Ity Simijn PaU Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-05521 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily expres! or the editors. This must be WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1969 s the individual opinions of staff writers noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: NADINE COHODAS Deploying multiple warheads MANY TIMES HAVE the people of this country watched quietly as their government erected newer and frighten- ing means of destruction. They have seen countless times the mounting of more p o w e r f u I and sophisticated weapons whose only effect has been to further weaken the tenuous security of the globe. Yesterday, on the eve of the Senate's decision on President Nixon's Safeguard anti-ballistic missile system, the exist- enc'e of another such weapons system was officially confirmed. John S. Foster, Jr., director of research and engineering for the Defense Department told a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee that mul- tiple warhead capacity has already been added to the existing Polaris submarine A-3 missile. . Foster was quick to point out to the committee, which is investigating the ad- visability of a mutual moratorium with the Soviet Union on the flight testing of multiple warhead missiles, that the mis- siles already deployed are not independ- ently targeted. Unlike the MIRV which would be able to deliver nuclear warheads at targets separated by hundreds of miles, the MRV which Foster described would deliver several warheads in a pattern centered around a single target. THE MIRV WARHEAD, according to military spokesmen, is in advanced development stages in both the United States and the Soviet Union. Foster concluded his testimony before the subcommittee by calling for the pro- posed moratorium on MIRV testing. Stu m er Staff MARCIA ABRAMSON ........ . ............. Co-Editor CHRIS STEELE........... ............... Ca-Editor MARTIN HIRSCHMAN .. Summer Supplement Editor JIM FORRESTER .. . .......... Summer Sports Editor LEE KIRK .......... Associate Summer Sports Editor ERIC PERGEAUX......................Photo Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Nadine Cohodas, Martin Hirsch- man, Judy Sarasohn, Daniel Zwerdhing. Although moratorium on the testing of MIRV is still possible at this point the hopes for larger accord will be signifi- cantly worsened by the revelation of MRV deployment. Because of the impos- sibility of determining the strength of opposing nuclear forces, when equipped with MRV capability, without direct on site inspection agreement will now be much more difficult to achieve. -CHRIS STEELE No comment THE GIRL SCOUTS of America filed a $1-million suit against a poster com- pany yesterday, charging that the de- piction on a poster of a pregnant Scout and the motto "be prepared" was a "wanton and malicious defamation of the Scouts. . The Girl Scouts charged that a poster of a girl "in an advanced state of preg- nancy, wearing the official Junior Girl Scout uniform" was "intended to impute unchastity and moral turpitude to mem- bers." The poster shows a smiling girl in full Junior Girl Scout uniform and insignia, including the green beret with "GS" in a trefoil, and a New York troop patch on her right shoulder, in one corner is the motto "Be prepared." The plaintiffs, a 57-year-old organi- zation that now numbers 3,750,000 girls from 7 to 17 and adult leaders, alleged that the poster was "designed to destroy" the association of Girl Scout symbols and aims with "truth, loyalty, helpfulness, friendliness, courtesy, purity, kindness, obedience, cheerfulness, thriftiness and kindred virtues among girls." -N.Y. Times 0 August 5 A ci By WALTER SHAPIRO Associate Editorial Director, 1968-69 First of two parts REMEMBER WHEN television was good enough to be called a "vast wasteland"? Hearings began yesterday on a bill that would remove, whatever small chance exists of halting commercial television's determined efforts to extend the lower limits of mediocrity. Rarely are legislative battles in Washington simply a matter of the good guys versus the bad guys. But it is hard to view the bill in- troduced by Senator John Pastore in any other context. The Senate Communications subcommittee, chaired by Pastore, began hearings on- a bill which would forbid the Federal Com- munications Commission to accept competing applications for the re- newal of broadcast licenses. The bill means that the F.C.C. would have to evaluate broadcast license renewal applications in a vacuum. Only in those extremely rare cases when the Commission decides not to renew a license, could it accept a competing ap- plication for the frequency. Although sounding rather in- nocuous, the bill might serve as a textbook example of why regula- tory agencies can't regulate. Traditionally the F.C.C. has been rather lax with the broad- cast industry. But when for the first time in its history, the Com- sission refused to renew the li- cense of a major television station last January and instead awarded the facility to a competing ap- plicant, the industry was thrown into panic. The Pastore bill is the industry's answer to this uppity regulatory agency. Since the F.C.C. had shown faint signs of making license re- newals more than a pro forma charade, Congress is being pres- sured to restrictsthe agency's :ati- tude in these cases. Under the communications Act of 1934, licenses for broadcast frequencies are subject to renewal by the F.C.C. every three years. The Commission is required by the Act to hold a comparative hearing whenever a competitive applica- tion is filed against a station ap- plying for license renewal. These provisions are almost meaningless since the F.C.C. has a staff of 17-including program analysts, accountants, lawyers and engineers-who must review over 2500 broadcast license renewals a year. Including cases where com- peting applications were filed, the Commission held hearings on only 39 license renewal application be- tween 1959 and 1968. SET AGAINST this background, it must have seemed almost rev- olutionary to the broadcast in- dustry when the F.C.C. by a 3-1 vote denied the renewal of WHDH-TV in Boston last Jan. 23. With three members either ab- sent or timidly abstaining, the Commission based its decision pri- marily on concentration of media control. For WHDH is owned by the Boston Herald-Traveller, a newspaper which also owns local AM and FM radio stations, as well as having extensive cable television interests in the area. The F.C.C.'s gadfly, the youth- ful Nicholas Johnson, noted in a concurring opinion, "In America's eleven largest cities there is not a single network-affiliated VHF television station that is inde- pendently and locally owned. They are all owned by the networks, multiple station owners or major local newspapers." Johnson concluded by saying that the WHDH decision opened the door "for, local citizens to chal- lenge media giants in their local community at renewal time with some hope of success .." But traditionally the tanding of local citizens before the F.C.C. was virtually nil. Short of filing a competing application (a proce- dire which before the WHDH case seemed an exercise in futility), a citizen's rights before the Commis- sion were all but limited to writing letters of complaint. EARLY IN JUNE, however, the rights of citizens' groups before the F.C.C. was affirmed from a surprising source. Warren Burger, writing his last opinion as a U.S. Court of Appcals judge, overturned the F C.C. and held that the United Church of Christ had been unjustly barred from appearing before the com- mission in opposition to tne re- newal of the license of WLBT-TV in J a c k s a n , Mississippi. The church had tried to bring WLBT's long history of blatant, on-the-air racism before the F.C.C. In a precedent-making decision. Burger argued that the television viewer, or groups representing viewers, qualify as interested par- ties to appear before the Commis- sion in license renewal cases. In line with this reasoning the Court returned the WLBT case to the Commission for rehearing. But the Commission in original- ly renewing WLBT's license by a 5-2 vote indicated its preference for inadequate service over risking the possibility of no service at all. Short of bankruptcy, criminal misconduct, or a competitive ap- plication th'e F.C.C. still will not deny, renewal of a broadcast li- cense. Even when inclined to take ef- fective action, the Commission has been handcuffed by its inabil- ity to measure broadcast perform- ance. The F.C.C. has been forced to resort to such crude devices as measuring the amount of air time devoted to public service program- ming. Although several Commis- sioners take such quantitative yardsticks seriously, these for- mulas merely fill Saturday and Sunday mornings with allegedly "public service" programming, generally of the most banal va- riety, The importance of competitive applications stems from just this absence of any qualitative measure of broadcast performance. Robert Thorpe, an aide to Nich- olas Johnson, explained that al- though "the Commission will not revoke a license solely for anti- trust reasons, allegations of con- centration of media ownership would be a potent factor in a comparative proceeding." NOW THAT THE RENEWAL application of WLBT is again be- fore the Commission, a competing application has been filed by a black group which includes Aaron Henry, Chairman of the Mississip- pi NAACP, and Charles EVrS. the recently elected mayor of Favette. Mississippi. This black-oriented challenge to WLBT is not unique. Ben Kubasik, Executive Director of the National Citizens Comtnut- tee for Broadcasting, said -n an interview, "The existing broadc st legislation has never been test ed, but it provides awfully good grounds for minorities to chal- lenge the white-dominated pre- serves in major broadcasting to- day." In addition to WLBT, there are currently five competing applica- tions pending against major tele- vision stations. Challenges to WPIX in New York (owned by the New York Daily News), WNAC in Boston (owned by RKO Gen- eral ) and KNBC in Los Angeles (one of five VHF stations owned by the N a t i o n a l Broadcasting Company) have been filed by groups claiming to represent, at least in part, the, local black com- munities. IT IS CONCEIVABLE that some of these ghetto-oriented applica- tions have been designed by clever businessmen to play on the liceral sympathies of Commission inem- bers. But the potential impact of black-controlled television should not be minimized. Senator Philip Hart noted in hearings of the Communications subcommittee last March 12, "Re- -cent studies have indicated that 40 per cent of the poor black chil- dren and 30 per cent of the poor white children, compared to 15 per cent of the middle-class white, be- lieve that what they see on tele- vision represents an accurate por- trayal of what life in America is all about." Despite integrated deodorant commercials and Negro situation comedies, television has been al- most as laggard as newspapers in attempting to transcend racial stereotypes. The Pastore bill runs couniter to far more than merely the inter- ests of the suburban elite already catered to by educational televis- ion. It runs counter to the inter- ests of everyone except the tre- mendously powerful broadcast industry, tizen's place in the wasteland in University planning and the North ampus myth By MARTIN ZIMMERMAN Daily Guest Writer "AN UNPLANNED CITY," John Kenneth Galbraith has noted, "has as m u c h chance of being beautiful as an unmade bed." Similarly, a poor plan is more often than not, worse than no plan at all. There is substantial evidence to indicate that this is precisely the case at the University of Michigan. Specifically, it is poor planning which has made the campus uglier; it is poor planning which has caused the area called North Campus to grow to its pres- ent amorphous state; it is poor planning which has placed a higher priority on land and building costs per se than upon edu- cational and community needs; finally, it is poor planning which has excluded the students from a meaningful role in Uni- versity physical expansion. Such assertions may no doubt come as surprise to the uninitiated. It is a curious anomoly that the topic of physical plan- ning has rarely been broached by the Uni- versity at l a r g e. Certainly its influence should warrant this. Ostensibly, at least,r the central campus, t h e medical center, and the north campus are all being' devel- oped according to plans submitted to the university and approved by the regents. Vital questions such as apportionment of state funds for engineering versus lit school facilities, use of student funds for the proposed theater, whether to expand the bus system which already costs well over $100,000 a year, whether the Univer- sity' Events Building should have had pri- ority over badly needed intramural facili- ties - all t h e s e are physical planning questions of paramount concern. Yet, dis- cussion of these questions by the Univer- sity community has rarely occurred except on an infrequent ad hoc basis. The whole problem of the role of physical planning bas not been subjected to any public de- bate at all, Why is this so? Part of the explanation is because physical planning has tradition- ally been relegated to professional special- ists. Such data as enrollment projections, building square footage, funding, and land acquisition, have been considered too re- mote and complex to be understood by the University community. Thus it had best be left to exoerts. university, than it naturally follows that any attempt to change the basic institu- tional structure should in the process ad- dress itself to the role of physical ;plan- ning as well. Underlying all these points of view is the lingering fear t h a t the University has reached the point of no r e t u r n. It has grown at such a rate during the last two decades that it is now out of control. There is ample data to warrant this. Since 1950 building investment has tripled, building area has increased by two-thirds, and en- rollment h a s practically doubled. Today the University has 36,000 students, 20,000 employes; it owns 12% of Ann Arbor land; it contains over 14 million square feet of building area which has a value of close to $200 million. In the future, administrators are thinking in terms of enrollments as high as 70,000. Current plans are for it to exceed 50,000, w i t h a 70% increase in building area and 60% increase- in build- ing investment. The result has been a manefestation of the "size syndrome." Mark Killingsworth, former editor of The Daily, commented in a 1967 editorial that "size is a problem for a 35,000 student university with a budget of nearly $175 million, and the university community - student, faculty, adminis- tration, and Regents - have all recognized this. Size means inflexibility - an inabili- ty to introduce reforms or merely to try something new. Size means anonymity... Size means mechanization - a grinding bureaucratic mentality which affects ev- eryone . . .'" THE "SIZE SYNDROME" is more or less a psychological manifestation of the idea of the "multiversity." This has been defin- ed by George Beadle, president'of the Uni- versity of Chicago, as "a series of colleges held together by a central heating system," (or in the case of the University of Michi- gan - a cow pasture tied to four campuses by an unknown bus schedule). The concept of the multiversity has been perceived from two radically opposing points of view. On one hand, many share the deterministic notion that the institu- tion is going through an evolutionary pro- cess which cannot be basically altered. The only alternative is perpetuation - a basic roasaefnrir. o+ the hii s, in.at,, nn at this point. What is considered important is the commitment to revolt. In neither case does physical planning imply a way of controlling or reforming the institutional structure. In the first case it assumes an anonymous role of recording the expedient; in the second case it is con- sidered totally undesirable and irrelevant. There still remains, however, the hope that the idea of the university can be re- stored to its traditional stature; that the institution can find its own self-propor- tions; that it can be controlled - not by a computer; that the basic changes which -are necessary do not require destruction of the total institution. Clark Kerr, in h i s b o o k, The Uses of the University, com- ments that the University, like the prehis- toric dinosaur, may become extinct. But he adds that "the problems of today and to- morrow may inherently be problems of in- ternal resolution. The University may now again need to find out whether it has a brain as well as a body." An understanding of the role of physical planning in the past can help focus on this question. To what extent has it been det- rimental to the balance between academic process and the environment? How h a s physical planning fostered the idea of the multiversity? What kind of premises does it really rest upon? An explanation of the North Campus myth can do much to ex- plain this. North Campus is the most blatant ex- ample of the fiasco of physical planning at the University. In the last 16 years there have been three different physical plan- ning proposals made for this area. In spite' of this, North Campus is not a "campus" in any meaningful sense of the word, nor will it ever be. The process of its evolution is not much different from the pattern of housing subdivisions scattered around the outskirts of big cities. These subdivisions are the urban sprawl of cities, and North Campus is the urban sprawl of the Univer- sity. It is devoid of any seriously reasoned rationale; it is rather a result of a series of rationalizations which have collectively committed the University almost to the point of no return. There are a series of reasons given for the move to North Campus, which either collectively or individually are simply not accurate. LAND COSTS - This excuse is that land is too expensive around central campus. City statistics reveal that costs per square foot in this area range from $4 to $10. In contrast the land on north campus h a s cost practically nothing at all. The Re- gents minutes of February 1953 s t a t e a typical purchase - 30 acres purchased at $1050 per acre or only two c e n t s per square foot. The case is not simply a comparison of land costs, however. For one thing, costs for land immediately adjacent to central campus are less than further out because private interests consider it a bad risk ly- ing as it does in the path of University ex- pansion. More important than this, how- ever, is that land costs actually amount to a small portion of the total cost problem. For instance, if the education college were to construct new facilities costing $6 mil- lion on five acres costing $5 per square foot, simple arithmatic would show that the land costs would only amount to 15% of the total building costs. This becomes miniscule when other factors such as fac- ulty salaries and building operation a r e added. Time in an intangible but signifi- cant factor as well. If a faculty member wastes ten minutes a day commuting un- necessarily between north and central campus it would cost $150 over a school year. In a period of twenty to thirty years, the cost of time wasted could very easily equal the price originally spent for t h e land. CONFLICT WITH COMMUNITY areas to North Campus is stated in the "Build- ings Under Study - 1965," report, issued by the office of the Vice-President f o r Business and Finance. It states (p.29) that "the addition of the North Campus in the 1950's served to . . . diminish the need to extend the Central Campus into establish- ed community areas." Presumably, t h i s means respecting the "town and gown" re- north of Huron street, almost the entire block south of Mary Markeley dormitory, and even the site of the Ann Arbor bank at the corner of South University and East University. In fact the percentage of land within Ann Arbor owned by the University has doubled from 6 to 12 per cent since 1951 after remaining steady for the previous 30 years? Does this sound like a policy geared to nonintrusion? NEED FOR MORE SPACE - A Daily story of January, 1965 carried in its title that the need of North Campus was related to the overcrowded central campus. Simple comparisons of data between two publish- ed reports would indicate that, to the con- trary, there is every possibility that needed facilities could be built in the central cam- pus area. The first report, prepared in 1963 and entitled "The Central Campus Plan," projected a total of 4,600,000 square feet for the area as feasible. The second report, a "Building Under Study-1967" projected only 3,600,000 square feet for academic facilities. This means that the University could construct all its desired academic fa- cilities and still have a million square feet left over for additional facilities such as housing, parking, and libraries. This ig- nores the possibility of other space economy measures, such as high rise structures, renting space, or utilization of air rights over existing streets. To assert that the central campus is overcrowded, in light of these figures is not correct. There is room for expansion in central campus in the future. EDUCATIONAL POLICY- This is the most important consideration of all. On this score there has been no formal re- search beyond the needs of specific col- leges. How much sense does it make to group as currently planned the Music School, Architecture and 'Design, School of Education and the Engineering College on North Campus? In terms of credit hours taken, they have more in common with the College of Literature, Science and the Arts than they do with each other. Statistics issued by the Office of Academic Affairs for the fall 1967 term indicate that the nereentag of credit hours taken in LSA Ki 4 I