that of one edition of 500 copies of Lorenzo Valla's work 'published in 1540, 450 are known to be in libraries, maps, but only the extremely valu- able books are ever reproduced. Sev- eral times a year Mr. Bishop is of- fered copies of newspapers contain- ing accounts of Washington's death, or other rare copies. In most cases, the papers are facsimiles of the orig- inals. Facsimiles of letters which were difficult to distinguish from the originals were reproduced by clever lithographing for many years, but less of this is being done now. There are many cases in which those trying to sell the fakes are not themselves aware of the substitution, even large booksellers of Europe placing faked articles on the market innocently' enough. Educational poverty has greatly re- duced the equipment in American periodical journals of the libraries of European universities. Cirrency in- flation has so increased prices as to cause one national library to reduce its annual purchase from 300 Amer- ican journals to 14, and the cost of Sthe 14 is now higher than the cost of the originalg300. Ascarcityco material on America-economic, sci- entific, medical, and literary, is re- salting in foreign univeiies an A