Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 26, 1968 , , . . I i . , , i IM P , , M , I - , z W I e . I I I , , - , I I Building for the year 2000: No room for big bus iness 4 By MARTIN DALE If there is one interest which' Time valiantly espouses, it is cause of the corporate enter- prise and the personalities who.. run it. In a recent cover story which, included eight full pages of color photographs, Time attempted to assuage the discrepancies be- tween the pervasiveness of the corporation and the pressing needs of society at large. The subject was architecture. The theme was "Building for the Year 2000." The corporate personality w a s Nathaniel Owings, founder and partner of the prestigious architectural firm of Skidmore, OWings and Merrill ("the General Motors of architecture, with a record of high performance in everything' fron its corporate Cadillacs to its economy Chevy's"), and the living testimony to the myth of the self-made man ("from black dirt belt to megalopolis"). Not unexpectedly, in its mis- conceived and oversimplified reliance on corporate enterprise as the key .agent in the city- building process, Time seems ierely to be saying "what's good enough for G.M. (or S.O. & M for that matter) is good enough for the country." For example, Time lauds San Francisco's Alcoa Bldg. saying it "upgrades the bland apart- ment houses around it and thus makes a positive contribution to San Francisco." The structure also blocks magnificent views of the'bay. The towering John Hancock Bldg. in Chicago is character- ized as "a radical departure"in skyscrapers." That is to say, it is shaped like a sawed-off obelisk instead of a rectangle. A photo shows a worms-eye , view of tpe 140 Broadway Bldg. in the Wall Street financial dis- trict, thus disregarding the ob- vious-that the building cannot be viewed from this perspective except at the risk of a badly strained back. Then there is a shot of Lake Point Tower, "the world's high- est apartment building on the shore of Lake Michigan." It is also the world's most mono- tonous - 70 identical floors and an infinity of identical win- dows applied like a blue-green decal. Time calls these structures "New Shapes and a New Spirit." In fact, they are only the same old shapes, and the same old spirit shined -up a bit to look more spiffy. Why is architecture locked, in the doldrums? Simply be- cause of the law of the land- in our society land goes to the highest bidder, that is, to the corporation. Thus, while the centers of our cities have virtually undergone reconstruction three times in the lives of our grandparents, the result has been only more noise, higher density and more magnificent ugliness. Buildings are profitable even when they are designed as filing cabinets for people-as-functions. Le Corbusier, the great French architect, ironically dubbed our skyscrapers , "too small." His vision was .,a generous one whereby mammouth structures would house. whole communi- ties amidst green trees, blue skies and multi-colored flow-' ers. Louis Sullivan, though he was committed to the skyscraper by. necessity, abhorred the Amer- ican city. And Frank Lloyd Wright suggested the solution t,.!, New York City's problems would be happy devastation by the atom bomb. Clearly, the individual archi- tect, no matter what his genius, has been reduced to the benign adversary of the corporate giant. Meanwhile, the corporate a chi- tect and his big business cB'nt continue to satisfy their mutual interests. Only a few weeks ago, for example, it was learned that corporate interests want9d to construct an office tower di- rectly above Grand Central Station in New York. Not on- ly would this building block light and the view, but it vould create incredible traffic con- gestion in the immediate vicin- ity, The proposal met opposition from Lindsay's urban design consultants and the City Plan- ning Commission, but civic power in the field is negligible. (The architect, by the way, is Marcel Breuer, famed pro- duct of the Bauhaus and a prime mover in the modern movement of architecture. For. Breuer at lerct, the moral seems to be "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em.") What kind of measures will the challenge of rebuilding our urban environment really take? Not only the profit-motive and the private sector, but the pub-} lic interest and more initiative on the part of the government. The place to look for signs of change is not the penthouse of Sunoco, nor the Four Seasons of Seagram, but the Housing and Urban Development headquar- ters and t h e office of Mayor Lindsay. Only through the vest- ,ed powers of government will the necessary coordination be provided- Moishe Safdie's Habitat of Ex- po; the central district of Cum- bernauld - a new town in Eng- land; Market Street East - re- development in Philadelphia's Central Business District; and the Linear City Proposal f o r Brooklyn are all urban design projects which go far beyond the concept of the monolithic corporate structure. Their con- cern is with the complex needs of the total urban environment. And significantly, government played a decisive role the plan- ing of each. Ultimately, the architecture of the year 2000 will have to an- swer a three-part question to be worthy of modern civilization: - Is corporate interest willing to make the necessary sacrifices in the interests of the total com- munity? - Is government ready to ac- cept its responsibility in the ar- ea of urban planning? - Can public interest prevail over both governmental and cor- porate interests to assure an en- vironment for people rather than for automatons? Unfortunately, but expectedly, Time has ignored these pressing questions and instead has once more praised the golden calf of the American corporation. For Time's lack of forsight, only the people will suffer. Saldie's 'Habitat': Some hope for the future Local boycott planned to back grape pickers By GREG ZIEREN Table grapes may be hard to' find in Ann Arbor, if a group of University professors and students supporting the boycott of Cali- fornia table grapes have their way. The group, led by Prof. Nicaulos YAFi7initiates The Czechoslovakian invasion, five 'weeks old today, will be re- newed in the minds of University students as the Young Americans Freedom (YAF) collect petition signatures on the Diag to protest the Soviet military intervention. The petition reads: To our elected National representatives: We the undersigned urge that our government use 61l means possible, excepting armed force, to encour- age the Soviet bloc to withdraw forces from Czechoslovakia imme- diately and to permit this country to resume its efforts at achieviig freedom .and self-determination." The drive was originated by YAF faculty sponsor Prof. Ross Wilhelm of the School of Business Administration. Mills of the English department, will hold its meeting tonight to discuss organizing the boycott. Prof. Mills, who has worked with Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers in California, said the group will approach chain store owners in the area trying to con- vince them not to reorder Cali- fornia table grapes. Stores who do not comply will' be picketed, as they have been in most cities where the boycott has been in effect. The group has already received the financial support of several local church groups and the build- ing trades unions in Ann Arbor. Student support is necessary to] make picketing sand boycotting of the chain stores effective, Prof. Mills said. Another aspect of the group's work will be' educational-convinc- ing students and townspeople that they should not patronize stores that keep the California grapes. The boycott has been particu- larly successful in such cities as Boston and New York where the mayors of those cities came out i4 support. Mills estimated its success at 90 per cent in New Ybrk where it also received the strong support of the local AFL-CIO and UAW. rC "q,~ --- act kmd in LAST DAY Positively Ends Tonight Tannewscxrnn plentc or...Thc mt manifiepfir?'m Vinler of Ten ,cademyAwards ALL SEATS $2.00 :\f - -- - -- - -- - - -- - - - .kl : l:Y 4. 4..,' -i x Y Y 4A f' ;Y: r 44 ' Q' TONIGH T 8:30 P.M Special Events Building TICKETS AVAILABLEiK AT THE DOOR 6:00-9:00 P.M. Presented by the U. of M. Men's Glee Club wa 4 DAILY AT 1:30 and 7: 0 /,I Presents !,..> OEDIPUS REX Directed by Tyrone Guthrie, 1964 The great Greek tragedy, perforrmed with many of the conventions of the Greek stage., SHORT: ON THE JOB (Stan Lauren: WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY--FRl DAY co-starring KATHERINE directed by INGER STEVENS RODDY McDOWALL. JUSTICE HENRY HATHAWAY screenplay by noeEEbyBERT"Soe d Esceby Ncer"-m cU* MARGUERITE ROBERTS 11*~u~oo ARMVI~II[*